cosmopolitan/libc/calls/calls.h

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7.6 KiB
C
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2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
#ifndef COSMOPOLITAN_LIBC_CALLS_SYSCALLS_H_
#define COSMOPOLITAN_LIBC_CALLS_SYSCALLS_H_
#define _POSIX_VERSION 200809L
#define _POSIX2_VERSION _POSIX_VERSION
#define _XOPEN_VERSION 700
#define EOF -1 /* end of file */
#define WEOF -1u /* end of file (multibyte) */
#define _IOFBF 0 /* fully buffered */
#define _IOLBF 1 /* line buffered */
#define _IONBF 2 /* no buffering */
#define SEEK_SET 0 /* relative to beginning */
#define SEEK_CUR 1 /* relative to current position */
#define SEEK_END 2 /* relative to end */
#define __WALL 0x40000000 /* Wait on all children, regardless of type */
#define __WCLONE 0x80000000 /* Wait only on non-SIGCHLD children */
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#define SIG_ERR ((void (*)(int))(-1))
#define SIG_DFL ((void *)0)
#define SIG_IGN ((void *)1)
#define MAP_FAILED ((void *)-1)
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#define ARCH_SET_GS 0x1001
#define ARCH_SET_FS 0x1002
#define ARCH_GET_FS 0x1003
#define ARCH_GET_GS 0x1004
#define MAP_HUGE_2MB (21 << MAP_HUGE_SHIFT)
#define MAP_HUGE_1GB (30 << MAP_HUGE_SHIFT)
#define WCOREDUMP(s) (0x80 & (s))
#define WEXITSTATUS(s) ((0xff00 & (s)) >> 8)
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#define WIFCONTINUED(s) ((s) == 0xffff)
#define WIFEXITED(s) (!WTERMSIG(s))
#define WIFSIGNALED(s) ((0xffff & (s)) - 1u < 0xffu)
#define WIFSTOPPED(s) ((short)(((0xffff & (s)) * 0x10001) >> 8) > 0x7f00)
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#define WSTOPSIG(s) WEXITSTATUS(s)
#define WTERMSIG(s) (127 & (s))
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
#define W_STOPCODE(s) ((s) << 8 | 0177)
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#if !(__ASSEMBLER__ + __LINKER__ + 0)
COSMOPOLITAN_C_START_
/*───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────│─╗
cosmopolitan § system calls
*/
typedef int sig_atomic_t;
bool fileexists(const char *);
bool isdirectory(const char *);
bool isexecutable(const char *);
bool isregularfile(const char *);
bool issymlink(const char *);
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bool32 isatty(int) nosideeffect;
bool32 ischardev(int) nosideeffect;
char *commandv(const char *, char *, size_t);
char *get_current_dir_name(void) dontdiscard;
char *getcwd(char *, size_t);
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char *realpath(const char *, char *);
char *replaceuser(const char *) dontdiscard;
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char *ttyname(int);
int access(const char *, int) dontthrow;
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int arch_prctl();
int chdir(const char *);
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int chmod(const char *, uint32_t);
int chown(const char *, uint32_t, uint32_t);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
int chroot(const char *);
int clone(void *, void *, size_t, int, void *, int *, void *, int *);
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int close(int);
int close_range(unsigned, unsigned, unsigned);
int closefrom(int);
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int creat(const char *, uint32_t);
int dup(int);
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int dup2(int, int);
int dup3(int, int, int);
int execl(const char *, const char *, ...) nullterminated();
int execle(const char *, const char *, ...) nullterminated((1));
int execlp(const char *, const char *, ...) nullterminated();
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int execv(const char *, char *const[]);
int execve(const char *, char *const[], char *const[]);
int execvp(const char *, char *const[]);
int execvpe(const char *, char *const[], char *const[]);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int faccessat(int, const char *, int, uint32_t);
int fadvise(int, uint64_t, uint64_t, int);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
int fchdir(int);
int fchmod(int, uint32_t) dontthrow;
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int fchmodat(int, const char *, uint32_t, int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int fchown(int, uint32_t, uint32_t);
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int fchownat(int, const char *, uint32_t, uint32_t, int);
2020-10-27 10:39:46 +00:00
int fcntl(int, int, ...);
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int fdatasync(int);
int filecmp(const char *, const char *);
int flock(int, int);
int fork(void);
int fsync(int);
int ftruncate(int, int64_t);
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int getdents(unsigned, void *, unsigned, long *);
int getdomainname(char *, size_t);
int getegid(void) nosideeffect;
int geteuid(void) nosideeffect;
int getgid(void) nosideeffect;
int gethostname(char *, size_t);
int getloadavg(double *, int);
int getpgid(int) nosideeffect libcesque;
int getpgrp(void) nosideeffect;
int getpid(void) nosideeffect libcesque;
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int getppid(void);
int getpriority(int, unsigned);
int getresgid(uint32_t *, uint32_t *, uint32_t *);
int getresuid(uint32_t *, uint32_t *, uint32_t *);
int getsid(int) nosideeffect libcesque;
int gettid(void) libcesque;
int getuid(void) nosideeffect libcesque;
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int ioprio_get(int, int);
int ioprio_set(int, int, int);
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int kill(int, int);
int killpg(int, int);
int link(const char *, const char *) dontthrow;
Improve ZIP filesystem and change its prefix The ZIP filesystem has a breaking change. You now need to use /zip/ to open() / opendir() / etc. assets within the ZIP structure of your APE binary, instead of the previous convention of using zip: or zip! URIs. This is needed because Python likes to use absolute paths, and having ZIP paths encoded like URIs simply broke too many things. Many more system calls have been updated to be able to operate on ZIP files and file descriptors. In particular fcntl() and ioctl() since Python would do things like ask if a ZIP file is a terminal and get confused when the old implementation mistakenly said yes, because the fastest way to guarantee native file descriptors is to dup(2). This change also improves the async signal safety of zipos and ensures it doesn't maintain any open file descriptors beyond that which the user has opened. This change makes a lot of progress towards adding magic numbers that are specific to platforms other than Linux. The philosophy here is that, if you use an operating system like FreeBSD, then you should be able to take advantage of FreeBSD exclusive features, even if we don't polyfill them on other platforms. For example, you can now open() a file with the O_VERIFY flag. If your program runs on other platforms, then Cosmo will automatically set O_VERIFY to zero. This lets you safely use it without the need for #ifdef or ifstatements which detract from readability. One of the blindspots of the ASAN memory hardening we use to offer Rust like assurances has always been that memory passed to the kernel via system calls (e.g. writev) can't be checked automatically since the kernel wasn't built with MODE=asan. This change makes more progress ensuring that each system call will verify the soundness of memory before it's passed to the kernel. The code for doing these checks is fast, particularly for buffers, where it can verify 64 bytes a cycle. - Correct O_LOOP definition on NT - Introduce program_executable_name - Add ASAN guards to more system calls - Improve termios compatibility with BSDs - Fix bug in Windows auxiliary value encoding - Add BSD and XNU specific errnos and open flags - Add check to ensure build doesn't talk to internet
2021-08-22 08:04:18 +00:00
int linkat(int, const char *, int, const char *, int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int madvise(void *, uint64_t, int);
int mincore(void *, size_t, unsigned char *);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int mkdir(const char *, uint32_t);
int mkdirat(int, const char *, uint32_t);
int mkfifo(const char *, uint32_t);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
int mkfifoat(int, const char *, uint32_t);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int mknod(const char *, uint32_t, uint64_t);
int mknodat(int, const char *, int32_t, uint64_t);
int mlock(const void *, size_t);
int mlock2(const void *, size_t, int);
int mlockall(int);
int munlock(const void *, size_t);
int munlockall(void);
int nice(int);
int open(const char *, int, ...);
int openat(int, const char *, int, ...);
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int pause(void);
int personality(uint64_t);
int pipe(int[hasatleast 2]);
int pipe2(int[hasatleast 2], int);
int pledge(const char *, const char *);
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int posix_fadvise(int, uint64_t, uint64_t, int);
int posix_madvise(void *, uint64_t, int);
int prctl(int, ...);
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int raise(int);
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int reboot(int);
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int remove(const char *);
int rename(const char *, const char *);
int renameat(int, const char *, int, const char *);
int renameat2(long, const char *, long, const char *, int);
int rmdir(const char *);
int sched_getaffinity(int, uint64_t, void *);
int sched_setaffinity(int, uint64_t, const void *);
int sched_yield(void);
int seccomp(unsigned, unsigned, void *);
int setegid(uint32_t);
int seteuid(uint32_t);
int setfsgid(int);
int setfsuid(int);
int setgid(int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int setpgid(int, int);
int setpgrp(void);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int setpriority(int, unsigned, int);
int setregid(uint32_t, uint32_t);
int setresgid(uint32_t, uint32_t, uint32_t);
int setresuid(uint32_t, uint32_t, uint32_t);
int setreuid(uint32_t, uint32_t);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int setsid(void);
int setuid(int);
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int sigignore(int);
int siginterrupt(int, int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int symlink(const char *, const char *);
int symlinkat(const char *, int, const char *);
int sync_file_range(int, int64_t, int64_t, unsigned);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
int sysctl(const int *, unsigned, void *, size_t *, void *, size_t);
int tgkill(int, int, int);
int tkill(int, int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int touch(const char *, uint32_t);
int truncate(const char *, uint64_t);
int ttyname_r(int, char *, size_t);
int umask(int);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int unlink(const char *);
int unlink_s(const char **);
int unlinkat(int, const char *, int);
int unveil(const char *, const char *);
2020-10-27 10:39:46 +00:00
int vfork(void) returnstwice;
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
int wait(int *);
int waitpid(int, int *, int);
2021-02-07 14:11:44 +00:00
intptr_t syscall(int, ...);
2022-03-24 15:00:21 +00:00
long ptrace(int, ...);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
size_t GetFileSize(const char *);
ssize_t copy_file_range(int, long *, int, long *, size_t, uint32_t);
ssize_t copyfd(int, int64_t *, int, int64_t *, size_t, uint32_t);
ssize_t getfiledescriptorsize(int);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
ssize_t lseek(int, int64_t, unsigned);
ssize_t pread(int, void *, size_t, int64_t);
ssize_t pwrite(int, const void *, size_t, int64_t);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
ssize_t read(int, void *, size_t);
ssize_t readansi(int, char *, size_t);
ssize_t readlink(const char *, char *, size_t);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
ssize_t readlinkat(int, const char *, char *, size_t);
ssize_t splice(int, int64_t *, int, int64_t *, size_t, uint32_t);
ssize_t write(int, const void *, size_t);
Undiamond Python headers This change gets the Python codebase into a state where it conforms to the conventions of this codebase. It's now possible to include headers from Python, without worrying about ordering. Python has traditionally solved that problem by "diamonding" everything in Python.h, but that's problematic since it means any change to any Python header invalidates all the build artifacts. Lastly it makes tooling not work. Since it is hard to explain to Emacs when I press C-c C-h to add an import line it shouldn't add the header that actually defines the symbol, and instead do follow the nonstandard Python convention. Progress has been made on letting Python load source code from the zip executable structure via the standard C library APIs. System calss now recognizes zip!FILENAME alternative URIs as equivalent to zip:FILENAME since Python uses colon as its delimiter. Some progress has been made on embedding the notice license terms into the Python object code. This is easier said than done since Python has an extremely complicated ownership story. - Some termios APIs have been added - Implement rewinddir() dirstream API - GetCpuCount() API added to Cosmopolitan Libc - More bugs in Cosmopolitan Libc have been fixed - zipobj.com now has flags for mangling the path - Fixed bug a priori with sendfile() on certain BSDs - Polyfill F_DUPFD and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC across platforms - FIOCLEX / FIONCLEX now polyfilled for fast O_CLOEXEC changes - APE now supports a hybrid solution to no-self-modify for builds - Many BSD-only magnums added, e.g. O_SEARCH, O_SHLOCK, SF_NODISKIO
2021-08-12 07:42:14 +00:00
void sync(void);
2020-06-15 14:18:57 +00:00
COSMOPOLITAN_C_END_
#endif /* !(__ASSEMBLER__ + __LINKER__ + 0) */
#endif /* COSMOPOLITAN_LIBC_CALLS_SYSCALLS_H_ */