Currently, in cosmopolitan, there is no handling of the current rounding
mode for long double conversions, such that round-to-nearest gets always
used, regardless of the current rounding mode. %Le also improperly calls
gdtoa with a too small precision (which led to relatively similar bugs).
This patch fixes these issues, in particular by modifying the FPI object
passed to gdtoa such that it is modifiable (so that __fmt can adjust its
rounding field to correspond to FLT_ROUNDS (note that this is not needed
for dtoa, which checks FLT_ROUNDS directly)) and ors STRTOG_Neg into the
kind field in both of the __fmt_dfpbits and __fmt_ldfpbits functions, as
the gdtoa function also depends on it to be able to accurately round any
negative arguments. The change to kind also requires a few other changes
to make sure kind's upper bits (which include STRTOG_Neg) are masked off
when attempting to only examine the lower bits' value. Furthermore, this
patch also makes exactly one change in gdtoa, which appears to be needed
to fix rounding issues with FE_TOWARDZERO (this seems like a gdtoa bug).
The patch also adds a few tests for these issues, along with also taking
the opportunity to clean up some of the previous tests to do the asserts
in the right order (i.e. with the first argument as the expected result,
and the second one being used as the value that it is compared against).
Cosmopolitan's printf-family functions will currently crash if one tries
formatting a floating point number with a larger precision (large enough
that gdtoa attempts to allocate memory to format the number) while under
memory pressure (i.e. when malloc fails) because gdtoa fails to check if
malloc fails.
The added tests (which would previously crash under cosmopolitan without
this patch) show how to reproduce the issue.
This patch fixes this, and adds the aforementioned tests.
At least in neovim, `│vi:` is not recognized as a modeline because it
has no preceding whitespace. After fixing this, opening a file yields
an error because `net` is not an option. (`noet`, however, is.)
This change makes pthread_mutex_lock() as fast as _spinlock() by
default. Thread instability issues on NetBSD have been resolved.
Improvements made to gdtoa thread code. Crash reporting will now
synchronize between threads in a slightly better way.
This commit makes numerous refinements to cosmopolitan memory handling.
The default stack size has been reduced from 2mb to 128kb. A new macro
is now provided so you can easily reconfigure the stack size to be any
value you want. Work around the breaking change by adding to your main:
STATIC_STACK_SIZE(0x00200000); // 2mb stack
If you're not sure how much stack you need, then you can use:
STATIC_YOINK("stack_usage_logging");
After which you can `sort -nr o/$MODE/stack.log`. Based on the unit test
suite, nothing in the Cosmopolitan repository (except for Python) needs
a stack size greater than 30kb. There are also new macros for detecting
the size and address of the stack at runtime, e.g. GetStackAddr(). We
also now support sigaltstack() so if you want to see nice looking crash
reports whenever a stack overflow happens, you can put this in main():
ShowCrashReports();
Under `make MODE=dbg` and `make MODE=asan` the unit testing framework
will now automatically print backtraces of memory allocations when
things like memory leaks happen. Bugs are now fixed in ASAN global
variable overrun detection. The memtrack and asan runtimes also handle
edge cases now. The new tools helped to identify a few memory leaks,
which are fixed by this change.
This change should fix an issue reported in #288 with ARG_MAX limits.
Fixing this doubled the performance of MKDEPS.COM and AR.COM yet again.
This program popped up on Hacker News recently. It's the only modern
compiler I've ever seen that doesn't have dependencies and is easily
modified. So I added all of the missing GNU extensions I like to use
which means it might be possible soon to build on non-Linux and have
third party not vendor gcc binaries.