Commit graph

348 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justine Tunney
642e9cb91a
Introduce cosmocc flags -mdbg -mtiny -moptlinux
The cosmocc.zip toolchain will now include four builds of the libcosmo.a
runtime libraries. You can pass the -mdbg flag if you want to debug your
cosmopolitan runtime. You can pass the -moptlinux flag if you don't want
windows code lurking in your binary. See tool/cosmocc/README.md for more
details on how these flags may be used and their important implications.
2024-07-26 05:10:25 -07:00
Justine Tunney
3de6632be6
Graduate some clock_gettime() constants to #define
- CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID
- CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID

Cosmo now supports the above constants universally across supported OSes
therefore it's now safe to let programs detect their presence w/ #ifdefs
2024-07-22 07:14:35 -07:00
Justine Tunney
1ff037df3c
Add some documentation 2024-07-19 04:46:26 -07:00
Justine Tunney
567d8fe32d
Create variables for page size 2024-07-18 21:16:53 -07:00
Justine Tunney
f7780de24b
Make realloc() go 100x faster on Linux/NetBSD
Cosmopolitan now supports mremap(), which is only supported on Linux and
NetBSD. First, it allows memory mappings to be relocated without copying
them; this can dramatically speed up data structures like std::vector if
the array size grows larger than 256kb. The mremap() system call is also
10x faster than munmap() when shrinking large memory mappings.

There's now two functions, getpagesize() and getgransize() which help to
write portable code that uses mmap(MAP_FIXED). Alternative sysconf() may
be called with our new _SC_GRANSIZE. The madvise() system call now has a
better wrapper with improved documentation.
2024-07-07 12:40:30 -07:00
Justine Tunney
8c645fa1ee
Make mmap() scalable
It's now possible to create thousands of thousands of sparse independent
memory mappings, without any slowdown. The memory manager is better with
tracking memory protection now, particularly on Windows in a precise way
that can be restored during fork(). You now have the highest quality mem
manager possible. It's even better than some OSes like XNU, where mmap()
is implemented as an O(n) operation which means sadly things aren't much
improved over there. With this change the llamafile HTTP server endpoint
at /tokenize with a prompt of 50 tokens is now able to handle 2.6m r/sec
2024-07-05 23:26:00 -07:00
Justine Tunney
6ffed14b9c
Rewrite memory manager
Actually Portable Executable now supports Android. Cosmo's old mmap code
required a 47 bit address space. The new implementation is very agnostic
and supports both smaller address spaces (e.g. embedded) and even modern
56-bit PML5T paging for x86 which finally came true on Zen4 Threadripper

Cosmopolitan no longer requires UNIX systems to observe the Windows 64kb
granularity; i.e. sysconf(_SC_PAGE_SIZE) will now report the host native
page size. This fixes a longstanding POSIX conformance issue, concerning
file mappings that overlap the end of file. Other aspects of conformance
have been improved too, such as the subtleties of address assignment and
and the various subtleties surrounding MAP_FIXED and MAP_FIXED_NOREPLACE

On Windows, mappings larger than 100 megabytes won't be broken down into
thousands of independent 64kb mappings. Support for MAP_STACK is removed
by this change; please use NewCosmoStack() instead.

Stack overflow avoidance is now being implemented using the POSIX thread
APIs. Please use GetStackBottom() and GetStackAddr(), instead of the old
error-prone GetStackAddr() and HaveStackMemory() APIs which are removed.
2024-06-22 05:45:11 -07:00
Jōshin
89fc95fefd
Rerun clang-format on the repo (#1217)
🚨 clang-format changes output per version!

This is with version 19.0.0. The modifications seem to be fixing the old
version’s errors - mainly involving omitted whitespace around binary ops
and inserted whitespace between goto labels and colons (if followed by a
curly brace.)

Also fixes a few mistakes made by e.g. someone (ahem) forgetting to pass
his ctl/string.h modifications through it.

We should add this to .git-blame-ignore-revs once we have its final hash
on master.
2024-06-15 16:34:48 -04:00
Jōshin
f032b5570b
Run clang-format (#1197) 2024-06-01 16:30:43 -04:00
Justine Tunney
cd672e251f
Improve crash signal reporting on Windows
This change fixes a bug where exiting a crash signal handler on Windows
after adding the signal to uc_sigmask, but not correcting the CPU state
would cause the signal handler to loop infinitely, causing process hang

Another issue is that very tiny programs, that don't link posix signals
would not have their SIGILL / SIGSEGV / etc. status reported to Cosmo's
bash shell when terminating on crash. That's fixed by a tiny handler in
WinMain() that knows how to map WIN32 crash codes to the POSIX flavors.
2024-05-30 14:04:10 -07:00
Justine Tunney
c68f6599e5
Fix definition of getpeername on FreeBSD
We were using the COMPAT magic number, which was recently removed.
2024-05-26 17:03:22 -07:00
Justine Tunney
f029375d39
Introduce MAP_HUGETLB 2024-05-24 11:44:44 -07:00
Justine Tunney
957c61cbbf
Release Cosmopolitan v3.3
This change upgrades to GCC 12.3 and GNU binutils 2.42. The GNU linker
appears to have changed things so that only a single de-duplicated str
table is present in the binary, and it gets placed wherever the linker
wants, regardless of what the linker script says. To cope with that we
need to stop using .ident to embed licenses. As such, this change does
significant work to revamp how third party licenses are defined in the
codebase, using `.section .notice,"aR",@progbits`.

This new GCC 12.3 toolchain has support for GNU indirect functions. It
lets us support __target_clones__ for the first time. This is used for
optimizing the performance of libc string functions such as strlen and
friends so far on x86, by ensuring AVX systems favor a second codepath
that uses VEX encoding. It shaves some latency off certain operations.
It's a useful feature to have for scientific computing for the reasons
explained by the test/libcxx/openmp_test.cc example which compiles for
fifteen different microarchitectures. Thanks to the upgrades, it's now
also possible to use newer instruction sets, such as AVX512FP16, VNNI.

Cosmo now uses the %gs register on x86 by default for TLS. Doing it is
helpful for any program that links `cosmo_dlopen()`. Such programs had
to recompile their binaries at startup to change the TLS instructions.
That's not great, since it means every page in the executable needs to
be faulted. The work of rewriting TLS-related x86 opcodes, is moved to
fixupobj.com instead. This is great news for MacOS x86 users, since we
previously needed to morph the binary every time for that platform but
now that's no longer necessary. The only platforms where we need fixup
of TLS x86 opcodes at runtime are now Windows, OpenBSD, and NetBSD. On
Windows we morph TLS to point deeper into the TIB, based on a TlsAlloc
assignment, and on OpenBSD/NetBSD we morph %gs back into %fs since the
kernels do not allow us to specify a value for the %gs register.

OpenBSD users are now required to use APE Loader to run Cosmo binaries
and assimilation is no longer possible. OpenBSD kernel needs to change
to allow programs to specify a value for the %gs register, or it needs
to stop marking executable pages loaded by the kernel as mimmutable().

This release fixes __constructor__, .ctor, .init_array, and lastly the
.preinit_array so they behave the exact same way as glibc.

We no longer use hex constants to define math.h symbols like M_PI.
2024-02-20 13:27:59 -08:00
Justine Tunney
2ab9e9f7fd
Make improvements
- Introduce portable sched_getcpu() api
- Support GCC's __target_clones__ feature
- Make fma() go faster on x86 in default mode
- Remove some asan checks from core libraries
- WinMain() now ensures $HOME and $USER are defined
2024-02-12 10:23:00 -08:00
Justine Tunney
eeb20775d2
Add dontthrow attribute to most libc functions
This will help C++ code that uses exceptions to be tinier. For example,
this change shaves away 1000 lines of assembly code from LLVM's libcxx,
which is 0.7% of all assembly instructions in the entire library.
2024-01-09 01:26:03 -08:00
Jōshin
636bc4007b
Enable argv[0] tests in more places (#1061)
Now we do them for assimilated binaries (except on OpenBSD or XNU
non-Silicon), for XnuSilicon, and for binaries with the preserve-
argv[0] auxv flag set. We check whether to pass the argv[0] value
at the test site rather than the Child site. We move a lot of the
test initialization into Child in the non-child case, in order to
get at the pre-init value of `__program_executable_name`. Finally,
we print out info about what we are skipping.
2024-01-06 11:42:03 -08:00
Justine Tunney
2d93788ce3
Fix --ftrace with cosmo_dlopen()
This change ensures function call logging won't crash the process when
cosmo_dlopen() is called.
2024-01-05 15:13:07 -08:00
Justine Tunney
2f89c2482a
Delete some dead code 2024-01-01 00:13:16 -08:00
Justine Tunney
d8ad34686a
Implement issetugid() on NetBSD 2023-12-30 14:58:16 -08:00
Justine Tunney
83107f78ed
Introduce FreeBSD ARM64 support
It's 100% passing test fleet. Solid as a rock.
2023-12-29 20:14:02 -08:00
Justine Tunney
43fe5956ad
Use DNS implementation from Musl Libc
Now that our socket system call polyfills are good enough to support
Musl's DNS library we should be using that rather than the barebones
domain name system implementation we rolled on our own. There's many
benefits to making this change. So many, that I myself wouldn't feel
qualified to enumerate them all. The Musl DNS code had to be changed
in order to support Windows of course, which looks very solid so far
2023-12-28 23:04:35 -08:00
Jōshin
3a8e01a77a
more modeline errata (#1019)
Somehow or another, I previously had missed `BUILD.mk` files.

In the process I found a few straggler cases where the modeline was
different from the file, including one very involved manual fix where a
file had been treated like it was ts=2 and ts=8 on separate occasions.

The commit history in the PR shows the gory details; the BUILD.mk was
automated, everything else was mostly manual.
2023-12-16 23:07:10 -05:00
Jōshin
2fc507c98f
Fix more vi modelines (#1006)
* modelines: tw -> sw

shiftwidth, not textwidth.

* space-surround modelines

* fix irregular modelines

* Fix modeline in titlegen.c
2023-12-13 02:28:11 -05:00
Jōshin
e16a7d8f3b
flip et / noet in modelines
`et` means `expandtab`.

```sh
rg 'vi: .* :vi' -l -0 | \
  xargs -0 sed -i '' 's/vi: \(.*\) et\(.*\)  :vi/vi: \1 xoet\2:vi/'
rg 'vi: .*  :vi' -l -0 | \
  xargs -0 sed -i '' 's/vi: \(.*\)noet\(.*\):vi/vi: \1et\2  :vi/'
rg 'vi: .*  :vi' -l -0 | \
  xargs -0 sed -i '' 's/vi: \(.*\)xoet\(.*\):vi/vi: \1noet\2:vi/'
```
2023-12-07 22:17:11 -05:00
Jōshin
394d998315
Fix vi modelines (#989)
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.)
2023-12-05 14:37:54 -08:00
Justine Tunney
2b960bb249
Exclude strace from MODE=tiny builds
This change gets o/tinylinux/examples/hello2.com back down to 8kb in
size which had been unintentionally bloated to 40kb in recent months

See #965
2023-11-29 03:45:54 -08:00
Justine Tunney
fa20edc44d
Reduce header complexity
- Remove most __ASSEMBLER__ __LINKER__ ifdefs
- Rename libc/intrin/bits.h to libc/serialize.h
- Block pthread cancelation in fchmodat() polyfill
- Remove `clang-format off` statements in third_party
2023-11-28 14:39:42 -08:00
Justine Tunney
96f979dfc5
Rename makefiles BUILD.mk
This way they appear at the top of directory listings.
2023-11-28 11:21:08 -08:00
Stephen Gregoratto
cc5c5319bf
Linux: Add cachestat, fchmodat2 syscalls (#958) 2023-11-19 19:01:20 -08:00
Justine Tunney
8caf1b48a9
Improve time/sleep accuracy on Windows
It's now almost as good as Linux thanks to a Windows 8+ API.
2023-11-18 01:57:44 -08:00
Justine Tunney
529cb4817c
Improve dlopen() on Apple Silicon
- Introduce MAP_JIT which is zero on other platforms
- Invent __jit_begin() and __jit_end() which wrap Apple's APIs
- Runtime dispatch to sys_icache_invalidate() in __clear_cache()
2023-11-17 02:33:14 -08:00
Justine Tunney
68c7c9c1e0
Clean up some code
- Use good ELF technique in cosmo_dlopen()
- Make strerror() conform more to other libc impls
- Introduce __clear_cache() and use it in cosmo_dlopen()
- Remove libc/fmt/fmt.h header (trying to kill off LIBC_FMT)
2023-11-16 17:31:07 -08:00
Justine Tunney
8f5e516b39
Remove sync_file_range()
After hearing horror stories from a trusted colleague, I don't think
this is the kind of API we want to be supporting. Also SQLite wisdom
regarding fdatasync() has been added to the documentation.
2023-11-15 23:21:22 -08:00
Justine Tunney
d2f49ca175
Improve mkdeps
Our makefile generator now accepts badly formatted include lines. It's
now more hermetic with better error checking in the cosmo repo, and it
can be configured to not be hermetic at all.
2023-11-10 04:14:27 -08:00
Justine Tunney
ac125d3e1f
Fix console copy/paste issue
Fixes #936
2023-11-08 09:29:45 -08:00
Justine Tunney
d7917ea076
Make win32 i/o signals atomic and longjmp() safe 2023-11-04 20:33:29 -07:00
Justine Tunney
48e260e653
Introduce NO_ADDRESS constant 2023-11-03 13:56:17 -07:00
Justine Tunney
024be3b009
Introduce getifaddrs()
This function was invented by the BSDs (it's not in POSIX.1). It
provides a high-level interface into ioctl(SIOCGIFCONF) which is
comparatively clumsy to use. We already made the ioctls portable
across our entire support vector back in 2021, so this interface
is portable too. See o//tool/viz/getifaddrs.com for our demo app
2023-11-02 08:33:03 -07:00
Justine Tunney
c9fecf3a55
Make improvements
- You can now run `make -j8 toolchain` on Windows
- You can now run `make -j` on MacOS ARM64 and BSD OSes
- You can now use our Emacs dev environment on MacOS/Windows
- Fix bug where the x16 register was being corrupted by --ftrace
- The programs under build/bootstrap/ are updated as fat binaries
- The Makefile now explains how to download cosmocc-0.0.12 toolchain
- The build scripts under bin/ now support "cosmo" branded toolchains
- stat() now goes faster on Windows (shaves 100ms off `make` latency)
- Code cleanup and added review on the Windows signal checking code
- posix_spawnattr_setrlimit() now works around MacOS ARM64 bugs
- Landlock Make now favors posix_spawn() on non-Linux/OpenBSD
- posix_spawn() now has better --strace logging on Windows
- fstatat() can now avoid EACCES in more cases on Windows
- fchmod() can now change the readonly bit on Windows
2023-10-15 16:45:00 -07:00
Justine Tunney
49b0eaa69f
Improve threading and i/o routines
- On Windows connect() can now be interrupted by a signal; connect() w/
  O_NONBLOCK will now raise EINPROGRESS; and connect() with SO_SNDTIMEO
  will raise ETIMEDOUT after the interval has elapsed.

- We now get the AcceptEx(), ConnectEx(), and TransmitFile() functions
  from the WIN32 API the officially blessed way, using WSAIoctl().

- Do nothing on Windows when fsync() is called on a directory handle.
  This was raising EACCES earlier becaues GENERIC_WRITE is required on
  the handle. It's possible to FlushFileBuffers() a directory handle if
  it's opened with write access but MSDN doesn't document what it does.
  If you have any idea, please let us know!

- Prefer manual reset event objects for read() and write() on Windows.

- Do some code cleanup on our dlmalloc customizations.

- Fix errno type error in Windows blocking routines.

- Make the futex polyfill simpler and faster.
2023-10-12 23:13:04 -07:00
Justine Tunney
285c565051
Clean up some code 2023-10-11 11:45:31 -07:00
Justine Tunney
791f79fcb3
Make improvements
- We now serialize the file descriptor table when spawning / executing
  processes on Windows. This means you can now inherit more stuff than
  just standard i/o. It's needed by bash, which duplicates the console
  to file descriptor #255. We also now do a better job serializing the
  environment variables, so you're less likely to encounter E2BIG when
  using your bash shell. We also no longer coerce environ to uppercase

- execve() on Windows now remotely controls its parent process to make
  them spawn a replacement for itself. Then it'll be able to terminate
  immediately once the spawn succeeds, without having to linger around
  for the lifetime as a shell process for proxying the exit code. When
  process worker thread running in the parent sees the child die, it's
  given a handle to the new child, to replace it in the process table.

- execve() and posix_spawn() on Windows will now provide CreateProcess
  an explicit handle list. This allows us to remove handle locks which
  enables better fork/spawn concurrency, with seriously correct thread
  safety. Other codebases like Go use the same technique. On the other
  hand fork() still favors the conventional WIN32 inheritence approach
  which can be a little bit messy, but is *controlled* by guaranteeing
  perfectly clean slates at both the spawning and execution boundaries

- sigset_t is now 64 bits. Having it be 128 bits was a mistake because
  there's no reason to use that and it's only supported by FreeBSD. By
  using the system word size, signal mask manipulation on Windows goes
  very fast. Furthermore @asyncsignalsafe funcs have been rewritten on
  Windows to take advantage of signal masking, now that it's much more
  pleasant to use.

- All the overlapped i/o code on Windows has been rewritten for pretty
  good signal and cancelation safety. We're now able to ensure overlap
  data structures are cleaned up so long as you don't longjmp() out of
  out of a signal handler that interrupted an i/o operation. Latencies
  are also improved thanks to the removal of lots of "busy wait" code.
  Waits should be optimal for everything except poll(), which shall be
  the last and final demon we slay in the win32 i/o horror show.

- getrusage() on Windows is now able to report RUSAGE_CHILDREN as well
  as RUSAGE_SELF, thanks to aggregation in the process manager thread.
2023-10-08 08:59:53 -07:00
Justine Tunney
1694edf85c
Fix some additional Windows TTY issues 2023-10-04 02:17:25 -07:00
Justine Tunney
f26a280cda
Implement basic canonical mode for Windows
The `cat` command now works properly, when run by itself on the bash
command prompt. It's working beautifully so far, and is only missing
a few keystrokes for clearing words and lines. Definitely works more
well than the one that ships with WIN32 :-)
2023-10-03 22:36:22 -07:00
Justine Tunney
85f64f3851
Make futexes 100x better on x86 MacOS
Thanks to @autumnjolitz (in #876) the Cosmopolitan codebase is now
acquainted with Apple's outstanding ulock system calls which offer
something much closer to futexes than Grand Central Dispatch which
wasn't quite as good, since its wait function can't be interrupted
by signals (therefore necessitating a busy loop) and it also needs
semaphore objects to be created and freed. Even though ulock is an
internal Apple API, strictly speaking, the benefits of futexes are
so great that it's worth the risk for now especially since we have
the GCD implementation still as a quick escape hatch if it changes

Here's why this change is important for x86 XNU users. Cosmo has a
suboptimal polyfill when the operating system doesn't offer an API
that let's us implement futexes properly. Sadly we had to use that
on X86 XNU until now. The polyfill works using clock_nanosleep, to
poll the futex in a busy loop with exponential backoff. On XNU x86
clock_nanosleep suffers from us not being able to use a fast clock
gettime implementation, which had a compounding effect that's made
the polyfill function even more poorly. On X86 XNU we also need to
polyfill sched_yield() using select(), which made things even more
troublesome. Now that we have futexes we don't have any busy loops
anymore for both condition variables and thread joining so optimal
performance is attained. To demonstrate, consider these benchmarks

Before:

    $ ./lockscale_test.com -b
    consumed 38.8377   seconds real time and
              0.087131 seconds cpu time

After:

    $ ./lockscale_test.com -b
    consumed 0.007955 seconds real time and
             0.011515 seconds cpu time

Fixes #876
2023-10-03 15:15:43 -07:00
Justine Tunney
ff77f2a6af
Make improvements
- This change fixes a bug that allowed unbuffered printf() output (to
  streams like stderr) to be truncated. This regression was introduced
  some time between now and the last release.

- POSIX specifies all functions as thread safe by default. This change
  works towards cleaning up our use of the @threadsafe / @threadunsafe
  documentation annotations to reflect that. The goal is (1) to use
  @threadunsafe to document functions which POSIX say needn't be thread
  safe, and (2) use @threadsafe to document functions that we chose to
  implement as thread safe even though POSIX didn't mandate it.

- Tidy up the clock_gettime() implementation. We're now trying out a
  cleaner approach to system call support that aims to maintain the
  Linux errno convention as long as possible. This also fixes bugs that
  existed previously, where the vDSO errno wasn't being translated
  properly. The gettimeofday() system call is now a wrapper for
  clock_gettime(), which reduces bloat in apps that use both.

- The recently-introduced improvements to the execute bit on Windows has
  had bugs fixed. access(X_OK) on a directory on Windows now succeeds.
  fstat() will now perform the MZ/#! ReadFile() operation correctly.

- Windows.h is no longer included in libc/isystem/, because it confused
  PCRE's build system into thinking Cosmopolitan is a WIN32 platform.
  Cosmo's Windows.h polyfill was never even really that good, since it
  only defines a subset of the subset of WIN32 APIs that Cosmo defines.

- The setlongerjmp() / longerjmp() APIs are removed. While they're nice
  APIs that are superior to the standardized setjmp / longjmp functions,
  they weren't superior enough to not be dead code in the monorepo. If
  you use these APIs, please file an issue and they'll be restored.

- The .com appending magic has now been removed from APE Loader.
2023-10-03 06:17:16 -07:00
Justine Tunney
4f5d5a6813
Fix some more issues
- ARM Neon headers are now exported in libc/isystem/

- stat() and access() now do a better job reporting which files are
  executable which ones aren't. They do this by reading the first two
  bytes in a file to see if it's `MZ` or `#!`.
2023-09-21 11:41:42 -07:00
Justine Tunney
0c5dd7b342
Make improvements
- Improved async signal safety of read() particularly for longjmp()
- Started adding cancel cleanup handlers for locks / etc on Windows
- Make /dev/tty work better particularly for uses like `foo | less`
- Eagerly read console input into a linked list, so poll can signal
- Fix some libc definitional bugs, which configure scripts detected
2023-09-21 07:30:39 -07:00
Justine Tunney
ec480f5aa0
Make improvements
- Every unit test now passes on Apple Silicon. The final piece of this
  puzzle was porting our POSIX threads cancelation support, since that
  works differently on ARM64 XNU vs. AMD64. Our semaphore support on
  Apple Silicon is also superior now compared to AMD64, thanks to the
  grand central dispatch library which lets *NSYNC locks go faster.

- The Cosmopolitan runtime is now more stable, particularly on Windows.
  To do this, thread local storage is mandatory at all runtime levels,
  and the innermost packages of the C library is no longer being built
  using ASAN. TLS is being bootstrapped with a 128-byte TIB during the
  process startup phase, and then later on the runtime re-allocates it
  either statically or dynamically to support code using _Thread_local.
  fork() and execve() now do a better job cooperating with threads. We
  can now check how much stack memory is left in the process or thread
  when functions like kprintf() / execve() etc. call alloca(), so that
  ENOMEM can be raised, reduce a buffer size, or just print a warning.

- POSIX signal emulation is now implemented the same way kernels do it
  with pthread_kill() and raise(). Any thread can interrupt any other
  thread, regardless of what it's doing. If it's blocked on read/write
  then the killer thread will cancel its i/o operation so that EINTR can
  be returned in the mark thread immediately. If it's doing a tight CPU
  bound operation, then that's also interrupted by the signal delivery.
  Signal delivery works now by suspending a thread and pushing context
  data structures onto its stack, and redirecting its execution to a
  trampoline function, which calls SetThreadContext(GetCurrentThread())
  when it's done.

- We're now doing a better job managing locks and handles. On NetBSD we
  now close semaphore file descriptors in forked children. Semaphores on
  Windows can now be canceled immediately, which means mutexes/condition
  variables will now go faster. Apple Silicon semaphores can be canceled
  too. We're now using Apple's pthread_yield() funciton. Apple _nocancel
  syscalls are now used on XNU when appropriate to ensure pthread_cancel
  requests aren't lost. The MbedTLS library has been updated to support
  POSIX thread cancelations. See tool/build/runitd.c for an example of
  how it can be used for production multi-threaded tls servers. Handles
  on Windows now leak less often across processes. All i/o operations on
  Windows are now overlapped, which means file pointers can no longer be
  inherited across dup() and fork() for the time being.

- We now spawn a thread on Windows to deliver SIGCHLD and wakeup wait4()
  which means, for example, that posix_spawn() now goes 3x faster. POSIX
  spawn is also now more correct. Like Musl, it's now able to report the
  failure code of execve() via a pipe although our approach favors using
  shared memory to do that on systems that have a true vfork() function.

- We now spawn a thread to deliver SIGALRM to threads when setitimer()
  is used. This enables the most precise wakeups the OS makes possible.

- The Cosmopolitan runtime now uses less memory. On NetBSD for example,
  it turned out the kernel would actually commit the PT_GNU_STACK size
  which caused RSS to be 6mb for every process. Now it's down to ~4kb.
  On Apple Silicon, we reduce the mandatory upstream thread size to the
  smallest possible size to reduce the memory overhead of Cosmo threads.
  The examples directory has a program called greenbean which can spawn
  a web server on Linux with 10,000 worker threads and have the memory
  usage of the process be ~77mb. The 1024 byte overhead of POSIX-style
  thread-local storage is now optional; it won't be allocated until the
  pthread_setspecific/getspecific functions are called. On Windows, the
  threads that get spawned which are internal to the libc implementation
  use reserve rather than commit memory, which shaves a few hundred kb.

- sigaltstack() is now supported on Windows, however it's currently not
  able to be used to handle stack overflows, since crash signals are
  still generated by WIN32. However the crash handler will still switch
  to the alt stack, which is helpful in environments with tiny threads.

- Test binaries are now smaller. Many of the mandatory dependencies of
  the test runner have been removed. This ensures many programs can do a
  better job only linking the the thing they're testing. This caused the
  test binaries for LIBC_FMT for example, to decrease from 200kb to 50kb

- long double is no longer used in the implementation details of libc,
  except in the APIs that define it. The old code that used long double
  for time (instead of struct timespec) has now been thoroughly removed.

- ShowCrashReports() is now much tinier in MODE=tiny. Instead of doing
  backtraces itself, it'll just print a command you can run on the shell
  using our new `cosmoaddr2line` program to view the backtrace.

- Crash report signal handling now works in a much better way. Instead
  of terminating the process, it now relies on SA_RESETHAND so that the
  default SIG_IGN behavior can terminate the process if necessary.

- Our pledge() functionality has now been fully ported to AARCH64 Linux.
2023-09-18 21:04:47 -07:00
Justine Tunney
77a7873057
Improve AARCH64 execution
This change fixes bugs in the APE loader. The execve() unit tests are
now enabled for MODE=aarch64. See the README for how you need to have
binfmt_misc configured with Qemu to run them. Apple Silicon bugs have
been fixed too, e.g. tkill() now works.
2023-09-11 14:46:46 -07:00