Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justine Tunney
de5de19004 Make improvements
- Document redbean's argon2 module
- Fix regressions in cthreads library
- Make testlib work better with threads
- Give the cthreads library lots of love
- Remove some of the stdio assembly code
- Implement getloadavg() across platforms
- Code size optimizations for errnos, etc.
- Only check for signals in main thread on Windows
- Make errnos for dup2 / dup3 consistent with posix

This change also fixes a bug in the argon2 module, where the NUL
terminator was being included in the hash encoded ascii string. This
shouldn't require any database migrations to folks who found this module
and productionized it, since the argon2 library treats it as a c string.
2022-05-28 00:28:09 -07:00
Justine Tunney
55de4ca6b5 Support thread local storage 2022-05-16 13:20:08 -07:00
Justine Tunney
0cb6b6ff4b Get Redbean fork() working on the New Technology
Now that we have understandable system call tracing on Windows, this
change rewrites many of the polyfill internals for that platform, to
help things get closer to tip top shape. Support for complex forking
scenarios had been in a regressed state for quite some time. Now, it
works! Subsequent changes should be able to address the performance.
2022-03-20 08:01:14 -07:00
Florian Lemaitre
45a7435788
[WIP] Threading phase 2 (#301)
* Exponential back-off
* Removed "native" specifier
* Abstract away Futex for cthread
* Complete setup for TLS (including main thread)
2021-10-25 16:02:26 -07:00
Justine Tunney
e75ffde09e Get codebase completely working with LLVM
You can now build Cosmopolitan with Clang:

    make -j8 MODE=llvm
    o/llvm/examples/hello.com

The assembler and linker code is now friendly to LLVM too.
So it's not needed to configure Clang to use binutils under
the hood. If you love LLVM then you can now use pure LLVM.
2021-02-09 02:57:32 -08:00
Justine Tunney
37a4c70c36 Change license 2020-12-27 17:18:44 -08:00
Justine Tunney
f4f4caab0e Add x86_64-linux-gnu emulator
I wanted a tiny scriptable meltdown proof way to run userspace programs
and visualize how program execution impacts memory. It helps to explain
how things like Actually Portable Executable works. It can show you how
the GCC generated code is going about manipulating matrices and more. I
didn't feel fully comfortable with Qemu and Bochs because I'm not smart
enough to understand them. I wanted something like gVisor but with much
stronger levels of assurances. I wanted a single binary that'll run, on
all major operating systems with an embedded GPL barrier ZIP filesystem
that is tiny enough to transpile to JavaScript and run in browsers too.

https://justine.storage.googleapis.com/emulator625.mp4
2020-08-25 04:43:42 -07:00
Justine Tunney
2e979c00c3 Polish up repository and other revisions 2020-06-16 06:38:43 -07:00
Justine Tunney
c91b3c5006 Initial import 2020-06-15 07:18:57 -07:00