Currently, cosmopolitan's pledge sandbox .so shared object wrongly tries
to use a bunch of UBSAN symbols, which are not defined when outside of a
cosmopolitan-based context (save if the sandboxed binary also happens to
be itself using UBSAN, but that's obviously very commonly not the case).
Fix this by making it such that the sandbox .so shared object traps when
UBSAN is triggered, avoiding any attempt to call into the UBSAN runtime.
Cosmopolitan now supports 104 time zones. They're embedded inside any
binary that links the localtime() function. Doing so adds about 100kb
to the binary size. This change also gets time zones working properly
on Windows for the first time. It's not needed to have /etc/localtime
exist on Windows, since we can get this information from WIN32. We're
also now updated to the latest version of Paul Eggert's TZ library.
The WIN32 CreateProcess() function does not require an .exe or .com
suffix in order to spawn an executable. Now that we have Cosmo bash
we're no longer so dependent on the cmd.exe prompt.
Our dynamic linking implementation is now able to support functions with
dozens of parameters. In addition to having extra integral arguments you
can now pass vector registers using intrinsic types. Lastly, you can now
return multiple values, which is useful for functions returning structs.
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
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.