We have received multiple reports of GCC breaking builds when compiler
flags like `-std=c11` were being passed. The workaround until the next
release is to simply not define `__STRICT_ANSI__` which is a bad idea.
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.)
* Introduce env.com
Handy tool for debugging environment issues.
* Inject path as COSMOPOLITAN_PROGRAM_EXECUTABLE
`argv[0]` was previously being used as a communication channel between
the loader and the binary, giving the binary its full path for use e.g.
in `GetProgramExecutableName`. But `argv[0]` is not a good channel for
this; much of what made 2a3813c6 so gross is due to that.
This change fixes the issue by preserving `argv[0]` and establishing a
new communication channel: `COSMOPOLITAN_PROGRAM_EXECUTABLE`.
The M1 loader will always set this as the first variable. Linux should
soon follow. On the other side, `GetProgramExecutableName` checks that
variable first. If it sees it, it trusts it as-is.
A lot of the churn in `ape/ape-m1.c` in this change is actually backing
out hacks introduced in 2a3813c6; the best comparison is:
git diff 2a3813c6^..
* Better refcounting
Cribbed from [Rust Arc][1] and the [Boost docs][2]:
"""
Increasing the reference counter can always be done with
memory_order_relaxed: New references to an object can only be formed
from an existing reference, and passing an existing reference from one
thread to another must already provide any required synchronization.
It is important to enforce any possible access to the object in one
thread (through an existing reference) to happen before deleting the
object in a different thread. This is achieved by a "release" operation
after dropping a reference (any access to the object through this
reference must obviously happened before), and an "acquire" operation
before deleting the object.
It would be possible to use memory_order_acq_rel for the fetch_sub
operation, but this results in unneeded "acquire" operations when the
reference counter does not yet reach zero and may impose a performance
penalty.
"""
[1] https://moshg.github.io/rust-std-ja/src/alloc/arc.rs.html
[2] https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/atomic/usage_examples.html
* Make ZiposHandle's pos atomic
Implements a somewhat stronger guarantee than POSIX specifies: reads and
seeks are atomic. They may be arbitrarily reordered between threads, but
each one happens all the way and leaves the fd in a consistent state.
This is achieved by "locking" pos in __zipos_read by storing SIZE_MAX to
pos during the operation, so only one can be in-flight at a time. Seeks,
on the other hand, just update pos in one go, and rerun if it changed in
the meantime.
I used `LIKELY` / `UNLIKELY` to pessimize the concurrent case; hopefully
that buys back some performance.
* Implement __zipos_dup
Makes ZiposHandle reference-counted by an `rc` field in a union with its
freelist `next` pointer. The functions `__zipos_free` and `__zipos_keep`
function as incref/decref for it. Adds `__zipos_postdup` to fix metadata
on file descriptors after dup-like operations, and adds zipos support to
`sys_dup_nt` + `sys_close_nt`.
* Remove noop __zipos_postdup
rc is never a zipos file because it is always a previously unused file
descriptor. fd is never a zipos file because that case has been handled
above by __zipos_fcntl.
On UNIX if dup2(newfd) was a ZipOS file descriptor, then its resources
weren't being released, and the newly created file descriptor would be
mistaken for ZipOS due to its memory not being cleared. On Windows, an
issue also existed relating to newfd resources not being released.
Munging of paths passed inside the system() interpreter command is no
longer supported. You have to pass your paths to posix_spawn() or the
execve() family of functions if you want them to be munged. The first
three characters must match `^/[a-z]/` in which case, it'll be turned
into a DOS-style drive path with backslashes.
- 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()
- 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)
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.
Imported functions are now aspected with a trampoline that blocks
signals and changes the thread-local storage register. This means
bigger more complicated libraries can now be imported even though
the whole technique remains fundamentally unsafe.