Thanks to all the refactorings we now have the ability to enforce
reasonable limitations on the amount of resources any individual
compile or test can consume. Those limits are currently:
- `-C 8` seconds of 3.1ghz CPU time
- `-M 256mebibytes` of virtual memory
- `-F 100megabyte` limit on file size
Only one file currently needs to exceed these limits:
o/$(MODE)/third_party/python/Objects/unicodeobject.o: \
QUOTA += -C16 # overrides cpu limit to 16 seconds
This change introduces a new sizetol() function to LIBC_FMT for parsing
byte or bit size strings with Si unit suffixes. Functions like atoi()
have been rewritten too.
- Better UBSAN error messages
- POSIX Advisory Locks polyfills
- Move redbean manual to /.help.txt
- System call memory safety in ASAN mode
- Character classification now does UNICODE
Cosmopolitan's QuickJS is now equally conformant and performant, with
the exception of Atomics, which have been disabled since Cosmopolitan
currently doesn't support pthreads.
QuickJS memory usage -- BigNum 2021-03-27 version, 64-bit, malloc limit: -1
NAME COUNT SIZE
memory allocated 937 131764 (140.6 per block)
memory used 938 116103 (8 overhead, 16.7 average slack)
atoms 513 21408 (41.7 per atom)
objects 170 12279 (72.2 per object)
properties 864 15531 (5.1 per object)
shapes 58 12995 (224.1 per shape)
bytecode functions 13 1512
bytecode 13 867 (66.7 per function)
C functions 99
arrays 1
fast arrays 1
elements 1 16 (1.0 per fast array)
Result: 35/74740 errors, 1279 excluded, 485 skipped, 19 new, 2 fixed
real 2m40.828s
user 2m29.764s
sys 0m10.939s
Now when you send a pull request Travis CI will build the entire
repository and run all the tests for you automatically. It takes
approximately two minutes to finish so you can get fast feedback
Your Actually Portable Executables now contains a simple virtual memory
that works similarly to the Linux Kernel in the sense that it maps your
physical memory to negative addresses. This is needed to support mmap()
and malloc(). This functionality has zero code size impact. For example
the MODE=tiny LIFE.COM executable is still only 12KB in size.
The APE bootloader code has also been simplified to improve readibility
and further elevate the elegance by which we're able to support so many
platforms thereby enhancing verifiability so that we may engender trust
in this bootloading process.
We're now scrubbing environment variables in compile.com since gnu make
was not behaving as expected. It also appears there was a regression in
recent revisions that caused ASAN to be turned off for most binaries in
dbg mode, which has now been fixed. Cosmopolitan is fully ASAN hardened
down to the lowest level libraries and it doesn't need any interceptors
- Reduce full build latency from ~20s to ~18s
- Bring back silent mode if `make V=0` is passed
- Demodernize utimes() polyfill so it works RHEL5
- Delete some old shell scripts that are no longer needed
- Truncate long lines when outputting builds to Emacs buffers
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.