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2025-04-25linux/termio: remove <termio.h> and struct termioH. Peter Anvin5-46/+0
The <termio.h> interface is absolutely ancient: it was obsoleted by <termios.h> already in the first version of POSIX (1988) and thus predates the very first version of Linux. Unfortunately, some constant macros are used both by <termio.h> and <termios.h>; particularly problematic is the baud rate constants since the termio interface *requires* that the baud rate is set via an enumeration as part of c_cflag. In preparation of revamping the termios interface to support the arbitrary baud rate capability that the Linux kernel has supported since 2008, remove <termio.h> in the hope that no one still uses this archaic interface. Note that there is no actual code in glibc to support termio: it is purely an unabstracted ioctl() interface. Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin (Intel) <hpa@zytor.com> Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2025-04-22elf: tst-audit10: split AVX512F code into dedicated functions [BZ #32882]Aurelien Jarno2-55/+55
"Recent" GCC versions (since commit fc62716fe8d1, backported to stable branches) emit a vzeroupper instruction at the end of functions containing AVX instructions. This causes the tst-audit10 test to fail on CPUs lacking AVX instructions, despite the AVX512F check. The crash occurs in the pltenter function of tst-auditmod10b.c. Fix that by moving the code guarded by the check_avx512 function into specific functions using the target ("avx512f") attribute. Note that since commit 5359c3bc91cc ("x86-64: Remove compiler -mavx512f check") it is safe to assume that the compiler has AVX512F support, thus the __AVX512F__ checks can be dropped. Tested on non-AVX, AVX2 and AVX512F machines. Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2025-04-22Add AT_* constants from Linux 6.12Joseph Myers1-0/+2
Linux 6.12 adds AT_RENAME_* aliases for RENAME_* flags for renameat2, and also AT_HANDLE_MNT_ID_UNIQUE. Add the first set of aliases to stdio.h alongside the RENAME_* names, and AT_HANDLE_MNT_ID_UNIQUE to bits/fcntl-linux.h. Tested for x86_64.
2025-04-21hurd: Make symlink return EEXIST on existing target directorySamuel Thibault1-1/+1
8ef17919509e ("hurd: Fix EINVAL error on linking to a slash-trailing path [BZ #32569]) made symlink return ENOTDIR, but the gnulib testsuite does not recognize it for such a situation, and EEXIST is indeed more comprehensible to users.
2025-04-21hurd: Clear FP exceptions before calling signal handlerSamuel Thibault1-4/+10
This avoids SIGFPE handlers (or code longjmp-ed to) getting disturbed by the exception that generated it. Note: gcc's unwinding depends on the rpc_wait_trampoline/trampoline exact code, so we here avoid breaking it.
2025-04-21hurd: Do not check for xstate level if it was not initializedSamuel Thibault1-1/+1
If __thread_get_state failed, there is no xstate level to check. ok is 0 already and the memory exists, but better not read uninitialized memory.
2025-04-21hurd: Do not restore xstate when it is not initializedSamuel Thibault2-34/+40
If the process has never used fp before getting a signal, xstate is set (and thus the x87 state is not initialized) but xstate->initialized is still 0, and we should not restore anything.
2025-04-20hurd: Make *utime*s catch invalid times [BZ #32802, BZ #32803]Samuel Thibault3-12/+66
2025-04-18hurd: save xstate during signal handlingLuca Dariz5-25/+134
* hurd/Makefile: add new tests * hurd/test-sig-rpc-interrupted.c: check xstate save and restore in the case where a signal is delivered to a thread which is waiting for an rpc. This test implements the rpc interruption protocol used by the hurd servers. It was so far passing on Debian thanks to the local-intr-msg-clobber.diff patch, which is now obsolete. * hurd/test-sig-xstate.c: check xstate save and restore in the case where a signal is delivered to a running thread, making sure that the xstate is modified in the signal handler. * hurd/test-xstate.h: add helpers to test xstate * sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/bits/sigcontext.h: add xstate to the sigcontext structure. + sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c: restore xstate from the saved context * sysdeps/mach/hurd/x86/trampoline.c: save xstate if supported. Otherwise we fall back to the previous behaviour of ignoring xstate. * sysdeps/mach/hurd/x86_64/bits/sigcontext.h: add xstate to the sigcontext structure. * sysdeps/mach/hurd/x86_64/sigreturn.c: restore xstate from the saved context Signed-off-by: Luca Dariz <luca@orpolo.org> Signed-off-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org> Message-ID: <20250319171118.142163-1-luca@orpolo.org>
2025-04-18hurd: Check return value of mach_port_mod_refs() in the dup routine of fcntl()Zhaoming Luo2-28/+87
Message-ID: <20250310084409.24177-1-zhmingluo@163.com>
2025-04-15aarch64: Add back non-temporal load/stores from oryon-1's memsetAndrew Pinski1-0/+26
I misunderstood the recommendation from the hardware team about non-temporal load/stores. It is still recommended to use them in memset for large sizes. It was not recommended for their use with device memory and memset is already not valid to be used with device memory. This reverts commit e6590f0c86632c36c9a784cf96075f4be2e920d2. Signed-off-by: Andrew Pinski <quic_apinski@quicinc.com> Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2025-04-15aarch64: Add back non-temporal load/stores from oryon-1's memcpyAndrew Pinski1-0/+40
I misunderstood the recommendation from the hardware team about non-temporal load/stores. It is still recommended to use them in memcpy for large sizes. It was not recommended for their use with device memory and memcpy is already not valid to be use with device memory. This reverts commit eb5eeb47403e0a91de834868e501b4d62b8d2cb9. Signed-off-by: Andrew Pinski <quic_apinski@quicinc.com> Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2025-04-14Fix spelling mistake "succsefully" -> "successfully"Colin Ian King1-1/+1
There is a spelling mistake in a puts statement. Fix it. Signed-off-by: Colin Ian King <colin.i.king@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2025-04-12x86: Detect Intel Diamond RapidsH.J. Lu1-0/+12
Detect Intel Diamond Rapids and tune it similar to Intel Granite Rapids. Signed-off-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp2@gmail.com>
2025-04-11x86: Handle unknown Intel processor with default tuningSunil K Pandey1-144/+143
Enable default tuning for unknown Intel processor. Tested on x86, no regression. Co-Authored-By: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2025-04-10x86: Add ARL/PTL/CWF model detection supportSunil K Pandey1-0/+10
- Add ARROWLAKE model detection. - Add PANTHERLAKE model detection. - Add CLEARWATERFOREST model detection. IntelĀ® Architecture Instruction Set Extensions Programming Reference https://cdrdv2.intel.com/v1/dl/getContent/671368 Section 1.2. No regression, validated model detection on SDE. Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2025-04-10powerpc: Remove relocation cache flush code for power64Florian Weimer1-15/+0
This is only needed for -mno-secure-plt, and this linkage mode is not supported with powerpc64 and powerp64le. Reviewed-by: Peter Bergner <bergner@linux.ibm.com>
2025-04-09math: Fix up THREEp96 constant in expf128 [BZ #32411]Jakub Jelinek1-1/+1
As mentioned by the reporter in a pull request against gcc-mirror, the THREEp96 constant in e_expl.c is incorrect, it is actually 0x3.p+94f128 rather than 0x3.p+96f128. The algorithm uses that to compute the t2 integer (tval2), by whose delta it adjusts the x+xl pair and then in the result uses the precomputed exp value for that entry. Using 0x3.p+94f128 rather than 0x3.p+96f128 results in tval2 sometimes being one smaller, sometimes one larger than the desired value, thus can mean the x+xl pair after adjustment will be larger in absolute value than it should be. DesWursters created a test program for this https://github.com/DesWurstes/comparefloats and his results were total: 1135000000 not_equal: 4322 earlier_score: 674 later_score: 3648 I've modified this so with https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=32411#c3 so that it actually tests pseudo-random _Float128 values with range (-16384.,16384) with strong bias on values larger than 0.0002 in absolute value (so that tval1/tval2 aren't zero most of the time) and that gave total: 10000000000 not_equal: 29861 earlier_score: 4606 later_score: 25255 So, in both cases, in most cases the change doesn't result in any differences, and in those rare cases where does, about 85% have smaller ulp than without the patch. Additionally I've tried https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=32411#c4 and in 2 billion iterations it didn't find any case where x+xl after the adjustments without this change would be smaller in absolute value compared to x+xl after the adjustments with this change. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-04-08elf: Extend glibc.rtld.execstack tunable to force executable stack (BZ 32653)Adhemerval Zanella1-0/+13
From the bug report [1], multiple programs still require to dlopen shared libraries with either missing PT_GNU_STACK or with the executable bit set. Although, in some cases, it seems to be a hard-craft assembly source without the required .note.GNU-stack marking (so the static linker is forced to set the stack executable if the ABI requires it), other cases seem that the library uses trampolines [2]. Unfortunately, READ_IMPLIES_EXEC is not an option since on some ABIs (x86_64), the kernel clears the bit, making it unsupported. To avoid reinstating the broken code that changes stack permission on dlopen (0ca8785a28), this patch extends the glibc.rtld.execstack tunable to allow an option to force an executable stack at the program startup. The tunable is a security issue because it defeats the PT_GNU_STACK hardening. It has the slight advantage of making it explicit by the caller, and, as for other tunables, this is disabled for setuid binaries. A tunable also allows us to eventually remove it, but from previous experiences, it would require some time. Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu, x86_64-linux-gnu, and i686-linux-gnu. [1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=32653 [2] https://github.com/conda-forge/ctng-compiler-activation-feedstock/issues/143 Reviewed-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
2025-04-08stdlib: Implement C2Y uabs, ulabs, ullabs and uimaxabsLenard Mollenkopf34-0/+136
C2Y adds unsigned versions of the abs functions (see C2Y draft N3467 and proposal N3349). Tested for x86_64. Signed-off-by: Lenard Mollenkopf <glibc@lenardmollenkopf.de>
2025-04-05x86: Optimize xstate size calculationSunil K Pandey2-56/+24
Scan xstate IDs up to the maximum supported xstate ID. Remove the separate AMX xstate calculation. Instead, exclude the AMX space from the start of TILECFG to the end of TILEDATA in xsave_state_size. Completed validation on SKL/SKX/SPR/SDE and compared xsave state size with "ld.so --list-diagnostics" option, no regression. Co-Authored-By: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp2@gmail.com>
2025-04-02stdlib: Fix qsort memory leak if callback throws (BZ 32058)Adhemerval Zanella3-4/+22
If the input buffer exceeds the stack auxiliary buffer, qsort will malloc a temporary one to call mergesort. Since C++ standard does allow the callback comparison function to throw [1], the glibc implementation can potentially leak memory. The fixes uses a pthread_cleanup_combined_push and pthread_cleanup_combined_pop, so it can work with and without exception enables. The qsort code path that calls malloc now requires some extra setup and a call to __pthread_cleanup_push anmd __pthread_cleanup_pop (which should be ok since they just setup some buffer state). Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu. [1] https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4950/alg.c.library#4 Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2025-04-02sysdeps: powerpc: restore -mlong-double-128 checkSam James2-0/+117
We mistakenly dropped the check in 27b96e069aad17cefea9437542180bff448ac3a0; there's some other checks which we *can* drop, but let's worry about that later. Fixes the build on ppc64le where GCC is configured with --with-long-double-format=ieee. Reviewed-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de>
2025-04-01Update syscall lists for Linux 6.14Joseph Myers1-2/+2
Linux 6.14 has no new syscalls. Update the version number in syscall-names.list to reflect that it is still current for 6.14. Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
2025-03-31x86: Link tst-gnu2-tls2-x86-noxsave{,c,xsavec} with libpthreadFlorian Weimer1-0/+3
This fixes a test build failure on Hurd. Fixes commit 145097dff170507fe73190e8e41194f5b5f7e6bf ("x86: Use separate variable for TLSDESC XSAVE/XSAVEC state size (bug 32810)"). Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2025-03-31Raise the minimum GCC version to 12.1 [BZ #32539]H.J. Lu4-175/+0
For all Linux distros with glibc 2.40 which I can find, GCC 14.2 is used to compile glibc 2.40: OS GCC URL AOSC 14.2.0 https://aosc.io/ Arch Linux 14.2.0 https://archlinux.org/ ArchPOWER 14.2.0 https://archlinuxpower.org/ Artix 14.2.0 https://artixlinux.org/ Debian 14.2.0 https://www.debian.org/ Devuan 14.2.0 https://www.devuan.org/ Exherbo 14.2.0 https://www.exherbolinux.org/ Fedora 14.2.1 https://fedoraproject.org/ Gentoo 14.2.1 https://gentoo.org/ Kali Linux 14.2.0 https://www.kali.org/ KaOS 14.2.0 https://kaosx.us/ LiGurOS 14.2.0 https://liguros.gitlab.io/ Mageia 14.2.0 https://www.mageia.org/en/ Manjaro 14.2.0 https://manjaro.org/ NixOS 14.2.0 https://nixos.org/ openmamba 14.2.0 https://openmamba.org/ OpenMandriva 14.2.0 https://openmandriva.org/ openSUSE 14.2.0 https://www.opensuse.org/ Parabola 14.2.0 https://www.parabola.nu/ PLD Linux 14.2.0 https://pld-linux.org/ PureOS 14.2.0 https://pureos.net/ Raspbian 14.2.0 http://raspbian.org/ Slackware 14.2.0 http://www.slackware.com/ Solus 14.2.0 https://getsol.us/ T2 SDE 14.2.0 http://t2sde.org/ Ubuntu 14.2.0 https://www.ubuntu.com/ Wikidata 14.2.0 https://wikidata.org/ Support older versions of GCC to build glibc 2.42: 1. Need to work around bugs in older versions of GCC. 2. Can't use the new features in newer versions of GCC, which may be required for new features, like _Float16 which requires GCC 12.1 or above, in glibc, The main benefit of supporting older versions of GCC is easier backport of bug fixes to the older releases of glibc, which can be mitigated by avoiding incompatible features in newer versions of GCC for critical bug fixes. Require GCC 12.1 or newer to build. Remove GCC version check for PowerPC and s390x. TEST_CC and TEST_CXX can be used to test the glibc build with the older versions of GCC. For glibc developers who are using Linux OSes which don't come with GCC 12.1 or newer, they should build and install GCC 12.1 or newer to work on glibc. This fixes BZ #32539. Signed-off-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
2025-03-31Fix typo in commentYLK2-2/+2
2025-03-31aarch64: Fix _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic unwind for pac-ret (BZ 32612)Adhemerval Zanella4-12/+100
When libgcc is built with pac-ret, it requires to autenticate the unwinding frame based on CFI information. The _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic uses a custom calling convention, where it is responsible to save and restore all registers it might use (even volatile). The pac-ret support added by 1be3d6eb823d8b952fa54b7bbc90cbecb8981380 was added only on the slow-path, but the fast path also adds DWARF Register Rule Instruction (cfi_adjust_cfa_offset) since it requires to save/restore some auxiliary register. It seems that this is not fully supported neither by libgcc nor AArch64 ABI [1]. Instead, move paciasp/autiasp to function prologue/epilogue to be used on both fast and slow paths. I also corrected the _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic comment description, it was copied from i386 implementation without any adjustment. Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu with a toolchain built with --enable-standard-branch-protection on a system with pac-ret support. [1] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aadwarf64/aadwarf64.rst#id1 Reviewed-by: Yury Khrustalev <yury.khrustalev@arm.com>
2025-03-29x86: Use separate variable for TLSDESC XSAVE/XSAVEC state size (bug 32810)Florian Weimer9-8/+40
Previously, the initialization code reused the xsave_state_full_size member of struct cpu_features for the TLSDESC state size. However, the tunable processing code assumes that this member has the original XSAVE (non-compact) state size, so that it can use its value if XSAVEC is disabled via tunable. This change uses a separate variable and not a struct member because the value is only needed in ld.so and the static libc, but not in libc.so. As a result, struct cpu_features layout does not change, helping a future backport of this change. Fixes commit 9b7091415af47082664717210ac49d51551456ab ("x86-64: Update _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic to preserve AMX registers"). Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2025-03-29x86: Skip XSAVE state size reset if ISA level requires XSAVEFlorian Weimer1-0/+5
If we have to use XSAVE or XSAVEC trampolines, do not adjust the size information they need. Technically, it is an operator error to try to run with -XSAVE,-XSAVEC on such builds, but this change here disables some unnecessary code with higher ISA levels and simplifies testing. Related to commit befe2d3c4dec8be2cdd01a47132e47bdb7020922 ("x86-64: Don't use SSE resolvers for ISA level 3 or above"). Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2025-03-28stdio-common: Reject real data w/o exponent digits in scanf [BZ #12701]Maciej W. Rozycki36-2332/+2332
Reject invalid formatted scanf real input data the exponent part of which is comprised of an exponent introducing character, optionally followed by a sign, and with no actual digits following. Such data is a prefix of, but not a matching input sequence and it is required by ISO C to cause a matching failure. Currently a matching success is instead incorrectly produced along with the conversion result according to the input significand read and the exponent of zero, with the significand and the exponent part wholly consumed from input. Correct an invalid `tstscanf.c' test accordingly that expects a matching success for input data provided in the ISO C standard as an example for a matching failure. Enable input data that causes test failures without this fix in place. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-28stdio-common: Reject significand prefixes in scanf [BZ #12701]Maciej W. Rozycki12-504/+504
Reject invalid formatted scanf real input data that is comprised of a hexadecimal prefix, optionally preceded by a sign, and with no actual digits following owing to the field width restriction in effect. Such data is a prefix of, but not a matching input sequence and it is required by ISO C to cause a matching failure. Currently a matching success is instead incorrectly produced along with the conversion result of zero, with the prefix wholly consumed from input. Where the end of input is marked by the end-of-file condition rather than the field width restriction in effect a matching failure is already correctly produced. Enable input data that causes test failures without this fix in place. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-28stdio-common: Reject integer prefixes in scanf [BZ #12701]Maciej W. Rozycki16-960/+960
Reject invalid formatted scanf integer input data that is comprised of a binary or hexadecimal prefix, optionally preceded by a sign, and with no actual digits following. Such data is a prefix of, but not a matching input sequence and it is required by ISO C to cause a matching failure. Currently a matching success is instead incorrectly produced along with the conversion result of zero, with the prefix wholly consumed from input. Enable input data that causes test failures without this fix in place. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-28stdio-common: Add scanf long double data for Intel/Motorola 80-bit formatMaciej W. Rozycki10-0/+4873
Add Makefile infrastructure, a format-specific test skeleton providing a data comparison implementation that ignores bits of data representation in memory that do not participate in holding floating-point data, and `long double' real input data for targets using the Intel/Motorola 80-bit format. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-27Implement C23 pownJoseph Myers41-4/+256
C23 adds various <math.h> function families originally defined in TS 18661-4. Add the pown functions, which are like pow but with an integer exponent. That exponent has type long long int in C23; it was intmax_t in TS 18661-4, and as with other interfaces changed after their initial appearance in the TS, I don't think we need to support the original version of the interface. The test inputs are based on the subset of test inputs for pow that use integer exponents that fit in long long. As the first such template implementation that saves and restores the rounding mode internally (to avoid possible issues with directed rounding and intermediate overflows or underflows in the wrong rounding mode), support also needed to be added for using SET_RESTORE_ROUND* in such template function implementations. This required math-type-macros-float128.h to include <fenv_private.h>, so it can tell whether SET_RESTORE_ROUNDF128 is defined. In turn, the include order with <fenv_private.h> included before <math_private.h> broke loongarch builds, showing up that sysdeps/loongarch/math_private.h is really a fenv_private.h file (maybe implemented internally before the consistent split of those headers in 2018?) and needed to be renamed to fenv_private.h to avoid errors with duplicate macro definitions if <math_private.h> is included after <fenv_private.h>. The underlying implementation uses __ieee754_pow functions (called more than once in some cases, where the exponent does not fit in the floating type). I expect a custom implementation for a given format, that only handles integer exponents but handles larger exponents directly, could be faster and more accurate in some cases. I encourage searching for worst cases for ulps error for these implementations (necessarily non-exhaustively, given the size of the input space). Tested for x86_64 and x86, and with build-many-glibcs.py.
2025-03-25linux: Fix integer overflow warnings when including <sys/mount.h> [BZ #32708]Collin Funk1-1/+1
Using gcc -Wshift-overflow=2 -Wsystem-headers to compile a file including <sys/mount.h> will cause a warning since 1 << 31 is undefined behavior on platforms where int is 32-bits. Signed-off-by: Collin Funk <collin.funk1@gmail.com> Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf long double data for IBM 128-bit formatMaciej W. Rozycki10-0/+4895
Add Makefile infrastructure and IBM 128-bit 'long double' real input for targets switching between the IEEE 754 binary128 and IBM 128-bit formats with '-mabi=ieeelongdouble' and '-mabi=ibmlongdouble'. Reuse IEEE 754 binary128 input data but with modified output file names so as not to clash with the names used for IBM 128-bit format tests made with common rules for the 'long double' data type. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf long double data for IEEE 754 binary64 formatMaciej W. Rozycki10-1/+5028
Add Makefile infrastructure and 64-bit `long double' real input data for targets switching between the IEEE 754 binary64 and IEEE 754 binary128 formats with `-mlong-double-64' and `-mlong-double-128'. Use modified output file names for the IEEE 754 binary64 format so as not to clash with the names used for IEEE 754 binary128 format tests made with common rules for the 'long double' data type. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf long double data for IEEE 754 binary128 formatMaciej W. Rozycki9-0/+4840
Add Makefile infrastructure and `long double' real input data for targets using the IEEE 754 binary128 format. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf double data for IEEE 754 binary64 formatMaciej W. Rozycki9-0/+4964
Add Makefile infrastructure and `double' real input data for targets using the IEEE 754 binary64 format. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf float data for IEEE 754 binary32 formatMaciej W. Rozycki9-0/+4963
Add Makefile infrastructure and `float' real input data for targets using the IEEE 754 binary32 format. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0e', '0e+', '0x', '0x8p', '0x0p-', etc. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25stdio-common: Add scanf integer data for LP64 targetsMaciej W. Rozycki15-0/+9105
Add Makefile infrastructure and `int' and `long' integer input data, signed and unsigned, for LP64 targets. While the size of `int' data is the same between ILP32 and LP64 targets, resulting scanf output is different between them for out of range input data and while ISO C and POSIX both say that the behavior is undefined if the result of the conversion cannot be represented we want to keep track of our output to prevent inadvertent changes. Hence the use of distinct `int' integer input data between ILP32 and LP64 targets. Keep input data disabled and referring to BZ #12701 for entries that are are currently incorrectly accepted as valid data, such as '0b' or '0x'. Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <josmyers@redhat.com>
2025-03-25