Joseph Myers 5c5c0dd747 Make llseek a compat symbol (bug 18471).
The llseek function name is an obsolete, Linux-specific, unprototyped
name for lseek64 with a link-time warning.  This patch completes the
obsoletion of this function name by making it into a compat symbol,
not available for newly linked programs and not included in the ABI
for new ports.

When a compat symbol is defined in syscalls.list, the code for that
function is not built at all for static linking unless some non-compat
symbol for that function is also defined with an explicit symbol
version, so an explicit symbol version for lseek64 is added to the
MIPS n32 syscalls.list.  The case in make-syscalls.sh that handles
such explicit non-compat symbol versions then needs to be changed to
use weak_alias instead of strong_alias when the syscall is built
outside of libc, to avoid linknamespace failures from a strong lseek64
symbol in static libpthread.

The x32 llseek.S was as far as I could tell already unused (nothing
builds an llseek.* source file, at least since the lseek / lseek64 /
llseek consolidation), so is removed in this patch as well.

Tested for x86_64 and x86, and with build-many-glibcs.py.

	[BZ #18471]
	* sysdeps/unix/make-syscalls.sh (emit_weak_aliases): Use weak
	aliases for non-libc case of versioned symbols.
	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/lseek64.c: Include <shlib-compat.h>.
	(llseek): Define as compat symbol if
	[SHLIB_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_28)], not as weak alias
	with link warning.
	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n32/syscalls.list (llseek):
	Make into a compat symbol, disabled for minimum symbol version
	GLIBC_2.28 and later.
	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/llseek.S: Remove file.
2018-05-22 15:44:01 +00:00
2018-04-03 02:56:35 +02:00
2018-04-04 02:06:16 +02:00
2018-03-05 21:46:55 +00:00
2018-04-02 21:45:38 +02:00
2018-04-03 00:36:33 +00:00
2018-04-04 02:17:49 +02:00
2018-05-17 00:40:52 +00:00
2018-05-18 17:30:18 +00:00
2018-05-02 08:43:31 -03:00
2018-05-17 04:25:10 -07:00
2018-04-02 01:44:14 +02:00
2018-05-16 00:05:28 +00:00
2015-05-18 15:26:26 +05:30
2017-05-20 08:09:10 -04:00
2018-01-29 10:24:57 -08:00
2017-05-11 13:38:30 -04:00
2018-03-15 19:21:35 +00:00
2018-05-22 15:44:01 +00:00
2018-04-27 19:11:24 +00:00
2017-07-17 15:52:44 -04:00

This directory contains the sources of the GNU C Library.
See the file "version.h" for what release version you have.

The GNU C Library is the standard system C library for all GNU systems,
and is an important part of what makes up a GNU system.  It provides the
system API for all programs written in C and C-compatible languages such
as C++ and Objective C; the runtime facilities of other programming
languages use the C library to access the underlying operating system.

In GNU/Linux systems, the C library works with the Linux kernel to
implement the operating system behavior seen by user applications.
In GNU/Hurd systems, it works with a microkernel and Hurd servers.

The GNU C Library implements much of the POSIX.1 functionality in the
GNU/Hurd system, using configurations i[4567]86-*-gnu.

When working with Linux kernels, this version of the GNU C Library
requires Linux kernel version 3.2 or later.

Also note that the shared version of the libgcc_s library must be
installed for the pthread library to work correctly.

The GNU C Library supports these configurations for using Linux kernels:

	aarch64*-*-linux-gnu
	alpha*-*-linux-gnu
	arm-*-linux-gnueabi
	hppa-*-linux-gnu
	i[4567]86-*-linux-gnu
	x86_64-*-linux-gnu	Can build either x86_64 or x32
	ia64-*-linux-gnu
	m68k-*-linux-gnu
	microblaze*-*-linux-gnu
	mips-*-linux-gnu
	mips64-*-linux-gnu
	powerpc-*-linux-gnu	Hardware or software floating point, BE only.
	powerpc64*-*-linux-gnu	Big-endian and little-endian.
	s390-*-linux-gnu
	s390x-*-linux-gnu
	riscv64-*-linux-gnu
	sh[34]-*-linux-gnu
	sparc*-*-linux-gnu
	sparc64*-*-linux-gnu

If you are interested in doing a port, please contact the glibc
maintainers; see http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/ for more
information.

See the file INSTALL to find out how to configure, build, and install
the GNU C Library.  You might also consider reading the WWW pages for
the C library at http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/.

The GNU C Library is (almost) completely documented by the Texinfo manual
found in the `manual/' subdirectory.  The manual is still being updated
and contains some known errors and omissions; we regret that we do not
have the resources to work on the manual as much as we would like.  For
corrections to the manual, please file a bug in the `manual' component,
following the bug-reporting instructions below.  Please be sure to check
the manual in the current development sources to see if your problem has
already been corrected.

Please see http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/bugs.html for bug reporting
information.  We are now using the Bugzilla system to track all bug reports.
This web page gives detailed information on how to report bugs properly.

The GNU C Library is free software.  See the file COPYING.LIB for copying
conditions, and LICENSES for notices about a few contributions that require
these additional notices to be distributed.  License copyright years may be
listed using range notation, e.g., 1996-2015, indicating that every year in
the range, inclusive, is a copyrightable year that would otherwise be listed
individually.
Description
No description provided
Readme 191 MiB
Languages
C 75%
Assembly 14.8%
Roff 3.5%
Pawn 3.4%
Makefile 0.8%
Other 2.3%