Commit Graph

447 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Florian Weimer
7187efd0aa malloc: Use __getrandom_nocancel during tcache initiailization
Cancellation currently cannot happen at this point because dlopen
as used by the unwind link always performs additional allocations
for libgcc_s.so.1, even if it has been loaded already as a dependency
of the main executable.  But it seems prudent not to rely on this
quirk.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-08-01 15:50:09 +02:00
Florian Weimer
ac8047cdf3 malloc: Simplify implementation of __malloc_assert
It is prudent not to run too much code after detecting heap
corruption, and __fxprintf is really complex.  The line number
and file name do not carry much information, so it is not included
in the error message.  (__libc_message only supports %s formatting.)
The function name and assertion should provide some context.

Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
2022-07-21 16:33:04 +02:00
Florian Weimer
7519dee356 malloc: Simplify checked_request2size interface
In-band signaling avoids an uninitialized variable warning when
building with -Og and GCC 12.

Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
2022-07-05 11:04:45 +02:00
Adhemerval Zanella
a4ea49f85e malloc: Fix duplicate inline for do_set_mxfast 2022-03-23 12:28:44 -03:00
Paul Eggert
581c785bf3 Update copyright dates with scripts/update-copyrights
I used these shell commands:

../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")

and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 7061 files FOO.

I then removed trailing white space from math/tgmath.h,
support/tst-support-open-dev-null-range.c, and
sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strlen-vec.S, to work around the following
obscure pre-commit check failure diagnostics from Savannah.  I don't
know why I run into these diagnostics whereas others evidently do not.

remote: *** 912-#endif
remote: *** 913:
remote: *** 914-
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
...
remote: *** error: sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/statx_cp.c: trailing lines
2022-01-01 11:40:24 -08:00
Patrick McGehearty
0a4df6f534 Remove upper limit on tunable MALLOC_MMAP_THRESHOLD
The current limit on MALLOC_MMAP_THRESHOLD is either 1 Mbyte (for
32-bit apps) or 32 Mbytes (for 64-bit apps).  This value was set by a
patch dated 2006 (15 years ago).  Attempts to set the threshold higher
are currently ignored.

The default behavior is appropriate for many highly parallel
applications where many processes or threads are sharing RAM. In other
situations where the number of active processes or threads closely
matches the number of cores, a much higher limit may be desired by the
application designer. By today's standards on personal computers and
small servers, 2 Gbytes of RAM per core is commonly available. On
larger systems 4 Gbytes or more of RAM is sometimes available.
Instead of raising the limit to match current needs, this patch
proposes to remove the limit of the tunable, leaving the decision up
to the user of a tunable to judge the best value for their needs.

This patch does not change any of the defaults for malloc tunables,
retaining the current behavior of the dynamic malloc mmap threshold.

bugzilla 27801 - Remove upper limit on tunable MALLOC_MMAP_THRESHOLD
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>

malloc/
        malloc.c changed do_set_mmap_threshold to remove test
        for HEAP_MAX_SIZE.
2021-12-16 17:24:37 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
0f982c1827 malloc: Enable huge page support on main arena
This patch adds support huge page support on main arena allocation,
enable with tunable glibc.malloc.hugetlb=2.  The patch essentially
disable the __glibc_morecore() sbrk() call (similar when memory
tag does when sbrk() call does not support it) and fallback to
default page size if the memory allocation fails.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:39 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
0849eed45d malloc: Move MORECORE fallback mmap to sysmalloc_mmap_fallback
So it can be used on hugepage code as well.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:39 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
c1beb51d08 malloc: Add Huge Page support to arenas
It is enabled as default for glibc.malloc.hugetlb set to 2 or higher.
It also uses a non configurable minimum value and maximum value,
currently set respectively to 1 and 4 selected huge page size.

The arena allocation with huge pages does not use MAP_NORESERVE.  As
indicate by kernel internal documentation [1], the flag might trigger
a SIGBUS on soft page faults if at memory access there is no left
pages in the pool.

On systems without a reserved huge pages pool, is just stress the
mmap(MAP_HUGETLB) allocation failure.  To improve test coverage it is
required to create a pool with some allocated pages.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu with no reserved pages, 10 reserved pages
(which trigger mmap(MAP_HUGETBL) failures) and with 256 reserved pages
(which does not trigger mmap(MAP_HUGETLB) failures).

[1] https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.18/vm/hugetlbfs_reserv.html#resv-map-modifications

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:39 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
98d5fcb8d0 malloc: Add Huge Page support for mmap
With the morecore hook removed, there is not easy way to provide huge
pages support on with glibc allocator without resorting to transparent
huge pages.  And some users and programs do prefer to use the huge pages
directly instead of THP for multiple reasons: no splitting, re-merging
by the VM, no TLB shootdowns for running processes, fast allocation
from the reserve pool, no competition with the rest of the processes
unlike THP, no swapping all, etc.

This patch extends the 'glibc.malloc.hugetlb' tunable: the value
'2' means to use huge pages directly with the system default size,
while a positive value means and specific page size that is matched
against the supported ones by the system.

Currently only memory allocated on sysmalloc() is handled, the arenas
still uses the default system page size.

To test is a new rule is added tests-malloc-hugetlb2, which run the
addes tests with the required GLIBC_TUNABLE setting.  On systems without
a reserved huge pages pool, is just stress the mmap(MAP_HUGETLB)
allocation failure.  To improve test coverage it is required to create
a pool with some allocated pages.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:38 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
6cc3ccc67e malloc: Move mmap logic to its own function
So it can be used with different pagesize and flags.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:15 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
7478c9959a malloc: Add THP/madvise support for sbrk
To increase effectiveness with Transparent Huge Page with madvise, the
large page size is use instead page size for sbrk increment for the
main arena.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:15 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
5f6d8d97c6 malloc: Add madvise support for Transparent Huge Pages
Linux Transparent Huge Pages (THP) current supports three different
states: 'never', 'madvise', and 'always'.  The 'never' is
self-explanatory and 'always' will enable THP for all anonymous
pages.  However, 'madvise' is still the default for some system and
for such case THP will be only used if the memory range is explicity
advertise by the program through a madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) call.

To enable it a new tunable is provided, 'glibc.malloc.hugetlb',
where setting to a value diffent than 0 enables the madvise call.

This patch issues the madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) call after a successful
mmap() call at sysmalloc() with sizes larger than the default huge
page size.  The madvise() call is disable is system does not support
THP or if it has the mode set to "never" and on Linux only support
one page size for THP, even if the architecture supports multiple
sizes.

To test is a new rule is added tests-malloc-hugetlb1, which run the
addes tests with the required GLIBC_TUNABLE setting.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-12-15 17:35:14 -03:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
88e316b064 Handle NULL input to malloc_usable_size [BZ #28506]
Hoist the NULL check for malloc_usable_size into its entry points in
malloc-debug and malloc and assume non-NULL in all callees.  This fixes
BZ #28506

Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
2021-10-29 14:53:55 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
30891f35fa Remove "Contributed by" lines
We stopped adding "Contributed by" or similar lines in sources in 2012
in favour of git logs and keeping the Contributors section of the
glibc manual up to date.  Removing these lines makes the license
header a bit more consistent across files and also removes the
possibility of error in attribution when license blocks or files are
copied across since the contributed-by lines don't actually reflect
reality in those cases.

Move all "Contributed by" and similar lines (Written by, Test by,
etc.) into a new file CONTRIBUTED-BY to retain record of these
contributions.  These contributors are also mentioned in
manual/contrib.texi, so we just maintain this additional record as a
courtesy to the earlier developers.

The following scripts were used to filter a list of files to edit in
place and to clean up the CONTRIBUTED-BY file respectively.  These
were not added to the glibc sources because they're not expected to be
of any use in future given that this is a one time task:

https://gist.github.com/siddhesh/b5ecac94eabfd72ed2916d6d8157e7dc
https://gist.github.com/siddhesh/15ea1f5e435ace9774f485030695ee02

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-09-03 22:06:44 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
5b8d271571 Fix build and tests with --disable-tunables
Remove unused code and declare __libc_mallopt when !IS_IN (libc) to
allow the debug hook to build with --disable-tunables.

Also, run tst-ifunc-isa-2* tests only when tunables are enabled since
the result depends on it.

Tested on x86_64.

Reported-by: Matheus Castanho <msc@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-23 13:57:56 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
0552fd2c7d Move malloc_{g,s}et_state to libc_malloc_debug
These deprecated functions are only safe to call from
__malloc_initialize_hook and as a result, are not useful in the
general case.  Move the implementations to libc_malloc_debug so that
existing binaries that need it will now have to preload the debug DSO
to work correctly.

This also allows simplification of the core malloc implementation by
dropping all the undumping support code that was added to make
malloc_set_state work.

One known breakage is that of ancient emacs binaries that depend on
this.  They will now crash when running with this libc.  With
LD_BIND_NOW=1, it will terminate immediately because of not being able
to find malloc_set_state but with lazy binding it will crash in
unpredictable ways.  It will need a preloaded libc_malloc_debug.so so
that its initialization hook is executed to allow its malloc
implementation to work properly.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:10 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
b5bd5bfe88 glibc.malloc.check: Wean away from malloc hooks
The malloc-check debugging feature is tightly integrated into glibc
malloc, so thanks to an idea from Florian Weimer, much of the malloc
implementation has been moved into libc_malloc_debug.so to support
malloc-check.  Due to this, glibc malloc and malloc-check can no
longer work together; they use altogether different (but identical)
structures for heap management.  This should not make a difference
though since the malloc check hook is not disabled anywhere.
malloc_set_state does, but it does so early enough that it shouldn't
cause any problems.

The malloc check tunable is now in the debug DSO and has no effect
when the DSO is not preloaded.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:08 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
cc35896ea3 Simplify __malloc_initialized
Now that mcheck no longer needs to check __malloc_initialized (and no
other third party hook can since the symbol is not exported), make the
variable boolean and static so that it is used strictly within malloc.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:04 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
2d2d9f2b48 Move malloc hooks into a compat DSO
Remove all malloc hook uses from core malloc functions and move it
into a new library libc_malloc_debug.so.  With this, the hooks now no
longer have any effect on the core library.

libc_malloc_debug.so is a malloc interposer that needs to be preloaded
to get hooks functionality back so that the debugging features that
depend on the hooks, i.e. malloc-check, mcheck and mtrace work again.
Without the preloaded DSO these debugging features will be nops.
These features will be ported away from hooks in subsequent patches.

Similarly, legacy applications that need hooks functionality need to
preload libc_malloc_debug.so.

The symbols exported by libc_malloc_debug.so are maintained at exactly
the same version as libc.so.

Finally, static binaries will no longer be able to use malloc
debugging features since they cannot preload the debugging DSO.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:37:59 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
55a4dd3930 Remove __morecore and __default_morecore
Make the __morecore and __default_morecore symbols compat-only and
remove their declarations from the API.  Also, include morecore.c
directly into malloc.c; this should ideally get merged into malloc in
a future cleanup.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:37:57 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
57b07bede1 Remove __after_morecore_hook
Remove __after_morecore_hook from the API and finalize the symbol so
that it can no longer be used in new applications.  Old applications
using __after_morecore_hook will find that their hook is no longer
called.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:37:54 +05:30
Florian Weimer
7c241325d6 Force building with -fno-common
As a result, is not necessary to specify __attribute__ ((nocommon))
on individual definitions.

GCC 10 defaults to -fno-common on all architectures except ARC,
but this change is compatible with older GCC versions and ARC, too.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-09 20:09:14 +02:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
79969f41a7 _int_realloc is static
_int_realloc is correctly declared at the top to be static, but
incorrectly defined without the static keyword.  Fix that.  The
generated binaries have identical code.
2021-07-08 18:47:21 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
fc859c3048 Harden tcache double-free check
The tcache allocator layer uses the tcache pointer as a key to
identify a block that may be freed twice.  Since this is in the
application data area, an attacker exploiting a use-after-free could
potentially get access to the entire tcache structure through this
key.  A detailed write-up was provided by Awarau here:

https://awaraucom.wordpress.com/2020/07/19/house-of-io-remastered/

Replace this static pointer use for key checking with one that is
generated at malloc initialization.  The first attempt is through
getrandom with a fallback to random_bits(), which is a simple
pseudo-random number generator based on the clock.  The fallback ought
to be sufficient since the goal of the randomness is only to make the
key arbitrary enough that it is very unlikely to collide with user
data.

Co-authored-by: Eyal Itkin <eyalit@checkpoint.com>
2021-07-08 01:39:38 +05:30
JeffyChen
dfec225ee1 malloc: Initiate tcache shutdown even without allocations [BZ #28028]
After commit 1e26d35193 ("malloc: Fix
tcache leak after thread destruction [BZ #22111]"),
tcache_shutting_down is still not early enough.  When we detach a
thread with no tcache allocated, tcache_shutting_down would still be
false.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-07-02 17:39:24 +02:00
Xeonacid
5295172e20 fix typo
"accomodate" should be "accommodate"
Reviewed-by: Paul Zimmermann <Paul.Zimmermann@inria.fr>
2021-06-02 12:16:49 +02:00
Paul Eggert
9f1bed18f9 Further fixes for REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES comment
* malloc/malloc.c (REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES): Improve comment further.
2021-04-12 00:45:06 -07:00
Paul Eggert
dff9e592b8 Fix REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES comment to match C17
* malloc/malloc.c (REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES):
Update comment to match current C standard.
2021-04-11 14:39:20 -07:00
Szabolcs Nagy
850dbf24ee malloc: Ensure mtag code path in checked_request2size is cold
This is a workaround (hack) for a gcc optimization issue (PR 99551).
Without this the generated code may evaluate the expression in the
cold path which causes performance regression for small allocations
in the memory tagging disabled (common) case.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
05f878c58e malloc: Remove unnecessary tagging around _mid_memalign
The internal _mid_memalign already returns newly tagged memory.
(__libc_memalign and posix_memalign already relied on this, this
patch fixes the other call sites.)

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
ca89f1c7d7 malloc: Rename chunk2rawmem
The previous patch ensured that all chunk to mem computations use
chunk2rawmem, so now we can rename it to chunk2mem, and in the few
cases where the tag of mem is relevant chunk2mem_tag can be used.

Replaced tag_at (chunk2rawmem (x)) with chunk2mem_tag (x).
Renamed chunk2rawmem to chunk2mem.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
4eac0ab186 malloc: Use chunk2rawmem throughout
The difference between chunk2mem and chunk2rawmem is that the latter
does not get the memory tag for the returned pointer.  It turns out
chunk2rawmem almost always works:

The input of chunk2mem is a chunk pointer that is untagged so it can
access the chunk header. All memory that is not user allocated heap
memory is untagged, which in the current implementation means that it
has the 0 tag, but this patch does not rely on the tag value. The
patch relies on that chunk operations are either done on untagged
chunks or without doing memory access to the user owned part.

Internal interface contracts:

sysmalloc: Returns untagged memory.
_int_malloc: Returns untagged memory.
_int_free: Takes untagged memory.
_int_memalign: Returns untagged memory.
_int_realloc: Takes and returns tagged memory.

So only _int_realloc and functions outside this list need care.
Alignment checks do not need the right tag and tcache works with
untagged memory.

tag_at was kept in realloc after an mremap, which is not strictly
necessary, since the pointer is only used to retag the memory, but this
way the tag is guaranteed to be different from the old tag.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
14652f60a4 malloc: Use different tag after mremap
The comment explained why different tag is used after mremap, but
for that correctly tagged pointer should be passed to tag_new_usable.
Use chunk2mem to get the tag.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
faf003ed8d malloc: Use memsize instead of CHUNK_AVAILABLE_SIZE
This is a pure refactoring change that does not affect behaviour.

The CHUNK_AVAILABLE_SIZE name was unclear, the memsize name tries to
follow the existing convention of mem denoting the allocation that is
handed out to the user, while chunk is its internally used container.

The user owned memory for a given chunk starts at chunk2mem(p) and
the size is memsize(p).  It is not valid to use on dumped heap chunks.

Moved the definition next to other chunk and mem related macros.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
d32624802d malloc: Use mtag_enabled instead of USE_MTAG
Use the runtime check where possible: it should not cause slow down in
the !USE_MTAG case since then mtag_enabled is constant false, but it
allows compiling the tagging logic so it's less likely to break or
diverge when developers only test the !USE_MTAG case.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
63a20eb03c malloc: Use branches instead of mtag_granule_mask
The branches may be better optimized since mtag_enabled is widely used.

Granule size larger than a chunk header is not supported since then we
cannot have both the chunk header and user area granule aligned.  To
fix that for targets with large granule, the chunk layout has to change.

So code that attempted to handle the granule mask generally was changed.
This simplified CHUNK_AVAILABLE_SIZE and the logic in malloc_usable_size.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
9d61722b59 malloc: Change calloc when tagging is disabled
When glibc is built with memory tagging support (USE_MTAG) but it is not
enabled at runtime (mtag_enabled) then unconditional memset was used
even though that can be often avoided.

This is for performance when tagging is supported but not enabled.
The extra check should have no overhead: tag_new_zero_region already
had a runtime check which the compiler can now optimize away.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
c076a0bc69 malloc: Only support zeroing and not arbitrary memset with mtag
The memset api is suboptimal and does not provide much benefit. Memory
tagging only needs a zeroing memset (and only for memory that's sized
and aligned to multiples of the tag granule), so change the internal
api and the target hooks accordingly.  This is to simplify the
implementation of the target hook.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
42bac88a21 malloc: Use global flag instead of function pointer dispatch for mtag
A flag check can be faster than function pointers because of how
branch prediction and speculation works and it can also remove a layer
of indirection when there is a mismatch between the malloc internal
tag_* api and __libc_mtag_* target hooks.

Memory tagging wrapper functions are moved to malloc.c from arena.c and
the logic now checks mmap_enabled.  The definition of tag_new_usable is
moved after chunk related definitions.

This refactoring also allows using mtag_enabled checks instead of
USE_MTAG ifdefs when memory tagging support only changes code logic
when memory tagging is enabled at runtime. Note: an "if (false)" code
block is optimized away even at -O0 by gcc.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
0c719cf42c malloc: Refactor TAG_ macros to avoid indirection
This does not change behaviour, just removes one layer of indirection
in the internal memory tagging logic.

Use tag_ and mtag_ prefixes instead of __tag_ and __mtag_ since these
are all symbols with internal linkage, private to malloc.c, so there
is no user namespace pollution issue.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
b9b85be6ea malloc: Avoid taggig mmaped memory on free
Either the memory belongs to the dumped area, in which case we don't
want to tag (the dumped area has the same tag as malloc internal data
so tagging is unnecessary, but chunks there may not have the right
alignment for the tag granule), or the memory will be unmapped
immediately (and thus tagging is not useful).

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
0ae773bba0 malloc: Move MTAG_MMAP_FLAGS definition
This is only used internally in malloc.c, the extern declaration
was wrong, __mtag_mmap_flags has internal linkage.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
8ae909a533 malloc: Fix a potential realloc issue with memory tagging
At an _int_free call site in realloc the wrong size was used for tag
clearing: the chunk header of the next chunk was also cleared which
in practice may work, but logically wrong.

The tag clearing is moved before the memcpy to save a tag computation,
this avoids a chunk2mem.  Another chunk2mem is removed because newmem
does not have to be recomputed. Whitespaces got fixed too.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 11:03:06 +00:00
Szabolcs Nagy
42cc96066b malloc: Fix a realloc crash with heap tagging [BZ 27468]
_int_free must be called with a chunk that has its tag reset. This was
missing in a rare case that could crash when heap tagging is enabled:
when in a multi-threaded process the current arena runs out of memory
during realloc, but another arena still has space to finish the realloc
then _int_free was called without clearing the user allocation tags.

Fixes bug 27468.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2021-03-26 10:43:51 +00:00
Florian Weimer
0923f74ada Support for multiple versions in versioned_symbol, compat_symbol
This essentially folds compat_symbol_unique functionality into
compat_symbol.

This change eliminates the need for intermediate aliases for defining
multiple symbol versions, for both compat_symbol and versioned_symbol.
Some binutils versions do not suport multiple versions per symbol on
some targets, so aliases are automatically introduced, similar to what
compat_symbol_unique did.  To reduce symbol table sizes, a configure
check is added to avoid these aliases if they are not needed.

The new mechanism works with data symbols as well as function symbols,
due to the way an assembler-level redirect is used.  It is not
compatible with weak symbols for old binutils versions, which is why
the definition of __malloc_initialize_hook had to be changed.  This
is not a loss of functionality because weak symbols do not matter
to dynamic linking.

The placeholder symbol needs repeating in nptl/libpthread-compat.c
now that compat_symbol is used, but that seems more obvious than
introducing yet another macro.

A subtle difference was that compat_symbol_unique made the symbol
global automatically.  compat_symbol does not do this, so static
had to be removed from the definition of
__libpthread_version_placeholder.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2021-03-25 12:33:02 +01:00
Paul Eggert
2b778ceb40 Update copyright dates with scripts/update-copyrights
I used these shell commands:

../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")

and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 6694 files FOO.
I then removed trailing white space from benchtests/bench-pthread-locks.c
and iconvdata/tst-iconv-big5-hkscs-to-2ucs4.c, to work around this
diagnostic from Savannah:
remote: *** pre-commit check failed ...
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
remote: error: hook declined to update refs/heads/master
2021-01-02 12:17:34 -08:00
Paul Eggert
69fda43b8d free: preserve errno [BZ#17924]
In the next release of POSIX, free must preserve errno
<https://www.austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=385>.
Modify __libc_free to save and restore errno, so that
any internal munmap etc. syscalls do not disturb the caller's errno.
Add a test malloc/tst-free-errno.c (almost all by Bruno Haible),
and document that free preserves errno.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2020-12-29 00:46:46 -08:00
Richard Earnshaw
3784dfc098 malloc: Basic support for memory tagging in the malloc() family
This patch adds the basic support for memory tagging.

Various flavours are supported, particularly being able to turn on
tagged memory at run-time: this allows the same code to be used on
systems where memory tagging support is not present without neededing
a separate build of glibc.  Also, depending on whether the kernel
supports it, the code will use mmap for the default arena if morecore
does not, or cannot support tagged memory (on AArch64 it is not
available).

All the hooks use function pointers to allow this to work without
needing ifuncs.

Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
2020-12-21 15:25:25 +00:00
Florian Weimer
29a4db291b malloc: Use __libc_initial to detect an inner libc
The secondary/non-primary/inner libc (loaded via dlmopen, LD_AUDIT,
static dlopen) must not use sbrk to allocate member because that would
interfere with allocations in the outer libc.  On Linux, this does not
matter because sbrk itself was changed to fail in secondary libcs.

 _dl_addr occasionally shows up in profiles, but had to be used before
because __libc_multiple_libs was unreliable.  So this change achieves
a slight reduction in startup time.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2020-12-16 15:13:40 +01:00