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path: root/libc/sysdeps/linux/metag/__syscall_error.c
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2019-10-30Make __syscall_error return long, as expected by syscall() callersCarlos Santos
The return type of syscall() is long so __syscall_error, which is jumped to by syscall handlers to stash an error number into errno, must return long too otherwhise it returs 4294967295L instead of -1L. For example, syscall for x86_64 is defined in libc/sysdeps/linux/x86_64/syscall.S as syscall: movq %rdi, %rax /* Syscall number -> rax. */ movq %rsi, %rdi /* shift arg1 - arg5. */ movq %rdx, %rsi movq %rcx, %rdx movq %r8, %r10 movq %r9, %r8 movq 8(%rsp),%r9 /* arg6 is on the stack. */ syscall /* Do the system call. */ cmpq $-4095, %rax /* Check %rax for error. */ jae __syscall_error /* Branch forward if it failed. */ ret /* Return to caller. */ In libc/sysdeps/linux/x86_64/__syscall_error.c, __syscall_error is defined as int __syscall_error(void) attribute_hidden; int __syscall_error(void) { register int err_no __asm__ ("%rcx"); __asm__ ("mov %rax, %rcx\n\t" "neg %rcx"); __set_errno(err_no); return -1; } So __syscall_error returns -1 as a 32-bit int in a 64-bit register, %rax (0x00000000ffffffff, whose decimal value is decimal 4294967295) and a test like this always returns false: if (syscall(number, ...) == -1) foo(); Fix the error by making __syscall_error return a long, like syscall(). The problem can be circumvented by the caller by coercing the returned value to int before comparing it to -1: if ((int) syscall(number, ...) == -1) foo(); The same problem probably occurs on other 64-bit systems but so far only x86_64 was tested, so this change must be considered experimental. Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
2013-03-14Add support for the Meta architectureMarkos Chandras
Meta cores are 32-bit, hardware multithreaded, general purpose, embedded processors which also feature a DSP instruction set, and can be found in many digital radios. They are capable of running different operating systems on different hardware threads, for example a digital radio might run RTOSes for DAB decoding and audio decoding on 3 hardware threads, and run Linux on the 4th hardware thread to manage the user interface, networking etc. HTPs are also capable of running SMP Linux on multiple hardware threads. Signed-off-by: Markos Chandras <markos.chandras@imgtec.com> Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reutner-Fischer <rep.dot.nop@gmail.com>