Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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This was split from the prior commit so it could be easily applied to
the 5.4 branch.
Closes: https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/pull/77
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If liblzma is configured with --disable-clmul-crc
CFLAGS="-msse4.1 -mpclmul", then it will fail to compile because the
generic version must be used but the CRC tables were not included.
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The code was using HAVE_FUNC_ATTRIBUTE_IFUNC instead of CRC_USE_IFUNC.
With ARM64, ifunc is incompatible because it requires non-inline
function calls for runtime detection.
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This is similar to the existing x86-64 CLMUL conditions to omit the
tables. They were slightly refactored to improve readability.
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Even though the proper name for the architecture is aarch64, this
project uses ARM64 throughout. So the rename is for consistency.
Additionally, crc32_arm64.h was slightly refactored for the following
changes:
* Added MSVC, FreeBSD, and macOS support in
is_arch_extension_supported().
* crc32_arch_optimized() now checks the size when aligning the
buffer.
* crc32_arch_optimized() loop conditions were slightly modified to
avoid both decrementing the size and incrementing the buffer
pointer.
* Use the intrinsic wrappers defined in <arm_acle.h> because GCC and
Clang name them differently.
* Minor spacing and comment changes.
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The CRC_GENERIC is now split into CRC32_GENERIC and CRC64_GENERIC, since
the ARM64 optimizations will be different between CRC32 and CRC64.
For the same reason, CRC_ARCH_OPTIMIZED is split into
CRC32_ARCH_OPTIMIZED and CRC64_ARCH_OPTIMIZED.
ifunc will only be used with x86-64 CLMUL because the runtime detection
methods needed with ARM64 are not compatible with ifunc.
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This adds --enable-arm64-crc32/--disable-arm64-crc32 (enabled by
default) for using the ARM64 CRC32 instruction. This can be disabled if
one knows the binary will never need to run on an ARM64 machine
with this instruction extension.
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The CRC32 instructions in ARM64 can calculate the CRC32 result
for 8 bytes in a single operation, making the use of ARM64
instructions much faster compared to the general CRC32 algorithm.
Optimized CRC32 will be enabled if ARM64 has CRC extension
running on Linux.
Signed-off-by: Chenxi Mao <chenxi.mao2013@gmail.com>
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The footer isn't a complete HTML file so having it in the doxygen
directory is a tiny bit clearer.
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The Overall documentation section (1.1) table spacing had to be adjusted
since the filename was very long.
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The PROJECT_LOGO field is now used to include the XZ logo. The footer
of each page now lists the copyright information instead of the default
footer. The license is also copied to statisfy the copyright and so the
link in the documentation can be local.
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This hopefully does more good than bad:
+ It's faster by default.
+ Only the threaded compressor creates files that
can be decompressed in threaded mode.
- Compression ratio is worse, usually not too much though.
When it matters, -T1 must be used.
- Memory usage increases.
- Scripts that assume single-threaded mode but don't use -T1 will
possibly use too much resources, for example, if they run
multiple xz processes in parallel to compress multiple files.
- Output from single-threaded and multi-threaded compressors
differ but such changes could happen for other reasons too
(they just haven't happened since 5.0.0).
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Not all RISC-V processors support fast unaligned access so
it's better to read only one byte in the main loop. This can
be faster even on x86-64 when compared to reading 32 bits at
a time as half the time the address is only 16-bit aligned.
The downside is larger code size on archs that do support
fast unaligned access.
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Version 5.6.0 will be shown, even though upcoming alphas and betas
will be able to support this filter. 5.6.0 looks nicer in the output and
people shouldn't be encouraged to use an unstable version in production
in any way.
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These test files achieve 100% code coverage in
src/liblzma/simple/riscv.c. They contain all of the instructions that
should be filtered and a few cases that should not.
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A special note was added to suggest using four-byte alignment when the
compressed instruction extension is not present in a RISC-V binary.
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The new Filter ID is 0x0B.
Thanks to Chien Wong <m@xv97.com> for the initial version of the Filter,
the xz CLI updates, and the Autotools build system modifications.
Thanks to Igor Pavlov for his many contributions to the design of
the filter.
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The new RISC-V filter was added to the specification, in addition to
updating the specification URL.
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Now crc_simd_body() in crc_x86_clmul.h is only called once
in a translation unit, we no longer need to be so cautious
about ensuring the always-inline behavior.
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CRC_CLMUL was split to CRC_ARCH_OPTIMIZED and CRC_X86_CLMUL.
CRC_ARCH_OPTIMIZED is defined when an arch-optimized version is used.
Currently the x86 CLMUL implementations are the only arch-optimized
versions, and these also use the CRC_x86_CLMUL macro to tell when
crc_x86_clmul.h needs to be included.
is_clmul_supported() was renamed to is_arch_extension_supported().
crc32_clmul() and crc64_clmul() were renamed to
crc32_arch_optimized() and crc64_arch_optimized().
This way the names make sense with arch-specific non-CLMUL
implementations as well.
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A CLMUL-only build will have the crcxx_clmul() inlined into
lzma_crcxx(). Previously a jump to the extern lzma_crcxx_clmul()
was needed. Notes about shared liblzma on ELF platforms:
- On platforms that support ifunc and -fvisibility=hidden, this
was silly because CLMUL-only build would have that single extra
jump instruction of extra overhead.
- On platforms that support neither -fvisibility=hidden nor linker
version script (liblzma*.map), jumping to lzma_crcxx_clmul()
would go via PLT so a few more instructions of overhead (still
not a big issue but silly nevertheless).
There was a downside with static liblzma too: if an application only
needs lzma_crc64(), static linking would make the linker include the
CLMUL code for both CRC32 and CRC64 from crc_x86_clmul.o even though
the CRC32 code wouldn't be needed, thus increasing code size of the
executable (assuming that -ffunction-sections isn't used).
Also, now compilers are likely to inline crc_simd_body()
even if they don't support the always_inline attribute
(or MSVC's __forceinline). Quite possibly all compilers
that build the code do support such an attribute. But now
it likely isn't a problem even if the attribute wasn't supported.
Now all x86-specific stuff is in crc_x86_clmul.h. If other archs
The other archs can then have their own headers with their own
is_clmul_supported() and crcxx_clmul().
Another bonus is that the build system doesn't need to care if
crc_clmul.c is needed.
is_clmul_supported() stays as inline function as it's not needed
when doing a CLMUL-only build (avoids a warning about unused function).
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This reduces the number of the complex #if directives.
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And remove one too.
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It makes no difference in practice.
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It requires fast unaligned access to 64-bit integers
and a fast instruction to count leading zeros in
a 64-bit integer (__builtin_ctzll()). This perhaps
should be enabled on some other archs too.
Thanks to Chenxi Mao for the original patch:
https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/pull/75 (the first commit)
According to the numbers there, this may improve encoding
speed by about 3-5 %.
This enables the 8-byte method on MSVC ARM64 too which
should work but wasn't tested.
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This change hopefully makes no practical difference as Clang
likely was detected via __GNUC__ or _MSC_VER already.
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This comment is repeated in xzdec.c to help remind us why all the
capabilities are removed from stdin in certain situations.
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xzdec now also uses the sandbox when its configured.
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The sandbox is now enabled for xzdec as well, so it no longer belongs
in just the xz section. xz and xzdec are always built, except for older
MSVC versions, so there isn't a need to conditionally show the sandbox
configuration. CMake will do a little unecessary work on older MSVC
versions that can't build xz or xzdec, but this is a very small
downside.
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If xz is disabled, then xzdec can still use the sandbox.
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A very strict sandbox is used when the last file is decompressed. The
likely most common use case of xzdec is to decompress a single file.
The Pledge sandbox is applied to the entire process with slightly more
relaxed promises, until the last file is processed.
Thanks to Christian Weisgerber for the initial patch adding Pledge
sandboxing.
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This fixes the recent change to lzma_lz_encoder that used memzero
instead of the NULL constant. On some compilers the NULL constant
(always 0) may not equal the NULL pointer (this only needs to guarentee
to not point to valid memory address).
Later code compares the pointers to the NULL pointer so we must
initialize them with the NULL pointer instead of 0 to guarentee
code correctness.
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The first member of lzma_lz_encoder doesn't necessarily need to be set
to NULL since it will always be set before anything tries to use it.
However the function pointer members must be set to NULL since other
functions rely on this NULL value to determine if this behavior is
supported or not.
This fixes a somewhat serious bug, where the options_update() and
set_out_limit() function pointers are not set to NULL. This seems to
have been forgotten since these function pointers were added many years
after the original two (code() and end()).
The problem is that by not setting this to NULL we are relying on the
memory allocation to zero things out if lzma_filters_update() is called
on a LZMA1 encoder. The function pointer for set_out_limit() is less
serious because there is not an API function that could call this in an
incorrect way. set_out_limit() is only called by the MicroLZMA encoder,
which must use LZMA1 where set_out_limit() is always set. Its currently
not possible to call set_out_limit() on an LZMA2 encoder at this time.
So calling lzma_filters_update() on an LZMA1 encoder had undefined
behavior since its possible that memory could be manipulated so the
options_update member pointed to a different instruction sequence.
This is unlikely to be a bug in an existing application since it relies
on calling lzma_filters_update() on an LZMA1 encoder in the first place.
For instance, it does not affect xz because lzma_filters_update() can
only be used when encoding to the .xz format.
This is fixed by using memzero() to set all members of lzma_lz_encoder
to NULL after it is allocated. This ensures this mistake will not occur
here in the future if any additional function pointers are added.
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lzma_raw_encoder() and lzma_raw_encoder_init() used "options" as the
parameter name instead of "filters" (used by the declaration). "filters"
is more clear since the parameter represents the list of filters passed
to the raw encoder, each of which contains filter options.
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lzma_encoder_init() did not check for NULL options, but
lzma2_encoder_init() did. This is more of a code style improvement than
anything else to help make lzma_encoder_init() and lzma2_encoder_init()
more similar.
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Since GCC version 10, GCC no longer complains about simple implicit
integer conversions with Arithmetic operators.
For instance:
uint8_t a = 5;
uint32_t b = a + 5;
Give a warning on GCC 9 and earlier but this:
uint8_t a = 5;
uint32_t b = (a + 5) * 2;
Gives a warning with GCC 10+.
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Most of these fixes are small typos and tweaks. A few were caused by bad
advice from me. Here is the summary of what is changed:
- Author line edits
- Small comment changes/additions
- Using the return value in the error messages in the fuzz targets'
coder initialization code
- Removed fuzz_encode_stream.options. This set a max length, which may
prevent some worthwhile code paths from being properly exercised.
- Removed the max_len option from fuzz_decode_stream.options for the
same reason as fuzz_encode_stream. The alone decoder fuzz target still
has this restriction.
- Altered the dictionary contents for fuzz_lzma.dict. Instead of keeping
the properties static and varying the dictionary size, the properties
are varied and the dictionary size is kept small. The dictionary size
doesn't have much impact on the code paths but the properties do.
Closes: https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/pull/73
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This fuzz target handles .xz stream encoding. The first byte of input
is used to dynamically set the preset level in order to increase the
fuzz coverage of complex critical code paths.
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This fuzz target that handles LZMA alone decoding. A new fuzz
dictionary .dict was also created with common LZMA header values to
help speed up the discovery of valid headers.
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All .c files can be built as separate fuzz targets. This simplifies
the Makefile by allowing us to use wildcards instead of having a
Makefile target for each fuzz target.
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This renames ALLOW_ATTR_IFUNC to USE_ATTR_IFUNC and applies the ifunc
detection changes that were made to the Autotools build.
Fixes: https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/issues/70
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Some compilers support __attribute__((__ifunc__())) even though the
dynamic linker does not. The compiler is able to create the binary
but it will fail on startup. So it is not enough to just test if
the attribute is supported.
The default value for enable_ifunc is now auto, which will attempt
to compile a program using __attribute__((__ifunc__())). There are
additional checks in this program if glibc is being used or if it
is running on FreeBSD.
Setting --enable-ifunc will skip this test and always enable
__attribute__((__ifunc__())), even if is not supported.
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The new is_tty() will report if a file descriptor is a terminal or not.
On POSIX systems, it is a wrapper around isatty(). However, the native
Windows implementation of isatty() will return true for all character
devices, not just terminals. So is_tty() has a special case for Windows
so it can use alternative Windows API functions to determine if a file
descriptor is a terminal.
This fixes a bug with MSVC and MinGW-w64 builds that refused to read from
or write to non-terminal character devices because xz thought it was a
terminal. For instance:
xz foo -c > /dev/null
would fail because /dev/null was assumed to be a terminal.
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Based on internet dictionary searches, 'choise' is an outdated spelling
of 'choice'.
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Now it reads from argv[] instead of args->arg_names.
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This tests some complicated interactions with the --suffix= option.
The suffix option must be used with --format=raw, but can optionally
be used to override the default .xz suffix.
This test also verifies some recent bugs have been correctly solved
and to hopefully avoid further regressions in the future.
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The following command caused a segmentation fault:
xz -Fraw --lzma1 --files=foo
when foo was a valid file. The usage of --files or --files0 was not
being checked when compressing or decompressing in raw mode without a
suffix. The suffix checking code was meant to validate that all files
to be processed are "-" (if not writing to standard out), meaning the
data is only coming from standard in. In this case, there were no file
names to check since --files and --files0 store their file name in a
different place.
Later code assumed the suffix was set and caused a segmentation fault.
Now, the above command results in an error.
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The previous version set opt_stdout, but this caused an issue with
copying an input file to standard out when decompressing an unknown file
type. The following needs to result in an error:
echo foo | xz -df
since -c, --stdout is not used. This fixes the previous error by not
setting opt_stdout.
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This fixes a bug introduced in cc5aa9ab138beeecaee5a1e81197591893ee9ca0
when the suffix check was initially moved. This caused a situation that
previously worked:
echo foo | xz -Fraw --lzma1 | wc -c
to fail because the old code knew that this would write to standard out
so a suffix was not needed.
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If the -c, --stdout argument is not used, then we can still detect when
the data will be written to standard out if all of the provided
filenames are "-" (denoting standard in) or if no filenames are
provided.
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The macro lzma_attr_visibility_hidden has to be defined to make
fastpos.h usable. The visibility attribute is irrelevant to
fastpos_tablegen.c so simply #define the macro to an empty value.
fastpos_tablegen.c is never built by the included build systems
and so the problem wasn't noticed earlier. It's just a standalone
program for generating fastpos_table.c.
Fixes: https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/pull/69
Thanks to GitHub user Jamaika1.
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Solaris Studio is a possible example (not tested) which
supports the always_inline attribute but might not get
detected by the common.h #ifdefs.
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These variables are internal to liblzma and not exposed in the API.
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In ELF shared libs:
-fvisibility=hidden affects definitions of symbols but not
declarations.[*] This doesn't affect direct calls to functions
inside liblzma as a linker can replace a call to lzma_foo@plt
with a call directly to lzma_foo when -fvisibility=hidden is used.
[*] It has to be like this because otherwise every installed
header file would need to explictly set the symbol visibility
to default.
When accessing extern variables that aren't defined in the
same translation unit, compiler assumes that the variable has
the default visibility and thus indirection is needed. Unlike
function calls, linker cannot optimize this.
Using __attribute__((__visibility__("hidden"))) with the extern
variable declarations tells the compiler that indirection isn't
needed because the definition is in the same shared library.
About 15+ years ago, someone told me that it would be good if
the CRC tables would be defined in the same translation unit
as the C code of the CRC functions. While I understood that it
could help a tiny amount, I didn't want to change the code because
a separate translation unit for the CRC tables was needed for the
x86 assembly code anyway. But when visibility attributes are
supported, simply marking the extern declaration with the
hidden attribute will get identical result. When there are only
a few affected variables, this is trivial to do. I wish I had
understood this back then already.
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MinGW (formely a MinGW.org Project, later the MinGW.OSDN Project
at <https://osdn.net/projects/mingw/>) has GCC 9.2.0 as the
most recent GCC package (released 2021-02-02). The project might
still be alive but majority of people have switched to MinGW-w64.
Thus it seems clearer to refer to MinGW-w64 in our API headers too.
Building with MinGW is likely to still work but I haven't tested it
in the recent years.
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A CMake option LARGE_FILE_SUPPORT is created if and only if
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 affects sizeof(off_t).
This is needed on many 32-bit platforms and even with 64-bit builds
with MinGW-w64 to get support for files larger than 2 GiB.
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Autotools based build uses -pthread and thus adds it to Libs.private
in liblzma.pc. CMake doesn't use -pthread at all if pthread functions
are available in libc so Libs.private doesn't get -pthread either.
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The windres workaround now replaces spaces with \x20 so
the package name isn't repeated.
These changes will help with creation of liblzma.pc.
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It properly adds -DLZMA_API_STATIC when compiling code that
will be linked against static liblzma. Having it there on
systems other than Windows does no harm.
See: https://www.msys2.org/docs/pkgconfig/
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In this case they have identical values.
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Both PREFIX and IMPORT_PERFIX have to be set to "" to get
liblzma.dll and liblzma.dll.a.
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Now configure will fail if -fsanitize= is found in CFLAGS
and sanitizer-incompatible ifunc or Landlock sandboxing
would be used. These are incompatible with one or more sanitizers.
It's simpler to reject all -fsanitize= uses instead of trying to
pass those that might not cause problems.
CMake-based build was updated similarly. It lets the configuration
finish (SEND_ERROR instead of FATAL_ERROR) so that both error
messages can be seen at once.
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The sandboxing on Linux now supports Landlock, which restricts all
supported filesystem actions after xz opens the files it needs. The
sandbox is only enabled when one file is input and we are writing to
standard out. With fsanitize=address,undefined, the instrumentation
needs to read additional files after the sandbox is in place. This
forces all xz based test to fail, so the sandbox must instead be
disabled.
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Using set(ENABLE_THREADS "posix") is confusing because it sets
a new normal variable and leaves the cache entry with the same
name unchanged. The intent wasn't to change the cache entry so
this switches to a different variable name.
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It is enabled only when decompressing one file to stdout,
similar to how Capsicum is used.
Landlock was added in Linux 5.13.
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It's mostly to change from "thread method" to "threading method".
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This way typos are caught quickly and compounding error messages
are avoided (a single typo could cause more than one error).
This keeps using SEND_ERROR when the system is lacking a feature
(like threading library or sandboxing method). This way the whole
configuration log will be generated in case someone wishes to
report a problem upstream.
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This removes support for FreeBSD 10.0 and 10.1 which used
<sys/capability.h> instead of <sys/capsicum.h>. Support for
FreeBSD 10.1 ended on 2016-12-31. So now FreeBSD >= 10.2 is
required to enable Capsicum support.
This also removes support for Capsicum on Linux (libcaprights)
which seems to have been unmaintained since 2017 and Linux 4.11:
https://github.com/google/capsicum-linux
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If winpthreads are used for threading, it's OK to use clock_gettime()
from winpthreads too.
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This might be almost useless but it doesn't need much extra code either.
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This mirrors configure.ac although currently MinGW-w64 builds
don't use clock_gettime() even if it is found.
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See the new comment in the code.
This also makes the check for clock_gettime() run with MinGW-w64
with which we don't want to use clock_gettime(). The previous
commit already took care of this situation.
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This commit alone doesn't change anything in the real-world:
- configure.ac currently checks for clock_gettime() only
when using pthreads.
- CMakeLists.txt doesn't check for clock_gettime() on Windows.
So clock_gettime() wasn't used with MinGW-w64 before either.
clock_gettime() provides monotonic time and it's better than
gettimeofday() in this sense. But clock_gettime() is defined
in winpthreads, and liblzma or xz needs nothing else from
winpthreads. By avoiding clock_gettime(), we avoid the dependency on
libwinpthread-1.dll or the need to link against the static version.
As a bonus, GetTickCount64() and MinGW-w64's gettimeofday() can be
faster than clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tv). The resolution
is more than good enough for the progress indicator in xz.
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This partially reverts creating crc_clmul.c
(8c0f9376f58c0696d5d6719705164d35542dd891) where is_clmul_supported()
was moved, extern'ed, and renamed to lzma_is_clmul_supported(). This
caused a problem when the function call to lzma_is_clmul_supported()
results in a call through the PLT. ifunc resolvers run very early in
the dynamic loading sequence, so the PLT may not be setup properly at
this point. Whether the PLT is used or not for
lzma_is_clmul_supported() depened upon the compiler-toolchain used and
flags.
In liblzma compiled with GCC, for instance, GCC will go through the PLT
for function calls internal to liblzma if the version scripts and
symbol visibility hiding are not used. If lazy-binding is disabled,
then it would have made any program linked with liblzma fail during
dynamic loading in the ifunc resolver.
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Currently crc32 is always enabled, so COND_CHECK_CRC32 must always be
set. Because of this, it makes the recent change to conditionally
compile check/crc_clmul.c appear wrong since that file has CLMUL
implementations for both CRC32 and CRC64.
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The option is enabled by default, but will only be visible to a user
listing cache variables or using a CMake GUI application if the
immintrin.h header file is found.
This mirrors our Autotools build --disable-clmul-crc functionality.
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After forcing crc_simd_body() to always be inlined it caused
-fsanitize=address to fail for lzma_crc32_clmul() and
lzma_crc64_clmul(). The __no_sanitize_address__ attribute was added
to lzma_crc32_clmul() and lzma_crc64_clmul(), but not removed from
crc_simd_body(). ASAN and inline functions behavior has changed over
the years for GCC specifically, so while strictly required we will
keep __attribute__((__no_sanitize_address__)) on crc_simd_body() in
case this becomes a requirement in the future.
Older GCC versions refuse to inline a function with ASAN if the
caller and callee do not agree on sanitization flags
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=89124#c3). If the
function was forced to be inlined, it will not compile if the callee
function has __no_sanitize_address__ but the caller doesn't.
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PowerPC64LE wasn't tested but it seems like a safe change.
POWER8 supports unaligned access in little endian mode. Testing
on godbolt.org shows that GCC uses unaligned access by default.
The RISC-V macro __riscv_misaligned_fast is very new and not
in any stable compiler release yet.
Documentation in INSTALL was updated to match.
Documentation about an autodetection bug when using ARM64 GCC
with -mstrict-align was added to INSTALL.
CMake files weren't updated yet.
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In XZ Utils context this doesn't matter much because
unaligned reads and writes aren't used in hot code
when TUKLIB_FAST_UNALIGNED_ACCESS isn't #defined.
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After testing a 32-bit Release build on MSVC, only lzma_crc64_clmul()
has the bug. crc_simd_body() and lzma_crc32_clmul() do not need the
optimizations disabled.
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crc_common.h depends on common.h. The headers include common.h except
when there is a reason to not do so.
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Forcing this to be inline has a significant speed improvement at the
cost of a few repeated instructions. The compilers tested on did not
inline this function since it is large and is used twice in the same
translation unit.
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This macro must be used instead of the inline keyword. On MSVC, it is
a replacement for __forceinline which is an MSVC specific keyword that
should not be used with inline (it will issue a warning if it is).
It does not use a build system check to determine if
__attribute__((__always_inline__)) since all compilers that can use
CLMUL extensions (except the special case for MSVC) should support this
attribute. If this assumption is incorrect then it will result in a bug
report instead of silently producing slow code.
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A detailed description of the three dispatch methods was added. Also,
duplicated comments now only appear in crc32_fast.c or were removed from
both crc32_fast.c and crc64_fast.c if they appeared in crc_clmul.c.
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Both crc32_clmul() and crc64_clmul() are now exported from
crc32_clmul.c as lzma_crc32_clmul() and lzma_crc64_clmul(). This
ensures that is_clmul_supported() (now lzma_is_clmul_supported()) is
not duplicated between crc32_fast.c and crc64_fast.c.
Also, it encapsulates the complexity of the CLMUL implementations into a
single file and reduces the complexity of crc32_fast.c and crc64_fast.c.
Before, CLMUL code was present in crc32_fast.c, crc64_fast.c, and
crc_common.h.
During the conversion, various cleanups were applied to code (thanks to
Lasse Collin) including:
- Require using semicolons with MASK_/L/H/LH macros.
- Variable typing and const handling improvements.
- Improvements to comments.
- Fixes to the pragmas used.
- Removed unneeded variables.
- Whitespace improvements.
- Fixed CRC_USE_GENERIC_FOR_SMALL_INPUTS handling.
- Silenced warnings and removed the need for some #pragmas
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When ifunc is supported, we can define a simpler macro instead of
repeating the more complex check in both crc32_fast.c and crc64_fast.c.
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crc64_fast.c was updated to use the code from crc_common.h instead.
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Referencing actions by commit SHA in GitHub workflows guarantees you are using an immutable version. Actions referenced by tags and branches are more vulnerable to attacks, such as the tag being moved to a malicious commit or a malicious commit being pushed to the branch.
It's important to make sure the SHA's are from the original repositories and not forks.
For reference:
https://github.com/msys2/setup-msys2/releases/tag/v2.20.1
https://github.com/msys2/setup-msys2/commit/27b3aa77f672cb6b3054121cfd80c3d22ceebb1d
https://github.com/actions/checkout/releases/tag/v4.1.0
https://github.com/actions/checkout/commit/8ade135a41bc03ea155e62e844d188df1ea18608
https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact/releases/tag/v3.1.3
https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact/commit/a8a3f3ad30e3422c9c7b888a15615d19a852ae32
Signed-off-by: Gabriela Gutierrez <gabigutierrez@google.com>
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Referencing actions by commit SHA in GitHub workflows guarantees you are using an immutable version. Actions referenced by tags and branches are more vulnerable to attacks, such as the tag being moved to a malicious commit or a malicious commit being pushed to the branch.
It's important to make sure the SHA's are from the original repositories and not forks.
For reference:
https://github.com/actions/checkout/releases/tag/v4.1.0
https://github.com/actions/checkout/commit/8ade135a41bc03ea155e62e844d188df1ea18608
https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact/releases/tag/v3.1.3
https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact/commit/a8a3f3ad30e3422c9c7b888a15615d19a852ae32
Signed-off-by: Gabriela Gutierrez <gabigutierrez@google.com>
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Updating from version 6 -> 8 from upstream. Declarations for variables
and function bodies were added to avoid unnecessary failures with
-Werror.
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CMake doesn't set WIN32 on CYGWIN but the workaround is
probably needed on Cygwin too. Same for MSYS and MSYS2.
The workaround must not be used with Clang that is acting in
MSVC mode. This fixes it by checking for the known environments
that need the workaround instead of using "NOT MSVC".
Thanks to Martin Storsjö.
https://github.com/tukaani-project/xz/commit/0570308ddd9c0e39e85597ebc0e31d4fc81d436f#commitcomment-129098431
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lld 17.0.1 searches for libraries to link first in the toolchain
directories before the local directory when building. The is a problem
for us because liblzma.a is installed in MSYS2 CLANG64 by default and
xz.exe will thus use the installed library instead of the one being
built.
This causes tests to fail when they are expecting features to be
disabled. More importantly, it will compile xz.exe with an incorrect
liblzma and could cause unexpected behavior by being unable to update
liblzma code in static builds. The CLANG64 environment can be tested
again once this is fixed.
Link to bug: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/67779.
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The Ninja Generator for CMake cannot have a custom target and its
BYPRODUCTS have the same name. This has prevented Ninja builds on
Unix-like systems since the xz symlinks were introduced in
80a1a8bb838842a2be343bd88ad1462c21c5e2c9.
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CMake is unable to guess the linker language for just a header file so
it must be explicitly set.
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llvm-windres 17.0.0 has more accurate emulation of GNU windres, so
the hack for GNU windres must now be used with llvm-windres too.
LLVM 16.0.6 has the old behavior and there likely won't be more
16.x releases. So we can simply check for >= 17.0.0.
See also:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/2bcc0fdc58a220cb9921b47ec8a32c85f2511a47
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The C standards don't allow an empty translation unit which can be
avoided by declaring something, without exporting any symbols.
When I committed f644473a211394447824ea00518d0a214ff3f7f2 I had
a feeling that some specific toolchain somewhere didn't like
empty object files (assembler or maybe "ar" complained) but
I cannot find anything to confirm this now. Quite likely I
remembered nonsense. I leave this here as a note to my future self. :-)
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When the generic fast crc64 method is used, then we omit
lzma_crc64_table[][]. Similar to
d9166b52cf3458a4da3eb92224837ca8fc208d79, we can avoid compiler warnings
with -Wempty-translation-unit (Clang) or -pedantic (GCC) by creating a
never used typedef instead of an extra symbol.
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Now if user-supplied CFLAGS contains -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic
the two checks that need -Werror will still work.
At CMake side there is add_compile_options(-Wall -Wextra)
but it didn't affect the -Werror tests. So with both Autotools
and CMake only user-supplied CFLAGS could make the checks fail
when they shouldn't.
This is not a full fix as things like -Wunused-macros in
user-supplied CFLAGS will still cause problems with both
GCC and Clang.
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It made no practical difference in this case.
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There were two uses of AC_COMPILE_IFELSE that didn't use
AC_LANG_SOURCE and Autoconf warned about these. The omission
had been intentional but it turned out that this didn't do
what I thought it would.
Autoconf 2.71 manual gives an impression that AC_LANG_SOURCE
inserts all #defines that have been made with AC_DEFINE so
far (confdefs.h). The idea was that omitting AC_LANG_SOURCE
would mean that only the exact code included in the
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE call would be compiled.
With C programs this is not true: the #defines get added without
AC_LANG_SOURCE too. There seems to be no neat way to avoid this.
Thus, with the C language at least, adding AC_LANG_SOURCE makes
no other difference than silencing a warning from Autoconf. The
generated "configure" remains identical. (Docs of AC_LANG_CONFTEST
say that the #defines have been inserted since Autoconf 2.63b and
that AC_COMPILE_IFELSE uses AC_LANG_CONFTEST. So the behavior is
documented if one also reads the docs of macros that one isn't
calling directly.)
Any extra code, including #defines, can cause problems for
these two tests because these tests must use -Werror.
CC=clang CFLAGS=-Weverything is the most extreme example.
It enables -Wreserved-macro-identifier which warns about
#define __EXTENSIONS__ 1 because it begins with two underscores.
It's possible to write a test file that passes -Weverything but
it becomes impossible when Autoconf inserts confdefs.h.
So this commit adds AC_LANG_SOURCE to silence Autoconf warnings.
A different solution is needed for -Werror tests.
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The tests do not use any Gnulib replacements so they do not need to link
libgnu.a or have /lib in the include path.
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The tests never included anything from /lib, so this was not needed.
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This was done for both internal and API headers.
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These days the ` and ' do not look symmetric. This quoting style has
been changed in various apps over the years including the GNU tools.
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This file was modified from upstream since we do not need to replace
getopt() and can avoid complexity and feature tests.
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The only difference was maintaining the conditional inclusion for
config.h.
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We can still avoid modifying the contents of this file during
configuration to simplify the build systems. Gnulib added replacements
for inclusions guards for Cygwin. Cygwin should not need getopt_long
replacement so this feature can be omitted.
<unistd.h> is conditionally included to avoid MSVC since it is not
available.
The definition for _GL_ARG_NONNULL was also copied into this file from
Gnulib since this stage is usually done during gnulib-tool.
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The code maintains the prior modifications of conditionally including
config.h and disabling NLS support.
_GL_UNUSED is repalced with the simple cast to void trick. _GL_UNUSED
is only used for these two parameters so its simpler than having to
define it.
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This was modified slightly from Gnulib. In Gnulib, it expects the
@HAVE_SYS_CDEFS_H@ to be replaced. Instead, we can set HAVE_SYS_CDEFS_H
on systems that have it and avoid copying another file into the build
directory. Since we are not using gnulib-tool, copying extra files
requires extra build system updates (and special handling with CMake) so
we should avoid when possible.
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The getopt related files have changed from Gnulib by splitting up
getopt.in.h into more modular header files. We could have kept
everything in just getopt.in.h, but this will help us continue to update
in the future.
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Before this commit, the following writes "foo" to the
console and deletes the input file:
echo foo | xz > con_xz
xz --suffix=_xz --decompress con_xz
It cannot happen without --suffix because names like con.xz
are also special and so attempting to decompress con.xz
(or compress con to con.xz) will already fail when opening
the input file.
Similar thing is possible when compressing. The following
writes to "nul" and the input file "n" is deleted.
echo foo | xz > n
xz --suffix=ul n
Now xz checks if the destination is a special file before
continuing. DOS/DJGPP version had a check for this but
Windows (and OS/2) didn't.
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CMake is now the preferred build file generator when building
with MSVC.
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xzdec might build with VS2013 but it hasn't been tested.
It was never supported before and VS2013 is old anyway
so for simplicity only liblzma is supported with VS2013.
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Building the command line tools xz and xzdec with the combination
of CMake + Visual Studio 2015/2017/2019/2022 works now.
VS2013 update 2 should still be able to build liblzma.
VS2013 cannot build the xz command line tool because xz
needs snprintf() that roughly conforms to C99.
VS2013 is old and no extra code will be added to support it.
Thanks to Kelvin Lee and Jia Tan for testing.
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This also drops the check for _WIN32 as that shouldn't be needed.
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Thanks to Jia Tan for the initial work. I added the libgnu target
and made a few related minor edits.
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