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README revision 1.2
      1 	$NetBSD: README,v 1.2 2015/03/20 13:26:51 riastradh Exp $
      2 
      3 libc: The C library.
      4 
      5 * ELF symbols and source names
      6 
      7 libc contains symbols for:
      8 
      9 (a) standard library routines in C and POSIX,
     10 (b) published NetBSD-specific nonstandard extensions,
     11 (c) old versions of library routines, and
     12 (d) internal symbols.
     13 
     14 If a library routine is standard and its signature has never changed,
     15 it is defined as an ELF global symbol.  Its name is declared normally
     16 in the appropriate header file.
     17 
     18 => Example: libc defines global symbols `malloc' and `free' for the
     19    standard C memory allocator routines.  The names `malloc' and `free'
     20    are declared normally in <stdlib.h> (src/include/stdlib.h).
     21 
     22 If a library routine is nonstandard but published and its signature has
     23 never changed, it is defined as an ELF weak symbol aliasing an ELF
     24 global symbol of the same name with an underscore prefix.
     25 
     26 The name is declared normally in the appropriate header file, provided
     27 that the relevant feature macro, such as _NETBSD_SOURCE, is defined.
     28 
     29 Within libc, the name is defined in "namespace.h"
     30 (src/lib/libc/include/namespace.h) as a macro expanding to the
     31 underscored name, so that the definition in a .c file will define the
     32 underscored ELF global symbol.
     33 
     34 Alongside the definition in the .c file is a __weak_alias directive to
     35 create the ELF weak symbol alias.
     36 
     37 => Example: For the nonstandard extension consttime_memequal, libc
     38    defines a weak symbol `consttime_memequal' aliasing a global symbol
     39    `_consttime_memequal'.
     40 
     41    The name `consttime_memequal' is declared in <string.h>
     42    (src/include/string.h) if the caller defines _NETBSD_SOURCE.
     43 
     44    The name `consttime_memequal' is defined as a macro in "namespace.h"
     45    (src/lib/libc/include/namespace.h) expanding to
     46    `_consttime_memequal'.  The source name `consttime_memequal' is
     47    defined in src/common/lib/libc/string/consttime_memequal.c, causing
     48    the ELF global symbol `_consttime_memequal' to be defined, after
     49    macro expansion.
     50 
     51    Alongside the definition is
     52 
     53 	__weak_alias(consttime_memequal,_consttime_memequal)
     54 
     55    to provide `consttime_memequal' as an ELF weak symbol aliasing
     56    `_consttime_memequal'.
     57 
     58 If a library routine is internal to libc, it is defined as an ELF
     59 global symbol with an underscore prefix.  Its name is declared in the
     60 appropriate internal header file.
     61 
     62 => Example: For the internal library routine _initdir, used by the
     63    implementations of opendir and rewinddir, libc defines a global
     64    symbol `_initdir'.  The name `_initdir' is declared normally in
     65    src/lib/libc/gen/dirent_private.h, and defined normally in
     66    src/lib/libc/gen/initdir.c.
     67 
     68 If the signature or semantics of a library routine foo changed in (for
     69 example) NetBSD 6.0, then libc provides
     70 
     71 (1) an ELF global symbol `_foo' implementing its old signature,
     72 (2) an ELF weak symbol `foo' aliasing `_foo', and
     73 (3) an ELF global symbol `__foo50' implementing its new signature (yes,
     74     `__foo50', not `__foo60').
     75 
     76 The name foo is declared in the appropriate header file, under any
     77 relevant feature macros, with a __RENAME directive so that for calls to
     78 foo, the compiler will generate relocations for __foo50.  Old programs,
     79 compiled with the old signature, will continue to use the old symbol.
     80 
     81 => Example: In NetBSD 5.0, time_t was int32_t on every machine.  In
     82    NetBSD 6.0 and onward, time_t is int64_t on every machine.
     83    Consequently, the signature of time(3), written as
     84 
     85 	time_t time(time_t *);
     86 
     87    changed in NetBSD 6.0 from being effectively
     88 
     89 	int32_t time(int32_t *);
     90 
     91    to being effectively
     92 
     93 	int64_t time(int64_t *);
     94 
     95    Thus, libc provides
     96 
     97    (1) the ELF global symbol `_time' implementing the old signature,
     98    (2) the ELF weak symbol `time' aliasing `_time', and
     99    (3) the ELF global symbol `__time50' implementing the new signature.
    100 
    101    The header file <time.h> (src/include/time.h) declares
    102 
    103 	time_t time(time_t *) __RENAME(__time50);
    104 
    105    so that compiling C programs that call time will yield objects that
    106    use the __time50 symbol from libc.  However, old programs that were
    107    compiled against the 32-bit declaration will continue to use the
    108    32-bit symbol from libc.
    109 
    110    The header file "namespace.h" (src/lib/libc/include/namespace.h)
    111    defines `time' as a macro expanding to `_time'.
    112 
    113    The source file src/lib/libc/gen/time.c includes "namespace.h" and
    114    <time.h> and defines `time' normally.  The declaration of `time' in
    115    <time.h> is replaced after macro expansion by a declaration of
    116    `_time', and the definition in time.c is replaced by a definition of
    117    `_time'.  But the __RENAME directive causes the resulting ELF global
    118    symbol to be `__time50'.
    119 
    120    The header file <compat/include/time.h>
    121    (src/lib/libc/compat/include/time.h) declares
    122 
    123 	int32_t time(int32_t *);
    124 
    125    The source file src/lib/libc/compat/gen/compat_time.c includes
    126    "namespace.h", <compat/include/time.h>, and <time.h>, but suppresses
    127    the normal declaration of `time' in <time.h> by defining
    128    __LIBC12_SOURCE__.  Then compat_time.c defines `time' normally.
    129    Again, the name is replaced after macro expansion by `_time', but
    130    since there is no __RENAME directive in <compat/include/time.h>, the
    131    resulting ELF global symbol is `_time'.
    132 
    133    Finally, alongside the definition in compat_time.c is
    134 
    135 	__weak_alias(time,_time)
    136 
    137    to provide `time' as an ELF weak symbol aliasing `_time'.
    138 
    139    The net effect is that NetBSD 6's libc provides the same definitions
    140    as NetBSD 5's libc for the symbols `time' and `_time', so that old
    141    programs that were compiled in NetBSD 5 will continue to work with
    142    NetBSD 6's libc.  But programs compiled in NetBSD 6 will have 64-bit
    143    time_t.
    144