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authorAlexandre Oliva <aoliva@redhat.com>2014-01-29 15:29:59 -0200
committerAlexandre Oliva <aoliva@redhat.com>2014-01-29 15:29:59 -0200
commit86e60666b66627d2eb788e970a59e5a470cd484c (patch)
treeb59a59dc97c9502ff1dae4b9bd48d7bac12718ef /manual/charset.texi
parenta8b0805d0b9616adb2a93213efb79fc48f163101 (diff)
* manual/charset.texi: Document MTASC-safety properties.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/charset.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/charset.texi94
1 files changed, 94 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/manual/charset.texi b/manual/charset.texi
index a3e2577bfc..b2d73abc1e 100644
--- a/manual/charset.texi
+++ b/manual/charset.texi
@@ -504,6 +504,14 @@ sequence points. Communication protocols often require this.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun int mbsinit (const mbstate_t *@var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
+@c ps is dereferenced once, unguarded. This would call for @mtsrace:ps,
+@c but since a single word-sized field is (atomically) accessed, any
+@c race here would be harmless. Other functions that take an optional
+@c mbstate_t* argument named ps are marked with @mtasurace:<func>/!ps,
+@c to indicate that the function uses a static buffer if ps is NULL.
+@c These could also have been marked with @mtsrace:ps, but we'll omit
+@c that for brevity, for it's somewhat redundant with the @mtasurace.
The @code{mbsinit} function determines whether the state object pointed
to by @var{ps} is in the initial state. If @var{ps} is a null pointer or
the object is in the initial state the return value is nonzero. Otherwise
@@ -559,6 +567,14 @@ that is beyond the range @math{0} to @math{127}.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun wint_t btowc (int @var{c})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
+@c Calls btowc_fct or __fct; reads from locale, and from the
+@c get_gconv_fcts result multiple times. get_gconv_fcts calls
+@c __wcsmbs_load_conv to initialize the ctype if it's null.
+@c wcsmbs_load_conv takes a non-recursive wrlock before allocating
+@c memory for the fcts structure, initializing it, and then storing it
+@c in the locale object. The initialization involves dlopening and a
+@c lot more.
The @code{btowc} function (``byte to wide character'') converts a valid
single byte character @var{c} in the initial shift state into the wide
character equivalent using the conversion rules from the currently
@@ -615,6 +631,7 @@ There is also a function for the conversion in the other direction.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun int wctob (wint_t @var{c})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{wctob} function (``wide character to byte'') takes as the
parameter a valid wide character. If the multibyte representation for
this character in the initial state is exactly one byte long, the return
@@ -634,6 +651,7 @@ and they also do not require it to be in the initial state.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t mbrtowc (wchar_t *restrict @var{pwc}, const char *restrict @var{s}, size_t @var{n}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:mbrtowc/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
@cindex stateful
The @code{mbrtowc} function (``multibyte restartable to wide
character'') converts the next multibyte character in the string pointed
@@ -728,6 +746,7 @@ function that does part of the work.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t mbrlen (const char *restrict @var{s}, size_t @var{n}, mbstate_t *@var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:mbrlen/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{mbrlen} function (``multibyte restartable length'') computes
the number of at most @var{n} bytes starting at @var{s}, which form the
next valid and complete multibyte character.
@@ -811,6 +830,50 @@ doing the work twice.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t wcrtomb (char *restrict @var{s}, wchar_t @var{wc}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:wcrtomb/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
+@c wcrtomb uses a static, non-thread-local unguarded state variable when
+@c PS is NULL. When a state is passed in, and it's not used
+@c concurrently in other threads, this function behaves safely as long
+@c as gconv modules don't bring MT safety issues of their own.
+@c Attempting to load gconv modules or to build conversion chains in
+@c signal handlers may encounter gconv databases or caches in a
+@c partially-updated state, and asynchronous cancellation may leave them
+@c in such states, besides leaking the lock that guards them.
+@c get_gconv_fcts ok
+@c wcsmbs_load_conv ok
+@c norm_add_slashes ok
+@c wcsmbs_getfct ok
+@c gconv_find_transform ok
+@c gconv_read_conf (libc_once)
+@c gconv_lookup_cache ok
+@c find_module_idx ok
+@c find_module ok
+@c gconv_find_shlib (ok)
+@c ->init_fct (assumed ok)
+@c gconv_get_builtin_trans ok
+@c gconv_release_step ok
+@c do_lookup_alias ok
+@c find_derivation ok
+@c derivation_lookup ok
+@c increment_counter ok
+@c gconv_find_shlib ok
+@c step->init_fct (assumed ok)
+@c gen_steps ok
+@c gconv_find_shlib ok
+@c dlopen (presumed ok)
+@c dlsym (presumed ok)
+@c step->init_fct (assumed ok)
+@c step->end_fct (assumed ok)
+@c gconv_get_builtin_trans ok
+@c gconv_release_step ok
+@c add_derivation ok
+@c gconv_close_transform ok
+@c gconv_release_step ok
+@c step->end_fct (assumed ok)
+@c gconv_release_shlib ok
+@c dlclose (presumed ok)
+@c gconv_release_cache ok
+@c ->tomb->__fct (assumed ok)
The @code{wcrtomb} function (``wide character restartable to
multibyte'') converts a single wide character into a multibyte string
corresponding to that wide character.
@@ -955,6 +1018,7 @@ extensions that can help in some important situations.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t mbsrtowcs (wchar_t *restrict @var{dst}, const char **restrict @var{src}, size_t @var{len}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:mbsrtowcs/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{mbsrtowcs} function (``multibyte string restartable to wide
character string'') converts a NUL-terminated multibyte character
string at @code{*@var{src}} into an equivalent wide character string,
@@ -1039,6 +1103,7 @@ length and passing this length to the function.
@comment wchar.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t wcsrtombs (char *restrict @var{dst}, const wchar_t **restrict @var{src}, size_t @var{len}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:wcsrtombs/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{wcsrtombs} function (``wide character string restartable to
multibyte string'') converts the NUL-terminated wide character string at
@code{*@var{src}} into an equivalent multibyte character string and
@@ -1084,6 +1149,7 @@ array size (the @var{len} parameter).
@comment wchar.h
@comment GNU
@deftypefun size_t mbsnrtowcs (wchar_t *restrict @var{dst}, const char **restrict @var{src}, size_t @var{nmc}, size_t @var{len}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:mbsnrtowcs/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{mbsnrtowcs} function is very similar to the @code{mbsrtowcs}
function. All the parameters are the same except for @var{nmc}, which is
new. The return value is the same as for @code{mbsrtowcs}.
@@ -1136,6 +1202,7 @@ of the given buffer, there is no problem with altering the state.
@comment wchar.h
@comment GNU
@deftypefun size_t wcsnrtombs (char *restrict @var{dst}, const wchar_t **restrict @var{src}, size_t @var{nwc}, size_t @var{len}, mbstate_t *restrict @var{ps})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:wcsnrtombs/!ps}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{wcsnrtombs} function implements the conversion from wide
character strings to multibyte character strings. It is similar to
@code{wcsrtombs} but, just like @code{mbsnrtowcs}, it takes an extra
@@ -1280,6 +1347,7 @@ conversion functions.}
@comment stdlib.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun int mbtowc (wchar_t *restrict @var{result}, const char *restrict @var{string}, size_t @var{size})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{mbtowc} (``multibyte to wide character'') function when called
with non-null @var{string} converts the first multibyte character
beginning at @var{string} to its corresponding wide character code. It
@@ -1314,6 +1382,7 @@ shift state. @xref{Shift State}.
@comment stdlib.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun int wctomb (char *@var{string}, wchar_t @var{wchar})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{wctomb} (``wide character to multibyte'') function converts
the wide character code @var{wchar} to its corresponding multibyte
character sequence, and stores the result in bytes starting at
@@ -1353,6 +1422,7 @@ terms of @code{mbtowc}.
@comment stdlib.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun int mblen (const char *@var{string}, size_t @var{size})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{mblen} function with a non-null @var{string} argument returns
the number of bytes that make up the multibyte character beginning at
@var{string}, never examining more than @var{size} bytes. (The idea is
@@ -1391,6 +1461,9 @@ suffer from the same problems as their reentrant counterparts from
@comment stdlib.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t mbstowcs (wchar_t *@var{wstring}, const char *@var{string}, size_t @var{size})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
+@c Odd... Although this was supposed to be non-reentrant, the internal
+@c state is not a static buffer, but an automatic variable.
The @code{mbstowcs} (``multibyte string to wide character string'')
function converts the null-terminated string of multibyte characters
@var{string} to an array of wide character codes, storing not more than
@@ -1431,6 +1504,7 @@ mbstowcs_alloc (const char *string)
@comment stdlib.h
@comment ISO
@deftypefun size_t wcstombs (char *@var{string}, const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, size_t @var{size})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
The @code{wcstombs} (``wide character string to multibyte string'')
function converts the null-terminated wide character array @var{wstring}
into a string containing multibyte characters, storing not more than
@@ -1618,6 +1692,16 @@ The first step is the function to create a handle.
@comment iconv.h
@comment XPG2
@deftypefun iconv_t iconv_open (const char *@var{tocode}, const char *@var{fromcode})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}}
+@c Calls malloc if tocode and/or fromcode are too big for alloca. Calls
+@c strip and upstr on both, then gconv_open. strip and upstr call
+@c isalnum_l and toupper_l with the C locale. gconv_open may MT-safely
+@c tokenize toset, replace unspecified codesets with the current locale
+@c (possibly two different accesses), and finally it calls
+@c gconv_find_transform and initializes the gconv_t result with all the
+@c steps in the conversion sequence, running each one's initializer,
+@c destructing and releasing them all if anything fails.
+
The @code{iconv_open} function has to be used before starting a
conversion. The two parameters this function takes determine the
source and destination character set for the conversion, and if the
@@ -1682,6 +1766,12 @@ conversion is not needed anymore.
@comment iconv.h
@comment XPG2
@deftypefun int iconv_close (iconv_t @var{cd})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asucorrupt{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{} @ascudlopen{}}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{} @aculock{} @acsmem{}}}
+@c Calls gconv_close to destruct and release each of the conversion
+@c steps, release the gconv_t object, then call gconv_close_transform.
+@c Access to the gconv_t object is not guarded, but calling iconv_close
+@c concurrently with any other use is undefined.
+
The @code{iconv_close} function frees all resources associated with the
handle @var{cd}, which must have been returned by a successful call to
the @code{iconv_open} function.
@@ -1708,6 +1798,10 @@ even file to file can be implemented on top of it.
@comment iconv.h
@comment XPG2
@deftypefun size_t iconv (iconv_t @var{cd}, char **@var{inbuf}, size_t *@var{inbytesleft}, char **@var{outbuf}, size_t *@var{outbytesleft})
+@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:cd}}@assafe{}@acunsafe{@acucorrupt{}}}
+@c Without guarding access to the iconv_t object pointed to by cd, call
+@c the conversion function to convert inbuf or flush the internal
+@c conversion state.
@cindex stateful
The @code{iconv} function converts the text in the input buffer
according to the rules associated with the descriptor @var{cd} and