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Modern gcc and clang compilers offer alignment sanitizers, which help to detect pointer misalignment. However, our codebase already contains x86-specific crc32 computation code, which uses unalignment access. Thankfully, those compilers also support the attribute, which disables alignment sanitizers at the function level. This commit adds pg_attribute_no_sanitize_alignment(), which wraps this attribute, and applies it to pg_comp_crc32c_sse42() function. Back-patch of commits |
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| .. | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| chklocale.c | ||
| crypt.c | ||
| dirent.c | ||
| dirmod.c | ||
| erand48.c | ||
| fls.c | ||
| fseeko.c | ||
| getaddrinfo.c | ||
| getopt.c | ||
| getopt_long.c | ||
| getpeereid.c | ||
| getrusage.c | ||
| gettimeofday.c | ||
| inet_aton.c | ||
| inet_net_ntop.c | ||
| isinf.c | ||
| kill.c | ||
| Makefile | ||
| mkdtemp.c | ||
| noblock.c | ||
| open.c | ||
| path.c | ||
| pg_crc32c_armv8.c | ||
| pg_crc32c_armv8_choose.c | ||
| pg_crc32c_sb8.c | ||
| pg_crc32c_sse42.c | ||
| pg_crc32c_sse42_choose.c | ||
| pg_strong_random.c | ||
| pgcheckdir.c | ||
| pgmkdirp.c | ||
| pgsleep.c | ||
| pgstrcasecmp.c | ||
| pgstrsignal.c | ||
| pqsignal.c | ||
| pthread-win32.h | ||
| qsort.c | ||
| qsort_arg.c | ||
| quotes.c | ||
| random.c | ||
| README | ||
| rint.c | ||
| snprintf.c | ||
| sprompt.c | ||
| srandom.c | ||
| strerror.c | ||
| strlcat.c | ||
| strlcpy.c | ||
| strnlen.c | ||
| system.c | ||
| tar.c | ||
| thread.c | ||
| unsetenv.c | ||
| win32.ico | ||
| win32env.c | ||
| win32error.c | ||
| win32security.c | ||
| win32setlocale.c | ||
| win32ver.rc | ||
src/port/README
libpgport
=========
libpgport must have special behavior. It supplies functions to both
libraries and applications. However, there are two complexities:
1) Libraries need to use object files that are compiled with exactly
the same flags as the library. libpgport might not use the same flags,
so it is necessary to recompile the object files for individual
libraries. This is done by removing -lpgport from the link line:
# Need to recompile any libpgport object files
LIBS := $(filter-out -lpgport, $(LIBS))
and adding infrastructure to recompile the object files:
OBJS= execute.o typename.o descriptor.o data.o error.o prepare.o memory.o \
connect.o misc.o path.o exec.o \
$(filter snprintf.o, $(LIBOBJS))
The problem is that there is no testing of which object files need to be
added, but missing functions usually show up when linking user
applications.
2) For applications, we use -lpgport before -lpq, so the static files
from libpgport are linked first. This avoids having applications
dependent on symbols that are _used_ by libpq, but not intended to be
exported by libpq. libpq's libpgport usage changes over time, so such a
dependency is a problem. Windows, Linux, and macOS use an export list to
control the symbols exported by libpq.