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| <h2>uClibc vs. glibc</h2> |
| |
| <p> |
| uClibc and Glibc are not the same -- there are a number of differences which |
| may or may not cause you problems. This document attempts to list these |
| differences and, when completed, will contain a full list of all relevant |
| differences. |
| <br><br></p> |
| <ol> |
| <li>uClibc is smaller than glibc. We attempt to maintain a glibc compatible |
| interface, allowing applications that compile with glibc to easily compile with |
| uClibc. However, we do not include _everything_ that glibc includes, and |
| therefore some applications may not compile. If this happens to you, please |
| report the failure to the uclibc mailing list, with detailed error messages. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc is much more configurable then glibc. This means that a developer |
| may have compiled uClibc in such a way that significant amounts of |
| functionality have been omitted. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc does not even attempt to ensure binary compatibility across releases. |
| When a new version of uClibc is released, you may or may not need to recompile |
| all your binaries. |
| </li><br> |
| <li><ul><li> malloc(0) in glibc returns a valid pointer to something(!?!?) while in |
| uClibc calling malloc(0) returns a NULL. The behavior of malloc(0) is listed |
| as implementation-defined by SuSv3, so both libraries are equally correct. |
| This difference also applies to realloc(NULL, 0). I personally feel glibc's |
| behavior is not particularly safe. To enable glibc behavior, one has to |
| explicitly enable the MALLOC_GLIBC_COMPAT option. |
| </li><br><li> |
| glibc's malloc() implementation has behavior that is tunable via the |
| MALLOC_CHECK_ environment variable. This is primarily used to provide extra |
| malloc debugging features. These extended malloc debugging features are not |
| available within uClibc. There are many good malloc debugging libraries |
| available for Linux (dmalloc, electric fence, valgrind, etc) that work much |
| better than the glibc extended malloc debugging. So our omitting this |
| functionality from uClibc is not a great loss. |
| </li><br> |
| </ul></li> |
| <li>uClibc does not provide a database library (libdb). |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc does not support NSS (/lib/libnss_*), which allows glibc to easily |
| support various methods of authentication and DNS resolution. uClibc only |
| supports flat password files and shadow password files for storing |
| authentication information. If you need something more complex than this, |
| you can compile and install pam. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's libresolv is only a stub. Some, but not all of the functionality |
| provided by glibc's libresolv is provided internal to uClibc. Other functions |
| are not at all implemented. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>libnsl provides support for Network Information Service (NIS) which was |
| originally called "Yellow Pages" or "YP", which is an extension of RPC invented |
| by Sun to share Unix password files over the network. I personally think NIS |
| is an evil abomination and should not be used. These days, using ldap is much |
| more effective mechanism for doing the same thing. uClibc provides a stub |
| libnsl, but has no actual support for Network Information Service (NIS). |
| We therefore, also do not provide any of the headers files provided by glibc |
| under /usr/include/rpcsvc. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's locale support is not 100% complete yet. We are working on it. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's math library only supports long double as inlines, and even |
| then the long double support is quite limited. Also, very few of the |
| float math functions are implemented. Stick with double and you should |
| be just fine. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's libcrypt does not support the reentrant crypt_r, setkey_r and |
| encrypt_r, since these are not required by SuSv3. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc directly uses kernel types to define most opaque data types. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc directly uses the linux kernel's arch specific 'stuct stat'. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's librt library currently lacks all aio routines, all clock |
| routines, and all shm routines (only the timer routines and the mq |
| routines are implemented). |
| </li><br> |
| </ol> |
| <hr> |
| <h3>Manuel's Notes</h3> |
| |
| Some general comments...<br> |
| <p> |
| The intended target for all my uClibc code is ANSI/ISO C99 and SUSv3 |
| compliance. While some glibc extensions are present, many will eventually |
| be configurable. Also, even when present, the glibc-like extensions may |
| differ slightly or be more restrictive than the native glibc counterparts. |
| They are primarily meant to be porting _aides_ and not necessarily |
| drop-in replacements. |
| </p><br> |
| Now for some details...<br><br> |
| |
| <u>time functions</u><br> |
| <ol> |
| <li>Leap seconds are not supported.</li><br> |
| <li>/etc/timezone and the whole zoneinfo directory tree are not supported. |
| To set the timezone, set the TZ environment variable as specified in |
| http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/basedefs/xbd_chap08.html |
| or you may also create an /etc/TZ file of a single line, ending with a |
| newline, containing the TZ setting. For example |
| echo CST6CDT > /etc/TZ |
| </li><br> |
| <li>Currently, locale specific eras and alternate digits are not supported. |
| They are on my TODO list. |
| </li> |
| </ol><br> |
| <u>wide char support</u><br> |
| <ol> |
| <li>The only multibyte encoding currently supported is UTF-8. The various |
| ISO-8859-* encodings are (optionally) supported. The internal |
| representation of wchar's is assumed to be 31 bit unicode values in |
| native endian representation. Also, the underlying char encoding is |
| assumed to match ASCII in the range 0-0x7f. |
| </li> |
| <li>In the next iteration of locale support, I plan to add support for |
| (at least some) other multibyte encodings. |
| </li> |
| </ol> |
| <u>locale support</u><br> |
| <ol> |
| <li>The target for support is SUSv3 locale functionality. While nl_langinfo |
| has been extended, similar to glibc, it only returns values for related |
| locale entries. |
| </li> |
| <li>Currently, all SUSv3 libc locale functionality should be implemented |
| except for wcsftime and collating item support in regex. |
| </li> |
| </ol> |
| <u>stdio</u><br> |
| <ol> |
| <li>Conversion of large magnitude floating-point values by printf suffers a loss |
| of precision due to the algorithm used. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's printf is much stricter than glibcs, especially regarding positional |
| args. The entire format string is parsed first and an error is returned if |
| a problem is detected. In locales other than C, the format string is checked |
| to be a valid multibyte sequence as well. Also, currently at most 10 positional |
| args are allowed (although this is configurable). |
| </li><br> |
| <li>BUFSIZ is configurable, but no attempt is made at automatic tuning of internal |
| buffer sizes for stdio streams. In fact, the stdio code in general sacrifices |
| sophistication/performace for minimal size. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc allows glibc-like custom printf functions. However, while not |
| currently checked, the specifier must be <= 0x7f. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc allows glibc-like custom streams. However, no in-buffer seeking is |
| done. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>The functions fcloseall() and __fpending() can behave differently than their |
| glibc counterparts. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>uClibc's setvbuf is more restrictive about when it can be called than glibc's |
| is. The standards specify that setvbuf must occur before any other operations |
| take place on the stream. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>Right now, %m is not handled properly by printf when the format uses positional |
| args. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>The FILEs created by glibc's fmemopen(), open_memstream(), and fopencookie() |
| are not capable of wide orientation. The corresponding uClibc routines do |
| not have this limitation. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>For scanf, the C99 standard states "The fscanf function returns the value of |
| the macro EOF if an input failure occurs before any conversion." But glibc's |
| scanf does not respect conversions for which assignment was surpressed, even |
| though the standard states that the value is converted but not stored. |
| </li></ol><br> |
| <hr><h3>Glibc bugs</h3><br> |
| glibc bugs that Ulrich Drepper has refused to acknowledge or comment on |
| ( <a href="http://sources.redhat.com/ml/libc-alpha/2003-09/">http://sources.redhat.com/ml/libc-alpha/2003-09/</a> ) |
| <br> |
| <ol> |
| <li>The C99 standard says that for printf, a %s conversion makes no special |
| provisions for multibyte characters. SUSv3 is even more clear, stating |
| that bytes are written and a specified precision is in bytes. Yet glibc |
| treats the arg as a multibyte string when a precision is specified and |
| not otherwise. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>Both C99 and C89 state that the %c conversion for scanf reads the exact |
| number of bytes specified by the optional field width (or 1 if not specified). |
| uClibc complies with the standard. There is an argument that perhaps the |
| specified width should be treated as an upper bound, based on some historical |
| use. However, such behavior should be mentioned in the Conformance document. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>glibc's scanf is broken regarding some numeric patterns. Some invalid |
| strings are accepted as valid ("0x.p", "1e", digit grouped strings). |
| In spite of my posting examples clearly illustrating the bugs, they remain |
| unacknowledged by the glibc developers. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>glibc's scanf seems to require a 'p' exponent for hexadecimal float strings. |
| According to the standard, this is optional. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>C99 requires that once an EOF is encountered, the stream should be treated |
| as if at end-of-file even if more data becomes available. Further reading |
| can be attempted by clearing the EOF flag though, via clearerr() or a file |
| positioning function. For details concerning the original change, see |
| Defect Report #141. glibc is currently non-compliant, and the developers |
| did not comment when I asked for their official position on this issue. |
| </li><br> |
| <li>glibc's collation routines and/or localedef are broken regarding implicit |
| and explicit UNDEFINED rules. |
| </li><br></ol> |
| More to follow as I think of it... |
| <br><br><hr> |
| <h3>Profiling:</h3> |
| <p> |
| uClibc no longer supports 'gcc -fprofile-arcs -pg' style profiling, which |
| causes your application to generate a 'gmon.out' file that can then be analyzed |
| by 'gprof'. Not only does this require explicit extra support in uClibc, it |
| requires that you rebuild everything with profiling support. There is both a |
| size and performance penalty to profiling your applications this way, as well |
| as Heisenberg effects, where the act of measuring changes what is measured. |
| </p> |
| <p> |
| There exist a number of less invasive alternatives that do not require you to |
| specially instrument your application, and recompile and relink everything. |
| </p><p> |
| The OProfile system-wide profiler is an excellent alternative: |
| <a href="http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/">http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/</a> |
| </p><p> |
| Many people have had good results using the combination of Valgrind |
| to generate profiling information and KCachegrind for analysis: |
| <a href="http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/">http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/</a> |
| <a href="http://kcachegrind.sourceforge.net/">http://kcachegrind.sourceforge.net/</a> |
| </p><p> |
| Prospect is another alternative based on OProfile: |
| <a href="http://prospect.sourceforge.net/">http://prospect.sourceforge.net/</a> |
| </p><p> |
| And the Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) is also a fine tool: |
| <a href="http://www.opersys.com/LTT/">http://www.opersys.com/LTT/</a> |
| </p><p> |
| FunctionCheck: |
| <a href="http://www710.univ-lyon1.fr/~yperret/fnccheck/">http://www710.univ-lyon1.fr/~yperret/fnccheck/</a> |
| </p> |
| |
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