Adds `dlopen` and friends. This is needed as part of the effort to
compile `libunwind` + `libc` without baremetal mode. This is part of
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/97191. This should still be
spec compliant, since `dlopen` always returns `NULL` and `dlerror`
always returns an error message.
> If dlopen() fails for any reason, it returns NULL.
> The function dlclose() returns 0 on success, and nonzero on error.
> Since the value of the symbol could actually be NULL (so that a NULL
return from dlsym() need not indicate an error), the correct way to test
for an error is to call dlerror() to clear any old error conditions,
then call dlsym(), and then call dlerror() again, saving its return
value into a variable, and check whether this saved value is not NULL.
See:
- https://linux.die.net/man/3/dlopen
Summary:
Currently we print `null` for the null pointer in a `%s` expression.
Although it's not defined by the standard, other implementations choose
to use `(null)` to indicate this. We also currently print `(nullptr)` so
I think it's more consistent to use parens in both cases.
As encountered with <sys/queue.h>, we need a policy for how to handle
implementing functions that users need, but has no specific standard. In
that case, we should treat existing implementations as the standard and
try to match their behavior as best as possible.
Following up the discussion at
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/73469#discussion_r1409593911
by @nickdesaulniers.
According to FreeBSD implementation
(https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/refs/heads/main/libc/upstream-freebsd/lib/libc/stdlib/hcreate.c),
`hsearch` is able to handle the cases where the global table is not
properly initialized. To do this, FreeBSD actually allows hash table to
be dynamically resized. If the global table is uninitialized at the
first call, the table will be initialized with a minimal size; hence
subsequent insertion will be reasonable as the table grows
automatically.
This patch mimic such behaviors. More precisely, this patch introduces:
1. a full table iterator that scans each element in the table,
2. a resize routine that is automatically triggered whenever the load
factor is reached where it iterates the old table and insert the entries
into a new one,
3. more tests that cover the growth of the table.