Glibc_vs_uClibc_Differences.txt 6.9 KB

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  1. uClibc and Glibc are not the same -- there are a number of differences which
  2. may or may not cause you problems. This document attempts to list these
  3. differences and, when completed, will contain a full list of all relevant
  4. differences.
  5. 1) uClibc is smaller than glibc. We attempt to maintain a glibc compatible
  6. interface, allowing applications that compile with glibc to easily compile with
  7. uClibc. However, we do not include _everything_ that glibc includes, and
  8. therefore some applications may not compile. If this happens to you, please
  9. report the failure to the uclibc mailing list, with detailed error messages.
  10. 2) uClibc is much more configurable then glibc. This means that a developer
  11. may have compiled uClibc in such a way that significant amounts of
  12. functionality have been omitted.
  13. 3) uClibc does not even attempt to ensure binary compatibility across releases.
  14. When a new version of uClibc is released, you may or may not need to recompile
  15. all your binaries.
  16. 4) malloc(0) in glibc returns a valid pointer to something(!?!?) while in
  17. uClibc calling malloc(0) returns a NULL. The behavior of malloc(0) is listed
  18. as implementation-defined by SuSv3, so both libraries are equally correct.
  19. This difference also applies to realloc(NULL, 0). I personally feel glibc's
  20. behavior is not particularly safe.
  21. 4.1) glibc's malloc() implementation has behavior that is tunable via the
  22. MALLOC_CHECK_ environment variable. This is primarily used to provide extra
  23. malloc debugging features. These extended malloc debugging features are not
  24. available within uClibc. There are many good malloc debugging libraries
  25. available for Linux (dmalloc, electric fence, valgrind, etc) that work much
  26. better than the glibc extended malloc debugging. So our omitting this
  27. functionality from uClibc is not a great loss.
  28. 5) uClibc does not provide a database library (libdb).
  29. 6) uClibc does not support NSS (/lib/libnss_*), which allows glibc to easily
  30. support various methods of authentication and DNS resolution. uClibc only
  31. supports flat password files and shadow password files for storing
  32. authentication information.
  33. 7) uClibc's libresolv is only a stub. Some, but not all of the functionality
  34. provided by glibc's libresolv is provided internal to uClibc. Other functions
  35. are not at all implemented.
  36. 8) libnsl provides support for Network Information Service (NIS) which was
  37. originally called "Yellow Pages" or "YP", which is an extension of RPC invented
  38. by Sun to share Unix password files over the network. I personally think NIS
  39. is an evil abomination, and should be avoided. These days, using ldap is much
  40. more effective mechanism for doing the same thing. uClibc provides a stub
  41. libnsl, but and has no actuall support for Network Information Service (NIS).
  42. We therefore, also do not provide any of the headers files provided by glibc
  43. under /usr/include/rpcsvc. I am open to implementing ldap based password
  44. authentication, but I do not personally intend to implement it (since I have no
  45. use for it).
  46. 9) uClibc's locale support is not 100% complete yet. We are working on it.
  47. 10) uClibc's math library only supports long double as inlines, and even
  48. then the long double support is quite limited.
  49. 11) uClibc's libcrypt does not support the reentrant crypt_r, setkey_r and
  50. encrypt_r, since these are not required by SuSv3.
  51. 12) uClibc does not implement wordexp()
  52. 13) uClibc directly uses the kernel types to define most opaque data types.
  53. 14) uClibc directly uses the linux kernel's arch specific 'stuct stat'.
  54. 15) Add other things here as they come up......
  55. ****************************** Manuel's Notes ******************************
  56. Some general comments...
  57. The intended target for all my uClibc code is ANSI/ISO C99 and SUSv3
  58. compliance. While some glibc extensions are present, many will eventually
  59. be configurable. Also, even when present, the glibc-like extensions may
  60. differ slightly or be more restrictive than the native glibc counterparts.
  61. They are primarily meant to be porting _aides_ and not necessarily
  62. drop-in replacements.
  63. Now for some details...
  64. time functions
  65. --------------
  66. 1) Leap seconds are not supported.
  67. 2) /etc/timezone and the whole zoneinfo directory tree are not supported.
  68. To set the timezone, set the TZ environment variable as specified in
  69. http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/basedefs/xbd_chap08.html
  70. or you may also create an /etc/TZ file of a single line, ending with a
  71. newline, containing the TZ setting. For example
  72. echo CST6CDT > /etc/TZ
  73. 3) Currently, locale specific eras and alternate digits are not supported.
  74. They are on my TODO list.
  75. 4) The extension fields tm_gmtoff and tm_zone, even prefixed with "__", are
  76. not currently supported as they aren't required by SUSv3 and I didn't
  77. need them when I wrote the time code.
  78. wide char support
  79. -----------------
  80. 1) The only multibyte encoding to be supported will be UTF-8. The various
  81. ISO-8859-* encodings will be (optionally) supported. The internal
  82. representation of wchar's is assumed to be 31 bit unicode values in
  83. native endian representation. Also, the underlying char encoding is
  84. assumed to match ASCII in the range 0-0x7f.
  85. locale support
  86. --------------
  87. 1) The target for support is SUSv3 locale functionality. While nl_langinfo
  88. has been extended, similar to glibc, it only returns values for related
  89. locale entries.
  90. 2) Currently, collation support is being implemented.
  91. stdio
  92. -----
  93. 1) For printf, %a, %A, and floating point locale-specific grouping are not
  94. yet implemented. Also, conversion of large magnitude floating-point values
  95. suffers a loss of precision due to the algorithm used. The conversion
  96. function was written before uClibc had proper semi-numerical macros/functions.
  97. This code is slated to be rewritten after the i10n/i18n work is completed.
  98. 2) uClibc's printf is much stricter than glibcs, especially regarding positional
  99. args. The entire format string is parsed first and an error is returned if
  100. a problem is detected. Also, currently at most 10 positional args are allowed
  101. although this is configurable.
  102. 3) BUFSIZ is currently 256. No attempt is made at automatic tuning of internal
  103. buffer sizes for stdio streams. In fact, the stdio code in general sacrifices
  104. sophistication/performace for minimal size.
  105. 4) uClibc allows glibc-like custom printf functions. However, while not
  106. currently checked, the specifier must be <= 0x7f.
  107. 5) uClibc allows glibc-like custom streams. However, no in-buffer seeking is
  108. done.
  109. 6) uClibc's scanf still needs work.
  110. 7) The functions fcloseall() and __fpending() can behave differently than their
  111. glibc counterparts.
  112. 8) uClibc's setvbuf is more restrictive about when it can be called than glibc's
  113. is. The standards specify that setvbuf must occur before any other operations
  114. take place on the stream.
  115. 9) Right now, %m is not handled properly by printf when the format uses positional
  116. args.
  117. More to follow as I think of it...