looper/subprojects/mpg123/doc/LARGEFILE

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2024-09-28 10:31:06 -07:00
The state from 1.32.0 on:
=========================
Yet again, things had to change. The previous state works fine for Unix (adjacent)
sytems, also MinGW stuff on Windows, but it still suffers from off_t being shifty
and not behaving as I expect, even, when people try to build mpg123 with rogue
compilers like MSVC, where off_t is always 32 bits, no largefile support, the whole
idea falls flat. I was pushed to introduce API without off_t where the user can
provide I/O and ensure largefile support and whatnot without being encumbered by
offsets possibly limited to 32 bits.
So this is a new set of API functions with the explicit suffix 64 (not _64), notably
simple functions like
int64_t mpg123_tell64()
but also
int mpg123_reader64()
which takes callbacks that work on int64_t, always. The internal reader code path
in libmpg123 uses either 32 bit or 64 bit offsets, but throughout the library,
it is 64 bits being used as if we supported large files everywhere. And in fact,
we do, if the user provides callbacks that are smart enough.
All existing offset-sensitive code paths are to be rephrased in terms of the new
portable API (portable, because the platform specifics of off_t implementation are
not present). All old API entry points in that regard become wrappers over this
portable API.
The build of libmpg123 needs explicit awareness of largefile support to properly
reason about which wrapper uses which types. It makes use of off_t at default
size and explicit off64_t if available. This results in this for a typical 32 bit
Linux system:
int64_t mpg123_tell64(); // passing on the internal int64_t value
off_t mpg123_tell(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
off_t mpg123_tell_32(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
off64_t mpg123_tell_64(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
A 64 bit Linux would have only these:
int64_t mpg123_tell64(); // passing on the internal int64_t value
off_t mpg123_tell(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
off_t mpg123_tell_64(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
This would look the same on a 32 bit system that also went for fixed 64 bit offsets,
or if you
#define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64
during build on a sensitive system. On a funny system that has 64 bit native integers
but still 32 bit off_t, this would also be:
int64_t mpg123_tell64(); // passing on the internal int64_t value
off_t mpg123_tell(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
off_t mpg123_tell_32(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
If this weird system would be also largefile-sensitive, you get the additional
off64_t mpg123_tell_64(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
entry point.
The whole point here: If you stick to mpg123_tell64(), you always can assume
64 bit offsets on any platform. If you also provide your own reader functions, you
can ensure it. Even if we don't properly do large file I/O in libmpg123 itself in
an MSVC build, users can provide it with their application. Providing a full mpg123
program binary along with it in that environment is not a current target. You want
the library.
The point that every platform gets the _64 suffix means that the header can still
do the renaming of function calls if client code defines _FILE_OFFSET_BITS and not
depend on any build-time switches for that. This is what we do officially now with
headers that are not preprocessed anymore, independent of platform.
The build, just assuming int64 is available, needs to know some bits:
- SIZEOF_OFF_T==8: Is the system 64 bit clean, anyway, with 64 bit off_t?
- LFS_LARGEFILE_64: Is there explicit 64 bit I/O for the 32 bit system?
This includes availability of off64_t.
If SIZEOF_OFF_T==8, there will be all 64 bit internal code and two wrappers:
off_t mpg123_tell(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
off_t mpg123_tell_64(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
The second question isn't even needed. If SIZEOF_OFF_T==4, you get
off_t mpg123_tell(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
off_t mpg123_tell_32(); // converting to 32 bit off_t (overflow check)
and the additional decision of LFS_LARGEFILE_64 gives actual 64 bit internal
reader code and the wrapper
off64_t mpg123_tell_64(); // converting to 64 bit off_t (no overflow)
along with that. There is nothing more to know about a system. I do not care how
large your long is. I only ask
1. How big is your off_t?
2. If small, can you give me some off64_t?
That's all what there is to it. The build is not even interested in whether off_t
changes size. This is a detail on the client side that it then gets the off64_t
versions. I do not support a system that allows changing off_t size _without_
off64_t being available.
The state from 1.15.4 on:
=========================
Regarding largefile setup, client apps can be built three ways:
1. _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64 (header maps to mpg123_open_64)
2. _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 32 (header maps to mpg123_open_32)
3. _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == <nothing> (header maps to mpg123_open)
The libmpg123 build needs to be prepared for everything. Also, it needs to keep
in mind the days before introducing large file support --- binaries should still
work with updated libmpg123. So, mpg123_open should always match what is the
default build on a platform without added settings. Those are the platform
variants:
1. 64 bit native system, long == off_t
libmpg123: mpg123_open
lfs_alias: mpg123_open_64 -> mpg123_open
lfs_wrap: <none>
2. largefile-sensitive, long = 32, off_t = 64 (if enabled)
libmpg123: mpg123_open_64
lfs_alias: mpg123_open_32 -> mpg123_open
lfs_wrap: mpg123_open -> mpg123_open_64
3. largefile, long = 32, off_t = 64 (FreeBSD)
libmpg123: mpg123_open
lfs_alias: mpg123_open_64 -> mpg123_open
lfs_wrap: <none>
This is what mpg123 does in version 1.15.4 and it works. Well, for cases 1
(Linux/Solaris x86-64) and 2 (Linux/Solaris x86). Case 3 needs to be added
properly. Actually, let's have a second look at case 2: When mpg123 is built
with --disable-largefile:
2a. largefile-sensitive, mpg123 built with off_t = 32 == long
libmpg123: mpg123_open
lfs_alias: mpg123_open_32 -> mpg123_open
lfs_wrap: <none>
So, this is still correct. Now, what about case 3? What does mpg123 do
currently, as of 1.15.4?
3a. largefile, long = 32, off_t = 64 (... and mpg123 not really aware of that)
libmpg123: mpg123_open
lfs_alias: mpg123_open_32(long) -> mpg123_open(off_t)
lfs_wrap: <none>
This is _wrong_. Luckily, this does not cause binary compatibility issues, as
mpg123_open_32 won't be called by anyone unless that someone tries to define
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=32, which is nonsense. Perhaps old FreeBSD binaries before
LFS times? Well, back then, there was no libmpg123. So let's ignore that case.
The issue at hand is that the alias should be from mpg123_open_64 to
mpg123_open, for clients that insist on defining _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64.
The change needed now is to fix the naming and also change the type the
alias functions use: It is not long int anymore!
Let's revisit case 1 for a moment: My old lfs_alias.c provides for the case
lfs_alias: mpg123_open -> mpg123_open_64. Is that actually possible?
What means enforcing _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 from the outside, which _could_
happen when libmpg123 is included someplace and folks are on the wrong side
of paranoid regarding this. So, there is
1a. 64 bit native system, long == off_t = 64 and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
libmpg123: mpg123_open_64
lfs_alias: mpg123_open -> mpg123_open_64
lfs_wrap: <none>
(Works also for any system with long == off_t in any width)
Likewise, there is largefile-sensitive system with enforced 32 bits:
2b. largefile-sensitive, mpg123 with enforced _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=32
libmpg123: mpg123_open_32
lfs_alias: mpg123_open -> mpg123_open_32
lfs_wrap: <none>
All cases are supported with this significant change from 1.15.4:
Make the aliases use a defined lfs_alias_t, which can be long or off_t,
depending on what is the default type for offsets on the platform.
Folks who try _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=32 on a system that only supports
64 bit get a linking error during mpg123 build (from the _64 aliases),
which I consider to be a feature.
I salute anyone who is not confused after reading this.