Original author(s) | Roland McGrath |
---|---|
Developer(s) | GNU Project |
Initial release | 1987[1] |
Stable release | 2.15 / 21 March 2012[2] |
Development status | Active |
Written in | C |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Runtime library |
License | GNU Lesser General Public License |
Website | www.gnu.org/software/libc |
The GNU C Library, commonly known as glibc, is the GNU Project's implementation of the C standard library. Originally written by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) for the GNU operating system, the library's development had been overseen by a committee since 2001,[3] with Ulrich Drepper[4] as the lead contributor and maintainer. In March 2012, the steering committee voted to disband itself, in favor of a community-driven development process, with Ryan Arnold, Maxim Kuvyrkov, Joseph Myers, Carlos O'Donell, and Alexandre Oliva as non-decision making project stewards.[5][6]
Released under the GNU Lesser General Public License, glibc is free software.
Contents |
History
glibc was initially written mostly by Roland McGrath, working for the Free Software Foundation (FSF) in the 1980s.
In February 1988, FSF described glibc as having nearly completed the functionality required by ANSI C.[7] By 1992, it had the ANSI C-1989 and POSIX.1-1990 functions implemented and work was under way on POSIX.2.[8]
A temporary fork
In the early 1990s, the developers of the Linux kernel forked glibc. Their fork, called "Linux libc", was maintained separately for years and released versions 2 through 5.
When FSF released glibc 2.0 in January 1997, it had much more complete POSIX standards support, better internationalisation/multilingual support, support for IPv6, 64-bit data access, support for multithreaded applications, future version compatibility support, and the code was more portable.[9] At this point, the Linux kernel developers discontinued their fork and returned to using FSF's glibc.[10]
The last used version of Linux libc used the internal name (soname) libc.so.5. Following on from this, glibc 2.x on Linux uses the soname libc.so.6[11] (Alpha and IA64 architectures now use libc.so.6.1, instead). The soname is often abbreviated as libc6 (for example in the package name in Debian) following the normal conventions for libraries.
According to Richard Stallman, the changes that had been made in Linux libc could not be merged back into glibc because the authorship status of that code was unclear and the GNU project is quite strict about recording copyright and authors.[12]
Version history
This version history uses dates from the ChangeLog files packaged in the 2.13 release.
Version | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|
2.15 | March 2012 | |
2.14 | June 2011 | |
2.13 | January 2011 | |
2.12 | May 2010 | Used in RHEL 6 |
2.11 | October 2009 | Used in SLES 11, eglibc 2.11 used in Debian , Squeeze |
2.10 | May 2009 | |
2.9 | November 2008 | |
2.8 | April 2008 | |
2.7 | October 2007 | Debian 5 (Lenny) |
2.6 | May 2007 | |
2.5 | September 2006 | Used in RHEL 5 |
2.4 | March 2006 | Standard for LSB 4.0, Used in SLES 10 |
2.3.4 | December 2004 | Standard for LSB 3.0 |
2.3.3 | December 2003 | |
2.3.2 | February 2003 | |
2.3.1 | October 2002 | |
2.3 | October 2002 | |
2.2.4 | July 2001 | |
2.2.3 | March 2001 | |
2.2.2 | February 2001 | |
2.2.1 | January 2001 | |
2.2 | November 2000 | |
2.1.1 | March 1999 | |
2.1 | February 1999 | |
2.0.95 | July 1998 | |
2.0.91 | December 1997 | |
2.0.2 | February 1997 | |
2.0.1 | January 1997 | |
2.0 | January 1997 | |
1.90 – 1.102 | May 1996 – January 1997 | |
1.01 – 1.09.3 | March 1992 – December 1994 | |
1.0 | February 1992 | |
0.1 – 0.6 | Oct 1991 – February 1992 |
Supported hardware and kernels
Glibc is used in systems that run many different kernels and different hardware architectures. Its most common use is in systems using the Linux kernel on x86 hardware, however, officially supported hardware includes: x86, Motorola 680x0, DEC Alpha, PowerPC, ETRAX CRIS, s390, and SPARC. It officially supports the Hurd and Linux kernels. Additionally, there are heavily patched versions that run on the kernels of FreeBSD and NetBSD (from which Debian GNU/kFreeBSD and Debian GNU/NetBSD systems are built, respectively), as well as the kernel of OpenSolaris.[13] It is also used (in an edited form) and named libroot.so in BeOS and Haiku.
Functionality
glibc provides the functionality required by the Single UNIX Specification, POSIX (1c, 1d, and 1j) and some of the functionality required by ISO C99, Berkeley Unix (BSD) interfaces, the System V Interface Definition (SVID) and the X/Open Portability Guide (XPG), Issue 4.2, with all extensions common to XSI (X/Open System Interface) compliant systems along with all X/Open UNIX extensions.
In addition, glibc also provides extensions that have been deemed useful or necessary while developing GNU.
Use in small devices
glibc has been criticized as being "bloated" and slower than other libraries in the past, e.g. by Linus Torvalds[14] and embedded Linux programmers. For this reason, several alternative C standard libraries have been created which emphasize a smaller footprint. Among them are Bionic (based mostly on libc from BSD and used in Android[15]), dietlibc, uClibc, Newlib, Klibc, and EGLIBC (used in Debian, Ubuntu and ArkLinux).[16]
However, many small-device projects use GNU libc over the smaller alternatives because of its application support, standards compliance, and completeness. Examples include Openmoko[17] and Familiar Linux for iPaq handhelds (when using the GPE display software).[18]
See also
References
- ^ A turning point for GNU libc, By Jonathan Corbet, March 28, 2012, LWN.net
- ^ Glibc 2.15 release announcement
- ^ "glibc homepage". http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/. "In 2001 The GNU C Library Steering Committee ..., was formed and currently consists of Mark Brown, Paul Eggert, Andreas Jaeger, Jakub Jelinek, Roland McGrath and Andreas Schwab."
- ^ http://www.linkedin.com/in/ulrichdrepper
- ^ http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-03/msg01038.html
- ^ http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-03/msg01040.html
- ^ "http://www.gnu.org/bulletins/bull4.html". http://www.gnu.org/bulletins/bull4.html. "Most libraries are done. Roland McGrath [...] has a nearly complete set of ANSI C library functions. We hope they will be ready some time this spring."
- ^ "GNU's Bulletin, vol. 1 no. 12". http://www.gnu.org/bulletins/bull12.html. "It now contains all of the ANSI C-1989 and POSIX.1-1990 functions, and work is in progress on POSIX.2 and Unix functions (BSD and System V)"
- ^ Elliot Lee (2001). "A Technical Comparison of glibc 2.x With Legacy System Libraries". Archived from the original on 11 April 2004. http://web.archive.org/web/20040411191201/http://people.redhat.com/~sopwith/old/glibc-vs-libc5.html.
- ^ "Forking: it could even happen to you". http://www.linux.com/archive/feature/3874. "the split between GNU LIBC and the Linux LIBC -- it went on for years while Linux stabilized, and then the forks re-merged into one project"
- ^ "Fear of Forking essay, see "6. glibc --> Linux libc --> glibc"". http://linuxmafia.com/faq/Licensing_and_Law/forking.html.
- ^ "Fear of Forking, footnote on Stallman's merge comments". http://linuxmafia.com/faq/Licensing_and_Law/forking.html#foot25.
- ^ Bartley, David; Michael Spang. "GNU/kOpenSolaris (GNU libc/base + OpenSolaris kernel)". http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/~dtbartle/opensolaris/. Retrieved 2008-12-16.
- ^ Linus Torvalds: Posting to the glibc mailing list, 9 January 2002 19:02:37
- ^ Bionic libc README
- ^ EGLIBC
- ^ "OpenMoko components". http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/OpenMoko. "We will use glibc (not uClibC) ... The alternatives may save more space and be more optimized, but are more likely to give us integration headaches"
- ^ "Re: [Familiar] Which glibc for Familiar 0.8.4 ?". http://marc.info/?l=familiar&m=118666899424374&w=2. "Question: which version of the GLIBC was used to build the Familiar 0.8.4 ? Answer: 2.3.3"
External links
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