commit 900056024b75eae8b550d7fee1dec9e71f28344e
Author: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Mar 7 13:48:47 2016 +0100
test-skeleton.c: Do not set RLIMIT_DATA [BZ #19648]
With older kernels, it is mostly ineffective because it causes malloc
to switch from sbrk to mmap (potentially invalidating malloc testing
compared to what real appliations do). With newer kernels which
have switched to enforcing RLIMIT_DATA for mmap as well, some test
cases will fail in an unintended fashion because the limit which was
set previously does not include room for all mmap mappings.
Index: b/test-skeleton.c
===================================================================
--- a/test-skeleton.c
+++ b/test-skeleton.c
@@ -356,23 +356,6 @@ main (int argc, char *argv[])
setrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &core_limit);
#endif
-#ifdef RLIMIT_DATA
- /* Try to avoid eating all memory if a test leaks. */
- struct rlimit data_limit;
- if (getrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &data_limit) == 0)
- {
- if (TEST_DATA_LIMIT == RLIM_INFINITY)
- data_limit.rlim_cur = data_limit.rlim_max;
- else if (data_limit.rlim_cur > (rlim_t) TEST_DATA_LIMIT)
- data_limit.rlim_cur = MIN ((rlim_t) TEST_DATA_LIMIT,
- data_limit.rlim_max);
- if (setrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &data_limit) < 0)
- printf ("setrlimit: RLIMIT_DATA: %m\n");
- }
- else
- printf ("getrlimit: RLIMIT_DATA: %m\n");
-#endif
-
/* We put the test process in its own pgrp so that if it bogusly
generates any job control signals, they won't hit the whole build. */
setpgid (0, 0);