s of the
Linux kernel. and GNU C Library together form the
Linux API. After compilation, the binaries offer an
ABI. The glibc project was initially written mostly by Roland McGrath, working for the
Free Software Foundation (FSF) in the summer of 1987 as a teenager. In February 1988, FSF described glibc as having nearly completed the functionality required by
ANSI C. By 1992, it had the ANSI C-1989 and POSIX.1-1990 functions implemented and work was under way on POSIX.2. In September 1995 Ulrich Drepper made his first contribution to the glibc and by 1997 most commits were made by him. Drepper held the maintainership position for many years and until 2012 accumulated 63% of all commits to the project. In May 2009, glibc was migrated to a
Git repository. In 2014, glibc suffered from an ABI breakage bug on s390. In July 2017, 30 years after he started glibc, Roland McGrath announced his departure, "declaring myself maintainer emeritus and withdrawing from direct involvement in the project. These past several months, if not the last few years, have proven that you don't need me anymore". In 2021, the
copyright assignment requirement to the
Free Software Foundation was removed from the project.
Fork and variant In 1994, the developers of the
Linux kernel forked glibc. Their fork, "Linux libc", was maintained separately until around 1998. Because the copyright attribution was insufficient, changes could not be merged back to the GNU Libc. When the FSF released glibc 2.0 in January 1997, the kernel developers discontinued Linux libc due to glibc 2.0's superior compliance with POSIX standards. glibc 2.0 also had better
internationalization and more in-depth translation,
IPv6 capability, 64-bit data access, facilities for multithreaded applications, future version compatibility, and the code was more portable. The last-used version of Linux libc used the internal name (
soname) . Following on from this, glibc 2.x on Linux uses the soname In 2009,
Debian and a number of
derivatives switched from glibc to the variant eglibc. Eglibc was supported by a
consortium consisting of
Freescale,
MIPS,
MontaVista and
Wind River. It contained changes that made it more suitable for
embedded usage and had added support for architectures that were not supported by glibc, such as the
PowerPC e500. The code of eglibc was merged back into glibc at version 2.20. Since 2014, eglibc is discontinued. The
Yocto Project and Debian also moved back to glibc since the release of
Debian Jessie.
Steering committee Starting in 2001 the library's development had been overseen by a committee, with Ulrich Drepper kept as the lead contributor and maintainer. The
steering committee installation was surrounded by a public controversy, as it was openly described by Ulrich Drepper as a failed
hostile takeover maneuver by
Richard Stallman. In March 2012, the steering committee voted to disband itself and remove Drepper in favor of a community-driven development process, with Ryan Arnold, Maxim Kuvyrkov, Joseph Myers, Carlos O'Donell, and Alexandre Oliva holding the responsibility of GNU maintainership (but no extra decision-making power). ==Functionality==