From 6f090c1d8d226d214edd8958d0df561513b0547f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@postgresql.org>
Date: Sat, 19 Jan 2019 20:36:07 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] Revert "Add valgrind suppressions for wcsrtombs
 optimizations"

This reverts commit 41344896364c4bf2229ec590c95cf23a6bec928e.

Per discussion, it's not desirable to add valgrind suppressions for
outside our own code base (e.g. glibc in this case), especially when
the suppressions may be platform-specific. There are better ways to
deal with that, e.g. by providing local suppressions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/90ac0452-e907-e7a4-b3c8-15bd33780e62%402ndquadrant.com
---
 src/tools/valgrind.supp | 36 ------------------------------------
 1 file changed, 36 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/tools/valgrind.supp b/src/tools/valgrind.supp
index 7151d24ad31..5f15ac13afd 100644
--- a/src/tools/valgrind.supp
+++ b/src/tools/valgrind.supp
@@ -212,39 +212,3 @@
    Memcheck:Cond
    fun:PyObject_Realloc
 }
-
-# wcsrtombs uses some clever optimizations internally, which to valgrind
-# may look like access to uninitialized data. For example AVX2 instructions
-# load data in 256-bit chunks, irrespectedly of wchar length. gconv does
-# somethink similar by loading data in 32bit chunks and then shifting the
-# data internally. Neither of those actually uses the uninitialized part
-# of the buffer, as far as we know.
-#
-# https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/90ac0452-e907-e7a4-b3c8-15bd33780e62@2ndquadrant.com
-
-{
-   wcsnlen_optimized
-   Memcheck:Cond
-   ...
-   fun:wcsrtombs
-   fun:wcstombs
-   fun:wchar2char
-}
-
-{
-   wcsnlen_optimized_addr32
-   Memcheck:Addr32
-   ...
-   fun:wcsrtombs
-   fun:wcstombs
-   fun:wchar2char
-}
-
-{
-   gconv_transform_internal
-   Memcheck:Cond
-   fun:__gconv_transform_internal_utf8
-   fun:wcsrtombs
-   fun:wcstombs
-   fun:wchar2char
-}
-- 
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