do not participate in the global symbols namespace, but rtld locks are
still replaced and functions are interposed. In particular,
__pthread_map_stacks_exec is resolved to the libc version. If a
library is loaded later, which requires adjustment of the stack
protection mode, rtld calls into libc __pthread_map_stacks_exec due to
the symbols scope. The libc version might recurse into binder and
recursively acquire rtld bind lock, causing the hang.
Make libc __pthread_map_stacks_exec() interposed, which synchronizes
rtld locks and version of the stack exec hook when libthr loaded,
regardless of the symbol scope control or symbol resolution order.
The __pthread_map_stacks_exec() symbol is removed from the private
version in libthr since libc symbol now operates correctly in presence
of libthr.
Reported and tested by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
wraps sendmsg(2) and recvmsg(2) into batch send and receive operation.
The goal of this implementation is only to provide API compatibility
with Linux.
The cancellation behaviour of the functions is not quite right, but
due to relative rare use of cancellation it is considered acceptable
comparing with the complexity of the correct implementation. If
functions are reimplemented as syscalls, the fix would come almost
trivial. The direct use of the syscall trampolines instead of libc
wrappers for sendmsg(2) and recvmsg(2) is to avoid data loss on
cancellation.
Submitted by: Boris Astardzhiev <boris.astardzhiev@gmail.com>
Discussed with: jilles (cancellation behaviour)
MFC after: 1 month
by application closing its stdin (i.e. STDIN_FILENO) prior to
calling readpassphrase WITHOUT setting RPP_STDIN. What happens
then is that the readpassphrase would open /dev/tty, and since
file descriptors are reused, the call would return first unused
fd, which is 0 which is also STDIN_FILENO. Then due to the usage
of "input != STDIN_FILENO" in the code to do its logic, that
would result in noecho flags not set on that file descriptor,
which was original issue I've been trying to fix.
In addition to that, the readpassphrase() would leak file
descriptor on its way out, so fix that one as well.
This problem can be tested with:
$ ssh-add - < /tmp/myprivate.key
The password will not be hidden as it should and ktrace will
show:
53326 ssh-add CALL open(0x80142443c,0x100002<O_RDWR|O_CLOEXEC>,<unused>0x165f030)
53326 ssh-add NAMI "/dev/tty"
53326 ssh-add RET open 0
53326 ssh-add CALL sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK,0x802eb1324,0x7fffffffd5e0)
53326 ssh-add RET sigprocmask 0
53326 ssh-add CALL sigaction(SIGALRM,0x7fffffffd630,0x7fffffffd610)
Instead of:
57690 ssh-add CALL open(0x80142443c,0x100002<O_RDWR|O_CLOEXEC>,<unused>0x165f030)
57690 ssh-add NAMI "/dev/tty"
57690 ssh-add RET open 4
57690 ssh-add CALL ioctl(0x4,TIOCGETA,0x7fffffffd860)
57690 ssh-add RET ioctl 0
57690 ssh-add CALL ioctl(0x4,TIOCSETAF,0x7fffffffd680)
57690 ssh-add RET ioctl 0
57690 ssh-add CALL sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK,0x802eb1324,0x7fffffffd620)
57690 ssh-add RET sigprocmask 0
57690 ssh-add CALL sigaction(SIGALRM,0x7fffffffd670,0x7fffffffd650)
For the case when the key is read from the file.
Technically this can also be workaround'ed at the application side
by not closing the STDIN_FILENO in the first place, but readpassphrase(3)
doesn't need to make any assumptions about that. Plus the file descriptor
leak confirms that this is an oversight, rather than a deliberate behaviour.
MFC after: 1 week
This bug could be reproduced easily by calling sem_open() with O_CREAT |
O_EXCL on a semaphore that is already open in the process. The struct
sem_nameinfo would be freed while still in sem_list and later calls to
sem_open() or sem_close() could access freed memory.
PR: 206396
MFC after: 5 days
Set _PATH_DEFPATH to
/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin. This is the
path in the default class in the default /etc/login.conf,
excluding ~/bin which would not be expanded properly in a string
constant.
For normal logins, _PATH_DEFPATH is overridden by /etc/login.conf,
~/.login_conf or shell startup files. _PATH_DEFPATH is still used as a
default by execlp(), execvp(), posix_spawnp() and sh if PATH is not set, and
by cron. Especially the latter is a common trap (most recently in PR
204813).
PR: 204813
Reviewed by: secteam (delphij), alfred
i386 is the only current FreeBSD architecture that ever used a.out
format.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4687
Tracking these leads to situations where meta mode will consider the
file to be out of date if /bin/sh or /bin/ln are newer than the source
file. There's no reason for meta mode to do this as make is already
handling the rebuild dependency fine.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Move fdopen() up near other resource allocation like malloc(); do proper
deallocation on failure later on in the function.
Submitted by: Ramachandra Topannavar <rtopannavar@panasas.com>
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panasas, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4126
M lib/libc/gen/popen.c
MK_NIS == no by converting `i` back to an int, and instead cast the loop
comparison to `int`
The loop comparison is iterating the len(ns_dtab)-1, because
the last element is the sentinel tuple { NULL, NULL, NULL, }, so when
both HESOID and NIS are off, len(ns_dtab)-1 == 1 - 1 == 0, and the loop
is skipped because the expression is tautologically false
While here, convert `(sizeof(x) / sizeof(x[0]))` to `nitems(x)`
Tested with: clang 3.7.0, gcc 4.2.1, and gcc 4.9.4 [*] with MK_NIS={no,yes}
and by running bash -lc 'id -u && id -g && id'
* gcc 4.9.4 needs another patch in order for the compile to succeed
with -Werror with lib/libc/gen/getgrent.c
Reported by: jhibbits
Shell syntax is too complicated to detect command substitution and unquoted
operators reliably without implementing much of sh's parser. Therefore, have
sh do this detection.
While changing sh's support anyway, also read input from a pipe instead of
arguments to avoid {ARG_MAX} limits and improve privacy, and output count
and length using 16 instead of 8 digits.
The basic concept is:
execl("/bin/sh", "sh", "-c", "freebsd_wordexp ${1:+\"$1\"} -f "$2",
"", flags & WRDE_NOCMD ? "-p" : "", <pipe with words>);
The WRDE_BADCHAR error is still implemented in libc. POSIX requires us to
fail strings containing unquoted braces with code WRDE_BADCHAR. Since this
is normally not a syntax error in sh, there is still a need for checking
code in libc, we_check().
The new we_check() is an optimistic check that all the characters
<newline> | & ; < > ( ) { }
are quoted. To avoid duplicating too much sh logic, such characters are
permitted when quoting characters are seen, even if the quoting characters
may themselves be quoted. This code reports all WRDE_BADCHAR errors; bad
characters that get past it and are a syntax error in sh return WRDE_SYNTAX.
Although many implementations of WRDE_NOCMD erroneously allow some command
substitutions (and ours even documented this), there appears to be code that
relies on its security (codesearch.debian.net shows quite a few uses).
Passing untrusted data to wordexp() still exposes a denial of service
possibility and a fairly large attack surface.
Reviewed by: wblock (man page only)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Security: fixes command execution with wordexp(untrusted, WRDE_NOCMD)
The old code was exponential in the number of asterisks in the pattern.
However, once a match has been found upto the next asterisk, the previous
asterisks are no longer relevant.
comment above, POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGMASK and POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF
handlers used libthr interposed functions instead of syscalls.
Noted by: jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 6 days
are aliases for the syscall stubs and are plt-interposed, to the
libc-private aliases of internally interposed sigprocmask() etc.
Since e.g. _sigaction is not interposed by libthr, calling signal()
removes thr_sighandler() from the handler slot etc. The result was
breaking signal semantic and rtld locking.
The added __libc_sigprocmask and other symbols are hidden, they are
not exported and cannot be called through PLT. The setjmp/longjmp
functions for x86 were changed to use direct calls, and since
PIC_PROLOGUE only needed for functional PLT indirection on i386, it is
removed as well.
The PowerPC bug of calling the syscall directly in the setjmp/longjmp
implementation is kept as is.
Reported by: Pete French <petefrench@ingresso.co.uk>
Tested by: Michiel Boland <boland37@xs4all.nl>
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Distinguish between WRDE_BADVAL and WRDE_SYNTAX based on when the error
occurred (parsing or execution), not based on whether WRDE_UNDEF was passed.
Also, return WRDE_NOSPACE for a few more unexpected results from sh.
The functionality of the wordexp builtin is easily replaced using normal
shell code, although performance is slightly worse.
This does not mean that wordexp() will remain shell-independent -- a fully
reliable implementation of WRDE_NOCMD is really only possible using
extensions to the shell, or by adding much of the shell's code to libc.
the 'user' sysctl tree, which have all been coming back 0 or empty
since r240176.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2945
Reviewed by: sbruno
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
as seek to teh last location saved will still work. This is needed for Samba
to be able to correctly handle delete requests from windows. This does not
completely fix seekdir when deletes are present but fixes the worst of the
problems. The real solution must involve some changes to the API for eh VFS
and getdirentries(2).
Obtained from: Panzura inc
MFC after: 1 week
kernel, but keep explanation of the old ps_strings structure to make
it clear what sanity check tries to accomplish.
Noted by: Oliver Pinter <oliver.pinter@hardenedbsd.org>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
waitid() function is required to be cancellable by the standard. The
wait6() and ppoll() follow the other syscalls in their groups.
Reviewed by: jhb, jilles (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
dependent functions have been implemented, but this is enough for world.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2132
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When following symlinks, fts returned FTS_SLNONE when fstatat(flag=0)
failed, but a subsequent fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) succeeded. This
incorrectly triggered if a filename existed to be read from the directory,
was deleted before the fstatat(flag=0) and created again after the
fstatat(flag=0).
Fix this by only returning FTS_SLNONE if the result from
fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) is actually a symlink. If it is not a
symlink, treat it as if fstatat(flag=0) succeeded.
PR: 196724
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
Per Austin group issue #884, sh should not import IFS from the environment
but always set it to $' \t\n'. For wordexp(), however, it is documented and
useful for it to use IFS from the environment.
Since sh currently imports IFS from the environment, this change has no
functional effect.
MFC after: 1 week
Commit r279154 changed the API and ABI significantly, and {NZERO} is still
wrong.
Also, preserve errno on success instead of setting it to 0.
PR: 189821
Reported by: bde
Relnotes: yes
Our man page already documented this partially but now
we have some consistent behavior.
PR: 136669
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS rev. 1.31, 1.33)
Relnotes: yes
MFC after: 3 weeks
rlim_t is at least as large as long, so we don't need the
extra variable to keep the intermediate step. We don't
need the volatile either.
The code was tested on i386 and amd64.
Suggested by: bde
X-MFC with: r278803
As a followup to r278363, there is one more case where
stayopen can be accessed uninitialized, but even after
swapping arguments, access is possible in some other
cases so prevent it completely by initializing stayopen.
CID: 1018729
CID: 1018732
The existing implementation had a broken comparison that could
overflow and return confusing values. Replace this with a check
that avoids the overflow before it happens.
Consistently return a maximum value also on the case of negative
arguments since negative is considered an overflow and means
infinity for our current setrlimit().
New revamped version is credited to Bruce Evans.
CID: 1199295
MFC after: 1 week
particular, stdio locking was affected.
Reported and tested by: "Matthew D. Fuller" <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
The existing implementation had a broken comparison that could overflow.
Replace this with a check that avoids the overflow before it happens.
Consistently return a maximum value also on the case of negative
arguments since negative is considered an overflow and means
infinity for our current setrlimit().
Discussed with: bde (rather extensively)
CID: 1199295
MFC after: 1 week
In a couple of cases a variable "stayopen" can be checked
unitialized. This is of no danger as the complementary
condition is false but prevent the access by switching
the checks.
CID: 1018729
CID: 1018732
This was a local addition to the original change from NetBSD.
Being this libc there is some chance for it to interfere with
user's cget*() functions usage. The memory leak was finely
plugged by r278300.
Pointed out by: ache
Only i386 and amd64 provide a non-trivial __getcontextx(). Use a common
trivial implementation in gen/ for other architectures, rather than
copying the file to each MD subdirectory.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1472
cancellation-handling code in the libthr. Translate some syscalls
into their more generic counterpart, and remove translated syscalls
from the table.
List of the affected syscalls:
creat, open -> openat
raise -> thr_kill
sleep, usleep -> nanosleep
pause -> sigsuspend
wait, wait3, waitpid -> wait4
Suggested and reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
(or loading a dso linked to libthr.so into process which was not
linked against threading library).
- Remove libthr interposers of the libc functions, including
__error(). Instead, functions calls are indirected through the
interposing table, similar to how pthread stubs in libc are already
done. Libc by default points either to syscall trampolines or to
existing libc implementations. On libthr load, libthr rewrites the
pointers to the cancellable implementations already in libthr. The
interposition table is separate from pthreads stubs indirection
table to not pull pthreads stubs into static binaries.
- Postpone the malloc(3) internal mutexes initialization until libthr
is loaded. This avoids recursion between calloc(3) and static
pthread_mutex_t initialization.
- Reinstall signal handlers with wrapper on libthr load. The
_rtld_is_dlopened(3) is used to avoid useless calls to sigaction(2)
when libthr is statically referenced from the main binary.
In the process, fix openat(2), swapcontext(2) and setcontext(2)
interposing. The libc symbols were exported at different versions
than libthr interposers. Export both libc and libthr versions from
libc now, with default set to the higher version from libthr.
Remove unused and disconnected swapcontext(3) userspace implementation
from libc/gen.
No objections from: deischen
Tested by: pho, antoine (exp-run) (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
In r228193 the test of CONNPRIV have been moved to before the _usleep
and send in vsyslog(). When syslogd restarts, this would prevent the
message being logged after the disconnect/connect dance for
scenario #1.
PR: 194751
Submitted by: Peter Creath <pjcreath+freebsd gmail com>
Reviewed By: glebius
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1227
It is automatically set when -fPIC is passed to the compiler.
Reviewed by: dim, kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1179
in a separate word from the _count. This does not permit both items to
be updated atomically in a portable manner. As a result, sem_post()
must always perform a system call to safely clear _has_waiters.
This change removes the _has_waiters field and instead uses the high bit
of _count as the _has_waiters flag. A new umtx object type (_usem2) and
two new umtx operations are added (SEM_WAIT2 and SEM_WAKE2) to implement
these semantics. The older operations are still supported under the
COMPAT_FREEBSD9/10 options. The POSIX semaphore API in libc has
been updated to use the new implementation. Note that the new
implementation is not compatible with the previous implementation.
However, this only affects static binaries (which cannot be helped by
symbol versioning). Binaries using a dynamic libc will continue to work
fine. SEM_MAGIC has been bumped so that mismatched binaries will error
rather than corrupting a shared semaphore. In addition, a padding field
has been added to sem_t so that it remains the same size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D961
Reported by: adrian
Reviewed by: kib, jilles (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Norse
previous seek location was 0. Without this, readdir() would see
dd_loc of zero and call getdirentries() which would start reading
entries at the current seek location of the directory ignoring the
first batch of entries. Also, rewinddir() should always seek so that
it reads the directory from the beginning to get updated entries.
PR: 192935
Reported by: iron@mail.ua
MFC after: 3 days
requires the return value of telldir() to equal the value passed to
seekdir(). The current seekdir code with SINGLEUSE enabled breaks
this case as each call to telldir() allocates a new cookie. Instead,
remove the SINGLEUSE code and change telldir() to look for an existing
cookie for the directory's current location rather than always creating
a new cookie.
CR: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D490
PR: 121656
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
after an intervening call to rewinddir() is undefined, so reclaim any
pending telldir() cookies in the directory when rewinddir() is called.
CR: D459
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
arc4random.c
- CVS rev. 1.22
Change arc4random_uniform() to calculate ``2**32 % upper_bound'' as
``-upper_bound % upper_bound''. Simplifies the code and makes it the
same on both ILP32 and LP64 architectures, and also slightly faster on
LP64 architectures by using a 32-bit remainder instead of a 64-bit
remainder.
- CVS rev. 1.23
Spacing
readpassphrase.c
-CVS rev. v 1.24
most obvious unsigned char casts for ctype
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 5 days
- In the unionfs case, opendir() and fdopendir() read the directory's full
contents and cache it. This cache is not refreshed when rewinddir() is
called, so rewinddir() will not notice updates to a directory. Fix this
by splitting the code to fetch a directory's contents out of
__opendir_common() into a new _filldir() function and call this from
rewinddir() when operating on a unionfs directory.
- If rewinddir() is called on a directory opened with fdopendir() before
any directory entries are fetched, rewinddir() will not adjust the seek
location of the backing file descriptor. If the file descriptor passed
to fdopendir() had a non-zero offset, the rewinddir() will not rewind to
the beginning. Fix this by always seeking back to 0 in rewinddir().
This means the dd_rewind hack can also be removed.
While here, add missing locking to rewinddir().
CR: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D312
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
This includes:
o All directories named *ia64*
o All files named *ia64*
o All ia64-specific code guarded by __ia64__
o All ia64-specific makefile logic
o Mention of ia64 in comments and documentation
This excludes:
o Everything under contrib/
o Everything under crypto/
o sys/xen/interface
o sys/sys/elf_common.h
Discussed at: BSDcan
actual file storing the semaphore object is different from the file
created on the first open. Store the file st_dev and st_ino members
of the struct stat in the semaphore structure on open, and compare
them with the attributes of the opened file to detect unlink and
re-creation.
This fixes an issue of sem_unlink(3) failing to flush the named entry
in the semaphore list for the current or remote process, making
sem_unlink(3) not correctly operating if the unlinked semaphore is
still opened.
Reported by: Joris Giovannangeli <joris@giovannangeli.fr>
PR: standards/189353
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
pointer for the login name (result). Make sure to handle that
case properly. Improve robustness by checking namelen and then
nul-terminating the provided buffer to simplify subsequent logic.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Make fts_open(3) treat an empty pathname like any other pathname that cannot
be lstatted because of [ENOENT].
It is rather confusing if rm -rf file1 "" file2 does not remove file1 and
file2.
PR: bin/187264
MFC after: 2 weeks
if not already defined. This allows building libc from outside of
lib/libc using a reach-over makefile.
A typical use-case is to build a standard ILP32 version and a COMPAT32
version in a single iteration by building the COMPAT32 version using a
reach-over makefile.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
If rare conditions such as concurrent conflicting manipulation of the
filesystem occur, fts_read() frees the current FTSENT without adjusting
the pointers in the FTS accordingly. A later fts_close() then frees the
same FTSENT again.
Reported by: pho
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
device is an active kernel console and "off" otherwise. This is designed to
allow serial-booting x86 systems to provide a login prompt on the serial line
by default without providing one on all systems by default.
Comments and suggestions by: grehan, dteske, jilles
MFC after: 1 month
As a result, the kernel needs to process shorter pathnames if fts is not
changing directories (if fts follows symlinks (-L option to utilities), fts
cannot open "." or FTS_NOCHDIR was specified).
Side effect: If pathnames exceed PATH_MAX, [ENAMETOOLONG] is not hit at the
stat stage but later (opendir or application fts_accpath) or not at all.
Even though not all race conditions can be fixed if the 'e' option is not
used, still fix some race conditions using pipe2():
* Prevent both ends of the pipe from leaking to a concurrent popen().
* Prevent the child process's end of the pipe from leaking to any concurrent
fork and exec.
This change also simplifies the code.
This ensures strerror() and friends continue to work correctly even if a
(non-PIE) executable linked against an older libc imports sys_errlist (which
causes sys_errlist to refer to the executable's copy with a size fixed when
that executable was linked).
The executable's use of sys_errlist remains broken because it uses the
current value of sys_nerr and may access past the bounds of the array.
Different from the message "Using sys_errlist from executables is not
ABI-stable" on freebsd-arch, this change does not affect the static library.
There seems no reason to prevent overriding the error messages in the static
library.
and CIFS file attributes as BSD stat(2) flags.
This work is intended to be compatible with ZFS, the Solaris CIFS
server's interaction with ZFS, somewhat compatible with MacOS X,
and of course compatible with Windows.
The Windows attributes that are implemented were chosen based on
the attributes that ZFS already supports.
The summary of the flags is as follows:
UF_SYSTEM: Command line name: "system" or "usystem"
ZFS name: XAT_SYSTEM, ZFS_SYSTEM
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM
This flag means that the file is used by the
operating system. FreeBSD does not enforce any
special handling when this flag is set.
UF_SPARSE: Command line name: "sparse" or "usparse"
ZFS name: XAT_SPARSE, ZFS_SPARSE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SPARSE_FILE
This flag means that the file is sparse. Although
ZFS may modify this in some situations, there is
not generally any special handling for this flag.
UF_OFFLINE: Command line name: "offline" or "uoffline"
ZFS name: XAT_OFFLINE, ZFS_OFFLINE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_OFFLINE
This flag means that the file has been moved to
offline storage. FreeBSD does not have any special
handling for this flag.
UF_REPARSE: Command line name: "reparse" or "ureparse"
ZFS name: XAT_REPARSE, ZFS_REPARSE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT
This flag means that the file is a Windows reparse
point. ZFS has special handling code for reparse
points, but we don't currently have the other
supporting infrastructure for them.
UF_HIDDEN: Command line name: "hidden" or "uhidden"
ZFS name: XAT_HIDDEN, ZFS_HIDDEN
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN
This flag means that the file may be excluded from
a directory listing if the application honors it.
FreeBSD has no special handling for this flag.
The name and bit definition for UF_HIDDEN are
identical to the definition in MacOS X.
UF_READONLY: Command line name: "urdonly", "rdonly", "readonly"
ZFS name: XAT_READONLY, ZFS_READONLY
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY
This flag means that the file may not written or
appended, but its attributes may be changed.
ZFS currently enforces this flag, but Illumos
developers have discussed disabling enforcement.
The behavior of this flag is different than MacOS X.
MacOS X uses UF_IMMUTABLE to represent the DOS
readonly permission, but that flag has a stronger
meaning than the semantics of DOS readonly permissions.
UF_ARCHIVE: Command line name: "uarch", "uarchive"
ZFS_NAME: XAT_ARCHIVE, ZFS_ARCHIVE
Windows name: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE
The UF_ARCHIVED flag means that the file has changed and
needs to be archived. The meaning is same as
the Windows FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE attribute, and
the ZFS XAT_ARCHIVE and ZFS_ARCHIVE attribute.
msdosfs and ZFS have special handling for this flag.
i.e. they will set it when the file changes.
sys/param.h: Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000047 for the
addition of new stat(2) flags.
chflags.1: Document the new command line flag names
(e.g. "system", "hidden") available to the
user.
ls.1: Reference chflags(1) for a list of file flags
and their meanings.
strtofflags.c: Implement the mapping between the new
command line flag names and new stat(2)
flags.
chflags.2: Document all of the new stat(2) flags, and
explain the intended behavior in a little
more detail. Explain how they map to
Windows file attributes.
Different filesystems behave differently
with respect to flags, so warn the
application developer to take care when
using them.
zfs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting the
UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY, UF_SYSTEM, UF_HIDDEN,
UF_REPARSE, UF_OFFLINE, and UF_SPARSE flags.
All of these flags are implemented using
attributes that ZFS already supports, so
the on-disk format has not changed.
ZFS currently doesn't allow setting the
UF_REPARSE flag, and we don't really have
the other infrastructure to support reparse
points.
msdosfs_denode.c,
msdosfs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting
UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM and UF_READONLY
in MSDOSFS.
It supported SF_ARCHIVED, but this has been
changed to be UF_ARCHIVE, which has the same
semantics as the DOS archive attribute instead
of inverse semantics like SF_ARCHIVED.
After discussion with Bruce Evans, change
several things in the msdosfs behavior:
Use UF_READONLY to indicate whether a file
is writeable instead of file permissions, but
don't actually enforce it.
Refuse to change attributes on the root
directory, because it is special in FAT
filesystems, but allow most other attribute
changes on directories.
Don't set the archive attribute on a directory
when its modification time is updated.
Windows and DOS don't set the archive attribute
in that scenario, so we are now bug-for-bug
compatible.
smbfs_node.c,
smbfs_vnops.c: Add support for UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM,
UF_READONLY and UF_ARCHIVE in SMBFS.
This is similar to changes that Apple has
made in their version of SMBFS (as of
smb-583.8, posted on opensource.apple.com),
but not quite the same.
We map SMB_FA_READONLY to UF_READONLY,
because UF_READONLY is intended to match
the semantics of the DOS readonly flag.
The MacOS X code maps both UF_IMMUTABLE
and SF_IMMUTABLE to SMB_FA_READONLY, but
the immutable flags have stronger meaning
than the DOS readonly bit.
stat.h: Add definitions for UF_SYSTEM, UF_SPARSE,
UF_OFFLINE, UF_REPARSE, UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY
and UF_HIDDEN.
The definition of UF_HIDDEN is the same as
the MacOS X definition.
Add commented-out definitions of
UF_COMPRESSED and UF_TRACKED. They are
defined in MacOS X (as of 10.8.2), but we
do not implement them (yet).
ufs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting
UF_ARCHIVE, UF_HIDDEN, UF_OFFLINE, UF_READONLY,
UF_REPARSE, UF_SPARSE, and UF_SYSTEM in UFS.
Alphabetize the flags that are supported.
These new flags are only stored, UFS does
not take any action if the flag is set.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Reviewed by: bde (earlier version)
function, but returns directory file descriptor instead of closing it.
Submitted by: Mariusz Zaborski <oshogbo@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2013
The variable _logname_valid is not exported via the version script;
therefore, change C and i386/amd64 assembler code to remove indirection
(which allowed interposition). This makes the code slightly smaller and
faster.
Also, remove #define PIC_GOT from i386/amd64 in !PIC mode. Without PIC,
there is no place containing the address of each variable, so there is no
possible definition for PIC_GOT.
I removed functionality not proposed for POSIX in Austin group issue #411.
A man page (my own) and test cases will follow in later commits.
PR: 176233
Submitted by: Jukka Ukkonen
any character including '\0', but our version replace escaped '\0'
with '\\'.
I.e. fnmatch("\\", "\\", 0) should not match while fnmatch("\\", "", 0)
should (Linux and NetBSD does the same). Was vice versa.
PR: 181129
MFC after: 1 week
check_deferred_signal() returns twice, since handle_signal() emulates
the return from the normal signal handler by sigreturn(2)ing the
passed context. Second return is performed on the destroyed stack
frame, because __fillcontextx() has already returned. This causes
undefined and bad behaviour, usually the victim thread gets SIGSEGV.
Avoid nested frame and the need to return from it by doing direct call
to getcontext() in the check_deferred_signal() and using a new private
libc helper __fillcontextx2() to complement the context with the
extended CPU state if the deferred signal is still present.
The __fillcontextx() is now unused, but is kept to allow older
libthr.so to be used with the new libc.
Mark __fillcontextx() as returning twice [1].
Reported by: pgj
Pointy hat to: kib
Discussed with: dim
Tested by: pgj, dim
Suggested by: jilles [1]
MFC after: 1 week
If 'e' is used, the kernel must support the recently added pipe2() system
call.
The use of pipe2() with O_CLOEXEC also fixes race conditions between
concurrent popen() calls from different threads, even if the close-on-exec
flag on the fd of the returned FILE is later cleared (because popen() closes
all file descriptors from earlier popen() calls in the child process).
Therefore, this approach should be used in all cases when pipe2() can be
assumed present.
The old version of popen() rejects "re" and "we" but treats "r+e" like "r+".
The ability to clear a file descriptor's close-on-exec flag via
posix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2() is in fact proposed in Austin Group issue
#411.
MFC after: 1 week
As per POSIX.1-2008, posix_spawn_file_actions_add* return [EBADF] if a file
descriptor is negative, not [EINVAL]. The bug was only in the manual page;
the code is correct.
MFC after: 1 week
The functions utx_active_add(), utx_active_remove(), utx_lastlogin_add() and
utx_log_add() set errno to 0 if they are successful. This not only violates
POSIX if pututxline() is successful, but may also overwrite a valid error
with 0 if, for example, utx_lastlogin_add() fails while utx_log_add()
succeeds.
Reviewed by: ed
signal.
- Fix the old ksem implementation for POSIX semaphores to not restart
sem_wait() or sem_timedwait() if interrupted by a signal.
MFC after: 1 week
Words in shell script are separated by spaces or tabs independent of the
value of IFS. The value of IFS is only relevant for the result of
substitutions. Therefore, there should be a space between 'wordexp' and the
words to be expanded, not an IFS character.
Paranoia might dictate that the shell ignore IFS from the environment (even
though our sh currently uses it), so do not depend on it in the new test
case.
multibyte support[0] and the new functions strenvisx and strsenvisx.
Add MLINKS for vis(3) functions add by this and the initial import from
NetBSD[1].
PR: bin/166364, bin/175418
Submitted by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <fbsd@opal.com>[0]
stefanf[1]
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
system call, which has a nice property - it never fails, so it is a bit
easier to use. If there is no support for capability mode in the kernel
the function will return false (not in a sandbox). If the kernel is compiled
with the support for capability mode, the function will return true or false
depending if the calling process is in the capability mode sandbox or not
respectively.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
* Reopen the directory using openat(fd, ".", ...) instead of opening the
pathname again. This fixes a race condition where the meaning of the
pathname changes and allows a reopen with fdopendir().
* Always reopen the directory for union stacks, not only when DTF_REWIND
is passed. Applications should be able to fchdir(dirfd(dir)) and
*at(dirfd(dir), ...). DTF_REWIND now does nothing.
There are uncommon cases where fts_safe_changedir() may be called with a
non-NULL name that is not "..". Do not block or worse if an attacker put (a
(symlink to) a fifo or device where a directory used to be.
MFC after: 1 week
path longer than this.
- Fix an unreached case of check against sizeof buf, which in turn leads
to an off-by-one nul byte write on the stack. The original condition
can never be satisfied because the passed boundary is the maximum value
that can be returned, so code was harmless.
MFC after: 1 month
NetBSD's. This output size limited versions of vis and unvis functions
as well as a set of vis variants that allow arbitrary characters to be
specified for encoding.
Finally, MIME Quoted-Printable encoding as described in RFC 2045 is
supported.
The changes were derived from what has been committed to NetBSD, with
modifications. These are:
1. Preserve the existsing GLOB_LIMIT behaviour by including the number
of matches to the set of parameters to limit.
2. Change some of the limits to avoid impacting normal use cases:
GLOB_LIMIT_STRING - change from 65536 to ARG_MAX so that glob(3)
can still provide a full command line of expanded names.
GLOB_LIMIT_STAT - change from 128 to 1024 for no other reason than
that 128 feels too low (it's not a limit that impacts the
behaviour of the test program listed in CVE-2010-2632).
GLOB_LIMIT_PATH - change from 1024 to 65536 so that glob(3) can
still provide a fill command line of expanded names.
3. Protect against buffer overruns when we hit the GLOB_LIMIT_STAT or
GLOB_LIMIT_READDIR limits. We append SEP and EOS to pathend in
those cases. Return GLOB_ABORTED instead of GLOB_NOSPACE when we
would otherwise overrun the buffer.
This change also modifies the existing behaviour of glob(3) in case
GLOB_LIMIT is specifies by limiting the *new* matches and not all
matches. This is an important distinction when GLOB_APPEND is set or
when the caller uses a non-zero gl_offs. Previously pre-existing
matches or the value of gl_offs would be counted in the number of
matches even though the man page states that glob(3) would return
GLOB_NOSPACE when gl_matchc or more matches were found.
The limits that cannot be circumvented are GLOB_LIMIT_STRING and
GLOB_LIMIT_PATH all others can be crossed by simply calling glob(3)
again and with GLOB_APPEND set.
The entire description above applies only when GLOB_LIMIT has been
specified of course. No limits apply when this flag isn't set!
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
equivalent to malloc(size). This eliminates the conditional expression
used for calling either realloc() or malloc() when realloc() will do
all the time.
free and clear the gl_pathv pointer in the glob_t structure. Such
breaks the invariant of the glob_t structure, as stated in the comment
right in front of the globextend() function. If gl_pathv was non-NULL,
then gl_pathc was > 0. Making gl_pathv a NULL pointer without also
setting gl_pathc to 0 is wrong.
Since we otherwise don't free the memory associated with a glob_t in
error cases, it's unlikely that this change will cause a memory leak
that wasn't already there to begin with. Callers of glob(3) must
call globfree(3) irrespective of whether glob(3) returned an error
or not.
libc.a and libc_p.a. In addition, define isnan in libm.a and libm_p.a,
but not in libm.so.
This makes it possible to statically link executables using both isnan
and isnanf with libc and libm.
Tested by: kargl
MFC after: 1 week
This adds two features:
* uid_from_user() and gid_from_group() as the reverse of user_from_uid()
and groups_from_gid().
* pwcache_userdb() and pwcache_groupdb() which allow alternative lookup
functions to be used. For example lookups from passwd and group
databases in a non-standard location.
This fixes a race condition where another thread may fork() before CLOEXEC
is set, unintentionally passing the descriptor to the child process.
This commit only adds O_CLOEXEC flags to open() or openat() calls where no
fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC) follows. The separate fcntl() call still
leaves a race window so it should be fixed later.
Because fts keeps internal file descriptors open across calls, making such
descriptors close-on-exec helps not only multi-threaded applications but
also single-threaded applications.
In particular, this prevents passing a temporary file descriptor for saving
the current directory to processes created via find -exec.