for the permission to create subdirectory (ACE4_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY)), it doesn't
really make sense for VOP_ACCESS(9). Also, many VOP_ACCESS(9) implementations
don't expect that. Make sure we don't confuse them.
Normally msgbufp is locked using Giant. Switch it to use the
msgbuf_lock. Instead of changing the tsleep() calls to msleep(), just
convert it to condvar(9).
In my opinion the locking around msgbuf_peekbytes() still remains
questionable. It looks like locks are dropped while performing copies of
multiple blocks to userspace, which may cause the msgbuf to be reset in
the mean time. At least getting it underneath from Giant should make it
a little easier for us to figure out how to solve that.
Reminded by: rdivacky
This improvements aims for avoiding further cache-misses in scheduler
specific functions which need to keep track of average thread running
time and further locking in places setting for this flag.
Reported by: jeff (originally), kris (currently)
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: Giuseppe Cocomazzi <sbudella at email dot it>
prepared bytes and next portion of transfer, inner loop of kern_sendfile()
aborts, not preparing next mbuf for socket buffer, and not modifying
any outer loop invariants. The thread loops in the outer loop forever.
Instead of breaking from inner loop, prepare only bytes that fit into
the socket buffer space.
In collaboration with: pho
Reviewed by: bz
PR: kern/138999
MFC after: 2 weeks
lock and curproc->p_sigacts->ps_mtx. Reschedule_signals may need to have
ps_mtx locked to decide and wakeup a thread, causing recursion on the
mutex.
Inform kern_sigprocmask() and reschedule_signals() about lock state
of the ps_mtx by new flag SIGPROCMASK_PS_LOCKED to avoid recursion.
Reported and tested by: keramida
MFC after: 1 month
well-known race condition, which elimination was the reason for the
function appearance in first place. If sigmask supplied as argument to
pselect() enables a signal, the signal might be delivered before thread
called select(2), causing lost wakeup. Reimplement pselect() in kernel,
making change of sigmask and sleep atomic.
Since signal shall be delivered to the usermode, but sigmask restored,
set TDP_OLDMASK and save old mask in td_oldsigmask. The TDP_OLDMASK
should be cleared by ast() in case signal was not gelivered during
syscall execution.
Reviewed by: davidxu
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
while in kernel mode, and later changing signal mask to block the
signal, was fixed for sigprocmask(2) and ptread_exit(3). The same race
exists for sigreturn(2), setcontext(2) and swapcontext(2) syscalls.
Use kern_sigprocmask() instead of direct manipulation of td_sigmask to
reschedule newly blocked signals, closing the race.
Reviewed by: davidxu
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
kern_sigprocmask() to properly notify other possible candidate threads
for signal delivery.
Since sigsuspend() shall only return to usermode after a signal was
delivered, do cursig/postsig loop immediately after waiting for
signal, repeating the wait if wakeup was spurious due to race with
other thread fetching signal from the process queue before us. Add
thread_suspend_check() call to allow the thread to be stopped or killed
while in loop.
Modify last argument of kern_sigprocmask() from boolean to flags,
allowing the function to be called with locked proc. Convertion of the
callers that supplied 1 to the old argument will be done in the next
commit, and due to SIGPROCMASK_OLD value equial to 1, code is formally
correct in between.
Reviewed by: davidxu
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
td_name[] arrays are actually MAXCOMLEN + 1 in size and a few places that
created shadow copies of these arrays were just using MAXCOMLEN.
- Prefer using sizeof() of an array type to explicit constants for the
array length in a few places.
- Ensure that all of p_comm[] and td_name[] is always zero'd during
execve() to guard against any possible information leaks. Previously
trailing garbage in p_comm[] could be leaked to userland in ktrace
record headers via td_name[].
Reviewed by: bde
sooner so it is always valid when a driver's identify routine is
called. Previously, new-bus would attempt to create the devclass for
a newly loaded driver in two separate places, once in
devclass_add_driver(), and again after devclass_add_driver() returned
in driver_module_handler(). Only the second lookup attempted to set a
device class' parent and set the devclass_t pointer specified in the
DRIVER_MODULE() macro. However, by the time it was executed, the
driver was already added to existing instances of the parent driver at
which point in time the new driver's identify routine would have been
invoked. The fix is to merge the two attempts and only create the
devclass once in devclass_add_driver() including setting the
devclass_t pointer passed to DRIVER_MODULE() before the driver is
added to any existing bus devices.
Reported by: avg
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
the memory or D-cache, depending on the semantics of the platform.
vm_sync_icache() is basically a wrapper around pmap_sync_icache(),
that translates the vm_map_t argumument to pmap_t.
o Introduce pmap_sync_icache() to all PMAP implementation. For powerpc
it replaces the pmap_page_executable() function, added to solve
the I-cache problem in uiomove_fromphys().
o In proc_rwmem() call vm_sync_icache() when writing to a page that
has execute permissions. This assures that when breakpoints are
written, the I-cache will be coherent and the process will actually
hit the breakpoint.
o This also fixes the Book-E PMAP implementation that was missing
necessary locking while trying to deal with the I-cache coherency
in pmap_enter() (read: mmu_booke_enter_locked).
The key property of this change is that the I-cache is made coherent
*after* writes have been done. Doing it in the PMAP layer when adding
or changing a mapping means that the I-cache is made coherent *before*
any writes happen. The difference is key when the I-cache prefetches.
- Introduce new SI_SUB_RANDOM point in boot sequence to make it
clear from where one may start using random(9). It should be as
early as possible, so place it just after SI_SUB_CPU where we
have some randomness on most platforms via get_cyclecount().
- Move stack protector initialization to be after SI_SUB_RANDOM
as before this point we have no randomness at all. This fixes
stack protector to actually protect stack with some random guard
value instead of a well-known one.
Note that this patch doesn't try to address arc4random(9) issues.
With current code, it will be implicitly seeded by stack protector
and hence will get the same entropy as random(9). It will be
securely reseeded once /dev/random is feeded by some entropy from
userland.
Submitted by: Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
MFC after: 3 days
Now that buffers are deallocated lazily, we should not use
tty*q_getsize() to obtain the buffer size to calculate the low
watermarks. Doing this may cause the watermark to be placed outside the
typical buffer size.
This caused some regressions after my previous commit to the TTY code,
which allows pseudo-devices to resize the buffers as well.
Reported by: yongari, dougb
MFC after: 1 week
Devices that don't implement param() (which means they don't support
hardware parameters such as flow control, baud rate) hardcode the baud
rate to TTYDEF_SPEED. This means the buffer size cannot be configured,
which is a little inconvenient when using canonical mode with big lines
of input, etc.
Make it adjustable, but do clamp it between B50 and B115200 to prevent
awkward buffer sizes. Remove the baud rate assignment from
/etc/gettytab. Trust the kernel to fill in a proper value.
Reported by: Mikolaj Golub <to my trociny gmail com>
MFC after: 1 month
It turned out I did add the code to use the init state devices to set
the termios structure when opening the device, but it seems I totally
forgot to add the bits required to force the actual locking of flags
through the lock state devices.
Reported by: ru
MFC after: 1 week (to be discussed)
and do not relocate the binary to ET_DYN_LOAD_ADDR. This allows for the
binary author to influence address map of the process. In particular,
when the binary is actually an interpeter, this allows to have almost
usual process address map.
Communicate the relocation bias of the mapping for interpeter-less
ET_DYN binary, that is interperter itself, in AT_BASE aux entry. This
way, rtld is able to find its dynamic structure and relocate itself.
Note that mapbase in the rtld is still wrong and requires further
fixing.
Reported and tested by: rwatson
Discussed with: kan
MFC after: 3 days
Applications like shells expect EOF to give no graphical output, while
our implementation prints ^D by default (tunable with stty echoctl).
Make the new implementation behave like the old TTY code. Print two
backspaces afterwards.
Reported by: koitsu
MFC after: 1 month
handlers. This is primarily intended as a way to allow devices that use
multiple interrupts (e.g. MSI) to meaningfully distinguish the various
interrupt handlers.
- Add a new BUS_DESCRIBE_INTR() method to the bus interface to associate
a description with an active interrupt handler setup by BUS_SETUP_INTR.
It has a default method (bus_generic_describe_intr()) which simply passes
the request up to the parent device.
- Add a bus_describe_intr() wrapper around BUS_DESCRIBE_INTR() that supports
printf(9) style formatting using var args.
- Reserve MAXCOMLEN bytes in the intr_handler structure to hold the name of
an interrupt handler and copy the name passed to intr_event_add_handler()
into that buffer instead of just saving the pointer to the name.
- Add a new intr_event_describe_handler() which appends a description string
to an interrupt handler's name.
- Implement support for interrupt descriptions on amd64 and i386 by having
the nexus(4) driver supply a custom bus_describe_intr method that invokes
a new intr_describe() MD routine which in turn looks up the associated
interrupt event and invokes intr_event_describe_handler().
Requested by: many
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
not blocking the signal, signal is placed on the thread sigqueue. If
the selected thread is in kernel executing thr_exit() or sigprocmask()
syscalls, then signal might be not delivered to usermode for arbitrary
amount of time, and for exiting thread it is lost.
Put process-directed signals to the process queue unconditionally,
selecting the thread to deliver the signal only by the thread returning
to usermode, since only then the thread can handle delivery of signal
reliably. For exiting thread or thread that has blocked some signals,
check whether the newly blocked signal is queued for the process, and
try to find a thread to wakeup for delivery, in reschedule_signal(). For
exiting thread, assume that all signals are blocked.
Change cursig() and postsig() to look both into the thread and process
signal queues. When there is a signal that thread returning to usermode
could consume, TDF_NEEDSIGCHK flag is not neccessary set now. Do
unlocked read of p_siglist and p_pendingcnt to check for queued signals.
Note that thread that has a signal unblocked might get spurious wakeup
and EINTR from the interruptible system call now, due to the possibility
of being selected by reschedule_signals(), while other thread returned
to usermode earlier and removed the signal from process queue. This
should not cause compliance issues, since the thread has not blocked a
signal and thus should be ready to receive it anyway.
Reported by: Justin Teller <justin.teller gmail com>
Reviewed by: davidxu, jilles
MFC after: 1 month
set quite late in the revocation path, properly verify that vnode is
not doomed before calling VOP.
Reported and tested by: Harald Schmalzbauer <h.schmalzbauer omnilan de>
MFC after: 3 days
unlocked. fdrop() closes file descriptor when reference count goes to
zero. Close method for vnodes locks the vnode, resulting in "sleepable
after non-sleepable". For pipes, pipe mutex is before kqueue lock,
causing LOR.
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
instead of sizeof(int), and on sparc64 that resulted in fetching wrong
value for acl_maxcnt, which in turn caused __acl_get_link(2) to fail
with EINVAL.
PR: sparc64/139304
Submitted by: Dmitry Afanasiev <KOT at MATPOCKuH.Ru>
sockets. This allows for reliable bi-directional datagram communication
over UNIX domain sockets, in contrast to SOCK_DGRAM (M:N, unreliable) or
SOCK_STERAM (bi-directional bytestream). Largely, this reuses existing
UNIX domain socket code. This allows applications requiring record-
oriented semantics to do so reliably via local IPC.
Some implementation notes (also present in XXX comments):
- Currently we lack an sbappend variant able to do datagrams and control
data without doing addresses, so we mark SOCK_SEQPACKET as PR_ADDR.
Adding a new variant will solve this problem.
- UNIX domain sockets on FreeBSD provide back-pressure/flow control
notification for stream sockets by manipulating the send socket
buffer's size during pru_send and pru_rcvd. This trick works less well
for SOCK_SEQPACKET as sosend_generic() uses sb_hiwat not just to
manage blocking, but also to determine maximum datagram size. Fixing
this requires rethinking how back-pressure is done for SOCK_SEQPACKET;
in the mean time, it's possible to get EMSGSIZE when buffers fill,
instead of blocking.
Discussed with: benl
Reviewed by: bz, rpaulo
MFC after: 3 months
Sponsored by: Google
virtual address 0, limiting the ability to convert a kernel
NULL pointer dereference into a privilege escalation attack.
If the sysctl is set to 0 a newly started process will not be able
to map anything in the address range of the first page (0 to PAGE_SIZE).
This is the default. Already running processes are not affected by this.
You can either change the sysctl or the tunable from loader in case
you need to map at a virtual address of 0, for example when running
any of the extinct species of a set of a.out binaries, vm86 emulation, ..
In that case set security.bsd.map_at_zero="1".
Superseeds: r197537
In collaboration with: jhb, kib, alc
if it is empty. Otherwise the previous thread's name would remain in the
struct and then be reported for this thread.
Submitted by: Ryan Stone
MFC after: 1 week