Commit Graph

3612 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
mckusick
23f4bb763f Update to D25266, bin/ps: Make the rtprio option actually show
realtime priorities

The current `ps -axO rtprio' show threads running at interrupt
priority such as the [intr] thread as '1:48' and threads running
at kernel priority such as [pagedaemon] as normal:4294967260.

This change shows [intr] as intr:48 and [pagedaemon] as kernel:4.

Reviewed by:    kib
MFC after:	1 week (together with -r362369)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25660
2020-07-14 18:57:31 +00:00
jilles
3019e6712d sh: Do not ignore INTOFF during a trap
INTOFF postpones SIGINT processing and INTON enables it again. This is
important so an interactive shell can return to the top level prompt when
Ctrl+C is pressed.

Given that INTON is automatically done when a builtin completes, the part
where onsig() ignores suppressint when in_dotrap is true is both unnecessary
and unsafe. If the trap is for some other signal than SIGINT, arbitrary code
could have been interrupted.

Historically, INTOFF remained in effect for longer.

Reviewed by:	bdrewery
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25270
2020-07-09 20:53:56 +00:00
0mp
6daf14915b Fix description of the "\$" sequence for PS1
The manual page documents "\$" to expand to either "$" or "#" followed by
a single space. In reality, the single space character is not appended.

PR:		247791
Submitted by:	kd-dev@pm.me
MFC after:	7 days
2020-07-06 10:05:35 +00:00
jilles
bd21b86f1a sh/tests: Re-enable bin.sh.execution.functional_test.bg12.0
This reverts r362646.

PR:		247559
MFC after:	1 week
2020-06-28 21:33:08 +00:00
jilles
1eab6dff3b sh/tests: Fix flaky execution/bg12.0
When job control is not enabled, the shell ignores SIGINT while waiting for
a foreground process unless that process exits on SIGINT. In this case, the
foreground process is sleep and it does not exit on SIGINT because the
signal is only sent to the shell. Depending on order of events, this could
cause the SIGINT to be unexpectedly ignored.

On lightly loaded bare metal, the chance of this happening tends to be less
than 0.01% but with higher loads and/or virtualization it becomes more
likely.

Starting the sleep in background and using the wait builtin ensures SIGINT
will not be ignored.

PR:		247559
Reported by:	lwhsu
MFC after:	1 week
2020-06-28 21:15:29 +00:00
pstef
ee18d3b109 ps(1): don't try to handle non-SMP systems
As reported by kib, sysctl machdep.smp_active doesn't exist and on UP we
return CPU 0 for all threads anyway.

Reported by:	kib
2020-06-27 20:01:56 +00:00
pstef
eb1c123d53 ps(1): reuse keyword "cpu" to show CPU number
This flag will now show the processor number on which a process is running.

This change was inspired by PR129965. Initially I didn't think that the
patch attached to it was correct -- it sacrificed ki_estcpu use in "cpu"
for ki_lastcpu and I thought that the old functionality should be kept and
the new (cpu#) one added to it. But I've since discovered that ki_estcpu is
sched_4bsd-specific. What's worse, it represents the same thing as
ki_pctcpu, except ki_pctcpu is universal -- so "%cpu" has been using it
successfully. Therefore, I've decided to replace information based on
ki_estcpu with information based on ki_oncpu/ki_lastcpu.

Key parts of the code and manual changes were borrowed from top(1).

PR:		129965
Reported by:	Nikola Knežević
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25377
2020-06-27 19:09:33 +00:00
lwhsu
d98e414c36 Temporarily skip flakey bin.sh.execution.functional_test.bg12 in CI
PR:		238870
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2020-06-26 09:39:23 +00:00
salvadore
98fe3d31f1 bin/ps: Make the rtprio option actually show realtime priorities
Fix the rtprio option that for some reason was progessively becoming an
option showing the priority class of threads. In particular:

- use the constants defined in sys/sys/rtprio.h instead of those defined in
  sys/sys/priority.h: this helps making clearer that the code actually is
  about realtime priorities and not standard scheduler priorities;
- remove the PRI_ITHD case that has nothing to do with realtime priorities;
- convert the priority levels to realtime priority levels using the same
  formulas used for pri_to_rtp function in sys/kern/kern_resource.c.
- remove outdated note "101 = not a realtime process" in the man page and
  replace it with a more useful reference to man 1 rtprio.

Approved by:	src (mckusick), manpages (bcr), gerald (mentor)
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25266
2020-06-19 09:27:58 +00:00
jilles
e4f768ec7d sh/tests: Add tests for SIGINT in non-jobc background commands
If job control is not enabled, background commands shall ignore SIGINT and
SIGQUIT, and it shall be possible to override that ignore in the same shell.

MFC after:	1 week
2020-06-14 19:41:24 +00:00
yuripv
93131c8b36 ps: remove xo_no_setlocale() call
Apparently libxo was fixed to do the right thing on FreeBSD,
and calling xo_no_setlocale() is no longer needed.

Reported by:	phil
2020-06-09 07:07:29 +00:00
yuripv
4ea0099bc3 ps: use %hs instead of %s format specifiers
Use %hs (locale-based encoding) instead of %s (UTF-8) format for
strings that are expected to be in current locale encoding (date/time,
process names/argument list).

PR:		241491
Reviewed by:	phil
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22160
2020-06-07 08:21:19 +00:00
rscheff
a71bce46fb Add O_DIRECT flag to DD for cache bypass
FreeBSD DD utility has not had support for the O_DIRECT flag, which
is useful to bypass local caching, e.g. for unconditionally issuing
NFS IO requests during testing.

Reviewed by:	rgrimes (mentor)
Approved by:	rgrimes (mentor, blanket)
MFC after:	3 weeks
Sponsored by:	NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25066
2020-06-04 20:47:11 +00:00
kevans
deeb56f911 vfs: add restrictions to read(2) of a directory [1/2]
Historically, we've allowed read() of a directory and some filesystems will
accommodate (e.g. ufs/ffs, msdosfs). From the history department staffed by
Warner: <<EOF

pdp-7 unix seemed to allow reading directories, but they were weird, special
things there so I'm unsure (my pdp-7 assembler sucks).

1st Edition's sources are lost, mostly. The kernel allows it. The
reconstructed sources from 2nd or 3rd edition read it though.

V6 to V7 changed the filesystem format, and should have been a warning, but
reading directories weren't materially changed.

4.1b BSD introduced readdir because of UFS. UFS broke all directory reading
programs in 1983. ls, du, find, etc all had to be rewritten. readdir() and
friends were introduced here.

SysVr3 picked up readdir() in 1987 for the AT&T fork of Unix. SysVr4 updated
all the directory reading programs in 1988 because different filesystem
types were introduced.

In the 90s, these interfaces became completely ubiquitous as PDP-11s running
V7 faded from view and all the folks that initially started on V7 upgraded
to SysV. Linux never supported this (though I've not done the software
archeology to check) because it has always had a pathological diversity of
filesystems.
EOF

Disallowing read(2) on a directory has the side-effect of masking
application bugs from relying on other implementation's behavior
(e.g. Linux) of rejecting these with EISDIR across the board, but allowing
it has been a vector for at least one stack disclosure bug in the past[0].

By POSIX, this is implementation-defined whether read() handles directories
or not. Popular implementations have chosen to reject them, and this seems
sensible: the data you're reading from a directory is not structured in some
unified way across filesystem implementations like with readdir(2), so it is
impossible for applications to portably rely on this.

With this patch, we will reject most read(2) of a dirfd with EISDIR. Users
that know what they're doing can conscientiously set
bsd.security.allow_read_dir=1 to allow read(2) of directories, as it has
proven useful for debugging or recovery. A future commit will further limit
the sysctl to allow only the system root to read(2) directories, to make it
at least relatively safe to leave on for longer periods of time.

While we're adding logic pertaining to directory vnodes to vn_io_fault, an
additional assertion has also been added to ensure that we're not reaching
vn_io_fault with any write request on a directory vnode. Such request would
be a logical error in the kernel, and must be debugged rather than allowing
it to potentially silently error out.

Commented out shell aliases have been placed in root's chsrc/shrc to promote
awareness that grep may become noisy after this change, depending on your
usage.

A tentative MFC plan has been put together to try and make it as trivial as
possible to identify issues and collect reports; note that this will be
strongly re-evaluated. Tentatively, I will MFC this knob with the default as
it is in HEAD to improve our odds of actually getting reports. The future
priv(9) to further restrict the sysctl WILL NOT BE MERGED BACK, so the knob
will be a faithful reversion on stable/12. We will go into the merge
acknowledging that the sysctl default may be flipped back to restore
historical behavior at *any* point if it's warranted.

[0] https://www.freebsd.org/security/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-19:10.ufs.asc

PR:		246412
Reviewed by:	mckusick, kib, emaste, jilles, cy, phk, imp (all previous)
Reviewed by:	rgrimes (latest version)
MFC after:	1 month (note the MFC plan mentioned above)
Relnotes:	absolutely, but will amend previous RELNOTES entry
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24596
2020-06-04 18:09:55 +00:00
jilles
9a1cd36331 sh: Allow more scripts without #!
Austin Group bugs #1226 and #1250 changed the requirements for shell scripts
without #! (POSIX does not specify #!; this is about the shell execution
when execve(2) returns an [ENOEXEC] error).

POSIX says we shall allow execution if the initial part intended to be
parsed by the shell consists of characters and does not contain the NUL
character.  This allows concatenating a shell script (ending with exec or
exit) and a binary payload.

In order to reject common binary files such as PNG images, check that there
is a lowercase letter or expansion before the last newline before the NUL
character, in addition to the check for the newline character suggested by
POSIX.
2020-05-30 16:00:49 +00:00
jilles
e75dbd74b9 sh: Remove a comment that was obsoleted by r358152
Since r358152, the read builtin has used a buffer.

Also, remove a space at the end of the line in a comment.

No functional change is intended.
2020-05-22 14:46:23 +00:00
kevans
3af58cb1fc ls: fix WITHOUT_LS_COLORS build
*sigh* references to colorflags should be gated by COLORLS.

Pointy hat to:	kevans
Reported by:	jenkins (rescue build)
X-MFC-With:	r361318
2020-05-21 15:15:50 +00:00
kevans
1785410f94 ls(1): actually restore proper behavior
Highlights:
- CLICOLOR in the environment should imply --color=auto to maintain
  compatibility with historical behavior
- -G should set CLICOLOR and imply --color=auto

The manpage has been updated to draw the connection between -G and --color;
the former is in-fact a sort of compromise between --color=always and
--color=auto, where we'll output color regardless of the environment lacking
CLICOLOR/COLORTERM assuming stdout is a tty.

X-MFC-With: r361318
2020-05-21 14:39:00 +00:00
kevans
6ca17c6850 ls: fix a --color regression from r337956
The regression is in-fact that I flipped the default from never to auto. The
incorrect impression was based on an alias that I failed to notice,
installed by the Linux distribution that I used for testing compatibility
here. Users that want the old default should be doing so with a shell alias
as is done elsewhere, rather than making this decision in ls(1).

Many thanks to rgrimes for pointing out the alias that I clearly overlooked
that resulted in this; if you despised colors in your terminal from this,
consider buying him a beer at the next venue that you see him at.

MFC after:	1 week
Relnotes:	yes
2020-05-21 03:50:56 +00:00
jilles
f4b455ec72 sh: Fix double INTON with vfork
The shell maintains a count of the number of times SIGINT processing has
been disabled via INTOFF, so SIGINT processing resumes when all disables
have enabled again (INTON).

If an error occurs in a vfork() child, the processing of the error enables
SIGINT processing again, and the INTON in vforkexecshell() causes the count
to become negative.

As a result, a later INTOFF may not actually disable SIGINT processing. This
might cause memory corruption if a SIGINT arrives at an inopportune time. As
of r360452, it causes the shell to abort when it would unsafely allocate or
free memory in certain ways.

Note that various places such as errors in non-special builtins
unconditionally reset the count to 0, so the problem might still not always
be visible.

PR:		246497
Reported by:	jbeich
MFC after:	2 weeks
2020-05-16 16:29:23 +00:00
jilles
a47ba490d6 sh/tests: Test some obscure cases with aliasing keywords 2020-05-12 21:59:21 +00:00
pstef
ee0e12fee6 ps: extend the non-standard option -d (tree view) to work with -p
Initially it seemed that there were multiple possible ways to do it.

Processing option -p could conditionally add selected processes and
their descendants to the list for further work, but it is not guaranteed
to know whether the -d option has been used or not, and it also doesn't
have access to the process list just yet.

There is also descendant_sort() which has access to all possibly needed
information, but serves the purely post-processing purpose of sorting
output.

Then there is the loop that uses invocation information and full process
list to create a list of processes for final display. It seems the most
natural place to implement this, but indeterminate state of the process
list and volatility of the final list that is being created obstruct
adding an elegant search for all elements of process descendancy trees.

So I opted for adding another loop, just before the one I mentioned
above. For all selected processes it conditionally adds direct
descendants to the end of this list of selected processes.

Possible usage:
* ps -auxd -p $$
* ps -auxd -p 1
* while x=$(pgrep svnlite); do clear; ps auxd -p $x; sleep 2; done
* ps -auxd -p `pgrep make`

Reviewed by:	kevans, kaktus (earlier version)
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24380
2020-05-07 16:56:18 +00:00
cem
97fb10977a ls(1): Fix trivial SEGV due to NULL deref in OOM path
Reported by:	Anton Rang <rang AT acm.org>
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2020-05-05 18:06:32 +00:00
jilles
0b1d4f8660 sh: Assert INTOFF rather than applying it in ck*
As I noted in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22756, INTOFF should be in effect
when calling ckmalloc/ckrealloc/ckfree to avoid memory leaks and double
frees. Therefore, change the functions to check if INTOFF is in effect
instead of applying it.

Reviewed by:	bdrewery
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24599
2020-04-28 20:34:27 +00:00
delphij
15388cf0c5 Remove include of stdint.h. It was added in r241014 for uintmax_t,
which is gone in r340330 and is therefore no longer necessary.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2020-04-23 03:46:41 +00:00
jilles
9c4155f1b8 sh: Remove remnants to compile out fc completely
r360139 made compiling with NO_HISTORY work. This #define does not remove
the fc and bind builtins completely but makes them always write an error
message.

However, there was also some code in builtins.def and mkbuiltins to remove
the fc builtin entirely (but not the bind builtin). The additional build
system complication to make this work seems not worth it, so remove that
code.
2020-04-22 21:45:43 +00:00
bdrewery
e2cf201d24 Fix build with NO_HISTORY set
Reviewed by:		jilles
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24458
2020-04-21 00:37:55 +00:00
adrian
44d5b1237f [sh] Fix a "may be unused" warning on mips-gcc
mips-gcc for mips32 was complaining that c was potentially used before
being set.  Setting it to 0 before calling fdgetsc() looks like the right
thing to do in this instance; there's an explicit check for c == 0 later
on.

Tested: mips-gcc mips32 build, running /bin/sh on mips32
2020-04-16 23:31:39 +00:00
trasz
a935895999 Bump WARNS for sh(1).
Reviewed by:	jilles
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	DARPA
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24181
2020-04-01 15:12:51 +00:00
kevans
ff71585afb sh: remove duplicate el definition
el is declared extern in myhistedit.h and defined in histedit.c. Remove the
duplicate definition in input.c to appease the -fno-common build.

-fno-common will become the default in GCC10/LLVM11.

MFC after:	3 days
2020-03-28 17:02:32 +00:00
kevans
4d75f3c558 sh: fix read builtin on 32-bit systems
Specifically, any system with a 32-bit size_t; -residue is calculated as a
32-bit *then* promoted to the 64-bit off_t and the result is ultimately
wrong. This resulted in what would appear to be truncated output, as only
the first line would be read.

Correct it by just making residue an off_t to begin with, since this is what
lseek will take anyways.

Reported by:	antoine, dim
Triaged by:	cem
Tested by:	kevans
X-MFC-With:	r358152
2020-02-22 03:14:05 +00:00
hrs
53fde55a32 Improve performance of "read" built-in command when using a seekable
fd.

The read built-in command calls read(2) with a 1-byte buffer because
newline characters need to be detected even on a byte stream which
comes from a non-seekable file descriptor.  Because of this, the
following script calls >6,000 read(2) to show a 6KiB file:

 while read IN; do echo "$IN"; done < /COPYRIGHT

When the input byte stream is seekable, it is possible to read a data
block and then reposition the file pointer to where a newline
character found.  This change adds a small buffer to do this and
reduces the number of read(2) calls.

Theoretically, multiple built-in commands reading the same seekable
byte stream in a single pipe chain can share the buffer.  However,
this change just makes a single invocation of the read built-in
allocate a buffer and deallocate it every time for simplicity.
Although this causes read(2) to read the same regions multiple times,
the performance penalty should be small compared to the reduction of
read(2) calls.

Reviewed by:		jilles
MFC after:		1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23747
2020-02-20 03:01:27 +00:00
delphij
375e706820 Remove unused include.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2020-02-02 20:51:28 +00:00
pjd
ce88a7c18d Restore previous usage presentation (without "pwait: " prefix).
Pointed out by:	jilles
2020-02-01 09:13:11 +00:00
pjd
b30c2b0177 Style changes, mostly usage of braces around single line statements -
it is safer and allowed for some time now by style(9).

Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 11:13:34 +00:00
pjd
1fc3e92e6d Implement tests for the newly added -o flag.
Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 11:03:45 +00:00
pjd
acb46d5976 Implement -o flag which tells pwait(1) to exit if any of the given processes
has terminated.

Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 11:02:51 +00:00
pjd
99c74523a1 Don't setup a timeout if we are exiting.
Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 10:54:16 +00:00
pjd
1bf809e6bc Check for duplicated PID without using additional variable.
Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 10:51:57 +00:00
pjd
91f3bc7fb8 - Be consistent with using sysexits(3) codes.
- Turn fprintf()+exit() into errx().

Sponsored by:	Fudo Security
2020-01-26 10:49:24 +00:00
arichardson
646b571454 Allow building bin/cat on non-FreeBSD systems
`cat -l` is needed during the installworld phase and other system's cat
don't support that flag. To avoid portability issues when compiling on
Linux/macOS (such as the the direct access to &fp->_mbstate), we
disable the entire multibyte support when building as a boostrap tool.

Reviewed By:	brooks, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13939
2020-01-16 14:15:00 +00:00
jilles
322a329b20 sh: Fix rare memory leak with SIGINT
If getcwd() failed earlier on but later succeeded in the pwd builtin,
there was no INTOFF protection between calling savestr() and storing its
result.

It is quite rare for getcwd() to fail, and rarer for it to succeed later in
the same directory.

Found via code inspection for changing ckmalloc() and similar to assert
INTOFF protection instead of applying it directly (which protects against
corrupting malloc's internal state but allows memory leaks or double frees).

MFC after:	1 week
2020-01-01 12:06:37 +00:00
jilles
93e13a789f sh: Test that executing various binary files is rejected
If executing a file fails with an [ENOEXEC] error, the shell executes the
file as a shell script, except that this execution may instead result in an
error message if the file is binary.

Per a recent Austin Group interpretation, we will need to change this to
allow a concatenation of a shell script and a binary payload. See
Austin Group bugs #1226 and #1250.

MFC after:	1 week
2019-12-30 21:32:55 +00:00
sjg
16923f2426 Update Makefile.depend files
Update a bunch of Makefile.depend files as
a result of adding Makefile.depend.options files

Reviewed by:	 bdrewery
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:   Juniper Networks
Differential Revision:  https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22494
2019-12-11 17:37:53 +00:00
sjg
7ee5f04e26 Add Makefile.depend.options
Leaf directories that have dependencies impacted
by options need a Makefile.depend.options file
to avoid churn in Makefile.depend

DIRDEPS for cases such as OPENSSL, TCP_WRAPPERS etc
can be set in local.dirdeps-options.mk
which can add to those set in Makefile.depend.options

See share/mk/dirdeps-options.mk

Reviewed by:	 bdrewery
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:   Juniper Networks
Differential Revision:  https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22469
2019-12-11 17:37:37 +00:00
mmacy
27a9e100ab Add iflag=fullblock to dd
Normally, count=n means read(2) will be called n times on the input to dd. If
the read() returns short, as may happen when reading from a pipe, fewer bytes
will be copied from the input. With conv=sync the buffer is padded with zeros
to fill the rest of the block.

iflag=fullblock causes dd to continue reading until the block is full, so that
count=n means n full blocks are copied. This flag is compatible with illumos
and GNU dd and is used in the ZFS test suite.

Submitted by:	Ryan Moeller
Reviewed by:	manpages, mmacy@
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	 iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21441
2019-09-30 22:00:48 +00:00
mmacy
1a62b6270f Add oflag=fsync and oflag=sync capability to dd
Sets the O_FSYNC flag on the output file. oflag=fsync and oflag=sync are
synonyms just as O_FSYNC and O_SYNC are synonyms. This functionality is
intended to improve portability of dd commands in the ZFS test suite.

Submitted by:	Ryan Moeller
Reviewed by:	manpages, mmacy@
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	 iXsytems, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21422
2019-09-30 21:56:42 +00:00
mmacy
7c49598dff dd: Check result of close(2) for errors
close(2) can return errors from previous operations which should not be ignored.

PR: 229616
Submitted by:	Thomas Hurst
Reported by:	Thomas Hurst
Reviewed by:	mmacy@
Obtained from:	Ryan Moeller
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21376
2019-09-30 21:53:26 +00:00
mmacy
c67dc60f49 Add conv=fdatasync flag to dd
The fdatasync flag performs an fdatasync(2) on the output file before closing it.
This will be useful for the ZFS test suite.

Submitted by:	Ryan Moeller
Reviewed by:	manpages, mmacy@
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	iXSystems, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21373
2019-09-30 21:48:12 +00:00
bapt
136394b1da Do not use our custom completion function, it is not needed anymore 2019-09-16 07:31:59 +00:00