Fix some wrong usages.
Note: this does not affect generated binaries as this argument is not used.
PR: 137213
Submitted by: Eygene Ryabinkin (initial version)
MFC after: 1 month
The maximum length of a username has nothing to do with the size of the
username in the utmp files. Use MAXLOGNAME, which is defined as 17
(UT_USERSIZE + 1).
The entries in the argv array are not const themselves, but sometimes we
want to fill in const values. Just make the array const and use
__DECONST() to make it const for the execve()-call itself.
Also convert the only K&R prototype to ANSI.
execvPe() is called by _execvpe(), which we added to implement
posix_spawnp(). We just took execvP() and added the envp argument.
Unfortunately we forgot to change the implementation to use envp over
environ.
This fixes the following piece of code:
| char * const arg[2] = { "env", NULL };
| char * const env[2] = { "FOO=BAR", NULL };
| posix_spawnp(NULL, "/usr/bin/env", NULL, NULL, arg, env);
MFC after: 2 weeks
FTS_NOCHDIR option is used. fts_build() could strip a trailing slash
from path name in post-order visit if a path pointing to an empty
directory was given for fts_open().
PR: bin/133907, kern/134513
Reviewed by: das
Approved by: trasz (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
a feature that libstdc++ depends on to simulate the behavior of libc's
internal '__isthreaded' variable. One benefit of this is that _libc_once()
is now private to _once_stub.c.
Requested by: kan
with the additional property that it is safe for routines in libc to use
in both single-threaded and multi-threaded processes. Multi-threaded
processes use the pthread_once() implementation from the threading library
while single-threaded processes use a simplified "stub" version internal
to libc. The libc stub-version of pthread_once() now also uses the
simplified "stub" version as well instead of being a nop.
Reviewed by: deischen, Matthew Fleming @ Isilon
Suggested by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
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
* retry various system calls on EINTR
* retry the rest after a short read (common if there is more than about 1K
of output)
* block SIGCHLD like system(3) does (note that this does not and cannot
work fully in threaded programs, they will need to be careful with wait
functions)
PR: 90580
MFC after: 1 month
one path. When the list is empty (contain only a NULL pointer), return
EINVAL instead of pretending to succeed, which will cause a NULL pointer
deference in a later fts_read() call.
Noticed by: Christoph Mallon (via rdivacky@)
MFC after: 2 weeks
the type argument. This is known to fix some pthread_mutexattr_settype()
invocations, especially when it comes to pulseaudio.
Approved by: kib
deischen (threads)
MFC after: 3 days
other than the current system-wide size (32-bits) has been updated so
for now just cautiously turn the check off. While here fix the check
for IDs being too large which doesn't work due to type mis-matches.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version)
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 month (type mis-match fixes only)
- The uid/cuid members of struct ipc_perm are now uid_t instead of unsigned
short.
- The gid/cgid members of struct ipc_perm are now gid_t instead of unsigned
short.
- The mode member of struct ipc_perm is now mode_t instead of unsigned short
(this is merely a style bug).
- The rather dubious padding fields for ABI compat with SV/I386 have been
removed from struct msqid_ds and struct semid_ds.
- The shm_segsz member of struct shmid_ds is now a size_t instead of an
int. This removes the need for the shm_bsegsz member in struct
shmid_kernel and should allow for complete support of SYSV SHM regions
>= 2GB.
- The shm_nattch member of struct shmid_ds is now an int instead of a
short.
- The shm_internal member of struct shmid_ds is now gone. The internal
VM object pointer for SHM regions has been moved into struct
shmid_kernel.
- The existing __semctl(), msgctl(), and shmctl() system call entries are
now marked COMPAT7 and new versions of those system calls which support
the new ABI are now present.
- The new system calls are assigned to the FBSD-1.1 version in libc. The
FBSD-1.0 symbols in libc now refer to the old COMPAT7 system calls.
- A simplistic framework for tagging system calls with compatibility
symbol versions has been added to libc. Version tags are added to
system calls by adding an appropriate __sym_compat() entry to
src/lib/libc/incldue/compat.h. [1]
PR: kern/16195 kern/113218 bin/129855
Reviewed by: arch@, rwatson
Discussed with: kan, kib [1]
system callers of getgroups(), getgrouplist(), and setgroups() to
allocate buffers dynamically. Specifically, allocate a buffer of size
sysconf(_SC_NGROUPS_MAX)+1 (+2 in a few cases to allow for overflow).
This (or similar gymnastics) is required for the code to actually follow
the POSIX.1-2008 specification where {NGROUPS_MAX} may differ at runtime
and where getgroups may return {NGROUPS_MAX}+1 results on systems like
FreeBSD which include the primary group.
In id(1), don't pointlessly add the primary group to the list of all
groups, it is always the first result from getgroups(). In principle
the old code was more portable, but this was only done in one of the two
places where getgroups() was called to the overall effect was pointless.
Document the actual POSIX requirements in the getgroups(2) and
setgroups(2) manpages. We do not yet support a dynamic NGROUPS, but we
may in the future.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Last year I added SLIST_REMOVE_NEXT and STAILQ_REMOVE_NEXT, to remove
entries behind an element in the list, using O(1) time. I recently
discovered NetBSD also has a similar macro, called SLIST_REMOVE_AFTER.
In my opinion this approach is a lot better:
- It doesn't have the unused first argument of the list pointer. I added
this, mainly because OpenBSD also had it.
- The _AFTER suffix makes a lot more sense, because it is related to
SLIST_INSERT_AFTER. _NEXT is only used to iterate through the list.
The reason why I want to rename this now, is to make sure we don't
release a major version with the badly named macros.
the length by evaluating the value from the copy, cbuf instead. This
fixes a crash caused by previous commit (use-after-free)
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry andric com>
Pointy hat to: delphij
The entire world seems to use the non-standard TIOCSCTTY ioctl to make a
TTY a controlling terminal of a session. Even though tcsetsid(3) is also
non-standard, I think it's a lot better to use in our own source code,
mainly because it's similar to tcsetpgrp(), tcgetpgrp() and tcgetsid().
I stole the idea from QNX. They do it the other way around; their
TIOCSCTTY is just a wrapper around tcsetsid(). tcsetsid() then calls
into an IPC framework.
dlfunc() called dlsym() to do the work, and dlsym() determines the dso
that originating the call by the return address. Due to this, dlfunc()
operated as if the caller is always the libc.
To fix this, move the dlfunc() to rtld, where it can call the internal
implementation of dlsym, and still correctly fetch return address.
Provide usual weak stub for the symbol from libc for static binaries.
dlfunc is put to FBSD_1.0 symver namespace in the ld.so export to
override dlfunc@FBSD_1.0 weak symbol, exported by libc.
Reported, analyzed and tested by: Tijl Coosemans <tijl ulyssis org>
PR: standards/133339
Reviewed by: kan
these functions were moved into the kernel:
- Move the version entries from gen/ to sys/. Since the ABI of the actual
routines did not change, I'm still exporting them as FBSD 1.0 on purpose.
- Add FBSD-private versions for the _ and __sys_ variants.
When calling setttyent() after calling endttyent(), pts_valid will never
be set to 1, because the readdir()-loop will likely never vind a pts
that has a higher number than before.
Simplify the code by removing pts_valid. We'll just set maxpts to -1
when we don't have a valid count yet.
It seems ttyslot() calls rindex(), to strip the device name to the last
slash, but this is obviously invalid. /dev/pts/0 should be stripped
until pts/0. Because /etc/ttys only supports TTY names in /dev/, just
strip this piece of the pathname.
A more elegant way of obtaining a name of a character device by its file
descriptor on FreeBSD, is to use the FIODGNAME ioctl. Because a valid
file descriptor implies a file descriptor is visible in /dev, it will
always resolve a valid device name.
I'm adding a more friendly wrapper for this ioctl, called fdevname(). It
is a lot easier to use than devname() and also has better error
handling. When a device name cannot be resolved, it will just return
NULL instead of a generated device name that makes no sense.
Discussed with: kib