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otherwise, pointer arguments are sign-extended on x32, resulting in
EFAULT.
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the syscall used to probe availability of the clock fails with EINVAL
when the requested pid does not exist, but clock_getcpuclockid is
specified to use ESRCH for this purpose.
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The generic vfork implementation uses clone(SIGCHLD) which has fork
semantics.
Implement vfork as clone(SIGCHLD|CLONE_VM|CLONE_VFORK, 0) instead which
has vfork semantics. (stack == 0 means sp is unchanged in the child.)
Some users rely on vfork semantics when memory overcommit is disabled
or when the vfork child runs code that synchronizes with the parent
process (non-conforming).
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this code attempts to use the value of errno from failure of socket or
connect to infer availability of the requested address family (v4 or
v6). however, in the case where connect failed, there is an
intervening call to close between connect and the use of errno. close
is not required to preserve errno on success, and in fact the
__aio_close code, which is called whenever aio is linked and thus
always called in dynamic-linked programs, unconditionally clobbers
errno. as a result, getaddrinfo fails with EAI_SYSTEM and errno=ENOENT
rather than correctly determining that the address family was
unavailable.
this fix is based on report/patch by Jussi Nieminen, but simplified
slightly to avoid breaking the case where socket, not connect, failed.
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this is not an issue that was actually hit, but I noticed it during
previous changes to __randname: if the resolution of tv_nsec is too
low, the space of temp file names obtainable by a thread could
plausibly be exhausted. mixing in tv_sec avoids this.
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the __randname function is used by various temp file creation
interfaces as a backend to produce a name to attempt using. it does
not have to produce results that are safe against guessing, and only
aims to avoid unintentional collisions.
mixing the address of an object on the stack in a reversible manner
leaked ASLR information, potentially allowing an attacker who can
observe the temp files created and their creation timestamps to narrow
down the possible ASLR state of the process that created them. there
is no actual value in mixing these addresses in; it was just
obfuscation. so don't do it.
instead, mix the tid, just to avoid collisions if multiple
processes/threads stampede to create temp files at the same moment.
even without this measure, they should not collide unless the clock
source is very low resolution, but it's a cheap improvement.
if/when we have a guaranteed-available userspace csprng, it could be
used here instead. even though there is no need for cryptographic
entropy here, it would avoid having to reason about clock resolution
and such to determine whether the behavior is nice.
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assuming a reasonable realtime clock, res_mkquery is highly unlikely
to generate the same query id twice in a row, but it's possible with a
very low-resolution system clock or under extreme delay of forward
progress. when it happens, res_msend fails to wait for both answers,
and instead stops listening after getting two answers to the same
query (A or AAAA).
to avoid this, increment one byte of the second query's id if it
matches the first query's. don't bother checking if the second byte is
also equal, since it doesn't matter; we just need to ensure that at
least one byte is distinct.
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commit 05973dc3bbc1aca9b3c8347de6879ed72147ab3b made it so that lines
longer than INT_MAX can in theory be read, but did not use a suitable
type for the positions determined by sscanf. we could change to using
size_t, but since the signature for getmntent_r does not admit lines
longer than INT_MAX, it does not make sense to support them in the
legacy thread-unsafe form either -- the principle here is that there
should not be an incentive to use the unsafe function to get added
functionality.
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According to fstab(5), the last two fields are optional, but this
wasn't accepted. After this change, only the first field is required,
which matches glibc's behaviour.
Using sscanf as before, it would have been impossible to differentiate
between 0 fields and 4 fields, because sscanf would have returned 0 in
both cases due to the use of assignment suppression and %n for the
string fields (which is important to avoid copying any strings). So
instead, before calling sscanf, initialize every string to the empty
string, and then we can check which strings are empty afterwards to
know how many fields were matched.
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function pointer types do not implicitly convert to void *. a cast is
required here.
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this isolates knowledge of the nonstandard AT_EMPTY_PATH extension to
one place and returns __map_file to its prior simplicity.
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this avoids the need for implementation-internal callers to depend on
the nonstandard AT_EMPTY_PATH extension to use __fstatat and isolates
knowledge of that extension to the implementation of __fstat.
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riscv32 and future architectures only provide statx.
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this function is used to implement some baseline ISO C interfaces, so
it cannot call any of the stat functions by their public names. use
the namespace-safe __fstatat instead.
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this makes it so we can drop direct stat syscall use in interfaces
that can't use the POSIX namespace.
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instead, use the fstatat/stat functions, so that the logic for which
syscalls are present and usable is all in fstatat.
this results in a slight increase in cost for old kernels on 32-bit
archs: now statx will be attempted first rather than just using the
legacy time32 syscalls, despite us not caring about timestamps.
however, it's not even clear that the legacy syscalls *should* succeed
if the timestamps are out of range; arguably they should fail with
EOVERFLOW. as such, paying a small cost here on old kernels seems
well-motivated.
with this change, fchmodat itself is no longer blocking ports to new
archs that lack the legacy syscalls.
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this change serves two purposes:
1. it eliminates one of the few remaining uses of the kernel stat
structure which will not be present in future archs, avoiding the need
for growing ifdef logic here.
2. it potentially makes the operations less expensive when the
candidate exists as a non-symlink by avoiding the need to read the
inode (assuming the directory tables suffice to distinguish symlinks).
this uses the idiom I discovered while rewriting realpath for commit
29ff7599a448232f2527841c2362643d246cee36 of being able to use the
readlink operation as an inexpensive probe for file existence that
doesn't following symlinks.
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riscv32 and future architectures only provide the clock_ functions.
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riscv32 and future architectures only provide prlimit64.
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riscv32 and future architectures lack the _time32 variants entirely,
so don't try to use their numbers. instead, reflect that they're not
present.
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_CS_POSIX_V7_THREADS_CFLAGS and _CS_POSIX_V7_THREADS_LDFLAGS have been
missing for a long time, which is a conformance defect. we were
waiting on glibc to add them or at least agree on the numeric values
they will have so as to keep the numbering aligned. it looks like they
will be added to glibc with these numbers, and in any case, this list
does not have any significant churn that would result in the numbers
getting taken.
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the wrong name works only by accident.
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the change to support passing null was rejected in the past on the
grounds that GNU gettext documented it as undefined, on an assumption
that only glibc accepted it and that the standalone GNU gettext did
not. but it turned out that both explicitly accept it.
in light of this, since some software assumes null can be passed
safely, allow it.
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newlocale and freelocale use __libc_malloc and __libc_free, but
duplocale used malloc. If malloc was replaced, this resulted in
invalid free using the wrong allocator when passing the result of
duplocale to freelocale.
Instead, use libc-internal malloc for duplocale.
This bug was introduced by commit
1e4204d522670a1d8b8ab85f1cfefa960547e8af.
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To comply with POSIX, change errno from EACCES to EPERM
when the caller did not have the required privilege.
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This reduces entropy of the canary from 64-bit to 56-bit in exchange
for mitigating non-terminated C string overflows by setting the second
byte of the canary to nul, so that off-by-one write overflow with a
nul byte can still be detected.
Idea from GrapheneOS bionic commit 7024d880b51f03a796ff8832f1298f2f1531fd7b
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gcc-12 with -frounding-mode will do inexact constant conversions at
runtime according to the runtime rounding mode.
in the math library we want constants to be rounding mode independent
so this patch fixes cases where new runtime conversions happen with
gcc-12.
fortunately this only affects two minor cases, the fix uses global
initializers where rounding mode does not apply.
after the patch the same amount of conversions happen with gcc-12 as
with gcc-11.
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commit a90d9da1d1b14d81c4f93e1a6d1a686c3312e4ba made fgetws look for
changes to errno by fgetwc to detect encoding errors, since ISO C did
not allow the implementation to set the stream's error flag in this
case, and the fgetwc interface did not admit any other way to detect
the error. however, the possibility of fgetwc setting errno to EILSEQ
in the success path was overlooked, and in fact this can happen if the
buffer ends with a partial character, causing mbtowc to be called with
only part of the character available.
since that change was made, the C standard was amended to specify that
fgetwc set the stream error flag on encoding errors, and commit
511d70738bce11a67219d0132ce725c323d00e4e made it do so. thus, there is
no longer any need for fgetws to poke at errno to handle encoding
errors.
this commit reverts commit a90d9da1d1b14d81c4f93e1a6d1a686c3312e4ba
and thereby fixes the problem.
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this bug goes back to commit 1cc81f5cb0df2b66a795ff0c26d7bbc4d16e13c6
where zoneinfo file support was first added. in scan_trans, which
searches for the appropriate local time/dst rule in effect at a given
time, times prior to the second transition time caused the -1 slot of
the index to be read to determine the previous rule in effect. this
memory was always valid (part of another zoneinfo table in the mapped
file) but the byte value read was then used to index another table,
possibly going outside the bounds of the mmap. most of the time, the
result was limited to misinterpretation of the rule in effect at that
time (pre-1900s), but it could produce a crash if adjacent memory was
not readable.
the root cause of the problem, however, was that the logic for this
code path was all wrong. as documented in the comment, times before
the first transition should be treated as using the lowest-numbered
non-dst rule, or rule 0 if no non-dst rules exist. if the argument is
in units of local time, however, the rule prior to the first
transition is needed to determine if it falls before or after it, and
that's where the -1 index was wrongly used.
instead, use the documented logic to find out what rule would be in
effect before the first transition, and apply it as the offset if the
argument was given in local time.
the new code has not been heavily tested, but no longer performs
potentially out-of-bounds accesses, and successfully handles the 1883
transition from local mean time to central standard time in the test
case the error was reported for.
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these are specified to use the sign of the imaginary part of the input
as the sign of zero in the result, but wrongly copied the sign of the
real part.
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this is a POSIX requirement. we previously relied on the underlying fd
(or other backend) seek operation to produce the error, but since
linux lseek now supports other seek modes (SEEK_DATA and SEEK_HOLE)
which do not interact well with stdio buffering, this is insufficient.
instead, explicitly check whence before performing any operations.
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these characters combine onto a base character (initial) and therefore
need to have width 0. the original binary-search implementation of
wcwidth handled them correctly, but a regression was introduced in
commit 1b0ce9af6d2aa7b92edaf3e9c631cb635bae22bd by generating the new
tables from unicode without noticing that the classification logic in
use (unicode character category Mn/Me/Cf) was insufficient to catch
these characters.
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strtod_l, strtof_l, and strtold_l originally existed only as
glibc-ABI-compat symbols. as noted in the commit which added them,
17a60f9d327c6f8b5707a06f9497d846e75c01f2, making them aliases for the
non-_l functions was a hack and not appropriate if they ever became
public API.
unfortunately, commit 35eb1a1a9b97577e113240cd65bf9fc44b8df030 did
make them public without undoing the hack. fix that now by moving the
the _l functions to their own file as wrappers that just throw away
the locale_t argument.
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commit 7be59733d71ada3a32a98622507399253f1d5e48 introduced the
hwcap-based branches to support the SPE FPU, but wrongly coded them as
bitwise tests on the computed address of __hwcap, not a value loaded
from that address. replace the add with indexed load to fix it.
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the snd_pcm_mmap_control struct used with SNDRV_PCM_IOCTL_SYNC_PTR was
mistakenly defined in the kernel uapi with "before u32" padding both
before and after the first u32 member. our conversion between the
modern struct and the legacy time32 struct was written without
awareness of that mistake, and assumed the time64 version of the
struct was the intended form with padding to match the layout on
64-bit archs. as a result, the struct was not converted correctly when
running on old kernels, with audio glitches as the likely result.
this was discovered thanks to a related bug in the kernel, whereby
32-bit userspace running on a 64-bit kernel also suffered from the
types mismatching. the mistaken layout is now the ABI and can't be
changed -- or at least making a new ioctl to change it would just
result in a worse situation.
our conversion here is changed to treat the snd_pcm_mmap_control
substruct as two separate substructs at locations dependent on
endianness (since the displacement depends on endianness), using the
existing conversion framework.
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we make qsort a wrapper by providing a wrapper_cmp function that uses
the extra argument as a function pointer. should be optimized to a tail
call on most architectures, as long as it's built with
-fomit-frame-pointer, so the performance impact should be minimal.
to keep the git history clean, for now qsort_r is implemented in qsort.c
and qsort is implemented in qsort_nr.c. qsort.c also received a few
trivial cleanups, including replacing (*cmp)() calls with cmp().
qsort_nr.c contains only wrapper_cmp and qsort as a qsort_r wrapper
itself.
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When the soft-float ABI for PowerPC was added in commit
5a92dd95c77cee81755f1a441ae0b71e3ae2bcdb, with Freescale cpus using
the alternative SPE FPU as the main use case, it was noted that we
could probably support hard float on them, but that it would involve
determining some difficult ABI constraints. This commit is the
completion of that work.
The Power-Arch-32 ABI supplement defines the ABI profiles, and indeed
ATR-SPE is built on ATR-SOFT-FLOAT. But setjmp/longjmp compatibility
are problematic for the same reason they're problematic on ARM, where
optional float-related parts of the register file are "call-saved if
present". This requires testing __hwcap, which is now done.
In keeping with the existing powerpc-sf subarch definition, which did
not have fenv, the fenv macros are not defined for SPE and the SPEFSCR
control register is left (and assumed to start in) the default mode.
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both passing a null pointer to memcpy with length 0, and adding 0 to a
null pointer, are undefined. in some sense this is 'benign' UB, but
having it precludes use of tooling that strictly traps on UB. there
may be better ways to fix it, but conditioning the operations which
are intended to be no-ops in the k==0 case on k being nonzero is a
simple and safe solution.
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len is unsigned and can never be smaller than 0. though unlikely, an
error in read() would have lead to an out of bounds write to name.
Reported-by: Michael Forney <mforney@mforney.org>
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due to historical reasons, the mips signal set has 128 bits rather
than 64 like on every other arch. this was special-cased correctly, at
least for 32-bit mips, at one time, but was inadvertently broken in
commit 7c440977db9444d7e6b1c3dcb1fdf4ee49ca4158, and seems never to
have been right on mips64/n32.
as consequenct of this bug, applications making use of high realtime
signal numbers on mips may have been able to execute application code
in contexts where doing so was unsafe.
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previously, the contents of the TZ variable were considered a
candidate for a file/path name only if they began with a colon or
contained a slash before any comma. the latter was very sloppy logic
to avoid treating any valid POSIX TZ string as a file name, but it
also triggered on values that are not valid POSIX TZ strings,
including 3-letter timezone names without any offset.
instead, only treat the TZ variable as POSIX form if it begins with a
nonzero standard time name followed by +, -, or a digit.
also, special case GMT and UTC to always be treated as POSIX form
(with implicit zero offset) so that a stray file by the same name
cannot break software that depends on setting TZ=GMT or TZ=UTC.
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based on the pthread_setname_np implementation
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POSIX places an obscure requirement on popen which is like a limited
version of close-on-exec:
"The popen() function shall ensure that any streams from previous
popen() calls that remain open in the parent process are closed in
the new child process."
if the POSIX-future 'e' mode flag is passed, producing a pipe FILE
with FD_CLOEXEC on the underlying pipe, this requirement is
automatically satisfied. however, for applications which use multiple
concurrent popen pipes but don't request close-on-exec, fd leaks from
earlier popen calls to later ones could produce deadlock situations
where processes are waiting for a pipe EOF that will never happen.
to fix this, iterate through all open FILEs and add close actions for
those obtained from popen. this requires holding a lock on the open
file list across the posix_spawn call so that additional popen FILEs
are not created after the list is traversed. note that it's still
possible for another popen call to start and create its pipe while the
lock is held, but such pipes are created with O_CLOEXEC and only drop
close-on-exec status (when 'e' flag is omitted) under control of the
lock.
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the newly allocated FILE * has not yet leaked to the application and
is only visible to stdio internals until popen returns. since we do
not change any fields of the structure observed by libc internals,
only the pipe_pid member, locking is not necessary.
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With mallocng, calling posix_memalign() or aligned_alloc() will
SIGSEGV if the internal malloc() call returns NULL. This does not
occur with oldmalloc, which explicitly checks for allocation failure.
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this is a Linux-specific function and not covered by POSIX's
requirements for which interfaces are cancellation points, but glibc
makes it one and existing software relies on it being one.
at some point a review for similar functions that should be made
cancellation points should be done.
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