During postclean.req testing it was found that the fork in the
parent process (after the unshare syscall) would fail with ENOMEM
(see recursive_remove() in test-container.c). While failing with
ENOMEM is certainly unexpected, it is simply easier to refactor
the design and have the parent remain outside of the namespace.
This change moves the postclean.req processing to a distinct
process (the parent) that then forks the test process (which will
have to fork once more to complete uid/gid transitions). When the
test process exists the cleanup process will ensure all files are
deleted when a post clean is requested.
Signed-off-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
[BZ #23948]
* support/test-container.c: Move postclean step to before we
change namespaces.
Signal zero does not terminate a process, so it is safe to use negative
values for signal numbers.
Adjust libio/tst-vtables-common.c to use this new functionality,
instead of determining the termination status for a signal indirectly.
This is sometimes useful to determine if a test truly got stuck, or if
it was making progress (logging information to standard output) and
was merely slow to finish.
Fix the following on 32 bits targets:
support_test_compare_string.c: In function ‘support_test_compare_string’:
support_test_compare_string.c:80:37: error: format ‘%lu’ expects argument of
type ‘long unsigned int’, but argument 2 has type ‘size_t’ {aka ‘unsigned int’}
[-Werror=format=]
printf (" string length: %lu bytes\n", left_length);
~~^ ~~~~~~~~~~~
%u
Checked on arm-linux-gnueabihf.
* support/support_test_compare_string.c
(support_test_compare_string): Fix printf format.
On systems without enough random-access memory, stdlib/test-bz22786
will go deeply into swap and time out, even with a substantial
TIMEOUTFACTOR. This commit adds a facility to construct repeating
strings with alias mappings, so that the requirement for physical
memory, and uses it in stdlib/test-bz22786.
The test-container.c file assumes that ld.so is always named
something like /elf/ld-linux-*.
But e.g. on s390x it is named ld64.so.1 or ld.so.1 on s390.
There are other architectures like power or mips with similar names.
This patch introduces the new global variable support_objdir_elf_ldso
which contains the absolute path to the runtime linker used by the
testsuite, e.g. OBJDIR_PATH/elf/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2.
The check in test-container.c is now comparing against this path.
Without this patch, test-container.c is searching invalid files / directories
and fails to find glibc/nss/tst-nss-test3.root/tst-nss-test3.script.
Then the test tst-nss-test3 fails!
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
ChangeLog:
* support/support.h (support_objdir_elf_ldso): New variable.
* support/support_paths.c (support_objdir_elf_ldso): Likewise.
* support/Makefile (CFLAGS-support_paths.c): Add definition
for OBJDIR_ELF_LDSO_PATH.
* support/test-container.c (main): Search for the ld.so
which is also used by the testsuite.
copy_file_range can't be used to copy a file from glibc source directory
to glibc build directory since they may be on different filesystems.
This patch adds xcopy_file_range for cross-device copy.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
[BZ #23597]
* support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add
support_copy_file_range and xcopy_file_range.
* support/support.h: Include <sys/types.h>.
(support_copy_file_range): New prototype.
* support/support_copy_file_range.c: New file. Copied and
modified from io/copy_file_range-compat.c.
* support/test-container.c (copy_one_file): Call xcopy_file_rang
instead of copy_file_range.
* support/xcopy_file_range.c: New file.
* support/xunistd.h (xcopy_file_range): New prototype.
C99 specifies that the EOF condition on a file is "sticky": once EOF
has been encountered, all subsequent reads should continue to return
EOF until the file is closed or something clears the "end-of-file
indicator" (e.g. fseek, clearerr). This is arguably a change from
C89, where the wording was ambiguous; the BSDs always had sticky EOF,
but the System V lineage would attempt to read from the underlying fd
again. GNU libc has followed System V for as long as we've been
using libio, but nowadays C99 conformance and BSD compatibility are
more important than System V compatibility.
You might wonder if changing the _underflow impls is sufficient to
apply the C99 semantics to all of the many stdio functions that
perform input. It should be enough to cover all paths to _IO_SYSREAD,
and the only other functions that call _IO_SYSREAD are the _seekoff
impls, which is OK because seeking clears EOF, and the _xsgetn impls,
which, as far as I can tell, are unused within glibc.
The test programs in this patch use a pseudoterminal to set up the
necessary conditions. To facilitate this I added a new test-support
function that sets up a pair of pty file descriptors for you; it's
almost the same as BSD openpty, the only differences are that it
allocates the optionally-returned tty pathname with malloc, and that
it crashes if anything goes wrong.
[BZ #1190]
[BZ #19476]
* libio/fileops.c (_IO_new_file_underflow): Return EOF immediately
if the _IO_EOF_SEEN bit is already set; update commentary.
* libio/oldfileops.c (_IO_old_file_underflow): Likewise.
* libio/wfileops.c (_IO_wfile_underflow): Likewise.
* support/support_openpty.c, support/tty.h: New files.
* support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add support_openpty.
* libio/tst-fgetc-after-eof.c, wcsmbs/test-fgetwc-after-eof.c:
New test cases.
* libio/Makefile (tests): Add tst-fgetc-after-eof.
* wcsmbs/Makefile (tests): Add tst-fgetwc-after-eof.
The old implementation based on hsearch_r used an ad-hoc C string
encoding and produced an incorrect format on the wire for domain
names which contained bytes which needed escaping when printed.
This commit switches to ns_name_pton for the wire format conversion
(now that we have separate tests for it) and uses a tsearch tree
with a suitable comparison function to locate compression targets.
The previous implementation of the TEST_COMPARE macro would fail
to compile code like this:
int ret = res_send (query, sizeof (query), buf, sizeof (buf));
TEST_COMPARE (ret,
sizeof (query)
+ 2 /* Compression reference. */
+ 2 + 2 + 4 + 2 /* Type, class, TTL, RDATA length. */
+ 1 /* Pascal-style string length. */
+ strlen (expected_name));
This resulted in a failed static assertion, "integer conversions
may alter sign of operands". A user of the TEST_COMPARE would have
to add a cast to fix this.
This patch reverts to the original proposed solution of a run-time
check, making TEST_COMPARE usable for comparisons of numbers with
types with different signedness in more contexts.
This adds system call wrappers for pkey_alloc, pkey_free, pkey_mprotect,
and x86-64 implementations of pkey_get and pkey_set, which abstract over
the PKRU CPU register and hide the actual number of memory protection
keys supported by the CPU. pkey_mprotect with a -1 key is implemented
using mprotect, so it will work even if the kernel does not support the
pkey_mprotect system call.
The system call wrapers use unsigned int instead of unsigned long for
parameters, so that no special treatment for x32 is needed. The flags
argument is currently unused, and the access rights bit mask is limited
to two bits by the current PKRU register layout anyway.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The requirement to write "deny" to /proc/<pid>/setgroups for a given user
namespace before being able to write a gid mapping was introduced in Linux
3.19. Before that this requirement including the file did not exist.
So don't fail when errno == ENOENT.
System defaults vary, and a mere unshare (CLONE_NEWNS) (which is part of
support_become_root) is no longer sufficient.
Reviewed-by: Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
create_temp_file automatically supplies the test directory and the
XXXXXX suffix. support_create_temp_directory required the caller to
specify them, which was confusing.
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Without UID/GID maps, file creation will file with EOVERFLOW.
This patch is based on DJ Delorie's work on container testing.
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>