This patch adds fall-through comments in some cases where -Wextra
produces implicit-fallthrough warnings.
The patch is non-exhaustive. Apart from architecture-specific code
for non-x86_64 architectures, it does not change sunrpc/xdr.c (legacy
code, probably should have such changes, but left to be dealt with
separately), or places that already had comments about the
fall-through but not matching the form expected by
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 (the default level with -Wextra; my
inclination is to adjust those comments to match rather than
downgrading to -Wimplicit-fallthrough=1 to allow any comment), or one
place where I thought the implicit fallthrough was not correct and so
should be handled separately as a bug fix. I think the key thing to
consider in review of this patch is whether the fall-through is indeed
intended and correct in each place where such a comment is added.
Tested for x86_64.
* elf/dl-exception.c (_dl_exception_create_format): Add
fall-through comments.
* elf/ldconfig.c (parse_conf_include): Likewise.
* elf/rtld.c (print_statistics): Likewise.
* locale/programs/charmap.c (parse_charmap): Likewise.
* misc/mntent_r.c (__getmntent_r): Likewise.
* posix/wordexp.c (parse_arith): Likewise.
(parse_backtick): Likewise.
* resolv/ns_ttl.c (ns_parse_ttl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86/cpu-features.c (init_cpu_features): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela): Likewise.
Non-sysdeps headers cannot be overriden by sysdeps headers across the
entire build, so it is necessary to turn such extension headers into
sysdeps headers themselves. The approach here follows the existing
<bits/shm.h> header (although it uses sysdeps/gnu instead of
sysdeps/generic).
Fixes commit 1d0fc21382 ("Linux: Add
gettid system call wrapper [BZ #6399]") and commit
8f89ab216f ("posix: Fix missing wrapper
header for <bits/unistd_ext.h>").
This commit adds gettid to <unistd.h> on Linux, and not to the
kernel-independent GNU API.
gettid is now supportable on Linux because too many things assume a
1:1 mapping between libpthread threads and kernel threads.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This fixes the same bug in fnmatch that was fixed by commit 7e2f0d2d77 for
regexp matching. As a side effect it also removes the use of an unbound
VLA.
From time to time I get fails in tst-spawn like:
tst-spawn.c:111: numeric comparison failure
left: 0 (0x0); from: xlseek (fd2, 0, SEEK_CUR)
right: 28 (0x1c); from: strlen (fd2string)
error: 1 test failures
tst-spawn.c:252: numeric comparison failure
left: 1 (0x1); from: WEXITSTATUS (status)
right: 0 (0x0); from: 0
error: 1 test failures
It turned out, that a child process is testing it's open file descriptors
with e.g. a sequence of testing the current position, setting the position
to zero and reading a specific amount of bytes.
Unfortunately starting with commit 2a69f853c0
the test is spawning a second child process which is sharing some of the
file descriptors. If the test sequence as mentioned above is running in parallel
it leads to test failures.
As the second call of posix_spawn shall test a NULL pid argument,
this patch is just moving the waitpid of the first child
before the posix_spawn of the second child.
ChangeLog:
* posix/tst-spawn do_test(): Move waitpid before posix_spawn.
Problem found by AddressSanitizer, reported by Hongxu Chen in:
https://debbugs.gnu.org/34140
* posix/regexec.c (proceed_next_node):
Do not read past end of input buffer.
Austin Group issue #411 [1] proposes that posix_spawn file action
posix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2 resets the close-on-exec when
source and destination refer to same file descriptor.
It solves the issue on multi-thread applications which uses
close-on-exec as default, and want to hand-chose specifically
file descriptor to purposefully inherited into a child process.
Current approach to achieve this scenario is to use two adddup2 file
actions and a temporary file description which do not conflict with
any other, coupled with a close file action to avoid leaking the
temporary file descriptor. This approach, besides being complex,
may fail with EMFILE/ENFILE file descriptor exaustion.
This can be more easily accomplished with an in-place removal of
FD_CLOEXEC. Although the resulting adddup2 semantic is slight
different than dup2 (equal file descriptors should be handled as
no-op), the proposed possible solution are either more complex
(fcntl action which a limited set of operations) or results in
unrequired operations (dup3 which also returns EINVAL for same
file descriptor).
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
[BZ #23640]
* posix/tst-spawn.c (do_prepare, handle_restart, do_test): Add
posix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2 test to check O_CLOCEXEC reset.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/spawni.c (__spawni_child): Add
close-on-exec reset for adddup2 file action.
* sysdeps/posix/spawni.c (__spawni_child): Likewise.
[1] http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=411
From the glibc point of view, this removes duplicate macro
definitions and is obviously safe.
From the Gnulib point of view, this pacifies xlc 12.01 on AIX 7.1.
* posix/regex_internal.h:
(__attribute__, __attribute_warn_unused_result__):
Remove; already defined elsewhere.
This simplifies the code, by removing stuff intended for porting
to Gnulib but no longer needed there.
* posix/regcomp.c [!_LIBC]: No need to put #ifdef _LIBC around
uses of libc_hidden_def, weak_alias.
* posix/regcomp.c, posix/regexec.c: Use __restrict rather than
_Restrict_ except for public-facing headers.
* posix/regex_internal.h (attribute_hidden) [!_LIBC]:
Remove; already defined elsewhere.
* posix/regex.c, posix/regex_internal.h:
Use __GNUC_PREREQ instead of rolling our own.
* posix/regex_internal.h (__GNUC_PREREQ): Remove duplicate defn.
[BZ #18040]
Problem reported by Saito Takaaki <tails.saito@gmail.com> in
https://debbugs.gnu.org/32592
Call stack get_subexp->get_subexp_sub->clean_state_log_if_needed may
call extend_buffers which reallocates the re_string_t internal buffer.
Local variable 'buf' was not updated in such case, resulting in
use-after-free.
* posix/regexec.c (get_subexp): Update 'buf' after call to
get_subexp_sub.
Along with posix_spawn_file_actions_addchdir,
posix_spawn_file_actions_addfchdir is the subject of a change proposal
for POSIX: <http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1208>
These files were both auto-generated and shipped in the source tree.
We can assume that sed is available and always generate the files
during the build.
Building posix/bug-regex22.c fails with GCC mainline because of
-Wformat-overflow= warnings for NULL arguments to %s formats.
This is *not* testing how glibc handles such format arguments; in the
context of the messages in question it makes no sense to pass NULL to
such a %s format (the code passes s, inside "if (s == NULL)"). So
this patch changes the code not to pass such a format argument at all
(which means the string passed is constant, so no need to use printf
at all - however, there are two separate tests here with different
length arguments passed to re_compile_pattern, so it *does* make sense
to make the strings used different so that in the event of failure
it's clear which one of the tests failed).
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py with GCC mainline for
aarch64-linux-gnu.
* posix/bug-regex22.c (main): Use puts with distinct error
messages for unexpected success of re_compile_pattern, not printf
with NULL argument to %s.
glibc support for 64-bit time_t on 32-bit architectures
will involve:
- Using 64-bit times inside glibc, with conversions
to and from 32-bit times taking place as necessary
for interfaces using such times.
- Adding 64-bit-time support in the glibc public API.
This support should be dynamic, i.e. glibc should
provide both 32-bit and 64-bit implementations and
let user code choose at compile time whether to use
the 32-bit or 64-bit interfaces.
This requires a glibc-internal name for a type for times
that are always 64-bit.
Based on __TIMESIZE, a new macro is defined, __TIME64_T_TYPE,
which is always the right __*_T_TYPE to hold a 64-bit-time.
__TIME64_T_TYPE equals __TIME_T_TYPE if __TIMESIZE equals 64
and equals __SQUAD_T_TYPE otherwise.
__time64_t can then replace uses of internal_time_t.
This patch was tested by running 'make check' on branch
master then applying this patch and its predecessor and
running 'make check' again, and checking that both 'make
check' yield identical results. This was done on
x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
* bits/time64.h: New file.
* include/time.h: Replace internal_time_t with __time64_t.
* posix/bits/types (__time64_t): Add.
* stdlib/Makefile: Add bits/time64.h to includes.
* time/tzfile.c: Replace internal_time_t with __time64_t.
[BZ#23744]
This refactoring was prompted by a problem when the regex code is
used as part of Gnulib and when the builder’s compiler does not grok
__builtin_expect. Problem reported for Gawk by Nelson H.F. Beebe in:
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-gnulib/2018-09/msg00137.html
Although this refactoring does not fix the problem directly,
we might as well have Gawk use the now-preferred glibc style for when
__builtin_expect is unavailable.
* posix/regex_internal.h (BE): Remove.
All uses replaced by __glibc_unlikely or __glibc_likely.
Adjust the non-glibc code to agree with what Gawk needs for
rational range interpretation (RRI) for regular expression ranges.
In unibyte locales, Gawk wants ranges to use the underlying byte
rather than the character code point. This change does not affect
glibc proper.
* posix/regcomp.c (parse_byte) [!LIBC && RE_ENABLE_I18N]:
In unibyte locales, use the byte value rather than
running it through btowc.
Problem and fix reported by Assaf Gordon in:
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-gnulib/2018-07/txtqLKNwBdefE.txt
* posix/regcomp.c (free_charset) [!_LIBC]: Free range_starts and
range_ends members too, as they are defined in 'struct
re_charset_t' even if not _LIBC. This affects only Gnulib.
In commit 9479b6d5e0 we updated all of
the collation data to harmonize with the new version of ISO 14651
which is derived from Unicode 9.0.0. This collation update brought
with it some changes to locales which were not desirable by some
users, in particular it altered the meaning of the
locale-dependent-range regular expression, namely [a-z] and [A-Z], and
for en_US it caused uppercase letters to be matched by [a-z] for the
first time. The matching of uppercase letters by [a-z] is something
which is already known to users of other locales which have this
property, but this change could cause significant problems to en_US
and other similar locales that had never had this change before.
Whether this behaviour is desirable or not is contentious and GNU Awk
has this to say on the topic:
https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Ranges-and-Locales.html
While the POSIX standard also has this further to say: "RE Bracket
Expression":
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/xrat/V4_xbd_chap09.html
"The current standard leaves unspecified the behavior of a range
expression outside the POSIX locale. ... As noted above, efforts were
made to resolve the differences, but no solution has been found that
would be specific enough to allow for portable software while not
invalidating existing implementations."
In glibc we implement the requirement of ISO POSIX-2:1993 and use
collation element order (CEO) to construct the range expression, the
API internally is __collseq_table_lookup(). The fact that we use CEO
and also have 4-level weights on each collation rule means that we can
in practice reorder the collation rules in iso14651_t1_common (the new
data) to provide consistent range expression resolution *and* the
weights should maintain the expected total order. Therefore this
patch does three things:
* Reorder the collation rules for the LATIN script in
iso14651_t1_common to deinterlace uppercase and lowercase letters in
the collation element orders.
* Adds new test data en_US.UTF-8.in for sort-test.sh which exercises
strcoll* and strxfrm* and ensures the ISO 14651 collation remains.
* Add back tests to tst-fnmatch.input and tst-regexloc.c which
exercise that [a-z] does not match A or Z.
The reordering of the ISO 14651 data is done in an entirely mechanical
fashion using the following program attached to the bug:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23393#c28
It is up for discussion if the iso14651_t1_common data should be
refined further to have 3 very tight collation element ranges that
include only a-z, A-Z, and 0-9, which would implement the solution
sought after in:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23393#c12
and implemented here:
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-07/msg00854.html
No regressions on x86_64.
Verified that removal of the iso14651_t1_common change causes tst-fnmatch
to regress with:
422: fnmatch ("[a-z]", "A", 0) = 0 (FAIL, expected FNM_NOMATCH) ***
...
425: fnmatch ("[A-Z]", "z", 0) = 0 (FAIL, expected FNM_NOMATCH) ***
This bug is very similar to bug 23036: The existing code assumed that
the length count included the length byte itself.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Various glibc testcases use tmpnam in ways subject to race conditions
(generate a temporary file name, then later open that file without
O_EXCL).
This patch fixes those tests to use mkstemp - generally a minimal
local fix to use mkstemp instead of tmpnam, rather than a larger fix
to use other testsuite infrastructure for temporary files. The
unchanged use of tmpnam in posix/wordexp-test.c would fail safe in the
event of a race (it's generating a name for use with mkdir rather than
for a file to be opened for writing).
Tested for x86_64.
* grp/tst_fgetgrent.c: Include <unistd.h>.
(main): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* io/test-utime.c (main): Likewise.
* posix/annexc.c (macrofile): Change to modifiable array.
(get_null_defines): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam. Do not remove
macrofile here.
* posix/bug-getopt1.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(do_test): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* posix/bug-getopt2.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(do_test): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* posix/bug-getopt3.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(do_test): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* posix/bug-getopt4.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(do_test): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* posix/bug-getopt5.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(do_test): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* stdio-common/bug7.c: Include <stdlib.h> and <unistd.h>.
(main): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* stdio-common/tst-fdopen.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(main): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* stdio-common/tst-ungetc.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
(main): use mkstemp instead of tmpnam.
* stdlib/isomac.c (macrofile): Change to modifiable array.
(get_null_defines): Use mkstemp instead of tmpnam. Do not remove
macrofile here.
Each weight is prefixed by its length, and the length does not include
itself in the count. This can be seen clearly from the find_idx
function in string/strxfrm_l.c, for example. The old code behaved as if
the length itself counted, thus comparing an additional byte after the
weight, leading to spurious comparison failures and incorrect further
partitioning of character equivalence classes.
On some platforms the inclusion of regex-internal.h in bug-regex33
testcase show a MAX redefinition if test-skeleton.c is include later.
This patch fixes by removing regex-internal.h inclusion and using
SBC_MAX value directly.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
* posix/bug-regex33.c: Fix build after regex sync.
This patch syncs the regex implementation with gnulib (commit 0ee5212).
Only two changes in GLIBC regex testing are required:
1. posix/bug-regex28.c: as previously discussed [1] the change of
expected results on the pattern should be safe.
2. posix/PCRE.tests: the ERE (a)|\1 is malformed (in the sense that
the \1 doesn't mean anything) and although current GLIBC accepts
it has undefined behavior. This patch removes the specific test.
This sync contains some patches from thread 'Regex: Make libc regex
more usable outside GLIBC.' [2] which have been pushed upstream in
gnulib. This patches also fixes some regex issues (BZ #23233,
BZ #21163, BZ #18986, BZ #13762) and I did not add testcases for
both #23233 and #13762 because I couldn't think a simple way to
trigger the expected failure path to trigger them.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
[BZ #23233]
[BZ #21163]
[BZ #18986]
[BZ #13762]
* posix/Makefile (tests): Add bug-regex37 and bug-regex38.
* posix/PCRE.tests: Remove invalid test.
* posix/bug-regex28.c: Fix expected values for used syntax.
* posix/bug-regex37.c: New file.
* posix/bug-regex38.c: Likewise.
* posix/regcomp.c: Sync with gnulib.
* posix/regex.c: Likewise.
* posix/regex.h: Likewise.
* posix/regex_internal.c: Likewise.
* posix/regex_internal.h: Likewise.
* posix/regexec.c: Likewise.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2017-12/msg00807.html
[2] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2017-12/msg00237.html
This is a major rewrite of the description of 'crypt', 'getentropy',
and 'getrandom'.
A few highlights of the content changes:
- Throughout the manual, public headers, and user-visible messages,
I replaced the term "password" with "passphrase", the term
"password database" with "user database", and the term
"encrypt(ion)" with "(one-way) hashing" whenever it was applied to
passphrases. I didn't bother making this change in internal code
or tests. The use of the term "password" in ruserpass.c survives,
because that refers to a keyword in netrc files, but it is adjusted
to make this clearer.
There is a note in crypt.texi explaining that they were
traditionally called passwords but single words are not good enough
anymore, and a note in users.texi explaining that actual passphrase
hashes are found in a "shadow" database nowadays.
- There is a new short introduction to the "Cryptographic Functions"
section, explaining how we do not intend to be a general-purpose
cryptography library, and cautioning that there _are_, or have
been, legal restrictions on the use of cryptography in many
countries, without getting into any kind of detail that we can't
promise to keep up to date.
- I added more detail about what a "one-way function" is, and why
they are used to obscure passphrases for storage. I removed the
paragraph saying that systems not connected to a network need no
user authentication, because that's a pretty rare situation
nowadays. (It still says "sometimes it is necessary" to
authenticate the user, though.)
- I added documentation for all of the hash functions that glibc
actually supports, but not for the additional hash functions
supported by libxcrypt. If we're going to keep this manual section
around after the transition is more advanced, it would probably
make sense to add them then.
- There is much more detailed discussion of how to generate a salt,
and the failure behavior for crypt is documented. (Returning an
invalid hash on failure is what libxcrypt does; Solar Designer's
notes say that this was done "for compatibility with old programs
that assume crypt can never fail".)
- As far as I can tell, the header 'crypt.h' is entirely a GNU
invention, and never existed on any other Unix lineage. The
function 'crypt', however, was in Issue 1 of the SVID and is now
in the XSI component of POSIX. I tried to make all of the
@standards annotations consistent with this, but I'm not sure I got
them perfectly right.
- The genpass.c example has been improved to use getentropy instead
of the current time to generate the salt, and to use a SHA-256 hash
instead of MD5. It uses more random bytes than is strictly
necessary because I didn't want to complicate the code with proper
base64 encoding.
- The testpass.c example has three hardwired hashes now, to
demonstrate that different one-way functions produce different
hashes for the same input. It also demonstrates how DES hashing
only pays attention to the first eight characters of the input.
- There is new text explaining in more detail how a CSPRNG differs
from a regular random number generator, and how
getentropy/getrandom are not exactly a CSPRNG. I tried not to make
specific falsifiable claims here. I also tried to make the
blocking/cancellation/error behavior of both getentropy and
getrandom clearer.
The functions encrypt, setkey, encrypt_r, setkey_r, cbc_crypt,
ecb_crypt, and des_setparity should not be used in new programs,
because they use the DES block cipher, which is unacceptably weak by
modern standards. Demote all of them to compatibility symbols, and
remove their prototypes from installed headers. cbc_crypt, ecb_crypt,
and des_setparity were already compat symbols when glibc was
configured with --disable-obsolete-rpc.
POSIX requires encrypt and setkey to be available when _XOPEN_CRYPT
is defined, so this change also removes the definition of X_OPEN_CRYPT
from <unistd.h>.
The entire "DES Encryption" section is dropped from the manual, as is
the mention of AUTH_DES and FIPS 140-2 in the introduction to
crypt.texi. The documentation of 'memfrob' cross-referenced the DES
Encryption section, which is replaced by a hyperlink to libgcrypt, and
while I was in there I spruced up the actual documentation of
'memfrob' and 'strfry' a little. It's still fairly jokey, because
those functions _are_ jokes, but they do also have real use cases, so
people trying to use them for real should have all the information
they need.
DES-based authentication for Sun RPC is also insecure and should be
deprecated or even removed, but maybe that can be left as TI-RPC's
problem.
As noted in bug 13888, and as I noted previously in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2000-10/msg00111.html>, various
tests used hardcoded paths in /tmp, so posing issues for simultaneous
test runs from different build directories.
This patch fixes such uses of hardcoded file names to put them in the
build directory instead (in the case of stdio-common/bug5 the file
names are changed as well, to avoid a conflict with the name bug5.out
also used for the automatic test output redirection). It also fixes
test-installation.pl likewise (that was using filenames with $$ in
them rather than strictly hardcoded names, but that's still not good
practice for temporary file naming).
Note that my list of files changed is not identical to that in bug
13888. I added tst-spawn3.c and test-installation.pl, and removed
some tests that seem to me (now) to create temporary files securely
(simply using /tmp is not itself a problem if the temporary files are
handled properly with mkstemp; I haven't checked whether those tests
used to do things insecurely). conformtest is not changed because the
makefiles always pass a --tmpdir option so the /tmp default is
irrelevant, and for the same reason there is no actual problem with
nptl/tst-umask1.c because again the makefiles always override the
default.
nptl/sockperf.c is ignored because there is no code to run it;
probably that file should actually be removed.
Some tests use the mktemp function, but I think they all use it in a
way that *is* secure (for generating names for directories / sockets /
fifos / symlinks, where the operation using the name will not follow
symlinks and so there is no potential for a symlink attack on the
account running the testsuite).
Some tests use the tmpnam function to generate temporary file names.
This is in principle insecure, but not addressed by this patch (I
consider it a separate issue from the fully hardcoded paths).
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #13888]
* posix/Makefile (CFLAGS-tst-spawn3.c): New variable.
* posix/tst-spawn3.c (do_test): Put tst-spwan3.pid in OBJPFX, not
/tmp.
* scripts/test-installation.pl: Put temporary files in build
directory, not /tmp.
* stdio-common/Makefile (CFLAGS-bug3.c): New variable.
(CFLAGS-bug4.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-bug5.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-test-fseek.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-test-popen.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-test_rdwr.c): Likewise.
* stdio-common/bug3.c (main): Put temporary file in OBJPFX, not
/tmp.
* stdio-common/bug4.c (main): Likewise.
* stdio-common/bug5.c (main): Likewise.
* stdio-common/test-fseek.c (TESTFILE): Likewise.
* stdio-common/test-popen.c (do_test): Likewise.
* stdio-common/test_rdwr.c (main): Likewise.
Neither the <dlfcn.h> entry points, nor lazy symbol resolution, nor
initial shared library load-up, are cancellation points, so ld.so
should exclusively use I/O primitives that are not cancellable. We
currently achieve this by having the cancellation hooks compile as
no-ops when IS_IN(rtld); this patch changes to using exclusively
_nocancel primitives in the source code instead, which makes the
intent clearer and significantly reduces the amount of code compiled
under IS_IN(rtld) as well as IS_IN(libc) -- in particular,
elf/Makefile no longer thinks we require a copy of unwind.c in
rtld-libc.a. (The older mechanism is preserved as a backstop.)
The bulk of the change is splitting up the files that define the
_nocancel I/O functions, so they don't also define the variants that
*are* cancellation points; after which, the existing logic for picking
out the bits of libc that need to be recompiled as part of ld.so Just
Works. I did this for all of the _nocancel functions, not just the
ones used by ld.so, for consistency.
fcntl was a little tricky because it's only a cancellation point for
certain opcodes (F_SETLKW(64), which can block), and the existing
__fcntl_nocancel wasn't applying the FCNTL_ADJUST_CMD hook, which
strikes me as asking for trouble, especially as the only nontrivial
definition of FCNTL_ADJUST_CMD (for powerpc64) changes F_*LK* opcodes.
To fix this, fcntl_common moves to fcntl_nocancel.c along with
__fcntl_nocancel, and changes its name to the extern (but hidden)
symbol __fcntl_nocancel_adjusted, so that regular fcntl can continue
calling it. __fcntl_nocancel now applies FCNTL_ADJUST_CMD; so that
both both fcntl.c and fcntl_nocancel.c can see it, the only nontrivial
definition moves from sysdeps/u/s/l/powerpc/powerpc64/fcntl.c to
.../powerpc64/sysdep.h and becomes entirely a macro, instead of a macro
that calls an inline function.
The nptl version of libpthread also changes a little, because its
"compat-routines" formerly included files that defined all the
_nocancel functions it uses; instead of continuing to duplicate them,
I exported the relevant ones from libc.so as GLIBC_PRIVATE. Since the
Linux fcntl.c calls a function defined by fcntl_nocancel.c, it can no
longer be used from libpthread.so; instead, introduce a custom
forwarder, pt-fcntl.c, and export __libc_fcntl from libc.so as
GLIBC_PRIVATE. The nios2-linux ABI doesn't include a copy of vfork()
in libpthread, and it was handling that by manipulating
libpthread-routines in .../linux/nios2/Makefile; it is cleaner to do
what other such ports do, and have a pt-vfork.S that defines no symbols.
Right now, it appears that Hurd does not implement _nocancel I/O, so
sysdeps/generic/not-cancel.h will forward everything back to the
regular functions. This changed the names of some of the functions
that sysdeps/mach/hurd/dl-sysdep.c needs to interpose.
* elf/dl-load.c, elf/dl-misc.c, elf/dl-profile.c, elf/rtld.c
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-sysdep.c
Include not-cancel.h. Use __close_nocancel instead of __close,
__open64_nocancel instead of __open, __read_nocancel instead of
__libc_read, and __write_nocancel instead of __libc_write.
* csu/check_fds.c (check_one_fd)
* sysdeps/posix/fdopendir.c (__fdopendir)
* sysdeps/posix/opendir.c (__alloc_dir): Use __fcntl_nocancel
instead of __fcntl and/or __libc_fcntl.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pthread_setname.c (pthread_setname_np)
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pthread_getname.c (pthread_getname_np)
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/smp.h (is_smp_system):
Use __open64_nocancel instead of __open_nocancel.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/not-cancel.h: Move all of the
hidden_proto declarations to the end and issue them if either
IS_IN(libc) or IS_IN(rtld).
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/Makefile [subdir=io] (sysdep_routines):
Add close_nocancel, fcntl_nocancel, nanosleep_nocancel,
open_nocancel, open64_nocancel, openat_nocancel, pause_nocancel,
read_nocancel, waitpid_nocancel, write_nocancel.
* io/Versions [GLIBC_PRIVATE]: Add __libc_fcntl,
__fcntl_nocancel, __open64_nocancel, __write_nocancel.
* posix/Versions: Add __nanosleep_nocancel, __pause_nocancel.
* nptl/pt-fcntl.c: New file.
* nptl/Makefile (pthread-compat-wrappers): Remove fcntl.
(libpthread-routines): Add pt-fcntl.
* include/fcntl.h (__fcntl_nocancel_adjusted): New function.
(__libc_fcntl): Remove attribute_hidden.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fcntl.c (__libc_fcntl): Call
__fcntl_nocancel_adjusted, not fcntl_common.
(__fcntl_nocancel): Move to new file fcntl_nocancel.c.
(fcntl_common): Rename to __fcntl_nocancel_adjusted; also move
to fcntl_nocancel.c.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fcntl_nocancel.c: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/fcntl.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/sysdep.h:
Define FCNTL_ADJUST_CMD here, as a self-contained macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/close.c: Move __close_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/close_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/nanosleep.c: Move __nanosleep_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/nanosleep_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/open.c: Move __open_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/open_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/open64.c: Move __open64_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/open64_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat.c: Move __openat_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat64.c: Move __openat64_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat64_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pause.c: Move __pause_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pause_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/read.c: Move __read_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/read_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/waitpid.c: Move __waitpid_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/waitpid_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/write.c: Move __write_nocancel to...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/write_nocancel.c: ...this new file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/nios2/Makefile: Don't override
libpthread-routines.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/nios2/pt-vfork.S: New file which
defines nothing.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/dl-sysdep.c: Define __read instead of
__libc_read, and __write instead of __libc_write. Define
__open64 in addition to __open.
Current posix_spawnp implementation wrongly tries to execute invalid
binaries (for instance script without shebang) as a shell script in
non compat mode. It was a regression introduced by
9ff72da471 when __spawni started to use
__execvpe instead of __execve (glibc __execvpe try to execute ENOEXEC
as shell script regardless).
This patch fixes it by using an internal symbol (__execvpex) with the
faulty semantic (since compat mode is handled by spawni.c itself).
It was reported by Daniel Drake on libc-help [1].
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
[BZ #23264]
* include/unistd.h (__execvpex): New prototype.
* posix/Makefile (tests): Add tst-spawn4.
(tests-internal): Add tst-spawn4-compat.
* posix/execvpe.c (__execvpe_common, __execvpex): New functions.
* posix/tst-spawn4-compat.c: New file.
* posix/tst-spawn4.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/spawni.c (__spawni): Do not interpret invalid
binaries as shell scripts.
* sysdeps/posix/spawni.c (__spawni): Likewise.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-help/2018-06/msg00012.html
* bits/sched.h: Include <bits/types/struct_sched_param.h> and move struct
sched_param definition to it.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/bits/sched.h: Likewise.
* bits/types/struct_sched_param.h: New file.
* sysdeps/htl/bits/types/struct___pthread_attr.h: Include
<bits/types/struct_sched_param.h> instead of <sched.h>.
* posix/Makefile (headers): Add bits/types/struct_sched_param.h.
See:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xbd/re.html
> A range expression represents the set of collating elements that fall
> between two elements in the current collation sequence,
> inclusively. It is expressed as the starting point and the ending
> point separated by a hyphen (-).
>
> Range expressions must not be used in portable applications because
> their behaviour is dependent on the collating sequence. Ranges will be
> treated according to the current collating sequence, and include such
> characters that fall within the range based on that collating
> sequence, regardless of character values. This, however, means that
> the interpretation will differ depending on collating sequence. If,
> for instance, one collating sequence defines ä as a variant of a,
> while another defines it as a letter following z, then the expression
> [ä-z] is valid in the first language and invalid in the second.
Therefore, using [a-z] does not make much sense except in the C/POSIX locale.
The new iso14651_t1_common lists upper case and lower case Latin characters
in a different order than the old one which causes surprising results
for example in the de_DE locale: [a-z] now includes A because A comes
after a in iso14651_t1_common but does not include Z because that comes
after z in iso14651_t1_common.
* posix/tst-fnmatch.input: Fix results for range expressions
for non C locales.
* posix/tst-regexloc.c: Do not use a range expression for
de_DE.ISO-8859-1 locale.
This test case tests how many collating elements are defined in
da_DK.ISO-8859-1 locale. The da_DK locale source defines 4:
collating-element <A-A> from "<U0041><U0041>"
collating-element <A-a> from "<U0041><U0061>"
collating-element <a-A> from "<U0061><U0041>"
collating-element <a-a> from "<U0061><U0061>"
The new iso14651_t1_common file defines more collating elements, two
of them are in the ISO-8859-1 range:
collating-element <U004C_00B7> from "<U004C><U00B7>" % decomposition of LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L WITH MIDDLE DOT
collating-element <U006C_00B7> from "<U006C><U00B7>" % decomposition of LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH MIDDLE DOT
So the total count is now 6 instead of 4.
* posix/bug-regex5.c: Fix test case because with the new
iso14651_t1_common file, the da_DK locale now has 6 collating elements
in the ISO-8859-1 range instead of 4 with the old iso14651_t1_common
file.