When extracting compressed files from an uncompressed Phar, we must not
use the direct file pointer, but rather get an uncompressed file
pointer.
We also add a test to show that deflated and stored entries are
properly extracted.
This also fixes#79912, which appears to be a duplicate of #69279.
Co-authored-by: Anna Filina <afilina@gmail.com>
Closes GH-6599.
This is mainly to work around https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/6455,
but not building the mime structure for empty hashtables is a general
performance optimization, so we do not restrict it to affected cURL
versions (7.56.0 to 7.75.0).
The minor change to bug79033.phpt is unexpected, but should not matter
in practice.
Closes GH-6606.
We must not assume that the first end of central dir signature in a ZIP
archive actually designates the end of central directory record, since
the data in the archive may contain arbitrary byte patterns. Thus, we
better search from the end of the data, what is also slightly more
efficient.
There is, however, no way to detect the end of central directory
signature by searching from the end of the ZIP archive with absolute
certainty, since the signature could be part of the trailing comment.
To mitigate, we check that the comment length fits to the found
position, but that might still not be the correct position in rare
cases.
Closes GH-6507.
In the case of a stream with no filters, php_stream_fill_read_buffer
only reads stream->chunk_size into the read buffer. If the stream has
filters attached, it could unnecessarily buffer a large amount of data.
With this change, php_stream_fill_read_buffer only proceeds until either
the requested size or stream->chunk_size is available in the read buffer.
Co-authored-by: Christoph M. Becker <cmbecker69@gmx.de>
Closes GH-6444.
This fixes two related issues:
1. When a PS with cursor is used in store_result/get_result,
perform a COM_FETCH with maximum number of rows rather than
silently switching to an unbuffered result set (in the case of
store_result) or erroring (in the case of get_result).
In the future, we might want to make get_result unbuffered for
PS with cursors, as using cursors with buffered result sets
doesn't really make sense. Unlike store_result, get_result
isn't very explicit about what kind of result set is desired.
2. If the client did not request a cursor, but the server reports
that a cursor exists, ignore this and treat the PS as if it
has no cursor (i.e. to not use COM_FETCH). It appears to be a
server side bug that a cursor used inside an SP will be reported
to the client, even though the client cannot use the cursor.
Fixes bug #64638, bug #72862, bug #77935.
Closes GH-6518.
Don't truncate the file length to unsigned int...
I have no idea whether that fully fixes the problem because the
process gets OOM killed before finishing, but at least the
immediate parse error is gone now.
`phar_path_check()` already strips a leading slash, so we must not
attempt to strip the trailing slash from an now empty directory name.
Closes GH-6508.
When we receive an error while reading a result set, we should
assume that no more result sets are available. libmysqlclient
implements the same behavior.
When `php_zlib_deflate_filter()` is called with `PSFS_FLAG_FLUSH_INC`
but without new buckets being available (e.g. because a user calls
`rewind()` after writing to the stream), we have to make sure that any
pending data are flushed. This could basically be done like in the
attached patch[1], but that could cause unnessary flushes, which can be
harmful for compression, and adds unnecessary flush markers to the
stream. Thus, we use the `php_zlib_filter_data.finished` field, which
has not been used for `zlib.deflate` filters, and properly keep track
of the need to flush.
[1] <https://bugs.php.net/patch-display.php?bug_id=48725&patch=zlib-filter-flush-fix.patch&revision=latest>
Closes GH-6019.
Reading from a stream may return greater than zero, but nonetheless the
stream's EOF flag may have been set. We have to cater to this
condition by setting the close flag for filters.
We also have to cater to that change in the zlib.inflate filter:
If `inflate()` is called with flush mode `Z_FINISH`, but the output
buffer is not large enough to inflate all available data, it fails with
`Z_BUF_ERROR`. However, `Z_BUF_ERROR` is not fatal; in fact, the zlib
manual states: "If deflate returns with Z_OK or Z_BUF_ERROR, this
function must be called again with Z_FINISH and more output space
(updated avail_out) but no more input data, until it returns with
Z_STREAM_END or an error." Hence, we do so.
Closes GH-6001.
If there is no result set (e.g. for upsert queries), still allow
fetching to occur without error, i.e. treat it the same way as
an empty result set.
This normalizes behavior between native and emulated prepared
statements and addresses a regression in PHP 7.4.13.
Apparently, there are broken tarballs out there which are actually in
ustar format, but did not write the `ustar` marker. Since popular tar
tools like GNU tar and 7zip have no issues dealing with such tarballs,
Phar should also be more resilient.
Thus, when the first checksum check of a tarball in (presumed) in old-
style format fails, we check whether the checksum would be suitable for
ustar format; if so, we treat the tarball as being in ustar format.
Closes GH-6479.
Phar signatures practically are of limited size; for the MD5 and SHA
hashes the size is fixed (at most 64 bytes for SHA512); for OpenSSL
public keys there is no size limit in theory, but "64 KiB ought to be
good enough for anybody". So we check for that limit, to avoid fatal
errors due to out of memory conditions.
Since it is neither possible to have the signature compressed in the
ZIP archive, nor is it possible to manually add a signature via Phar,
we use ZipArchive to create a suitable archive for the test on the fly.
Closes GH-6474.
We avoid `YYCURSOR` becoming `NULL` by initializing `YYMARKER`, and add
a default rule for `<NORMAL>` where we catch unexpected input.
We also fix the only superficially related issue regarding empty input
followed by `T_SEPARATOR` and command, which caused another segfault.
Closes GH-6464.
Rename the methods in MessageFormatAdapter to make sure they don't
clash with anything defined by icu itself, which may be a problem
if icu is linked statically.
The current behavior has been introduced 20 years ago in
f9e375f493 as part of a larger change.
It's not clear to me why special treatement of -lpthread is necessary
here.
References to null-serializations are stored as null, and as such
are part of the reference count.
Reminds me that we really need to deprecate the mess that is
Serializable.
In the somewhat unlikely case that `zend_fstat()` fails, we must not
proceed executing the function, but return `false` instead.
Patch based on the patch contributed by sagpant at microsoft dot com.
Closes GH-6432.
`\r\n` does only terminate a header, if not followed by `\t` or ` `.
We have to cater to that when determining the end position of the
respective headers.
Closes GH-6420.
We must not redefine the version "constants" for phpize builds, because
these have already generated in phpize.js, from where we pass these
variables forward to configure.js.
We also add `PHP_EXTRA_VERSION` and `PHP_VERSION_STRING` to the files
for completeness.
Closes GH-6419.
Failure to rebind such closures is not necessarily related to them
being created by `ReflectionFunctionAbstract::getClosure()`, so we fix
the error message.
Closes GH-6424.
As of commit 81b2f3e[1], `parse_url()` accepts URLs with a zero port,
but does not report that port, what is wrong in hindsight.
Since the port number is stored as `unsigned short` there is no way to
distinguish between port zero and no port. For BC reasons, we thus
introduce `parse_url_ex2()` which accepts an output parameter that
allows that distinction, and use the new function to fix the behavior.
The introduction of `parse_url_ex2()` has been suggested by Nikita.
[1] <http://git.php.net/?p=php-src.git;a=commit;h=81b2f3e5d9fcdffd87a4fcd12bd8c708a97091e1>
Closes GH-6399.
We cannot simply switch to use_result here, because the fetch_row
methods in get_result mode and in use_result/store_result mode
are different: In one case it accepts a statement, in the other
a return value zval. Thus, doing a switch to use_result results
in a segfault when trying to fetch a row.
Actually supporting get_result with cursors would require adding
cursor support in mysqlnd_result, not just mysqlnd_ps. That would
be a significant amount of effort and, given the age of the issue,
does not appear to be particularly likely to happen soon.
As such, we simply generate an error when using get_result()
with cursors, which is much better than causing a segfault.
Instead, parameter binding needs to be used.
Unless `SQLGetData()` returns `SQL_SUCCESS` or `SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO`,
the `StrLen_or_IndPtr` output argument is not guaranteed to be properly
set. Thus we handle retrieval failure other than `SQL_ERROR` by
yielding `false` for those column values and raising a warning.
Closes GH-6281.
Set error_info when we fail to read a packet, instead of throwing
a warning. Additionally we also need to populate the right
error_info in rowp_read -- we'll later take the error from the
packet, not the connection.
No test case, as this is hard to reliably test. I'm using the
test case from:
https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/2131#issuecomment-538374838
We have to error on unhandled exceptions in FFI callbacks, to avoid
passing back undefined values.
This has been discussed and agreed upon in a previous PR[1].
[1] <https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/5120>
Closes GH-6366.