| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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the resolution to Austin Group issue #411 defined new semantics for
the posix_spawn dup2 file action in the (previously useless) case
where src and dest fd are equal. future issues will require the dup2
file action to remove the close-on-exec flag. without this change,
passing fds to a child with posix_spawn while avoiding fd-leak races
in a multithreaded parent required a complex dance with temporary fds.
based on patch by Petr Skocik. changes were made to preserve the
80-column formatting of the function and to remove code that became
unreachable as a result of the new functionality.
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commit 8c4be3e2209d2a1d3874b8bc2b474668fcbbbac6 was written to
preclude the GLOB_PERIOD extension from matching these directory
entries, but also precluded literal matches.
adjust the check that excludes . and .. to check whether the
GLOB_PERIOD flag is in effect, so that it cannot alter behavior in
cases governed by the standard, and also don't exclude . or .. in any
case where normal glob behavior (fnmatch's FNM_PERIOD flag) would have
included one or both of them (patterns such as ".*").
it's still not clear whether this is the preferred behavior for
GLOB_PERIOD, but at least it's clear that it can no longer break
applications which are not relying on quirks of a nonstandard feature.
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execvpe stack-allocates a buffer used to hold the full path
(combination of a PATH entry and the program name)
while searching through $PATH, so at least
NAME_MAX+PATH_MAX is needed.
The stack size can be made conditionally smaller
(the current 1024 appears appropriate)
should this larger size be burdensome in those situations.
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MAXADDRS was chosen not to need enforcement, but the logic used to
compute it assumes the answers received match the RR types of the
queries. specifically, it assumes that only one replu contains A
record answers. if the replies to both the A and the AAAA query have
their answer sections filled with A records, MAXADDRS can be exceeded
and clobber the stack of the calling function.
this bug was found and reported by Felix Wilhelm.
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the rightmost '/' character is not necessarily the delimiter before
the basename; it could be a spurious trailing character on the
directory name.
this change does not introduce any normalization of pathnames or
stripping of trailing slashes, contrary to at least glibc and perhaps
other implementations; it jusst prevents their presence from breaking
things. whether further changes should be made is an open question
that may depend on conformance and/or application compatibility
considerations.
based loosely on patch by Joakim Sindholt.
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calling __unlock on t->exitlock is not valid because __unlock reads
the waiters count after making the atomic store that could allow
pthread_exit to continue and unmap the thread's stack and the object t
points to. for now, inline the __unlock logic with an unconditional
futex wake operation so that the waiters count is not needed.
once __lock/__unlock have been made safe for self-synchronized
destruction, we could switch back to using them.
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the freebsd fma code failed to raise underflow exception in some
cases in nearest rounding mode (affects fmal too) e.g.
fma(-0x1p-1000, 0x1.000001p-74, 0x1p-1022)
and the inexact exception may be raised spuriously since the fenv
is not saved/restored around the exact multiplication algorithm
(affects x86 fma too).
another issue is that the underflow behaviour when the rounded result
is the minimal normal number is target dependent, ieee754 allows two
ways to raise underflow for inexact results: raise if the result before
rounding is in the subnormal range (e.g. aarch64, arm, powerpc) or if
the result after rounding with infinite exponent range is in the
subnormal range (e.g. x86, mips, sh).
to avoid all these issues the algorithm was rewritten with mostly int
arithmetics and float arithmetics is only used to get correct rounding
and raise exceptions according to the behaviour of the target without
any fenv.h dependency. it also unifies x86 and non-x86 fma.
fmaf is not affected, fmal need to be fixed too.
this algorithm depends on a_clz_64 and it required a few spurious
instructions to make sure underflow exception is raised in a particular
corner case. (normally FORCE_EVAL(tiny*tiny) would be used for this,
but on i386 gcc is broken if the expression is constant
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=57245
and there is no easy portable fix for the macro.)
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this is for consistency with the way it's done in in the dynamic
linker, avoiding a deprecated C feature (non-prototype function
types), and improving code generation. GCC unnecessarily uses the
variadic calling convention (e.g. clearing rax on x86_64) when making
a call where the argument types are not known for compatibility with
wrong code which calls variadic functions this way. (C on the other
hand is clear that such calls have undefined behavior.)
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this is a subtle issue with how the assembler/linker work. for the adr
pseudo-instruction used to find __hwcap, the assembler in thumb mode
generates a 16-bit thumb add instruction which can only represent
word-aligned addresses, despite not knowing the alignment of the
label. if the setjmp function is assigned a non-multiple-of-4 address
at link time, the load then loads from the wrong address (the last
instruction rather than the data containing the offset) and ends up
reading nonsense instead of the value of __hwcap. this in turn causes
the checks for floating-point/vector register sets (e.g. IWMMX) to
evaluate incorrectly, crashing when setjmp/longjmp try to save/restore
those registers.
fix based on bug report by Felix Hädicke.
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under some conditions, the mmap syscall wrongly fails with EPERM
instead of ENOMEM when memory is exhausted; this is probably the
result of the kernel trying to fit the allocation somewhere that
crosses into the kernel range or below mmap_min_addr. in any case it's
a conformance bug, so work around it. for now, only handle the case of
anonymous mappings with no requested address; in other cases EPERM may
be a legitimate error.
this indirectly fixes the possibility of malloc failing with the wrong
errno value.
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GLOB_PERIOD is a gnu extension, and GNU glob does not seem to honor it
except in the last path component. it's not clear whether this a bug
or intentional, but it seems reasonable that it should exclude the
special entries . and .. when walking.
changes based on report and analysis by Julien Ramseier.
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some applications use getservbyport to find port numbers that are not
assigned to a service; if getservbyport always succeeds with a numeric
string as the result, they fail to find any available ports.
POSIX doesn't seem to mandate the behavior one way or another. it
specifies an abstract service database, which an implementation could
define to include numeric port strings, but it makes more sense to
align behavior with traditional implementations.
based on patch by A. Wilcox. the original patch only changed
getservbyport[_r]. to maintain a consistent view of the "service
database", I have also modified getservbyname[_r] to exclude numeric
port strings.
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if the parent thread was able to set the new thread's priority before
it reached the check for 'startlock', the new thread failed to restore
its signal mask and thus ran with all signals blocked.
concept for patch by Sergei, who reported the issue; unnecessary
changes were removed and comments added since the whole 'startlock'
thing is non-idiomatic and confusing. eventually it should be replaced
with use of idiomatic synchronization primitives.
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this is mandated by C and POSIX standards and is in accordance with
glibc behavior.
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Reported by Leah Neukirchen.
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This aligns clearenv with the Linux man page by setting 'environ'
rather than '*environ' to NULL, and stops it from leaking entries
allocated by the libc.
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Rewrite environment access functions to slim down code, fix bugs and
avoid invoking undefined behavior.
* avoid using int-typed iterators where size_t would be correct;
* use strncmp instead of memcmp consistently;
* tighten prologues by invoking __strchrnul;
* handle NULL environ.
putenv:
* handle "=value" input via unsetenv too (will return -1/EINVAL);
* rewrite and simplify __putenv; fix the leak caused by failure to
deallocate entry added by preceding setenv when called from putenv.
setenv:
* move management of libc-allocated entries to this translation unit,
and use no-op weak symbols in putenv/unsetenv;
unsetenv:
* rewrite; this fixes UB caused by testing a free'd pointer against
NULL on entry to subsequent loops.
Not changed:
Failure to extend allocation tracking array (previously __env_map, now
env_alloced) is ignored rather than causing to report -1/ENOMEM to the
caller; the worst-case consequence is leaking this allocation when it
is removed or replaced in a subsequent environment access.
Initially UB in unsetenv was reported by Alexander Cherepanov.
Using a weak alias to avoid pulling in malloc via unsetenv was
suggested by Rich Felker.
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the DFA table controlling accepted ranges for the f4 prefix used an
incorrect upper bound of 0xa0 where it should have been 0x90, allowing
such sequences to be accepted and decoded as non-Unicode-scalar values
0x110000 through 0x11ffff.
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the value computed as an output limit that bounds the amount of input
consumed below the input limit was incorrectly being used as the
actual amount of input consumed. instead, compute the actual amount of
input consumed as a difference of pointers before and after the
conversion.
patch by Mikhail Kremnyov.
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counts leading zero bits of a 64bit int, undefined on zero input.
(has nothing to do with atomics, added to atomic.h so target specific
helper functions are together.)
there is a logarithmic generic implementation and another in terms of
a 32bit a_clz_32 on targets where that's available.
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patch by Pascal Cuoq.
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It is possible for argv[0] to be a null pointer, but the __progname
variable is used to implement functions in src/legacy/err.c that do not
expect it to be null. It is also available to the user via the
program_invocation_name alias as a GNU extension, and the implementation
in Glibc initializes it to a pointer to empty string rather than NULL.
Since argv[0] is usually non-null and it's preferable to keep those
variables in BSS, implement the fallbacks in __init_libc, which also
allows to have an intermediate fallback to AT_EXECFN.
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commit c002668eb0352e619ea7064e4940b397b4a6e68d inadvertently moved
the check for unflushed write buffer outside of the scope of the
existing lock.
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passing to pthread_join the id of a thread which is not joinable
results in undefined behavior.
in principle the check to trap does not necessarily work if
pthread_detach was called after thread creation, since no effort is
made here to synchronize access to t->detached, but the check is
well-defined and harmless for callers which did not invoke UB, and
likely to help catch erroneous code that would otherwise mysteriously
hang.
patch by William Pitcock.
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The TOC pointer is constant within a single dso, but needs to be saved
and restored around cross-dso calls. The PLT stub saves it to the
caller's stack frame, and the linker adds code to the caller to restore
it.
With a local call, as within a single dso or with static linking, this
doesn't happen and the TOC pointer is always in r2. Therefore,
setjmp/longjmp need to save/restore the TOC pointer from/to different
locations depending on whether the call to setjmp was a local or non-local
call.
It is always safe for longjmp to restore to both r2 and the caller's stack.
If the call to setjmp was local, and only r2 matters and the stack location
will be ignored, but is required by the ABI to be reserved for the TOC
pointer. If the call was non-local, then only the stack location matters,
and whatever is restored into r2 will be clobbered anyway when the caller
reloads r2 from the stack.
A little extra care is required for sigsetjmp, because it uses setjmp
internally. After the second return from this setjmp call, r2 will contain
the caller's TOC pointer instead of libc's TOC pointer. We need to save
and restore the correct libc pointer before we can tail call to
__sigsetjmp_tail.
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since setlocale(cat, NULL) is required to return the setting for the
global locale, there is no standard mechanism to obtain the name of
the currently active thread-local locale set by uselocale. this makes
it impossible for application/library software to load appropriate
translations, etc. unless using the gettext implementation provided by
libc, which has privileged access to libc internals.
to fill this gap, glibc introduced the _NL_LOCALE_NAME macro which can
be used with nl_langinfo to obtain the name. GNU gettext/gnulib code
already use this functionality on glibc, and can easily be adapted to
make use of it on non-glibc systems if it's available; for other
systems they poke at locale implementation internals, which we want to
avoid. this patch provides a compatible interface to the one glibc
introduced.
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The switch statement has no 'default:' case and the function ends
immediately following the switch, so the extra comparison did not
communicate any extra information to the compiler.
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The flag 1<<7 is used in several places for different purposes that are
not always easy to distinguish. Mark those usages that correspond to the
flag that is used by the kernel for futexes.
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commit 58e2396a9aa23c132faf4198ca4d779c84955b38 missed that the same
code was duplicated in implementation of vfwprintf.
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while the official elfv2 abi for "powerpc64le" sets power8 as the
baseline isa, we use it for both little and big endian powerpc64
targets and need to maintain compatibility with pre-power8 models. the
instructions for sqrt, fabs, and fma are in the baseline isa; support
for the rest is conditional via predefined isa-level macros.
patch by David Edelsohn.
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these were introduced in z196 and not available in the baseline (z900)
ISA level. use __HTM__ as an alternate indicator for ISA level, since
gcc did not define __ARCH__ until 7.x.
patch by David Edelsohn.
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in arm rtabi these __aeabi_* functions have special abi (they are
only allowed to clobber r0,r1,r2,r3,ip,lr,cpsr), so they cannot
be simple wrappers around normal string functions (which may
clobber other registers), the safest solution is to write them in
asm, a minimalistic implementation works because these are not
supposed to be emitted by compilers or used in general.
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commit 2d7d05f031e014068a61d3076c6178513395d2ae wrongly changed ERANGE
to EINVAL, likely as the result of copy-and-paste error.
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commit 97bd6b09dbe7478d5a90a06ecd9e5b59389d8eb9 refactored the table
lookup into a function and introduced an error in index computation.
the error caused garbage to be read from the table if the given charmap
had a non-zero number of elided entries.
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POSIX requires ctime_r return a null pointer on failure, which can
occur if the input time_t value is not representable in broken down
form.
based on patch by Alexander Monakov.
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these functions return an error code, and are not explicitly
documented to set errno, but they are nonstandard and the historical
implementations do set errno as well, and some applications expect
this behavior. do likewise for compatibility.
patch by Rudolph Pereira.
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ctime passes the result from localtime directly to asctime. But in case
of error, localtime returns 0. This causes an error (NULL pointer
dereference) in asctime.
based on patch by Omer Anson.
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mremap seems to always fail on nommu, and on some non-Linux
implementations of the Linux syscall API, it at least fails to
increase allocation size, and may fail to move (i.e. defragment) the
existing mapping when shrinking it too. instead of failing realloc or
leaving an over-sized allocation that may waste a large amount of
memory, fallback to malloc-memcpy-free if mremap fails.
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POSIX defines getdate error #5 as:
"An I/O error is encountered while reading the template file."
POSIX defines getdate error #7 as:
"There is no line in the template that matches the input."
This change correctly disambiguates between the two error conditions.
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Per 1003.1-2008 (2016 ed.), catopen must set errno on failure.
We set errno to EOPNOTSUPP because musl does not currently support
message catalogues.
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the check to prevent matching empty string wrongly blocked matching
of "/" due to checking emptiness after stripping leading slashes
rather than checking the full original argument string.
simplified from patch by Julien Ramseier.
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when using the sh4a opcodes, the assembler tags the resulting object
file as requiring sh4a. the linker then refuses to (static) link it
with object files marked as requiring j2, since there is no isa level
that includes both sh4a and j2 instructions.
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Make a fast path for ascii chars which is assumed to be the most common
case. This has significant performance benefit on xml json and similar
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The flags argument was missing, causing uninitalized data to be passed
to fchownat(2). The correct value of flags should match the fallback for
chown(3).
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there was missing reverse-conversion logic for the case, handled
specially in the character set tables, where a byte represents a
unicode codepoint with the same value.
this patch adds code to handle the case, and refactors the two-level
10-bit table lookup for legacy character sets into a function to avoid
repeating it yet another time as part of the fix.
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