Before commit 44f73c5a62 ("Cygwin: Fix segfalt when too many command
line args are specified.") we had no actual argument size limit, except
for the fact that the child process created another copy of the argv
array on the stack, which could result in a stack overflow and a
subsequent SEGV. Commit 44f73c5a62 changed that by allocating the
additional argv array via malloc, and it introduced a new SC_ARG_MAX
limit along the lines of the typical Linux limit.
However, this new limit is artificial. Cygwin allocates all argument
and environment data on the cygheap. We only run out of ARG_MAX space
if we're out of memory resources.
Change argument size handling accordingly:
- Drop the args size check from child_info_spawn::worker.
- Return -1 from sysconf (SC_ARG_MAX), i. e., the argument size limit
is undefined.
- Change argv handling in class av, so that a failing cmalloc is not
fatal. This allows the parent process to return E2BIG if it's out
of cygheap resources.
- In the child, add a check around the new malloc call, so that it
doesn't result in a SEGV if the child process gets unexpectedly into
an ENOMEM situation at this point. In this (unlikely) case, proceed
with the original __argv array instead. Add comment to explain why.
Fixes: 44f73c5a62 ("Cygwin: Fix segfalt when too many command line args are specified.")
Tested-by: Takashi Yano <takashi.yano@nifty.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>