vmstat from proc-ps-4.0.x prints "Unable to create system stat structure"
if the /proc/cpuinfo output fails to contain topology info. While
Linux always prints topology info if the kernel has been built with
CONFIG_SMP, Cygwin only prints topology info if the CPU is known to
be multi-core (i. e., the HT feature flag is set).
Fix that by printing topology info all the time, even for single-core
CPUs.
Fixes: e0d48debed ("Fix /proc/cpuinfo topology and cache size info")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The code computing the mask of pending signals used the per-queued
signal TLS pointer without checking it for NULL. Fix this by using
the process-wide signal mask in that case.
Fixes: 195169186b ("Cygwin: wait_sig: allow to compute process-wide mask of pending signals")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-December/252737.html
If the less is started from non-cygwin shell and window size is
changed, it will hang-up when quitting. The cause of the proglem is
that less uses longjump() in signal handler. If the signal handler
is called while cygwin is acquiring the mutex, cygwin loses the
chance to release mutex. With this patch, the mutex is released
just before calling kill_pgrp() and re-acquired when kill_pgrp()
returns.
Reported-by: Gregory Mason <grmason@epic.com>
Signed-off-by: Takashi Yano <takashi.yano@nifty.ne.jp>
Commit c1023ee353 introduced a split between mount flags and
path flags. It didn't initialize symlink_info::path_flags in
path_conv::check, because that's done in symlink_info::check.
However, there are two code paths expecting symlink_info::path_flags
being already initialized and both skip symlink_info::check.
Make sure symlink_info::path_flags is initalized to 0 early in
path_conv::check.
Fixes: c1023ee353 ("Cygwin: path_conv: decouple path_types from mount types")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-December/252628.html
After the commit 9e4d308cd5, the performance of read from non-cygwin
pipe has been degraded. This is because select_sem mechanism does not
work for non-cygwin pipe. This patch fixes the issue.
Fixes: 9e4d308cd5 ("Cygwin: pipe: Adopt FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
flag for read pipe.")
Reported-by: tryandbuy <tryandbuy@proton.me>
Reviewed-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Signed-off-by: Takashi Yano <takashi.yano@nifty.ne.jp>
Commit 188d5f6c9a erroneously moved the mcountFunc.S file to the
TARGET_FILES target, rather than keeping it in GMON_FILES. The
result is that the __fentry__ entry point is now entirely undefined,
so `gcc -pg' is broken.
Create new target-specific GMON_TARGET_FILES and move mcountFunc.S
into it. Add $(GMON_TARGET_FILES) to GMON_FILES.
Fixes: 188d5f6c9a ("Cygwin: x86_64: add wmemset assembler entry point")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
.com is a remnant from the past. There are only five executables
left:
chcp.com
format.com
mode.com
more.com
tree.com
Calling them on the command line already requires to use the
suffix anyway. So drop useless .com test from the execve test
for scripts (they are handled earlier in the same function
as executables) and do not handle them like .exe suffixes in
other functions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
According to POSIX and the Linux man page, select(2) is supposed to
report read ready if a file is at EOF. In the case of a FIFO, this
means that the pipe is empty and there are no writers. But there
seems to be an undocumented exception, observed on Linux and other
platforms: If no writer has ever been opened, then select(2) does not
report read ready. This can happen if a reader is opened with
O_NONBLOCK before any writers have opened.
This commit makes Cygwin consistent with those other platforms by
introducing a special EOF test, fhandler_fifo::select_hit_eof, which
returns false if there's never been a writer opened.
To implement this we use a new variable '_writer_opened' in the FIFO's
shared memory, which is set to 1 the first time a writer opens. New
methods writer_opened() and set_writer_opened() are used to test and
set this variable.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-September/252223.html
This simple testcase:
locale_t st = newlocale(LC_ALL_MASK, "C", (locale_t)0);
locale_t st2 = newlocale(LC_CTYPE_MASK, "en_US.UTF-8", st);
is sufficient to reproduce a crash in _newlocale_r. After the first call
to newlocale, `st' points to __C_locale, which is const. When using `st'
as locale base in the second call, _newlocale_r tries to set pointers
inside base to NULL. This is bad if base is __C_locale, obviously.
Add a test to avoid trying to overwrite pointer values inside base if
base is __C_locale.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Currently it is possible for symlink_info::check to return -1 in case
we're searching for foo and find foo.lnk that is not a Cygwin symlink.
This contradicts the new meaning attached to a negative return value
in commit 19d59ce75d. Fix this by setting "res" to 0 at the beginning
of the main loop and not seting it to -1 later.
Also fix the commentary preceding the function definition to reflect
the current behavior.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-August/252030.html
Define FD_SETSIZE (<sys/select.h>) to be 1024 by default, and define
NOFILE (<sys/param.h>) to be OPEN_MAX (== 3200) by default.
Remove the comment in <sys/select.h> that FD_SETSIZE should be >=
NOFILE.
Bump API minor.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-July/251839.html
- With this patch, the empty path (empty element in PATH or PATH is
absent) is treated as the current directory as Linux does. This
feature is added for Linux compatibility, but it is deprecated.
POSIX notes that a conforming application shall use an explicit
pathname to specify the current working directory.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-June/251730.html
This reverts commit 1f8f7e2d54, "* libc/stdio/refill.c (__srefill):
Try again after EOF on Cygwin." If EOF is set on a file, the stdio
input functions will now immediately return EOF rather than trying
again to read. This aligns Cygwin's behavior to that of Linux.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-June/251672.html
- poll() has a bug that it returns event which is not inquired if
events are inquired in multiple pollfd entries on the same fd at
the same time. This patch fixes the issue.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-June/251732.html
The current definition of mknod in syscalls.cc has a third argument of
type __dev16_t instead of dev_t. Fix this on 64-bit Cygwin by making
the existing mknod 32-bit only and then exporting mknod as an alias
for mknod32. (No fix is needed on 32-bit because mknod is redirected
to mknod32 via NEW_FUNCTIONS in Makefile.am.)
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-developers/2022-May/012589.html
killpg(pgid, 0) (or kill_pgrp(pgid, si_signo=0), in signal.cc)
fails (returns -1) even when there is a process in the process
group pgid, if the process is in the middle of spawnve(), see
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-May/251479.html
When exec'ing a process the assumption is that the exec'ed process creates its
own symlink (in pinfo::thisproc() in pinfo.cc). If the exec'ing process
calls NtClose on it's own winpid symlink, but the exec'ed process didn't
progress enough into initialization, there's a slim chance that neither
the exec'ing process, nor the exec'ed process has a winpid symlink
attached.
Always create the winpid symlink in spawn.cc, even for exec'ed Cygwin
processes. Make sure to dup the handle into the new process, and stop
creating the winpid symlink in exec'ed processes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
A recent patch fixed gmondump to stop printing "0x0x" as an address
prefix. It turns out the Cygwin User's Guide and the gmondump and
ssp man pages (all from utils.xml) have examples of the same error.
- As mentioned in commit message of the commit b531d6b0, if multiple
writers including non-cygwin app exist, the non-cygwin app cannot
detect pipe closure on the read side when the pipe is created by
system account or the the pipe creator is running as service.
This is because query_hdl which is held in write side also is a
read end of the pipe, so the pipe is still alive for the non-cygwin
app even after the reader is closed.
To avoid this problem, this patch lets all processes in the same
process group close query_hdl using newly introduced internal signal
__SIGNONCYGCHLD when non-cygwin app is started.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-March/251097.html
This reverts commit 0390cc8572.
There's no indication what exact situation this patch was supposed to
solve, and local testing doesn't show any such problems. However, this
patch itself introduced a new problem, as outlined by
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-January/250629.html
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
32 bit Cygwin still exports function calls to support old applications.
E. g., when switching from 16 to 32 bit uid/gid values, new function
like getuid32 have been added and the old getuid function still only
provides 16 bit values. Newly built applications using getuid are
actually calling getuid32.
However, this link magic isn't performed inside Cygwin itself, so if
newlib functions call getuid, they actually call the old getuid, not
the new getuid32. This leads to truncated uid/gid values.
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-January/250453.html reports
how this leads to problems in posix_spawn.
Fix this temporarily. i686 support will go away soon in Cygwin and the
fix can be dropped.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
get_posix_access() creates DEF_*_OBJ aclent_t entries from Windows ACEs
with INHERIT flags set, independent of the file type. These flags only
make sense on directory objects, but certain Windows functions don't
check the file type and allow INHERIT ACE flags even on non-directories.
As a fix, make sure to ignore the INHERIT flags on non-directory ACLs
and don't propagate the matching DEF_*_OBJ aclent_t entries to callers.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
NtQueryInformationProcess(ProcessHandleInformation) can return
STATUS_SUCCESS with invalid handle data for certain processes
("minimal" processes on Windows 10). This can cause a crash when
there's an attempt to access that data. Fix that by setting
NumberOfHandles to zero before calling NtQueryInformationProcess.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-patches/2021q4/011611.html
- This patch fixes the bug that input is wrongly sent to io_handle_nat
rather than io_handle when neither read() nor select() is called
after the cygwin app is started from non-cygwin app. This happens
only if psuedo console is disabled.
Addresses:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-patches/2021q4/011587.html
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-November/249930.html
reported a regression introduce by using a dynamically sized local
char array in favor of a statically sized array.
Fix this by reverting to a statically sized array, using a small
buffer on the stack for a reasonable number of requested digits, a
big mallocated buffer otherwise. This should work for small targets
as well, given that malloc is used in printf anyway right now.
This is *still* hopefully just a temporary measure, unless somebody
actually provides a new ldtoa.
Fixes: 4d90e53359 ("ldtoa: fix dropping too many digits from output")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The file attributes after creating a file are not necessarily
identical to the attributes we passed as argument to NtCreateFile.
This results in subsequent operations like fchmod or facl to
set the DOS file attributes to unexpected values.
The fix is to request file attributes from the OS after file creation
and cache those.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When running Cygwin's Bash in the Windows Terminal (see
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/terminal/ for details), Cygwin
is receiving keyboard input in the form of UTF-16 characters.
UTF-16 has that awkward challenge that it cannot map the full Unicode
range, and to make up for it, there are the ranges U+D800-U+DBFF and
U+DC00-U+DFFF which are illegal except when they come in a pair encoding
for Unicode characters beyond U+FFFF.
Cygwin does not handle such surrogate pairs correctly at the moment, as
can be seen e.g. when running Cygwin's Bash in the Windows Terminal and
then inserting an emoji (e.g. via Windows + <dot>, which opens an emoji
picker on recent Windows versions): Instead of showing an emoji, this
shows the infamous question mark in a black triangle, i.e. the invalid
Unicode character.
Let's special-case surrogate pairs in this scenario.
This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/3281
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A recent change in binutils marks the .gnu_debuglink_overlay section
as debug section. When dllfixdbg calls objcopy -g, the section
is removed and the --add-gnu-debuglink option on the same command line
appends the section consequentially at the end of the sections.
This in turn breaks Windows Version info and, potentially, raising
the cygheap size at runtime.
Fix this by adding an explicit --keep-section=.gnu_debuglink_overlay
to the objcopy command line.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Cygwin always requests FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES permissions when trying to
change DAC information. This can lead to permission problems when
trying to chmod/chown files on Samba shares. Drop requesting
FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES on Samba shares and go with WRITE_DAC/WRITE_OWNER
only.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Also rename release 3.4.0 to 3.3.2. It doesn't make sense to
duplicate the issues fixed in 3.3.x into the 3.4.0 relnotes.
Only patches not backported into 3.3.x belong into 3.4.0.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Per https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-developers/2021-October/012429.html,
we may encounter a crash when starting multiple threads during process
startup (here: fhandler_fifo::fixup_after_{fork,exec}) which in turn
allocate memory via malloc.
The problem is concurrent usage of malloc before the malloc muto has
been initialized.
To fix this issue, convert the muto to a SRWLOCK and make sure it is
statically initalized. Thus, malloc can be called as early as necessary
and malloc_init is only required to check for user space provided malloc.
Note that this requires to implement a __malloc_trylock macro to be
called from fork.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This patch unifies the layout of the clipboard descriptor cygcb_t for
32- and 64-bit Cygwin. It allows correct copy/paste between the two
environments without corruption of user's copied data and without access
violations due to interpreting that data as a size field.
The definitions of CYGWIN_NATIVE and cygcb_t are moved to a new include
file, sys/clipboard.h. The include file is used by fhandler_clipboard.cc
as well as getclip.c and putclip.c in the Cygwin cygutils package.
When copy/pasting between 32- and 64-bit Cygwin environments, both must
be running version 3.3.0 or later for successful operation.
Due to reports on the Cygwin mailing list[1][2], it was uncovered
that a NtOpenDirectoryObject/NtQueryDirectoryObject/NtClose sequence
with NtQueryDirectoryObject iterating over the directory entries,
one entry per invocation, is not running atomically. If new entries
are inserted into the queried directory, other entries may be moved
around and then accidentally show up twice while iterating.
Change (almost) all NtQueryDirectoryObject invocations so that it gets
a really big buffer (64K) and ideally fetches all entries at once.
This appears to work atomically.
"Almost" all, because fhandler_procsys::readdir can't be easily changed.
[1] https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-July/248998.html
[2] https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-August/249124.html
Fixes: e9c8cb3193 ("(format_proc_partitions): Revamp loop over existing harddisks by scanning the NT native \Device object directory and looking for Harddisk entries.")
Fixes: a998dd7055 ("Implement advisory file locking.")
Fixes: 3b7cd74bfd ("(winpids::enum_processes): Fetch Cygwin processes from listing of shared cygwin object dir in the native NT namespace.")
Fixes: 0d6f2b0117 ("syscalls.cc (sync_worker): Rewrite using native NT functions.")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
It appears to be the case that NtQueryTimer can return a negative time
remaining for an unsignalled timer. The value appears to be less than
the timer resolution.
Signed-off-by: David Allsopp <david.allsopp@metastack.com>
These are updates to wire into the build tree the new tools profiler and
gmondump, and to supply documentation for the tools.
The documentation for profiler and ssp now mention each other but do not
discuss their similarities or differences. That will be handled in a
future update to the "Profiling Cygwin Programs" section of the Cygwin
User's Guide, to be supplied.
The Linux man page for cfsetspeed(3) specifies that the speed argument
must be one of the constants Bnnn (e.g., B9600) defined in termios.h.
But Linux in fact allows the speed to be the numerical baud rate
(e.g., 9600). For consistency with Linux, we now do the same.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-July/248887.html
Following POSIX and Linux, allow a connected DGRAM socket's connection
to be reset (so that the socket becomes unconnected). This is done by
calling connect and specifing an address whose family is AF_UNSPEC.
When connect is called on a DGRAM socket, the call to Winsock's
connect can immediately return successfully rather than failing with
WSAEWOULDBLOCK. Set the connect state to "connected" in this case.
Previously the connect state remained "connect_pending" after the
successful connection.
Per discussion on cygwin-developers, a Cygwin tmpfile(3) implementation
has been added to syscalls.cc. This overrides the one supplied by
newlib. Then the open(2) flag O_TMPFILE was added to the open call that
tmpfile internally makes.
This v2 patch removes O_CREAT from open() call as O_TMPFILE obviates it.
Note that open() takes a directory's path but returns an fd to a file.