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: e9c8cb31930bd ("(format_proc_partitions): Revamp loop over existing harddisks by scanning the NT native \Device object directory and looking for Harddisk entries.")
Fixes: a998dd7055766 ("Implement advisory file locking.")
Fixes: 3b7cd74bfdf56 ("(winpids::enum_processes): Fetch Cygwin processes from listing of shared cygwin object dir in the native NT namespace.")
Fixes: 0d6f2b0117aa7 ("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.
This fixes a bug on 32-bit Cygwin that was introduced in commit
84252946, "Cygwin: fstatat, fchownat: support the AT_EMPTY_PATH flag".
Add a comment explaining why fstat should not be called.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-January/247399.html
The return value is now -NaN.
This fixes a bug in the mingw-w64 code that was imported into Cygwin.
The fix is consistent with Posix and Linux. It is also consistent
with the current mingw-w64 code, with one exception: The mingw-w64
code sets errno to EDOM if the input is -NaN, but this appears to
differ from Posix and Linux.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-October/246606.html
Setting up the pty in the master constructor ends up creating a new pty
on every stat(2) call on /dev/ptmx. Only do this when actually opening
the device, not when using the device class in another, non-opening
context.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Both flags are outdated and collide with official flags in
sys/_default_fcntl.h, which may result in weird misbehaviour
of file functions.
O_NOSYMLINK is not used anyway.
O_DIROPEN is used in fhandler_virtual and derived classes.
The collision with O_NOFOLLOW results in spurious EISDIR
errors when, e. g., reading files in the registry.
fhandler_base::open_fs uses O_DIROPEN in the call to
fhandler_base::open, but it's not used in this context
further down the road.
Drop both flags and create an alternative "diropen" bool
flag in fhandler_virtual.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This is necessary in order to be consistent with the following comment
in the definition of _Unwind_RaiseException() in the GCC source file
libgcc/unwind-seh.c:
The exception handler installed in crt0 will continue any GCC
exception that reaches there (and isn't marked non-continuable).
Previously we failed to do this and, as a consequence, the C++ runtime
didn't call std::terminate after an unhandled exception.
This fixes the problem reported here:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2019-October/242795.htmlhttps://sourceware.org/pipermail/cygwin/2020-August/245897.html
If the acl_t struct was at or above 0x80000000 then the pointer was
sign-extended to 0xffff_ffff_8000_0000 and so the index was lost.
Signed-off-by: David Allsopp <david.allsopp@metastack.com>
sys_mbstowcs is called with the destination buffer length
set to MaximumLength from the receiving UNICODE_STRING buffer.
This is twice as much as the actual size of the buffer in
wchar_t units, which is the unit expected by sys_mbstowcs.
sys_mbstowcs always attaches a NUL, within the destination
buffersize given. But if the string is exactly one wchar_t
less than the actual buffer, and the buffersize is given too
large, sys_mbstowcs writes a NUL one wchar_t beyond the buffer.
This has only been exposed with Cygwin 3.1.5 because alloca
on newer gcc 9 apparently allocates more tightly. The alloca
buffer here is requested with 16 bytes, which is exactly the
number of bytes required for the string L"cmd.exe". Older gcc
apparently allocated a few more bytes on the stack, while gcc 9
allocates in 16 byte granularity...
Fix this by giving the correct destination buffer size to
sys_mbstowcs.
Fixes: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-June/245226.html
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This partially reverts commit
f36262d56ac78f04de147746ce4a85c6155e4a23. That commit incorrectly
made the st_mode of a fifo reflect the Windows permissions of the disk
file underlying the fifo.
WSL symlinks are reparse points containing a POSIX path in UTF-8.
On filesystems supporting reparse points, use this symlink type.
On other filesystems, or in case of error, fall back to the good
old plain SYSTEM file.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Treat WSL symlinks just like other symlinks. Convert
absolute paths pointing to Windows drives via
/mnt/<driveletter> to Windows-style paths <driveletter>:
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>