Remove "32" or "64" from each of the following names: acl32,
aclcheck32, aclfrommode32, aclfrompbits32, aclfromtext32, aclsort32,
acltomode32, acltopbits32, acltotext32, facl32, fchown32, fcntl64,
fstat64, _fstat64, _fstat64_r, ftruncate64, getgid32, getgrent32,
getgrgid32, getgrnam32, getgroups32, getpwuid32, getpwuid_r32,
getuid32, getuid32, initgroups32, lseek64, lstat64, mknod32, mmap64,
setegid32, seteuid32, setgid32, setgroups32, setregid32, setreuid32,
setuid32, stat64, _stat64_r, truncate64.
Remove prototypes and macro definitions of these names.
Remove "#ifndef __INSIDE_CYGWIN__" from some headers so that the new
names will be available when compiling Cygwin.
Remove aliases that are no longer needed.
Include <unistd.h> in fhandler_clipboard.cc for the declarations of
geteuid and getegid.
Remove the definitions of the following: acl, aclcheck, aclfrommode,
aclfrompbits, aclfromtext, aclsort, acltomode, acltopbits, acltotext,
chown, fchown, _fcntl, fstat, _fstat_r, ftruncate, getegid, geteuid, getgid,
getgrent, getgrgid, getgrnam, getgroups, getpwduid, getpwuid,
getpwuid_r, getuid, initgroups, lacl, lacl32, lchown, lseek, lstat,
mknod, mmap, setegid, seteuid, setgid, setgroups, setregid, setreuid,
setuid, stat, _stat_r, truncate.
[For most of these, the corresponding 64-bit entry points are obtained
by exporting aliases. For example, acl is an alias for acl32, and
truncate is an alias for truncate64.]
Remove the following structs and all code using them (which is 32-bit
only): __stat32, __group16, __flock32, __aclent16_t.
Remove the typedefs of __blkcnt32_t __dev16_t, __ino32_t, which are
used only in code that has been removed.
Put the typedefs of __uid16_t and __gid16_t in one header, instead of
one header if __INSIDE_CYGWIN__ is defined and a different header
otherwise.
This was a hack to begin with. Clean this mess up:
- Move definition of CYGTLS_PADSIZE to cygwin/config.h and drop
local cygtls_padsize.h
- Rename CYGTLS_PADSIZE to __CYGTLS_PADSIZE__ to keep namespace
clean. Redefine as macro, rather than as const.
- Move struct _reent first in struct _cygtls to allow using
__CYGTLS_PADSIZE__ as offset in __getreent().
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
By including sys/_stdint.h, all types from stdint.h are
exposed even if stdint.h isn't pulled in explicitely. Include
<machine/_default_types.h instead. Fix up newlib and Cygwin
files which rely on stdint.h types, too.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- The recent commit: "Cygwin: pty: Fix Ctrl-C handling for non-cygwin
apps in background." causes the problem that cmd.exe is terminated
by Ctrl-C even if it is running in pseudo console. This patch fixes
the issue.
Use the same name as glibc & gnulib to indicate "newlib itself is
being compiled". This also harmonizes the codebase a bit in that
_LIBC was already used in places instead of _COMPILING_NEWLIB.
Building for bfin-elf, mips-elf, and x86_64-pc-cygwin produces
the same object code.
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.
Drop the Cygwin-specific fenv.cc and fenv.h file and use the equivalent
newlib functionality now, so we have at least one example of a user for
this new mechanism.
fenv.c: allow _feinitialise to be called from Cygwin startup code
fenv.h: add declarations for fegetprec and fesetprec for Cygwin only.
Fix a comment.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This reverts commit 532b91d24e.
It turned out that this patch has undesired side effects. To wit, if a
newer, post-uname_x executable was linked against or loading an older,
pre-uname_x DLL, and this DLL called uname. This call would jump into
the old uname with the old struct utsname as parameter, but given the
newer executable it would get redirected to uname_x. uname_x in turn
would overwrite stack memory it should leave well alone, given it
expects the newer, larger struct utsname.
For the entire discussion see the thread starting at
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-February/247870.html
and continuing in March at
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-March/247930.html
For a description where we're coming from, see
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-March/247959.html
While we *could* make the scenario in question work by patching dlsym,
the problem would actually be the same, just for dynamic loading. In
the end, we're missing the information, which Cygwin version has been
used when building DLLs.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The new header defines some Cygwin-specific limits, using private
names. It is included by include/limits.h.
For example, we now have
#define __OPEN_MAX 3200
in include/cygwin/limits.h and
#define OPEN_MAX __OPEN_MAX
in include/limits.h. The purpose is to hide implementation details
from users who view <limits.h>.
Replace all occurrences of OPEN_MAX_MAX by OPEN_MAX, and define the
latter to be 3200, which was the value of the former. In view of the
recent change to getdtablesize, there is no longer a need to
distinguish between these two macros.
if an application built after API version 334 loads uname dynamically,
it actually gets the old uname, rather than the new uname_x. Fix this by
checking the apps API version in uname and call uname_x instead, if it's
a newer app.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Code taken from FreeBSD, which implements C11 threads as
wrapper around pthreads. Fix up machine/_threads.h which
is called from newlib's machine-independent threads.h to
match Cygwin's pthreads types.
Add the FreeBSD source files to libc subdir and take
opportunity to define LIBC_OFILES var in Makefile.
Add new symbols to common.din and sort symbols.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
pthread_yield was only declared under GNU visibility,
but the function should be available under BSD visibility
as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
POSIX requires that key destructors are called in a loop
for each key with a non-NULL value until all values are
NULL, or until all destructors for non-NULL values
have been called at least PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS
(per POSIX: 4) times.
Cygwinonly called all destructors with non-NULL values
exactly once. This patch fixes Cygwin to follow POSIX.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Use WSAIoctl(SIO_KEEPALIVE_VALS) on older systems.
Make sure that keep-alive timeout is equivalent to
TCP_KEEPIDLE + TCP_KEEPCNT * TCP_KEEPINTVL on older systems,
even with TCP_KEEPCNT being a fixed value on those systems.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Drop definitions from <cygwin/sockets.h>
- Drop options only available on BSD
- Fix value of TCP_MAXSEG. It was still defined as the BSD value
while WinSock uses another value
- Handle the fact that TCP_MAXSEG is a R/O value in WinSock
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
NSIG is a deprecated symbol only visible under MISC visibility.
_NSIG is used widely instead, and on most systems NSIG is
defined in terms of _NSIG.
Follow suit: Change NSIG to _NSIG throughout and change visiblity
of NSIG to be defined only in __MISC_VISIBLE case.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This edits licenses held by Berkeley and NetBSD, both of which
have removed the advertising requirement from their licenses.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Though our implementation of cpu sets doesn't need it, software from
Linux environments expects this definition to be present. It's
documented on the Linux CPU_SET(3) man page but was left out due to
oversight.
Addresses https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-12/msg00248.html
The CPU_SET macros defined in Cygwin's include/sys/cpuset.h must not
be visible in an application's namespace unless _GNU_SOURCE has been
#defined. Internally this means wrapping them in #if __GNU_VISIBLE.
This patch supplies an implementation of the CPU_SET(3) processor
affinity macros as documented on the relevant Linux man page.
There is a mostly superset implementation of cpusets under newlib's
libc/sys/RTEMS/include/sys that has Linux and FreeBSD compatibility
and is built on top of FreeBSD bitsets. This Cygwin implementation
and the RTEMS one could be combined if desired at some future point.
Have sched_getaffinity() interface like glibc's, and provide an
undocumented internal interface __sched_getaffinity_sys() like the Linux
kernel's sched_getaffinity() for benefit of taskset(1).
This patch set implements the Linux syscalls sched_getaffinity,
sched_setaffinity, pthread_getaffinity_np, and pthread_setaffinity_np.
Linux has a straightforward view of the cpu sets used in affinity masks.
They are simply long (1024-bit) bit masks. This code emulates that view
while internally dealing with Windows' distribution of available CPUs among
processor groups.
libX11 provides <X11/Xlocale.h>. The build of libX11 itself adds
include/X11 to the compiler's include path. This results in a name
collision with /usr/include/xlocale.h on case-insensitive filesystems.
Commit 90e35b1eb3 renamed sys/_locale.h to xlocale.h in March 2017 under
the assumption that we should provide the locale_t type in the same file
as on Linux, FreeBSD, and Darwin.
A few weeks later (June 2017), glibc removed the xlocale.h file in favor
of bits/types/locale_t.h, which shouldn't be included directly anyway.
For reference and the reasoning, see
https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commit;h=f0be25b6336d
Given the above, revert 90e35b1eb3 and
fix additional usage of xlocale.h.
strace only printed the Windows PID in event output so far.
Especially now that Windows and Cygwin PID are decoupled, the
strace user might like to see the Cygwin pid in event output as
well. However, at process startup, the process might not have
a Cygwin PID yet.
To mitigate this, always print the Windows PID and only add the
Cygwin pid if it exists.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- feenableexcept,fedisableexcept, fegetexcept are GNU-only
- fegetprec, fesetprec are Solaris, use __MISC_VISIBLE
- _feinitialise is Cygwin-internal only
- Replace self-named FP precision values to values from
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22//WG14/www/docs/n752.htm
as used by Solaris.
- Change return value of fesetprec to adhere to the above document
and Solaris.
- Document fegetprec, fesetprec as Solaris functions, not as GNU
functions
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit c1023ee353 changed the way
path_conv::binmode() works. Rather than returning three states,
O_BINARY, O_TEXT, 0, it only returned 2 states, O_BINARY, O_TEXT. Since
mounts are only binary if they are explicitely mounted binary by setting
the MOUNT_BINARY flag, textmode is default.
This introduced a new bug. When inheriting stdio HANDLEs from native
Windows processes, the fhandler and its path_conv are created from a
device struct only. None of the path or mount flags get set this way.
So the mount flags are 0 and path_conv::binmode() returned 0.
After the path_conv::binmode() change it returned O_TEXT since, as
explained above, the default mount mode is textmode.
Rather than just enforcing binary mode for path_conv's created from
device structs, this patch changes the default mount mode to binary:
Replace MOUNT_BINARY flag with MOUNT_TEXT flag with opposite meaning.
Drop all explicit setting of MOUNT_BINARY. Drop local set_flags
function, it doesn't add any value.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* Rename cygwin_shared->prefer_forkable_hardlinks to
forkable_hardlink_support, with values
0 for Unknown, 1 for Supported, -1 for Unsupported.
Upon first dll loaded ever, dll_list::forkable_ntnamesize checks the
/var/run/cygfork directory to both exist and reside on NTFS, setting
cygwin_shared->forkable_hardlink_support accordingly.
* Replace enum forkables_needs by bool forkables_created: Set
to True by request_forkables after creating forkable hardlinks.
To avoid the need for each process to check the filesystem to detect
that hardlink creation is impossible or disabled, cache this fact in
shared memory. Removing cygfork directory while in use does disable
hardlinks creation. To (re-)enable hardlinks creation, the cygfork
directory has to exist before the first cygwin process does fork.
* forkable.cc (dll_list::forkable_ntnamesize): Short cut
forkables needs to impossible when disabled via shared memory.
(dll_list::update_forkables_needs): When detecting hardlink
creation as impossible (not on NTFS) while still (we are the
first one checking) enabled via shared memory, disable the
shared memory value.
(dll_list::request_forkables): Disable the shared memory value
when hardlinks creation became disabled, that is when the
cygfork directory was removed.
* include/cygwin/version.h: Bump CYGWIN_VERSION_SHARED_DATA 6.
* shared_info.h (struct shared_info): Add member
prefer_forkable_hardlinks. Update CURR_SHARED_MAGIC.
* shared.cc (shared_info::initialize): Initialize
prefer_forkable_hardlinks to 1 (Yes).
Using the Windows PID as Cygwin PID has a few drawbacks:
- the PIDs on Windows get reused quickly. Some POSIX applications choke
on that, so we need extra code to avoid too quick PID reuse.
- The code to avoid PID reuse keeps parent process handles and
(depending on a build option) child processes open unnecessarily.
- After an execve, the process has a split personality: Its Windows PID
is a new PID, while its Cygwin PID is the PID of the execve caller
process. This requires to keep two procinfo shared sections open, the
second just to redirect process info requests to the first, correct
one.
This patch changes the way Cygwin PIDs are generated:
- Cygwin PIDs are generated independently of the Windows PID, in a way
expected by POSIX processes. The PIDs are created incrementally in
the range between 2 and 65535, round-robin.
- On startup of the first Cygwin process, choose a semi-random start PID
for the first process in the lower PID range to make the PIDs slightly
unpredictable. This may not be necessary but it seems kind of inviting
to know that the first Cygwin process always starts with PID 2.
- Every process not only creates the shared procinfo section, but also a
symlink in the NT namespace, symlinking the Windows PID to the Cygwin
PID. This drops the need for the extra procinfo section after execve.
- Don't keep other process handles around unnecessarily.
- Simplify the code creating/opening the shared procinfo section and
make a clear distinction between interfaces getting a Cygwin PID and
interfaces getting a Windows PID.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- This simple and official method replaces cyglsa and "create token"
methods. No network share access, same as before.
- lsaauth and create_token are disabled now. If problems crop up,
they can be easily reactivated. If no problems crop up, they
can be removed in a while, together with the lsaauth subdir.
- Bump Cygwin version to 3.0.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
First cut of a timerfd implementation.
Still TODO:
- fork/exec semantics
- timerfd_settime TFD_TIMER_CANCEL_ON_SET flag
- ioctl(TFD_IOC_SET_TICKS)
- bug fixes
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
First cut of a signalfd implementation.
Still TODO: Non-polling select.
This should mostly work as on Linux except for missing support
for some members of struct signalfd_siginfo, namely ssi_fd,
ssi_band (both SIGIO/SIGPOLL, not fully implemented) and ssi_trapno
(HW exception, required HW support).
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The new proc fd code accidentally allowed to linkat an O_TMPFILE
even if the file has been opened with O_EXCL. This patch fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Remove another unfortunate amalgamation: Mount flags (MOUNT_xxx)
are converted to path_types (PATH_xxx) and mixed with non-mount
path_types flags in the same storage, leading to a tangled,
pell-mell usage of mount flags and path flags in path_conv and
symlink_info.
- There's also the case of PC_NONULLEMPTY. It's used in exactly
one place with a path_conv constructor only used in this single
place, just to override the automatic PC_NULLEMPTY addition
when calling the other path_conv constructors. Crazily,
PC_NONULLEMPTY is a define, no path_types flag, despite its
name.
- It doesn't help that the binary flag exists as mount and path
flag, while the text flag only exists as path flag. This leads
to mount code using path flags to set text/binary. Very confusing
is the fact that a text mount/path flag is not actually required;
the mount code sets the text flag on non binary mounts anyway, so
there are only two states. However, to puzzle people a bit more,
path_conv::binary wrongly implies there's a third, non-binary/non-text
state.
Clean up this mess:
- Store path flags separately from mount flags in path_conv and
symlink_info classes and change all checks and testing inline
methods accordingly.
- Make PC_NONULLEMPTY a simple path_types flag and drop the
redundant path_check constructor.
- Clean up the definition of pathconv_arg, path_types, and mount flags.
Use _BIT expression, newly define in cygwin/bits.h.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>