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>
raise(2) on Linux returns the same values and sets errno
independent of calling kill(2) or pthread_kill(3). Align
code to behave the same.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The check for the pthread self pointer in TLS is misleading,
given the main thread has this pointer initialized as well.
Check for the global __isthreaded flag as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- This patch fixes the issue that process sometimes hangs for 60
seconds with the following scenario.
1) Open command prompt.
2) Run "c:\cygwin64\bin\bash -l"
3) Compipe the following source with mingw compiler.
/*--- Begin ---*/
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {return getchar();}
/*---- End ----*/
4) Run "tcsh -c ./a.exe"
5) Hit Ctrl-C.
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>
isabspath handles a path "X:", without trailing slash or backslash,
as absolute path. This breaks some scenarios with relative paths
starting with "X:". For instance, fstatat will mishandle a call
with valid dirfd and "c:" as path.
The reason is that gen_full_path_at() will check for isabspath("C:")
which returns true. So the path will be used verbatim in fstatat,
rather than being converted to a path "<dirfd-path>/c:".
So, introduce isabspath_strict, which returns true for paths starting
with "X:" only if the next char is actually a slash or backslash.
Use it from gen_full_path_at().
This still fixes only half the problem. The right thing would have been
to disallow using DOS paths in the first place. Unfortunately it's much
too late for that.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-November/249837.html
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>
ldtoa cuts the number of digits it returns based on a computation of
number of supported bits (144) divide by log10(2). Not only is the
integer approximation of log10(2) ~= 8/27 missing a digit here, it
also fails to take really small double and long double values into
account.
Allow for the full potential precision of long double values. At the
same time, change the local string array allocation to request only as
much bytes as necessary to support the caller-requested number of
digits, to keep the stack size low on small targets.
In the long run a better fix would be to switch to gdtoa, as the BSD
variants, as well as Mingw64 do.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Currently, bash occasionally exits by Ctrl-C with the following
scenario.
1) Start bash in the command prompt.
2) Run 'exec bash'.
3) Press Ctrl-C several times.
This patch fixes the issue.
- Currently, read() returns EINTR due to a bug if signal handler
is SIG_DFL and the process is suspended by Ctrl-Z and restarted.
This patch fixes the issue.
Cygwin 3.3 only: Replace SRWLOCK usage for malloc synchronization with
the first incarnation of the patch splitting malloc_init into two parts.
The SRWLOCK usage requires TryAcquireSRWLockExclusive, which isn't
available on Vista / Server 2008, unfortunately.
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, split malloc_init into malloc_init_0, called from
dll_crt0_0, and malloc_init_1, called from dll_crt_0_1. malloc_init_0
just initializes the muto, malloc_init_1 checks for user space provided
malloc.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Currently, newlib does not declare strsignal if DEFS_H is defined,
ostensibly to work around a gdb bug. However, gdb itself compiles
even with this ifndef removed, and this makes sim (another part of
gdb) fail to compile.
Since it is not clear exactly what issue this was working around,
this patch just replaces that ifdef with the correct check,
i.e. __POSIX_VISIBLE >= 200809.
The file configure.in was renamed to configure.ac in libgloss/riscv but
the hard coded name in the Makefile for that directory was not updated.
This patch simply renamed this to configure.ac.
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.
Reported by prodisDown:
In picolibc/newlib/libc/string/strrchr.c
if (i) { while ((s=strchr(s, i))) { last = s; s++; } } else { last = strchr(s, i); }
Value (for example 0xFFFFFF00) in if (i) can pass test and
then be typecasted to char inside strchr(). Then s++ and then
buffer overrun.
It can be fixed by preventive typecast i = (int) (char) i; or
typecasting inside expression if ((char) i).
Fixed by casting to char.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Add specialized rotations RB_RED_ROTATE_LEFT() and RB_RED_ROTATE_RIGHT() which
may be used if we rotate a red child which has a black sibling. Such a red
node must have at least two child nodes so that the following red-black tree
invariant is fulfilled:
Every path from a given node to any of its descendant NULL nodes goes through
the same number of black nodes.
PARENT
/ \
BLACK RED
/ \
BLACK BLACK
Add specialized rotations RB_PARENT_ROTATE_LEFT() and RB_PARENT_ROTATE_RIGHT()
which may be used if the parent node exists and the direction of the child is
known. The specialized rotations are derived from RB_ROTATE_LEFT() and
RB_ROTATE_RIGHT() where the RB_SWAP_CHILD() was replaced by a simple
assignment.
In RB_GENERATE_REMOVE_COLOR() simplify a chain of conditions of the following
pattern
if (x) {
...
} else if (!x) {
...
}
to
if (x) {
...
} else {
...
}
We have
#define RB_ISRED(elm, field) \
((elm) != NULL && RB_COLOR(elm, field) == RB_RED)
So, the RB_ISRED() contains an implicit check for NULL. In
RB_GENERATE_REMOVE_COLOR() the "elm" pointer cannot be NULL in the while
condition. Use RB_COLOR(elm) == RB_BLACK instead.