If fstatvfs(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not
a socket file, the current code calls fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs in
most cases. The latter expects to be operating on a disk file and
uses the socket's io_handle, which is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs only if the
fhandler_socket object is a socket file (determined by testing
dev().isfs()).
If fstat(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not a
socket file, the current code calls fstat_fs. The latter expects to
be operating on a disk file and uses the socket's io_handle, which is
not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fstat_fs only if the fhandler_socket object is a
file (determined by testing dev().isfs()).
This is in the spirit of the Linux requirement that file operations
like fchmod(2), fchown(2), and fgetxattr(2) fail with EBADF on files
opened with O_PATH.
This was done for the fhandler_socket_local class in commits
3a2191653a, 141437d374, and 477121317d, but the fhandler_socket_unix
class was overlooked.
When a FIFO is opened, syscalls.cc:open always calls fstat on the
newly-created fhandler_fifo. This results from a call to
device_access_denied.
To speed-up this fstat call, and therefore the open(2) call, use
PC_KEEP_HANDLE when the fhandler is created. The resulting
conv_handle is retained until after the fstat call if the fhandler is
a FIFO; otherwise, it is closed immediately.
Previously, the call to get_file_attribute for FIFOs set the first
argument to NULL instead of the handle h returned by get_stat_handle,
thereby forcing the file to be opened for fetching the security
descriptor in get_file_sd(). This was done because h might have been
a pipe handle rather than a file handle, and its permissions would not
necessarily reflect those of the file.
That situation can no longer occur with the new fhandler_fifo::fstat
introduced in the previous commit.
Previously fstat on a FIFO would call fhandler_base::fstat.
The latter is not appropriate if fhandler_fifo::open has already been
called (and O_PATH is not set), for the following reason. If a FIFO
has been opened as a writer or duplexer, then it has an io_handle that
is a pipe handle rather than a file handle. fhandler_base::fstat will
use this handle and potentially return incorrect results. If the FIFO
has been opened as a reader, then it has no io_handle, and a call to
fhandler_base::fstat will lead to a call to fhandler_base::open.
Opening the fhandler a second time can change it in undesired ways;
for example, it can modify the flags and status_flags.
The new fhandler_fifo::fstat avoids these problems by creating an
fhandler_disk_file and calling its fstat method in case
fhandler_fifo::open has already been called and O_PATH is not set.
Consider this case:
- Cygwin installed in C:\cygwin64
- mklink /j D:\cygwin64 C:\cygwin64
- create testcase calling
realpath("/", result);
printf ("%s\n", result);
- start cmd
>C:\cygwin64\bin\bash -lc <path-to-testcase>
/
>D\cygwin64\bin\bash -lc <path-to-testcase>
/cygdrive/c/cygwin64
This scenario circumventing the mount point handling which is automated
in terms of /, depending on the path returned from GetModuleFileNameW
for the Cygwin DLL. When calling D:\cygwin64\bin\bash the dir returned
from GetModuleFileNameW is D:\cygwin64\bin, thus root is D:\cygwin64.
However, junctions are treated as symlinks in Cygwin which explains why
the path gets converted to a cygdrive path.
Fix this by calling GetFinalPathNameByHandleW on the result from
GetModuleFileNameW to get the correct root path, even if accessed via
a junction point.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This only affects the very seldom bordercase of apps calling setmode(fd,
0) on fhandlers not calling fhandler_base::set_open_status(). All
fhandlers not calling set_open_status() are binary mode only, but the
way reset_to_open_binmode worked, calling setmode(fd, 0) would have
"reset" their open flags to O_TEXT accidentally.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- If ENABLE_LINE_INPUT is set, Ctrl-S is handled by Windows if the
OS is Windows 7. This conflicts with Ctrl-S handling in cygwin
console code. This patch unsets ENABLE_LINE_INPUT flag in cygwin
and set it when native app is executed.
- If ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_INPUT is not set, changing window height
does not generate WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE_EVENT. This happens if console
is in the legacy mode. Therefore, with this patch, the windows size
is checked every time in cons_master_thread() if the cosole is in
the legacy mode.
Linux 5.11 💕 Valentine's Day Edition 💕 added features and changes:
add Intel 0x00000007 EDX:23 avx512_fp16 and 0x00000007:1 EAX:4 avx_vnni;
group scattered AMD 0x8000001f EAX Secure Mem/Encrypted Virt features at end:
0 sme, 1 sev, 3 sev_es (more to come not yet displayed)
- Currently, Ctrl-Z, Ctrl-\ and SIGWINCH does not work in console
if the process does not call read() or select(). This is because
these are processed in process_input_message() which is called
from read() or select(). This is a long standing issue of console.
Addresses:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/244898.htmlhttps://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-February/247779.html
With this patch, new thread which handles only input signals is
introduced so that Crtl-Z, etc. work without calling read() or
select(). Ctrl-S and Ctrl-Q are also handled in this thread.
- Currently, console read() keeps reading after SIGWINCH is sent
even if SA_RESTART flag is not set. With this patch, read()
returns EINTR on SIGWINCH if SA_RESTART flag is not set.
The same problem for SIGQUIT and SIGTSTP has also been fixed.
- Currently, input transfer is performed every time one line is read(),
if the non-cygwin app is running in the background. With this patch,
transfer is triggered by setpgid() rather than read() so that the
unnecessary input transfer can be reduced much in that situation.
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.
Analyzing the fhandler::copyto logic shows that the fhandler_base::reset
method was only called from copyto anyway.
Trying to convert reset to a protected method uncovered that the copyto
method is actually thought upside down from an object oriented POV.
Rather than calling copyto, manipulating the object given as parameter,
rename the method to copy_from, which manipulates the calling object
itself with data from the object given as parameter.
Eventually make reset a protected method and rename it to
_copy_from_reset_helper to clarify it's only called from copy_from.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
path_conv_handle::dup calls DuplicateHandle unconditionally,
but we only have a handle in some cases. Check handle for being
non-NULL before calling DuplicateHandle.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
path_conv::reset_conv_handle is only called after fhandler::copyto
has been called. This duplicated the path_conv_handle if there was
one, so just setting the conv handle to NULL potentially produces a
handle leak. Replace reset_conv_handle calls with calls to
close_conv_handle and drop the reset_conv_handle method.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
There's a slim chance that duplicating fhandlers may end up duplicating
path_conv_handle handles twice ending up with a handle leak, due to
fhandler_base::reset calling path_conv::operator<< after the only
caller, fhandler::copyto, already called path_conv::operator=.
Just drop the call which basically duplicates what path_conv::operator=
already did.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This reverts commit 76dca77f04. That
commit was based on the incorrect assumption that get_stat_handle,
when called on a FIFO in fstat_helper, would always return a handle
that is safe to use for getting the file information.
That assumption is true in many cases but not all. For example, if
the call to fstat_helper arises from a call to fstat(2) on a FIFO that
has been opened for writing, then get_stat_handle will return a pipe
handle instead of a file handle.
Allow check_reparse_point_target to recognize reparse points with
reparse tag IO_REPARSE_TAG_AF_UNIX. These are used in recent versions
of Windows 10 to represent AF_UNIX sockets.
check_reparse_point_target now returns PATH_REP on files of this type,
so that they are treated as known reparse points (but not as sockets).
This allows tools like 'rm', 'ls', etc. to operate on these files.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-September/246362.htmlhttps://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-January/247666.html
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.
Now that getdtablesize always returns OPEN_MAX_MAX, we can simplify
sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) and getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE) to just use that
same constant instead of calling getdtablesize.
According to the Linux man page for getdtablesize(3), the latter is
supposed to return "the maximum number of files a process can have
open, one more than the largest possible value for a file descriptor."
The constant OPEN_MAX_MAX is the only limit enforced by Cygwin, so we
now return that.
Previously getdtablesize returned the current size of cygheap->fdtab,
Cygwin's internal file descriptor table. But this is a dynamically
growing table, and its current size does not reflect an actual limit
on the number of open files.
With this change, gnulib now reports that getdtablesize and
fcntl(F_DUPFD) work on Cygwin. Packages like GNU tar that use the
corresponding gnulib modules will no longer use gnulib replacements on
Cygwin.
- Currently, thread created by pthread_create() is not suspended by
the signal SIGTSTP. For example, even if a process with a thread
is suspended by Ctrl-Z, the thread continues running. This patch
fixes the issue.
- Currently, read() returns -1 with EINTR if the process is suspended
by Ctrl-Z and resumed by fg command, while pty continues to read.
For example, xxd command stops with error "Interrupted system call"
after Ctrl-Z and fg. This patch aligns the behaviour with pty (and
Linux).
Allow fchmodat with the AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flag to succeed on
non-symlinks. Previously it always failed, as it does on Linux. But
POSIX permits it to succeed on non-symlinks even if it fails on
symlinks.
The reason for following POSIX rather than Linux is to make gnulib
report that fchmodat works on Cygwin. This improves the efficiency of
packages like GNU tar that use gnulib's fchmodat module. Previously
such packages would use a gnulib replacement for fchmodat on Cygwin.
- After commit bb428520, there has been the disadvantage:
7) Pseudo console cannot be activated if it is already activated for
another process on same pty.
This patch clears this disadvantage.
- After commit bb428520, there has been the disadvantage:
2) The apps which use console API cannot be debugged with gdb. This
is because pseudo console is not activated since gdb uses
CreateProcess() rather than exec(). Even with this limitation,
attaching gdb to native app, in which pseudo console is already
activated, works.
This patch clears this disadvantage.
- After commit bb428520, there has been the disadvantage:
4) Code page cannot be changed by chcp.com. Acctually, chcp works
itself and changes code page of its own pseudo console. However,
since pseudo console is recreated for another process, it cannot
inherit the code page.
This patch clears this disadvantage.
- PTY has a problem that the key input, which is typed during windows
native app is running, disappears when it returns to shell. This is
beacuse pty has two input pipes, one is for cygwin apps and the other
one is for native windows apps. The key input during windows native
program is running is sent to the second input pipe while cygwin
shell reads input from the first input pipe. This issue had been
fixed once by commit 29431fcb, however, the new implementation of
pseudo console support by commit bb428520 could not inherit this
feature. This patch realize transfering input data between these
two pipes bidirectionally by utilizing cygwin-console-helper process.
The helper process is launched prior to starting the non-cygwin app,
however, exits immediately unlike previous implementation.
Following POSIX, ensure that ctime is updated if chown succeeds,
unless the new owner is specified as (uid_t)-1 and the new group is
specified as (gid_t)-1. Previously, ctime was unchanged whenever the
owner and group were both unchanged.
Aside from POSIX compliance, this fix makes gnulib report that chown
works on Cygwin. This improves the efficiency of packages like GNU
tar that use gnulib's chown module. Previously such packages would
use a gnulib replacement for chown on Cygwin.