Any C++ app that calls 'throw' on 64-bit Cygwin results in an
exception of type STATUS_GCC_THROW (0x20474343) generated by the C++
runtime. Don't pollute the strace output by printing information
about this and other GCC exceptions.
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
- After commit 095972ce5b, charset
conversion in mintty is broken if charset is set to other than
UTF-8. This seems to be caused because mintty does not set locale
yet at fork() call. This patch changes the timing of set_locale()
call again to avoid this issue.
- If native app is exec()'ed in a new pty, setup_locale() loses the
chance to be called. For example, with "mintty -e cmd", charset
conversion does not work as expected. This patch fixes the issue.
- If a lot of mintty are started in a short time from a mintty, some
of them hang with empty screen, crash immediately or hang on exiting
mintty. The following report seems to be related to this issue.
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-August/245751.html
The cause is not clear at all, but this patch seems to solve the
issue.
- update path to Unicode windowsZones.xml file
- drop Windows XP considerations
- regenerate tzmap.h
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This patch has been inspired by the Linux kernel patch
294f69e662d1 compiler_attributes.h: Add 'fallthrough' pseudo keyword for switch/case use
written by Joe Perches <joe AT perches DOT com> based on an idea from
Dan Carpenter <dan DOT carpenter AT oracle DOT com>. The following text
is from the original log message:
Reserve the pseudo keyword 'fallthrough' for the ability to convert the
various case block /* fallthrough */ style comments to appear to be an
actual reserved word with the same gcc case block missing fallthrough
warning capability.
All switch/case blocks now should end in one of:
break;
fallthrough;
goto <label>;
return [expression];
continue;
In C mode, GCC supports the __fallthrough__ attribute since 7.1,
the same time the warning and the comment parsing were introduced.
Cygwin-only: add an explicit -Wimplicit-fallthrough=5 to the build
flags.
Currently raw_read makes two passes through the list of clients. On
the first pass it tries to read from the client from which it last
read successfully. On the second pass it tries to read from all
connected clients.
Add a new pass in between these two, in which raw_read tries to read
from all clients that are in the fc_input_avail case. This should be
more efficient in case select was previously called and detected input
available.
Slightly tweak the first pass. If a client is marked as having the
last successful read but reading from it now finds no input, don't
unmark it unless we successfully read from a different client on one
of the later passes.
The fifo_reader thread function and the function select.cc:peek_fifo()
can both change the state of a fifo_client_handler. These changes are
made under fifo_client_lock, so there is no race, but the changes can
still be incompatible.
Add code to make sure that only one of these functions can change the
state from its initial fc_listening state. Whichever function does
this calls the fhandler_fifo::record_connection method, which is now
public so that peek_fifo can call it.
Slightly modify that method to make it suitable for being called by
peek_fifo.
Make a few other small changes to the fifo_reader thread function to
change how it deals with the STATUS_PIPE_CLOSING value that can
(rarely) be returned by NtFsControlFile.
Add commentary to fhandler_fifo.cc to explain fifo_client connect
states and where they can be changed.
Don't try to read from fifo_client_handlers that are in the fc_closing
state. Experiments have shown that this always yields
STATUS_PIPE_BROKEN, so it just wastes a Windows system call.
Re-order the values in enum fifo_client_connect_state to reflect the
new status of fc_closing.
Rename the existing set_state() to query_and_set_state() to reflect
what it really does. (It queries the O/S for the pipe state.) Add a
new set_state() method, which is a standard setter, and a
corresponding getter get_state().
fhandler_fifo::take_ownership() is called from select.cc::peek_fifo
and fhandler_fifo::raw_read and could potentially block indefinitely
if something goes wrong. This is always undesirable in peek_fifo, and
it is undesirable in a nonblocking read. Fix this by adding a timeout
parameter to take_ownership.
Arbitrarily use a 1 ms timeout in peek_fifo and a 10 ms timeout in
raw_read. These numbers may have to be tweaked based on experience.
Replace the call to cygwait in take_ownership by a call to WFSO.
There's no need to allow interruption now that we have a timeout.
fhandler_fifo::take_ownership() tacitly assumes that the current
owner's fifo_reader_thread will be woken up from WFMO when
update_needed_evt is signaled. But it's possible that the the current
owner's fifo_reader_thread is at the beginning of its main loop rather
than in its WFMO call when that event is signaled.
In this case the owner will never see that the event has been
signaled, and it will never update the shared fifo_client_handlers.
The reader that wants to take ownership will then spin its wheels
forever.
Fix this by having the current owner call update_shared_handlers at
the beginning of its loop, if necessary.
microcode is unsigned long long, printed by _small_sprintf using %x;
Cygwin32 used last 4 bytes of microcode for next field MHz, printing 0;
use correct _small_sprintf format %X to print microcode, producing
correct MHz value under Cygwin32
CPUID 7:0 EDX[14] serialize added in linux-next 5.8 by Ricardo Neri-Calderon:
The Intel architecture defines a set of Serializing Instructions (a
detailed definition can be found in Vol.3 Section 8.3 of the Intel "main"
manual, SDM). However, these instructions do more than what is required,
have side effects and/or may be rather invasive. Furthermore, some of
these instructions are only available in kernel mode or may cause VMExits.
Thus, software using these instructions only to serialize execution (as
defined in the manual) must handle the undesired side effects.
As indicated in the name, SERIALIZE is a new Intel architecture
Serializing Instruction. Crucially, it does not have any of the mentioned
side effects. Also, it does not cause VMExit and can be used in user mode.
This new instruction is currently documented in the latest "extensions"
manual (ISE). It will appear in the "main" manual in the future.
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git/commit/arch/x86/include/asm/cpufeatures.h?id=85b23fbc7d88f8c6e3951721802d7845bc39663d
Newlib's posix_spawn has been taken from FreeBSD. The code relies on
BSD-specific behaviour of vfork, namely the fact that vfork blocks
the parent until the child exits or calls execve as well as the fact
that the child shares parent memory in non-COW mode.
This behaviour can't be emulated by Cygwin. Cygwin's vfork is
equivalent to fork. This is POSIX-compliant, but it's lacking BSD's
vfork ingrained synchronization of the parent to wait for the child
calling execve, or the chance to just write a variable and the parent
will see the result.
So this requires a Cygwin-specific solution. The core function of
posix_spawn, called do_posix_spawn is now implemented twice, once using
the BSD method, and once for Cygwin using Windows synchronization under
the hood waiting for the child to call execve and signalling errors
upstream. The Windows specifics are hidden inside Cygwin, so newlib
only calls internal Cygwin functions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Stop after we've written the dump in response to the initial breakpoint
EXCEPTION_DEBUG_EVENT we recieve for attaching to the process.
(rather than bogusly sitting there for 20 seconds waiting for more debug
events from a stopped process after we've already written the dump).
It's working on 32 bit OSes only anyway. It even fails on WOW64.
Drop unsupported NtMapViewOfSection flags.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Use the (undocumented) MEMORY_WORKING_SET_EX_INFORMATION in dumper to
determine if a MEM_IMAGE region is unsharable, and hence has been
modified.
After this, we will end up dumping memory regions where:
- state is MEM_COMMIT (i.e. is not MEM_RESERVE or MEM_FREE), and
-- type is MEM_PRIVATE and protection allows reads (i.e. not a guardpage), or
-- type is MEM_IMAGE and attribute is non-sharable (i.e. it was WC, got
written to, and is now a RW copy)
After this, we will end up dumping memory regions where:
- state is MEM_COMMIT (i.e. is not MEM_RESERVE or MEM_FREE), and
-- type is MEM_PRIVATE and protection allows reads (i.e. not a guardpage), or
-- type is MEM_IMAGE and protection allows writes
Making this decision based on the current protection isn't 100% correct,
because it may have been changed using VirtualProtect(). But we don't
know how to determine if a region is shareable.
(As a practical matter, anything which gets us the stack (MEM_PRIVATE)
and .data/.bss (RW MEM_IMAGE) is going to be enough for 99% of cases)
Commit 605bdcd410 enabled mapping beyond
EOF in 64 bit environments. But the variable 'orig_len' did not get
rounded up to a multiple of 64K. This rounding was done on 32 bit
only. Fix this by rounding up orig_len on 64 bit, in the same place
where 'len' is rounded up.
Rounding up is needed to make sigbus_page_len a multiple of the
allocation granularity.
In addition, failing to round up could cause orig_len to be smaller
than len. Since these are both unsigned values, the statement
'orig_len -= len' could then cause orig_len to be huge, and mmap would
fail with errno EFBIG.
I observed this failure while debugging the problem reported in
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/cygwin/2020-July/245557.html.
The failure can be seen by running the test case in that report under
gdb or strace.
- After commit 0365031ce1, key input
becomes not working by following steps.
1) Start cmd.exe in mintty.
2) Open another mintty.
3) Execute "echo AAA > /dev/pty*" (pty* is the pty opened in 1.)
This patch fixes the issue.
Use cygwait in take_ownership to allow interruption while waiting to
become owner. Return the cygwait return value or a suitable value to
indicate an error.
raw_read now checks the return value and acts accordingly.
If update_my_handlers fails to duplicate one or more handles, just
mark the corresponding handlers as being in an error state.
But if update_my_handlers is unable to open the process of the
previous owner, it's likely that something serious has gone wrong, so
we continue to make that a fatal error.
When a reader takes ownership in fifo_reader_thread, it now goes
directly to the part of the main loop that listens for a connection.
Previously it went back to the beginning of the loop.
Also, if the reader has to delay taking ownership because the previous
owner has not finished updating the shared fifo_client handlers, it
now checks to see if cancel_evt has been set. Previously it might
have had to spin its wheels unnecessarily only to eventually find that
its thread had been canceled.
Add a bool member 'last_read' to the fifo_client_handler structure,
which is set to true on a successful read. This is used by raw_read
as follows.
When raw_read is called, it first locates the writer (if any) for
which last_read is true. raw_read tries to read from that writer and
returns if there is input available. Otherwise, it proceeds to poll
all the writers, as before.
The effect of this is that if a writer writes some data that is only
partially read, the next attempt to read will continue to read from
the same writer. This should reduce the interleaving of output from
different writers.
When a reader opens, it needs to block if there are no writers open
(unless is is opened with O_NONBLOCK). This is easy for the first
reader to test, since it can just wait for a writer to signal that it
is open (via the write_ready event). But when a second reader wants
to open, all writers might have closed.
To check this, use a new '_nwriters' member of struct fifo_shmem_t,
which keeps track of the number of open writers. This should be more
reliable than the previous method.
Add nwriters_lock to control access to shmem->_nwriters, and remove
reader_opening_lock, which is no longer needed.
Previously only readers had access to the shared memory, but now
writers access it too so that they can increment _nwriters during
open/dup/fork/exec and decrement it during close.
Add an optional 'only_open' argument to create_shmem for use by
writers, which only open the shared memory rather than first trying to
create it. Since writers don't need to access the shared memory until
they have successfully connected to a pipe instance, they can safely
assume that a reader has already created the shared memory.
For debugging purposes, change create_shmem to return 1 instead of 0
when a reader successfully opens the shared memory after finding that
it had already been created.
Remove check_write_ready_evt, write_ready_ok_evt, and
check_write_ready(), which are no longer needed.
When opening a writer and looping to try to get a connection, recheck
read_ready at the top of the loop since the number of readers might
have changed.
To slightly speed up the process of opening the first reader, take
ownership immediately rather than waiting for the fifo_reader_thread
to handle it.
When the owning reader closes and there are still readers open, the
owner needs to wait for a new owner to be found before closing its
fifo_client handlers. This involves a loop in which dec_nreaders is
called at the beginning and inc_nreaders is called at the end. Any
other reader that tries to access shmem->_nreaders during this loop
will therefore get an inaccurate answer.
Fix this by adding an nreaders method and using it instead of
dec_nreaders and inc_nreaders. Also add nreaders_lock to control
access to the shmem->_nreaders.
Make various other changes to improve the reliability of finding a new
owner.
Since FD_CONNECT is only given once, we manually need to set
FD_WRITE for connection failed sockets to have consistent
behaviour in programs calling poll/select multiple times.
Example test to non-listening port: curl -v 127.0.0.1:47
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>
This should slightly speed up especially path conversions,
given there's one less function call rearranging all function
arguments in registers/stack (and less stack pressure).
For clarity, rename overloaded sys_wcstombs to _sys_wcstombs
and sys_cp_mbstowcs to _sys_mbstowcs.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Re: CPU microcode reported wrong in /proc/cpuinfo
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/245063.html
earlier Windows releases used different registry values to store microcode
revisions depending on the MSR name being used to get microcode revisions:
add these alternative registry values to the cpuinfo registry value lookup;
iterate thru the registry data until a valid microcode revision is found;
some revision values are in the high bits, so if the low bits are all clear,
shift the revision value down into the low bits
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>
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>
- Return value of eat_readahead() is redefined. The return values
of fhandler_termios::eat_readahead() and fhandler_pty_slave::
eat_readahead() were little bit different. This patch unifies
them to number of bytes eaten by eat_readahead().
- Considerration for raixget() is added to fhandler_pty_master::
accept_input() code.
- Transfering contents of read ahead buffer in
fhandler_pty_master::transfer_input_to_pcon() is removed since
it is not necessary.
- fhandler_pty_slave::eat_readahead() ckecks EOL only when ICANON
is set.
- Guard for _POSIX_VDISABLE is added in checking EOL.
- If vim is started from WSL (Ubuntu) which is executed in pseudo
console in mintty, shift key and ctrl key do not work. Though
this issue is similar to the issue resolved by commit
4527541ec6, that commit is not
effective for this issue. This patch fixes the issue by discarding
"CSI > Pm m" in fhandler_pty_master::pty_master_fwd_thread().
- Commit c4b060e3fe seems to be not
enough. Moreover, it does not work as expected at all in Win10
1809. This patch essentially reverts that commit and add another
fix. After all, the cause of the problem was a race issue in
switch_to_pcon_out flag. That is, this flag is set when native
app starts, however, it is delayed by wait_pcon_fwd(). Since the
flag is not set yet when less starts, the data which should go
into the output_handle accidentally goes into output_handle_cyg.
This patch fixes the problem more essentially for the cause of
the problem than previous one.
- If the output of non-cygwin apps is browsed using less, screen is
ocasionally distorted after less exits. This frequently happens
if cmd.exe is executed after less. This patch fixes the issue.
- In current pty, the window title can not be set from non-cygwin
program due to the code which prevents overwriting the window
title to "cygwin-console-helper.exe" in fhandler_pty_master::pty_
master_fwd_thread(). This patch fixes the issue.
- If the cygwin vim is started from a non-cygwin process which is
executed in pseudo console, shift key and ctrl key do not work.
In this case, vim is executed under /dev/cons*. If vim outputs
escape sequence which is not supported by pseudo console, the
escape sequence is leaked into the parent pty. This causes
unexpected results. This patch fixes the issue by discarding
"CSI > Pm m". "OSC 10;? BEL/ST" and "OSC 11;? BEL/ST" are
discarded as well.
- After commit 29431fcb5b, the issue
reported in https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/245057.html
occurs. This is caused by the following mechanism. Cygwin less
called from non-cygwin git is executed under /dev/cons* rather
than /dev/pty* because parent git process only inherits pseudo
console handle. Therefore, less sets ICANON flag for /dev/cons*
rather than original /dev/pty*. When pty is switched to non-cygwin
git process, line_edit() is used in fhandler_pty_master::write()
only to set input_available_event and read ahead buffer is supposed
to be flushed in accept_input(). However, ICANON flag is not set
for /dev/pty*, so accept_input() is not called unless newline
is entered. As a result, the input data remains in the read ahead
buffer. This patch fixes the issue.
Disable -std option since gnu++14 is default anyway, but keep
it available as comment.
Update dynamic exception specifications deprecated with
C++11 to C++11-introduced noexcept expression.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This partially reverts commit
f36262d56a. That commit incorrectly
made the st_mode of a fifo reflect the Windows permissions of the disk
file underlying the fifo.
Rename localtime.c.patched to localtime.patched.c to keep the correct
language suffix.
Create localtime.patched.c in the build dir rather than in the source
dir. Decouple the build rule for creating localtime.patched.c from
the rule to build localtime.o, so we don't have to rebuild the patched
source file all the time.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
That also requires a small tweak to localtime.c.patch, otherwise
GCC complains about the position of the 'trydefrules' label.
Also, simplify includes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Add tz_posixrules.h with data generated from most recent Cygwin tzdata
package. Establish localtime.cc as primarily a wrapper around a patched
copy of localtime.c. See README for more information.
Modifies winsup/cygwin/Makefile.in to build localtime.o from items in
new winsup/cygwin/tzcode subdirectory. Compiler option "-fpermissive"
is used to accept warnings about missing casts on the return values of
malloc() calls. This patch also removes existing localtime.cc and
tz_posixrules.h from winsup/cygwin as they are superseded by the
subsequent patches in this set.
Both functions are declared as extern "C" functions in
sys/smallprint.h, but as C++ funcs in winsup.h and in the
source itself.
Add extern "C to definitions, remove declarations in winsup.h
and include sys/smallprint.h instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- The number of slaves attached to pseudo console is used only for
triggering redraw screen. Counting was not only needless, but also
did not work as expected. This patch removes the code for counting.
This reverts commit 39a9cd9465.
There is no need to explicitly take ownership in fixup_after_exec; if
ownership transfer is needed, it will be taken care of by
fhandler_fifo::close when the parent closes. Moreover, closing the
parent's fifo_reader_thread can cause problems, such as the one
reported here:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-patches/2020q2/010235.html
- After commit 071b8e0cbd, the problem
reported in https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/244873.html
occurs. This is due to freeing console device accidentally rather
than pseudo console. This patch makes sure to call FreeConsole()
only if the process is attached to the pseudo console of the current
pty.
Windows Explorer shows a warning with Cygwin-created DACLs, but putting
the text of the warning into Google doesn't lead to the relevant Cygwin
docs. Let's copy the warning text into the docs in the hopes of helping
confused users. Most of the credit for the wording belongs to Yaakov
Selkowitz.
Latest inquiry: <https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/244814.html>
Signed-off-by: David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>
During a blocking read, we sleep for 1 ms after each iteration through
the connected writers. Currently we do this by calling Sleep (1).
Remove this call to Sleep and instead change the timeout in the
cygwait call from 0 to 1, so that raw_read can be interrupted while
sleeping.
There are currently three functions that call NtQueryInformationFile
to determine the state of a pipe instance. Do this only once, in a
new fifo_client_handler::set_state () function, and call that when
state information is needed.
Remove the fifo_client_handler methods pipe_state and get_state, which
are no longer needed.
Make fhandler_fifo::get_fc_handler return a reference, for use in
select.cc:peek_fifo.
Make other small changes to ensure that this commit doesn't change any
decisions based on the state of a fifo_client_handler.
The tricky part is interpreting FILE_PIPE_CLOSING_STATE, which we
translate to fc_closing. Our current interpretation, which is not
changing as a result of this commit, is that the writer at the other
end of the pipe instance is viewed as still connected from the point
of view of raw_read and determining EOF.
But it is not viewed as still connected if we are deciding whether to
unblock a new reader that is trying to open.
fifo_reader_id_t::operator == and != have been defined without type
accidentally. For some weird reason, only x86 gcc complains about
this problem, not x86_64 gcc.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The beginning of fhandler_fifo.cc contains a long comment giving an
overview of the FIFO implementation. This is now updated to describe
the support for multiple readers.
Although we can have multiple readers open because of dup/fork/exec,
the current code does not support multiple readers opening a FIFO by
explicitly calling 'open'.
The main complication in supporting this is that when a blocking
reader tries to open and there's already one open, it has to check
whether there any writers open. It can't rely on the write_ready
event, whose state hasn't changed since the first writer opened.
To fix this, add two new named events, check_write_ready_evt and
write_ready_ok_evt, and a new method, check_write_ready().
The first event signals the owner's reader thread to call
check_write_ready(), which polls the fc_handler list to check for
connected writers. If it finds none, it checks to see if there's a
writer in the process and then sets/resets write_ready appropriately.
When check_write_ready() finishes it sets write_ready_ok_evt to signal
the reader that write_ready has been updated.
The polling is done via fifo_client_handler::pipe_state(). As long as
it's calling that function anyway, check_write_ready() updates the
state of each handler.
Also add a new lock to prevent a race if two readers are trying to
open simultaneously.
Add a take_ownership method, used by raw_read and select.cc:peek_fifo.
It wakes up all fifo_reader_threads and allows the caller to become
owner. The work is done by the fifo_reader_threads.
For synchronization we introduce several new fhandler_fifo data
members and methods:
- update_needed_evt signals the current owner to stop listening for
writer connections and update its fc_handler list.
- shared_fc_handler() gets and sets the status of the fc_handler
update process.
- get_pending_owner() and set_pending_owner() get and set the reader
that is requesting ownership.
Finally, a new 'reading_lock' prevents two readers from trying to take
ownership simultaneously.
If the owning reader is closing, wait for another reader (if there is
one) to take ownership before closing the owner's pipe handles.
To synchronize the ownership transfer, add events owner_needed_evt and
owner_found_evt, and add methods owner_needed and owner_found to
set/reset them.
Modify the fifo_reader_thread function to wake up all non-owners when
a new owner is needed.
Make a cosmetic change in close so that fhandler_base::close is called
only if we have a write handle. This prevents strace output from
being littered with statements that the null handle is being closed.
If fixup_after_exec is called on a non-close-on-exec reader whose
parent is the owner, transfer ownership to the child. Otherwise the
parent's pipe handles will be closed before any other reader can
duplicate them.
To help with this, make the cancel_evt and thr_sync_evt handles
inheritable, so that the child can terminate the parent's
fifo_reader_thread (and the parent will update the shared fc_handler
list).
Add an optional argument 'from_exec' to update_my_handlers to simplify
its use in this case; no handle duplication is required.
This is in a new shared memory section. We will use it for temporary
storage of the owner's fc_handler list when we need to change owner.
The new owner can then duplicate the pipe handles from that list
before taking ownership.
Add several shared data members and methods that are needed for the
duplication process
Add methods update_my_handlers and update_shared_handlers that carry
out the duplication.
Allow the shared list to grow dynamically, up to a point. Do this by
initially reserving a block of memory (currently 100 pages) and only
committing pages as needed.
Add methods create_shared_fc_handler, reopen_shared_fc_handler, and
remap_shared_fc_handler to create the new shared memory section,
reopen it, and commit new pages. The first is called in open, the
second is called in dup/fork/exec, and the third is called in
update_shared_handlers if more shared memory is needed.
Modify the fifo_reader_thread function to call update_my_handlers when
it finds that there is no owner. Also make it call
update_shared_handlers when the owner's thread terminates, so that the
new owner will have an accurate shared fc_handler list from which to
duplicate.
For convenience, add new methods cleanup_handlers and
close_all_handlers. And add an optional arg to add_client_handler
that allows it to create a new fifo_client_handler without creating a
new pipe instance.
Make fc_handler a pointer to malloc'd memory instead of a fixed-size
array. The size is now a new data member 'shandlers'. Call realloc
in add_client_handler if we need to grow the array.
free fc_handler in close. As long as we're touching that code, also
remove an unneeded lock.
Among all the open readers of a FIFO, one is declared to be the owner.
This is the only reader that listens for client connections, and it is
the only one that has an accurate fc_handler list.
Add shared data and methods for getting and setting the owner, as well
as a lock to prevent more than one reader from accessing these data
simultaneously.
Modify the fifo_reader_thread so that it checks the owner at the
beginning of its loop. If there is no owner, it takes ownership. If
there is an owner but it is a different reader, the thread just waits
to be canceled. Otherwise, it listens for client connections as
before.
Remove the 'first' argument from create_pipe_instance. It is not
needed, and it may be confusing in the future since only the owner
knows whether a pipe instance is the first.
When opening a reader, don't return until the fifo_reader_thread has
time to set an owner.
If the owner closes, indicate that there is no longer an owner.
Clear the child's fc_handler list in dup, and don't bother duplicating
the handles. The child never starts out as owner, so it can't use
those handles.
Do the same thing in fixup_after_fork in the close-on-exec case. In
the non-close-on-exec case, the child inherits an fc_handler list that
it can't use, but we can just leave it alone; the handles will be
closed when the child is closed.
This uniquely identifies an fhandler_fifo open for reading in any
process.
Add a new data member 'me' of this type, which is set in open, dup,
fork, and exec.
Add data and methods to the shared memory that keep track of the
number of open readers.
Increment this number in open, dup, fork, and exec. Decrement it in
close. Reset read_ready if there are no readers left.
Even though we currently allow a FIFO to be opened for reading only
once, we can still have more than one reader open because of dup and
fork. Add a named shared memory section accessible to all readers of
a given FIFO. In future commits we will add information needed by all
readers to this section
Add a class fifo_shmem_t that lets us access this information.
Add a method create_shmem that is called when a reader opens, and add
a method reopen_shmem that is called by dup, fork, and exec. (Each
new reader needs its own view of the shared memory.)
This will simplify future work.
Rename the thread from "listen_client_thread" to "fifo_reader_thread"
because it will be used for more than just listening.
Remove the fixup_before stuff, which won't be needed after future
changes to fixup_after_fork and fixup_after_exec.
- Make read_ready a manual-reset event.
- Signal read_ready in open instead of in the listen_client_thread.
- Don't reset read_ready when the listen_client thread terminates;
instead do it in close().
- Rearrange open and change its error handling.
- Add a wait_open_pipe method that waits for a pipe instance to be
available and then calls open_pipe. Use it when opening a writer if
we can't connect immediately. This can happen if the system is
heavily loaded and/or if many writers are trying to open
simultaneously.
According to Posix, a FIFO open for reading is at EOF if it is empty
and there are no writers open.
The only way to test this is to poll the fifo_client_handlers as in
raw_read and select.cc:peek_fifo. The current hit_eof instead relies
on the value of nconnected, which can be out of date. On the one
hand, it doesn't take into account writers that were connected but
have since closed. On the other hand, it doesn't take into account
writers that are in the process of opening but haven't yet connected.
Fix this by introducing a maybe_eof method that tentatively assumes
EOF if there are no connected writers after polling. Then check for
writers currently opening (via a new 'writer_opening' event), and wait
for the fifo_reader_thread to record any new connection that was made
while we were polling.
To handle the needs of peek_fifo, replace the get_fc_handle method
by a get_fc_handler method, and add a fifo_client_handler::get_state
method.
Remove the is_connected method, which was used only in peek_fifo and
is no longer needed.
Remove the nconnected data member, which was used only for the flawed
hit_eof.
Add some comments about events to fhandler.h.
Always return 0; no one is doing anything with the return value
anyway.
Remove the return value from stop_listen_client.
Make the connection event auto-reset, so that we don't have to reset
it later.
Simplify the process of connecting a bogus client when thread
termination is signaled.
Make some failures fatal.
Remove the unnecessary extra check for thread termination near the end
of listen_client_thread.
Make the values correspond to the possible return values of
fifo_client_handler::pipe_state().
When cleaning up the fc_handler list in listen_client_thread(), don't
delete handlers in the fc_closing state. I think the pipe might still
have input to be read in that case.
Set the state to fc_closing later in the same function if a connection
is made and the status returned by NtFsControlFile is
STATUS_PIPE_CLOSING.
In raw_read, don't error out if NtReadFile returns an unexpected
status; just set the state of that handler to fc_error. One writer in
a bad state doesn't justify giving up on reading.
Replace the 'fhandler_base *' member by a HANDLE to the server side of
the Windows named pipe instance. Make the corresponding
simplifications throughout.
When `cygwin-console-helper.exe` is either missing, or corresponds to a
different Cygwin runtime, we currently wait forever while setting up
access to the pseudo console, even long after the process is gone that
was supposed to signal that it set up access to the pseudo console.
Let's handle that more gracefully: if the process exited without
signaling, we cannot use the pseudo console. In that case, let's just
fall back to not using it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The workaround to access the full disk required since Vista
and described in http://support.microsoft.com/kb/942448
(NOT ACCESSIBLE at the time of writing this commit message)
is required on floppy drives as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The cast to generate the return value uses a DWORD variable
as test and set value. The error case is the constant -1.
Given the type of the other half of the conditioal expression,
-1 is cast to DWORD as well.
On 64 bit, this results in the error case returning a 32 bit
-1 value which is equivalent to (ssize_t) 4294967295 rather
than (ssize_t) -1.
Add a fixing cast.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The return type of fhandler write methods is ssize_t. Don't
use an int to store the return value, use ssize_t. Use ptrdiff_t
for the buffer size.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The implicit assumption seemed to be that any subsequent occurence of
the same setting in nsswitch.conf is supposed to rewrite the previous
ones completely. This was not the case if the third or any further
schema was previously defined and the last line defined less than that
(but at least 2), for example:
```
db_home: windows cygwin /myhome/%U
db_home: cygwin desc
```
Let's document this behavior as well.
Signed-off-by: David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>
If the cygdrive prefix is /, then the following happens right now:
$ ln -s /tmp/foo .
$ ls -l foo
lrwxrwxrwx 1 user group 12 Apr 15 23:44 foo -> /mnt/tmp/foo
Fix this by skipping cygdrive prefix conversion to WSL drive
prefix "/mnt", if the cygdrive prefix is just "/". There's no
satisfying way to do the right thing all the time in this case
anyway. For a description and the alternatives, see
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-developers/2020-April/011859.html
Also, fix a typo in a comment.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If the first scheme in db_* was invalid, the code would think there
were no schemes specified and replace the second scheme with
NSS_SCHEME_DESC.
Signed-off-by: David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>
PMEM_EXTENDED_PARAMETER is defined in the local winlean.h as long
as mingw-w64 doesn't define it (in winnt.h). ntdll.h needs the
definition for declaring NtMapViewOfSectionEx. cygpath.cc and ps.cc
both include ntdll.h but not winlean.h, so they complain about the
missing definition.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far Cygwin was jumping through hoops to restrict memory
allocation to specific regions. With the advent of VirtualAlloc2
and MapViewOfFile3 (and it's NT counterpart NtMapViewOfSectionEx),
we can skip searching for free space in the specific regions
and just call these functions and let the OS do the job more
efficiently and less racy.
Use VirtualAlloc2 on W10 1803 and later in thread stack allocation.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far Cygwin was jumping through hoops to restrict memory
allocation to specific regions. With the advent of VirtualAlloc2
and MapViewOfFile3 (and it's NT counterpart NtMapViewOfSectionEx),
we can skip searching for free space in the specific regions
and just call these functions and let the OS do the job more
efficiently and less racy.
Use the new functions on W10 1803 and later in mmap.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Windows 10 1803 introduced an extended memory API allowing
to specify memory regions allocations are to be taken off.
In preparation of using this API, define the struct
MEM_EXTENDED_PARAMETER and friends. Declare and allow to
autoload the functions VirtualAlloc2 and NtMapViewOfSectionEx.
Introduce a wincap flag has_extended_mem_api.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Otherwise big stacks have a higher probability to collide with
randomized PEBs and TEBs after fork.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Unfortunately Windows doesn't understand WSL symlinks,
despite being a really easy job. NT functions trying
to access paths traversing WSL symlinks return the status
code STATUS_IO_REPARSE_TAG_NOT_HANDLED. Handle this
status code same as STATUS_OBJECT_PATH_NOT_FOUND in
symlink_info::check to align behaviour to traversing
paths with other non-NTFS type symlinks.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The descriptions of symlink handling are a bit dated, so
revamp them and add the new WSL symlink type.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
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>
Commit 4a36897af3 allowed to convert /mnt/<drive> path
prefixes to Cygwin cygdrive prefixes on the fly. However,
the patch neglected WSL symlinks pointing to the /mnt
directory. Rearrange path conversion so /mnt is converted
to the cygdrive prefix path itself.
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>
This reverts commit 082f2513c7.
Turns out, Linux as well as BSD really only wait for the smaller
number, MIN or # of requested bytes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Per termios, read waits for MIN chars even if the number of requested
bytes is less. This requires to add WaitCommEvent to wait non-busily
for MIN chars prior to calling ReadFile, so, reintroduce it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Sharing the OVERLAPPED struct and event object in there between
read and select calls in the fhandler might have been a nice
optimization way back when, but it is a dangerous, not thread-safe
approach. Fix this by creating per-fhandler, per-call OVERLAPPED
structs and event objects on demand.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- make sure event object is reset
- set read_ready to true if WaitCommEvent returns success
- improve debugging
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
tcsetattr checks if the VTIME and VMIN values changed and only
calls SetCommTimeouts if so. That's a problem if tcsetattr
is supposed to set VTIME and VIMN to 0, because these are the
start values anyway. But this requires to set ReadIntervalTimeout
to MAXDWORD, which just doesn't happen.
Fix this by dropping the over-optimization of checking the old
values before calling SetCommTimeouts,
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
After changing the type of fhandler_serial::vtime_ to cc_t, vtime_
must be stored in 10s of seconds, not in milliseconds.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Get rid of WaitCommEvent and using overlapped_armed to share the
same overlapped operation between read and select. Rather, make
sure to cancel the overlapped IO before leaving any of these functions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Datatypes were incorrect, especially vmin_ and vtime_.
Change them to cc_t, as in user space.
- Error checking had a gap or two. Debug output used the
wrong formatting.
- Don't use ev member for ClearCommError and WaitCommEvent.
Both returned values are different (error value vs. event
code). The values are not used elsewhere so it doesn't make
sense to store them in the object. Therefore, drop ev member.
- Some variable names were not very helpful. Especially using
n as lpNumberOfBytesTransferred from GetOverlappedResult and
then actually printing it as if it makes sense was quite
puzzeling.
- Rework the loop and the definition of minchars so that it
still makes sense when looping.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Don't use ev member for ClearCommError and WaitCommEvent.
Both returned values are different (error value vs. event
code). The values are not used elsewhere so it doesn't make
sense to store them in the object.
- Drop local variable ready which is used inconsequentially.
- Since WFSO already waits 10 ms, don't wait again if no char
is in the inbound queue.
- Avoid else if chains.
- Only print one line of debug output on error.
- Drop overlapped_armed < 0 check. This value is only set in
fhandler_serial::raw_read if VTIME > 0, and even then it's only
set to be immediately reset to 0 before calling ReadFile. So
overlapped_armed is never actually < 0 when calling select.
- Fix a screwed up statement order.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Passing a pointer to a local variable to WriteConsoleA is
not actually needed if we're not going to do anything with
what WriteConsoleA would put in there.
For the wpbuf class the pointer argument was made optional,
so it can be just left out; other call places now pass a
NULL pointer instead. The local variables `wn' and `n'
are no unused, so they go away.
Replace direct access to a pair of co-dependent variables
by calls to methods of a class that encapsulates their relation.
Also replace C #define by C++ class constant.
- In xterm compatible mode, "ESC 7" and "ESC 8" do not work properly
in the senario:
1) Execute /bin/ls /bin to fill screen.
2) Sned CSI?1049h to alternate screen.
3) Reduce window size.
4) Send CSI?1049l to resume screen.
5) Send "ESC 7" and "ESC 8".
After sending "ESC 8", the cursor goes to incorrect position. This
patch adds a workaround for this issue.
- This patch fixes the issue that xterm compatible mode for input
is not correctly set/unset in some situation such as:
1) cat is stopped by ctrl-c.
2) The window size is changed in less.
In case 1), request_xterm_mode_input(true) is called in read(),
however, cat is stopped without request_xterm_mode_input(false).
In case 2), less uses longjmp in signal handler, therefore,
corresponding request_xterm_mode_input(false) is not called if
the SIGWINCH signal is sent within read(). With this patch,
InterlockedExchange() is used instead of InterlockedIncrement/
Decrement().
So far ioctl(TIOCINQ) could end up returning -1 with errno set to EINVAL
if a non-zero device error mask has been returned by ClearCommError.
This doesn't reflect Linux behaviour, which always returns the number of
chars in the inbound queue, independent of any I/O error condition.
EINVAL was a pretty weird error code to use in this scenario, too.
Fix this by dropping all checking for device errors in the TIOCINQ
case. Just return the number of chars in the inbound queue.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- This patch makes some detailed behaviour of ESC sequences such as
"CSI Ps L" (IL), "CSI Ps M" (DL) and "ESC M" (RI) in xterm mode
match with real xterm.
fhandler_socket_unix::fixup_after_exec incorrectly calls
fhandler_socket_unix::fixup_after_fork with a NULL parent process
handle. Not only that calling DuplicateHandle with a NULL parent
handle fails, but it's utterly wrong trying to duplicate the handles
at all here.
Rather just set some important values to NULL and reopen the shared
memory region. Create a fixup_helper method to call common code from
fixup_after_fork and fixup_after_exec.
Add comments to other invocations of fixup_after_fork with NULL
handle to mark them as correct this way.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Aligning the stack pointer using an asm statement isn't any longer
supported. gcc-9.2.0 generates the following warning:
init.cc:33:46: error: listing the stack pointer register '%esp'
in a clobber list is deprecated [-Werror=deprecated]
[...]
init.cc:33:46: note: the value of the stack pointer after an
'asm' statement must be the same as it was before the statement
Replace the asm expression with the gcc function attribute
`force_align_arg_pointer'. This aligns the stack exactly as
required.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
reopen_shmem is accidentally called on the parent fhandler
rather than the child fhandler, and it's called too early.
Make sure to call it on the child and only after its shmem_handle
is valid.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Update dumper for bfd API changes in binutils 2.34
libbfd doesn't guarantee API stability, so we've just been lucky this
hasn't broken more often.
See binutils commit fd361982.
- In Win10 upto 1809, xterm compatible mode does not have REP
escape sequence which terminfo declares. This patch adds support
for "CSI Ps b" (REP). With this patch, bvi (binary editor) works
normally in Win10 1809. Also, xterm compatible mode does not have
"CSI Pm `" (HPA), "CSI Pm a" (HPR) and "CSI Ps e" (VPR). However,
they do not appear to be declared by terminfo. Therefore, these
have been pending.
- Cygwin console with xterm compatible mode causes problem reported
in https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin-patches/2020-q1/msg00212.html
if background/foreground colors are set to gray/black respectively
in Win10 1903/1909. This is caused by "CSI Ps L" (IL), "CSI Ps M"
(DL) and "ESC M" (RI) control sequences which are broken. This
patch adds a workaround for the issue.
The helper function ttynam creates a tty name by using sprintf wrongly
on a pretty short buffer. The foramt string only specifies a minimum
field length, not a maximum field length, so gcc-9.2.0 complains:
ps.cc:101:23: warning: 'sprintf' may write a terminating nul past the
end of the destination [-Wformat-overflow=]
Fix this thoroughly by specifying a maximum field width as well as by
using snprintf with a fixed buffer length. Also, drop using a static
buffer in favor of using a buffer in the caller.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
...from structs used for data exchange between clients and cygserver.
All of the structs have the same size and member offsets, packed or
unpacked. Keeping the packed attribute results in ominous warnings
from gcc-9.2.0:
cygserver.cc:259:10: warning: taking address of packed member of
'client_request_attach_tty::request_attach_tty' may result in an
unaligned pointer value [-Waddress-of-packed-member]
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
gcc-9.2.0 has an execve builtin which uses the nothrow attribute.
This results in an error when aliasing execve to _execve for newlib:
exec.cc:88:23: error: 'int _execve(const char*, char* const*, char*
const*)' specifies less restrictive attribute than its target
'int execve(const char*, char* const*, char* const*)': 'nothrow'
[-Werror=missing-attributes]
88 | EXPORT_ALIAS (execve, _execve) /* For newlib */
Add the -fno-builtin-execve CFLAGS when building exec.o to override
the gcc builtin.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The variable returning the overrun count from the tracker object after
disarming the overrun counter was not correctly initialized. For some
reason this has only been noticed by gcc-9.2.0, not by the formerly used
gcc-7.4.0.
This problem should not have had any runtime impact. The method
timer_tracker::disarm_overrun_event is supposed to be called in
lock-step with timer_tracker::arm_overrun_event, which in turn
results in the variable getting a valid value.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
linux 4.6 x86/cpu: Add advanced power management bits
Bit 11 of CPUID 8000_0007 edx is processor feedback interface.
Bit 12 of CPUID 8000_0007 edx is accumulated power.
Print proper names in /proc/cpuinfo
[missed enabling this 2016 change during previous major cpuinfo update
as no power related changes were made to the Linux files since then]
- Accessing shared_console_info before initialization causes access
violation because it is a NULL pointer. The cause of the problem
reported in https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-02/msg00197.html is
this NULL pointer access in request_xterm_mode_output() when it is
called from close(). This patch makes sure that shared_console_info
is not NULL before calling request_xterm_mode_output().
Added in Linux 5.6:
Check FSRM and use REP MOVSB for short copies on systems that have it.
>From the Intel Optimization Reference Manual:
3.7.6.1 Fast Short REP MOVSB
Beginning with processors based on Ice Lake Client microarchitecture,
REP MOVSB performance is enhanced with string lengths up to 128 bytes.
Support for fast-short REP MOVSB is indicated by the CPUID feature flag:
CPUID [EAX=7H, ECX=0H).EDX.FAST_SHORT_REP_MOVSB[bit 4] = 1.
There is no change in the REP STOS performance.
A NUL byte in the output stream got accidentally not handled as IGN char
in xterm console mode. The internal mbtowc conversion doesn't handle
embedded NUL values gracefully, it always stops converting at NUL bytes.
This broke the output of strings with embedded NUL bytes.
Fix this by always skipping IGN chars in the "normal char output loop"
and make sure not to move the cursor one position to the right, as in
legacy console mode.
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>
- If two cygwin programs are executed simultaneousley with pipes
in cmd.exe, xterm compatible mode is accidentally disabled by
the process which ends first. After that, escape sequences are
not handled correctly in the other app. This is the problem 2
reported in https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-02/msg00116.html.
This patch fixes the issue. This patch also fixes the problem 3.
For these issues, the timing of setting and unsetting xterm
compatible mode is changed. For read, xterm compatible mode is
enabled only within read() or select() functions. For write, it
is enabled every time write() is called, and restored on close().
- In push_to_pcon_screenbuffer(), open() and ioctl() are called.
Since push_to_pcon_screenbuffer() is called in read() and write(),
errno which is set in read() and write() code may be overwritten
in open() or ioctl() call. This patch prevent this situation.
- PTY has a bug reported in:
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-02/msg00067.html.
This is the result of state mismatch between real pseudo console
attaching state and state variable. This patch fixes the issue.
- PTY has a problem that the key input, which is typed during
windows native app is running, disappear when it returns to shell.
(Problem 3 in https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-02/msg00007.html)
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 patch realize transfering input data between these two pipes.
- Debug codes used in the early stage of pseudo console support are
removed. (Regarding ALWAYS_USE_PCON and USE_API_HOOK) Along with
this, the codes related to this change are organized.
- PTY code has a problem that tcsh is terminated if the following
command is executed.
true; chcp &
This seems to be caused by invalid pointer access which occurs
when the process exits during the kill() code is execuetd. This
patch avoids the issue by not using kill().
- With this patch, foreground color and background color are allowed
to be set simultaneously by 24 bit color escape sequence such as
ESC[38;2;0;0;255;48;2;128;128;0m in legacy console mode.