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.
When fhandler_base::fstat_helper is called, the handle h returned by
get_stat_handle() should be pc.handle() and should be safe to use for
getting the file information. Previously, the call to
get_file_attribute() for FIFOs set the first argument to NULL instead
of h, thereby forcing the file to be opened for fetching the security
descriptor in get_file_sd().
Make fhandler_socket_local::dup and fhandler_socket_local::fcntl (a
new method) call fhandler_base::dup and fhandler_base::fcntl if O_PATH
is set.
We're viewing the socket as a disk file here, but there's no need to
implement the actions of fhandler_disk_file::dup and
fhandler_disk_file::fcntl, which do nothing useful in this case beyond
what the fhandler_base methods do. (The extra actions are only useful
when I/O is going to be done on the file.)
If O_PATH is set, then the fhandler_socket_local object has a handle
that can be used for getting the statvfs information. Use it by
calling fhandler_base::fstatvfs_by_handle. Without this change,
fhandler_disk_file::fstatfvs would be called on a new fhandler_disk
object, which would then have to be opened.
If an AF_LOCAL socket is opened with O_PATH, all socket system calls
that take a file descriptor argument fail on the resulting descriptor.
Make sure that errno is set as on Linux for those calls that are
implemented on Linux. In almost all cases it is ENOTSOCK. There are
two exceptions:
- sockatatmark(3); errno is EBADF.
- bindresvport(3); errno is EAFNOSUPPORT if the second argument sin
(of type struct sockaddr_in *) is non-NULL and satisfies
sin->sin_family == AF_INET.
Finally, there are two BSD socket system calls implemented on Cygwin
but not Linux: getpeereid(3) and bindresvport_sa(3). Set errno to
ENOTSOCK for these for consistency with the majority of the other
calls.
If that flag is not set, or if an attempt is made to open a different
type of socket, the errno is now EOPNOTSUPP instead of ENXIO. This is
consistent with POSIX, starting with the 2016 edition. Earlier
editions were silent on this issue.
Opening is done in a (new) fhandler_socket_local::open method by
calling fhandler_base::open_fs.
Also add a corresponding fhandler_socket_local::close method.
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>
This option has been disabled long ago and nobody missed it.
Removing drops a bit of unneeded code
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If O_PATH is set, then the fhandler_fifo object has a handle that can
be used for getting the statvfs information. Use it by calling
fhandler_base::fstatvfs_by_handle. Before this change,
fhandler_disk_file::fstatfvs was called on a new fhandler_disk_file
object, which would then have to be opened.
Define a new method fhandler_base::fstatvfs_by_handle, extracted from
fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs, which gets the statvfs information when
a handle is available.
This will be used in future commits for special files that have been
opened with O_PATH.
Treat a special file opened with O_PATH the same as a regular file,
i.e., use its handle to get the stat information.
Before this change, fstat_fs opened the file a second time, with the
wrong flags and without closing the existing handle. A side effect
was to change the openflags of the file, possibly causing further
system calls to fail.
Currently this change only affects FIFOs, but it will affect
AF_LOCAL/AF_UNIX sockets too once they support O_PATH.
mknod32 actually creates a path_conv, just to call mknod_worker
with a win32 path. This doesn't only require to create path_conv
twice, it also breaks permissions on filesystems supporting ACLs.
Fix this by passing the path_conv created in the caller down to
symlink_worker. Also, while at it, simplify the handling of trailing
slashes and move it out of symlink_worker. Especially use the
new PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW_DIR flag to avoid fiddeling with creating
a new path copy without the trailing slash.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Usually a trailing slash requires to follow an existing symlink,
even with PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW. The reason is that "foo/" is equivalent
to "foo/." so the symlink is in fact not the last path component,
"." is. This is default for almost all scenarios.
PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW_DIR now allows the caller to request not to
follow the symlink even if a trailing slash is given. This can
be used in callers to perform certain functions Linux-compatible.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- After commit 6cc299f0e2, outputs of
cygwin programs which call both printf() and WriteConsole() are
frequently distorted. This patch fixes the issue.
- The cause of the problem reported in
https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-01/msg00220.html is that the
chars input before dup() cannot be read from the new file descriptor.
This is because the readahead buffer (rabuf) in the console is newly
created by dup(), and does not inherit from the parent. This patch
fixes the issue.
If the O_PATH flag is set, fhandler_fifo::open now simply calls
fhandler_base::open_fs.
The previous attempt to handle O_PATH in commit aa55d22c, "Cygwin:
honor the O_PATH flag when opening a FIFO", fixed a hang but otherwise
didn't do anything useful.
If O_PATH is set in the flags argument of
fhandler_base::device_access_denied, return false. No
read/write/execute access should be required in this case.
Previously, the call to device_access_denied in open(2) would lead to
an attempt to open the file with read access even if the O_PATH flag
was set.
rdpru flag is cpuid xfn 80000008 ebx bit 4 added in linux 5.5;
see AMD64 Architecture Programmer's Manual Volume 3:
General-Purpose and System Instructions
https://www.amd.com/system/files/TechDocs/24594.pdf#page=329
and elsewhere in that document
- For programs which does not work properly with pseudo console,
disable_pcon in environment CYGWIN is introduced. If disable_pcon
is set, pseudo console support is disabled.
- For programs compiled with -mwindows option, reopening slave is
needed in push_to_pcon_screenbuffer(), however, it was not at
appropriate place. This causes the problem reported in
https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-01/msg00161.html. This
patch fixes the issue.
- Though this rarely happens, sometimes the first printing of non-
cygwin process does not displayed correctly. To fix this issue,
the code for waiting for forwarding by master_fwd_thread is revised.
Following Linux, allow the pathname argument to be an empty string if
the AT_EMPTY_PATH flag is specified. In this case the dirfd argument
can refer to any type of file, not just a directory, and the call
operates on that file. In particular, dirfd can refer to a symlink
that was opened with O_PATH | O_NOFOLLOW.
Following Linux, allow the pathname argument to be an empty string,
provided the dirfd argument refers to a symlink opened with
O_PATH | O_NOFOLLOW. The readlinkat call then operates on that
symlink.
Commit 283cb372, "Cygwin: normalize_win32_path: improve error
checking", required a prefix '\\?\' or '\??\' in the source path to be
followed by 'UNC\' or 'X:\', where X is a drive letter. That was too
restrictive, since it disallowed the paths '\\?\X: and '\??\X:'. This
caused problems when a user tried to use the root of a drive as the
Cygwin installation root, as reported here:
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-01/msg00111.html
Modify the requirement so that '\??\X:' and '\\?\X:' are now allowed
as source paths, without a trailing backslash.
- In octave gui, sometimes state mismatch between real pty state
and state variable occurs. For example, this occurs when 'ls'
command is executed in octave gui. This patch fixes the issue.
- After commit e1a0775dc0, the problem
reported in https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2020-01/msg00093.html
occurs. For Gnu scren and tmux, calling FreeConsole() on pty close
is necessary. However, if FreeConsole() is called, cygwin setup
with '-h' option does not work. Therefore, the commit
e1a0775dc0 delayed closing pty.
This is the cause of the problem above. Now, instead of delaying
pty close, FreeConsole() is not called if the process is non cygwin
processes such as cygwin setup.
- The console with 24bit color support has a problem that console
mode is changed if cygwin process is executed in cmd.exe which
started in cygwin shell. For example, cursor keys become not
working if bash -> cmd -> true are executed in this order.
This patch fixes the issue.
- In Win10 1809, the cursor position sometimes goes out of screen
by clear command in console. This seems to be caused by escape
sequence CSI3J (ESC[3J). This happens only for 1809. This patch
is a workaround for the issue.
- Special function keys such as arrow keys or function keys do not
work in ConEmu with cygwin-connector after commit
6a06c6bc8f. This patch fixes the
issue.
- PTY code which support pseudo console has a problem that causes
handle leaks. Four of these are bug in pty code, and the other
one seems to be a bug of Windows10. ClosePseudoConsole() fails
to close one internal handle. This patch fixes the issue.
- If two PTYs are opened in the same process and the first one
is closed, the helper process for the first PTY remains running.
This patch fixes the issue.
- The slowing down issue of X11 forwarding using ssh -Y, reported
in https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-12/msg00295.html,
is due to the change of select() code for pty in the commit
915fcd0ae8. cygthread::detach()
takes at most about 10msec because Sleep() is used in the thread.
For this issue, this patch uses cygwait() instead of Sleep() and
introduces an event to abort the wait. For not only pty, but pipe
and fifo also have the same problem potentially, so this patch
applies same strategy to them as well.
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
Add that flag to the pipe type argument when creating the Windows
named pipe. And add a definition of that flag to ntdll.h (copied from
/usr/include/w32api/ddk/ntifs.h).
- Even with commit fe512b2b12, pty
still has a problem in ESC[?3h and ESC[?3l handling if invalid
sequence such as ESC[?$ is sent. This patch fixes the issue.
Both functions were introduce with Windows 7 only, so we need to
autoload them for the sake of Vista/2008.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On certain error conditions there is a code snippet that checks
whether the last component of the path has a trailing dot or space or
a leading space. Skip this check if the last component is empty,
i.e., if the path ends with a backslash. This avoids an assertion
failure if the trailing backslash is the only backslash in the path,
as is the case for a DOS drive 'X:\'.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-12/msg00016.html
- Pseudo console clears console screen buffer if ESC[?3h or ESC[?3l
is sent. However, xterm/vt100 does not clear screen. This cause
mismatch between real screen and console screen buffer. Therefore,
this patch triggers redraw screen in that situation so that the
synchronization is done on the next execution of native app.
This solves the problem reported in:
https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin-patches/2019-q4/msg00116.html
- Previously, pty cleared screen at startup for synchronization
between the real screen and console screen buffer for pseudo
console. With this patch, instead of clearing screen, the screen
is redrawn when the first native program is executed after pty
is created. In other words, synchronization is deferred until
the native app is executed. Moreover, this realizes excluding
$TERM dependent code.
fhandler_console::create_invisible_console_workaround() does not use the
lpApplicationName parameter and neglects to quote its command name on
lpCommandLine in the call to CreateProcessW.
Given CreateProcessW's brain-dead method to evaluate the application
path given on the command line, this opens up a security problem if
Cygwin is installed into a path with spaces in it.
Fix this by using the lpApplicationName parameter and quoting of the
application path in the lpCommandLine parameter (used as argv[0] in
the called console helper.
For extended paranoia, make the argument string array big enough to
fit full 64 bit pointer values into it. Handles usually only use
the lower 32 bit, but better safe than sorry.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
FH_CONS_MAX should refelect the fact that we allow 128 consoles, even if
it's unused.
Suggested-by: Achim Gratz <Stromeko@nexgo.de>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit 5a0f2c00aa "Cygwin: fork/exec: fix child process permissions"
removed the PROCESS_DUP_HANDLE handle permission of the parent process
handle in the child to avoid a security problem.
It turned out that this broke the following scenario: If a process forks
and then the parent execs, the child loses the ability to register the
parent's death. To wit, after the parent died the child process does
not set its own PPID to 1 anymore.
The current exec mechanism copies required handle values (handles to
keep contact to the child processes) into the child_info for the
about-to-be-exec'ed process. The exec'ed process is supposed to
duplicate these handles. This fails, given that we don't allow the
exec'ed process PROCESS_DUP_HANDLE access to the exec'ing process since
commit 5a0f2c00aa.
The fix is to avoid the DuplicateHandle calls in the exec'ed process.
This patch sets the affected handles to "inheritable" in the exec'ing
process at exec time. The exec'ed process just copies the handle values
and resets handle inheritance to "non-inheritable". The exec'ing
process doesn't have to reset handle inheritance, it exits after setting
up the exec'ed process anyway.
Testcase: $ ssh-agent /bin/sleep 3
ssh-agent forks and the parent exec's sleep. After sleep exits, `ps'
should show ssh-agent to have PPID 1, and eventually ssh-agent exits.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Call find_exec with the FE_NNF flag to enforce a NULL return when the
executable isn't found in $PATH. Convert NULL to "". This aligns
spawnvp and spawnvpe with execvp and execvpe.
If the directory name has the form 'x:' followed by one or more
slashes or backslashes, and if there's at least one backslash, assume
that the user is referring to 'x:\', the root directory of drive x,
and don't strip the backslash.
Previously all trailing slashes and backslashes were stripped, and the
name was treated as a relative file name containing a literal colon.
Addresses https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-08/msg00334.html.
Add feature test print macro that makes feature, bit, and flag text
comparison and checking easier. Handle as common former Intel only
feature flags also supported on AMD. Change order and some flag names
to agree with current Linux.
If the source path starts with the Win32 long path prefix '\\?\' or
the NT object directory prefix '\??\', require the prefix to be
followed by 'UNC\' or '<drive letter>:\'. Otherwise return EINVAL.
This fixes the assertion failure in symlink_info::check that was
reported here:
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-09/msg00228.html
That assertion failure was caused by normalize_win32_path returning a
path with no backslashes when the source path was '\\?\DRIVE'.
If the last component of the directory name is a symlink followed by a
slash, rmdir now fails, following Linux but not POSIX, even if the
symlink resolves to an existing empty directory.
mkdir was similarly changed in 2009 in commit
52dba6a5c4. Modify a comment to clarify
the purpose of that commit.
Addresses https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-09/msg00221.html.
Prior to commit b0717aae, path_conv::check had the following code:
if (strncmp (path, "\\\\.\\", 4))
{
/* Windows ignores trailing dots and spaces in the last path
component, and ignores exactly one trailing dot in inner
path components. */
char *tail = NULL;
[...]
if (!tail || tail == path)
/* nothing */;
else if (tail[-1] != '\\')
{
*tail = '\0';
[...]
}
Commit b0717aae0 intended to disable this code, but it inadvertently
disabled only part of it. In particular, the declaration of the local
tail variable was in the disabled code, but the following remained:
if (!tail || tail == path)
/* nothing */;
else if (tail[-1] != '\\')
{
*tail = '\0';
[...]
}
[A later commit removed the disabled code.]
The tail variable here points into a string different from path,
causing that string to be truncated under some circumstances. See
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2019-09/msg00001.html
for more details.
This commit fixes the problem by removing the leftover code
that was intended to be removed in b0717aae.
- The autoload feature is used rather than GetModuleHandle(),
GetProcAddress() for CreatePseudoConsole(), ResizePseudoConsole()
and ClosePseudoConsole().
- Since calling system __loadlocale() caused execution error,
PTY used its own NLS function. The cause of the error has been
found, the corresponding code has been rewritten using system
function.
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.