When logging in via ssh with an unprivileged account,
PdhAddEnglishCounter returns with status 0x800007D0,
PDH_CSTATUS_NO_MACHINE. We didn't find any workaround
but the changes to improve debugging output may help
in future. Using UNICODE instead of ANSI functions is
a result of trying to fix this problem.
Also drop the prototype workaround for PdhAddEnglishCounterA.
It's not required anymore since Mingw-w64's pdh.h catched up.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Create process with standard rights, plus
PROCESS_QUERY_LIMITED_INFORMATION for authenticated users. This
allows to fetch basic process information and thus /proc/<PID>/stat
to succeed on foreign processes.
While at it, fix formatting in CreateProcess calls.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
There's no good reason to return blank if some of the info
couldn't be collected. Drop useless call collecting
SystemProcessorPerformanceInformation. Always return some
valid start_time, even if we couldn't collect ProcessTimes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The OpenProcess call to generate /proc/<PID>/stat info requests
PROCESS_VM_READ, but that's not required. Drop it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Creating /proc/<PID>/cmdline requires permissions to communicate
with the target process via its signal pipe. If that fails, the
output is "<defunct>" which doesn't make sense most of the time.
Rather, call format_process_exename in this case to get more useful
process name info, albeit not the full cmdline.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The winpid symlinks got created with no query permissions, so
only admins could see all Cygwin processes. Create symlinks
so everyone has query permissions instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Canceling the timer thread runs under lock. The thread uses the same
lock to guard its timer_tracker struct access. If the timing is bad,
timer_settime or timer_delete grab the lock at the same time, the timer
expires. In the end, cancel waits for the thread sync while the thread
waits for ther lock to be released.
Fix this by not waiting for the thread sync under lock.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On setting the timer, the thread is accidentally only canceled when
disarming the timer. This leaks one thread per timer_settimer call.
Move the thread cancellation where it belongs.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
We don't support setting groups via /etc/groups anymore. Also, the
initgroups group list is created via S4U, so we have "Interactive" vs.
"Network" token, an artificial and entirely irrelevant difference.
So, "verifying" the lsaprivkeyauth token may lead to rejecting a prefectly
valid token. Just remove the verify_token call.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Revert "Cywin: user profile: unload impersonation user profile on exit"
Revert "Cygwin: seteuid: allow inheriting impersonation user profile handle"
Revert "Cygwin: user profile: add debug output to unload_user_profile"
Revert "Cygwin: user profile: Make an effort to unload unused user profiles"
This reverts commit bcb33dc4f0.
This reverts commit dd3730ed9c.
This reverts commit 8eee25241e.
This reverts commit 71b8777a71.
This patchset actually results in the following problem:
- After a couple of ssh logon/logoff attempts, an interactive session
of the same user loging in, is broken.
Apparently UnloadUserProfile manages to unload the user's profile
even while a parallel interactive session still uses the user's
profile.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Per MSDN VirtualQueryEx requires PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION.
Testing showed that PROCESS_QUERY_LIMITED_INFORMATION is sufficient
since Windows 8.1. The assumption that Windows 8 is the same as
Windows 8 was not correct, it requires PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION
as well.
Fix that by splitting the Windows 8 wincaps into one for Windows 8
and one for Windows 8.1. Set needs_query_information for Windows 8.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If the user domain is the primary domain, LDAP is supposed to
use the default naming context. This is accomplished by setting
domain name to NULL in the call to cyg_ldap::fetch_ad_account.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
cyg_ldap::fetch_ad_account creates a naming context from the
incoming domain, if it's not NULL. The algorithm overwrites
dots with \0 in domain while creating the naming context, but
neglects to restore the dots.
Fix that by never overwriting the incoming domain name.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- feenableexcept,fedisableexcept, fegetexcept are GNU-only
- fegetprec, fesetprec are Solaris, use __MISC_VISIBLE
- _feinitialise is Cygwin-internal only
- Replace self-named FP precision values to values from
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22//WG14/www/docs/n752.htm
as used by Solaris.
- Change return value of fesetprec to adhere to the above document
and Solaris.
- Document fegetprec, fesetprec as Solaris functions, not as GNU
functions
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
...before calling any of its method. It's no safe bet that
it's already initialized when calling s4uauth and adding it
to load_user_profile certainly doesn't hurt.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In case of a local machine account login, pi.lpProfilePath points
to the buffer returned by NetUserGetInfo, but NetApiBufferFree
is called prior to calling LoadUserProfileW. Fix by copying over
usri3_profile to the local userpath buffer, just as in the AD case.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This never really worked. While at it, restructure code to
do common stuff only in one spot. Improve debug output.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Inspecting the content of case-sensitive directories
on remote machines results in lots of errors like
disappearing diretories and files, file not found, etc.
This is not feasible as default behaviour
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
A sleep is required on Windows 10 64 bit only before calling
RegisterClassW in the timerfd thread, and only when running
under strace. One of the child processes inheriting the timerfd
descriptor will get a STATUS_FLOAT_INEXACT_RESULT exception inside
of msvcrt.dll. It's apparently some timing problem. It occurs
in 4 out of 5 runs under strace only. WOW64 and Windows 7 64 bit
don't have this problem.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The share section was created using the PAGE_SIZE constant,
but PAGE_SIZE is 64K. Fix that by using wincap.page_size()
instead, which returns the desired actual page size of 4K.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
timerfd_tracker and timerfd_shared classes:
- Just because handles are shared, we don't have to store them in
shared memory. Move share handles into timerfd_tracker class.
- Drop shared instance counter since it's not required anymore.
timerfd_shared only stores the actual timer data.
- Drop timerfd_shared::create, just set clock id.
- Drop timerfd_shared::dtor, it's not required anymore.
- Drop timerfd_tracker::close, just call dtor where required.
- Rename timerfd_tracker::increment_instances to timerfd_tracker::dup.
It's the only reason it exists...
- timerfd_tracker::dtor now checks the non-shared pointers for NULL
before attempting to close them.
- timerfd_tracker::dtor handles decrementing the local instance count
by itself.
- Add a method timerfd_tracker::init_fixup_after_fork_exec to set
non-shared pointers to NULL. Together with the dtor patches it
fixes a problem with close_on_exec timerfd descriptors.
- Fix a bug in handling the thread synchronization event. It's
actually nice to create it before using it...
- Drop using sec_none{_nih} in InitializeObjectAttributes. It's
an unnecessary roundabout route just to get a NULL pointer.
- Slightly rework timechange window handling.
- Add more comments to explain what happens.
fhandler_timerfd:
- Drop cnew macro, it just hides what happens.
- fhandler_timerfd::fixup_after_exec now calls
timerfd_tracker::init_fixup_after_fork_exec first, so a subsequent
call to timerfd_tracker::dtor only works on valid handles.
- fhandler_timerfd::close directly calls timerfd_tracker::dtor now.
- Drop dtor call in fhandler_timerfd destructor.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
timerfd_tracker::fixup_after_fork_exec always tries to restore
the shared timer region at the same address as in the parent.
This is entirely unnecessary and wasn't intended, rather some
kind of copy/paste thinko. Fix that. Print NtMapViewOfSection
status code in api_fatal on failure for debugging.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The "optimized" condition to recognize an unarmed timer was plain
wrong. Replace it by checking the stored it_value against 0.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The child process needs access to the handle to be able to
unload it when switching user context.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Does this work? There's not much feedback given.
TODO: We might want to try unloading the user profile at process
exit as well, FWIW.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
curr_primary_token is either NO_IMPERSONATION or the external_token
or the internal_token, so it's never required to be closed by itself.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit 649911fb40 avoids the
calls to NetUserGetGroups and NetUserGetLocalGroups since
these can take a lot of time. The same problem potentially
occurs when loading the user profile. The code fetches
the roaming profile path calling NetUserGetInfo, which also
can be rather slow.
To avoid this problem, fetch the profile patch using LDAP.
Also, don't bail out early if the user's registry hive already
exists. This may result in outdated information.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
NetUserGetGroups and NetUserGetLocalGroups sometimes take a lot of time
(up to more than 2 mins) for no apparent reason.
Call s4uauth to generate an identification token for the user and fetch
the group list from there. This is *much* faster.
Keep the old code only for the sake of WOW64 on Vista and Windows 7,
which don't implement MsV1_0S4ULogon.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
s4uath was only callable to create an impersonation token so
far. Rework the function to allow creating an identification
token for informational purposes even from untrusted processes.
Take domainname and username instead of a passwd pointer to be
more multi-purpose.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit 4e34a39b5c made sure all user and
group names are case-correct, but it introduced a hefty performance hit
on starting the first Cygwin process.
Adding an ldap call for each AD group in a user token takes its toll in
bigger AD environments with lots of groups in a user token. Real-life
example: 300 groups w/ roundtrip time to the LDAP server of 0.25 secs
per call...
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Up to Vista CreateProcessAsUser only worked with primary tokens,
so convert S4U impersonation token to primary token. MSDN still
documents it that way, but actually an impersonation token is
sufficient since Windows 7.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Under WOW64 on 64 bit Windows 7, MsV1_0S4ULogon appears to be
unimplemented, probably under Vista as well. Re-enable
create_token method, to allow basic seteuid on W7 WOW64 and
Vista as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
for domain accounts we try KerbS4ULogon first, MsV1_0S4ULogon
second. But we only fetch the package id for the supporting
authentication package (Kerberos/MsV1_0) once at the start.
Duplicate LsaLookupAuthenticationPackage call and move into the
Kerb/MsV1_0 branches so that it fetches the correct package id
for the method we call next.
Curious enough this worked before. Apparently both methods
work with the MICROSOFT_KERBEROS_NAME_A package id. However,
requesting and using the right authentication package id is
the prudent thing to do.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This reverts commit 7c34811440.
This potentially allows to circumvent OpenSSHs user/group name matching,
unless the Admin knows to add every local user twice or to use patterns,
e.g.:
Match user MACHINE+user,.+user
Match user *+user
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit c1023ee353 changed the way
path_conv::binmode() works. Rather than returning three states,
O_BINARY, O_TEXT, 0, it only returned 2 states, O_BINARY, O_TEXT. Since
mounts are only binary if they are explicitely mounted binary by setting
the MOUNT_BINARY flag, textmode is default.
This introduced a new bug. When inheriting stdio HANDLEs from native
Windows processes, the fhandler and its path_conv are created from a
device struct only. None of the path or mount flags get set this way.
So the mount flags are 0 and path_conv::binmode() returned 0.
After the path_conv::binmode() change it returned O_TEXT since, as
explained above, the default mount mode is textmode.
Rather than just enforcing binary mode for path_conv's created from
device structs, this patch changes the default mount mode to binary:
Replace MOUNT_BINARY flag with MOUNT_TEXT flag with opposite meaning.
Drop all explicit setting of MOUNT_BINARY. Drop local set_flags
function, it doesn't add any value.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When recognizing a negative pid, optind is off by one. The
code correcting this has been erroneously removed by commit
8de660271f. Revert that.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The solution from commit 9a3cc77b2a
didn't work for foreign domain accounts. Rather than calling
LookupAccountSid we now use the info when we fetch it anyway
via LDAP or Net*GetInfo. Only in case of domain groups we have
to add an LDAP call explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Make sure a domain+username fits into the local name buffer.
The former buffer size didn't take adding a domain name to
a really_really_long_user_name into account.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When looking up valid accounts by name, LookupAccountName returns
a SID and a case-correct domain name. However, the name was input
and LookupAccountName is case-insensitive, so the name is not
necessarily written the same way as in SAM or AD.
Fix that by doing a reverse lookup on the just fetched SID. This
fetches the account name in the correct case. Override the
incoming name with the case correct name from LookupAccountSid.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This is a really old and crappy API, as the previous commit shows.
Use NtQueryInformationFile(FilePositionInformation) here instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
dtable::set_file_pointers_for_exec is called from
child_info_spawn::worker to move the file position of O_APPEND
files to EOF if the child is a native child.
However, this only works correctly for the first O_APPEND
file descriptor:
- set_file_pointers_for_exec calls SetFilePointer. The higher
4 bytes of the desired file offset are given to SetFilePointer
as pointer to a DWORD value. On return, SetFilePointer returns
the higher 4 bytes of the new file position in this DWORD.
- So for the second and subsequent descriptors the higher 4 byte
of the file position depend on what the actual file position
of the previous file has been set to:
- If the file is > 2 Gigs, the high offset will not be 0 anymore.
- If the desciptor points to a non-seekable file (i.e., a pipe
or socket), SetFilePosition returns an error and sets the high
position to -1.
Fix this by calling SetFilePointerEx instead, which does not
modify the incoming position value.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When calling spawnve, in contrast to execve, the parent has
to create the pid for the child. With the old technique
this was simply the Windows pid, but now we have to inform
the child about its new pid.
Add a cygpid member to class child_info_spawn. Set it in
child_info_spawn::worker, just prior to calling CreateProcess
rather than afterwards. Overwrite cygheap->pid in
child_info_spawn::handle_spawn before calling pinfo::thisproc.
Make sure pinfo::thisproc knows the pid is already set by
setting the handle argument to INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE.
Also set procinfo->dwProcessId to myself_initial.dwProcessId
instead of to myself_initial.pid for clarity.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When the current process has renamed (to bin) a readonly dll, we get
STATUS_TRANSACTION_NOT_ACTIVE for unknown reason when subsequently
creating the forkable hardlink. A workaround is to open the original
file with FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES access, but that fails with permission
denied for users not owning the original file.
* forkable.cc (dll::create_forkable): Retry hardlink creation using the
original file's handle opened with FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES access when the
first attempt fails with STATUS_TRANSACTION_NOT_ACTIVE.
* Rename cygwin_shared->prefer_forkable_hardlinks to
forkable_hardlink_support, with values
0 for Unknown, 1 for Supported, -1 for Unsupported.
Upon first dll loaded ever, dll_list::forkable_ntnamesize checks the
/var/run/cygfork directory to both exist and reside on NTFS, setting
cygwin_shared->forkable_hardlink_support accordingly.
* Replace enum forkables_needs by bool forkables_created: Set
to True by request_forkables after creating forkable hardlinks.
To avoid the need for each process to check the filesystem to detect
that hardlink creation is impossible or disabled, cache this fact in
shared memory. Removing cygfork directory while in use does disable
hardlinks creation. To (re-)enable hardlinks creation, the cygfork
directory has to exist before the first cygwin process does fork.
* forkable.cc (dll_list::forkable_ntnamesize): Short cut
forkables needs to impossible when disabled via shared memory.
(dll_list::update_forkables_needs): When detecting hardlink
creation as impossible (not on NTFS) while still (we are the
first one checking) enabled via shared memory, disable the
shared memory value.
(dll_list::request_forkables): Disable the shared memory value
when hardlinks creation became disabled, that is when the
cygfork directory was removed.
* include/cygwin/version.h: Bump CYGWIN_VERSION_SHARED_DATA 6.
* shared_info.h (struct shared_info): Add member
prefer_forkable_hardlinks. Update CURR_SHARED_MAGIC.
* shared.cc (shared_info::initialize): Initialize
prefer_forkable_hardlinks to 1 (Yes).
To support in-cygwin package managers, the fork() implementation must
not rely on .exe and .dll files to stay in their original location, as
the package manager's job is to replace these files. Instead, when the
first fork try fails, and we have NTFS, we use hardlinks to the original
binaries in /var/run/cygfork/ to create the child process during the
second fork try, along the main.exe.local file to enable the "DotLocal
Dll Redirection" feature for the dlls.
The (probably few) users that need an update-safe fork manually have to
create the /var/run/cygfork/ directory for now, using:
mkdir --mode=a=rwxt /var/run/cygfork
* child_info.h: Bump CURR_CHILD_INFO_MAGIC.
(enum child_status): Add _CI_SILENTFAIL flag.
(struct child_info): Add silentfail setter and getter.
* winsup.h (child_copy): Add bool silentfail parameter.
* cygheap.cc: Pass silentfail parameter to child_copy.
* dcrt0.cc: Ditto.
* dll_init.h (struct dll): Define public inline method forkedntname.
(struct dll_list): Declare private method find_by_forkedntname.
* dll_init.cc (struct dll_list): Implement find_by_forkedntname.
(dll_list::alloc): Use find_by_forkedntname when in load after fork.
(dll_list::load_after_fork_impl): Load dlls using dll::forkedntname.
* fork.cc (frok::parent): Set silentfail child info flag. Pass
silentfail parameter to child_copy. Use forkedntname of
dlls.main_executable.
(fork): When first dofork run failed and did not use forkables,
run dofork again with_forkables set to true.
(child_copy): Use debug_printf if silentfail is true,
system_printf otherwise.
In preparation to protect fork() against dll- and exe-updates, create
hardlinks to the main executable and each loaded dll in subdirectories
of /var/run/cygfork/, if that one exists on the NTFS file system.
The directory names consist of the user sid, the main executable's NTFS
IndexNumber, and the most recent LastWriteTime of all involved binaries
(dlls and main executable). Next to the main.exe hardlink we create the
empty file main.exe.local to enable dll redirection.
The name of the mutex to synchronize hardlink creation/cleanup also is
assembled from these directory names, to allow for synchronized cleanup
of even orphaned hardlink directories.
The hardlink to each dynamically loaded dll goes into another directory,
named using the NTFS IndexNumber of the dll's original directory.
* Makefile.in (DLL_OFILES): Add forkable.o.
* dll_init.h (struct dll): Declare member variables fbi, fii,
forkable_ntname. Declare methods nominate_forkable,
create_forkable.
(struct dll_list): Declare enum forkables_needs. Declare member
variables forkables_dirx_size, forkables_dirx_ntname,
forkables_mutex_name, forkables_mutex. Declare private methods
forkable_ntnamesize, prepare_forkables_nomination,
update_forkables_needs, update_forkables, create_forkables,
denominate_forkables, close_mutex, try_remove_forkables,
set_forkables_inheritance, request_forkables. Declare public
static methods ntopenfile, read_fii, read_fbi. Declare public
methods release_forkables, cleanup_forkables. Define public
inline method setup_forkables.
* dll_init.cc (dll_list::alloc): Allocate memory to hold the
name of the hardlink in struct dll member forkable_ntname.
Initialize struct dll members fbi, fii.
(dll_list::load_after_fork): Call release_forkables method.
* fork.cc: Rename public fork function to static dofork, add
with_forkables as bool pointer parameter. Add new fork function
calling dofork. (struct frok): Add bool pointer member
with_forkables, add as constructor parameter.
(frok::parent): Call dlls.setup_forkables before CreateProcessW,
dlls.release_forkables afterwards.
* pinfo.cc (pinfo::exit): Call dlls.cleanup_forkables.
* syscalls.cc (_unlink_nt): Rename public unlink_nt function to
static _unlink_nt, with 'shareable' as additional argument.
(unlink_nt): New, wrap _unlink_nt for original behaviour.
(unlink_nt_shareable): New, wrap _unlink_nt to keep a binary
file still loadable while removing one of its hardlinks.
* forkable.cc: New file.
Implement static functions mkdirs, rmdirs, rmdirs_synchronized,
stat_real_file_once, format_IndexNumber, rootname, sidname,
exename, lwtimename. Define static array forkable_nameparts.
(struct dll): Implement nominate_forkable, create_forkable.
(struct dll_list): Implement static methods ntopenfile,
read_fii, read_fbi. Implement forkable_ntnamesize,
Even for the main executable and cygwin1.dll store the file name as full
NT path. Create the child process using the main executable's file name
converted from the full NT path stored before.
* dll_init.cc (dll_list::alloc): Search for DLL_SELF type entry
with module name like for DLL_LINK, use full NT path to search
for DLL_LOAD type only. For DLL_SELF type do not indicate
having a destructor to be called.
(dll_list::find): Ignore DLL_SELF type entries.
(dll_list::init): Ditto. Call track_self method.
(dll_list::track_self): New.
(dll_list::load_after_fork): Call track_self method.
* dll_init.h (enum dll_type): Add DLL_SELF, for the main
executable and cygwin1.dll.
(struct dll_list): Declare private method track_self. Declare
member variable main_executable.
* fork.cc (frok::parent): Use ntname from dlls.main_executable
to create child process, converted to short path using
dll_list::buffered_shortname.
Store loaded dll's file name as full NT path.
* dll_init.h (struct dll): Rename member variable name to ntname.
(struct dll_list): Declare private static member variable
nt_max_path_buffer. Declare public static methods form_ntname,
form_shortname. Define public static methods nt_max_path_buf,
buffered_shortname.
(dll_list::operator []): Use PCWCHAR rather than const PWCHAR.
(dll_list::find_by_modname): Ditto.
* dll_init.cc (in_load_after_fork): Define earlier in file.
(struct dll_list): Rename member variable name to ntname.
Define nt_max_path_buffer variable.
Implement static methods form_ntname, form_shortname.
(dll_list::operator []): Use PCWCHAR rather than const PWCHAR.
(dll_list::find_by_modname): Ditto.
(reserve_at): Ditto.
(release_at): Ditto.
(dll_list::alloc): Use nt_max_path_buf method instead of local
buffer. Store module file name as full NT path, convert using
the form_ntname static method.
(dll_list::load_after_fork): Call load_after_fork_impl only when
reload_on_fork is set.
* fork.cc (frok::child): Call dlls.load_after_fork even without
need to dynamically load dlls.
(frok::parent): Move syscall_printf into the retry loop.
Trying to delete in-use executables and DLLs using
FILE_DISPOSITION_POSIX_SEMANTICS returns STATUS_CANNOT_DELETE.
Fall back to the former method if that error occurs to allow
unlinking these files.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The symlink target of /proc/PID/fd files pointing to pipes and
sockets are just artificial filenames referencing the object using
some internal number. The pipe open code expects a path specifying
process pid and the internal number so it access the right process
and pipe.
- Set the posix path of the pipe to the simple pipe name only,
as it shows up in /proc/PID/fd. A /proc/self prefix is just
as wrong as a /dev/fd prefix.
- Revert thinko in fhandler_pipe::open expecting the name as
/proc/self/fd/... In fact this should never happen.
- Fix up the path before re-opening the pipe instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The reopen code neglected to pass along the requested open
mode correctly. This may end up reopening the file with
incorrect access mask, or duplicating the wrong pipe handle.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Move TerminateProcess call into cleanup code to make sure child
doesn't linger in some border cases.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When fork finally fails although both CreateProcess and creating the
"cygpid.N" shared memory section succeeded, we have to release that
shared memory section as well - before releasing the process handle.
Otherways we leave an orphan "cygpid.N" shared memory section, and any
subsequent cygwin process receiving the same PID fails to initialize.
* fork.cc (frok::parent): Call child.allow_remove in cleanup code.
- If the execve'ed process is a non-Cygwin process, we have to
create the matching winpid symlink and remove the old one
ourselves.
- If we spawn a child, the winpid symlink has to be maintained
by the child process, otherwise it disappears if the parent
process exits.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The arguments are not used anyway, so drop them. When called,
procinfo->dwProcessId is already set right, so we don't have
to access myself_initial.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Since commit b5e1003722, native
Windows processes not started by Cygwin processes don't have a
Cygwin PID anymore. This breaks ps -W and kill -f <WINPID>.
Introduce MAX_PID (65536 for now).
Cygwin processes as well as native Windows processes started
from a Cygwin process get a PID < MAX_PID. All other native
Windows processes get a faked Cygwin PID >= MAX_PID.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Using the Windows PID as Cygwin PID has a few drawbacks:
- the PIDs on Windows get reused quickly. Some POSIX applications choke
on that, so we need extra code to avoid too quick PID reuse.
- The code to avoid PID reuse keeps parent process handles and
(depending on a build option) child processes open unnecessarily.
- After an execve, the process has a split personality: Its Windows PID
is a new PID, while its Cygwin PID is the PID of the execve caller
process. This requires to keep two procinfo shared sections open, the
second just to redirect process info requests to the first, correct
one.
This patch changes the way Cygwin PIDs are generated:
- Cygwin PIDs are generated independently of the Windows PID, in a way
expected by POSIX processes. The PIDs are created incrementally in
the range between 2 and 65535, round-robin.
- On startup of the first Cygwin process, choose a semi-random start PID
for the first process in the lower PID range to make the PIDs slightly
unpredictable. This may not be necessary but it seems kind of inviting
to know that the first Cygwin process always starts with PID 2.
- Every process not only creates the shared procinfo section, but also a
symlink in the NT namespace, symlinking the Windows PID to the Cygwin
PID. This drops the need for the extra procinfo section after execve.
- Don't keep other process handles around unnecessarily.
- Simplify the code creating/opening the shared procinfo section and
make a clear distinction between interfaces getting a Cygwin PID and
interfaces getting a Windows PID.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If a process is just exiting, requesting memory info may fail
with STATUS_PROCESS_IS_TERMINATING. Right now the code just bails
out if fetching mem info fails. However, the rest of the info is
still valuable for procps, so just carry on.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
After creating a pthread, the stack gets moved to the desired memory
location. While the 32 bit thread wrapper copies the exception handler
information to the new stack (so we have at least *some* exception
handler present), the x86_64 code didn't perform any exception handler
magic. Fix that.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
VirtualQueryEx, called by fixup_mmaps_after_fork, requires
PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION permissions per MSDN. However, testing
shows that PROCESS_QUERY_LIMITED_INFORMATION is sufficient when
running the same code on Windows 8.1 or Windows 10. Fix the code
to give the forked child always PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION perms
on Windows Vista/7 and respective server releases.
Revert now unneeded patch to check_token_membership as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
POSIX requires that raise(3) is equivalent to
pthread_kill(pthread_self(), sig);
in multi-threaded applications. Our raise just called kill(sig).
Fix that.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Keeping an inheritable handle open results in that handle being
spilled over into grandchild processes, which is not desired.
Duplicate original parent handle into a non-inheritable one with
minimal SYNCHRONIZE permissions and close the original handle.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Exec'ed/spawned processes don't need PROCESS_DUP_HANDLE. Remove that
permission from the parent handle.
- PROCESS_QUERY_LIMITED_INFORMATION doesn't work for Windows 7 if the
process is started as a service. Add PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION for
pre-Windows 8 in that case.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The version info only depends on the object files. This results
in the version info not being rebuild immediately if a source
file is changed. Rather, the version info is only rebuilt on the
next make run.
Fix that by making the version info build rule dependent on the
source files.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- This simple and official method replaces cyglsa and "create token"
methods. No network share access, same as before.
- lsaauth and create_token are disabled now. If problems crop up,
they can be easily reactivated. If no problems crop up, they
can be removed in a while, together with the lsaauth subdir.
- Bump Cygwin version to 3.0.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The previous patch failed with password-less auth because in
that case the return code from get_server_groups wasn't tested.
Fix that. Also make sure that get_server_groups does not
check if the account is disabled or locked out when just fetching
the group list for initgroups or getgrouplist.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far seteuid could change uid to any existing account, given
sufficient permissions of the caller. This is kind of bad since
it disallows admins to refuse login to disabled or locked out
accounts.
Add check for the account's UF_ACCOUNTDISABLE or UF_LOCKOUT flags
and don't let the user in, if one of the flags is set.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Use info from same source (GetNetworkParams).
Also move getdomainname near gethostname in source.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If gethostname() fails we call GetComputerNameEx with
ComputerNameDnsFullyQualified. This is wrong, gethostname should return
the hostname only, not the FQDN. Fix this by calling GetComputerNameEx
with ComputerNameDnsHostname.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
When reusing a cygthread, the stub method fails to set the thread name
to the new name. The name is only set when actually creating the
thread. Fix that by moving the SetThreadName call right in front of the
thread function call.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Combine with a bit of cleanup:
- Drop overrun_event_running in favor of overrun_count being -1.
- Fix include guard in posix_timer.h.
- Drop ununsed function timespec_to_us.
- Don't use Interlocked functions without need.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Allocating on the cygheap would copy information of the tracker into
the child process. A forked child knows the timer id and could simply
still access the (free'd but still valid) timer_tracker on the heap,
which is dangerous and very certainly doesn't reflect POSIX semantics.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Rename files timer.* to posix_timer.*.
- Reimplement using an OS timer rather than a handcrafted wait loop.
- Use a Slim R/W Lock for synchronization.
- Drop timer chaining. It doesn't server a purpose since all timers
are local only.
- Rename ttstart to itimer_tracker to better reflect its purpose.
It's not the anchor for a timer chain anymore anyway.
- Drop fixup_timers_after_fork. Everything is process-local, nothing
gets inherited.
- Rename timer_tracker::disarm_event to disarm_overrun_event for
better readability.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- When correcting the next expiration timestamp, the number of
expirations gets computed correctly, just the expiration timestamp
itself is then only incremented by a single interval, rather than
the just computed expired intervals. Fix that.
- drop the local clock variable in timerfd_tracker::create. It doesn't
serve any purpose.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- split into to __try/__except blocks to make sure
leave_critical_section is always called when required.
- Actually fill time_spec in settime so it_interval is returned
correctly.
- Return all 0 if timer is disarmed.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The value returned by reading from a timerfd is not an overrun
count in the same sense as for posix timers, it's an expiry counter.
Reflect that in the name.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Drop erroneous initial computation of overrun count in settime
for absolute non-realtime clocks. It's repeated in thread_func
and thus counted twice.
- Fix overrun computation for timestamp offsets being a multiple of
the timer interval. The timestamp has to be corrected after the
first offset, otherwise the correction loop counts the intervals
again.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Non-CLOCK_REALTIME counters always use a relative DueTime in NtSetTimer.
However, relative DueTime has to be negative, but the code
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- On systems with inexact realtime clock, the current timestamp may
be fractionally smaller than the desired timestamp. This breaks the
computation for incrementing overrun_count so overrun_count may end
up as 0. Expiring the timer with an overrun_count of 0 is a no-go.
Make sure we always increment overrun_count by at least one after
timer expiry.
- Do not expire the timer when another process deletes its timer_tracker.
This, too, may result in a 0 overrun_count.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Using posix timers "timer_tracker" as base class for timerfd was flawed.
Posix timers are not inherited by child processes and don't survive
execve. The method used by posix timers didn't allow to share timers
between processes. The timers were still per-process timers and worked
entirely separate from each other. Reading from these timers via
different descriptors was only synchronized within the same process.
This does not reflect the timerfd semantics in Linux: The per-file
timers can be dup'ed and survive fork and execve. They are still just
descriptors pointing to the same timer object originally created by
timerfd_create. Synchronization is performed between all descriptor
instances of the same timer, system-wide.
Thus, reimplement timerfd using a timer instance in shared memory,
a kernel timer, and a handful of sync objects.
Every process maintains a per-process timerfd struct on the cygheap
maintaining a per-process thread. Every process sharing the same
timerfd will run this thread checking the state of the timer, similar
to the posix timer thread, just working on the shared objects and
synchronizing its job with each other thread.
Drop the timerfd implementation in the posix timer code and move the
public API to fhandler_timerfd.c. Keep the ttstart timer_tracker
anchor out of "NO_COPY" since the fixup_after_fork code should run to
avoid memory leakage.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Linux returns EINVAL, "fd is attached to an object which is unsuitable
for writing". If we don't handle write locally, write returns EBADF.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Puzzeling: Commit ec98d19a08
changed ttstart to NO_COPY but kept all the code to handle
fixup after fork. Revert to not-NO_COPY and make timerfd
fork work.
- On fixup_after_fork, keep timerfd timers and restart thread
if they were armed in the parent.
- Move timerfd timer_trackers to cygheap. Overload timer_tracker
new and delete methods to handle timers accordingly. This is not
exactly required for fork, but exec will be grateful.
- Give up on TFD_TIMER_CANCEL_ON_SET for now. There's no easy way
to recognize a discontinuous change in a clock.
- Be paranoid when cleaning out ttstart.
- Fix some minor issues.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Drop initial overrun computation from timer_tracker::settimer.
It's performed in timer_tracker::thread_func anyway.
- Fix regression in returning correct overrun count narrowed down to
int from timer_getoverrun. This has been introduced by changing
overrun_count_curr to LONG64.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
First cut of a timerfd implementation.
Still TODO:
- fork/exec semantics
- timerfd_settime TFD_TIMER_CANCEL_ON_SET flag
- ioctl(TFD_IOC_SET_TICKS)
- bug fixes
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In case sigwait_common returns EINTR, read wrongly ignores it,
so read can't be interrupt by a signal. Fix that.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
While FileRenameInformationEx is defined starting with Windows
10 1709 per MSDN, it only starts working in W10 1809, apparently.
Users of 1803 report "Function not implemented".
Introduce wincap_10_1809 and change the version check in
wincapc::init accordingly. Split has_posix_file_info into
has_posix_unlink_semantics and has_posix_rename_semantics.
Enable the latter only starting with W10 1809.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Allow the signal thread to recognize we're called in consequence of
select on a signalfd. If the signal is part of the wait mask, don't
call any signal handler and don't remove the signal from the queue,
so a subsequent read (or sigwaitinfo/sigtimedwait) still gets the
signal. Instead, just signal the event object at
_cygtls::signalfd_select_wait for the thread running select.
The addition of signalfd_select_wait to _cygtls unearthed the alignment
problem of the context member again. To make sure this doesn't get lost,
improve the related comment in the header file so that this (hopefully)
doesn't get lost (again).
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
First cut of a signalfd implementation.
Still TODO: Non-polling select.
This should mostly work as on Linux except for missing support
for some members of struct signalfd_siginfo, namely ssi_fd,
ssi_band (both SIGIO/SIGPOLL, not fully implemented) and ssi_trapno
(HW exception, required HW support).
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
There's a long-standing bug in select. If we have poll-only
descriptors in the fd set, select overwrites the incoming
fd sets with the polling result. If none of the fds is ready,
select has to loop again. But now the fd sets are set to all
zero and select hangs.
Fix this by utilizing the local fd sets r, w, e as storage for
the incoming fd sets and use them to initialize select_stuff.
If we have to loop, overwritung the incoming fd sets doesn't matter.
While at it, rename r, w, e to readfds_in, writefds_in, exceptfds_in.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- use int64_t instead of long long
- make is_timer_tracker const
- improve copyright header comment
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far we check the recycler name all the time, and the last interation
also only managed to handle two ways to write the recycler. However,
an adventurous user might change the case of the recycler arbitrarily.
Fix this problem by keeping track of the name in a somewhat relaxed
fashion. Use camel back on drive C by default, all upper case elsewhere.
Only if the rename op fails do we fix the recycler name on the fly
when trying to create it, and it turns out it already existed.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If the first rename fails, we reopen the rootdir for creating a subdir.
The rootdir handle can change its value at this point, but the code
doesn't take this into account. The subsequent rename then fails with
STATUS_INVALID_HANDLE. Fix this by copying the new rootdir value to
pfri->RootDirectory.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far we reopened the file if it was opened case sensitive to
workaround the problem that the recycler could be named in
camel back or all upper case, depending on who created it.
That's a problem for O_TMPFILE on pre-W10. As soon as the
original HANDLE gets closed, delete-on-close is converted to full
delete disposition and all useful operations on the file cease to
work (STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED or STATUS_FILE_DELETED).
To avoid that problem drop the reopen code and check for the exact
recycler filename, either $Recycle.Bin or $RECYCLE.BIN, if the file
has been opened case sensitive.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On pre-W10 systems there's no way to reopen a file by handle if
the delete disposition is set. We try to get around with
duplicating the handle.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The new proc fd code accidentally allowed to linkat an O_TMPFILE
even if the file has been opened with O_EXCL. This patch fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
move special fd symlink code into own fhandler_process_fd class
to simplify further additions to /proc/PID/fd/DESCRIPTOR symlink
handling.
Add a method to handle stat(2) on such a proc fd symlink by handle.
This allows correct reply from stat(2) if the target file has been
deleted. This eventually fixes `awk -f /dev/fd/3 3<<eof'.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
path_conv now sets the PATH_RESOLVE_PROCFD flag in path_flags if
the PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW_PROCFD pathconv_arg flag has been set on input
*and* the file is actually a proc fd symlink.
Add matching path_conv::follow_fd_symlink method for checking and
use it in open(2).
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Remove another unfortunate amalgamation: Mount flags (MOUNT_xxx)
are converted to path_types (PATH_xxx) and mixed with non-mount
path_types flags in the same storage, leading to a tangled,
pell-mell usage of mount flags and path flags in path_conv and
symlink_info.
- There's also the case of PC_NONULLEMPTY. It's used in exactly
one place with a path_conv constructor only used in this single
place, just to override the automatic PC_NULLEMPTY addition
when calling the other path_conv constructors. Crazily,
PC_NONULLEMPTY is a define, no path_types flag, despite its
name.
- It doesn't help that the binary flag exists as mount and path
flag, while the text flag only exists as path flag. This leads
to mount code using path flags to set text/binary. Very confusing
is the fact that a text mount/path flag is not actually required;
the mount code sets the text flag on non binary mounts anyway, so
there are only two states. However, to puzzle people a bit more,
path_conv::binary wrongly implies there's a third, non-binary/non-text
state.
Clean up this mess:
- Store path flags separately from mount flags in path_conv and
symlink_info classes and change all checks and testing inline
methods accordingly.
- Make PC_NONULLEMPTY a simple path_types flag and drop the
redundant path_check constructor.
- Clean up the definition of pathconv_arg, path_types, and mount flags.
Use _BIT expression, newly define in cygwin/bits.h.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
There's an unfortunate amalgamation of caller-provided pathconv_arg
flags with path_types flags which in turn are mostly mount flags.
This leads to a confusion of flag values in sylink_info::pflags and,
in turn, in path_conv::path_flags.
This patch decouples pathconv_flags from the other flags by making
sure that a pathconv_flag is never copied into a variable used for
path_types flags. Also, remove PATH_NO_ACCESS_CHECK since it's
not necessary.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Along the same lines as the previous patch: By reopening an
O_TMPFILE by handle, we can now move the file to the bin at
open time and thus free'ing up the parent dir and *still*
open the file as /proc/PID/fd/DESCRIPTOR by linkat(2).
Allows expressions along the lines of `cat /proc/self/fd/0 <<EOF'.
The problem here is that the temporary file used for the here script
has already been deleted by the shell. Opening by filename, as
implemented so far, doesn't work because the file has been moved
to the bin.
Allow reopening files by handle the same way from another process
as long as we have sufficient permissions on the foreign process.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
To allow reopening a file open in another process by HANDLE, introduce
a matching file_pathconv method, taking a file descriptor as parameter.
The result is a serialized path_conv and a HANDLE value. The HANDLE is
valid in the foreign process and MUST be duplicated into the target
process before usage.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far io_handle is NULL when calling fhandler_base::open to
open or create a file. Add a check for io_handle to allow
priming the fhandler with a HANDLE value so we can reopen a
file from a HANDLE on file systems supporting it. This allows
to open already deleted files for further action. This will
be used by open("/proc/PID/fd/DESCRIPTOR") scenarios.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The commit message of commit 07e0a9584f
and the expectation set therein, are wrong.
There's no POSIX semantics allowing to link a file with a link
count of 0 and making it available in the file system again.
In fact, the Linux linkat extension AT_EMPTY_PATH explicitely
disallows to link a file descriptor to a file with a link count
of 0, except for O_TMPFILE without O_EXCL.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Turns out, the definition of POSIX unlink semantics is half-hearted
so far: It's not possible to link an open file HANDLE if it has
been deleted with POSIX semantics, nor is it possible to remove
the delete disposition. This breaks linkat on an O_TMPFILE.
Tested with W10 1809.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On Windows 10 1803 and later, create dirs under the Cygwin
installation dir as case sensitive, if WSL is installed.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- short-circuit most code in unlink_nt since it's not necessary
anymore if FILE_DISPOSITION_POSIX_SEMANTICS is supported.
- Immediately remove O_TMPFILE from filesystem after creation.
Disable code for now because we have to implement /proc/self/fd
opening by handle first, lest linkat fails.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Newer FAT32 and exFAT add FILE_SUPPORTS_ENCRYPTION to their
flags which wasn't handled by Cygwin yet.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Various new file info class members adding important POSIX semantics
have been added with W10 1709. We may want to utilize them, so add
a matching wincaps.
Rearrange checking the W10 build number to prefer the latest builds
over the older builds. Rename wincap_10 to wincap_10_1507 for
enhanced clarity.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Add missing members added in later OS versions
- Rearrange accompanying FILE_foo_INFORMATION structs
ordered by info class
- Add promising FILE_foo_INFORMATION structs of later
Windows 10 releases plus accompanying enums
- Drop "Checked on 64 bit" comments since that's self-evident
these days
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The check for the TEB being allocated beyond the first 2GB area is not
valid anymore. At least on W10 WOW64, the TEB is allocated in the
lower 2GB even in large-address aware executables. Use VirtualQuery
instead. It fails for invalid addresses so that's a simple enough test.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
While reformatting the script, backticks `` were replaced with
brackets $(). This in turn invalidated the \\( ... \\) expressions in the
sed script because backslash resolution in $() works differently from
backslash resolution in ``. Only a single backslash is valid now.
While at it, fix up the uname(2) date representation when building a
snapshot.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
when calling clocks too early in DLL init, the vtables are not correctly
set up for some reason. Calls to init() from now() fail because the init
pointer in the vtable is NULL.
Real life example is mintty which runs into a minor problem at startup,
triggering a system_printf call. Strace is another problem, it's called
the first time prior to any class initialization.
Workaround is to make sure that no virtual methods are called in an
early stage. Make init() non-virtual and convert resolution() to a
virtual method instead. Add a special non-virtual
clk_monotonic_t::strace_usecs.
While at it:
- Inline internal-only methods.
- Drop the `inited' member. Convert period/ticks_per_sec toa union.
Initialize period/ticks_per_sec via InterlockeExchange64.
- Fix GetTickCount64 usage. No, it's not returning ticks but
milliseconds since boot (unbiased).
- Fix comment indentation.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Use whatever native unit the system provides for the resolution of
a timer to avoid rounding problems
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Drop hires_[nm]s clocks, rename hires.h to clock.h.
- Implement clk_t class as an extensible clock class in new file clock.cc.
- Introduce get_clock(clock_id) returning a pointer to the clk_t instance
for clock_id. Provide the following methods along the lines of the former
hires classes:
void clk_t::nsecs (struct timespec *);
ULONGLONG clk_t::nsecs ();
LONGLONG clk_t::usecs ();
LONGLONG clk_t::msecs ();
void clk_t::resolution (struct timespec *);
- Add CLOCK_REALTIME_COARSE, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE
and CLOCK_BOOTTIME clocks.
- Allow clock_nanosleep, pthread_condattr_setclock and timer_create to use
all new clocks (both clocks should be usable with a small tweak, though).
- Bump DLL major version to 2.12.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
clock_setres is a questionable function only existing on QNX.
Disable the function, just return success for CLOCK_REALTIME
to maintain backward compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The current method to make hires_ns priming thread-safe isn't
thread-safe. Rather than hoping that running the thread in
TIME_CRITICAL priority is doing the right thing, use a spinlock.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
LARGE_INTEGER has QuadPart anyway, no reason to compute the
64 bit value from HighPart and LowPart.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
fhandler_socket_wsock::set_socket_handle calls set_flags after
setting the O_NONBLOCK/O_CLOEXEC flags, thus overwriting them.
It also turns out that fhandler_socket_wsock::init_events is called
too late. The inheritence flags are changed before creating the
socket event handling objects. Thus, inheritence flags for
those objects are wrong with SOCK_CLOEXEC.
Fix this by reordering the calls and setting the file flags through
fhandler_base::set_flags.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Regression introduced with 2.11.0:
The failure paths in socket, socketpair and accept4 functions and
methods accidentally release *unused* cygheap_fdmanip objects. The
subsequently called dtable::release method was designed to be called for
*used* cygheap_fdmanip objects only. Using them on unused objects leads
to NULL pointer member dereferencing.
Worse, the inet/local accept4 methods only release the cygheap_fdmanip
object but neglect to delete the just created fhandler_socket_* object.
Fix this by removing the erroneous release calls in the aforementioned
failure paths and delete the fhandler_socket_* object in accept4 instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The fhandler_base_overlapped::copyto clears atomic_write_buf on the
clone, but none of the derived classes were doing this. This allowed
the destructor to double-free the buffer and corrupt cygheap.
Clear atomic_write_buf in copyto of all derived classes.
Move common content of the various <sys/dirent.h> and the latest FreeBSD
<dirent.h> to <dirent.h>.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Drop Cygwin-specific nanl in favor of a generic implementation
in newlib. Requires GCC 3.3 or later.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The current loop condition is borderline. Make sure it ends and
choose a replacement char in the unlikely case the current console
font isn't recognized at all.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Rather than relying on an index variable, store the current
replacement char and use that directly in WriteConsoleW.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
EnumFontFamiliesExW fails if the font is "Terminal" (aka "Raster Fonts")
and lfCharSet requests ANSI_CHARSET. Using DEFAULT_CHARSET fixes this.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Make sure device context is not copied to forked process.
It is a process-specific datastructure.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Try various Unicode characters which may be used as a replacement
character in case an invalid character has to be printed.
Current list is 0xfffd "REPLACEMENT CHARACTER", 0x25a1 "WHITE SQUARE",
and 0x2592 "MEDIUM SHADE" in that order.
Additionally workaround a problem with some fonts (namely DejaVu
Sans Mono) which are returned wit ha broken fontname with trailing
stray characters.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far we printed a half filled square (0x2592) if the input char is
invalid, but using REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (0xfffd) is apparently the way
to go.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit 35998fc2fa fixed the buffer underun
in win32 path normalization, but introduced a new bug: A wrong
assumption led to the inability to backtrack the path outside of the
current working directory in case of relative paths.
This patch fixes this problem, together with a minor problem if the CWD
is on a network share: The result erroneously started with tripple
backslash if the src path starts with a single backslash.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Starting with Windows 10, LookupAccountSid/Name return valid
info for the login session with new SID_NAME_USE value
SidTypeLogonSession. To return the same info as on pre-Windows 10,
we have to handle this type.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
cygpsid::get_id neglects to set the type to 0 (ACL_UNDEFINED_TAG
in POSIX speak) if the SID can not be translated into a valid
uid or gid. This in turn leads to incorrect handling of uid/gid -1
entries.
Fix this by setting type to 0 if the id is unknown.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This patch follows glibc. Original commit message:
Author: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Date: Thu, 14 Apr 2016 06:54:57 +0000
Remove union wait [BZ #19613]
The overloading approach in the W* macros was incompatible with
integer expressions of a type different from int. Applications
using union wait and these macros will have to migrate to the
POSIX-specified int status type.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Add __nl_item to <sys/_types.h> for FreeBSD compatibility. Use it in
<langinfo.h> and the Cygwin <nl_types.h>. Make the enum __nl_item in
<langinfo.h> anonymous.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
This reverts commit 8a32c24a7b.
Replacing page_size() with allocation_granularity() was incorrect.
The values returned by get_mem_values() are # of pages of size
page_size(). Multiplying with allocation_granularity() here
results in values 16 times too big.
By excluding the denormal-operand exception from FE_ALL_EXCEPT, it will not
be possible anymore to UNmask this exception by means of the API defined by
/usr/include/fenv.h
Note: terminology has changed since IEEE Std 854-1987; denormalized numbers
are called subnormal numbers nowadays.
This modification has basically been motivated by the fact that it is also
not possible on Linux to manipulate the denormal-operand exception by means
of the interface as defined by /usr/include/fenv.h. This has been the state
of affairs on Linux since 2001 (Andreas Jaeger).
The exceptions required by the standard (IEEE Std 754), in case they can be
supported by the implementation, are:
FE_INEXACT, FE_UNDERFLOW, FE_OVERFLOW, FE_DIVBYZERO and FE_INVALID.
Although it is allowed to define additional exceptions, there is no reason
to support the "denormal-operand exception" in this case (fenv.h), because
the subnormal numbers can be handled almost as fast the normalized numbers
by the hardware of the x86/x86_64 architecture. Said differently, a reason
to trap on the input of subnormal numbers does not exist. At least that is
what William Kahan and others at Intel asserted around 2000.
(that is William Kahan of the K-C-S draft, the precursor to the standard)
This commit modifies winsup/cygwin/include/fenv.h as follows:
- redefines FE_ALL_EXCEPT from 0x3f to 0x3d
- removes the definition for FE_DENORMAL
- introduces __FE_DENORM (0x2) (enum in Linux also uses __FE_DENORM)
- introduces FE_ALL_EXCEPT_X86 (0x3f), i.e. ALL x86/x86_64 FP exceptions
* create new function __get_cpus_per_group to evaluate # of CPU groups
* Call from format_proc_cpuinfo and sched_getcpu
* Bump API minor version
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
fnstenv MUST be followed by fldenv in fegetenv(), as the former disables all
exceptions in the x87 FPU, which is not appropriate here (fegetenv() ).
fldenv after fnstenv should reload the x87 FPU w/ the configuration that was
saved by fnstenv, i.e. a configuration that might have exceptions enabled.
Note: x86_64 uses SSE for floating-point, not the x87 FPU. However, because
feraiseexcept() attempts to provoke an exception using the x87 FPU, the bug
in fegetenv() will make this attempt futile here (x86_64).
Note: WoW uses the x87 FPU for floating-point, not SSE. Here anything that
would normally result in triggering an exception, not only feraiseexcept(),
will not be able to, as result of the bug in fegetenv().
Updates to misc files to integrate AIO into the Cygwin source tree.
Much of it has to be done when adding any new syscalls. There are
some updates to limits.h for AIO-specific limits. And some doc mods.
This code is where the AIO implementation is wired into existing Cygwin
mechanisms for file and device I/O: the fhandler* functions. It makes
use of an existing internal routine prw_open to supply a "shadow fd"
that permits asynchronous operations on a file the user app accesses
via its own fd. This allows AIO to read or write at arbitrary locations
within a file without disturbing the app's file pointer. (This was
already the case with normal pread|pwrite; we're just adding "async"
to the mix.)
This is the core of the AIO implementation: aio.cc and aio.h. The
latter is used within the Cygwin DLL by aio.cc and the fhandler* modules,
as well as by user programs wanting the AIO functionality.
Bug in current ARM64 WOW64: GetNativeSystemInfo returns
PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE_INTEL rather than PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE_ARM64.
Provide for this.
Make code better readable.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Guard the entire operation with the FastPebLock critical section
used by RtlSetCurrentDirectory_U as well, thus eliminating the
race between concurrent chdir/fchdir/SetCurrentDirectory calls.
Streamline comment explaining the fallback method.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* fhandler_socket_local.cc (get_inet_addr_local): Change type from
'static int' to 'int' to be callable from syslog.cc.
* syslog.cc (connect_syslogd): Use get_inet_addr_local() instead of
getsockname() to retrieve name information of the syslogd socket.
Our local ntsecapi.h wrapper corrects a bug in the definition of
SystemFunction036 which otherwise leads to crashes on 32 bit when
using RtlGenRandom. The fhandler_socket_local.cc file accidentally
included the incorrect w32api version of that file, rather than the
local wrapper. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Certain tape drives (known example: QUANTUM_ULTRIUM-HH6) return
the non-standard ERROR_NOT_READY rather than ERROR_NO_MEDIA_IN_DRIVE
if no media is present. ERROR_NOT_READY is not documented as valid
return code from GetTapeStatus. Without handling this error code
Cygwin's tape code can't report an offline state to user space.
Fix this by converting ERROR_NOT_READY to ERROR_NO_MEDIA_IN_DRIVE
where appropriate.
Add a debug_printf to mtinfo_drive::get_status to allow requesting
user info without having to rebuild the DLL.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
pthread_timedjoin_np returns ETIMEDOUT if a thread is still running,
not EBUSY as pthread_tryjoin_np.
Also, clean up initializing timeout in pthread_tryjoin_np.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Move pthread_join to thread.cc to have all `join' calls in
the same file (pthread_timedjoin_np needs pthread_convert_abstime
which is static inline in thread.cc)
- Bump API version
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* fhandler.h (class fhandler_socket_inet): Add variable bool oobinline.
* fhandler_socket_inet.cc (fhandler_socket_inet::fhandler_socket_inet):
Initialize variable oobinline.
(fhandler_socket_inet::recv_internal): Make the handling of OOB data
as consistent with POSIX as possible. Add simulation of inline mode
for OOB data as a workaround for broken winsock behavior.
(fhandler_socket_inet::setsockopt): Ditto.
(fhandler_socket_inet::getsockopt): Ditto.
(fhandler_socket_wsock::ioctl): Fix return value of SIOCATMARK command.
The return value of SIOCATMARK of winsock is almost opposite to
expectation.
* fhandler_socket_local.cc (fhandler_socket_local::recv_internal):
Remove the handling of OOB data from AF_LOCAL domain socket. Operation
related to OOB data will result in an error like Linux does.
(fhandler_socket_local::sendto): Ditto.
(fhandler_socket_local::sendmsg): Ditto.
This fixes the issue reported in following post.
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2018-06/msg00143.html
Commit ebd645e on 2001-10-03 made environ.cc:_addenv() add unneeded
space at the end of the environment block to "work around problems
with some buggy applications." This clutters the code and is
presumably no longer needed.