This encapsulated creation, duplication, and closing of all
Windows objects connected to the message queue in the fhandler.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The function evaluating correctness of ipc object names was a
bit half-hearted. Fix the tests to follow more closely the
desriptions in the Linux man pages.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
build_fh_dev can take the POSIX object name as parameter anyway,
so use that and drop from mqinfo call.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Drop creating a unique ID, the queue name itself is already
unique. This allows to move ipc object generation into the
fhandler in the next step.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far, the mqd_t type returned a pointer to an allocated
area under the hood. The mutex and event objects attached
to the message queue were implemented as inheritable types.
As unfortunate side effect the HANDLEs to these objects
were inherited by exec'd child processes, even though all
other message queue properties are not inherted, per POSIX.
Fix this by converting an mqd_t to a descriptor, and create a
matching fhandler_mqueue object to handle various aspects of
the message queues inside the fhandler. Especially, create the
IPC objects as non-inheritable and duplicate the HANDLEs as
part of the fixup_after_fork mechanism.
Drop using mmap and create the memory map with NT functions.
This allows to control duplication of handle and mapping in the
forked child process, without the requirement to regenerate the
map in the same spot. It also allows to dup() the descriptor,
as on Linux, albeit this isn't implemented yet.
This patch is the first cut. There's a bit more to do, like
moving more functionality from the POSIX functions into the
fhandler and making sure the mqd_t type can't be used in other
descriptor-related functions willy-nilly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Avoid this warning:
[...]/winsup/utils/mingw/../path.cc:569:1: warning: 'void read_mounts() ' defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
569 | read_mounts ()
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Drop the unexpected behaviour to run chattr in the CWD if no file has
been specified on the command line. Bail out with usage info instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
chattr [mode] dir
incorrectly recurses one level into the given directory, even if the
--recursive option has not been used. This patch adds a test to avoid
this bug.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Allow multiple characters also in first '-mode' argument.
Use '-H' instead of '-h' for '--help' to fix ambiguity with
hidden attribute. Fix help and usage texts and documentation.
Signed-off-by: Christian Franke <christian.franke@t-online.de>
The previous patch is accidentally missing the declaration of
IsWow64Process2. Add it belatedly.
Fixes: 1865a41cb383 ("Cygwin: suppress FAST_CWD warnings on ARM64")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The old check was insufficient: new insider preview builds of Windows
allow running x86_64 process on ARM64. The IsWow64Process2 function
seems to be the intended way to figure this situation out.
This avoids MAX_PATH-related problems in native tools in case the
virtual drive points to a deep directory
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Move all the source files used in utils/mingw/ into that subdirectory,
so the built objects are in the expected place.
(path.cc requires some more unpicking, and even then there is genuinely
some shared code, so use a trivial file which includes the real path.cc
so the object file is generated where expected)
Rather than having testsuite.h do various things, depending on defines,
just have it do one thing, and then explicitly redirect to test stubs in
path.cc when building test.
Rather than fetching the system Windows directory at dll init time
only on 32 bit, fetch it on all platforms. Store as WCHAR and
UNICODE_STRING. Use where appropriate to simplify code.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
commit 456c3a4638 was only going half-way. It handled symlinks and
junction points as inner path components and made realpath return the
correct path, but it ignored drive letter substitution, i. e., virtual
drives created with, e. g.
subst X: C:\foo\bar
It was also too simple. Just returning an error code from
symlink_info::check puts an unnecessary onus on the symlink evaluation
loop in path_conv::check.
Rework the code to use GetFinalPathNameByHandle, and only do this after
checking the current file for being a symlink failed.
If the final path returned by GetFinalPathNameByHandle is not the same
as the incoming path, replace the incoming path with the POSIXified
final path. This also short-circuits path evaluation, because
path_conv::check doesn't have to recurse over the inner path components
multiple times if all symlinks are of a native type, while still getting
the final path as end result.
Virtual drives are now handled like symlinks. This is a necessary change
from before to make sure virtual drives are handled identically across
different access methods. An example is realpath(1) from coreutils. It
doesn't call readlink(2), but iterates over all path components using
lstat/readlink calls. Both methods should result in the same real path.
Fixes: 456c3a4638 ("path_conv: Try to handle native symlinks more sanely")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Converting to automake dropped the former, handwritten tags/ctags
target. This leads to a couple of problems:
- For no good reason the tags file gets written to the builddir
instead of to the srcdir where it's needed.
- `make tags' requires etags to exist, rather than checking if it
exists and skipping it.
- Adding the extra ctags arguments to AM_CTAGSFLAGS still results
in a shortened tags file.
(Temporary?) solution: Revert the old tags/ctags rules and silence
the automake warnings.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
autogen.sh expects to run from within the winsup dir, so
set CWD accordingly before running autotools.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
page/swap space name >= 40 or size/used >= 8 leaves no space between fields;
ensure a space after name and add extra tabs after size and used fields;
output appears like Linux 5.8 after changes to mm/swapfile(swap_show);
proc-swaps-space-before.log:
==> /proc/swaps <==
Filename Type Size Used Priority
/mnt/c/pagefile.sys file 11567748292920 0
/mnt/d/pagefile.sys file 12582912205960 0
proc-swaps-space-after.log:
==> /proc/swaps <==
Filename Type Size Used Priority
/mnt/c/pagefile.sys file 11567748 241024 0
/mnt/d/pagefile.sys file 12582912 182928 0
Install autoconf and automake, and run winsup/autogen.sh, and don't have
it silently ignore failures.
On AppVeyor:
- use latest VM image, to reduce time spent installing updates.
- run the testsuite, but ignore the result, as some tests don't work
correctly.
- hardcode the python-lxml and python-ply packages to install, so we get
ones for the right python.
- install texlive collections now needed to build documentation.
On github:
- Use a copr for cocom, since RPMSphere's package updates don't track
fedora:latest very efficently.
_mq_send as well as _mq_receive call ipc_mutex_unlock twice in case
of success, after having introduced __try/__except blocks.
Fixes: 3f3bd10104 ("* Throughout, use __try/__except/__endtry blocks, rather than myfault handler.")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
POSIX requires that message priorities range from 0 (low) to
sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX) - 1 (high). Cygwin's mq_send erroneously
allowed a message priority of sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX). Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
We are building a ps executable, but the rule to build the target
collides with an auto-generated, documentation-related `ps' rule.
Work around that by naming the executable "cygps" at build time
and use a transform rule to rename it at installation time.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Specify toollibdir and toolincludedir in terms of tooldir, so the
install location is correct if tooldir is the default
($(exec_prefix)/$(target_alias)), or explicitly specified on the 'make'
command line.
Linux 5.12 Frozen Wasteland added features and changes:
add AMD 0x8000000a EDX:20 v_spec_ctrl virtual speculation control support
add Intel 0x00000007 ECX:24 bus_lock_detect bus lock detect debug exception
v2:
* Include tzmap.h in BUILT_SOURCES
* Make per-file flags appear after user-supplied CXXFLAGS, so they can
override optimization level.
* Correct .o files used to define symbols exported by libm.a
* Drop gcrt0.o mistakenly included in libgmon.a
* Add missing line continuations in GMON_FILES value
v3:
* use per-file flags for .c compilation
* override C{XX,}FLAGS, as they are set on the command line by top-level make
v4:
* Drop -Wno-error=write-strings from path_testsuite CXXFLAGS
v5:
* Update for changes in master
- Add -fno-threadsafe-statics to CXX flags
- Add hypotl.cc
- Remove fenv.cc (in favour of newlib), add fenv.c stub
- Add proc.5 manpage rules
Following POSIX and Linux, allow a connected DGRAM socket's connection
to be reset (so that the socket becomes unconnected). This is done by
calling connect and specifing an address whose family is AF_UNSPEC.
When connect is called on a DGRAM socket, the call to Winsock's
connect can immediately return successfully rather than failing with
WSAEWOULDBLOCK. Set the connect state to "connected" in this case.
Previously the connect state remained "connect_pending" after the
successful connection.
- In commit bb93c6d7, the race issue was not completely fixed. In
the pseudo console inheritance, if the destination process to
which the ownership of pseudo console switches, is found but exits
before switching, the inheritance fails. Currently, this extremely
rarely happens. This patch fixes the issue.
Commit 456c3a4638 added a workaround when handling paths with native
symlinks as inner path components. This patch introduced a problem for
paths handled by the WOW64 File System Redirector (FSR).
Fix this problem by not performing the new code from commit 456c3a4638
for paths under the Windows directory. Only do this in WOW64.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
For local paths, add a check if the inner path components contain native
symlinks or junctions. Compare the incoming path with the path returned
by NtQueryInformationFile(FileNameInformation). If they differ, there
must be at least one native symlink or junction in the path. If so,
treat the currently evaluated file as non-existant. This forces
path_conv::check to backtrack inner path components until we eliminated
all native symlinks or junctions and have a normalized path.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The simple newlib hypotl for real long double architectures is too
simple at this point. It's implemented as a real call to sqrtl(x^2+y^2).
This has a fatal tendency to overflow for big input numbers. Hypotl
isn't supposed to do that if the result would still be valid in range of
long double.
Given the complexity of implementing hypotl for various architectures,
we just take the hypotl function from Mingw-w64, which is in the public
domain.
Even though this hypotl is an architecture-independent implementation,
we can't use it for newlib yet, unfortunately, because it requires logbl
under the hood. Logbl is yet another function missing in newlib for
real long double architectures.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Use the more official fesetenv(FE_DFL_ENV) from _dll_crt0, thus
allowing to drop the _feinitialise declaration from fenv.h.
Provide a no-op _feinitialise in Cygwin as exportable symbol for really
old applications when _feinitialise was called from mainCRTStartup in
crt0.o.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Drop the Cygwin-specific fenv.cc and fenv.h file and use the equivalent
newlib functionality now, so we have at least one example of a user for
this new mechanism.
fenv.c: allow _feinitialise to be called from Cygwin startup code
fenv.h: add declarations for fegetprec and fesetprec for Cygwin only.
Fix a comment.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
An FD_CLOSE event sets a socket descriptor ready for writing.
This is incorrect if the FD_CLOSE is a result of shutdown(SHUT_RD).
Only set the socket descriptor ready for writing if the FD_CLOSE
is indicating an connection abort or reset error condition.
This requires to tweak fhandler_socket_wsock::evaluate_events.
FD_CLOSE in conjunction with FD_ACCEPT/FD_CONNECT special cases
a shutdown condition by setting an error code. This is correct
for accept/connect, but not for select. In this case, make sure
to return with an error code only if FD_CLOSE indicates a
connection error.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far select wrongly sets the descriptor as ready for exception
when a shutdown occurs. This is entirely non-standard. Only set
this bit on an out-of-band event.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Currently, functions/variables regarding the handles for cygwin
apps are with "_cyg", and those of handles for non-cygwin apps
are without "_cyg", such as get_handle_cyg() and get_handle().
This patch renames these to the names without "_nat" and with
"_nat" respectively, such as get_handle() and get_handle_nat().
When the Windows Store version of Python is installed, so-called "app
execution aliases" are put into the `PATH`. These are reparse points
under the hood, with an undocumented format.
We do know a bit about this format, though, as per the excellent analysis:
https://www.tiraniddo.dev/2019/09/overview-of-windows-execution-aliases.html
The first 4 bytes is the reparse tag, in this case it's
0x8000001B which is documented in the Windows SDK as
IO_REPARSE_TAG_APPEXECLINK. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to
be a corresponding structure, but with a bit of reverse
engineering we can work out the format is as follows:
Version: <4 byte integer>
Package ID: <NUL Terminated Unicode String>
Entry Point: <NUL Terminated Unicode String>
Executable: <NUL Terminated Unicode String>
Application Type: <NUL Terminated Unicode String>
Let's treat them as symbolic links. For example, in this developer's
setup, this will result in the following nice output:
$ cd $LOCALAPPDATA/Microsoft/WindowsApps/
$ ls -l python3.exe
lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 105 Aug 23 2020 python3.exe -> '/c/Program Files/WindowsApps/PythonSoftwareFoundation.Python.3.7_3.7.2544.0_x64__qbz5n2kfra8p0/python.exe'
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The Windows Store version of Python (and apparently other Windows Store
applications) install a special reparse point called "app execution
alias" into the user's `PATH`.
These applications can be executed without any problem, but they cannot
be read as if they were files. This trips up Cygwin's beautiful logic that
tries to determine whether we're about to execute a Cygwin executable or
not: instead of executing the application, it will fail, saying
"Permission denied".
Let's detect this situation (`NtOpenFile()` helpfully says that this
operation is not supported on this reparse point type), and simply skip
the logic: Windows Store apps are not Cygwin executables (and even if
they were, it is unlikely that they would come with a compatible
`cygwin1.dll` or `msys-2.0.dll`).
This fixes https://github.com/msys2/MSYS2-packages/issues/1943
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
- Currently, names of output pipes are "pty%d-to-master" and "pty%d-
to-master-cyg" and names of input pipes are "pty%d-to-slave" and
"pty%d-from-master". With this patch, these pipes are renamed to
"pty%d-to-master-nat", "pty%d-to-master", "pty%d-from-master-nat"
and "pty%d-from-master" respectively.
- Currently, transfer input is triggered even if the stdin of native
app is not a pseudo console. With this patch it is triggered only
if the stdin is a pseudo console.
- If two non-cygwin apps are started simultaneously, attaching to
pseudo console sometimes fails. This is because the second app
trys to attach to the process not started yet. This patch avoids
the issue by attaching to the stub process rather than the other
non-cygwin app.
- Perhaps current code misunderstand meaning of the IGNBRK. As far
as I investigated, IGNBRK is concerned with break signal in serial
port but there is no evidence that it has effect to ignore Ctrl-C.
This patch stops ignoring Ctrl-C by IGNBRK for non-cygwin apps.
This reverts commit 532b91d24e.
It turned out that this patch has undesired side effects. To wit, if a
newer, post-uname_x executable was linked against or loading an older,
pre-uname_x DLL, and this DLL called uname. This call would jump into
the old uname with the old struct utsname as parameter, but given the
newer executable it would get redirected to uname_x. uname_x in turn
would overwrite stack memory it should leave well alone, given it
expects the newer, larger struct utsname.
For the entire discussion see the thread starting at
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-February/247870.html
and continuing in March at
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-March/247930.html
For a description where we're coming from, see
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-March/247959.html
While we *could* make the scenario in question work by patching dlsym,
the problem would actually be the same, just for dynamic loading. In
the end, we're missing the information, which Cygwin version has been
used when building DLLs.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- If two non-cygwin apps are started simultaneously and this is the
first execution of non-cygwin apps in the pty, these occasionally
hang up. The cause is the race issue between term_has_pcon_cap(),
reset_switch_to_pcon() and setup_pseudoconsole(). This patch fixes
the issue.
linkat(olddirfd, oldpath, oldname, newdirfd, newname, AT_EMPTY_PATH)
is supposed to create a link to the file referenced by olddirfd if
oldname is the empty string. Currently this is done via the /proc
filesystem by converting the call to
linkat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/self/fd/<olddirfd>", newdirfd, newname,
AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW),
which ultimately leads to a call to the appropriate fhandler's link
method. Simplify this by using cygheap_fdget to obtain the fhandler
directly.
If linkat(2) is called with AT_EMPTY_PATH on an AF_LOCAL or
AF_UNIX socket that is not a socket file, the current code calls
fhandler_disk_file::link in most cases. The latter expects to be
operating on a disk file and uses the socket's io_handle, which
is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::link only if the
fhandler_socket object is a file (determined by testing
dev().isfs()).
Also fix the case of a socket file opened with O_PATH by setting
the fhandler_disk_file's io_handle.
If facl(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not a
socket file, the current code calls fhandler_disk_file::facl in most
cases. The latter expects to be operating on a disk file and uses the
socket's io_handle, which is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::facl only if the
fhandler_socket object is a file (determined by testing dev().isfs()).
If fchown(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not a
socket file, the current code calls fhandler_disk_file::fchown in most
cases. The latter expects to be operating on a disk file and uses the
socket's io_handle, which is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::fchown only if the
fhandler_socket object is a file (determined by testing dev().isfs()).
If fchmod(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not a
socket file, the current code calls fhandler_disk_file::fchmod in most
cases. The latter expects to be operating on a disk file and uses the
socket's io_handle, which is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::fchmod only if the
fhandler_socket object is a file (determined by testing dev().isfs()).
If fstatvfs(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not
a socket file, the current code calls fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs in
most cases. The latter expects to be operating on a disk file and
uses the socket's io_handle, which is not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs only if the
fhandler_socket object is a socket file (determined by testing
dev().isfs()).
If fstat(2) is called on an AF_LOCAL or AF_UNIX socket that is not a
socket file, the current code calls fstat_fs. The latter expects to
be operating on a disk file and uses the socket's io_handle, which is
not a file handle.
Fix this by calling fstat_fs only if the fhandler_socket object is a
file (determined by testing dev().isfs()).
This is in the spirit of the Linux requirement that file operations
like fchmod(2), fchown(2), and fgetxattr(2) fail with EBADF on files
opened with O_PATH.
This was done for the fhandler_socket_local class in commits
3a2191653a, 141437d374, and 477121317d, but the fhandler_socket_unix
class was overlooked.
When a FIFO is opened, syscalls.cc:open always calls fstat on the
newly-created fhandler_fifo. This results from a call to
device_access_denied.
To speed-up this fstat call, and therefore the open(2) call, use
PC_KEEP_HANDLE when the fhandler is created. The resulting
conv_handle is retained until after the fstat call if the fhandler is
a FIFO; otherwise, it is closed immediately.
Previously, the call to get_file_attribute for FIFOs set the first
argument to NULL instead of the handle h returned by get_stat_handle,
thereby forcing the file to be opened for fetching the security
descriptor in get_file_sd(). This was done because h might have been
a pipe handle rather than a file handle, and its permissions would not
necessarily reflect those of the file.
That situation can no longer occur with the new fhandler_fifo::fstat
introduced in the previous commit.
Previously fstat on a FIFO would call fhandler_base::fstat.
The latter is not appropriate if fhandler_fifo::open has already been
called (and O_PATH is not set), for the following reason. If a FIFO
has been opened as a writer or duplexer, then it has an io_handle that
is a pipe handle rather than a file handle. fhandler_base::fstat will
use this handle and potentially return incorrect results. If the FIFO
has been opened as a reader, then it has no io_handle, and a call to
fhandler_base::fstat will lead to a call to fhandler_base::open.
Opening the fhandler a second time can change it in undesired ways;
for example, it can modify the flags and status_flags.
The new fhandler_fifo::fstat avoids these problems by creating an
fhandler_disk_file and calling its fstat method in case
fhandler_fifo::open has already been called and O_PATH is not set.
Consider this case:
- Cygwin installed in C:\cygwin64
- mklink /j D:\cygwin64 C:\cygwin64
- create testcase calling
realpath("/", result);
printf ("%s\n", result);
- start cmd
>C:\cygwin64\bin\bash -lc <path-to-testcase>
/
>D\cygwin64\bin\bash -lc <path-to-testcase>
/cygdrive/c/cygwin64
This scenario circumventing the mount point handling which is automated
in terms of /, depending on the path returned from GetModuleFileNameW
for the Cygwin DLL. When calling D:\cygwin64\bin\bash the dir returned
from GetModuleFileNameW is D:\cygwin64\bin, thus root is D:\cygwin64.
However, junctions are treated as symlinks in Cygwin which explains why
the path gets converted to a cygdrive path.
Fix this by calling GetFinalPathNameByHandleW on the result from
GetModuleFileNameW to get the correct root path, even if accessed via
a junction point.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This only affects the very seldom bordercase of apps calling setmode(fd,
0) on fhandlers not calling fhandler_base::set_open_status(). All
fhandlers not calling set_open_status() are binary mode only, but the
way reset_to_open_binmode worked, calling setmode(fd, 0) would have
"reset" their open flags to O_TEXT accidentally.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>