And reformat to GNU style, and eliminate the labellen function.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style, and eliminate the digits variable.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style. Check for negative error returns
(instead of -1).
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic.
This also results in a fix of bug 28091 due to the additional packet
length checks.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@systemhalted.org>
Debugging interfaces: p_*, fp_*, and sym_* could conceivably be
used to produce debug out, but these functions have not been
updated to parse more resource records, so they are not very useful
today. Likewise for ns_sprintrr and ns_sprintrrf. ns_format_ttl and
ns_parse_ttl are related to these.
Internal implementation details: res_isourserver is probably only
useful in the implementation of a stub resolver, and so is
res_nameinquery.
Unclear semantics and bad performance: ns_samedomain, ns_subdomain,
ns_makecanon, ns_samename do textual converions & copies instead of
checking equivalence of the wire format.
inet_neta cannot handle IPv6 addresses.
res_hostalias has been superseded by getaddrinfo with AI_CANONNAME.
hostalias is not thread-safe.
Some functions have int as size arguments instead of size_t, so they
do not follow current coding practices. However, dn_expand and
b64_ntop are somewhat widely used (to name just two examples), so
deprecating them seems problematic.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@systemhalted.org>
Reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds buffer arithmetic.
Eliminate the labellen function.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
As the comment indicates, the check is unnecessary due to the way the
UDP socket is set up.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic
(e.g., use eom - dn < 2 instead of dn + 1 >= eom). Inline the
labellen function and fold the compression pointer check into
the length check (l >= 64). Assume ASCII encoding.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
As a result, is not necessary to specify __attribute__ ((nocommon))
on individual definitions.
GCC 10 defaults to -fno-common on all architectures except ARC,
but this change is compatible with older GCC versions and ARC, too.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The symbols gai_cancel, gai_error, gai_suspend, getaddrinfo_a,
__gai_suspend_time64 were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
For Hurd (which remains !PTHREAD_IN_LIBC), a few #define redirects
had to be added because several pthread functions are not available
under __. (Linux uses __ prefixes for most hidden aliases, and has
to in some cases to avoid linknamespace issues.)
A new build flag, _TIME_BITS, enables the usage of the newer 64-bit
time symbols for legacy ABI (where 32-bit time_t is default). The 64
bit time support is only enabled if LFS (_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64) is
also used.
Different than LFS support, the y2038 symbols are added only for the
required ABIs (armhf, csky, hppa, i386, m68k, microblaze, mips32,
mips64-n32, nios2, powerpc32, sparc32, s390-32, and sh). The ABIs with
64-bit time support are unchanged, both for symbol and types
redirection.
On Linux the full 64-bit time support requires a minimum of kernel
version v5.1. Otherwise, the 32-bit fallbacks are used and might
results in error with overflow return code (EOVERFLOW).
The i686-gnu does not yet support 64-bit time.
This patch exports following rediretions to support 64-bit time:
* libc:
adjtime
adjtimex
clock_adjtime
clock_getres
clock_gettime
clock_nanosleep
clock_settime
cnd_timedwait
ctime
ctime_r
difftime
fstat
fstatat
futimens
futimes
futimesat
getitimer
getrusage
gettimeofday
gmtime
gmtime_r
localtime
localtime_r
lstat_time
lutimes
mktime
msgctl
mtx_timedlock
nanosleep
nanosleep
ntp_gettime
ntp_gettimex
ppoll
pselec
pselect
pthread_clockjoin_np
pthread_cond_clockwait
pthread_cond_timedwait
pthread_mutex_clocklock
pthread_mutex_timedlock
pthread_rwlock_clockrdlock
pthread_rwlock_clockwrlock
pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock
pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock
pthread_timedjoin_np
recvmmsg
sched_rr_get_interval
select
sem_clockwait
semctl
semtimedop
sem_timedwait
setitimer
settimeofday
shmctl
sigtimedwait
stat
thrd_sleep
time
timegm
timerfd_gettime
timerfd_settime
timespec_get
utime
utimensat
utimes
utimes
wait3
wait4
* librt:
aio_suspend
mq_timedreceive
mq_timedsend
timer_gettime
timer_settime
* libanl:
gai_suspend
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This commit removes the ELF constructor and internal variables from
dlfcn/dlfcn.c. The file now serves the same purpose as
nptl/libpthread-compat.c, so it is renamed to dlfcn/libdl-compat.c.
The use of libdl-shared-only-routines ensures that libdl.a is empty.
This commit adjusts the test suite not to use $(libdl). The libdl.so
symbolic link is no longer installed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Now that compat_symbol_reference works for non-internal tests, too.
Also do not build and run the tests on architectures which lack the
__p_secstodate compatibility symbol.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
I used these shell commands:
../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")
and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 6694 files FOO.
I then removed trailing white space from benchtests/bench-pthread-locks.c
and iconvdata/tst-iconv-big5-hkscs-to-2ucs4.c, to work around this
diagnostic from Savannah:
remote: *** pre-commit check failed ...
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
remote: error: hook declined to update refs/heads/master
This change uses (in gai_misc.h):
- __futex_abstimed_wait64 (instead of futex_reltimed_wait)
- __futex_abstimed_wait_cancellable64
(instead of futex_reltimed_wait_cancellable)
from ./sysdeps/nptl/futex-helpers.h
The gai_suspend() accepts relative timeout, which then is converted to
absolute one.
The i686-gnu port (HURD) do not define DONT_NEED_GAI_MISC_COND and as it
doesn't (yet) support 64 bit time it uses not converted
pthread_cond_timedwait().
The __gai_suspend() is supposed to be run on ports with __TIMESIZE !=64 and
__WORDSIZE==32. It internally utilizes __gai_suspend_time64() and hence the
conversion from 32 bit struct timespec to 64 bit one is required.
For ports supporting 64 bit time the __gai_suspend_time64() will be used
either via alias (to __gai_suspend when __TIMESIZE==64) or redirection
(when -D_TIME_BITS=64 is passed).
Build tests:
./src/scripts/build-many-glibcs.py glibcs
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Starting with commit 29fddfc7df, the
tests posix/bug-ga2 and resolv/tst-leaks2 are test-container tests.
If test-container.c returns with EXIT_UNSUPPORTED, the tests with
mtrace() are not executed and the mtrace files do not exist.
Therefore the "mtrace-analysis-part" of those tests are marked
UNSUPPORTED if the mtrace files are missing.
Reported-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
The tests posix/bug-ga2-mem and resolv/mtrace-tst-leaks2 are failing on
fedora 33 as mtrace reports memory leaks.
The /etc/nsswitch.conf differs between
Fedora 32: hosts: files dns myhostname
Fedora 33: hosts: files resolve [!UNAVAIL=return] myhostname dns
Therefore /lib64/libnss_resolve.so.2 (from systemd) and the dependencies
libgcc_s.so.1 and libpthread.so.0 are loaded.
Usually all malloc'ed resources from getaddrinfo / gethostbyname are freed
and the libraries are dlclose'd in nss/nsswitch.c:libc_freeres_fn (free_mem).
Unfortunately, /lib64/libnss_resolve.so.2 is marked with DF_1_NODELETE.
As this library is not unmapped, you'll see "Memory not freed".
Therefore those tests are now only relying on libnss_files.so by making
them test-container tests and providing the required configuration files.
By moving the tests to tests-container, those are now running with
"make check". Therefore the mtrace part of the tests are also moved
from "make xcheck" to "make check".
bug-ga2.c is now using test-driver.c in order to support WAIT_FOR_DEBUGGER
environment variable.
When switching name servers, response processing by two server
threads clobbers the global test state. (There is still some
risk that this test is negatively impact by packet drops and
packet reordering, but this applies to many of the resolver tests
and is difficult to avoid.)
Fixes commit f1f00c0721 ("resolv:
Handle transaction ID collisions in parallel queries (bug 26600)").
If the transaction IDs are equal, the old check attributed both
responses to the first query, not recognizing the second response.
This fixes bug 26600.
Restore <rpc/netdb.h> as an installed header. Delete the dummy header
resolv/rpc/netdb.h because inet is not an optional glibc component
(so its <rpc/netdb.h> is always available).
Fixes commit acb527929d ("Move
non-deprecated RPC-related functions from sunrpc to inet") in
combination with commit 5500cdba40
("Remove --enable-obsolete-rpc configure flag").
file_change_detection_for_stat partially initialize
struct file_change_detection in some cases, when the size member
alone determines the outcome of all comparisons. This results
in maybe-uninitialized compiler warnings in case of sufficiently
aggressive inlining.
Once the implementation is moved into a separate C file, this kind
of inlining is no longer possible, so the compiler warnings are gone.
__resolv_conf_get_current should only record the initial file
change data if after verifying that file just read matches the
original measurement. Fixes commit aef16cc8a4
("resolv: Automatically reload a changed /etc/resolv.conf file
[BZ #984]").
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The data is captured after reading the file. This allows callers
to check the change data against an earlier measurement.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
res_vinit_1 did not close the stream on errors, only on success.
This change moves closing the stream to __resolv_conf_load, for both
the success and error cases.
Fixes commit 89f187a40f ("resolv: Use
getline for configuration file reading in res_vinit_1") and commit
3f853f22c8 ("resolv: Lift domain search
list limits [BZ #19569] [BZ #21475]"), where memory allocation was
introduced into res_vinit_1.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Only minor functional changes (i.e., regarding the handling of
directories, which are now treated as empty files).
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The second CNAME record optionally generated by the response function
used the question name, not the redirected name from the first CNAME.
This breaks the chain and results in failures of these IDNA tests if
CNAME owner names are checked as expected (which the current
implementation does not do).
The commit 446997ff14 introduced
this new usage of resplen. If build with gcc 9 -march>=z13 on s390x,
the following warning occurs:
res_send.c: In function ‘__res_context_send’:
res_send.c:539:6: error: ‘resplen’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
539 | if (resplen > HFIXEDSZ)
| ^
Therefore this patch adds a further DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT in the
same way as it was previously done for usages of resplen or n.
See commit d1bc2cbbed.
This introduces a concept of trusted name servers, for which the
AD bit is passed through to applications. For untrusted name
servers (the default), the AD bit in responses are cleared, to
provide a safe default.
This approach is very similar to the one suggested by Pavel Šimerda
in <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1164339#c15>.
The DNS test framework in support/ is enhanced with support for
setting the AD bit in responses.
Tested on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Change-Id: Ibfe0f7c73ea221c35979842c5c3b6ed486495ccc
Since gettimeofday will shortly be implemented in terms of
clock_gettime on all platforms, internal code should use clock_gettime
directly; in addition to removing a layer of indirection, this will
allow us to remove the PLT-bypass gunk for gettimeofday. (We can't
quite do that yet, but it'll be coming later in this patch series.)
In many cases, the changed code does fewer conversions.
The changed code always assumes __clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME)
cannot fail. Most of the call sites were assuming gettimeofday could
not fail, but a few places were checking for errors. POSIX says
clock_gettime can only fail if the clock constant is invalid or
unsupported, and CLOCK_REALTIME is the one and only clock constant
that's required to be supported. For consistency I grepped the entire
source tree for any other places that checked for errors from
__clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME), found one, and changed it too.
(For the record, POSIX also says gettimeofday can never fail.)
(It would be nice if we could declare that GNU systems will always
support CLOCK_MONOTONIC as well as CLOCK_REALTIME; there are several
places where we are using CLOCK_REALTIME where _MONOTONIC would be
more appropriate, and/or trying to use _MONOTONIC and then falling
back to _REALTIME. But the Hurd doesn't support CLOCK_MONOTONIC yet,
and it looks like adding it would involve substantial changes to
gnumach's internals and API. Oh well.)
A few Hurd-specific files were changed to use __host_get_time instead
of __clock_gettime, as this seemed tidier. We also assume this cannot
fail. Skimming the code in gnumach leads me to believe the only way
it could fail is if __mach_host_self also failed, and our
Hurd-specific code consistently assumes that can't happen, so I'm
going with that.
With the exception of support/support_test_main.c, test cases are not
modified, mainly because I didn't want to have to figure out which
test cases were testing gettimeofday specifically.
The definition of GETTIME in sysdeps/generic/memusage.h had a typo and
was not reading tv_sec at all. I fixed this. It appears nobody has been
generating malloc traces on a machine that doesn't have a superseding
definition.
There are a whole bunch of places where the code could be simplified
by factoring out timespec subtraction and/or comparison logic, but I
want to keep this patch as mechanical as possible.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu,
powerpc64-linux-gnu, powerpc-linux-gnu, and aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
When using a system (e.g. Ubuntu 18.04) with libidn2 2.0.4 or earlier,
test results include:
FAIL: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn
FAIL: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn-latin1
It was previously stated
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-05/msg00771.html> that "It
should fail to indicate you have bugs in your system libidn.".
However, the glibc testsuite should be indicating whether there are
bugs in glibc, not whether there are bugs in other system pieces - so
unless you consider it a glibc bug that it fails to work around the
libidn issues, these FAILs are not helpful. And as a general
principle, it's best for the expected glibc test results to be clean,
with Bugzilla used to track known bugs in glibc itself, rather than
people needing to know about the expected FAILs to tell if there are
problems with their glibc build. So, while there is an argument that
install.texi (not just the old NEWS entries for 2.28) should explain
the use of libidn2 and that 2.0.5 or later is recommended, test FAILs
are not the right way to indicate the presence of an old libidn2
version.
This patch accordingly makes those tests return UNSUPPORTED for older
libidn2 versions, just as they do when libidn2 isn't present at all.
As implied by that past discussion, it's possible this could result in
UNSUPPORTED for systems with older versions but whatever required
fixes backported so the tests previously passed, if there are any such
systems.
Tested for x86_64 on Ubuntu 18.04, including verifying that putting an
earlier version in place of 2.0.5 results in the tests FAILing whereas
using 2.0.5 as in the patch results in UNSUPPORTED. Florian reports
that the tests still run on Fedora 30, with libidn 2.2.0.
* resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn-latin1.c (do_test): Mark test
unsupported with libidn2 before 2.0.5.
* resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn.c (do_test): Likewise.
This patch fixes the gcc warnings seen with gcc 9 -march>=z13 on s390x:
res_send.c: In function ‘__res_context_send’:
res_send.c:498:7: error: ‘resplen’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
498 | if (n == 0 && (buf2 == NULL || *resplen2 == 0))
| ^
In this case send_vc is inlined into __res_context_send
and the maybe uninitialized resplen belongs to the one in send_vc.
In send_vc there is already a DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT (5, "-Wmaybe-uninitialized")
and a comment which explains that this is a false-positive.
Note that resplen is used as return value.
This patch adds a further DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT around the declaration of n
in __res_context_send and the comparison after n was set to the return value of send_vc.
ChangeLog:
* resolv/res_send.c (__res_context_send): Disable maybe-uninitialized
warning.
The purpose of the bp[0] == '.' check is unclear. Only the root domain
starts with '.'. The empty string is accepted as a domain name in many
places, denoting the root, but using it implicitly is confusing.
This functionality was deprecated in glibc 2.25.
This commit only includes the core changes to remove the
functionality. It does not remove the RES_USE_INET6 handling in the
individual NSS service modules and the res_use_inet6 function.
These changes will happen in future commits.
This patch removes the HP_TIMING_BITS usage for fast random bits and replace
with clock_gettime (CLOCK_MONOTONIC). It has unspecified starting time and
nano-second accuracy, so its randomness is significantly better than
gettimeofday.
Althoug it should incur in more overhead (specially for architecture that
support hp-timing), the symbol is also common implemented as a vDSO.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu, x86_64-linux-gnu, and i686-linux-gnu. I also
checked on a i686-gnu build.
* include/random-bits.h: New file.
* resolv/res_mkquery.c [HP_TIMING_AVAIL] (RANDOM_BITS,
(__res_context_mkquery): Remove usage hp-timing usage and replace with
random_bits.
* resolv/res_send.c [HP_TIMING_AVAIL] (nameserver_offset): Likewise.
* sysdeps/posix/tempname.c [HP_TIMING_AVAIL] (__gen_tempname):
Likewise.
The Linux kernel suppresses some ICMP error messages by default for
UDP sockets. This commit enables full ICMP error reporting,
hopefully resulting in faster failover to working name servers.
This patch adds fall-through comments in some cases where -Wextra
produces implicit-fallthrough warnings.
The patch is non-exhaustive. Apart from architecture-specific code
for non-x86_64 architectures, it does not change sunrpc/xdr.c (legacy
code, probably should have such changes, but left to be dealt with
separately), or places that already had comments about the
fall-through but not matching the form expected by
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 (the default level with -Wextra; my
inclination is to adjust those comments to match rather than
downgrading to -Wimplicit-fallthrough=1 to allow any comment), or one
place where I thought the implicit fallthrough was not correct and so
should be handled separately as a bug fix. I think the key thing to
consider in review of this patch is whether the fall-through is indeed
intended and correct in each place where such a comment is added.
Tested for x86_64.
* elf/dl-exception.c (_dl_exception_create_format): Add
fall-through comments.
* elf/ldconfig.c (parse_conf_include): Likewise.
* elf/rtld.c (print_statistics): Likewise.
* locale/programs/charmap.c (parse_charmap): Likewise.
* misc/mntent_r.c (__getmntent_r): Likewise.
* posix/wordexp.c (parse_arith): Likewise.
(parse_backtick): Likewise.
* resolv/ns_ttl.c (ns_parse_ttl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86/cpu-features.c (init_cpu_features): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela): Likewise.
The IPv4 address parser in the getaddrinfo function is changed so that
it does not ignore trailing whitespace and all characters after it.
For backwards compatibility, the getaddrinfo function still recognizes
legacy name syntax, such as 192.000.002.010 interpreted as 192.0.2.8
(octal).
This commit does not change the behavior of inet_addr and inet_aton.
gethostbyname already had additional sanity checks (but is switched
over to the new __inet_aton_exact function for completeness as well).
To avoid sending the problematic query names over DNS, commit
6ca53a2453 ("resolv: Do not send queries
for non-host-names in nss_dns [BZ #24112]") is needed.
Before this commit, nss_dns would send a query which did not contain a
host name as the query name (such as invalid\032name.example.com) and
then reject the answer in getanswer_r and gaih_getanswer_slice, using
a check based on res_hnok. With this commit, no query is sent, and a
host-not-found error is returned to NSS without network interaction.
The __libc_freeres framework does not extend to non-libc.so objects.
This causes problems in general for valgrind and mtrace detecting
unfreed objects in both libdl.so and libpthread.so. This change is
a pre-requisite to properly moving the malloc hooks out of malloc
since such a move now requires precise accounting of all allocated
data before destructors are run.
This commit adds a proper hook in libc.so.6 for both libdl.so and
for libpthread.so, this ensures that shm-directory.c which uses
freeit () to free memory is called properly. We also remove the
nptl_freeres hook and fall back to using weak-ref-and-check idiom
for a loaded libpthread.so, thus making this process similar for
all DSOs.
Lastly we follow best practice and use explicit free calls for
both libdl.so and libpthread.so instead of the generic hook process
which has undefined order.
Tested on x86_64 with no regressions.
Signed-off-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Contributed by
Agustina Arzille <avarzille@riseup.net>
Amos Jeffries <squid3@treenet.co.nz>
David Michael <fedora.dm0@gmail.com>
Marco Gerards <marco@gnu.org>
Marcus Brinkmann <marcus@gnu.org>
Neal H. Walfield <neal@gnu.org>
Pino Toscano <toscano.pino@tiscali.it>
Richard Braun <rbraun@sceen.net>
Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org>
Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
Thomas DiModica <ricinwich@yahoo.com>
Thomas Schwinge <tschwinge@gnu.org>
* htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/hurd/htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/i386/htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/mach/htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/htl: New directory.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/htl: New directory.
* nscd/Depend, resolv/Depend, rt/Depend: Add htl dependency.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/Implies: Add mach/hurd/i386/htl imply.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/libpthread.abilist: New file.
The old implementation based on hsearch_r used an ad-hoc C string
encoding and produced an incorrect format on the wire for domain
names which contained bytes which needed escaping when printed.
This commit switches to ns_name_pton for the wire format conversion
(now that we have separate tests for it) and uses a tsearch tree
with a suitable comparison function to locate compression targets.
This patch increases timeouts on three tests I observed timing out on
slow systems.
* malloc/tst-malloc-tcache-leak.c (TIMEOUT): Define to 50.
* posix/tst-glob-tilde.c (TIMEOUT): Define to 200.
* resolv/tst-resolv-res_ninit.c (TIMEOUT): Define to 50.
This patch, relative to a tree with
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2017-11/msg00797.html> (pending
review) applied, obsoletes p_secstodate, making the underlying
function __p_secstodate into a compat symbol not available for new
binaries or ports. The calls in ns_print.c (part of incomplete
handling of TKEY) are changed to use %lu to print times instead of
trying to pretty-print the times any more.
Tested for x86_64.
* resolv/res_debug.c (p_secstodate): Condition definition on
[SHLIB_COMPAT (libresolv, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_27)]. Define
directly as __p_secstodate, and as a compat symbol. Do not use
libresolv_hidden_def.
* resolv/resolv.h (p_secstodate): Remove macro and function
declaration.
* resolv/ns_print.c (ns_sprintrrf): Print times with %lu, not
using p_secstodate.
* include/resolv.h (__p_secstodate): Do not use
libresolv_hidden_proto.
* resolv/Makefile (tests): Move tst-p_secstodate to ....
(tests-internal): ... here.
* resolv/tst-p_secstodate.c: Include <shlib-compat.h>. Condition
all contents on [TEST_COMPAT (libresolv, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_27)]
and declare and use __p_secstodate and use compat_symbol_reference
in that case.
[!TEST_COMPAT (libresolv, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_27)] (do_test): Add
implementation returning 77.
The resolv/res_debug.c function p_secstodate (which is a public
function exported from libresolv, taking an unsigned long argument)
does:
struct tm timebuf;
time = __gmtime_r(&clock, &timebuf);
time->tm_year += 1900;
time->tm_mon += 1;
sprintf(output, "%04d%02d%02d%02d%02d%02d",
time->tm_year, time->tm_mon, time->tm_mday,
time->tm_hour, time->tm_min, time->tm_sec);
If __gmtime_r returns NULL (because the year overflows the range of
int), this will dereference a null pointer. Otherwise, if the
computed year does not fit in four characters, this will cause a
buffer overrun of the fixed-size 15-byte buffer. With current GCC
mainline, there is a compilation failure because of the possible
buffer overrun.
I couldn't find a specification for how this function is meant to
behave, but Paul pointed to RFC 4034 as relevant to the cases where
this function is called from within glibc. The function's interface
is inherently problematic when dates beyond Y2038 might be involved,
because of the ambiguity in how to interpret 32-bit timestamps as such
dates (the RFC suggests interpreting times as being within 68 years of
the present date, which would mean some kind of interface whose
behavior depends on the present date).
This patch works on the basis of making a minimal fix in preparation
for obsoleting the function. The function is made to handle times in
the interval [0, 0x7fffffff] only, on all platforms, with <overflow>
used as the output string in other cases (and errno set to EOVERFLOW
in such cases). This seems to be a reasonable state for the function
to be in when made a compat symbol by a future patch, being compatible
with any existing uses for existing timestamps without trying to work
for later timestamps. Results independent of the range of time_t also
simplify the testcase.
I couldn't persuade GCC to recognize the ranges of the struct tm
fields by adding explicit range checks with a call to
__builtin_unreachable if outside the range (this looks similar to
<https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=80776>), so having added
a range check on the input, this patch then disables the
-Wformat-overflow= warning for the sprintf call (I prefer that to the
use of strftime, as being more transparently correct without knowing
what each of %m and %M etc. is).
I do not know why this build failure should be new with mainline GCC
(that is, I don't know what GCC change might have introduced it, when
the basic functionality for such warnings was already in GCC 7).
I do not know if this is a security issue (that is, if there are
plausible ways in which a date before -999 or after 9999 from an
untrusted source might end up in this function). The system clock is
arguably an untrusted source (in that e.g. NTP is insecure), but
probably not to that extent (NTP can't communicate such wild
timestamps), and uses from within glibc are limited to 32-bit inputs.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py that this restores the build for arm
with yesterday's mainline GCC. Also tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #22463]
* resolv/res_debug.c: Include <libc-diag.h>.
(p_secstodate): Assert time_t at least as wide as u_long. On
overflow, use integer seconds since the epoch as output, or use
"<overflow>" as output and set errno to EOVERFLOW if integer
seconds since the epoch would be 14 or more characters.
(p_secstodate) [__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0)]: Disable -Wformat-overflow=
for sprintf call.
* resolv/tst-p_secstodate.c: New file.
* resolv/Makefile (tests): Add tst-p_secstodate.
($(objpfx)tst-p_secstodate): Depend on $(objpfx)libresolv.so.
res_hnok rejected some host names used on the Internet, such as
www-.example.com. res_hnok and res_dnok failed to perform basic syntax
checking on DNS domain names.
Also fix res_mailok, res_ownok.
Remove the bogus targets (and source) that supposedly build ga_test.
This code was added to resolv very early in the development process
but does not appear to be an actual test program. The target for
building this file is tests but because the glibc Make system is
built the way it is, the target is overriden by higher-level tests
targets and, therefore, the ga_test program is never built. Removing
the target and the source code makes the resolv/Makefile less confusing.
Tested by building and running 'make check' on 64 bit host running
Kernel 4.10.0-19 configured with
--prefix=/home/hawkinsw/code/glibc-build/install
--enable-hardcoded-path-in-tests
--disable-mathvec
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Various subdirectories of glibc include Banner files to put some text
in the output of executing libc.so.6, under "Available extensions".
Some of those subdirectories (e.g. crypt) may originally have been
add-ons (and so optional, so a particular glibc build might or might
not have included them), but except for libidn they aren't now (or if
only included in some builds, in the case of soft-fp, the inclusion
depends on the architecture for which glibc is configured rather than
having any glibc configuration for which it's an optional feature),
and it doesn't seem useful for the libc.so.6 output to call out a few
features like that.
This patch removes the non-add-on Banner files, updating contrib.texi
where they noted contributions not otherwise mentioned there.
Tested for x86_64.
* crypt/Banner: Remove file.
* nptl/Banner: Likewise.
* resolv/Banner: Likewise.
* soft-fp/Banner: Likewise.
* nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)banner.h): Remove rule.
($(objpfx)version.d): Remove dependency on banner.h.
($(objpfx)version.os): Likewise.
* nptl/version.c (banner): Do not include banner.h.
* manual/contrib.texi: Update entries for Richard Henderson, Jakub
Jelinek and BIND code.
The old code uses errno as the primary indicator for success or
failure. This is wrong because errno is only set for specific
combinations of the status return value and the h_errno variable.
This patch consolidates all the non cancellable writev calls to use
the __writev_nocancel identifier. For non cancellable targets it will
be just a macro to call the default respective symbol while on Linux
will be a internal one.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, x86_64-linux-gnu-x32, and i686-linux-gnu.
* gmon/gmon.c (write_hist): Replace writev_not_cancel_no_status with
__writev_nocancel_nostatus.
(write_call_graph): Likewise.
(write_bb_counts): Likewise.
* resolv/herror.c (herror): Likewise.
* sysdeps/generic/not-cancel.h (writev_not_cancel_no_status): Remove
macro.
(__writev_nocancel_nostatus): New macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/not-cancel.h (writev_not_cancel_no_status):
Remove macro.
(__writev_nocancel_nostatus): New function.
A dot-less host name without an /etc/resolv.conf file caused an
assertion failure in update_from_conf because the function would not
deal correctly with the empty search list case.
Thanks to Andreas Schwab for debugging assistence.
This commit enhances the stub resolver to reload the configuration
in the per-thread _res object if the /etc/resolv.conf file has
changed. The resolver checks whether the application has modified
_res and will not overwrite the _res object in that case.
The struct resolv_context mechanism is used to check the
configuration file only once per name lookup.
This commit adds the remaining unchanging members (which are loaded
from /etc/resolv.conf) to struct resolv_conf.
The extended name server list is currently not used by the stub
resolver. The switch depends on a cleanup: The _u._ext.nssocks
array stores just a single socket, and needs to be replaced with
a single socket value.
(The compatibility gethostname implementation does not use the
extended addres sort list, either. Updating the compat code is
not worthwhile.)
This change uses the extended resolver state in struct resolv_conf to
store the search list. If applications have not patched the _res
object directly, this extended search list will be used by the stub
resolver during name resolution.
This change provides additional resolver configuration state which
is not exposed through the _res ABI. It reuses the existing
initstamp field in the supposedly-private part of _res. Some effort
is undertaken to avoid memory safety issues introduced by applications
which directly patch the _res object.
With this commit, only the initstamp field is moved into struct
resolv_conf. Additional members will be added later, eventually
migrating the entire resolver configuration.
struct resolv_context objects provide a temporary resolver context
which does not change during a name lookup operation. Only when the
outmost context is created, the stub resolver configuration is
verified to be current (at present, only against previous res_init
calls). Subsequent attempts to obtain the context will reuse the
result of the initial verification operation.
struct resolv_context can also be extended in the future to store
data which needs to be deallocated during thread cancellation.