Commit graph

114 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justine Tunney
ff77f2a6af
Make improvements
- This change fixes a bug that allowed unbuffered printf() output (to
  streams like stderr) to be truncated. This regression was introduced
  some time between now and the last release.

- POSIX specifies all functions as thread safe by default. This change
  works towards cleaning up our use of the @threadsafe / @threadunsafe
  documentation annotations to reflect that. The goal is (1) to use
  @threadunsafe to document functions which POSIX say needn't be thread
  safe, and (2) use @threadsafe to document functions that we chose to
  implement as thread safe even though POSIX didn't mandate it.

- Tidy up the clock_gettime() implementation. We're now trying out a
  cleaner approach to system call support that aims to maintain the
  Linux errno convention as long as possible. This also fixes bugs that
  existed previously, where the vDSO errno wasn't being translated
  properly. The gettimeofday() system call is now a wrapper for
  clock_gettime(), which reduces bloat in apps that use both.

- The recently-introduced improvements to the execute bit on Windows has
  had bugs fixed. access(X_OK) on a directory on Windows now succeeds.
  fstat() will now perform the MZ/#! ReadFile() operation correctly.

- Windows.h is no longer included in libc/isystem/, because it confused
  PCRE's build system into thinking Cosmopolitan is a WIN32 platform.
  Cosmo's Windows.h polyfill was never even really that good, since it
  only defines a subset of the subset of WIN32 APIs that Cosmo defines.

- The setlongerjmp() / longerjmp() APIs are removed. While they're nice
  APIs that are superior to the standardized setjmp / longjmp functions,
  they weren't superior enough to not be dead code in the monorepo. If
  you use these APIs, please file an issue and they'll be restored.

- The .com appending magic has now been removed from APE Loader.
2023-10-03 06:17:16 -07:00
Justine Tunney
c88f95a892
Remove Windows executable path guessing logic
Unlike CMD.EXE, CreateProcess() doesn't care if an executable name ends
with .COM or .EXE. We now have the unbourne shell and bash working well
on Windows, so we don't need DOS anymore. Making this change will grant
us better performance, particularly for builds, because commandv() will
need to make fewer system calls. Path mangling magic still happens with
WinMain() and ntspawn() in order to do things like turn \ into / so the
interop works well at the borders. But all the code in libraries, which
did that, has been removed. It's not possible for libraries to abstract
the differences between paths.
2023-09-21 08:13:50 -07:00
Justine Tunney
ec480f5aa0
Make improvements
- Every unit test now passes on Apple Silicon. The final piece of this
  puzzle was porting our POSIX threads cancelation support, since that
  works differently on ARM64 XNU vs. AMD64. Our semaphore support on
  Apple Silicon is also superior now compared to AMD64, thanks to the
  grand central dispatch library which lets *NSYNC locks go faster.

- The Cosmopolitan runtime is now more stable, particularly on Windows.
  To do this, thread local storage is mandatory at all runtime levels,
  and the innermost packages of the C library is no longer being built
  using ASAN. TLS is being bootstrapped with a 128-byte TIB during the
  process startup phase, and then later on the runtime re-allocates it
  either statically or dynamically to support code using _Thread_local.
  fork() and execve() now do a better job cooperating with threads. We
  can now check how much stack memory is left in the process or thread
  when functions like kprintf() / execve() etc. call alloca(), so that
  ENOMEM can be raised, reduce a buffer size, or just print a warning.

- POSIX signal emulation is now implemented the same way kernels do it
  with pthread_kill() and raise(). Any thread can interrupt any other
  thread, regardless of what it's doing. If it's blocked on read/write
  then the killer thread will cancel its i/o operation so that EINTR can
  be returned in the mark thread immediately. If it's doing a tight CPU
  bound operation, then that's also interrupted by the signal delivery.
  Signal delivery works now by suspending a thread and pushing context
  data structures onto its stack, and redirecting its execution to a
  trampoline function, which calls SetThreadContext(GetCurrentThread())
  when it's done.

- We're now doing a better job managing locks and handles. On NetBSD we
  now close semaphore file descriptors in forked children. Semaphores on
  Windows can now be canceled immediately, which means mutexes/condition
  variables will now go faster. Apple Silicon semaphores can be canceled
  too. We're now using Apple's pthread_yield() funciton. Apple _nocancel
  syscalls are now used on XNU when appropriate to ensure pthread_cancel
  requests aren't lost. The MbedTLS library has been updated to support
  POSIX thread cancelations. See tool/build/runitd.c for an example of
  how it can be used for production multi-threaded tls servers. Handles
  on Windows now leak less often across processes. All i/o operations on
  Windows are now overlapped, which means file pointers can no longer be
  inherited across dup() and fork() for the time being.

- We now spawn a thread on Windows to deliver SIGCHLD and wakeup wait4()
  which means, for example, that posix_spawn() now goes 3x faster. POSIX
  spawn is also now more correct. Like Musl, it's now able to report the
  failure code of execve() via a pipe although our approach favors using
  shared memory to do that on systems that have a true vfork() function.

- We now spawn a thread to deliver SIGALRM to threads when setitimer()
  is used. This enables the most precise wakeups the OS makes possible.

- The Cosmopolitan runtime now uses less memory. On NetBSD for example,
  it turned out the kernel would actually commit the PT_GNU_STACK size
  which caused RSS to be 6mb for every process. Now it's down to ~4kb.
  On Apple Silicon, we reduce the mandatory upstream thread size to the
  smallest possible size to reduce the memory overhead of Cosmo threads.
  The examples directory has a program called greenbean which can spawn
  a web server on Linux with 10,000 worker threads and have the memory
  usage of the process be ~77mb. The 1024 byte overhead of POSIX-style
  thread-local storage is now optional; it won't be allocated until the
  pthread_setspecific/getspecific functions are called. On Windows, the
  threads that get spawned which are internal to the libc implementation
  use reserve rather than commit memory, which shaves a few hundred kb.

- sigaltstack() is now supported on Windows, however it's currently not
  able to be used to handle stack overflows, since crash signals are
  still generated by WIN32. However the crash handler will still switch
  to the alt stack, which is helpful in environments with tiny threads.

- Test binaries are now smaller. Many of the mandatory dependencies of
  the test runner have been removed. This ensures many programs can do a
  better job only linking the the thing they're testing. This caused the
  test binaries for LIBC_FMT for example, to decrease from 200kb to 50kb

- long double is no longer used in the implementation details of libc,
  except in the APIs that define it. The old code that used long double
  for time (instead of struct timespec) has now been thoroughly removed.

- ShowCrashReports() is now much tinier in MODE=tiny. Instead of doing
  backtraces itself, it'll just print a command you can run on the shell
  using our new `cosmoaddr2line` program to view the backtrace.

- Crash report signal handling now works in a much better way. Instead
  of terminating the process, it now relies on SA_RESETHAND so that the
  default SIG_IGN behavior can terminate the process if necessary.

- Our pledge() functionality has now been fully ported to AARCH64 Linux.
2023-09-18 21:04:47 -07:00
Justine Tunney
f531acc8f9
Make improvements
- Invent openatemp() API
- Invent O_UNLINK open flag
- Introduce getenv_secure() API
- Remove `git pull` from cosmocc
- Fix utimes() when path is NULL
- Fix mktemp() to never return NULL
- Fix utimensat() UTIME_OMIT on XNU
- Improve utimensat() code for RHEL5
- Turn `argv[0]` C:/ to /C/ on Windows
- Introduce tmpnam() and tmpnam_r() APIs
- Fix more const issues with internal APIs
- Permit utimes() on WIN32 in O_RDONLY mode
- Fix fdopendir() to check fd is a directory
- Fix recent crash regression in landlock make
- Fix futimens(AT_FDCWD, NULL) to return EBADF
- Use workaround so `make -j` doesn't fork bomb
- Rename dontdiscard to __wur (just like glibc)
- Fix st_size for WIN32 symlinks containing UTF-8
- Introduce stdio ext APIs needed by GNU coreutils
- Fix lstat() on WIN32 for symlinks to directories
- Move some constants from normalize.inc to limits.h
- Fix segv with memchr() and memcmp() overlapping page
- Implement POSIX fflush() behavior for reader streams
- Implement AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW for utimensat() on WIN32
- Don't change read-only status of existing files on WIN32
- Correctly handle `0x[^[:xdigit:]]` case in strtol() functions
2023-09-06 12:34:59 -07:00
Justine Tunney
0d748ad58e
Fix warnings
This change fixes Cosmopolitan so it has fewer opinions about compiler
warnings. The whole repository had to be cleaned up to be buildable in
-Werror -Wall mode. This lets us benefit from things like strict const
checking. Some actual bugs might have been caught too.
2023-09-01 20:50:18 -07:00
Justine Tunney
6ef2a471e4
Get GNU MPFR and MPC tests to pass
This change fixes more issues with our scanf() function.
2023-08-21 15:05:10 -07:00
Justine Tunney
7e0a09feec
Mint APE Loader v1.5
This change ports APE Loader to Linux AARCH64, so that Raspberry Pi
users can run programs like redbean, without the executable needing
to modify itself. Progress has also slipped into this change on the
issue of making progress better conforming to user expectations and
industry standards regarding which symbols we're allowed to declare
2023-07-26 13:54:49 -07:00
Justine Tunney
00acd81b2f
Delete more dead code 2023-07-06 09:12:28 -07:00
Justine Tunney
226375933a
Implement more toolchain fixes 2023-06-18 05:39:31 -07:00
Justine Tunney
d7c79f43ef
Clean up more code
- Found some bugs in LLVM compiler-rt library
- The useless LIBC_STUBS package is now deleted
- Improve the overflow checking story even further
- Get chibicc tests working in MODE=dbg mode again
- The libc/isystem/ headers now have correctly named guards
2023-06-18 01:00:05 -07:00
Justine Tunney
b881c0ec9e
Remove printf() linking hack 2023-06-17 10:13:50 -07:00
Justine Tunney
4778cd4d27
Fix bugs in termios library and cleanup code
This change fixes an issue with the tcflow() magic numbers that was
causing bash to freeze up on Linux. While auditing termios polyfills,
several other issues were identified with XNU/BSD compatibility.

Out of an abundance of caution this change undefines as much surface
area from libc/calls/struct/termios.h as possible, so that autoconf
scripts are less likely to detect non-POSIX teletypewriter APIs that
haven't been polyfilled by Cosmopolitan.

This is a *breaking change* for your static archives in /opt/cosmos if
you use the cosmocc toolchain. That's because this change disables the
ioctl() undiamonding trick for code outside the monorepo, specifically
because it'll lead to brittle ABI breakages like this. If you're using
the cosmocc toolchain, you'll need to rebuild libraries like ncurses,
readline, etc. Yes diamonds cause bloat. To work around that, consider
using tcgetwinsize() instead of ioctl(TIOCGWINSZ) since it'll help you
avoid pulling every single ioctl-related polyfill into the linkage.

The cosmocc script was specifying -DNDEBUG for some reason. It's fixed.
2023-06-14 19:30:52 -07:00
Justine Tunney
b8a6a989c0
Create ELF aliases for identical symbols
This change greatly reduces the number of modules that need to be
compiled. The only issue right now is that sometimes when viewing
symbol table entries, the aliased symbol is chosen.
2023-06-06 03:33:49 -07:00
Justine Tunney
550b52abf6
Port a lot more code to AARCH64
- Introduce epoll_pwait()
- Rewrite -ftrapv and ffs() libraries in C code
- Use more FreeBSD code in math function library
- Get significantly more tests passing on qemu-aarch64
- Fix many Musl long double functions that were broken on AARCH64
2023-05-14 09:37:26 -07:00
Justine Tunney
036b9a0002
Make further progress on non-x86 support 2023-05-10 04:20:47 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
9a5d69c842
Fix scanf x specifier with string of 0 (#793)
The C standard states that, in the context of an x conversion
specifier given to scanf:
> Matches an optionally signed hexadecimal integer, whose format is
> the same as expected for the subject sequence of the strtoul
> function with the value 16 for the base argument.
- C standard, 7.23.6.2.11. The fscanf function

Cosmopolitan fails to do this, as 0 should be parsed as a 0 by such an
invocation of strtoul. Instead, cosmopolitan errors out as though such
input is invalid, which is wrong.

This means that a program such as this:

 #include <stdio.h>
 #undef NDEBUG
 #include <assert.h>

int main()
{
    int v = 0;
    assert(sscanf("0", "%x", &v) == 1);
}

will not run correctly on cosmpolitan, instead failing the assertion.

This patch fixes this, along with the associated GitHub issue,
https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/issues/778
2023-04-15 06:25:35 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
12e07798df
Fix printf precision/field width being limited by internal buffer size (#799)
The C standard, when defining field width and precision, never gives
any limit on the values used for them (except, I believe, that they
fit within an int). In other words, if the user gives a field width of
32145 and a precision of 9218, the implementation has to handle these
values correctly. However, when such kinds of high numbers are used
with integer conversions, cosmopolitan is limited by an internal
buffer size of 144, which means precisions and field widths have to
fit within this, which violates the standard.

This means that for example, the following program:

 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <string.h>

int main()
{
    char buf2[512] = {};

    int i = snprintf(buf2, sizeof(buf2), "%.9999u", 10);
    printf("%d %zu\n", i, strlen(buf2));
}

would, instead of printing "9999 511" (the correct output), instead
print "144 144" under cosmopolitan.

This patch fixes this.
2023-04-04 14:16:34 -04:00
Gabriel Ravier
9c6d78c26d
Fix vfprintf and derived functions not handling write errors (#798)
The C standard states:
> The fprintf function returns the number of characters transmitted,
> or a negative value if an output or encoding error occurred or if
> the implementation does not support a specified width length
> modifier.
- C Standard, 7.23.6.1.15. The fprintf function

However, cosmopolitan fails to return a negative value in the case of
an output error, meaning that a program such as:

 #include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    FILE *fp = fopen("/dev/full", "w");

    setbuf(fp, NULL);
    printf("fprintf: %d\n", fprintf(fp, "test\n"));
    printf("fflush: %d\n", fflush(fp));
}

will, under cosmopolitan, print that no error occured in either of the
calls to fprintf and fflush.

This patch fixes this, along with the associated GitHub issue,
https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/issues/784
2023-03-31 09:57:29 -04:00
Gabriel Ravier
36f52ea687
Fix PFLINK mechanism for uppercase float conversion specifiers (#796)
_PFLINK is supposed to automatically pull in required functions for
specific conversion specifiers. However, it fails to do so for the F,
G and E conversion specifiers.

This means that, for example, the following program:

 #include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    printf("%F %G %E\n", .0, .0, .0);
}

fails to run correctly, printing "? ? ?" instead of
"0.000000 0 0.000000E+00".

This patch fixes this.
2023-03-29 22:18:59 -04:00
Justine Tunney
999481ace0
Fix memcpy(size=0) ubsan warning in vsnprintf()
Fixes #785
2023-03-29 01:28:10 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
7f925e6be9
Fix issues 774, 782 and 789 (printf precision bugs) (#790)
The C standard states that, within the context of a printf-family
function, when specifying the precision of a conversion specification:

> A negative precision argument is taken as if the precision were
> omitted.
- Quoth the C Standard, 7.23.6.1. The fprintf function

Cosmopolitan instead treated negative precision arguments as
though they had a value of 0, which was non-conforming. This
change fixes that. Another issue we found relates to:

> For o conversion, it increases the precision, if and only if
> necessary, to force the first digit of the result to be a zero (if
> the value and precision are both 0, a single 0 is printed).
- Quoth the C standard, 7.23.6.1.6. The fprintf function

When printing numbers in their alternative form, with a precision and
with a conversion specifier of o (octal), Cosmopolitan wasn't following
the standard in two ways:

1. When printing a value with a precision that results in 0-padding,
   cosmopolitan would still add an extra 0 even though this should be
   done "if and only if necessary"
2. When printing a value of 0 with a precision of 0, nothing is
   printed, even though the standard specifically states that a single
   0 is printed in this case

This change fixes those issues too. Furthermore, regression tests have
been introduced to ensure Cosmopolitan continues to be conformant
going forward.

Fixes #774 
Fixes #782 
Fixes #789
2023-03-29 01:11:48 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
2f4335e081
Fix inttypes.h FAST16 macros to have a correct definition (#791)
Cosmopolitan now conforms to the C Standard 7.8.1 specification
of the PRI and SCN macros, because this change fixes a bug where
the FAST16 ones were incorrectly using the %hd specifier.
2023-03-29 00:19:40 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
0adefbf152
Fix the X conversion specifier's alternative form (#788)
The standard states that, when the # flag is used:
> The result is converted to an "alternative form". [...] For x (or X)
conversion, a nonzero result has 0x (or 0X) prefixed to it.
- C standard, 7.23.6.1. The fprintf function

cosmopolitan fails to use the correct alternative form (0X) when the X
conversion specifier is used, instead using 0x, which is not
capitalized.

This patch fixes this, along with the several tests that test for the
wrong behavior.
2023-03-29 00:10:53 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier
792b1c84c0
Fix padding+minus flag on numbers for printf-family functions (#787)
The C standard states, for conversions using the d, i, b, B, o, u, x or X conversion specifiers:
> The precision specifies the minimum number of digits to appear; if
> the value being converted can be represented in fewer digits, it is
> expanded with leading zeros.
- C standard, 7.23.6.1. The fprintf function

However, cosmopolitan currently suppresses the addition of leading
zeros when the minus flag is set. This is not reflected by anything
within the C standard, meaning that behavior is incorrect.

This patch fixes this.
2023-03-25 14:39:25 -04:00
Gabriel Ravier
2d6ea2fbc9
Fix issue #771 by implementing S conversion specifier for printf-related functions (#786)
* Implement S conversion specifier for printf-related functions

POSIX specifies that a conversion specifier of S must be interpreted
the same way as %ls. This patch implements this.

* clang-format

---------

Co-authored-by: Gavin Hayes <gavin@computoid.com>
2023-03-25 14:38:21 -04:00
Justine Tunney
b41f91c658
Greatly expand system() shell code features
The cosmopolitan command interpreter now has 13 builtin commands,
variable support, support for ; / && / || syntax, asynchronous support,
and plenty of unit tests with bug fixes.

This change fixes a bug in posix_spawn() with null envp arg. strace
logging now uses atomic writes for scatter functions. Breaking change
renaming GetCpuCount() to _getcpucount(). TurfWar is now updated to use
the new token bucket algorithm. WIN32 affinity masks now inherit across
fork() and execve().
2022-10-11 21:30:31 -07:00
Justine Tunney
e557058ac8
Improve cosmo's conformance to libc-test
This change addresses various open source compatibility issues, so that
we pass 313/411 of the tests in https://github.com/jart/libc-test where
earlier today we were passing about 30/411 of them, due to header toil.
Please note that Glibc only passes 341/411 so 313 today is pretty good!

- Make the conformance of libc/isystem/ headers nearly perfect
- Import more of the remaining math library routines from Musl
- Fix inconsistencies with type signatures of calls like umask
- Write tests for getpriority/setpriority which work great now
- conform to `struct sockaddr *` on remaining socket functions
- Import a bunch of uninteresting stdlib functions e.g. rand48
- Introduce readdir_r, scandir, pthread_kill, sigsetjmp, etc..

Follow the instructions in our `tool/scripts/cosmocc` toolchain to run
these tests yourself. You use `make CC=cosmocc` on the test repository
2022-10-10 17:52:41 -07:00
Hugues Morisset
f155205eb0
Add imaxdiv, wcscoll, getdtablesize (#639) 2022-10-05 07:14:58 -07:00
Justine Tunney
6f7d0cb1c3
Pay off more technical debt
This makes breaking changes to add underscores to many non-standard
function names provided by the c library. MODE=tiny is now tinier and
we now use smaller locks that are better for tiny apps in this mode.
Some headers have been renamed to be in the same folder as the build
package, so it'll be easier to know which build dependency is needed.
Certain old misguided interfaces have been removed. Intel intrinsics
headers are now listed in libc/isystem (but not in the amalgamation)
to help further improve open source compatibility. Header complexity
has also been reduced. Lastly, more shell scripts are now available.
2022-09-12 23:36:56 -07:00
Justine Tunney
3265324e00
Don't relocate file descriptor memory
This change fixes #496 where ASAN spotted a race condition that could
happen in multithreaded programs, with more than OPEN_MAX descriptors
when using ZipOS or Windows NT, which require tracking open file info
and this change fixes that table so it never relocates, thus allowing
us to continue to enjoy the benefits of avoiding locks while reading.
2022-09-09 16:54:28 -07:00
Justine Tunney
d721ff8938
Remove testonly keyword 2022-09-05 08:41:43 -07:00
Justine Tunney
35203c0551 Do some string library work 2022-08-20 22:17:14 -07:00
Gavin Hayes
897e33ccc4
Fix stdio fmt of "%.0e" and "%.0g" (#544)
* Fix %.0e by always rounding even if precision is 0
* Fix %.0g by treating it the same as %.1g
* Fix %g tests to match glibc, add more tests
2022-08-18 15:53:07 -07:00
Justine Tunney
f0701d2a24 Make improvements
- Polyfill pselect() on Windows
- Add -O NOFILE flag to pledge.com
- Polyfill ppoll() on NetBSD, XNU, and Windows
- Support negative numbers and errno in sizetol()
- Add .RSS, .NOFILE, and .MAXCORE to Landlock Make
- Fix issue with .PLEDGE preventing touching of output files
- Add __watch() function (like ftrace) for logging memory changes
2022-08-15 15:20:36 -07:00
Justine Tunney
367d06d9e4 Fold LIBC_UNICODE into LIBC_STR 2022-08-13 08:42:32 -07:00
Justine Tunney
17aea99bb3 Fold LIBC_ALG into LIBC_MEM 2022-08-13 08:32:34 -07:00
Justine Tunney
8a0a2c0c36 Fold LIBC_RAND into LIBC_STDIO/TINYMATH/INTRIN 2022-08-11 12:32:00 -07:00
Justine Tunney
05b8f82371 Fold LIBC_BITS into LIBC_INTRIN 2022-08-11 12:13:18 -07:00
Justine Tunney
10fd8bdb70 Unbloat the build
This change resurrects ae5d06dc53
2022-08-11 00:15:29 -07:00
Justine Tunney
7b993d561c Use private keyword on makefile target variables 2022-08-10 18:36:11 -07:00
Justine Tunney
c1d99676c4 Revert "Unbloat build config"
This reverts commit ae5d06dc53.
2022-08-10 12:44:56 -07:00
Justine Tunney
ae5d06dc53 Unbloat build config
- 10.5% reduction of o//depend dependency graph
- 8.8% reduction in latency of make command
- Fix issue with temporary file cleanup

There's a new -w option in compile.com that turns off the recent
Landlock output path workaround for "good commands" which do not
unlink() the output file like GNU tooling does.

Our new GNU Make unveil sandboxing appears to have zero overhead
in the grand scheme of things. Full builds are pretty fast since
the only thing that's actually slowed us down is probably libcxx

    make -j16 MODE=rel
    RL: took 85,732,063µs wall time
    RL: ballooned to 323,612kb in size
    RL: needed 828,560,521µs cpu (11% kernel)
    RL: caused 39,080,670 page faults (99% memcpy)
    RL: 350,073 context switches (72% consensual)
    RL: performed 0 reads and 11,494,960 write i/o operations

pledge() and unveil() no longer consider ENOSYS to be an error.
These functions have also been added to Python's cosmo module.

This change also removes some WIN32 APIs and System Five magnums
which we're not using and it's doubtful anyone else would be too
2022-08-10 04:43:09 -07:00
Justine Tunney
1837dc2e85 Make improvements
- Introduce path module to redbean
- Fix glitch with linenoise printing extra line on eof
- Introduce closefrom() and close_range() system calls
- Make file descriptor closing more secure in pledge.com
2022-07-21 03:36:42 -07:00
Justine Tunney
98254a7c1f Make pledge() and unveil() work amazingly
This change reconciles our pledge() implementation with the OpenBSD
kernel source code. We now a polyfill that's much closer to OpenBSD's
behavior. For example, it was discovered that "stdio" permits threads.
There were a bunch of Linux system calls that needed to be added, like
sched_yield(). The exec / execnative category division is now dropped.
We're instead using OpenBSD's "prot_exec" promise for launching APE
binaries and dynamic shared objects. We also now filter clone() flags.

The pledge.com command has been greatly improved. It now does unveiling
by default when Landlock is available. It's now smart enough to unveil a
superset of paths that OpenBSD automatically unveils with pledge(), such
as /etc/localtime. pledge.com also now checks if the executable being
launched is a dynamic shared object, in which case it unveils libraries.

These changes now make it possible to pledge curl on ubuntu 20.04 glibc:

    pledge.com -p 'stdio rpath prot_exec inet dns tty sendfd recvfd' \
        curl -s https://justine.lol/hello.txt

Here's what pledging curl on Alpine 3.16 with Musl Libc looks like:

    pledge.com -p 'stdio rpath prot_exec dns inet' \
        curl -s https://justine.lol/hello.txt

Here's what pledging curl.com w/ ape loader looks like:

    pledge.com -p 'stdio rpath prot_exec dns inet' \
        o//examples/curl.com https://justine.lol/hello.txt

The most secure sandbox, is curl.com converted to static ELF:

    o//tool/build/assimilate.com o//examples/curl.com
    pledge.com -p 'stdio rpath dns inet' \
        o//examples/curl.com https://justine.lol/hello.txt

A weird corner case needed to be handled when resolving symbolic links
during the unveiling process, that's arguably a Landlock bug. It's not
surprising since Musl and Glibc are also inconsistent here too.
2022-07-19 21:33:49 -07:00
Justine Tunney
6c724c0f1a Update experiment with tty audio 2022-07-15 23:07:32 -07:00
Gautham
a6f65eea7c
Scan fixed-width integers in vcscanf (#424)
When a format string like %2x is provided, the width parameter was read
correctly as 2, but it was not used when decoding the number from the
input string (ie instead of reading 2 characters from the input string,
vcscanf read all the characters).

This change uses the value of width within the number decoding loop to
read fixed number of digits correctly. if width is zero (not provided),
the default of width is set as bits.

Fixes #423
2022-06-26 21:27:07 -07:00
Justine Tunney
d0d9cd38c5 Write tests and fixes for utimensat() 2022-06-17 02:43:00 -07:00
Justine Tunney
1c387727fe Add long double printf formatting support
You can now easily print numbers that have 80 bits of precision. This
change also imports many of the test vectors from the gdtoa codebase.
2022-06-14 02:18:03 -07:00
Justine Tunney
a3865ecc3c Make more fixes and improvements
- Fix Makefile flaking due to ZIPOBJ_FLAGS generation
- Make printf() floating point and gdtoa thread safe
- Polish up the runit / runitd programs some more
- Prune some more makefile dependencies
2022-06-13 11:02:13 -07:00
Justine Tunney
3c285337a2 Fix %c with nul character
Fixes #417
2022-06-12 22:28:19 -07:00