Now that our socket system call polyfills are good enough to support
Musl's DNS library we should be using that rather than the barebones
domain name system implementation we rolled on our own. There's many
benefits to making this change. So many, that I myself wouldn't feel
qualified to enumerate them all. The Musl DNS code had to be changed
in order to support Windows of course, which looks very solid so far
Somehow or another, I previously had missed `BUILD.mk` files.
In the process I found a few straggler cases where the modeline was
different from the file, including one very involved manual fix where a
file had been treated like it was ts=2 and ts=8 on separate occasions.
The commit history in the PR shows the gory details; the BUILD.mk was
automated, everything else was mostly manual.
The ape loader now passes the program executable name directly as a
register. `x2` is used on aarch64, `%rdx` on x86_64. This is passed
as the third argument to `cosmo()` (M1) or `Launch` (non-M1) and is
assigned to the global `__program_executable_name`.
`GetProgramExecutableName` now returns this global's value, setting
it if it is initially null. `InitProgramExecutableName` first tries
exotic, secure methods: `KERN_PROC_PATHNAME` on FreeBSD/NetBSD, and
`/proc` on Linux. If those produce a reasonable response (i.e., not
`"/usr/bin/ape"`, which happens with the loader before this change),
that is used. Otherwise, if `issetugid()`, the empty string is used.
Otherwise, the old argv/envp parsing code is run.
The value returned from the loader is always the full absolute path
of the binary to be executed, having passed through `realpath`. For
the non-M1 loader, this necessitated writing `RealPath`, which uses
`readlinkat` of `"/proc/self/fd/[progfd]"` on Linux, `F_GETPATH` on
Xnu, and the `__realpath` syscall on OpenBSD. On FreeBSD/NetBSD, it
punts to `GetProgramExecutableName`, which is secure on those OSes.
With the loader, all platforms now have a secure program executable
name. With no loader or an old loader, everything still works as it
did, but setuid/setgid is not supported if the insecure pathfinding
code would have been needed.
Fixes#991.
At least in neovim, `│vi:` is not recognized as a modeline because it
has no preceding whitespace. After fixing this, opening a file yields
an error because `net` is not an option. (`noet`, however, is.)
* Introduce env.com
Handy tool for debugging environment issues.
* Inject path as COSMOPOLITAN_PROGRAM_EXECUTABLE
`argv[0]` was previously being used as a communication channel between
the loader and the binary, giving the binary its full path for use e.g.
in `GetProgramExecutableName`. But `argv[0]` is not a good channel for
this; much of what made 2a3813c6 so gross is due to that.
This change fixes the issue by preserving `argv[0]` and establishing a
new communication channel: `COSMOPOLITAN_PROGRAM_EXECUTABLE`.
The M1 loader will always set this as the first variable. Linux should
soon follow. On the other side, `GetProgramExecutableName` checks that
variable first. If it sees it, it trusts it as-is.
A lot of the churn in `ape/ape-m1.c` in this change is actually backing
out hacks introduced in 2a3813c6; the best comparison is:
git diff 2a3813c6^..
* Implement __zipos_dup
Makes ZiposHandle reference-counted by an `rc` field in a union with its
freelist `next` pointer. The functions `__zipos_free` and `__zipos_keep`
function as incref/decref for it. Adds `__zipos_postdup` to fix metadata
on file descriptors after dup-like operations, and adds zipos support to
`sys_dup_nt` + `sys_close_nt`.
* Remove noop __zipos_postdup
rc is never a zipos file because it is always a previously unused file
descriptor. fd is never a zipos file because that case has been handled
above by __zipos_fcntl.
On UNIX if dup2(newfd) was a ZipOS file descriptor, then its resources
weren't being released, and the newly created file descriptor would be
mistaken for ZipOS due to its memory not being cleared. On Windows, an
issue also existed relating to newfd resources not being released.
Munging of paths passed inside the system() interpreter command is no
longer supported. You have to pass your paths to posix_spawn() or the
execve() family of functions if you want them to be munged. The first
three characters must match `^/[a-z]/` in which case, it'll be turned
into a DOS-style drive path with backslashes.
- Use good ELF technique in cosmo_dlopen()
- Make strerror() conform more to other libc impls
- Introduce __clear_cache() and use it in cosmo_dlopen()
- Remove libc/fmt/fmt.h header (trying to kill off LIBC_FMT)
The test was failing if the process's umask happened to be
0077, for example. The file `foo` was then created with a
file mode of 0100600, rather than the expected 0100644.
We now have an `#include <cxxabi.h>` header which defines all the APIs
Cosmopolitan's implemented so far. The `cosmocc` README.md file is now
greatly expanded with documentation.
Our makefile generator now accepts badly formatted include lines. It's
now more hermetic with better error checking in the cosmo repo, and it
can be configured to not be hermetic at all.
wait4() is now solid enough to run `make -j100` on Windows. You can now
use MSG_DONTWAIT on Windows. There was a handle leak in accept() that's
been fixed. Our WIN32 overlapped i/o code has been simplified. Priority
class now inherits into subprocesses, so the verynice command will work
and the signal mask will now be inherited by execve() and posix_spawn()
This change addresses a bug that was reported in #923 where bash on
Windows behaved strangely. It turned out that our weak linking of
malloc() caused bash's configure script to favor its own getcwd()
function, which is implemented in the most astonishing way, using
opendir() and readdir() to recursively construct the current path.
This change moves getcwd() into LIBC_STDIO so it can strongly link
malloc(). A new __getcwd() function is now introduced, so all the
low-level runtime services can still use the actual system call. It
provides the Linux Kernel API convention across platforms, and is
overall a higher-quality implementation than what we had before.
In the future, we should probably take a closer look into why bash's
getcwd() polyfill wasn't working as intended on Windows, since there
might be a potential opportunity there to improve our readdir() too.
This change gets the pledge (formerly pledge.com) command back in tip
top shape for a 3.0.1 cosmos release. It now runs on all platforms, even
though it's mostly a no-op on ones that lack the kernel security stuff.
The binary footprint is now smaller, since it no longer needs to link
malloc. It's also now able to be built as a fat binary.