The cosmo_dlsym() function now returns the raw function address. You
need to call cosmo_dltramp() on the result, to make it safe to call.
This change is important, because cosmo_dltramp() magic can't always
work; for some tricky functions, you need to translate ABIs by hand.
Now we do them for assimilated binaries (except on OpenBSD or XNU
non-Silicon), for XnuSilicon, and for binaries with the preserve-
argv[0] auxv flag set. We check whether to pass the argv[0] value
at the test site rather than the Child site. We move a lot of the
test initialization into Child in the non-child case, in order to
get at the pre-init value of `__program_executable_name`. Finally,
we print out info about what we are skipping.
If cosmo_dlopen() is linked on AMD64 then the runtime will switch to
using %gs for thread-local storage. This eliminates the need for the
imported symbol trampoline. It's now safer to pass function pointers
back and forth with imported libraries. Your program gets recompiled
at runtime to make it happen and the overhead is a few milliseconds.
The toolchain will now be downloaded going forward from multiple pinned
URLs which have shasums. Either wget or curl must be installed.
This change unblocks #1053
Our dynamic linking implementation is now able to support functions with
dozens of parameters. In addition to having extra integral arguments you
can now pass vector registers using intrinsic types. Lastly, you can now
return multiple values, which is useful for functions returning structs.
* Reorder Launch arguments, pass aarch64 os
Third and fourth arguments are now identical between cosmo and Launch.
By passing sp as argument 4, we save a bit of register juggling.
Fourth argument (os) is now always passed by the loader on aarch64. It
is not yet processed by cosmo. Pushing this change separately, as the
cosmo side turns out to be somewhat more involved.
* cosmo2 receives os from loader
FreeBSD aarch64 now traps early rather than pretending to be Linux.
o/aarch64/examples/env.com still works on Linux and Xnu.
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
Missed this when changing the code back to be like the old version.
com is now a parameter.
The only plausible way to trigger this would be to pass a loader
pathname close to MAX_PATH characters long, and then remove that
path prior to the first sys_faccessat.
This implements proposals 1 and 2a from this gist:
https://gist.github.com/mrdomino/2222cab61715fd527e82e036ba4156b1
The only reason to use realpath from the loader was to try to prevent a
TOCTOU between the loader and the binary. But this is only a real issue
in set-id contexts, and in those cases there is already a canonical way
to do it: `/dev/fd`, passed by the kernel to the loader, so all we have
to do is pass that along to the binary.
Aside from realpath, there is no reason to absolutize the path we supply
to the binary, since it can call `getcwd` as well as we can, and on non-
M1 the binary is in a much better position to make that call.
Since we no longer absolutize the path, the binary does need to do this,
so we make its argv-parsing code generic and apply that to the different
possible places the path could come from. This means that `_` is finally
usable as a relative path, as a nice side benefit.
The M1 realpath code had a significant bug - it uses the wrong offset to
truncate the `.ape` in the `$prog.ape` case.
This PR also fixes a regression in `ape $progname` out of `$PATH` on the
two BSDs (Free and Net) that did not implement `RealPath`.
Fixes a regression in GetProgramExecutableName on Linux against old
loaders. In the loader case, /proc/self/exe gives the loader's path.
We tried to detect this by checking for `/usr/bin/ape`. But that is
only one of the possible places the loader could be.
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.