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2022-05-29DnsLookup: stdint, timeforced reseedinghanishkvc
Explicitly include stdint header as logic uses INT[64]_MAX, just in case for future, even though the chain of headers from existing includes brings in the definition indirectly as of now. Cross check for time gap between prngplus reseeding, periodically, has the internal state is being consumed, so that if there is too much time gap, then prng reseeding can be forced, before the normal reseed window is reached. This is useful for long running programs which trigger dns queries only intermittently. If clock_gettime is not available, then reseed more frequently, by default. A platform developer may change the reseed frequence, to be bit more less often in this case, if needed, by tweaking the defines in the source. Signed-off-by: hanishkvc <hanishkvc@gmail.com>
2022-05-23libc/misc/getloadavg: Add getloadavg support to uClibc-nglancethepants
This borrows getloadavg.c from musl. getloadavg pops up often. Recently llvm and rust are dependent on it. glibc and musl have it and no-one actually checks if it's available in your libc. It's just become way easier to add it in uclibc-ng rather than patch everything else. Signed-off-by: Lance Fredrickson <lancethepants@gmail.com>
2022-05-20define RLIMIT_RTTIME, bump RLIMIT_NLIMITSRomain Naour
This macro exists since Linux 2.6.25 [1] and is defined in glibc since 2.14 [2] for sparc and most supported architectures. RLIMIT_RTTIME has been added later for mips [3] and alpha [4]. For example, RLIMIT_RTTIME is needed to build qemu 7.0.0 with Linux user-land emulation support [5]. [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git/commit/?id=78f2c7db6068fd6ef75b8c120f04a388848eacb5 [2] https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commitdiff;h=67f86a251e0d36107fe28999281d46e76941c7b9 [3] https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commitdiff;h=8969f4df1a526aa60dd0bc1c4736cf02104d4a05 [4] https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commitdiff;h=53c2cb7641bd866398156625ef672bbd2d78a0d8 [5] https://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=commitdiff;h=244fd08323088db73590ff2317dfe86f810b51d7 Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
2022-05-12DnsLookup: Configurable dnsQueryId generation including randomhanishkvc
Dns lookup logic has been updated to provide a configurable compile time selection of dns query id generation logics, including random, where possible, instead of the previous simple counter mode. This should make dns poison attempts more difficult. The uclibc developers wish to thank the white hat teams which alerted the community about the possible weakness in the dns path, given the increased resources with adversaries today. Given that embedded systems may or may not have sources for trying to generate random numbers, and also to try and keep the load on the system low, by default it uses the standard random prng based logic to indirectly generate the ids. However if either urandom or else if realtime clock is available on the target, then the same is used to reseed the prng periodically in a slightly non deterministic manner. Also additional transform (one way where possible) is used to avoid directly exposing the internal random sequence. The dns lookup logic maintains its own state wrt the random prng functions, so that other users of the library's random prng are not affected wrt their operations with the prng. Note to Platform developers: If you want to change from the default prngplus based logic, to one of the other logics provided, then during compile/config time you can switch to one of these additional choices wrt dns query id generation, by using make config and companions. If your platform doesnt support urandom nor a realtime clock backed by a source with sufficient resolution, and or for some reason if you want to revert to previous simple counter, rather than the transformed random prng plus logic, you can force the same at compile time by selecting SimpleCounter mode. If you want to increase the randomness of the generated ids, and dont mind the increased system load and latency then you could select the Urandom mode during config. Do note that it will be dipping into the entropy pool maintained by ur system. If your target has a system realtime clock available and exposed to user space, and inturn if you want to keep the underlying logic simple, you could try using the clock option from the config. However do note that the clock should have nanosecond resolution to help generate ids which are plausibly random. Also improvements to processor and or io performance can affect this. Wrt the URandom and Clock modes, if there is a failure with generation of the next random value, the logic tries to fallback to simple counter mode. If you want to change the underlying logic to make it more random and or more simple, look at dnsrand_setup and dnsrand_next. Signed-off-by: hanishkvc <hanishkvc@gmail.com>
2022-04-13Fix bug in ARM memset implementationTom Bannink
The ARM implementation of memset has a bug when the fill-value is negative or outside the [0, 255] range. To reproduce: char array[256]; memset(array, -5, 256); This is supposed to fill the array with int8 values -5, -5, -5, ... . On ARM, this does not work because the implementation assumes the high bytes of the fill-value argument are already zero. However in this test case they are filled with 1-bits. The aarch64 and x86_64 implementations do not have this problem: they first convert the fill-value to an unsigned byte following the specification of memset. With GCC one can use `memset(ptr, (-5 & 0xFF), size)` as a workaround, but for clang users that does not work: clang optimizes the `& 0xFF` away because it assumes that memset will do it. Signed-off-by: Tom Bannink <tombannink@gmail.com> Acked-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
2022-02-27guard prlimit, reported by Lance FredricksonWaldemar Brodkorb
2022-01-28sched.h: Add SCHED_DEADLINEPetr Vorel
Defined in kernel v3.14, commit aab03e05e8f7 ("sched/deadline: Add SCHED_DEADLINE structures & implementation") Signed-off-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
2022-01-21fix compile for Linuxthreads enabledWaldemar Brodkorb
Signed-off-by: Peter Seiderer <ps.report@gmx.net>
2022-01-21add prlimit syscall wrapper, now for realWaldemar Brodkorb
2022-01-21add prlimit syscall wrapperWaldemar Brodkorb
2022-01-21nds32: sync with binutils 2.37, gcc 11.2 and linux 5.10.93 changesWaldemar Brodkorb
2022-01-10arc: fix signal handler restorerSergey Matyukevich
When MD_FALLBACK_FRAME_STATE_FOR handler in libgcc unwind code checks the second instruction opcode in __default_rt_sa_restorer function, it expects to see the following values for ARC cores: - 0x7ee0781e for ARCv2 LE - 0x003f226f for ARC700 LE ARC700 value correspond to trap0 instruction. ARCv2 value corresponds to the following code: traps_0 j_s [blink] However, unlike glibc, uClibc implementation of __default_rt_sa_restorer for ARC does not have that jump. Hence libgcc unwind code is not able to recognize signal frame correctly on ARCv2 and completes too early. This change fixes libgcc unwinding over signal frame on ARCv2 adding missing jump to __default_rt_sa_restorer. Signed-off-by: Sergey Matyukevich <sergey.matyukevich@synopsys.com>
2021-12-24Fix some warnings due to type issuesYann Sionneau
Fixes those two warnings: In file included from <command-line>: libc/sysdeps/linux/common/openat64.c:18:33: warning: 'openat64' alias between functions of incompatible types 'int(int, const char *, int, ...)' and 'int(int, const char *, int, mode_t)' {aka 'int(int, const char *, int, unsigned int)'} [-Wattribute-alias=] 18 | strong_alias_untyped(__openat64,openat64) | ^~~~~~~~ ./include/libc-symbols.h:177:31: note: in definition of macro '_strong_alias_untyped' 177 | extern __typeof (aliasname) aliasname __attribute__ ((alias (#name))) __attribute_copy__ (name); | ^~~~~~~~~ libc/sysdeps/linux/common/openat64.c:18:1: note: in expansion of macro 'strong_alias_untyped' 18 | strong_alias_untyped(__openat64,openat64) | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ libc/sysdeps/linux/common/openat64.c:14:12: note: aliased declaration here 14 | static int __openat64(int fd, const char *file, int oflag, mode_t mode) | ^~~~~~~~~~ and CC libc/sysdeps/linux/common/stat.os libc/sysdeps/linux/common/stat.c: In function 'stat': libc/sysdeps/linux/common/stat.c:28:40: warning: passing argument 3 of 'fstatat64' from incompatible pointer type [-Wincompatible-pointer-types] 28 | return fstatat64(AT_FDCWD, file_name, buf, 0); | ^~~ | | | struct stat * In file included from libc/sysdeps/linux/common/stat.c:11: ./include/sys/stat.h:258:35: note: expected 'struct stat64 * restrict' but argument is of type 'struct stat *' 258 | struct stat64 *__restrict __buf, int __flag) | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~ Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2021-12-24Fix -Wundef related warningsYann Sionneau
Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2021-12-24kvx: fix warning about __BITS_PER_LONG not being definedYann Sionneau
Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2021-11-26libc/inet/resolv: fix per thread res_state accessPeter Seiderer
- use the provided __res_state() method instead of direct access to struct __res_state pointer &_res/*__resp - change the __UCLIBC_HAS_TLS__ protected __res_state() implementation to the one where the comment 'When threaded, _res may be a per-thread variable.' indicates this should be used with threads/TLS enabled Fixes the following segfaults with buildroot raspberrypi3_64_defconfig (uclibc, -Os, Note: runs fine using the raspberrypi3_defconfig): $ /usr/sbin/ntpd -n -d 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: INIT: ntpd ntpsec-1.2.0 2021-11-03T20:39:50Z: Starting 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: INIT: Command line: /usr/sbin/ntpd -n -d 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: INIT: precision = 7.240 usec (-17) 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: INIT: successfully locked into RAM 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: CONFIG: readconfig: parsing file: /etc/ntp.conf 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: CONFIG: restrict nopeer ignored 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: INIT: Using SO_TIMESTAMPNS 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen and drop on 0 v6wildcard [::]:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen and drop on 1 v4wildcard 0.0.0.0:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen normally on 2 lo 127.0.0.1:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen normally on 3 eth0 172.16.0.30:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen normally on 4 lo [::1]:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listen normally on 5 eth0 [fe80::ba27:ebff:fea6:340%2]:123 1970-01-01T00:01:49 ntpd[249]: IO: Listening on routing socket on fd #22 for interface updates 1970-01-01T00:01:50 ntpd[249]: SYNC: Found 10 servers, suggest minsane at least 3 1970-01-01T00:01:50 ntpd[249]: INIT: MRU 10922 entries, 13 hash bits, 65536 bytes 1970-01-01T00:01:50 ntpd[249]: statistics directory /var/NTP/ does not exist or is unwriteable, error No such file or directory 1970-01-01T00:01:51 ntpd[249]: DNS: dns_probe: 0.pool.ntp.org, cast_flags:8, flags:101 Segmentation fault (core dumped) $ ./host/bin/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc-gdb ./build/ntpsec-1_2_0/build/main/ntpd/ntpd core Core was generated by `/usr/sbin/ntpd -n -d'. Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. (gdb) where #0 0x0000007f8ff1f150 in res_sync_func () at libc/inet/resolv.c:3356 #1 0x0000007f8ff1c468 in __open_nameservers () at libc/inet/resolv.c:949 #2 0x0000007f8ff1b498 in __dns_lookup (name=0x55943c67f0 "0.pool.ntp.org", type=1, outpacket=0x7f8fe91c48, a=0x7f8fe91c08) at libc/inet/resolv.c:1134 #3 0x0000007f8ff1d744 in __GI_gethostbyname_r ( name=0x55943c67f0 "0.pool.ntp.org", result_buf=0x7f8fe92628, buf=0x7f8fe91d90 "", buflen=992, result=0x7f8fe92670, h_errnop=0x7f8fe92668) at libc/inet/resolv.c:1966 #4 0x0000007f8ff1d9a0 in __GI_gethostbyname2_r ( name=0x55943c67f0 "0.pool.ntp.org", family=2, result_buf=0x7f8fe92628, buf=0x7f8fe91d70 "0.pool.ntp.org", buflen=1024, result=0x7f8fe92670, h_errnop=0x7f8fe92668) at libc/inet/resolv.c:2065 #5 0x0000007f8ff16924 in gaih_inet (name=0x55943c67f0 "0.pool.ntp.org", service=0x7f8fe92828, req=0x7f8fe92890, pai=0x7f8fe92838) at libc/inet/getaddrinfo.c:596 #6 0x0000007f8ff17624 in __GI_getaddrinfo ( name=0x55943c67f0 "0.pool.ntp.org", service=0x5582eb8acd "\377H\213D$\bL\211\367H\213\260\270", hints=0x7f8fe92890, pai=0x5582ee1bf8) at libc/inet/getaddrinfo.c:957 #7 0x0000005582ea60f4 in _start () (gdb) p _res $1 = {options = 0, nsaddr_list = {{sin_family = 0, sin_port = 0, sin_addr = { s_addr = 0}, sin_zero = "\000\000\000\000\000\000\000"}, { sin_family = 0, sin_port = 0, sin_addr = {s_addr = 0}, sin_zero = "\000\000\000\000\000\000\000"}, {sin_family = 0, sin_port = 0, sin_addr = {s_addr = 0}, sin_zero = "\000\000\000\000\000\000\000"}}, dnsrch = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, nscount = 0 '\000', ndots = 0 '\000', retrans = 0 '\000', retry = 0 '\000', defdname = '\000' <repeats 255 times>, nsort = 0 '\000', pfcode = 0, id = 0, res_h_errno = 0, sort_list = {{addr = { s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = {s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = { s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = {s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = { s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = {s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = { s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = {s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = { s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}, {addr = {s_addr = 0}, mask = 0}}, _u = { _ext = {nsaddrs = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, nscount = 0 '\000', nstimes = {0, 0, 0}, nssocks = {0, 0, 0}, nscount6 = 0, nsinit = 0}}} (gdb) p &_res $2 = (struct __res_state *) 0x7f8ff8fd98 <_res> (gdb) p rp $3 = (struct __res_state *) 0x7fffffffff And the following uclibc code at libc/inet/resolv.c:3356: 3345 static void res_sync_func(void) 3346 { 3347 struct __res_state *rp = &(_res); 3348 int n; 3349 3350 /* If we didn't get malloc failure earlier... */ 3351 if (__nameserver != (void*) &__local_nameserver) { 3352 /* TODO: 3353 * if (__nameservers < rp->nscount) - try to grow __nameserver[]? 3354 */ 3355 #ifdef __UCLIBC_HAS_IPV6__ 3356 if (__nameservers > rp->_u._ext.nscount) 3357 __nameservers = rp->_u._ext.nscount; 3358 n = __nameservers; The special thing about ntpsec is the DNS lookup in an extra thread and/or the call to res_init(), see ntpsec-1_2_0/ntpd/ntp_dns.c: 69 msyslog(LOG_INFO, "DNS: dns_probe: %s, cast_flags:%x, flags:%x%s", 70 hostname, pp->cast_flags, pp->cfg.flags, busy); 71 if (NULL != active) /* normally redundant */ 72 return false; 73 74 active = pp; 75 76 sigfillset(&block_mask); 77 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, &block_mask, &saved_sig_mask); 78 rc = pthread_create(&worker, NULL, dns_lookup, pp); and 165 static void* dns_lookup(void* arg) 166 { 167 struct peer *pp = (struct peer *) arg; 168 struct addrinfo hints; 169 170 #ifdef HAVE_SECCOMP_H 171 setup_SIGSYS_trap(); /* enable trap for this thread */ 172 #endif 173 174 #ifdef HAVE_RES_INIT 175 /* Reload DNS servers from /etc/resolv.conf in case DHCP has updated it. 176 * We only need to do this occasionally, but it's not expensive 177 * and simpler to do it every time than it is to figure out when 178 * to do it. 179 * This res_init() covers NTS too. 180 */ 181 res_init(); 182 #endif 183 184 if (pp->cfg.flags & FLAG_NTS) { 185 #ifndef DISABLE_NTS 186 nts_probe(pp); 187 #endif 188 } else { 189 ZERO(hints); 190 hints.ai_protocol = IPPROTO_UDP; 191 hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_DGRAM; 192 hints.ai_family = AF(&pp->srcadr); 193 gai_rc = getaddrinfo(pp->hostname, NTP_PORTA, &hints, &answer); 194 } $ /usr/lib/uclibc-ng-test/test/inet/tst-res Segmentation fault (core dumped) $ ./host/bin/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc-gdb ./build/uclibc-ng-test-0844445e7358eb10e716155b55b0fb23e88d644a/test/inet/tst-res core Core was generated by `/usr/lib/uclibc-ng-test/test/inet/tst-res'. Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. (gdb) where #0 __GI___res_init () at libc/inet/resolv.c:3514 #1 0x0000005591e507e4 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at tst-res.c:20 First reported here: https://lore.kernel.org/buildroot/20211028230131.5f50d6e7@gmx.net/ https://www.mail-archive.com/devel@uclibc-ng.org/msg01085.html Signed-off-by: Peter Seiderer <ps.report@gmx.net>
2021-08-25Merge remote-tracking branch 'evolvis/dns-things'Waldemar Brodkorb
2021-08-09libc/inet/resolv.c: add __hnbad to check DNS entries for validity…mirabilos
… using the same rules glibc does also call __hnbad in some places to check answers
2021-08-09make __{en,de}code_dotted into macrosmirabilos
they merely call dn_{comp,expand} slightly rearranging the arguments Signed-off-by: mirabilos <mirabilos@evolvis.org>
2021-08-09actually remove the ifdeffed-out code from the previous commitmirabilos
Signed-off-by: mirabilos <mirabilos@evolvis.org>
2021-08-09libc/inet/resolv.c: use dn_{comp,expand} for __{en,de}code_dottedmirabilos
Minimal-invasive change: just ifdeffing away the older code. There is no reason to have two different sets of functions doing the same thing, one used in half the code and another, doing less escaping, in the other half; just use one. Signed-off-by: mirabilos <mirabilos@evolvis.org>
2021-06-04powerpc: fix PIE/PIC builds with newer gcc/binutils which use secureplt by ↵Yann Sionneau
default This patch fixes segfault of all user space processes (including init, which caused a panic) on recent buildroot powerpc32 builds. The issue has been reported by Romain Naour in this thread: https://mailman.uclibc-ng.org/pipermail/devel/2021-May/002068.html Recent buildroot toolchain enables secure PLT in powerpc gcc. The latter will then supply -msecure-plt to gas invocations by default. Recent buildroot also enables PIE by defaults. For the secure PLT to work in PIC, the r30 register needs to point to the GOT. Old "bss plt" was just a one-instruction-wide PLT slot, pointed-to by a R_PPC_JMP_SLOT relocation, which was written on-the-fly to contain a branch instruction to the correct address. It therefore had to stay writable. New secure PLT only contains read-only code which loads the branch address from the writable GOT. Note: secure PLT without PIC does not need r30 to be set. Because offset between plt stub code and got is known at link-time. In this case the PLT entry looks like: 1009b3e0 <__uClibc_main@plt>: 1009b3e0: 3d 60 10 0e lis r11,4110 1009b3e4: 81 6b 03 74 lwz r11,884(r11) 1009b3e8: 7d 69 03 a6 mtctr r11 1009b3ec: 4e 80 04 20 bctr Whereas secure PLT with PIC - offset between plt and got is unknown at link-time - looks like this: 000af800 <00000000.plt_pic32.__uClibc_main>: af800: 81 7e 03 80 lwz r11,896(r30) af804: 7d 69 03 a6 mtctr r11 af808: 4e 80 04 20 bctr af80c: 60 00 00 00 nop Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <yann@sionneau.net>
2021-04-09open: Add support for O_TMPFILENicolas Cavallari
Since Linux 3.11, O_TMPFILE allows to create unnamed files that can be linked later on. It is internally defined as (O_TMPFILE | O_DIRECTORY) to make it fail on old kernels. Copying definitions from glibc for O_TMPFILE is not enough to support O_TMPFILE; The open() wrapper also need to pass the mode when the flag contains O_TMPFILE, otherwise, it will pass mode 000 which will succeed but yield unexpected results. openat() is curiously not affected since it passes the mode unconditionally.. Signed-off-by: Nicolas Cavallari <nicolas.cavallari@green-communications.fr>
2021-02-19fcntl.h: Make F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC if _USE_XOPEN2K8Paul Cercueil
The F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC flag was added in POSIX 2008.09. Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
2021-01-28use renameat2 syscall, when renameat isn't availableWaldemar Brodkorb
2021-01-27fix umount2 compilation for alpha on Linux 5.xWaldemar Brodkorb
2021-01-27sh: Add 64-bit time types from kernelGeoffrey Le Gourriérec
Building uclibc 1.0.37 for SuperH architecture with linux-headers 5.10.7 fails at libpthread level due to missing time-related data structures, usually defined by the kernel. Define those missing data structures in SuperH-specific kernel_types.h. Context: building for sh4eb-r2d[1] and sh4-r2d[1] boards emulations for QEMU using the buildroot image generation tool. Regarding the issue, a patch[3] was already issued in the kernel some time ago, which aimed to solve precisely this problem. After coming up with a quick and dirty patch for buildroot modifying Linux headers[4], some discussion was sparked on the subject with Linux folks[5]. Some analyzing later, conclusion was that: 1) Previously mentioned patch[4] was fixing the symptom, not the ill 2) SuperH-specific code in uclibc could be patched instead, to solve the problem for other use cases (e.g. building just a toolchain) [1] https://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/tree/configs/qemu_sh4eb_r2d_defconfig?h=2020.02.9 [2] https://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/tree/configs/qemu_sh4_r2d_defconfig?h=2020.02.9 [3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=fc94cf2092c7c1267fa2deb8388d624f50eba808 [4] https://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/commit/?id=742f37de8d0e3797698411dfc6a63bd7e98aafe2 [5] https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-sh/patch/20210123165652.10884-1-geoffrey.legourrierec@gmail.com/ Signed-off-by: Geoffrey Le Gourriérec <geoffrey.legourrierec@gmail.com>
2020-12-23stdlib: fix potential UB and integer overflow with huge allocations using ↵Yann Sionneau
malloc-simple allocator Two things are fixed by this commit: 1/ It is wrong to allocate an object of size > PTRDIFF_MAX. It is explained in this thread: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=63303 2/ There was a possible integer overflow in both malloc() and memalign() implementations of stdlib/malloc-simple. The malloc() integer overflow issue is fixed by the side effect of fixing the PTRDIFF_MAX issue. The memalign() one is fixed by adding a comparison. Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <yann@sionneau.net>
2020-10-19hasmntopt: better option matchingYann Sionneau
Previous implementation was respecting the man page description of what the function should do. Also the function does not seem to be defined by POSIX. But... to be really useful the function needs to handle option matching and not just substring matching. This is copy pasted from glibc. This fixes issue reported by https://github.com/wbx-github/uclibc-ng/issues/8 that can happen for instance there: https://github.com/frida/glib/blob/master/gio/gunixmounts.c#L622 Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <yann@sionneau.net>
2020-10-02kvx: add support for kvx arch to uClibc-ngYann Sionneau
This commit adds support for Kalray VLIW family (kvx) Kalray kv3 core is embedded in Kalray Coolidge SoC. This core which is the third of the KV family has the following features: 32/64 bits execution mode 6-issue VLIW architecture 64 x 64bits general purpose registers SIMD instructions little-endian In order to build a usable toolchain, build scripts are provided at the following address: https://github.com/kalray/build-scripts. Kalray uses FOSS which is available at https://github.com/kalray This includes Linux kernel, uClibc-ng, gcc, binutils, etc. Signed-off-by: Clément Léger <cleger@kalray.eu> Signed-off-by: Guillaume Thouvenin <gthouvenin@kalray.eu> Signed-off-by: Laurent Thevenoux <lthevenoux@kalray.eu> Signed-off-by: Marc Poulhies <mpoulhies@kalray.eu> Signed-off-by: Marius Gligor <mgligor@kalray.eu> Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-09-22Fix warning due to unused variable in strlenYann Sionneau
Fixes this: libc/string/generic/strlen.c: In function 'strlen': libc/string/generic/strlen.c:31:31: warning: variable 'magic_bits' set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable] unsigned long int longword, magic_bits, himagic, lomagic; ^~~~~~~~~~ Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-09-22Fix warning about macro redefinitionYann Sionneau
Fixes this: libc/misc/internals/tempname.c: In function 'brain_damaged_fillrand': libc/misc/internals/tempname.c:155:0: warning: "L" redefined #define L ((UINT32_MAX % NUM_LETTERS + 1) % NUM_LETTERS) In file included from ./libpthread/nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/lowlevellock.h:24:0, from ./include/bits/libc-lock.h:35, from ./include/bits/stdio-lock.h:22, from ./include/bits/uClibc_mutex.h:73, from ./include/bits/uClibc_stdio.h:83, from ./include/stdio.h:71, from libc/misc/internals/tempname.c:35: ./libc/sysdeps/linux/kvx/sysdep.h:40:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition # define L(name) $L##name Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-09-22Fix warning about missing const qualifierYann Sionneau
Fixes this: In file included from libc/misc/fnmatch/fnmatch.c:235:0: libc/misc/fnmatch/fnmatch_loop.c: In function 'internal_fnmatch': libc/misc/fnmatch/fnmatch_loop.c:207:21: warning: initialization discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [-Wdiscarded-qualifiers] CHAR *p_init = p; ^ libc/misc/fnmatch/fnmatch_loop.c:208:21: warning: initialization discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [-Wdiscarded-qualifiers] CHAR *n_init = n; Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-09-21Support b64_ntop(), b64_pton() (bsd-compat)Waldemar Brodkorb
Signed-off-by: akater <nuclearspace@gmail.com>
2020-09-15Fix memory corruption due to struct stat fieldYann Sionneau
Kernel stat/stat64 structure and uClibc-ng ones were not in sync regarding the timespec fields. Kernel had them but uClibc did not expose it in some cases. Man page says that stat struct should have timespec fields if: * _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined to 200809L or greater or * _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined to 700 or greater or * _BSD_SOURCE is defined or * _SVID_SOURCE is defined In the case of buildroot vim build, neither _BSD_SOURCE nor _SVID_SOURCE were defined. Only _POSIX_C_SOURCE and _XOPEN_SOURCE were defined. uClibc-ng header only checked for _BSD_SOURCE and _SVID_SOURCE via __USE_MISC. This patch adds a check to __USE_XOPEN2K8 which is defined if _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200809L or _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 700 This for instance fixes a crash at startup of vim (not the busybox one) on aarch64 and all other arch where in kernel STAT_HAVE_NSEC is set and where stat.h in uClibc-ng comes from libc/sysdeps/linux/common-generic/bits Signed-off-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-09-02Revert "Fix static linking with GCC-10"Waldemar Brodkorb
This reverts commit 5b58a1ebd89a4f05778441814e81817c82193fa3. This breaks all static builds earlier to gcc 10 :( Bad testing on my side.
2020-08-19Add {name, open}_to_handle_at() implementationPetr Vorel
copied from musl 1.2.1. Signed-off-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
2020-08-17riscv64: add __riscv_flush_icacheWaldemar Brodkorb
Always use the systemcall as uClibc-ng has no vdso support. Tested with libffi and python in qemu-system-riscv64.
2020-08-15sys/random.h include stddef.hWaldemar Brodkorb
Reported-By: akater <nuclearspace@gmail.com>
2020-08-11Fix static linking with GCC-10Lance Fredrickson
Starting with GCC-10 multiple definitions of global variables by will be rejected. https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-10/porting_to.html This fixes multiple definitions of _dl_pagesize and _dl_tls_static_size while attempting static linking. Of course this only occurs when compiling something that requires these symbols. First patch submission so hopefully all done correctly. thanks, Lance Fredrickson From e0686f7c03ce8e51ccffefeb6365e50311e6dd10 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: lancethepants <lancethepants@gmail.com> Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2020 13:09:26 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] Starting with GCC-10 multiple definitions of global variables by will be rejected. This fixes multiple definitions of _dl_pagesize and _dl_tls_static_size while attempting static linking.
2020-08-11xtensa: add exclusive access supportMax Filippov
Add XCHAL definitions for S32C1I and EXCLUSIVE options to xtensa-config.h, include it in places that implement atomic operations and add implementations with exclusive access option opcodes. Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
2020-08-11xtensa: relax memory constraint in atomic assemblyMax Filippov
Replace "a" constraints with "+m" to avoid forcing atomic variable address into a register and let the compiler use non-zero offset in load/store opcodes. Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
2020-07-02Rename __unused struct members to include a namespaceEd Wildgoose
Rename various spare fields in structs to include a namespace This should avoid accidental clashes with uses of the __unused symbol in upstream projects. eg currently it causes a compile error in dhcpcd 8.x due to their re-use of the __unused symbol as a macro This follows the style of glibc which does something equivalent
2020-06-19inet: add sockatmark implementationClement Leger
Import musl C sockatmark implementation into uClibc-ng. Signed-off-by: Clement Leger <cleger@kalray.eu> Acked-by: Yann Sionneau <ysionneau@kalray.eu>
2020-05-17mips: Do not include hi and lo in __SYSCALL_CLOBBERS for R6Romain Naour
From [1] "GCC 10 (PR 91233) won't silently allow registers that are not architecturally available to be present in the clobber list anymore, resulting in build failure for mips*r6 targets in form of: ... .../sysdep.h:146:2: error: the register ‘lo’ cannot be clobbered in ‘asm’ for the current target 146 | __asm__ volatile ( \ | ^~~~~~~ This is because base R6 ISA doesn't define hi and lo registers w/o DSP extension. This patch provides the alternative definitions of __SYSCALL_CLOBBERS for r6 targets that won't include those registers." [1] https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commit;h=020b2a97bb15f807c0482f0faee2184ed05bcad8 Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com> Cc: Waldemar Brodkorb <wbx@openadk.org>
2020-04-01statx: make include conditional, fixes non-csky arch buildroot buildsWaldemar Brodkorb
2020-04-01Resolve bug when using unusual MALLOC_ALIGNMENTEyal Itkin
Safe-Linking alignment checks should be done on the user's buffer and not the mchunkptr. The new check adds support for cases in which: MALLOC_ALIGNMENT != 2*(sizeof(size_t)) The default case for both 32 bits and 64 bits was already supported, and this patch adds support for the described irregular case.
2020-02-19malloc: add missing header for some arch (alpha)Waldemar Brodkorb
2020-02-16Add Safe-Linking to fastbinsEyal Itkin
Safe-Linking is a security mechanism that protects single-linked lists (such as the fastbins) from being tampered by attackers. The mechanism makes use of randomness from ASLR (mmap_base), and when combined with chunk alignment integrity checks, it protects the pointers from being hijacked by an attacker. While Safe-Unlinking protects double-linked lists (such as the small bins), there wasn't any similar protection for attacks against single-linked lists. This solution protects against 3 common attacks: * Partial pointer override: modifies the lower bytes (Little Endian) * Full pointer override: hijacks the pointer to an attacker's location * Unaligned chunks: pointing the list to an unaligned address The design assumes an attacker doesn't know where the heap is located, and uses the ASLR randomness to "sign" the single-linked pointers. We mark the pointer as P and the location in which it is stored as L, and the calculation will be: * PROTECT(P) := (L >> PAGE_SHIFT) XOR (P) * *L = PROTECT(P) This way, the random bits from the address L (which start at the bits in the PAGE_SHIFT position), will be merged with the LSB of the stored protected pointer. This protection layer prevents an attacker from modifying the pointer into a controlled value. An additional check that the chunks are MALLOC_ALIGNed adds an important layer: * Attackers can't point to illegal (unaligned) memory addresses * Attackers must guess correctly the alignment bits On standard 32 bit Linux machines, an attacker will directly fail 7 out of 8 times, and on 64 bit machines it will fail 15 out of 16 times. The proposed solution adds 3-4 asm instructions per malloc()/free() and therefore has only minor performance implications if it has any. A similar protection was added to Chromium's version of TCMalloc in 2013, and according to their documentation the performance overhead was less than 2%. Signed-off-by: Eyal Itkin <eyalit@checkpoint.com>
2020-02-07aarch64/bits: provide sigstack.hVladimir Murzin
It fixes tst-signal6 and friends. Signed-off-by: Vladimir Murzin <vladimir.murzin@arm.com>