This restore the 2.33 semantic for arena_get2. It was changed by
11a02b035b to avoid arena_get2 call malloc (back when __get_nproc
was refactored to use an scratch_buffer - 903bc7dcc2). The
__get_nproc was refactored over then and now it also avoid to call
malloc.
The 11a02b035b did not take in consideration any performance
implication, which should have been discussed properly. The
__get_nprocs_sched is still used as a fallback mechanism if procfs
and sysfs is not acessible.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 472894d2cf)
The commit 49d877a80b (arm: Remove
_dl_skip_args usage) removed the _SKIP_ARGS literal, which was
previously loader to r4 on loader _start. However, the cleanup did not
remove the following 'ldr r4, [sl, r4]' on _dl_start_user, used to check
to skip the arguments after ld self-relocations.
In my testing, the kernel initially set r4 to 0, which makes the
ldr instruction just read the _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_. However, since r4
is a callee-saved register; a different runtime might not zero
initialize it and thus trigger an invalid memory access.
Checked on arm-linux-gnu.
Reported-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1e25112dc0)
The functions were previously written in C, but were not compiled
with unwind information. The ENTRY/END macros includes .cfi_startproc
and .cfi_endproc which adds unwind information. This caused the
tests cleanup-8 and cleanup-10 in the GCC testsuite to fail.
This patch adds a version of the ENTRY/END macros without the
CFI instructions that can be used instead.
sigaction registers a restorer address that is located two instructions
before the stub function. This patch adds a two instruction padding to
avoid that the unwinder accesses the unwind information from the function
that the linker has placed right before it in memory. This fixes an issue
with pthread_cancel that caused tst-mutex8-static (and other tests) to fail.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Cederman <cederman@gaisler.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
(cherry picked from commit 7bd06985c0)
The small counts copy bytes comparsion should be unsigned (as the
memmove size argument). It fixes string/tst-memmove-overflow on
sparcv9, where the input size triggers an invalid code path.
Checked on sparc64-linux-gnu and sparcv9-linux-gnu.
(cherry picked from commit 926a4bdbb5)
Similar to sparc32 fix, remove the unwind information on the signal
return stubs. This fixes the regressions:
FAIL: nptl/tst-cancel24-static
FAIL: nptl/tst-cond8-static
FAIL: nptl/tst-mutex8-static
FAIL: nptl/tst-mutexpi8-static
FAIL: nptl/tst-mutexpi9
On sparc64-linux-gnu.
(cherry picked from commit 369efd8177)
Fixes commit a61933fe27 ("sparc: Remove bzero optimization") that
after moving code jumped to the wrong label 4.
Verfied by successfully running string/test-memset on sparc32.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Larsson <andreas@gaisler.com>
Signed-off-by: Ludwig Rydberg <ludwig.rydberg@gaisler.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
(cherry picked from commit 578190b7e4)
Starting with commits
- 7ea510127e
string: Add libc_hidden_proto for strchrnul
- 22999b2f0f
string: Add libc_hidden_proto for memrchr
building glibc on s390x with --disable-multi-arch fails if only
the C-variant of strchrnul / memrchr is used. This is the case
if gcc uses -march < z13.
The build fails with:
../sysdeps/s390/strchrnul-c.c:28:49: error: ‘__strchrnul_c’ undeclared here (not in a function); did you mean ‘__strchrnul’?
28 | __hidden_ver1 (__strchrnul_c, __GI___strchrnul, __strchrnul_c);
With --disable-multi-arch, __strchrnul_c is not available as string/strchrnul.c
is just included without defining STRCHRNUL and thus we also don't have to create
the internal hidden symbol.
Tested-by: Andreas K. Hüttel <dilfridge@gentoo.org>
(cherry picked from commit cc1b91eabd)
Ffsll function randomly regress by ~20%, depending on how code gets
aligned in memory. Ffsll function code size is 17 bytes. Since default
function alignment is 16 bytes, it can load on 16, 32, 48 or 64 bytes
aligned memory. When ffsll function load at 16, 32 or 64 bytes aligned
memory, entire code fits in single 64 bytes cache line. When ffsll
function load at 48 bytes aligned memory, it splits in two cache line,
hence random regression.
Ffsll function size reduction from 17 bytes to 12 bytes ensures that it
will always fit in single 64 bytes cache line.
This patch fixes ffsll function random performance regression.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 9d94997b5f)
__vsyslog_internal calculated a buffer size by adding two integers, but
did not first check if the addition would overflow. This commit fixes
that.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit ddf542da94)
__vsyslog_internal used the return value of snprintf/vsnprintf to
calculate buffer sizes for memory allocation. If these functions (for
any reason) failed and returned -1, the resulting buffer would be too
small to hold output. This commit fixes that.
All snprintf/vsnprintf calls are checked for negative return values and
the function silently returns upon encountering them.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 7e5a0c286d)
__vsyslog_internal did not handle a case where printing a SYSLOG_HEADER
containing a long program name failed to update the required buffer
size, leading to the allocation and overflow of a too-small buffer on
the heap. This commit fixes that. It also adds a new regression test
that uses glibc.malloc.check.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 6bd0e4efcc)
The multibyte character needs to fit into the remaining buffer space,
not the already-written buffer space. Without the fix, we were never
moving the write pointer from the start of the buffer, always using
the single-character fallback buffer.
Fixes commit 04b76b5aa8 ("Don't error out writing
a multibyte character to an unbuffered stream (bug 17522)").
(cherry picked from commit ecc7c3deb9)
_dl_tlsdesc_undefweak and _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic access the thread pointer
via the tcb field in TCB:
_dl_tlsdesc_undefweak:
_CET_ENDBR
movq 8(%rax), %rax
subq %fs:0, %rax
ret
_dl_tlsdesc_dynamic:
...
subq %fs:0, %rax
movq -8(%rsp), %rdi
ret
Since the tcb field in TCB is a pointer, %fs:0 is a 32-bit location,
not 64-bit. It should use "sub %fs:0, %RAX_LP" instead. Since
_dl_tlsdesc_undefweak returns ptrdiff_t and _dl_make_tlsdesc_dynamic
returns void *, RAX_LP is appropriate here for x32 and x86-64. This
fixes BZ #31185.
(cherry picked from commit 81be2a61da)
On x32, I got
FAIL: elf/tst-tlsgap
$ gdb elf/tst-tlsgap
...
open tst-tlsgap-mod1.so
Thread 2 "tst-tlsgap" received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
[Switching to LWP 2268754]
_dl_tlsdesc_dynamic () at ../sysdeps/x86_64/dl-tlsdesc.S:108
108 movq (%rsi), %rax
(gdb) p/x $rsi
$4 = 0xf7dbf9005655fb18
(gdb)
This is caused by
_dl_tlsdesc_dynamic:
_CET_ENDBR
/* Preserve call-clobbered registers that we modify.
We need two scratch regs anyway. */
movq %rsi, -16(%rsp)
movq %fs:DTV_OFFSET, %rsi
Since the dtv field in TCB is a pointer, %fs:DTV_OFFSET is a 32-bit
location, not 64-bit. Load the dtv field to RSI_LP instead of rsi.
This fixes BZ #31184.
(cherry picked from commit 3502440397)
This is a minimal regression test for bug 29039 which only affects
targets with TLSDESC and a reproducer requires that
1) Have modid gaps (closed modules) with old generation.
2) Update a DTV to a newer generation (needs a newer dlopen).
3) But do not update the closed gap entry in that DTV.
4) Reuse the modid gap for a new module (another dlopen).
5) Use dynamic TLSDESC in that new module with old generation (bug).
6) Access TLS via this TLSDESC and the now outdated DTV.
However step (3) in practice rarely happens: during DTV update the
entries for closed modids are initialized to "unallocated" and then
dynamic TLSDESC calls __tls_get_addr independently of its generation.
The only exception to this is DTV setup at thread creation (gaps are
initialized to NULL instead of unallocated) or DTV resize where the
gap entries are outside the previous DTV array (again NULL instead
of unallocated, and this requires loading > DTV_SURPLUS modules).
So the bug can only cause NULL (+ offset) dereference, not use after
free. And the easiest way to get (3) is via thread creation.
Note that step (5) requires that the newly loaded module has larger
TLS than the remaining optional static TLS. And for (6) there cannot
be other TLS access or dlopen in the thread that updates the DTV.
Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
(cherry picked from commit 980450f126)
_dl_assign_tls_modid() assigns a slotinfo entry for a new module, but
does *not* do anything to the generation counter. The first time this
happens, the generation is zero and map_generation() returns the current
generation to be used during relocation processing. However, if
a slotinfo entry is later reused, it will already have a generation
assigned. If this generation has fallen behind the current global max
generation, then this causes an obsolete generation to be assigned
during relocation processing, as map_generation() returns this
generation if nonzero. _dl_add_to_slotinfo() eventually resets the
generation, but by then it is too late. This causes DTV updates to be
skipped, leading to NULL or broken TLS slot pointers and segfaults.
Fix this by resetting the generation to zero in _dl_assign_tls_modid(),
so it behaves the same as the first time a slot is assigned.
_dl_add_to_slotinfo() will still assign the correct static generation
later during module load, but relocation processing will no longer use
an obsolete generation.
Note that slotinfo entry (aka modid) reuse typically happens after a
dlclose and only TLS access via dynamic tlsdesc is affected. Because
tlsdesc is optimized to use the optional part of static TLS, dynamic
tlsdesc can be avoided by increasing the glibc.rtld.optional_static_tls
tunable to a large enough value, or by LD_PRELOAD-ing the affected
modules.
Fixes bug 29039.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
(cherry picked from commit 3921c5b40f)
When invoking sem_open with O_CREAT as one of its flags, we'll end up
in the second part of sem_open's "if ((oflag & O_CREAT) == 0 || (oflag
& O_EXCL) == 0)", which means that we don't expect the semaphore file
to exist.
In that part, open_flags is initialized as "O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_EXCL
| O_CLOEXEC" and there's an attempt to open(2) the file, which will
likely fail because it won't exist. After that first (expected)
failure, some cleanup is done and we go back to the label "try_again",
which lives in the first part of the aforementioned "if".
The problem is that, in that part of the code, we expect the semaphore
file to exist, and as such O_CREAT (this time the flag we pass to
open(2)) needs to be cleaned from open_flags, otherwise we'll see
another failure (this time unexpected) when trying to open the file,
which will lead the call to sem_open to fail as well.
This can cause very strange bugs, especially with OpenMPI, which makes
extensive use of semaphores.
Fix the bug by simplifying the logic when choosing open(2) flags and
making sure O_CREAT is not set when the semaphore file is expected to
exist.
A regression test for this issue would require a complex and cpu time
consuming logic, since to trigger the wrong code path is not
straightforward due the racy condition. There is a somewhat reliable
reproducer in the bug, but it requires using OpenMPI.
This resolves BZ #30789.
See also: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/h5py/+bug/2031912
Signed-off-by: Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@sergiodj.net>
Co-Authored-By: Simon Chopin <simon.chopin@canonical.com>
Co-Authored-By: Adhemerval Zanella Netto <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Fixes: 533deafbdf ("Use O_CLOEXEC in more places (BZ #15722)")
(cherry picked from commit f957f47df7)
The string parsing routine may end up writing beyond bounds of tunestr
if the input tunable string is malformed, of the form name=name=val.
This gets processed twice, first as name=name=val and next as name=val,
resulting in tunestr being name=name=val:name=val, thus overflowing
tunestr.
Terminate the parsing loop at the first instance itself so that tunestr
does not overflow.
This also fixes up tst-env-setuid-tunables to actually handle failures
correct and add new tests to validate the fix for this CVE.
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1056e5b4c3)
GLIBC_TUNABLES scrubbing happens earlier than envvar scrubbing and some
tunables are required to propagate past setxid boundary, like their
env_alias. Rely on tunable scrubbing to clean out GLIBC_TUNABLES like
before, restoring behaviour in glibc 2.37 and earlier.
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 0d5f9ea97f)
This patch fixes a very recently added leak in getaddrinfo.
This was assigned CVE-2023-5156.
Resolves: BZ #30884
Related: BZ #30842
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
(cherry picked from commit ec6b95c330)
The missing @item makes it look like errno will be set to ESRCH
if a cross-session getpgid is not permitted.
Found by ulfvonbelow on irc.
(cherry picked from commit 5a21cefd5a)
When building with fortify enabled, GCC < 12 issues a warning on the
fortify strncat wrapper might overflow the destination buffer (the
failure is tied to -Werror).
Checked on ppc64 and x86_64.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
(cherry picked from commit f1c7ed0859)
Commit 91927b7c76 ("Rewrite iconv option parsing [BZ #19519]") changed the
iconv program to call __gconv_open directly instead of the iconv_open
wrapper, but the former does not set errno. Update the caller to
interpret the return codes like iconv_open does.
(cherry picked from commit fc72b6d7d8)
When an NSS plugin only implements the _gethostbyname2_r and
_getcanonname_r callbacks, getaddrinfo could use memory that was freed
during tmpbuf resizing, through h_name in a previous query response.
The backing store for res->at->name when doing a query with
gethostbyname3_r or gethostbyname2_r is tmpbuf, which is reallocated in
gethosts during the query. For AF_INET6 lookup with AI_ALL |
AI_V4MAPPED, gethosts gets called twice, once for a v6 lookup and second
for a v4 lookup. In this case, if the first call reallocates tmpbuf
enough number of times, resulting in a malloc, th->h_name (that
res->at->name refers to) ends up on a heap allocated storage in tmpbuf.
Now if the second call to gethosts also causes the plugin callback to
return NSS_STATUS_TRYAGAIN, tmpbuf will get freed, resulting in a UAF
reference in res->at->name. This then gets dereferenced in the
getcanonname_r plugin call, resulting in the use after free.
Fix this by copying h_name over and freeing it at the end. This
resolves BZ #30843, which is assigned CVE-2023-4806.
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
(cherry picked from commit 973fe93a56)
Without passing alt_dns_packet_buffer, __res_context_search can only
store 2048 bytes (what fits into dns_packet_buffer). However,
the function returns the total packet size, and the subsequent
DNS parsing code in _nss_dns_gethostbyname4_r reads beyond the end
of the stack-allocated buffer.
Fixes commit f282cdbe7f ("resolv: Implement no-aaaa
stub resolver option") and bug 30842.
(cherry picked from commit bd77dd7e73)
It is a left-over from commit 52a01100ad
("elf: Remove ad-hoc restrictions on dlopen callers [BZ #22787]").
When backporting commmit 6985865bc3
("elf: Always call destructors in reverse constructor order
(bug 30785)"), we can move the l_init_called_next field to this
place, so that the internal GLIBC_PRIVATE ABI does not change.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 53df2ce688)
The current implementation of dlclose (and process exit) re-sorts the
link maps before calling ELF destructors. Destructor order is not the
reverse of the constructor order as a result: The second sort takes
relocation dependencies into account, and other differences can result
from ambiguous inputs, such as cycles. (The force_first handling in
_dl_sort_maps is not effective for dlclose.) After the changes in
this commit, there is still a required difference due to
dlopen/dlclose ordering by the application, but the previous
discrepancies went beyond that.
A new global (namespace-spanning) list of link maps,
_dl_init_called_list, is updated right before ELF constructors are
called from _dl_init.
In dl_close_worker, the maps variable, an on-stack variable length
array, is eliminated. (VLAs are problematic, and dlclose should not
call malloc because it cannot readily deal with malloc failure.)
Marking still-used objects uses the namespace list directly, with
next and next_idx replacing the done_index variable.
After marking, _dl_init_called_list is used to call the destructors
of now-unused maps in reverse destructor order. These destructors
can call dlopen. Previously, new objects do not have l_map_used set.
This had to change: There is no copy of the link map list anymore,
so processing would cover newly opened (and unmarked) mappings,
unloading them. Now, _dl_init (indirectly) sets l_map_used, too.
(dlclose is handled by the existing reentrancy guard.)
After _dl_init_called_list traversal, two more loops follow. The
processing order changes to the original link map order in the
namespace. Previously, dependency order was used. The difference
should not matter because relocation dependencies could already
reorder link maps in the old code.
The changes to _dl_fini remove the sorting step and replace it with
a traversal of _dl_init_called_list. The l_direct_opencount
decrement outside the loader lock is removed because it appears
incorrect: the counter manipulation could race with other dynamic
loader operations.
tst-audit23 needs adjustments to the changes in LA_ACT_DELETE
notifications. The new approach for checking la_activity should
make it clearer that la_activty calls come in pairs around namespace
updates.
The dependency sorting test cases need updates because the destructor
order is always the opposite order of constructor order, even with
relocation dependencies or cycles present.
There is a future cleanup opportunity to remove the now-constant
force_first and for_fini arguments from the _dl_sort_maps function.
Fixes commit 1df71d32fe ("elf: Implement
force_first handling in _dl_sort_maps_dfs (bug 28937)").
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 6985865bc3)
IO_VTABLES_LEN is the size of the struct array in bytes, not the number
of __IO_jump_t's in the array. Drops just under 384kb from .rodata on
LP64 machines.
Fixes: 3020f72618 ("libio: Remove the usage of __libc_IO_vtables")
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8cb69e0543)
Commit 5f828ff824 ("io: Fix F_GETLK, F_SETLK, and F_SETLKW for
powerpc64") fixed an issue with the value of the lock constants on
powerpc64 when not using __USE_FILE_OFFSET64, but it ended-up also
changing the value when using __USE_FILE_OFFSET64 causing an API change.
Fix that by also checking that define, restoring the pre
4d0fe291ae commit values:
Default values:
- F_GETLK: 5
- F_SETLK: 6
- F_SETLKW: 7
With -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64:
- F_GETLK: 12
- F_SETLK: 13
- F_SETLKW: 14
At the same time, it has been noticed that there was no test for io lock
with __USE_FILE_OFFSET64, so just add one.
Tested on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu and
powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu.
Resolves: BZ #30804.
Co-authored-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
(cherry picked from commit 434bf72a94)
SYS_modify_ldt requires CONFIG_MODIFY_LDT_SYSCALL to be set in the kernel, which
some distributions may disable for hardening. Check if that's the case (unset)
and mark the test as UNSUPPORTED if so.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
(cherry picked from commit 652b9fdb77)
All callers pass 1 or 0x11 anyway (same meaning according to man page),
but still.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
(cherry picked from commit e0b712dd91)
On the test workload (mpv --cache=yes with VP9 video decoding), the
bin scanning has a very poor success rate (less than 2%). The tcache
scanning has about 50% success rate, so keep that.
Update comments in malloc/tst-memalign-2 to indicate the purpose
of the tests. Even with the scanning removed, the additional
merging opportunities since commit 542b110585
("malloc: Enable merging of remainders in memalign (bug 30723)")
are sufficient to pass the existing large bins test.
Remove leftover variables from _int_free from refactoring in the
same commit.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 0dc7fc1cf0)
Previously, calling _int_free from _int_memalign could put remainders
into the tcache or into fastbins, where they are invisible to the
low-level allocator. This results in missed merge opportunities
because once these freed chunks become available to the low-level
allocator, further memalign allocations (even of the same size are)
likely obstructing merges.
Furthermore, during forwards merging in _int_memalign, do not
completely give up when the remainder is too small to serve as a
chunk on its own. We can still give it back if it can be merged
with the following unused chunk. This makes it more likely that
memalign calls in a loop achieve a compact memory layout,
independently of initial heap layout.
Drop some useless (unsigned long) casts along the way, and tweak
the style to more closely match GNU on changed lines.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 542b110585)
Since i686 provides the fortified wrappers for memcpy, mempcpy,
memmove, and memset on the same string implementation, the static
build tries to optimized it by not tying the fortified wrappers
to string routine (to avoid pulling the fortify function if
they are not required).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu building with different option:
default and --disable-multi-arch plus default, --disable-default-pie,
--enable-fortify-source={2,3}, and --enable-fortify-source={2,3}
with --disable-default-pie.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
(cherry picked from commit c73c96a4a1)
With multiarch disabled, the default memmove implementation provides
the fortify routines for memcpy, mempcpy, and memmove. However, it
does not provide the internal hidden definitions used when building
with fortify enabled. The memset has a similar issue.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu building with different options:
default and --disable-multi-arch plus default, --disable-default-pie,
--enable-fortify-source={2,3}, and --enable-fortify-source={2,3}
with --disable-default-pie.
Tested-by: Andreas K. Huettel <dilfridge@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
(cherry picked from commit 51cb52214f)
The:
```
if (shared_per_thread > 0 && threads > 0)
shared_per_thread /= threads;
```
Code was accidentally moved to inside the else scope. This doesn't
match how it was previously (before af992e7abd).
This patch fixes that by putting the division after the `else` block.
(cherry picked from commit 084fb31bc2)
The nscd daemon caches hosts data from NSS modules verbatim, without
filtering protocol families or sorting them (otherwise separate caches
would be needed for certain ai_flags combinations). The cache
implementation is complete separate from the getaddrinfo code. This
means that rebuilding getaddrinfo is not needed. The only function
actually used is __bump_nl_timestamp from check_pf.c, and this change
moves it into nscd/connections.c.
Tested on x86_64-linux-gnu with -fexceptions, built with
build-many-glibcs.py. I also backported this patch into a distribution
that still supports nscd and verified manually that caching still works.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
(cherry picked from commit 039ff51ac7)