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freebsd/sys/kern/kern_descrip.c

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1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
* (c) UNIX System Laboratories, Inc.
* All or some portions of this file are derived from material licensed
* to the University of California by American Telephone and Telegraph
* Co. or Unix System Laboratories, Inc. and are reproduced herein with
* the permission of UNIX System Laboratories, Inc.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* @(#)kern_descrip.c 8.6 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
*/
2003-06-11 00:56:59 +00:00
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include "opt_compat.h"
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#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/limits.h>
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#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/syscallsubr.h>
#include <sys/sysproto.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
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#include <sys/filedesc.h>
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#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/jail.h>
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#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/limits.h>
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#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
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#include <sys/vnode.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
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#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/namei.h>
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#include <sys/file.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/filio.h>
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#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <sys/resourcevar.h>
#include <sys/event.h>
#include <sys/sx.h>
#include <sys/socketvar.h>
#include <sys/signalvar.h>
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/vm_extern.h>
#include <vm/uma.h>
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_FILEDESC, "file desc", "Open file descriptor table");
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_FILEDESC_TO_LEADER, "file desc to leader",
"file desc to leader structures");
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_SIGIO, "sigio", "sigio structures");
static uma_zone_t file_zone;
static d_open_t fdopen;
#define NUMFDESC 64
#define CDEV_MAJOR 22
static struct cdevsw fildesc_cdevsw = {
.d_version = D_VERSION,
.d_flags = D_NEEDGIANT,
.d_open = fdopen,
.d_name = "FD",
.d_maj = CDEV_MAJOR,
};
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
/* How to treat 'new' parameter when allocating a fd for do_dup(). */
enum dup_type { DUP_VARIABLE, DUP_FIXED };
static int do_dup(struct thread *td, enum dup_type type, int old, int new,
register_t *retval);
static int fd_first_free(struct filedesc *, int, int);
static int fd_last_used(struct filedesc *, int, int);
static void fdgrowtable(struct filedesc *, int);
static void fdunused(struct filedesc *fdp, int fd);
/*
* A process is initially started out with NDFILE descriptors stored within
* this structure, selected to be enough for typical applications based on
* the historical limit of 20 open files (and the usage of descriptors by
* shells). If these descriptors are exhausted, a larger descriptor table
* may be allocated, up to a process' resource limit; the internal arrays
* are then unused.
*/
#define NDFILE 20
#define NDSLOTSIZE sizeof(NDSLOTTYPE)
#define NDENTRIES (NDSLOTSIZE * __CHAR_BIT)
#define NDSLOT(x) ((x) / NDENTRIES)
#define NDBIT(x) ((NDSLOTTYPE)1 << ((x) % NDENTRIES))
#define NDSLOTS(x) (((x) + NDENTRIES - 1) / NDENTRIES)
/*
* Basic allocation of descriptors:
* one of the above, plus arrays for NDFILE descriptors.
*/
struct filedesc0 {
struct filedesc fd_fd;
/*
* These arrays are used when the number of open files is
* <= NDFILE, and are then pointed to by the pointers above.
*/
struct file *fd_dfiles[NDFILE];
char fd_dfileflags[NDFILE];
NDSLOTTYPE fd_dmap[NDSLOTS(NDFILE)];
};
/*
* Storage required per open file descriptor.
*/
#define OFILESIZE (sizeof(struct file *) + sizeof(char))
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/*
* Descriptor management.
*/
struct filelist filehead; /* head of list of open files */
int nfiles; /* actual number of open files */
struct sx filelist_lock; /* sx to protect filelist */
struct mtx sigio_lock; /* mtx to protect pointers to sigio */
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/*
* Find the first zero bit in the given bitmap, starting at low and not
* exceeding size - 1.
*/
static int
fd_first_free(struct filedesc *fdp, int low, int size)
{
NDSLOTTYPE *map = fdp->fd_map;
NDSLOTTYPE mask;
int off, maxoff;
if (low >= size)
return (low);
off = NDSLOT(low);
if (low % NDENTRIES) {
mask = ~(~(NDSLOTTYPE)0 >> (NDENTRIES - (low % NDENTRIES)));
if ((mask &= ~map[off]) != 0UL)
return (off * NDENTRIES + ffsl(mask) - 1);
++off;
}
for (maxoff = NDSLOTS(size); off < maxoff; ++off)
if (map[off] != ~0UL)
return (off * NDENTRIES + ffsl(~map[off]) - 1);
return (size);
}
/*
* Find the highest non-zero bit in the given bitmap, starting at low and
* not exceeding size - 1.
*/
static int
fd_last_used(struct filedesc *fdp, int low, int size)
{
NDSLOTTYPE *map = fdp->fd_map;
NDSLOTTYPE mask;
int off, minoff;
if (low >= size)
return (-1);
off = NDSLOT(size);
if (size % NDENTRIES) {
mask = ~(~(NDSLOTTYPE)0 << (size % NDENTRIES));
if ((mask &= map[off]) != 0)
return (off * NDENTRIES + flsl(mask) - 1);
--off;
}
for (minoff = NDSLOT(low); off >= minoff; --off)
if (map[off] != 0)
return (off * NDENTRIES + flsl(map[off]) - 1);
return (size - 1);
}
static int
fdisused(struct filedesc *fdp, int fd)
{
KASSERT(fd >= 0 && fd < fdp->fd_nfiles,
("file descriptor %d out of range (0, %d)", fd, fdp->fd_nfiles));
return ((fdp->fd_map[NDSLOT(fd)] & NDBIT(fd)) != 0);
}
/*
* Mark a file descriptor as used.
*/
void
fdused(struct filedesc *fdp, int fd)
{
FILEDESC_LOCK_ASSERT(fdp, MA_OWNED);
KASSERT(!fdisused(fdp, fd),
("fd already used"));
fdp->fd_map[NDSLOT(fd)] |= NDBIT(fd);
if (fd > fdp->fd_lastfile)
fdp->fd_lastfile = fd;
if (fd == fdp->fd_freefile)
fdp->fd_freefile = fd_first_free(fdp, fd, fdp->fd_nfiles);
}
/*
* Mark a file descriptor as unused.
*/
static void
fdunused(struct filedesc *fdp, int fd)
{
FILEDESC_LOCK_ASSERT(fdp, MA_OWNED);
KASSERT(fdisused(fdp, fd),
("fd is already unused"));
KASSERT(fdp->fd_ofiles[fd] == NULL,
("fd is still in use"));
fdp->fd_map[NDSLOT(fd)] &= ~NDBIT(fd);
if (fd < fdp->fd_freefile)
fdp->fd_freefile = fd;
if (fd == fdp->fd_lastfile)
fdp->fd_lastfile = fd_last_used(fdp, 0, fd);
}
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/*
* System calls on descriptors.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
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struct getdtablesize_args {
int dummy;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
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/* ARGSUSED */
int
getdtablesize(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
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struct getdtablesize_args *uap;
{
struct proc *p = td->td_proc;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_LOCK(p);
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
td->td_retval[0] =
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
min((int)lim_cur(p, RLIMIT_NOFILE), maxfilesperproc);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (0);
}
/*
* Duplicate a file descriptor to a particular value.
*
* note: keep in mind that a potential race condition exists when closing
* descriptors from a shared descriptor table (via rfork).
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
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struct dup2_args {
u_int from;
u_int to;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
dup2(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct dup2_args *uap;
{
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
return (do_dup(td, DUP_FIXED, (int)uap->from, (int)uap->to,
td->td_retval));
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Duplicate a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct dup_args {
u_int fd;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
/* ARGSUSED */
int
dup(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
struct dup_args *uap;
{
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
return (do_dup(td, DUP_VARIABLE, (int)uap->fd, 0, td->td_retval));
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* The file control system call.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct fcntl_args {
int fd;
int cmd;
long arg;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
fcntl(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct fcntl_args *uap;
{
struct flock fl;
intptr_t arg;
int error;
error = 0;
switch (uap->cmd) {
case F_GETLK:
case F_SETLK:
case F_SETLKW:
error = copyin((void *)(intptr_t)uap->arg, &fl, sizeof(fl));
arg = (intptr_t)&fl;
break;
default:
arg = uap->arg;
break;
}
if (error)
return (error);
error = kern_fcntl(td, uap->fd, uap->cmd, arg);
if (error)
return (error);
if (uap->cmd == F_GETLK)
error = copyout(&fl, (void *)(intptr_t)uap->arg, sizeof(fl));
return (error);
}
int
kern_fcntl(struct thread *td, int fd, int cmd, intptr_t arg)
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc *fdp;
struct flock *flp;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct file *fp;
struct proc *p;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
char *pop;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct vnode *vp;
u_int newmin;
int error, flg, tmp;
int giant_locked;
/*
* XXXRW: Some fcntl() calls require Giant -- others don't. Try to
* avoid grabbing Giant for calls we know don't need it.
*/
switch (cmd) {
case F_DUPFD:
case F_GETFD:
case F_SETFD:
case F_GETFL:
giant_locked = 0;
break;
default:
giant_locked = 1;
mtx_lock(&Giant);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
error = 0;
flg = F_POSIX;
p = td->td_proc;
fdp = p->p_fd;
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if ((unsigned)fd >= fdp->fd_nfiles ||
(fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[fd]) == NULL) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EBADF;
goto done2;
}
pop = &fdp->fd_ofileflags[fd];
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
switch (cmd) {
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_DUPFD:
/* mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_NOTOWNED); */
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
newmin = arg;
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_LOCK(p);
if (newmin >= lim_cur(p, RLIMIT_NOFILE) ||
newmin >= maxfilesperproc) {
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
error = EINVAL;
break;
}
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
error = do_dup(td, DUP_VARIABLE, fd, newmin, td->td_retval);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_GETFD:
/* mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_NOTOWNED); */
td->td_retval[0] = (*pop & UF_EXCLOSE) ? FD_CLOEXEC : 0;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_SETFD:
/* mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_NOTOWNED); */
*pop = (*pop &~ UF_EXCLOSE) |
(arg & FD_CLOEXEC ? UF_EXCLOSE : 0);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_GETFL:
/* mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_NOTOWNED); */
FILE_LOCK(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
td->td_retval[0] = OFLAGS(fp->f_flag);
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_SETFL:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
FILE_LOCK(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fhold_locked(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fp->f_flag &= ~FCNTLFLAGS;
fp->f_flag |= FFLAGS(arg & ~O_ACCMODE) & FCNTLFLAGS;
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
tmp = fp->f_flag & FNONBLOCK;
error = fo_ioctl(fp, FIONBIO, &tmp, td->td_ucred, td);
if (error) {
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
tmp = fp->f_flag & FASYNC;
error = fo_ioctl(fp, FIOASYNC, &tmp, td->td_ucred, td);
if (error == 0) {
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
}
FILE_LOCK(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fp->f_flag &= ~FNONBLOCK;
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
tmp = 0;
(void)fo_ioctl(fp, FIONBIO, &tmp, td->td_ucred, td);
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_GETOWN:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = fo_ioctl(fp, FIOGETOWN, &tmp, td->td_ucred, td);
if (error == 0)
td->td_retval[0] = tmp;
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_SETOWN:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
tmp = arg;
error = fo_ioctl(fp, FIOSETOWN, &tmp, td->td_ucred, td);
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_SETLKW:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
flg |= F_WAIT;
/* FALLTHROUGH F_SETLK */
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_SETLK:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
if (fp->f_type != DTYPE_VNODE) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EBADF;
break;
}
flp = (struct flock *)arg;
if (flp->l_whence == SEEK_CUR) {
2001-08-29 18:53:53 +00:00
if (fp->f_offset < 0 ||
(flp->l_start > 0 &&
fp->f_offset > OFF_MAX - flp->l_start)) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EOVERFLOW;
break;
}
flp->l_start += fp->f_offset;
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* VOP_ADVLOCK() may block.
*/
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
vp = fp->f_vnode;
switch (flp->l_type) {
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_RDLCK:
if ((fp->f_flag & FREAD) == 0) {
error = EBADF;
break;
}
PROC_LOCK(p->p_leader);
p->p_leader->p_flag |= P_ADVLOCK;
PROC_UNLOCK(p->p_leader);
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)p->p_leader, F_SETLK,
flp, flg);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_WRLCK:
if ((fp->f_flag & FWRITE) == 0) {
error = EBADF;
break;
}
PROC_LOCK(p->p_leader);
p->p_leader->p_flag |= P_ADVLOCK;
PROC_UNLOCK(p->p_leader);
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)p->p_leader, F_SETLK,
flp, flg);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_UNLCK:
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)p->p_leader, F_UNLCK,
flp, F_POSIX);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
default:
error = EINVAL;
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/* Check for race with close */
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if ((unsigned) fd >= fdp->fd_nfiles ||
fp != fdp->fd_ofiles[fd]) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
flp->l_whence = SEEK_SET;
flp->l_start = 0;
flp->l_len = 0;
flp->l_type = F_UNLCK;
(void) VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)p->p_leader,
F_UNLCK, flp, F_POSIX);
} else
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
case F_GETLK:
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
if (fp->f_type != DTYPE_VNODE) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EBADF;
break;
}
flp = (struct flock *)arg;
if (flp->l_type != F_RDLCK && flp->l_type != F_WRLCK &&
flp->l_type != F_UNLCK) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EINVAL;
break;
}
if (flp->l_whence == SEEK_CUR) {
if ((flp->l_start > 0 &&
fp->f_offset > OFF_MAX - flp->l_start) ||
(flp->l_start < 0 &&
fp->f_offset < OFF_MIN - flp->l_start)) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EOVERFLOW;
break;
}
flp->l_start += fp->f_offset;
}
/*
* VOP_ADVLOCK() may block.
*/
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
vp = fp->f_vnode;
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)p->p_leader, F_GETLK, flp,
F_POSIX);
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
default:
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = EINVAL;
break;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
done2:
if (giant_locked)
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
return (error);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Common code for dup, dup2, and fcntl(F_DUPFD).
*/
static int
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
do_dup(td, type, old, new, retval)
enum dup_type type;
int old, new;
register_t *retval;
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc *fdp;
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
struct proc *p;
struct file *fp;
struct file *delfp;
int error, holdleaders, maxfd;
KASSERT((type == DUP_VARIABLE || type == DUP_FIXED),
("invalid dup type %d", type));
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
p = td->td_proc;
fdp = p->p_fd;
/*
* Verify we have a valid descriptor to dup from and possibly to
* dup to.
*/
if (old < 0 || new < 0)
return (EBADF);
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_LOCK(p);
maxfd = min((int)lim_cur(p, RLIMIT_NOFILE), maxfilesperproc);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
if (new >= maxfd)
return (EMFILE);
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if (old >= fdp->fd_nfiles || fdp->fd_ofiles[old] == NULL) {
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (EBADF);
}
if (type == DUP_FIXED && old == new) {
*retval = new;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (0);
}
fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[old];
fhold(fp);
/*
* If the caller specified a file descriptor, make sure the file
* table is large enough to hold it, and grab it. Otherwise, just
* allocate a new descriptor the usual way. Since the filedesc
* lock may be temporarily dropped in the process, we have to look
* out for a race.
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
*/
if (type == DUP_FIXED) {
if (new >= fdp->fd_nfiles)
fdgrowtable(fdp, new + 1);
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[new] == NULL)
fdused(fdp, new);
} else {
if ((error = fdalloc(td, new, &new)) != 0) {
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
return (error);
}
}
/*
* If the old file changed out from under us then treat it as a
* bad file descriptor. Userland should do its own locking to
* avoid this case.
*/
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[old] != fp) {
/* we've allocated a descriptor which we won't use */
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[new] == NULL)
fdunused(fdp, new);
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
return (EBADF);
}
KASSERT(old != new,
("new fd is same as old"));
/*
* Save info on the descriptor being overwritten. We cannot close
* it without introducing an ownership race for the slot, since we
* need to drop the filedesc lock to call closef().
*
* XXX this duplicates parts of close().
*/
delfp = fdp->fd_ofiles[new];
holdleaders = 0;
if (delfp != NULL) {
if (td->td_proc->p_fdtol != NULL) {
/*
* Ask fdfree() to sleep to ensure that all relevant
* process leaders can be traversed in closef().
*/
fdp->fd_holdleaderscount++;
holdleaders = 1;
}
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Duplicate the source descriptor
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fdp->fd_ofiles[new] = fp;
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
fdp->fd_ofileflags[new] = fdp->fd_ofileflags[old] &~ UF_EXCLOSE;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (new > fdp->fd_lastfile)
fdp->fd_lastfile = new;
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
*retval = new;
/*
* If we dup'd over a valid file, we now own the reference to it
* and must dispose of it using closef() semantics (as if a
* close() were performed on it).
*
* XXX this duplicates parts of close().
*/
if (delfp != NULL) {
2004-08-16 03:09:01 +00:00
knote_fdclose(td, new);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
mtx_lock(&Giant);
(void) closef(delfp, td);
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
if (holdleaders) {
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdp->fd_holdleaderscount--;
if (fdp->fd_holdleaderscount == 0 &&
fdp->fd_holdleaderswakeup != 0) {
fdp->fd_holdleaderswakeup = 0;
wakeup(&fdp->fd_holdleaderscount);
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
2004-08-16 03:09:01 +00:00
} else {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (0);
}
/*
* If sigio is on the list associated with a process or process group,
* disable signalling from the device, remove sigio from the list and
* free sigio.
*/
void
funsetown(sigiop)
struct sigio **sigiop;
{
struct sigio *sigio;
SIGIO_LOCK();
sigio = *sigiop;
if (sigio == NULL) {
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
return;
}
*(sigio->sio_myref) = NULL;
if ((sigio)->sio_pgid < 0) {
struct pgrp *pg = (sigio)->sio_pgrp;
PGRP_LOCK(pg);
SLIST_REMOVE(&sigio->sio_pgrp->pg_sigiolst, sigio,
sigio, sio_pgsigio);
PGRP_UNLOCK(pg);
} else {
struct proc *p = (sigio)->sio_proc;
PROC_LOCK(p);
SLIST_REMOVE(&sigio->sio_proc->p_sigiolst, sigio,
sigio, sio_pgsigio);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
}
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
crfree(sigio->sio_ucred);
FREE(sigio, M_SIGIO);
}
/*
* Free a list of sigio structures.
* We only need to lock the SIGIO_LOCK because we have made ourselves
* inaccessable to callers of fsetown and therefore do not need to lock
* the proc or pgrp struct for the list manipulation.
*/
void
funsetownlst(sigiolst)
struct sigiolst *sigiolst;
{
struct proc *p;
struct pgrp *pg;
struct sigio *sigio;
sigio = SLIST_FIRST(sigiolst);
if (sigio == NULL)
return;
p = NULL;
pg = NULL;
/*
* Every entry of the list should belong
* to a single proc or pgrp.
*/
if (sigio->sio_pgid < 0) {
pg = sigio->sio_pgrp;
PGRP_LOCK_ASSERT(pg, MA_NOTOWNED);
} else /* if (sigio->sio_pgid > 0) */ {
p = sigio->sio_proc;
PROC_LOCK_ASSERT(p, MA_NOTOWNED);
}
SIGIO_LOCK();
while ((sigio = SLIST_FIRST(sigiolst)) != NULL) {
*(sigio->sio_myref) = NULL;
if (pg != NULL) {
KASSERT(sigio->sio_pgid < 0,
("Proc sigio in pgrp sigio list"));
KASSERT(sigio->sio_pgrp == pg,
("Bogus pgrp in sigio list"));
PGRP_LOCK(pg);
SLIST_REMOVE(&pg->pg_sigiolst, sigio, sigio,
sio_pgsigio);
PGRP_UNLOCK(pg);
} else /* if (p != NULL) */ {
KASSERT(sigio->sio_pgid > 0,
("Pgrp sigio in proc sigio list"));
KASSERT(sigio->sio_proc == p,
("Bogus proc in sigio list"));
PROC_LOCK(p);
SLIST_REMOVE(&p->p_sigiolst, sigio, sigio,
sio_pgsigio);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
}
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
crfree(sigio->sio_ucred);
FREE(sigio, M_SIGIO);
SIGIO_LOCK();
}
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
}
/*
* This is common code for FIOSETOWN ioctl called by fcntl(fd, F_SETOWN, arg).
*
* After permission checking, add a sigio structure to the sigio list for
* the process or process group.
*/
int
fsetown(pgid, sigiop)
pid_t pgid;
struct sigio **sigiop;
{
struct proc *proc;
struct pgrp *pgrp;
struct sigio *sigio;
int ret;
if (pgid == 0) {
funsetown(sigiop);
return (0);
}
ret = 0;
/* Allocate and fill in the new sigio out of locks. */
MALLOC(sigio, struct sigio *, sizeof(struct sigio), M_SIGIO, M_WAITOK);
sigio->sio_pgid = pgid;
sigio->sio_ucred = crhold(curthread->td_ucred);
sigio->sio_myref = sigiop;
sx_slock(&proctree_lock);
if (pgid > 0) {
proc = pfind(pgid);
if (proc == NULL) {
ret = ESRCH;
goto fail;
}
/*
* Policy - Don't allow a process to FSETOWN a process
* in another session.
*
* Remove this test to allow maximum flexibility or
* restrict FSETOWN to the current process or process
* group for maximum safety.
*/
PROC_UNLOCK(proc);
if (proc->p_session != curthread->td_proc->p_session) {
ret = EPERM;
goto fail;
}
pgrp = NULL;
} else /* if (pgid < 0) */ {
pgrp = pgfind(-pgid);
if (pgrp == NULL) {
ret = ESRCH;
goto fail;
}
PGRP_UNLOCK(pgrp);
/*
* Policy - Don't allow a process to FSETOWN a process
* in another session.
*
* Remove this test to allow maximum flexibility or
* restrict FSETOWN to the current process or process
* group for maximum safety.
*/
if (pgrp->pg_session != curthread->td_proc->p_session) {
ret = EPERM;
goto fail;
}
proc = NULL;
}
funsetown(sigiop);
if (pgid > 0) {
PROC_LOCK(proc);
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
/*
* Since funsetownlst() is called without the proctree
* locked, we need to check for P_WEXIT.
* XXX: is ESRCH correct?
*/
if ((proc->p_flag & P_WEXIT) != 0) {
PROC_UNLOCK(proc);
ret = ESRCH;
goto fail;
}
SLIST_INSERT_HEAD(&proc->p_sigiolst, sigio, sio_pgsigio);
sigio->sio_proc = proc;
PROC_UNLOCK(proc);
} else {
PGRP_LOCK(pgrp);
SLIST_INSERT_HEAD(&pgrp->pg_sigiolst, sigio, sio_pgsigio);
sigio->sio_pgrp = pgrp;
PGRP_UNLOCK(pgrp);
}
sx_sunlock(&proctree_lock);
SIGIO_LOCK();
*sigiop = sigio;
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
return (0);
fail:
sx_sunlock(&proctree_lock);
crfree(sigio->sio_ucred);
FREE(sigio, M_SIGIO);
return (ret);
}
/*
* This is common code for FIOGETOWN ioctl called by fcntl(fd, F_GETOWN, arg).
*/
pid_t
fgetown(sigiop)
struct sigio **sigiop;
{
pid_t pgid;
SIGIO_LOCK();
pgid = (*sigiop != NULL) ? (*sigiop)->sio_pgid : 0;
SIGIO_UNLOCK();
return (pgid);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Close a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct close_args {
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
int fd;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
close(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct close_args *uap;
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc *fdp;
struct file *fp;
int fd, error;
int holdleaders;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fd = uap->fd;
error = 0;
holdleaders = 0;
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
mtx_lock(&Giant);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if ((unsigned)fd >= fdp->fd_nfiles ||
(fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[fd]) == NULL) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
return (EBADF);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fdp->fd_ofiles[fd] = NULL;
fdp->fd_ofileflags[fd] = 0;
fdunused(fdp, fd);
if (td->td_proc->p_fdtol != NULL) {
/*
* Ask fdfree() to sleep to ensure that all relevant
* process leaders can be traversed in closef().
*/
fdp->fd_holdleaderscount++;
holdleaders = 1;
}
/*
* we now hold the fp reference that used to be owned by the descriptor
* array.
* We have to unlock the FILEDESC *AFTER* knote_fdclose to prevent a
* race of the fd getting opened, a knote added, and deleteing a knote
* for the new fd.
*/
knote_fdclose(td, fd);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
error = closef(fp, td);
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
if (holdleaders) {
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdp->fd_holdleaderscount--;
if (fdp->fd_holdleaderscount == 0 &&
fdp->fd_holdleaderswakeup != 0) {
fdp->fd_holdleaderswakeup = 0;
wakeup(&fdp->fd_holdleaderscount);
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
return (error);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
#if defined(COMPAT_43)
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Return status information about a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct ofstat_args {
int fd;
struct ostat *sb;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
ofstat(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct ofstat_args *uap;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct file *fp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct stat ub;
struct ostat oub;
int error;
if ((error = fget(td, uap->fd, &fp)) != 0)
goto done2;
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
error = fo_stat(fp, &ub, td->td_ucred, td);
if (error == 0) {
cvtstat(&ub, &oub);
error = copyout(&oub, uap->sb, sizeof(oub));
}
fdrop(fp, td);
done2:
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (error);
}
#endif /* COMPAT_43 */
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Return status information about a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct fstat_args {
int fd;
struct stat *sb;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
fstat(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
struct fstat_args *uap;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct file *fp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct stat ub;
int error;
if ((error = fget(td, uap->fd, &fp)) != 0)
goto done2;
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
error = fo_stat(fp, &ub, td->td_ucred, td);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (error == 0)
error = copyout(&ub, uap->sb, sizeof(ub));
fdrop(fp, td);
done2:
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (error);
}
/*
* Return status information about a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct nfstat_args {
int fd;
struct nstat *sb;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
/* ARGSUSED */
int
nfstat(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct nfstat_args *uap;
{
struct file *fp;
struct stat ub;
struct nstat nub;
int error;
if ((error = fget(td, uap->fd, &fp)) != 0)
goto done2;
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
error = fo_stat(fp, &ub, td->td_ucred, td);
if (error == 0) {
cvtnstat(&ub, &nub);
error = copyout(&nub, uap->sb, sizeof(nub));
}
fdrop(fp, td);
done2:
return (error);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Return pathconf information about a file descriptor.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct fpathconf_args {
int fd;
int name;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
fpathconf(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct fpathconf_args *uap;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct file *fp;
struct vnode *vp;
int error;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if ((error = fget(td, uap->fd, &fp)) != 0)
return (error);
/* If asynchronous I/O is available, it works for all descriptors. */
if (uap->name == _PC_ASYNC_IO) {
td->td_retval[0] = async_io_version;
goto out;
}
vp = fp->f_vnode;
if (vp != NULL) {
mtx_lock(&Giant);
vn_lock(vp, LK_EXCLUSIVE | LK_RETRY, td);
error = VOP_PATHCONF(vp, uap->name, td->td_retval);
VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
} else if (fp->f_type == DTYPE_PIPE || fp->f_type == DTYPE_SOCKET) {
if (uap->name != _PC_PIPE_BUF) {
error = EINVAL;
} else {
td->td_retval[0] = PIPE_BUF;
error = 0;
}
} else {
error = EOPNOTSUPP;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
out:
fdrop(fp, td);
return (error);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Grow the file table to accomodate (at least) nfd descriptors. This may
* block and drop the filedesc lock, but it will reacquire it before
* returing.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
static void
fdgrowtable(struct filedesc *fdp, int nfd)
{
struct file **ntable;
char *nfileflags;
int nnfiles, onfiles;
NDSLOTTYPE *nmap;
FILEDESC_LOCK_ASSERT(fdp, MA_OWNED);
KASSERT(fdp->fd_nfiles > 0,
("zero-length file table"));
/* compute the size of the new table */
onfiles = fdp->fd_nfiles;
nnfiles = NDSLOTS(nfd) * NDENTRIES; /* round up */
if (nnfiles <= onfiles)
/* the table is already large enough */
return;
/* allocate a new table and (if required) new bitmaps */
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
MALLOC(ntable, struct file **, nnfiles * OFILESIZE,
M_FILEDESC, M_ZERO | M_WAITOK);
nfileflags = (char *)&ntable[nnfiles];
if (NDSLOTS(nnfiles) > NDSLOTS(onfiles))
MALLOC(nmap, NDSLOTTYPE *, NDSLOTS(nnfiles) * NDSLOTSIZE,
M_FILEDESC, M_ZERO | M_WAITOK);
else
nmap = NULL;
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
/*
* We now have new tables ready to go. Since we dropped the
* filedesc lock to call malloc(), watch out for a race.
*/
onfiles = fdp->fd_nfiles;
if (onfiles >= nnfiles) {
/* we lost the race, but that's OK */
free(ntable, M_FILEDESC);
if (nmap != NULL)
free(nmap, M_FILEDESC);
return;
}
bcopy(fdp->fd_ofiles, ntable, onfiles * sizeof(*ntable));
bcopy(fdp->fd_ofileflags, nfileflags, onfiles);
if (onfiles > NDFILE)
free(fdp->fd_ofiles, M_FILEDESC);
fdp->fd_ofiles = ntable;
fdp->fd_ofileflags = nfileflags;
if (NDSLOTS(nnfiles) > NDSLOTS(onfiles)) {
bcopy(fdp->fd_map, nmap, NDSLOTS(onfiles) * sizeof(*nmap));
if (NDSLOTS(onfiles) > NDSLOTS(NDFILE))
free(fdp->fd_map, M_FILEDESC);
fdp->fd_map = nmap;
}
fdp->fd_nfiles = nnfiles;
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Allocate a file descriptor for the process.
*/
int
fdalloc(struct thread *td, int minfd, int *result)
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct proc *p = td->td_proc;
struct filedesc *fdp = p->p_fd;
int fd = -1, maxfd;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
FILEDESC_LOCK_ASSERT(fdp, MA_OWNED);
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_LOCK(p);
maxfd = min((int)lim_cur(p, RLIMIT_NOFILE), maxfilesperproc);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Search the bitmap for a free descriptor. If none is found, try
* to grow the file table. Keep at it until we either get a file
* descriptor or run into process or system limits; fdgrowtable()
* may drop the filedesc lock, so we're in a race.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
for (;;) {
fd = fd_first_free(fdp, minfd, fdp->fd_nfiles);
if (fd >= maxfd)
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (EMFILE);
if (fd < fdp->fd_nfiles)
break;
fdgrowtable(fdp, min(fdp->fd_nfiles * 2, maxfd));
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Perform some sanity checks, then mark the file descriptor as
* used and return it to the caller.
*/
KASSERT(!fdisused(fdp, fd),
("fd_first_free() returned non-free descriptor"));
KASSERT(fdp->fd_ofiles[fd] == NULL,
("free descriptor isn't"));
fdp->fd_ofileflags[fd] = 0; /* XXX needed? */
fdused(fdp, fd);
fdp->fd_freefile = fd_first_free(fdp, fd, fdp->fd_nfiles);
*result = fd;
return (0);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Check to see whether n user file descriptors
* are available to the process p.
*/
int
fdavail(td, n)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
int n;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct proc *p = td->td_proc;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc *fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
struct file **fpp;
int i, lim, last;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
FILEDESC_LOCK_ASSERT(fdp, MA_OWNED);
Locking for the per-process resource limits structure. - struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from it without needing a further lock. - The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from under you while reading from it. - Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock wouldn't buy us anything. - All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified resource from a process. - dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of other similar syscall helper functions. - The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit() (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls, but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead. - The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result, ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant. - The p_rlimit macro no longer exists. Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups) Tested on: i386 Compiled on: alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
PROC_LOCK(p);
lim = min((int)lim_cur(p, RLIMIT_NOFILE), maxfilesperproc);
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if ((i = lim - fdp->fd_nfiles) > 0 && (n -= i) <= 0)
return (1);
last = min(fdp->fd_nfiles, lim);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fpp = &fdp->fd_ofiles[fdp->fd_freefile];
for (i = last - fdp->fd_freefile; --i >= 0; fpp++) {
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (*fpp == NULL && --n <= 0)
return (1);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (0);
}
/*
* Create a new open file structure and allocate
* a file decriptor for the process that refers to it.
* We add one reference to the file for the descriptor table
* and one reference for resultfp. This is to prevent us being
* prempted and the entry in the descriptor table closed after
* we release the FILEDESC lock.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
int
falloc(td, resultfp, resultfd)
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct file **resultfp;
int *resultfd;
{
struct proc *p = td->td_proc;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct file *fp, *fq;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
int error, i;
int maxuserfiles = maxfiles - (maxfiles / 20);
static struct timeval lastfail;
static int curfail;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fp = uma_zalloc(file_zone, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
sx_xlock(&filelist_lock);
if ((nfiles >= maxuserfiles && (td->td_ucred->cr_ruid != 0 ||
jailed(td->td_ucred))) || nfiles >= maxfiles) {
if (ppsratecheck(&lastfail, &curfail, 1)) {
printf("kern.maxfiles limit exceeded by uid %i, please see tuning(7).\n",
td->td_ucred->cr_ruid);
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
}
sx_xunlock(&filelist_lock);
uma_zfree(file_zone, fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (ENFILE);
}
nfiles++;
/*
* If the process has file descriptor zero open, add the new file
* descriptor to the list of open files at that point, otherwise
* put it at the front of the list of open files.
*/
fp->f_mtxp = mtx_pool_alloc(mtxpool_sleep);
fp->f_count = 1;
if (resultfp)
fp->f_count++;
fp->f_cred = crhold(td->td_ucred);
fp->f_ops = &badfileops;
fp->f_data = NULL;
fp->f_vnode = NULL;
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_LOCK(p->p_fd);
if ((fq = p->p_fd->fd_ofiles[0])) {
LIST_INSERT_AFTER(fq, fp, f_list);
} else {
LIST_INSERT_HEAD(&filehead, fp, f_list);
}
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
sx_xunlock(&filelist_lock);
if ((error = fdalloc(td, 0, &i))) {
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(p->p_fd);
fdrop(fp, td);
if (resultfp)
fdrop(fp, td);
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
return (error);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
p->p_fd->fd_ofiles[i] = fp;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(p->p_fd);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (resultfp)
*resultfp = fp;
if (resultfd)
*resultfd = i;
return (0);
}
/*
* Free a file descriptor.
*/
void
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
ffree(fp)
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct file *fp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
KASSERT(fp->f_count == 0, ("ffree: fp_fcount not 0!"));
sx_xlock(&filelist_lock);
LIST_REMOVE(fp, f_list);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
nfiles--;
sx_xunlock(&filelist_lock);
crfree(fp->f_cred);
uma_zfree(file_zone, fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Build a new filedesc structure from another.
* Copy the current, root, and jail root vnode references.
*/
struct filedesc *
fdinit(fdp)
struct filedesc *fdp;
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc0 *newfdp;
newfdp = malloc(sizeof *newfdp, M_FILEDESC, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
mtx_init(&newfdp->fd_fd.fd_mtx, FILEDESC_LOCK_DESC, NULL, MTX_DEF);
if (fdp != NULL) {
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_cdir = fdp->fd_cdir;
if (newfdp->fd_fd.fd_cdir)
VREF(newfdp->fd_fd.fd_cdir);
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_rdir = fdp->fd_rdir;
if (newfdp->fd_fd.fd_rdir)
VREF(newfdp->fd_fd.fd_rdir);
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_jdir = fdp->fd_jdir;
if (newfdp->fd_fd.fd_jdir)
VREF(newfdp->fd_fd.fd_jdir);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
/* Create the file descriptor table. */
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_refcnt = 1;
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_cmask = CMASK;
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_ofiles = newfdp->fd_dfiles;
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_ofileflags = newfdp->fd_dfileflags;
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_nfiles = NDFILE;
newfdp->fd_fd.fd_map = newfdp->fd_dmap;
return (&newfdp->fd_fd);
}
/*
* Share a filedesc structure.
*/
struct filedesc *
fdshare(fdp)
struct filedesc *fdp;
{
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdp->fd_refcnt++;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (fdp);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Copy a filedesc structure.
* A NULL pointer in returns a NULL reference, this is to ease callers,
* not catch errors.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
struct filedesc *
fdcopy(fdp)
struct filedesc *fdp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct filedesc *newfdp;
int i;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* Certain daemons might not have file descriptors. */
if (fdp == NULL)
return (NULL);
newfdp = fdinit(fdp);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
while (fdp->fd_lastfile >= newfdp->fd_nfiles) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
FILEDESC_LOCK(newfdp);
fdgrowtable(newfdp, fdp->fd_lastfile + 1);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(newfdp);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
}
/* copy everything except kqueue descriptors */
newfdp->fd_freefile = -1;
for (i = 0; i <= fdp->fd_lastfile; ++i) {
if (fdisused(fdp, i) &&
fdp->fd_ofiles[i]->f_type != DTYPE_KQUEUE) {
newfdp->fd_ofiles[i] = fdp->fd_ofiles[i];
newfdp->fd_ofileflags[i] = fdp->fd_ofileflags[i];
fhold(newfdp->fd_ofiles[i]);
newfdp->fd_lastfile = i;
} else {
if (newfdp->fd_freefile == -1)
newfdp->fd_freefile = i;
}
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
FILEDESC_LOCK(newfdp);
for (i = 0; i <= newfdp->fd_lastfile; ++i)
if (newfdp->fd_ofiles[i] != NULL)
fdused(newfdp, i);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(newfdp);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if (newfdp->fd_freefile == -1)
newfdp->fd_freefile = i;
newfdp->fd_cmask = fdp->fd_cmask;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (newfdp);
}
/* A mutex to protect the association between a proc and filedesc. */
struct mtx fdesc_mtx;
MTX_SYSINIT(fdesc, &fdesc_mtx, "fdesc", MTX_DEF);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Release a filedesc structure.
*/
void
fdfree(td)
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct filedesc *fdp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct file **fpp;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
int i;
struct filedesc_to_leader *fdtol;
struct file *fp;
struct vnode *vp;
struct flock lf;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
GIANT_REQUIRED; /* VFS */
/* Certain daemons might not have file descriptors. */
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
if (fdp == NULL)
return;
/* Check for special need to clear POSIX style locks */
fdtol = td->td_proc->p_fdtol;
if (fdtol != NULL) {
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
KASSERT(fdtol->fdl_refcount > 0,
("filedesc_to_refcount botch: fdl_refcount=%d",
fdtol->fdl_refcount));
if (fdtol->fdl_refcount == 1 &&
(td->td_proc->p_leader->p_flag & P_ADVLOCK) != 0) {
i = 0;
fpp = fdp->fd_ofiles;
for (i = 0, fpp = fdp->fd_ofiles;
i <= fdp->fd_lastfile;
i++, fpp++) {
if (*fpp == NULL ||
(*fpp)->f_type != DTYPE_VNODE)
continue;
fp = *fpp;
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
lf.l_whence = SEEK_SET;
lf.l_start = 0;
lf.l_len = 0;
lf.l_type = F_UNLCK;
vp = fp->f_vnode;
(void) VOP_ADVLOCK(vp,
(caddr_t)td->td_proc->
p_leader,
F_UNLCK,
&lf,
F_POSIX);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
fpp = fdp->fd_ofiles + i;
}
}
retry:
if (fdtol->fdl_refcount == 1) {
if (fdp->fd_holdleaderscount > 0 &&
(td->td_proc->p_leader->p_flag & P_ADVLOCK) != 0) {
/*
* close() or do_dup() has cleared a reference
* in a shared file descriptor table.
*/
fdp->fd_holdleaderswakeup = 1;
msleep(&fdp->fd_holdleaderscount, &fdp->fd_mtx,
PLOCK, "fdlhold", 0);
goto retry;
}
if (fdtol->fdl_holdcount > 0) {
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
/*
* Ensure that fdtol->fdl_leader
* remains valid in closef().
*/
fdtol->fdl_wakeup = 1;
msleep(fdtol, &fdp->fd_mtx,
PLOCK, "fdlhold", 0);
goto retry;
}
}
fdtol->fdl_refcount--;
if (fdtol->fdl_refcount == 0 &&
fdtol->fdl_holdcount == 0) {
fdtol->fdl_next->fdl_prev = fdtol->fdl_prev;
fdtol->fdl_prev->fdl_next = fdtol->fdl_next;
} else
fdtol = NULL;
td->td_proc->p_fdtol = NULL;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
if (fdtol != NULL)
FREE(fdtol, M_FILEDESC_TO_LEADER);
}
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if (--fdp->fd_refcnt > 0) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return;
}
/*
* We are the last reference to the structure, so we can
* safely assume it will not change out from under us.
*/
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fpp = fdp->fd_ofiles;
for (i = fdp->fd_lastfile; i-- >= 0; fpp++) {
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (*fpp)
(void) closef(*fpp, td);
}
/* XXX This should happen earlier. */
mtx_lock(&fdesc_mtx);
td->td_proc->p_fd = NULL;
mtx_unlock(&fdesc_mtx);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (fdp->fd_nfiles > NDFILE)
FREE(fdp->fd_ofiles, M_FILEDESC);
if (NDSLOTS(fdp->fd_nfiles) > NDSLOTS(NDFILE))
FREE(fdp->fd_map, M_FILEDESC);
Clean up some low level bootstrap code: - stop using the evil 'struct trapframe' argument for mi_startup() (formerly main()). There are much better ways of doing it. - do not use prepare_usermode() - setregs() in execve() will do it all for us as long as the p_md.md_regs pointer is set. (which is now done in machdep.c rather than init_main.c. The Alpha port did it this way all along and is much cleaner). - collect all the magic %cr0 etc register settings into one place and have the AP's call that instead of using magic numbers (!!) that keep changing over and over again. - Make it safe to call kthread_create() earlier, including during the device probe sequence. It doesn't need the callback mechanism that NetBSD's version uses. - kthreads created this way are root-less as they exist before the root filesystem is mounted. init(1) is set up so that it aquires the root pointers prior to running. If other kthreads want filesystem acccess we can make this code more generic. - set all threads start times once we have decided what time it is. - init uses a trampoline rather than the evil prepare_usermode() hack. - kern_descrip.c has a couple of tweaks to deal with forking when there is no rootdir or cwd etc. - adjust the early SYSINIT() sequence so that a few prereqisites are in place. eg: make sure the run queue is initialized before doing forks. With this, the USB code can easily create a kthread to do the device tree discovery. (I have tested it, it works nicely). There are still some open issues before this is truely useful. - tsleep() does not like working before the clock is running. It sort-of tries to spin wait, but it can do more useful things now. - stopping a kthread in kld code at unload time is "interesting" but we have a solution for that. The Alpha code needs no changes for this. It already uses pretty much the same strategies, but a little cleaner.
2000-08-11 09:05:12 +00:00
if (fdp->fd_cdir)
vrele(fdp->fd_cdir);
if (fdp->fd_rdir)
vrele(fdp->fd_rdir);
if (fdp->fd_jdir)
vrele(fdp->fd_jdir);
mtx_destroy(&fdp->fd_mtx);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
FREE(fdp, M_FILEDESC);
}
/*
2000-01-21 02:52:54 +00:00
* For setugid programs, we don't want to people to use that setugidness
* to generate error messages which write to a file which otherwise would
* otherwise be off-limits to the process. We check for filesystems where
* the vnode can change out from under us after execve (like [lin]procfs).
*
* Since setugidsafety calls this only for fd 0, 1 and 2, this check is
2000-01-21 02:52:54 +00:00
* sufficient. We also don't for check setugidness since we know we are.
*/
static int
is_unsafe(struct file *fp)
{
if (fp->f_type == DTYPE_VNODE) {
struct vnode *vp = fp->f_vnode;
if ((vp->v_vflag & VV_PROCDEP) != 0)
return (1);
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Make this setguid thing safe, if at all possible.
*/
void
setugidsafety(td)
struct thread *td;
{
struct filedesc *fdp;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
int i;
/* Certain daemons might not have file descriptors. */
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
if (fdp == NULL)
return;
/*
* Note: fdp->fd_ofiles may be reallocated out from under us while
* we are blocked in a close. Be careful!
*/
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
for (i = 0; i <= fdp->fd_lastfile; i++) {
if (i > 2)
break;
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[i] && is_unsafe(fdp->fd_ofiles[i])) {
struct file *fp;
knote_fdclose(td, i);
/*
* NULL-out descriptor prior to close to avoid
* a race while close blocks.
*/
fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[i];
fdp->fd_ofiles[i] = NULL;
fdp->fd_ofileflags[i] = 0;
fdunused(fdp, i);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
(void) closef(fp, td);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
}
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
void
fdclose(struct filedesc *fdp, struct file *fp, int idx, struct thread *td)
{
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[idx] == fp) {
fdp->fd_ofiles[idx] = NULL;
fdunused(fdp, idx);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
} else {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
}
/*
* Close any files on exec?
*/
void
fdcloseexec(td)
struct thread *td;
{
struct filedesc *fdp;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
int i;
/* Certain daemons might not have file descriptors. */
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
if (fdp == NULL)
return;
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
/*
* We cannot cache fd_ofiles or fd_ofileflags since operations
* may block and rip them out from under us.
*/
for (i = 0; i <= fdp->fd_lastfile; i++) {
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[i] != NULL &&
(fdp->fd_ofileflags[i] & UF_EXCLOSE)) {
struct file *fp;
knote_fdclose(td, i);
/*
* NULL-out descriptor prior to close to avoid
* a race while close blocks.
*/
fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[i];
fdp->fd_ofiles[i] = NULL;
fdp->fd_ofileflags[i] = 0;
fdunused(fdp, i);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
(void) closef(fp, td);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
}
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
/*
* It is unsafe for set[ug]id processes to be started with file
* descriptors 0..2 closed, as these descriptors are given implicit
* significance in the Standard C library. fdcheckstd() will create a
* descriptor referencing /dev/null for each of stdin, stdout, and
* stderr that is not already open.
*/
int
fdcheckstd(td)
struct thread *td;
{
struct nameidata nd;
struct filedesc *fdp;
struct file *fp;
register_t retval;
int fd, i, error, flags, devnull;
GIANT_REQUIRED; /* VFS */
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
if (fdp == NULL)
return (0);
KASSERT(fdp->fd_refcnt == 1, ("the fdtable should not be shared"));
devnull = -1;
error = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
if (fdp->fd_ofiles[i] != NULL)
continue;
if (devnull < 0) {
error = falloc(td, &fp, &fd);
if (error != 0)
break;
/* Note extra ref on `fp' held for us by falloc(). */
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
KASSERT(fd == i, ("oof, we didn't get our fd"));
NDINIT(&nd, LOOKUP, FOLLOW, UIO_SYSSPACE, "/dev/null",
td);
flags = FREAD | FWRITE;
error = vn_open(&nd, &flags, 0, -1);
if (error != 0) {
/*
* Someone may have closed the entry in the
* file descriptor table, so check it hasn't
* changed before dropping the reference count.
*/
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
KASSERT(fdp->fd_ofiles[fd] == fp,
("table not shared, how did it change?"));
fdp->fd_ofiles[fd] = NULL;
fdunused(fdp, fd);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
fdrop(fp, td);
fdrop(fp, td);
break;
}
NDFREE(&nd, NDF_ONLY_PNBUF);
fp->f_flag = flags;
fp->f_vnode = nd.ni_vp;
if (fp->f_data == NULL)
fp->f_data = nd.ni_vp;
if (fp->f_ops == &badfileops)
fp->f_ops = &vnops;
fp->f_type = DTYPE_VNODE;
VOP_UNLOCK(nd.ni_vp, 0, td);
devnull = fd;
fdrop(fp, td);
} else {
- Change falloc() to acquire an fd from the process table last so that it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock. - fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a result. - Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate statements. This is still a bit ugly though. - Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to the min() in the previous line. - Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior to doing the malloc(). - malloc() doesn't need Giant now. - Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc(). - Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd, then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some huge table and copy the existing table into it. - Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses a different error return value in one case then the other functions. - Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with the fd table, there might could be a problem. - To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing some other descriptor and returning it to them. Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-09-03 20:16:31 +00:00
error = do_dup(td, DUP_FIXED, devnull, i, &retval);
if (error != 0)
break;
}
}
return (error);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* Internal form of close.
* Decrement reference count on file structure.
* Note: td may be NULL when closing a file
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
* that was being passed in a message.
*/
int
closef(fp, td)
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct file *fp;
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct vnode *vp;
struct flock lf;
struct filedesc_to_leader *fdtol;
struct filedesc *fdp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
if (fp == NULL)
return (0);
/*
* POSIX record locking dictates that any close releases ALL
* locks owned by this process. This is handled by setting
* a flag in the unlock to free ONLY locks obeying POSIX
* semantics, and not to free BSD-style file locks.
* If the descriptor was in a message, POSIX-style locks
* aren't passed with the descriptor.
*/
if (td != NULL &&
fp->f_type == DTYPE_VNODE) {
if ((td->td_proc->p_leader->p_flag & P_ADVLOCK) != 0) {
lf.l_whence = SEEK_SET;
lf.l_start = 0;
lf.l_len = 0;
lf.l_type = F_UNLCK;
vp = fp->f_vnode;
(void) VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)td->td_proc->p_leader,
F_UNLCK, &lf, F_POSIX);
}
fdtol = td->td_proc->p_fdtol;
if (fdtol != NULL) {
/*
* Handle special case where file descriptor table
* is shared between multiple process leaders.
*/
fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd;
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
for (fdtol = fdtol->fdl_next;
fdtol != td->td_proc->p_fdtol;
fdtol = fdtol->fdl_next) {
if ((fdtol->fdl_leader->p_flag &
P_ADVLOCK) == 0)
continue;
fdtol->fdl_holdcount++;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
lf.l_whence = SEEK_SET;
lf.l_start = 0;
lf.l_len = 0;
lf.l_type = F_UNLCK;
vp = fp->f_vnode;
(void) VOP_ADVLOCK(vp,
(caddr_t)fdtol->fdl_leader,
F_UNLCK, &lf, F_POSIX);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdtol->fdl_holdcount--;
if (fdtol->fdl_holdcount == 0 &&
fdtol->fdl_wakeup != 0) {
fdtol->fdl_wakeup = 0;
wakeup(fdtol);
}
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
return (fdrop(fp, td));
}
/*
* Drop reference on struct file passed in, may call closef if the
* reference hits zero.
*/
int
fdrop(fp, td)
struct file *fp;
struct thread *td;
{
FILE_LOCK(fp);
return (fdrop_locked(fp, td));
}
/*
* Extract the file pointer associated with the specified descriptor for
* the current user process.
*
* If the descriptor doesn't exist, EBADF is returned.
*
* If the descriptor exists but doesn't match 'flags' then
* return EBADF for read attempts and EINVAL for write attempts.
*
* If 'hold' is set (non-zero) the file's refcount will be bumped on return.
* It should be droped with fdrop().
* If it is not set, then the refcount will not be bumped however the
* thread's filedesc struct will be returned locked (for fgetsock).
*
* If an error occured the non-zero error is returned and *fpp is set to NULL.
* Otherwise *fpp is set and zero is returned.
*/
static __inline int
_fget(struct thread *td, int fd, struct file **fpp, int flags, int hold)
{
struct filedesc *fdp;
struct file *fp;
*fpp = NULL;
if (td == NULL || (fdp = td->td_proc->p_fd) == NULL)
return (EBADF);
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if ((fp = fget_locked(fdp, fd)) == NULL || fp->f_ops == &badfileops) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (EBADF);
}
/*
* Note: FREAD failures returns EBADF to maintain backwards
* compatibility with what routines returned before.
*
* Only one flag, or 0, may be specified.
*/
if (flags == FREAD && (fp->f_flag & FREAD) == 0) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (EBADF);
}
if (flags == FWRITE && (fp->f_flag & FWRITE) == 0) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
return (EINVAL);
}
if (hold) {
fhold(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
}
*fpp = fp;
return (0);
}
int
fget(struct thread *td, int fd, struct file **fpp)
{
return(_fget(td, fd, fpp, 0, 1));
}
int
fget_read(struct thread *td, int fd, struct file **fpp)
{
return(_fget(td, fd, fpp, FREAD, 1));
}
int
fget_write(struct thread *td, int fd, struct file **fpp)
{
return(_fget(td, fd, fpp, FWRITE, 1));
}
/*
* Like fget() but loads the underlying vnode, or returns an error if
* the descriptor does not represent a vnode. Note that pipes use vnodes
* but never have VM objects (so VOP_GETVOBJECT() calls will return an
* error). The returned vnode will be vref()d.
*/
static __inline int
_fgetvp(struct thread *td, int fd, struct vnode **vpp, int flags)
{
struct file *fp;
int error;
GIANT_REQUIRED; /* VFS */
*vpp = NULL;
if ((error = _fget(td, fd, &fp, 0, 0)) != 0)
return (error);
if (fp->f_vnode == NULL) {
error = EINVAL;
} else {
*vpp = fp->f_vnode;
vref(*vpp);
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(td->td_proc->p_fd);
return (error);
}
int
fgetvp(struct thread *td, int fd, struct vnode **vpp)
{
return (_fgetvp(td, fd, vpp, 0));
}
int
fgetvp_read(struct thread *td, int fd, struct vnode **vpp)
{
return (_fgetvp(td, fd, vpp, FREAD));
}
int
fgetvp_write(struct thread *td, int fd, struct vnode **vpp)
{
return (_fgetvp(td, fd, vpp, FWRITE));
}
/*
* Like fget() but loads the underlying socket, or returns an error if
* the descriptor does not represent a socket.
*
* We bump the ref count on the returned socket. XXX Also obtain the SX
* lock in the future.
*/
int
fgetsock(struct thread *td, int fd, struct socket **spp, u_int *fflagp)
{
struct file *fp;
int error;
NET_ASSERT_GIANT();
*spp = NULL;
if (fflagp != NULL)
*fflagp = 0;
if ((error = _fget(td, fd, &fp, 0, 0)) != 0)
return (error);
if (fp->f_type != DTYPE_SOCKET) {
error = ENOTSOCK;
} else {
*spp = fp->f_data;
if (fflagp)
*fflagp = fp->f_flag;
SOCK_LOCK(*spp);
soref(*spp);
SOCK_UNLOCK(*spp);
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(td->td_proc->p_fd);
return (error);
}
/*
* Drop the reference count on the the socket and XXX release the SX lock in
* the future. The last reference closes the socket.
*/
void
fputsock(struct socket *so)
{
NET_ASSERT_GIANT();
Push acquisition of the accept mutex out of sofree() into the caller (sorele()/sotryfree()): - This permits the caller to acquire the accept mutex before the socket mutex, avoiding sofree() having to drop the socket mutex and re-order, which could lead to races permitting more than one thread to enter sofree() after a socket is ready to be free'd. - This also covers clearing of the so_pcb weak socket reference from the protocol to the socket, preventing races in clearing and evaluation of the reference such that sofree() might be called more than once on the same socket. This appears to close a race I was able to easily trigger by repeatedly opening and resetting TCP connections to a host, in which the tcp_close() code called as a result of the RST raced with the close() of the accepted socket in the user process resulting in simultaneous attempts to de-allocate the same socket. The new locking increases the overhead for operations that may potentially free the socket, so we will want to revise the synchronization strategy here as we normalize the reference counting model for sockets. The use of the accept mutex in freeing of sockets that are not listen sockets is primarily motivated by the potential need to remove the socket from the incomplete connection queue on its parent (listen) socket, so cleaning up the reference model here may allow us to substantially weaken the synchronization requirements. RELENG_5_3 candidate. MFC after: 3 days Reviewed by: dwhite Discussed with: gnn, dwhite, green Reported by: Marc UBM Bocklet <ubm at u-boot-man dot de> Reported by: Vlad <marchenko at gmail dot com>
2004-10-18 22:19:43 +00:00
ACCEPT_LOCK();
SOCK_LOCK(so);
sorele(so);
}
/*
* Drop reference on struct file passed in, may call closef if the
* reference hits zero.
* Expects struct file locked, and will unlock it.
*/
int
fdrop_locked(fp, td)
struct file *fp;
struct thread *td;
{
int error;
FILE_LOCK_ASSERT(fp, MA_OWNED);
if (--fp->f_count > 0) {
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
return (0);
}
/* We have the last ref so we can proceed without the file lock. */
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
if (fp->f_count < 0)
panic("fdrop: count < 0");
if (fp->f_ops != &badfileops)
error = fo_close(fp, td);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
else
error = 0;
ffree(fp);
return (error);
}
/*
* Apply an advisory lock on a file descriptor.
*
* Just attempt to get a record lock of the requested type on
* the entire file (l_whence = SEEK_SET, l_start = 0, l_len = 0).
*/
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct flock_args {
int fd;
int how;
};
#endif
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/* ARGSUSED */
int
flock(td, uap)
struct thread *td;
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct flock_args *uap;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
struct file *fp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct vnode *vp;
struct flock lf;
int error;
if ((error = fget(td, uap->fd, &fp)) != 0)
return (error);
if (fp->f_type != DTYPE_VNODE) {
fdrop(fp, td);
return (EOPNOTSUPP);
}
mtx_lock(&Giant);
vp = fp->f_vnode;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
lf.l_whence = SEEK_SET;
lf.l_start = 0;
lf.l_len = 0;
if (uap->how & LOCK_UN) {
lf.l_type = F_UNLCK;
FILE_LOCK(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fp->f_flag &= ~FHASLOCK;
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)fp, F_UNLCK, &lf, F_FLOCK);
goto done2;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
if (uap->how & LOCK_EX)
lf.l_type = F_WRLCK;
else if (uap->how & LOCK_SH)
lf.l_type = F_RDLCK;
else {
error = EBADF;
goto done2;
}
FILE_LOCK(fp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fp->f_flag |= FHASLOCK;
FILE_UNLOCK(fp);
error = VOP_ADVLOCK(vp, (caddr_t)fp, F_SETLK, &lf,
(uap->how & LOCK_NB) ? F_FLOCK : F_FLOCK | F_WAIT);
done2:
fdrop(fp, td);
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
return (error);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
}
/*
* File Descriptor pseudo-device driver (/dev/fd/).
*
* Opening minor device N dup()s the file (if any) connected to file
* descriptor N belonging to the calling process. Note that this driver
* consists of only the ``open()'' routine, because all subsequent
* references to this file will be direct to the other driver.
*/
/* ARGSUSED */
static int
fdopen(dev, mode, type, td)
struct cdev *dev;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
int mode, type;
struct thread *td;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
{
/*
* XXX Kludge: set curthread->td_dupfd to contain the value of the
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
* the file descriptor being sought for duplication. The error
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
* return ensures that the vnode for this device will be released
* by vn_open. Open will detect this special error and take the
* actions in dupfdopen below. Other callers of vn_open or VOP_OPEN
* will simply report the error.
*/
td->td_dupfd = dev2unit(dev);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (ENODEV);
}
/*
* Duplicate the specified descriptor to a free descriptor.
*/
int
dupfdopen(td, fdp, indx, dfd, mode, error)
struct thread *td;
struct filedesc *fdp;
int indx, dfd;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
int mode;
int error;
{
2003-01-01 01:05:54 +00:00
struct file *wfp;
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
struct file *fp;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* If the to-be-dup'd fd number is greater than the allowed number
* of file descriptors, or the fd to be dup'd has already been
* closed, then reject.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
if (dfd < 0 || dfd >= fdp->fd_nfiles ||
(wfp = fdp->fd_ofiles[dfd]) == NULL) {
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (EBADF);
}
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
/*
* There are two cases of interest here.
*
* For ENODEV simply dup (dfd) to file descriptor
* (indx) and return.
*
* For ENXIO steal away the file structure from (dfd) and
* store it in (indx). (dfd) is effectively closed by
* this operation.
*
* Any other error code is just returned.
*/
switch (error) {
case ENODEV:
/*
* Check that the mode the file is being opened for is a
* subset of the mode of the existing descriptor.
*/
FILE_LOCK(wfp);
if (((mode & (FREAD|FWRITE)) | wfp->f_flag) != wfp->f_flag) {
FILE_UNLOCK(wfp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (EACCES);
}
fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[indx];
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fdp->fd_ofiles[indx] = wfp;
fdp->fd_ofileflags[indx] = fdp->fd_ofileflags[dfd];
if (fp == NULL)
fdused(fdp, indx);
fhold_locked(wfp);
FILE_UNLOCK(wfp);
if (fp != NULL)
FILE_LOCK(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
/*
* We now own the reference to fp that the ofiles[] array
* used to own. Release it.
*/
if (fp != NULL)
fdrop_locked(fp, td);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (0);
case ENXIO:
/*
* Steal away the file pointer from dfd and stuff it into indx.
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
*/
fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[indx];
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
fdp->fd_ofiles[indx] = fdp->fd_ofiles[dfd];
fdp->fd_ofiles[dfd] = NULL;
fdp->fd_ofileflags[indx] = fdp->fd_ofileflags[dfd];
fdp->fd_ofileflags[dfd] = 0;
fdunused(fdp, dfd);
if (fp == NULL)
fdused(fdp, indx);
if (fp != NULL)
FILE_LOCK(fp);
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
/*
* we now own the reference to fp that the ofiles[] array
* used to own. Release it.
*/
if (fp != NULL)
fdrop_locked(fp, td);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (0);
default:
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00
return (error);
}
/* NOTREACHED */
}
struct filedesc_to_leader *
filedesc_to_leader_alloc(struct filedesc_to_leader *old,
struct filedesc *fdp,
struct proc *leader)
{
struct filedesc_to_leader *fdtol;
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
MALLOC(fdtol, struct filedesc_to_leader *,
sizeof(struct filedesc_to_leader),
M_FILEDESC_TO_LEADER,
M_WAITOK);
fdtol->fdl_refcount = 1;
fdtol->fdl_holdcount = 0;
fdtol->fdl_wakeup = 0;
fdtol->fdl_leader = leader;
if (old != NULL) {
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
fdtol->fdl_next = old->fdl_next;
fdtol->fdl_prev = old;
old->fdl_next = fdtol;
fdtol->fdl_next->fdl_prev = fdtol;
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
} else {
fdtol->fdl_next = fdtol;
fdtol->fdl_prev = fdtol;
}
return (fdtol);
}
/*
* Get file structures.
*/
static int
sysctl_kern_file(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
struct xfile xf;
struct filedesc *fdp;
struct file *fp;
struct proc *p;
int error, n;
/*
* Note: because the number of file descriptors is calculated
* in different ways for sizing vs returning the data,
* there is information leakage from the first loop. However,
* it is of a similar order of magnitude to the leakage from
* global system statistics such as kern.openfiles.
*/
error = sysctl_wire_old_buffer(req, 0);
if (error != 0)
return (error);
if (req->oldptr == NULL) {
n = 16; /* A slight overestimate. */
sx_slock(&filelist_lock);
LIST_FOREACH(fp, &filehead, f_list) {
/*
* We should grab the lock, but this is an
* estimate, so does it really matter?
*/
/* mtx_lock(fp->f_mtxp); */
n += fp->f_count;
/* mtx_unlock(f->f_mtxp); */
}
sx_sunlock(&filelist_lock);
return (SYSCTL_OUT(req, 0, n * sizeof(xf)));
}
error = 0;
bzero(&xf, sizeof(xf));
xf.xf_size = sizeof(xf);
sx_slock(&allproc_lock);
LIST_FOREACH(p, &allproc, p_list) {
if (p->p_state == PRS_NEW)
continue;
PROC_LOCK(p);
if (p_cansee(req->td, p) != 0) {
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
continue;
}
xf.xf_pid = p->p_pid;
xf.xf_uid = p->p_ucred->cr_uid;
PROC_UNLOCK(p);
mtx_lock(&fdesc_mtx);
if ((fdp = p->p_fd) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&fdesc_mtx);
continue;
}
FILEDESC_LOCK(fdp);
for (n = 0; n < fdp->fd_nfiles; ++n) {
if ((fp = fdp->fd_ofiles[n]) == NULL)
continue;
xf.xf_fd = n;
xf.xf_file = fp;
xf.xf_data = fp->f_data;
xf.xf_vnode = fp->f_vnode;
xf.xf_type = fp->f_type;
xf.xf_count = fp->f_count;
xf.xf_msgcount = fp->f_msgcount;
xf.xf_offset = fp->f_offset;
xf.xf_flag = fp->f_flag;
error = SYSCTL_OUT(req, &xf, sizeof(xf));
if (error)
break;
}
FILEDESC_UNLOCK(fdp);
mtx_unlock(&fdesc_mtx);
if (error)
break;
}
sx_sunlock(&allproc_lock);
return (error);
}
SYSCTL_PROC(_kern, KERN_FILE, file, CTLTYPE_OPAQUE|CTLFLAG_RD,
0, 0, sysctl_kern_file, "S,xfile", "Entire file table");
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
SYSCTL_INT(_kern, KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC, maxfilesperproc, CTLFLAG_RW,
&maxfilesperproc, 0, "Maximum files allowed open per process");
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
SYSCTL_INT(_kern, KERN_MAXFILES, maxfiles, CTLFLAG_RW,
&maxfiles, 0, "Maximum number of files");
2004-01-11 19:39:14 +00:00
SYSCTL_INT(_kern, OID_AUTO, openfiles, CTLFLAG_RD,
&nfiles, 0, "System-wide number of open files");
static void
fildesc_drvinit(void *unused)
{
struct cdev *dev;
dev = make_dev(&fildesc_cdevsw, 0, UID_ROOT, GID_WHEEL, 0666, "fd/0");
make_dev_alias(dev, "stdin");
dev = make_dev(&fildesc_cdevsw, 1, UID_ROOT, GID_WHEEL, 0666, "fd/1");
make_dev_alias(dev, "stdout");
dev = make_dev(&fildesc_cdevsw, 2, UID_ROOT, GID_WHEEL, 0666, "fd/2");
make_dev_alias(dev, "stderr");
}
2002-12-24 09:44:51 +00:00
static fo_rdwr_t badfo_readwrite;
static fo_ioctl_t badfo_ioctl;
static fo_poll_t badfo_poll;
static fo_kqfilter_t badfo_kqfilter;
static fo_stat_t badfo_stat;
static fo_close_t badfo_close;
struct fileops badfileops = {
.fo_read = badfo_readwrite,
.fo_write = badfo_readwrite,
.fo_ioctl = badfo_ioctl,
.fo_poll = badfo_poll,
.fo_kqfilter = badfo_kqfilter,
.fo_stat = badfo_stat,
.fo_close = badfo_close,
};
static int
In order to better support flexible and extensible access control, make a series of modifications to the credential arguments relating to file read and write operations to cliarfy which credential is used for what: - Change fo_read() and fo_write() to accept "active_cred" instead of "cred", and change the semantics of consumers of fo_read() and fo_write() to pass the active credential of the thread requesting an operation rather than the cached file cred. The cached file cred is still available in fo_read() and fo_write() consumers via fp->f_cred. These changes largely in sys_generic.c. For each implementation of fo_read() and fo_write(), update cred usage to reflect this change and maintain current semantics: - badfo_readwrite() unchanged - kqueue_read/write() unchanged pipe_read/write() now authorize MAC using active_cred rather than td->td_ucred - soo_read/write() unchanged - vn_read/write() now authorize MAC using active_cred but VOP_READ/WRITE() with fp->f_cred Modify vn_rdwr() to accept two credential arguments instead of a single credential: active_cred and file_cred. Use active_cred for MAC authorization, and select a credential for use in VOP_READ/WRITE() based on whether file_cred is NULL or not. If file_cred is provided, authorize the VOP using that cred, otherwise the active credential, matching current semantics. Modify current vn_rdwr() consumers to pass a file_cred if used in the context of a struct file, and to always pass active_cred. When vn_rdwr() is used without a file_cred, pass NOCRED. These changes should maintain current semantics for read/write, but avoid a redundant passing of fp->f_cred, as well as making it more clear what the origin of each credential is in file descriptor read/write operations. Follow-up commits will make similar changes to other file descriptor operations, and modify the MAC framework to pass both credentials to MAC policy modules so they can implement either semantic for revocation. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-15 20:55:08 +00:00
badfo_readwrite(fp, uio, active_cred, flags, td)
struct file *fp;
struct uio *uio;
In order to better support flexible and extensible access control, make a series of modifications to the credential arguments relating to file read and write operations to cliarfy which credential is used for what: - Change fo_read() and fo_write() to accept "active_cred" instead of "cred", and change the semantics of consumers of fo_read() and fo_write() to pass the active credential of the thread requesting an operation rather than the cached file cred. The cached file cred is still available in fo_read() and fo_write() consumers via fp->f_cred. These changes largely in sys_generic.c. For each implementation of fo_read() and fo_write(), update cred usage to reflect this change and maintain current semantics: - badfo_readwrite() unchanged - kqueue_read/write() unchanged pipe_read/write() now authorize MAC using active_cred rather than td->td_ucred - soo_read/write() unchanged - vn_read/write() now authorize MAC using active_cred but VOP_READ/WRITE() with fp->f_cred Modify vn_rdwr() to accept two credential arguments instead of a single credential: active_cred and file_cred. Use active_cred for MAC authorization, and select a credential for use in VOP_READ/WRITE() based on whether file_cred is NULL or not. If file_cred is provided, authorize the VOP using that cred, otherwise the active credential, matching current semantics. Modify current vn_rdwr() consumers to pass a file_cred if used in the context of a struct file, and to always pass active_cred. When vn_rdwr() is used without a file_cred, pass NOCRED. These changes should maintain current semantics for read/write, but avoid a redundant passing of fp->f_cred, as well as making it more clear what the origin of each credential is in file descriptor read/write operations. Follow-up commits will make similar changes to other file descriptor operations, and modify the MAC framework to pass both credentials to MAC policy modules so they can implement either semantic for revocation. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-15 20:55:08 +00:00
struct ucred *active_cred;
struct thread *td;
int flags;
{
return (EBADF);
}
static int
badfo_ioctl(fp, com, data, active_cred, td)
struct file *fp;
u_long com;
void *data;
struct ucred *active_cred;
struct thread *td;
{
return (EBADF);
}
static int
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
badfo_poll(fp, events, active_cred, td)
struct file *fp;
int events;
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
struct ucred *active_cred;
struct thread *td;
{
return (0);
}
static int
badfo_kqfilter(fp, kn)
struct file *fp;
struct knote *kn;
{
return (0);
}
static int
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
badfo_stat(fp, sb, active_cred, td)
struct file *fp;
struct stat *sb;
Make similar changes to fo_stat() and fo_poll() as made earlier to fo_read() and fo_write(): explicitly use the cred argument to fo_poll() as "active_cred" using the passed file descriptor's f_cred reference to provide access to the file credential. Add an active_cred argument to fo_stat() so that implementers have access to the active credential as well as the file credential. Generally modify callers of fo_stat() to pass in td->td_ucred rather than fp->f_cred, which was redundantly provided via the fp argument. This set of modifications also permits threads to perform these operations on behalf of another thread without modifying their credential. Trickle this change down into fo_stat/poll() implementations: - badfo_poll(), badfo_stat(): modify/add arguments. - kqueue_poll(), kqueue_stat(): modify arguments. - pipe_poll(), pipe_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass active_cred to MAC checks rather than td->td_ucred. - soo_poll(), soo_stat(): modify/add arguments, pass fp->f_cred rather than cred to pru_sopoll() to maintain current semantics. - sopoll(): moidfy arguments. - vn_poll(), vn_statfile(): modify/add arguments, pass new arguments to vn_stat(). Pass active_cred to MAC and fp->f_cred to VOP_POLL() to maintian current semantics. - vn_close(): rename cred to file_cred to reflect reality while I'm here. - vn_stat(): Add active_cred and file_cred arguments to vn_stat() and consumers so that this distinction is maintained at the VFS as well as 'struct file' layer. Pass active_cred instead of td->td_ucred to MAC and to VOP_GETATTR() to maintain current semantics. - fifofs: modify the creation of a "filetemp" so that the file credential is properly initialized and can be used in the socket code if desired. Pass ap->a_td->td_ucred as the active credential to soo_poll(). If we teach the vnop interface about the distinction between file and active credentials, we would use the active credential here. Note that current inconsistent passing of active_cred vs. file_cred to VOP's is maintained. It's not clear why GETATTR would be authorized using active_cred while POLL would be authorized using file_cred at the file system level. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 12:52:03 +00:00
struct ucred *active_cred;
struct thread *td;
{
return (EBADF);
}
static int
badfo_close(fp, td)
struct file *fp;
struct thread *td;
{
return (EBADF);
}
SYSINIT(fildescdev,SI_SUB_DRIVERS,SI_ORDER_MIDDLE+CDEV_MAJOR,
fildesc_drvinit,NULL)
2002-03-19 21:25:46 +00:00
static void filelistinit(void *);
SYSINIT(select, SI_SUB_LOCK, SI_ORDER_FIRST, filelistinit, NULL)
/* ARGSUSED*/
static void
filelistinit(dummy)
void *dummy;
{
file_zone = uma_zcreate("Files", sizeof(struct file), NULL, NULL,
NULL, NULL, UMA_ALIGN_PTR, 0);
sx_init(&filelist_lock, "filelist lock");
mtx_init(&sigio_lock, "sigio lock", NULL, MTX_DEF);
}