Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
This was detected in about 25% of runs with gcc -fsanitize=address
ERROR: AddressSanitizer: global-buffer-overflow on address ...
READ of size 4 at 0x000000416628 thread T0
#0 0x40479f in genpattern src/shred.c:782
#1 0x4050d9 in do_wipefd src/shred.c:921
#2 0x406203 in wipefile src/shred.c:1175
#3 0x406b84 in main src/shred.c:1316
#4 0x7f3454a1ef9f in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x1ff9f)
#5 0x4025d8 (/tmp/coreutils-8.23/src/shred+0x4025d8)
0x000000416628 is located 56 bytes to the left of
global variable '*.LC49' from 'src/shred.c' (0x416660) of size 17
0x000000416628 is located 12 bytes to the right of
global variable 'patterns' from 'src/shred.c' (0x416540) of size 220
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: global-buffer-overflow src/shred.c:782
* src/shred.c (gen_patterns): Restrict pattern selection
to the K available, which regressed due to v5.92-1462-g65533e1.
* tests/misc/shred-passes.sh: Add a deterministic test case.
* NEWS: Mention the bug fix.
Fixes http://bugs.gnu.org/20998
|
|
Since non interactive shells don't generally set $SHELL,
its value is propagated through the tests and may cause issues;
for example if $SHELL implicitly adjusts $PATH when run.
Instead we set $SHELL to that determined by the posix-shell module,
and use that consistently for all test sub scripts,
including those created thorugh the `split --filter` command.
* tests/local.mk: Explicitly set $SHELL to $(PREFERABLY_POSIX_SHELL)
which defaults to $CONFIG_SHELL and thus usually /bin/sh.
* tests/envvar-check: Remove bash environment variables with
side effects, in case /bin/bash was selected for $SHELL.
* tests/misc/help-version.sh: Remove redundant initialization of $SHELL.
* tests/install/strip-program.sh: Use $SHELL for sub script.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-hang.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-proc.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-compress.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/timeout-group.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/fail-eperm.xpl: Remove redundant elision of bash env vars.
* tests/misc/pwd-long.sh: Likewise.
|
|
* tests/du/threshold.sh: Homogenize getopt error messages.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Likewise.
* tests/mv/i-3.sh: Skip on *BSD not just FreeBSD.
|
|
* tests/misc/stty.sh: FreeBSD returns ENOTTY for
the TIOCEXT ioctl, so just avoid this option for now.
|
|
* tests/misc/sync.sh: Ensure dir is unreadable before
including the permission check.
|
|
* src/factor.c (n_out): A new global variable to track
how much data has been written to stdout.
(print_factors_single): Use n_out to determine whether
to flush the current (and previous) lines.
* tests/misc/factor-parallel.sh: Add a new test.
* tests/local.mk: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the bug fix.
|
|
src/seq.c (scan_arg): Set precision and width _after_ exponentiation.
For example, this will make '1.1e1 12' and '11 1.2e1' equivalent.
One can still set the precision by specifying extra precision on
the start value, or more naturally with a precision on a step value.
* tests/misc/seq-precision.sh: Add new cases.
|
|
* src/seq.c (scan_arg): Set precision to 0 for hex constants
(while avoiding hex floats). This will use then use the
fast path for these arguments. Note we also set the precision
of inf to 0 here, which ensures we use consistent precision
on output where possible.
* tests/misc/seq-precision.sh: Add corresponding test cases.
|
|
* src/seq.c (main): Call seq_fast for infinite last value.
This implicitly avoids format conversion on the
999999 -> 1000000 transition.
* src/seq.c (seq_fast): Generalize the buffer handling,
and adjust to handle the "inf" last value specifics.
* tests/misc/seq-precision.sh: A new test.
* tests/local.mk: Reference the new test.
|
|
* src/numfmt.c (MAX_UNSCALED_DIGITS): Set this to LDBL_DIG
rather than hardcoding at 18 for better portability.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Restrict limit tests to supported platforms.
|
|
* src/numfmt.c (simple_strtod_int): Don't count leading zeros
as significant digits. Also have leading zeros as optional
for floating point numbers.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Add test cases.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
|
|
Due to existing limits this is usually triggered
with an increased precision. We also add further
restrictions to the output of increased precision numbers.
* src/numfmt.c (simple_round): Avoid intmax_t overflow.
(simple_strtod_int): Count digits consistently
for precision loss and overflow detection.
(prepare_padded_number): Include the precision
when excluding numbers to output, since the precision
determines the ultimate values used in the rounding scheme
in double_to_human().
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Add previously failing test cases.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
|
|
* src/numfmt.c (usage): Update the --format description
to indicate precision is allowed.
(parse_format_string): Parse a precision specification
like the standard printf does.
(double_to_human): Honor the precision in --to mode.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: New tests.
* doc/coreutils.texi (numfmt invocation): Mention the new feature.
* NEWS: Likewise.
|
|
* src/numfmt.c: Replace field handling code with logic that understands
field range specifiers. Instead of processing a single field and
printing line prefix/suffix around it, process each field in the line
checking whether it has been included for conversion. If so convert and
print, otherwise just print the unaltered field.
(extract_fields): Removed.
(skip_fields): Removed.
(process_line): Gutted and heavily reworked.
(process_suffixed_number): FIELD is now passed as an arg instead of
using a global.
(parse_field_arg): New function that parses field range specifiers.
(next_field): New function that returns pointers to the next field in
a line.
(process_field): New function that wraps the field conversion logic
(include_field): New function that checks whether a field should be
converted
(compare_field): New function used for field value comparisons in a
gl_list.
(free_field): New function used for freeing field values in a gl_list.
Global variable FIELD removed.
New global variable all_fields indicates whether all fields should be
processed.
New global variable all_fields_after stores the first field of a N-
style range.
New global variable all_fields_before stores the last field of a -M
style range.
New global variable field_list stores explicitly specified fields to
process (N N,M or N-M style specifiers).
(usage): Document newly supported field range specifiers.
* bootstrap.conf: Include xlist and linked-list modules. numfmt now
uses the gl_linked_list implementation to store the field ranges.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Add tests for 'cut style' field ranges.
Adjust existing tests as partial output can occur before an error
Remove test for the 'invalid' field -5.. this is now a valid range.
* gnulib: update to avoid compiler warnings in linked-list.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
|
|
* src/numfmt.c (unit_to_umax): Support SI (power of 10) suffixes
with the --from-unit and --to-unit options. Treat suffixes like
is done with --from=auto, which for example will change the meaning
of --to-unit=G to that of --to-unit=Gi. The suffix support was
previously undocumented and it's better to avoid the traditional
coreutils suffix handling in numfmt by default.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Document the new behavior. Also fix a typo
mentioning {from,to}=units=.
* tests/misc/numfmt.pl: Adjust accordingly.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
|
|
* configure.ac: Comment on why we link rather than run the test,
and remove the moot __ELF__ check since we never ran it anyway,
and the new CFLAGS and LDFLAGS are a more direct test of support.
* tests/misc/wc-parallel.sh: Fix a syntax error in the previous change.
* tests/misc/md5sum-parallel.sh: Use better error checking, consistent
with that used in wc-parallel.sh.
|
|
Problems reported by Michael Felt, and and part of this fix taken
from code suggested by Pádraig Brady in:
http://bugs.gnu.org/20733#112
* configure.ac (stdbuf_supported): Check for warnings, and
for -fPIC and -shared, for AIX.
* src/stat.c (STRUCT_STATVFS): Define to struct statvfs64 if
STATFS is statvfs64.
* src/sync.c (sync_arg) [_AIX]: Open in write mode,
since AIX fsync doesn't work on read-only file descriptors.
* tests/misc/wc-parallel.sh: Skip test if xargs -P does not work.
|
|
* tests/misc/uniq-perf.sh: Use our standard 10s timeout,
which is sufficient to trigger the failure and also
avoids a false failure on slow/loaded systems.
Noticed at http://hydra.nixos.org/build/22766288
|
|
Reap background processes so that:
- Stray processes aren't left on the system
- Files aren't held open causing deletion issues on NFS
- Partitions used to run the tests from can be unmounted
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-missing.sh: Add the `kill && wait` of the
background $pid(s) to cleanup_().
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-rename.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/f-vs-rename.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/append-only.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/assert-2.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/assert.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/flush-initial.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse2.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-race.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-rotate-resources.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-rotate.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/pid.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f2.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/retry.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/symlink.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/tail-n0f.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait.sh: Likewise.
* tests/cp/existing-perm-race.sh: Likewise.
* tests/cp/file-perm-race.sh: Likewise.
* tests/cp/parent-perm-race.sh: Likewise.
* tests/cp/sparse-to-pipe.sh: Likewise.
* tests/dd/stats.sh: Likewise.
* tests/du/move-dir-while-traversing.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/cat-buf.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/help-version.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/printf-surprise.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-proc.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-spinlock-abuse.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stdbuf.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/tac-continue.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/timeout-group.sh: Likewise.
* tests/mv/i-3.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/dangling-symlink.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/isatty.sh: Likewise.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_test_background_without_cleanup_):
A new syntax-check to ensure cleanup_() is defined
when background tasks are created in a test.
|
|
* src/yes.c (main): Even when the internal buffer isn't large enough,
output what we've buffered already, and interate over the rest.
This improves the performance in the edge case where there are
many small arguments that overflow the buffer.
* tests/misc/yes.sh: Add a test case for the many small arguments case.
|
|
yes(1) may be used to generate repeating patterns of text
for test inputs etc., so adjust to be more efficient.
Profiling the case where yes(1) is outputting small items
through stdio (which was the default case), shows the overhead
of continuously processing small items in main() and in stdio:
$ yes >/dev/null & perf top -p $!
31.02% yes [.] main
27.36% libc-2.20.so [.] _IO_file_xsputn@@GLIBC_2.2.5
14.51% libc-2.20.so [.] fputs_unlocked
13.50% libc-2.20.so [.] strlen
10.66% libc-2.20.so [.] __GI___mempcpy
1.98% yes [.] fputs_unlocked@plta
Sending more data per stdio call improves the situation,
but still, there is significant stdio overhead due to memory copies,
and the repeated string length checking:
$ yes "`echo {1..1000}`" >/dev/null & perf top -p $!
42.26% libc-2.20.so [.] __GI___mempcpy
17.38% libc-2.20.so [.] strlen
5.21% [kernel] [k] __srcu_read_lock
4.58% [kernel] [k] __srcu_read_unlock
4.27% libc-2.20.so [.] _IO_file_xsputn@@GLIBC_2.2.5
2.50% libc-2.20.so [.] __GI___libc_write
2.45% [kernel] [k] system_call
2.40% [kernel] [k] system_call_after_swapgs
2.27% [kernel] [k] vfs_write
2.09% libc-2.20.so [.] _IO_do_write@@GLIBC_2.2.5
2.01% [kernel] [k] fsnotify
1.95% libc-2.20.so [.] _IO_file_write@@GLIBC_2.2.5
1.44% yes [.] main
We can avoid all stdio overhead by building up the buffer
_once_ and outputting that, and the profile below shows
the bottleneck moved to the kernel:
$ src/yes >/dev/null & perf top -p $!
15.42% [kernel] [k] __srcu_read_lock
12.98% [kernel] [k] __srcu_read_unlock
9.41% libc-2.20.so [.] __GI___libc_write
9.11% [kernel] [k] vfs_write
8.35% [kernel] [k] fsnotify
8.02% [kernel] [k] system_call
5.84% [kernel] [k] system_call_after_swapgs
4.54% [kernel] [k] __fget_light
3.98% [kernel] [k] sys_write
3.65% [kernel] [k] selinux_file_permission
3.44% [kernel] [k] rw_verify_area
2.94% [kernel] [k] __fsnotify_parent
2.76% [kernel] [k] security_file_permission
2.39% yes [.] main
2.17% [kernel] [k] __fdget_pos
2.13% [kernel] [k] sysret_check
0.81% [kernel] [k] write_null
0.36% yes [.] write@plt
Note this change also ensures that yes(1) will only write
complete lines for lines shorter than BUFSIZ.
* src/yes.c (main): Build up a BUFSIZ buffer of lines,
and output that, rather than having stdio process each item.
* tests/misc/yes.sh: Add a new test for various buffer sizes.
* tests/local.mk: Reference the new test.
Fixes http://bugs.gnu.org/20029
|
|
Adjust commit v8.23-140-gfdd6ebf to add the --output-error option
instead of --write-error, and treat open() errors like write() errors.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tee invocation): s/write-error/output-error/.
* src/tee.c (main): Exit on open() error if appropriate.
* tests/misc/tee.sh: Add a case to test open() errors.
* NEWS: Adjust for the more general output error behavior.
Suggested by Bernhard Voelker.
|
|
tee is very often used with pipes and this gives better control
when writing to them. There are 3 classes of file descriptors
that tee can write to: files(1), pipes(2), and early close pipes(3).
Handling write errors to 1 & 2 is supported at present with the caveat
that failure writing to any pipe will terminate tee immediately.
Handling write errors to type 3 is not currently supported.
To improve the supported combinations we add these options:
--write-error=warn
Warn if error writing any output including pipes.
Allows continued writing to still open files/pipes.
Exit status is failure if any output had error.
--write-error=warn-nopipe, -p
Warn if error writing any output except pipes.
Allows continued writing to still open files/pipes.
Exit status is failure if any non pipe output had error.
--write-error=exit
Exit if error writing any output including pipes.
--write-error=exit-nopipe
Exit if error writing any output except pipes.
Use the "nopipe" variants when files are of types 1 and 3, otherwise
use the standard variants with types 1 and 2. A caveat with the above
scheme is that a combination of pipe types (2 & 3) is not supported
robustly. I.e. if you use the "nopipe" variants when using both type
2 and 3 pipes, then any "real" errors on type 2 pipes will not be
diagnosed.
Note also a general issue with type 3 pipes that are not on tee's
stdout, is that shell constructs don't allow to distinguish early
close from real failures. For example `tee >(head -n1) | grep -m1 ..`
can't distinguish between an error or an early close in "head" pipe,
while the fail on the grep part of the pipe is distinguished
independently from the resulting pipe errors. This is a general
issue with the >() construct, rather than with tee itself.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tee invocation): Describe the new option.
* src/tee.c (usage): Likewise.
(main): With --write-error ignore SIGPIPE, and handle
the various exit, diagnostics combinations.
* tests/misc/tee.sh: Tess all the new options.
Fixes http://bugs.gnu.org/11540
|
|
Since v5.2.1-1247-g8dafbe5, tee(1) treated '-' as stdout while POSIX
explicitly requires to treat this as a file name. Revert this change,
as the interleaved output - due to sending another copy of input to
stdout - is not considered to be useful. Discussed in
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/coreutils/2015-02/msg00085.html
* src/tee.c (tee_files): Remove the special handling for "-" operands.
(usage): Remove the corresponding sentence.
* doc/coreutils.texi (common options): Remove the "tee -" example.
(tee invocation): Document that tee(1) now treats "-" as a file name.
* tests/misc/tee.sh: Add a test case for "tee -".
While at it, re-indent the above multi-argument processing case and
extend that to 13 operands, as POSIX mandates that, too.
* tests/misc/tee-dash.sh: Remove now-obsolete test.
* tests/local.mk (all_tests): Remove the above test.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention the change.
|
|
* src/tee.c (main): Don't continue reading if we can't
output anywhere.
* tests/misc/tee.sh: Ensure we exit when no more outputs.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
|
|
The following test fails on aarch64 on openSUSE's OpenBuildService
due to glibc's execvp reversing the pointers of 'environ', i.e.,
the output of "env|tac" equals "env env" on that platform.
* tests/misc/printenv.sh: Use 'env env' to work around the behavior
on that platform.
While at it, fix the grep pattern which suppressed all environment
variables starting with an underscore "_" instead of "$_" (and
"$LD_PRELOAD") only.
|
|
To align with all other places (and correct grammar), change all
upper-case "I.E." to "I.e.". Furthermore, ensure that "i.e." is
followed by a comma. Finally, ensure to use a double-space before
"I.e.," at the beginning of a sentence.
The following was used to change all offending uses (apart from
old ChangeLog files):
$ git grep -liF 'i.e.' \
| xargs sed -i \
-e 's/I\.E\./I.e./g' \
-e 's/\. \(I\.e\.\)/. \1/g' \
-e 's/\([Ii]\.e\.\)\( \)/\1,\2/g' \
-e 's/\([Ii]\.e\.\)$/\1,/g'
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_uppercase_id_est): Add new rule.
(sc_ensure_double_space_after_dot_before_id_est): Likewise.
(sc_ensure_comma_after_id_est): Likewise.
(old_NEWS_hash): Refresh hash via "make update-NEWS-hash".
* NEWS: Change use of "id est" abbreviation via the above command.
* README: Likewise.
* README-prereq: Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Likewise.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.c: Likewise.
* gl/lib/tempname.c.diff: Likewise.
* man/stdbuf.x: Likewise.
* src/cat.c: Likewise.
* src/copy.c: Likewise.
* src/copy.h: Likewise.
* src/cp.c: Likewise.
* src/cut.c: Likewise.
* src/dd.c: Likewise.
* src/df.c: Likewise.
* src/fiemap.h: Likewise.
* src/longlong.h: Likewise.
* src/ls.c: Likewise.
* src/numfmt.c: Likewise.
* src/pr.c: Likewise.
* src/shred.c: Likewise.
* src/shuf.c: Likewise.
* src/split.c: Likewise.
* tests/Coreutils.pm: Likewise.
* tests/df/df-symlink.sh: Likewise.
* tests/df/skip-rootfs.sh: Likewise.
* tests/init.sh: Likewise.
* tests/ls/color-norm.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/basename.pl: Likewise.
* tests/misc/ls-misc.pl: Likewise.
* tests/misc/md5sum-bsd.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/shred-exact.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort.pl: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stdbuf.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/tac-continue.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/r-root.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/symlink.sh: Likewise.
|
|
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Check for syncfs().
* man/sync.x: Add references to syncfs, fsync and fdatasync.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sync invocation): Document the new feature.
* src/sync.c: Include "quote.h".
(AUTHORS): Include myself.
(MODE_FILE, MODE_DATA, MODE_FILE_SYSTEM, MODE_SYNC): New enum values.
(long_options): Define.
(sync_arg): New function.
(usage): Describe that arguments are now accepted.
(main): Add arguments parsing and add support for fsync(2),
fdatasync(2) and syncfs(2).
* tests/misc/sync.sh: New (and only) test for sync.
* tests/local.mk: Reference the new test.
* AUTHORS: Add myself to sync's authors.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
|
|
When some program produces unexpected output, that use of
compare-vs-/dev/null will ensure that the surprising output is
printed in the test's output. With "test -s err" only, one
would have to instrument and rerun in order to see the offending
output.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_and_fail_1): Exempt 'compare' from this check.
* tests/dd/misc.sh: Change "tests -s ... || fail=1" to
"compare /dev/null ... && fail=1".
* tests/misc/nice.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/read-only.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-race.sh: Likewise.
* tests/touch/no-dereference.sh: Likewise.
Suggested by Jim Meyering in
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/coreutils/2015-01/msg00042.html
|
|
Many tests use `program ... && fail=1` to ensure expected
error situations are indicated. However that would mask
an unexpected exit (like a crash). Therefore explicitly
check the expected exit code.
Note where error messages are also verified, the extra
protection is not added.
* tests/init.sh (returns_): A new helper function to
check the return code of a command, and used
throughout the tests.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_and_fail_1): Add a syntax check
to avoid new instances of this issue.
|
|
* tests/cp/cp-a-selinux.sh: Comment why unused variables are assigned.
Fix misspellings noticed while adjusting.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf.sh: Fix quoting.
* tests/misc/shuf.sh: Avoid useless use of cat.
* tests/misc/printf-surprise.sh: Likewise.
|
|
* tests/misc/shuf.sh: Improve the test so it detects
crashes in more cases.
* NEWS: Mention the previous fix.
|
|
Problem reported by Daiki Ueno in: http://bugs.gnu.org/19520
* src/shuf.c (main): Avoid core dump if !input_range.
* tests/misc/shuf.sh: Test for this bug.
|
|
Run "make update-copyright" and then...
* tests/sample-test: Adjust to use the single most recent year.
* tests/du/bind-mount-dir-cycle-v2.sh: Fix case in copyright message,
so that year is updated automatically in future.
|
|
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/18129583 identified (on OS X)
an incorrect test assumption in the previous commit.
* gl/lib/xdectoint.c (__xnumtoint): Suppress the EINVAL
error message as it's redundant in this context.
* tests/misc/tail.pl: Suppress _optionally_ appended
strerror messages.
* tests/fmt/base.pl: Likewise.
* tests/pr/pr-tests.pl: Likewise.
* tests/split/l-chunk.sh: Likewise.
|
|
Following on from commit v8.23-82-gaddae94, consistently diagnose
numbers that are too large, so as to distinguish from other errors,
and make the limits obvious.
* gl/modules/xdectoint: A new module implementing xdecto[iu]max(),
which handles the common case of parsing a bounded integer and
exiting with a diagnostic on error.
* gl/lib/xdectoimax.c: The signed variant.
* gl/lib/xdectoint.c: The parameterized implementation.
* gl/lib/xdectoint.h: The interface.
* gl/lib/xdectoumax.c: The unsigned variant.
* bootstrap.conf: Reference the new module.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_require_config_h_first):
Exclude the parameterized templates.
* src/csplit.c: Output EOVERFLOW or ERANGE errors if appropriate.
* src/fmt.c: Likewise.
* src/fold.c: Likewise.
* src/head.c: Likewise.
* src/ls.c: Likewise.
* src/nl.c: Likewise.
* src/nproc.c: Likewise.
* src/shred.c: Likewise.
* src/shuf.c: Likewise.
* src/stdbuf.c: Likewise.
* src/stty.c: Likewise.
* src/tail.c: Likewise.
* src/truncate.c: Likewise.
* src/split.c: Likewise.
* src/pr.c: Likewise.
* tests/pr/pr-tests.pl: Adjust to avoid matching errno diagnostic.
* tests/fmt/base.pl: Likewise.
* tests/split/l-chunk.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/shred-negative.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/tail.pl: Likewise. Also remove the redundant
existing ERR_SUBST from test err-6.
* tests/ls/hex-option.sh: Check HEX/OCT options.
* tests/misc/shred-size.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stty-row-col.sh: Likewise.
|
|
glibc <= 2.5 would crash when passed invalid long double values,
therefore internal gnulib routines were used, essentially only by od,
to output such invalid values. Later glibc versions don't crash,
as per https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=4586
and subsequently od was adjusted to use the system printf routines
through the use of the ftoastr module with commit v8.7-22-ga71c22f.
Consequently our testing of this feature was moot, and use of
the gnulib printf replacement for printf(1), od(1) and error(3) etc.
was redundant.
* configure.ac (gl_printf_safe): Unset so that we don't check that
"nan" is output for these long double values.
* tests/misc/od-float.sh: Adjust all existing checks to fail if od
exits with failure status (like crashing for example). Add a new case
for one of the problematic invalid long double values for x86_64.
We only check that od exits successfully at present, which may change
if https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17661 is resolved.
|
|
file_t is now mapped to unlabeled_t as per:
http://danwalsh.livejournal.com/68189.html
Therefore use the latter to ensure we match correctly.
This is needed on >= Fedora 21 for example,
while it also works on earlier releases.
|
|
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-missing.sh: Comment with the correct total delay.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-rename.shi: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/flush-initial.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse.sh: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f2.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/chroot-fail.sh: Initialize can_chroot_root in all cases.
|
|
At least the MHz number in /proc/cpuinfo may change, thus leading to
a false positive failure when comparing the expected against the
actual output file. Use an invariant file instead: /proc/version.
* tests/misc/head-c.sh: s/cpuinfo/version/
|
|
* src/chroot.c (is_root): Adjust to compare canonicalized paths
rather than inodes, to handle (return false in) the case where
we have a tree that is constructed by first bind mounting "/"
(thus having the same inode).
(main): Unconditionally call chroot() because it's safer
and of minimal performance benefit to avoid in this case.
This will cause inconsistency with some platforms
not allowing `chroot / true` for non root users.
* tests/misc/chroot-fail.sh: Adjust appropriately.
* NEWS: Mention the bug fixes.
Fixes http://bugs.gnu.org/18736
|
|
* tests/misc/od-j.sh: Non standard comparison order.
* tests/split/b-chunk.sh: Confusing input file name.
* tests/tail-2/tail-c.sh: Redundant require ulimit.
|
|
Fix similar problems in head, od, split, tac, and tail.
Reported by George Shuklin in: http://bugs.gnu.org/18621
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/head.c (elseek): Move up.
(elide_tail_bytes_pipe, elide_tail_lines_pipe): New arg
CURRENT_POS. All uses changed.
(elide_tail_bytes_file, elide_tail_lines_file):
New arg ST and remove arg SIZE. All uses changed.
* src/head.c (elide_tail_bytes_file):
* src/od.c (skip): Avoid optimization for /sys files, where
st_size is bogus and st_size == st_blksize.
Don't report error at EOF when not optimizing.
* src/head.c, src/od.c, src/tail.c: Include "stat-size.h".
* src/split.c (input_file_size): New function.
(bytes_split, lines_chunk_split, bytes_chunk_extract): New arg
INITIAL_READ. All uses changed. Use it to double-check st_size.
* src/tac.c (tac_seekable): New arg FILE_POS. All uses changed.
(copy_to_temp): Return size of temp file. All uses changed.
* src/tac.c (tac_seekable):
* src/tail.c (tail_bytes):
* src/wc.c (wc):
Don't trust st_size; double-check by reading.
* src/wc.c (wc): New arg CURRENT_POS. All uses changed.
* tests/local.mk (all_tests): Add tests/misc/wc-proc.sh,
tests/misc/od-j.sh, tests/tail-2/tail-c.sh.
* tests/misc/head-c.sh:
* tests/misc/tac-2-nonseekable.sh:
* tests/split/b-chunk.sh:
Add tests for problems with /proc and /sys files.
* tests/misc/od-j.sh, tests/misc/wc-proc.sh, tests/tail-2/tail-c.sh:
New files.
|
|
Problem reported by Göran Uddeborg in: http://bugs.gnu.org/18540
* tests/misc/sort.pl: New test 23.
|
|
Problem reported by Vincent Lefevre in: http://bugs.gnu.org/18449
* src/cat.c (main): Allow copying an empty file to itself.
* tests/misc/cat-self.sh: New test.
* tests/local.mk (all_tests): Add it.
|
|
Since commit v8.22-94-g99960ee, chroot(1) skips the chroot(2) syscall
for "/" arguments (and synonyms). The problem is that it also skips
the following chdir("/") call in that case. The latter breaks existing
scripts which expect "/" to be the working directory inside the chroot.
While the first part of the change - i.e., skipping chroot("/") - is
okay for consistency with systems where it might succeed for a non-root
user, the second part might be malicious, e.g.
cd /home/user && chroot '/' bin/foo
In the "best" case, chroot(1) could not execute 'bin/foo' with ENOENT,
but in the worst case, chroot(1) would execute '/home/user/bin/foo' in
the case that exists - instead of '/bin/foo'.
Revert that second part of the patch, i.e., perform the chdir("/)
in the common case again - unless the new --skip-chdir option is
specified. Restrict this new option to the case of "/" arguments.
* src/chroot.c (SKIP_CHDIR): Add enum.
(long_opts): Add entry for the new --skip-chdir option.
(usage): Add --skip-chdir option, and while at it, move the other
to options into alphabetical order.
(main): Accept the above new option, allowing it only in the case
when NEWROOT is the old "/".
Move down the chdir() call after the if-clause to ensure it is
run in any case - unless --skip-chdir is specified.
Add a 'newroot' variable for the new root directory as it is used
in a couple of places now.
* tests/misc/chroot-fail.sh: Invert the last tests which check the
working directory of the execvp()ed program when a "/"-like
argument was passed: now expect it to be "/" - unless --skip-chdir
is given.
* doc/coreutils.texi (chroot invocation): Document the new option.
Document that chroot(1) usually calls chdir("/") unless the new
--skip-chdir option is specified. Sort options.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention the fix.
(New features): Mention the new option.
* init.cfg (nonroot_has_perm_): Add chroot's new --skip-chdir option.
* tests/cp/preserve-gid.sh (t1): Likewise.
* tests/cp/special-bits.sh: Likewise.
* tests/id/setgid.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/truncate-owned-by-other.sh: Likewise.
* tests/mv/sticky-to-xpart.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/fail-2eperm.sh: Likewise.
* tests/rm/no-give-up.sh: Likewise.
* tests/touch/now-owned-by-other.sh: Likewise.
Reported by Andreas Schwab in http://bugs.gnu.org/18062
|
|
* tests/misc/env.sh: Skip if we can't execute the generated shebang,
which would be the case if there are spaces in the directory hierarchy.
This is triggered by `make distcheck`
|
|
* tests/misc/od-endian.sh: '\n' is not generally supported
in the replacement, so use the more portable "\\$NL".
|
|
Add the --enable-single-binary option to the configure file.
When enabled, this option builds a single binary file containing
the selected tools. Which tool gets executed depends on the value
of argv[0] which can be set implicitly through symlinks to the
single program.
This setup reduces significantly the size of a complete coreutils
install, since code from lib/libcoreutils.a is not duplicated in
every one of the more than 100 binaries. Runtime overhead is
increased due to more dynamic libraries being loaded, and extra
initialization being performed for all utils. Also initially
a larger binary is loaded from storage, though this is usually
alleviated due to caching and lazy mmaping of unused blocks,
and in fact the single binary should have better caching
characteristics.
Comparing the size of the individual versus single binary on x86_64:
$ cd src
$ size coreutils
$ size -t $(../build-aux/gen-lists-of-programs.sh --list-progs |
grep -Ev '(coreutils|libstdbuf)') | tail -n1
text data bss dec hex filename
1097416 5388 88432 1191236 122d44 src/coreutils
4901010 124964 163768 5189742 4f306e (TOTALS)
Storage requirements are reduced similarly:
$ cd src
$ du -h coreutils
$ du -ch $(../build-aux/gen-lists-of-programs.sh --list-progs |
grep -Ev '(coreutils|libstdbuf)') | tail -n1
1.2M coreutils
5.3M total
When installing, the makefile will create either symlinks or
shebangs based on the --enable-single-binary setting, for
each configured tool. In this way, all the tools are still
callable individually, but they are all implemented by the same
"coreutils" binary installed on the same directory.
* .gitignore: Add new generated files.
* Makefile.am: New rules to generate build-aux/gen-single-binary.sh
and install symlinks.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* README: Add "coreutils" to the list of utils.
* bootstrap.conf: Regenerate src/single-binary.mk
* build-aux/gen-lists-of-programs.sh: New --list-progs option.
* build-aux/gen-single-binary.sh: Regenerate
* configure.ac: New --enable-single-binary option and other variables.
Disallow --enable-single-binary=symlinks with --program-prefix et. al.
* man/coreutils.x: Manpage hook.
* man/local.mk: Add manpage hook and fix dependencies.
* src/coreutils.c: Multicall implementation.
* src/local.mk: New rules for the single binary option.
* tests/local.mk: Add $single_binary_progs to support
require_built_() from init.cfg
* tests/misc/env.sh: Avoid the use of symlink to echo.
* tests/misc/help-version.sh: Add exception for coreutils.
* tests/install/basic-1.sh: Really avoid using ginstall strip
functionality if there is an issue with the independent strip command.
* src/kill.c: Changes to call exit() in main.
* src/readlink.c: Likewise.
* src/shuf.c: Likewise.
* src/timeout.c: Likewise.
* src/truncate.c: Likewise.
|
|
Avoid complicated and error-prone parsing of df's output via
sed(1), cut(1), etc., and instead use df's more modern --output
option.
* src/ioblksize.h (in a comment): Simplify the extraction of the
device name of the mounted file system from df's output.
* tests/dd/skip-seek-past-dev.sh: Likewise.
* tests/du/2g.sh: Likewise for the 'avail' column here.
Also avoid the deprecated use of "tail -NUM".
* tests/misc/stat-mount.sh: While at it, remove the determination
of the mount point of "." via df(1) plus sed(1) as it is unused
since commit v8.5-159-gf57cb37 anyway. Instead, improve this test
by verifying that the output of "stat -c%m ." at least starts with
a slash '/'.
|