Split out XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP handling to a separate function and make
sure that it drops all the invalid entries properly. Earlier a bad
entry could slip through the checks by sitting just after another bad
entry, like in env being set to `invalid1!:invalid2!`, where
`invalid2!` could slip the checks.
It occasionally fails in CI with output like:
```
196/274 glib:gio / gdbus-connection-slow FAIL 0.54 s (killed by signal 6 SIGABRT)
--- command ---
G_TEST_BUILDDIR='/builds/pwithnall/glib/_build/gio/tests' G_TEST_SRCDIR='/builds/pwithnall/glib/gio/tests' GIO_MODULE_DIR='' /builds/pwithnall/glib/_build/gio/tests/gdbus-connection-slow
--- stdout ---
\# random seed: R02S4eb186e89e2472eedd11538b37192543
1..2
\# Start of gdbus tests
\# Start of connection tests
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/gdbus-connection-slow.c:98:test_connection_flush: assertion failed (error == NULL): Child process killed by signal 11 (g-exec-error-quark, 19)
--- stderr ---
**
GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/gdbus-connection-slow.c:98:test_connection_flush: assertion failed (error == NULL): Child process killed by signal 11 (g-exec-error-quark, 19)
cleaning up pid 12991
```
which is not very helpful. Add some more debug output to print the
stdout and stderr of the child process, to hopefully give an insight
into why it’s dying with signal 11 (sigsegv).
I can’t reproduce the sigsegv locally.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
As with previous commits, this could have been used to load private data
for an unprivileged caller.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2168
It could have been used to load private data which would not normally be
accessible to an unprivileged caller.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2168
Its components are used to build filenames, so if the value of
`XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP` comes from an untrusted caller (as can happen in
setuid programs), using it unvalidated may be unsafe.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2168
As with the previous commit, it’s unsafe to trust the environment when
running as setuid, as it comes from an untrusted caller. In particular,
with D-Bus, the caller could set up a fake ‘system’ bus which fed
incorrect data to this process.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2168
Even if the modules in the given directory never get chosen to be used,
loading arbitrary code from a user-provided directory is not safe when
running as setuid, as the process’ environment comes from an untrusted
source.
Also ignore `GIO_EXTRA_MODULES`.
Spotted by Simon McVittie.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2168
Clang says:
../gio/glocalfile.c:2090:11: warning: variable 'success' is used uninitialized whenever 'if' condition is false [-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
if (trashdir == NULL)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../gio/glocalfile.c:2133:12: note: uninitialized use occurs here
if (!success)
^~~~~~~
../gio/glocalfile.c:2090:7: note: remove the 'if' if its condition is always true
if (trashdir == NULL)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../gio/glocalfile.c:2041:23: note: initialize the variable 'success' to silence this warning
gboolean success;
^
= 0
So just do that.
Most variables were, but a few were not declared as local, and hence
leaked into the calling environment every time someone tab-completed the
`gio` command.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2275
- When querying a TCP socket, getsockopt() may succeed but the resulting
`optlen` will be zero. This means we'd previously be reading
uninitialized stack memory in such cases.
- After a file-descriptor has gone through FD-passing, getsockopt() may
fail with EINVAL. At least this is the case with TCP sockets.
- While at it also use SOL_LOCAL instead of hard-coding its value.
Contrary to what the WSARecvFrom seem to imply, a UDP socket is perfectly recoverable and usable after a WSAECONNRESET error (and, I assume, WSAENETRESET).
However GSocket condition has the FD_READ bit set after a UDP socket fails with WSAECONNRESET, even if no data is available on the socket anymore; this causes select calls to report the socket as readable when, in fact, it's not.
The change resets FD_READ flag on a socket upon the above error conditions; there's no 'if' to filter between datagram and stream sockets as the change should be harmless in the case of stream sockets which are, however, very unlikely to be usable after a WSAECONNRESET.
The list is sorted in ascending order, which means that to put
verbs alphabetically we need to sort ealier verbs with -1. Same for
the "open" verb and the preferred verb (if any).
* UWP apps that have low registry footprint might end up with chosen_handler == NULL.
Ensure that this doesn't happen.
* UWP apps don't need verbs for URIs, but we do need verbs to have a link to an app
(since handlers don't contain app fields). Work around this by adding an "open" verb
to each UWP URI handler.
* Duplicate the code that inserts extension handler verbs into the app to also insert
URI handler verbs. This allows URI-only apps to be used correctly later on (otherwise
GLib errors out, saying that the app has no verbs).
Use pretty name as the result of _name(), if available. This is
more in line with what .desktop files return. Canonical name
may be completely unintelligible.
MSDN doesn't say much on this subject, but i've seen apps in the wild
that have the "shell" subkey with verbs *either* in the root app key *or*
in the "Capabilities" subkey of the root key. Accommodate either case by trying both
(root key gets a priority, since this is how MS Address Book is registered -
assume that MS knows how to do this the right way).
This function enumerates all user-accessible UWP packages
and calls the user-provided callback for each package.
This can be used to make GLib aware of the UWP applications
installed in the system.
The function works by using IPackageManager/IPackage UWP interfaces
and XmlLite COM library to parse package manifests.
The function requires COM, and initializes it to a single-thread
appartment model. To ensure this doesn't break anything, either
only use it in a separate thread (COM is initialized on a per-thread
basis), or make sure that the main thread also uses the same COM
model (it's OK to initialize COM multiple times, as long as the same
model is used and as long as init/uninit calls are paired correctly).
MinGW-w64 lacks the appropriate headers, so we have to add them
here. Note that these only have the C versions (normally these
things come in both C and C++ flavours), since that's what we use.
Also note that some of the functions that we don't use (but must
describe to maintain binary compatibility) were altered to use
IUnknown (basically, an untyped pointer) instead of the appropriate
object types, as adding these types would require other types,
which would pull even more types, forcing us to drag half of the
UWP headers in here. By replacing unused types with IUnknown we
can trim a lot of branches from the dependency graph.
This is a COM object that implements IStream by using a HANDLE
and WinAPI file functions to access the file (only a file; pipes
are not supported). Only supports synchronous access (this is
a feature - the APIs that read from this stream internally will
never return the COM equivalent of EWOULDBLOCK, which greatly
simplifies their use).
Just embed a PNG instead. gdk-pixbuf deprecated its pixdata support in
version 2.32, in 2015.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #1281