* altered command do_checkout
new option -D | --deleted. Can only be used with PACKAGE and needs
-o to work
* what happens:
core function checkout_deleted_package fetches the file list of the deleted
package and saves it to given destdir. If destdir is not existent it
creates the destination directory. Otherwise the files will be written
in the existing directory.
The old code could potentially yield to a use-after-free situation,
which results in UB. For this, consider the following scenario, where
osc performs several HTTPS requests (assumption: the server supports
ssl session resumption):
- HTTPS Request 1:
* a new SSL *s connection is established, which also creates a new
SSL_SESSION *ss => ss->references == 1
* once the handshake is done, the ss is put into the session cache
(see ssl_update_cache) => ss->references == 2
- osc saves the session ss in a class variable
- s is SSL_free()d, which calls SSL_SESSION_free => ss->references == 1
- HTTPS Request 2:
* setup a new SSL *s connection that reuses the saved session ss
=> ss->references == 2
* once the handshake is done, ssl_update_cache is called, which is a
NOP, because s->hit == 1 (that is, the session was resumed)
* osc saves the session ss in a class variable
* s is SSL_free()d, which calls SSL_SESSION_free => ss->references == 1
...
> 2 hours later (see tls1_default_timeout)
...
- HTTPS Request 256:
* setup a new SSL *s connection that reuses the saved session ss
=> ss->references == 2
* once the handshake is done, ssl_update_cache is called, but is
_no_ NOP anymore
* ssl_update_cache flushes the session cache (this is done every
255/256 (depending on the way we count) connections) => ss is
SSL_SESSION_free()d => ss->references == 1
* osc saves the session ss in a class variable
* s is SSL_free()d, which calls SSL_SESSION_free:
since ss->references == 1, ss is eventually free()d
- HTTPS Request 257:
* setup a new SSL *s connection that reuses the saved session ss
Since ss does not exist anymore, the remaining program execution is UB.
(Note: SSL_free(...) is _NOT_ called, if M2Crypto 0.29 is used.
M2Crypto 0.30 calls SSL_free(...) again.)
Due to a bug in OpenSSL_1_1_0h (see openssl commit 8e405776858) the
scenario from above can be triggered with exactly 2 HTTPS requests (the
SSL_SESSION is not cached, because we configured SSL_VERIFY_PEER, but
no sid_ctx was set). This is fixed in openssl commit c4fa1f7fc01.
In order to reliably reuse a session, we probably need to listen to the
session cache changes. Such callbacks could be registered via
SSL_CTX_sess_set_new_cb and/or SSL_CTX_sess_set_remove_cb, but both
functions are not provided by M2Crypto. Another idea is to directly utilize
the session cache, but this also has to be implemented in M2Crypto first.
Yet another approach is to retrieve the session via SSL_get1_session, which
increases the session's refcnt, but this also needs to be implemented in
M2Crypto first (if we choose to use this approach, we also have to make
sure that we eventually free the session manually...).
Fixes: #398 ("SIGSEGV on \"osc commit\"")
Always pass the "--statistics" option to the build script (only affects
a vm build). It is not implemented as an option, because we already have
so many of them... (see also https://github.com/openSUSE/osc/pull/412).
yet another option, but
* only very old build scripts don't know it, we should just require a recent one
* build script is ignoring it for chroot case
so why bother with another option?
Note that the diff is only shown, if it was requested before (that is
the "i" command was issued). The new behavior is consistent with the
other commands like "a", "d" etc.
The script used ${PWD} without proper quoting causing Bash completion
to not work properly if there was whitespace in the path of the current
working directory.
Storing the error encoding in an "encoding" attribute "breaks" the
python3 "input" function: In essence, builtin_input_impl does a
getattr(sys.stdout, 'encoding'), which returns our error encoding
instead of the "real" stdout encoding. In order to avoid this, we
store the error encoding in an "_encoding" attribute.
Making SafeWriter a new-style class simplifies the code a lot.