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forked from pool/glibc
glibc/select-modify-timeout.patch
Andreas Schwab 97cf158760 Accepting request 885029 from home:Andreas_Schwab:Factory
- Enable support for static PIE (bsc#1184646)
- select-modify-timeout.patch: linux: always update select timeout
  (bsc#1184339, BZ #27706)

OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/885029
OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Base:System/glibc?expand=0&rev=589
2021-04-13 14:29:17 +00:00

155 lines
5.1 KiB
Diff

From cedbf6d5f3f70ca911176de87d6e453eeab4b7a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2021 07:39:32 -0300
Subject: [PATCH] linux: always update select timeout (BZ #27706)
The timeout should be updated even on failure for time64 support.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu.
From 9d7c5cc38e58fb0923e88901f87174a511b61552 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2021 13:53:34 -0300
Subject: [PATCH] linux: Normalize and return timeout on select (BZ #27651)
The commit 2433d39b697, which added time64 support to select, changed
the function to use __NR_pselect6 (or __NR_pelect6_time64) on all
architectures. However, on architectures where the symbol was
implemented with __NR_select the kernel normalizes the passed timeout
instead of return EINVAL. For instance, the input timeval
{ 0, 5000000 } is interpreted as { 5, 0 }.
And as indicated by BZ #27651, this semantic seems to be expected
and changing it results in some performance issues (most likely
the program does not check the return code and keeps issuing
select with unormalized tv_usec argument).
To avoid a different semantic depending whether which syscall the
architecture used to issue, select now always normalize the timeout
input. This is a slight change for some ABIs (for instance aarch64).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Index: glibc-2.33/include/time.h
===================================================================
--- glibc-2.33.orig/include/time.h
+++ glibc-2.33/include/time.h
@@ -502,6 +502,11 @@ time_now (void)
__clock_gettime (TIME_CLOCK_GETTIME_CLOCKID, &ts);
return ts.tv_sec;
}
+
+#define NSEC_PER_SEC 1000000000L /* Nanoseconds per second. */
+#define USEC_PER_SEC 1000000L /* Microseconds per second. */
+#define NSEC_PER_USEC 1000L /* Nanoseconds per microsecond. */
+
#endif
#endif
Index: glibc-2.33/sunrpc/svcauth_des.c
===================================================================
--- glibc-2.33.orig/sunrpc/svcauth_des.c
+++ glibc-2.33/sunrpc/svcauth_des.c
@@ -58,7 +58,6 @@
#define debug(msg) /*printf("svcauth_des: %s\n", msg) */
-#define USEC_PER_SEC ((uint32_t) 1000000L)
#define BEFORE(t1, t2) timercmp(t1, t2, <)
/*
Index: glibc-2.33/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/select.c
===================================================================
--- glibc-2.33.orig/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/select.c
+++ glibc-2.33/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/select.c
@@ -33,13 +33,35 @@ int
__select64 (int nfds, fd_set *readfds, fd_set *writefds, fd_set *exceptfds,
struct __timeval64 *timeout)
{
- struct __timespec64 ts64, *pts64 = NULL;
- if (timeout != NULL)
+ __time64_t s = timeout != NULL ? timeout->tv_sec : 0;
+ int32_t us = timeout != NULL ? timeout->tv_usec : 0;
+ int32_t ns;
+
+ if (s < 0 || us < 0)
+ return INLINE_SYSCALL_ERROR_RETURN_VALUE (EINVAL);
+
+ /* Normalize the timeout, as legacy Linux __NR_select and __NR__newselect.
+ Different than syscall, it also handle possible overflow. */
+ if (us / USEC_PER_SEC > INT64_MAX - s)
{
- ts64 = timeval64_to_timespec64 (*timeout);
- pts64 = &ts64;
+ s = INT64_MAX;
+ ns = NSEC_PER_SEC - 1;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ s += us / USEC_PER_SEC;
+ us = us % USEC_PER_SEC;
+ ns = us * NSEC_PER_USEC;
}
+ struct __timespec64 ts64, *pts64 = NULL;
+ if (timeout != NULL)
+ {
+ ts64.tv_sec = s;
+ ts64.tv_nsec = ns;
+ pts64 = &ts64;
+ }
+
#ifndef __NR_pselect6_time64
# define __NR_pselect6_time64 __NR_pselect6
#endif
@@ -52,10 +74,10 @@ __select64 (int nfds, fd_set *readfds, f
(though the pselect() glibc call suppresses this behavior).
Since select() on Linux has the same behavior as the pselect6
syscall, we update the timeout here. */
- if (r == 0 || errno != ENOSYS)
+ if (r >= 0 || errno != ENOSYS)
{
if (timeout != NULL)
- TIMEVAL_TO_TIMESPEC (timeout, &ts64);
+ TIMESPEC_TO_TIMEVAL (timeout, &ts64);
return r;
}
@@ -64,14 +86,15 @@ __select64 (int nfds, fd_set *readfds, f
#ifndef __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS
struct timespec ts32, *pts32 = NULL;
- if (timeout != NULL)
+ if (pts64 != NULL)
{
- if (! in_time_t_range (timeout->tv_sec))
+ if (! in_time_t_range (pts64->tv_sec))
{
__set_errno (EINVAL);
return -1;
}
- ts32 = valid_timespec64_to_timespec (ts64);
+ ts32.tv_sec = s;
+ ts32.tv_nsec = ns;
pts32 = &ts32;
}
# ifndef __ASSUME_PSELECT
@@ -84,7 +107,7 @@ __select64 (int nfds, fd_set *readfds, f
r = SYSCALL_CANCEL (pselect6, nfds, readfds, writefds, exceptfds, pts32,
NULL);
# endif
- if (r >= 0 && timeout != NULL)
+ if (timeout != NULL)
*timeout = valid_timespec_to_timeval64 (ts32);
#endif
@@ -105,7 +128,7 @@ __select (int nfds, fd_set *readfds, fd_
ptv64 = &tv64;
}
int r = __select64 (nfds, readfds, writefds, exceptfds, ptv64);
- if (r >= 0 && timeout != NULL)
+ if (timeout != NULL)
/* The remanining timeout will be always less the input TIMEOUT. */
*timeout = valid_timeval64_to_timeval (tv64);
return r;