This resolves a problem with ioctl(NIOCGETHSTAT) hanging forever
as identified by Erik van der Kouwe, and possibly many other corner
cases.
Change-Id: I2350c882dc6a0862e16454ec6b6c320d78780bcd
This test connects to a remote HTTP server to retrieve files, using various
chunk sizes and concurrency settings to exercise the network stack. The test
is only performed is USENETWORK=yes. This test requires the following URLs to
remain available: http://test82.minix3.org/test1.txt and
http://test82.minix3.org/test2.bin. The former contains a 'Hello world'
message followed by a newline, the latter all 16-bit values in increasing
order, using big-endian notation.
Change-Id: I696106482fb1658f9657be2b6845a1b37a3d6172
These new tests are largely based on the code from test 56 (UDS). Common code
is moved into a separate file common-socket.c. In some instances the tests
are too strict for TCP/UDP sockets, which may not always react instantly to
whatever happens on the other side (even locally). For these cases, the
ignore_* fields in struct socket_test_info indicate that there needs to be
an exception. There are also tests where it seems the functionality of inet
is either incorrect or incomplete with regard to the POSIX standard. In these
cases, the bug_* fields are used to document the issues while avoiding
failure of the test.
Change-Id: Ia860deb4559d42608790451936b1aade866faebc
This patch introduces USENETWORK environment variable to determine whether to
use the network or not, instead of the unreliable ping test; set to 'yes' to
enable network usage.
Change-Id: I9e26fa95b5b990fd94f5978db8de0dd73496d314
This fixes an issue when compiling with GCC 4.9.
For details, see: http://reviews.llvm.org/rL201729
Change-Id: Iaa522715798016f6edb433b01b02aa664fcb5d1c
Extended by David van Moolenbroek to continue using static buffers
for short inode names, so as to prevent important file system
services such as procfs from running out of memory at runtime.
Change-Id: I6f841741ee9944fc87dbdb78b5cdaa2abee9da76
Each /proc/service entry must have a unique label. With cloning,
multiple RS services may have the same label. Since we are not
actually interested in inactive services (for now), eliminate those
entries, leaving only the active service which will then indeed have
a unique label in the list. This resolves a procfs crash.
Change-Id: I0de7ef8fd186ab13f3e22e46416504fd981c09aa
Previously, procfs would retrieve the rproc and rprocpub tables from
RS in two separate calls. This allowed for a race condition where the
tables could change in between the calls, resulting in a panic in
procfs under certain circumstances. RS now implements a new method
for getsysinfo that allows the retrieval of both tables at once.
Change-Id: I5ec22d25898361270c90e805a43fc6d76ad9e29d
This patch adds support for Unix98 pseudo terminals, that is,
posix_openpt(3), grantpt(3), unlockpt(3), /dev/ptmx, and /dev/pts/.
The latter is implemented with a new pseudo file system, PTYFS.
In effect, this patch adds secure support for unprivileged pseudo
terminal allocation, allowing programs such as tmux(1) to be used by
non-root users as well. Test77 has been extended with new tests, and
no longer needs to run as root.
The new functionality is optional. To revert to the old behavior,
remove the "ptyfs" entry from /etc/fstab.
Technical nodes:
o The reason for not implementing the NetBSD /dev/ptm approach is that
implementing the corresponding ioctl (TIOCPTMGET) would require
adding a number of extremely hairy exceptions to VFS, including the
PTY driver having to create new file descriptors for its own device
nodes.
o PTYFS is required for Unix98 PTYs in order to avoid that the PTY
driver has to be aware of old-style PTY naming schemes and even has
to call chmod(2) on a disk-backed file system. PTY cannot be its
own PTYFS since a character driver may currently not also be a file
system. However, PTYFS may be subsumed into a DEVFS in the future.
o The Unix98 PTY behavior differs somewhat from NetBSD's, in that
slave nodes are created on ptyfs only upon the first call to
grantpt(3). This approach obviates the need to revoke access as
part of the grantpt(3) call.
o Shutting down PTY may leave slave nodes on PTYFS, but once PTY is
restarted, these leftover slave nodes will be removed before they
create a security risk. Unmounting PTYFS will make existing PTY
slaves permanently unavailable, and absence of PTYFS will block
allocation of new Unix98 PTYs until PTYFS is (re)mounted.
Change-Id: I822b43ba32707c8815fd0f7d5bb7a438f51421c1
As part of its built-in mmap emulation support for "none" file system
services, libfsdriver clears the VM cache upon exit. However, for
trivial file systems which do not even support reading from files, the
the VM cache need to be cleared either. With this patch, the VM cache
is cleared only when modified, so that such trivial file systems need
not be given CLEARCACHE permission.
Change-Id: I518c092443455302b9b9728f10a3f894d2c8036b
While putnode requests should always succeed, very simple file system
services may not care about reference counts and thus about putnode
requests at all. For this reason, we now default to an OK response if
no fdr_putnode implementation is given.
Change-Id: I01f6421abf4546a1f69d8c21900a92d6acc45745
The stat.st_ino field must always be filled with the inode number
given as part of the fdr_stat request anyway, so libfsdriver can
simply fill in the number and allow the file system not to bother.
Change-Id: Ia7a849d0b23dfc83010df0d48fa26e4225427694
Commit 723e513 erroneously removed a yield() call from VFS which was
necessary to get resumed pipe read/write threads to run before VFS
blocks on receive(). The removal caused those threads to run only
once VFS received another message, effectively slowing down activity
on pipes to a crawl in some cases.
Instead of readding the yield() call, this patch restructures the
get_work() code to go back through the main message loop even when no
new work is received, thus ensuring that newly started threads are
always activated without requiring a special case.
This fixes#65.
Change-Id: I59b7fb9e403d87dba1a5deecb04539cc37517742
kb_init() panics, if no keyboard controller is found during self-test.
Instead of panic, the driver should quit the init process and tell it the SEF .
Change-Id: Icdfb7125f5d4062f46cfbbdbbb9e54ac4b273642
This change requires a small patch to libc, in order to avoid that
libminc has to pull in a large chunk of libc just for mktime(3).
Change-Id: I48e598b3716eff626cac461f78a41e32334e6b28
Previously, services would obtain the user ID of "service" through
getpwnam(3). While this approach is conceptually better, it also
imposes linking against libc which in turn causes problems with
printf(3), which already led to PFS no longer dropping privileges at
all. For now, we hardcode SERVICE_UID and use that instead.
In the future, two changes should allow removal of SERVICE_UID again:
- "service edit" should cause RS to request that a service (such as
PFS) drop privileges through SEF, using the user ID resolved by
service(8), or something similar;
- a future devfs should make it possible for inet to start without
root privileges altogether.
Change-Id: Ie02a1e888cde325806fc0ae76909943ac42c9b96
For VFS, initialization is a special case for processing work: PFS
and the ramdisk MFS must be fully mounted before VFS can process any
other requests, in particular from init(8). This case was handled by
receiving reply messages only from the FS service being mounted, but
this effectively disallowed PFS from calling setuid(2) at startup.
This patch lets VFS receive all messages during the mounting process,
but defer processing any new requests. As a result, the FS services
have a bit more freedom in what they can do during startup.
Change-Id: I18275f458952a8d790736a9c9559b27bbef97b7b
This patch fixes two related issues:
- If a large (>PIPE_BUF) pipe write is processed partially, only to be
followed by a write error condition, then the process is left in an
incorrect state, possibly causing VFS to crash on a subsequent call.
- If such a partially processed large pipe write ends up resulting in
an EPIPE error, no corresponding SIGPIPE signal is generated.
The corrected behavior is tested in test68.
Change-Id: I5540e61ab6bcc60a31201485eda04bc49ece2ca8
From the termcap section of the GNU termutils manual:
"There is no way you can tell how much space is needed, so the convention
is to allocate a buffer 2048 characters long and assume that is enough.
(Formerly the convention was to allocate 1024 characters and assume that
was enough. But one day, for one kind of terminal, that was not
enough.)"
Change-Id: Ia5937366ae89e886dbaef7d180bee40669d0c488
As suggested in issue #43.
Historic Locations:
Prior to this commit
minix/commands/mined
Prior to commit 433d6423c3
commands
Change-Id: I374ab3ff0e3b9e47779fc21e80b47fda87698242