These functions can return NULL for otherwise-valid values of
time_t. Notably, the glibc gmtime manpage says it can return NULL
if the year if greater than INT_MAX, and the windows MSDN gmtime
page says it can return NULL for negative time_t values.
Also, our formatting code is not guaranteed to correctly handle
years after 9999 CE.
This patch tries to correct this by detecting NULL values from
gmtime/localtime_r, and trying to clip them to a reasonable end of
the scale. If they are in the middle of the scale, we call it a
downright error.
Arguably, it's a bug to get out-of-bounds dates like this to begin
with. But we've had bugs of this kind in the past, and warning when
we see a bug is much kinder than doing a NULL-pointer dereference.
Boboper found this one too.
Patch our implementation of tor_lockfile_lock() to handle this case
correctly. Also add a note that blocking behaviour differs from windows
to *nix. Fixes bug 2504, issue pointed out by mobmix.
It's all too easy in C to convert an unsigned value to a signed one,
which will (on all modern computers) give you a huge signed value. If
you have a size_t value of size greater than SSIZE_T_MAX, that is way
likelier to be an underflow than it is to be an actual request for
more than 2gb of memory in one go. (There's nothing in Tor that
should be trying to allocate >2gb chunks.)
This is needed for IOCP, since telling the IOCP backend about all
your CPUs is a good idea. It'll also come in handy with asn's
multithreaded crypto stuff, and for people who run servers without
reading the manual.
This should keep WinCE working (unicode always-on) and get Win98
working again (unicode never-on).
There are two places where we explicitly use ASCII-only APIs, still:
in ntmain.c and in the unit tests.
This patch also fixes a bug in windoes tor_listdir that would cause
the first file to be listed an arbitrary number of times that was
also introduced with WinCE support.
Should fix bug 1797.
This should make us conflict less with system files named "log.h".
Yes, we shouldn't have been conflicting with those anyway, but some
people's compilers act very oddly.
The actual change was done with one "git mv", by editing
Makefile.am, and running
find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs perl -i -pe 'if (/^#include.*\Wlog.h/) {s/log.h/torlog.h/; }'
Most of the changes here are switches to use APIs available on Windows
CE. The most pervasive change is that Windows CE only provides the
wide-character ("FooW") variants of most of the windows function, and
doesn't support the older ASCII verions at all.
This patch will require use of the wcecompat library to get working
versions of the posix-style fd-based file IO functions.
[commit message by nickm]
1) mingw doesn't have _vscprintf(); mingw instead has a working snprintf.
2) windows compilers that _do_ have a working _vscprintf spell it so; they do
not spell it _vcsprintf().
asprintf() is a GNU extension that some BSDs have picked up: it does a printf
into a newly allocated chunk of RAM.
Our tor_asprintf() differs from standard asprintf() in that:
- Like our other malloc functions, it asserts on OOM.
- It works on windows.
- It always sets its return-field.
Some *_free functions threw asserts when passed NULL. Now all of them
accept NULL as input and perform no action when called that way.
This gains us consistence for our free functions, and allows some
code simplifications where an explicit null check is no longer necessary.
On this OSX version, there is a stub mlockall() function
that doesn't work, *and* the declaration for it is hidden by
an '#ifdef _P1003_1B_VISIBLE'. This would make autoconf
successfully find the function, but our code fail to build
when no declaration was found.
This patch adds an additional test for the declaration.
This fixes bug 1147:
bionic doesn't have an actual implementation of mlockall();
mlockall() is merely in the headers but not actually in the library.
This prevents Tor compilation with the bionic libc for Android handsets.
This commit implements a new config option: 'DisableAllSwap'
This option probably only works properly when Tor is started as root.
We added two new functions: tor_mlockall() and tor_set_max_memlock().
tor_mlockall() attempts to mlock() all current and all future memory pages.
For tor_mlockall() to work properly we set the process rlimits for memory to
RLIM_INFINITY (and beyond) inside of tor_set_max_memlock().
We behave differently from mlockall() by only allowing tor_mlockall() to be
called one single time. All other calls will result in a return code of 1.
It is not possible to change DisableAllSwap while running.
A sample configuration item was added to the torrc.complete.in config file.
A new item in the man page for DisableAllSwap was added.
Thanks to Moxie Marlinspike and Chris Palmer for their feedback on this patch.
Please note that we make no guarantees about the quality of your OS and its
mlock/mlockall implementation. It is possible that this will do nothing at all.
It is also possible that you can ulimit the mlock properties of a given user
such that root is not required. This has not been extensively tested and is
unsupported. I have included some comments for possible ways we can handle
this on win32.
I don't think we actually use (or plan to use) strtok_r in a reentrant
way anywhere in our code, but would be nice not to have to think about
whether we're doing it.
This patch adds a function to determine whether we're in the main
thread, and changes control_event_logmsg() to return immediately if
we're in a subthread. This is necessary because otherwise we will
call connection_write_to_buf, which modifies non-locked data
structures.
Bugfix on 0.2.0.x; fix for at least one of the things currently
called "bug 977".
This matters because a cpuworker can close its socket when it
finishes. Cpuworker typically runs in another thread, so without a
lock here, we can have a race condition and get confused about how
many sockets are open. Possible fix for bug 939.
It seems that 64-bit Sparc Solaris demands 64-bit-aligned access to
uint64_t, but does not 64-bit-align the stack-allocated char array we
use for cpuworker tags. So this patch adds a set/get_uint64 pair, and
uses them to access the conn_id field in the tag.
svn:r18743
The subversion $Id$ fields made every commit force a rebuild of
whatever file got committed. They were not actually useful for
telling the version of Tor files in the wild.
svn:r17867
Make definition of tor_mutex_t go into compat.h, so that it is possible to inline mutexes in critical objects. Add init/uninit functions for mutexes allocated inside other structs.
svn:r16623
Make generic address manipulation functions work better. Switch address policy code to use tor_addr_t, so it can handle IPv6. That is a good place to start.
svn:r16178
Forward-port: I had apparently broken OSX and Freebsd by not initializing threading before we initialize the logging system. This patch should do so, and fix bug 671.
svn:r14430
On platforms using pthreads, allow a thread to acquire a lock it already holds. This is crucial for logging: otherwise any log message thrown from inside the logging process (especially from control.c) will deadlock. Win32 CriticalSections are already recursive. Bug spotted by nwf. Bugfix on 0.2.0.16-alpha. Backport candidate. I hope this is portable.
svn:r14406
Combine common code in set_max_file_descriptors(): all that varies from platform to platform in the no-getrlimit() case is the connection limit and the platform name.
svn:r14101
Fix all remaining shorten-64-to-32 errors in src/common. Some were genuine problems. Many were compatibility errors with libraries (openssl, zlib) that like predate size_t. Partial backport candidate.
svn:r13665
Apply patch from Sebastian Hahn: stop imposing an arbitrary maximum on the number of file descriptors used for busy servers. Bug reported by Olaf Selke.
svn:r13626
Change tor_addr_t to be a tagged union of in_addr and in6_addr, not of sockaddr_in and sockaddr_in6. It's hardly used in the main code as it is, but let's get it right before it gets popular.
svn:r12660
If setting our rlimit to rlim_max or cap fails, fall back to OPEN_FILES if defiled. This makes Tor run on OSX 10.5, while allowing OSX to mend its ways in the future.
svn:r12341
Patch from croup: rewrite the logic of get_next_token() to do the right thing with input that ends at weird places, or aligns with block boundaries after mmap. should fix bug 455. Needs fuzzing.
svn:r10847
Implement conditions in compat.c; switch windows to use "critical sections" instead of mutexes. Apparently, mutexes are for IPC and critical sections are for multithreaded.
svn:r10716
First bare stubs of ipv6 work: commit some (untested, hence doublessly broken) implementations of inet_ntop/pton for systems that lack them.
svn:r10326
[Backport candidate] On windows, open cached-routers with the sharing mode "FILE_SHARE_READ so that other processes can read it while Tor is running. (Reported by Janbar).
svn:r10148
Track the number of connection_t separately from the number of open sockets. It is already possible to have connections that do not count: resolving conns, for one. Once we move from socketpairs to linked conns, and once we do dns proxying, there will be lots of such connections.
svn:r9994