Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexander Færøy
c8b8b15f0e Ensure that line_size >= 1 before trying to trim input string.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
a33a77d9cd Document the format of process_t::arguments.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
5585cbd08f Change the Process exit_callback to return bool.
This patch changes our process_t's exit_callback to return a boolean
value.  If the returned value is true, the process subsystem will call
process_free() on the given process_t.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
ccc1963890 Move remaining code from subprocess.{h,c} to more appropriate places.
This patch moves the remaining code from subprocess.{h,c} to more
appropriate places in the process.c and process_win32.c module.

We also delete the now empty subprocess module files.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
b0d268a822 Add process_reset_environment() to the Process subsystem.
This patch adds a new function that allows us to reset the environment
of a given process_t with a list of key/value pairs.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
4f611a1df7 Add process_terminate().
This patch adds support for process termination to the Process
subsystem.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
89393a77e5 Add process_get_pid() to the Process subsystem.
This patch adds support for getting the unique process identifier from a
given process_t. This patch implements both support for both the Unix
and Microsoft Windows backend.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
bb784cf4f3 Add Windows backend for the Process subsystem.
This patch adds support for Microsoft Windows in the Process subsystem.

Libevent does not support mixing different types of handles (sockets,
named pipes, etc.) on Windows in its core event loop code. This have
historically meant that Tor have avoided attaching any non-networking
handles to the event loop. This patch uses a slightly different approach
to roughly support the same features for the Process subsystem as we do
with the Unix backend.

In this patch we use Windows Extended I/O functions (ReadFileEx() and
WriteFileEx()) which executes asynchronously in the background and
executes a completion routine when the scheduled read or write operation
have completed. This is much different from the Unix backend where the
operating system signals to us whenever a file descriptor is "ready" to
either being read from or written to.

To make the Windows operating system execute the completion routines of
ReadFileEx() and WriteFileEx() we must get the Tor process into what
Microsoft calls an "alertable" state. To do this we execute SleepEx()
with a zero millisecond sleep time from a main loop timer that ticks
once a second.  This moves the process into the "alertable" state and
when we return from the zero millisecond timeout all the outstanding I/O
completion routines will be called and we can schedule the next reads
and writes.

The timer loop is also responsible for detecting whether our child
processes have terminated since the last timer tick.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
2e957027e2 Add Unix backend for the Process subsystem.
This patch adds the Unix backend for the Process subsystem. The Unix
backend attaches file descriptors from the child process's standard in,
out and error to Tor's libevent based main loop using traditional Unix
pipes. We use the already available `waitpid` module to get events
whenever the child process terminates.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00
Alexander Færøy
35509978dd Add new Process subsystem.
This patch adds a new Process subsystem for running external programs in
the background of Tor. The design is focused around a new type named
`process_t` which have an API that allows the developer to easily write
code that interacts with the given child process. These interactions
includes:

- Easy API for writing output to the child process's standard input
  handle.
- Receive callbacks whenever the child has output on either its standard
  output or standard error handles.
- Receive callback when the child process terminates.

We also support two different "protocols" for handling output from the
child process. The default protocol is the "line" protocol where the
process output callbacks will be invoked only when there is complete
lines (either "\r\n" or "\n" terminated). We also support the "raw"
protocol where the read callbacks will get whatever the operating system
delivered to us in a single read operation.

This patch does not include any operating system backends, but the Unix
and Windows backends will be included in separate commits.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
2018-12-17 16:39:28 -05:00