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It was meant to write to q instead of t
FAIL: test-id128
================
=================================================================
==125770==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow on address 0x7ffd4615bd31 at pc 0x7a2f41b1bf33 bp 0x7ffd4615b750 sp 0x7ffd4615b748
WRITE of size 1 at 0x7ffd4615bd31 thread T0
#0 0x7a2f41b1bf32 in id128_to_uuid_string src/libsystemd/sd-id128/id128-util.c:42
#1 0x401f73 in main src/test/test-id128.c:147
#2 0x7a2f41336341 in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x20341)
#3 0x401129 in _start (/home/crrodriguez/scm/systemd/.libs/test-id128+0x401129)
Address 0x7ffd4615bd31 is located in stack of thread T0 at offset 1409 in frame
#0 0x401205 in main src/test/test-id128.c:37
This frame has 23 object(s):
[32, 40) 'b'
[96, 112) 'id'
[160, 176) 'id2'
[224, 240) 'a'
[288, 304) 'b'
[352, 368) 'a'
[416, 432) 'b'
[480, 496) 'a'
[544, 560) 'b'
[608, 624) 'a'
[672, 688) 'b'
[736, 752) 'a'
[800, 816) 'b'
[864, 880) 'a'
[928, 944) 'b'
[992, 1008) 'a'
[1056, 1072) 'b'
[1120, 1136) 'a'
[1184, 1200) 'b'
[1248, 1264) 'a'
[1312, 1328) 'b'
[1376, 1409) 't' <== Memory access at offset 1409 overflows this variable
[1472, 1509) 'q'
HINT: this may be a false positive if your program uses some custom stack unwind mechanism or swapcontext
(longjmp and C++ exceptions *are* supported)
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow src/libsystemd/sd-id128/id128-util.c:42 in id128_to_uuid_string
Shadow bytes around the buggy address:
0x100028c23750: f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2
0x100028c23760: f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2
0x100028c23770: f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2
0x100028c23780: f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2
0x100028c23790: f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00 f4 f4 f2 f2
=>0x100028c237a0: f2 f2 00 00 00 00[01]f4 f4 f4 f2 f2 f2 f2 00 00
0x100028c237b0: 00 00 05 f4 f4 f4 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
0x100028c237c0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
0x100028c237d0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
0x100028c237e0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
0x100028c237f0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Shadow byte legend (one shadow byte represents 8 application bytes):
Addressable: 00
Partially addressable: 01 02 03 04 05 06 07
Heap left redzone: fa
Heap right redzone: fb
Freed heap region: fd
Stack left redzone: f1
Stack mid redzone: f2
Stack right redzone: f3
Stack partial redzone: f4
Stack after return: f5
Stack use after scope: f8
Global redzone: f9
Global init order: f6
Poisoned by user: f7
Container overflow: fc
Array cookie: ac
Intra object redzone: bb
ASan internal: fe
Left alloca redzone: ca
Right alloca redzone: cb
==125770==ABORTING
FAIL test-id128 (exit status: 1)
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ASAN is unable to handle it.
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beef up /var/tmp and /tmp handling; set $SERVICE_RESULT/$EXIT_CODE/$EXIT_STATUS on ExecStop= and make sure root/nobody are always resolvable
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This adds parse_nice() that parses a nice level and ensures it is in the right
range, via a new nice_is_valid() helper. It then ports over a number of users
to this.
No functional changes.
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Beef up the existing var_tmp() call, rename it to var_tmp_dir() and add a
matching tmp_dir() call (the former looks for the place for /var/tmp, the
latter for /tmp).
Both calls check $TMPDIR, $TEMP, $TMP, following the algorithm Python3 uses.
All dirs are validated before use. secure_getenv() is used in order to limite
exposure in suid binaries.
This also ports a couple of users over to these new APIs.
The var_tmp() return parameter is changed from an allocated buffer the caller
will own to a const string either pointing into environ[], or into a static
const buffer. Given that environ[] is mostly considered constant (and this is
exposed in the very well-known getenv() call), this should be OK behaviour and
allows us to avoid memory allocations in most cases.
Note that $TMPDIR and friends override both /var/tmp and /tmp usage if set.
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This patch improves parsing and generation of timestamps and calendar
specifications in two ways:
- The week day is now always printed in the abbreviated English form, instead
of the locale's setting. This makes sure we can always parse the week day
again, even if the locale is changed. Given that we don't follow locale
settings for printing timestamps in any other way either (for example, we
always use 24h syntax in order to make uniform parsing possible), it only
makes sense to also stick to a generic, non-localized form for the timestamp,
too.
- When parsing a timestamp, the local timezone (in its DST or non-DST name)
may be specified, in addition to "UTC". Other timezones are still not
supported however (not because we wouldn't want to, but mostly because libc
offers no nice API for that). In itself this brings no new features, however
it ensures that any locally formatted timestamp's timezone is also parsable
again.
These two changes ensure that the output of format_timestamp() may always be
passed to parse_timestamp() and results in the original input. The related
flavours for usec/UTC also work accordingly. Calendar specifications are
extended in a similar way.
The man page is updated accordingly, in particular this removes the claim that
timestamps systemd prints wouldn't be parsable by systemd. They are now.
The man page previously showed invalid timestamps as examples. This has been
removed, as the man page shouldn't be a unit test, where such negative examples
would be useful. The man page also no longer mentions the names of internal
functions, such as format_timestamp_us() or UNIX error codes such as EINVAL.
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Depending on how binutils was configured and the --enable-fast-install
configure option, the test binary might be called either name.
Fixes: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3838
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Private devices don't exist when running in a container, so skip the related
tests.
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No point running tests against process 1 if systemd is not running as that
process. This is a rework of an unpublished patch by @9muir.
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The condition tests for hostname will fail if hostname looks like an id128.
The test function attempts to convert hostname to an id128, and if that
succeeds compare it to the machine ID (presumably because the 'hostname'
condition test is overloaded to also test machine ID). That will typically
fail, and unfortunately the 'mock' utility generates a random hostname that
happens to have the same format as an id128, thus causing a test failure.
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Accept both files with and without trailing newlines. Apparently some rkt
releases generated them incorrectly, missing the trailing newlines, and we
shouldn't break that.
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User expectations are broken when "systemctl enable /some/path/service.service"
behaves differently to "systemctl link ..." followed by "systemctl enable".
From user's POV, "enable" with the full path just combines the two steps into
one.
Fixes #3010.
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uuid/id128 code rework
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This way we can reuse them for validating User=/Group= settings in unit files
(to be added in a later commit).
Also, add some tests for them.
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This adds support for a TasksMax=40% syntax for specifying values relative to
the system's configured maximum number of processes. This is useful in order to
neatly subdivide the available room for tasks within containers.
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We currently have code to read and write files containing UUIDs at various
places. Unify this in id128-util.[ch], and move some other stuff there too.
The new files are located in src/libsystemd/sd-id128/ (instead of src/shared/),
because they are actually the backend of sd_id128_get_machine() and
sd_id128_get_boot().
In follow-up patches we can use this reduce the code in nspawn and
machine-id-setup by adopted the common implementation.
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Let's lot at LOG_NOTICE about any processes that we are going to
SIGKILL/SIGABRT because clean termination of them didn't work.
This turns the various boolean flag parameters to cg_kill(), cg_migrate() and
related calls into a single binary flags parameter, simply because the function
now gained even more parameters and the parameter listed shouldn't get too
long.
Logging for killing processes is done either when the kill signal is SIGABRT or
SIGKILL, or on explicit request if KILL_TERMINATE_AND_LOG instead of LOG_TERMINATE
is passed. This isn't used yet in this patch, but is made use of in a later
patch.
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strv_make_nulstr was creating a nulstr which was not a valid nulstr,
because it was missing the terminating NUL. This didn't cause any issues,
because strv_parse_nulstr correctly parsed the result, using the
separately specified length.
But it's confusing to have something called nulstr which really isn't.
It is likely that somebody will try to use strv_make_nulstr() in
some other place, incorrectly.
This patch changes strv_parse_nulstr() to produce a valid nulstr, and
changes the output length parameter to be the minimum number of bytes
which can be later on parsed by strv_parse_nulstr(). This allows the
only user in ask-password-api to be slightly simplified.
Based-on-patch-by: Jean-Sébastien Bour <jean-sebastien@bour.name>
Fixes #3689.
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(systemd/systemd#3689)
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==1447== 4 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 1
==1447== at 0x4C2BBAD: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==1447== by 0x5350F19: strdup (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.23.so)
==1447== by 0x4E9D435: strv_new_ap (strv.c:166)
==1447== by 0x4E9D5FA: strv_new (strv.c:199)
==1447== by 0x10E665: test_strv_fnmatch (test-strv.c:693)
==1447== by 0x10EAD5: main (test-strv.c:763)
==1447==
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For backwards compatibility, both the new format (Mon..Wed) and
the old format (Mon-Wed) are supported.
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Resolves #3042
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* networkd: condition_test() can return a negative error, handle that
If a condition check fails with an error we should not consider the check
successful. Fix that.
We should probably also improve logging in this case, but for now, let's just
unbreak this breakage.
Fixes: #3236
* condition: handle unrecognized architectures nicer
When we encounter a check for an architecture we don't know we should not
let the condition check fail with an error code, but instead simply return
false. After all the architecture might just be newer than the ones we know, in
which case it's certainly not our local one.
Fixes: #3236
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journalctl: Use env variable TMPDIR to save temporary files
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build-sys: Convert libshared into a private shared library
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Fixes:
```
$ systemctl list-unit-files 'hey\*'
0 unit files listed.
$ systemctl list-unit-files | grep hey
hey\x7eho.service static
```
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Link as many binaries as possible with it, to save storage space.
Preserve the static libshared and libbasic for use in libraries, nss
modules and udev.
Libraries need to be static in order to avoid polluting the symbol
namespace.
Udev needs to be static so downstream can avoid strict version dependencies
with the systemd package, and this can complicate upgrade scenarios.
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See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3555#issuecomment-226564908
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various changes, most importantly regarding memory metrics
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Super-important change, yeah!
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This reworks get_process_cmdline() quite substantially, fixing the following:
- Fixes:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3512/commits/a4e3bf4d7ac2de51191ce136ee9361ba319e106c#r66837630
- The passed max_length is also applied to the "comm" name, if comm_fallback is
set.
- The right thing happens if max_length == 1 is specified
- when the cmdline "foobar" is abbreviated to 6 characters the result is not
"foobar" instead of "foo...".
- trailing whitespace are removed before the ... suffix is appended. The 7
character abbreviation of "foo barz" is hence "foo..." instead of "foo ...".
- leading whitespace are suppressed from the cmdline
- a comprehensive test case is added
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The various bits of code did the scaling all different, let's unify this,
given that the code is not trivial.
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And port a couple of users over to it.
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limit into account
When determining the amount of RAM in the system, let's make sure we also read
the root-level cgroup memory limit into account. This isn't particularly useful
on the host, but in containers it makes sure that whatever memory the container
got assigned is actually used for RAM size calculations.
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Typing `rd.rescue` is easier than `rd.systemd.unit=rescue.target`.
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This makes it easy to test the query code on "ssh localhost"
and similar.
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This fixes a bunch of copy&paste errors in the output.
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resolved: support IPv6 DNS servers on the local link
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Make sure we can parse DNS server addresses that use the "zone id" syntax for
local link addresses, i.e. "fe80::c256:27ff:febb:12f%wlp3s0", when reading
/etc/resolv.conf.
Also make sure we spit this out correctly again when writing /etc/resolv.conf
and via the bus.
Fixes: #3359
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The current raw_clone function takes two arguments, the cloning flags and
a pointer to the stack for the cloned child. The raw cloning without
passing a "thread main" function does not make sense if a new stack is
specified, as it returns in both the parent and the child, which will fail
in the child as the stack is virgin. All uses of raw_clone indeed pass NULL
for the stack pointer which indicates that both processes should share the
stack address (so you better don't pass CLONE_VM).
This commit refactors the code to not require the caller to pass the stack
address, as NULL is the only sensible option. It also adds the magic code
needed to make raw_clone work on sparc64, which does not return 0 in %o0
for the child, but indicates the child process by setting %o1 to non-zero.
This refactoring is not plain aesthetic, because non-NULL stack addresses
need to get mangled before being passed to the clone syscall (you have to
apply STACK_BIAS), whereas NULL must not be mangled. Implementing the
conditional mangling of the stack address would needlessly complicate the
code.
raw_clone is moved to a separete header, because the burden of including
the assert machinery and sched.h shouldn't be applied to every user of
missing_syscalls.h
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Implement compat translation between IO* and BlockIO* settings
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minor improvements for dealing with MAC Addresses
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rm_rf_physical_and_freep in tests (#3292)
Some distros don't mount /tmp as tmpfs.
For example:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-cloud/2016-January/001009.html
Some tests:
* print 'Attempted to remove disk file system, and we can't allow that.'
* don't really cleanup /tmp
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Due to the substantial interface changes in cgroup unified hierarchy, new IO
settings are introduced. Currently, IO settings apply only to unified
hierarchy and BlockIO to legacy. While the transition is necessary, it's
painful for users to have to provide configs for both. This patch implements
translation from one config set to another for configs which make sense.
* The translation takes place during application of the configs. Users won't
see IO or BlockIO settings appearing without being explicitly created.
* The translation takes place only if there is no config for the matching
cgroup hierarchy type at all.
While this doesn't provide comprehensive compatibility, it should considerably
ease transition to the new IO settings which are a superset of BlockIO
settings.
v2:
- Update test-cgroup-mask.c so that it accounts for the fact that
CGROUP_MASK_IO and CGROUP_MASK_BLKIO move together. Also, test/parent.slice
now sets IOWeight instead of BlockIOWeight.
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