9791177448
* sigproc.cc (exit_thread): Remove now-unneeded sleep code.
538 lines
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538 lines
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Plaintext
2013-06-07 cgf-000023
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Given the fact that the signal thread never exits there is no need
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for exit_thread to ever block. So, nuke this code.
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2013-01-31 cgf-000022
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While researching the lftp behavior reported here:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2013-01/msg00390.html
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after a frenzy of rewriting sigflush handling to avoid blocking in the
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signal thread (which is now and should ever have been illegal), it
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dawned on me that we're not supposed to be flushing the tty input buffer
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every time a signal is received. We're supposed to do this only when
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the user hits a character (e.g., CTRL-C) which initiates a signal
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action. So, I removed sigflush from sigpacket::process and moved it to
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tc ()->kill_pgrp (). This function should only be called to send
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signals related to the tty so this should have the desired effect.
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2013-01-11 cgf-000021
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Apparently I got the signal handling semantics of select() wrong again
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even though I would have sworn that I tested this on Linux and Windows.
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select() is apparently *always* interrupted by a signal and *never*
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restarts. Hopefully, between the comment added to the code and this
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note, I'll not make this mistake again.
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2013-01-02 cgf-000020
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(This entry should have been checked in with the changes but... I forgot)
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This is a fairly big revamp of the way that windows signals are handled.
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The intent is that all signal decisions should be made by the signal
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thread; not by the exception handler.
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This required the ability to pass information from the exception handler
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to the signal thread so, a si_cyg field was added to siginfo_t. This
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contains information needed to generate a "core dump". Hmm. Haven't
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checked to see if this breaks Cygwin's hardly-ever-used real core dump
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facility.
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Anyway, I moved signal_exit back into exceptions.cc and removed it from
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the sigpacket class. This function is now treated like a signal handler
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function - Cygwin will cause it to be dispatched in the context of
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whatever thread caught the signal. signal_exit also makes the
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determination about when to write a stackdump.
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The signal-handler thread will no longer ever attempt to exit. It will
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just keep processing signals (it will not process real signals after
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Cygwin stops shutting down, however). This should make it impossible
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for the signal thread to ever block waiting for the process lock since
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it now never grabs the process lock. The signal-handler thread will
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notify gdb when it gets a signal now but, in theory, gdb should see the
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context of the thread which received the signal, not the signal-handler
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thread.
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2012-12-28 cgf-000019
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(I forgot to mention that cgf-000018 was reverted. Although I never saw
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a hang from this, I couldn't convince myself that one wasn't possible.)
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This fix attempts to correct a deadlock where, when a true Windows
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signal arrives, Windows creates a thread which "does stuff" and attempts
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to exit. In the process of exiting Cygwin grabs the process lock. If
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the signal thread has seen the signal and wants to exit, it can't
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because the newly-created thread now holds it. But, since the new
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thread is relying on the signal thread to release its process lock,
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it exits and the process lock is never released.
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To fix this, I removed calls to _cygtls::signal_exit in favor of
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flagging that we were exiting by setting signal_exit_code (almost forgot
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to mark that NO_COPY: that would have been fun). The new function
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setup_signal_exit() now handles setting things up so that ReadFile loop
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in wait_sig will do the right thing when it terminates. This function
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may just Sleep indefinitely if a signal is being sent from a thread
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other than the signal thread. wait_sig() was changed so that it will
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essentially drop into asychronous-read-mode when a signal which exits
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has been detected. The ReadFile loop is exited when we know that the
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process is supposed to be exiting and there is nothing else in the
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signal queue.
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Although I never actually saw this happen, exit_thread() was also
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changed to release the process lock and just sleep indefintely if it is
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detected that we are exiting.
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2012-12-21 cgf-000018
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Re: cgf-000017
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It occurred to me that just getting the process lock during
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DLL_THREAD_DETACH in dll_entry() might be adequate to fix this
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problem. It's certainly much less intrusive.
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There are potential deadlock problems with grabbing a lock in
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this code, though, so this check-in will be experimental.
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2012-12-21 cgf-000017
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The changes in this set are to work around the issue noted here:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-12/threads.html#00140
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The problem is, apparently, that the return value of an ExitThread()
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will take precedence over the return value of TerminateProcess/ExitProcess
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if the thread is the last one exiting. That's rather amazing...
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For the fix, I replaced all calls to ExitThread with exit_thread(). The
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exit_thread function, creates a handle to the current thread and sends
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it to a packet via sig_send(__SIGTHREADEXIT). Then it acquires the
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process lock and calls ExitThread.
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wait_sig will then wait for the handle, indicating that the thread has
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exited, and, when that has happened, removes the process lock on behalf
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of the now-defunct thread. wait_sig will now also avoid actually
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exiting since it could trigger the same problem.
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Holding process_lock should prevent threads from exiting while a Cygwin
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process is shutting down. They will just block forever in that case -
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just like wait_sig.
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2012-08-17 cgf-000016
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While debugging another problem I finally noticed that
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sigpacket::process was unconditionally calling tls->set_siginfo prior to
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calling setup_handler even though setup_handler could fail. In the
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event of two successive signals, that would cause the second signal's
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info to overwrite the first even though the signal handler for the first
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would eventually be called. Doh.
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Fixing this required passing the sigpacket si field into setup_handler.
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Making setup_handler part of the sigpacket class seemed to make a lot of
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sense so that's what I did. Then I passed the si element into
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interrupt_setup so that the infodata structure could be filled out prior
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to arming the signal.
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The other changes checked in here eliminate the ResetEvent for
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signal_arrived since previous changes to cygwait should handle the
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case of spurious signal_arrived detection. Since signal_arrived is
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not a manual-reset event, we really should just let the appropriate
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WFMO handle it. Otherwise, there is a race where a signal comes in
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a "split second" after WFMO responds to some other event. Resetting
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the signal_arrived would cause any subsequent WFMO to never be
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triggered. My current theory is that this is what is causing:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-08/msg00310.html
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2012-08-15 cgf-000015
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RIP cancelable_wait. Yay.
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2012-08-09 cgf-000014
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So, apparently I got it somewhat right before wrt signal handling.
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Checking on linux, it appears that signals will be sent to a thread
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which can accept the signal. So resurrecting and extending the
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"find_tls" function is in order. This function will return the tls
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of any thread which 1) is waiting for a signal with sigwait*() or
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2) has the signal unmasked.
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In redoing this it became obvious that I had the class designation wrong
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for the threadlist handling so I moved the manipulation of the global
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threadlist into the cygheap where it logically belongs.
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2012-07-21 cgf-000013
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These changes reflect a revamp of the "wait for signal" functionality
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which has existed in Cygwin through several signal massages.
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We now create a signal event only when a thread is waiting for a signal
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and arm it only for that thread. The "set_signal_arrived" function is
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used to establish the event and set it in a location referencable by
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the caller.
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I still do not handle all of the race conditions. What happens when
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a signal comes in just after a WF?O succeeds for some other purpose? I
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suspect that it will arm the next WF?O call and the subsequent call to
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call_signal_handler could cause a function to get an EINTR when possibly
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it shouldn't have.
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I haven't yet checked all of the test cases for the URL listed in the
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previous entry.
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Baby steps.
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2012-06-12 cgf-000012
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These changes are the preliminary for redoing the way threads wait for
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signals. The problems are shown by the test case mentioned here:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00434.html
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I've known that the signal handling in threads wasn't quite right for
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some time. I lost all of my thread signal tests in the great "rm -r"
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debacle of a few years ago and have been less than enthusiastic about
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redoing everything (I had PCTS tests and everything). But it really is
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time to redo this signal handling to make it more like it is supposed to
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be.
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This change should not introduce any new behavior. Things should
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continue to behave as before. The major differences are a change in the
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arguments to cancelable_wait and cygwait now uses cancelable_wait and,
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so, the returns from cygwait now mirror cancelable_wait.
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The next change will consolidate cygwait and cancelable_wait into one
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cygwait function.
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2012-06-02 cgf-000011
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The refcnt handling was tricky to get right but I had convinced myself
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that the refcnt's were always incremented/decremented under a lock.
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Corinna's 2012-05-23 change to refcnt exposed a potential problem with
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dup handling where the fdtab could be updated while not locked.
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That should be fixed by this change but, on closer examination, it seems
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like there are many places where it is possible for the refcnt to be
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updated while the fdtab is not locked since the default for
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cygheap_fdget is to not lock the fdtab (and that should be the default -
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you can't have read holding a lock).
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Since refcnt was only ever called with 1 or -1, I broke it up into two
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functions but kept the Interlocked* operation. Incrementing a variable
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should not be as racy as adding an arbitrary number to it but we have
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InterlockedIncrement/InterlockedDecrement for a reason so I kept the
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Interlocked operation here.
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In the meantime, I'll be mulling over whether the refcnt operations are
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actually safe as they are. Maybe just ensuring that they are atomically
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updated is enough since they control the destruction of an fh. If I got
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the ordering right with incrementing and decrementing then that should
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be adequate.
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2012-06-02 cgf-000010
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix emacs problem which exposed an issue with Cygwin's select() function.
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If a signal arrives while select is blocking and the program longjmps
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out of the signal handler then threads and memory may be left hanging.
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Fixes: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/threads.html#00275
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</1.7.16>
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This was try #4 or #5 to get select() signal handling working right.
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It's still not there but it should now at least not leak memory or
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threads.
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I mucked with the interface between cygwin_select and select_stuff::wait
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so that the "new" loop in select_stuff::wait() was essentially moved
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into the caller. cygwin_select now uses various enum states to decide
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what to do. It builds the select linked list at the beginning of the
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loop, allowing wait() to tear everything down and restart. This is
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necessary before calling a signal handler because the signal handler may
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longjmp away.
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I initially had this all coded up to use a special signal_cleanup
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callback which could be called when a longjmp is called in a signal
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handler. And cygwin_select() set up and tore down this callback. Once
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I got everything compiling it, of course, dawned on me that just because
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you call a longjmp in a signal handler it doesn't mean that you are
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jumping *out* of the signal handler. So, if the signal handler invokes
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the callback and returns it will be very bad for select(). Hence, this
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slower, but hopefully more correct implementation.
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(I still wonder if some sort of signal cleanup callback might still
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be useful in the future)
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TODO: I need to do an audit of other places where this problem could be
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occurring.
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As alluded to above, select's signal handling is still not right. It
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still acts as if it could call a signal handler from something other
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than the main thread but, AFAICT, from my STC, this doesn't seem to be
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the case. It might be worthwhile to extend cygwait to just magically
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figure this out and not even bother using w4[0] for scenarios like this.
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2012-05-16 cgf-000009
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix broken console mouse handling. Reported here:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00360.html
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</1.7.16>
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I did a cvs annotate on smallprint.cc and see that the code to translate
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%characters > 127 to 0x notation was in the 1.1 revision. Then I
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checked the smallprint.c predecessor. It was in the 1.1 version of that
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program too, which means that this odd change has probably been around
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since <= 2000.
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Since __small_sprintf is supposed to emulate sprintf, I got rid of the
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special case handling. This may affect fhandler_socket::bind. If so, we
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should work around this problem there rather than keeping this strange
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hack in __small_printf.
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2012-05-14 cgf-000008
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix hang when zero bytes are written to a pty using
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Windows WriteFile or equivalent. Fixes:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00323.html
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</1.7.16>
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cgf-000002, as usual, fixed one thing while breaking another. See
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Larry's predicament in: http://goo.gl/oGEr2 .
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The problem is that zero byte writes to the pty pipe caused the dread
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end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it problem reported on the mailing list
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where ReadFile reads zero bytes even though there is still more to read
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on the pipe. This is because that change caused a 'record' to be read
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and a record can be zero bytes.
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I was never really keen about using a throwaway buffer just to get a
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count of the number of characters available to be read in the pty pipe.
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On closer reading of the documentation for PeekNamedPipe it seemed like
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the sixth argument to PeekNamedPipe should return what I needed without
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using a buffer. And, amazingly, it did, except that the problem still
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remained - a zero byte message still screwed things up.
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So, we now detect the case where there is zero bytes available as a
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message but there are bytes available in the pipe. In that scenario,
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return the bytes available in the pipe rather than the message length of
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zero. This could conceivably cause problems with pty pipe handling in
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this scenario but since the only way this scenario could possibly happen
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is when someone is writing zero bytes using WriteFile to a pty pipe, I'm
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ok with that.
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2012-05-14 cgf-000007
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix invocation of strace from a cygwin process. Fixes:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00292.html
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</1.7.16>
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The change in cgf-000004 introduced a problem for processes which load
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cygwin1.dll dynamically. strace.exe is the most prominent example of
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this.
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Since the parent handle is now closed for "non-Cygwin" processes, when
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strace.exe tried to dynamically load cygwin1.dll, the handle was invalid
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and child_info_spawn::handle_spawn couldn't use retrieve information
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from the parent. This eventually led to a strace_printf error due to an
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attempt to dereference an unavailable cygheap. Probably have to fix
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this someday. You shouldn't use the cygheap while attempting to print
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an error about the inavailability of said cygheap.
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This was fixed by saving the parent pid in child_info_spawn and calling
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OpenProcess for the parent pid and using that handle iff a process is
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dynamically loaded.
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2012-05-12 cgf-000006
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix hang when calling pthread_testcancel in a canceled thread.
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Fixes some of: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00186.html
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</1.7.16>
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This should fix the first part of the reported problem in the above
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message. The cancel seemed to actually be working but, the fprintf
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eventually ended up calling pthread_testcancel. Since we'd gotten here
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via a cancel, it tried to recursively call the cancel handler causing a
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recursive loop.
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2012-05-12 cgf-000005
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<1.7.16>
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- Fix pipe creation problem which manifested as a problem creating a
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fifo. Fixes: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00253.html
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</1.7.16>
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My change on 2012-04-28 introduced a problem with fifos. The passed
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in name was overwritten. This was because I wasn't properly keeping
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track of the length of the generated pipe name when there was a
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name passed in to fhandler_pipe::create.
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There was also another problem in fhandler_pipe::create. Since fifos
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use PIPE_ACCESS_DUPLEX and PIPE_ACCESS_DUPLEX is an or'ing of
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PIPE_ACCESS_INBOUND and PIPE_ACCESS_OUTBOUND, using PIPE_ACCESS_OUTBOUND
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as a "never-used" option for PIPE_ADD_PID in fhandler.h was wrong. So,
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fifo creation attempted to add the pid of a pipe to the name which is
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wrong for fifos.
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2012-05-08 cgf-000004
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The change for cgf-000003 introduced a new problem:
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00154.html
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00157.html
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Since a handle associated with the parent is no longer being duplicated
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into a non-cygwin "execed child", Windows is free to reuse the pid of
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the parent when the parent exits. However, since we *did* duplicate a
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handle pointing to the pid's shared memory area into the "execed child",
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the shared memory for the pid was still active.
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Since the shared memory was still available, if a new process reuses the
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previous pid, Cygwin would detect that the shared memory was not created
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and had a "PID_REAPED" flag. That was considered an error, and, so, it
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would set procinfo to NULL and pinfo::thisproc would die since this
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situation is not supposed to occur.
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I fixed this in two ways:
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1) If a shared memory region has a PID_REAPED flag then zero it and
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reuse it. This should be safe since you are not really supposed to be
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querying the shared memory region for anything after PID_REAPED has been
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set.
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2) Forego duping a copy of myself_pinfo if we're starting a non-cygwin
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child for exec.
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It seems like 2) is a common theme and an audit of all of the handles
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that are being passed to non-cygwin children is in order for 1.7.16.
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The other minor modification that was made in this change was to add the
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pid of the failing process to fork error output. This helps slightly
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when looking at strace output, even though in this case it was easy to
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find what was failing by looking for '^---' when running the "stv"
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strace dumper. That found the offending exception quickly.
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2012-05-07 cgf-000003
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<1.7.15>
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Don't make Cygwin wait for all children of a non-cygwin child program.
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Fixes: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00063.html,
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http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00075.html
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</1.7.15>
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This problem is due to a recent change which added some robustness and
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speed to Cygwin's exec/spawn handling by not trying to force inheritance
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every time a process is started. See ChangeLog entries starting on
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2012-03-20, and multiple on 2012-03-21.
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Making the handle inheritable meant that, as usual, there were problems
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with non-Cygwin processes. When Cygwin "execs" a non-Cygwin process N,
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all of its N + 1, N + 2, ... children will also inherit the handle.
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That means that Cygwin will wait until all subprocesses have exited
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before it returns.
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I was willing to make this a restriction of starting non-Cygwin
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processes but the problem with allowing that is that it can cause the
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creation of a "limbo" pid when N exits and N + 1 and friends are still
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around. In this scenario, Cygwin dutifully notices that process N has
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died and sets the exit code to indicate that but N's parent will wait on
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rd_proc_pipe and will only return when every N + ... windows process
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has exited.
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The removal of cygheap::pid_handle was not related to the initial
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problem that I set out to fix. The change came from the realization
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|
that we were duping the current process handle into the child twice and
|
|
only needed to do it once. The current process handle is used by exec
|
|
to keep the Windows pid "alive" so that it will not be reused. So, now
|
|
we just close parent in child_info_spawn::handle_spawn iff we're not
|
|
execing.
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|
|
|
In debugging this it bothered me that 'ps' identified a nonactive pid as
|
|
active. Part of the reason for this was the 'parent' handle in
|
|
child_info was opened in non-Cygwin processes, keeping the pid alive.
|
|
That has been kluged around (more changes after 1.7.15) but that didn't
|
|
fix the problem. On further investigation, this seems to be caused by
|
|
the fact that the shared memory region pid handles were still being
|
|
passed to non-cygwin children, keeping the pid alive in a limbo-like
|
|
fashion. This was easily fixed by having pinfo::init() consider a
|
|
memory region with PID_REAPED as not available. A more robust fix
|
|
should be considered for 1.7.15+ where these handles are not passed
|
|
to non-cygwin processes.
|
|
|
|
This fixed the problem where a pid showed up in the list after a user
|
|
does something like: "bash$ cmd /c start notepad" but, for some reason,
|
|
it does not fix the problem where "bash$ setsid cmd /c start notepad".
|
|
That bears investigation after 1.7.15 is released but it is not a
|
|
regression and so is not a blocker for the release.
|
|
|
|
2012-05-03 cgf-000002
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|
|
|
<1.7.15>
|
|
Fix problem where too much input was attempted to be read from a
|
|
pty slave. Fixes: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00049.html
|
|
</1.7.15>
|
|
|
|
My change on 2012/04/05 reintroduced the problem first described by:
|
|
http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2011-10/threads.html#00445
|
|
|
|
The problem then was, IIRC, due to the fact that bytes sent to the pty
|
|
pipe were not written as records. Changing pipe to PIPE_TYPE_MESSAGE in
|
|
pipe.cc fixed the problem since writing lines to one side of the pipe
|
|
caused exactly that the number of characters to be read on the other
|
|
even if there were more characters in the pipe.
|
|
|
|
To debug this, I first replaced fhandler_tty.cc with the 1.258,
|
|
2012/04/05 version. The test case started working when I did that.
|
|
|
|
So, then, I replaced individual functions, one at a time, in
|
|
fhandler_tty.cc with their previous versions. I'd expected this to be a
|
|
problem with fhandler_pty_master::process_slave_output since that had
|
|
seen the most changes but was surprised to see that the culprit was
|
|
fhandler_pty_slave::read().
|
|
|
|
The reason was that I really needed the bytes_available() function to
|
|
return the number of bytes which would be read in the next operation
|
|
rather than the number of bytes available in the pipe. That's because
|
|
there may be a number of lines available to be read but the number of
|
|
bytes which will be read by ReadFile should reflect the mode of the pty
|
|
and, if there is a line to read, only the number of bytes in the line
|
|
should be seen as available for the next read.
|
|
|
|
Having bytes_available() return the number of bytes which would be read
|
|
seemed to fix the problem but it could subtly change the behavior of
|
|
other callers of this function. However, I actually think this is
|
|
probably a good thing since they probably should have been seeing the
|
|
line behavior.
|
|
|
|
2012-05-02 cgf-000001
|
|
|
|
<1.7.15>
|
|
Fix problem setting parent pid to 1 when process with children execs
|
|
itself. Fixes: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2012-05/msg00009.html
|
|
</1.7.15>
|
|
|
|
Investigating this problem with strace showed that ssh-agent was
|
|
checking the parent pid and getting a 1 when it shouldn't have. Other
|
|
stuff looked ok so I chose to consider this a smoking gun.
|
|
|
|
Going back to the version that the OP said did not have the problem, I
|
|
worked forward until I found where the problem first occurred -
|
|
somewhere around 2012-03-19. And, indeed, the getppid call returned the
|
|
correct value in the working version. That means that this stopped
|
|
working when I redid the way the process pipe was inherited around
|
|
this time period.
|
|
|
|
It isn't clear why (and I suspect I may have to debug this further at
|
|
some point) this hasn't always been a problem but I made the obvious fix.
|
|
We shouldn't have been setting ppid = 1 when we're about to pass off to
|
|
an execed process.
|
|
|
|
As I was writing this, I realized that it was necessary to add some
|
|
additional checks. Just checking for "have_execed" isn't enough. If
|
|
we've execed a non-cygwin process then it won't know how to deal with
|
|
any inherited children. So, always set ppid = 1 if we've execed a
|
|
non-cygwin process.
|