osdep: add mkostemps() emulation

Supposed to follow the standard function.

The standard function is not standard, but a GNU extension. Adding some
ifdef mess is pointless too - it has no advantages other than having a
mess, and not spotting implementation bugs in the emulation due to
running it only on "obscure" platforms (like Windows, so most computers
actually, except the developer's platform).

There is mkstemp(), which at least is in POSIX 2008. But it's 100%
useless, except in some obscure cases: it doesn't set O_CLOEXEC, nor can
you pass it to it. Without O_CLOEXEC, we'd leak the temporary file to
all child processes. (The fact that the file, which is expected to reach
double or tripple digit GB sizes, will be deleted only once all
processes unreference the FD, makes this sort of a big deal. You could
ftruncate() it, but that doesn't fix all the other problems.)

Why did POSIX standardize mkstemp() and O_CLOEXEC apparently at the same
time, but provided no way to pass O_CLOEXEC to mkstemp()? With the
introduction of O_CLOEXEC, they acknowledged that there's a need to
atomically set the FD_CLOEXEC flag when creating file descriptors.
(FD_CLOEXEC was standard before that, but setting it with fcntl() is
racy.) You're much more likely to need a temp file that is CLOEXEC
rather than the opposite, and even if they were somehow opposed to
CLOEXEC by default (such as for compat. reasons), surely POSIX could
have standardized mkostemp() too or instead.

And then there's the fact that this whole O_CLOEXEC mess is stupid.
Surely there would have been a better way to handle this, instead of
requiring adding O_CLOEXEC to almost ALL instances of open() in all code
that has been written ever. The justification for this is that the
historic default was wrong, and you can't change it (e.g. this won't
work: changing the behavior of exec() and not inherit the FD to the
child process, unless a hypothetical O_KEEP_EXEC flag is set).

But on the other hand, surely you could have introduced an exec()
variant which does close all FDs, except a whitelist of FDs passed to
it. Let's call it execve2(). In fact, I'm going to argue that exec()
call sites are the most aware of whether (and which) FDs to inherit.
Some programs even tried to explicitly iterate over all opened FDs and
explicitly close "unwanted" FDs (which of course was problematic for
other reasons), and such an execve2() call would have been the ideal
solution.

Maybe this proposed solution would have had problems too. But surely
revisiting and reviewing every exec*() call would have been simpler than
reviewing every open() call. And more importantly, having to extend
every damn library function that either calls open() or creates FDs in
some other way, like mkstemp().

What argument are there going to be against this? That there will be
library code that can't keep working correctly with processes that use
the "old" exec? Well, what about all my legacy library code that uses
open() incorrectly, and that will break no matter what?

Well, I'm not going to claim that I can come up with better solutions
than POSIX (generally or in this case), but this situation is ABSOLUTELY
ATROCIOUS. It makes win32 programming look attractive compared to POSIX,
that standard pandering to dead people from the past. (Note: not trying
to insult dead people.)

I'm not sure what POSIX is even doing. Anything useful? Doesn't look
like it to me. Are they paid? Why? They didn't even fix the locale mess,
nor do they intend to. I bet they're proud of discussing compatibility
to 70ies code day in and day out iwtohut ever producing anything useful.
What a load of crap. They seriously got to do better than this.

Oh, and my wrapper is probably buggy. Fortunately that doesn't matter.
Also I'm dumping this into io.h. Originally, io.h was just supposed to
replace broken implementation of standard functions by MinGW (and then
by Android), but whatever, just give a dumping ground for shit code.
This commit is contained in:
wm4 2019-06-13 18:23:05 +02:00
parent 2e3d3bbfc8
commit ef507ad50a
2 changed files with 36 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -19,9 +19,15 @@
* License along with mpv. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "mpv_talloc.h"
@ -814,3 +820,29 @@ void freelocale(locale_t locobj)
}
#endif // __MINGW32__
int mp_mkostemps(char *template, int suffixlen, int flags)
{
size_t len = strlen(template);
char *t = len >= 6 + suffixlen ? &template[len - (6 + suffixlen)] : NULL;
if (!t || strncmp(t, "XXXXXX", 6) != 0) {
errno = EINVAL;
return -1;
}
for (size_t fuckshit = 0; fuckshit < UINT32_MAX; fuckshit++) {
// Using a random value may make it require fewer iterations (even if
// not truly random; just a counter would be sufficient).
size_t fuckmess = rand();
char crap[7] = "";
snprintf(crap, sizeof(crap), "%06zx", fuckmess);
memcpy(t, crap, 6);
int res = open(template, O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_EXCL | flags, 0600);
if (res >= 0 || errno != EEXIST)
return res;
}
errno = EEXIST;
return -1;
}

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@ -207,4 +207,6 @@ void freelocale(locale_t);
#endif /* __MINGW32__ */
int mp_mkostemps(char *template, int suffixlen, int flags);
#endif