aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/templates
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2011-06-09Fix realpath(name, NULL) when PSEUDO_DISABLED=1Peter Seebach
On some Linux systems, dlsym("realpath", RTLD_NEXT) prefers for reasons of its own to give a symbol that is also known as old_realpath, which fails and yields EINVAL when called with a null pointer as the second argument. This can be avoided, on some systems, by using dlvsym() to request the GLIBC_2.3 version of the symbol. The wrapper logic is enhanced to allow for specifying versions, although this currently only works for Linux (Darwin has no dlvsym, apparently?). The test case is a trivial program which calls realpath(name, NULL) run with PSEUDO_DISABLED=1.
2011-04-21Fix hangs on Fedora 13 et al.Peter Seebach
2011-03-25Merge in ports workPeter Seebach
This is a spiffied-up rebase of a bunch of intermediate changes, presented as a whole because it is, surprisingly, less confusing that way. The basic idea is to separate the guts code into categories ranging from generic stuff that can be the same everywhere and specific variants. The big scary one is the Darwin support, which actually seems to run okay on 64-bit OS X 10.6. (No other variants were tested.) The other example given is support for the old clone() syscall on RHEL 4, which affects some wrlinux use cases. There's a few minor cleanup bits here, such as a function with inconsistent calling conventions, but nothing really exciting.
2010-12-16Restructure wrapfuncs.cMark Hatle
Restructure wrapfuncs.c in an attempt to improve PSEUDO_DISABLED=1 performance. Signed-off-by: Mark Hatle <mark.hatle@windriver.com>
2010-12-13Further amend the system to enable/disable sudo during fork/exec.Mark Hatle
2010-12-09: * (mhatle) Add doc/program_flow to attempt to explain startup/running * (mhatle) guts/* minor cleanup * (mhatle) Reorganize into a new constructor for libpseudo ONLY pseudo main() now manually calls the util init new / revised init for client, wrappers and utils * (mhatle) Add central "reinit" function * (mhatle) Add manul execv* functions * (mhatle) rename pseudo_populate_wrappers to pseudo_check_wrappers Signed-off-by: Mark Hatle <mark.hatle@windriver.com>
2010-12-07This is a merge of several commits from a tree which turned out toPeter Seebach
be out of sync in a very inconvenient way. Changes include: * Some whitespace fixes, also move the pseudo_variables definition into pseudo_util.c since it's not used anywhere else. * Further improvements in the fork() support: We now recognize both positive and negative forms of PSEUDO_DISABLED, so we can distinguish between "it was removed from the environment by env -i" (restore the old value) and "it was intentionally turned off" (the new value wins). * clone(2) support. This is a little primitive, and programs might still fail horribly due to clone's semantics, but at least it's there and passes easy test cases. Plus a big patch from Mark Hatle: Cleanup fork/clone and PSEUDO_DISABLED guts/fork.c: * cleanup function and make it more robust * be sure to call pseudo_setupenv prior to pseudo_client_reset to match exec behavior pseudo_wrappers.c: * fix mismatched type in execl_to_v call via typecast * Simplify fork call via single call to wrap_fork() * be sure to save pseudo_disabled * be sure to call pseudo_setupenv prior to pseudo_client_reset to match exec behavior tests: * Add a test of whether pseudo can be disabled/enabled on a fork. Signed-off-by: Mark Hatle <mark.hatle@windriver.com>
2010-10-25Clean up makewrappers a bit.Peter Seebach
2010-10-11Major change: Replace the shell-based makewrappers with a PythonPeter Seebach
one. There's a long story here, but to abbreviate it: The shell script was annoying at best to maintain and starting to show signs of not really being the right tool for the job. For various reasons, we have some other Python stuff in our build system, so we picked Python as the language we were already using for other stuff. We think this works with anything reasonably recent (around Python 2.4 through 2.6). There's a little bit of cleanup, also, of the wrapper templates.