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tcsh.19069
tcsh-closem.patch
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File tcsh-closem.patch of Package tcsh.19069
[PATCH] Slightly less drastic closem() Miloslav Trmac mitr at volny.cz Thu Sep 9 19:17:10 EDT 2004 Previous message: [PATCH] Slightly less drastic closem() Next message: Newlines in command substitution Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] On Wed, Sep 08, 2004 at 08:38:03PM -0400, Christos Zoulas wrote: (Original mail reordered) > Finally, I do have an old patch that makes tcsh not use closem at all, > and adds sh like I/O redirection (plus other fd manipulations) to it, sh-like I/O redirection could actually make the problem worse if tcsh is using NSS after performing the redirections --- I haven't checked whether it does. Avoiding closem () completely is of course the "correct" fix, but I'm afraid I won't be able to spend the time needed to do this. > The same problem has been present for years with NIS. Same as with nss_ldap, > NIS happily discovers that the fd it was using before is gone, and re-opens > it. Are other file types than sockets involved? > I don't like the socket hack because: > > 1. It makes closem not close all the fds anymore. I have already argued this should not be a problem: tcsh never creates sockets. > 3. the message that nss_ldap produces should be log_debug at best. I can imagine scenarios where the message is really useful, but I don't feel strongly about it. > 2. The fact that nss_ldap uses sockets now is an artifact of the > implementation. What if tomorrow it changes to use doors or named pipes? I have never met doors in practice so I won't comment on them except by noting that the nss_ldap in question surely won't use them. If nss_ldap used named pipes, the "it is necessary for performance" justification would be so weak that I would prefer patching nss_ldap to close the pipe after each call instead of changing tcsh. nss_ldap and tcsh are fighting over a gray area in the system <-> application contract, so it seems reasonable to solve it by a "compromise", restricting the behavior of both. AFAICS, solving the general case reliably would require a lot of work and I have no emprical evidence suggesting that this work is necessary. To make this lobbying attempt complete :-), I'm attaching a properly commented socket hack patch. Mirek --- sh.misc.c | 11 +++++++++++ 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+) --- sh.misc.c +++ sh.misc.c 2017-06-16 07:51:59.732399828 +0000 @@ -257,6 +257,7 @@ void closem(void) { int f, num_files; + struct stat st; #ifdef NLS_BUGS #ifdef NLS_CATALOGS @@ -274,6 +275,16 @@ closem(void) #ifdef MALLOC_TRACE && f != 25 #endif /* MALLOC_TRACE */ +#ifdef S_ISSOCK + /* NSS modules (e.g. Linux nss_ldap) might keep sockets open. + * If we close such a socket, both the NSS module and tcsh think + * they "own" the descriptor. + * + * Not closing sockets does not make the cleanup use of closem() + * less reliable because tcsh never creates sockets. + */ + && fstat(f, &st) == 0 && !S_ISSOCK(st.st_mode) +#endif ) { xclose(f);
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