Reopen standard streams when they are closed on Unix

The syscalls returning a new file descriptors generally use
lowest-numbered file descriptor not currently opened, without any
exceptions for those corresponding to the standard streams.

Previously when any of standard streams has been closed before starting
the application, operations on std::io::{stderr,stdin,stdout} objects
were likely to operate on other logically unrelated file resources
opened afterwards.

Avoid the issue by reopening the standard streams when they are closed.
This commit is contained in:
Tomasz Miąsko 2020-09-27 00:00:00 +00:00
parent 4529af972e
commit 7d98d2207a
2 changed files with 82 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -75,6 +75,13 @@ pub use crate::sys_common::os_str_bytes as os_str;
#[cfg(not(test))]
pub fn init() {
// The standard streams might be closed on application startup. To prevent
// std::io::{stdin, stdout,stderr} objects from using other unrelated file
// resources opened later, we reopen standards streams when they are closed.
unsafe {
sanitize_standard_fds();
}
// By default, some platforms will send a *signal* when an EPIPE error
// would otherwise be delivered. This runtime doesn't install a SIGPIPE
// handler, causing it to kill the program, which isn't exactly what we
@ -86,6 +93,61 @@ pub fn init() {
reset_sigpipe();
}
// In the case when all file descriptors are open, the poll has been
// observed to perform better than fcntl (on GNU/Linux).
#[cfg(not(any(
miri,
target_os = "emscripten",
target_os = "fuchsia",
// The poll on Darwin doesn't set POLLNVAL for closed fds.
target_os = "macos",
target_os = "ios",
target_os = "redox",
)))]
unsafe fn sanitize_standard_fds() {
use crate::sys::os::errno;
let pfds: &mut [_] = &mut [
libc::pollfd { fd: 0, events: 0, revents: 0 },
libc::pollfd { fd: 1, events: 0, revents: 0 },
libc::pollfd { fd: 2, events: 0, revents: 0 },
];
while libc::poll(pfds.as_mut_ptr(), 3, 0) == -1 {
if errno() == libc::EINTR {
continue;
}
libc::abort();
}
for pfd in pfds {
if pfd.revents & libc::POLLNVAL == 0 {
continue;
}
if libc::open("/dev/null\0".as_ptr().cast(), libc::O_RDWR, 0) == -1 {
// If the stream is closed but we failed to reopen it, abort the
// process. Otherwise we wouldn't preserve the safety of
// operations on the corresponding Rust object Stdin, Stdout, or
// Stderr.
libc::abort();
}
}
}
#[cfg(any(target_os = "macos", target_os = "ios", target_os = "redox"))]
unsafe fn sanitize_standard_fds() {
use crate::sys::os::errno;
for fd in 0..3 {
if libc::fcntl(fd, libc::F_GETFD) == -1 && errno() == libc::EBADF {
if libc::open("/dev/null\0".as_ptr().cast(), libc::O_RDWR, 0) == -1 {
libc::abort();
}
}
}
}
#[cfg(any(
// The standard fds are always available in Miri.
miri,
target_os = "emscripten",
target_os = "fuchsia"))]
unsafe fn sanitize_standard_fds() {}
#[cfg(not(any(target_os = "emscripten", target_os = "fuchsia")))]
unsafe fn reset_sigpipe() {
assert!(signal(libc::SIGPIPE, libc::SIG_IGN) != libc::SIG_ERR);

View File

@ -36,6 +36,16 @@ unsafe fn without_stdio<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> R {
return r
}
#[cfg(unix)]
fn assert_fd_is_valid(fd: libc::c_int) {
if unsafe { libc::fcntl(fd, libc::F_GETFD) == -1 } {
panic!("file descriptor {} is not valid: {}", fd, io::Error::last_os_error());
}
}
#[cfg(windows)]
fn assert_fd_is_valid(_fd: libc::c_int) {}
#[cfg(windows)]
unsafe fn without_stdio<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> R {
type DWORD = u32;
@ -77,10 +87,18 @@ unsafe fn without_stdio<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> R {
fn main() {
if env::args().len() > 1 {
// Writing to stdout & stderr should not panic.
println!("test");
assert!(io::stdout().write(b"test\n").is_ok());
assert!(io::stderr().write(b"test\n").is_ok());
// Stdin should be at EOF.
assert_eq!(io::stdin().read(&mut [0; 10]).unwrap(), 0);
// Standard file descriptors should be valid on UNIX:
assert_fd_is_valid(0);
assert_fd_is_valid(1);
assert_fd_is_valid(2);
return
}
@ -109,12 +127,12 @@ fn main() {
.stdout(Stdio::null())
.stderr(Stdio::null())
.status().unwrap();
assert!(status.success(), "{:?} isn't a success", status);
assert!(status.success(), "{} isn't a success", status);
// Finally, close everything then spawn a child to make sure everything is
// *still* ok.
let status = unsafe {
without_stdio(|| Command::new(&me).arg("next").status())
}.unwrap();
assert!(status.success(), "{:?} isn't a success", status);
assert!(status.success(), "{} isn't a success", status);
}