xref: /dragonfly/contrib/xz/src/xz/file_io.c (revision e151908b)
1 ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 //
3 /// \file       file_io.c
4 /// \brief      File opening, unlinking, and closing
5 //
6 //  Author:     Lasse Collin
7 //
8 //  This file has been put into the public domain.
9 //  You can do whatever you want with this file.
10 //
11 ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12 
13 #include "private.h"
14 
15 #include <fcntl.h>
16 
17 #ifdef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
18 #	include <io.h>
19 #else
20 #	include <poll.h>
21 static bool warn_fchown;
22 #endif
23 
24 #if defined(HAVE_FUTIMES) || defined(HAVE_FUTIMESAT) || defined(HAVE_UTIMES)
25 #	include <sys/time.h>
26 #elif defined(HAVE__FUTIME)
27 #	include <sys/utime.h>
28 #elif defined(HAVE_UTIME)
29 #	include <utime.h>
30 #endif
31 
32 #ifdef HAVE_CAPSICUM
33 #	ifdef HAVE_SYS_CAPSICUM_H
34 #		include <sys/capsicum.h>
35 #	else
36 #		include <sys/capability.h>
37 #	endif
38 #endif
39 
40 #include "tuklib_open_stdxxx.h"
41 
42 #ifndef O_BINARY
43 #	define O_BINARY 0
44 #endif
45 
46 #ifndef O_NOCTTY
47 #	define O_NOCTTY 0
48 #endif
49 
50 // Using this macro to silence a warning from gcc -Wlogical-op.
51 #if EAGAIN == EWOULDBLOCK
52 #	define IS_EAGAIN_OR_EWOULDBLOCK(e) ((e) == EAGAIN)
53 #else
54 #	define IS_EAGAIN_OR_EWOULDBLOCK(e) \
55 		((e) == EAGAIN || (e) == EWOULDBLOCK)
56 #endif
57 
58 
59 typedef enum {
60 	IO_WAIT_MORE,    // Reading or writing is possible.
61 	IO_WAIT_ERROR,   // Error or user_abort
62 	IO_WAIT_TIMEOUT, // poll() timed out
63 } io_wait_ret;
64 
65 
66 /// If true, try to create sparse files when decompressing.
67 static bool try_sparse = true;
68 
69 #ifdef ENABLE_SANDBOX
70 /// True if the conditions for sandboxing (described in main()) have been met.
71 static bool sandbox_allowed = false;
72 #endif
73 
74 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
75 /// File status flags of standard input. This is used by io_open_src()
76 /// and io_close_src().
77 static int stdin_flags;
78 static bool restore_stdin_flags = false;
79 
80 /// Original file status flags of standard output. This is used by
81 /// io_open_dest() and io_close_dest() to save and restore the flags.
82 static int stdout_flags;
83 static bool restore_stdout_flags = false;
84 
85 /// Self-pipe used together with the user_abort variable to avoid
86 /// race conditions with signal handling.
87 static int user_abort_pipe[2];
88 #endif
89 
90 
91 static bool io_write_buf(file_pair *pair, const uint8_t *buf, size_t size);
92 
93 
94 extern void
io_init(void)95 io_init(void)
96 {
97 	// Make sure that stdin, stdout, and stderr are connected to
98 	// a valid file descriptor. Exit immediately with exit code ERROR
99 	// if we cannot make the file descriptors valid. Maybe we should
100 	// print an error message, but our stderr could be screwed anyway.
101 	tuklib_open_stdxxx(E_ERROR);
102 
103 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
104 	// If fchown() fails setting the owner, we warn about it only if
105 	// we are root.
106 	warn_fchown = geteuid() == 0;
107 
108 	// Create a pipe for the self-pipe trick.
109 	if (pipe(user_abort_pipe))
110 		message_fatal(_("Error creating a pipe: %s"),
111 				strerror(errno));
112 
113 	// Make both ends of the pipe non-blocking.
114 	for (unsigned i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
115 		int flags = fcntl(user_abort_pipe[i], F_GETFL);
116 		if (flags == -1 || fcntl(user_abort_pipe[i], F_SETFL,
117 				flags | O_NONBLOCK) == -1)
118 			message_fatal(_("Error creating a pipe: %s"),
119 					strerror(errno));
120 	}
121 #endif
122 
123 #ifdef __DJGPP__
124 	// Avoid doing useless things when statting files.
125 	// This isn't important but doesn't hurt.
126 	_djstat_flags = _STAT_EXEC_EXT | _STAT_EXEC_MAGIC | _STAT_DIRSIZE;
127 #endif
128 
129 	return;
130 }
131 
132 
133 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
134 extern void
io_write_to_user_abort_pipe(void)135 io_write_to_user_abort_pipe(void)
136 {
137 	// If the write() fails, it's probably due to the pipe being full.
138 	// Failing in that case is fine. If the reason is something else,
139 	// there's not much we can do since this is called in a signal
140 	// handler. So ignore the errors and try to avoid warnings with
141 	// GCC and glibc when _FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 is used.
142 	uint8_t b = '\0';
143 	const int ret = write(user_abort_pipe[1], &b, 1);
144 	(void)ret;
145 	return;
146 }
147 #endif
148 
149 
150 extern void
io_no_sparse(void)151 io_no_sparse(void)
152 {
153 	try_sparse = false;
154 	return;
155 }
156 
157 
158 #ifdef ENABLE_SANDBOX
159 extern void
io_allow_sandbox(void)160 io_allow_sandbox(void)
161 {
162 	sandbox_allowed = true;
163 	return;
164 }
165 
166 
167 /// Enables operating-system-specific sandbox if it is possible.
168 /// src_fd is the file descriptor of the input file.
169 static void
io_sandbox_enter(int src_fd)170 io_sandbox_enter(int src_fd)
171 {
172 	if (!sandbox_allowed) {
173 		// This message is more often annoying than useful so
174 		// it's commented out. It can be useful when developing
175 		// the sandboxing code.
176 		//message(V_DEBUG, _("Sandbox is disabled due "
177 		//		"to incompatible command line arguments"));
178 		return;
179 	}
180 
181 	const char dummy_str[] = "x";
182 
183 	// Try to ensure that both libc and xz locale files have been
184 	// loaded when NLS is enabled.
185 	snprintf(NULL, 0, "%s%s", _(dummy_str), strerror(EINVAL));
186 
187 	// Try to ensure that iconv data files needed for handling multibyte
188 	// characters have been loaded. This is needed at least with glibc.
189 	tuklib_mbstr_width(dummy_str, NULL);
190 
191 #ifdef HAVE_CAPSICUM
192 	// Capsicum needs FreeBSD 10.0 or later.
193 	cap_rights_t rights;
194 
195 	if (cap_rights_limit(src_fd, cap_rights_init(&rights,
196 			CAP_EVENT, CAP_FCNTL, CAP_LOOKUP, CAP_READ, CAP_SEEK)))
197 		goto error;
198 
199 	if (cap_rights_limit(STDOUT_FILENO, cap_rights_init(&rights,
200 			CAP_EVENT, CAP_FCNTL, CAP_FSTAT, CAP_LOOKUP,
201 			CAP_WRITE, CAP_SEEK)))
202 		goto error;
203 
204 	if (cap_rights_limit(user_abort_pipe[0], cap_rights_init(&rights,
205 			CAP_EVENT)))
206 		goto error;
207 
208 	if (cap_rights_limit(user_abort_pipe[1], cap_rights_init(&rights,
209 			CAP_WRITE)))
210 		goto error;
211 
212 	if (cap_enter())
213 		goto error;
214 
215 #else
216 #	error ENABLE_SANDBOX is defined but no sandboxing method was found.
217 #endif
218 
219 	// This message is annoying in xz -lvv.
220 	//message(V_DEBUG, _("Sandbox was successfully enabled"));
221 	return;
222 
223 error:
224 	message(V_DEBUG, _("Failed to enable the sandbox"));
225 }
226 #endif // ENABLE_SANDBOX
227 
228 
229 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
230 /// \brief      Waits for input or output to become available or for a signal
231 ///
232 /// This uses the self-pipe trick to avoid a race condition that can occur
233 /// if a signal is caught after user_abort has been checked but before e.g.
234 /// read() has been called. In that situation read() could block unless
235 /// non-blocking I/O is used. With non-blocking I/O something like select()
236 /// or poll() is needed to avoid a busy-wait loop, and the same race condition
237 /// pops up again. There are pselect() (POSIX-1.2001) and ppoll() (not in
238 /// POSIX) but neither is portable enough in 2013. The self-pipe trick is
239 /// old and very portable.
240 static io_wait_ret
io_wait(file_pair * pair,int timeout,bool is_reading)241 io_wait(file_pair *pair, int timeout, bool is_reading)
242 {
243 	struct pollfd pfd[2];
244 
245 	if (is_reading) {
246 		pfd[0].fd = pair->src_fd;
247 		pfd[0].events = POLLIN;
248 	} else {
249 		pfd[0].fd = pair->dest_fd;
250 		pfd[0].events = POLLOUT;
251 	}
252 
253 	pfd[1].fd = user_abort_pipe[0];
254 	pfd[1].events = POLLIN;
255 
256 	while (true) {
257 		const int ret = poll(pfd, 2, timeout);
258 
259 		if (user_abort)
260 			return IO_WAIT_ERROR;
261 
262 		if (ret == -1) {
263 			if (errno == EINTR || errno == EAGAIN)
264 				continue;
265 
266 			message_error(_("%s: poll() failed: %s"),
267 					is_reading ? pair->src_name
268 						: pair->dest_name,
269 					strerror(errno));
270 			return IO_WAIT_ERROR;
271 		}
272 
273 		if (ret == 0)
274 			return IO_WAIT_TIMEOUT;
275 
276 		if (pfd[0].revents != 0)
277 			return IO_WAIT_MORE;
278 	}
279 }
280 #endif
281 
282 
283 /// \brief      Unlink a file
284 ///
285 /// This tries to verify that the file being unlinked really is the file that
286 /// we want to unlink by verifying device and inode numbers. There's still
287 /// a small unavoidable race, but this is much better than nothing (the file
288 /// could have been moved/replaced even hours earlier).
289 static void
io_unlink(const char * name,const struct stat * known_st)290 io_unlink(const char *name, const struct stat *known_st)
291 {
292 #if defined(TUKLIB_DOSLIKE)
293 	// On DOS-like systems, st_ino is meaningless, so don't bother
294 	// testing it. Just silence a compiler warning.
295 	(void)known_st;
296 #else
297 	struct stat new_st;
298 
299 	// If --force was used, use stat() instead of lstat(). This way
300 	// (de)compressing symlinks works correctly. However, it also means
301 	// that xz cannot detect if a regular file foo is renamed to bar
302 	// and then a symlink foo -> bar is created. Because of stat()
303 	// instead of lstat(), xz will think that foo hasn't been replaced
304 	// with another file. Thus, xz will remove foo even though it no
305 	// longer is the same file that xz used when it started compressing.
306 	// Probably it's not too bad though, so this doesn't need a more
307 	// complex fix.
308 	const int stat_ret = opt_force
309 			? stat(name, &new_st) : lstat(name, &new_st);
310 
311 	if (stat_ret
312 #	ifdef __VMS
313 			// st_ino is an array, and we don't want to
314 			// compare st_dev at all.
315 			|| memcmp(&new_st.st_ino, &known_st->st_ino,
316 				sizeof(new_st.st_ino)) != 0
317 #	else
318 			// Typical POSIX-like system
319 			|| new_st.st_dev != known_st->st_dev
320 			|| new_st.st_ino != known_st->st_ino
321 #	endif
322 			)
323 		// TRANSLATORS: When compression or decompression finishes,
324 		// and xz is going to remove the source file, xz first checks
325 		// if the source file still exists, and if it does, does its
326 		// device and inode numbers match what xz saw when it opened
327 		// the source file. If these checks fail, this message is
328 		// shown, %s being the filename, and the file is not deleted.
329 		// The check for device and inode numbers is there, because
330 		// it is possible that the user has put a new file in place
331 		// of the original file, and in that case it obviously
332 		// shouldn't be removed.
333 		message_error(_("%s: File seems to have been moved, "
334 				"not removing"), name);
335 	else
336 #endif
337 		// There's a race condition between lstat() and unlink()
338 		// but at least we have tried to avoid removing wrong file.
339 		if (unlink(name))
340 			message_error(_("%s: Cannot remove: %s"),
341 					name, strerror(errno));
342 
343 	return;
344 }
345 
346 
347 /// \brief      Copies owner/group and permissions
348 ///
349 /// \todo       ACL and EA support
350 ///
351 static void
io_copy_attrs(const file_pair * pair)352 io_copy_attrs(const file_pair *pair)
353 {
354 	// Skip chown and chmod on Windows.
355 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
356 	// This function is more tricky than you may think at first.
357 	// Blindly copying permissions may permit users to access the
358 	// destination file who didn't have permission to access the
359 	// source file.
360 
361 	// Try changing the owner of the file. If we aren't root or the owner
362 	// isn't already us, fchown() probably doesn't succeed. We warn
363 	// about failing fchown() only if we are root.
364 	if (fchown(pair->dest_fd, pair->src_st.st_uid, (gid_t)(-1))
365 			&& warn_fchown)
366 		message_warning(_("%s: Cannot set the file owner: %s"),
367 				pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
368 
369 	mode_t mode;
370 
371 	if (fchown(pair->dest_fd, (uid_t)(-1), pair->src_st.st_gid)) {
372 		message_warning(_("%s: Cannot set the file group: %s"),
373 				pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
374 		// We can still safely copy some additional permissions:
375 		// `group' must be at least as strict as `other' and
376 		// also vice versa.
377 		//
378 		// NOTE: After this, the owner of the source file may
379 		// get additional permissions. This shouldn't be too bad,
380 		// because the owner would have had permission to chmod
381 		// the original file anyway.
382 		mode = ((pair->src_st.st_mode & 0070) >> 3)
383 				& (pair->src_st.st_mode & 0007);
384 		mode = (pair->src_st.st_mode & 0700) | (mode << 3) | mode;
385 	} else {
386 		// Drop the setuid, setgid, and sticky bits.
387 		mode = pair->src_st.st_mode & 0777;
388 	}
389 
390 	if (fchmod(pair->dest_fd, mode))
391 		message_warning(_("%s: Cannot set the file permissions: %s"),
392 				pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
393 #endif
394 
395 	// Copy the timestamps. We have several possible ways to do this, of
396 	// which some are better in both security and precision.
397 	//
398 	// First, get the nanosecond part of the timestamps. As of writing,
399 	// it's not standardized by POSIX, and there are several names for
400 	// the same thing in struct stat.
401 	long atime_nsec;
402 	long mtime_nsec;
403 
404 #	if defined(HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIM_TV_NSEC)
405 	// GNU and Solaris
406 	atime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_atim.tv_nsec;
407 	mtime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_mtim.tv_nsec;
408 
409 #	elif defined(HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIMESPEC_TV_NSEC)
410 	// BSD
411 	atime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_atimespec.tv_nsec;
412 	mtime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_mtimespec.tv_nsec;
413 
414 #	elif defined(HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIMENSEC)
415 	// GNU and BSD without extensions
416 	atime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_atimensec;
417 	mtime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_mtimensec;
418 
419 #	elif defined(HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_UATIME)
420 	// Tru64
421 	atime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_uatime * 1000;
422 	mtime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_umtime * 1000;
423 
424 #	elif defined(HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIM_ST__TIM_TV_NSEC)
425 	// UnixWare
426 	atime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_atim.st__tim.tv_nsec;
427 	mtime_nsec = pair->src_st.st_mtim.st__tim.tv_nsec;
428 
429 #	else
430 	// Safe fallback
431 	atime_nsec = 0;
432 	mtime_nsec = 0;
433 #	endif
434 
435 	// Construct a structure to hold the timestamps and call appropriate
436 	// function to set the timestamps.
437 #if defined(HAVE_FUTIMENS)
438 	// Use nanosecond precision.
439 	struct timespec tv[2];
440 	tv[0].tv_sec = pair->src_st.st_atime;
441 	tv[0].tv_nsec = atime_nsec;
442 	tv[1].tv_sec = pair->src_st.st_mtime;
443 	tv[1].tv_nsec = mtime_nsec;
444 
445 	(void)futimens(pair->dest_fd, tv);
446 
447 #elif defined(HAVE_FUTIMES) || defined(HAVE_FUTIMESAT) || defined(HAVE_UTIMES)
448 	// Use microsecond precision.
449 	struct timeval tv[2];
450 	tv[0].tv_sec = pair->src_st.st_atime;
451 	tv[0].tv_usec = atime_nsec / 1000;
452 	tv[1].tv_sec = pair->src_st.st_mtime;
453 	tv[1].tv_usec = mtime_nsec / 1000;
454 
455 #	if defined(HAVE_FUTIMES)
456 	(void)futimes(pair->dest_fd, tv);
457 #	elif defined(HAVE_FUTIMESAT)
458 	(void)futimesat(pair->dest_fd, NULL, tv);
459 #	else
460 	// Argh, no function to use a file descriptor to set the timestamp.
461 	(void)utimes(pair->dest_name, tv);
462 #	endif
463 
464 #elif defined(HAVE__FUTIME)
465 	// Use one-second precision with Windows-specific _futime().
466 	// We could use utime() too except that for some reason the
467 	// timestamp will get reset at close(). With _futime() it works.
468 	// This struct cannot be const as _futime() takes a non-const pointer.
469 	struct _utimbuf buf = {
470 		.actime = pair->src_st.st_atime,
471 		.modtime = pair->src_st.st_mtime,
472 	};
473 
474 	// Avoid warnings.
475 	(void)atime_nsec;
476 	(void)mtime_nsec;
477 
478 	(void)_futime(pair->dest_fd, &buf);
479 
480 #elif defined(HAVE_UTIME)
481 	// Use one-second precision. utime() doesn't support using file
482 	// descriptor either. Some systems have broken utime() prototype
483 	// so don't make this const.
484 	struct utimbuf buf = {
485 		.actime = pair->src_st.st_atime,
486 		.modtime = pair->src_st.st_mtime,
487 	};
488 
489 	// Avoid warnings.
490 	(void)atime_nsec;
491 	(void)mtime_nsec;
492 
493 	(void)utime(pair->dest_name, &buf);
494 #endif
495 
496 	return;
497 }
498 
499 
500 /// Opens the source file. Returns false on success, true on error.
501 static bool
io_open_src_real(file_pair * pair)502 io_open_src_real(file_pair *pair)
503 {
504 	// There's nothing to open when reading from stdin.
505 	if (pair->src_name == stdin_filename) {
506 		pair->src_fd = STDIN_FILENO;
507 #ifdef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
508 		setmode(STDIN_FILENO, O_BINARY);
509 #else
510 		// Try to set stdin to non-blocking mode. It won't work
511 		// e.g. on OpenBSD if stdout is e.g. /dev/null. In such
512 		// case we proceed as if stdin were non-blocking anyway
513 		// (in case of /dev/null it will be in practice). The
514 		// same applies to stdout in io_open_dest_real().
515 		stdin_flags = fcntl(STDIN_FILENO, F_GETFL);
516 		if (stdin_flags == -1) {
517 			message_error(_("Error getting the file status flags "
518 					"from standard input: %s"),
519 					strerror(errno));
520 			return true;
521 		}
522 
523 		if ((stdin_flags & O_NONBLOCK) == 0
524 				&& fcntl(STDIN_FILENO, F_SETFL,
525 					stdin_flags | O_NONBLOCK) != -1)
526 			restore_stdin_flags = true;
527 #endif
528 #ifdef HAVE_POSIX_FADVISE
529 		// It will fail if stdin is a pipe and that's fine.
530 		(void)posix_fadvise(STDIN_FILENO, 0, 0,
531 				opt_mode == MODE_LIST
532 					? POSIX_FADV_RANDOM
533 					: POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL);
534 #endif
535 		return false;
536 	}
537 
538 	// Symlinks are not followed unless writing to stdout or --force
539 	// was used.
540 	const bool follow_symlinks = opt_stdout || opt_force;
541 
542 	// We accept only regular files if we are writing the output
543 	// to disk too. bzip2 allows overriding this with --force but
544 	// gzip and xz don't.
545 	const bool reg_files_only = !opt_stdout;
546 
547 	// Flags for open()
548 	int flags = O_RDONLY | O_BINARY | O_NOCTTY;
549 
550 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
551 	// Use non-blocking I/O:
552 	//   - It prevents blocking when opening FIFOs and some other
553 	//     special files, which is good if we want to accept only
554 	//     regular files.
555 	//   - It can help avoiding some race conditions with signal handling.
556 	flags |= O_NONBLOCK;
557 #endif
558 
559 #if defined(O_NOFOLLOW)
560 	if (!follow_symlinks)
561 		flags |= O_NOFOLLOW;
562 #elif !defined(TUKLIB_DOSLIKE)
563 	// Some POSIX-like systems lack O_NOFOLLOW (it's not required
564 	// by POSIX). Check for symlinks with a separate lstat() on
565 	// these systems.
566 	if (!follow_symlinks) {
567 		struct stat st;
568 		if (lstat(pair->src_name, &st)) {
569 			message_error("%s: %s", pair->src_name,
570 					strerror(errno));
571 			return true;
572 
573 		} else if (S_ISLNK(st.st_mode)) {
574 			message_warning(_("%s: Is a symbolic link, "
575 					"skipping"), pair->src_name);
576 			return true;
577 		}
578 	}
579 #else
580 	// Avoid warnings.
581 	(void)follow_symlinks;
582 #endif
583 
584 	// Try to open the file. Signals have been blocked so EINTR shouldn't
585 	// be possible.
586 	pair->src_fd = open(pair->src_name, flags);
587 
588 	if (pair->src_fd == -1) {
589 		// Signals (that have a signal handler) have been blocked.
590 		assert(errno != EINTR);
591 
592 #ifdef O_NOFOLLOW
593 		// Give an understandable error message if the reason
594 		// for failing was that the file was a symbolic link.
595 		//
596 		// Note that at least Linux, OpenBSD, Solaris, and Darwin
597 		// use ELOOP to indicate that O_NOFOLLOW was the reason
598 		// that open() failed. Because there may be
599 		// directories in the pathname, ELOOP may occur also
600 		// because of a symlink loop in the directory part.
601 		// So ELOOP doesn't tell us what actually went wrong,
602 		// and this stupidity went into POSIX-1.2008 too.
603 		//
604 		// FreeBSD associates EMLINK with O_NOFOLLOW and
605 		// Tru64 uses ENOTSUP. We use these directly here
606 		// and skip the lstat() call and the associated race.
607 		// I want to hear if there are other kernels that
608 		// fail with something else than ELOOP with O_NOFOLLOW.
609 		bool was_symlink = false;
610 
611 #	if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__)
612 		if (errno == EMLINK)
613 			was_symlink = true;
614 
615 #	elif defined(__digital__) && defined(__unix__)
616 		if (errno == ENOTSUP)
617 			was_symlink = true;
618 
619 #	elif defined(__NetBSD__)
620 		if (errno == EFTYPE)
621 			was_symlink = true;
622 
623 #	else
624 		if (errno == ELOOP && !follow_symlinks) {
625 			const int saved_errno = errno;
626 			struct stat st;
627 			if (lstat(pair->src_name, &st) == 0
628 					&& S_ISLNK(st.st_mode))
629 				was_symlink = true;
630 
631 			errno = saved_errno;
632 		}
633 #	endif
634 
635 		if (was_symlink)
636 			message_warning(_("%s: Is a symbolic link, "
637 					"skipping"), pair->src_name);
638 		else
639 #endif
640 			// Something else than O_NOFOLLOW failing
641 			// (assuming that the race conditions didn't
642 			// confuse us).
643 			message_error("%s: %s", pair->src_name,
644 					strerror(errno));
645 
646 		return true;
647 	}
648 
649 	// Stat the source file. We need the result also when we copy
650 	// the permissions, and when unlinking.
651 	//
652 	// NOTE: Use stat() instead of fstat() with DJGPP, because
653 	// then we have a better chance to get st_ino value that can
654 	// be used in io_open_dest_real() to prevent overwriting the
655 	// source file.
656 #ifdef __DJGPP__
657 	if (stat(pair->src_name, &pair->src_st))
658 		goto error_msg;
659 #else
660 	if (fstat(pair->src_fd, &pair->src_st))
661 		goto error_msg;
662 #endif
663 
664 	if (S_ISDIR(pair->src_st.st_mode)) {
665 		message_warning(_("%s: Is a directory, skipping"),
666 				pair->src_name);
667 		goto error;
668 	}
669 
670 	if (reg_files_only && !S_ISREG(pair->src_st.st_mode)) {
671 		message_warning(_("%s: Not a regular file, skipping"),
672 				pair->src_name);
673 		goto error;
674 	}
675 
676 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
677 	if (reg_files_only && !opt_force) {
678 		if (pair->src_st.st_mode & (S_ISUID | S_ISGID)) {
679 			// gzip rejects setuid and setgid files even
680 			// when --force was used. bzip2 doesn't check
681 			// for them, but calls fchown() after fchmod(),
682 			// and many systems automatically drop setuid
683 			// and setgid bits there.
684 			//
685 			// We accept setuid and setgid files if
686 			// --force was used. We drop these bits
687 			// explicitly in io_copy_attr().
688 			message_warning(_("%s: File has setuid or "
689 					"setgid bit set, skipping"),
690 					pair->src_name);
691 			goto error;
692 		}
693 
694 		if (pair->src_st.st_mode & S_ISVTX) {
695 			message_warning(_("%s: File has sticky bit "
696 					"set, skipping"),
697 					pair->src_name);
698 			goto error;
699 		}
700 
701 		if (pair->src_st.st_nlink > 1) {
702 			message_warning(_("%s: Input file has more "
703 					"than one hard link, "
704 					"skipping"), pair->src_name);
705 			goto error;
706 		}
707 	}
708 
709 	// If it is something else than a regular file, wait until
710 	// there is input available. This way reading from FIFOs
711 	// will work when open() is used with O_NONBLOCK.
712 	if (!S_ISREG(pair->src_st.st_mode)) {
713 		signals_unblock();
714 		const io_wait_ret ret = io_wait(pair, -1, true);
715 		signals_block();
716 
717 		if (ret != IO_WAIT_MORE)
718 			goto error;
719 	}
720 #endif
721 
722 #ifdef HAVE_POSIX_FADVISE
723 	// It will fail with some special files like FIFOs but that is fine.
724 	(void)posix_fadvise(pair->src_fd, 0, 0,
725 			opt_mode == MODE_LIST
726 				? POSIX_FADV_RANDOM
727 				: POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL);
728 #endif
729 
730 	return false;
731 
732 error_msg:
733 	message_error("%s: %s", pair->src_name, strerror(errno));
734 error:
735 	(void)close(pair->src_fd);
736 	return true;
737 }
738 
739 
740 extern file_pair *
io_open_src(const char * src_name)741 io_open_src(const char *src_name)
742 {
743 	if (is_empty_filename(src_name))
744 		return NULL;
745 
746 	// Since we have only one file open at a time, we can use
747 	// a statically allocated structure.
748 	static file_pair pair;
749 
750 	pair = (file_pair){
751 		.src_name = src_name,
752 		.dest_name = NULL,
753 		.src_fd = -1,
754 		.dest_fd = -1,
755 		.src_eof = false,
756 		.src_has_seen_input = false,
757 		.flush_needed = false,
758 		.dest_try_sparse = false,
759 		.dest_pending_sparse = 0,
760 	};
761 
762 	// Block the signals, for which we have a custom signal handler, so
763 	// that we don't need to worry about EINTR.
764 	signals_block();
765 	const bool error = io_open_src_real(&pair);
766 	signals_unblock();
767 
768 #ifdef ENABLE_SANDBOX
769 	if (!error)
770 		io_sandbox_enter(pair.src_fd);
771 #endif
772 
773 	return error ? NULL : &pair;
774 }
775 
776 
777 /// \brief      Closes source file of the file_pair structure
778 ///
779 /// \param      pair    File whose src_fd should be closed
780 /// \param      success If true, the file will be removed from the disk if
781 ///                     closing succeeds and --keep hasn't been used.
782 static void
io_close_src(file_pair * pair,bool success)783 io_close_src(file_pair *pair, bool success)
784 {
785 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
786 	if (restore_stdin_flags) {
787 		assert(pair->src_fd == STDIN_FILENO);
788 
789 		restore_stdin_flags = false;
790 
791 		if (fcntl(STDIN_FILENO, F_SETFL, stdin_flags) == -1)
792 			message_error(_("Error restoring the status flags "
793 					"to standard input: %s"),
794 					strerror(errno));
795 	}
796 #endif
797 
798 	if (pair->src_fd != STDIN_FILENO && pair->src_fd != -1) {
799 		// Close the file before possibly unlinking it. On DOS-like
800 		// systems this is always required since unlinking will fail
801 		// if the file is open. On POSIX systems it usually works
802 		// to unlink open files, but in some cases it doesn't and
803 		// one gets EBUSY in errno.
804 		//
805 		// xz 5.2.2 and older unlinked the file before closing it
806 		// (except on DOS-like systems). The old code didn't handle
807 		// EBUSY and could fail e.g. on some CIFS shares. The
808 		// advantage of unlinking before closing is negligible
809 		// (avoids a race between close() and stat()/lstat() and
810 		// unlink()), so let's keep this simple.
811 		(void)close(pair->src_fd);
812 
813 		if (success && !opt_keep_original)
814 			io_unlink(pair->src_name, &pair->src_st);
815 	}
816 
817 	return;
818 }
819 
820 
821 static bool
io_open_dest_real(file_pair * pair)822 io_open_dest_real(file_pair *pair)
823 {
824 	if (opt_stdout || pair->src_fd == STDIN_FILENO) {
825 		// We don't modify or free() this.
826 		pair->dest_name = (char *)"(stdout)";
827 		pair->dest_fd = STDOUT_FILENO;
828 #ifdef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
829 		setmode(STDOUT_FILENO, O_BINARY);
830 #else
831 		// Try to set O_NONBLOCK if it isn't already set.
832 		// If it fails, we assume that stdout is non-blocking
833 		// in practice. See the comments in io_open_src_real()
834 		// for similar situation with stdin.
835 		//
836 		// NOTE: O_APPEND may be unset later in this function
837 		// and it relies on stdout_flags being set here.
838 		stdout_flags = fcntl(STDOUT_FILENO, F_GETFL);
839 		if (stdout_flags == -1) {
840 			message_error(_("Error getting the file status flags "
841 					"from standard output: %s"),
842 					strerror(errno));
843 			return true;
844 		}
845 
846 		if ((stdout_flags & O_NONBLOCK) == 0
847 				&& fcntl(STDOUT_FILENO, F_SETFL,
848 					stdout_flags | O_NONBLOCK) != -1)
849 				restore_stdout_flags = true;
850 #endif
851 	} else {
852 		pair->dest_name = suffix_get_dest_name(pair->src_name);
853 		if (pair->dest_name == NULL)
854 			return true;
855 
856 #ifdef __DJGPP__
857 		struct stat st;
858 		if (stat(pair->dest_name, &st) == 0) {
859 			// Check that it isn't a special file like "prn".
860 			if (st.st_dev == -1) {
861 				message_error("%s: Refusing to write to "
862 						"a DOS special file",
863 						pair->dest_name);
864 				free(pair->dest_name);
865 				return true;
866 			}
867 
868 			// Check that we aren't overwriting the source file.
869 			if (st.st_dev == pair->src_st.st_dev
870 					&& st.st_ino == pair->src_st.st_ino) {
871 				message_error("%s: Output file is the same "
872 						"as the input file",
873 						pair->dest_name);
874 				free(pair->dest_name);
875 				return true;
876 			}
877 		}
878 #endif
879 
880 		// If --force was used, unlink the target file first.
881 		if (opt_force && unlink(pair->dest_name) && errno != ENOENT) {
882 			message_error(_("%s: Cannot remove: %s"),
883 					pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
884 			free(pair->dest_name);
885 			return true;
886 		}
887 
888 		// Open the file.
889 		int flags = O_WRONLY | O_BINARY | O_NOCTTY
890 				| O_CREAT | O_EXCL;
891 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
892 		flags |= O_NONBLOCK;
893 #endif
894 		const mode_t mode = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR;
895 		pair->dest_fd = open(pair->dest_name, flags, mode);
896 
897 		if (pair->dest_fd == -1) {
898 			message_error("%s: %s", pair->dest_name,
899 					strerror(errno));
900 			free(pair->dest_name);
901 			return true;
902 		}
903 	}
904 
905 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
906 	// dest_st isn't used on DOS-like systems except as a dummy
907 	// argument to io_unlink(), so don't fstat() on such systems.
908 	if (fstat(pair->dest_fd, &pair->dest_st)) {
909 		// If fstat() really fails, we have a safe fallback here.
910 #	if defined(__VMS)
911 		pair->dest_st.st_ino[0] = 0;
912 		pair->dest_st.st_ino[1] = 0;
913 		pair->dest_st.st_ino[2] = 0;
914 #	else
915 		pair->dest_st.st_dev = 0;
916 		pair->dest_st.st_ino = 0;
917 #	endif
918 	} else if (try_sparse && opt_mode == MODE_DECOMPRESS) {
919 		// When writing to standard output, we need to be extra
920 		// careful:
921 		//  - It may be connected to something else than
922 		//    a regular file.
923 		//  - We aren't necessarily writing to a new empty file
924 		//    or to the end of an existing file.
925 		//  - O_APPEND may be active.
926 		//
927 		// TODO: I'm keeping this disabled for DOS-like systems
928 		// for now. FAT doesn't support sparse files, but NTFS
929 		// does, so maybe this should be enabled on Windows after
930 		// some testing.
931 		if (pair->dest_fd == STDOUT_FILENO) {
932 			if (!S_ISREG(pair->dest_st.st_mode))
933 				return false;
934 
935 			if (stdout_flags & O_APPEND) {
936 				// Creating a sparse file is not possible
937 				// when O_APPEND is active (it's used by
938 				// shell's >> redirection). As I understand
939 				// it, it is safe to temporarily disable
940 				// O_APPEND in xz, because if someone
941 				// happened to write to the same file at the
942 				// same time, results would be bad anyway
943 				// (users shouldn't assume that xz uses any
944 				// specific block size when writing data).
945 				//
946 				// The write position may be something else
947 				// than the end of the file, so we must fix
948 				// it to start writing at the end of the file
949 				// to imitate O_APPEND.
950 				if (lseek(STDOUT_FILENO, 0, SEEK_END) == -1)
951 					return false;
952 
953 				// Construct the new file status flags.
954 				// If O_NONBLOCK was set earlier in this
955 				// function, it must be kept here too.
956 				int flags = stdout_flags & ~O_APPEND;
957 				if (restore_stdout_flags)
958 					flags |= O_NONBLOCK;
959 
960 				// If this fcntl() fails, we continue but won't
961 				// try to create sparse output. The original
962 				// flags will still be restored if needed (to
963 				// unset O_NONBLOCK) when the file is finished.
964 				if (fcntl(STDOUT_FILENO, F_SETFL, flags) == -1)
965 					return false;
966 
967 				// Disabling O_APPEND succeeded. Mark
968 				// that the flags should be restored
969 				// in io_close_dest(). (This may have already
970 				// been set when enabling O_NONBLOCK.)
971 				restore_stdout_flags = true;
972 
973 			} else if (lseek(STDOUT_FILENO, 0, SEEK_CUR)
974 					!= pair->dest_st.st_size) {
975 				// Writing won't start exactly at the end
976 				// of the file. We cannot use sparse output,
977 				// because it would probably corrupt the file.
978 				return false;
979 			}
980 		}
981 
982 		pair->dest_try_sparse = true;
983 	}
984 #endif
985 
986 	return false;
987 }
988 
989 
990 extern bool
io_open_dest(file_pair * pair)991 io_open_dest(file_pair *pair)
992 {
993 	signals_block();
994 	const bool ret = io_open_dest_real(pair);
995 	signals_unblock();
996 	return ret;
997 }
998 
999 
1000 /// \brief      Closes destination file of the file_pair structure
1001 ///
1002 /// \param      pair    File whose dest_fd should be closed
1003 /// \param      success If false, the file will be removed from the disk.
1004 ///
1005 /// \return     Zero if closing succeeds. On error, -1 is returned and
1006 ///             error message printed.
1007 static bool
io_close_dest(file_pair * pair,bool success)1008 io_close_dest(file_pair *pair, bool success)
1009 {
1010 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
1011 	// If io_open_dest() has disabled O_APPEND, restore it here.
1012 	if (restore_stdout_flags) {
1013 		assert(pair->dest_fd == STDOUT_FILENO);
1014 
1015 		restore_stdout_flags = false;
1016 
1017 		if (fcntl(STDOUT_FILENO, F_SETFL, stdout_flags) == -1) {
1018 			message_error(_("Error restoring the O_APPEND flag "
1019 					"to standard output: %s"),
1020 					strerror(errno));
1021 			return true;
1022 		}
1023 	}
1024 #endif
1025 
1026 	if (pair->dest_fd == -1 || pair->dest_fd == STDOUT_FILENO)
1027 		return false;
1028 
1029 	if (close(pair->dest_fd)) {
1030 		message_error(_("%s: Closing the file failed: %s"),
1031 				pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
1032 
1033 		// Closing destination file failed, so we cannot trust its
1034 		// contents. Get rid of junk:
1035 		io_unlink(pair->dest_name, &pair->dest_st);
1036 		free(pair->dest_name);
1037 		return true;
1038 	}
1039 
1040 	// If the operation using this file wasn't successful, we git rid
1041 	// of the junk file.
1042 	if (!success)
1043 		io_unlink(pair->dest_name, &pair->dest_st);
1044 
1045 	free(pair->dest_name);
1046 
1047 	return false;
1048 }
1049 
1050 
1051 extern void
io_close(file_pair * pair,bool success)1052 io_close(file_pair *pair, bool success)
1053 {
1054 	// Take care of sparseness at the end of the output file.
1055 	if (success && pair->dest_try_sparse
1056 			&& pair->dest_pending_sparse > 0) {
1057 		// Seek forward one byte less than the size of the pending
1058 		// hole, then write one zero-byte. This way the file grows
1059 		// to its correct size. An alternative would be to use
1060 		// ftruncate() but that isn't portable enough (e.g. it
1061 		// doesn't work with FAT on Linux; FAT isn't that important
1062 		// since it doesn't support sparse files anyway, but we don't
1063 		// want to create corrupt files on it).
1064 		if (lseek(pair->dest_fd, pair->dest_pending_sparse - 1,
1065 				SEEK_CUR) == -1) {
1066 			message_error(_("%s: Seeking failed when trying "
1067 					"to create a sparse file: %s"),
1068 					pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
1069 			success = false;
1070 		} else {
1071 			const uint8_t zero[1] = { '\0' };
1072 			if (io_write_buf(pair, zero, 1))
1073 				success = false;
1074 		}
1075 	}
1076 
1077 	signals_block();
1078 
1079 	// Copy the file attributes. We need to skip this if destination
1080 	// file isn't open or it is standard output.
1081 	if (success && pair->dest_fd != -1 && pair->dest_fd != STDOUT_FILENO)
1082 		io_copy_attrs(pair);
1083 
1084 	// Close the destination first. If it fails, we must not remove
1085 	// the source file!
1086 	if (io_close_dest(pair, success))
1087 		success = false;
1088 
1089 	// Close the source file, and unlink it if the operation using this
1090 	// file pair was successful and we haven't requested to keep the
1091 	// source file.
1092 	io_close_src(pair, success);
1093 
1094 	signals_unblock();
1095 
1096 	return;
1097 }
1098 
1099 
1100 extern void
io_fix_src_pos(file_pair * pair,size_t rewind_size)1101 io_fix_src_pos(file_pair *pair, size_t rewind_size)
1102 {
1103 	assert(rewind_size <= IO_BUFFER_SIZE);
1104 
1105 	if (rewind_size > 0) {
1106 		// This doesn't need to work on unseekable file descriptors,
1107 		// so just ignore possible errors.
1108 		(void)lseek(pair->src_fd, -(off_t)(rewind_size), SEEK_CUR);
1109 	}
1110 
1111 	return;
1112 }
1113 
1114 
1115 extern size_t
io_read(file_pair * pair,io_buf * buf,size_t size)1116 io_read(file_pair *pair, io_buf *buf, size_t size)
1117 {
1118 	// We use small buffers here.
1119 	assert(size < SSIZE_MAX);
1120 
1121 	size_t pos = 0;
1122 
1123 	while (pos < size) {
1124 		const ssize_t amount = read(
1125 				pair->src_fd, buf->u8 + pos, size - pos);
1126 
1127 		if (amount == 0) {
1128 			pair->src_eof = true;
1129 			break;
1130 		}
1131 
1132 		if (amount == -1) {
1133 			if (errno == EINTR) {
1134 				if (user_abort)
1135 					return SIZE_MAX;
1136 
1137 				continue;
1138 			}
1139 
1140 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
1141 			if (IS_EAGAIN_OR_EWOULDBLOCK(errno)) {
1142 				// Disable the flush-timeout if no input has
1143 				// been seen since the previous flush and thus
1144 				// there would be nothing to flush after the
1145 				// timeout expires (avoids busy waiting).
1146 				const int timeout = pair->src_has_seen_input
1147 						? mytime_get_flush_timeout()
1148 						: -1;
1149 
1150 				switch (io_wait(pair, timeout, true)) {
1151 				case IO_WAIT_MORE:
1152 					continue;
1153 
1154 				case IO_WAIT_ERROR:
1155 					return SIZE_MAX;
1156 
1157 				case IO_WAIT_TIMEOUT:
1158 					pair->flush_needed = true;
1159 					return pos;
1160 
1161 				default:
1162 					message_bug();
1163 				}
1164 			}
1165 #endif
1166 
1167 			message_error(_("%s: Read error: %s"),
1168 					pair->src_name, strerror(errno));
1169 
1170 			return SIZE_MAX;
1171 		}
1172 
1173 		pos += (size_t)(amount);
1174 
1175 		if (!pair->src_has_seen_input) {
1176 			pair->src_has_seen_input = true;
1177 			mytime_set_flush_time();
1178 		}
1179 	}
1180 
1181 	return pos;
1182 }
1183 
1184 
1185 extern bool
io_pread(file_pair * pair,io_buf * buf,size_t size,off_t pos)1186 io_pread(file_pair *pair, io_buf *buf, size_t size, off_t pos)
1187 {
1188 	// Using lseek() and read() is more portable than pread() and
1189 	// for us it is as good as real pread().
1190 	if (lseek(pair->src_fd, pos, SEEK_SET) != pos) {
1191 		message_error(_("%s: Error seeking the file: %s"),
1192 				pair->src_name, strerror(errno));
1193 		return true;
1194 	}
1195 
1196 	const size_t amount = io_read(pair, buf, size);
1197 	if (amount == SIZE_MAX)
1198 		return true;
1199 
1200 	if (amount != size) {
1201 		message_error(_("%s: Unexpected end of file"),
1202 				pair->src_name);
1203 		return true;
1204 	}
1205 
1206 	return false;
1207 }
1208 
1209 
1210 static bool
is_sparse(const io_buf * buf)1211 is_sparse(const io_buf *buf)
1212 {
1213 	assert(IO_BUFFER_SIZE % sizeof(uint64_t) == 0);
1214 
1215 	for (size_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(buf->u64); ++i)
1216 		if (buf->u64[i] != 0)
1217 			return false;
1218 
1219 	return true;
1220 }
1221 
1222 
1223 static bool
io_write_buf(file_pair * pair,const uint8_t * buf,size_t size)1224 io_write_buf(file_pair *pair, const uint8_t *buf, size_t size)
1225 {
1226 	assert(size < SSIZE_MAX);
1227 
1228 	while (size > 0) {
1229 		const ssize_t amount = write(pair->dest_fd, buf, size);
1230 		if (amount == -1) {
1231 			if (errno == EINTR) {
1232 				if (user_abort)
1233 					return true;
1234 
1235 				continue;
1236 			}
1237 
1238 #ifndef TUKLIB_DOSLIKE
1239 			if (IS_EAGAIN_OR_EWOULDBLOCK(errno)) {
1240 				if (io_wait(pair, -1, false) == IO_WAIT_MORE)
1241 					continue;
1242 
1243 				return true;
1244 			}
1245 #endif
1246 
1247 			// Handle broken pipe specially. gzip and bzip2
1248 			// don't print anything on SIGPIPE. In addition,
1249 			// gzip --quiet uses exit status 2 (warning) on
1250 			// broken pipe instead of whatever raise(SIGPIPE)
1251 			// would make it return. It is there to hide "Broken
1252 			// pipe" message on some old shells (probably old
1253 			// GNU bash).
1254 			//
1255 			// We don't do anything special with --quiet, which
1256 			// is what bzip2 does too. If we get SIGPIPE, we
1257 			// will handle it like other signals by setting
1258 			// user_abort, and get EPIPE here.
1259 			if (errno != EPIPE)
1260 				message_error(_("%s: Write error: %s"),
1261 					pair->dest_name, strerror(errno));
1262 
1263 			return true;
1264 		}
1265 
1266 		buf += (size_t)(amount);
1267 		size -= (size_t)(amount);
1268 	}
1269 
1270 	return false;
1271 }
1272 
1273 
1274 extern bool
io_write(file_pair * pair,const io_buf * buf,size_t size)1275 io_write(file_pair *pair, const io_buf *buf, size_t size)
1276 {
1277 	assert(size <= IO_BUFFER_SIZE);
1278 
1279 	if (pair->dest_try_sparse) {
1280 		// Check if the block is sparse (contains only zeros). If it
1281 		// sparse, we just store the amount and return. We will take
1282 		// care of actually skipping over the hole when we hit the
1283 		// next data block or close the file.
1284 		//
1285 		// Since io_close() requires that dest_pending_sparse > 0
1286 		// if the file ends with sparse block, we must also return
1287 		// if size == 0 to avoid doing the lseek().
1288 		if (size == IO_BUFFER_SIZE) {
1289 			// Even if the block was sparse, treat it as non-sparse
1290 			// if the pending sparse amount is large compared to
1291 			// the size of off_t. In practice this only matters
1292 			// on 32-bit systems where off_t isn't always 64 bits.
1293 			const off_t pending_max
1294 				= (off_t)(1) << (sizeof(off_t) * CHAR_BIT - 2);
1295 			if (is_sparse(buf) && pair->dest_pending_sparse
1296 					< pending_max) {
1297 				pair->dest_pending_sparse += (off_t)(size);
1298 				return false;
1299 			}
1300 		} else if (size == 0) {
1301 			return false;
1302 		}
1303 
1304 		// This is not a sparse block. If we have a pending hole,
1305 		// skip it now.
1306 		if (pair->dest_pending_sparse > 0) {
1307 			if (lseek(pair->dest_fd, pair->dest_pending_sparse,
1308 					SEEK_CUR) == -1) {
1309 				message_error(_("%s: Seeking failed when "
1310 						"trying to create a sparse "
1311 						"file: %s"), pair->dest_name,
1312 						strerror(errno));
1313 				return true;
1314 			}
1315 
1316 			pair->dest_pending_sparse = 0;
1317 		}
1318 	}
1319 
1320 	return io_write_buf(pair, buf->u8, size);
1321 }
1322