Refactor DynamicLoader construction with a try_create() helper so that
we can call mmap() before making a loader. This way the loader doesn't
need to have an "mmap failed" state.
This patch also takes care of determining the ELF file size in
try_create() instead of expecting callers to provide it.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Note:
- `append` is not being changed because there are several overloads
for appending single values and concatenating vectors. This
conflation needs to be addressed first.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
Problem:
- Using regular functions rather than function templates results in
the arguments not being deduced. This then requires the same
function to be written multiple times and for `move` to be used
rather than `forward`.
Solution:
- Collapse multiple function overloads to a single function template
with a deduced argument. This allows the argument to be a forwarding
reference and bind to either an l-value or r-value and forward the
value.
We had an exception that allowed SOL_SOCKET + SO_PEERCRED on local
socket to support LibIPC's PID exchange mechanism. This is no longer
needed so let's just remove the exception.
The PIDs were used for sharing shbufs between processes, but now that
we have migrated to file descriptor passing, we no longer need to know
the PID of the other side.
This patch adds an IPC call for debugging requests. It's stringly typed
and very simple, and allows us to easily implement all the features in
the Browser's Debug menu.
It's useful for programs to change their thread names to say something
interesting about what they are working on. Let's not require "thread"
for this since single-threaded programs may want to do it without
pledging "thread".
Frick it, let's just enable this by default and give ourselves a reason
to improve things! Some things are broken, and there's a bit of flicker
when resizing, but we can do this.
This drastically improves our web browsing security model by isolating
each tab into its own WebContent process that runs as an unprivileged
user with a tight pledge+unveil sandbox.
To get a single-process browser, you can start it with -s.
This is a workaround until we can implement a proper <input type=text>
in terms of LibWeb primitives.
This makes google.com not crash in multi-process mode (but there is no
search box.)
The OOPWV will now detect WebContent process crashes/disconnections and
simply create a new WebContent process in its place. We also generate a
little error page with a link to the crashing URL so you can reload and
try again.
This a huge step forward for OOPWV since it now has a feature that IPWV
can never replicate. :^)
If a window is being torn down during app shutdown, the global
application pointer may be nulled out already. So let's handle that
case gracefully in Window::hide().
Image boxes want to know whether they are inside the visible viewport.
This is used to pause/resume animations, and to update the purgeable
memory volatility state.
Previously we would traverse the entire layout tree on every resize,
calling a helper on each ImageBox. Make those boxes register with the
frame they are interested in instead, saving us all that traversal.
This also makes it easier for other parts of the code to learn about
viewport changes in the future. :^)
We were ignoring everything but A records in DNS responses. This broke
reverse lookups which obviously want the PTR records.
Fix this by filtering on the requested record type instead of always A.
Remap the list of atexit handlers as read-only while we're not actively
writing to it. This prevents an attacker from using a memory write
primitive to gain code execution via the atexit list.
This is based on a technique used in OpenBSD. :^)
Section names are referred to by offset and length. We do not check
(and probably should not check) whether these names overlap in any way.
This opened the door to many sections (in this example: about 2700)
forcing ELF::Image::m_sections to contain endless copies of the same
huge string (in this case: 882K).
Fix this by loading only the first PAGE_SIZE bytes of each name.
Since section names are only relevant for relocations and debug
information and most section names are hard-coded (and far below 4096
bytes) anyway, this should be no restriction at all for 'normal'
executables.
Found by OSS-Fuzz:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=29187
I overlooked a corner case where we might call the built-in ctz() on zero.
Furthermore, the calculation of the shift was wrong and the results were often
unusable.
Both issue were caused by a forgotten 36daeee34f.
This time I made sure to look at bmpsuite_files first, and now they look good.
Found by OSS-Fuzz:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=28985
This caused some confusion: Apparently, clang has no trouble overriding Shell's
main, and this issue only surfaced when I tried to build the fuzzers with
wrong configuration (i.e., without the clang-injected 'main').
The diff is suggested by, and work of, @alimpfard.
Previously regions were stored in a vector and then a pointer to
regions in this vector were taken and stored. The problem is the vector
were still appended after pointers were taken, if enough regions were
present the vector would grow so large that it needed a resize, this
cause his memory to moved and now the previous pointers are now
pointing to old memory we just freed.
Fixes#5160
This used to be in Kernel/, next to the build-root-filesystem.sh script,
which was then moved to Meta/ during the transition to CMake but has the
working directory set to Build/, effectively expecting it there - which
seems silly.
TL;DR: Very confusing. Use an explicit path relative to SERENITY_ROOT
instead and update the .gitignore files.