this was reported by codeql's scan as a TOCTOU bug. while that's true in
theory, i don't believe it would've had any practical effect.
a better justification for this change might be the fact that it
upgrades from `utime` (which is depreciated by POSIX [0]) to `futimens`.
[0]: https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/utime.3p.html#FUTURE_DIRECTIONS
malloc (called by xasprintf) is not async-signal-safe. beside, the
string here is constant, so there's no need to malloc it all.
eerrorx isn't async-signal-safe either (due to calling fprintf and exit)
but consequence of them are _typically_ not as grave as calling malloc
while it's internal state is inconsistent.
Bug: https://github.com/OpenRC/openrc/issues/589
From scan-build w/ clang-16.0.0_pre20230107:
```
../src/librc/librc.c:759:14: warning: Potential leak of memory pointed to by 'init' [unix.Malloc]
return false;
^~~~~
```
It's already initialised to false at the start and it's clear when reading
what the flow is.
While at it, fix some indentation and adjust whitespace to make more readable.
These become fine with C23 because () starts to mean (void) then, but for
previous language versions, it's deprecated, and it causes an annoying
warning when building with Clang by default.
Plus, GCC lacks specific flags to trigger what C23 *does* ban, so a lot
of people are going around building with -Wstrict-prototypes, so let's
just fix this to be consistent with the rest of the codebase anyway
to fend off false positive reports.
On systems with a very large RLIMIT_NOFILE, calling close() in a loop
from 3 to getdtablesize() effects an enormous number of system calls.
There are better alternatives. Both BSD and Linux have the closefrom()
system call that closes all file descriptors with indices not less than
a specified minimum. Have start-stop-daemon call closefrom() on systems
where it's implemented, falling back to the old loop elsewhere.
Likewise, calling fcntl(i, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC) in a loop from 3 to
getdtablesize() raises a similar performance concern. Linux 5.11 and
onward has a close_range() system call with a CLOSE_RANGE_CLOEXEC flag
that sets the FD_CLOEXEC flag on all file descriptors in a specified
range. Have supervise-daemon utilize this feature on systems where it's
implemented, falling back to the old loop elsewhere.
1364e6631c exempted the write end of the
synchronization pipe from the close() loop in the child process, but
this is unnecessary, as the pipe is opened with O_CLOEXEC, and the child
process calls execvp() soon after the close() loop, with the intervening
code not needing the pipe. Indeed, the pipe only needs to remain open in
the child process until after the call to setsid(), which occurs well
before the close() loop. So, eliminate the needless carve-out from the
close() loop, in preparation for introducing closefrom().
dirfd is uninitialized at this point, and even if it were, it doesn't
make sense to use since the path is "/" -- the dirfd is ignored when
the path is absolute. Switch to AT_FDCWD to avoid all that.
The default behavior of check: false is going to change to true in the
future, see <https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/9300>.
Thus we are explicit about the desired behavior. The error in uname is
important but with test we check ourselves using returncode().
This fixes#556.
If supervise_daemon_args is not set *or empty*, it defaults to
`start_stop_daemon_args`. This is bad because supervise-daemon doesn't
accept the same options as `start-stop-daemon`. So if we set e.g.
`start_stop_daemon_args="--wait 50"`, but not `supervise_daemon_args`,
and the user adds `supervisor=supervise-daemon` to the corresponding
/etc/conf.d/<service> file, the service will fail to start due to
unrecognized option "wait".
It would be best to remove this fallback, but that might break some
existing scripts that depend on it. So this commit just changes it to
use `start_stop_daemon_args` as the default for `supervise_daemon_args`
only if `supervise_daemon_args` is not set at all, but not if it's
empty.
This at least simplifies workarounds; we can just add
`supervise_daemon_args="$supervise_daemon_args"` to init scripts.
This fixes#558.