This is part of !118 where @tt.rantala found a memory leak.
The other part of !118 may come later if the performance change
is significant.
References:
procps-ng/procps!118
This commit just addresses those warnings shown below.
Reference(s):
proc/sysinfo.c: In function `getrunners':
proc/sysinfo.c:491:26: warning: `%s' directive writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size 26 [-Wformat-overflow=]
491 | sprintf(tbuf, "/proc/%s/stat", ent->d_name);
| ^~
pgrep.c: In function `select_procs':
pgrep.c:591:11: warning: suggest explicit braces to avoid ambiguous `else' [-Wdangling-else]
591 | else if (opt_older)
| ^
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Based on the command line option, use 'sigqueue'
instead of 'kill' to pass the integer value with
the signal.
References:
procps-ng/procps!32
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
As comm length can be longer than 15 characters with newer kernels, it
doesn't make sense to have a warning when you make the match string
longer than this.
As a side-effect, it removes the false-positive you got when you used
long regex matches (see issue #92 )
References:
commit 2cfdbbe897procps-ng/procps#92
This is one of the worst issues that we found: if the strlen() of one of
the cmdline arguments is greater than INT_MAX (it is possible), then the
"int bytes" could wrap around completely, back to a very large positive
int, and the next strncat() would be called with a huge number of
destination bytes (a stack-based buffer overflow).
Fortunately, every distribution that we checked compiles its procps
utilities with FORTIFY, and the fortified strncat() detects and aborts
the buffer overflow before it occurs.
This patch also fixes a secondary issue: the old "--bytes;" meant that
cmdline[sizeof (cmdline) - 2] was never written to if the while loop was
never entered; in the example below, "ff" is the uninitialized byte:
((exec -ca `python3 -c 'print("A" * 131000)'` /usr/bin/cat < /dev/zero) | sleep 60) &
pgrep -a -P "$!" 2>/dev/null | hexdump -C
00000000 31 32 34 36 30 20 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 |12460 AAAAAAAAAA|
00000010 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 |AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA|
*
00001000 41 41 41 41 ff 0a 31 32 34 36 32 20 73 6c 65 65 |AAAA..12462 slee|
00001010 70 20 36 30 0a |p 60.|
Otherwise (for example), if the (undocumented) opt_echo is set, but not
opt_long, and not opt_longlong, and not opt_pattern, there is a call to
xstrdup(cmdoutput) but cmdoutput was never initialized:
sleep 60 & echo "$!" > pidfile
env -i LD_DEBUG=`perl -e 'print "A" x 131000'` pkill -e -c -F pidfile | xxd
...
000001c0: 4141 4141 4141 4141 4141 4141 4141 4141 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
000001d0: 4141 4141 4141 4141 fcd4 e6bd e47f 206b AAAAAAAA...... k
000001e0: 696c 6c65 6420 2870 6964 2031 3230 3931 illed (pid 12091
000001f0: 290a 310a ).1.
[1]+ Terminated sleep 60
(the LD_DEBUG is just a trick to fill the initial stack with non-null
bytes, to show that there is uninitialized data from the stack in the
output; here, an address "fcd4 e6bd e47f")
Not exploitable (not under an attacker's control), but still a potential
non-security problem. Copied, fixed, and used the grow_size() macro from
pidof.c.
memset()ing task and subtask inside their loops prevents free_acquired()
(in readproc() and readtask()) from free()ing their contents (especially
cmdline and environ).
Our solution is not perfect, because we still memleak the very last
cmdline/environ, but select_procs() is called only once, so this is not
as bad as it sounds.
It would be better to leave subtask in its block and call
free_acquired() after the loop, but this function is static (not
exported).
The only other solution is to use freeproc(), but this means replacing
the stack task/subtask with xcalloc()s, thus changing a lot of code in
pgrep.c (to pointer accesses).
Hence this imperfect solution for now.
If pgrep is run with a non-program name match and there are
no matches, it segfaults.
The testsuite thinks zero bytes sent, and zero bytes sent
because the program crashed is the same :/
References:
commit 1aacf4af7fhttps://bugs.debian.org/894917
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
By default pgrep/pkill should not kill processes in a namespace it is not
part of. If this is allowed, it allows callers to break namespaces they did
not expect to affect, requiring rewrite of all callers to fix.
So by default, we should work in the current namespace. If --ns 0 is
specified, they we look at all namespaces, and if any other pid is specified
we continue to look in only that namespace.
Signed-off-by: Debabrata Banerjee <dbanerje@akamai.com>
Original report:
When trying kill a process with insufficient privileges (see blow),
pkill displays the error message “... failed: Operation not permitted”,
but returns 0. Surely it should return 3?
$ pkill syslogd ; echo $?
pkill: killing pid 373 failed: Operation not permitted
0
Return value 0 means one of more things matched. For a pgrep (which
shares code with pkill) this makes sense, there was a match. It seems
wrong for pkill to return 0 when it in fact could not do what you told
it to. However return value 3 means a fatal error and it's not fatal.
Looking at other programs when trying to kill things it cannot kill.
shell kill returns 1, procps kill returns 1, killall returns 1, skill
returns 0 (and says it was successful!, ah well poor old skill)
The consensus seems to be that you return 1 if you cannot kill it, even
if you found it. In other words the return value for both not found and
not able to kill it is the same.
pkill only returns 0 if something was killed. This means we found a
match AND the kill() system call worked too.
References:
https://bugs.debian.org/852758
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
There is now a warning if your command is longer than 15 characters
and therefore can never match. Except it was checking for more than
16 characters.
Adjusted this and added a test case.
References:
!25
commit 8e8835b2ee
This commit prevents pkill from accepting something like `-1garbage` as
a SIGHUP. The previous code was using atoi() which does not check for
trailing garbage and would parse the above as 1.
Handling numeric signals in signal_option() is not really necessary,
since signal_name_to_number() will recognize numeric signals and parse
them properly using strtol() and checking for trailing garbage. It also
checks that the numeric signals are in the proper range. So all we need
to do is remove the buggy numeric signal handling here.
Tested with `pkill -1garbage sleep`, after this patch it will complain
that "1" is not a valid option, which is the expected.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
It doesn't make any sense to have the binary version strings
embedded into the library. The version strings are defined
already either in the Makefile or in include/c.h
Recent commit 9742c74e7c ("pgrep: Enable case-insensitive process matching")
caused the "opts" string to overflow the show 32-character space allocated for
it.
Bump it up to 64 bytes, which should be enough even if more options are added.
Tested: Running ./pgrep stopped crashing and `make check` passed.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
FreeBSD has case-insensitive matching of processes in pgrep and
pkill, which can be super-useful. This patch uncomments and
documents the code needed to make this work.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
The loop that parses options has a of by one bug where the realloc
adds one byte, instead of one list element. This is exposed when
you try things like:
pgrep -t,,,,
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
The pgrep usage() rework commit from 26-Sep-2011 introduced
a regression in exitcodes and the pgrep tool now returns
EXIT_FAILURE (1) or even EXIT_SUCCESS (0) instead
of the documented EXIT_USAGE (2). This commit fixes
the usage() so that the exitcodes match the manual.
Benno Schulenberg suggested some changes to the help messages
to provide some consistency and clarity for both the users and
translators of procps.
The test needed to be updated as the pmap output changed too.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
pgrep does not show the full command line when the -a and -u flags are
combined. The -a flag is ignored when the -u flag is used as well.
In addition, the supplied patch by Elliot did not fix the problem
when invert flag ( -v ) was used; a very small tweak to the patch
fixed this problem as well. This problem existed before.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
To assist the translators, each option is a separate string.
This means if we add/change/delete an option the remaining ones
will just keep working and only the impacted option needs some
translation work on it.
Additional errors resulting from merge request #13 are
being addressed in this commit. They involve two cases
of trailing whitespace and one xwarnx printf type arg.
Reference(s):
http://gitorious.org/procps/procps/merge_requests/13
. earlier build-sys fix
commit e2242cb943
. original merge
commit dd6f24dbed
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
A PID should be specified with --ns:
$ pgrep --ns 12345
which will only match the processes which belong to to the same 6
namespaces. It is also possible to specify which namespaces to test:
$ pgrep --ns 12345 --nslist mnt,net,ipc
which will match processes that belong to the same mount, network and
IPC namespaces as PID 12345.
Signed-off-by: Aristeu Rozanski <arozansk@redhat.com>
An earlier commit attempted to cleanse our environment
of all useless trailing whitespace. But the effort did
not catch 'empty' lines with a single space before ^J.
This commit hopefully finishes off the earlier effort.
In the meantime, let's pray that contributors' editors
are configured so that such wasted crap is disallowed!
Reference(s):
commit fe75e26ab6
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
For portabiliy, check for program_invocation_name during configure and
define HAVE_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME accordingly. Use of this symbol is
now enclosed with the appropriate #ifdef block.
The symbol program_invocation_name is only used for error message
handling using error(), so it's safe to omit this if it is not
available.
The entire tree's polluted with inappropriate trailing
whitespace. This commit rids our environment of all of
those useless keystrokes. Unfortunately, it sure ain't
a permanent solution and requires every contributor to
instruct their editor(s) to prevent or eliminate them.
Plus it's strongly recommended we all insert something
like what's shown below to our '.gitconfig' file so as
to provide at least some warnings when we try to apply
any patches (git am) that do contain the #@!%& things!
References(s):
~/.gitconfig excerpt ---------------------------------
[core]
whitespace = trailing-space, space-before-tab, blank-at-eof
[apply]
whitespace = warn
--------------------------------- ~/.gitconfig excerpt
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>