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authorRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2013-08-02 12:25:32 -0400
committerRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2013-08-02 12:25:32 -0400
commit0dc4824479e357a3e23a02d35527e23fca920343 (patch)
treea293864b7e9dc56a3ed9488576134a68812b82b1 /src/process
parent3e3753c1a8e047dc84f9db1dc26bb046cff457a6 (diff)
downloadmusl-0dc4824479e357a3e23a02d35527e23fca920343.tar.gz
work around linux's lack of flags argument to fchmodat syscall
previously, the AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flag was ignored, giving dangerously incorrect behavior -- the target of the symlink had its modes changed to the modes (usually 0777) intended for the symlink). this issue was amplified by the fact that musl provides lchmod, as a wrapper for fchmodat, which some archival programs take as a sign that symlink modes are supported and thus attempt to use. emulating AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW was a difficult problem, and I originally believed it could not be solved, at least not without depending on kernels newer than 3.5.x or so where O_PATH works halfway well. however, it turns out that accessing O_PATH file descriptors via their pseudo-symlink entries in /proc/self/fd works much better than trying to use the fd directly, and works even on older kernels. moreover, the kernel has permanently pegged these references to the inode obtained by the O_PATH open, so there should not be race conditions with the file being moved, deleted, replaced, etc.
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