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authorZack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com>2018-02-21 19:12:51 -0500
committerZack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com>2018-03-13 08:31:56 -0400
commit2cc7bad0ae0a412e75270be5ed41d45c03e7a931 (patch)
treea726dff1dc98e5fabf47685d10f9c681265db95b /wcsmbs
parent778f1974863d63e858b6d0105e41d6f0c30732d3 (diff)
downloadglibc-2cc7bad0ae0a412e75270be5ed41d45c03e7a931.tar.gz
[BZ 1190] Make EOF sticky in stdio.
C99 specifies that the EOF condition on a file is "sticky": once EOF has been encountered, all subsequent reads should continue to return EOF until the file is closed or something clears the "end-of-file indicator" (e.g. fseek, clearerr). This is arguably a change from C89, where the wording was ambiguous; the BSDs always had sticky EOF, but the System V lineage would attempt to read from the underlying fd again. GNU libc has followed System V for as long as we've been using libio, but nowadays C99 conformance and BSD compatibility are more important than System V compatibility. You might wonder if changing the _underflow impls is sufficient to apply the C99 semantics to all of the many stdio functions that perform input. It should be enough to cover all paths to _IO_SYSREAD, and the only other functions that call _IO_SYSREAD are the _seekoff impls, which is OK because seeking clears EOF, and the _xsgetn impls, which, as far as I can tell, are unused within glibc. The test programs in this patch use a pseudoterminal to set up the necessary conditions. To facilitate this I added a new test-support function that sets up a pair of pty file descriptors for you; it's almost the same as BSD openpty, the only differences are that it allocates the optionally-returned tty pathname with malloc, and that it crashes if anything goes wrong. [BZ #1190] [BZ #19476] * libio/fileops.c (_IO_new_file_underflow): Return EOF immediately if the _IO_EOF_SEEN bit is already set; update commentary. * libio/oldfileops.c (_IO_old_file_underflow): Likewise. * libio/wfileops.c (_IO_wfile_underflow): Likewise. * support/support_openpty.c, support/tty.h: New files. * support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add support_openpty. * libio/tst-fgetc-after-eof.c, wcsmbs/test-fgetwc-after-eof.c: New test cases. * libio/Makefile (tests): Add tst-fgetc-after-eof. * wcsmbs/Makefile (tests): Add tst-fgetwc-after-eof.
Diffstat (limited to 'wcsmbs')
-rw-r--r--wcsmbs/Makefile2
-rw-r--r--wcsmbs/tst-fgetwc-after-eof.c114
2 files changed, 115 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/wcsmbs/Makefile b/wcsmbs/Makefile
index 3ee91d2e1a..63a6fbab58 100644
--- a/wcsmbs/Makefile
+++ b/wcsmbs/Makefile
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ strop-tests := wcscmp wcsncmp wmemcmp wcslen wcschr wcsrchr wcscpy wcsnlen \
tests := tst-wcstof wcsmbs-tst1 tst-wcsnlen tst-btowc tst-mbrtowc \
tst-wcrtomb tst-wcpncpy tst-mbsrtowcs tst-wchar-h tst-mbrtowc2 \
tst-c16c32-1 wcsatcliff tst-wcstol-locale tst-wcstod-nan-locale \
- tst-wcstod-round test-char-types \
+ tst-wcstod-round test-char-types tst-fgetwc-after-eof \
$(addprefix test-,$(strop-tests))
include ../Rules
diff --git a/wcsmbs/tst-fgetwc-after-eof.c b/wcsmbs/tst-fgetwc-after-eof.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9103529246
--- /dev/null
+++ b/wcsmbs/tst-fgetwc-after-eof.c
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+/* Bug 1190: EOF conditions are supposed to be sticky.
+ Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation.
+ Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification,
+ are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright
+ notice and this notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is,
+ without any warranty. */
+
+/* ISO C1999 specification of fgetwc:
+
+ #include <stdio.h>
+ #include <wchar.h>
+ wint_t fgetwc (FILE *stream);
+
+ Description
+
+ If the end-of-file indicator for the input stream pointed to by
+ stream is not set and a next wide character is present, the
+ fgetwc function obtains that wide character as a wchar_t
+ converted to a wint_t and advances the associated file position
+ indicator for the stream (if defined).
+
+ Returns
+
+ If the end-of-file indicator for the stream is set, or if the
+ stream is at end-of-file, the end- of-file indicator for the
+ stream is set and the fgetwc function returns WEOF. Otherwise,
+ the fgetwc function returns the next wide character from the
+ input stream pointed to by stream. If a read error occurs, the
+ error indicator for the stream is set and the fgetwc function
+ returns WEOF. If an encoding error occurs (including too few
+ bytes), the value of the macro EILSEQ is stored in errno and the
+ fgetwc function returns WEOF.
+
+ The requirement to return WEOF "if the end-of-file indicator for the
+ stream is set" was new in C99; the language in the 1995 edition of
+ the standard was ambiguous. Historically, BSD-derived Unix always
+ had the C99 behavior, whereas in System V fgetwc would attempt to
+ call read() again before returning EOF again. Prior to version 2.28,
+ glibc followed the System V behavior even though this does not
+ comply with C99.
+
+ See
+ <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=1190>,
+ <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19476>,
+ and the thread at
+ <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-09/msg00343.html>
+ for more detail. */
+
+#include <support/tty.h>
+#include <support/check.h>
+
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <string.h>
+#include <unistd.h>
+#include <wchar.h>
+
+#define XWRITE(fd, s, msg) do { \
+ if (write (fd, s, sizeof s - 1) != sizeof s - 1) \
+ { \
+ perror ("write " msg); \
+ return 1; \
+ } \
+ } while (0)
+
+int
+do_test (void)
+{
+ /* The easiest way to set up the conditions under which you can
+ notice whether the end-of-file indicator is sticky, is with a
+ pseudo-tty. This is also the case which applications are most
+ likely to care about. And it avoids any question of whether and
+ how it is legitimate to access the same physical file with two
+ independent FILE objects. */
+ int outer_fd, inner_fd;
+ FILE *fp;
+
+ support_openpty (&outer_fd, &inner_fd, 0, 0, 0);
+ fp = fdopen (inner_fd, "r+");
+ if (!fp)
+ {
+ perror ("fdopen");
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ XWRITE (outer_fd, "abc\n\004", "first line + EOF");
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'a');
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'b');
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'c');
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'\n');
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), WEOF);
+
+ TEST_VERIFY_EXIT (feof (fp));
+ TEST_VERIFY_EXIT (!ferror (fp));
+
+ XWRITE (outer_fd, "d\n", "second line");
+
+ /* At this point, there is a new full line of input waiting in the
+ kernelside input buffer, but we should still observe EOF from
+ stdio, because the end-of-file indicator has not been cleared. */
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), WEOF);
+
+ /* Clearing EOF should reveal the next line of input. */
+ clearerr (fp);
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'd');
+ TEST_COMPARE (fgetwc (fp), L'\n');
+
+ fclose (fp);
+ close (outer_fd);
+ return 0;
+}
+
+#include <support/test-driver.c>