/dev/mem (and /dev/kmem) are not enabled in the kernels, and selinux
prevents access and makes it a rule compilation error to enable
access. No code uses the _PATH_MEM macro. Remove definition to
suppress future usage.
Bug: 19549480
Change-Id: Ie0fb0f53d43349f4fe227068e4bf8a768f620d60
The kernel system call faccessat() does not have any flags arguments,
so passing flags to the kernel is currently ignored.
Fix the kernel system call so that no flags argument is passed in.
Ensure that we don't support AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW. This non-POSIX
(http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/access.html)
flag is a glibc extension, and has non-intuitive, error prone behavior.
For example, consider the following code:
symlink("foo.is.dangling", "foo");
if (faccessat(AT_FDCWD, "foo", R_OK, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) == 0) {
int fd = openat(AT_FDCWD, "foo", O_RDONLY | O_NOFOLLOW);
}
The faccessat() call in glibc will return true, but an attempt to
open the dangling symlink will end up failing. GLIBC documents this
as returning the access mode of the symlink itself, which will
always return true for any symlink on Linux.
Some further discussions of this are at:
* http://lists.landley.net/pipermail/toybox-landley.net/2014-September/003617.html
* http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.linux.lib.musl.general/6952
AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW seems broken by design. I suspect this is why this
function was never added to POSIX. (note that "access" is pretty much
broken by design too, since it introduces a race condition between
check and action). We shouldn't support this until it's clearly
documented by POSIX or we can have it produce intuitive results.
Don't support AT_EACCESS for now. Implementing it is complicated, and
pretty much useless on Android, since we don't have setuid binaries.
See http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/commit/?id=0a05eace163cee9b08571d2ff9d90f5e82d9c228
for how an implementation might look.
Bug: 18867827
Change-Id: I25b86c5020f3152ffa3ac3047f6c4152908d0e04
Build was broken by:
https://android-review.googlesource.com/133834
Use <unistd.h> to get syscall().
Remove <asm/unistd.h>, it gets included through <sys/syscall.h>.
Change-Id: Id762f6dea5f9538c19b79cdd46deda978efd50fe
The * flag to printf() wants an int instead of size_t, and these are
distinct types on 64-bit. To accomodate this, make the name column
width helpers return int.
In theory this truncates things, but in practice this only matters if
you have a benchmark with more than INT_MAX characters in its name (in
which case you have bigger problems).
Change-Id: I3338948c25a3a8d84f1ead2f5b457c05da8a01cf
Signed-off-by: Greg Hackmann <ghackmann@google.com>