// Functions for executing a program. // // Some of the code in this file is based on code from the Glibc manual, though the changes // performed have been massive. #include "config.h" #include #include #ifdef HAVE_SIGINFO_H #include #endif #include #ifdef HAVE_SPAWN_H #include #endif #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "builtin.h" #include "common.h" #include "env.h" #include "exec.h" #include "fallback.h" // IWYU pragma: keep #include "function.h" #include "io.h" #include "parse_tree.h" #include "parser.h" #include "postfork.h" #include "proc.h" #include "reader.h" #include "signal.h" #include "wutil.h" // IWYU pragma: keep /// File descriptor redirection error message. #define FD_ERROR _(L"An error occurred while redirecting file descriptor %d") /// File descriptor redirection error message. #define WRITE_ERROR _(L"An error occurred while writing output") /// File redirection error message. #define FILE_ERROR _(L"An error occurred while redirecting file '%s'") /// Base open mode to pass to calls to open. #define OPEN_MASK 0666 /// Called in a forked child. static void exec_write_and_exit(int fd, const char *buff, size_t count, int status) { if (write_loop(fd, buff, count) == -1) { debug(0, WRITE_ERROR); wperror(L"write"); exit_without_destructors(status); } exit_without_destructors(status); } void exec_close(int fd) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); // This may be called in a child of fork(), so don't allocate memory. if (fd < 0) { debug(0, L"Called close on invalid file descriptor "); return; } while (close(fd) == -1) { debug(1, FD_ERROR, fd); wperror(L"close"); break; } } int exec_pipe(int fd[2]) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); int res; while ((res = pipe(fd))) { if (errno != EINTR) { return res; // caller will call wperror } } debug(4, L"Created pipe using fds %d and %d", fd[0], fd[1]); // Pipes ought to be cloexec. Pipes are dup2'd the corresponding fds; the resulting fds are not // cloexec. set_cloexec(fd[0]); set_cloexec(fd[1]); return res; } /// Returns true if the redirection is a file redirection to a file other than /dev/null. static bool redirection_is_to_real_file(const io_data_t *io) { bool result = false; if (io != NULL && io->io_mode == IO_FILE) { // It's a file redirection. Compare the path to /dev/null. const io_file_t *io_file = static_cast(io); const char *path = io_file->filename_cstr; if (strcmp(path, "/dev/null") != 0) { // It's not /dev/null. result = true; } } return result; } static bool chain_contains_redirection_to_real_file(const io_chain_t &io_chain) { bool result = false; for (size_t idx = 0; idx < io_chain.size(); idx++) { const io_data_t *io = io_chain.at(idx).get(); if (redirection_is_to_real_file(io)) { result = true; break; } } return result; } /// Returns the interpreter for the specified script. Returns NULL if file is not a script with a /// shebang. char *get_interpreter(const char *command, char *interpreter, size_t buff_size) { // OK to not use CLO_EXEC here because this is only called after fork. int fd = open(command, O_RDONLY); if (fd >= 0) { size_t idx = 0; while (idx + 1 < buff_size) { char ch; ssize_t amt = read(fd, &ch, sizeof ch); if (amt <= 0) break; if (ch == '\n') break; interpreter[idx++] = ch; } interpreter[idx++] = '\0'; close(fd); } if (strncmp(interpreter, "#! /", 4) == 0) { return interpreter + 3; } else if (strncmp(interpreter, "#!/", 3) == 0) { return interpreter + 2; } return NULL; } /// This function is executed by the child process created by a call to fork(). It should be called /// after \c setup_child_process. It calls execve to replace the fish process image with the command /// specified in \c p. It never returns. Called in a forked child! Do not allocate memory, etc. static void safe_launch_process(process_t *p, const char *actual_cmd, const char *const *cargv, const char *const *cenvv) { UNUSED(p); int err; // debug( 1, L"exec '%ls'", p->argv[0] ); // This function never returns, so we take certain liberties with constness. char *const *envv = const_cast(cenvv); char *const *argv = const_cast(cargv); execve(actual_cmd, argv, envv); err = errno; // Something went wrong with execve, check for a ":", and run /bin/sh if encountered. This is a // weird predecessor to the shebang that is still sometimes used since it is supported on // Windows. OK to not use CLO_EXEC here because this is called after fork and the file is // immediately closed. int fd = open(actual_cmd, O_RDONLY); if (fd >= 0) { char begin[1] = {0}; ssize_t amt_read = read(fd, begin, 1); close(fd); if ((amt_read == 1) && (begin[0] == ':')) { // Relaunch it with /bin/sh. Don't allocate memory, so if you have more args than this, // update your silly script! Maybe this should be changed to be based on ARG_MAX // somehow. char sh_command[] = "/bin/sh"; char *argv2[128]; argv2[0] = sh_command; for (size_t i = 1; i < sizeof argv2 / sizeof *argv2; i++) { argv2[i] = argv[i - 1]; if (argv2[i] == NULL) break; } execve(sh_command, argv2, envv); } } errno = err; safe_report_exec_error(errno, actual_cmd, argv, envv); exit_without_destructors(STATUS_EXEC_FAIL); } /// This function is similar to launch_process, except it is not called after a fork (i.e. it only /// calls exec) and therefore it can allocate memory. static void launch_process_nofork(process_t *p) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); ASSERT_IS_NOT_FORKED_CHILD(); null_terminated_array_t argv_array; convert_wide_array_to_narrow(p->get_argv_array(), &argv_array); const char *const *envv = env_export_arr(); char *actual_cmd = wcs2str(p->actual_cmd); // Ensure the terminal modes are what they were before we changed them. restore_term_mode(); // Bounce to launch_process. This never returns. safe_launch_process(p, actual_cmd, argv_array.get(), envv); } /// Check if the IO redirection chains contains redirections for the specified file descriptor. static int has_fd(const io_chain_t &d, int fd) { return io_chain_get(d, fd).get() != NULL; } /// Close a list of fds. static void io_cleanup_fds(const std::vector &opened_fds) { std::for_each(opened_fds.begin(), opened_fds.end(), close); } /// Make a copy of the specified io redirection chain, but change file redirection into fd /// redirection. This makes the redirection chain suitable for use as block-level io, since the file /// won't be repeatedly reopened for every command in the block, which would reset the cursor /// position. /// /// \return true on success, false on failure. Returns the output chain and opened_fds by reference. static bool io_transmogrify(const io_chain_t &in_chain, io_chain_t *out_chain, std::vector *out_opened_fds) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); assert(out_chain != NULL && out_opened_fds != NULL); assert(out_chain->empty()); // Just to be clear what we do for an empty chain. if (in_chain.empty()) { return true; } bool success = true; // Make our chain of redirections. io_chain_t result_chain; // In the event we can't finish transmorgrifying, we'll have to close all the files we opened. std::vector opened_fds; for (size_t idx = 0; idx < in_chain.size(); idx++) { const shared_ptr &in = in_chain.at(idx); shared_ptr out; // gets allocated via new switch (in->io_mode) { case IO_PIPE: case IO_FD: case IO_BUFFER: case IO_CLOSE: { // These redirections don't need transmogrification. They can be passed through. out = in; break; } case IO_FILE: { // Transmogrify file redirections. int fd; io_file_t *in_file = static_cast(in.get()); if ((fd = open(in_file->filename_cstr, in_file->flags, OPEN_MASK)) == -1) { debug(1, FILE_ERROR, in_file->filename_cstr); wperror(L"open"); success = false; break; } opened_fds.push_back(fd); out.reset(new io_fd_t(in->fd, fd, false)); break; } } if (out.get() != NULL) result_chain.push_back(out); // Don't go any further if we failed. if (!success) { break; } } // Now either return success, or clean up. if (success) { *out_chain = std::move(result_chain); *out_opened_fds = std::move(opened_fds); } else { result_chain.clear(); io_cleanup_fds(opened_fds); } return success; } /// Morph an io redirection chain into redirections suitable for passing to eval, call eval, and /// clean up morphed redirections. /// /// \param parsed_source the parsed source code containing the node to evaluate /// \param node the node to evaluate /// \param ios the io redirections to be performed on this block template void internal_exec_helper(parser_t &parser, parsed_source_ref_t parsed_source, tnode_t node, const io_chain_t &ios, std::shared_ptr parent_job) { assert(parsed_source && node && "exec_helper missing source or without node"); io_chain_t morphed_chain; std::vector opened_fds; bool transmorgrified = io_transmogrify(ios, &morphed_chain, &opened_fds); // Did the transmogrification fail - if so, set error status and return. if (!transmorgrified) { proc_set_last_status(STATUS_EXEC_FAIL); return; } parser.eval_node(parsed_source, node, morphed_chain, TOP, parent_job); morphed_chain.clear(); io_cleanup_fds(opened_fds); job_reap(false); } // Returns whether we can use posix spawn for a given process in a given job. Per // https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/364 , error handling for file redirections is too // difficult with posix_spawn, so in that case we use fork/exec. // // Furthermore, to avoid the race between the caller calling tcsetpgrp() and the client checking the // foreground process group, we don't use posix_spawn if we're going to foreground the process. (If // we use fork(), we can call tcsetpgrp after the fork, before the exec, and avoid the race). static bool can_use_posix_spawn_for_job(const std::shared_ptr &job, const process_t *process) { if (job->get_flag(job_flag_t::JOB_CONTROL)) { //!OCLINT(collapsible if statements) // We are going to use job control; therefore when we launch this job it will get its own // process group ID. But will it be foregrounded? if (job->get_flag(job_flag_t::TERMINAL) && job->is_foreground()) { // It will be foregrounded, so we will call tcsetpgrp(), therefore do not use // posix_spawn. return false; } } // Now see if we have a redirection involving a file. The only one we allow is /dev/null, which // we assume will not fail. bool result = true; if (chain_contains_redirection_to_real_file(job->block_io_chain()) || chain_contains_redirection_to_real_file(process->io_chain())) { result = false; } return result; } void internal_exec(job_t *j, const io_chain_t &&all_ios) { // Do a regular launch - but without forking first... // setup_child_process makes sure signals are properly set up. // PCA This is for handling exec. Passing all_ios here matches what fish 2.0.0 and 1.x did. // It's known to be wrong - for example, it means that redirections bound for subsequent // commands in the pipeline will apply to exec. However, using exec in a pipeline doesn't // really make sense, so I'm not trying to fix it here. if (!setup_child_process(0, all_ios)) { // Decrement SHLVL as we're removing ourselves from the shell "stack". auto shlvl_var = env_get(L"SHLVL", ENV_GLOBAL | ENV_EXPORT); wcstring shlvl_str = L"0"; if (shlvl_var) { long shlvl = fish_wcstol(shlvl_var->as_string().c_str()); if (!errno && shlvl > 0) { shlvl_str = to_string(shlvl - 1); } } env_set_one(L"SHLVL", ENV_GLOBAL | ENV_EXPORT, shlvl_str); // launch_process _never_ returns. launch_process_nofork(j->processes.front().get()); } else { j->set_flag(job_flag_t::CONSTRUCTED, true); j->processes.front()->completed = 1; return; } } static void on_process_created(const std::shared_ptr &j, pid_t child_pid) { // We only need to do this the first time a child is forked/spawned if (j->pgid != INVALID_PID) { return; } if (j->get_flag(job_flag_t::JOB_CONTROL)) { j->pgid = child_pid; } else { j->pgid = getpgrp(); } } /// Call fork() as part of executing a process \p p in a job \j. Execute \p child_action in the /// context of the child. Returns true if fork succeeded, false if fork failed. static bool fork_child_for_process(const std::shared_ptr &job, process_t *p, const io_chain_t &io_chain, bool drain_threads, const char *fork_type, const std::function &child_action) { pid_t pid = execute_fork(drain_threads); if (pid == 0) { // This is the child process. Setup redirections, print correct output to // stdout and stderr, and then exit. p->pid = getpid(); child_set_group(job.get(), p); setup_child_process(p, io_chain); child_action(); DIE("Child process returned control to fork_child lambda!"); } if (pid < 0) { debug(1, L"Failed to fork %s!\n", fork_type); job_mark_process_as_failed(job, p); return false; } // This is the parent process. Store away information on the child, and // possibly give it control over the terminal. debug(4, L"Fork #%d, pid %d: %s for '%ls'", g_fork_count, pid, fork_type, p->argv0()); p->pid = pid; on_process_created(job, p->pid); set_child_group(job.get(), p->pid); maybe_assign_terminal(job.get()); return true; } /// Execute an internal builtin. Given a parser, a job within that parser, and a process within that /// job corresponding to a builtin, execute the builtin with the given streams. If pipe_read is set, /// assign stdin to it; otherwise infer stdin from the IO chain. /// \return true on success, false if there is an exec error. static bool exec_internal_builtin_proc(parser_t &parser, const std::shared_ptr &j, process_t *p, const io_pipe_t *pipe_read, const io_chain_t &proc_io_chain, io_streams_t &streams) { assert(p->type == INTERNAL_BUILTIN && "Process must be a builtin"); int local_builtin_stdin = STDIN_FILENO; bool close_stdin = false; // If this is the first process, check the io redirections and see where we should // be reading from. if (pipe_read) { local_builtin_stdin = pipe_read->pipe_fd[0]; } else if (const auto in = proc_io_chain.get_io_for_fd(STDIN_FILENO)) { switch (in->io_mode) { case IO_FD: { const io_fd_t *in_fd = static_cast(in.get()); // Ignore user-supplied fd redirections from an fd other than the // standard ones. e.g. in source <&3 don't actually read from fd 3, // which is internal to fish. We still respect this redirection in // that we pass it on as a block IO to the code that source runs, // and therefore this is not an error. Non-user supplied fd // redirections come about through transmogrification, and we need // to respect those here. if (!in_fd->user_supplied || (in_fd->old_fd >= 0 && in_fd->old_fd < 3)) { local_builtin_stdin = in_fd->old_fd; } break; } case IO_PIPE: { const io_pipe_t *in_pipe = static_cast(in.get()); local_builtin_stdin = in_pipe->pipe_fd[0]; break; } case IO_FILE: { // Do not set CLO_EXEC because child needs access. const io_file_t *in_file = static_cast(in.get()); local_builtin_stdin = open(in_file->filename_cstr, in_file->flags, OPEN_MASK); if (local_builtin_stdin == -1) { debug(1, FILE_ERROR, in_file->filename_cstr); wperror(L"open"); } else { close_stdin = true; } break; } case IO_CLOSE: { // FIXME: When requesting that stdin be closed, we really don't do // anything. How should this be handled? local_builtin_stdin = -1; break; } default: { local_builtin_stdin = -1; debug(1, _(L"Unknown input redirection type %d"), in->io_mode); break; } } } if (local_builtin_stdin == -1) return false; // Determine if we have a "direct" redirection for stdin. bool stdin_is_directly_redirected; if (!p->is_first_in_job) { // We must have a pipe stdin_is_directly_redirected = true; } else { // We are not a pipe. Check if there is a redirection local to the process // that's not IO_CLOSE. const shared_ptr stdin_io = io_chain_get(p->io_chain(), STDIN_FILENO); stdin_is_directly_redirected = stdin_io && stdin_io->io_mode != IO_CLOSE; } streams.stdin_fd = local_builtin_stdin; streams.out_is_redirected = has_fd(proc_io_chain, STDOUT_FILENO); streams.err_is_redirected = has_fd(proc_io_chain, STDERR_FILENO); streams.stdin_is_directly_redirected = stdin_is_directly_redirected; streams.io_chain = &proc_io_chain; // Since this may be the foreground job, and since a builtin may execute another // foreground job, we need to pretend to suspend this job while running the // builtin, in order to avoid a situation where two jobs are running at once. // // The reason this is done here, and not by the relevant builtins, is that this // way, the builtin does not need to know what job it is part of. It could // probably figure that out by walking the job list, but it seems more robust to // make exec handle things. const int fg = j->is_foreground(); j->set_flag(job_flag_t::FOREGROUND, false); // Note this call may block for a long time, while the builtin performs I/O. p->status = builtin_run(parser, j->pgid, p->get_argv(), streams); // Restore the fg flag, which is temporarily set to false during builtin // execution so as not to confuse some job-handling builtins. j->set_flag(job_flag_t::FOREGROUND, fg); // If stdin has been redirected, close the redirection stream. if (close_stdin) { exec_close(local_builtin_stdin); } return true; // "success" } /// Handle output from a builtin, by printing the contents of builtin_io_streams to the redirections /// given in io_chain. static bool handle_builtin_output(const std::shared_ptr &j, process_t *p, io_chain_t *io_chain, const io_streams_t &builtin_io_streams) { assert(p->type == INTERNAL_BUILTIN && "Process is not a builtin"); // Handle output from builtin commands. In the general case, this means forking of a // worker process, that will write out the contents of the stdout and stderr buffers // to the correct file descriptor. Since forking is expensive, fish tries to avoid // it when possible. bool fork_was_skipped = false; const shared_ptr stdout_io = io_chain->get_io_for_fd(STDOUT_FILENO); const shared_ptr stderr_io = io_chain->get_io_for_fd(STDERR_FILENO); const output_stream_t &stdout_stream = builtin_io_streams.out; const output_stream_t &stderr_stream = builtin_io_streams.err; // If we are outputting to a file, we have to actually do it, even if we have no // output, so that we can truncate the file. Does not apply to /dev/null. bool must_fork = redirection_is_to_real_file(stdout_io.get()) || redirection_is_to_real_file(stderr_io.get()); if (!must_fork && p->is_last_in_job) { // We are handling reads directly in the main loop. Note that we may still end // up forking. const bool stdout_is_to_buffer = stdout_io && stdout_io->io_mode == IO_BUFFER; const bool no_stdout_output = stdout_stream.empty(); const bool no_stderr_output = stderr_stream.empty(); const bool stdout_discarded = stdout_stream.buffer().discarded(); if (!stdout_discarded && no_stdout_output && no_stderr_output) { // The builtin produced no output and is not inside of a pipeline. No // need to fork or even output anything. debug(4, L"Skipping fork: no output for internal builtin '%ls'", p->argv0()); fork_was_skipped = true; } else if (no_stderr_output && stdout_is_to_buffer) { // The builtin produced no stderr, and its stdout is going to an // internal buffer. There is no need to fork. This helps out the // performance quite a bit in complex completion code. // TODO: we're sloppy about handling explicitly separated output. // Theoretically we could have explicitly separated output on stdout and // also stderr output; in that case we ought to thread the exp-sep output // through to the io buffer. We're getting away with this because the only // thing that can output exp-sep output is `string split0` which doesn't // also produce stderr. debug(4, L"Skipping fork: buffered output for internal builtin '%ls'", p->argv0()); io_buffer_t *io_buffer = static_cast(stdout_io.get()); io_buffer->append_from_stream(stdout_stream); fork_was_skipped = true; } else if (stdout_io.get() == NULL && stderr_io.get() == NULL) { // We are writing to normal stdout and stderr. Just do it - no need to fork. debug(4, L"Skipping fork: ordinary output for internal builtin '%ls'", p->argv0()); const std::string outbuff = wcs2string(stdout_stream.contents()); const std::string errbuff = wcs2string(stderr_stream.contents()); bool builtin_io_done = do_builtin_io(outbuff.data(), outbuff.size(), errbuff.data(), errbuff.size()); if (!builtin_io_done && errno != EPIPE) { redirect_tty_output(); // workaround glibc bug debug(0, "!builtin_io_done and errno != EPIPE"); show_stackframe(L'E'); } if (stdout_discarded) p->status = STATUS_READ_TOO_MUCH; fork_was_skipped = true; } } if (fork_was_skipped) { p->completed = 1; if (p->is_last_in_job) { debug(4, L"Set status of job %d (%ls) to %d using short circuit", j->job_id, j->preview().c_str(), p->status); int status = p->status; proc_set_last_status(j->get_flag(job_flag_t::NEGATE) ? (!status) : status); } } else { // Ok, unfortunately, we have to do a real fork. Bummer. We work hard to make // sure we don't have to wait for all our threads to exit, by arranging things // so that we don't have to allocate memory or do anything except system calls // in the child. // // These strings may contain embedded nulls, so don't treat them as C strings. const std::string outbuff_str = wcs2string(stdout_stream.contents()); const char *outbuff = outbuff_str.data(); size_t outbuff_len = outbuff_str.size(); const std::string errbuff_str = wcs2string(stderr_stream.contents()); const char *errbuff = errbuff_str.data(); size_t errbuff_len = errbuff_str.size(); fflush(stdout); fflush(stderr); if (!fork_child_for_process(j, p, *io_chain, false, "internal builtin", [&] { do_builtin_io(outbuff, outbuff_len, errbuff, errbuff_len); exit_without_destructors(p->status); })) { return false; } } return true; } /// Executes an external command. /// \return true on success, false if there is an exec error. static bool exec_external_command(const std::shared_ptr &j, process_t *p, const io_chain_t &proc_io_chain) { assert(p->type == EXTERNAL && "Process is not external"); // Get argv and envv before we fork. null_terminated_array_t argv_array; convert_wide_array_to_narrow(p->get_argv_array(), &argv_array); // Ensure that stdin is blocking before we hand it off (see issue #176). It's a // little strange that we only do this with stdin and not with stdout or stderr. // However in practice, setting or clearing O_NONBLOCK on stdin also sets it for the // other two fds, presumably because they refer to the same underlying file // (/dev/tty?). make_fd_blocking(STDIN_FILENO); const char *const *argv = argv_array.get(); const char *const *envv = env_export_arr(); std::string actual_cmd_str = wcs2string(p->actual_cmd); const char *actual_cmd = actual_cmd_str.c_str(); const wchar_t *file = reader_current_filename(); #if FISH_USE_POSIX_SPAWN // Prefer to use posix_spawn, since it's faster on some systems like OS X. bool use_posix_spawn = g_use_posix_spawn && can_use_posix_spawn_for_job(j, p); if (use_posix_spawn) { g_fork_count++; // spawn counts as a fork+exec // Create posix spawn attributes and actions. pid_t pid = 0; posix_spawnattr_t attr = posix_spawnattr_t(); posix_spawn_file_actions_t actions = posix_spawn_file_actions_t(); bool made_it = fork_actions_make_spawn_properties(&attr, &actions, j.get(), p, proc_io_chain); if (made_it) { // We successfully made the attributes and actions; actually call // posix_spawn. int spawn_ret = posix_spawn(&pid, actual_cmd, &actions, &attr, const_cast(argv), const_cast(envv)); // This usleep can be used to test for various race conditions // (https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/360). // usleep(10000); if (spawn_ret != 0) { safe_report_exec_error(spawn_ret, actual_cmd, argv, envv); // Make sure our pid isn't set. pid = 0; } // Clean up our actions. posix_spawn_file_actions_destroy(&actions); posix_spawnattr_destroy(&attr); } // A 0 pid means we failed to posix_spawn. Since we have no pid, we'll never get // told when it's exited, so we have to mark the process as failed. debug(4, L"Fork #%d, pid %d: spawn external command '%s' from '%ls'", g_fork_count, pid, actual_cmd, file ? file : L""); if (pid == 0) { job_mark_process_as_failed(j, p); return false; } // these are all things do_fork() takes care of normally (for forked processes): p->pid = pid; on_process_created(j, p->pid); // We explicitly don't call set_child_group() for spawned processes because that // a) isn't necessary, and b) causes issues like fish-shell/fish-shell#4715 #if defined(__GLIBC__) // Unfortunately, using posix_spawn() is not the panacea it would appear to be, // glibc has a penchant for using fork() instead of vfork() when posix_spawn() is // called, meaning that atomicity is not guaranteed and we can get here before the // child group has been set. See discussion here: // https://github.com/Microsoft/WSL/issues/2997 And confirmation that this persists // past glibc 2.24+ here: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/4715 if (j->get_flag(job_flag_t::JOB_CONTROL) && getpgid(p->pid) != j->pgid) { set_child_group(j.get(), p->pid); } #else // In do_fork, the pid of the child process is used as the group leader if j->pgid // invalid, posix_spawn assigned the new group a pgid equal to its own id if // j->pgid was invalid, so this is what we do instead of calling set_child_group if (j->pgid == INVALID_PID) { j->pgid = pid; } #endif maybe_assign_terminal(j.get()); } else #endif { if (!fork_child_for_process(j, p, proc_io_chain, false, "external command", [&] { safe_launch_process(p, actual_cmd, argv, envv); })) { return false; } } return true; } /// Execute a block node or function "process". /// \p user_ios contains the list of user-specified ios, used so we can avoid stomping on them with /// our pipes. \return true on success, false on error. static bool exec_block_or_func_process(parser_t &parser, std::shared_ptr j, process_t *p, const io_chain_t &user_ios, io_chain_t io_chain) { assert((p->type == INTERNAL_FUNCTION || p->type == INTERNAL_BLOCK_NODE) && "Unexpected process type"); // Create an output buffer if we're piping to another process. shared_ptr block_output_io_buffer{}; if (!p->is_last_in_job) { // Be careful to handle failure, e.g. too many open fds. block_output_io_buffer = io_buffer_t::create(STDOUT_FILENO, user_ios); if (!block_output_io_buffer) { job_mark_process_as_failed(j, p); return false; } else { // This looks sketchy, because we're adding this io buffer locally - they // aren't in the process or job redirection list. Therefore select_try won't // be able to read them. However we call block_output_io_buffer->read() // below, which reads until EOF. So there's no need to select on this. io_chain.push_back(block_output_io_buffer); } } if (p->type == INTERNAL_FUNCTION) { const wcstring func_name = p->argv0(); auto props = function_get_properties(func_name); if (!props) { debug(0, _(L"Unknown function '%ls'"), p->argv0()); return false; } const std::map inherit_vars = function_get_inherit_vars(func_name); function_block_t *fb = parser.push_block(p, func_name, props->shadow_scope); function_prepare_environment(func_name, p->get_argv() + 1, inherit_vars); parser.forbid_function(func_name); internal_exec_helper(parser, props->parsed_source, props->body_node, io_chain, j); parser.allow_function(); parser.pop_block(fb); } else { assert(p->type == INTERNAL_BLOCK_NODE); assert(p->block_node_source && p->internal_block_node && "Process is missing node info"); internal_exec_helper(parser, p->block_node_source, p->internal_block_node, io_chain, j); } int status = proc_get_last_status(); // Handle output from a block or function. This usually means do nothing, but in the // case of pipes, we have to buffer such io, since otherwise the internal pipe // buffer might overflow. if (!block_output_io_buffer.get()) { // No buffer, so we exit directly. This means we have to manually set the exit // status. if (p->is_last_in_job) { proc_set_last_status(j->get_flag(job_flag_t::NEGATE) ? (!status) : status); } p->completed = 1; return true; } // Here we must have a non-NULL block_output_io_buffer. assert(block_output_io_buffer.get() != NULL); io_chain.remove(block_output_io_buffer); block_output_io_buffer->read(); const std::string buffer_contents = block_output_io_buffer->buffer().newline_serialized(); const char *buffer = buffer_contents.data(); size_t count = buffer_contents.size(); if (count > 0) { // We don't have to drain threads here because our child process is simple. const char *fork_reason = p->type == INTERNAL_BLOCK_NODE ? "internal block io" : "internal function io"; if (!fork_child_for_process(j, p, io_chain, false, fork_reason, [&] { exec_write_and_exit(block_output_io_buffer->fd, buffer, count, status); })) { return false; } } else { if (p->is_last_in_job) { proc_set_last_status(j->get_flag(job_flag_t::NEGATE) ? (!status) : status); } p->completed = 1; } return true; } /// Executes a process \p in job \j, using the read pipe \p pipe_current_read. /// If the process pipes to a command, the read end of the created pipe is returned in /// out_pipe_next_read. \returns true on success, false on exec error. static bool exec_process_in_job(parser_t &parser, process_t *p, std::shared_ptr j, autoclose_fd_t pipe_current_read, autoclose_fd_t *out_pipe_next_read, const io_chain_t &all_ios, size_t stdout_read_limit) { // The IO chain for this process. It starts with the block IO, then pipes, and then gets any // from the process. io_chain_t process_net_io_chain = j->block_io_chain(); // See if we need a pipe. const bool pipes_to_next_command = !p->is_last_in_job; // The write end of any pipe we create. autoclose_fd_t pipe_current_write{}; // The pipes the current process write to and read from. Unfortunately these can't be just // allocated on the stack, since j->io wants shared_ptr. // // The write pipe (destined for stdout) needs to occur before redirections. For example, // with a redirection like this: // // `foo 2>&1 | bar` // // what we want to happen is this: // // dup2(pipe, stdout) // dup2(stdout, stderr) // // so that stdout and stderr both wind up referencing the pipe. // // The read pipe (destined for stdin) is more ambiguous. Imagine a pipeline like this: // // echo alpha | cat < beta.txt // // Should cat output alpha or beta? bash and ksh output 'beta', tcsh gets it right and // complains about ambiguity, and zsh outputs both (!). No shells appear to output 'alpha', // so we match bash here. That would mean putting the pipe first, so that it gets trumped by // the file redirection. // // However, eval does this: // // echo "begin; $argv "\n" ;end <&3 3<&-" | source 3<&0 // // which depends on the redirection being evaluated before the pipe. So the write end of the // pipe comes first, the read pipe of the pipe comes last. See issue #966. shared_ptr pipe_write; shared_ptr pipe_read; // Write pipe goes first. if (pipes_to_next_command) { pipe_write.reset(new io_pipe_t(p->pipe_write_fd, false)); process_net_io_chain.push_back(pipe_write); } // The explicit IO redirections associated with the process. process_net_io_chain.append(p->io_chain()); // Read pipe goes last. if (!p->is_first_in_job) { pipe_read.reset(new io_pipe_t(p->pipe_read_fd, true)); // Record the current read in pipe_read. pipe_read->pipe_fd[0] = pipe_current_read.fd(); process_net_io_chain.push_back(pipe_read); } // This call is used so the global environment variable array is regenerated, if needed, // before the fork. That way, we avoid a lot of duplicate work where EVERY child would need // to generate it, since that result would not get written back to the parent. This call // could be safely removed, but it would result in slightly lower performance - at least on // uniprocessor systems. if (p->type == EXTERNAL) { // Apply universal barrier so we have the most recent uvar changes if (!get_proc_had_barrier()) { set_proc_had_barrier(true); env_universal_barrier(); } env_export_arr(); } // Set up fds that will be used in the pipe. if (pipes_to_next_command) { // debug( 1, L"%ls|%ls" , p->argv[0], p->next->argv[0]); int local_pipe[2] = {-1, -1}; if (exec_pipe(local_pipe) == -1) { debug(1, PIPE_ERROR); wperror(L"pipe"); job_mark_process_as_failed(j, p); return false; } // Ensure our pipe fds not conflict with any fd redirections. E.g. if the process is // like 'cat <&5' then fd 5 must not be used by the pipe. if (!pipe_avoid_conflicts_with_io_chain(local_pipe, all_ios)) { // We failed. The pipes were closed for us. wperror(L"dup"); job_mark_process_as_failed(j, p); return false; } // This tells the redirection about the fds, but the redirection does not close them. assert(local_pipe[0] >= 0); assert(local_pipe[1] >= 0); memcpy(pipe_write->pipe_fd, local_pipe, sizeof(int) * 2); // Record our pipes. pipe_current_write.reset(local_pipe[1]); out_pipe_next_read->reset(local_pipe[0]); } // Execute the process. switch (p->type) { case INTERNAL_FUNCTION: case INTERNAL_BLOCK_NODE: { if (!exec_block_or_func_process(parser, j, p, all_ios, process_net_io_chain)) { return false; } break; } case INTERNAL_BUILTIN: { io_streams_t builtin_io_streams{stdout_read_limit}; if (!exec_internal_builtin_proc(parser, j, p, pipe_read.get(), process_net_io_chain, builtin_io_streams)) { return false; } if (!handle_builtin_output(j, p, &process_net_io_chain, builtin_io_streams)) { return false; } break; } case EXTERNAL: { if (!exec_external_command(j, p, process_net_io_chain)) { return false; } break; } case INTERNAL_EXEC: { // We should have handled exec up above. DIE("INTERNAL_EXEC process found in pipeline, where it should never be. Aborting."); break; } } return true; } bool exec_job(parser_t &parser, shared_ptr j) { assert(j && "null job_t passed to exec_job!"); // Set to true if something goes wrong while executing the job, in which case the cleanup // code will kick in. bool exec_error = false; // If fish was invoked with -n or --no-execute, then no_exec will be set and we do nothing. if (no_exec) { return true; } const std::shared_ptr parent_job = j->get_parent(); // Perhaps inherit our parent's pgid and job control flag. if (parent_job && j->processes.front()->type == EXTERNAL) { if (parent_job->pgid != INVALID_PID) { j->pgid = parent_job->pgid; j->set_flag(job_flag_t::JOB_CONTROL, true); } } // Verify that all IO_BUFFERs are output. We used to support a (single, hacked-in) magical input // IO_BUFFER used by fish_pager, but now the claim is that there are no more clients and it is // removed. This assertion double-checks that. size_t stdout_read_limit = 0; const io_chain_t all_ios = j->all_io_redirections(); for (size_t idx = 0; idx < all_ios.size(); idx++) { const shared_ptr &io = all_ios.at(idx); if ((io->io_mode == IO_BUFFER)) { io_buffer_t *io_buffer = static_cast(io.get()); assert(!io_buffer->is_input); stdout_read_limit = io_buffer->buffer().limit(); } } if (j->processes.front()->type == INTERNAL_EXEC) { internal_exec(j.get(), std::move(all_ios)); DIE("this should be unreachable"); } // We may have block IOs that conflict with fd redirections. For example, we may have a command // with a redireciton like <&3; we may also have chosen 3 as the fd for our pipe. Ensure we have // no conflicts. for (const auto io : all_ios) { if (io->io_mode == IO_BUFFER) { auto *io_buffer = static_cast(io.get()); if (!io_buffer->avoid_conflicts_with_io_chain(all_ios)) { // We could not avoid conflicts, probably due to fd exhaustion. Mark an error. exec_error = true; job_mark_process_as_failed(j, j->processes.front().get()); break; } } } // This loop loops over every process_t in the job, starting it as appropriate. This turns out // to be rather complex, since a process_t can be one of many rather different things. // // The loop also has to handle pipelining between the jobs. // // We can have up to three pipes "in flight" at a time: // // 1. The pipe the current process should read from (courtesy of the previous process) // 2. The pipe that the current process should write to // 3. The pipe that the next process should read from (courtesy of us) // autoclose_fd_t pipe_next_read; for (const auto &unique_p : j->processes) { autoclose_fd_t current_read = std::move(pipe_next_read); if (!exec_process_in_job(parser, unique_p.get(), j, std::move(current_read), &pipe_next_read, all_ios, stdout_read_limit)) { exec_error = true; break; } } pipe_next_read.close(); debug(3, L"Created job %d from command '%ls' with pgrp %d", j->job_id, j->command_wcstr(), j->pgid); j->set_flag(job_flag_t::CONSTRUCTED, true); if (!j->is_foreground()) { env_set_one(L"last_pid", ENV_GLOBAL, to_string(j->pgid)); } if (exec_error) { return false; } j->continue_job(false); return true; } static int exec_subshell_internal(const wcstring &cmd, wcstring_list_t *lst, bool apply_exit_status, bool is_subcmd) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); bool prev_subshell = is_subshell; const int prev_status = proc_get_last_status(); bool split_output = false; const auto ifs = env_get(L"IFS"); if (!ifs.missing_or_empty()) { split_output = true; } is_subshell = true; int subcommand_status = -1; // assume the worst // IO buffer creation may fail (e.g. if we have too many open files to make a pipe), so this may // be null. const shared_ptr io_buffer( io_buffer_t::create(STDOUT_FILENO, io_chain_t(), is_subcmd ? read_byte_limit : 0)); if (io_buffer.get() != NULL) { parser_t &parser = parser_t::principal_parser(); if (parser.eval(cmd, io_chain_t(io_buffer), SUBST) == 0) { subcommand_status = proc_get_last_status(); } io_buffer->read(); } if (io_buffer->buffer().discarded()) subcommand_status = STATUS_READ_TOO_MUCH; // If the caller asked us to preserve the exit status, restore the old status. Otherwise set the // status of the subcommand. proc_set_last_status(apply_exit_status ? subcommand_status : prev_status); is_subshell = prev_subshell; if (lst == NULL || io_buffer.get() == NULL) { return subcommand_status; } // Walk over all the elements. for (const auto &elem : io_buffer->buffer().elements()) { if (elem.is_explicitly_separated()) { // Just append this one. lst->push_back(str2wcstring(elem.contents)); continue; } // Not explicitly separated. We have to split it explicitly. assert(!elem.is_explicitly_separated() && "should not be explicitly separated"); const char *begin = elem.contents.data(); const char *end = begin + elem.contents.size(); if (split_output) { const char *cursor = begin; while (cursor < end) { // Look for the next separator. const char *stop = (const char *)memchr(cursor, '\n', end - cursor); const bool hit_separator = (stop != NULL); if (!hit_separator) { // If it's not found, just use the end. stop = end; } // Stop now points at the first character we do not want to copy. lst->push_back(str2wcstring(cursor, stop - cursor)); // If we hit a separator, skip over it; otherwise we're at the end. cursor = stop + (hit_separator ? 1 : 0); } } else { // We're not splitting output, but we still want to trim off a trailing newline. if (end != begin && end[-1] == '\n') { --end; } lst->push_back(str2wcstring(begin, end - begin)); } } return subcommand_status; } int exec_subshell(const wcstring &cmd, std::vector &outputs, bool apply_exit_status, bool is_subcmd) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); return exec_subshell_internal(cmd, &outputs, apply_exit_status, is_subcmd); } int exec_subshell(const wcstring &cmd, bool apply_exit_status, bool is_subcmd) { ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD(); return exec_subshell_internal(cmd, NULL, apply_exit_status, is_subcmd); }