diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'security/sandbox/chromium/base/posix/safe_strerror.cc')
-rw-r--r-- | security/sandbox/chromium/base/posix/safe_strerror.cc | 128 |
1 files changed, 128 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/security/sandbox/chromium/base/posix/safe_strerror.cc b/security/sandbox/chromium/base/posix/safe_strerror.cc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..aef5742d33 --- /dev/null +++ b/security/sandbox/chromium/base/posix/safe_strerror.cc @@ -0,0 +1,128 @@ +// Copyright (c) 2006-2009 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be +// found in the LICENSE file. + +#if defined(__ANDROID__) +// Post-L versions of bionic define the GNU-specific strerror_r if _GNU_SOURCE +// is defined, but the symbol is renamed to __gnu_strerror_r which only exists +// on those later versions. To preserve ABI compatibility with older versions, +// undefine _GNU_SOURCE and use the POSIX version. +#undef _GNU_SOURCE +#endif + +#include "base/posix/safe_strerror.h" + +#include <errno.h> +#include <stdio.h> +#include <string.h> + +#include "build/build_config.h" + +namespace base { + +#if defined(__GLIBC__) || defined(OS_NACL) +#define USE_HISTORICAL_STRERRO_R 1 +#else +#define USE_HISTORICAL_STRERRO_R 0 +#endif + +#if USE_HISTORICAL_STRERRO_R && defined(__GNUC__) +// GCC will complain about the unused second wrap function unless we tell it +// that we meant for them to be potentially unused, which is exactly what this +// attribute is for. +#define POSSIBLY_UNUSED __attribute__((unused)) +#else +#define POSSIBLY_UNUSED +#endif + +#if USE_HISTORICAL_STRERRO_R +// glibc has two strerror_r functions: a historical GNU-specific one that +// returns type char *, and a POSIX.1-2001 compliant one available since 2.3.4 +// that returns int. This wraps the GNU-specific one. +static void POSSIBLY_UNUSED wrap_posix_strerror_r( + char *(*strerror_r_ptr)(int, char *, size_t), + int err, + char *buf, + size_t len) { + // GNU version. + char *rc = (*strerror_r_ptr)(err, buf, len); + if (rc != buf) { + // glibc did not use buf and returned a static string instead. Copy it + // into buf. + buf[0] = '\0'; + strncat(buf, rc, len - 1); + } + // The GNU version never fails. Unknown errors get an "unknown error" message. + // The result is always null terminated. +} +#endif // USE_HISTORICAL_STRERRO_R + +// Wrapper for strerror_r functions that implement the POSIX interface. POSIX +// does not define the behaviour for some of the edge cases, so we wrap it to +// guarantee that they are handled. This is compiled on all POSIX platforms, but +// it will only be used on Linux if the POSIX strerror_r implementation is +// being used (see below). +static void POSSIBLY_UNUSED wrap_posix_strerror_r( + int (*strerror_r_ptr)(int, char *, size_t), + int err, + char *buf, + size_t len) { + int old_errno = errno; + // Have to cast since otherwise we get an error if this is the GNU version + // (but in such a scenario this function is never called). Sadly we can't use + // C++-style casts because the appropriate one is reinterpret_cast but it's + // considered illegal to reinterpret_cast a type to itself, so we get an + // error in the opposite case. + int result = (*strerror_r_ptr)(err, buf, len); + if (result == 0) { + // POSIX is vague about whether the string will be terminated, although + // it indirectly implies that typically ERANGE will be returned, instead + // of truncating the string. We play it safe by always terminating the + // string explicitly. + buf[len - 1] = '\0'; + } else { + // Error. POSIX is vague about whether the return value is itself a system + // error code or something else. On Linux currently it is -1 and errno is + // set. On BSD-derived systems it is a system error and errno is unchanged. + // We try and detect which case it is so as to put as much useful info as + // we can into our message. + int strerror_error; // The error encountered in strerror + int new_errno = errno; + if (new_errno != old_errno) { + // errno was changed, so probably the return value is just -1 or something + // else that doesn't provide any info, and errno is the error. + strerror_error = new_errno; + } else { + // Either the error from strerror_r was the same as the previous value, or + // errno wasn't used. Assume the latter. + strerror_error = result; + } + // snprintf truncates and always null-terminates. + snprintf(buf, + len, + "Error %d while retrieving error %d", + strerror_error, + err); + } + errno = old_errno; +} + +void safe_strerror_r(int err, char *buf, size_t len) { + if (buf == nullptr || len <= 0) { + return; + } + // If using glibc (i.e., Linux), the compiler will automatically select the + // appropriate overloaded function based on the function type of strerror_r. + // The other one will be elided from the translation unit since both are + // static. + wrap_posix_strerror_r(&strerror_r, err, buf, len); +} + +std::string safe_strerror(int err) { + const int buffer_size = 256; + char buf[buffer_size]; + safe_strerror_r(err, buf, sizeof(buf)); + return std::string(buf); +} + +} // namespace base |