The TSRM keeps a hashtable mapping the thread IDs to the thread resource pointers.
It's possible that the thread disappears without us knowing, and then another thread
gets spawned some time later with the same ID as the disappeared thread.
Note that since it's a new thread the TSRM key pointer and cached pointer will be NULL.
The Apache request handler `php_handler()` will try to fetch some fields from the SAPI globals.
It uses a lazy thread resource allocation by calling `ts_resource(0);`.
This allocates a thread resource and sets up the TSRM pointers if they haven't been set up yet.
At least, that's what's supposed to happen. But since we are in a situation where the thread ID
still has the resources of the *old* thread associated in the hashtable,
the loop in `ts_resource_ex` will find that thread resource and assume the thread has been setup
already. But this is not the case since this thread is actually a new thread, just reusing the ID
of the old one, without any relation whatsoever to the old thread.
Because of this assumption, the TSRM pointers will not be setup, leading to a
NULL pointer dereference when trying to access the SAPI globals.
We can easily detect this scenario: if we're in the fallback path, and the pointer is NULL,
and we're looking for our own thread resource, we know we're actually reusing a thread ID.
In that case, we'll free up the old thread resources gracefully (gracefully because
there might still be resources open like database connection which need to be
shut down cleanly). After freeing the resources, we'll create the new resources for
this thread as if the stale resources never existed in the first place.
From that point forward, it is as if that situation never occurred.
The fact that this situation happens isn't that bad because a child process containing
threads will eventually be respawned anyway by the SAPI, so the stale thread resources
won't remain forever.
Note that we can't simply assign our own TSRM pointers to the existing
thread resource for our ID, since it was actually from a different thread
(just with the same ID!). Furthermore, the dynamically loaded extensions
have their own pointer, which is only set when their constructor is
called, so we'd have to call their constructor anyway...
I also tried to call the dtor and then the ctor again for those resources
on the pre-existing thread resource to reuse storage, but that didn't work properly
because other code doesn't expect something like that to happen, which breaks assumptions,
and this in turn caused Valgrind to (rightfully) complain about memory bugs.
Note 2: I also had to fix a bug in the core globals destruction because it
always assumed that the thread destroying them was the owning thread,
which on TSRM shutdown isn't always the case. A similar bug was fixed
recently with the JIT globals.
Closes GH-10863.
* ext/opcache/zend_jit: cast function to fix -Wincompatible-pointer-types
Regression by commit a21195650e
* TSRM/win32: fix ts_allocate_dtor cast
The dtor was casted to ts_allocate_ctor; luckily, ts_allocate_dtor and
ts_allocate_ctor just happen to be the same type.
The recently committed fix for GH-9944 did only indirectly cater to
that, namely because in this case `CreateFileMapping()` with a zero
size couldn't be created. As of PHP 8.2.0, the mappings of the actual
SHM and the info segment have been merged, so creating a zero size SHM
would be possible unless we explicitly prohibit this.
`shm_get()` (not to be confused with `shmget()`) returns `NULL` if
reallocation fails; we need to cater to that when calling the function.
Closes GH-9872.
`shm->addr` cannot be `NULL` here, so the whole check is completely
pointless.
Given that this is merely a clean-up and not an actual bug fix, we do
without a NEWS entry.
Closes GH-9873.
There is not much point in having two distinct file mappings; since the
info mapping is very small and of fixed size, we can put it at the
beginning of a single mapping. Besides the obvious resource savings,
that also simplifies the error handling.
Closes GH-8648.
We need to allocate buffers for the file mapping names which are large
enough for all potential keys (`key_t` is defined as `int` on Windows).
Regarding the test: it's probably never a good idea to use hard-coded
keys (should always use `ftok()` instead), but to reliably reproduce
this Windows specific issue we need to, and it shouldn't be an issue on
that OS.
Closes GH-7448.
* JIT/AArch64: [macos][ZTS] Support fast path for tlv_get_addr
Access to TLV(thread local variable) in macOS is in "dynamic" form and
function tlv_get_addr() is invoked to resolve the address. See the
example in [1].
Note there is one struct TLVDescriptor [2] for each TLV. The first
member holds the address of function tlv_get_addr(), and the other two
members, "key" and "offset", would be used inside tlv_get_addr().
The disassembly code for function tlv_get_addr() is shown in [3]. With
the value from system register, i.e. tpidrro_el0, together with "key"
and "offset", the TLV address can be obtained.
Note that the value from tpidrro_el0 varies for different threads, and
unique address for TLV is resolved.
It's worth noting that slow path would be executed, i.e. function
tlv_allocate_and_initialize_for_key(), for the first time of TLV access.
In this patch:
1. "_tsrm_ls_cache" is guaranteed to be accessed before any VM/JIT code
during the request startup, e.g. in init_executor(), therefore, slow
path can be avoided.
2. As TLVDecriptor is immutable and zend_jit_setup() executes once, we
get this structure in tsrm_get_ls_cache_tcb_offset(). Note the 'ldr'
instruction would be patched to 'add' by the linker.
3. Only fast path for tlv_get_addr() is implemented in macro
LOAD_TSRM_CACHE.
With this patch, all ~4k test cases can pass for ZTS+CALL in macOS on
Apple silicon.
[1] https://gist.github.com/shqking/4aab67e0105f7c1f2c549d57d5799f94
[2]
https://opensource.apple.com/source/dyld/dyld-195.6/src/threadLocalVariables.c.auto.html
[3] https://gist.github.com/shqking/329d7712c26bad49786ab0a544a4af43
Change-Id: I613e9c37e3ff2ecc3fab0f53f1e48a0246e12ee3
1. Update: http://www.php.net/license/3_01.txt to https, as there is anyway server header "Location:" to https.
2. Update few license 3.0 to 3.01 as 3.0 states "php 5.1.1, 4.1.1, and earlier".
3. In some license comments is "at through the world-wide-web" while most is without "at", so deleted.
4. fixed indentation in some files before |
This PR corrects misspellings identified by the check-spelling action.
The misspellings have been reported at jsoref@b6ba3e2#commitcomment-48946465
The action reports that the changes in this PR would make it happy: jsoref@602417c
Closes GH-6822.
We map the POSIX semantics of `IPC_PRIVATE` by creating unnamed file
mapping objects on Windows. While that is not particularly useful for
ext/shmop, which is the only bundled extension which uses `shmget()`,
it may be useful for external extensions.
While the `$command` passed to `proc_open()` had to be wrapped in
double-quotes manually, that was implicitly done for all other
program execution functions. This could easily introduce bugs and
even security issues when switching from one to another program
execution function.
Furthermore we ensure that the additional quotes are always
unwrapped regardless of what is passed as `$command` by passing
the `/s` flag to cmd.exe. As it was, `shell_exec('path with
spaces/program.exe')` did execute program.exe, but adding an
argument (`shell_exec('path with spaces/program.exe -h)`) failed
to execute program.exe, because cmd.exe stripped the additional
quotes.
While these changes obviously can cause BC breaks, we feel that in
the long run the benefits of having consistent behavior for all
program execution functions outweighs the drawbacks of potentially
breaking some code now.