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| 1 #include <unistd.h> |
| 2 #include <errno.h> |
| 3 #include "syscall.h" |
| 4 #include "libc.h" |
| 5 #include "pthread_impl.h" |
| 6 |
| 7 struct ctx { |
| 8 int id, eid, sid; |
| 9 int nr, err; |
| 10 }; |
| 11 |
| 12 static void do_setxid(void *p) |
| 13 { |
| 14 struct ctx *c = p; |
| 15 if (c->err>0) return; |
| 16 int ret = -__syscall(c->nr, c->id, c->eid, c->sid); |
| 17 if (ret && !c->err) { |
| 18 /* If one thread fails to set ids after another has already |
| 19 * succeeded, forcibly killing the process is the only safe |
| 20 * thing to do. State is inconsistent and dangerous. Use |
| 21 * SIGKILL because it is uncatchable. */ |
| 22 __block_all_sigs(0); |
| 23 __syscall(SYS_kill, __syscall(SYS_getpid), SIGKILL); |
| 24 } |
| 25 c->err = ret; |
| 26 } |
| 27 |
| 28 int __setxid(int nr, int id, int eid, int sid) |
| 29 { |
| 30 /* err is initially nonzero so that failure of the first thread does not |
| 31 * trigger the safety kill above. */ |
| 32 struct ctx c = { .nr = nr, .id = id, .eid = eid, .sid = sid, .err = -1 }
; |
| 33 __synccall(do_setxid, &c); |
| 34 if (c.err) { |
| 35 if (c.err>0) errno = c.err; |
| 36 return -1; |
| 37 } |
| 38 return 0; |
| 39 } |
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