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8 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Groh
e7183cc762 Kernel: Don't drop pledge()'d promises/execpromises when passing nullptr
When passing nullptr for either promises or execpromises to pledge(),
the expected behaviour is to not change their current value at all - we
were accidentally resetting them to 0, effectively dropping previously
pledge()'d promises.
2021-01-26 18:18:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
c7858622ec Kernel: Update process promise states on execve() and fork()
We now move the execpromises state into the regular promises, and clear
the execpromises state.

Also make sure to duplicate the promise state on fork.

This fixes an issue where "su" would launch a shell which immediately
crashed due to not having pledged "stdio".
2021-01-26 15:26:37 +01:00
Linus Groh
629180b7d8 Kernel: Support pledge() with empty promises
This tells the kernel that the process wants to use pledge, but without
pledging anything - effectively restricting it to syscalls that don't
require a certain promise. This is part of OpenBSD's pledge() as well,
which served as basis for Serenity's.
2021-01-25 23:22:21 +01:00
Andreas Kling
2cd07c6212 Kernel+Userland: Remove "dns" pledge promise alias
This was just an alias for "unix" that I added early on back when there
was some belief that we might be compatible with OpenBSD. We're clearly
never going to be compatible with their pledges so just drop the alias.
2021-01-22 19:39:44 +01:00
Andreas Kling
219c0fbea9 Kernel: Unbreak sys$pledge()
We were dropping all the incoming pledge promise strings and parsing
"" instead.

Fixes #3519.
2020-09-17 15:07:20 +02:00
Tom
c8d9f1b9c9 Kernel: Make copy_to/from_user safe and remove unnecessary checks
Since the CPU already does almost all necessary validation steps
for us, we don't really need to attempt to do this. Doing it
ourselves doesn't really work very reliably, because we'd have to
account for other processors modifying virtual memory, and we'd
have to account for e.g. pages not being able to be allocated
due to insufficient resources.

So change the copy_to/from_user (and associated helper functions)
to use the new safe_memcpy, which will return whether it succeeded
or not. The only manual validation step needed (which the CPU
can't perform for us) is making sure the pointers provided by user
mode aren't pointing to kernel mappings.

To make it easier to read/write from/to either kernel or user mode
data add the UserOrKernelBuffer helper class, which will internally
either use copy_from/to_user or directly memcpy, or pass the data
through directly using a temporary buffer on the stack.

Last but not least we need to keep syscall params trivial as we
need to copy them from/to user mode using copy_from/to_user.
2020-09-13 21:19:15 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro
2a74c59dec Kernel: Use Userspace<T> in pledge syscall 2020-08-02 10:56:43 +02:00
Andreas Kling
949aef4aef Kernel: Move syscall implementations out of Process.cpp
This is something I've been meaning to do for a long time, and here we
finally go. This patch moves all sys$foo functions out of Process.cpp
and into files in Kernel/Syscalls/.

It's not exactly one syscall per file (although it could be, but I got
a bit tired of the repetitive work here..)

This makes hacking on individual syscalls a lot less painful since you
don't have to rebuild nearly as much code every time. I'm also hopeful
that this makes it easier to understand individual syscalls. :^)
2020-07-30 23:40:57 +02:00