Because we were holding a strong ref to the OpenFileDescription in
LocalSocket and a strong ref to the LocalSocket in Inode, we were
creating a reference cycle in the event of the socket being cleaned up
after the file description did (i.e. unlinking the file before closing
the socket), because the file description never got destructed.
Sockets remember their last error code in the SO_ERROR field, so we need
to take special care to remember this when returning an error.
This patch adds a SOCKET_TRY() that works like TRY() but also calls
set_so_error() on the failure path.
There's probably a lot more code that should be using this, but that's
outside the scope of this patch.
Prior to this change, both uid_t and gid_t were typedef'ed to `u32`.
This made it easy to use them interchangeably. Let's not allow that.
This patch adds UserID and GroupID using the AK::DistinctNumeric
mechanism we've already been employing for pid_t/ProcessID.
This has several benefits:
1) We no longer just blindly derefence a null pointer in various places
2) We will get nicer runtime error messages if the current process does
turn out to be null in the call location
3) GCC no longer complains about possible nullptr dereferences when
compiling without KUBSAN
This patch removes KResult::operator int() and deals with the fallout.
This forces a lot of code to be more explicit in its handling of errors,
greatly improving readability.
This fixes the placeholder stub for the SO_ERROR via getsockopt. It
leverages the m_so_error value that each socket maintains. The SO_ERROR
option obtains and then clears this field, which is useful when checking
for errors that occur between socket calls. This uses an integer value
to return the SO_ERROR status.
Resolves#146
LocalSockets keep a DoubleBuffer for both client and server usage.
This change converts the usage from using the default constructor
which is unable to observe OOM, to the new try_create factory and
plumb the result through the constructor.
This commit converts naked `new`s to `AK::try_make` and `AK::try_create`
wherever possible. If the called constructor is private, this can not be
done, so we instead now use the standard-defined and compiler-agnostic
`new (nothrow)`.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
Switch to using type-safe bitwise operators for the BlockFlags class,
this cleans up a lot of boilerplate casts which are necessary when the
enum is declared as `enum class`.
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.