[Xcb] [PATCH libX11] xcb_io: Fix Xlib 32-bit request number issues
Jonas Petersen
jnsptrsn1 at gmail.com
Mon Sep 15 12:31:19 PDT 2014
By design, on 32-bit systems, the Xlib internal 32-bit request sequence
numbers may wrap. There is some locations within xcb_io.c that are not
wrap-safe though. The value of last_flushed relies on request to be
sequential all the time. This is not given in the moment when the
sequence has just wrapped. Applications may then crash with a
"Fatal IO error 11 (Resource temporarily unavailable)".
This patch fixes this by "unwrapping" the sequence number when needed to
retain the sequence relative to last_flushed. It also contains some
additional optimizations.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Petersen <jnsptrsn1 at gmail.com>
---
src/Xxcbint.h | 2 +-
src/xcb_io.c | 27 +++++++++++++++++++++------
2 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
diff --git a/src/Xxcbint.h b/src/Xxcbint.h
index bf41c23..feee775 100644
--- a/src/Xxcbint.h
+++ b/src/Xxcbint.h
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ typedef struct _X11XCBPrivate {
char *reply_data;
int reply_length;
int reply_consumed;
- uint64_t last_flushed;
+ unsigned long last_flushed;
enum XEventQueueOwner event_owner;
XID next_xid;
diff --git a/src/xcb_io.c b/src/xcb_io.c
index 5987329..03af1f9 100644
--- a/src/xcb_io.c
+++ b/src/xcb_io.c
@@ -59,15 +59,19 @@ static void require_socket(Display *dpy)
{
if(dpy->bufmax == dpy->buffer)
{
- uint64_t sent;
+ uint64_t sent64;
+ unsigned long sent;
int flags = 0;
/* if we don't own the event queue, we have to ask XCB
* to set our errors aside for us. */
if(dpy->xcb->event_owner != XlibOwnsEventQueue)
flags = XCB_REQUEST_CHECKED;
if(!xcb_take_socket(dpy->xcb->connection, return_socket, dpy,
- flags, &sent))
+ flags, &sent64))
_XIOError(dpy);
+
+ sent = sent64;
+
/* Xlib uses unsigned long for sequence numbers. XCB
* uses 64-bit internally, but currently exposes an
* unsigned int API. If these differ, Xlib cannot track
@@ -77,7 +81,7 @@ static void require_socket(Display *dpy)
* 64-bit sequence numbers. */
if (sizeof(unsigned long) > sizeof(unsigned int) &&
dpy->xcb->event_owner == XlibOwnsEventQueue &&
- (sent - dpy->last_request_read >= (UINT64_C(1) << 32))) {
+ (long) (sent - dpy->last_request_read) < 0) {
throw_thread_fail_assert("Sequence number wrapped "
"beyond 32 bits while Xlib "
"did not own the socket",
@@ -455,7 +459,7 @@ void _XSend(Display *dpy, const char *data, long size)
static const xReq dummy_request;
static char const pad[3];
struct iovec vec[3];
- uint64_t requests;
+ uint64_t requests, unwrapped_request;
_XExtension *ext;
xcb_connection_t *c = dpy->xcb->connection;
if(dpy->flags & XlibDisplayIOError)
@@ -464,6 +468,13 @@ void _XSend(Display *dpy, const char *data, long size)
if(dpy->bufptr == dpy->buffer && !size)
return;
+ unwrapped_request = dpy->request;
+ /* If there was a sequence number wrap since our last flush,
+ * make sure the sequence number we use, stays in sequence
+ * with dpy->xcb->last_flush. */
+ if (sizeof(uint64_t) > sizeof(unsigned long) && dpy->request < dpy->xcb->last_flushed)
+ unwrapped_request += UINT64_C(1) << 32;
+
/* iff we asked XCB to set aside errors, we must pick those up
* eventually. iff there are async handlers, we may have just
* issued requests that will generate replies. in either case,
@@ -471,10 +482,14 @@ void _XSend(Display *dpy, const char *data, long size)
if(dpy->xcb->event_owner != XlibOwnsEventQueue || dpy->async_handlers)
{
uint64_t sequence;
- for(sequence = dpy->xcb->last_flushed + 1; sequence <= dpy->request; ++sequence)
+ for(sequence = (uint64_t) dpy->xcb->last_flushed + 1; sequence <= unwrapped_request; ++sequence)
+ /* On systems where unsigned long is 32 bits, the 64-bit sequence
+ * passed to append_pending_request might get trimmed off.
+ * This is logically correct and expected, as it's simply
+ * 're-wrapping' the 'unwrapped' sequence number. */
append_pending_request(dpy, sequence);
}
- requests = dpy->request - dpy->xcb->last_flushed;
+ requests = unwrapped_request - dpy->xcb->last_flushed;
dpy->xcb->last_flushed = dpy->request;
vec[0].iov_base = dpy->buffer;
--
1.9.1
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