Context:
- https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/09/04/cve-2024-43402.html
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129962
Note that the Rust test case for this checks that it executes the batch file successfully with the proper mitigation in place, while the Zig test case expects a FileNotFound error. This is because of a PATHEXT optimization that Zig does, and that Rust doesn't do because Rust doesn't do PATHEXT appending (it only appends .exe specifically). See the added comment for more details.
Add a test for std.fs.File's `setEndPos` (which is a simple wrapper around
`std.posix.ftruncate`) to exercise some success and failure paths.
Explicitly check that the `ftruncate` length isn't negative when
interpreted as a signed value. This avoids having to decode overloaded
`EINVAL` errors.
Add errno handling to Windows path to map INVALID_PARAMETER to FileTooBig.
Fixes#22960
Adds a CreateProcessFlags packed struct for all the possible flags to
CreateProcessW on windows. In addition, propagates the existing
`start_suspended` option in std.process.Child which was previously only
used on Darwin. Also adds a `create_no_window` option to std.process.Child
which is a commonly used flag for launching console executables on
windows without causing a new console window to "pop up".
This PR consistently maps .ACCES into AccessDenied and .PERM into
PermissionDenied. AccessDenied is returned if the file mode bit
(user/group/other rwx bits) disallow access (errno was `EACCES`).
PermissionDenied is returned if something else denies access (errno was
`EPERM`) (immutable bit, SELinux, capabilities, etc). This somewhat
subtle distinction is a POSIX thing.
Most of the change is updating std.posix Error Sets to contain both
errors, and then propagating the pair up through caller Error Sets.
Fixes#16782
Use error.AccessDenied for permissions (rights) failures on Wasi
(`EACCES`) and error.PermissionDenied (`EPERM`) for systemic failures.
And pass-through underlying Wasi errors (PermissionDenied or AccessDenied)
without mapping.
Windows defines an `ACCESS_DENIED` error code. There is no
PERMISSION_DENIED (or its equivalent) which seems to only exist on POSIX
systems. Fix a couple Windows calls code to return `error.AccessDenied`
for `ACCESS_DENIED` and to stop mapping AccessDenied into
PermissionDenied.
The "musl" part of the Zig target triples `wasm32-wasi-musl` and
`wasm32-emscripten-musl` refers to the libc, not really the ABI.
For WASM, most LLVM-based tooling uses `wasm32-wasi`, which is
normalized into `wasm32-unknown-wasi`, with an implicit `-unknown` and
without `-musl`.
Similarly, Emscripten uses `wasm32-unknown-emscripten` without `-musl`.
By using `-unknown` instead of `-musl` we get better compatibility with
external tooling.
While it is not allowed for a function coercion to change whether a
function is generic, it *is* okay to make existing concrete parameters
of a generic function also generic, or vice versa. Either of these cases
implies that the result is a generic function, so comptime type checks
will happen when the function is ultimately called.
Resolves: #21099
Emscripten currently implements `emscripten_return_address()` by calling
out into JavaScript and parsing a stack trace, which introduces
significant overhead that we would prefer to avoid in release builds.
This is especially problematic for allocators because the generic parts
of `std.mem.Allocator` make frequent use of `@returnAddress`, even
though very few allocator implementations even observe the return
address, which makes allocators nigh unusable for performance-critical
applications like games if the compiler is unable to devirtualize the
allocator calls.
The old logic only decremented `remaining_prelink_tasks` if `bin_file`
was not `null`. This meant that on `-fno-emit-bin` builds with
registered prelink tasks (e.g. C source files), we exited from
`Compilation.performAllTheWorkInner` early, assuming a prelink error.
Instead, when `bin_file` is `null`, we still decrement
`remaining_prelink_tasks`; we just don't do any actual work.
Resolves: #22682
Too many bugs have been found with `truncate` at this point, so it was
rewritten from scratch.
Based on the doc comment, the utility of `convertToTwosComplement` over
`r.truncate(a, .unsigned, bit_count)` is unclear and it has a subtle
behavior difference that is almost certainly a bug, so it was deleted.
When determining the type of RC compiler, meson passes `/?` or `--version` and then reads from `stdout` looking for particular string(s) anywhere in the output.
So, by adding the string "Microsoft Resource Compiler" to the `/?` output, meson will recognize `zig rc` as rc.exe and give it the correct options, which works fine since `zig rc` is drop-in CLI compatible with rc.exe.
This allows using `zig rc` with meson for (cross-)compiling, by either:
- Setting WINDRES="zig rc" or putting windres = ['zig', 'rc'] in the cross-file
+ This will work like rc.exe, so it will output .res files. This will only link successfully if you are using a linker that can do .res -> .obj conversion (so something like zig cc, MSVC, lld)
- Setting WINDRES="zig rc /:output-format coff" or putting windres = ['zig', 'rc', '/:output-format', 'coff'] in the cross-file
+ This will make meson pass flags as if it were rc.exe, but it will cause the resulting .res file to actually be a COFF object file, meaning it will work with any linker that handles COFF object files
Example cross file that uses `zig cc` (which can link `.res` files, so `/:output-format coff` is not necessary) and `zig rc`:
```
[binaries]
c = ['zig', 'cc', '--target=x86_64-windows-gnu']
windres = ['zig', 'rc']
[target_machine]
system = 'windows'
cpu_family = 'x86_64'
cpu = 'x86_64'
endian = 'little'
```
LLD expects the library file name (minus extension) to be exactly libmingw32. By
calling it mingw32 previously, we prevented it from being detected as being in
LLD's list of libraries that are excluded from the MinGW-specific auto-export
mechanism.
b9d27ac252/lld/COFF/MinGW.cpp (L30-L56)
As a result, a DLL built for *-windows-gnu with Zig would export a bunch of
internal MinGW symbols. This sometimes worked out fine, but it could break at
link or run time when linking an EXE with a DLL, where both are targeting
*-windows-gnu and thus linking separate copies of mingw32.lib. In #23204, this
manifested as the linker getting confused about _gnu_exception_handler() because
it was incorrectly exported by the DLL while also being defined in the
mingw32.lib that was being linked into the EXE.
Closes#23204.