Commit Graph

464 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Kelley 4d6d2922b8 std: move memory locking and memory protection to process
and introduce type safety for posix.PROT (mmap, mprotect)

progress towards #6600
2026-01-09 13:52:00 -08:00
Andrew Kelley ee574f665c std.Io.Dir: introduce renamePreserve and use it in File.Atomic.link
breaking change: the error for renaming over a non-empty directory now
returns error.DirNotEmpty rather than error.PathAlreadyExists.
2026-01-07 11:03:37 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 06130c5e61 std.Io.Threaded: set O_DIRECTORY along with O_TMPFILE 2026-01-05 20:31:31 -08:00
Andrew Kelley f9a5b34e67 std.Io.Threaded: fix compilation on s390x, hexagon, or1k, m68k
Apparently the O_TMPFILE flag is split across two bits on these
architectures and missing on m68k.
2026-01-05 20:28:58 -08:00
Andrew Kelley c6b75b61b7 std: fix child processes on riscv32-linux 2026-01-04 00:27:08 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 32af0f6154 std: move child process APIs to std.Io
this gets the build runner compiling again on linux

this work is incomplete; it only moves code around so that environment
variables can be wrangled properly. a future commit will need to audit
the cancelation and error handling of this moved logic.
2026-01-04 00:27:08 -08:00
Andrew Kelley c0809c9b68 std: add more timespec OMIT and NOW definitions 2025-12-27 11:08:56 -08:00
Andrew Kelley a7c9d11b28 std.Io: make file access time optional
Some filesystems, such as ZFS, do not report atime. It's pretty useless
in general, so make it an optional field in File.Stat.

Also take the opportunity to make setting timestamps API more flexible
and match the APIs widely available, which have UTIME_OMIT and UTIME_NOW
constants that can be independently set for both fields.

This is needed to handle smoothly the case when atime is null.
2025-12-27 10:40:24 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 002d444964 std: fix Io.Dir.min_buffer_len on Linux 2025-12-23 22:15:11 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 651ff9f9ee std.Io.Threaded: implement dirHardLink 2025-12-23 22:15:10 -08:00
Andrew Kelley f82e7dfbc0 std.os.linux: move statx docs to proper location 2025-12-23 22:15:09 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 0e230993d5 std.Io.Dir: add setFilePermissions and setFileOwner 2025-12-23 22:15:09 -08:00
Andrew Kelley ba999d608c std: extract sendfile/copy_file_range from Io.File.Writer
and move it into std.Io.Threaded (below the VTable)
2025-12-23 22:15:07 -08:00
pyk b346090ed2 add PERF_EVENT_IOC_ID
The value is derived from the following:

```
std.os.linux.IOCTL.IOR('$', 7, u64);
```

Signed-off-by: pyk <pyk@noreply.codeberg.org>
2025-12-22 14:16:06 +01:00
Stephen Gregoratto 6216922a9d Linux: Nuke Stat bits in favour of statx
Maintaining the POSIX `stat` bits for Zig is a pain. The order and
bit-length of members differ between all architectures, and int types
can be signed or unsigned. The libcs deal with this by introducing the
own version of `struct stat` and copying the kernel structure members to
it. In the case of glibc, they did it twice thanks to the largefile
transition!

In practice, the project needs to maintain three versions of `struct
stat`:
- What the kernel defines.
- What musl wants for `struct stat`.
- What glibc wants for `struct stat64`. Make sure to use `fstatat64`!

This isn't as simple as running `zig translate-c`. In #21440 I had to:
- Compile toolchains for each arch+glibc/musl combo.
- Create a test `fstat` program with/without `FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64`.
- Dump the value for `struct stat`.
- Stare at `std.os.linux`/`std.c` and cry.
- Add some missing padding.

The fact that so many target checks in the `linux` and `posix` tests
exist is most likely due to writing to padding bits and failing later.

The solution to this madness is `statx(2)`:
- It takes a single structure that is the same for all arches AND libcs.
- It uses a custom timestamp format, but it is 64-bit ready.
- It gives the same info as `fstatat(2)` and more!
- Unlike `fstatat(2)`, you can request a subset of the info required
  based on passing a mask.

It's so good that modern Linux arches (e.g. riscv) don't even implement
`stat`, with the libcs using a generic `struct stat` and copying from
`struct statx`.

Therefore, this commit rips out all the `stat` bits from `std.os.linux`
and `std.c`. `std.posix.Stat` is now `void`, and calling
`std.posix.*stat` is an compile-time error. A wrapper around `statx` has
been added to `std.os.linux`, and callers have been upgraded to use it.
Tests have also been updated to use `statx` where possible.

While I was here, I converted the mask and file attributes to be packed
struct bitfields. A nice side effect is checking that you actually
recieved the members you asked for via `Statx.mask`, which I have used
by adding `assert`s at specific callsites.
2025-12-14 01:41:47 +01:00
Stephen Gregoratto ff3fd950a7 Linux: Update Statx structure
Also removes the blank lines between members, and a comptime sizeOf
check.
2025-12-14 01:41:47 +01:00
Andrew Kelley 54a84964f8 std.os.linux: SIG enum is non-exhaustive 2025-12-01 19:17:52 -08:00
Andrew Kelley 9e981c3ae5 std.os.linux: delete unnecessary @compileError
Without this, it already fails to compile with a sufficiently helpful
error message.
2025-12-01 19:17:52 -08:00
rpkak 6b4f45f782 system specific errno 2025-11-20 15:03:23 -08:00
Jacob Young 57889cae80 posix: reduce the number of assumptions made by dl_iterate_phdr
Not yet fully compatible with the new linker, but still progress.

Closes #25786
2025-11-09 03:31:26 -05:00
Andrew Kelley 8b269f7e18 std: make signal numbers into an enum
fixes start logic for checking whether IO/POLL exist
2025-10-29 06:20:51 -07:00
Andrew Kelley 90fdd21df6 std: move DNS record enum to a better namespace 2025-10-29 06:20:50 -07:00
Andrew Kelley 961961cf85 std: fix msghdr and cmsghdr when using musl libc
glibc and linux kernel use size_t for some field lengths while POSIX and
musl use int. This bug would have caused breakage the first time someone
tried to call sendmsg on a 64-bit big endian system when linking musl
libc.

my opinion:
* msghdr.iovlen: kernel and glibc have it right. This field should
  definitely be size_t. With int, the padding bytes are wasted for no
  reason.
* msghdr.controllen: POSIX and musl have it right. 4 bytes is plenty for
  the length, and it saves 4 bytes next to flags.
* cmsghdr.len: POSIX and musl have it right. 4 bytes is plenty for the
  length, and it saves 4 bytes since the other fields are also 32-bits
  each.
2025-10-29 06:20:48 -07:00
Andrew Kelley 95dee2af9c std.Io: implement netSend 2025-10-29 06:20:48 -07:00
Andrew Kelley bcb6760fa5 std.os.linux: remove unnecessary warnings from sendmmsg
The one about INT_MAX is self-evident from the type system.

The one about kernel having bad types doesn't seem accurate as I checked
the source code and it uses size_t for all the appropriate types,
matching the libc struct definition for msghdr and msghdr_const.
2025-10-29 06:20:48 -07:00
Andrew Kelley 3b80fde6f4 std.os.linux: remove sendmmsg workaround
This "fix" is too opinionated to belong here. Better instead to
document the pitfalls.
2025-10-29 06:20:48 -07:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 3e2daa509a std.Target: add arceb and xtensaeb Cpu.Arch tags 2025-10-23 09:27:17 +02:00
Wim de With 49eea79ec2 std.os.linux: add pivot_root syscall 2025-10-19 22:24:24 +02:00
Wim de With 5442e06632 std.os.linux: add setns syscall 2025-10-19 22:24:24 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen c571840e71 std.os.linux: add or1k arch bits 2025-10-18 22:27:35 +02:00
Brandon Black d18f1dde41 os.linux.timeval: use same field names as std.c
Otherwise, the field names in std.posix.timeval vary by target os.
I think this was an accidental change during the work of #25610
2025-10-18 01:51:44 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 1f8a72175b Merge pull request #25610 from alexrp/std-os-linux-cleanup
`std.os.linux`: some miscellaneous cleanup in arch bits
2025-10-17 12:07:51 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen d5481e6536 std.os.linux: add incomplete x32 arch bits file
This is very likely full of wrong stuff. It's effectively just a copy of the
x86_64 file - needed because the former stopped using usize/isize. To be clear,
this is no more broken than the old situation was; this just makes the
brokenness explicit.
2025-10-17 01:20:33 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 502eca7b09 std.os.linux: add incomplete mipsn32 arch bits file
This is very likely full of wrong stuff. It's effectively just a copy of the
mips64 file - needed because the former stopped using usize/isize. To be clear,
this is no more broken than the old situation was; this just makes the
brokenness explicit.
2025-10-17 01:20:33 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen dc1bc52dd6 std.os.linux: retranslate F_* constants and Flock struct, and move out of arch bits
Flock is now equivalent to struct flock64, and the related F.* constants map to
the 64-bit variants on 32-bit systems.
2025-10-17 01:20:33 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen fc7a5f2ae4 std.os.linux: move some generic decls out of the arch bits 2025-10-17 01:20:31 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 05b52da15e std.os.linux: fix a bunch of syscall and time ABI issues on hexagon
I'm not particularly happy with sprinkling this check everywhere, but the
situation should improve once we complete the time64 migration.
2025-10-16 22:12:42 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 36dbe66cf4 std: stop exposing anything having to do with ucontext_t
This type is useful for two things:

* Doing non-local control flow with ucontext.h functions.
* Inspecting machine state in a signal handler.

The first use case is not one we support; we no longer expose bindings to those
functions in the standard library. They're also deprecated in POSIX and, as a
result, not available in musl.

The second use case is valid, but is very poorly served by the standard library.
As evidenced by my changes to std.debug.cpu_context.signal_context_t, users will
be better served rolling their own ucontext_t and especially mcontext_t types
which fit their specific situation. Further, these types tend to evolve
frequently as architectures evolve, and the standard library has not done a good
job keeping up, or even providing them for all supported targets.
2025-10-10 04:43:18 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 6c760d76b9 std.os.linux: define PROT.SEM for xtensa 2025-10-09 20:42:19 +02:00
mlugg a18fd41064 std: rework/remove ucontext_t
Our usage of `ucontext_t` in the standard library was kind of
problematic. We unnecessarily mimiced libc-specific structures, and our
`getcontext` implementation was overkill for our use case of stack
tracing.

This commit introduces a new namespace, `std.debug.cpu_context`, which
contains "context" types for various architectures (currently x86,
x86_64, ARM, and AARCH64) containing the general-purpose CPU registers;
the ones needed in practice for stack unwinding. Each implementation has
a function `current` which populates the structure using inline
assembly. The structure is user-overrideable, though that should only be
necessary if the standard library does not have an implementation for
the *architecture*: that is to say, none of this is OS-dependent.

Of course, in POSIX signal handlers, we get a `ucontext_t` from the
kernel. The function `std.debug.cpu_context.fromPosixSignalContext`
converts this to a `std.debug.cpu_context.Native` with a big ol' target
switch.

This functionality is not exposed from `std.c` or `std.posix`, and
neither are `ucontext_t`, `mcontext_t`, or `getcontext`. The rationale
is that these types and functions do not conform to a specific ABI, and
in fact tend to get updated over time based on CPU features and
extensions; in addition, different libcs use different structures which
are "partially compatible" with the kernel structure. Overall, it's a
mess, but all we need is the kernel context, so we can just define a
kernel-compatible structure as long as we don't claim C compatibility by
putting it in `std.c` or `std.posix`.

This change resulted in a few nice `std.debug` simplifications, but
nothing too noteworthy. However, the main benefit of this change is that
DWARF unwinding---sometimes necessary for collecting stack traces
reliably---now requires far less target-specific integration.

Also fix a bug I noticed in `PageAllocator` (I found this due to a bug
in my distro's QEMU distribution; thanks, broken QEMU patch!) and I
think a couple of minor bugs in `std.debug`.

Resolves: #23801
Resolves: #23802
2025-09-30 13:44:54 +01:00
Alex Rønne Petersen 42e4411377 std.os.linux: delete SA.RESTORER and k_sigaction.restorer for hexagon, loongarch, mips, riscv
The kABIs for these architectures don't define these concepts.
2025-09-28 18:23:58 +02:00
rpkak bc512648db use copy_file_range syscall on linux 2025-09-24 03:08:12 +02:00
Andrew Kelley d6b4e1918b Merge pull request #25195 from blblack/netdefs
std: Add several sockopt-related constants and structs
2025-09-17 21:43:23 -07:00
Andrew Kelley d2e4ad613b Merge pull request #25217 from blblack/setsiderr
std.os.linux.setsid(): return raw syscall0 result
2025-09-17 21:14:08 -07:00
Andrew Kelley 0df89cd0e1 Merge pull request #25225 from Justus2308/darwin-fixes
std.*.ptrace: support more platforms and features more correctly
2025-09-17 21:11:28 -07:00
Justus Klausecker 1b4508cfb3 std.os.linux.ptrace: add PTRACE_EVENT_* and PTRACE_O_* values 2025-09-13 14:43:15 +02:00
Brandon Black 6dbfba526f linux: Doc and check retval for no-fail pid calls
The switch from @bitCast() to @intCast() here safety-checks
Linux's assertion that these 3 calls never return errors (negative
values as pid_t).  getppid() can legally return 0 if the parent is
in a different pid namespace, but this is not an error.
2025-09-12 07:20:08 -05:00
Brandon Black 04071d64bb std.os.linux.setsid(): return raw syscall0 result
When not linking libc on 64-bit Linux and calling posix.setsid(),
we get a type error at compile time inside of posix.errno().  This
is because posix.errno()'s non-libc branch expects a usize-sized
value, which is what all the error-returning os.linux syscalls
return, and linux.setsid() instead returned a pid_t, which is only
32 bits wide.

This and the other 3 pid-related calls just below it (getpid(),
getppid(), and gettid()) are the only Linux syscall examples here
that are casting their return values to pid_t. For the other 3
this makes sense: those calls are documented to have no possible
errors and always return a valid pid_t value.

However, setsid() actually can return the error EPERM, and
therefore needs to return the raw value from syscall0 for
posix.errno() to process like normal.

Additionally, posix.setsid() needs an @intCast(rc) for the success
case as a result, like most other such cases.
2025-09-12 07:19:01 -05:00
Brandon Black a0ec4e270e std.os.linux.socketpair(): switch to unsigned args
We need std.os.linux and std.c to agree on the types here, or else
we'd have to pointlessly cast across the difference up in the
std.posix wrapper.  I ran into this as a type error the first time
I tried to compile my code that calls posix.socketpair() on Linux
without libc.

All of our existing socket calls with these kinds of arguments in
std (including the existing c.socketpair as well as
os.linux.socket in this same file) use unsigned for all of these
parameters, and so this brings linux.socketpair() into alignment
with everything else.
2025-09-12 07:01:04 +02:00
Brandon Black 7995697527 std: add IP, IPV6, IPTOS sockopt constants
Because these lists are very long in several cases and quite
varied, I opted to place them in the existing c/foo.zig files.

There are many other sets of network-related constants like this
to add over time across all the OSes.  For now I picked these
because I needed a few constants from each of these namespaces for
my own project, so I tried to flesh out these namespaces
completely as best I could, at least for basic sockopt purposes.

Note windows has some of these already defined in ws2_32 as
individual constants rather than contained in a namespacing
struct.  I'm not sure what to do with that in the long run (break
it and namespace them?), but this doesn't change the status quo
for windows in any case.
2025-09-09 17:01:20 -05:00