Based on the guidelines at
https://opensource.google.com/docs/releasing/authors/.
1. $ rg -l "Google LLC" | xargs sed -i 's/Google LLC.*/The gVisor Authors./'
2. Manual fixup of "Google Inc" references.
3. Add AUTHORS file. Authors may request to be added to this file.
4. Point netstack AUTHORS to gVisor AUTHORS. Drop CONTRIBUTORS.
Fixes#209
PiperOrigin-RevId: 245823212
Change-Id: I64530b24ad021a7d683137459cafc510f5ee1de9
MM.insertPMAsLocked() passes vma.maxPerms to memmap.Mappable.Translate
(although it unsets AccessType.Write if the vma is private). This
somewhat simplifies handling of pmas, since it means only COW-break
needs to replace existing pmas. However, it also means that a MAP_SHARED
mapping of a file opened O_RDWR dirties the file, regardless of the
mapping's permissions and whether or not the mapping is ever actually
written to with I/O that ignores permissions (e.g.
ptrace(PTRACE_POKEDATA)).
To fix this:
- Change the pma-getting path to request only the permissions that are
required for the calling access.
- Change memmap.Mappable.Translate to take requested permissions, and
return allowed permissions. This preserves the existing behavior in the
common cases where the memmap.Mappable isn't
fsutil.CachingInodeOperations and doesn't care if the translated
platform.File pages are written to.
- Change the MM.getPMAsLocked path to support permission upgrading of
pmas outside of copy-on-write.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 240196979
Change-Id: Ie0147c62c1fbc409467a6fa16269a413f3d7d571
This is in preparation for improved page cache reclaim, which requires
greater integration between the page cache and page allocator.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 238444706
Change-Id: Id24141b3678d96c7d7dc24baddd9be555bffafe4
Nothing reads them and they can simply get stale.
Generated with:
$ sed -i "s/licenses(\(.*\)).*/licenses(\1)/" **/BUILD
PiperOrigin-RevId: 231818945
Change-Id: Ibc3f9838546b7e94f13f217060d31f4ada9d4bf0
Shm segments can be marked for lazy destruction via shmctl(IPC_RMID),
which destroys a segment once it is no longer attached to any
processes. We were unconditionally decrementing the segment refcount
on shmctl(IPC_RMID) which allowed a user to force a segment to be
destroyed by repeatedly calling shmctl(IPC_RMID), with outstanding
memory maps to the segment.
This is problematic because the memory released by a segment destroyed
this way can be reused by a different process while remaining
accessible by the process with outstanding maps to the segment.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 219713660
Change-Id: I443ab838322b4fb418ed87b2722c3413ead21845
Attempting to create a zero-len shm segment causes a panic since we
try to allocate a zero-len filemem region. The existing code had a
guard to disallow this, but the check didn't encode the fact that
requesting a private segment implies a segment creation regardless of
whether IPC_CREAT is explicitly specified.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218405743
Change-Id: I30aef1232b2125ebba50333a73352c2f907977da
We have been unnecessarily creating too many savable types implicitly.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 206334201
Change-Id: Idc5a3a14bfb7ee125c4f2bb2b1c53164e46f29a8