1 /* BFD library -- caching of file descriptors. 2 3 Copyright (C) 1990-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 4 5 Hacked by Steve Chamberlain of Cygnus Support (steve@cygnus.com). 6 7 This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library. 8 9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or 12 (at your option) any later version. 13 14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 17 GNU General Public License for more details. 18 19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 20 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 21 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, 22 MA 02110-1301, USA. */ 23 24 /* 25 SECTION 26 File caching 27 28 The file caching mechanism is embedded within BFD and allows 29 the application to open as many BFDs as it wants without 30 regard to the underlying operating system's file descriptor 31 limit (often as low as 20 open files). The module in 32 <<cache.c>> maintains a least recently used list of 33 <<bfd_cache_max_open>> files, and exports the name 34 <<bfd_cache_lookup>>, which runs around and makes sure that 35 the required BFD is open. If not, then it chooses a file to 36 close, closes it and opens the one wanted, returning its file 37 handle. 38 39 SUBSECTION 40 Caching functions 41 */ 42 43 #include "sysdep.h" 44 #include "bfd.h" 45 #include "libbfd.h" 46 #include "libiberty.h" 47 #include "bfd_stdint.h" 48 49 #ifdef HAVE_MMAP 50 #include <sys/mman.h> 51 #endif 52 53 /* In some cases we can optimize cache operation when reopening files. 54 For instance, a flush is entirely unnecessary if the file is already 55 closed, so a flush would use CACHE_NO_OPEN. Similarly, a seek using 56 SEEK_SET or SEEK_END need not first seek to the current position. 57 For stat we ignore seek errors, just in case the file has changed 58 while we weren't looking. If it has, then it's possible that the 59 file is shorter and we don't want a seek error to prevent us doing 60 the stat. */ 61 enum cache_flag { 62 CACHE_NORMAL = 0, 63 CACHE_NO_OPEN = 1, 64 CACHE_NO_SEEK = 2, 65 CACHE_NO_SEEK_ERROR = 4 66 }; 67 68 /* The maximum number of files which the cache will keep open at 69 one time. When needed call bfd_cache_max_open to initialize. */ 70 71 static int max_open_files = 0; 72 73 /* Set max_open_files, if not already set, to 12.5% of the allowed open 74 file descriptors, but at least 10, and return the value. */ 75 static int 76 bfd_cache_max_open (void) 77 { 78 if (max_open_files == 0) 79 { 80 int max; 81 #if defined(__sun) && !defined(__sparcv9) && !defined(__x86_64__) 82 /* PR ld/19260: 32-bit Solaris has very inelegant handling of the 255 83 file descriptor limit. The problem is that setrlimit(2) can raise 84 RLIMIT_NOFILE to a value that is not supported by libc, resulting 85 in "Too many open files" errors. This can happen here even though 86 max_open_files is set to rlim.rlim_cur / 8. For example, if 87 a parent process has set rlim.rlim_cur to 65536, then max_open_files 88 will be computed as 8192. 89 90 This check essentially reverts to the behavior from binutils 2.23.1 91 for 32-bit Solaris only. (It is hoped that the 32-bit libc 92 limitation will be removed soon). 64-bit Solaris libc does not have 93 this limitation. */ 94 max = 16; 95 #else 96 #ifdef HAVE_GETRLIMIT 97 struct rlimit rlim; 98 99 if (getrlimit (RLIMIT_NOFILE, &rlim) == 0 100 && rlim.rlim_cur != (rlim_t) RLIM_INFINITY) 101 max = rlim.rlim_cur / 8; 102 else 103 #endif 104 #ifdef _SC_OPEN_MAX 105 max = sysconf (_SC_OPEN_MAX) / 8; 106 #else 107 max = 10; 108 #endif 109 #endif /* not 32-bit Solaris */ 110 111 max_open_files = max < 10 ? 10 : max; 112 } 113 114 return max_open_files; 115 } 116 117 /* The number of BFD files we have open. */ 118 119 static int open_files; 120 121 /* Zero, or a pointer to the topmost BFD on the chain. This is 122 used by the <<bfd_cache_lookup>> macro in @file{libbfd.h} to 123 determine when it can avoid a function call. */ 124 125 static bfd *bfd_last_cache = NULL; 126 127 /* Insert a BFD into the cache. */ 128 129 static void 130 insert (bfd *abfd) 131 { 132 if (bfd_last_cache == NULL) 133 { 134 abfd->lru_next = abfd; 135 abfd->lru_prev = abfd; 136 } 137 else 138 { 139 abfd->lru_next = bfd_last_cache; 140 abfd->lru_prev = bfd_last_cache->lru_prev; 141 abfd->lru_prev->lru_next = abfd; 142 abfd->lru_next->lru_prev = abfd; 143 } 144 bfd_last_cache = abfd; 145 } 146 147 /* Remove a BFD from the cache. */ 148 149 static void 150 snip (bfd *abfd) 151 { 152 abfd->lru_prev->lru_next = abfd->lru_next; 153 abfd->lru_next->lru_prev = abfd->lru_prev; 154 if (abfd == bfd_last_cache) 155 { 156 bfd_last_cache = abfd->lru_next; 157 if (abfd == bfd_last_cache) 158 bfd_last_cache = NULL; 159 } 160 } 161 162 /* Close a BFD and remove it from the cache. */ 163 164 static bfd_boolean 165 bfd_cache_delete (bfd *abfd) 166 { 167 bfd_boolean ret; 168 169 if (fclose ((FILE *) abfd->iostream) == 0) 170 ret = TRUE; 171 else 172 { 173 ret = FALSE; 174 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 175 } 176 177 snip (abfd); 178 179 abfd->iostream = NULL; 180 --open_files; 181 182 return ret; 183 } 184 185 /* We need to open a new file, and the cache is full. Find the least 186 recently used cacheable BFD and close it. */ 187 188 static bfd_boolean 189 close_one (void) 190 { 191 register bfd *to_kill; 192 193 if (bfd_last_cache == NULL) 194 to_kill = NULL; 195 else 196 { 197 for (to_kill = bfd_last_cache->lru_prev; 198 ! to_kill->cacheable; 199 to_kill = to_kill->lru_prev) 200 { 201 if (to_kill == bfd_last_cache) 202 { 203 to_kill = NULL; 204 break; 205 } 206 } 207 } 208 209 if (to_kill == NULL) 210 { 211 /* There are no open cacheable BFD's. */ 212 return TRUE; 213 } 214 215 to_kill->where = real_ftell ((FILE *) to_kill->iostream); 216 217 return bfd_cache_delete (to_kill); 218 } 219 220 /* Check to see if the required BFD is the same as the last one 221 looked up. If so, then it can use the stream in the BFD with 222 impunity, since it can't have changed since the last lookup; 223 otherwise, it has to perform the complicated lookup function. */ 224 225 #define bfd_cache_lookup(x, flag) \ 226 ((x) == bfd_last_cache \ 227 ? (FILE *) (bfd_last_cache->iostream) \ 228 : bfd_cache_lookup_worker (x, flag)) 229 230 /* Called when the macro <<bfd_cache_lookup>> fails to find a 231 quick answer. Find a file descriptor for @var{abfd}. If 232 necessary, it open it. If there are already more than 233 <<bfd_cache_max_open>> files open, it tries to close one first, to 234 avoid running out of file descriptors. It will return NULL 235 if it is unable to (re)open the @var{abfd}. */ 236 237 static FILE * 238 bfd_cache_lookup_worker (bfd *abfd, enum cache_flag flag) 239 { 240 bfd *orig_bfd = abfd; 241 if ((abfd->flags & BFD_IN_MEMORY) != 0) 242 abort (); 243 244 while (abfd->my_archive) 245 abfd = abfd->my_archive; 246 247 if (abfd->iostream != NULL) 248 { 249 /* Move the file to the start of the cache. */ 250 if (abfd != bfd_last_cache) 251 { 252 snip (abfd); 253 insert (abfd); 254 } 255 return (FILE *) abfd->iostream; 256 } 257 258 if (flag & CACHE_NO_OPEN) 259 return NULL; 260 261 if (bfd_open_file (abfd) == NULL) 262 ; 263 else if (!(flag & CACHE_NO_SEEK) 264 && real_fseek ((FILE *) abfd->iostream, abfd->where, SEEK_SET) != 0 265 && !(flag & CACHE_NO_SEEK_ERROR)) 266 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 267 else 268 return (FILE *) abfd->iostream; 269 270 (*_bfd_error_handler) (_("reopening %B: %s\n"), 271 orig_bfd, bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ())); 272 return NULL; 273 } 274 275 static file_ptr 276 cache_btell (struct bfd *abfd) 277 { 278 FILE *f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NO_OPEN); 279 if (f == NULL) 280 return abfd->where; 281 return real_ftell (f); 282 } 283 284 static int 285 cache_bseek (struct bfd *abfd, file_ptr offset, int whence) 286 { 287 FILE *f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, whence != SEEK_CUR ? CACHE_NO_SEEK : CACHE_NORMAL); 288 if (f == NULL) 289 return -1; 290 return real_fseek (f, offset, whence); 291 } 292 293 /* Note that archive entries don't have streams; they share their parent's. 294 This allows someone to play with the iostream behind BFD's back. 295 296 Also, note that the origin pointer points to the beginning of a file's 297 contents (0 for non-archive elements). For archive entries this is the 298 first octet in the file, NOT the beginning of the archive header. */ 299 300 static file_ptr 301 cache_bread_1 (struct bfd *abfd, void *buf, file_ptr nbytes) 302 { 303 FILE *f; 304 file_ptr nread; 305 /* FIXME - this looks like an optimization, but it's really to cover 306 up for a feature of some OSs (not solaris - sigh) that 307 ld/pe-dll.c takes advantage of (apparently) when it creates BFDs 308 internally and tries to link against them. BFD seems to be smart 309 enough to realize there are no symbol records in the "file" that 310 doesn't exist but attempts to read them anyway. On Solaris, 311 attempting to read zero bytes from a NULL file results in a core 312 dump, but on other platforms it just returns zero bytes read. 313 This makes it to something reasonable. - DJ */ 314 if (nbytes == 0) 315 return 0; 316 317 f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NORMAL); 318 if (f == NULL) 319 return 0; 320 321 #if defined (__VAX) && defined (VMS) 322 /* Apparently fread on Vax VMS does not keep the record length 323 information. */ 324 nread = read (fileno (f), buf, nbytes); 325 /* Set bfd_error if we did not read as much data as we expected. If 326 the read failed due to an error set the bfd_error_system_call, 327 else set bfd_error_file_truncated. */ 328 if (nread == (file_ptr)-1) 329 { 330 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 331 return nread; 332 } 333 #else 334 nread = fread (buf, 1, nbytes, f); 335 /* Set bfd_error if we did not read as much data as we expected. If 336 the read failed due to an error set the bfd_error_system_call, 337 else set bfd_error_file_truncated. */ 338 if (nread < nbytes && ferror (f)) 339 { 340 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 341 return nread; 342 } 343 #endif 344 if (nread < nbytes) 345 /* This may or may not be an error, but in case the calling code 346 bails out because of it, set the right error code. */ 347 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_file_truncated); 348 return nread; 349 } 350 351 static file_ptr 352 cache_bread (struct bfd *abfd, void *buf, file_ptr nbytes) 353 { 354 file_ptr nread = 0; 355 356 /* Some filesystems are unable to handle reads that are too large 357 (for instance, NetApp shares with oplocks turned off). To avoid 358 hitting this limitation, we read the buffer in chunks of 8MB max. */ 359 while (nread < nbytes) 360 { 361 const file_ptr max_chunk_size = 0x800000; 362 file_ptr chunk_size = nbytes - nread; 363 file_ptr chunk_nread; 364 365 if (chunk_size > max_chunk_size) 366 chunk_size = max_chunk_size; 367 368 chunk_nread = cache_bread_1 (abfd, (char *) buf + nread, chunk_size); 369 370 /* Update the nread count. 371 372 We just have to be careful of the case when cache_bread_1 returns 373 a negative count: If this is our first read, then set nread to 374 that negative count in order to return that negative value to the 375 caller. Otherwise, don't add it to our total count, or we would 376 end up returning a smaller number of bytes read than we actually 377 did. */ 378 if (nread == 0 || chunk_nread > 0) 379 nread += chunk_nread; 380 381 if (chunk_nread < chunk_size) 382 break; 383 } 384 385 return nread; 386 } 387 388 static file_ptr 389 cache_bwrite (struct bfd *abfd, const void *where, file_ptr nbytes) 390 { 391 file_ptr nwrite; 392 FILE *f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NORMAL); 393 394 if (f == NULL) 395 return 0; 396 nwrite = fwrite (where, 1, nbytes, f); 397 if (nwrite < nbytes && ferror (f)) 398 { 399 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 400 return -1; 401 } 402 return nwrite; 403 } 404 405 static int 406 cache_bclose (struct bfd *abfd) 407 { 408 return bfd_cache_close (abfd) - 1; 409 } 410 411 static int 412 cache_bflush (struct bfd *abfd) 413 { 414 int sts; 415 FILE *f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NO_OPEN); 416 417 if (f == NULL) 418 return 0; 419 sts = fflush (f); 420 if (sts < 0) 421 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 422 return sts; 423 } 424 425 static int 426 cache_bstat (struct bfd *abfd, struct stat *sb) 427 { 428 int sts; 429 FILE *f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NO_SEEK_ERROR); 430 431 if (f == NULL) 432 return -1; 433 sts = fstat (fileno (f), sb); 434 if (sts < 0) 435 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 436 return sts; 437 } 438 439 static void * 440 cache_bmmap (struct bfd *abfd ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 441 void *addr ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 442 bfd_size_type len ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 443 int prot ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 444 int flags ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 445 file_ptr offset ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 446 void **map_addr ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 447 bfd_size_type *map_len ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) 448 { 449 void *ret = (void *) -1; 450 451 if ((abfd->flags & BFD_IN_MEMORY) != 0) 452 abort (); 453 #ifdef HAVE_MMAP 454 else 455 { 456 static uintptr_t pagesize_m1; 457 FILE *f; 458 file_ptr pg_offset; 459 bfd_size_type pg_len; 460 461 f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd, CACHE_NO_SEEK_ERROR); 462 if (f == NULL) 463 return ret; 464 465 if (pagesize_m1 == 0) 466 pagesize_m1 = getpagesize () - 1; 467 468 /* Handle archive members. */ 469 if (abfd->my_archive != NULL) 470 offset += abfd->origin; 471 472 /* Align. */ 473 pg_offset = offset & ~pagesize_m1; 474 pg_len = (len + (offset - pg_offset) + pagesize_m1) & ~pagesize_m1; 475 476 ret = mmap (addr, pg_len, prot, flags, fileno (f), pg_offset); 477 if (ret == (void *) -1) 478 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 479 else 480 { 481 *map_addr = ret; 482 *map_len = pg_len; 483 ret = (char *) ret + (offset & pagesize_m1); 484 } 485 } 486 #endif 487 488 return ret; 489 } 490 491 static const struct bfd_iovec cache_iovec = 492 { 493 &cache_bread, &cache_bwrite, &cache_btell, &cache_bseek, 494 &cache_bclose, &cache_bflush, &cache_bstat, &cache_bmmap 495 }; 496 497 /* 498 INTERNAL_FUNCTION 499 bfd_cache_init 500 501 SYNOPSIS 502 bfd_boolean bfd_cache_init (bfd *abfd); 503 504 DESCRIPTION 505 Add a newly opened BFD to the cache. 506 */ 507 508 bfd_boolean 509 bfd_cache_init (bfd *abfd) 510 { 511 BFD_ASSERT (abfd->iostream != NULL); 512 if (open_files >= bfd_cache_max_open ()) 513 { 514 if (! close_one ()) 515 return FALSE; 516 } 517 abfd->iovec = &cache_iovec; 518 insert (abfd); 519 ++open_files; 520 return TRUE; 521 } 522 523 /* 524 INTERNAL_FUNCTION 525 bfd_cache_close 526 527 SYNOPSIS 528 bfd_boolean bfd_cache_close (bfd *abfd); 529 530 DESCRIPTION 531 Remove the BFD @var{abfd} from the cache. If the attached file is open, 532 then close it too. 533 534 RETURNS 535 <<FALSE>> is returned if closing the file fails, <<TRUE>> is 536 returned if all is well. 537 */ 538 539 bfd_boolean 540 bfd_cache_close (bfd *abfd) 541 { 542 if (abfd->iovec != &cache_iovec) 543 return TRUE; 544 545 if (abfd->iostream == NULL) 546 /* Previously closed. */ 547 return TRUE; 548 549 return bfd_cache_delete (abfd); 550 } 551 552 /* 553 FUNCTION 554 bfd_cache_close_all 555 556 SYNOPSIS 557 bfd_boolean bfd_cache_close_all (void); 558 559 DESCRIPTION 560 Remove all BFDs from the cache. If the attached file is open, 561 then close it too. 562 563 RETURNS 564 <<FALSE>> is returned if closing one of the file fails, <<TRUE>> is 565 returned if all is well. 566 */ 567 568 bfd_boolean 569 bfd_cache_close_all () 570 { 571 bfd_boolean ret = TRUE; 572 573 while (bfd_last_cache != NULL) 574 ret &= bfd_cache_close (bfd_last_cache); 575 576 return ret; 577 } 578 579 /* 580 INTERNAL_FUNCTION 581 bfd_open_file 582 583 SYNOPSIS 584 FILE* bfd_open_file (bfd *abfd); 585 586 DESCRIPTION 587 Call the OS to open a file for @var{abfd}. Return the <<FILE *>> 588 (possibly <<NULL>>) that results from this operation. Set up the 589 BFD so that future accesses know the file is open. If the <<FILE *>> 590 returned is <<NULL>>, then it won't have been put in the 591 cache, so it won't have to be removed from it. 592 */ 593 594 FILE * 595 bfd_open_file (bfd *abfd) 596 { 597 abfd->cacheable = TRUE; /* Allow it to be closed later. */ 598 599 if (open_files >= bfd_cache_max_open ()) 600 { 601 if (! close_one ()) 602 return NULL; 603 } 604 605 switch (abfd->direction) 606 { 607 case read_direction: 608 case no_direction: 609 abfd->iostream = real_fopen (abfd->filename, FOPEN_RB); 610 break; 611 case both_direction: 612 case write_direction: 613 if (abfd->opened_once) 614 { 615 abfd->iostream = real_fopen (abfd->filename, FOPEN_RUB); 616 if (abfd->iostream == NULL) 617 abfd->iostream = real_fopen (abfd->filename, FOPEN_WUB); 618 } 619 else 620 { 621 /* Create the file. 622 623 Some operating systems won't let us overwrite a running 624 binary. For them, we want to unlink the file first. 625 626 However, gcc 2.95 will create temporary files using 627 O_EXCL and tight permissions to prevent other users from 628 substituting other .o files during the compilation. gcc 629 will then tell the assembler to use the newly created 630 file as an output file. If we unlink the file here, we 631 open a brief window when another user could still 632 substitute a file. 633 634 So we unlink the output file if and only if it has 635 non-zero size. */ 636 #ifndef __MSDOS__ 637 /* Don't do this for MSDOS: it doesn't care about overwriting 638 a running binary, but if this file is already open by 639 another BFD, we will be in deep trouble if we delete an 640 open file. In fact, objdump does just that if invoked with 641 the --info option. */ 642 struct stat s; 643 644 if (stat (abfd->filename, &s) == 0 && s.st_size != 0) 645 unlink_if_ordinary (abfd->filename); 646 #endif 647 abfd->iostream = real_fopen (abfd->filename, FOPEN_WUB); 648 abfd->opened_once = TRUE; 649 } 650 break; 651 } 652 653 if (abfd->iostream == NULL) 654 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call); 655 else 656 { 657 if (! bfd_cache_init (abfd)) 658 return NULL; 659 } 660 661 return (FILE *) abfd->iostream; 662 } 663