Blocked and ignored signals -- but not caught signals -- are inherited across exec. Some callers with sloppy signal-handling behavior can call git with SIGPIPE blocked or ignored, even non-deterministically. When SIGPIPE is blocked or ignored, several git commands can run indefinitely, ignoring EPIPE returns from write() calls, even when the process that called them has gone away. Our specific case involved a pipe of git diff-tree output to a script that reads a limited amount of diff data. In an ideal world, git would never be called with SIGPIPE blocked or ignored. But in the real world, several real potential callers, including Perl, Apache, and Unicorn, sometimes spawn subprocesses with SIGPIPE ignored. It is easier and more productive to harden git against this mistake than to clean it up in every potential parent process. Signed-off-by: Patrick Reynolds <patrick.reynolds@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> --- 1. Merged Junio's work from pu: moved restore_sigpipe_to_default into git.c and restyled the new tests. 2. Moved the new tests into t0005. This meant switching back to `git diff` as our data generator, as the sample repo in t0005 doesn't have any files for `git ls-files` to output. 3. Squashed. git.c | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ t/t0005-signals.sh | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 44 insertions(+) diff --git a/git.c b/git.c index 210f1ae..0f03d56 100644 --- a/git.c +++ b/git.c @@ -593,6 +593,26 @@ static int run_argv(int *argcp, const char ***argv) return done_alias; } +/* + * Many parts of Git have subprograms communicate via pipe, expect the + * upstream of the pipe to die with SIGPIPE and the downstream process + * even knows to check and handle EPIPE correctly. Some third-party + * programs that ignore or block SIGPIPE for their own reason forget + * to restore SIGPIPE handling to the default before spawning Git and + * break this carefully orchestrated machinery. + * + * Restore the way SIGPIPE is handled to default, which is what we + * expect. + */ +static void restore_sigpipe_to_default(void) +{ + sigset_t unblock; + + sigemptyset(&unblock); + sigaddset(&unblock, SIGPIPE); + sigprocmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, &unblock, NULL); + signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_DFL); +} int main(int argc, char **av) { @@ -612,6 +632,8 @@ int main(int argc, char **av) */ sanitize_stdfds(); + restore_sigpipe_to_default(); + git_setup_gettext(); trace_command_performance(argv); diff --git a/t/t0005-signals.sh b/t/t0005-signals.sh index 981437b..638a355 100755 --- a/t/t0005-signals.sh +++ b/t/t0005-signals.sh @@ -27,4 +27,26 @@ test_expect_success !MINGW 'signals are propagated using shell convention' ' test_expect_code 143 git sigterm ' +large_git () { + for i in $(test_seq 1 100) + do + git diff --cached --binary || return + done +} + +test_expect_success 'create blob' ' + test-genrandom foo 16384 >file && + git add file +' + +test_expect_success 'a constipated git dies with SIGPIPE' ' + OUT=$( ((large_git; echo $? 1>&3) | :) 3>&1 ) + test "$OUT" -eq 141 +' + +test_expect_success 'a constipated git dies with SIGPIPE even if parent ignores it' ' + OUT=$( ((trap "" PIPE; large_git; echo $? 1>&3) | :) 3>&1 ) + test "$OUT" -eq 141 +' + test_done -- 2.0.1 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html