Fixes GH-8789.
Fixes GH-10015.
This is one small part of the underlying bug for GH-10737, as in my
attempts to reproduce the issue I constantly hit this crash easily.
(The fix for the other underlying issue for that bug will follow soon.)
It's possible that a signal arrives at a thread that never handled a PHP
request before. This causes the signal globals to dereference a NULL
pointer because the TSRM pointers for the thread aren't set up to point
to the thread resources yet.
PR GH-9766 previously fixed this for master by ignoring the signal if
the thread didn't handle a PHP request yet. While this fixes the crash
bug, I think the solution is suboptimal for 3 reasons:
1) The signal is ignored and a message is printed saying there is a bug.
However, this is not a bug at all. For example in Apache, the signal
set up happens on child process creation, and the thread resource
creation happens lazily when the first request is handled by the
thread. Hence, the fact that the thread resources aren't set up yet
is not actually buggy behaviour.
2) I believe since it was believed to be buggy behaviour, that fix was
only applied to master, so 8.1 & 8.2 keep on crashing.
3) We can do better than ignoring the signal. By just acting in the
same way as if the signals aren't active. This means we need to
take the same path as if the TSRM had already shut down.
Closes GH-10861.
* Missing check: SQLAllocHandle() for the environment wasn't checked in
pdo_odbc_handle_factory(). Add a check similar to the other ones for
SQLAllocHandle().
* Inconsistent check: one of the SQLAllocHandle() calls wasn't checked
for SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO. However, looking at the other uses and the
documentation we should probably check this as well.
Furthermore, since there was a mix of "SQLAllocHandle: reason" and
"SQLAllocHandle (reason)" in the error reporting, I made them
consistently use the first option as that seems to be the most used for
error reporting in this file.
Closes GH-10740.
Fixes GH-10801
Named arguments are not supported by the constant evaluation routine, in
the sense that they are ignored. This causes two issues:
- It causes a crash because not all oplines belonging to the call are
removed, which results in SEND_VA{L,R} which should've been removed.
- It causes semantic issues (demonstrated in the test case).
This case never worked anyway, leading to crashes or incorrect behaviour,
so just prevent CTE of calls with named parameters for now.
We can choose to support it later, but introducing support for this in
a stable branch seems too dangerous.
This patch does not change the removal of SEND_* opcodes in remove_call
because the crash bug can't be triggered anymore with this patch as
there are no named parameters anymore and no variadic CTE functions
exist.
Closes GH-10811.
We need to carry around a reference to the underlying Bucket to be able to modify it by reference.
Closes GH-10749
Signed-off-by: George Peter Banyard <girgias@php.net>
Disable opcache.consistency_checks.
This feature does not work right now and leads to memory leaks and other
problems. For analysis and discussion see GH-8065. In GH-10624 it was
decided to disable the feature to prevent problems for end users.
If end users which to get some consistency guarantees, they can rely on
opcache.protect_memory.
Closes GH-10798.
Fixes GH-8646
See https://github.com/php/php-src/issues/8646 for thorough discussion.
Interned strings that hold class entries can get a corresponding slot in map_ptr for the CE cache.
map_ptr works like a bump allocator: there is a counter which increases to allocate the next slot in the map.
For class name strings in non-opcache we have:
- on startup: permanent + interned
- on request: interned
For class name strings in opcache we have:
- on startup: permanent + interned
- on request: either not interned at all, which we can ignore because they won't get a CE cache entry
or they were already permanent + interned
or we get a new permanent + interned string in the opcache persistence code
Notice that the map_ptr layout always has the permanent strings first, and the request strings after.
In non-opcache, a request string may get a slot in map_ptr, and that interned request string
gets destroyed at the end of the request. The corresponding map_ptr slot can thereafter never be used again.
This causes map_ptr to keep reallocating to larger and larger sizes.
We solve it as follows:
We can check whether we had any interned request strings, which only happens in non-opcache.
If we have any, we reset map_ptr to the last permanent string.
We can't lose any permanent strings because of map_ptr's layout.
Closes GH-10783.
Due to an incorrect check, the datetime was never actually set.
To test this we need to write the file using phar, but read the file
using a different method to not get a cached, or a value that's been
transformed twice and is therefore accidentally correct.
Closes GH-10769
The docs say that this function returns true on success, and false on
error. This function always returns true in the current implementation
because the success return value from ftp_close() is never propagated to
userland. This affects one test: since the test server exits after an
invalid login, the ftp close correctly fails (because the server has
gone away).
Remove capstone include folder.
For most of the supported systems it worked fine somehow despite
the pkg-config --cflags, but is always include it even on Linux.
Closes GH-10732.
Fixes GH-10715
When a string starting with a NUL character is passed to
phpdbg_vprint(), the vasprintf() will return that 0 characters have been
printed. This causes msglen == 0. When phpdbg_process_print() is called
with a message of length 0, the -1 to check for '\n' will perform an out
of bounds read. Since nothing is printed anyway for msglen == 0, it
seems best to just skip the printing routine for this case.
Closes GH-10720.
SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh() and SSL_CTX_set0_tmp_dh_pkey() return 1 on success
and 0 on error. But only < 0 was checked which means that errors were
never caught.
Closes GH-10705.
Fixes GH-10692
php_fopen_primary_script() does not initialize all fields of
zend_file_handle. So when it fails and when fastcgi is true, the
zend_destroy_file_handle() function will try to free uninitialized
pointers, causing a segmentation fault. Fix it by zero-initializing file
handles just like the zend_stream_init_fp() counterpart does.
Closes GH-10697.
zend_update_static_property_ex() returns a zend_result, but the return
value is stored here in a bool. A bool is unsigned on my system, so in
case zend_update_static_property_ex() returns FAILURE (== -1) this gets
converted to 1 instead. This is not a valid zend_result value. This
means that (transitive) callers could mistakingly think the function
succeeded while it did in fact not succeed. Fix it by changing the type
to zend_result.
Closes GH-10691.