// Copyright 2017 The Crashpad Authors. All rights reserved. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. #include "util/posix/double_fork_and_exec.h" #include #include #include #include #include "base/check_op.h" #include "base/logging.h" #include "base/posix/eintr_wrapper.h" #include "base/strings/stringprintf.h" #include "util/posix/close_multiple.h" namespace crashpad { bool DoubleForkAndExec(const std::vector& argv, const std::vector* envp, int preserve_fd, bool use_path, void (*child_function)()) { DCHECK(!envp || !use_path); // argv_c contains const char* pointers and is terminated by nullptr. This is // suitable for passing to execv(). Although argv_c is not used in the parent // process, it must be built in the parent process because it’s unsafe to do // so in the child or grandchild process. std::vector argv_c; argv_c.reserve(argv.size() + 1); for (const std::string& argument : argv) { argv_c.push_back(argument.c_str()); } argv_c.push_back(nullptr); std::vector envp_c; if (envp) { envp_c.reserve(envp->size() + 1); for (const std::string& variable : *envp) { envp_c.push_back(variable.c_str()); } envp_c.push_back(nullptr); } // Double-fork(). The three processes involved are parent, child, and // grandchild. The grandchild will call execv(). The child exits immediately // after spawning the grandchild, so the grandchild becomes an orphan and its // parent process ID becomes 1. This relieves the parent and child of the // responsibility to reap the grandchild with waitpid() or similar. The // grandchild is expected to outlive the parent process, so the parent // shouldn’t be concerned with reaping it. This approach means that accidental // early termination of the handler process will not result in a zombie // process. pid_t pid = fork(); if (pid < 0) { PLOG(ERROR) << "fork"; return false; } if (pid == 0) { // Child process. if (child_function) { child_function(); } // Call setsid(), creating a new process group and a new session, both led // by this process. The new process group has no controlling terminal. This // disconnects it from signals generated by the parent process’ terminal. // // setsid() is done in the child instead of the grandchild so that the // grandchild will not be a session leader. If it were a session leader, an // accidental open() of a terminal device without O_NOCTTY would make that // terminal the controlling terminal. // // It’s not desirable for the grandchild to have a controlling terminal. The // grandchild manages its own lifetime, such as by monitoring clients on its // own and exiting when it loses all clients and when it deems it // appropraite to do so. It may serve clients in different process groups or // sessions than its original client, and receiving signals intended for its // original client’s process group could be harmful in that case. PCHECK(setsid() != -1) << "setsid"; pid = fork(); if (pid < 0) { PLOG(FATAL) << "fork"; } if (pid > 0) { // Child process. // _exit() instead of exit(), because fork() was called. _exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); } // Grandchild process. CloseMultipleNowOrOnExec(STDERR_FILENO + 1, preserve_fd); // &argv_c[0] is a pointer to a pointer to const char data, but because of // how C (not C++) works, execvp() wants a pointer to a const pointer to // char data. It modifies neither the data nor the pointers, so the // const_cast is safe. char* const* argv_for_execv = const_cast(&argv_c[0]); if (envp) { // This cast is safe for the same reason that the argv_for_execv cast is. char* const* envp_for_execv = const_cast(&envp_c[0]); execve(argv_for_execv[0], argv_for_execv, envp_for_execv); PLOG(FATAL) << "execve " << argv_for_execv[0]; } if (use_path) { execvp(argv_for_execv[0], argv_for_execv); PLOG(FATAL) << "execvp " << argv_for_execv[0]; } execv(argv_for_execv[0], argv_for_execv); PLOG(FATAL) << "execv " << argv_for_execv[0]; } // waitpid() for the child, so that it does not become a zombie process. The // child normally exits quickly. // // Failures from this point on may result in the accumulation of a zombie, but // should not be considered fatal. Log only warnings, but don’t treat these // failures as a failure of the function overall. int status; pid_t wait_pid = HANDLE_EINTR(waitpid(pid, &status, 0)); if (wait_pid == -1) { PLOG(WARNING) << "waitpid"; return true; } DCHECK_EQ(wait_pid, pid); if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) { int sig = WTERMSIG(status); LOG(WARNING) << base::StringPrintf( "intermediate process terminated by signal %d (%s)%s", sig, strsignal(sig), WCOREDUMP(status) ? " (core dumped)" : ""); } else if (!WIFEXITED(status)) { LOG(WARNING) << base::StringPrintf( "intermediate process: unknown termination 0x%x", status); } else if (WEXITSTATUS(status) != EXIT_SUCCESS) { LOG(WARNING) << "intermediate process exited with code " << WEXITSTATUS(status); } return true; } } // namespace crashpad