summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2025-11-14Add __diagnose_if annotations3.0jvoisin
2025-11-14Add `format` annotationsjvoisin
2025-11-14Add `access` annotationsjvoisin
2025-11-11Make use of github actionsjvoisin
2025-11-11Add a testsuitejvoisin
Co-Authored-By: q66 <q66@chimera-linux.org>
2025-11-10Refresh the readmejvoisin
2025-11-10Add missing include in select.hq66
2025-11-10Do not use static inline for C++ to avoid ODR violationsq66
Fixes https://github.com/jvoisin/fortify-headers/issues/31
2025-11-10Remove wctombjvoisin
It's unfortunately valid to pass a buffer smaller than MB_CUR_MAX to wctomb, so let's not trap on this. Moreover, it's supposed to be implemented in stdlib.h and not wchar.h anyway.
2025-10-31Add `swab`jvoisin
Co-Authored-By: Sertonix <sertonix@posteo.net>
2025-10-31add initial clang supportDaniel Kolesa
Co-Authored-By: jvoisin <julien.voisin@dustri.org>
2025-10-31avoid __extension__ with clangDaniel Kolesa
It seems useless and triggers 'error: expected external declaration'
2025-10-31Only install header filesNatanael Copa
Avoid installing *.orig or other files.
2025-10-31Improve support for 64b time_tjvoisin
fortify/poll.h includes poll.h, which redirects the ppoll sys call to __ppoll_time64, if the _REDIR_TIME64 macro is 1. Then fortify/poll.h will #undef ppoll and use the 32 bit version, which is inconsistent. Taken from: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/12575 Co-authored-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
2025-10-31Add a .gitattributesjvoisin
2025-10-31Add a .gitignorejvoisin
2025-10-31Make use of __builtin_dynamic_object_sizejvoisin
GCC and Clang provide __builtin_dynamic_object_size (see documentation: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Object-Size-Checking.html), so we should make use of it when its available.
2019-04-14Bump to 1.11.1sin
2019-03-13getgroups: do not trap on non-positive gidsetsizeinfo@mobile-stream.com
First, we should never check the size of __s if __l == 0 since the array is not going to be modified in that case. Second, negative __l is a well-defined error case (EINVAL) and we should never trap on a conforming code like this: r = getgroups(-1, NULL); if (r == -1) ... An example of non-desired behaviour for negative __l is the gnulib configure script which checks for getgroups(-1, ...) to catch some ancient FreeBSD kernel bug. The conftest binary traps even on good system (e.g. linux/musl) and the unnecessary getgroups wrapper is enforced for any project that uses gnulib. This patch also changes the size_t cast to avoid the explicit zero extension on systems where size_t differs from unsigned int.
2019-03-07wctomb, wcrtomb: guard slow/trap path with MB_LEN_MAXinfo@mobile-stream.com
This allows the compiler to optimize out the slow/trap path at all for the typical correct code: char buf[MB_LEN_MAX]; r = wctomb(buf, c); The change tries to keep the "unknown object size" case handling in wcrtomb() as is even if it seems redundant and not helping (we copy __buf to possibly undersized __s in any case) and inconsistent with wctomb() (where we let the original library method itself overwrite the possibly undersized __s).
2019-03-07realpath: guard slow/trap path with PATH_MAXinfo@mobile-stream.com
This allows the compiler to optimize out the slow/trap path at all for the typical correct code: char buf[PATH_MAX]; r = realpath(path, buf); The change keeps the "unknown object size" case handling intact.
2019-02-25Bump copyrightsin
2019-02-25Make use of builtins whenever possiblesin
2018-07-24Bump to 1.01.0sin
2018-07-24Don't use __extension__ in C++ codeA. Wilcox
A few important notes: * __extension__ is a GNU C "alternate" keyword, not a C++ keyword.[1] * __extension__ is designed to work on "expressions"; it does work on #include_next in C mode, but it has no effect in C++ mode; the warning will still appear, if enabled, even with __extension__ preceding #include_next. This is because #include_next is not considered an expression in C++, so the compiler attaches __extension__ to the first expression of the header. All of this leads us to a build failure while building at least all Mozilla software. Moz has an alternate -isystem dir searched before /usr/include that overrides some headers, including <features.h>. The first statement in each of these headers is a #pragma, and since __extension__ is looking for an expression, and #pragma is a "null" expression, we end up with the following error: dist/system_wrappers/features.h:1:9: error: '#pragma' is not allowed here Since __extension__ has no effect on #include_next in C++ mode anyway, and since it can cause breakage, this commit omits __extension__ in C++ mode. [1]: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-6.4.0/gcc/Alternate-Keywords.html
2017-08-22Bump to 0.90.9sin
2017-08-22Don't trap if an encoding error occurs in wcrtomb()sin
The POSIX definition of wcrtomb (http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/wcrtomb.html) states: "When wc is not a valid wide character, an encoding error shall occur. In this case, the function shall store the value of the macro [EILSEQ] in errno and shall return (size_t)-1; the conversion state shall be undefined." The fortify-headers implementation of wcrtomb interprets the result -1 as 18446744073709551615 bytes. Since this is the highest 64-bit number possible, it is pretty safe to say this will always be larger than any buffer provided to wcrtomb. Therefore, it traps. Fixes bug https://bugs.alpinelinux.org/issues/7681. Patch by A. Wilcox <AWilcox@Wilcox-Tech.com>
2016-09-10Bump copyright yearsin
2016-07-14Bump to 0.80.8sin
2016-07-14Only include limits.h when actually usedNatanael Copa
The __extension__ seems to trigger a bug in gcc when there are no identifier specified afterwards. Testcase: echo "#include <stdlib.h>" > try.c && cc -O0 -c try.c try.c:2:0: error: expected identifier or '(' at end of input With -O2 it does not happen. We work around this by only pulling in limits.h when we actually need the PATH_MAX. Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
2015-07-24Bump to 0.70.7sin
2015-07-16Only crash on overflow for realpath()sin
2015-07-15Fix stpncpy() checksin
Do not crash unless the overflow would happen.
2015-07-15Fix confstr() checksin
Do not crash unless the overflow would actually happen.
2015-07-15Fix wcrtomb() checksin
This was breaking valid code, example: char c; wcrtomb(&c, L'0', st);
2015-06-25Add __extension__ mark to include_next to silence -pedanticSteven Barth
Signed-off-by: Steven Barth <steven@midlink.org>
2015-06-22unistd: fix signed / unsigned comparison in getgroupsSteven Barth
Signed-off-by: Steven Barth <steven@midlink.org>
2015-06-17Bump to 0.60.6sin
2015-06-04Use the __inline__ keyword instead of __inline to avoid breakageTrutz Behn
Newer compilers default to GNU11, a C11 dialect. Some software however is unprepared for this or has wrong compatibility checks. What happens is that some software will for compatibility with C89 #define inline before inclusion of a standard header, which is undefined behaviour in C99 and above (C99/C11 7.1.2/4), as inline is a keyword. If any libc headers that are then included via #include_next provide an __inline macro definition (current musl does this if C++ or C99 and above is detected) like the following #define __inline inline this results in any __inline token to be preprocessed away. This breaks use of __builtin_va_arg_pack() in our stdio.h at compile-time as it can only be used in always inlined functions. The function attributes __always_inline__ and __gnu_inline__ themselves require an inline specifier on the function to be applied.
2015-06-03Use namespace-safe macro, param and variable namesTrutz Behn
2015-06-03Fix usage of __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__Trutz Behn
The predefined __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__ macro if it is non-empty contains an identifier, not a string literal, thus it needs to be stringified.
2015-05-29Bump to 0.50.5sin
2015-05-21Fix return-type of fortified FD_CLR and FD_SETTrutz Behn
POSIX specifies them to have return-type void, not int.
2015-05-19Be less verbose in READMEsin
2015-05-13Wrap some overly long linessin
2015-05-13Add LICENSE headersin
2015-05-13Add fortify_fn() helper in fortify-headers.hsin
2015-05-07Minor style fixsin
2015-05-07fix realpath when stdlib.h is included before limits.hNatanael Copa
If program includes stdlib.h before limits.h without _XOPEN_SOURCE, _GNU_SOURCE or _BSD_SOURCE explicitly set, then will it always trigger the trap with musl libc. This is becase stdlib.h will pull in features.h which will set _GNU_SOURCE. This means that the fortify stdlib.h will not include limits.h but it will still trigger the fortified realpath(), but without PATH_MAX set. We fix this by including system stdlib.h before testing if limits.h should be included. Since PATH_MAX is known at compile time we can also error at compile time, instead of compiling a broken realpath().
2015-04-08Add read checks for bcopy()sin