fix a problem that the standard streams are unexpectedly closed

In the current implementation, the slave PTY (assigned to the variable
`s') is always closed after duplicating it to file descriptors of
standard streams (0, 1, and 2).  However, when the allocated slave PTY
`s' is already one of 0, 1, or 2, this causes unexpected closing of a
standard stream.  The same problem occurs when the file descriptor of
the master PTY (the variable `m') is one of 0, 1, or 2.

In this patch, the original master PTY (m) is closed before it would
be overwritten by duplicated slave PTYs.  The original slave PTY (s)
is closed only when it is not one of the stanrad streams.
dev
Koichi Murase 2021-08-24 06:25:05 +09:00 committed by Hiltjo Posthuma
parent 2ec571a30c
commit 1d3142da96
1 changed files with 3 additions and 2 deletions

3
st.c
View File

@ -793,14 +793,15 @@ ttynew(const char *line, char *cmd, const char *out, char **args)
break; break;
case 0: case 0:
close(iofd); close(iofd);
close(m);
setsid(); /* create a new process group */ setsid(); /* create a new process group */
dup2(s, 0); dup2(s, 0);
dup2(s, 1); dup2(s, 1);
dup2(s, 2); dup2(s, 2);
if (ioctl(s, TIOCSCTTY, NULL) < 0) if (ioctl(s, TIOCSCTTY, NULL) < 0)
die("ioctl TIOCSCTTY failed: %s\n", strerror(errno)); die("ioctl TIOCSCTTY failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
if (s > 2)
close(s); close(s);
close(m);
#ifdef __OpenBSD__ #ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("stdio getpw proc exec", NULL) == -1) if (pledge("stdio getpw proc exec", NULL) == -1)
die("pledge\n"); die("pledge\n");