In anticipation of the next commit which adds win32 pipe APIs, add some
of the foundational NT APIs for that, which will be required for making
a robust Go pipe library. Also add a simple test case.
Change-Id: I898bd6c5265a8939a7f05a24c4d9b22941dc56b7
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It turns out that the proc thread update function doesn't actually
allocate new memory for its arguments and instead just copies the
pointer values into the preallocated memory. Since we were allocating
that memory as []byte, the garbage collector didn't scan it for pointers
to Go allocations and freed them. We _could_ fix this by requiring that
all users of this use runtime.KeepAlive for everything they pass to the
update function, but that seems harder than necessary. Instead, we can
just do the allocation as []unsafe.Pointer, which means the GC can
operate as intended and not free these from beneath our feet. In order
to ensure this remains true, we also add a test for this.
Updates golang/go#44662.
Change-Id: Iaa8b694a6682cc1876879632c7ba068e47b8666d
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The prior function updated the TEB's LastStatus member, which is not
what we want to be doing here. It's also not consistent with Microsoft's
own Go code for their pipe library, which properly uses the "NoTeb"
variant like this commit.
For good measure, we add a simple test case to make sure these paths are
being exercised.
Change-Id: I4080898f704bdc93a6048001b06ffce516fb412d
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The native NT API returns error values from a different namespace as the
usual Win32 one. This means it needs to be typed differently. This
commit adds broad support for using NTSTATUS values in a new type called
NTStatus.
First we add the type as a basic uint32. Then we add all of the
predefined constants from ntstatus.h, by augmenting mkerrors.bash to do
automatic extraction. There's a convenece way to convert an NT error to
a Win32 error, so we add the NTStatus.Errno() function. Since NTStatus
is an error type, we define an Error() function that returns a string by
asking ntdll.dll for its contents, in the exact same way that
syscall.Errno.Error() does, by calling FormatMessage. Since functions
need to actually use this, we add the rule that if a `//sys` declaration
returns an error value called "ntstatus", then the type underlying the
error interface is an NTStatus instead of an Errno. Finally we fix one
function that was returning an error interface of an Errno rather than
an NTStatus.
Change-Id: I06296b9563bbec526759d12a19f13ac6ad46dcc3
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The third argument to GetQueuedCompletionStatus is a pointer to a
uintptr, not a uint32. Users of this functions have therefore been
corrupting their memory every time they used it. Either that memory
corruption was silent (dangerous), or their programs didn't work so they
chose a different API to use.
Updates golang/go#44538.
Change-Id: Ie1f66de11001cf9c8195afaa61f003a86f821a95
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This function returns 0 and sets last error on failure. While this isn't
said explicitly on MSDN, there's no PID 0, and trivial reverse
engineering shows that this is the case. For example:
.text:00000001800035ED loc_1800035ED: ; CODE XREF: GetWindowThreadProcessId+23↑j
.text:00000001800035ED ; GetWindowThreadProcessId+3D↑j ...
.text:00000001800035ED mov ecx, 578h ; LastError
.text:00000001800035F2 call cs:__imp_RtlSetLastWin32Error
.text:00000001800035F9 nop dword ptr [rax+rax+00h]
.text:00000001800035FE
.text:00000001800035FE loc_1800035FE: ; CODE XREF: GetWindowThreadProcessId+65↑j
.text:00000001800035FE xor eax, eax
.text:0000000180003600 jmp short loc_1800035AA
This function was also just added by a user who is likely its only
consumer, so this error is not too late to fix.
Change-Id: I5dd24e78c006686bb8f1288ad0fe63cd67df56a6
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This matches usual win32api conventions. While we're at it, we
group together user32.dll functions together.
This CL was based on CL 282634 with all but MessageBox, GetShellWindow
and GetWindowThreadProcessId changes removed to prevent compatibility
break.
Change-Id: I7e17c581723c41580a49c5612cabc7a5c13c0f15
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The original IsWow64Process returns false on arm, always, and so
IsWow64Process2 was added to account for this scenario. This isn't
available on older versions of Windows, so we mark it as such using the
new '?' notation. Finally, we add a test to make sure this all works and
does the expected thing on different versions of Windows.
Change-Id: Ic0412578cfb3f4cf6c9dc92a0028abc579bf6c85
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CL 258038 improperly added a weird custom type to mkwinsyscall, rather
than doing the norm with wrapper functions. So, we revert the change to
mkwinsyscall and add the proper wrapper function to do the type
conversion.
Change-Id: I98134e4ce6bf4b52e1384fe84bddeedb00e18c0b
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We already provide ByteSliceFromString and BytePtrFromString, and on
Windows we provide UTF16FromString, UTF16PtrFromString, UTF16ToString,
and UTF16PtrToString. So this commit fills in the remaining two
Byte-oriented functions: ByteSliceToString and BytePtrToString. Since
the existing two are available on windows, unix, and plan9, we add the
remaining two to the same places. This helps eliminate unsafe pointer
options in addition to triggering checkptr in Go 1.15, by eliminating
the use of prior idioms for these types of casts.
Change-Id: I85ae49f2756e142c2462fe8b2428216b6992e089
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CL 244958 includes isWindowsService function that determines if a
process is running as a service. The code of the function is based on
public .Net implementation.
IsAnInteractiveSession function implements similar functionality, but
is based on an old Stackoverflow post., which is not as authoritative
as code written by Microsoft for their official product.
This change copies CL 244958 isWindowsService function into svc package
and makes it public. The intention is that future users will prefer
IsWindowsService to IsAnInteractiveSession.
Also this change adds "Deprecated" comment to IsAnInteractiveSession to
point future users to IsWindowsService.
Call to IsAnInteractiveSession is also replaced with IsWindowsService
in golang.org/x/sys/windows/svc/example package.
Change-Id: I4a33b7f590ee8161d1134d8e83668e9da4e6b434
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This CL fixes unsafe casts to slices that are missing length or capacity.
Running tests with -d=checkptr enabled may panic on casting unsafe.Pointer to a static array of large predefined length, that is most likely much bigger than the size of the actual array in memory. Checkptr check is not satisfied if slicing operator misses length and capacity arguments `(*[(1 << 30) - 1]uint16)(unsafe.Pointer(p))[:]`, or when there is no slicing at all `(*[(1 << 30) - 1]uint16)(unsafe.Pointer(p))`.
To find all potential cases I used `grep -nr ")(unsafe.Pointer(" ./windows`, then filtered out safe casts when object size is always static and known at compile time.
To reproduce the issue run tests with checkptr enabled `go test -a -gcflags=all=-d=checkptr ./windows/...`.
Updates golang/go#34972Fixesgolang/go#38355
Change-Id: I9dd2084b4f9fb7618cdb140fb2f38b56b6d6cc04
GitHub-Last-Rev: 73288ad18a
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/sys#65
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This commit adds the following MUI functions:
- GetUserPreferredUILanguages
- GetSystemPreferredUILanguages
- GetThreadPreferredUILanguages
- GetProcessPreferredUILanguages
Change-Id: I44f1c07245ab814935778c6b910b224d24cc753c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/sys/+/207860
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Chmod toggles the FILE_ATTRIBUTES_READONLY flag depending on the
permission bits. That's a bit odd but I guess some compromises were made
at some point and this is what was chosen to map to a Unix concept that
Windows doesn't really have in the same way. That's fine. However, the
logic used in Chmod was forgotten from Open, which then manifested
itself in various places, most recently, go modules' read-only behavior.
This corresonds with the syscall CL 202439.
Updates golang/go#35033
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