/* fcntl.cc: fcntl syscall This file is part of Cygwin. This software is a copyrighted work licensed under the terms of the Cygwin license. Please consult the file "CYGWIN_LICENSE" for details. */ #include "winsup.h" #include #include "cygerrno.h" #include "security.h" #include "path.h" #include "fhandler.h" #include "dtable.h" #include "cygheap.h" #include "cygtls.h" extern "C" int fcntl (int fd, int cmd, ...) { int res = -1; intptr_t arg = 0; va_list args; pthread_testcancel (); __try { debug_printf ("fcntl(%d, %d, ...)", fd, cmd); /* Don't lock the fd table when performing locking calls. */ cygheap_fdget cfd (fd, cmd < F_GETLK || cmd > F_SETLKW); if (cfd < 0) __leave; /* FIXME? All numerical args to fcntl are defined as long on Linux. This relies on a really dirty trick on x86_64: A 32 bit mov to a register (e.g. mov $1, %edx) always sets the high 32 bit to 0. We're following the Linux lead here since the third arg to any function is in a register anyway (%r8 in MS ABI). That's the easy case which is covered here by always reading the arg with sizeof (intptr_t) == sizeof (long) == sizeof (void*) which matches all targets. However, the POSIX standard defines all numerical args as type int. If we take that literally, we had a (small) problem on 64 bit, since sizeof (void*) != sizeof (int). If we would like to follow POSIX more closely than Linux, we'd have to call va_arg on a per cmd basis. */ va_start (args, cmd); arg = va_arg (args, intptr_t); va_end (args); switch (cmd) { case F_DUPFD: case F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC: if (arg >= 0 && arg < OPEN_MAX) { int flags = cmd == F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC ? O_CLOEXEC : 0; res = cygheap->fdtab.dup3 (fd, cygheap_fdnew ((arg) - 1), flags); } else { set_errno (EINVAL); res = -1; } break; default: res = cfd->fcntl (cmd, arg); break; } } __except (EFAULT) {} __endtry syscall_printf ("%R = fcntl(%d, %d, %ly)", res, fd, cmd, arg); return res; } EXPORT_ALIAS (fcntl, _fcntl)