ID:               39648
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      wharmby at uk dot ibm dot com
-Status:           Assigned
+Status:           Closed
 Bug Type:         Unknown/Other Function
 Operating System: Linux RHEL4
 PHP Version:      5CVS-2006-11-27 (snap)
 Assigned To:      iliaa
 New Comment:

This bug has been fixed in CVS.

Snapshots of the sources are packaged every three hours; this change
will be in the next snapshot. You can grab the snapshot at
http://snaps.php.net/.
 
Thank you for the report, and for helping us make PHP better.




Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2006-11-27 17:05:42] wharmby at uk dot ibm dot com

Description:
------------
The current implementation of the chown() and chgrp() 
functions on Linux use the non-reentrant getpwnam() and 
getgrnam() C library calls respectively rather than the
reentrant getpwnam_r() and getgrnam_r(). Therefore using
either chown() or chgrp() on Linux in a ZTS enabled build
could lead to unpredictable/undesirable results.

The following patch, which was built against the latest snapshot (Nov
27th, 2006, 0730 GMT) modifies the code in 
ext/standard/filestat.c to use the reentrant versions of
these functions and so make these 2 functions thread safe:

            http://pastebin.ca/259657

However, I am concerned that this patch relies on the C
library supporting the POSIX.1 functions getpwnam_r(), 
getgrnam_r() and sysconf(). These are all implemented by 
GNU libc but are there other C libraries used to build PHP 
which may not have the necessary support ?  Or is it 
reasonable to assume that all C libraries used when buiding 
PHP will be POSIX.1 compliant ? 

N.B There are other uses of these non-reentrant functions in
the PHP code base (e.g posix.c and fopen_wrappers.c) and I 
m happy to produce the necessary patches to fix these uses 
if this fix proves satisfactory.

Andy Wharmby
IBM United Kingdom Limited

Reproduce code:
---------------
---------------
Problem found by code inspection. As with most thread safety issues
difficult to produce a simple testcase which will show a reproducible
crash but current Linux executable is clearly
not reentrant.

Expected result:
----------------
N/A

Actual result:
--------------
N/A


------------------------------------------------------------------------


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