/*
* Copyright (C) 2016 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#include <algorithm>
#include <cerrno>
#include <cstdint>
#include <cstring>
#include "android-base/logging.h"
#include "wifilogd/local_utils.h"
#include "wifilogd/os.h"
namespace android {
namespace wifilogd {
using local_utils::GetMaxVal;
namespace {
constexpr auto kMaxNanoSeconds = 1000 * 1000 * 1000 - 1;
}
constexpr int Os::kInvalidFd;
Os::Os() : raw_os_(new RawOs()) {}
Os::Os(std::unique_ptr<RawOs> raw_os) : raw_os_(std::move(raw_os)) {}
Os::~Os() {}
std::tuple<int, Os::Errno> Os::GetControlSocket(
const std::string& socket_name) {
int sock_fd = raw_os_->GetControlSocket(socket_name.c_str());
if (sock_fd < 0) {
return {kInvalidFd, errno};
} else {
return {sock_fd, 0};
}
}
Os::Timestamp Os::GetTimestamp(clockid_t clock_id) const {
struct timespec now_timespec;
int failed = raw_os_->ClockGettime(clock_id, &now_timespec);
if (failed) {
LOG(FATAL) << "Unexpected error: " << std::strerror(errno);
}
CHECK(now_timespec.tv_nsec <= kMaxNanoSeconds);
Timestamp now_timestamp;
now_timestamp.secs = SAFELY_CLAMP(
now_timespec.tv_sec, uint32_t, 0,
// The upper-bound comes from the source-type on 32-bit platforms,
// and the dest-type on 64-bit platforms. Using min(), we can figure out
// which type to use for the upper bound, without resorting to macros.
std::min(static_cast<uintmax_t>(GetMaxVal(now_timestamp.secs)),
static_cast<uintmax_t>(GetMaxVal(now_timespec.tv_sec))));
now_timestamp.nsecs =
SAFELY_CLAMP(now_timespec.tv_nsec, uint32_t, 0, kMaxNanoSeconds);
return now_timestamp;
}
void Os::Nanosleep(uint32_t sleep_time_nsec) {
struct timespec sleep_timespec = {
0, // tv_sec
SAFELY_CLAMP(sleep_time_nsec, decltype(timespec::tv_nsec), 0, kMaxNanos)};
int failed = 0;
do {
struct timespec remaining_timespec;
failed = raw_os_->Nanosleep(&sleep_timespec, &remaining_timespec);
sleep_timespec = remaining_timespec;
} while (failed && errno == EINTR && sleep_timespec.tv_nsec > 0);
if (failed && errno != EINTR) {
// The only other documented errors for the underlying nanosleep() call are
// EFAULT and EINVAL. But we always pass valid pointers, and the values in
// |sleep_timespec| are always valid.
LOG(FATAL) << "Unexpected error: " << std::strerror(errno);
}
}
std::tuple<size_t, Os::Errno> Os::ReceiveDatagram(int fd, void* buf,
size_t buflen) {
// recv() takes a size_t, but returns an ssize_t. That means that the largest
// successful read that recv() can report is the maximal ssize_t. Passing a
// larger |buflen| risks mistakenly reporting a truncated read.
CHECK(buflen <= GetMaxVal<ssize_t>());
const ssize_t res = raw_os_->Recv(fd, buf, buflen, MSG_TRUNC);
if (res < 0) {
return {0, errno};
}
// Due to the MSG_TRUNC flag, |res| may reasonably be larger than
// |buflen|. In such cases, |res| indicates the full size of the datagram,
// before being truncated to fit our buffer. Hence, we omit the
// buffer-overflow CHECK that exists in Write().
return {res, 0};
}
std::tuple<size_t, Os::Errno> Os::Write(int fd, const void* buf,
size_t buflen) {
// write() takes a size_t, but returns an ssize_t. That means that the
// largest successful write that write() can report is the maximal ssize_t.
// Passing a larger |buflen| risks mistakenly reporting a truncated write.
CHECK(buflen <= GetMaxVal<ssize_t>());
const ssize_t res = raw_os_->Write(fd, buf, buflen);
if (res < 0) {
return {0, errno};
}
CHECK(res <=
SAFELY_CLAMP(buflen, ssize_t, 0,
GetMaxVal<ssize_t>())); // Abort on buffer overflow.
// Note that |res| may be less than buflen. However, a) a short write is
// not an error, and b) |errno| may be stale, as |errno| is only guaranteed to
// be set if an error occurred. Hence, we return Errno of 0 unconditionally.
// See http://yarchive.net/comp/linux/write_error_return.html
return {res, 0};
}
} // namespace wifilogd
} // namespace android