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authorLibravatar Jeff King <peff@peff.net>2016-02-24 02:44:58 -0500
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2016-02-25 13:51:47 -0800
commit9ff18faf2f8578ed1cbc4376b594fa7ff22c9085 (patch)
treeafba51cd1e399129f96d8f0a876ce2f6ba7918ef /t
parentwrite_or_die: handle EPIPE in async threads (diff)
downloadtgif-9ff18faf2f8578ed1cbc4376b594fa7ff22c9085.tar.xz
fetch-pack: ignore SIGPIPE in sideband demuxer
If the other side feeds us a bogus pack, index-pack (or unpack-objects) may die early, before consuming all of its input. As a result, the sideband demuxer may get SIGPIPE (racily, depending on whether our data made it into the pipe buffer or not). If this happens and we are compiled with pthread support, it will take down the main thread, too. This isn't the end of the world, as the main process will just die() anyway when it sees index-pack failed. But it does mean we don't get a chance to say "fatal: index-pack failed" or similar. And it also means that we racily fail t5504, as we sometimes die() and sometimes are killed by SIGPIPE. So let's ignore SIGPIPE while demuxing the sideband. We are already careful to check the return value of write(), so we won't waste time writing to a broken pipe. The caller will notice the error return from the async thread, though in practice we don't even get that far, as we die() as soon as we see that index-pack failed. The non-sideband case is already fine; we let index-pack read straight from the socket, so there is no SIGPIPE at all. Technically the non-threaded async case is also OK without this (the forked async process gets SIGPIPE), but it's not worth distinguishing from the threaded case here. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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