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Revision tags: lighttpd-1.4.69, lighttpd-1.4.68, lighttpd-1.4.67, lighttpd-1.4.66, lighttpd-1.4.65, lighttpd-1.4.64, lighttpd-1.4.63, lighttpd-1.4.62, lighttpd-1.4.61, lighttpd-1.4.60 |
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309c1693 |
| 12-Jul-2021 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[multiple] Y2038 32-bit signed time_t mitigations
Most OS platforms have already provided solutions to Y2038 32-bit signed time_t 5 - 10 years ago (or more!) Notable exceptions are Linux i686 and Fr
[multiple] Y2038 32-bit signed time_t mitigations
Most OS platforms have already provided solutions to Y2038 32-bit signed time_t 5 - 10 years ago (or more!) Notable exceptions are Linux i686 and FreeBSD i386.
Since 32-bit systems tend to be embedded systems, and since many distros take years to pick up new software, this commit aims to provide Y2038 mitigations for lighttpd running on 32-bit systems with Y2038-unsafe 32-bit signed time_t
* Y2038: lighttpd 1.4.60 and later report Y2038 safety $ lighttpd -V + Y2038 support # Y2038-SAFE $ lighttpd -V - Y2038 support (unsafe 32-bit signed time_t) # Y2038-UNSAFE
* Y2038: general platform info * Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 64-bit builds on platforms using 64-bit time_t - all major 64-bit platforms (known to this author) use 64-bit time_t * Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 64-bit time_t - Linux x32 ABI (different from i686) - FreeBSD all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures *except* 32-bit i386 - NetBSD 6.0 (released Oct 2012) all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures - OpenBSD 5.5 (released May 2014) all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures - Microsoft Windows XP and Visual Studio 2005 (? unsure ?) Another reference suggests Visual Studio 2015 defaults to 64-bit time_t - MacOS 10.15 Catalina (released 2019) drops support for 32-bit apps * Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 32-bit unsigned time_t - e.g. OpenVMS (unknown if lighttpd builds on this platform) * Y2038-UNSAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 32-bit signed time_t - Linux 32-bit (including i686) - glibc 32-bit library support not yet available for 64-bit time_t - https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/Y2038ProofnessDesign - Linux kernel 5.6 on 32-bit platforms does support 64-bit time_t https://itsubuntu.com/linux-kernel-5-6-to-fix-the-year-2038-issue-unix-y2k/ - https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/64_002dbit-time-symbol-handling.html "Note: at this point, 64-bit time support in dual-time configurations is work-in-progress, so for these configurations, the public API only makes the 32-bit time support available. In a later change, the public API will allow user code to choose the time size for a given compilation unit." - compiling with -D_TIME_BITS=64 currently has no effect - glibc recent (Jul 2021) mailing list discussion - https://public-inbox.org/bug-gnulib/[email protected]/T/ - FreeBSD i386 - DragonFlyBSD 32-bit
* Y2038 mitigations attempted on Y2038-UNSAFE platforms (32-bit signed time_t) * lighttpd prefers system monotonic clock instead of realtime clock in places where realtime clock is not required * lighttpd treats negative time_t values as after 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT * (lighttpd presumes that lighttpd will not encounter dates before 1970 during normal operation.) * lighttpd casts struct stat st.st_mtime (and st.st_*time) through uint64_t to convert negative timestamps for comparisions with 64-bit timestamps (treating negative timestamp values as after 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT) * lighttpd provides unix_time64_t (int64_t) and * lighttpd provides struct unix_timespec64 (unix_timespec64_t) (struct timespec equivalent using unix_time64_t tv_sec member) * lighttpd provides gmtime64_r() and localtime64_r() wrappers for platforms 32-bit platforms using 32-bit time_t and lighttpd temporarily shifts the year in order to use gmtime_r() and localtime_r() (or gmtime() and localtime()) from standard libraries, before readjusting year and passing struct tm to formatting functions such as strftime() * lighttpd provides TIME64_CAST() macro to cast signed 32-bit time_t to unsigned 32-bit and then to unix_time64_t
* Note: while lighttpd tries handle times past 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT on 32-bit platforms using 32-bit signed time_t, underlying libraries and underlying filesystems might not behave properly after 32-bit signed time_t overflows (19 Jan 2038 03:14:08 GMT). If a given 32-bit OS does not work properly using negative time_t values, then lighttpd likely will not work properly on that system.
* Other references and blogs - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_formatting_and_storage_bugs - http://www.lieberbiber.de/2017/03/14/a-look-at-the-year-20362038-problems-and-time-proofness-in-various-systems/
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6b6252a3 |
| 26-Apr-2021 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[core] move timegm() impl inline in sys-time.h
(for systems without timegm())
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Revision tags: lighttpd-1.4.59, lighttpd-1.4.58, lighttpd-1.4.57, lighttpd-1.4.56 |
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a0b615ac |
| 23-Nov-2020 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[core] http_date_timegm() (portable timegm())
move from mod_openssl.c
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122094e3 |
| 22-Nov-2020 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[multiple] employ http_date.h, sys-time.h
- replace use of strptime() w/ implementation specialized for HTTP dates - use thread-safe gmtime_r(), localtime_r() (replace localtime, gmtime)
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48a8e893 |
| 21-Nov-2020 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[core] specialized strptime() for HTTP date fmts
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f8cc9fb9 |
| 21-Nov-2020 |
Glenn Strauss <[email protected]> |
[core] http_date.[ch] encapsulate HTTP-date parse
http_date.[ch] encapsulate HTTP-date parse/compare
(import from one of my development branches from 2015)
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