• Masahiro Yamada's avatar
    scripts: handle BrokenPipeError for python scripts · 87c7ee67
    Masahiro Yamada authored
    In the follow-up of commit fb3041d6 ("kbuild: fix SIGPIPE error
    message for AR=gcc-ar and AR=llvm-ar"), Kees Cook pointed out that
    tools should _not_ catch their own SIGPIPEs [1] [2].
    
    Based on his feedback, LLVM was fixed [3].
    
    However, Python's default behavior is to show noisy bracktrace when
    SIGPIPE is sent. So, scripts written in Python are basically in the
    same situation as the buggy llvm tools.
    
    Example:
    
      $ make -s allnoconfig
      $ make -s allmodconfig
      $ scripts/diffconfig .config.old .config | head -n1
      -ALIX n
      Traceback (most recent call last):
        File "/home/masahiro/linux/scripts/diffconfig", line 132, in <module>
          main()
        File "/home/masahiro/linux/scripts/diffconfig", line 130, in main
          print_config("+", config, None, b[config])
        File "/home/masahiro/linux/scripts/diffconfig", line 64, in print_config
          print("+%s %s" % (config, new_value))
      BrokenPipeError: [Errno 32] Broken pipe
    
    Python documentation [4] notes how to make scripts die immediately and
    silently:
    
      """
      Piping output of your program to tools like head(1) will cause a
      SIGPIPE signal to be sent to your process when the receiver of its
      standard output closes early. This results in an exception like
      BrokenPipeError: [Errno 32] Broken pipe. To handle this case,
      wrap your entry point to catch this exception as follows:
    
        import os
        import sys
    
        def main():
            try:
                # simulate large output (your code replaces this loop)
                for x in range(10000):
                    print("y")
                # flush output here to force SIGPIPE to be triggered
                # while inside this try block.
                sys.stdout.flush()
            except BrokenPipeError:
                # Python flushes standard streams on exit; redirect remaining output
                # to devnull to avoid another BrokenPipeError at shutdown
                devnull = os.open(os.devnull, os.O_WRONLY)
                os.dup2(devnull, sys.stdout.fileno())
                sys.exit(1)  # Python exits with error code 1 on EPIPE
    
        if __name__ == '__main__':
            main()
    
      Do not set SIGPIPE’s disposition to SIG_DFL in order to avoid
      BrokenPipeError. Doing that would cause your program to exit
      unexpectedly whenever any socket connection is interrupted while
      your program is still writing to it.
      """
    
    Currently, tools/perf/scripts/python/intel-pt-events.py seems to be the
    only script that fixes the issue that way.
    
    tools/perf/scripts/python/compaction-times.py uses another approach
    signal.signal(signal.SIGPIPE, signal.SIG_DFL) but the Python
    documentation clearly says "Don't do it".
    
    I cannot fix all Python scripts since there are so many.
    I fixed some in the scripts/ directory.
    
    [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/all/202211161056.1B9611A@keescook/
    [2]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59037
    [3]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/4787efa38066adb51e2c049499d25b3610c0877b
    [4]: https://docs.python.org/3/library/signal.html#note-on-sigpipeSigned-off-by: default avatarMasahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarNick Desaulniers <ndesaulniers@google.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarNicolas Schier <nicolas@fjasle.eu>
    87c7ee67
run-clang-tools.py 2.35 KB