libgcrypt/libgcrypt-1.7.3-use-poll.patch
2016-11-23 09:59:17 +01:00

72 lines
2.5 KiB
Diff

diff -up libgcrypt-1.7.3/random/rndlinux.c.use-poll libgcrypt-1.7.3/random/rndlinux.c
--- libgcrypt-1.7.3/random/rndlinux.c.use-poll 2016-11-22 16:05:05.114761069 +0100
+++ libgcrypt-1.7.3/random/rndlinux.c 2016-11-22 16:16:05.373139721 +0100
@@ -32,6 +32,7 @@
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
+#include <poll.h>
#if defined(__linux__) && defined(HAVE_SYSCALL)
# include <sys/syscall.h>
#endif
@@ -211,9 +212,11 @@ _gcry_rndlinux_gather_random (void (*add
return with something we will actually use 100ms. */
while (length)
{
- fd_set rfds;
- struct timeval tv;
int rc;
+ struct pollfd pfd;
+
+ pfd.fd = fd;
+ pfd.events = POLLIN;
/* If we collected some bytes update the progress indicator. We
do this always and not just if the select timed out because
@@ -227,33 +230,19 @@ _gcry_rndlinux_gather_random (void (*add
any_need_entropy = 1;
}
- /* If the system has no limit on the number of file descriptors
- and we encounter an fd which is larger than the fd_set size,
- we don't use the select at all. The select code is only used
- to emit progress messages. A better solution would be to
- fall back to poll() if available. */
-#ifdef FD_SETSIZE
- if (fd < FD_SETSIZE)
-#endif
+ if ( !(rc=poll(&pfd, 1, delay)) )
+ {
+ any_need_entropy = 1;
+ delay = 3000; /* Use 3 seconds henceforth. */
+ continue;
+ }
+ else if( rc == -1 )
{
- FD_ZERO(&rfds);
- FD_SET(fd, &rfds);
- tv.tv_sec = delay;
- tv.tv_usec = delay? 0 : 100000;
- if ( !(rc=select(fd+1, &rfds, NULL, NULL, &tv)) )
- {
- any_need_entropy = 1;
- delay = 3; /* Use 3 seconds henceforth. */
- continue;
- }
- else if( rc == -1 )
- {
- log_error ("select() error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
- if (!delay)
- delay = 1; /* Use 1 second if we encounter an error before
- we have ever blocked. */
- continue;
- }
+ log_error ("poll() error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
+ if (!delay)
+ delay = 1000; /* Use 1 second if we encounter an error before
+ we have ever blocked. */
+ continue;
}
/* If we have a modern Linux kernel and we want to read from the