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@ -6,6 +6,9 @@ |
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# ifdef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H |
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# include <sys/stat.h> |
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# endif |
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# ifdef HAVE_LINUX_RANDOM_H |
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# include <linux/random.h> |
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# endif |
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# ifdef HAVE_GETRANDOM |
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# include <sys/random.h> |
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# elif defined(HAVE_GETRANDOM_SYSCALL) |
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@ -122,9 +125,13 @@ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise) |
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/* Is getrandom() supported by the running kernel? |
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* Need Linux kernel 3.17 or newer, or Solaris 11.3 or newer */ |
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static int getrandom_works = 1; |
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/* Use non-blocking /dev/urandom device. On Linux at boot, the getrandom() |
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* syscall blocks until /dev/urandom is initialized with enough entropy. */ |
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const int flags = 0; |
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/* getrandom() on Linux will block if called before the kernel has |
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* initialized the urandom entropy pool. This will cause Python |
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* to hang on startup if called very early in the boot process - |
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* see https://bugs.python.org/issue26839. To avoid this, use the |
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* GRND_NONBLOCK flag. */ |
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const int flags = GRND_NONBLOCK; |
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int n; |
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if (!getrandom_works) |
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@ -168,6 +175,17 @@ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise) |
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getrandom_works = 0; |
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return 0; |
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} |
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if (errno == EAGAIN) { |
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/* If we failed with EAGAIN, the entropy pool was |
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* uninitialized. In this case, we return failure to fall |
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* back to reading from /dev/urandom. |
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* |
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* Note: In this case the data read will not be random so |
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* should not be used for cryptographic purposes. Retaining |
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* the existing semantics for practical purposes. */ |
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getrandom_works = 0; |
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return 0; |
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} |
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if (errno == EINTR) { |
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if (PyErr_CheckSignals()) { |
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