linux-user: Implement faccessat2
User space has been preferring this syscall for a while, due to its
closer match with C semantics, and newer platforms such as LoongArch
apparently have libc implementations that don't fallback to faccessat
so normal access checks are failing without the emulation in place.
Tested by successfully emerging several packages within a Gentoo loong
stage3 chroot, emulated on amd64 with help of static qemu-loongarch64.
Reported-by: Andreas K. Hüttel <dilfridge@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: WANG Xuerui <xen0n@gentoo.org>
Message-Id: <20221009060813.2289077-1-xen0n@gentoo.org>
[lv: removing defined(__NR_faccessat2) in syscall.c,
adding defined(TARGET_NR_faccessat2) on print_faccessat()]
Signed-off-by: Laurent Vivier <laurent@vivier.eu>
diff --git a/linux-user/syscall.c b/linux-user/syscall.c
index d499cac..e985ad1 100644
--- a/linux-user/syscall.c
+++ b/linux-user/syscall.c
@@ -9143,6 +9143,15 @@
unlock_user(p, arg2, 0);
return ret;
#endif
+#if defined(TARGET_NR_faccessat2)
+ case TARGET_NR_faccessat2:
+ if (!(p = lock_user_string(arg2))) {
+ return -TARGET_EFAULT;
+ }
+ ret = get_errno(faccessat(arg1, p, arg3, arg4));
+ unlock_user(p, arg2, 0);
+ return ret;
+#endif
#ifdef TARGET_NR_nice /* not on alpha */
case TARGET_NR_nice:
return get_errno(nice(arg1));