slock

simple X display locker utility

git clone https://9o.is/git/slock.git

commit dd61d08d74f543c05e37b6aaf4e5aa673c7485ac
parent c2afaea3bbb6dc685e00d95b7a349a7cd5ad232e
Author: FRIGN <dev@frign.de>
Date:   Tue, 23 Aug 2016 01:45:46 +0200

Refactor dontkillme()

- Use file pointers instead of raw I/O, inspired by Kernel code.
- Use OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN from linux/oom.h instead of working with
  magic values.
- Stricter error checking and descriptive error messages.

The reasoning for using the constant rather than magic values lies
in the fact that this ensures people get the message.
With "-1000", a code reviewer would question if that is really the
lowest possible number or just an arbitrary value.
The kernel ABI probably won't change, but even in the case, we wouldn't
have to modify the code. The OOM killer only is guaranteed to not
kill you if you have OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN.

Diffstat:
Mslock.c | 22+++++++++++++++-------
1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)

diff --git a/slock.c b/slock.c @@ -65,19 +65,27 @@ die(const char *errstr, ...) #ifdef __linux__ #include <fcntl.h> +#include <linux/oom.h> static void dontkillme(void) { - int fd; + FILE *f; + const char oomfile[] = "/proc/self/oom_score_adj"; - fd = open("/proc/self/oom_score_adj", O_WRONLY); - if (fd < 0 && errno == ENOENT) { - return; + if (!(f = fopen(oomfile, "w"))) { + if (errno == ENOENT) + return; + die("slock: fopen %s: %s\n", oomfile, strerror(errno)); } - if (fd < 0 || write(fd, "-1000\n", (sizeof("-1000\n") - 1)) != - (sizeof("-1000\n") - 1) || close(fd) != 0) { - die("can't tame the oom-killer. is suid or sgid set?\n"); + fprintf(f, "%d", OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN); + if (fclose(f)) { + if (errno == EACCES) + die("slock: unable to disable OOM killer. " + "suid or sgid set?\n"); + else + die("slock: fclose %s: %s\n", oomfile, + strerror(errno)); } } #endif