> On 11 Apr 2017, at 18:16, Jeff King <p...@peff.net> wrote:
> 
> On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 08:03:49AM -0400, Ben Peart wrote:
> 
>> @@ -642,7 +621,41 @@ static struct cmd2process 
>> *start_multi_file_filter(struct hashmap *hashmap, cons
>> done:
>>      sigchain_pop(SIGPIPE);
>> 
>> -    if (err || errno == EPIPE) {
>> +    if (err || errno == EPIPE)
>> +            err = err ? err : errno;
>> +
>> +    return err;
>> +}
> 
> This isn't a new problem introduced by your patch, but this use of errno
> seems funny to me. Specifically:

I introduced these lines, therefore I try to answer :-)


>  1. Do we need to save errno before calling sigchain_pop()? It's making
>     syscalls (though admittedly they are unlikely to fail).

What if we add the following right before sigchain_pop() ?

        if (errno == EPIPE)
                err = -1;


>  2. If err is 0, then nothing failed. Who would have set errno? Aren't
>     we reading whatever cruft happened to be in errno before the
>     function started?

Yeah, looks like you're right:
https://www.securecoding.cert.org/confluence/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=6619179

According to this article we shouldn't even check *only* for errno. 
At least we should add
        errno = 0;
at the beginning of the function, no?

This means we have many areas in Git where we don't handle errno
correctly. E.g. right in convert.c where I stole code from:
https://github.com/git/git/commit/0c4dd67a048b39470b9b95912e4912fecc405a85#diff-7949b716ab0a83e8c422a0d6336f19d6R361

Should that be addressed?

- Lars

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