WASI previously used `u32` as its `RawFd` type, since its "file descriptors"
are unsigned table indices, and there's no fundamental reason why WASI can't
have more than 2^31 handles.
However, this creates myriad little incompability problems with code
that also supports Unix platforms, where `RawFd` is `c_int`. While WASI
isn't a Unix, it often shares code with Unix, and this difference made
such shared code inconvenient. #87329 is the most recent example of such
code.
So, switch WASI to use `c_int`, which is `i32`. This will mean that code
intending to support WASI should ideally avoid assuming that negative file
descriptors are invalid, even though POSIX itself says that file descriptors
are never negative.
This is a breaking change, but `RawFd` is considerd an experimental
feature in [the documentation].
[the documentation]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/wasi/io/type.RawFd.html
This commit fixes an issue pointed out in #82758 where LTO changed the
behavior of a program. It turns out that LTO was not at fault here, it
simply uncovered an existing bug. The bindings to
`__wasilibc_find_relpath` assumed that the relative portion of the path
returned was always contained within thee input `buf` we passed in. This
isn't actually the case, however, and sometimes the relative portion of
the path may reference a sub-portion of the input string itself.
The fix here is to use the relative path pointer coming out of
`__wasilibc_find_relpath` as the source of truth. The `buf` used for
local storage is discarded in this function and the relative path is
copied out unconditionally. We might be able to get away with some
`Cow`-like business or such to avoid the extra allocation, but for now
this is probably the easiest patch to fix the original issue.
This brings in an implementation of `current_dir` and `set_current_dir`
(emulation in `wasi-libc`) as well as an updated version of finding
relative paths. This also additionally updates clang to the latest
release to build wasi-libc with.
Previously `std::fs::File::metadata` on wasm32-wasi would call `fd_filestat_get`
to get metadata associated with fd, but that fd is opened without
RIGHTS_FD_FILESTAT_GET right, so it will failed on correctly implemented WASI
environment.
This change instead to add the missing rights when opening an fd.