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Conflicts:
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit f586e1328681b400078c995a0bb6ad301ef73549)
Conflicts:
NEWS
stdlib/cxa_thread_atexit_impl.c
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Honoring the LD_POINTER_GUARD environment variable in AT_SECURE mode
has security implications. This commit enables pointer guard
unconditionally, and the environment variable is now ignored.
[BZ #18928]
* sysdeps/generic/ldsodefs.h (struct rtld_global_ro): Remove
_dl_pointer_guard member.
* elf/rtld.c (_rtld_global_ro): Remove _dl_pointer_guard
initializer.
(security_init): Always set up pointer guard.
(process_envvars): Do not process LD_POINTER_GUARD.
(cherry picked from commit a014cecd82b71b70a6a843e250e06b541ad524f7)
Conflicts:
NEWS
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[Modified from the original email by Siddhesh Poyarekar]
This patch solves bug #16009 by implementing an additional path in
strxfrm that does not depend on caching the weight and rule indices.
In detail the following changed:
* The old main loop was factored out of strxfrm_l into the function
do_xfrm_cached to be able to alternativly use the non-caching version
do_xfrm.
* strxfrm_l allocates a a fixed size array on the stack. If this is not
sufficiant to store the weight and rule indices, the non-caching path is
taken. As the cache size is not dependent on the input there can be no
problems with integer overflows or stack allocations greater than
__MAX_ALLOCA_CUTOFF. Note that malloc-ing is not possible because the
definition of strxfrm does not allow an oom errorhandling.
* The uncached path determines the weight and rule index for every char
and for every pass again.
* Passing all the locale data array by array resulted in very long
parameter lists, so I introduced a structure that holds them.
* Checking for zero src string has been moved a bit upwards, it is
before the locale data initialization now.
* To verify that the non-caching path works correct I added a test run
to localedata/sort-test.sh & localedata/xfrm-test.c where all strings
are patched up with spaces so that they are too large for the caching path.
(cherry picked from commit 0f9e585480edcdf1e30dc3d79e24b84aeee516fa)
Conflicts:
NEWS
string/strxfrm_l.c
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The call is technically in a loop, and under certain circumstances
(which are quite difficult to reproduce in a test case), alloca
can be invoked repeatedly during a single call to clntudp_call.
As a result, the available stack space can be exhausted (even
though individual alloca sizes are bounded implicitly by what
can fit into a UDP packet, as a side effect of the earlier
successful send operation).
(cherry picked from commit bc779a1a5b3035133024b21e2f339fe4219fb11c)
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Since commit 44d20bca52ace85850012b0ead37b360e3ecd96e (Implement
second fallback mode for DNS requests), there is a code path which
returns early, before *resplen2 is initialized. This happens if the
name server address is immediately recognized as invalid (because of
lack of protocol support, or if it is a broadcast address such
255.255.255.255, or another invalid address).
If this happens and *resplen2 was non-zero (which is the case if a
previous query resulted in a failure), __libc_res_nquery would reuse
an existing second answer buffer. This answer has been previously
identified as unusable (for example, it could be an NXDOMAIN
response). Due to the presence of a second answer, no name server
switching will occur. The result is a name resolution failure,
although a successful resolution would have been possible if name
servers have been switched and queries had proceeded along the search
path.
The above paragraph still simplifies the situation. Before glibc
2.23, if the second answer needed malloc, the stub resolver would
still attempt to reuse the second answer, but this is not possible
because __libc_res_nsearch has freed it, after the unsuccessful call
to __libc_res_nquerydomain, and set the buffer pointer to NULL. This
eventually leads to an assertion failure in __libc_res_nquery:
/* Make sure both hp and hp2 are defined */
assert((hp != NULL) && (hp2 != NULL));
If assertions are disabled, the consequence is a NULL pointer
dereference on the next line.
Starting with glibc 2.23, as a result of commit
e9db92d3acfe1822d56d11abcea5bfc4c41cf6ca (CVE-2015-7547: getaddrinfo()
stack-based buffer overflow (Bug 18665)), the second answer is always
allocated with malloc. This means that the assertion failure happens
with small responses as well because there is no buffer to reuse, as
soon as there is a name resolution failure which triggers a search for
an answer along the search path.
This commit addresses the issue by ensuring that *resplen2 is
initialized before the send_dg function returns.
This commit also addresses a bug where an invalid second reply is
incorrectly returned as a valid to the caller.
(cherry picked from commit b66d837bb5398795c6b0f651bd5a5d66091d8577)
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* A stack-based buffer overflow was found in libresolv when invoked from
libnss_dns, allowing specially crafted DNS responses to seize control
of execution flow in the DNS client. The buffer overflow occurs in
the functions send_dg (send datagram) and send_vc (send TCP) for the
NSS module libnss_dns.so.2 when calling getaddrinfo with AF_UNSPEC
family. The use of AF_UNSPEC triggers the low-level resolver code to
send out two parallel queries for A and AAAA. A mismanagement of the
buffers used for those queries could result in the response of a query
writing beyond the alloca allocated buffer created by
_nss_dns_gethostbyname4_r. Buffer management is simplified to remove
the overflow. Thanks to the Google Security Team and Red Hat for
reporting the security impact of this issue, and Robert Holiday of
Ciena for reporting the related bug 18665. (CVE-2015-7547)
See also:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2016-02/msg00416.html
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2016-02/msg00418.html
(cherry picked from commit e9db92d3acfe1822d56d11abcea5bfc4c41cf6ca)
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When converting a struct hostent response to struct gaih_addrtuple, the
gethosts macro (which is called from gaih_inet) used alloca, without
malloc fallback for large responses. This commit changes this code to
use calloc unconditionally.
This commit also consolidated a second hostent-to-gaih_addrtuple
conversion loop (in gaih_inet) to use the new conversion function.
(cherry picked from commit 4ab2ab03d4351914ee53248dc5aef4a8c88ff8b9)
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Instead, we store the data we need from the return value of
readdir in an object of the new type struct readdir_result.
This type is independent of the layout of struct dirent.
(cherry picked from commit 5171f3079f2cc53e0548fc4967361f4d1ce9d7ea)
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makecontext()" [BZ #18508].
On s390/s390x backtrace(buffer, size) returns the series of called functions until
"makecontext_ret" and additional entries (up to "size") with "makecontext_ret".
GDB-backtrace is also warning:
"Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)"
To reproduce this scenario you have to setup a new context with makecontext()
and activate it with setcontext(). See e.g. cf() function in testcase stdlib/tst-makecontext.c.
Or see bug in libgo "Bug 66303 - runtime.Caller() returns infinitely deep stack frames
on s390x " (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=66303).
This patch omits the cfi_startproc/cfi_endproc directives in ENTRY/END macro of
__makecontext_ret. Thus no frame information is generated in .eh_frame and backtrace
stops after __makecontext_ret. There is also no .eh_frame info for _start or
thread_start functions.
ChangeLog:
[BZ #18508]
* stdlib/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-makecontext3):
Depend on $(libdl).
* stdlib/tst-makecontext.c (cf): Test if _Unwind_Backtrace
is not called infinitely times.
(backtrace_helper): New function.
(trace_arg): New struct.
(st1): Enlarge stack size.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-32/__makecontext_ret.S:
(__makecontext_ret): Omit cfi_startproc and cfi_endproc.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/__makecontext_ret.S:
Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit 890b7a4b33d482b5c768ab47d70758b80227e9bc)
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This patch uses sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK) instead of SIG_BLOCK
in setcontext, swapcontext.
(cherry picked from commit 2e807f29595eb5b1e5d0decc6e356a3562ecc58e)
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The defensive copy is not needed because the name may not alias the
output buffer.
(cherry picked from commit 317b199b4aff8cfa27f2302ab404d2bb5032b9a4)
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(cherry picked from commit bae7c7c764413b23e61cb099ce33be4c4ee259bb)
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(cherry picked from commit d36c75fc0d44deec29635dd239b0fbd206ca49b7)
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(cherry picked from commit 0f58539030e436449f79189b6edab17d7479796e)
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Calls to stpcpy from nscd netgroups code will have overlapping source
and destination when all three values in the returned triplet are
non-NULL and in the expected (host,user,domain) order. This is seen
in valgrind as:
==3181== Source and destination overlap in stpcpy(0x19973b48, 0x19973b48)
==3181== at 0x4C2F30A: stpcpy (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==3181== by 0x12567A: addgetnetgrentX (string3.h:111)
==3181== by 0x12722D: addgetnetgrent (netgroupcache.c:665)
==3181== by 0x11114C: nscd_run_worker (connections.c:1338)
==3181== by 0x4E3C102: start_thread (pthread_create.c:309)
==3181== by 0x59B81AC: clone (clone.S:111)
==3181==
Fix this by using memmove instead of stpcpy.
(cherry picked from commit ea7d8b95e2fcb81f68b04ed7787a3dbda023991a)
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getnetgrent is supposed to return NULL for values that are wildcards
in the (host, user, domain) triplet. This works correctly with nscd
disabled, but with it enabled, it returns a blank ("") instead of a
NULL. This is easily seen with the output of `getent netgroup foonet`
for a netgroup foonet defined as follows in /etc/netgroup:
foonet (,foo,)
The output with nscd disabled is:
foonet ( ,foo,)
while with nscd enabled, it is:
foonet (,foo,)
The extra space with nscd disabled is due to the fact that `getent
netgroup` adds it if the return value from getnetgrent is NULL for
either host or user.
(cherry picked from commit dd3022d75e6fb8957843d6d84257a5d8457822d5)
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nscd works correctly when the request in innetgr is a wildcard,
i.e. when one or more of host, user or domain parameters is NULL.
However, it does not work when the the triplet in the netgroup
definition has a wildcard. This is easy to reproduce for a triplet
defined as follows:
foonet (,foo,)
Here, an innetgr call that looks like this:
innetgr ("foonet", "foohost", "foo", NULL);
should succeed and so should:
innetgr ("foonet", NULL, "foo", "foodomain");
It does succeed with nscd disabled, but not with nscd enabled. This
fix adds this additional check for all three parts of the triplet so
that it gives the correct result.
[BZ #16758]
* nscd/netgroupcache.c (addinnetgrX): Succeed if triplet has
blank values.
(cherry picked from commit fbd6b5a4052316f7eb03c4617eebfaafc59dcc06)
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Fix a bug number that was out of order.
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Conflicts:
NEWS
nss/nss_files/files-XXX.c
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(cherry picked from commit b3a9f56ba59c3d8eadd3135a1c25c37a63151450)
Conflicts:
NEWS
posix/Makefile
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Robin Hack discovered Samba would enter an infinite loop processing
certain quota-related requests. We eventually tracked this down to a
glibc issue.
Running a (simplified) test case under strace shows that /etc/passwd
is continuously opened and closed:
…
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
read(3, "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_SET) = 0
read(3, "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
…
The lookup function implementation in
nss/nss_files/files-XXX.c:DB_LOOKUP has code to prevent that. It is
supposed skip closing the input file if it was already open.
/* Reset file pointer to beginning or open file. */ \
status = internal_setent (keep_stream); \
\
if (status == NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ \
/* Tell getent function that we have repositioned the file pointer. */ \
last_use = getby; \
\
while ((status = internal_getent (result, buffer, buflen, errnop \
H_ERRNO_ARG EXTRA_ARGS_VALUE)) \
== NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ break_if_match } \
\
if (! keep_stream) \
internal_endent (); \
} \
keep_stream is initialized from the stayopen flag in internal_setent.
internal_setent is called from the set*ent implementation as:
status = internal_setent (stayopen);
However, for non-host database, this flag is always 0, per the
STAYOPEN magic in nss/getXXent_r.c.
Thus, the fix is this:
- status = internal_setent (stayopen);
+ status = internal_setent (1);
This is not a behavioral change even for the hosts database (where the
application can specify the stayopen flag) because with a call to
sethostent(0), the file handle is still not closed in the
implementation of gethostent.
(cherry picked from commit 03d2730b44cc2236318fd978afa2651753666c55)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit bdf1ff052a8e23d637f2c838fa5642d78fcedc33)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit 4a28f4d55a6cc33474c0792fe93b5942d81bf185)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit ac60763eac3d43b7234dd21286ad3ec3f17957fc)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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[BZ #17153]
* elf/elf.h (DT_PPC64_NUM): Correct value.
* NEWS: Add to fixed bug list.
(cherry picked from commit f6c44d475104e931bab2b4ffa499961088de673c)
Conflicts:
NEWS
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This fixes a bug in the way the results from __nscd_getai are collected:
for every returned result a new entry is first added to the
gaih_addrtuple list, but if that result doesn't match the request this
entry remains uninitialized. So for this non-matching result an extra
result with uninitialized content is returned.
To reproduce (with nscd running):
$ getent ahostsv4 localhost
127.0.0.1 STREAM localhost
127.0.0.1 DGRAM
127.0.0.1 RAW
(null) STREAM
(null) DGRAM
(null) RAW
(cherry picked from commit a071766ebfd853179ac39f9773f894029bf86d36)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit 2959eda9272a033863c271aff62095abd01bd4e3)
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(cherry picked from commit b0a3c1640ab2fb7d16d9b9a8d9c0e524e9cb0001)
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This patch fixes the ELFv2 gprof entry point since the ABI
does not define function descriptors. It fixes BZ#17213.
Conflicts:
NEWS
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Conflicts:
NEWS
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Robin Hack discovered Samba would enter an infinite loop processing
certain quota-related requests. We eventually tracked this down to a
glibc issue.
Running a (simplified) test case under strace shows that /etc/passwd
is continuously opened and closed:
…
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
read(3, "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_SET) = 0
read(3, "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
…
The lookup function implementation in
nss/nss_files/files-XXX.c:DB_LOOKUP has code to prevent that. It is
supposed skip closing the input file if it was already open.
/* Reset file pointer to beginning or open file. */ \
status = internal_setent (keep_stream); \
\
if (status == NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ \
/* Tell getent function that we have repositioned the file pointer. */ \
last_use = getby; \
\
while ((status = internal_getent (result, buffer, buflen, errnop \
H_ERRNO_ARG EXTRA_ARGS_VALUE)) \
== NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ break_if_match } \
\
if (! keep_stream) \
internal_endent (); \
} \
keep_stream is initialized from the stayopen flag in internal_setent.
internal_setent is called from the set*ent implementation as:
status = internal_setent (stayopen);
However, for non-host database, this flag is always 0, per the
STAYOPEN magic in nss/getXXent_r.c.
Thus, the fix is this:
- status = internal_setent (stayopen);
+ status = internal_setent (1);
This is not a behavioral change even for the hosts database (where the
application can specify the stayopen flag) because with a call to
sethostent(0), the file handle is still not closed in the
implementation of gethostent.
Conflicts:
NEWS
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Conflicts:
NEWS
resolv/nss_dns/dns-host.c
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This patch adds no FMA generation for e_pow to avoid precision issues
for powerpc. This fixes BZ#18104.
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BZ #16618
Under certain conditions wscanf can allocate too little memory for the
to-be-scanned arguments and overflow the allocated buffer. The
implementation now correctly computes the required buffer size when
using malloc.
A regression test was added to tst-sscanf.
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
NEWS
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The function wordexp() fails to properly handle the WRDE_NOCMD
flag when processing arithmetic inputs in the form of "$((... ``))"
where "..." can be anything valid. The backticks in the arithmetic
epxression are evaluated by in a shell even if WRDE_NOCMD forbade
command substitution. This allows an attacker to attempt to pass
dangerous commands via constructs of the above form, and bypass
the WRDE_NOCMD flag. This patch fixes this by checking for WRDE_NOCMD
in exec_comm(), the only place that can execute a shell. All other
checks for WRDE_NOCMD are superfluous and removed.
We expand the testsuite and add 3 new regression tests of roughly
the same form but with a couple of nested levels.
On top of the 3 new tests we add fork validation to the WRDE_NOCMD
testing. If any forks are detected during the execution of a wordexp()
call with WRDE_NOCMD, the test is marked as failed. This is slightly
heuristic since vfork might be used in the future, but it provides a
higher level of assurance that no shells were executed as part of
command substitution with WRDE_NOCMD in effect. In addition it doesn't
require libpthread or libdl, instead we use the public implementation
namespace function __register_atfork (already part of the public ABI
for libpthread).
Tested on x86_64 with no regressions.
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A larger number of format specifiers coudld cause a stack overflow,
potentially allowing to bypass _FORTIFY_SOURCE format string
protection.
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POSIX requires that we make a copy, so we allocate a new string
and free it in posix_spawn_file_actions_destroy.
Reported by David Reid, Alex Gaynor, and Glyph Lefkowitz. This bug
may have security implications.
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Prevent directory traversal in locale-related environment variables
(CVE-2014-0475).
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This functionality has never worked correctly, and the implementation
contained a security vulnerability (CVE-2014-5119).
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These changes are based on the fix for BZ #14134 in commit
6e230d11837f3ae7b375ea69d7905f0d18eb79e5.
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These changes are based on the fix for BZ #14134 in commit
6e230d11837f3ae7b375ea69d7905f0d18eb79e5.
(cherry picked from commit 41488498b6d9440ee66ab033808cce8323bba7ac)
Conflicts:
NEWS
iconvdata/Makefile
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This functionality has never worked correctly, and the implementation
contained a security vulnerability (CVE-2014-5119).
(cherry picked from commit a1a6a401ab0a3c9f15fb7eaebbdcee24192254e8)
(cherry picked from commit f9df71e895d3552d557e783fdb9d133328195645)
Conflicts:
NEWS
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(cherry picked from commit 95ee7fb13ba99ba265b49531c57e1cb8db629bc6)
Typo fix as in commit 45ef66289acbab17278a73512f9b2a9d8a7ca79d and
NEW enty adjusted to reflect revert occuring in 2.19.1 and 2.20.
Conflicts:
NEWS
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Prevent directory traversal in locale-related environment variables
(CVE-2014-0475).
(cherry picked from commit 4e8f95a0df7c2300b830ec12c0ae1e161bc8a8a3)
Addiational backporting fixes:
Added tst-setlocale3-ENV to localedata/Makefile
Conflicts:
NEWS
localedata/Makefile
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