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authorMarius Bakke <mbakke@fastmail.com>2017-03-11 20:20:50 +0100
committerMarius Bakke <mbakke@fastmail.com>2017-03-12 18:40:56 +0100
commite4d34cd0f0ced54210ed2df2b251430a9c98c6f4 (patch)
tree3d391e7ac3857277b133ee590138c276f9390bb0
parent343cee8af31e4dd917b88bec768a95dc449cadce (diff)
downloadpatches-e4d34cd0f0ced54210ed2df2b251430a9c98c6f4.tar
patches-e4d34cd0f0ced54210ed2df2b251430a9c98c6f4.tar.gz
gnu: python@3.5: Fix getentropy() calls on kernels < 3.17.
* gnu/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch: New file. * gnu/local.mk (dist_patch_DATA): Add it. * gnu/packages/python.scm (python-3.5, python-minimal, python-minimal-wrapper, python-wrapper)[source]: Use it.
-rw-r--r--gnu/local.mk1
-rw-r--r--gnu/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch720
-rw-r--r--gnu/packages/python.scm1
3 files changed, 722 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/gnu/local.mk b/gnu/local.mk
index 3356c9e34c..c51e04289b 100644
--- a/gnu/local.mk
+++ b/gnu/local.mk
@@ -855,6 +855,7 @@ dist_patch_DATA = \
%D%/packages/patches/python-3-search-paths.patch \
%D%/packages/patches/python-3.4-fix-tests.patch \
%D%/packages/patches/python-3.5-fix-tests.patch \
+ %D%/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch \
%D%/packages/patches/python-dendropy-fix-tests.patch \
%D%/packages/patches/python-file-double-encoding-bug.patch \
%D%/packages/patches/python-fix-tests.patch \
diff --git a/gnu/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch b/gnu/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8a12b5b448
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gnu/packages/patches/python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch
@@ -0,0 +1,720 @@
+This patch resolves a compatibility issue when compiled against glibc 2.25
+and run runder kernels < 3.17:
+
+https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1410175
+
+Upstream bug URL: https://bugs.python.org/issue29157
+
+Patch copied from upstream source repository:
+
+https://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/8125d9a8152b
+
+# HG changeset patch
+# User Victor Stinner <victor.stinner@gmail.com>
+# Date 1483957133 -3600
+# Node ID 8125d9a8152b79e712cb09c7094b9129b9bcea86
+# Parent 337461574c90281630751b6095c4e1baf380cf7d
+Issue #29157: Prefer getrandom() over getentropy()
+
+Copy and then adapt Python/random.c from default branch. Difference between 3.5
+and default branches:
+
+* Python 3.5 only uses getrandom() in non-blocking mode: flags=GRND_NONBLOCK
+* If getrandom() fails with EAGAIN: py_getrandom() immediately fails and
+ remembers that getrandom() doesn't work.
+* Python 3.5 has no _PyOS_URandomNonblock() function: _PyOS_URandom()
+ works in non-blocking mode on Python 3.5
+
+diff --git a/Python/random.c b/Python/random.c
+--- Python/random.c
++++ Python/random.c
+@@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
+ #include "Python.h"
+ #ifdef MS_WINDOWS
+ # include <windows.h>
++/* All sample MSDN wincrypt programs include the header below. It is at least
++ * required with Min GW. */
++# include <wincrypt.h>
+ #else
+ # include <fcntl.h>
+ # ifdef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H
+@@ -37,10 +40,9 @@ win32_urandom_init(int raise)
+ return 0;
+
+ error:
+- if (raise)
++ if (raise) {
+ PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr(0);
+- else
+- Py_FatalError("Failed to initialize Windows random API (CryptoGen)");
++ }
+ return -1;
+ }
+
+@@ -53,8 +55,9 @@ win32_urandom(unsigned char *buffer, Py_
+
+ if (hCryptProv == 0)
+ {
+- if (win32_urandom_init(raise) == -1)
++ if (win32_urandom_init(raise) == -1) {
+ return -1;
++ }
+ }
+
+ while (size > 0)
+@@ -63,11 +66,9 @@ win32_urandom(unsigned char *buffer, Py_
+ if (!CryptGenRandom(hCryptProv, (DWORD)chunk, buffer))
+ {
+ /* CryptGenRandom() failed */
+- if (raise)
++ if (raise) {
+ PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr(0);
+- else
+- Py_FatalError("Failed to initialized the randomized hash "
+- "secret using CryptoGen)");
++ }
+ return -1;
+ }
+ buffer += chunk;
+@@ -76,58 +77,23 @@ win32_urandom(unsigned char *buffer, Py_
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+-/* Issue #25003: Don't use getentropy() on Solaris (available since
+- * Solaris 11.3), it is blocking whereas os.urandom() should not block. */
+-#elif defined(HAVE_GETENTROPY) && !defined(sun)
+-#define PY_GETENTROPY 1
+-
+-/* Fill buffer with size pseudo-random bytes generated by getentropy().
+- Return 0 on success, or raise an exception and return -1 on error.
+-
+- If fatal is nonzero, call Py_FatalError() instead of raising an exception
+- on error. */
+-static int
+-py_getentropy(unsigned char *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int fatal)
+-{
+- while (size > 0) {
+- Py_ssize_t len = Py_MIN(size, 256);
+- int res;
+-
+- if (!fatal) {
+- Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
+- res = getentropy(buffer, len);
+- Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
+-
+- if (res < 0) {
+- PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_OSError);
+- return -1;
+- }
+- }
+- else {
+- res = getentropy(buffer, len);
+- if (res < 0)
+- Py_FatalError("getentropy() failed");
+- }
+-
+- buffer += len;
+- size -= len;
+- }
+- return 0;
+-}
+-
+-#else
++#else /* !MS_WINDOWS */
+
+ #if defined(HAVE_GETRANDOM) || defined(HAVE_GETRANDOM_SYSCALL)
+ #define PY_GETRANDOM 1
+
+-/* Call getrandom()
++/* Call getrandom() to get random bytes:
++
+ - Return 1 on success
+- - Return 0 if getrandom() syscall is not available (failed with ENOSYS or
+- EPERM) or if getrandom(GRND_NONBLOCK) failed with EAGAIN (system urandom
+- not initialized yet) and raise=0.
++ - Return 0 if getrandom() is not available (failed with ENOSYS or EPERM),
++ or if getrandom(GRND_NONBLOCK) failed with EAGAIN (system urandom not
++ initialized yet).
+ - Raise an exception (if raise is non-zero) and return -1 on error:
+- getrandom() failed with EINTR and the Python signal handler raised an
+- exception, or getrandom() failed with a different error. */
++ if getrandom() failed with EINTR, raise is non-zero and the Python signal
++ handler raised an exception, or if getrandom() failed with a different
++ error.
++
++ getrandom() is retried if it failed with EINTR: interrupted by a signal. */
+ static int
+ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise)
+ {
+@@ -142,16 +108,19 @@ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t si
+ * see https://bugs.python.org/issue26839. To avoid this, use the
+ * GRND_NONBLOCK flag. */
+ const int flags = GRND_NONBLOCK;
++ char *dest;
+ long n;
+
+ if (!getrandom_works) {
+ return 0;
+ }
+
++ dest = buffer;
+ while (0 < size) {
+ #ifdef sun
+ /* Issue #26735: On Solaris, getrandom() is limited to returning up
+- to 1024 bytes */
++ to 1024 bytes. Call it multiple times if more bytes are
++ requested. */
+ n = Py_MIN(size, 1024);
+ #else
+ n = Py_MIN(size, LONG_MAX);
+@@ -161,34 +130,35 @@ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t si
+ #ifdef HAVE_GETRANDOM
+ if (raise) {
+ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
+- n = getrandom(buffer, n, flags);
++ n = getrandom(dest, n, flags);
+ Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
+ }
+ else {
+- n = getrandom(buffer, n, flags);
++ n = getrandom(dest, n, flags);
+ }
+ #else
+ /* On Linux, use the syscall() function because the GNU libc doesn't
+- * expose the Linux getrandom() syscall yet. See:
+- * https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17252 */
++ expose the Linux getrandom() syscall yet. See:
++ https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17252 */
+ if (raise) {
+ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
+- n = syscall(SYS_getrandom, buffer, n, flags);
++ n = syscall(SYS_getrandom, dest, n, flags);
+ Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
+ }
+ else {
+- n = syscall(SYS_getrandom, buffer, n, flags);
++ n = syscall(SYS_getrandom, dest, n, flags);
+ }
+ #endif
+
+ if (n < 0) {
+- /* ENOSYS: getrandom() syscall not supported by the kernel (but
+- * maybe supported by the host which built Python). EPERM:
+- * getrandom() syscall blocked by SECCOMP or something else. */
++ /* ENOSYS: the syscall is not supported by the kernel.
++ EPERM: the syscall is blocked by a security policy (ex: SECCOMP)
++ or something else. */
+ if (errno == ENOSYS || errno == EPERM) {
+ getrandom_works = 0;
+ return 0;
+ }
++
+ if (errno == EAGAIN) {
+ /* getrandom(GRND_NONBLOCK) fails with EAGAIN if the system
+ urandom is not initialiazed yet. In this case, fall back on
+@@ -202,32 +172,101 @@ py_getrandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t si
+ }
+
+ if (errno == EINTR) {
+- if (PyErr_CheckSignals()) {
+- if (!raise) {
+- Py_FatalError("getrandom() interrupted by a signal");
++ if (raise) {
++ if (PyErr_CheckSignals()) {
++ return -1;
+ }
+- return -1;
+ }
+
+- /* retry getrandom() */
++ /* retry getrandom() if it was interrupted by a signal */
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ if (raise) {
+ PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_OSError);
+ }
+- else {
+- Py_FatalError("getrandom() failed");
++ return -1;
++ }
++
++ dest += n;
++ size -= n;
++ }
++ return 1;
++}
++
++#elif defined(HAVE_GETENTROPY)
++#define PY_GETENTROPY 1
++
++/* Fill buffer with size pseudo-random bytes generated by getentropy():
++
++ - Return 1 on success
++ - Return 0 if getentropy() syscall is not available (failed with ENOSYS or
++ EPERM).
++ - Raise an exception (if raise is non-zero) and return -1 on error:
++ if getentropy() failed with EINTR, raise is non-zero and the Python signal
++ handler raised an exception, or if getentropy() failed with a different
++ error.
++
++ getentropy() is retried if it failed with EINTR: interrupted by a signal. */
++static int
++py_getentropy(char *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise)
++{
++ /* Is getentropy() supported by the running kernel? Set to 0 if
++ getentropy() failed with ENOSYS or EPERM. */
++ static int getentropy_works = 1;
++
++ if (!getentropy_works) {
++ return 0;
++ }
++
++ while (size > 0) {
++ /* getentropy() is limited to returning up to 256 bytes. Call it
++ multiple times if more bytes are requested. */
++ Py_ssize_t len = Py_MIN(size, 256);
++ int res;
++
++ if (raise) {
++ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
++ res = getentropy(buffer, len);
++ Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
++ }
++ else {
++ res = getentropy(buffer, len);
++ }
++
++ if (res < 0) {
++ /* ENOSYS: the syscall is not supported by the running kernel.
++ EPERM: the syscall is blocked by a security policy (ex: SECCOMP)
++ or something else. */
++ if (errno == ENOSYS || errno == EPERM) {
++ getentropy_works = 0;
++ return 0;
++ }
++
++ if (errno == EINTR) {
++ if (raise) {
++ if (PyErr_CheckSignals()) {
++ return -1;
++ }
++ }
++
++ /* retry getentropy() if it was interrupted by a signal */
++ continue;
++ }
++
++ if (raise) {
++ PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_OSError);
+ }
+ return -1;
+ }
+
+- buffer += n;
+- size -= n;
++ buffer += len;
++ size -= len;
+ }
+ return 1;
+ }
+-#endif
++#endif /* defined(HAVE_GETENTROPY) && !defined(sun) */
++
+
+ static struct {
+ int fd;
+@@ -235,136 +274,123 @@ static struct {
+ ino_t st_ino;
+ } urandom_cache = { -1 };
+
++/* Read random bytes from the /dev/urandom device:
+
+-/* Read 'size' random bytes from py_getrandom(). Fall back on reading from
+- /dev/urandom if getrandom() is not available.
++ - Return 0 on success
++ - Raise an exception (if raise is non-zero) and return -1 on error
+
+- Call Py_FatalError() on error. */
+-static void
+-dev_urandom_noraise(unsigned char *buffer, Py_ssize_t size)
++ Possible causes of errors:
++
++ - open() failed with ENOENT, ENXIO, ENODEV, EACCES: the /dev/urandom device
++ was not found. For example, it was removed manually or not exposed in a
++ chroot or container.
++ - open() failed with a different error
++ - fstat() failed
++ - read() failed or returned 0
++
++ read() is retried if it failed with EINTR: interrupted by a signal.
++
++ The file descriptor of the device is kept open between calls to avoid using
++ many file descriptors when run in parallel from multiple threads:
++ see the issue #18756.
++
++ st_dev and st_ino fields of the file descriptor (from fstat()) are cached to
++ check if the file descriptor was replaced by a different file (which is
++ likely a bug in the application): see the issue #21207.
++
++ If the file descriptor was closed or replaced, open a new file descriptor
++ but don't close the old file descriptor: it probably points to something
++ important for some third-party code. */
++static int
++dev_urandom(char *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise)
+ {
+ int fd;
+ Py_ssize_t n;
+
+- assert (0 < size);
++ if (raise) {
++ struct _Py_stat_struct st;
+
+-#ifdef PY_GETRANDOM
+- if (py_getrandom(buffer, size, 0) == 1) {
+- return;
++ if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0) {
++ /* Does the fd point to the same thing as before? (issue #21207) */
++ if (_Py_fstat_noraise(urandom_cache.fd, &st)
++ || st.st_dev != urandom_cache.st_dev
++ || st.st_ino != urandom_cache.st_ino) {
++ /* Something changed: forget the cached fd (but don't close it,
++ since it probably points to something important for some
++ third-party code). */
++ urandom_cache.fd = -1;
++ }
++ }
++ if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0)
++ fd = urandom_cache.fd;
++ else {
++ fd = _Py_open("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY);
++ if (fd < 0) {
++ if (errno == ENOENT || errno == ENXIO ||
++ errno == ENODEV || errno == EACCES) {
++ PyErr_SetString(PyExc_NotImplementedError,
++ "/dev/urandom (or equivalent) not found");
++ }
++ /* otherwise, keep the OSError exception raised by _Py_open() */
++ return -1;
++ }
++ if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0) {
++ /* urandom_fd was initialized by another thread while we were
++ not holding the GIL, keep it. */
++ close(fd);
++ fd = urandom_cache.fd;
++ }
++ else {
++ if (_Py_fstat(fd, &st)) {
++ close(fd);
++ return -1;
++ }
++ else {
++ urandom_cache.fd = fd;
++ urandom_cache.st_dev = st.st_dev;
++ urandom_cache.st_ino = st.st_ino;
++ }
++ }
++ }
++
++ do {
++ n = _Py_read(fd, buffer, (size_t)size);
++ if (n == -1)
++ return -1;
++ if (n == 0) {
++ PyErr_Format(PyExc_RuntimeError,
++ "Failed to read %zi bytes from /dev/urandom",
++ size);
++ return -1;
++ }
++
++ buffer += n;
++ size -= n;
++ } while (0 < size);
+ }
+- /* getrandom() failed with ENOSYS or EPERM,
+- fall back on reading /dev/urandom */
+-#endif
+-
+- fd = _Py_open_noraise("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY);
+- if (fd < 0) {
+- Py_FatalError("Failed to open /dev/urandom");
+- }
+-
+- while (0 < size)
+- {
+- do {
+- n = read(fd, buffer, (size_t)size);
+- } while (n < 0 && errno == EINTR);
+-
+- if (n <= 0) {
+- /* read() failed or returned 0 bytes */
+- Py_FatalError("Failed to read bytes from /dev/urandom");
+- break;
+- }
+- buffer += n;
+- size -= n;
+- }
+- close(fd);
+-}
+-
+-/* Read 'size' random bytes from py_getrandom(). Fall back on reading from
+- /dev/urandom if getrandom() is not available.
+-
+- Return 0 on success. Raise an exception and return -1 on error. */
+-static int
+-dev_urandom_python(char *buffer, Py_ssize_t size)
+-{
+- int fd;
+- Py_ssize_t n;
+- struct _Py_stat_struct st;
+-#ifdef PY_GETRANDOM
+- int res;
+-#endif
+-
+- if (size <= 0)
+- return 0;
+-
+-#ifdef PY_GETRANDOM
+- res = py_getrandom(buffer, size, 1);
+- if (res < 0) {
+- return -1;
+- }
+- if (res == 1) {
+- return 0;
+- }
+- /* getrandom() failed with ENOSYS or EPERM,
+- fall back on reading /dev/urandom */
+-#endif
+-
+- if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0) {
+- /* Does the fd point to the same thing as before? (issue #21207) */
+- if (_Py_fstat_noraise(urandom_cache.fd, &st)
+- || st.st_dev != urandom_cache.st_dev
+- || st.st_ino != urandom_cache.st_ino) {
+- /* Something changed: forget the cached fd (but don't close it,
+- since it probably points to something important for some
+- third-party code). */
+- urandom_cache.fd = -1;
+- }
+- }
+- if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0)
+- fd = urandom_cache.fd;
+ else {
+- fd = _Py_open("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY);
++ fd = _Py_open_noraise("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY);
+ if (fd < 0) {
+- if (errno == ENOENT || errno == ENXIO ||
+- errno == ENODEV || errno == EACCES)
+- PyErr_SetString(PyExc_NotImplementedError,
+- "/dev/urandom (or equivalent) not found");
+- /* otherwise, keep the OSError exception raised by _Py_open() */
+ return -1;
+ }
+- if (urandom_cache.fd >= 0) {
+- /* urandom_fd was initialized by another thread while we were
+- not holding the GIL, keep it. */
+- close(fd);
+- fd = urandom_cache.fd;
+- }
+- else {
+- if (_Py_fstat(fd, &st)) {
++
++ while (0 < size)
++ {
++ do {
++ n = read(fd, buffer, (size_t)size);
++ } while (n < 0 && errno == EINTR);
++
++ if (n <= 0) {
++ /* stop on error or if read(size) returned 0 */
+ close(fd);
+ return -1;
+ }
+- else {
+- urandom_cache.fd = fd;
+- urandom_cache.st_dev = st.st_dev;
+- urandom_cache.st_ino = st.st_ino;
+- }
++
++ buffer += n;
++ size -= n;
+ }
++ close(fd);
+ }
+-
+- do {
+- n = _Py_read(fd, buffer, (size_t)size);
+- if (n == -1) {
+- return -1;
+- }
+- if (n == 0) {
+- PyErr_Format(PyExc_RuntimeError,
+- "Failed to read %zi bytes from /dev/urandom",
+- size);
+- return -1;
+- }
+-
+- buffer += n;
+- size -= n;
+- } while (0 < size);
+-
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+@@ -376,8 +402,8 @@ dev_urandom_close(void)
+ urandom_cache.fd = -1;
+ }
+ }
++#endif /* !MS_WINDOWS */
+
+-#endif
+
+ /* Fill buffer with pseudo-random bytes generated by a linear congruent
+ generator (LCG):
+@@ -400,29 +426,98 @@ lcg_urandom(unsigned int x0, unsigned ch
+ }
+ }
+
++/* Read random bytes:
++
++ - Return 0 on success
++ - Raise an exception (if raise is non-zero) and return -1 on error
++
++ Used sources of entropy ordered by preference, preferred source first:
++
++ - CryptGenRandom() on Windows
++ - getrandom() function (ex: Linux and Solaris): call py_getrandom()
++ - getentropy() function (ex: OpenBSD): call py_getentropy()
++ - /dev/urandom device
++
++ Read from the /dev/urandom device if getrandom() or getentropy() function
++ is not available or does not work.
++
++ Prefer getrandom() over getentropy() because getrandom() supports blocking
++ and non-blocking mode and Python requires non-blocking RNG at startup to
++ initialize its hash secret: see the PEP 524.
++
++ Prefer getrandom() and getentropy() over reading directly /dev/urandom
++ because these functions don't need file descriptors and so avoid ENFILE or
++ EMFILE errors (too many open files): see the issue #18756.
++
++ Only use RNG running in the kernel. They are more secure because it is
++ harder to get the internal state of a RNG running in the kernel land than a
++ RNG running in the user land. The kernel has a direct access to the hardware
++ and has access to hardware RNG, they are used as entropy sources.
++
++ Note: the OpenSSL RAND_pseudo_bytes() function does not automatically reseed
++ its RNG on fork(), two child processes (with the same pid) generate the same
++ random numbers: see issue #18747. Kernel RNGs don't have this issue,
++ they have access to good quality entropy sources.
++
++ If raise is zero:
++
++ - Don't raise an exception on error
++ - Don't call the Python signal handler (don't call PyErr_CheckSignals()) if
++ a function fails with EINTR: retry directly the interrupted function
++ - Don't release the GIL to call functions.
++*/
++static int
++pyurandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t size, int raise)
++{
++#if defined(PY_GETRANDOM) || defined(PY_GETENTROPY)
++ int res;
++#endif
++
++ if (size < 0) {
++ if (raise) {
++ PyErr_Format(PyExc_ValueError,
++ "negative argument not allowed");
++ }
++ return -1;
++ }
++
++ if (size == 0) {
++ return 0;
++ }
++
++#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
++ return win32_urandom((unsigned char *)buffer, size, raise);
++#else
++
++#if defined(PY_GETRANDOM) || defined(PY_GETENTROPY)
++#ifdef PY_GETRANDOM
++ res = py_getrandom(buffer, size, raise);
++#else
++ res = py_getentropy(buffer, size, raise);
++#endif
++ if (res < 0) {
++ return -1;
++ }
++ if (res == 1) {
++ return 0;
++ }
++ /* getrandom() or getentropy() function is not available: failed with
++ ENOSYS, EPERM or EAGAIN. Fall back on reading from /dev/urandom. */
++#endif
++
++ return dev_urandom(buffer, size, raise);
++#endif
++}
++
+ /* Fill buffer with size pseudo-random bytes from the operating system random
+ number generator (RNG). It is suitable for most cryptographic purposes
+ except long living private keys for asymmetric encryption.
+
+- Return 0 on success, raise an exception and return -1 on error. */
++ Return 0 on success. Raise an exception and return -1 on error. */
+ int
+ _PyOS_URandom(void *buffer, Py_ssize_t size)
+ {
+- if (size < 0) {
+- PyErr_Format(PyExc_ValueError,
+- "negative argument not allowed");
+- return -1;
+- }
+- if (size == 0)
+- return 0;
+-
+-#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
+- return win32_urandom((unsigned char *)buffer, size, 1);
+-#elif defined(PY_GETENTROPY)
+- return py_getentropy(buffer, size, 0);
+-#else
+- return dev_urandom_python((char*)buffer, size);
+-#endif
++ return pyurandom(buffer, size, 1);
+ }
+
+ void
+@@ -463,13 +558,14 @@ void
+ }
+ }
+ else {
+-#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
+- (void)win32_urandom(secret, secret_size, 0);
+-#elif defined(PY_GETENTROPY)
+- (void)py_getentropy(secret, secret_size, 1);
+-#else
+- dev_urandom_noraise(secret, secret_size);
+-#endif
++ int res;
++
++ /* _PyRandom_Init() is called very early in the Python initialization
++ and so exceptions cannot be used (use raise=0). */
++ res = pyurandom(secret, secret_size, 0);
++ if (res < 0) {
++ Py_FatalError("failed to get random numbers to initialize Python");
++ }
+ }
+ }
+
+@@ -481,8 +577,6 @@ void
+ CryptReleaseContext(hCryptProv, 0);
+ hCryptProv = 0;
+ }
+-#elif defined(PY_GETENTROPY)
+- /* nothing to clean */
+ #else
+ dev_urandom_close();
+ #endif
+
diff --git a/gnu/packages/python.scm b/gnu/packages/python.scm
index 6e41108df6..2a7257b21d 100644
--- a/gnu/packages/python.scm
+++ b/gnu/packages/python.scm
@@ -325,6 +325,7 @@ data types.")
(patches (search-patches
"python-fix-tests.patch"
"python-3.5-fix-tests.patch"
+ "python-3.5-getentropy-on-old-kernels.patch"
"python-3-deterministic-build-info.patch"
"python-3-search-paths.patch"))
(patch-flags '("-p0"))