/* GNU/Linux native-dependent code common to multiple platforms. Copyright (C) 2001-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "defs.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "target.h" #include "gdb_string.h" #include "gdb_wait.h" #include "gdb_assert.h" #ifdef HAVE_TKILL_SYSCALL #include #include #endif #include #include "linux-nat.h" #include "linux-ptrace.h" #include "linux-procfs.h" #include "linux-fork.h" #include "gdbthread.h" #include "gdbcmd.h" #include "regcache.h" #include "regset.h" #include "inf-ptrace.h" #include "auxv.h" #include /* for MAXPATHLEN */ #include /* for elf_gregset etc. */ #include "elf-bfd.h" /* for elfcore_write_* */ #include "gregset.h" /* for gregset */ #include "gdbcore.h" /* for get_exec_file */ #include /* for isdigit */ #include "gdbthread.h" /* for struct thread_info etc. */ #include "gdb_stat.h" /* for struct stat */ #include /* for O_RDONLY */ #include "inf-loop.h" #include "event-loop.h" #include "event-top.h" #include #include #include "gdb_dirent.h" #include "xml-support.h" #include "terminal.h" #include #include "solib.h" #include "linux-osdata.h" #include "linux-tdep.h" #include "symfile.h" #ifndef SPUFS_MAGIC #define SPUFS_MAGIC 0x23c9b64e #endif #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY # include # if !HAVE_DECL_ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE # define ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE 0x0040000 # endif #endif /* HAVE_PERSONALITY */ /* This comment documents high-level logic of this file. Waiting for events in sync mode =============================== When waiting for an event in a specific thread, we just use waitpid, passing the specific pid, and not passing WNOHANG. When waiting for an event in all threads, waitpid is not quite good. Prior to version 2.4, Linux can either wait for event in main thread, or in secondary threads. (2.4 has the __WALL flag). So, if we use blocking waitpid, we might miss an event. The solution is to use non-blocking waitpid, together with sigsuspend. First, we use non-blocking waitpid to get an event in the main process, if any. Second, we use non-blocking waitpid with the __WCLONED flag to check for events in cloned processes. If nothing is found, we use sigsuspend to wait for SIGCHLD. When SIGCHLD arrives, it means something happened to a child process -- and SIGCHLD will be delivered both for events in main debugged process and in cloned processes. As soon as we know there's an event, we get back to calling nonblocking waitpid with and without __WCLONED. Note that SIGCHLD should be blocked between waitpid and sigsuspend calls, so that we don't miss a signal. If SIGCHLD arrives in between, when it's blocked, the signal becomes pending and sigsuspend immediately notices it and returns. Waiting for events in async mode ================================ In async mode, GDB should always be ready to handle both user input and target events, so neither blocking waitpid nor sigsuspend are viable options. Instead, we should asynchronously notify the GDB main event loop whenever there's an unprocessed event from the target. We detect asynchronous target events by handling SIGCHLD signals. To notify the event loop about target events, the self-pipe trick is used --- a pipe is registered as waitable event source in the event loop, the event loop select/poll's on the read end of this pipe (as well on other event sources, e.g., stdin), and the SIGCHLD handler writes a byte to this pipe. This is more portable than relying on pselect/ppoll, since on kernels that lack those syscalls, libc emulates them with select/poll+sigprocmask, and that is racy (a.k.a. plain broken). Obviously, if we fail to notify the event loop if there's a target event, it's bad. OTOH, if we notify the event loop when there's no event from the target, linux_nat_wait will detect that there's no real event to report, and return event of type TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE. This is mostly harmless, but it will waste time and is better avoided. The main design point is that every time GDB is outside linux-nat.c, we have a SIGCHLD handler installed that is called when something happens to the target and notifies the GDB event loop. Whenever GDB core decides to handle the event, and calls into linux-nat.c, we process things as in sync mode, except that the we never block in sigsuspend. While processing an event, we may end up momentarily blocked in waitpid calls. Those waitpid calls, while blocking, are guarantied to return quickly. E.g., in all-stop mode, before reporting to the core that an LWP hit a breakpoint, all LWPs are stopped by sending them SIGSTOP, and synchronously waiting for the SIGSTOP to be reported. Note that this is different from blocking indefinitely waiting for the next event --- here, we're already handling an event. Use of signals ============== We stop threads by sending a SIGSTOP. The use of SIGSTOP instead of another signal is not entirely significant; we just need for a signal to be delivered, so that we can intercept it. SIGSTOP's advantage is that it can not be blocked. A disadvantage is that it is not a real-time signal, so it can only be queued once; we do not keep track of other sources of SIGSTOP. Two other signals that can't be blocked are SIGCONT and SIGKILL. But we can't use them, because they have special behavior when the signal is generated - not when it is delivered. SIGCONT resumes the entire thread group and SIGKILL kills the entire thread group. A delivered SIGSTOP would stop the entire thread group, not just the thread we tkill'd. But we never let the SIGSTOP be delivered; we always intercept and cancel it (by PTRACE_CONT without passing SIGSTOP). We could use a real-time signal instead. This would solve those problems; we could use PTRACE_GETSIGINFO to locate the specific stop signals sent by GDB. But we would still have to have some support for SIGSTOP, since PTRACE_ATTACH generates it, and there are races with trying to find a signal that is not blocked. */ #ifndef O_LARGEFILE #define O_LARGEFILE 0 #endif /* Unlike other extended result codes, WSTOPSIG (status) on PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD syscall events doesn't return SIGTRAP, but instead SIGTRAP with bit 7 set. */ #define SYSCALL_SIGTRAP (SIGTRAP | 0x80) /* The single-threaded native GNU/Linux target_ops. We save a pointer for the use of the multi-threaded target. */ static struct target_ops *linux_ops; static struct target_ops linux_ops_saved; /* The method to call, if any, when a new thread is attached. */ static void (*linux_nat_new_thread) (struct lwp_info *); /* Hook to call prior to resuming a thread. */ static void (*linux_nat_prepare_to_resume) (struct lwp_info *); /* The method to call, if any, when the siginfo object needs to be converted between the layout returned by ptrace, and the layout in the architecture of the inferior. */ static int (*linux_nat_siginfo_fixup) (struct siginfo *, gdb_byte *, int); /* The saved to_xfer_partial method, inherited from inf-ptrace.c. Called by our to_xfer_partial. */ static LONGEST (*super_xfer_partial) (struct target_ops *, enum target_object, const char *, gdb_byte *, const gdb_byte *, ULONGEST, LONGEST); static int debug_linux_nat; static void show_debug_linux_nat (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("Debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module is %s.\n"), value); } struct simple_pid_list { int pid; int status; struct simple_pid_list *next; }; struct simple_pid_list *stopped_pids; /* This variable is a tri-state flag: -1 for unknown, 0 if PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK can not be used, 1 if it can. */ static int linux_supports_tracefork_flag = -1; /* This variable is a tri-state flag: -1 for unknown, 0 if PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD can not be used, 1 if it can. */ static int linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag = -1; /* If we have PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK, this flag indicates whether we also have PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE. */ static int linux_supports_tracevforkdone_flag = -1; /* Stores the current used ptrace() options. */ static int current_ptrace_options = 0; /* Async mode support. */ /* The read/write ends of the pipe registered as waitable file in the event loop. */ static int linux_nat_event_pipe[2] = { -1, -1 }; /* Flush the event pipe. */ static void async_file_flush (void) { int ret; char buf; do { ret = read (linux_nat_event_pipe[0], &buf, 1); } while (ret >= 0 || (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR)); } /* Put something (anything, doesn't matter what, or how much) in event pipe, so that the select/poll in the event-loop realizes we have something to process. */ static void async_file_mark (void) { int ret; /* It doesn't really matter what the pipe contains, as long we end up with something in it. Might as well flush the previous left-overs. */ async_file_flush (); do { ret = write (linux_nat_event_pipe[1], "+", 1); } while (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR); /* Ignore EAGAIN. If the pipe is full, the event loop will already be awakened anyway. */ } static void linux_nat_async (void (*callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type, void *context), void *context); static int kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo); static int stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data); static void block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask); static void restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask); struct lwp_info; static struct lwp_info *add_lwp (ptid_t ptid); static void purge_lwp_list (int pid); static void delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid); static struct lwp_info *find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid); /* Trivial list manipulation functions to keep track of a list of new stopped processes. */ static void add_to_pid_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int status) { struct simple_pid_list *new_pid = xmalloc (sizeof (struct simple_pid_list)); new_pid->pid = pid; new_pid->status = status; new_pid->next = *listp; *listp = new_pid; } static int in_pid_list_p (struct simple_pid_list *list, int pid) { struct simple_pid_list *p; for (p = list; p != NULL; p = p->next) if (p->pid == pid) return 1; return 0; } static int pull_pid_from_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int *statusp) { struct simple_pid_list **p; for (p = listp; *p != NULL; p = &(*p)->next) if ((*p)->pid == pid) { struct simple_pid_list *next = (*p)->next; *statusp = (*p)->status; xfree (*p); *p = next; return 1; } return 0; } /* A helper function for linux_test_for_tracefork, called after fork (). */ static void linux_tracefork_child (void) { ptrace (PTRACE_TRACEME, 0, 0, 0); kill (getpid (), SIGSTOP); fork (); _exit (0); } /* Wrapper function for waitpid which handles EINTR. */ static int my_waitpid (int pid, int *statusp, int flags) { int ret; do { ret = waitpid (pid, statusp, flags); } while (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR); return ret; } /* Determine if PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK can be used to follow fork events. First, we try to enable fork tracing on ORIGINAL_PID. If this fails, we know that the feature is not available. This may change the tracing options for ORIGINAL_PID, but we'll be setting them shortly anyway. However, if it succeeds, we don't know for sure that the feature is available; old versions of PTRACE_SETOPTIONS ignored unknown options. We create a child process, attach to it, use PTRACE_SETOPTIONS to enable fork tracing, and let it fork. If the process exits, we assume that we can't use TRACEFORK; if we get the fork notification, and we can extract the new child's PID, then we assume that we can. */ static void linux_test_for_tracefork (int original_pid) { int child_pid, ret, status; long second_pid; sigset_t prev_mask; /* We don't want those ptrace calls to be interrupted. */ block_child_signals (&prev_mask); linux_supports_tracefork_flag = 0; linux_supports_tracevforkdone_flag = 0; ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, original_pid, 0, PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK); if (ret != 0) { restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return; } child_pid = fork (); if (child_pid == -1) perror_with_name (("fork")); if (child_pid == 0) linux_tracefork_child (); ret = my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0); if (ret == -1) perror_with_name (("waitpid")); else if (ret != child_pid) error (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: waitpid: unexpected result %d."), ret); if (! WIFSTOPPED (status)) error (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: waitpid: unexpected status %d."), status); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, child_pid, 0, PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK); if (ret != 0) { ret = ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, child_pid, 0, 0); if (ret != 0) { warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: failed to kill child")); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return; } ret = my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0); if (ret != child_pid) warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: failed " "to wait for killed child")); else if (!WIFSIGNALED (status)) warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: unexpected " "wait status 0x%x from killed child"), status); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return; } /* Check whether PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE is available. */ ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, child_pid, 0, PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE); linux_supports_tracevforkdone_flag = (ret == 0); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, child_pid, 0, 0); if (ret != 0) warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: failed to resume child")); ret = my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0); if (ret == child_pid && WIFSTOPPED (status) && status >> 16 == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK) { second_pid = 0; ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, child_pid, 0, &second_pid); if (ret == 0 && second_pid != 0) { int second_status; linux_supports_tracefork_flag = 1; my_waitpid (second_pid, &second_status, 0); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, second_pid, 0, 0); if (ret != 0) warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: " "failed to kill second child")); my_waitpid (second_pid, &status, 0); } } else warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: unexpected result from waitpid " "(%d, status 0x%x)"), ret, status); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, child_pid, 0, 0); if (ret != 0) warning (_("linux_test_for_tracefork: failed to kill child")); my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); } /* Determine if PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD can be used to follow syscalls. We try to enable syscall tracing on ORIGINAL_PID. If this fails, we know that the feature is not available. This may change the tracing options for ORIGINAL_PID, but we'll be setting them shortly anyway. */ static void linux_test_for_tracesysgood (int original_pid) { int ret; sigset_t prev_mask; /* We don't want those ptrace calls to be interrupted. */ block_child_signals (&prev_mask); linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag = 0; ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, original_pid, 0, PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD); if (ret != 0) goto out; linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag = 1; out: restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); } /* Determine wether we support PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD option available. This function also sets linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag. */ static int linux_supports_tracesysgood (int pid) { if (linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag == -1) linux_test_for_tracesysgood (pid); return linux_supports_tracesysgood_flag; } /* Return non-zero iff we have tracefork functionality available. This function also sets linux_supports_tracefork_flag. */ static int linux_supports_tracefork (int pid) { if (linux_supports_tracefork_flag == -1) linux_test_for_tracefork (pid); return linux_supports_tracefork_flag; } static int linux_supports_tracevforkdone (int pid) { if (linux_supports_tracefork_flag == -1) linux_test_for_tracefork (pid); return linux_supports_tracevforkdone_flag; } static void linux_enable_tracesysgood (ptid_t ptid) { int pid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid); if (pid == 0) pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid); if (linux_supports_tracesysgood (pid) == 0) return; current_ptrace_options |= PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD; ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, pid, 0, current_ptrace_options); } void linux_enable_event_reporting (ptid_t ptid) { int pid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid); if (pid == 0) pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid); if (! linux_supports_tracefork (pid)) return; current_ptrace_options |= PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORK | PTRACE_O_TRACEEXEC | PTRACE_O_TRACECLONE; if (linux_supports_tracevforkdone (pid)) current_ptrace_options |= PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE; /* Do not enable PTRACE_O_TRACEEXIT until GDB is more prepared to support read-only process state. */ ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, pid, 0, current_ptrace_options); } static void linux_child_post_attach (int pid) { linux_enable_event_reporting (pid_to_ptid (pid)); linux_enable_tracesysgood (pid_to_ptid (pid)); } static void linux_child_post_startup_inferior (ptid_t ptid) { linux_enable_event_reporting (ptid); linux_enable_tracesysgood (ptid); } /* Return the number of known LWPs in the tgid given by PID. */ static int num_lwps (int pid) { int count = 0; struct lwp_info *lp; for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lp->next) if (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == pid) count++; return count; } /* Call delete_lwp with prototype compatible for make_cleanup. */ static void delete_lwp_cleanup (void *lp_voidp) { struct lwp_info *lp = lp_voidp; delete_lwp (lp->ptid); } static int linux_child_follow_fork (struct target_ops *ops, int follow_child) { sigset_t prev_mask; int has_vforked; int parent_pid, child_pid; block_child_signals (&prev_mask); has_vforked = (inferior_thread ()->pending_follow.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED); parent_pid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid); if (parent_pid == 0) parent_pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid); child_pid = PIDGET (inferior_thread ()->pending_follow.value.related_pid); if (!detach_fork) linux_enable_event_reporting (pid_to_ptid (child_pid)); if (has_vforked && !non_stop /* Non-stop always resumes both branches. */ && (!target_is_async_p () || sync_execution) && !(follow_child || detach_fork || sched_multi)) { /* The parent stays blocked inside the vfork syscall until the child execs or exits. If we don't let the child run, then the parent stays blocked. If we're telling the parent to run in the foreground, the user will not be able to ctrl-c to get back the terminal, effectively hanging the debug session. */ fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, _("\ Can not resume the parent process over vfork in the foreground while\n\ holding the child stopped. Try \"set detach-on-fork\" or \ \"set schedule-multiple\".\n")); /* FIXME output string > 80 columns. */ return 1; } if (! follow_child) { struct lwp_info *child_lp = NULL; /* We're already attached to the parent, by default. */ /* Detach new forked process? */ if (detach_fork) { struct cleanup *old_chain; /* Before detaching from the child, remove all breakpoints from it. If we forked, then this has already been taken care of by infrun.c. If we vforked however, any breakpoint inserted in the parent is visible in the child, even those added while stopped in a vfork catchpoint. This will remove the breakpoints from the parent also, but they'll be reinserted below. */ if (has_vforked) { /* keep breakpoints list in sync. */ remove_breakpoints_pid (GET_PID (inferior_ptid)); } if (info_verbose || debug_linux_nat) { target_terminal_ours (); fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdlog, "Detaching after fork from " "child process %d.\n", child_pid); } old_chain = save_inferior_ptid (); inferior_ptid = ptid_build (child_pid, child_pid, 0); child_lp = add_lwp (inferior_ptid); child_lp->stopped = 1; child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; make_cleanup (delete_lwp_cleanup, child_lp); /* CHILD_LP has new PID, therefore linux_nat_new_thread is not called for it. See i386_inferior_data_get for the Linux kernel specifics. Ensure linux_nat_prepare_to_resume will reset the hardware debug registers. It is done by the linux_nat_new_thread call, which is being skipped in add_lwp above for the first lwp of a pid. */ gdb_assert (num_lwps (GET_PID (child_lp->ptid)) == 1); if (linux_nat_new_thread != NULL) linux_nat_new_thread (child_lp); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (child_lp); ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, child_pid, 0, 0); do_cleanups (old_chain); } else { struct inferior *parent_inf, *child_inf; struct cleanup *old_chain; /* Add process to GDB's tables. */ child_inf = add_inferior (child_pid); parent_inf = current_inferior (); child_inf->attach_flag = parent_inf->attach_flag; copy_terminal_info (child_inf, parent_inf); old_chain = save_inferior_ptid (); save_current_program_space (); inferior_ptid = ptid_build (child_pid, child_pid, 0); add_thread (inferior_ptid); child_lp = add_lwp (inferior_ptid); child_lp->stopped = 1; child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; child_inf->symfile_flags = SYMFILE_NO_READ; /* If this is a vfork child, then the address-space is shared with the parent. */ if (has_vforked) { child_inf->pspace = parent_inf->pspace; child_inf->aspace = parent_inf->aspace; /* The parent will be frozen until the child is done with the shared region. Keep track of the parent. */ child_inf->vfork_parent = parent_inf; child_inf->pending_detach = 0; parent_inf->vfork_child = child_inf; parent_inf->pending_detach = 0; } else { child_inf->aspace = new_address_space (); child_inf->pspace = add_program_space (child_inf->aspace); child_inf->removable = 1; set_current_program_space (child_inf->pspace); clone_program_space (child_inf->pspace, parent_inf->pspace); /* Let the shared library layer (solib-svr4) learn about this new process, relocate the cloned exec, pull in shared libraries, and install the solib event breakpoint. If a "cloned-VM" event was propagated better throughout the core, this wouldn't be required. */ solib_create_inferior_hook (0); } /* Let the thread_db layer learn about this new process. */ check_for_thread_db (); do_cleanups (old_chain); } if (has_vforked) { struct lwp_info *parent_lp; struct inferior *parent_inf; parent_inf = current_inferior (); /* If we detached from the child, then we have to be careful to not insert breakpoints in the parent until the child is done with the shared memory region. However, if we're staying attached to the child, then we can and should insert breakpoints, so that we can debug it. A subsequent child exec or exit is enough to know when does the child stops using the parent's address space. */ parent_inf->waiting_for_vfork_done = detach_fork; parent_inf->pspace->breakpoints_not_allowed = detach_fork; parent_lp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (parent_pid)); gdb_assert (linux_supports_tracefork_flag >= 0); if (linux_supports_tracevforkdone (0)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LCFF: waiting for VFORK_DONE on %d\n", parent_pid); parent_lp->stopped = 1; /* We'll handle the VFORK_DONE event like any other event, in target_wait. */ } else { /* We can't insert breakpoints until the child has finished with the shared memory region. We need to wait until that happens. Ideal would be to just call: - ptrace (PTRACE_SYSCALL, parent_pid, 0, 0); - waitpid (parent_pid, &status, __WALL); However, most architectures can't handle a syscall being traced on the way out if it wasn't traced on the way in. We might also think to loop, continuing the child until it exits or gets a SIGTRAP. One problem is that the child might call ptrace with PTRACE_TRACEME. There's no simple and reliable way to figure out when the vforked child will be done with its copy of the shared memory. We could step it out of the syscall, two instructions, let it go, and then single-step the parent once. When we have hardware single-step, this would work; with software single-step it could still be made to work but we'd have to be able to insert single-step breakpoints in the child, and we'd have to insert -just- the single-step breakpoint in the parent. Very awkward. In the end, the best we can do is to make sure it runs for a little while. Hopefully it will be out of range of any breakpoints we reinsert. Usually this is only the single-step breakpoint at vfork's return point. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LCFF: no VFORK_DONE " "support, sleeping a bit\n"); usleep (10000); /* Pretend we've seen a PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE event, and leave it pending. The next linux_nat_resume call will notice a pending event, and bypasses actually resuming the inferior. */ parent_lp->status = 0; parent_lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE; parent_lp->stopped = 1; /* If we're in async mode, need to tell the event loop there's something here to process. */ if (target_can_async_p ()) async_file_mark (); } } } else { struct inferior *parent_inf, *child_inf; struct lwp_info *child_lp; struct program_space *parent_pspace; if (info_verbose || debug_linux_nat) { target_terminal_ours (); if (has_vforked) fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdlog, _("Attaching after process %d " "vfork to child process %d.\n"), parent_pid, child_pid); else fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdlog, _("Attaching after process %d " "fork to child process %d.\n"), parent_pid, child_pid); } /* Add the new inferior first, so that the target_detach below doesn't unpush the target. */ child_inf = add_inferior (child_pid); parent_inf = current_inferior (); child_inf->attach_flag = parent_inf->attach_flag; copy_terminal_info (child_inf, parent_inf); parent_pspace = parent_inf->pspace; /* If we're vforking, we want to hold on to the parent until the child exits or execs. At child exec or exit time we can remove the old breakpoints from the parent and detach or resume debugging it. Otherwise, detach the parent now; we'll want to reuse it's program/address spaces, but we can't set them to the child before removing breakpoints from the parent, otherwise, the breakpoints module could decide to remove breakpoints from the wrong process (since they'd be assigned to the same address space). */ if (has_vforked) { gdb_assert (child_inf->vfork_parent == NULL); gdb_assert (parent_inf->vfork_child == NULL); child_inf->vfork_parent = parent_inf; child_inf->pending_detach = 0; parent_inf->vfork_child = child_inf; parent_inf->pending_detach = detach_fork; parent_inf->waiting_for_vfork_done = 0; } else if (detach_fork) target_detach (NULL, 0); /* Note that the detach above makes PARENT_INF dangling. */ /* Add the child thread to the appropriate lists, and switch to this new thread, before cloning the program space, and informing the solib layer about this new process. */ inferior_ptid = ptid_build (child_pid, child_pid, 0); add_thread (inferior_ptid); child_lp = add_lwp (inferior_ptid); child_lp->stopped = 1; child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; /* If this is a vfork child, then the address-space is shared with the parent. If we detached from the parent, then we can reuse the parent's program/address spaces. */ if (has_vforked || detach_fork) { child_inf->pspace = parent_pspace; child_inf->aspace = child_inf->pspace->aspace; } else { child_inf->aspace = new_address_space (); child_inf->pspace = add_program_space (child_inf->aspace); child_inf->removable = 1; child_inf->symfile_flags = SYMFILE_NO_READ; set_current_program_space (child_inf->pspace); clone_program_space (child_inf->pspace, parent_pspace); /* Let the shared library layer (solib-svr4) learn about this new process, relocate the cloned exec, pull in shared libraries, and install the solib event breakpoint. If a "cloned-VM" event was propagated better throughout the core, this wouldn't be required. */ solib_create_inferior_hook (0); } /* Let the thread_db layer learn about this new process. */ check_for_thread_db (); } restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return 0; } static int linux_child_insert_fork_catchpoint (int pid) { return !linux_supports_tracefork (pid); } static int linux_child_remove_fork_catchpoint (int pid) { return 0; } static int linux_child_insert_vfork_catchpoint (int pid) { return !linux_supports_tracefork (pid); } static int linux_child_remove_vfork_catchpoint (int pid) { return 0; } static int linux_child_insert_exec_catchpoint (int pid) { return !linux_supports_tracefork (pid); } static int linux_child_remove_exec_catchpoint (int pid) { return 0; } static int linux_child_set_syscall_catchpoint (int pid, int needed, int any_count, int table_size, int *table) { if (!linux_supports_tracesysgood (pid)) return 1; /* On GNU/Linux, we ignore the arguments. It means that we only enable the syscall catchpoints, but do not disable them. Also, we do not use the `table' information because we do not filter system calls here. We let GDB do the logic for us. */ return 0; } /* On GNU/Linux there are no real LWP's. The closest thing to LWP's are processes sharing the same VM space. A multi-threaded process is basically a group of such processes. However, such a grouping is almost entirely a user-space issue; the kernel doesn't enforce such a grouping at all (this might change in the future). In general, we'll rely on the threads library (i.e. the GNU/Linux Threads library) to provide such a grouping. It is perfectly well possible to write a multi-threaded application without the assistance of a threads library, by using the clone system call directly. This module should be able to give some rudimentary support for debugging such applications if developers specify the CLONE_PTRACE flag in the clone system call, and are using the Linux kernel 2.4 or above. Note that there are some peculiarities in GNU/Linux that affect this code: - In general one should specify the __WCLONE flag to waitpid in order to make it report events for any of the cloned processes (and leave it out for the initial process). However, if a cloned process has exited the exit status is only reported if the __WCLONE flag is absent. Linux kernel 2.4 has a __WALL flag, but we cannot use it since GDB must work on older systems too. - When a traced, cloned process exits and is waited for by the debugger, the kernel reassigns it to the original parent and keeps it around as a "zombie". Somehow, the GNU/Linux Threads library doesn't notice this, which leads to the "zombie problem": When debugged a multi-threaded process that spawns a lot of threads will run out of processes, even if the threads exit, because the "zombies" stay around. */ /* List of known LWPs. */ struct lwp_info *lwp_list; /* Original signal mask. */ static sigset_t normal_mask; /* Signal mask for use with sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait, initialized in _initialize_linux_nat. */ static sigset_t suspend_mask; /* Signals to block to make that sigsuspend work. */ static sigset_t blocked_mask; /* SIGCHLD action. */ struct sigaction sigchld_action; /* Block child signals (SIGCHLD and linux threads signals), and store the previous mask in PREV_MASK. */ static void block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask) { /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked. */ if (!sigismember (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD)) sigaddset (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD); sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &blocked_mask, prev_mask); } /* Restore child signals mask, previously returned by block_child_signals. */ static void restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask) { sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, prev_mask, NULL); } /* Mask of signals to pass directly to the inferior. */ static sigset_t pass_mask; /* Update signals to pass to the inferior. */ static void linux_nat_pass_signals (int numsigs, unsigned char *pass_signals) { int signo; sigemptyset (&pass_mask); for (signo = 1; signo < NSIG; signo++) { int target_signo = target_signal_from_host (signo); if (target_signo < numsigs && pass_signals[target_signo]) sigaddset (&pass_mask, signo); } } /* Prototypes for local functions. */ static int stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data); static int linux_thread_alive (ptid_t ptid); static char *linux_child_pid_to_exec_file (int pid); /* Convert wait status STATUS to a string. Used for printing debug messages only. */ static char * status_to_str (int status) { static char buf[64]; if (WIFSTOPPED (status)) { if (WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP) snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%s (stopped at syscall)", strsignal (SIGTRAP)); else snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%s (stopped)", strsignal (WSTOPSIG (status))); } else if (WIFSIGNALED (status)) snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%s (terminated)", strsignal (WTERMSIG (status))); else snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%d (exited)", WEXITSTATUS (status)); return buf; } /* Destroy and free LP. */ static void lwp_free (struct lwp_info *lp) { xfree (lp->arch_private); xfree (lp); } /* Remove all LWPs belong to PID from the lwp list. */ static void purge_lwp_list (int pid) { struct lwp_info *lp, *lpprev, *lpnext; lpprev = NULL; for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lpnext) { lpnext = lp->next; if (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == pid) { if (lp == lwp_list) lwp_list = lp->next; else lpprev->next = lp->next; lwp_free (lp); } else lpprev = lp; } } /* Add the LWP specified by PID to the list. Return a pointer to the structure describing the new LWP. The LWP should already be stopped (with an exception for the very first LWP). */ static struct lwp_info * add_lwp (ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp; gdb_assert (is_lwp (ptid)); lp = (struct lwp_info *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct lwp_info)); memset (lp, 0, sizeof (struct lwp_info)); lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue; lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; lp->ptid = ptid; lp->core = -1; lp->next = lwp_list; lwp_list = lp; /* Let the arch specific bits know about this new thread. Current clients of this callback take the opportunity to install watchpoints in the new thread. Don't do this for the first thread though. If we're spawning a child ("run"), the thread executes the shell wrapper first, and we shouldn't touch it until it execs the program we want to debug. For "attach", it'd be okay to call the callback, but it's not necessary, because watchpoints can't yet have been inserted into the inferior. */ if (num_lwps (GET_PID (ptid)) > 1 && linux_nat_new_thread != NULL) linux_nat_new_thread (lp); return lp; } /* Remove the LWP specified by PID from the list. */ static void delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp, *lpprev; lpprev = NULL; for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lpprev = lp, lp = lp->next) if (ptid_equal (lp->ptid, ptid)) break; if (!lp) return; if (lpprev) lpprev->next = lp->next; else lwp_list = lp->next; lwp_free (lp); } /* Return a pointer to the structure describing the LWP corresponding to PID. If no corresponding LWP could be found, return NULL. */ static struct lwp_info * find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp; int lwp; if (is_lwp (ptid)) lwp = GET_LWP (ptid); else lwp = GET_PID (ptid); for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lp->next) if (lwp == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)) return lp; return NULL; } /* Call CALLBACK with its second argument set to DATA for every LWP in the list. If CALLBACK returns 1 for a particular LWP, return a pointer to the structure describing that LWP immediately. Otherwise return NULL. */ struct lwp_info * iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t filter, int (*callback) (struct lwp_info *, void *), void *data) { struct lwp_info *lp, *lpnext; for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lpnext) { lpnext = lp->next; if (ptid_match (lp->ptid, filter)) { if ((*callback) (lp, data)) return lp; } } return NULL; } /* Iterate like iterate_over_lwps does except when forking-off a child call CALLBACK with CALLBACK_DATA specifically only for that new child PID. */ void linux_nat_iterate_watchpoint_lwps (linux_nat_iterate_watchpoint_lwps_ftype callback, void *callback_data) { int inferior_pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid); struct inferior *inf = current_inferior (); if (inf->pid == inferior_pid) { /* Iterate all the threads of the current inferior. Without specifying INFERIOR_PID it would iterate all threads of all inferiors, which is inappropriate for watchpoints. */ iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (inferior_pid), callback, callback_data); } else { /* Detaching a new child PID temporarily present in INFERIOR_PID. */ struct lwp_info *child_lp; struct cleanup *old_chain; pid_t child_pid = GET_PID (inferior_ptid); ptid_t child_ptid = ptid_build (child_pid, child_pid, 0); gdb_assert (!is_lwp (inferior_ptid)); gdb_assert (find_lwp_pid (child_ptid) == NULL); child_lp = add_lwp (child_ptid); child_lp->stopped = 1; child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; old_chain = make_cleanup (delete_lwp_cleanup, child_lp); callback (child_lp, callback_data); do_cleanups (old_chain); } } /* Update our internal state when changing from one checkpoint to another indicated by NEW_PTID. We can only switch single-threaded applications, so we only create one new LWP, and the previous list is discarded. */ void linux_nat_switch_fork (ptid_t new_ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp; purge_lwp_list (GET_PID (inferior_ptid)); lp = add_lwp (new_ptid); lp->stopped = 1; /* This changes the thread's ptid while preserving the gdb thread num. Also changes the inferior pid, while preserving the inferior num. */ thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, new_ptid); /* We've just told GDB core that the thread changed target id, but, in fact, it really is a different thread, with different register contents. */ registers_changed (); } /* Handle the exit of a single thread LP. */ static void exit_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp) { struct thread_info *th = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid); if (th) { if (print_thread_events) printf_unfiltered (_("[%s exited]\n"), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); delete_thread (lp->ptid); } delete_lwp (lp->ptid); } /* Detect `T (stopped)' in `/proc/PID/status'. Other states including `T (tracing stop)' are reported as false. */ static int pid_is_stopped (pid_t pid) { FILE *status_file; char buf[100]; int retval = 0; snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "/proc/%d/status", (int) pid); status_file = fopen (buf, "r"); if (status_file != NULL) { int have_state = 0; while (fgets (buf, sizeof (buf), status_file)) { if (strncmp (buf, "State:", 6) == 0) { have_state = 1; break; } } if (have_state && strstr (buf, "T (stopped)") != NULL) retval = 1; fclose (status_file); } return retval; } /* Wait for the LWP specified by LP, which we have just attached to. Returns a wait status for that LWP, to cache. */ static int linux_nat_post_attach_wait (ptid_t ptid, int first, int *cloned, int *signalled) { pid_t new_pid, pid = GET_LWP (ptid); int status; if (pid_is_stopped (pid)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNPAW: Attaching to a stopped process\n"); /* The process is definitely stopped. It is in a job control stop, unless the kernel predates the TASK_STOPPED / TASK_TRACED distinction, in which case it might be in a ptrace stop. Make sure it is in a ptrace stop; from there we can kill it, signal it, et cetera. First make sure there is a pending SIGSTOP. Since we are already attached, the process can not transition from stopped to running without a PTRACE_CONT; so we know this signal will go into the queue. The SIGSTOP generated by PTRACE_ATTACH is probably already in the queue (unless this kernel is old enough to use TASK_STOPPED for ptrace stops); but since SIGSTOP is not an RT signal, it can only be queued once. */ kill_lwp (pid, SIGSTOP); /* Finally, resume the stopped process. This will deliver the SIGSTOP (or a higher priority signal, just like normal PTRACE_ATTACH). */ ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, pid, 0, 0); } /* Make sure the initial process is stopped. The user-level threads layer might want to poke around in the inferior, and that won't work if things haven't stabilized yet. */ new_pid = my_waitpid (pid, &status, 0); if (new_pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD) { if (first) warning (_("%s is a cloned process"), target_pid_to_str (ptid)); /* Try again with __WCLONE to check cloned processes. */ new_pid = my_waitpid (pid, &status, __WCLONE); *cloned = 1; } gdb_assert (pid == new_pid); if (!WIFSTOPPED (status)) { /* The pid we tried to attach has apparently just exited. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNPAW: Failed to stop %d: %s", pid, status_to_str (status)); return status; } if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP) { *signalled = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNPAW: Received %s after attaching\n", status_to_str (status)); } return status; } /* Attach to the LWP specified by PID. Return 0 if successful, -1 if the new LWP could not be attached, or 1 if we're already auto attached to this thread, but haven't processed the PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE event of its parent thread, so we just ignore its existance, without considering it an error. */ int lin_lwp_attach_lwp (ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp; sigset_t prev_mask; int lwpid; gdb_assert (is_lwp (ptid)); block_child_signals (&prev_mask); lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); lwpid = GET_LWP (ptid); /* We assume that we're already attached to any LWP that has an id equal to the overall process id, and to any LWP that is already in our list of LWPs. If we're not seeing exit events from threads and we've had PID wraparound since we last tried to stop all threads, this assumption might be wrong; fortunately, this is very unlikely to happen. */ if (lwpid != GET_PID (ptid) && lp == NULL) { int status, cloned = 0, signalled = 0; if (ptrace (PTRACE_ATTACH, lwpid, 0, 0) < 0) { if (linux_supports_tracefork_flag) { /* If we haven't stopped all threads when we get here, we may have seen a thread listed in thread_db's list, but not processed the PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE yet. If that's the case, ignore this new thread, and let normal event handling discover it later. */ if (in_pid_list_p (stopped_pids, lwpid)) { /* We've already seen this thread stop, but we haven't seen the PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE extended event yet. */ restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return 0; } else { int new_pid; int status; /* See if we've got a stop for this new child pending. If so, we're already attached. */ new_pid = my_waitpid (lwpid, &status, WNOHANG); if (new_pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD) new_pid = my_waitpid (lwpid, &status, __WCLONE | WNOHANG); if (new_pid != -1) { if (WIFSTOPPED (status)) add_to_pid_list (&stopped_pids, lwpid, status); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return 1; } } } /* If we fail to attach to the thread, issue a warning, but continue. One way this can happen is if thread creation is interrupted; as of Linux kernel 2.6.19, a bug may place threads in the thread list and then fail to create them. */ warning (_("Can't attach %s: %s"), target_pid_to_str (ptid), safe_strerror (errno)); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return -1; } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLAL: PTRACE_ATTACH %s, 0, 0 (OK)\n", target_pid_to_str (ptid)); status = linux_nat_post_attach_wait (ptid, 0, &cloned, &signalled); if (!WIFSTOPPED (status)) { restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return 1; } lp = add_lwp (ptid); lp->stopped = 1; lp->cloned = cloned; lp->signalled = signalled; if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP) { lp->resumed = 1; lp->status = status; } target_post_attach (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLAL: waitpid %s received %s\n", target_pid_to_str (ptid), status_to_str (status)); } } else { /* We assume that the LWP representing the original process is already stopped. Mark it as stopped in the data structure that the GNU/linux ptrace layer uses to keep track of threads. Note that this won't have already been done since the main thread will have, we assume, been stopped by an attach from a different layer. */ if (lp == NULL) lp = add_lwp (ptid); lp->stopped = 1; } lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return 0; } static void linux_nat_create_inferior (struct target_ops *ops, char *exec_file, char *allargs, char **env, int from_tty) { #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY int personality_orig = 0, personality_set = 0; #endif /* HAVE_PERSONALITY */ /* The fork_child mechanism is synchronous and calls target_wait, so we have to mask the async mode. */ #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY if (disable_randomization) { errno = 0; personality_orig = personality (0xffffffff); if (errno == 0 && !(personality_orig & ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE)) { personality_set = 1; personality (personality_orig | ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE); } if (errno != 0 || (personality_set && !(personality (0xffffffff) & ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE))) warning (_("Error disabling address space randomization: %s"), safe_strerror (errno)); } #endif /* HAVE_PERSONALITY */ /* Make sure we report all signals during startup. */ linux_nat_pass_signals (0, NULL); linux_ops->to_create_inferior (ops, exec_file, allargs, env, from_tty); #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY if (personality_set) { errno = 0; personality (personality_orig); if (errno != 0) warning (_("Error restoring address space randomization: %s"), safe_strerror (errno)); } #endif /* HAVE_PERSONALITY */ } static void linux_nat_attach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty) { struct lwp_info *lp; int status; ptid_t ptid; /* Make sure we report all signals during attach. */ linux_nat_pass_signals (0, NULL); linux_ops->to_attach (ops, args, from_tty); /* The ptrace base target adds the main thread with (pid,0,0) format. Decorate it with lwp info. */ ptid = BUILD_LWP (GET_PID (inferior_ptid), GET_PID (inferior_ptid)); thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, ptid); /* Add the initial process as the first LWP to the list. */ lp = add_lwp (ptid); status = linux_nat_post_attach_wait (lp->ptid, 1, &lp->cloned, &lp->signalled); if (!WIFSTOPPED (status)) { if (WIFEXITED (status)) { int exit_code = WEXITSTATUS (status); target_terminal_ours (); target_mourn_inferior (); if (exit_code == 0) error (_("Unable to attach: program exited normally.")); else error (_("Unable to attach: program exited with code %d."), exit_code); } else if (WIFSIGNALED (status)) { enum target_signal signo; target_terminal_ours (); target_mourn_inferior (); signo = target_signal_from_host (WTERMSIG (status)); error (_("Unable to attach: program terminated with signal " "%s, %s."), target_signal_to_name (signo), target_signal_to_string (signo)); } internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("unexpected status %d for PID %ld"), status, (long) GET_LWP (ptid)); } lp->stopped = 1; /* Save the wait status to report later. */ lp->resumed = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNA: waitpid %ld, saving status %s\n", (long) GET_PID (lp->ptid), status_to_str (status)); lp->status = status; if (target_can_async_p ()) target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0); } /* Get pending status of LP. */ static int get_pending_status (struct lwp_info *lp, int *status) { enum target_signal signo = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; /* If we paused threads momentarily, we may have stored pending events in lp->status or lp->waitstatus (see stop_wait_callback), and GDB core hasn't seen any signal for those threads. Otherwise, the last signal reported to the core is found in the thread object's stop_signal. There's a corner case that isn't handled here at present. Only if the thread stopped with a TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED does stop_signal make sense as a real signal to pass to the inferior. Some catchpoint related events, like TARGET_WAITKIND_(V)FORK|EXEC|SYSCALL, have their stop_signal set to TARGET_SIGNAL_SIGTRAP when the catchpoint triggers. But, those traps are debug API (ptrace in our case) related and induced; the inferior wouldn't see them if it wasn't being traced. Hence, we should never pass them to the inferior, even when set to pass state. Since this corner case isn't handled by infrun.c when proceeding with a signal, for consistency, neither do we handle it here (or elsewhere in the file we check for signal pass state). Normally SIGTRAP isn't set to pass state, so this is really a corner case. */ if (lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) signo = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; /* a pending ptrace event, not a real signal. */ else if (lp->status) signo = target_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status)); else if (non_stop && !is_executing (lp->ptid)) { struct thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid); signo = tp->suspend.stop_signal; } else if (!non_stop) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); if (GET_LWP (lp->ptid) == GET_LWP (last_ptid)) { struct thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid); signo = tp->suspend.stop_signal; } } *status = 0; if (signo == TARGET_SIGNAL_0) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "GPT: lwp %s has no pending signal\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } else if (!signal_pass_state (signo)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "GPT: lwp %s had signal %s, " "but it is in no pass state\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), target_signal_to_string (signo)); } else { *status = W_STOPCODE (target_signal_to_host (signo)); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "GPT: lwp %s has pending signal %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), target_signal_to_string (signo)); } return 0; } static int detach_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { gdb_assert (lp->status == 0 || WIFSTOPPED (lp->status)); if (debug_linux_nat && lp->status) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "DC: Pending %s for %s on detach.\n", strsignal (WSTOPSIG (lp->status)), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* If there is a pending SIGSTOP, get rid of it. */ if (lp->signalled) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "DC: Sending SIGCONT to %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); kill_lwp (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), SIGCONT); lp->signalled = 0; } /* We don't actually detach from the LWP that has an id equal to the overall process id just yet. */ if (GET_LWP (lp->ptid) != GET_PID (lp->ptid)) { int status = 0; /* Pass on any pending signal for this LWP. */ get_pending_status (lp, &status); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); errno = 0; if (ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, WSTOPSIG (status)) < 0) error (_("Can't detach %s: %s"), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), safe_strerror (errno)); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "PTRACE_DETACH (%s, %s, 0) (OK)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), strsignal (WSTOPSIG (status))); delete_lwp (lp->ptid); } return 0; } static void linux_nat_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty) { int pid; int status; struct lwp_info *main_lwp; pid = GET_PID (inferior_ptid); if (target_can_async_p ()) linux_nat_async (NULL, 0); /* Stop all threads before detaching. ptrace requires that the thread is stopped to sucessfully detach. */ iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), stop_callback, NULL); /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that they're no longer running. */ iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), stop_wait_callback, NULL); iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), detach_callback, NULL); /* Only the initial process should be left right now. */ gdb_assert (num_lwps (GET_PID (inferior_ptid)) == 1); main_lwp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (pid)); /* Pass on any pending signal for the last LWP. */ if ((args == NULL || *args == '\0') && get_pending_status (main_lwp, &status) != -1 && WIFSTOPPED (status)) { /* Put the signal number in ARGS so that inf_ptrace_detach will pass it along with PTRACE_DETACH. */ args = alloca (8); sprintf (args, "%d", (int) WSTOPSIG (status)); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LND: Sending signal %s to %s\n", args, target_pid_to_str (main_lwp->ptid)); } if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (main_lwp); delete_lwp (main_lwp->ptid); if (forks_exist_p ()) { /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid is being detached from, but there are other viable forks to debug. Detach from the current fork, and context-switch to the first available. */ linux_fork_detach (args, from_tty); if (non_stop && target_can_async_p ()) target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0); } else linux_ops->to_detach (ops, args, from_tty); } /* Resume LP. */ static void resume_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int step) { if (lp->stopped) { struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (GET_PID (lp->ptid)); if (inf->vfork_child != NULL) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "RC: Not resuming %s (vfork parent)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } else if (lp->status == 0 && lp->waitstatus.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "RC: PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (resuming sibling)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); lp->stopped = 0; lp->step = step; memset (&lp->siginfo, 0, sizeof (lp->siginfo)); lp->stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; } else { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "RC: Not resuming sibling %s (has pending)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } } else { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "RC: Not resuming sibling %s (not stopped)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } } static int resume_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { resume_lwp (lp, 0); return 0; } static int resume_clear_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { lp->resumed = 0; lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; return 0; } static int resume_set_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { lp->resumed = 1; lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue; return 0; } static void linux_nat_resume (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid, int step, enum target_signal signo) { sigset_t prev_mask; struct lwp_info *lp; int resume_many; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLR: Preparing to %s %s, %s, inferior_ptid %s\n", step ? "step" : "resume", target_pid_to_str (ptid), (signo != TARGET_SIGNAL_0 ? strsignal (target_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"), target_pid_to_str (inferior_ptid)); block_child_signals (&prev_mask); /* A specific PTID means `step only this process id'. */ resume_many = (ptid_equal (minus_one_ptid, ptid) || ptid_is_pid (ptid)); /* Mark the lwps we're resuming as resumed. */ iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resume_set_callback, NULL); /* See if it's the current inferior that should be handled specially. */ if (resume_many) lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid); else lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); gdb_assert (lp != NULL); /* Remember if we're stepping. */ lp->step = step; lp->last_resume_kind = step ? resume_step : resume_continue; /* If we have a pending wait status for this thread, there is no point in resuming the process. But first make sure that linux_nat_wait won't preemptively handle the event - we should never take this short-circuit if we are going to leave LP running, since we have skipped resuming all the other threads. This bit of code needs to be synchronized with linux_nat_wait. */ if (lp->status && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status)) { if (!lp->step && WSTOPSIG (lp->status) && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (lp->status))) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLR: Not short circuiting for ignored " "status 0x%x\n", lp->status); /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue this thread with a signal? */ gdb_assert (signo == TARGET_SIGNAL_0); signo = target_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status)); lp->status = 0; } } if (lp->status || lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) { /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue this thread with a signal? */ gdb_assert (signo == TARGET_SIGNAL_0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLR: Short circuiting for status 0x%x\n", lp->status); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); if (target_can_async_p ()) { target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0); /* Tell the event loop we have something to process. */ async_file_mark (); } return; } /* Mark LWP as not stopped to prevent it from being continued by resume_callback. */ lp->stopped = 0; if (resume_many) iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resume_callback, NULL); /* Convert to something the lower layer understands. */ ptid = pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, ptid, step, signo); memset (&lp->siginfo, 0, sizeof (lp->siginfo)); lp->stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLR: %s %s, %s (resume event thread)\n", step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT", target_pid_to_str (ptid), (signo != TARGET_SIGNAL_0 ? strsignal (target_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0")); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); if (target_can_async_p ()) target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0); } /* Send a signal to an LWP. */ static int kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo) { /* Use tkill, if possible, in case we are using nptl threads. If tkill fails, then we are not using nptl threads and we should be using kill. */ #ifdef HAVE_TKILL_SYSCALL { static int tkill_failed; if (!tkill_failed) { int ret; errno = 0; ret = syscall (__NR_tkill, lwpid, signo); if (errno != ENOSYS) return ret; tkill_failed = 1; } } #endif return kill (lwpid, signo); } /* Handle a GNU/Linux syscall trap wait response. If we see a syscall event, check if the core is interested in it: if not, ignore the event, and keep waiting; otherwise, we need to toggle the LWP's syscall entry/exit status, since the ptrace event itself doesn't indicate it, and report the trap to higher layers. */ static int linux_handle_syscall_trap (struct lwp_info *lp, int stopping) { struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = target_thread_architecture (lp->ptid); int syscall_number = (int) gdbarch_get_syscall_number (gdbarch, lp->ptid); if (stopping) { /* If we're stopping threads, there's a SIGSTOP pending, which makes it so that the LWP reports an immediate syscall return, followed by the SIGSTOP. Skip seeing that "return" using PTRACE_CONT directly, and let stop_wait_callback collect the SIGSTOP. Later when the thread is resumed, a new syscall entry event. If we didn't do this (and returned 0), we'd leave a syscall entry pending, and our caller, by using PTRACE_CONT to collect the SIGSTOP, skips the syscall return itself. Later, when the user re-resumes this LWP, we'd see another syscall entry event and we'd mistake it for a return. If stop_wait_callback didn't force the SIGSTOP out of the LWP (leaving immediately with LWP->signalled set, without issuing a PTRACE_CONT), it would still be problematic to leave this syscall enter pending, as later when the thread is resumed, it would then see the same syscall exit mentioned above, followed by the delayed SIGSTOP, while the syscall didn't actually get to execute. It seems it would be even more confusing to the user. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHST: ignoring syscall %d " "for LWP %ld (stopping threads), " "resuming with PTRACE_CONT for SIGSTOP\n", syscall_number, GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); return 1; } if (catch_syscall_enabled ()) { /* Always update the entry/return state, even if this particular syscall isn't interesting to the core now. In async mode, the user could install a new catchpoint for this syscall between syscall enter/return, and we'll need to know to report a syscall return if that happens. */ lp->syscall_state = (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY ? TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN : TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY); if (catching_syscall_number (syscall_number)) { /* Alright, an event to report. */ ourstatus->kind = lp->syscall_state; ourstatus->value.syscall_number = syscall_number; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHST: stopping for %s of syscall %d" " for LWP %ld\n", lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY ? "entry" : "return", syscall_number, GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); return 0; } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHST: ignoring %s of syscall %d " "for LWP %ld\n", lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY ? "entry" : "return", syscall_number, GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); } else { /* If we had been syscall tracing, and hence used PT_SYSCALL before on this LWP, it could happen that the user removes all syscall catchpoints before we get to process this event. There are two noteworthy issues here: - When stopped at a syscall entry event, resuming with PT_STEP still resumes executing the syscall and reports a syscall return. - Only PT_SYSCALL catches syscall enters. If we last single-stepped this thread, then this event can't be a syscall enter. If we last single-stepped this thread, this has to be a syscall exit. The points above mean that the next resume, be it PT_STEP or PT_CONTINUE, can not trigger a syscall trace event. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHST: caught syscall event " "with no syscall catchpoints." " %d for LWP %ld, ignoring\n", syscall_number, GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; } /* The core isn't interested in this event. For efficiency, avoid stopping all threads only to have the core resume them all again. Since we're not stopping threads, if we're still syscall tracing and not stepping, we can't use PTRACE_CONT here, as we'd miss any subsequent syscall. Simply resume using the inf-ptrace layer, which knows when to use PT_SYSCALL or PT_CONTINUE. */ /* Note that gdbarch_get_syscall_number may access registers, hence fill a regcache. */ registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); return 1; } /* Handle a GNU/Linux extended wait response. If we see a clone event, we need to add the new LWP to our list (and not report the trap to higher layers). This function returns non-zero if the event should be ignored and we should wait again. If STOPPING is true, the new LWP remains stopped, otherwise it is continued. */ static int linux_handle_extended_wait (struct lwp_info *lp, int status, int stopping) { int pid = GET_LWP (lp->ptid); struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus; int event = status >> 16; if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE) { unsigned long new_pid; int ret; ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, pid, 0, &new_pid); /* If we haven't already seen the new PID stop, wait for it now. */ if (! pull_pid_from_list (&stopped_pids, new_pid, &status)) { /* The new child has a pending SIGSTOP. We can't affect it until it hits the SIGSTOP, but we're already attached. */ ret = my_waitpid (new_pid, &status, (event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE) ? __WCLONE : 0); if (ret == -1) perror_with_name (_("waiting for new child")); else if (ret != new_pid) internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("wait returned unexpected PID %d"), ret); else if (!WIFSTOPPED (status)) internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("wait returned unexpected status 0x%x"), status); } ourstatus->value.related_pid = ptid_build (new_pid, new_pid, 0); if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK && linux_fork_checkpointing_p (GET_PID (lp->ptid))) { /* Handle checkpointing by linux-fork.c here as a special case. We don't want the follow-fork-mode or 'catch fork' to interfere with this. */ /* This won't actually modify the breakpoint list, but will physically remove the breakpoints from the child. */ detach_breakpoints (new_pid); /* Retain child fork in ptrace (stopped) state. */ if (!find_fork_pid (new_pid)) add_fork (new_pid); /* Report as spurious, so that infrun doesn't want to follow this fork. We're actually doing an infcall in linux-fork.c. */ ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; linux_enable_event_reporting (pid_to_ptid (new_pid)); /* Report the stop to the core. */ return 0; } if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK) ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED; else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK) ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED; else { struct lwp_info *new_lp; ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: Got clone event " "from LWP %d, new child is LWP %ld\n", pid, new_pid); new_lp = add_lwp (BUILD_LWP (new_pid, GET_PID (lp->ptid))); new_lp->cloned = 1; new_lp->stopped = 1; if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP) { /* This can happen if someone starts sending signals to the new thread before it gets a chance to run, which have a lower number than SIGSTOP (e.g. SIGUSR1). This is an unlikely case, and harder to handle for fork / vfork than for clone, so we do not try - but we handle it for clone events here. We'll send the other signal on to the thread below. */ new_lp->signalled = 1; } else { struct thread_info *tp; /* When we stop for an event in some other thread, and pull the thread list just as this thread has cloned, we'll have seen the new thread in the thread_db list before handling the CLONE event (glibc's pthread_create adds the new thread to the thread list before clone'ing, and has the kernel fill in the thread's tid on the clone call with CLONE_PARENT_SETTID). If that happened, and the core had requested the new thread to stop, we'll have killed it with SIGSTOP. But since SIGSTOP is not an RT signal, it can only be queued once. We need to be careful to not resume the LWP if we wanted it to stop. In that case, we'll leave the SIGSTOP pending. It will later be reported as TARGET_SIGNAL_0. */ tp = find_thread_ptid (new_lp->ptid); if (tp != NULL && tp->stop_requested) new_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; else status = 0; } if (non_stop) { /* Add the new thread to GDB's lists as soon as possible so that: 1) the frontend doesn't have to wait for a stop to display them, and, 2) we tag it with the correct running state. */ /* If the thread_db layer is active, let it know about this new thread, and add it to GDB's list. */ if (!thread_db_attach_lwp (new_lp->ptid)) { /* We're not using thread_db. Add it to GDB's list. */ target_post_attach (GET_LWP (new_lp->ptid)); add_thread (new_lp->ptid); } if (!stopping) { set_running (new_lp->ptid, 1); set_executing (new_lp->ptid, 1); /* thread_db_attach_lwp -> lin_lwp_attach_lwp forced resume_stop. */ new_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue; } } if (status != 0) { /* We created NEW_LP so it cannot yet contain STATUS. */ gdb_assert (new_lp->status == 0); /* Save the wait status to report later. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: waitpid of new LWP %ld, " "saving status %s\n", (long) GET_LWP (new_lp->ptid), status_to_str (status)); new_lp->status = status; } /* Note the need to use the low target ops to resume, to handle resuming with PT_SYSCALL if we have syscall catchpoints. */ if (!stopping) { new_lp->resumed = 1; if (status == 0) { gdb_assert (new_lp->last_resume_kind == resume_continue); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: resuming new LWP %ld\n", GET_LWP (new_lp->ptid)); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (new_lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (new_pid), 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); new_lp->stopped = 0; } } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: resuming parent LWP %d\n", pid); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); return 1; } return 0; } if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: Got exec event from LWP %ld\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD; ourstatus->value.execd_pathname = xstrdup (linux_child_pid_to_exec_file (pid)); return 0; } if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE) { if (current_inferior ()->waiting_for_vfork_done) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: Got expected PTRACE_EVENT_" "VFORK_DONE from LWP %ld: stopping\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE; return 0; } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LHEW: Got PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE " "from LWP %ld: resuming\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); return 1; } internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("unknown ptrace event %d"), event); } /* Return non-zero if LWP is a zombie. */ static int linux_lwp_is_zombie (long lwp) { char buffer[MAXPATHLEN]; FILE *procfile; int retval; int have_state; xsnprintf (buffer, sizeof (buffer), "/proc/%ld/status", lwp); procfile = fopen (buffer, "r"); if (procfile == NULL) { warning (_("unable to open /proc file '%s'"), buffer); return 0; } have_state = 0; while (fgets (buffer, sizeof (buffer), procfile) != NULL) if (strncmp (buffer, "State:", 6) == 0) { have_state = 1; break; } retval = (have_state && strcmp (buffer, "State:\tZ (zombie)\n") == 0); fclose (procfile); return retval; } /* Wait for LP to stop. Returns the wait status, or 0 if the LWP has exited. */ static int wait_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp) { pid_t pid; int status = 0; int thread_dead = 0; sigset_t prev_mask; gdb_assert (!lp->stopped); gdb_assert (lp->status == 0); /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked for sigsuspend avoiding a race below. */ block_child_signals (&prev_mask); for (;;) { /* If my_waitpid returns 0 it means the __WCLONE vs. non-__WCLONE kind was right and we should just call sigsuspend. */ pid = my_waitpid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), &status, WNOHANG); if (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD) pid = my_waitpid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), &status, __WCLONE | WNOHANG); if (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD) { /* The thread has previously exited. We need to delete it now because, for some vendor 2.4 kernels with NPTL support backported, there won't be an exit event unless it is the main thread. 2.6 kernels will report an exit event for each thread that exits, as expected. */ thread_dead = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: %s vanished.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } if (pid != 0) break; /* Bugs 10970, 12702. Thread group leader may have exited in which case we'll lock up in waitpid if there are other threads, even if they are all zombies too. Basically, we're not supposed to use waitpid this way. __WCLONE is not applicable for the leader so we can't use that. LINUX_NAT_THREAD_ALIVE cannot be used here as it requires a STOPPED process; it gets ESRCH both for the zombie and for running processes. As a workaround, check if we're waiting for the thread group leader and if it's a zombie, and avoid calling waitpid if it is. This is racy, what if the tgl becomes a zombie right after we check? Therefore always use WNOHANG with sigsuspend - it is equivalent to waiting waitpid but the linux_lwp_is_zombie is safe this way. */ if (GET_PID (lp->ptid) == GET_LWP (lp->ptid) && linux_lwp_is_zombie (GET_LWP (lp->ptid))) { thread_dead = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: Thread group leader %s vanished.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); break; } /* Wait for next SIGCHLD and try again. This may let SIGCHLD handlers get invoked despite our caller had them intentionally blocked by block_child_signals. This is sensitive only to the loop of linux_nat_wait_1 and there if we get called my_waitpid gets called again before it gets to sigsuspend so we can safely let the handlers get executed here. */ sigsuspend (&suspend_mask); } restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); if (!thread_dead) { gdb_assert (pid == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: waitpid %s received %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), status_to_str (status)); } /* Check if the thread has exited. */ if (WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status)) { thread_dead = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: %s exited.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } } if (thread_dead) { exit_lwp (lp); return 0; } gdb_assert (WIFSTOPPED (status)); /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP) { /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here on. */ status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP); if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 1)) return wait_lwp (lp); } /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP && status >> 16 != 0) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: Handling extended status 0x%06x\n", status); if (linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status, 1)) return wait_lwp (lp); } return status; } /* Save the most recent siginfo for LP. This is currently only called for SIGTRAP; some ports use the si_addr field for target_stopped_data_address. In the future, it may also be used to restore the siginfo of requeued signals. */ static void save_siginfo (struct lwp_info *lp) { errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &lp->siginfo); if (errno != 0) memset (&lp->siginfo, 0, sizeof (lp->siginfo)); } /* Send a SIGSTOP to LP. */ static int stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { if (!lp->stopped && !lp->signalled) { int ret; if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SC: kill %s ****\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } errno = 0; ret = kill_lwp (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), SIGSTOP); if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SC: lwp kill %d %s\n", ret, errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK"); } lp->signalled = 1; gdb_assert (lp->status == 0); } return 0; } /* Request a stop on LWP. */ void linux_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp) { stop_callback (lwp, NULL); } /* Return non-zero if LWP PID has a pending SIGINT. */ static int linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (int pid) { sigset_t pending, blocked, ignored; linux_proc_pending_signals (pid, &pending, &blocked, &ignored); if (sigismember (&pending, SIGINT) && !sigismember (&ignored, SIGINT)) return 1; return 0; } /* Set a flag in LP indicating that we should ignore its next SIGINT. */ static int set_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { /* If a thread has a pending SIGINT, consume it; otherwise, set a flag to consume the next one. */ if (lp->stopped && lp->status != 0 && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status) && WSTOPSIG (lp->status) == SIGINT) lp->status = 0; else lp->ignore_sigint = 1; return 0; } /* If LP does not have a SIGINT pending, then clear the ignore_sigint flag. This function is called after we know the LWP has stopped; if the LWP stopped before the expected SIGINT was delivered, then it will never have arrived. Also, if the signal was delivered to a shared queue and consumed by a different thread, it will never be delivered to this LWP. */ static void maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp) { if (!lp->ignore_sigint) return; if (!linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (GET_LWP (lp->ptid))) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "MCIS: Clearing bogus flag for %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); lp->ignore_sigint = 0; } } /* Fetch the possible triggered data watchpoint info and store it in LP. On some archs, like x86, that use debug registers to set watchpoints, it's possible that the way to know which watched address trapped, is to check the register that is used to select which address to watch. Problem is, between setting the watchpoint and reading back which data address trapped, the user may change the set of watchpoints, and, as a consequence, GDB changes the debug registers in the inferior. To avoid reading back a stale stopped-data-address when that happens, we cache in LP the fact that a watchpoint trapped, and the corresponding data address, as soon as we see LP stop with a SIGTRAP. If GDB changes the debug registers meanwhile, we have the cached data we can rely on. */ static void save_sigtrap (struct lwp_info *lp) { struct cleanup *old_chain; if (linux_ops->to_stopped_by_watchpoint == NULL) { lp->stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; return; } old_chain = save_inferior_ptid (); inferior_ptid = lp->ptid; lp->stopped_by_watchpoint = linux_ops->to_stopped_by_watchpoint (); if (lp->stopped_by_watchpoint) { if (linux_ops->to_stopped_data_address != NULL) lp->stopped_data_address_p = linux_ops->to_stopped_data_address (¤t_target, &lp->stopped_data_address); else lp->stopped_data_address_p = 0; } do_cleanups (old_chain); } /* See save_sigtrap. */ static int linux_nat_stopped_by_watchpoint (void) { struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid); gdb_assert (lp != NULL); return lp->stopped_by_watchpoint; } static int linux_nat_stopped_data_address (struct target_ops *ops, CORE_ADDR *addr_p) { struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid); gdb_assert (lp != NULL); *addr_p = lp->stopped_data_address; return lp->stopped_data_address_p; } /* Commonly any breakpoint / watchpoint generate only SIGTRAP. */ static int sigtrap_is_event (int status) { return WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP; } /* SIGTRAP-like events recognizer. */ static int (*linux_nat_status_is_event) (int status) = sigtrap_is_event; /* Check for SIGTRAP-like events in LP. */ static int linux_nat_lp_status_is_event (struct lwp_info *lp) { /* We check for lp->waitstatus in addition to lp->status, because we can have pending process exits recorded in lp->status and W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0. We should probably have an additional lp->status_p flag. */ return (lp->waitstatus.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE && linux_nat_status_is_event (lp->status)); } /* Set alternative SIGTRAP-like events recognizer. If breakpoint_inserted_here_p there then gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break will be applied. */ void linux_nat_set_status_is_event (struct target_ops *t, int (*status_is_event) (int status)) { linux_nat_status_is_event = status_is_event; } /* Wait until LP is stopped. */ static int stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (GET_PID (lp->ptid)); /* If this is a vfork parent, bail out, it is not going to report any SIGSTOP until the vfork is done with. */ if (inf->vfork_child != NULL) return 0; if (!lp->stopped) { int status; status = wait_lwp (lp); if (status == 0) return 0; if (lp->ignore_sigint && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT) { lp->ignore_sigint = 0; errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (%s) " "(discarding SIGINT)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK"); return stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL); } maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp); if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP) { if (linux_nat_status_is_event (status)) { /* If a LWP other than the LWP that we're reporting an event for has hit a GDB breakpoint (as opposed to some random trap signal), then just arrange for it to hit it again later. We don't keep the SIGTRAP status and don't forward the SIGTRAP signal to the LWP. We will handle the current event, eventually we will resume all LWPs, and this one will get its breakpoint trap again. If we do not do this, then we run the risk that the user will delete or disable the breakpoint, but the thread will have already tripped on it. */ /* Save the trap's siginfo in case we need it later. */ save_siginfo (lp); save_sigtrap (lp); /* Now resume this LWP and get the SIGSTOP event. */ errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (%s)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK"); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SWC: Candidate SIGTRAP event in %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } /* Hold this event/waitstatus while we check to see if there are any more (we still want to get that SIGSTOP). */ stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL); /* Hold the SIGTRAP for handling by linux_nat_wait. If there's another event, throw it back into the queue. */ if (lp->status) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SWC: kill %s, %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), status_to_str ((int) status)); kill_lwp (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), WSTOPSIG (lp->status)); } /* Save the sigtrap event. */ lp->status = status; return 0; } else { /* The thread was stopped with a signal other than SIGSTOP, and didn't accidentally trip a breakpoint. */ if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SWC: Pending event %s in %s\n", status_to_str ((int) status), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } /* Now resume this LWP and get the SIGSTOP event. */ errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SWC: PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (%s)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK"); /* Hold this event/waitstatus while we check to see if there are any more (we still want to get that SIGSTOP). */ stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL); /* If the lp->status field is still empty, use it to hold this event. If not, then this event must be returned to the event queue of the LWP. */ if (lp->status) { if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SWC: kill %s, %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), status_to_str ((int) status)); } kill_lwp (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), WSTOPSIG (status)); } else lp->status = status; return 0; } } else { /* We caught the SIGSTOP that we intended to catch, so there's no SIGSTOP pending. */ lp->stopped = 1; lp->signalled = 0; } } return 0; } /* Return non-zero if LP has a wait status pending. */ static int status_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { /* Only report a pending wait status if we pretend that this has indeed been resumed. */ if (!lp->resumed) return 0; if (lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) { /* A ptrace event, like PTRACE_FORK|VFORK|EXEC, syscall event, or a pending process exit. Note that `W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0', so a clean process exit can not be stored pending in lp->status, it is indistinguishable from no-pending-status. */ return 1; } if (lp->status != 0) return 1; return 0; } /* Return non-zero if LP isn't stopped. */ static int running_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { return (!lp->stopped || ((lp->status != 0 || lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) && lp->resumed)); } /* Count the LWP's that have had events. */ static int count_events_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { int *count = data; gdb_assert (count != NULL); /* Count only resumed LWPs that have a SIGTRAP event pending. */ if (lp->resumed && linux_nat_lp_status_is_event (lp)) (*count)++; return 0; } /* Select the LWP (if any) that is currently being single-stepped. */ static int select_singlestep_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_step && lp->status != 0) return 1; else return 0; } /* Select the Nth LWP that has had a SIGTRAP event. */ static int select_event_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { int *selector = data; gdb_assert (selector != NULL); /* Select only resumed LWPs that have a SIGTRAP event pending. */ if (lp->resumed && linux_nat_lp_status_is_event (lp)) if ((*selector)-- == 0) return 1; return 0; } static int cancel_breakpoint (struct lwp_info *lp) { /* Arrange for a breakpoint to be hit again later. We don't keep the SIGTRAP status and don't forward the SIGTRAP signal to the LWP. We will handle the current event, eventually we will resume this LWP, and this breakpoint will trap again. If we do not do this, then we run the risk that the user will delete or disable the breakpoint, but the LWP will have already tripped on it. */ struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid); struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); CORE_ADDR pc; pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache) - gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch); if (breakpoint_inserted_here_p (get_regcache_aspace (regcache), pc)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "CB: Push back breakpoint for %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* Back up the PC if necessary. */ if (gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch)) regcache_write_pc (regcache, pc); return 1; } return 0; } static int cancel_breakpoints_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { struct lwp_info *event_lp = data; /* Leave the LWP that has been elected to receive a SIGTRAP alone. */ if (lp == event_lp) return 0; /* If a LWP other than the LWP that we're reporting an event for has hit a GDB breakpoint (as opposed to some random trap signal), then just arrange for it to hit it again later. We don't keep the SIGTRAP status and don't forward the SIGTRAP signal to the LWP. We will handle the current event, eventually we will resume all LWPs, and this one will get its breakpoint trap again. If we do not do this, then we run the risk that the user will delete or disable the breakpoint, but the LWP will have already tripped on it. */ if (linux_nat_lp_status_is_event (lp) && cancel_breakpoint (lp)) /* Throw away the SIGTRAP. */ lp->status = 0; return 0; } /* Select one LWP out of those that have events pending. */ static void select_event_lwp (ptid_t filter, struct lwp_info **orig_lp, int *status) { int num_events = 0; int random_selector; struct lwp_info *event_lp; /* Record the wait status for the original LWP. */ (*orig_lp)->status = *status; /* Give preference to any LWP that is being single-stepped. */ event_lp = iterate_over_lwps (filter, select_singlestep_lwp_callback, NULL); if (event_lp != NULL) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SEL: Select single-step %s\n", target_pid_to_str (event_lp->ptid)); } else { /* No single-stepping LWP. Select one at random, out of those which have had SIGTRAP events. */ /* First see how many SIGTRAP events we have. */ iterate_over_lwps (filter, count_events_callback, &num_events); /* Now randomly pick a LWP out of those that have had a SIGTRAP. */ random_selector = (int) ((num_events * (double) rand ()) / (RAND_MAX + 1.0)); if (debug_linux_nat && num_events > 1) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SEL: Found %d SIGTRAP events, selecting #%d\n", num_events, random_selector); event_lp = iterate_over_lwps (filter, select_event_lwp_callback, &random_selector); } if (event_lp != NULL) { /* Switch the event LWP. */ *orig_lp = event_lp; *status = event_lp->status; } /* Flush the wait status for the event LWP. */ (*orig_lp)->status = 0; } /* Return non-zero if LP has been resumed. */ static int resumed_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { return lp->resumed; } /* Stop an active thread, verify it still exists, then resume it. If the thread ends up with a pending status, then it is not resumed, and *DATA (really a pointer to int), is set. */ static int stop_and_resume_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { int *new_pending_p = data; if (!lp->stopped) { ptid_t ptid = lp->ptid; stop_callback (lp, NULL); stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL); /* Resume if the lwp still exists, and the core wanted it running. */ lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); if (lp != NULL) { if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop && lp->status == 0) { /* The core wanted the LWP to stop. Even if it stopped cleanly (with SIGSTOP), leave the event pending. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SARC: core wanted LWP %ld stopped " "(leaving SIGSTOP pending)\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); lp->status = W_STOPCODE (SIGSTOP); } if (lp->status == 0) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SARC: re-resuming LWP %ld\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); resume_lwp (lp, lp->step); } else { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "SARC: not re-resuming LWP %ld " "(has pending)\n", GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); if (new_pending_p) *new_pending_p = 1; } } } return 0; } /* Check if we should go on and pass this event to common code. Return the affected lwp if we are, or NULL otherwise. If we stop all lwps temporarily, we may end up with new pending events in some other lwp. In that case set *NEW_PENDING_P to true. */ static struct lwp_info * linux_nat_filter_event (int lwpid, int status, int *new_pending_p) { struct lwp_info *lp; *new_pending_p = 0; lp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (lwpid)); /* Check for stop events reported by a process we didn't already know about - anything not already in our LWP list. If we're expecting to receive stopped processes after fork, vfork, and clone events, then we'll just add the new one to our list and go back to waiting for the event to be reported - the stopped process might be returned from waitpid before or after the event is. But note the case of a non-leader thread exec'ing after the leader having exited, and gone from our lists. The non-leader thread changes its tid to the tgid. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && lp == NULL && (WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP && status >> 16 == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC)) { /* A multi-thread exec after we had seen the leader exiting. */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Re-adding thread group leader LWP %d.\n", lwpid); lp = add_lwp (BUILD_LWP (lwpid, lwpid)); lp->stopped = 1; lp->resumed = 1; add_thread (lp->ptid); } if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && !lp) { add_to_pid_list (&stopped_pids, lwpid, status); return NULL; } /* Make sure we don't report an event for the exit of an LWP not in our list, i.e. not part of the current process. This can happen if we detach from a program we originally forked and then it exits. */ if (!WIFSTOPPED (status) && !lp) return NULL; /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP) { /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here on. */ status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP); if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 0)) return NULL; } /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP && status >> 16 != 0) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Handling extended status 0x%06x\n", status); if (linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status, 0)) return NULL; } if (linux_nat_status_is_event (status)) { /* Save the trap's siginfo in case we need it later. */ save_siginfo (lp); save_sigtrap (lp); } /* Check if the thread has exited. */ if ((WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status)) && num_lwps (GET_PID (lp->ptid)) > 1) { /* If this is the main thread, we must stop all threads and verify if they are still alive. This is because in the nptl thread model on Linux 2.4, there is no signal issued for exiting LWPs other than the main thread. We only get the main thread exit signal once all child threads have already exited. If we stop all the threads and use the stop_wait_callback to check if they have exited we can determine whether this signal should be ignored or whether it means the end of the debugged application, regardless of which threading model is being used. */ if (GET_PID (lp->ptid) == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)) { lp->stopped = 1; iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (GET_PID (lp->ptid)), stop_and_resume_callback, new_pending_p); } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s exited.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); if (num_lwps (GET_PID (lp->ptid)) > 1) { /* If there is at least one more LWP, then the exit signal was not the end of the debugged application and should be ignored. */ exit_lwp (lp); return NULL; } } /* Check if the current LWP has previously exited. In the nptl thread model, LWPs other than the main thread do not issue signals when they exit so we must check whenever the thread has stopped. A similar check is made in stop_wait_callback(). */ if (num_lwps (GET_PID (lp->ptid)) > 1 && !linux_thread_alive (lp->ptid)) { ptid_t ptid = pid_to_ptid (GET_PID (lp->ptid)); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s exited.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); exit_lwp (lp); /* Make sure there is at least one thread running. */ gdb_assert (iterate_over_lwps (ptid, running_callback, NULL)); /* Discard the event. */ return NULL; } /* Make sure we don't report a SIGSTOP that we sent ourselves in an attempt to stop an LWP. */ if (lp->signalled && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Delayed SIGSTOP caught for %s.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); lp->signalled = 0; if (lp->last_resume_kind != resume_stop) { /* This is a delayed SIGSTOP. */ registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s %s, 0, 0 (discard SIGSTOP)\n", lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); lp->stopped = 0; gdb_assert (lp->resumed); /* Discard the event. */ return NULL; } } /* Make sure we don't report a SIGINT that we have already displayed for another thread. */ if (lp->ignore_sigint && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Delayed SIGINT caught for %s.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* This is a delayed SIGINT. */ lp->ignore_sigint = 0; registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s %s, 0, 0 (discard SIGINT)\n", lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); lp->stopped = 0; gdb_assert (lp->resumed); /* Discard the event. */ return NULL; } /* An interesting event. */ gdb_assert (lp); lp->status = status; return lp; } /* Detect zombie thread group leaders, and "exit" them. We can't reap their exits until all other threads in the group have exited. */ static void check_zombie_leaders (void) { struct inferior *inf; ALL_INFERIORS (inf) { struct lwp_info *leader_lp; if (inf->pid == 0) continue; leader_lp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (inf->pid)); if (leader_lp != NULL /* Check if there are other threads in the group, as we may have raced with the inferior simply exiting. */ && num_lwps (inf->pid) > 1 && linux_lwp_is_zombie (inf->pid)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "CZL: Thread group leader %d zombie " "(it exited, or another thread execd).\n", inf->pid); /* A leader zombie can mean one of two things: - It exited, and there's an exit status pending available, or only the leader exited (not the whole program). In the latter case, we can't waitpid the leader's exit status until all other threads are gone. - There are 3 or more threads in the group, and a thread other than the leader exec'd. On an exec, the Linux kernel destroys all other threads (except the execing one) in the thread group, and resets the execing thread's tid to the tgid. No exit notification is sent for the execing thread -- from the ptracer's perspective, it appears as though the execing thread just vanishes. Until we reap all other threads except the leader and the execing thread, the leader will be zombie, and the execing thread will be in `D (disc sleep)'. As soon as all other threads are reaped, the execing thread changes it's tid to the tgid, and the previous (zombie) leader vanishes, giving place to the "new" leader. We could try distinguishing the exit and exec cases, by waiting once more, and seeing if something comes out, but it doesn't sound useful. The previous leader _does_ go away, and we'll re-add the new one once we see the exec event (which is just the same as what would happen if the previous leader did exit voluntarily before some other thread execs). */ if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "CZL: Thread group leader %d vanished.\n", inf->pid); exit_lwp (leader_lp); } } } static ptid_t linux_nat_wait_1 (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus, int target_options) { static sigset_t prev_mask; enum resume_kind last_resume_kind; struct lwp_info *lp; int status; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: enter\n"); /* The first time we get here after starting a new inferior, we may not have added it to the LWP list yet - this is the earliest moment at which we know its PID. */ if (ptid_is_pid (inferior_ptid)) { /* Upgrade the main thread's ptid. */ thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, BUILD_LWP (GET_PID (inferior_ptid), GET_PID (inferior_ptid))); lp = add_lwp (inferior_ptid); lp->resumed = 1; } /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked. */ block_child_signals (&prev_mask); retry: lp = NULL; status = 0; /* First check if there is a LWP with a wait status pending. */ if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid) || ptid_is_pid (ptid)) { /* Any LWP in the PTID group that's been resumed will do. */ lp = iterate_over_lwps (ptid, status_callback, NULL); if (lp) { if (debug_linux_nat && lp->status) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Using pending wait status %s for %s.\n", status_to_str (lp->status), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } } else if (is_lwp (ptid)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Waiting for specific LWP %s.\n", target_pid_to_str (ptid)); /* We have a specific LWP to check. */ lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); gdb_assert (lp); if (debug_linux_nat && lp->status) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Using pending wait status %s for %s.\n", status_to_str (lp->status), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* We check for lp->waitstatus in addition to lp->status, because we can have pending process exits recorded in lp->status and W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0. We should probably have an additional lp->status_p flag. */ if (lp->status == 0 && lp->waitstatus.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) lp = NULL; } if (lp && lp->signalled && lp->last_resume_kind != resume_stop) { /* A pending SIGSTOP may interfere with the normal stream of events. In a typical case where interference is a problem, we have a SIGSTOP signal pending for LWP A while single-stepping it, encounter an event in LWP B, and take the pending SIGSTOP while trying to stop LWP A. After processing the event in LWP B, LWP A is continued, and we'll never see the SIGTRAP associated with the last time we were single-stepping LWP A. */ /* Resume the thread. It should halt immediately returning the pending SIGSTOP. */ registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s %s, 0, 0 (expect SIGSTOP)\n", lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); lp->stopped = 0; gdb_assert (lp->resumed); /* Catch the pending SIGSTOP. */ status = lp->status; lp->status = 0; stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL); /* If the lp->status field isn't empty, we caught another signal while flushing the SIGSTOP. Return it back to the event queue of the LWP, as we already have an event to handle. */ if (lp->status) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: kill %s, %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), status_to_str (lp->status)); kill_lwp (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), WSTOPSIG (lp->status)); } lp->status = status; } if (!target_can_async_p ()) { /* Causes SIGINT to be passed on to the attached process. */ set_sigint_trap (); } /* But if we don't find a pending event, we'll have to wait. */ while (lp == NULL) { pid_t lwpid; /* Always use -1 and WNOHANG, due to couple of a kernel/ptrace quirks: - If the thread group leader exits while other threads in the thread group still exist, waitpid(TGID, ...) hangs. That waitpid won't return an exit status until the other threads in the group are reapped. - When a non-leader thread execs, that thread just vanishes without reporting an exit (so we'd hang if we waited for it explicitly in that case). The exec event is reported to the TGID pid. */ errno = 0; lwpid = my_waitpid (-1, &status, __WCLONE | WNOHANG); if (lwpid == 0 || (lwpid == -1 && errno == ECHILD)) lwpid = my_waitpid (-1, &status, WNOHANG); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNW: waitpid(-1, ...) returned %d, %s\n", lwpid, errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK"); if (lwpid > 0) { /* If this is true, then we paused LWPs momentarily, and may now have pending events to handle. */ int new_pending; if (debug_linux_nat) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: waitpid %ld received %s\n", (long) lwpid, status_to_str (status)); } lp = linux_nat_filter_event (lwpid, status, &new_pending); /* STATUS is now no longer valid, use LP->STATUS instead. */ status = 0; if (lp && !ptid_match (lp->ptid, ptid)) { gdb_assert (lp->resumed); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf (stderr, "LWP %ld got an event %06x, leaving pending.\n", ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), lp->status); if (WIFSTOPPED (lp->status)) { if (WSTOPSIG (lp->status) != SIGSTOP) { /* Cancel breakpoint hits. The breakpoint may be removed before we fetch events from this process to report to the core. It is best not to assume the moribund breakpoints heuristic always handles these cases --- it could be too many events go through to the core before this one is handled. All-stop always cancels breakpoint hits in all threads. */ if (non_stop && linux_nat_lp_status_is_event (lp) && cancel_breakpoint (lp)) { /* Throw away the SIGTRAP. */ lp->status = 0; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf (stderr, "LLW: LWP %ld hit a breakpoint while" " waiting for another process;" " cancelled it\n", ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)); } lp->stopped = 1; } else { lp->stopped = 1; lp->signalled = 0; } } else if (WIFEXITED (lp->status) || WIFSIGNALED (lp->status)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf (stderr, "Process %ld exited while stopping LWPs\n", ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)); /* This was the last lwp in the process. Since events are serialized to GDB core, and we can't report this one right now, but GDB core and the other target layers will want to be notified about the exit code/signal, leave the status pending for the next time we're able to report it. */ /* Prevent trying to stop this thread again. We'll never try to resume it because it has a pending status. */ lp->stopped = 1; /* Dead LWP's aren't expected to reported a pending sigstop. */ lp->signalled = 0; /* Store the pending event in the waitstatus as well, because W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0. */ store_waitstatus (&lp->waitstatus, lp->status); } /* Keep looking. */ lp = NULL; } if (new_pending) { /* Some LWP now has a pending event. Go all the way back to check it. */ goto retry; } if (lp) { /* We got an event to report to the core. */ break; } /* Retry until nothing comes out of waitpid. A single SIGCHLD can indicate more than one child stopped. */ continue; } /* Check for zombie thread group leaders. Those can't be reaped until all other threads in the thread group are. */ check_zombie_leaders (); /* If there are no resumed children left, bail. We'd be stuck forever in the sigsuspend call below otherwise. */ if (iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resumed_callback, NULL) == NULL) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit (no resumed LWP)\n"); ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED; if (!target_can_async_p ()) clear_sigint_trap (); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return minus_one_ptid; } /* No interesting event to report to the core. */ if (target_options & TARGET_WNOHANG) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit (ignore)\n"); ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); return minus_one_ptid; } /* We shouldn't end up here unless we want to try again. */ gdb_assert (lp == NULL); /* Block until we get an event reported with SIGCHLD. */ sigsuspend (&suspend_mask); } if (!target_can_async_p ()) clear_sigint_trap (); gdb_assert (lp); status = lp->status; lp->status = 0; /* Don't report signals that GDB isn't interested in, such as signals that are neither printed nor stopped upon. Stopping all threads can be a bit time-consuming so if we want decent performance with heavily multi-threaded programs, especially when they're using a high frequency timer, we'd better avoid it if we can. */ if (WIFSTOPPED (status)) { enum target_signal signo = target_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (status)); /* When using hardware single-step, we need to report every signal. Otherwise, signals in pass_mask may be short-circuited. */ if (!lp->step && WSTOPSIG (status) && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (status))) { /* FIMXE: kettenis/2001-06-06: Should we resume all threads here? It is not clear we should. GDB may not expect other threads to run. On the other hand, not resuming newly attached threads may cause an unwanted delay in getting them running. */ registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, signo); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: %s %s, %s (preempt 'handle')\n", lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), (signo != TARGET_SIGNAL_0 ? strsignal (target_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0")); lp->stopped = 0; goto retry; } if (!non_stop) { /* Only do the below in all-stop, as we currently use SIGINT to implement target_stop (see linux_nat_stop) in non-stop. */ if (signo == TARGET_SIGNAL_INT && signal_pass_state (signo) == 0) { /* If ^C/BREAK is typed at the tty/console, SIGINT gets forwarded to the entire process group, that is, all LWPs will receive it - unless they're using CLONE_THREAD to share signals. Since we only want to report it once, we mark it as ignored for all LWPs except this one. */ iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (ptid_get_pid (ptid)), set_ignore_sigint, NULL); lp->ignore_sigint = 0; } else maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp); } } /* This LWP is stopped now. */ lp->stopped = 1; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: Candidate event %s in %s.\n", status_to_str (status), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); if (!non_stop) { /* Now stop all other LWP's ... */ iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_callback, NULL); /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that they're no longer running. */ iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_wait_callback, NULL); /* If we're not waiting for a specific LWP, choose an event LWP from among those that have had events. Giving equal priority to all LWPs that have had events helps prevent starvation. */ if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid) || ptid_is_pid (ptid)) select_event_lwp (ptid, &lp, &status); /* Now that we've selected our final event LWP, cancel any breakpoints in other LWPs that have hit a GDB breakpoint. See the comment in cancel_breakpoints_callback to find out why. */ iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, cancel_breakpoints_callback, lp); /* We'll need this to determine whether to report a SIGSTOP as TARGET_WAITKIND_0. Need to take a copy because resume_clear_callback clears it. */ last_resume_kind = lp->last_resume_kind; /* In all-stop, from the core's perspective, all LWPs are now stopped until a new resume action is sent over. */ iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, resume_clear_callback, NULL); } else { /* See above. */ last_resume_kind = lp->last_resume_kind; resume_clear_callback (lp, NULL); } if (linux_nat_status_is_event (status)) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: trap ptid is %s.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); } if (lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) { *ourstatus = lp->waitstatus; lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE; } else store_waitstatus (ourstatus, status); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit\n"); restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); if (last_resume_kind == resume_stop && ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP) { /* A thread that has been requested to stop by GDB with target_stop, and it stopped cleanly, so report as SIG0. The use of SIGSTOP is an implementation detail. */ ourstatus->value.sig = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; } if (ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED || ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED) lp->core = -1; else lp->core = linux_nat_core_of_thread_1 (lp->ptid); return lp->ptid; } /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. */ static int resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { ptid_t *wait_ptid_p = data; if (lp->stopped && lp->resumed && lp->status == 0 && lp->waitstatus.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE) { struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid); struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); CORE_ADDR pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache); gdb_assert (is_executing (lp->ptid)); /* Don't bother if there's a breakpoint at PC that we'd hit immediately, and we're not waiting for this LWP. */ if (!ptid_match (lp->ptid, *wait_ptid_p)) { if (breakpoint_inserted_here_p (get_regcache_aspace (regcache), pc)) return 0; } if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "RSRL: resuming stopped-resumed LWP %s at %s: step=%d\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), paddress (gdbarch, pc), lp->step); registers_changed (); if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL) linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp); linux_ops->to_resume (linux_ops, pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid)), lp->step, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); lp->stopped = 0; memset (&lp->siginfo, 0, sizeof (lp->siginfo)); lp->stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; } return 0; } static ptid_t linux_nat_wait (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus, int target_options) { ptid_t event_ptid; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "linux_nat_wait: [%s]\n", target_pid_to_str (ptid)); /* Flush the async file first. */ if (target_can_async_p ()) async_file_flush (); /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. LWPs get in this state if we find them stopping at a time we're not interested in reporting the event (target_wait on a specific_process, for example, see linux_nat_wait_1), and meanwhile the event became uninteresting. Don't bother resuming LWPs we're not going to wait for if they'd stop immediately. */ if (non_stop) iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, resume_stopped_resumed_lwps, &ptid); event_ptid = linux_nat_wait_1 (ops, ptid, ourstatus, target_options); /* If we requested any event, and something came out, assume there may be more. If we requested a specific lwp or process, also assume there may be more. */ if (target_can_async_p () && ((ourstatus->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE && ourstatus->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED) || !ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))) async_file_mark (); /* Get ready for the next event. */ if (target_can_async_p ()) target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0); return event_ptid; } static int kill_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { /* PTRACE_KILL may resume the inferior. Send SIGKILL first. */ errno = 0; kill (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), SIGKILL); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "KC: kill (SIGKILL) %s, 0, 0 (%s)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK"); /* Some kernels ignore even SIGKILL for processes under ptrace. */ errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, GET_LWP (lp->ptid), 0, 0); if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "KC: PTRACE_KILL %s, 0, 0 (%s)\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid), errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK"); return 0; } static int kill_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data) { pid_t pid; /* We must make sure that there are no pending events (delayed SIGSTOPs, pending SIGTRAPs, etc.) to make sure the current program doesn't interfere with any following debugging session. */ /* For cloned processes we must check both with __WCLONE and without, since the exit status of a cloned process isn't reported with __WCLONE. */ if (lp->cloned) { do { pid = my_waitpid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), NULL, __WCLONE); if (pid != (pid_t) -1) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "KWC: wait %s received unknown.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* The Linux kernel sometimes fails to kill a thread completely after PTRACE_KILL; that goes from the stop point in do_fork out to the one in get_signal_to_deliever and waits again. So kill it again. */ kill_callback (lp, NULL); } } while (pid == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); gdb_assert (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD); } do { pid = my_waitpid (GET_LWP (lp->ptid), NULL, 0); if (pid != (pid_t) -1) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "KWC: wait %s received unk.\n", target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid)); /* See the call to kill_callback above. */ kill_callback (lp, NULL); } } while (pid == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)); gdb_assert (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD); return 0; } static void linux_nat_kill (struct target_ops *ops) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; int status; /* If we're stopped while forking and we haven't followed yet, kill the other task. We need to do this first because the parent will be sleeping if this is a vfork. */ get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED || last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED) { ptrace (PT_KILL, PIDGET (last.value.related_pid), 0, 0); wait (&status); } if (forks_exist_p ()) linux_fork_killall (); else { ptid_t ptid = pid_to_ptid (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid)); /* Stop all threads before killing them, since ptrace requires that the thread is stopped to sucessfully PTRACE_KILL. */ iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_callback, NULL); /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that they're no longer running. */ iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_wait_callback, NULL); /* Kill all LWP's ... */ iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_callback, NULL); /* ... and wait until we've flushed all events. */ iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_wait_callback, NULL); } target_mourn_inferior (); } static void linux_nat_mourn_inferior (struct target_ops *ops) { purge_lwp_list (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid)); if (! forks_exist_p ()) /* Normal case, no other forks available. */ linux_ops->to_mourn_inferior (ops); else /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid has exited, but there are other viable forks to debug. Delete the exiting one and context-switch to the first available. */ linux_fork_mourn_inferior (); } /* Convert a native/host siginfo object, into/from the siginfo in the layout of the inferiors' architecture. */ static void siginfo_fixup (struct siginfo *siginfo, gdb_byte *inf_siginfo, int direction) { int done = 0; if (linux_nat_siginfo_fixup != NULL) done = linux_nat_siginfo_fixup (siginfo, inf_siginfo, direction); /* If there was no callback, or the callback didn't do anything, then just do a straight memcpy. */ if (!done) { if (direction == 1) memcpy (siginfo, inf_siginfo, sizeof (struct siginfo)); else memcpy (inf_siginfo, siginfo, sizeof (struct siginfo)); } } static LONGEST linux_xfer_siginfo (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { int pid; struct siginfo siginfo; gdb_byte inf_siginfo[sizeof (struct siginfo)]; gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO); gdb_assert (readbuf || writebuf); pid = GET_LWP (inferior_ptid); if (pid == 0) pid = GET_PID (inferior_ptid); if (offset > sizeof (siginfo)) return -1; errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo); if (errno != 0) return -1; /* When GDB is built as a 64-bit application, ptrace writes into SIGINFO an object with 64-bit layout. Since debugging a 32-bit inferior with a 64-bit GDB should look the same as debugging it with a 32-bit GDB, we need to convert it. GDB core always sees the converted layout, so any read/write will have to be done post-conversion. */ siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 0); if (offset + len > sizeof (siginfo)) len = sizeof (siginfo) - offset; if (readbuf != NULL) memcpy (readbuf, inf_siginfo + offset, len); else { memcpy (inf_siginfo + offset, writebuf, len); /* Convert back to ptrace layout before flushing it out. */ siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 1); errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_SETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo); if (errno != 0) return -1; } return len; } static LONGEST linux_nat_xfer_partial (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { struct cleanup *old_chain; LONGEST xfer; if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO) return linux_xfer_siginfo (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); /* The target is connected but no live inferior is selected. Pass this request down to a lower stratum (e.g., the executable file). */ if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY && ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid)) return 0; old_chain = save_inferior_ptid (); if (is_lwp (inferior_ptid)) inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (inferior_ptid)); xfer = linux_ops->to_xfer_partial (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); do_cleanups (old_chain); return xfer; } static int linux_thread_alive (ptid_t ptid) { int err, tmp_errno; gdb_assert (is_lwp (ptid)); /* Send signal 0 instead of anything ptrace, because ptracing a running thread errors out claiming that the thread doesn't exist. */ err = kill_lwp (GET_LWP (ptid), 0); tmp_errno = errno; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLTA: KILL(SIG0) %s (%s)\n", target_pid_to_str (ptid), err ? safe_strerror (tmp_errno) : "OK"); if (err != 0) return 0; return 1; } static int linux_nat_thread_alive (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid) { return linux_thread_alive (ptid); } static char * linux_nat_pid_to_str (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid) { static char buf[64]; if (is_lwp (ptid) && (GET_PID (ptid) != GET_LWP (ptid) || num_lwps (GET_PID (ptid)) > 1)) { snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "LWP %ld", GET_LWP (ptid)); return buf; } return normal_pid_to_str (ptid); } static char * linux_nat_thread_name (struct thread_info *thr) { int pid = ptid_get_pid (thr->ptid); long lwp = ptid_get_lwp (thr->ptid); #define FORMAT "/proc/%d/task/%ld/comm" char buf[sizeof (FORMAT) + 30]; FILE *comm_file; char *result = NULL; snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), FORMAT, pid, lwp); comm_file = fopen (buf, "r"); if (comm_file) { /* Not exported by the kernel, so we define it here. */ #define COMM_LEN 16 static char line[COMM_LEN + 1]; if (fgets (line, sizeof (line), comm_file)) { char *nl = strchr (line, '\n'); if (nl) *nl = '\0'; if (*line != '\0') result = line; } fclose (comm_file); } #undef COMM_LEN #undef FORMAT return result; } /* Accepts an integer PID; Returns a string representing a file that can be opened to get the symbols for the child process. */ static char * linux_child_pid_to_exec_file (int pid) { char *name1, *name2; name1 = xmalloc (MAXPATHLEN); name2 = xmalloc (MAXPATHLEN); make_cleanup (xfree, name1); make_cleanup (xfree, name2); memset (name2, 0, MAXPATHLEN); sprintf (name1, "/proc/%d/exe", pid); if (readlink (name1, name2, MAXPATHLEN) > 0) return name2; else return name1; } /* Records the thread's register state for the corefile note section. */ static char * linux_nat_collect_thread_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, ptid_t ptid, bfd *obfd, char *note_data, int *note_size, enum target_signal stop_signal) { struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); const struct regset *regset; int core_regset_p; gdb_gregset_t gregs; gdb_fpregset_t fpregs; core_regset_p = gdbarch_regset_from_core_section_p (gdbarch); if (core_regset_p && (regset = gdbarch_regset_from_core_section (gdbarch, ".reg", sizeof (gregs))) != NULL && regset->collect_regset != NULL) regset->collect_regset (regset, regcache, -1, &gregs, sizeof (gregs)); else fill_gregset (regcache, &gregs, -1); note_data = (char *) elfcore_write_prstatus (obfd, note_data, note_size, ptid_get_lwp (ptid), target_signal_to_host (stop_signal), &gregs); if (core_regset_p && (regset = gdbarch_regset_from_core_section (gdbarch, ".reg2", sizeof (fpregs))) != NULL && regset->collect_regset != NULL) regset->collect_regset (regset, regcache, -1, &fpregs, sizeof (fpregs)); else fill_fpregset (regcache, &fpregs, -1); note_data = (char *) elfcore_write_prfpreg (obfd, note_data, note_size, &fpregs, sizeof (fpregs)); return note_data; } /* Fills the "to_make_corefile_note" target vector. Builds the note section for a corefile, and returns it in a malloc buffer. */ static char * linux_nat_make_corefile_notes (bfd *obfd, int *note_size) { /* FIXME: uweigand/2011-10-06: Once all GNU/Linux architectures have been converted to gdbarch_core_regset_sections, this function can go away. */ return linux_make_corefile_notes (target_gdbarch, obfd, note_size, linux_nat_collect_thread_registers); } /* Implement the to_xfer_partial interface for memory reads using the /proc filesystem. Because we can use a single read() call for /proc, this can be much more efficient than banging away at PTRACE_PEEKTEXT, but it doesn't support writes. */ static LONGEST linux_proc_xfer_partial (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { LONGEST ret; int fd; char filename[64]; if (object != TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY || !readbuf) return 0; /* Don't bother for one word. */ if (len < 3 * sizeof (long)) return 0; /* We could keep this file open and cache it - possibly one per thread. That requires some juggling, but is even faster. */ sprintf (filename, "/proc/%d/mem", PIDGET (inferior_ptid)); fd = open (filename, O_RDONLY | O_LARGEFILE); if (fd == -1) return 0; /* If pread64 is available, use it. It's faster if the kernel supports it (only one syscall), and it's 64-bit safe even on 32-bit platforms (for instance, SPARC debugging a SPARC64 application). */ #ifdef HAVE_PREAD64 if (pread64 (fd, readbuf, len, offset) != len) #else if (lseek (fd, offset, SEEK_SET) == -1 || read (fd, readbuf, len) != len) #endif ret = 0; else ret = len; close (fd); return ret; } /* Enumerate spufs IDs for process PID. */ static LONGEST spu_enumerate_spu_ids (int pid, gdb_byte *buf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch); LONGEST pos = 0; LONGEST written = 0; char path[128]; DIR *dir; struct dirent *entry; xsnprintf (path, sizeof path, "/proc/%d/fd", pid); dir = opendir (path); if (!dir) return -1; rewinddir (dir); while ((entry = readdir (dir)) != NULL) { struct stat st; struct statfs stfs; int fd; fd = atoi (entry->d_name); if (!fd) continue; xsnprintf (path, sizeof path, "/proc/%d/fd/%d", pid, fd); if (stat (path, &st) != 0) continue; if (!S_ISDIR (st.st_mode)) continue; if (statfs (path, &stfs) != 0) continue; if (stfs.f_type != SPUFS_MAGIC) continue; if (pos >= offset && pos + 4 <= offset + len) { store_unsigned_integer (buf + pos - offset, 4, byte_order, fd); written += 4; } pos += 4; } closedir (dir); return written; } /* Implement the to_xfer_partial interface for the TARGET_OBJECT_SPU object type, using the /proc file system. */ static LONGEST linux_proc_xfer_spu (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { char buf[128]; int fd = 0; int ret = -1; int pid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); if (!annex) { if (!readbuf) return -1; else return spu_enumerate_spu_ids (pid, readbuf, offset, len); } xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "/proc/%d/fd/%s", pid, annex); fd = open (buf, writebuf? O_WRONLY : O_RDONLY); if (fd <= 0) return -1; if (offset != 0 && lseek (fd, (off_t) offset, SEEK_SET) != (off_t) offset) { close (fd); return 0; } if (writebuf) ret = write (fd, writebuf, (size_t) len); else if (readbuf) ret = read (fd, readbuf, (size_t) len); close (fd); return ret; } /* Parse LINE as a signal set and add its set bits to SIGS. */ static void add_line_to_sigset (const char *line, sigset_t *sigs) { int len = strlen (line) - 1; const char *p; int signum; if (line[len] != '\n') error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line); p = line; signum = len * 4; while (len-- > 0) { int digit; if (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9') digit = *p - '0'; else if (*p >= 'a' && *p <= 'f') digit = *p - 'a' + 10; else error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line); signum -= 4; if (digit & 1) sigaddset (sigs, signum + 1); if (digit & 2) sigaddset (sigs, signum + 2); if (digit & 4) sigaddset (sigs, signum + 3); if (digit & 8) sigaddset (sigs, signum + 4); p++; } } /* Find process PID's pending signals from /proc/pid/status and set SIGS to match. */ void linux_proc_pending_signals (int pid, sigset_t *pending, sigset_t *blocked, sigset_t *ignored) { FILE *procfile; char buffer[MAXPATHLEN], fname[MAXPATHLEN]; struct cleanup *cleanup; sigemptyset (pending); sigemptyset (blocked); sigemptyset (ignored); sprintf (fname, "/proc/%d/status", pid); procfile = fopen (fname, "r"); if (procfile == NULL) error (_("Could not open %s"), fname); cleanup = make_cleanup_fclose (procfile); while (fgets (buffer, MAXPATHLEN, procfile) != NULL) { /* Normal queued signals are on the SigPnd line in the status file. However, 2.6 kernels also have a "shared" pending queue for delivering signals to a thread group, so check for a ShdPnd line also. Unfortunately some Red Hat kernels include the shared pending queue but not the ShdPnd status field. */ if (strncmp (buffer, "SigPnd:\t", 8) == 0) add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending); else if (strncmp (buffer, "ShdPnd:\t", 8) == 0) add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending); else if (strncmp (buffer, "SigBlk:\t", 8) == 0) add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, blocked); else if (strncmp (buffer, "SigIgn:\t", 8) == 0) add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, ignored); } do_cleanups (cleanup); } static LONGEST linux_nat_xfer_osdata (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA); return linux_common_xfer_osdata (annex, readbuf, offset, len); } static LONGEST linux_xfer_partial (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object, const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len) { LONGEST xfer; if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV) return memory_xfer_auxv (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA) return linux_nat_xfer_osdata (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SPU) return linux_proc_xfer_spu (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); /* GDB calculates all the addresses in possibly larget width of the address. Address width needs to be masked before its final use - either by linux_proc_xfer_partial or inf_ptrace_xfer_partial. Compare ADDR_BIT first to avoid a compiler warning on shift overflow. */ if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY) { int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch); if (addr_bit < (sizeof (ULONGEST) * HOST_CHAR_BIT)) offset &= ((ULONGEST) 1 << addr_bit) - 1; } xfer = linux_proc_xfer_partial (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); if (xfer != 0) return xfer; return super_xfer_partial (ops, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf, offset, len); } /* Create a prototype generic GNU/Linux target. The client can override it with local methods. */ static void linux_target_install_ops (struct target_ops *t) { t->to_insert_fork_catchpoint = linux_child_insert_fork_catchpoint; t->to_remove_fork_catchpoint = linux_child_remove_fork_catchpoint; t->to_insert_vfork_catchpoint = linux_child_insert_vfork_catchpoint; t->to_remove_vfork_catchpoint = linux_child_remove_vfork_catchpoint; t->to_insert_exec_catchpoint = linux_child_insert_exec_catchpoint; t->to_remove_exec_catchpoint = linux_child_remove_exec_catchpoint; t->to_set_syscall_catchpoint = linux_child_set_syscall_catchpoint; t->to_pid_to_exec_file = linux_child_pid_to_exec_file; t->to_post_startup_inferior = linux_child_post_startup_inferior; t->to_post_attach = linux_child_post_attach; t->to_follow_fork = linux_child_follow_fork; t->to_make_corefile_notes = linux_nat_make_corefile_notes; super_xfer_partial = t->to_xfer_partial; t->to_xfer_partial = linux_xfer_partial; } struct target_ops * linux_target (void) { struct target_ops *t; t = inf_ptrace_target (); linux_target_install_ops (t); return t; } struct target_ops * linux_trad_target (CORE_ADDR (*register_u_offset)(struct gdbarch *, int, int)) { struct target_ops *t; t = inf_ptrace_trad_target (register_u_offset); linux_target_install_ops (t); return t; } /* target_is_async_p implementation. */ static int linux_nat_is_async_p (void) { /* NOTE: palves 2008-03-21: We're only async when the user requests it explicitly with the "set target-async" command. Someday, linux will always be async. */ return target_async_permitted; } /* target_can_async_p implementation. */ static int linux_nat_can_async_p (void) { /* NOTE: palves 2008-03-21: We're only async when the user requests it explicitly with the "set target-async" command. Someday, linux will always be async. */ return target_async_permitted; } static int linux_nat_supports_non_stop (void) { return 1; } /* True if we want to support multi-process. To be removed when GDB supports multi-exec. */ int linux_multi_process = 1; static int linux_nat_supports_multi_process (void) { return linux_multi_process; } static int linux_nat_supports_disable_randomization (void) { #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY return 1; #else return 0; #endif } static int async_terminal_is_ours = 1; /* target_terminal_inferior implementation. */ static void linux_nat_terminal_inferior (void) { if (!target_is_async_p ()) { /* Async mode is disabled. */ terminal_inferior (); return; } terminal_inferior (); /* Calls to target_terminal_*() are meant to be idempotent. */ if (!async_terminal_is_ours) return; delete_file_handler (input_fd); async_terminal_is_ours = 0; set_sigint_trap (); } /* target_terminal_ours implementation. */ static void linux_nat_terminal_ours (void) { if (!target_is_async_p ()) { /* Async mode is disabled. */ terminal_ours (); return; } /* GDB should never give the terminal to the inferior if the inferior is running in the background (run&, continue&, etc.), but claiming it sure should. */ terminal_ours (); if (async_terminal_is_ours) return; clear_sigint_trap (); add_file_handler (input_fd, stdin_event_handler, 0); async_terminal_is_ours = 1; } static void (*async_client_callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type, void *context); static void *async_client_context; /* SIGCHLD handler that serves two purposes: In non-stop/async mode, so we notice when any child changes state, and notify the event-loop; it allows us to use sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait_1 above to wait for the arrival of a SIGCHLD. */ static void sigchld_handler (int signo) { int old_errno = errno; if (debug_linux_nat) ui_file_write_async_safe (gdb_stdlog, "sigchld\n", sizeof ("sigchld\n") - 1); if (signo == SIGCHLD && linux_nat_event_pipe[0] != -1) async_file_mark (); /* Let the event loop know that there are events to handle. */ errno = old_errno; } /* Callback registered with the target events file descriptor. */ static void handle_target_event (int error, gdb_client_data client_data) { (*async_client_callback) (INF_REG_EVENT, async_client_context); } /* Create/destroy the target events pipe. Returns previous state. */ static int linux_async_pipe (int enable) { int previous = (linux_nat_event_pipe[0] != -1); if (previous != enable) { sigset_t prev_mask; block_child_signals (&prev_mask); if (enable) { if (pipe (linux_nat_event_pipe) == -1) internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "creating event pipe failed."); fcntl (linux_nat_event_pipe[0], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); fcntl (linux_nat_event_pipe[1], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); } else { close (linux_nat_event_pipe[0]); close (linux_nat_event_pipe[1]); linux_nat_event_pipe[0] = -1; linux_nat_event_pipe[1] = -1; } restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask); } return previous; } /* target_async implementation. */ static void linux_nat_async (void (*callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type, void *context), void *context) { if (callback != NULL) { async_client_callback = callback; async_client_context = context; if (!linux_async_pipe (1)) { add_file_handler (linux_nat_event_pipe[0], handle_target_event, NULL); /* There may be pending events to handle. Tell the event loop to poll them. */ async_file_mark (); } } else { async_client_callback = callback; async_client_context = context; delete_file_handler (linux_nat_event_pipe[0]); linux_async_pipe (0); } return; } /* Stop an LWP, and push a TARGET_SIGNAL_0 stop status if no other event came out. */ static int linux_nat_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp, void *data) { if (!lwp->stopped) { ptid_t ptid = lwp->ptid; if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNSL: running -> suspending %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid)); if (lwp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop) { if (debug_linux_nat) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "linux-nat: already stopping LWP %ld at " "GDB's request\n", ptid_get_lwp (lwp->ptid)); return 0; } stop_callback (lwp, NULL); lwp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop; } else { /* Already known to be stopped; do nothing. */ if (debug_linux_nat) { if (find_thread_ptid (lwp->ptid)->stop_requested) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNSL: already stopped/stop_requested %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid)); else fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNSL: already stopped/no " "stop_requested yet %s\n", target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid)); } } return 0; } static void linux_nat_stop (ptid_t ptid) { if (non_stop) iterate_over_lwps (ptid, linux_nat_stop_lwp, NULL); else linux_ops->to_stop (ptid); } static void linux_nat_close (int quitting) { /* Unregister from the event loop. */ if (linux_nat_is_async_p ()) linux_nat_async (NULL, 0); if (linux_ops->to_close) linux_ops->to_close (quitting); } /* When requests are passed down from the linux-nat layer to the single threaded inf-ptrace layer, ptids of (lwpid,0,0) form are used. The address space pointer is stored in the inferior object, but the common code that is passed such ptid can't tell whether lwpid is a "main" process id or not (it assumes so). We reverse look up the "main" process id from the lwp here. */ struct address_space * linux_nat_thread_address_space (struct target_ops *t, ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lwp; struct inferior *inf; int pid; pid = GET_LWP (ptid); if (GET_LWP (ptid) == 0) { /* An (lwpid,0,0) ptid. Look up the lwp object to get at the tgid. */ lwp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); pid = GET_PID (lwp->ptid); } else { /* A (pid,lwpid,0) ptid. */ pid = GET_PID (ptid); } inf = find_inferior_pid (pid); gdb_assert (inf != NULL); return inf->aspace; } int linux_nat_core_of_thread_1 (ptid_t ptid) { struct cleanup *back_to; char *filename; FILE *f; char *content = NULL; char *p; char *ts = 0; int content_read = 0; int i; int core; filename = xstrprintf ("/proc/%d/task/%ld/stat", GET_PID (ptid), GET_LWP (ptid)); back_to = make_cleanup (xfree, filename); f = fopen (filename, "r"); if (!f) { do_cleanups (back_to); return -1; } make_cleanup_fclose (f); for (;;) { int n; content = xrealloc (content, content_read + 1024); n = fread (content + content_read, 1, 1024, f); content_read += n; if (n < 1024) { content[content_read] = '\0'; break; } } make_cleanup (xfree, content); p = strchr (content, '('); /* Skip ")". */ if (p != NULL) p = strchr (p, ')'); if (p != NULL) p++; /* If the first field after program name has index 0, then core number is the field with index 36. There's no constant for that anywhere. */ if (p != NULL) p = strtok_r (p, " ", &ts); for (i = 0; p != NULL && i != 36; ++i) p = strtok_r (NULL, " ", &ts); if (p == NULL || sscanf (p, "%d", &core) == 0) core = -1; do_cleanups (back_to); return core; } /* Return the cached value of the processor core for thread PTID. */ int linux_nat_core_of_thread (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *info = find_lwp_pid (ptid); if (info) return info->core; return -1; } void linux_nat_add_target (struct target_ops *t) { /* Save the provided single-threaded target. We save this in a separate variable because another target we've inherited from (e.g. inf-ptrace) may have saved a pointer to T; we want to use it for the final process stratum target. */ linux_ops_saved = *t; linux_ops = &linux_ops_saved; /* Override some methods for multithreading. */ t->to_create_inferior = linux_nat_create_inferior; t->to_attach = linux_nat_attach; t->to_detach = linux_nat_detach; t->to_resume = linux_nat_resume; t->to_wait = linux_nat_wait; t->to_pass_signals = linux_nat_pass_signals; t->to_xfer_partial = linux_nat_xfer_partial; t->to_kill = linux_nat_kill; t->to_mourn_inferior = linux_nat_mourn_inferior; t->to_thread_alive = linux_nat_thread_alive; t->to_pid_to_str = linux_nat_pid_to_str; t->to_thread_name = linux_nat_thread_name; t->to_has_thread_control = tc_schedlock; t->to_thread_address_space = linux_nat_thread_address_space; t->to_stopped_by_watchpoint = linux_nat_stopped_by_watchpoint; t->to_stopped_data_address = linux_nat_stopped_data_address; t->to_can_async_p = linux_nat_can_async_p; t->to_is_async_p = linux_nat_is_async_p; t->to_supports_non_stop = linux_nat_supports_non_stop; t->to_async = linux_nat_async; t->to_terminal_inferior = linux_nat_terminal_inferior; t->to_terminal_ours = linux_nat_terminal_ours; t->to_close = linux_nat_close; /* Methods for non-stop support. */ t->to_stop = linux_nat_stop; t->to_supports_multi_process = linux_nat_supports_multi_process; t->to_supports_disable_randomization = linux_nat_supports_disable_randomization; t->to_core_of_thread = linux_nat_core_of_thread; /* We don't change the stratum; this target will sit at process_stratum and thread_db will set at thread_stratum. This is a little strange, since this is a multi-threaded-capable target, but we want to be on the stack below thread_db, and we also want to be used for single-threaded processes. */ add_target (t); } /* Register a method to call whenever a new thread is attached. */ void linux_nat_set_new_thread (struct target_ops *t, void (*new_thread) (struct lwp_info *)) { /* Save the pointer. We only support a single registered instance of the GNU/Linux native target, so we do not need to map this to T. */ linux_nat_new_thread = new_thread; } /* Register a method that converts a siginfo object between the layout that ptrace returns, and the layout in the architecture of the inferior. */ void linux_nat_set_siginfo_fixup (struct target_ops *t, int (*siginfo_fixup) (struct siginfo *, gdb_byte *, int)) { /* Save the pointer. */ linux_nat_siginfo_fixup = siginfo_fixup; } /* Register a method to call prior to resuming a thread. */ void linux_nat_set_prepare_to_resume (struct target_ops *t, void (*prepare_to_resume) (struct lwp_info *)) { /* Save the pointer. */ linux_nat_prepare_to_resume = prepare_to_resume; } /* Return the saved siginfo associated with PTID. */ struct siginfo * linux_nat_get_siginfo (ptid_t ptid) { struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid); gdb_assert (lp != NULL); return &lp->siginfo; } /* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */ extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_linux_nat; void _initialize_linux_nat (void) { add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("lin-lwp", class_maintenance, &debug_linux_nat, _("\ Set debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module."), _("\ Show debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module."), _("\ Enables printf debugging output."), NULL, show_debug_linux_nat, &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist); /* Save this mask as the default. */ sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &normal_mask); /* Install a SIGCHLD handler. */ sigchld_action.sa_handler = sigchld_handler; sigemptyset (&sigchld_action.sa_mask); sigchld_action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; /* Make it the default. */ sigaction (SIGCHLD, &sigchld_action, NULL); /* Make sure we don't block SIGCHLD during a sigsuspend. */ sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &suspend_mask); sigdelset (&suspend_mask, SIGCHLD); sigemptyset (&blocked_mask); } /* FIXME: kettenis/2000-08-26: The stuff on this page is specific to the GNU/Linux Threads library and therefore doesn't really belong here. */ /* Read variable NAME in the target and return its value if found. Otherwise return zero. It is assumed that the type of the variable is `int'. */ static int get_signo (const char *name) { struct minimal_symbol *ms; int signo; ms = lookup_minimal_symbol (name, NULL, NULL); if (ms == NULL) return 0; if (target_read_memory (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (ms), (gdb_byte *) &signo, sizeof (signo)) != 0) return 0; return signo; } /* Return the set of signals used by the threads library in *SET. */ void lin_thread_get_thread_signals (sigset_t *set) { struct sigaction action; int restart, cancel; sigemptyset (&blocked_mask); sigemptyset (set); restart = get_signo ("__pthread_sig_restart"); cancel = get_signo ("__pthread_sig_cancel"); /* LinuxThreads normally uses the first two RT signals, but in some legacy cases may use SIGUSR1/SIGUSR2. NPTL always uses RT signals, but does not provide any way for the debugger to query the signal numbers - fortunately they don't change! */ if (restart == 0) restart = __SIGRTMIN; if (cancel == 0) cancel = __SIGRTMIN + 1; sigaddset (set, restart); sigaddset (set, cancel); /* The GNU/Linux Threads library makes terminating threads send a special "cancel" signal instead of SIGCHLD. Make sure we catch those (to prevent them from terminating GDB itself, which is likely to be their default action) and treat them the same way as SIGCHLD. */ action.sa_handler = sigchld_handler; sigemptyset (&action.sa_mask); action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART; sigaction (cancel, &action, NULL); /* We block the "cancel" signal throughout this code ... */ sigaddset (&blocked_mask, cancel); sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &blocked_mask, NULL); /* ... except during a sigsuspend. */ sigdelset (&suspend_mask, cancel); }