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author | Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> | 2021-08-13 14:18:07 +0100 |
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committer | Laurent Vivier <laurent@vivier.eu> | 2021-09-23 14:42:55 +0200 |
commit | af7969605eed067320fe9eca80f1aa35b67ec46d (patch) | |
tree | b128e6c1be5d673bb7ecb2e5f84acfc7a49679df /linux-user | |
parent | 819121b9b08a41ccfcde2e18eb782f8f6b2912f1 (diff) | |
download | qemu-af7969605eed067320fe9eca80f1aa35b67ec46d.zip qemu-af7969605eed067320fe9eca80f1aa35b67ec46d.tar.gz qemu-af7969605eed067320fe9eca80f1aa35b67ec46d.tar.bz2 |
linux-user: Provide new force_sig_fault() function
In many places in the linux-user code we need to queue a signal for
the guest using the QEMU_SI_FAULT si_type. This requires that the
caller sets up and passes us a target_siginfo, including setting the
appropriate part of the _sifields union for the si_type. In a number
of places the code forgets to set the _sifields union field.
Provide a new force_sig_fault() function, which does the same thing
as the Linux kernel function of that name -- it takes the signal
number, the si_code value and the address to use in
_sifields._sigfault, and assembles the target_siginfo itself. This
makes the callsites simpler and means it's harder to forget to pass
in an address value.
We follow force_sig() and the kernel's force_sig_fault() in not
requiring the caller to pass in the CPU pointer but always acting
on the CPU of the current thread.
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-Id: <20210813131809.28655-6-peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Laurent Vivier <laurent@vivier.eu>
Diffstat (limited to 'linux-user')
-rw-r--r-- | linux-user/signal-common.h | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | linux-user/signal.c | 17 |
2 files changed, 18 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/linux-user/signal-common.h b/linux-user/signal-common.h index 58ea23f..79511be 100644 --- a/linux-user/signal-common.h +++ b/linux-user/signal-common.h @@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ void tswap_siginfo(target_siginfo_t *tinfo, void set_sigmask(const sigset_t *set); void force_sig(int sig); void force_sigsegv(int oldsig); +void force_sig_fault(int sig, int code, abi_ulong addr); #if defined(TARGET_ARCH_HAS_SETUP_FRAME) void setup_frame(int sig, struct target_sigaction *ka, target_sigset_t *set, CPUArchState *env); diff --git a/linux-user/signal.c b/linux-user/signal.c index 910b9dc..2038216 100644 --- a/linux-user/signal.c +++ b/linux-user/signal.c @@ -651,6 +651,23 @@ void force_sig(int sig) queue_signal(env, info.si_signo, QEMU_SI_KILL, &info); } +/* + * Force a synchronously taken QEMU_SI_FAULT signal. For QEMU the + * 'force' part is handled in process_pending_signals(). + */ +void force_sig_fault(int sig, int code, abi_ulong addr) +{ + CPUState *cpu = thread_cpu; + CPUArchState *env = cpu->env_ptr; + target_siginfo_t info = {}; + + info.si_signo = sig; + info.si_errno = 0; + info.si_code = code; + info._sifields._sigfault._addr = addr; + queue_signal(env, sig, QEMU_SI_FAULT, &info); +} + /* Force a SIGSEGV if we couldn't write to memory trying to set * up the signal frame. oldsig is the signal we were trying to handle * at the point of failure. |