binutils-gdb/gdb/procfs.c
2000-02-16 08:02:57 +00:00

5274 lines
136 KiB
C

/* Machine independent support for SVR4 /proc (process file system) for GDB.
Copyright 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Written by Michael Snyder at Cygnus Solutions.
Based on work by Fred Fish, Stu Grossman, Geoff Noer, and others.
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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
#include "defs.h"
#include "inferior.h"
#include "target.h"
#include "gdbcore.h"
#include "gdbcmd.h"
#include "gdbthread.h"
#if defined (NEW_PROC_API)
#define _STRUCTURED_PROC 1 /* Should be done by configure script. */
#endif
#include <sys/procfs.h>
#include <sys/fault.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include "proc-utils.h"
/*
* PROCFS.C
*
* This module provides the interface between GDB and the
* /proc file system, which is used on many versions of Unix
* as a means for debuggers to control other processes.
* Examples of the systems that use this interface are:
* Irix
* Solaris
* OSF
* Unixware
*
* /proc works by immitating a file system: you open a simulated file
* that represents the process you wish to interact with, and
* perform operations on that "file" in order to examine or change
* the state of the other process.
*
* The most important thing to know about /proc and this module
* is that there are two very different interfaces to /proc:
* One that uses the ioctl system call, and
* another that uses read and write system calls.
* This module has to support both /proc interfaces. This means
* that there are two different ways of doing every basic operation.
*
* In order to keep most of the code simple and clean, I have
* defined an interface "layer" which hides all these system calls.
* An ifdef (NEW_PROC_API) determines which interface we are using,
* and most or all occurrances of this ifdef should be confined to
* this interface layer.
*/
/* Determine which /proc API we are using:
The ioctl API defines PIOCSTATUS, while
the read/write (multiple fd) API never does. */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <dirent.h> /* opendir/readdir, for listing the LWP's */
#endif
#include <fcntl.h> /* for O_RDONLY */
#include <unistd.h> /* for "X_OK" */
#include "gdb_stat.h" /* for struct stat */
/* =================== TARGET_OPS "MODULE" =================== */
/*
* This module defines the GDB target vector and its methods.
*/
static void procfs_open PARAMS((char *, int));
static void procfs_attach PARAMS ((char *, int));
static void procfs_detach PARAMS ((char *, int));
static void procfs_resume PARAMS ((int, int, enum target_signal));
static int procfs_can_run PARAMS ((void));
static void procfs_stop PARAMS ((void));
static void procfs_files_info PARAMS ((struct target_ops *));
static void procfs_fetch_registers PARAMS ((int));
static void procfs_store_registers PARAMS ((int));
static void procfs_notice_signals PARAMS ((int));
static void procfs_prepare_to_store PARAMS ((void));
static void procfs_kill_inferior PARAMS ((void));
static void procfs_mourn_inferior PARAMS ((void));
static void procfs_create_inferior PARAMS ((char *, char *, char **));
static int procfs_wait PARAMS ((int,
struct target_waitstatus *));
static int procfs_xfer_memory PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR,
char *, int, int,
struct target_ops *));
static int procfs_thread_alive PARAMS ((int));
void procfs_find_new_threads PARAMS ((void));
char *procfs_pid_to_str PARAMS ((int));
struct target_ops procfs_ops; /* the target vector */
static void
init_procfs_ops ()
{
procfs_ops.to_shortname = "procfs";
procfs_ops.to_longname = "Unix /proc child process";
procfs_ops.to_doc =
"Unix /proc child process (started by the \"run\" command).";
procfs_ops.to_open = procfs_open;
procfs_ops.to_can_run = procfs_can_run;
procfs_ops.to_create_inferior = procfs_create_inferior;
procfs_ops.to_kill = procfs_kill_inferior;
procfs_ops.to_mourn_inferior = procfs_mourn_inferior;
procfs_ops.to_attach = procfs_attach;
procfs_ops.to_detach = procfs_detach;
procfs_ops.to_wait = procfs_wait;
procfs_ops.to_resume = procfs_resume;
procfs_ops.to_prepare_to_store = procfs_prepare_to_store;
procfs_ops.to_fetch_registers = procfs_fetch_registers;
procfs_ops.to_store_registers = procfs_store_registers;
procfs_ops.to_xfer_memory = procfs_xfer_memory;
procfs_ops.to_insert_breakpoint = memory_insert_breakpoint;
procfs_ops.to_remove_breakpoint = memory_remove_breakpoint;
procfs_ops.to_notice_signals = procfs_notice_signals;
procfs_ops.to_files_info = procfs_files_info;
procfs_ops.to_stop = procfs_stop;
procfs_ops.to_terminal_init = terminal_init_inferior;
procfs_ops.to_terminal_inferior = terminal_inferior;
procfs_ops.to_terminal_ours_for_output = terminal_ours_for_output;
procfs_ops.to_terminal_ours = terminal_ours;
procfs_ops.to_terminal_info = child_terminal_info;
procfs_ops.to_find_new_threads = procfs_find_new_threads;
procfs_ops.to_thread_alive = procfs_thread_alive;
procfs_ops.to_pid_to_str = procfs_pid_to_str;
procfs_ops.to_has_execution = 1;
procfs_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
procfs_ops.to_has_registers = 1;
procfs_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
procfs_ops.to_has_thread_control = tc_schedlock;
procfs_ops.to_magic = OPS_MAGIC;
}
/* =================== END, TARGET_OPS "MODULE" =================== */
/*
* Temporary debugging code:
*
* These macros allow me to trace the system calls that we make
* to control the child process. This is quite handy for comparing
* with the older version of procfs.
*/
#ifdef TRACE_PROCFS
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
extern int write_with_trace PARAMS ((int, void *, size_t, char *, int));
extern off_t lseek_with_trace PARAMS ((int, off_t, int, char *, int));
#define write(X,Y,Z) write_with_trace (X, Y, Z, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define lseek(X,Y,Z) lseek_with_trace (X, Y, Z, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#else
extern int ioctl_with_trace PARAMS ((int, long, void *, char *, int));
#define ioctl(X,Y,Z) ioctl_with_trace (X, Y, Z, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#endif
#define open(X,Y) open_with_trace (X, Y, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define close(X) close_with_trace (X, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define wait(X) wait_with_trace (X, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define PROCFS_NOTE(X) procfs_note (X, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS(X,Y,Z,T) \
proc_prettyfprint_status (X, Y, Z, T)
#else
#define PROCFS_NOTE(X)
#define PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS(X,Y,Z,T)
#endif
/*
* World Unification:
*
* Put any typedefs, defines etc. here that are required for
* the unification of code that handles different versions of /proc.
*/
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API /* Solaris 7 && 8 method for watchpoints */
#ifndef UNIXWARE
enum { READ_WATCHFLAG = WA_READ,
WRITE_WATCHFLAG = WA_WRITE,
EXEC_WATCHFLAG = WA_EXEC,
AFTER_WATCHFLAG = WA_TRAPAFTER
};
#endif
#else /* Irix method for watchpoints */
enum { READ_WATCHFLAG = MA_READ,
WRITE_WATCHFLAG = MA_WRITE,
EXEC_WATCHFLAG = MA_EXEC,
AFTER_WATCHFLAG = 0 /* trapafter not implemented */
};
#endif
/* =================== STRUCT PROCINFO "MODULE" =================== */
/* FIXME: this comment will soon be out of date W.R.T. threads. */
/* The procinfo struct is a wrapper to hold all the state information
concerning a /proc process. There should be exactly one procinfo
for each process, and since GDB currently can debug only one
process at a time, that means there should be only one procinfo.
All of the LWP's of a process can be accessed indirectly thru the
single process procinfo.
However, against the day when GDB may debug more than one process,
this data structure is kept in a list (which for now will hold no
more than one member), and many functions will have a pointer to a
procinfo as an argument.
There will be a separate procinfo structure for use by the (not yet
implemented) "info proc" command, so that we can print useful
information about any random process without interfering with the
inferior's procinfo information. */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
/* format strings for /proc paths */
# ifndef CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT
# define MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d"
# define CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/ctl"
# define AS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/as"
# define MAP_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/map"
# define STATUS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/status"
# define MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE sizeof("/proc/99999/lwp/8096/lstatus")
# endif
/* the name of the proc status struct depends on the implementation */
typedef pstatus_t gdb_prstatus_t;
typedef lwpstatus_t gdb_lwpstatus_t;
#else /* ! NEW_PROC_API */
/* format strings for /proc paths */
# ifndef CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT
# define MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%05d"
# define CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%05d"
# define AS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%05d"
# define MAP_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%05d"
# define STATUS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%05d"
# define MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE sizeof("/proc/ttttppppp")
# endif
/* the name of the proc status struct depends on the implementation */
typedef prstatus_t gdb_prstatus_t;
typedef prstatus_t gdb_lwpstatus_t;
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
/* These #ifdefs are for sol2.x in particular. sol2.x has
both a "gregset_t" and a "prgregset_t", which have
similar uses but different layouts. sol2.x gdb tries to
use prgregset_t (and prfpregset_t) everywhere. */
#ifdef GDB_GREGSET_TYPE
typedef GDB_GREGSET_TYPE gdb_gregset_t;
#else
typedef gregset_t gdb_gregset_t;
#endif
#ifdef GDB_FPREGSET_TYPE
typedef GDB_FPREGSET_TYPE gdb_fpregset_t;
#else
typedef fpregset_t gdb_fpregset_t;
#endif
/* Provide default composite pid manipulation macros for systems that
don't have threads. */
#ifndef PIDGET
#define PIDGET(PID) (PID)
#define TIDGET(PID) (PID)
#endif
#ifndef MERGEPID
#define MERGEPID(PID, TID) (PID)
#endif
typedef struct procinfo {
struct procinfo *next;
int pid; /* Process ID */
int tid; /* Thread/LWP id */
/* process state */
int was_stopped;
int ignore_next_sigstop;
/* The following four fd fields may be identical, or may contain
several different fd's, depending on the version of /proc
(old ioctl or new read/write). */
int ctl_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc control file */
/*
* The next three file descriptors are actually only needed in the
* read/write, multiple-file-descriptor implemenation (NEW_PROC_API).
* However, to avoid a bunch of #ifdefs in the code, we will use
* them uniformly by (in the case of the ioctl single-file-descriptor
* implementation) filling them with copies of the control fd.
*/
int status_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc status file */
int as_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc as file */
char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE]; /* Pathname to /proc entry */
fltset_t saved_fltset; /* Saved traced hardware fault set */
sigset_t saved_sigset; /* Saved traced signal set */
sigset_t saved_sighold; /* Saved held signal set */
sysset_t saved_exitset; /* Saved traced system call exit set */
sysset_t saved_entryset; /* Saved traced system call entry set */
gdb_prstatus_t prstatus; /* Current process status info */
#ifndef NEW_PROC_API
gdb_fpregset_t fpregset; /* Current floating point registers */
#endif
struct procinfo *thread_list;
int status_valid : 1;
int gregs_valid : 1;
int fpregs_valid : 1;
int threads_valid: 1;
} procinfo;
static char errmsg[128]; /* shared error msg buffer */
/* Function prototypes for procinfo module: */
static procinfo *find_procinfo_or_die PARAMS ((int pid, int tid));
static procinfo *find_procinfo PARAMS ((int pid, int tid));
static procinfo *create_procinfo PARAMS ((int pid, int tid));
static void destroy_procinfo PARAMS ((procinfo *p));
static void dead_procinfo PARAMS ((procinfo *p,
char *msg, int killp));
static int open_procinfo_files PARAMS ((procinfo *p, int which));
static void close_procinfo_files PARAMS ((procinfo *p));
/* The head of the procinfo list: */
static procinfo * procinfo_list;
/*
* Function: find_procinfo
*
* Search the procinfo list.
*
* Returns: pointer to procinfo, or NULL if not found.
*/
static procinfo *
find_procinfo (pid, tid)
int pid;
int tid;
{
procinfo *pi;
for (pi = procinfo_list; pi; pi = pi->next)
if (pi->pid == pid)
break;
if (pi)
if (tid)
{
/* Don't check threads_valid. If we're updating the
thread_list, we want to find whatever threads are already
here. This means that in general it is the caller's
responsibility to check threads_valid and update before
calling find_procinfo, if the caller wants to find a new
thread. */
for (pi = pi->thread_list; pi; pi = pi->next)
if (pi->tid == tid)
break;
}
return pi;
}
/*
* Function: find_procinfo_or_die
*
* Calls find_procinfo, but errors on failure.
*/
static procinfo *
find_procinfo_or_die (pid, tid)
int pid;
int tid;
{
procinfo *pi = find_procinfo (pid, tid);
if (pi == NULL)
{
if (tid)
error ("procfs: couldn't find pid %d (kernel thread %d) in procinfo list.",
pid, tid);
else
error ("procfs: couldn't find pid %d in procinfo list.", pid);
}
return pi;
}
/*
* Function: open_procinfo_files
*
* Open the file descriptor for the process or LWP.
* ifdef NEW_PROC_API, we only open the control file descriptor;
* the others are opened lazily as needed.
* else (if not NEW_PROC_API), there is only one real
* file descriptor, but we keep multiple copies of it so that
* the code that uses them does not have to be #ifdef'd.
*
* Return: file descriptor, or zero for failure.
*/
enum { FD_CTL, FD_STATUS, FD_AS };
static int
open_procinfo_files (pi, which)
procinfo *pi;
int which;
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
char tmp[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
#endif
int fd;
/*
* This function is getting ALMOST long enough to break up into several.
* Here is some rationale:
*
* NEW_PROC_API (Solaris 2.6, Solaris 2.7, Unixware):
* There are several file descriptors that may need to be open
* for any given process or LWP. The ones we're intereted in are:
* - control (ctl) write-only change the state
* - status (status) read-only query the state
* - address space (as) read/write access memory
* - map (map) read-only virtual addr map
* Most of these are opened lazily as they are needed.
* The pathnames for the 'files' for an LWP look slightly
* different from those of a first-class process:
* Pathnames for a process (<proc-id>):
* /proc/<proc-id>/ctl
* /proc/<proc-id>/status
* /proc/<proc-id>/as
* /proc/<proc-id>/map
* Pathnames for an LWP (lwp-id):
* /proc/<proc-id>/lwp/<lwp-id>/lwpctl
* /proc/<proc-id>/lwp/<lwp-id>/lwpstatus
* An LWP has no map or address space file descriptor, since
* the memory map and address space are shared by all LWPs.
*
* Everyone else (Solaris 2.5, Irix, OSF)
* There is only one file descriptor for each process or LWP.
* For convenience, we copy the same file descriptor into all
* three fields of the procinfo struct (ctl_fd, status_fd, and
* as_fd, see NEW_PROC_API above) so that code that uses them
* doesn't need any #ifdef's.
* Pathname for all:
* /proc/<proc-id>
*
* Solaris 2.5 LWP's:
* Each LWP has an independent file descriptor, but these
* are not obtained via the 'open' system call like the rest:
* instead, they're obtained thru an ioctl call (PIOCOPENLWP)
* to the file descriptor of the parent process.
*
* OSF threads:
* These do not even have their own independent file descriptor.
* All operations are carried out on the file descriptor of the
* parent process. Therefore we just call open again for each
* thread, getting a new handle for the same 'file'.
*/
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
/*
* In this case, there are several different file descriptors that
* we might be asked to open. The control file descriptor will be
* opened early, but the others will be opened lazily as they are
* needed.
*/
strcpy (tmp, pi->pathname);
switch (which) { /* which file descriptor to open? */
case FD_CTL:
if (pi->tid)
strcat (tmp, "/lwpctl");
else
strcat (tmp, "/ctl");
fd = open (tmp, O_WRONLY);
if (fd <= 0)
return 0; /* fail */
pi->ctl_fd = fd;
break;
case FD_AS:
if (pi->tid)
return 0; /* there is no 'as' file descriptor for an lwp */
strcat (tmp, "/as");
fd = open (tmp, O_RDWR);
if (fd <= 0)
return 0; /* fail */
pi->as_fd = fd;
break;
case FD_STATUS:
if (pi->tid)
strcat (tmp, "/lwpstatus");
else
strcat (tmp, "/status");
fd = open (tmp, O_RDONLY);
if (fd <= 0)
return 0; /* fail */
pi->status_fd = fd;
break;
default:
return 0; /* unknown file descriptor */
}
#else /* not NEW_PROC_API */
/*
* In this case, there is only one file descriptor for each procinfo
* (ie. each process or LWP). In fact, only the file descriptor for
* the process can actually be opened by an 'open' system call.
* The ones for the LWPs have to be obtained thru an IOCTL call
* on the process's file descriptor.
*
* For convenience, we copy each procinfo's single file descriptor
* into all of the fields occupied by the several file descriptors
* of the NEW_PROC_API implementation. That way, the code that uses
* them can be written without ifdefs.
*/
#ifdef PIOCTSTATUS /* OSF */
if ((fd = open (pi->pathname, O_RDWR)) == 0) /* Only one FD; just open it. */
return 0;
#else /* Sol 2.5, Irix, other? */
if (pi->tid == 0) /* Master procinfo for the process */
{
fd = open (pi->pathname, O_RDWR);
if (fd <= 0)
return 0; /* fail */
}
else /* LWP thread procinfo */
{
#ifdef PIOCOPENLWP /* Sol 2.5, thread/LWP */
procinfo *process;
int lwpid = pi->tid;
/* Find the procinfo for the entire process. */
if ((process = find_procinfo (pi->pid, 0)) == NULL)
return 0; /* fail */
/* Now obtain the file descriptor for the LWP. */
if ((fd = ioctl (process->ctl_fd, PIOCOPENLWP, &lwpid)) <= 0)
return 0; /* fail */
#else /* Irix, other? */
return 0; /* Don't know how to open threads */
#endif /* Sol 2.5 PIOCOPENLWP */
}
#endif /* OSF PIOCTSTATUS */
pi->ctl_fd = pi->as_fd = pi->status_fd = fd;
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
return 1; /* success */
}
/*
* Function: create_procinfo
*
* Allocate a data structure and link it into the procinfo list.
* (First tries to find a pre-existing one (FIXME: why???)
*
* Return: pointer to new procinfo struct.
*/
static procinfo *
create_procinfo (pid, tid)
int pid;
int tid;
{
procinfo *pi, *parent;
if ((pi = find_procinfo (pid, tid)))
return pi; /* Already exists, nothing to do. */
/* find parent before doing malloc, to save having to cleanup */
if (tid != 0)
parent = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, 0); /* FIXME: should I
create it if it
doesn't exist yet? */
pi = (procinfo *) xmalloc (sizeof (procinfo));
memset (pi, 0, sizeof (procinfo));
pi->pid = pid;
pi->tid = tid;
/* Chain into list. */
if (tid == 0)
{
sprintf (pi->pathname, MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT, pid);
pi->next = procinfo_list;
procinfo_list = pi;
}
else
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
sprintf (pi->pathname, "/proc/%05d/lwp/%d", pid, tid);
#else
sprintf (pi->pathname, MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT, pid);
#endif
pi->next = parent->thread_list;
parent->thread_list = pi;
}
return pi;
}
/*
* Function: close_procinfo_files
*
* Close all file descriptors associated with the procinfo
*/
static void
close_procinfo_files (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (pi->ctl_fd > 0)
close (pi->ctl_fd);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (pi->as_fd > 0)
close (pi->as_fd);
if (pi->status_fd > 0)
close (pi->status_fd);
#endif
pi->ctl_fd = pi->as_fd = pi->status_fd = 0;
}
/*
* Function: destroy_procinfo
*
* Destructor function. Close, unlink and deallocate the object.
*/
static void
destroy_one_procinfo (list, pi)
procinfo **list;
procinfo *pi;
{
procinfo *ptr;
/* Step one: unlink the procinfo from its list */
if (pi == *list)
*list = pi->next;
else
for (ptr = *list; ptr; ptr = ptr->next)
if (ptr->next == pi)
{
ptr->next = pi->next;
break;
}
/* Step two: close any open file descriptors */
close_procinfo_files (pi);
/* Step three: free the memory. */
free (pi);
}
static void
destroy_procinfo (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
procinfo *tmp;
if (pi->tid != 0) /* destroy a thread procinfo */
{
tmp = find_procinfo (pi->pid, 0); /* find the parent process */
destroy_one_procinfo (&tmp->thread_list, pi);
}
else /* destroy a process procinfo and all its threads */
{
/* First destroy the children, if any; */
while (pi->thread_list != NULL)
destroy_one_procinfo (&pi->thread_list, pi->thread_list);
/* Then destroy the parent. Genocide!!! */
destroy_one_procinfo (&procinfo_list, pi);
}
}
enum { NOKILL, KILL };
/*
* Function: dead_procinfo
*
* To be called on a non_recoverable error for a procinfo.
* Prints error messages, optionally sends a SIGKILL to the process,
* then destroys the data structure.
*/
static void
dead_procinfo (pi, msg, kill_p)
procinfo *pi;
char *msg;
int kill_p;
{
char procfile[80];
if (pi->pathname)
{
print_sys_errmsg (pi->pathname, errno);
}
else
{
sprintf (procfile, "process %d", pi->pid);
print_sys_errmsg (procfile, errno);
}
if (kill_p == KILL)
kill (pi->pid, SIGKILL);
destroy_procinfo (pi);
error (msg);
}
/* =================== END, STRUCT PROCINFO "MODULE" =================== */
/* =================== /proc "MODULE" =================== */
/*
* This "module" is the interface layer between the /proc system API
* and the gdb target vector functions. This layer consists of
* access functions that encapsulate each of the basic operations
* that we need to use from the /proc API.
*
* The main motivation for this layer is to hide the fact that
* there are two very different implementations of the /proc API.
* Rather than have a bunch of #ifdefs all thru the gdb target vector
* functions, we do our best to hide them all in here.
*/
int proc_get_status PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
long proc_flags PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_why PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_what PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_run_on_last_close PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_unset_run_on_last_close PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_inherit_on_fork PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_unset_inherit_on_fork PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_async PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_unset_async PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_stop_process PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_trace_signal PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, int signo));
int proc_ignore_signal PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, int signo));
int proc_clear_current_fault PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_current_signal PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, int signo));
int proc_clear_current_signal PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_gregs PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_fpregs PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_wait_for_stop PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_run_process PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, int step, int signo));
int proc_kill PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, int signo));
int proc_parent_pid PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_get_nthreads PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_get_current_thread PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_set_held_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sigset_t *sighold));
int proc_set_traced_sysexit PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sysset_t *sysset));
int proc_set_traced_sysentry PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sysset_t *sysset));
int proc_set_traced_faults PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, fltset_t *fltset));
int proc_set_traced_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sigset_t *sigset));
int proc_update_threads PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
int proc_iterate_over_threads PARAMS ((procinfo *pi,
int (*func) PARAMS ((procinfo *,
procinfo *,
void *)),
void *ptr));
gdb_gregset_t *proc_get_gregs PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
gdb_fpregset_t *proc_get_fpregs PARAMS ((procinfo *pi));
sysset_t *proc_get_traced_sysexit PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sysset_t *save));
sysset_t *proc_get_traced_sysentry PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sysset_t *save));
fltset_t *proc_get_traced_faults PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, fltset_t *save));
sigset_t *proc_get_traced_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sigset_t *save));
sigset_t *proc_get_held_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sigset_t *save));
sigset_t *proc_get_pending_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, sigset_t *save));
struct sigaction *proc_get_signal_actions PARAMS ((procinfo *pi,
struct sigaction *save));
void proc_warn PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, char *func, int line));
void proc_error PARAMS ((procinfo *pi, char *func, int line));
void
proc_warn (pi, func, line)
procinfo *pi;
char *func;
int line;
{
sprintf (errmsg, "procfs: %s line %d, %s", func, line, pi->pathname);
print_sys_errmsg (errmsg, errno);
}
void
proc_error (pi, func, line)
procinfo *pi;
char *func;
int line;
{
sprintf (errmsg, "procfs: %s line %d, %s", func, line, pi->pathname);
perror_with_name (errmsg);
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_status
*
* Updates the status struct in the procinfo.
* There is a 'valid' flag, to let other functions know when
* this function needs to be called (so the status is only
* read when it is needed). The status file descriptor is
* also only opened when it is needed.
*
* Return: non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_get_status (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
/* Status file descriptor is opened "lazily" */
if (pi->status_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_STATUS) == 0)
{
pi->status_valid = 0;
return 0;
}
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (lseek (pi->status_fd, 0, SEEK_SET) < 0)
pi->status_valid = 0; /* fail */
else
{
/* Sigh... I have to read a different data structure,
depending on whether this is a main process or an LWP. */
if (pi->tid)
pi->status_valid = (read (pi->status_fd,
(char *) &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp,
sizeof (lwpstatus_t))
== sizeof (lwpstatus_t));
else
{
pi->status_valid = (read (pi->status_fd,
(char *) &pi->prstatus,
sizeof (gdb_prstatus_t))
== sizeof (gdb_prstatus_t));
#if 0 /*def UNIXWARE*/
if (pi->status_valid &&
(pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_flags & PR_ISTOP) &&
pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_why == PR_REQUESTED)
/* Unixware peculiarity -- read the damn thing again! */
pi->status_valid = (read (pi->status_fd,
(char *) &pi->prstatus,
sizeof (gdb_prstatus_t))
== sizeof (gdb_prstatus_t));
#endif /* UNIXWARE */
}
}
#else /* ioctl method */
#ifdef PIOCTSTATUS /* osf */
if (pi->tid == 0) /* main process */
{
/* Just read the danged status. Now isn't that simple? */
pi->status_valid =
(ioctl (pi->status_fd, PIOCSTATUS, &pi->prstatus) >= 0);
}
else
{
int win;
struct {
long pr_count;
tid_t pr_error_thread;
struct prstatus status;
} thread_status;
thread_status.pr_count = 1;
thread_status.status.pr_tid = pi->tid;
win = (ioctl (pi->status_fd, PIOCTSTATUS, &thread_status) >= 0);
if (win)
{
memcpy (&pi->prstatus, &thread_status.status,
sizeof (pi->prstatus));
pi->status_valid = 1;
}
}
#else
/* Just read the danged status. Now isn't that simple? */
pi->status_valid = (ioctl (pi->status_fd, PIOCSTATUS, &pi->prstatus) >= 0);
#endif
#endif
if (pi->status_valid)
{
PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS (proc_flags (pi),
proc_why (pi),
proc_what (pi),
proc_get_current_thread (pi));
}
/* The status struct includes general regs, so mark them valid too */
pi->gregs_valid = pi->status_valid;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
/* In the read/write multiple-fd model,
the status struct includes the fp regs too, so mark them valid too */
pi->fpregs_valid = pi->status_valid;
#endif
return pi->status_valid; /* True if success, false if failure. */
}
/*
* Function: proc_flags
*
* returns the process flags (pr_flags field).
*/
long
proc_flags (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
# ifdef UNIXWARE
/* UnixWare 7.1 puts process status flags, e.g. PR_ASYNC, in
pstatus_t and LWP status flags, e.g. PR_STOPPED, in lwpstatus_t.
The two sets of flags don't overlap. */
return pi->prstatus.pr_flags | pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_flags;
# else
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_flags;
# endif
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_flags;
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_why
*
* returns the pr_why field (why the process stopped).
*/
int
proc_why (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_why;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_why;
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_what
*
* returns the pr_what field (details of why the process stopped).
*/
int
proc_what (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_what;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_what;
#endif
}
#ifndef PIOCSSPCACT /* The following is not supported on OSF. */
/*
* Function: proc_nsysarg
*
* returns the pr_nsysarg field (number of args to the current syscall).
*/
int
proc_nsysarg (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_nsysarg;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_nsysarg;
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_sysargs
*
* returns the pr_sysarg field (pointer to the arguments of current syscall).
*/
long *
proc_sysargs (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return (long *) &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_sysarg;
#else
return (long *) &pi->prstatus.pr_sysarg;
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_syscall
*
* returns the pr_syscall field (id of current syscall if we are in one).
*/
int
proc_syscall (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_syscall;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_syscall;
#endif
}
#endif /* PIOCSSPCACT */
/*
* Function: proc_cursig:
*
* returns the pr_cursig field (current signal).
*/
long
proc_cursig (struct procinfo *pi)
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_cursig;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_cursig;
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_modify_flag
*
* === I appologize for the messiness of this function.
* === This is an area where the different versions of
* === /proc are more inconsistent than usual. MVS
*
* Set or reset any of the following process flags:
* PR_FORK -- forked child will inherit trace flags
* PR_RLC -- traced process runs when last /proc file closed.
* PR_KLC -- traced process is killed when last /proc file closed.
* PR_ASYNC -- LWP's get to run/stop independently.
*
* There are three methods for doing this function:
* 1) Newest: read/write [PCSET/PCRESET/PCUNSET]
* [Sol6, Sol7, UW]
* 2) Middle: PIOCSET/PIOCRESET
* [Irix, Sol5]
* 3) Oldest: PIOCSFORK/PIOCRFORK/PIOCSRLC/PIOCRRLC
* [OSF, Sol5]
*
* Note: Irix does not define PR_ASYNC.
* Note: OSF does not define PR_KLC.
* Note: OSF is the only one that can ONLY use the oldest method.
*
* Arguments:
* pi -- the procinfo
* flag -- one of PR_FORK, PR_RLC, or PR_ASYNC
* mode -- 1 for set, 0 for reset.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
enum { FLAG_RESET, FLAG_SET };
static int
proc_modify_flag (pi, flag, mode)
procinfo *pi;
long flag;
long mode;
{
long win = 0; /* default to fail */
/*
* These operations affect the process as a whole, and applying
* them to an individual LWP has the same meaning as applying them
* to the main process. Therefore, if we're ever called with a
* pointer to an LWP's procinfo, let's substitute the process's
* procinfo and avoid opening the LWP's file descriptor
* unnecessarily.
*/
if (pi->pid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API /* Newest method: UnixWare and newer Solarii */
/* First normalize the PCUNSET/PCRESET command opcode
(which for no obvious reason has a different definition
from one operating system to the next...) */
#ifdef PCUNSET
#define GDBRESET PCUNSET
#endif
#ifdef PCRESET
#define GDBRESET PCRESET
#endif
{
long arg[2];
if (mode == FLAG_SET) /* Set the flag (RLC, FORK, or ASYNC) */
arg[0] = PCSET;
else /* Reset the flag */
arg[0] = GDBRESET;
arg[1] = flag;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else
#ifdef PIOCSET /* Irix/Sol5 method */
if (mode == FLAG_SET) /* Set the flag (hopefully RLC, FORK, or ASYNC) */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSET, &flag) >= 0);
}
else /* Reset the flag */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCRESET, &flag) >= 0);
}
#else
#ifdef PIOCSRLC /* Oldest method: OSF */
switch (flag) {
case PR_RLC:
if (mode == FLAG_SET) /* Set run-on-last-close */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSRLC, NULL) >= 0);
}
else /* Clear run-on-last-close */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCRRLC, NULL) >= 0);
}
break;
case PR_FORK:
if (mode == FLAG_SET) /* Set inherit-on-fork */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSFORK, NULL) >= 0);
}
else /* Clear inherit-on-fork */
{
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCRFORK, NULL) >= 0);
}
break;
default:
win = 0; /* fail -- unknown flag (can't do PR_ASYNC) */
break;
}
#endif
#endif
#endif
#undef GDBRESET
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
if (!win)
warning ("procfs: modify_flag failed to turn %s %s",
flag == PR_FORK ? "PR_FORK" :
flag == PR_RLC ? "PR_RLC" :
#ifdef PR_ASYNC
flag == PR_ASYNC ? "PR_ASYNC" :
#endif
#ifdef PR_KLC
flag == PR_KLC ? "PR_KLC" :
#endif
"<unknown flag>",
mode == FLAG_RESET ? "off" : "on");
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_run_on_last_close
*
* Set the run_on_last_close flag.
* Process with all threads will become runnable
* when debugger closes all /proc fds.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_RLC, FLAG_SET);
}
/*
* Function: proc_unset_run_on_last_close
*
* Reset the run_on_last_close flag.
* Process will NOT become runnable
* when debugger closes its file handles.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_unset_run_on_last_close (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_RLC, FLAG_RESET);
}
#ifdef PR_KLC
/*
* Function: proc_set_kill_on_last_close
*
* Set the kill_on_last_close flag.
* Process with all threads will be killed when debugger
* closes all /proc fds (or debugger exits or dies).
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_kill_on_last_close (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_KLC, FLAG_SET);
}
/*
* Function: proc_unset_kill_on_last_close
*
* Reset the kill_on_last_close flag.
* Process will NOT be killed when debugger
* closes its file handles (or exits or dies).
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_unset_kill_on_last_close (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_KLC, FLAG_RESET);
}
#endif /* PR_KLC */
/*
* Function: proc_set_inherit_on_fork
*
* Set inherit_on_fork flag.
* If the process forks a child while we are registered for events
* in the parent, then we will also recieve events from the child.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_inherit_on_fork (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_FORK, FLAG_SET);
}
/*
* Function: proc_unset_inherit_on_fork
*
* Reset inherit_on_fork flag.
* If the process forks a child while we are registered for events
* in the parent, then we will NOT recieve events from the child.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_unset_inherit_on_fork (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_FORK, FLAG_RESET);
}
#ifdef PR_ASYNC
/*
* Function: proc_set_async
*
* Set PR_ASYNC flag.
* If one LWP stops because of a debug event (signal etc.),
* the remaining LWPs will continue to run.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_async (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_ASYNC, FLAG_SET);
}
/*
* Function: proc_unset_async
*
* Reset PR_ASYNC flag.
* If one LWP stops because of a debug event (signal etc.),
* then all other LWPs will stop as well.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_unset_async (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_ASYNC, FLAG_RESET);
}
#endif /* PR_ASYNC */
/*
* Function: proc_stop_process
*
* Request the process/LWP to stop. Does not wait.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_stop_process (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int win;
/*
* We might conceivably apply this operation to an LWP, and
* the LWP's ctl file descriptor might not be open.
*/
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
return 0;
else
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
int cmd = PCSTOP;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSTOP, &pi->prstatus) >= 0);
/* Note: the call also reads the prstatus. */
if (win)
{
pi->status_valid = 1;
PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS (proc_flags (pi),
proc_why (pi),
proc_what (pi),
proc_get_current_thread (pi));
}
#endif
}
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_wait_for_stop
*
* Wait for the process or LWP to stop (block until it does).
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_wait_for_stop (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
int cmd = PCWSTOP;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
/* We been runnin' and we stopped -- need to update status. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
}
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCWSTOP, &pi->prstatus) >= 0);
/* Above call also refreshes the prstatus. */
if (win)
{
pi->status_valid = 1;
PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS (proc_flags (pi),
proc_why (pi),
proc_what (pi),
proc_get_current_thread (pi));
}
#endif
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_run_process
*
* Make the process or LWP runnable.
* Options (not all are implemented):
* - single-step
* - clear current fault
* - clear current signal
* - abort the current system call
* - stop as soon as finished with system call
* - (ioctl): set traced signal set
* - (ioctl): set held signal set
* - (ioctl): set traced fault set
* - (ioctl): set start pc (vaddr)
* Always clear the current fault.
* Clear the current signal if 'signo' is zero.
*
* Arguments:
* pi the process or LWP to operate on.
* step if true, set the process or LWP to trap after one instr.
* signo if zero, clear the current signal if any.
* if non-zero, set the current signal to this one.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_run_process (pi, step, signo)
procinfo *pi;
int step;
int signo;
{
int win;
int runflags;
/*
* We will probably have to apply this operation to individual threads,
* so make sure the control file descriptor is open.
*/
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
return 0;
}
runflags = PRCFAULT; /* always clear current fault */
if (step)
runflags |= PRSTEP;
if (signo == 0)
runflags |= PRCSIG;
else if (signo != -1) /* -1 means do nothing W.R.T. signals */
proc_set_current_signal (pi, signo);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
int cmd[2];
cmd[0] = PCRUN;
cmd[1] = runflags;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
}
#else /* ioctl method */
{
prrun_t prrun;
memset (&prrun, 0, sizeof (prrun));
prrun.pr_flags = runflags;
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCRUN, &prrun) >= 0);
}
#endif
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_traced_signals
*
* Register to trace signals in the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_traced_signals (pi, sigset)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *sigset;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char sigset[sizeof (sigset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSTRACE;
memcpy (&arg.sigset, sigset, sizeof (sigset_t));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSTRACE, sigset) >= 0);
#endif
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
if (!win)
warning ("procfs: set_traced_signals failed");
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_traced_faults
*
* Register to trace hardware faults in the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_traced_faults (pi, fltset)
procinfo *pi;
fltset_t *fltset;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char fltset[sizeof (fltset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSFAULT;
memcpy (&arg.fltset, fltset, sizeof (fltset_t));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSFAULT, fltset) >= 0);
#endif
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_traced_sysentry
*
* Register to trace entry to system calls in the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, sysset)
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t *sysset;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char sysset[sizeof (sysset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSENTRY;
memcpy (&arg.sysset, sysset, sizeof (sysset_t));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSENTRY, sysset) >= 0);
#endif
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_traced_sysexit
*
* Register to trace exit from system calls in the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, sysset)
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t *sysset;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char sysset[sizeof (sysset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSEXIT;
memcpy (&arg.sysset, sysset, sizeof (sysset_t));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else /* ioctl method */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSEXIT, sysset) >= 0);
#endif
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_held_signals
*
* Specify the set of blocked / held signals in the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_held_signals (pi, sighold)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *sighold;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char hold[sizeof (sigset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSHOLD;
memcpy (&arg.hold, sighold, sizeof (sigset_t));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSHOLD, sighold) >= 0);
#endif
/* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_pending_signals
*
* returns the set of signals that are pending in the process or LWP.
* Will also copy the sigset if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
sigset_t *
proc_get_pending_signals (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *save;
{
sigset_t *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_lwppend;
#else
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sigpend;
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sigset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_signal_actions
*
* returns the set of signal actions.
* Will also copy the sigactionset if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
struct sigaction *
proc_get_signal_actions (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
struct sigaction *save;
{
struct sigaction *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_action;
#else
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_action;
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (struct sigaction));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_held_signals
*
* returns the set of signals that are held / blocked.
* Will also copy the sigset if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
sigset_t *
proc_get_held_signals (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *save;
{
sigset_t *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
#ifdef UNIXWARE
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_context.uc_sigmask;
#else
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_lwphold;
#endif /* UNIXWARE */
#else /* not NEW_PROC_API */
{
static sigset_t sigheld;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGHOLD, &sigheld) >= 0)
ret = &sigheld;
}
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sigset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_traced_signals
*
* returns the set of signals that are traced / debugged.
* Will also copy the sigset if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
sigset_t *
proc_get_traced_signals (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *save;
{
sigset_t *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sigtrace;
#else
{
static sigset_t sigtrace;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGTRACE, &sigtrace) >= 0)
ret = &sigtrace;
}
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sigset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_trace_signal
*
* Add 'signo' to the set of signals that are traced.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_trace_signal (pi, signo)
procinfo *pi;
int signo;
{
sigset_t temp;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (pi)
{
if (proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &temp))
{
praddset (&temp, signo);
return proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &temp);
}
}
return 0; /* failure */
}
/*
* Function: proc_ignore_signal
*
* Remove 'signo' from the set of signals that are traced.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_ignore_signal (pi, signo)
procinfo *pi;
int signo;
{
sigset_t temp;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (pi)
{
if (proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &temp))
{
prdelset (&temp, signo);
return proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &temp);
}
}
return 0; /* failure */
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_traced_faults
*
* returns the set of hardware faults that are traced /debugged.
* Will also copy the faultset if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
fltset_t *
proc_get_traced_faults (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
fltset_t *save;
{
fltset_t *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_flttrace;
#else
{
static fltset_t flttrace;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGFAULT, &flttrace) >= 0)
ret = &flttrace;
}
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (fltset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_traced_sysentry
*
* returns the set of syscalls that are traced /debugged on entry.
* Will also copy the syscall set if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
sysset_t *
proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t *save;
{
sysset_t *ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sysentry;
#else
{
static sysset_t sysentry;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGENTRY, &sysentry) >= 0)
ret = &sysentry;
}
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sysset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_traced_sysexit
*
* returns the set of syscalls that are traced /debugged on exit.
* Will also copy the syscall set if 'save' is non-zero.
*/
sysset_t *
proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, save)
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t *save;
{
sysset_t * ret = NULL;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sysexit;
#else
{
static sysset_t sysexit;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGEXIT, &sysexit) >= 0)
ret = &sysexit;
}
#endif
if (save && ret)
memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sysset_t));
return ret;
}
/*
* Function: proc_clear_current_fault
*
* The current fault (if any) is cleared; the associated signal
* will not be sent to the process or LWP when it resumes.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_clear_current_fault (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
int cmd = PCCFAULT;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
}
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCCFAULT, 0) >= 0);
#endif
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_current_signal
*
* Set the "current signal" that will be delivered next to the process.
* NOTE: semantics are different from those of KILL.
* This signal will be delivered to the process or LWP
* immediately when it is resumed (even if the signal is held/blocked);
* it will NOT immediately cause another event of interest, and will NOT
* first trap back to the debugger.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_current_signal (pi, signo)
procinfo *pi;
int signo;
{
int win;
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char sinfo[sizeof (struct siginfo)];
} arg;
struct siginfo *mysinfo;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef PROCFS_DONT_PIOCSSIG_CURSIG
/* With Alpha OSF/1 procfs, the kernel gets really confused if it
* receives a PIOCSSIG with a signal identical to the current signal,
* it messes up the current signal. Work around the kernel bug.
*/
if (signo > 0 &&
signo == proc_cursig (pi))
return 1; /* I assume this is a success? */
#endif
/* The pointer is just a type alias. */
mysinfo = (struct siginfo *) &arg.sinfo;
mysinfo->si_signo = signo;
mysinfo->si_code = 0;
mysinfo->si_pid = getpid (); /* ?why? */
mysinfo->si_uid = getuid (); /* ?why? */
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
arg.cmd = PCSSIG;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSIG, (void *) &arg.sinfo) >= 0);
#endif
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_clear_current_signal
*
* The current signal (if any) is cleared, and
* is not sent to the process or LWP when it resumes.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_clear_current_signal (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int win;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
{
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char sinfo[sizeof (struct siginfo)];
} arg;
struct siginfo *mysinfo;
arg.cmd = PCSSIG;
/* The pointer is just a type alias. */
mysinfo = (struct siginfo *) &arg.sinfo;
mysinfo->si_signo = 0;
mysinfo->si_code = 0;
mysinfo->si_errno = 0;
mysinfo->si_pid = getpid (); /* ?why? */
mysinfo->si_uid = getuid (); /* ?why? */
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
}
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSIG, 0) >= 0);
#endif
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_gregs
*
* Get the general registers for the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
gdb_gregset_t *
proc_get_gregs (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid || !pi->gregs_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
/*
* OK, sorry about the ifdef's.
* There's three cases instead of two, because
* in this instance Unixware and Solaris/RW differ.
*/
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
#ifdef UNIXWARE /* ugh, a true architecture dependency */
return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_context.uc_mcontext.gregs;
#else /* not Unixware */
return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_reg;
#endif /* Unixware */
#else /* not NEW_PROC_API */
return &pi->prstatus.pr_reg;
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
}
/*
* Function: proc_get_fpregs
*
* Get the floating point registers for the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
gdb_fpregset_t *
proc_get_fpregs (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (!pi->status_valid || !pi->fpregs_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return NULL;
#ifdef UNIXWARE /* a true architecture dependency */
return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_context.uc_mcontext.fpregs;
#else
return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_fpreg;
#endif /* Unixware */
#else /* not NEW_PROC_API */
if (pi->fpregs_valid)
return &pi->fpregset; /* already got 'em */
else
{
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
return NULL;
}
else
{
#ifdef PIOCTGFPREG
struct {
long pr_count;
tid_t pr_error_thread;
tfpregset_t thread_1;
} thread_fpregs;
thread_fpregs.pr_count = 1;
thread_fpregs.thread_1.tid = pi->tid;
if (pi->tid == 0 &&
ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGFPREG, &pi->fpregset) >= 0)
{
pi->fpregs_valid = 1;
return &pi->fpregset; /* got 'em now! */
}
else if (pi->tid != 0 &&
ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCTGFPREG, &thread_fpregs) >= 0)
{
memcpy (&pi->fpregset, &thread_fpregs.thread_1.pr_fpregs,
sizeof (pi->fpregset));
pi->fpregs_valid = 1;
return &pi->fpregset; /* got 'em now! */
}
else
{
return NULL;
}
#else
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGFPREG, &pi->fpregset) >= 0)
{
pi->fpregs_valid = 1;
return &pi->fpregset; /* got 'em now! */
}
else
{
return NULL;
}
#endif
}
}
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_gregs
*
* Write the general registers back to the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_gregs (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
int win;
if ((gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi)) == NULL)
return 0; /* get_regs has already warned */
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
return 0;
}
else
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char gregs[sizeof (gdb_gregset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSREG;
memcpy (&arg.gregs, gregs, sizeof (arg.gregs));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSREG, gregs) >= 0);
#endif
}
/* Policy: writing the regs invalidates our cache. */
pi->gregs_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_fpregs
*
* Modify the floating point register set of the process or LWP.
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_set_fpregs (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
int win;
if ((fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi)) == NULL)
return 0; /* get_fpregs has already warned */
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
return 0;
}
else
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
struct {
int cmd;
/* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
char fpregs[sizeof (gdb_fpregset_t)];
} arg;
arg.cmd = PCSFPREG;
memcpy (&arg.fpregs, fpregs, sizeof (arg.fpregs));
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
#else
#ifdef PIOCTSFPREG
if (pi->tid == 0)
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSFPREG, fpregs) >= 0);
else
{
struct {
long pr_count;
tid_t pr_error_thread;
tfpregset_t thread_1;
} thread_fpregs;
thread_fpregs.pr_count = 1;
thread_fpregs.thread_1.tid = pi->tid;
memcpy (&thread_fpregs.thread_1.pr_fpregs, fpregs,
sizeof (*fpregs));
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCTSFPREG, &thread_fpregs) >= 0);
}
#else
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSFPREG, fpregs) >= 0);
#endif /* osf PIOCTSFPREG */
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
}
/* Policy: writing the regs invalidates our cache. */
pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_kill
*
* Send a signal to the proc or lwp with the semantics of "kill()".
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_kill (pi, signo)
procinfo *pi;
int signo;
{
int win;
/*
* We might conceivably apply this operation to an LWP, and
* the LWP's ctl file descriptor might not be open.
*/
if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
return 0;
}
else
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
int cmd[2];
cmd[0] = PCKILL;
cmd[1] = signo;
win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
#else /* ioctl method */
/* FIXME: do I need the Alpha OSF fixups present in
procfs.c/unconditionally_kill_inferior? Perhaps only for SIGKILL? */
win = (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCKILL, &signo) >= 0);
#endif
}
return win;
}
/*
* Function: proc_parent_pid
*
* Find the pid of the process that started this one.
* Returns the parent process pid, or zero.
*/
int
proc_parent_pid (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0;
return pi->prstatus.pr_ppid;
}
/*
* Function: proc_set_watchpoint
*
*/
int
proc_set_watchpoint (pi, addr, len, wflags)
procinfo *pi;
void *addr;
int len;
int wflags;
{
#if !defined (TARGET_HAS_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINTS)
return 0;
#else
/* Horrible hack! Detect Solaris 2.5, because this doesn't work on 2.5 */
#if defined (PIOCOPENLWP) || defined (UNIXWARE) /* Solaris 2.5: bail out */
return 0;
#else
struct {
int cmd;
char watch[sizeof (prwatch_t)];
} arg;
prwatch_t *pwatch;
pwatch = (prwatch_t *) &arg.watch;
pwatch->pr_vaddr = addr;
pwatch->pr_size = len;
pwatch->pr_wflags = wflags;
#if defined(NEW_PROC_API) && defined (PCWATCH)
arg.cmd = PCWATCH;
return (write (pi->ctl_fd, &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
#else
#if defined (PIOCSWATCH)
return (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSWATCH, pwatch) >= 0);
#else
return 0; /* Fail */
#endif
#endif
#endif
#endif
}
/*
* Function: proc_iterate_over_mappings
*
* Given a pointer to a function, call that function once for every
* mapped address space in the process. The callback function
* receives an open file descriptor for the file corresponding to
* that mapped address space (if there is one), and the base address
* of the mapped space. Quit when the callback function returns a
* nonzero value, or at teh end of the mappings.
*
* Returns: the first non-zero return value of the callback function,
* or zero.
*/
/* FIXME: it's probably a waste to cache this FD.
It doesn't get called that often... and if I open it
every time, I don't need to lseek it. */
int
proc_iterate_over_mappings (func)
int (*func) PARAMS ((int, CORE_ADDR));
{
struct prmap *map;
procinfo *pi;
#ifndef NEW_PROC_API /* avoid compiler warning */
int nmaps = 0;
int i;
#else
int map_fd;
char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
#endif
int funcstat = 0;
int fd;
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
/* Open map fd. */
sprintf (pathname, "/proc/%d/map", pi->pid);
if ((map_fd = open (pathname, O_RDONLY)) < 0)
proc_error (pi, "proc_iterate_over_mappings (open)", __LINE__);
/* Make sure it gets closed again. */
make_cleanup ((make_cleanup_func) close, (void *) map_fd);
/* Allocate space for mapping (lifetime only for this function). */
map = alloca (sizeof (struct prmap));
/* Now read the mappings from the file,
open a file descriptor for those that have a name,
and call the callback function. */
while (read (map_fd,
(void *) map,
sizeof (struct prmap)) == sizeof (struct prmap))
{
char name[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE + sizeof (map->pr_mapname)];
if (map->pr_vaddr == 0 && map->pr_size == 0)
break; /* sanity */
if (map->pr_mapname[0] == 0)
{
fd = -1; /* no map file */
}
else
{
sprintf (name, "/proc/%d/object/%s", pi->pid, map->pr_mapname);
/* Note: caller's responsibility to close this fd! */
fd = open (name, O_RDONLY);
/* Note: we don't test the above call for failure;
we just pass the FD on as given. Sometimes there is
no file, so the ioctl may return failure, but that's
not a problem. */
}
/* Stop looping if the callback returns non-zero. */
if ((funcstat = (*func) (fd, (CORE_ADDR) map->pr_vaddr)) != 0)
break;
}
#else
/* Get the number of mapping entries. */
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCNMAP, &nmaps) < 0)
proc_error (pi, "proc_iterate_over_mappings (PIOCNMAP)", __LINE__);
/* Allocate space for mappings (lifetime only this function). */
map = (struct prmap *) alloca ((nmaps + 1) * sizeof (struct prmap));
/* Read in all the mappings. */
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCMAP, map) < 0)
proc_error (pi, "proc_iterate_over_mappings (PIOCMAP)", __LINE__);
/* Now loop through the mappings, open an fd for each, and
call the callback function. */
for (i = 0;
i < nmaps && map[i].pr_size != 0;
i++)
{
/* Note: caller's responsibility to close this fd! */
fd = ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCOPENM, &map[i].pr_vaddr);
/* Note: we don't test the above call for failure;
we just pass the FD on as given. Sometimes there is
no file, so the ioctl may return failure, but that's
not a problem. */
/* Stop looping if the callback returns non-zero. */
if ((funcstat = (*func) (fd, (CORE_ADDR) map[i].pr_vaddr)) != 0)
break;
}
#endif
return funcstat;
}
#ifdef TM_I386SOL2_H /* Is it hokey to use this? */
#include <sys/sysi86.h>
/*
* Function: proc_get_LDT_entry
*
* Inputs:
* procinfo *pi;
* int key;
*
* The 'key' is actually the value of the lower 16 bits of
* the GS register for the LWP that we're interested in.
*
* Return: matching ssh struct (LDT entry).
*/
struct ssd *
proc_get_LDT_entry (pi, key)
procinfo *pi;
int key;
{
static struct ssd *ldt_entry = NULL;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
struct cleanup *old_chain = NULL;
int fd;
/* Allocate space for one LDT entry.
This alloc must persist, because we return a pointer to it. */
if (ldt_entry == NULL)
ldt_entry = (struct ssd *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct ssd));
/* Open the file descriptor for the LDT table. */
sprintf (pathname, "/proc/%d/ldt", pi->pid);
if ((fd = open (pathname, O_RDONLY)) < 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "proc_get_LDT_entry (open)", __LINE__);
return NULL;
}
/* Make sure it gets closed again! */
old_chain = make_cleanup ((make_cleanup_func) close, (void *) fd);
/* Now 'read' thru the table, find a match and return it. */
while (read (fd, ldt_entry, sizeof (struct ssd)) == sizeof (struct ssd))
{
if (ldt_entry->sel == 0 &&
ldt_entry->bo == 0 &&
ldt_entry->acc1 == 0 &&
ldt_entry->acc2 == 0)
break; /* end of table */
/* If key matches, return this entry. */
if (ldt_entry->sel == key)
return ldt_entry;
}
/* Loop ended, match not found. */
return NULL;
#else
int nldt, i;
static int nalloc = 0;
/* Get the number of LDT entries. */
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCNLDT, &nldt) < 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "proc_get_LDT_entry (PIOCNLDT)", __LINE__);
return NULL;
}
/* Allocate space for the number of LDT entries. */
/* This alloc has to persist, 'cause we return a pointer to it. */
if (nldt > nalloc)
{
ldt_entry = (struct ssd *)
xrealloc (ldt_entry, (nldt + 1) * sizeof (struct ssd));
nalloc = nldt;
}
/* Read the whole table in one gulp. */
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCLDT, ldt_entry) < 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "proc_get_LDT_entry (PIOCLDT)", __LINE__);
return NULL;
}
/* Search the table and return the (first) entry matching 'key'. */
for (i = 0; i < nldt; i++)
if (ldt_entry[i].sel == key)
return &ldt_entry[i];
/* Loop ended, match not found. */
return NULL;
#endif
}
#endif /* TM_I386SOL2_H */
/* =============== END, non-thread part of /proc "MODULE" =============== */
/* =================== Thread "MODULE" =================== */
/* NOTE: you'll see more ifdefs and duplication of functions here,
since there is a different way to do threads on every OS. */
/*
* Function: proc_get_nthreads
*
* Return the number of threads for the process
*/
#if defined (PIOCNTHR) && defined (PIOCTLIST)
/*
* OSF version
*/
int
proc_get_nthreads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int nthreads = 0;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCNTHR, &nthreads) < 0)
proc_warn (pi, "procfs: PIOCNTHR failed", __LINE__);
return nthreads;
}
#else
#if defined (SYS_lwpcreate) || defined (SYS_lwp_create) /* FIXME: multiple */
/*
* Solaris and Unixware version
*/
int
proc_get_nthreads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0;
/*
* NEW_PROC_API: only works for the process procinfo,
* because the LWP procinfos do not get prstatus filled in.
*/
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
if (pi->tid != 0) /* find the parent process procinfo */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
#endif
return pi->prstatus.pr_nlwp;
}
#else
/*
* Default version
*/
int
proc_get_nthreads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return 0;
}
#endif
#endif
/*
* Function: proc_get_current_thread (LWP version)
*
* Return the ID of the thread that had an event of interest.
* (ie. the one that hit a breakpoint or other traced event).
* All other things being equal, this should be the ID of a
* thread that is currently executing.
*/
#if defined (SYS_lwpcreate) || defined (SYS_lwp_create) /* FIXME: multiple */
/*
* Solaris and Unixware version
*/
int
proc_get_current_thread (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
/*
* Note: this should be applied to the root procinfo for the process,
* not to the procinfo for an LWP. If applied to the procinfo for
* an LWP, it will simply return that LWP's ID. In that case,
* find the parent process procinfo.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
if (!pi->status_valid)
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
return 0;
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_lwpid;
#else
return pi->prstatus.pr_who;
#endif
}
#else
#if defined (PIOCNTHR) && defined (PIOCTLIST)
/*
* OSF version
*/
int
proc_get_current_thread (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
#if 0 /* FIXME: not ready for prime time? */
return pi->prstatus.pr_tid;
#else
return 0;
#endif
}
#else
/*
* Default version
*/
int
proc_get_current_thread (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return 0;
}
#endif
#endif
/*
* Function: proc_update_threads
*
* Discover the IDs of all the threads within the process, and
* create a procinfo for each of them (chained to the parent).
*
* This unfortunately requires a different method on every OS.
*
* Return: non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
int
proc_delete_dead_threads (parent, thread, ignore)
procinfo *parent;
procinfo *thread;
void *ignore;
{
if (thread && parent) /* sanity */
{
thread->status_valid = 0;
if (!proc_get_status (thread))
destroy_one_procinfo (&parent->thread_list, thread);
}
return 0; /* keep iterating */
}
#if defined (PIOCLSTATUS)
/*
* Solaris 2.5 (ioctl) version
*/
int
proc_update_threads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
gdb_prstatus_t *prstatus;
struct cleanup *old_chain = NULL;
procinfo *thread;
int nlwp, i;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, proc_delete_dead_threads, NULL);
if ((nlwp = proc_get_nthreads (pi)) <= 1)
return 1; /* Process is not multi-threaded; nothing to do. */
if ((prstatus = (gdb_prstatus_t *)
malloc (sizeof (gdb_prstatus_t) * (nlwp + 1))) == 0)
perror_with_name ("procfs: malloc failed in update_threads");
old_chain = make_cleanup (free, prstatus);
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCLSTATUS, prstatus) < 0)
proc_error (pi, "update_threads (PIOCLSTATUS)", __LINE__);
/* Skip element zero, which represents the process as a whole. */
for (i = 1; i < nlwp + 1; i++)
{
if ((thread = create_procinfo (pi->pid, prstatus[i].pr_who)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "update_threads, create_procinfo", __LINE__);
memcpy (&thread->prstatus, &prstatus[i], sizeof (*prstatus));
thread->status_valid = 1;
}
pi->threads_valid = 1;
do_cleanups (old_chain);
return 1;
}
#else
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
/*
* Unixware and Solaris 6 (and later) version
*/
int
proc_update_threads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE + 16];
struct dirent *direntry;
struct cleanup *old_chain = NULL;
procinfo *thread;
DIR *dirp;
int lwpid;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, proc_delete_dead_threads, NULL);
/*
* Unixware
*
* Note: this brute-force method is the only way I know of
* to accomplish this task on Unixware. This method will
* also work on Solaris 2.6 and 2.7. There is a much simpler
* and more elegant way to do this on Solaris, but the margins
* of this manuscript are too small to write it here... ;-)
*/
strcpy (pathname, pi->pathname);
strcat (pathname, "/lwp");
if ((dirp = opendir (pathname)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "update_threads, opendir", __LINE__);
old_chain = make_cleanup ((make_cleanup_func) closedir, dirp);
while ((direntry = readdir (dirp)) != NULL)
if (direntry->d_name[0] != '.') /* skip '.' and '..' */
{
lwpid = atoi (&direntry->d_name[0]);
if ((thread = create_procinfo (pi->pid, lwpid)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "update_threads, create_procinfo", __LINE__);
}
pi->threads_valid = 1;
do_cleanups (old_chain);
return 1;
}
#else
#ifdef PIOCTLIST
/*
* OSF version
*/
int
proc_update_threads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int nthreads, i;
tid_t *threads;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, proc_delete_dead_threads, NULL);
nthreads = proc_get_nthreads (pi);
if (nthreads < 2)
return 0; /* nothing to do for 1 or fewer threads */
if ((threads = malloc (nthreads * sizeof (tid_t))) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "update_threads, malloc", __LINE__);
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCTLIST, threads) < 0)
proc_error (pi, "procfs: update_threads (PIOCTLIST)", __LINE__);
for (i = 0; i < nthreads; i++)
{
if (!find_procinfo (pi->pid, threads[i]))
if (!create_procinfo (pi->pid, threads[i]))
proc_error (pi, "update_threads, create_procinfo", __LINE__);
}
pi->threads_valid = 1;
return 1;
}
#else
/*
* Default version
*/
int
proc_update_threads (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
return 0;
}
#endif /* OSF PIOCTLIST */
#endif /* NEW_PROC_API */
#endif /* SOL 2.5 PIOCLSTATUS */
/*
* Function: proc_iterate_over_threads
*
* Description:
* Given a pointer to a function, call that function once
* for each lwp in the procinfo list, until the function
* returns non-zero, in which event return the value
* returned by the function.
*
* Note: this function does NOT call update_threads.
* If you want to discover new threads first, you must
* call that function explicitly. This function just makes
* a quick pass over the currently-known procinfos.
*
* Arguments:
* pi - parent process procinfo
* func - per-thread function
* ptr - opaque parameter for function.
*
* Return:
* First non-zero return value from the callee, or zero.
*/
int
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, func, ptr)
procinfo *pi;
int (*func) PARAMS ((procinfo *, procinfo *, void *));
void *ptr;
{
procinfo *thread, *next;
int retval = 0;
/*
* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
* except the one for the main process. If that ever changes
* for any reason, then take out the following clause and
* replace it with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open.
*/
if (pi->tid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
for (thread = pi->thread_list; thread != NULL; thread = next)
{
next = thread->next; /* in case thread is destroyed */
if ((retval = (*func) (pi, thread, ptr)) != 0)
break;
}
return retval;
}
/* =================== END, Thread "MODULE" =================== */
/* =================== END, /proc "MODULE" =================== */
/* =================== GDB "MODULE" =================== */
/*
* Here are all of the gdb target vector functions and their friends.
*/
static int do_attach PARAMS ((int pid));
static void do_detach PARAMS ((int signo));
static int register_gdb_signals PARAMS ((procinfo *, sigset_t *));
/*
* Function: procfs_debug_inferior
*
* Sets up the inferior to be debugged.
* Registers to trace signals, hardware faults, and syscalls.
* Note: does not set RLC flag: caller may want to customize that.
*
* Returns: zero for success (note! unlike most functions in this module)
* On failure, returns the LINE NUMBER where it failed!
*/
static int
procfs_debug_inferior (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
fltset_t traced_faults;
sigset_t traced_signals;
sysset_t traced_syscall_entries;
sysset_t traced_syscall_exits;
#ifdef PROCFS_DONT_TRACE_FAULTS
/* On some systems (OSF), we don't trace hardware faults.
Apparently it's enough that we catch them as signals.
Wonder why we don't just do that in general? */
premptyset (&traced_faults); /* don't trace faults. */
#else
/* Register to trace hardware faults in the child. */
prfillset (&traced_faults); /* trace all faults... */
prdelset (&traced_faults, FLTPAGE); /* except page fault. */
#endif
if (!proc_set_traced_faults (pi, &traced_faults))
return __LINE__;
/* Register to trace selected signals in the child. */
premptyset (&traced_signals);
if (!register_gdb_signals (pi, &traced_signals))
return __LINE__;
/* Register to trace the 'exit' system call (on entry). */
premptyset (&traced_syscall_entries);
praddset (&traced_syscall_entries, SYS_exit);
#ifdef SYS_lwpexit
praddset (&traced_syscall_entries, SYS_lwpexit); /* And _lwp_exit... */
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwp_exit
praddset (&traced_syscall_entries, SYS_lwp_exit);
#endif
if (!proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, &traced_syscall_entries))
return __LINE__;
#ifdef PRFS_STOPEXEC /* defined on OSF */
/* OSF method for tracing exec syscalls. Quoting:
Under Alpha OSF/1 we have to use a PIOCSSPCACT ioctl to trace
exits from exec system calls because of the user level loader. */
/* FIXME: make nice and maybe move into an access function. */
{
int prfs_flags;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGSPCACT, &prfs_flags) < 0)
return __LINE__;
prfs_flags |= PRFS_STOPEXEC;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSPCACT, &prfs_flags) < 0)
return __LINE__;
}
#else /* not PRFS_STOPEXEC */
/* Everyone else's (except OSF) method for tracing exec syscalls */
/* GW: Rationale...
Not all systems with /proc have all the exec* syscalls with the same
names. On the SGI, for example, there is no SYS_exec, but there
*is* a SYS_execv. So, we try to account for that. */
premptyset (&traced_syscall_exits);
#ifdef SYS_exec
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_exec);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execve
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_execve);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execv
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_execv);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwpcreate
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwpcreate);
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwpexit);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwp_create /* FIXME: once only, please */
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwp_create);
praddset (&traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwp_exit);
#endif
if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, &traced_syscall_exits))
return __LINE__;
#endif /* PRFS_STOPEXEC */
return 0;
}
static void
procfs_attach (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
char *exec_file;
int pid;
if (!args)
error_no_arg ("process-id to attach");
pid = atoi (args);
if (pid == getpid ())
error ("Attaching GDB to itself is not a good idea...");
if (from_tty)
{
exec_file = get_exec_file (0);
if (exec_file)
printf_filtered ("Attaching to program `%s', %s\n",
exec_file, target_pid_to_str (pid));
else
printf_filtered ("Attaching to %s\n", target_pid_to_str (pid));
fflush (stdout);
}
inferior_pid = do_attach (pid);
push_target (&procfs_ops);
}
static void
procfs_detach (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
char *exec_file;
int signo = 0;
if (from_tty)
{
exec_file = get_exec_file (0);
if (exec_file == 0)
exec_file = "";
printf_filtered ("Detaching from program: %s %s\n",
exec_file, target_pid_to_str (inferior_pid));
fflush (stdout);
}
if (args)
signo = atoi (args);
do_detach (signo);
inferior_pid = 0;
unpush_target (&procfs_ops); /* Pop out of handling an inferior */
}
static int
do_attach (pid)
int pid;
{
procinfo *pi;
int fail;
if ((pi = create_procinfo (pid, 0)) == NULL)
perror ("procfs: out of memory in 'attach'");
if (!open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL))
{
fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
sprintf (errmsg, "do_attach: couldn't open /proc file for process %d",
pid);
dead_procinfo (pi, errmsg, NOKILL);
}
/* Stop the process (if it isn't already stopped). */
if (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
{
pi->was_stopped = 1;
proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (pi), proc_what (pi), 1);
}
else
{
pi->was_stopped = 0;
/* Set the process to run again when we close it. */
if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't set RLC.", NOKILL);
/* Now stop the process. */
if (!proc_stop_process (pi))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't stop the process.", NOKILL);
pi->ignore_next_sigstop = 1;
}
/* Save some of the /proc state to be restored if we detach. */
if (!proc_get_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced faults.", NOKILL);
if (!proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced signals.", NOKILL);
if (!proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, &pi->saved_entryset))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced syscall entries.",
NOKILL);
if (!proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, &pi->saved_exitset))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced syscall exits.",
NOKILL);
if (!proc_get_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save held signals.", NOKILL);
if ((fail = procfs_debug_inferior (pi)) != 0)
dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: failed in procfs_debug_inferior", NOKILL);
/* Let GDB know that the inferior was attached. */
attach_flag = 1;
return MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi));
}
static void
do_detach (signo)
int signo;
{
procinfo *pi;
/* Find procinfo for the main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0); /* FIXME: threads */
if (signo)
if (!proc_set_current_signal (pi, signo))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_current_signal", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_signal", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_faults", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, &pi->saved_entryset))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, &pi->saved_exitset))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_held_signals", __LINE__);
if (signo || (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP)))
if (signo || !(pi->was_stopped) ||
query ("Was stopped when attached, make it runnable again? "))
{
/* Clear any pending signal. */
if (!proc_clear_current_fault (pi))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, clear_current_fault", __LINE__);
if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_rlc", __LINE__);
}
attach_flag = 0;
destroy_procinfo (pi);
}
/*
* fetch_registers
*
* Since the /proc interface cannot give us individual registers,
* we pay no attention to the (regno) argument, and just fetch them all.
* This results in the possibility that we will do unnecessarily many
* fetches, since we may be called repeatedly for individual registers.
* So we cache the results, and mark the cache invalid when the process
* is resumed.
*/
static void
procfs_fetch_registers (regno)
int regno;
{
gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
procinfo *pi;
int pid;
int tid;
pid = PIDGET (inferior_pid);
tid = TIDGET (inferior_pid);
/* First look up procinfo for the main process. */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, 0);
/* If the event thread is not the same as GDB's requested thread
(ie. inferior_pid), then look up procinfo for the requested
thread. */
if ((tid != 0) &&
(tid != proc_get_current_thread (pi)))
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, tid);
if (pi == NULL)
error ("procfs: fetch_registers failed to find procinfo for %s",
target_pid_to_str (inferior_pid));
if ((gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "fetch_registers, get_gregs", __LINE__);
supply_gregset (gregs);
#if defined (FP0_REGNUM) /* need floating point? */
if ((regno >= 0 && regno < FP0_REGNUM) ||
regno == PC_REGNUM ||
#ifdef NPC_REGNUM
regno == NPC_REGNUM ||
#endif
regno == FP_REGNUM ||
regno == SP_REGNUM)
return; /* not a floating point register */
if ((fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "fetch_registers, get_fpregs", __LINE__);
supply_fpregset (fpregs);
#endif
}
/* Get ready to modify the registers array. On machines which store
individual registers, this doesn't need to do anything. On
machines which store all the registers in one fell swoop, such as
/proc, this makes sure that registers contains all the registers
from the program being debugged. */
static void
procfs_prepare_to_store ()
{
#ifdef CHILD_PREPARE_TO_STORE
CHILD_PREPARE_TO_STORE ();
#endif
}
/*
* store_registers
*
* Since the /proc interface will not read individual registers,
* we will cache these requests until the process is resumed, and
* only then write them back to the inferior process.
*
* FIXME: is that a really bad idea? Have to think about cases
* where writing one register might affect the value of others, etc.
*/
static void
procfs_store_registers (regno)
int regno;
{
gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
procinfo *pi;
int pid;
int tid;
pid = PIDGET (inferior_pid);
tid = TIDGET (inferior_pid);
/* First find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, 0);
/* If current lwp for process is not the same as requested thread
(ie. inferior_pid), then find procinfo for the requested thread. */
if ((tid != 0) &&
(tid != proc_get_current_thread (pi)))
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, tid);
if (pi == NULL)
error ("procfs: store_registers: failed to find procinfo for %s",
target_pid_to_str (inferior_pid));
if ((gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "store_registers, get_gregs", __LINE__);
fill_gregset (gregs, regno);
if (!proc_set_gregs (pi))
proc_error (pi, "store_registers, set_gregs", __LINE__);
#if defined (FP0_REGNUM) /* need floating point? */
if ((regno >= 0 && regno < FP0_REGNUM) ||
regno == PC_REGNUM ||
#ifdef NPC_REGNUM
regno == NPC_REGNUM ||
#endif
regno == FP_REGNUM ||
regno == SP_REGNUM)
return; /* not a floating point register */
if ((fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi)) == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "store_registers, get_fpregs", __LINE__);
fill_fpregset (fpregs, regno);
if (!proc_set_fpregs (pi))
proc_error (pi, "store_registers, set_fpregs", __LINE__);
#endif
}
/*
* Function: target_wait
*
* Retrieve the next stop event from the child process.
* If child has not stopped yet, wait for it to stop.
* Translate /proc eventcodes (or possibly wait eventcodes)
* into gdb internal event codes.
*
* Return: id of process (and possibly thread) that incurred the event.
* event codes are returned thru a pointer parameter.
*/
static int
procfs_wait (pid, status)
int pid;
struct target_waitstatus *status;
{
/* First cut: loosely based on original version 2.1 */
procinfo *pi;
int temp, wstat;
int retval;
int why, what, flags;
int retry = 0;
wait_again:
retry++;
wstat = 0;
retval = -1;
/* Find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
if (pi)
{
/* We must assume that the status is stale now... */
pi->status_valid = 0;
pi->gregs_valid = 0;
pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
#if 0 /* just try this out... */
flags = proc_flags (pi);
why = proc_why (pi);
if ((flags & PR_STOPPED) && (why == PR_REQUESTED))
pi->status_valid = 0; /* re-read again, IMMEDIATELY... */
#endif
/* If child is not stopped, wait for it to stop. */
if (!(proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP)) &&
!proc_wait_for_stop (pi))
{
/* wait_for_stop failed: has the child terminated? */
if (errno == ENOENT)
{
/* /proc file not found; presumably child has terminated. */
retval = wait (&wstat); /* "wait" for the child's exit */
if (retval != PIDGET (inferior_pid)) /* wrong child? */
error ("procfs: couldn't stop process %d: wait returned %d\n",
inferior_pid, retval);
/* FIXME: might I not just use waitpid?
Or try find_procinfo to see if I know about this child? */
}
else
{
/* Unknown error from wait_for_stop. */
proc_error (pi, "target_wait (wait_for_stop)", __LINE__);
}
}
else
{
/* This long block is reached if either:
a) the child was already stopped, or
b) we successfully waited for the child with wait_for_stop.
This block will analyze the /proc status, and translate it
into a waitstatus for GDB.
If we actually had to call wait because the /proc file
is gone (child terminated), then we skip this block,
because we already have a waitstatus. */
flags = proc_flags (pi);
why = proc_why (pi);
what = proc_what (pi);
if (flags & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
{
#ifdef PR_ASYNC
/* If it's running async (for single_thread control),
set it back to normal again. */
if (flags & PR_ASYNC)
if (!proc_unset_async (pi))
proc_error (pi, "target_wait, unset_async", __LINE__);
#endif
if (info_verbose)
proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
/* The 'pid' we will return to GDB is composed of
the process ID plus the lwp ID. */
retval = MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi));
switch (why) {
case PR_SIGNALLED:
wstat = (what << 8) | 0177;
break;
case PR_SYSENTRY:
switch (what) {
#ifdef SYS_lwp_exit
case SYS_lwp_exit:
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwpexit
case SYS_lwpexit:
#endif
#if defined (SYS_lwp_exit) || defined (SYS_lwpexit)
printf_filtered ("[%s exited]\n",
target_pid_to_str (retval));
delete_thread (retval);
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return retval;
#endif /* _lwp_exit */
case SYS_exit:
/* Handle SYS_exit call only */
/* Stopped at entry to SYS_exit.
Make it runnable, resume it, then use
the wait system call to get its exit code.
Proc_run_process always clears the current
fault and signal.
Then return its exit status. */
pi->status_valid = 0;
wstat = 0;
/* FIXME: what we should do is return
TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS. */
if (!proc_run_process (pi, 0, 0))
proc_error (pi, "target_wait, run_process", __LINE__);
if (attach_flag)
{
/* Don't call wait: simulate waiting for exit,
return a "success" exit code. Bogus: what if
it returns something else? */
wstat = 0;
retval = inferior_pid; /* ??? */
}
else
{
int temp = wait (&wstat);
/* FIXME: shouldn't I make sure I get the right
event from the right process? If (for
instance) I have killed an earlier inferior
process but failed to clean up after it
somehow, I could get its termination event
here. */
/* If wait returns -1, that's what we return to GDB. */
if (temp < 0)
retval = temp;
}
break;
default:
printf_filtered ("procfs: trapped on entry to ");
proc_prettyprint_syscall (proc_what (pi), 0);
printf_filtered ("\n");
#ifndef PIOCSSPCACT
{
long i, nsysargs, *sysargs;
if ((nsysargs = proc_nsysarg (pi)) > 0 &&
(sysargs = proc_sysargs (pi)) != NULL)
{
printf_filtered ("%ld syscall arguments:\n", nsysargs);
for (i = 0; i < nsysargs; i++)
printf_filtered ("#%ld: 0x%08x\n",
i, sysargs[i]);
}
}
#endif
if (status)
{
/* How to exit gracefully, returning "unknown event" */
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return inferior_pid;
}
else
{
/* How to keep going without returning to wfi: */
target_resume (pid, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
goto wait_again;
}
break;
}
break;
case PR_SYSEXIT:
switch (what) {
#ifdef SYS_exec
case SYS_exec:
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execv
case SYS_execv:
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execve
case SYS_execve:
#endif
/* Hopefully this is our own "fork-child" execing
the real child. Hoax this event into a trap, and
GDB will see the child about to execute its start
address. */
wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
break;
#ifdef SYS_lwp_create
case SYS_lwp_create:
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwpcreate
case SYS_lwpcreate:
#endif
#if defined(SYS_lwp_create) || defined(SYS_lwpcreate)
/*
* This syscall is somewhat like fork/exec.
* We will get the event twice: once for the parent LWP,
* and once for the child. We should already know about
* the parent LWP, but the child will be new to us. So,
* whenever we get this event, if it represents a new
* thread, simply add the thread to the list.
*/
/* If not in procinfo list, add it. */
temp = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
if (!find_procinfo (pi->pid, temp))
create_procinfo (pi->pid, temp);
temp = MERGEPID (pi->pid, temp);
/* If not in GDB's thread list, add it. */
if (!in_thread_list (temp))
{
printf_filtered ("[New %s]\n", target_pid_to_str (temp));
add_thread (temp);
}
/* Return to WFI, but tell it to immediately resume. */
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return inferior_pid;
#endif /* _lwp_create */
#ifdef SYS_lwp_exit
case SYS_lwp_exit:
#endif
#ifdef SYS_lwpexit
case SYS_lwpexit:
#endif
#if defined (SYS_lwp_exit) || defined (SYS_lwpexit)
printf_filtered ("[%s exited]\n",
target_pid_to_str (retval));
delete_thread (retval);
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return retval;
#endif /* _lwp_exit */
#ifdef SYS_sproc
case SYS_sproc:
/* Nothing to do here for now. The old procfs
seemed to use this event to handle threads on
older (non-LWP) systems, where I'm assuming that
threads were actually separate processes. Irix,
maybe? Anyway, low priority for now. */
#endif
#ifdef SYS_fork
case SYS_fork:
/* FIXME: do we need to handle this? Investigate. */
#endif
#ifdef SYS_vfork
case SYS_vfork:
/* FIXME: see above. */
#endif
default:
printf_filtered ("procfs: trapped on exit from ");
proc_prettyprint_syscall (proc_what (pi), 0);
printf_filtered ("\n");
#ifndef PIOCSSPCACT
{
long i, nsysargs, *sysargs;
if ((nsysargs = proc_nsysarg (pi)) > 0 &&
(sysargs = proc_sysargs (pi)) != NULL)
{
printf_filtered ("%ld syscall arguments:\n", nsysargs);
for (i = 0; i < nsysargs; i++)
printf_filtered ("#%ld: 0x%08x\n",
i, sysargs[i]);
}
}
#endif
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return inferior_pid;
}
break;
case PR_REQUESTED:
#if 0 /* FIXME */
wstat = (SIGSTOP << 8) | 0177;
break;
#else
if (retry < 5)
{
printf_filtered ("Retry #%d:\n", retry);
pi->status_valid = 0;
goto wait_again;
}
else
{
/* If not in procinfo list, add it. */
temp = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
if (!find_procinfo (pi->pid, temp))
create_procinfo (pi->pid, temp);
/* If not in GDB's thread list, add it. */
temp = MERGEPID (pi->pid, temp);
if (!in_thread_list (temp))
{
printf_filtered ("[New %s]\n",
target_pid_to_str (temp));
add_thread (temp);
}
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
status->value.sig = 0;
return retval;
}
#endif
case PR_JOBCONTROL:
wstat = (what << 8) | 0177;
break;
case PR_FAULTED:
switch (what) { /* FIXME: FAULTED_USE_SIGINFO */
#ifdef FLTWATCH
case FLTWATCH:
wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
break;
#endif
#ifdef FLTKWATCH
case FLTKWATCH:
wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
break;
#endif
/* FIXME: use si_signo where possible. */
case FLTPRIV:
#if (FLTILL != FLTPRIV) /* avoid "duplicate case" error */
case FLTILL:
#endif
wstat = (SIGILL << 8) | 0177;
break;
case FLTBPT:
#if (FLTTRACE != FLTBPT) /* avoid "duplicate case" error */
case FLTTRACE:
#endif
wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
break;
case FLTSTACK:
case FLTACCESS:
#if (FLTBOUNDS != FLTSTACK) /* avoid "duplicate case" error */
case FLTBOUNDS:
#endif
wstat = (SIGSEGV << 8) | 0177;
break;
case FLTIOVF:
case FLTIZDIV:
#if (FLTFPE != FLTIOVF) /* avoid "duplicate case" error */
case FLTFPE:
#endif
wstat = (SIGFPE << 8) | 0177;
break;
case FLTPAGE: /* Recoverable page fault */
default: /* FIXME: use si_signo if possible for fault */
retval = -1;
printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
printf_filtered ("child stopped for unknown reason:\n");
proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
error ("... giving up...");
break;
}
break; /* case PR_FAULTED: */
default: /* switch (why) unmatched */
printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
printf_filtered ("child stopped for unknown reason:\n");
proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
error ("... giving up...");
break;
}
/*
* Got this far without error:
* If retval isn't in the threads database, add it.
*/
if (retval > 0 &&
retval != inferior_pid &&
!in_thread_list (retval))
{
/*
* We have a new thread.
* We need to add it both to GDB's list and to our own.
* If we don't create a procinfo, resume may be unhappy
* later.
*/
printf_filtered ("[New %s]\n", target_pid_to_str (retval));
add_thread (retval);
if (find_procinfo (PIDGET (retval), TIDGET (retval)) == NULL)
create_procinfo (PIDGET (retval), TIDGET (retval));
/* In addition, it's possible that this is the first
* new thread we've seen, in which case we may not
* have created entries for inferior_pid yet.
*/
if (TIDGET (inferior_pid) != 0)
{
if (!in_thread_list (inferior_pid))
add_thread (inferior_pid);
if (find_procinfo (PIDGET (inferior_pid),
TIDGET (inferior_pid)) == NULL)
create_procinfo (PIDGET (inferior_pid),
TIDGET (inferior_pid));
}
}
}
else /* flags do not indicate STOPPED */
{
/* surely this can't happen... */
printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- process not stopped.\n",
__LINE__);
proc_prettyprint_flags (flags, 1);
error ("procfs: ...giving up...");
}
}
if (status)
store_waitstatus (status, wstat);
}
return retval;
}
static int
procfs_xfer_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len, dowrite, target)
CORE_ADDR memaddr;
char *myaddr;
int len;
int dowrite;
struct target_ops *target; /* ignored */
{
procinfo *pi;
int nbytes = 0;
/* Find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
if (pi->as_fd == 0 &&
open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_AS) == 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "xfer_memory, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
return 0;
}
if (lseek (pi->as_fd, (off_t) memaddr, SEEK_SET) == (off_t) memaddr)
{
if (dowrite)
{
#ifdef NEW_PROC_API
PROCFS_NOTE ("write memory: ");
#else
PROCFS_NOTE ("write memory: \n");
#endif
nbytes = write (pi->as_fd, myaddr, len);
}
else
{
PROCFS_NOTE ("read memory: \n");
nbytes = read (pi->as_fd, myaddr, len);
}
if (nbytes < 0)
{
nbytes = 0;
}
}
return nbytes;
}
/*
* Function: invalidate_cache
*
* Called by target_resume before making child runnable.
* Mark cached registers and status's invalid.
* If there are "dirty" caches that need to be written back
* to the child process, do that.
*
* File descriptors are also cached.
* As they are a limited resource, we cannot hold onto them indefinitely.
* However, as they are expensive to open, we don't want to throw them
* away indescriminately either. As a compromise, we will keep the
* file descriptors for the parent process, but discard any file
* descriptors we may have accumulated for the threads.
*
* Return value:
* As this function is called by iterate_over_threads, it always
* returns zero (so that iterate_over_threads will keep iterating).
*/
static int
invalidate_cache (parent, pi, ptr)
procinfo *parent;
procinfo *pi;
void *ptr;
{
/*
* About to run the child; invalidate caches and do any other cleanup.
*/
#if 0
if (pi->gregs_dirty)
if (parent == NULL ||
proc_get_current_thread (parent) != pi->tid)
if (!proc_set_gregs (pi)) /* flush gregs cache */
proc_warn (pi, "target_resume, set_gregs",
__LINE__);
#ifdef FP0_REGNUM
if (pi->fpregs_dirty)
if (parent == NULL ||
proc_get_current_thread (parent) != pi->tid)
if (!proc_set_fpregs (pi)) /* flush fpregs cache */
proc_warn (pi, "target_resume, set_fpregs",
__LINE__);
#endif
#endif
if (parent != NULL)
{
/* The presence of a parent indicates that this is an LWP.
Close any file descriptors that it might have open.
We don't do this to the master (parent) procinfo. */
close_procinfo_files (pi);
}
pi->gregs_valid = 0;
pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
#if 0
pi->gregs_dirty = 0;
pi->fpregs_dirty = 0;
#endif
pi->status_valid = 0;
pi->threads_valid = 0;
return 0;
}
#if 0
/*
* Function: make_signal_thread_runnable
*
* A callback function for iterate_over_threads.
* Find the asynchronous signal thread, and make it runnable.
* See if that helps matters any.
*/
static int
make_signal_thread_runnable (process, pi, ptr)
procinfo *process;
procinfo *pi;
void *ptr;
{
#ifdef PR_ASLWP
if (proc_flags (pi) & PR_ASLWP)
{
if (!proc_run_process (pi, 0, -1))
proc_error (pi, "make_signal_thread_runnable", __LINE__);
return 1;
}
#endif
return 0;
}
#endif
/*
* Function: target_resume
*
* Make the child process runnable. Normally we will then call
* procfs_wait and wait for it to stop again (unles gdb is async).
*
* Arguments:
* step: if true, then arrange for the child to stop again
* after executing a single instruction.
* signo: if zero, then cancel any pending signal.
* If non-zero, then arrange for the indicated signal
* to be delivered to the child when it runs.
* pid: if -1, then allow any child thread to run.
* if non-zero, then allow only the indicated thread to run.
******* (not implemented yet)
*/
static void
procfs_resume (pid, step, signo)
int pid;
int step;
enum target_signal signo;
{
procinfo *pi, *thread;
int native_signo;
/* 2.1:
prrun.prflags |= PRSVADDR;
prrun.pr_vaddr = $PC; set resume address
prrun.prflags |= PRSTRACE; trace signals in pr_trace (all)
prrun.prflags |= PRSFAULT; trace faults in pr_fault (all but PAGE)
prrun.prflags |= PRCFAULT; clear current fault.
PRSTRACE and PRSFAULT can be done by other means
(proc_trace_signals, proc_trace_faults)
PRSVADDR is unnecessary.
PRCFAULT may be replaced by a PIOCCFAULT call (proc_clear_current_fault)
This basically leaves PRSTEP and PRCSIG.
PRCSIG is like PIOCSSIG (proc_clear_current_signal).
So basically PR_STEP is the sole argument that must be passed
to proc_run_process (for use in the prrun struct by ioctl). */
/* Find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
/* First cut: ignore pid argument */
errno = 0;
/* Convert signal to host numbering. */
if (signo == 0 ||
(signo == TARGET_SIGNAL_STOP && pi->ignore_next_sigstop))
native_signo = 0;
else
native_signo = target_signal_to_host (signo);
pi->ignore_next_sigstop = 0;
/* Running the process voids all cached registers and status. */
/* Void the threads' caches first */
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, invalidate_cache, NULL);
/* Void the process procinfo's caches. */
invalidate_cache (NULL, pi, NULL);
if (pid != -1)
{
/* Resume a specific thread, presumably suppressing the others. */
thread = find_procinfo (PIDGET (pid), TIDGET (pid));
if (thread == NULL)
warning ("procfs: resume can't find thread %d -- resuming all.",
TIDGET (pid));
else
{
if (thread->tid != 0)
{
/* We're to resume a specific thread, and not the others.
* Set the child process's PR_ASYNC flag.
*/
#ifdef PR_ASYNC
if (!proc_set_async (pi))
proc_error (pi, "target_resume, set_async", __LINE__);
#endif
#if 0
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi,
make_signal_thread_runnable,
NULL);
#endif
pi = thread; /* substitute the thread's procinfo for run */
}
}
}
if (!proc_run_process (pi, step, native_signo))
{
if (errno == EBUSY)
warning ("resume: target already running. Pretend to resume, and hope for the best!\n");
else
proc_error (pi, "target_resume", __LINE__);
}
}
/*
* Function: register_gdb_signals
*
* Traverse the list of signals that GDB knows about
* (see "handle" command), and arrange for the target
* to be stopped or not, according to these settings.
*
* Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure.
*/
static int
register_gdb_signals (pi, signals)
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t *signals;
{
int signo;
for (signo = 0; signo < NSIG; signo ++)
if (signal_stop_state (target_signal_from_host (signo)) == 0 &&
signal_print_state (target_signal_from_host (signo)) == 0 &&
signal_pass_state (target_signal_from_host (signo)) == 1)
prdelset (signals, signo);
else
praddset (signals, signo);
return proc_set_traced_signals (pi, signals);
}
/*
* Function: target_notice_signals
*
* Set up to trace signals in the child process.
*/
static void
procfs_notice_signals (pid)
int pid;
{
sigset_t signals;
procinfo *pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (pid), 0);
if (proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &signals) &&
register_gdb_signals (pi, &signals))
return;
else
proc_error (pi, "notice_signals", __LINE__);
}
/*
* Function: target_files_info
*
* Print status information about the child process.
*/
static void
procfs_files_info (ignore)
struct target_ops *ignore;
{
printf_filtered ("\tUsing the running image of %s %s via /proc.\n",
attach_flag? "attached": "child",
target_pid_to_str (inferior_pid));
}
/*
* Function: target_open
*
* A dummy: you don't open procfs.
*/
static void
procfs_open (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
error ("Use the \"run\" command to start a Unix child process.");
}
/*
* Function: target_can_run
*
* This tells GDB that this target vector can be invoked
* for "run" or "attach".
*/
int procfs_suppress_run = 0; /* Non-zero if procfs should pretend not to
be a runnable target. Used by targets
that can sit atop procfs, such as solaris
thread support. */
static int
procfs_can_run ()
{
/* This variable is controlled by modules that sit atop procfs that
may layer their own process structure atop that provided here.
sol-thread.c does this because of the Solaris two-level thread
model. */
/* NOTE: possibly obsolete -- use the thread_stratum approach instead. */
return !procfs_suppress_run;
}
/*
* Function: target_stop
*
* Stop the child process asynchronously, as when the
* gdb user types control-c or presses a "stop" button.
*
* Works by sending kill(SIGINT) to the child's process group.
*/
static void
procfs_stop ()
{
extern pid_t inferior_process_group;
kill (-inferior_process_group, SIGINT);
}
/*
* Function: unconditionally_kill_inferior
*
* Make it die. Wait for it to die. Clean up after it.
* Note: this should only be applied to the real process,
* not to an LWP, because of the check for parent-process.
* If we need this to work for an LWP, it needs some more logic.
*/
static void
unconditionally_kill_inferior (pi)
procinfo *pi;
{
int parent_pid;
parent_pid = proc_parent_pid (pi);
#ifdef PROCFS_NEED_CLEAR_CURSIG_FOR_KILL
/* FIXME: use access functions */
/* Alpha OSF/1-3.x procfs needs a clear of the current signal
before the PIOCKILL, otherwise it might generate a corrupted core
file for the inferior. */
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSIG, NULL) < 0)
{
printf_filtered ("unconditionally_kill: SSIG failed!\n");
}
#endif
#ifdef PROCFS_NEED_PIOCSSIG_FOR_KILL
/* Alpha OSF/1-2.x procfs needs a PIOCSSIG call with a SIGKILL signal
to kill the inferior, otherwise it might remain stopped with a
pending SIGKILL.
We do not check the result of the PIOCSSIG, the inferior might have
died already. */
{
struct siginfo newsiginfo;
memset ((char *) &newsiginfo, 0, sizeof (newsiginfo));
newsiginfo.si_signo = SIGKILL;
newsiginfo.si_code = 0;
newsiginfo.si_errno = 0;
newsiginfo.si_pid = getpid ();
newsiginfo.si_uid = getuid ();
/* FIXME: use proc_set_current_signal */
ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSIG, &newsiginfo);
}
#else /* PROCFS_NEED_PIOCSSIG_FOR_KILL */
if (!proc_kill (pi, SIGKILL))
proc_warn (pi, "unconditionally_kill, proc_kill", __LINE__);
#endif /* PROCFS_NEED_PIOCSSIG_FOR_KILL */
destroy_procinfo (pi);
/* If pi is GDB's child, wait for it to die. */
if (parent_pid == getpid ())
/* FIXME: should we use waitpid to make sure we get the right event?
Should we check the returned event? */
{
#if 0
int status, ret;
ret = waitpid (pi->pid, &status, 0);
#else
wait (NULL);
#endif
}
}
/*
* Function: target_kill_inferior
*
* We're done debugging it, and we want it to go away.
* Then we want GDB to forget all about it.
*/
static void
procfs_kill_inferior ()
{
if (inferior_pid != 0) /* ? */
{
/* Find procinfo for main process */
procinfo *pi = find_procinfo (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
if (pi)
unconditionally_kill_inferior (pi);
target_mourn_inferior ();
}
}
/*
* Function: target_mourn_inferior
*
* Forget we ever debugged this thing!
*/
static void
procfs_mourn_inferior ()
{
procinfo *pi;
if (inferior_pid != 0)
{
/* Find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
if (pi)
destroy_procinfo (pi);
}
unpush_target (&procfs_ops);
generic_mourn_inferior ();
}
/*
* Function: init_inferior
*
* When GDB forks to create a runnable inferior process,
* this function is called on the parent side of the fork.
* It's job is to do whatever is necessary to make the child
* ready to be debugged, and then wait for the child to synchronize.
*/
static void
procfs_init_inferior (pid)
int pid;
{
procinfo *pi;
sigset_t signals;
int fail;
/* This routine called on the parent side (GDB side)
after GDB forks the inferior. */
push_target (&procfs_ops);
if ((pi = create_procinfo (pid, 0)) == NULL)
perror ("procfs: out of memory in 'init_inferior'");
if (!open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
/*
xmalloc // done
open_procinfo_files // done
link list // done
prfillset (trace)
procfs_notice_signals
prfillset (fault)
prdelset (FLTPAGE)
PIOCWSTOP
PIOCSFAULT
*/
/* If not stopped yet, wait for it to stop. */
if (!(proc_flags (pi) & PR_STOPPED) &&
!(proc_wait_for_stop (pi)))
dead_procinfo (pi, "init_inferior: wait_for_stop failed", KILL);
/* Save some of the /proc state to be restored if we detach. */
/* FIXME: Why? In case another debugger was debugging it?
We're it's parent, for Ghu's sake! */
if (!proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_signals", __LINE__);
if (!proc_get_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_held_signals", __LINE__);
if (!proc_get_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_faults", __LINE__);
if (!proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, &pi->saved_entryset))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
if (!proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, &pi->saved_exitset))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
/* Register to trace selected signals in the child. */
prfillset (&signals);
if (!register_gdb_signals (pi, &signals))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, register_signals", __LINE__);
if ((fail = procfs_debug_inferior (pi)) != 0)
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior (procfs_debug_inferior)", fail);
/* FIXME: logically, we should really be turning OFF run-on-last-close,
and possibly even turning ON kill-on-last-close at this point. But
I can't make that change without careful testing which I don't have
time to do right now... */
/* Turn on run-on-last-close flag so that the child
will die if GDB goes away for some reason. */
if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, set_RLC", __LINE__);
/* The 'process ID' we return to GDB is composed of
the actual process ID plus the lwp ID. */
inferior_pid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi));
#ifdef START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED
startup_inferior (START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED);
#else
/* One trap to exec the shell, one to exec the program being debugged. */
startup_inferior (2);
#endif /* START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED */
}
/*
* Function: set_exec_trap
*
* When GDB forks to create a new process, this function is called
* on the child side of the fork before GDB exec's the user program.
* Its job is to make the child minimally debuggable, so that the
* parent GDB process can connect to the child and take over.
* This function should do only the minimum to make that possible,
* and to synchronize with the parent process. The parent process
* should take care of the details.
*/
static void
procfs_set_exec_trap ()
{
/* This routine called on the child side (inferior side)
after GDB forks the inferior. It must use only local variables,
because it may be sharing data space with its parent. */
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t exitset;
if ((pi = create_procinfo (getpid (), 0)) == NULL)
perror_with_name ("procfs: create_procinfo failed in child.");
if (open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
/* no need to call "dead_procinfo", because we're going to exit. */
_exit (127);
}
#ifdef PRFS_STOPEXEC /* defined on OSF */
/* OSF method for tracing exec syscalls. Quoting:
Under Alpha OSF/1 we have to use a PIOCSSPCACT ioctl to trace
exits from exec system calls because of the user level loader. */
/* FIXME: make nice and maybe move into an access function. */
{
int prfs_flags;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCGSPCACT, &prfs_flags) < 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap (PIOCGSPCACT)", __LINE__);
gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
_exit (127);
}
prfs_flags |= PRFS_STOPEXEC;
if (ioctl (pi->ctl_fd, PIOCSSPCACT, &prfs_flags) < 0)
{
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap (PIOCSSPCACT)", __LINE__);
gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
_exit (127);
}
}
#else /* not PRFS_STOPEXEC */
/* Everyone else's (except OSF) method for tracing exec syscalls */
/* GW: Rationale...
Not all systems with /proc have all the exec* syscalls with the same
names. On the SGI, for example, there is no SYS_exec, but there
*is* a SYS_execv. So, we try to account for that. */
premptyset (&exitset);
#ifdef SYS_exec
praddset (&exitset, SYS_exec);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execve
praddset (&exitset, SYS_execve);
#endif
#ifdef SYS_execv
praddset (&exitset, SYS_execv);
#endif
if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, &exitset))
{
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
_exit (127);
}
#endif /* PRFS_STOPEXEC */
/* FIXME: should this be done in the parent instead? */
/* Turn off inherit on fork flag so that all grand-children
of gdb start with tracing flags cleared. */
if (!proc_unset_inherit_on_fork (pi))
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, unset_inherit", __LINE__);
/* Turn off run on last close flag, so that the child process
cannot run away just because we close our handle on it.
We want it to wait for the parent to attach. */
if (!proc_unset_run_on_last_close (pi))
proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, unset_RLC", __LINE__);
/* FIXME: No need to destroy the procinfo --
we have our own address space, and we're about to do an exec! */
/*destroy_procinfo (pi);*/
}
/*
* Function: create_inferior
*
* This function is called BEFORE gdb forks the inferior process.
* Its only real responsibility is to set things up for the fork,
* and tell GDB which two functions to call after the fork (one
* for the parent, and one for the child).
*
* This function does a complicated search for a unix shell program,
* which it then uses to parse arguments and environment variables
* to be sent to the child. I wonder whether this code could not
* be abstracted out and shared with other unix targets such as
* infptrace?
*/
static void
procfs_create_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env)
char *exec_file;
char *allargs;
char **env;
{
char *shell_file = getenv ("SHELL");
char *tryname;
if (shell_file != NULL && strchr (shell_file, '/') == NULL)
{
/* We will be looking down the PATH to find shell_file. If we
just do this the normal way (via execlp, which operates by
attempting an exec for each element of the PATH until it
finds one which succeeds), then there will be an exec for
each failed attempt, each of which will cause a PR_SYSEXIT
stop, and we won't know how to distinguish the PR_SYSEXIT's
for these failed execs with the ones for successful execs
(whether the exec has succeeded is stored at that time in the
carry bit or some such architecture-specific and
non-ABI-specified place).
So I can't think of anything better than to search the PATH
now. This has several disadvantages: (1) There is a race
condition; if we find a file now and it is deleted before we
exec it, we lose, even if the deletion leaves a valid file
further down in the PATH, (2) there is no way to know exactly
what an executable (in the sense of "capable of being
exec'd") file is. Using access() loses because it may lose
if the caller is the superuser; failing to use it loses if
there are ACLs or some such. */
char *p;
char *p1;
/* FIXME-maybe: might want "set path" command so user can change what
path is used from within GDB. */
char *path = getenv ("PATH");
int len;
struct stat statbuf;
if (path == NULL)
path = "/bin:/usr/bin";
tryname = alloca (strlen (path) + strlen (shell_file) + 2);
for (p = path; p != NULL; p = p1 ? p1 + 1: NULL)
{
p1 = strchr (p, ':');
if (p1 != NULL)
len = p1 - p;
else
len = strlen (p);
strncpy (tryname, p, len);
tryname[len] = '\0';
strcat (tryname, "/");
strcat (tryname, shell_file);
if (access (tryname, X_OK) < 0)
continue;
if (stat (tryname, &statbuf) < 0)
continue;
if (!S_ISREG (statbuf.st_mode))
/* We certainly need to reject directories. I'm not quite
as sure about FIFOs, sockets, etc., but I kind of doubt
that people want to exec() these things. */
continue;
break;
}
if (p == NULL)
/* Not found. This must be an error rather than merely passing
the file to execlp(), because execlp() would try all the
exec()s, causing GDB to get confused. */
error ("procfs:%d -- Can't find shell %s in PATH",
__LINE__, shell_file);
shell_file = tryname;
}
fork_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env, procfs_set_exec_trap,
procfs_init_inferior, NULL, shell_file);
/* We are at the first instruction we care about. */
/* Pedal to the metal... */
proceed ((CORE_ADDR) -1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0, 0);
}
/*
* Function: notice_thread
*
* Callback for find_new_threads.
* Calls "add_thread".
*/
static int
procfs_notice_thread (pi, thread, ptr)
procinfo *pi;
procinfo *thread;
void *ptr;
{
int gdb_threadid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, thread->tid);
if (!in_thread_list (gdb_threadid))
add_thread (gdb_threadid);
return 0;
}
/*
* Function: target_find_new_threads
*
* Query all the threads that the target knows about,
* and give them back to GDB to add to its list.
*/
void
procfs_find_new_threads ()
{
procinfo *pi;
/* Find procinfo for main process */
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
proc_update_threads (pi);
proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, procfs_notice_thread, NULL);
}
/*
* Function: target_thread_alive
*
* Return true if the thread is still 'alive'.
*
* This guy doesn't really seem to be doing his job.
* Got to investigate how to tell when a thread is really gone.
*/
static int
procfs_thread_alive (pid)
int pid;
{
int proc, thread;
procinfo *pi;
proc = PIDGET (pid);
thread = TIDGET (pid);
/* If I don't know it, it ain't alive! */
if ((pi = find_procinfo (proc, thread)) == NULL)
return 0;
/* If I can't get its status, it ain't alive!
What's more, I need to forget about it! */
if (!proc_get_status (pi))
{
destroy_procinfo (pi);
return 0;
}
/* I couldn't have got its status if it weren't alive, so it's alive. */
return 1;
}
/*
* Function: target_pid_to_str
*
* Return a string to be used to identify the thread in
* the "info threads" display.
*/
char *
procfs_pid_to_str (pid)
int pid;
{
static char buf[80];
int proc, thread;
procinfo *pi;
proc = PIDGET (pid);
thread = TIDGET (pid);
pi = find_procinfo (proc, thread);
if (thread == 0)
sprintf (buf, "Process %d", proc);
else
sprintf (buf, "LWP %d", thread);
return &buf[0];
}
/*
* Function: procfs_set_watchpoint
* Insert a watchpoint
*/
int
procfs_set_watchpoint (pid, addr, len, rwflag, after)
int pid;
CORE_ADDR addr;
int len;
int rwflag;
int after;
{
#ifndef UNIXWARE
int pflags = 0;
procinfo *pi;
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid == -1 ?
PIDGET (inferior_pid) : PIDGET (pid), 0);
/* Translate from GDB's flags to /proc's */
if (len > 0) /* len == 0 means delete watchpoint */
{
switch (rwflag) { /* FIXME: need an enum! */
case hw_write: /* default watchpoint (write) */
pflags = WRITE_WATCHFLAG;
break;
case hw_read: /* read watchpoint */
pflags = READ_WATCHFLAG;
break;
case hw_access: /* access watchpoint */
pflags = READ_WATCHFLAG | WRITE_WATCHFLAG;
break;
case hw_execute: /* execution HW breakpoint */
pflags = EXEC_WATCHFLAG;
break;
default: /* Something weird. Return error. */
return -1;
}
if (after) /* Stop after r/w access is completed. */
pflags |= AFTER_WATCHFLAG;
}
if (!proc_set_watchpoint (pi, addr, len, pflags))
{
if (errno == E2BIG) /* Typical error for no resources */
return -1; /* fail */
/* GDB may try to remove the same watchpoint twice.
If a remove request returns no match, don't error. */
if (errno == ESRCH && len == 0)
return 0; /* ignore */
proc_error (pi, "set_watchpoint", __LINE__);
}
#endif
return 0;
}
/*
* Function: stopped_by_watchpoint
*
* Returns non-zero if process is stopped on a hardware watchpoint fault,
* else returns zero.
*/
int
procfs_stopped_by_watchpoint (pid)
int pid;
{
procinfo *pi;
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid == -1 ?
PIDGET (inferior_pid) : PIDGET (pid), 0);
if (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
{
if (proc_why (pi) == PR_FAULTED)
{
#ifdef FLTWATCH
if (proc_what (pi) == FLTWATCH)
return 1;
#endif
#ifdef FLTKWATCH
if (proc_what (pi) == FLTKWATCH)
return 1;
#endif
}
}
return 0;
}
#ifdef TM_I386SOL2_H
/*
* Function: procfs_find_LDT_entry
*
* Input:
* int pid; // The GDB-style pid-plus-LWP.
*
* Return:
* pointer to the corresponding LDT entry.
*/
struct ssd *
procfs_find_LDT_entry (pid)
int pid;
{
gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
int key;
procinfo *pi;
/* Find procinfo for the lwp. */
if ((pi = find_procinfo (PIDGET (pid), TIDGET (pid))) == NULL)
{
warning ("procfs_find_LDT_entry: could not find procinfi for %d.",
pid);
return NULL;
}
/* get its general registers. */
if ((gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi)) == NULL)
{
warning ("procfs_find_LDT_entry: could not read gregs for %d.",
pid);
return NULL;
}
/* Now extract the GS register's lower 16 bits. */
key = (*gregs)[GS] & 0xffff;
/* Find the matching entry and return it. */
return proc_get_LDT_entry (pi, key);
}
#endif /* TM_I386SOL2_H */
static void
info_proc_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
struct cleanup *old_chain;
procinfo *process = NULL;
procinfo *thread = NULL;
char **argv = NULL;
char *tmp = NULL;
int pid = 0;
int tid = 0;
old_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
if (args)
{
if ((argv = buildargv (args)) == NULL)
nomem (0);
else
make_cleanup ((make_cleanup_func) freeargv, argv);
}
while (argv != NULL && *argv != NULL)
{
if (isdigit (argv[0][0]))
{
pid = strtoul (argv[0], &tmp, 10);
if (*tmp == '/')
tid = strtoul (++tmp, NULL, 10);
}
else if (argv[0][0] == '/')
{
tid = strtoul (argv[0] + 1, NULL, 10);
}
else
{
/* [...] */
}
argv++;
}
if (pid == 0)
pid = PIDGET (inferior_pid);
if (pid == 0)
error ("No current process: you must name one.");
else
{
/* Have pid, will travel.
First see if it's a process we're already debugging. */
process = find_procinfo (pid, 0);
if (process == NULL)
{
/* No. So open a procinfo for it, but
remember to close it again when finished. */
process = create_procinfo (pid, 0);
make_cleanup ((make_cleanup_func) destroy_procinfo, process);
if (!open_procinfo_files (process, FD_CTL))
proc_error (process, "info proc, open_procinfo_files", __LINE__);
}
}
if (tid != 0)
thread = create_procinfo (pid, tid);
if (process)
{
printf_filtered ("process %d flags:\n", process->pid);
proc_prettyprint_flags (proc_flags (process), 1);
if (proc_flags (process) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (process), proc_what (process), 1);
if (proc_get_nthreads (process) > 1)
printf_filtered ("Process has %d threads.\n",
proc_get_nthreads (process));
}
if (thread)
{
printf_filtered ("thread %d flags:\n", thread->tid);
proc_prettyprint_flags (proc_flags (thread), 1);
if (proc_flags (thread) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (thread), proc_what (thread), 1);
}
do_cleanups (old_chain);
}
static void
proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, entry_or_exit, mode)
char *args;
int from_tty;
int entry_or_exit;
int mode;
{
procinfo *pi;
sysset_t *sysset;
int syscallnum = 0;
if (inferior_pid <= 0)
error ("you must be debugging a process to use this command.");
if (args == NULL || args[0] == 0)
error_no_arg ("system call to trace");
pi = find_procinfo_or_die (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
if (isdigit (args[0]))
{
syscallnum = atoi (args);
if (entry_or_exit == PR_SYSENTRY)
sysset = proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, NULL);
else
sysset = proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, NULL);
if (sysset == NULL)
proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, get_traced_sysset", __LINE__);
if (mode == FLAG_SET)
praddset (sysset, syscallnum);
else
prdelset (sysset, syscallnum);
if (entry_or_exit == PR_SYSENTRY)
{
if (!proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, sysset))
proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, set_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
}
else
{
if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, sysset))
proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
}
}
}
static void
proc_trace_sysentry_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSENTRY, FLAG_SET);
}
static void
proc_trace_sysexit_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSEXIT, FLAG_SET);
}
static void
proc_untrace_sysentry_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSENTRY, FLAG_RESET);
}
static void
proc_untrace_sysexit_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSEXIT, FLAG_RESET);
}
int
mapping_test (fd, core_addr)
int fd;
CORE_ADDR core_addr;
{
printf ("File descriptor %d, base address 0x%08x\n", fd, core_addr);
if (fd > 0)
close (fd);
return 0;
}
void
test_mapping_cmd (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
int ret;
ret = proc_iterate_over_mappings (mapping_test);
printf ("iterate_over_mappings returned %d.\n", ret);
}
void
_initialize_procfs ()
{
init_procfs_ops ();
add_target (&procfs_ops);
add_info ("proc", info_proc_cmd,
"Show /proc process information about any running process.\
Default is the process being debugged.");
add_com ("proc-trace-entry", no_class, proc_trace_sysentry_cmd,
"Give a trace of entries into the syscall.");
add_com ("proc-trace-exit", no_class, proc_trace_sysexit_cmd,
"Give a trace of exits from the syscall.");
add_com ("proc-untrace-entry", no_class, proc_untrace_sysentry_cmd,
"Cancel a trace of entries into the syscall.");
add_com ("proc-untrace-exit", no_class, proc_untrace_sysexit_cmd,
"Cancel a trace of exits from the syscall.");
add_com ("test-mapping", no_class, test_mapping_cmd,
"test iterate-over-mappings");
}
/* =================== END, GDB "MODULE" =================== */
/* miscelaneous stubs: */
/* The following satisfy a few random symbols mostly created by */
/* the solaris threads implementation, which I will chase down */
/* later. */
/*
* Return a pid for which we guarantee
* we will be able to find a 'live' procinfo.
*/
int
procfs_first_available ()
{
if (procinfo_list)
return procinfo_list->pid;
else
return -1;
}
int
procfs_get_pid_fd (pid)
int pid;
{
procinfo *pi;
if (pid == -1 && inferior_pid != 0)
pi = find_procinfo (PIDGET (inferior_pid), 0);
else
pi = find_procinfo (PIDGET (pid), 0);
if (pi)
return pi->ctl_fd;
else
return -1;
}