/* * Emulation of BSD signals * * Copyright (c) 2013 Stacey Son * * SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */ #ifndef SIGNAL_COMMON_H #define SIGNAL_COMMON_H /** * block_signals: block all signals while handling this guest syscall * * Block all signals, and arrange that the signal mask is returned to * its correct value for the guest before we resume execution of guest code. * If this function returns non-zero, then the caller should immediately * return -TARGET_ERESTARTSYS to the main loop, which will take the pending * signal and restart execution of the syscall. * If block_signals() returns zero, then the caller can continue with * emulation of the system call knowing that no signals can be taken * (and therefore that no race conditions will result). * This should only be called once, because if it is called a second time * it will always return non-zero. (Think of it like a mutex that can't * be recursively locked.) * Signals will be unblocked again by process_pending_signals(). * * Return value: non-zero if there was a pending signal, zero if not. */ int block_signals(void); /* Returns non zero if signal pending */ long do_rt_sigreturn(CPUArchState *env); int do_sigaction(int sig, const struct target_sigaction *act, struct target_sigaction *oact); abi_long do_sigaltstack(abi_ulong uss_addr, abi_ulong uoss_addr, abi_ulong sp); long do_sigreturn(CPUArchState *env, abi_ulong addr); void force_sig_fault(int sig, int code, abi_ulong addr); int host_to_target_signal(int sig); void host_to_target_sigset(target_sigset_t *d, const sigset_t *s); void process_pending_signals(CPUArchState *env); void queue_signal(CPUArchState *env, int sig, int si_type, target_siginfo_t *info); void signal_init(void); int target_to_host_signal(int sig); void target_to_host_sigset(sigset_t *d, const target_sigset_t *s); /* * Within QEMU the top 8 bits of si_code indicate which of the parts of the * union in target_siginfo is valid. This only applies between * host_to_target_siginfo_noswap() and tswap_siginfo(); it does not appear * either within host siginfo_t or in target_siginfo structures which we get * from the guest userspace program. Linux kenrels use this internally, but BSD * kernels don't do this, but its a useful abstraction. * * The linux-user version of this uses the top 16 bits, but FreeBSD's SI_USER * and other signal indepenent SI_ codes have bit 16 set, so we only use the top * byte instead. * * For FreeBSD, we have si_pid, si_uid, si_status, and si_addr always. Linux and * {Open,Net}BSD have a different approach (where their reason field is larger, * but whose siginfo has fewer fields always). */ #define QEMU_SI_NOINFO 0 /* nothing other than si_signo valid */ #define QEMU_SI_FAULT 1 /* _fault is valid in _reason */ #define QEMU_SI_TIMER 2 /* _timer is valid in _reason */ #define QEMU_SI_MESGQ 3 /* _mesgq is valid in _reason */ #define QEMU_SI_POLL 4 /* _poll is valid in _reason */ #define QEMU_SI_CAPSICUM 5 /* _capsicum is valid in _reason */ #endif