1 /* Machine independent support for Solaris /proc (process file system) for GDB.
3 Copyright (C) 1999-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 Written by Michael Snyder at Cygnus Solutions.
6 Based on work by Fred Fish, Stu Grossman, Geoff Noer, and others.
8 This file is part of GDB.
10 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
13 (at your option) any later version.
15 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 GNU General Public License for more details.
20 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
28 #include "elf-bfd.h" /* for elfcore_write_* */
30 #include "gdbthread.h"
32 #include "inf-child.h"
33 #include "nat/fork-inferior.h"
34 #include "common/filestuff.h"
36 #define _STRUCTURED_PROC 1 /* Should be done by configure script. */
38 #include <sys/procfs.h>
39 #include <sys/fault.h>
40 #include <sys/syscall.h>
41 #include "common/gdb_wait.h"
48 #include "observable.h"
49 #include "common/scoped_fd.h"
50 #include "common/pathstuff.h"
52 /* This module provides the interface between GDB and the
53 /proc file system, which is used on many versions of Unix
54 as a means for debuggers to control other processes.
56 /proc works by imitating a file system: you open a simulated file
57 that represents the process you wish to interact with, and perform
58 operations on that "file" in order to examine or change the state
61 The most important thing to know about /proc and this module is
62 that there are two very different interfaces to /proc:
64 One that uses the ioctl system call, and another that uses read
65 and write system calls.
67 This module supports only the Solaris version of the read/write
70 #include <sys/types.h>
71 #include <dirent.h> /* opendir/readdir, for listing the LWP's */
73 #include <fcntl.h> /* for O_RDONLY */
74 #include <unistd.h> /* for "X_OK" */
75 #include <sys/stat.h> /* for struct stat */
77 /* Note: procfs-utils.h must be included after the above system header
78 files, because it redefines various system calls using macros.
79 This may be incompatible with the prototype declarations. */
81 #include "proc-utils.h"
83 /* Prototypes for supply_gregset etc. */
86 /* =================== TARGET_OPS "MODULE" =================== */
88 /* This module defines the GDB target vector and its methods. */
91 static enum target_xfer_status procfs_xfer_memory (gdb_byte *,
96 class procfs_target final : public inf_child_target
99 void create_inferior (const char *, const std::string &,
100 char **, int) override;
102 void kill () override;
104 void mourn_inferior () override;
106 void attach (const char *, int) override;
107 void detach (inferior *inf, int) override;
109 void resume (ptid_t, int, enum gdb_signal) override;
110 ptid_t wait (ptid_t, struct target_waitstatus *, int) override;
112 void fetch_registers (struct regcache *, int) override;
113 void store_registers (struct regcache *, int) override;
115 enum target_xfer_status xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
118 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
119 ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
120 ULONGEST *xfered_len) override;
122 void pass_signals (gdb::array_view<const unsigned char>) override;
124 void files_info () override;
126 void update_thread_list () override;
128 bool thread_alive (ptid_t ptid) override;
130 std::string pid_to_str (ptid_t) override;
132 char *pid_to_exec_file (int pid) override;
134 thread_control_capabilities get_thread_control_capabilities () override
135 { return tc_schedlock; }
137 /* find_memory_regions support method for gcore */
138 int find_memory_regions (find_memory_region_ftype func, void *data)
141 char *make_corefile_notes (bfd *, int *) override;
143 bool info_proc (const char *, enum info_proc_what) override;
145 #if PR_MODEL_NATIVE == PR_MODEL_LP64
146 int auxv_parse (gdb_byte **readptr,
147 gdb_byte *endptr, CORE_ADDR *typep, CORE_ADDR *valp)
151 bool stopped_by_watchpoint () override;
153 int insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR, int, enum target_hw_bp_type,
154 struct expression *) override;
156 int remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR, int, enum target_hw_bp_type,
157 struct expression *) override;
159 int region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR, int) override;
161 int can_use_hw_breakpoint (enum bptype, int, int) override;
162 bool stopped_data_address (CORE_ADDR *) override;
165 static procfs_target the_procfs_target;
167 #if PR_MODEL_NATIVE == PR_MODEL_LP64
168 /* When GDB is built as 64-bit application on Solaris, the auxv data
169 is presented in 64-bit format. We need to provide a custom parser
172 procfs_target::auxv_parse (gdb_byte **readptr,
173 gdb_byte *endptr, CORE_ADDR *typep, CORE_ADDR *valp)
175 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch ());
176 gdb_byte *ptr = *readptr;
181 if (endptr - ptr < 8 * 2)
184 *typep = extract_unsigned_integer (ptr, 4, byte_order);
186 /* The size of data is always 64-bit. If the application is 32-bit,
187 it will be zero extended, as expected. */
188 *valp = extract_unsigned_integer (ptr, 8, byte_order);
196 /* =================== END, TARGET_OPS "MODULE" =================== */
198 /* World Unification:
200 Put any typedefs, defines etc. here that are required for the
201 unification of code that handles different versions of /proc. */
203 enum { READ_WATCHFLAG = WA_READ,
204 WRITE_WATCHFLAG = WA_WRITE,
205 EXEC_WATCHFLAG = WA_EXEC,
206 AFTER_WATCHFLAG = WA_TRAPAFTER
210 /* =================== STRUCT PROCINFO "MODULE" =================== */
212 /* FIXME: this comment will soon be out of date W.R.T. threads. */
214 /* The procinfo struct is a wrapper to hold all the state information
215 concerning a /proc process. There should be exactly one procinfo
216 for each process, and since GDB currently can debug only one
217 process at a time, that means there should be only one procinfo.
218 All of the LWP's of a process can be accessed indirectly thru the
219 single process procinfo.
221 However, against the day when GDB may debug more than one process,
222 this data structure is kept in a list (which for now will hold no
223 more than one member), and many functions will have a pointer to a
224 procinfo as an argument.
226 There will be a separate procinfo structure for use by the (not yet
227 implemented) "info proc" command, so that we can print useful
228 information about any random process without interfering with the
229 inferior's procinfo information. */
231 /* format strings for /proc paths */
232 #define MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d"
233 #define CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/ctl"
234 #define AS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/as"
235 #define MAP_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/map"
236 #define STATUS_PROC_NAME_FMT "/proc/%d/status"
237 #define MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE sizeof("/proc/999999/lwp/0123456789/lwpstatus")
239 typedef struct procinfo {
240 struct procinfo *next;
241 int pid; /* Process ID */
242 int tid; /* Thread/LWP id */
246 int ignore_next_sigstop;
248 int ctl_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc control file */
249 int status_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc status file */
250 int as_fd; /* File descriptor for /proc as file */
252 char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE]; /* Pathname to /proc entry */
254 fltset_t saved_fltset; /* Saved traced hardware fault set */
255 sigset_t saved_sigset; /* Saved traced signal set */
256 sigset_t saved_sighold; /* Saved held signal set */
257 sysset_t *saved_exitset; /* Saved traced system call exit set */
258 sysset_t *saved_entryset; /* Saved traced system call entry set */
260 pstatus_t prstatus; /* Current process status info */
262 struct procinfo *thread_list;
264 int status_valid : 1;
266 int fpregs_valid : 1;
267 int threads_valid: 1;
270 static char errmsg[128]; /* shared error msg buffer */
272 /* Function prototypes for procinfo module: */
274 static procinfo *find_procinfo_or_die (int pid, int tid);
275 static procinfo *find_procinfo (int pid, int tid);
276 static procinfo *create_procinfo (int pid, int tid);
277 static void destroy_procinfo (procinfo *p);
278 static void dead_procinfo (procinfo *p, const char *msg, int killp);
279 static int open_procinfo_files (procinfo *p, int which);
280 static void close_procinfo_files (procinfo *p);
282 static int iterate_over_mappings
283 (procinfo *pi, find_memory_region_ftype child_func, void *data,
284 int (*func) (struct prmap *map, find_memory_region_ftype child_func,
287 /* The head of the procinfo list: */
288 static procinfo *procinfo_list;
290 /* Search the procinfo list. Return a pointer to procinfo, or NULL if
294 find_procinfo (int pid, int tid)
298 for (pi = procinfo_list; pi; pi = pi->next)
305 /* Don't check threads_valid. If we're updating the
306 thread_list, we want to find whatever threads are already
307 here. This means that in general it is the caller's
308 responsibility to check threads_valid and update before
309 calling find_procinfo, if the caller wants to find a new
312 for (pi = pi->thread_list; pi; pi = pi->next)
320 /* Calls find_procinfo, but errors on failure. */
323 find_procinfo_or_die (int pid, int tid)
325 procinfo *pi = find_procinfo (pid, tid);
330 error (_("procfs: couldn't find pid %d "
331 "(kernel thread %d) in procinfo list."),
334 error (_("procfs: couldn't find pid %d in procinfo list."), pid);
339 /* Wrapper for `open'. The appropriate open call is attempted; if
340 unsuccessful, it will be retried as many times as needed for the
341 EAGAIN and EINTR conditions.
343 For other conditions, retry the open a limited number of times. In
344 addition, a short sleep is imposed prior to retrying the open. The
345 reason for this sleep is to give the kernel a chance to catch up
346 and create the file in question in the event that GDB "wins" the
347 race to open a file before the kernel has created it. */
350 open_with_retry (const char *pathname, int flags)
352 int retries_remaining, status;
354 retries_remaining = 2;
358 status = open (pathname, flags);
360 if (status >= 0 || retries_remaining == 0)
362 else if (errno != EINTR && errno != EAGAIN)
372 /* Open the file descriptor for the process or LWP. We only open the
373 control file descriptor; the others are opened lazily as needed.
374 Returns the file descriptor, or zero for failure. */
376 enum { FD_CTL, FD_STATUS, FD_AS };
379 open_procinfo_files (procinfo *pi, int which)
381 char tmp[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
384 /* This function is getting ALMOST long enough to break up into
385 several. Here is some rationale:
387 There are several file descriptors that may need to be open
388 for any given process or LWP. The ones we're intereted in are:
389 - control (ctl) write-only change the state
390 - status (status) read-only query the state
391 - address space (as) read/write access memory
392 - map (map) read-only virtual addr map
393 Most of these are opened lazily as they are needed.
394 The pathnames for the 'files' for an LWP look slightly
395 different from those of a first-class process:
396 Pathnames for a process (<proc-id>):
398 /proc/<proc-id>/status
401 Pathnames for an LWP (lwp-id):
402 /proc/<proc-id>/lwp/<lwp-id>/lwpctl
403 /proc/<proc-id>/lwp/<lwp-id>/lwpstatus
404 An LWP has no map or address space file descriptor, since
405 the memory map and address space are shared by all LWPs. */
407 /* In this case, there are several different file descriptors that
408 we might be asked to open. The control file descriptor will be
409 opened early, but the others will be opened lazily as they are
412 strcpy (tmp, pi->pathname);
413 switch (which) { /* Which file descriptor to open? */
416 strcat (tmp, "/lwpctl");
418 strcat (tmp, "/ctl");
419 fd = open_with_retry (tmp, O_WRONLY);
426 return 0; /* There is no 'as' file descriptor for an lwp. */
428 fd = open_with_retry (tmp, O_RDWR);
435 strcat (tmp, "/lwpstatus");
437 strcat (tmp, "/status");
438 fd = open_with_retry (tmp, O_RDONLY);
444 return 0; /* unknown file descriptor */
447 return 1; /* success */
450 /* Allocate a data structure and link it into the procinfo list.
451 First tries to find a pre-existing one (FIXME: why?). Returns the
452 pointer to new procinfo struct. */
455 create_procinfo (int pid, int tid)
457 procinfo *pi, *parent = NULL;
459 pi = find_procinfo (pid, tid);
461 return pi; /* Already exists, nothing to do. */
463 /* Find parent before doing malloc, to save having to cleanup. */
465 parent = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, 0); /* FIXME: should I
467 doesn't exist yet? */
469 pi = XNEW (procinfo);
470 memset (pi, 0, sizeof (procinfo));
474 pi->saved_entryset = XNEW (sysset_t);
475 pi->saved_exitset = XNEW (sysset_t);
477 /* Chain into list. */
480 xsnprintf (pi->pathname, sizeof (pi->pathname), MAIN_PROC_NAME_FMT, pid);
481 pi->next = procinfo_list;
486 xsnprintf (pi->pathname, sizeof (pi->pathname), "/proc/%d/lwp/%d",
488 pi->next = parent->thread_list;
489 parent->thread_list = pi;
494 /* Close all file descriptors associated with the procinfo. */
497 close_procinfo_files (procinfo *pi)
503 if (pi->status_fd > 0)
504 close (pi->status_fd);
505 pi->ctl_fd = pi->as_fd = pi->status_fd = 0;
508 /* Destructor function. Close, unlink and deallocate the object. */
511 destroy_one_procinfo (procinfo **list, procinfo *pi)
515 /* Step one: unlink the procinfo from its list. */
519 for (ptr = *list; ptr; ptr = ptr->next)
522 ptr->next = pi->next;
526 /* Step two: close any open file descriptors. */
527 close_procinfo_files (pi);
529 /* Step three: free the memory. */
530 xfree (pi->saved_entryset);
531 xfree (pi->saved_exitset);
536 destroy_procinfo (procinfo *pi)
540 if (pi->tid != 0) /* Destroy a thread procinfo. */
542 tmp = find_procinfo (pi->pid, 0); /* Find the parent process. */
543 destroy_one_procinfo (&tmp->thread_list, pi);
545 else /* Destroy a process procinfo and all its threads. */
547 /* First destroy the children, if any; */
548 while (pi->thread_list != NULL)
549 destroy_one_procinfo (&pi->thread_list, pi->thread_list);
550 /* Then destroy the parent. Genocide!!! */
551 destroy_one_procinfo (&procinfo_list, pi);
555 /* A deleter that calls destroy_procinfo. */
556 struct procinfo_deleter
558 void operator() (procinfo *pi) const
560 destroy_procinfo (pi);
564 typedef std::unique_ptr<procinfo, procinfo_deleter> procinfo_up;
566 enum { NOKILL, KILL };
568 /* To be called on a non_recoverable error for a procinfo. Prints
569 error messages, optionally sends a SIGKILL to the process, then
570 destroys the data structure. */
573 dead_procinfo (procinfo *pi, const char *msg, int kill_p)
578 print_sys_errmsg (pi->pathname, errno);
581 xsnprintf (procfile, sizeof (procfile), "process %d", pi->pid);
582 print_sys_errmsg (procfile, errno);
585 kill (pi->pid, SIGKILL);
587 destroy_procinfo (pi);
591 /* =================== END, STRUCT PROCINFO "MODULE" =================== */
593 /* =================== /proc "MODULE" =================== */
595 /* This "module" is the interface layer between the /proc system API
596 and the gdb target vector functions. This layer consists of access
597 functions that encapsulate each of the basic operations that we
598 need to use from the /proc API.
600 The main motivation for this layer is to hide the fact that there
601 are two very different implementations of the /proc API. Rather
602 than have a bunch of #ifdefs all thru the gdb target vector
603 functions, we do our best to hide them all in here. */
605 static long proc_flags (procinfo *pi);
606 static int proc_why (procinfo *pi);
607 static int proc_what (procinfo *pi);
608 static int proc_set_current_signal (procinfo *pi, int signo);
609 static int proc_get_current_thread (procinfo *pi);
610 static int proc_iterate_over_threads
612 int (*func) (procinfo *, procinfo *, void *),
616 proc_warn (procinfo *pi, const char *func, int line)
618 xsnprintf (errmsg, sizeof (errmsg), "procfs: %s line %d, %s",
619 func, line, pi->pathname);
620 print_sys_errmsg (errmsg, errno);
624 proc_error (procinfo *pi, const char *func, int line)
626 xsnprintf (errmsg, sizeof (errmsg), "procfs: %s line %d, %s",
627 func, line, pi->pathname);
628 perror_with_name (errmsg);
631 /* Updates the status struct in the procinfo. There is a 'valid'
632 flag, to let other functions know when this function needs to be
633 called (so the status is only read when it is needed). The status
634 file descriptor is also only opened when it is needed. Returns
635 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
638 proc_get_status (procinfo *pi)
640 /* Status file descriptor is opened "lazily". */
641 if (pi->status_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_STATUS) == 0)
643 pi->status_valid = 0;
647 if (lseek (pi->status_fd, 0, SEEK_SET) < 0)
648 pi->status_valid = 0; /* fail */
651 /* Sigh... I have to read a different data structure,
652 depending on whether this is a main process or an LWP. */
654 pi->status_valid = (read (pi->status_fd,
655 (char *) &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp,
656 sizeof (lwpstatus_t))
657 == sizeof (lwpstatus_t));
660 pi->status_valid = (read (pi->status_fd,
661 (char *) &pi->prstatus,
663 == sizeof (pstatus_t));
667 if (pi->status_valid)
669 PROC_PRETTYFPRINT_STATUS (proc_flags (pi),
672 proc_get_current_thread (pi));
675 /* The status struct includes general regs, so mark them valid too. */
676 pi->gregs_valid = pi->status_valid;
677 /* In the read/write multiple-fd model, the status struct includes
678 the fp regs too, so mark them valid too. */
679 pi->fpregs_valid = pi->status_valid;
680 return pi->status_valid; /* True if success, false if failure. */
683 /* Returns the process flags (pr_flags field). */
686 proc_flags (procinfo *pi)
688 if (!pi->status_valid)
689 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
690 return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
692 return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_flags;
695 /* Returns the pr_why field (why the process stopped). */
698 proc_why (procinfo *pi)
700 if (!pi->status_valid)
701 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
702 return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
704 return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_why;
707 /* Returns the pr_what field (details of why the process stopped). */
710 proc_what (procinfo *pi)
712 if (!pi->status_valid)
713 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
714 return 0; /* FIXME: not a good failure value (but what is?) */
716 return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_what;
719 /* This function is only called when PI is stopped by a watchpoint.
720 Assuming the OS supports it, write to *ADDR the data address which
721 triggered it and return 1. Return 0 if it is not possible to know
725 proc_watchpoint_address (procinfo *pi, CORE_ADDR *addr)
727 if (!pi->status_valid)
728 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
731 *addr = (CORE_ADDR) gdbarch_pointer_to_address (target_gdbarch (),
732 builtin_type (target_gdbarch ())->builtin_data_ptr,
733 (gdb_byte *) &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_info.si_addr);
737 /* Returns the pr_nsysarg field (number of args to the current
741 proc_nsysarg (procinfo *pi)
743 if (!pi->status_valid)
744 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
747 return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_nsysarg;
750 /* Returns the pr_sysarg field (pointer to the arguments of current
754 proc_sysargs (procinfo *pi)
756 if (!pi->status_valid)
757 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
760 return (long *) &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_sysarg;
763 /* Set or reset any of the following process flags:
764 PR_FORK -- forked child will inherit trace flags
765 PR_RLC -- traced process runs when last /proc file closed.
766 PR_KLC -- traced process is killed when last /proc file closed.
767 PR_ASYNC -- LWP's get to run/stop independently.
769 This function is done using read/write [PCSET/PCRESET/PCUNSET].
773 flag -- one of PR_FORK, PR_RLC, or PR_ASYNC
774 mode -- 1 for set, 0 for reset.
776 Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
778 enum { FLAG_RESET, FLAG_SET };
781 proc_modify_flag (procinfo *pi, long flag, long mode)
783 long win = 0; /* default to fail */
785 /* These operations affect the process as a whole, and applying them
786 to an individual LWP has the same meaning as applying them to the
787 main process. Therefore, if we're ever called with a pointer to
788 an LWP's procinfo, let's substitute the process's procinfo and
789 avoid opening the LWP's file descriptor unnecessarily. */
792 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
796 if (mode == FLAG_SET) /* Set the flag (RLC, FORK, or ASYNC). */
798 else /* Reset the flag. */
802 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
804 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus
806 pi->status_valid = 0;
809 warning (_("procfs: modify_flag failed to turn %s %s"),
810 flag == PR_FORK ? "PR_FORK" :
811 flag == PR_RLC ? "PR_RLC" :
812 flag == PR_ASYNC ? "PR_ASYNC" :
813 flag == PR_KLC ? "PR_KLC" :
815 mode == FLAG_RESET ? "off" : "on");
820 /* Set the run_on_last_close flag. Process with all threads will
821 become runnable when debugger closes all /proc fds. Returns
822 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
825 proc_set_run_on_last_close (procinfo *pi)
827 return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_RLC, FLAG_SET);
830 /* Reset the run_on_last_close flag. The process will NOT become
831 runnable when debugger closes its file handles. Returns non-zero
832 for success, zero for failure. */
835 proc_unset_run_on_last_close (procinfo *pi)
837 return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_RLC, FLAG_RESET);
840 /* Reset inherit_on_fork flag. If the process forks a child while we
841 are registered for events in the parent, then we will NOT recieve
842 events from the child. Returns non-zero for success, zero for
846 proc_unset_inherit_on_fork (procinfo *pi)
848 return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_FORK, FLAG_RESET);
851 /* Set PR_ASYNC flag. If one LWP stops because of a debug event
852 (signal etc.), the remaining LWPs will continue to run. Returns
853 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
856 proc_set_async (procinfo *pi)
858 return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_ASYNC, FLAG_SET);
861 /* Reset PR_ASYNC flag. If one LWP stops because of a debug event
862 (signal etc.), then all other LWPs will stop as well. Returns
863 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
866 proc_unset_async (procinfo *pi)
868 return proc_modify_flag (pi, PR_ASYNC, FLAG_RESET);
871 /* Request the process/LWP to stop. Does not wait. Returns non-zero
872 for success, zero for failure. */
875 proc_stop_process (procinfo *pi)
879 /* We might conceivably apply this operation to an LWP, and the
880 LWP's ctl file descriptor might not be open. */
882 if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
886 procfs_ctl_t cmd = PCSTOP;
888 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
894 /* Wait for the process or LWP to stop (block until it does). Returns
895 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
898 proc_wait_for_stop (procinfo *pi)
902 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
903 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
904 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
905 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
908 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
910 procfs_ctl_t cmd = PCWSTOP;
914 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
916 clear_sigint_trap ();
918 /* We been runnin' and we stopped -- need to update status. */
919 pi->status_valid = 0;
924 /* Make the process or LWP runnable.
926 Options (not all are implemented):
928 - clear current fault
929 - clear current signal
930 - abort the current system call
931 - stop as soon as finished with system call
932 - (ioctl): set traced signal set
933 - (ioctl): set held signal set
934 - (ioctl): set traced fault set
935 - (ioctl): set start pc (vaddr)
937 Always clears the current fault. PI is the process or LWP to
938 operate on. If STEP is true, set the process or LWP to trap after
939 one instruction. If SIGNO is zero, clear the current signal if
940 any; if non-zero, set the current signal to this one. Returns
941 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
944 proc_run_process (procinfo *pi, int step, int signo)
949 /* We will probably have to apply this operation to individual
950 threads, so make sure the control file descriptor is open. */
952 if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
955 runflags = PRCFAULT; /* Always clear current fault. */
960 else if (signo != -1) /* -1 means do nothing W.R.T. signals. */
961 proc_set_current_signal (pi, signo);
967 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
972 /* Register to trace signals in the process or LWP. Returns non-zero
973 for success, zero for failure. */
976 proc_set_traced_signals (procinfo *pi, sigset_t *sigset)
980 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
981 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
982 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
983 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
986 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
990 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
991 char sigset[sizeof (sigset_t)];
995 memcpy (&arg.sigset, sigset, sizeof (sigset_t));
997 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
999 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
1000 pi->status_valid = 0;
1003 warning (_("procfs: set_traced_signals failed"));
1007 /* Register to trace hardware faults in the process or LWP. Returns
1008 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1011 proc_set_traced_faults (procinfo *pi, fltset_t *fltset)
1015 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1016 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1017 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1018 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1021 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1025 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1026 char fltset[sizeof (fltset_t)];
1030 memcpy (&arg.fltset, fltset, sizeof (fltset_t));
1032 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1034 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus obsolete. */
1035 pi->status_valid = 0;
1040 /* Register to trace entry to system calls in the process or LWP.
1041 Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1044 proc_set_traced_sysentry (procinfo *pi, sysset_t *sysset)
1048 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1049 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1050 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1051 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1054 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1058 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1059 char sysset[sizeof (sysset_t)];
1063 memcpy (&arg.sysset, sysset, sizeof (sysset_t));
1065 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1067 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus
1069 pi->status_valid = 0;
1074 /* Register to trace exit from system calls in the process or LWP.
1075 Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1078 proc_set_traced_sysexit (procinfo *pi, sysset_t *sysset)
1082 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1083 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1084 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1085 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1088 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1090 struct gdb_proc_ctl_pcsexit {
1092 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1093 char sysset[sizeof (sysset_t)];
1097 memcpy (&arg.sysset, sysset, sizeof (sysset_t));
1099 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1101 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus
1103 pi->status_valid = 0;
1108 /* Specify the set of blocked / held signals in the process or LWP.
1109 Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1112 proc_set_held_signals (procinfo *pi, sigset_t *sighold)
1116 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1117 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1118 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1119 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1122 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1126 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1127 char hold[sizeof (sigset_t)];
1131 memcpy (&arg.hold, sighold, sizeof (sigset_t));
1132 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1134 /* The above operation renders the procinfo's cached pstatus
1136 pi->status_valid = 0;
1141 /* Returns the set of signals that are held / blocked. Will also copy
1142 the sigset if SAVE is non-zero. */
1145 proc_get_held_signals (procinfo *pi, sigset_t *save)
1147 sigset_t *ret = NULL;
1149 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1150 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1151 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1152 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1155 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1157 if (!pi->status_valid)
1158 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1161 ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_lwphold;
1163 memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sigset_t));
1168 /* Returns the set of signals that are traced / debugged. Will also
1169 copy the sigset if SAVE is non-zero. */
1172 proc_get_traced_signals (procinfo *pi, sigset_t *save)
1174 sigset_t *ret = NULL;
1176 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1177 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1178 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1179 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1182 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1184 if (!pi->status_valid)
1185 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1188 ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sigtrace;
1190 memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sigset_t));
1195 /* Returns the set of hardware faults that are traced /debugged. Will
1196 also copy the faultset if SAVE is non-zero. */
1199 proc_get_traced_faults (procinfo *pi, fltset_t *save)
1201 fltset_t *ret = NULL;
1203 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1204 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1205 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1206 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1209 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1211 if (!pi->status_valid)
1212 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1215 ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_flttrace;
1217 memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (fltset_t));
1222 /* Returns the set of syscalls that are traced /debugged on entry.
1223 Will also copy the syscall set if SAVE is non-zero. */
1226 proc_get_traced_sysentry (procinfo *pi, sysset_t *save)
1228 sysset_t *ret = NULL;
1230 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1231 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1232 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1233 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1236 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1238 if (!pi->status_valid)
1239 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1242 ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sysentry;
1244 memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sysset_t));
1249 /* Returns the set of syscalls that are traced /debugged on exit.
1250 Will also copy the syscall set if SAVE is non-zero. */
1253 proc_get_traced_sysexit (procinfo *pi, sysset_t *save)
1255 sysset_t *ret = NULL;
1257 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1258 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1259 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1260 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1263 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1265 if (!pi->status_valid)
1266 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1269 ret = &pi->prstatus.pr_sysexit;
1271 memcpy (save, ret, sizeof (sysset_t));
1276 /* The current fault (if any) is cleared; the associated signal will
1277 not be sent to the process or LWP when it resumes. Returns
1278 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1281 proc_clear_current_fault (procinfo *pi)
1285 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1286 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1287 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1288 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1291 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1293 procfs_ctl_t cmd = PCCFAULT;
1295 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
1300 /* Set the "current signal" that will be delivered next to the
1301 process. NOTE: semantics are different from those of KILL. This
1302 signal will be delivered to the process or LWP immediately when it
1303 is resumed (even if the signal is held/blocked); it will NOT
1304 immediately cause another event of interest, and will NOT first
1305 trap back to the debugger. Returns non-zero for success, zero for
1309 proc_set_current_signal (procinfo *pi, int signo)
1314 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1315 char sinfo[sizeof (siginfo_t)];
1319 struct target_waitstatus wait_status;
1321 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1322 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1323 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1324 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1327 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1329 /* The pointer is just a type alias. */
1330 get_last_target_status (&wait_ptid, &wait_status);
1331 if (wait_ptid == inferior_ptid
1332 && wait_status.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
1333 && wait_status.value.sig == gdb_signal_from_host (signo)
1334 && proc_get_status (pi)
1335 && pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_info.si_signo == signo
1337 /* Use the siginfo associated with the signal being
1339 memcpy (arg.sinfo, &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_info, sizeof (siginfo_t));
1342 mysinfo.si_signo = signo;
1343 mysinfo.si_code = 0;
1344 mysinfo.si_pid = getpid (); /* ?why? */
1345 mysinfo.si_uid = getuid (); /* ?why? */
1346 memcpy (arg.sinfo, &mysinfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
1350 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1355 /* The current signal (if any) is cleared, and is not sent to the
1356 process or LWP when it resumes. Returns non-zero for success, zero
1360 proc_clear_current_signal (procinfo *pi)
1364 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1365 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1366 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1367 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1370 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1374 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1375 char sinfo[sizeof (siginfo_t)];
1380 /* The pointer is just a type alias. */
1381 mysinfo.si_signo = 0;
1382 mysinfo.si_code = 0;
1383 mysinfo.si_errno = 0;
1384 mysinfo.si_pid = getpid (); /* ?why? */
1385 mysinfo.si_uid = getuid (); /* ?why? */
1386 memcpy (arg.sinfo, &mysinfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
1388 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1393 /* Return the general-purpose registers for the process or LWP
1394 corresponding to PI. Upon failure, return NULL. */
1396 static gdb_gregset_t *
1397 proc_get_gregs (procinfo *pi)
1399 if (!pi->status_valid || !pi->gregs_valid)
1400 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1403 return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_reg;
1406 /* Return the general-purpose registers for the process or LWP
1407 corresponding to PI. Upon failure, return NULL. */
1409 static gdb_fpregset_t *
1410 proc_get_fpregs (procinfo *pi)
1412 if (!pi->status_valid || !pi->fpregs_valid)
1413 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1416 return &pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_fpreg;
1419 /* Write the general-purpose registers back to the process or LWP
1420 corresponding to PI. Return non-zero for success, zero for
1424 proc_set_gregs (procinfo *pi)
1426 gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
1429 gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi);
1431 return 0; /* proc_get_regs has already warned. */
1433 if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
1439 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1440 char gregs[sizeof (gdb_gregset_t)];
1444 memcpy (&arg.gregs, gregs, sizeof (arg.gregs));
1445 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1448 /* Policy: writing the registers invalidates our cache. */
1449 pi->gregs_valid = 0;
1453 /* Write the floating-pointer registers back to the process or LWP
1454 corresponding to PI. Return non-zero for success, zero for
1458 proc_set_fpregs (procinfo *pi)
1460 gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
1463 fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi);
1465 return 0; /* proc_get_fpregs has already warned. */
1467 if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
1473 /* Use char array to avoid alignment issues. */
1474 char fpregs[sizeof (gdb_fpregset_t)];
1478 memcpy (&arg.fpregs, fpregs, sizeof (arg.fpregs));
1479 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (void *) &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1482 /* Policy: writing the registers invalidates our cache. */
1483 pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
1487 /* Send a signal to the proc or lwp with the semantics of "kill()".
1488 Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1491 proc_kill (procinfo *pi, int signo)
1495 /* We might conceivably apply this operation to an LWP, and the
1496 LWP's ctl file descriptor might not be open. */
1498 if (pi->ctl_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
1502 procfs_ctl_t cmd[2];
1506 win = (write (pi->ctl_fd, (char *) &cmd, sizeof (cmd)) == sizeof (cmd));
1512 /* Find the pid of the process that started this one. Returns the
1513 parent process pid, or zero. */
1516 proc_parent_pid (procinfo *pi)
1518 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1519 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1520 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1521 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1524 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1526 if (!pi->status_valid)
1527 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1530 return pi->prstatus.pr_ppid;
1533 /* Convert a target address (a.k.a. CORE_ADDR) into a host address
1534 (a.k.a void pointer)! */
1537 procfs_address_to_host_pointer (CORE_ADDR addr)
1539 struct type *ptr_type = builtin_type (target_gdbarch ())->builtin_data_ptr;
1542 gdb_assert (sizeof (ptr) == TYPE_LENGTH (ptr_type));
1543 gdbarch_address_to_pointer (target_gdbarch (), ptr_type,
1544 (gdb_byte *) &ptr, addr);
1549 proc_set_watchpoint (procinfo *pi, CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int wflags)
1553 char watch[sizeof (prwatch_t)];
1557 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-02-01: Even more horrible hack. Need to
1558 convert a target address into something that can be stored in a
1559 native data structure. */
1560 pwatch.pr_vaddr = (uintptr_t) procfs_address_to_host_pointer (addr);
1561 pwatch.pr_size = len;
1562 pwatch.pr_wflags = wflags;
1564 memcpy (arg.watch, &pwatch, sizeof (prwatch_t));
1565 return (write (pi->ctl_fd, &arg, sizeof (arg)) == sizeof (arg));
1568 #if (defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__)) && defined (sun)
1570 #include <sys/sysi86.h>
1572 /* The KEY is actually the value of the lower 16 bits of the GS
1573 register for the LWP that we're interested in. Returns the
1574 matching ssh struct (LDT entry). */
1577 proc_get_LDT_entry (procinfo *pi, int key) /* ARI: editCase function */
1579 static struct ssd *ldt_entry = NULL;
1580 char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
1582 /* Allocate space for one LDT entry.
1583 This alloc must persist, because we return a pointer to it. */
1584 if (ldt_entry == NULL)
1585 ldt_entry = XNEW (struct ssd);
1587 /* Open the file descriptor for the LDT table. */
1588 xsnprintf (pathname, sizeof (pathname), "/proc/%d/ldt", pi->pid);
1589 scoped_fd fd (open_with_retry (pathname, O_RDONLY));
1592 proc_warn (pi, "proc_get_LDT_entry (open)", __LINE__);
1596 /* Now 'read' thru the table, find a match and return it. */
1597 while (read (fd.get (), ldt_entry, sizeof (struct ssd))
1598 == sizeof (struct ssd))
1600 if (ldt_entry->sel == 0
1601 && ldt_entry->bo == 0
1602 && ldt_entry->acc1 == 0
1603 && ldt_entry->acc2 == 0)
1604 break; /* end of table */
1605 /* If key matches, return this entry. */
1606 if (ldt_entry->sel == key)
1609 /* Loop ended, match not found. */
1613 /* Returns the pointer to the LDT entry of PTID. */
1616 procfs_find_LDT_entry (ptid_t ptid) /* ARI: editCase function */
1618 gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
1622 /* Find procinfo for the lwp. */
1623 pi = find_procinfo (ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
1626 warning (_("procfs_find_LDT_entry: could not find procinfo for %d:%ld."),
1627 ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
1630 /* get its general registers. */
1631 gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi);
1634 warning (_("procfs_find_LDT_entry: could not read gregs for %d:%ld."),
1635 ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
1638 /* Now extract the GS register's lower 16 bits. */
1639 key = (*gregs)[GS] & 0xffff;
1641 /* Find the matching entry and return it. */
1642 return proc_get_LDT_entry (pi, key);
1647 /* =============== END, non-thread part of /proc "MODULE" =============== */
1649 /* =================== Thread "MODULE" =================== */
1651 /* NOTE: you'll see more ifdefs and duplication of functions here,
1652 since there is a different way to do threads on every OS. */
1654 /* Returns the number of threads for the process. */
1657 proc_get_nthreads (procinfo *pi)
1659 if (!pi->status_valid)
1660 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1663 /* Only works for the process procinfo, because the LWP procinfos do not
1664 get prstatus filled in. */
1665 if (pi->tid != 0) /* Find the parent process procinfo. */
1666 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1667 return pi->prstatus.pr_nlwp;
1672 Return the ID of the thread that had an event of interest.
1673 (ie. the one that hit a breakpoint or other traced event). All
1674 other things being equal, this should be the ID of a thread that is
1675 currently executing. */
1678 proc_get_current_thread (procinfo *pi)
1680 /* Note: this should be applied to the root procinfo for the
1681 process, not to the procinfo for an LWP. If applied to the
1682 procinfo for an LWP, it will simply return that LWP's ID. In
1683 that case, find the parent process procinfo. */
1686 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1688 if (!pi->status_valid)
1689 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
1692 return pi->prstatus.pr_lwp.pr_lwpid;
1695 /* Discover the IDs of all the threads within the process, and create
1696 a procinfo for each of them (chained to the parent). This
1697 unfortunately requires a different method on every OS. Returns
1698 non-zero for success, zero for failure. */
1701 proc_delete_dead_threads (procinfo *parent, procinfo *thread, void *ignore)
1703 if (thread && parent) /* sanity */
1705 thread->status_valid = 0;
1706 if (!proc_get_status (thread))
1707 destroy_one_procinfo (&parent->thread_list, thread);
1709 return 0; /* keep iterating */
1713 proc_update_threads (procinfo *pi)
1715 char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE + 16];
1716 struct dirent *direntry;
1721 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1722 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1723 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1724 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1727 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1729 proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, proc_delete_dead_threads, NULL);
1731 /* Note: this brute-force method was originally devised for Unixware
1732 (support removed since), and will also work on Solaris 2.6 and
1733 2.7. The original comment mentioned the existence of a much
1734 simpler and more elegant way to do this on Solaris, but didn't
1735 point out what that was. */
1737 strcpy (pathname, pi->pathname);
1738 strcat (pathname, "/lwp");
1739 dirp.reset (opendir (pathname));
1741 proc_error (pi, "update_threads, opendir", __LINE__);
1743 while ((direntry = readdir (dirp.get ())) != NULL)
1744 if (direntry->d_name[0] != '.') /* skip '.' and '..' */
1746 lwpid = atoi (&direntry->d_name[0]);
1747 thread = create_procinfo (pi->pid, lwpid);
1749 proc_error (pi, "update_threads, create_procinfo", __LINE__);
1751 pi->threads_valid = 1;
1755 /* Given a pointer to a function, call that function once for each lwp
1756 in the procinfo list, until the function returns non-zero, in which
1757 event return the value returned by the function.
1759 Note: this function does NOT call update_threads. If you want to
1760 discover new threads first, you must call that function explicitly.
1761 This function just makes a quick pass over the currently-known
1764 PI is the parent process procinfo. FUNC is the per-thread
1765 function. PTR is an opaque parameter for function. Returns the
1766 first non-zero return value from the callee, or zero. */
1769 proc_iterate_over_threads (procinfo *pi,
1770 int (*func) (procinfo *, procinfo *, void *),
1773 procinfo *thread, *next;
1776 /* We should never have to apply this operation to any procinfo
1777 except the one for the main process. If that ever changes for
1778 any reason, then take out the following clause and replace it
1779 with one that makes sure the ctl_fd is open. */
1782 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pi->pid, 0);
1784 for (thread = pi->thread_list; thread != NULL; thread = next)
1786 next = thread->next; /* In case thread is destroyed. */
1787 retval = (*func) (pi, thread, ptr);
1795 /* =================== END, Thread "MODULE" =================== */
1797 /* =================== END, /proc "MODULE" =================== */
1799 /* =================== GDB "MODULE" =================== */
1801 /* Here are all of the gdb target vector functions and their
1804 static ptid_t do_attach (ptid_t ptid);
1805 static void do_detach ();
1806 static void proc_trace_syscalls_1 (procinfo *pi, int syscallnum,
1807 int entry_or_exit, int mode, int from_tty);
1809 /* Sets up the inferior to be debugged. Registers to trace signals,
1810 hardware faults, and syscalls. Note: does not set RLC flag: caller
1811 may want to customize that. Returns zero for success (note!
1812 unlike most functions in this module); on failure, returns the LINE
1813 NUMBER where it failed! */
1816 procfs_debug_inferior (procinfo *pi)
1818 fltset_t traced_faults;
1819 sigset_t traced_signals;
1820 sysset_t *traced_syscall_entries;
1821 sysset_t *traced_syscall_exits;
1824 /* Register to trace hardware faults in the child. */
1825 prfillset (&traced_faults); /* trace all faults... */
1826 prdelset (&traced_faults, FLTPAGE); /* except page fault. */
1827 if (!proc_set_traced_faults (pi, &traced_faults))
1830 /* Initially, register to trace all signals in the child. */
1831 prfillset (&traced_signals);
1832 if (!proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &traced_signals))
1836 /* Register to trace the 'exit' system call (on entry). */
1837 traced_syscall_entries = XNEW (sysset_t);
1838 premptyset (traced_syscall_entries);
1839 praddset (traced_syscall_entries, SYS_exit);
1840 praddset (traced_syscall_entries, SYS_lwp_exit);
1842 status = proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, traced_syscall_entries);
1843 xfree (traced_syscall_entries);
1847 /* Method for tracing exec syscalls. */
1849 Not all systems with /proc have all the exec* syscalls with the same
1850 names. On the SGI, for example, there is no SYS_exec, but there
1851 *is* a SYS_execv. So, we try to account for that. */
1853 traced_syscall_exits = XNEW (sysset_t);
1854 premptyset (traced_syscall_exits);
1856 praddset (traced_syscall_exits, SYS_exec);
1858 praddset (traced_syscall_exits, SYS_execve);
1859 praddset (traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwp_create);
1860 praddset (traced_syscall_exits, SYS_lwp_exit);
1862 status = proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, traced_syscall_exits);
1863 xfree (traced_syscall_exits);
1871 procfs_target::attach (const char *args, int from_tty)
1876 pid = parse_pid_to_attach (args);
1878 if (pid == getpid ())
1879 error (_("Attaching GDB to itself is not a good idea..."));
1883 exec_file = get_exec_file (0);
1886 printf_filtered (_("Attaching to program `%s', %s\n"),
1887 exec_file, target_pid_to_str (ptid_t (pid)).c_str ());
1889 printf_filtered (_("Attaching to %s\n"),
1890 target_pid_to_str (ptid_t (pid)).c_str ());
1894 inferior_ptid = do_attach (ptid_t (pid));
1895 if (!target_is_pushed (this))
1900 procfs_target::detach (inferior *inf, int from_tty)
1902 int pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
1906 const char *exec_file;
1908 exec_file = get_exec_file (0);
1909 if (exec_file == NULL)
1912 printf_filtered (_("Detaching from program: %s, %s\n"), exec_file,
1913 target_pid_to_str (ptid_t (pid)).c_str ());
1918 inferior_ptid = null_ptid;
1919 detach_inferior (inf);
1920 maybe_unpush_target ();
1924 do_attach (ptid_t ptid)
1927 struct inferior *inf;
1931 pi = create_procinfo (ptid.pid (), 0);
1933 perror (_("procfs: out of memory in 'attach'"));
1935 if (!open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL))
1937 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
1938 xsnprintf (errmsg, sizeof (errmsg),
1939 "do_attach: couldn't open /proc file for process %d",
1941 dead_procinfo (pi, errmsg, NOKILL);
1944 /* Stop the process (if it isn't already stopped). */
1945 if (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
1947 pi->was_stopped = 1;
1948 proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (pi), proc_what (pi), 1);
1952 pi->was_stopped = 0;
1953 /* Set the process to run again when we close it. */
1954 if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
1955 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't set RLC.", NOKILL);
1957 /* Now stop the process. */
1958 if (!proc_stop_process (pi))
1959 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't stop the process.", NOKILL);
1960 pi->ignore_next_sigstop = 1;
1962 /* Save some of the /proc state to be restored if we detach. */
1963 if (!proc_get_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
1964 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced faults.", NOKILL);
1965 if (!proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
1966 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced signals.", NOKILL);
1967 if (!proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, pi->saved_entryset))
1968 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced syscall entries.",
1970 if (!proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, pi->saved_exitset))
1971 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save traced syscall exits.",
1973 if (!proc_get_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
1974 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: couldn't save held signals.", NOKILL);
1976 fail = procfs_debug_inferior (pi);
1978 dead_procinfo (pi, "do_attach: failed in procfs_debug_inferior", NOKILL);
1980 inf = current_inferior ();
1981 inferior_appeared (inf, pi->pid);
1982 /* Let GDB know that the inferior was attached. */
1983 inf->attach_flag = 1;
1985 /* Create a procinfo for the current lwp. */
1986 lwpid = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
1987 create_procinfo (pi->pid, lwpid);
1989 /* Add it to gdb's thread list. */
1990 ptid = ptid_t (pi->pid, lwpid, 0);
2001 /* Find procinfo for the main process. */
2002 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (),
2003 0); /* FIXME: threads */
2005 if (!proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
2006 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_signal", __LINE__);
2008 if (!proc_set_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
2009 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_faults", __LINE__);
2011 if (!proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, pi->saved_entryset))
2012 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
2014 if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, pi->saved_exitset))
2015 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
2017 if (!proc_set_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
2018 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_held_signals", __LINE__);
2020 if (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
2021 if (!(pi->was_stopped)
2022 || query (_("Was stopped when attached, make it runnable again? ")))
2024 /* Clear any pending signal. */
2025 if (!proc_clear_current_fault (pi))
2026 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, clear_current_fault", __LINE__);
2028 if (!proc_clear_current_signal (pi))
2029 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, clear_current_signal", __LINE__);
2031 if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
2032 proc_warn (pi, "do_detach, set_rlc", __LINE__);
2035 destroy_procinfo (pi);
2038 /* Fetch register REGNUM from the inferior. If REGNUM is -1, do this
2041 ??? Is the following note still relevant? We can't get individual
2042 registers with the PT_GETREGS ptrace(2) request either, yet we
2043 don't bother with caching at all in that case.
2045 NOTE: Since the /proc interface cannot give us individual
2046 registers, we pay no attention to REGNUM, and just fetch them all.
2047 This results in the possibility that we will do unnecessarily many
2048 fetches, since we may be called repeatedly for individual
2049 registers. So we cache the results, and mark the cache invalid
2050 when the process is resumed. */
2053 procfs_target::fetch_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regnum)
2055 gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
2057 ptid_t ptid = regcache->ptid ();
2058 int pid = ptid.pid ();
2059 int tid = ptid.lwp ();
2060 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
2062 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, tid);
2065 error (_("procfs: fetch_registers failed to find procinfo for %s"),
2066 target_pid_to_str (ptid).c_str ());
2068 gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi);
2070 proc_error (pi, "fetch_registers, get_gregs", __LINE__);
2072 supply_gregset (regcache, (const gdb_gregset_t *) gregs);
2074 if (gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch) >= 0) /* Do we have an FPU? */
2076 gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
2078 if ((regnum >= 0 && regnum < gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch))
2079 || regnum == gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)
2080 || regnum == gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch))
2081 return; /* Not a floating point register. */
2083 fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi);
2085 proc_error (pi, "fetch_registers, get_fpregs", __LINE__);
2087 supply_fpregset (regcache, (const gdb_fpregset_t *) fpregs);
2091 /* Store register REGNUM back into the inferior. If REGNUM is -1, do
2092 this for all registers.
2094 NOTE: Since the /proc interface will not read individual registers,
2095 we will cache these requests until the process is resumed, and only
2096 then write them back to the inferior process.
2098 FIXME: is that a really bad idea? Have to think about cases where
2099 writing one register might affect the value of others, etc. */
2102 procfs_target::store_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regnum)
2104 gdb_gregset_t *gregs;
2106 ptid_t ptid = regcache->ptid ();
2107 int pid = ptid.pid ();
2108 int tid = ptid.lwp ();
2109 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
2111 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (pid, tid);
2114 error (_("procfs: store_registers: failed to find procinfo for %s"),
2115 target_pid_to_str (ptid).c_str ());
2117 gregs = proc_get_gregs (pi);
2119 proc_error (pi, "store_registers, get_gregs", __LINE__);
2121 fill_gregset (regcache, gregs, regnum);
2122 if (!proc_set_gregs (pi))
2123 proc_error (pi, "store_registers, set_gregs", __LINE__);
2125 if (gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch) >= 0) /* Do we have an FPU? */
2127 gdb_fpregset_t *fpregs;
2129 if ((regnum >= 0 && regnum < gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch))
2130 || regnum == gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)
2131 || regnum == gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch))
2132 return; /* Not a floating point register. */
2134 fpregs = proc_get_fpregs (pi);
2136 proc_error (pi, "store_registers, get_fpregs", __LINE__);
2138 fill_fpregset (regcache, fpregs, regnum);
2139 if (!proc_set_fpregs (pi))
2140 proc_error (pi, "store_registers, set_fpregs", __LINE__);
2145 syscall_is_lwp_exit (procinfo *pi, int scall)
2147 if (scall == SYS_lwp_exit)
2153 syscall_is_exit (procinfo *pi, int scall)
2155 if (scall == SYS_exit)
2161 syscall_is_exec (procinfo *pi, int scall)
2164 if (scall == SYS_exec)
2167 if (scall == SYS_execve)
2173 syscall_is_lwp_create (procinfo *pi, int scall)
2175 if (scall == SYS_lwp_create)
2180 /* Retrieve the next stop event from the child process. If child has
2181 not stopped yet, wait for it to stop. Translate /proc eventcodes
2182 (or possibly wait eventcodes) into gdb internal event codes.
2183 Returns the id of process (and possibly thread) that incurred the
2184 event. Event codes are returned through a pointer parameter. */
2187 procfs_target::wait (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *status,
2190 /* First cut: loosely based on original version 2.1. */
2194 ptid_t retval, temp_ptid;
2195 int why, what, flags;
2202 retval = ptid_t (-1);
2204 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
2205 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2208 /* We must assume that the status is stale now... */
2209 pi->status_valid = 0;
2210 pi->gregs_valid = 0;
2211 pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
2213 #if 0 /* just try this out... */
2214 flags = proc_flags (pi);
2215 why = proc_why (pi);
2216 if ((flags & PR_STOPPED) && (why == PR_REQUESTED))
2217 pi->status_valid = 0; /* re-read again, IMMEDIATELY... */
2219 /* If child is not stopped, wait for it to stop. */
2220 if (!(proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
2221 && !proc_wait_for_stop (pi))
2223 /* wait_for_stop failed: has the child terminated? */
2224 if (errno == ENOENT)
2228 /* /proc file not found; presumably child has terminated. */
2229 wait_retval = ::wait (&wstat); /* "wait" for the child's exit. */
2232 if (wait_retval != inferior_ptid.pid ())
2233 error (_("procfs: couldn't stop "
2234 "process %d: wait returned %d."),
2235 inferior_ptid.pid (), wait_retval);
2236 /* FIXME: might I not just use waitpid?
2237 Or try find_procinfo to see if I know about this child? */
2238 retval = ptid_t (wait_retval);
2240 else if (errno == EINTR)
2244 /* Unknown error from wait_for_stop. */
2245 proc_error (pi, "target_wait (wait_for_stop)", __LINE__);
2250 /* This long block is reached if either:
2251 a) the child was already stopped, or
2252 b) we successfully waited for the child with wait_for_stop.
2253 This block will analyze the /proc status, and translate it
2254 into a waitstatus for GDB.
2256 If we actually had to call wait because the /proc file
2257 is gone (child terminated), then we skip this block,
2258 because we already have a waitstatus. */
2260 flags = proc_flags (pi);
2261 why = proc_why (pi);
2262 what = proc_what (pi);
2264 if (flags & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
2266 /* If it's running async (for single_thread control),
2267 set it back to normal again. */
2268 if (flags & PR_ASYNC)
2269 if (!proc_unset_async (pi))
2270 proc_error (pi, "target_wait, unset_async", __LINE__);
2273 proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
2275 /* The 'pid' we will return to GDB is composed of
2276 the process ID plus the lwp ID. */
2277 retval = ptid_t (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi), 0);
2281 wstat = (what << 8) | 0177;
2284 if (syscall_is_lwp_exit (pi, what))
2286 if (print_thread_events)
2287 printf_unfiltered (_("[%s exited]\n"),
2288 target_pid_to_str (retval).c_str ());
2289 delete_thread (find_thread_ptid (retval));
2290 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2293 else if (syscall_is_exit (pi, what))
2295 struct inferior *inf;
2297 /* Handle SYS_exit call only. */
2298 /* Stopped at entry to SYS_exit.
2299 Make it runnable, resume it, then use
2300 the wait system call to get its exit code.
2301 Proc_run_process always clears the current
2303 Then return its exit status. */
2304 pi->status_valid = 0;
2306 /* FIXME: what we should do is return
2307 TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS. */
2308 if (!proc_run_process (pi, 0, 0))
2309 proc_error (pi, "target_wait, run_process", __LINE__);
2311 inf = find_inferior_pid (pi->pid);
2312 if (inf->attach_flag)
2314 /* Don't call wait: simulate waiting for exit,
2315 return a "success" exit code. Bogus: what if
2316 it returns something else? */
2318 retval = inferior_ptid; /* ? ? ? */
2322 int temp = ::wait (&wstat);
2324 /* FIXME: shouldn't I make sure I get the right
2325 event from the right process? If (for
2326 instance) I have killed an earlier inferior
2327 process but failed to clean up after it
2328 somehow, I could get its termination event
2331 /* If wait returns -1, that's what we return
2334 retval = ptid_t (temp);
2339 printf_filtered (_("procfs: trapped on entry to "));
2340 proc_prettyprint_syscall (proc_what (pi), 0);
2341 printf_filtered ("\n");
2343 long i, nsysargs, *sysargs;
2345 nsysargs = proc_nsysarg (pi);
2346 sysargs = proc_sysargs (pi);
2348 if (nsysargs > 0 && sysargs != NULL)
2350 printf_filtered (_("%ld syscall arguments:\n"),
2352 for (i = 0; i < nsysargs; i++)
2353 printf_filtered ("#%ld: 0x%08lx\n",
2359 /* How to exit gracefully, returning "unknown
2361 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2362 return inferior_ptid;
2366 /* How to keep going without returning to wfi: */
2367 target_continue_no_signal (ptid);
2373 if (syscall_is_exec (pi, what))
2375 /* Hopefully this is our own "fork-child" execing
2376 the real child. Hoax this event into a trap, and
2377 GDB will see the child about to execute its start
2379 wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
2381 else if (syscall_is_lwp_create (pi, what))
2383 /* This syscall is somewhat like fork/exec. We
2384 will get the event twice: once for the parent
2385 LWP, and once for the child. We should already
2386 know about the parent LWP, but the child will
2387 be new to us. So, whenever we get this event,
2388 if it represents a new thread, simply add the
2389 thread to the list. */
2391 /* If not in procinfo list, add it. */
2392 temp_tid = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
2393 if (!find_procinfo (pi->pid, temp_tid))
2394 create_procinfo (pi->pid, temp_tid);
2396 temp_ptid = ptid_t (pi->pid, temp_tid, 0);
2397 /* If not in GDB's thread list, add it. */
2398 if (!in_thread_list (temp_ptid))
2399 add_thread (temp_ptid);
2401 /* Return to WFI, but tell it to immediately resume. */
2402 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2403 return inferior_ptid;
2405 else if (syscall_is_lwp_exit (pi, what))
2407 if (print_thread_events)
2408 printf_unfiltered (_("[%s exited]\n"),
2409 target_pid_to_str (retval).c_str ());
2410 delete_thread (find_thread_ptid (retval));
2411 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2416 /* FIXME: Do we need to handle SYS_sproc,
2417 SYS_fork, or SYS_vfork here? The old procfs
2418 seemed to use this event to handle threads on
2419 older (non-LWP) systems, where I'm assuming
2420 that threads were actually separate processes.
2421 Irix, maybe? Anyway, low priority for now. */
2425 printf_filtered (_("procfs: trapped on exit from "));
2426 proc_prettyprint_syscall (proc_what (pi), 0);
2427 printf_filtered ("\n");
2429 long i, nsysargs, *sysargs;
2431 nsysargs = proc_nsysarg (pi);
2432 sysargs = proc_sysargs (pi);
2434 if (nsysargs > 0 && sysargs != NULL)
2436 printf_filtered (_("%ld syscall arguments:\n"),
2438 for (i = 0; i < nsysargs; i++)
2439 printf_filtered ("#%ld: 0x%08lx\n",
2443 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2444 return inferior_ptid;
2449 wstat = (SIGSTOP << 8) | 0177;
2454 printf_filtered (_("Retry #%d:\n"), retry);
2455 pi->status_valid = 0;
2460 /* If not in procinfo list, add it. */
2461 temp_tid = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
2462 if (!find_procinfo (pi->pid, temp_tid))
2463 create_procinfo (pi->pid, temp_tid);
2465 /* If not in GDB's thread list, add it. */
2466 temp_ptid = ptid_t (pi->pid, temp_tid, 0);
2467 if (!in_thread_list (temp_ptid))
2468 add_thread (temp_ptid);
2470 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
2471 status->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
2476 wstat = (what << 8) | 0177;
2481 wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
2483 /* FIXME: use si_signo where possible. */
2486 wstat = (SIGILL << 8) | 0177;
2490 wstat = (SIGTRAP << 8) | 0177;
2495 wstat = (SIGSEGV << 8) | 0177;
2500 wstat = (SIGFPE << 8) | 0177;
2502 case FLTPAGE: /* Recoverable page fault */
2503 default: /* FIXME: use si_signo if possible for
2505 retval = ptid_t (-1);
2506 printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
2507 printf_filtered (_("child stopped for unknown reason:\n"));
2508 proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
2509 error (_("... giving up..."));
2512 break; /* case PR_FAULTED: */
2513 default: /* switch (why) unmatched */
2514 printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- ", __LINE__);
2515 printf_filtered (_("child stopped for unknown reason:\n"));
2516 proc_prettyprint_why (why, what, 1);
2517 error (_("... giving up..."));
2520 /* Got this far without error: If retval isn't in the
2521 threads database, add it. */
2522 if (retval.pid () > 0
2523 && retval != inferior_ptid
2524 && !in_thread_list (retval))
2526 /* We have a new thread. We need to add it both to
2527 GDB's list and to our own. If we don't create a
2528 procinfo, resume may be unhappy later. */
2529 add_thread (retval);
2530 if (find_procinfo (retval.pid (),
2531 retval.lwp ()) == NULL)
2532 create_procinfo (retval.pid (),
2536 else /* Flags do not indicate STOPPED. */
2538 /* surely this can't happen... */
2539 printf_filtered ("procfs:%d -- process not stopped.\n",
2541 proc_prettyprint_flags (flags, 1);
2542 error (_("procfs: ...giving up..."));
2547 store_waitstatus (status, wstat);
2553 /* Perform a partial transfer to/from the specified object. For
2554 memory transfers, fall back to the old memory xfer functions. */
2556 enum target_xfer_status
2557 procfs_target::xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
2558 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
2559 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset,
2560 ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
2564 case TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY:
2565 return procfs_xfer_memory (readbuf, writebuf, offset, len, xfered_len);
2567 case TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV:
2568 return memory_xfer_auxv (this, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
2569 offset, len, xfered_len);
2572 return this->beneath ()->xfer_partial (object, annex,
2573 readbuf, writebuf, offset, len,
2578 /* Helper for procfs_xfer_partial that handles memory transfers.
2579 Arguments are like target_xfer_partial. */
2581 static enum target_xfer_status
2582 procfs_xfer_memory (gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf,
2583 ULONGEST memaddr, ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
2588 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
2589 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2590 if (pi->as_fd == 0 && open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_AS) == 0)
2592 proc_warn (pi, "xfer_memory, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
2593 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
2596 if (lseek (pi->as_fd, (off_t) memaddr, SEEK_SET) != (off_t) memaddr)
2597 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
2599 if (writebuf != NULL)
2601 PROCFS_NOTE ("write memory:\n");
2602 nbytes = write (pi->as_fd, writebuf, len);
2606 PROCFS_NOTE ("read memory:\n");
2607 nbytes = read (pi->as_fd, readbuf, len);
2610 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
2611 *xfered_len = nbytes;
2612 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
2615 /* Called by target_resume before making child runnable. Mark cached
2616 registers and status's invalid. If there are "dirty" caches that
2617 need to be written back to the child process, do that.
2619 File descriptors are also cached. As they are a limited resource,
2620 we cannot hold onto them indefinitely. However, as they are
2621 expensive to open, we don't want to throw them away
2622 indescriminately either. As a compromise, we will keep the file
2623 descriptors for the parent process, but discard any file
2624 descriptors we may have accumulated for the threads.
2626 As this function is called by iterate_over_threads, it always
2627 returns zero (so that iterate_over_threads will keep
2631 invalidate_cache (procinfo *parent, procinfo *pi, void *ptr)
2633 /* About to run the child; invalidate caches and do any other
2637 if (pi->gregs_dirty)
2638 if (parent == NULL || proc_get_current_thread (parent) != pi->tid)
2639 if (!proc_set_gregs (pi)) /* flush gregs cache */
2640 proc_warn (pi, "target_resume, set_gregs",
2642 if (gdbarch_fp0_regnum (target_gdbarch ()) >= 0)
2643 if (pi->fpregs_dirty)
2644 if (parent == NULL || proc_get_current_thread (parent) != pi->tid)
2645 if (!proc_set_fpregs (pi)) /* flush fpregs cache */
2646 proc_warn (pi, "target_resume, set_fpregs",
2652 /* The presence of a parent indicates that this is an LWP.
2653 Close any file descriptors that it might have open.
2654 We don't do this to the master (parent) procinfo. */
2656 close_procinfo_files (pi);
2658 pi->gregs_valid = 0;
2659 pi->fpregs_valid = 0;
2661 pi->gregs_dirty = 0;
2662 pi->fpregs_dirty = 0;
2664 pi->status_valid = 0;
2665 pi->threads_valid = 0;
2671 /* A callback function for iterate_over_threads. Find the
2672 asynchronous signal thread, and make it runnable. See if that
2673 helps matters any. */
2676 make_signal_thread_runnable (procinfo *process, procinfo *pi, void *ptr)
2679 if (proc_flags (pi) & PR_ASLWP)
2681 if (!proc_run_process (pi, 0, -1))
2682 proc_error (pi, "make_signal_thread_runnable", __LINE__);
2690 /* Make the child process runnable. Normally we will then call
2691 procfs_wait and wait for it to stop again (unless gdb is async).
2693 If STEP is true, then arrange for the child to stop again after
2694 executing a single instruction. If SIGNO is zero, then cancel any
2695 pending signal; if non-zero, then arrange for the indicated signal
2696 to be delivered to the child when it runs. If PID is -1, then
2697 allow any child thread to run; if non-zero, then allow only the
2698 indicated thread to run. (not implemented yet). */
2701 procfs_target::resume (ptid_t ptid, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
2703 procinfo *pi, *thread;
2707 prrun.prflags |= PRSVADDR;
2708 prrun.pr_vaddr = $PC; set resume address
2709 prrun.prflags |= PRSTRACE; trace signals in pr_trace (all)
2710 prrun.prflags |= PRSFAULT; trace faults in pr_fault (all but PAGE)
2711 prrun.prflags |= PRCFAULT; clear current fault.
2713 PRSTRACE and PRSFAULT can be done by other means
2714 (proc_trace_signals, proc_trace_faults)
2715 PRSVADDR is unnecessary.
2716 PRCFAULT may be replaced by a PIOCCFAULT call (proc_clear_current_fault)
2717 This basically leaves PRSTEP and PRCSIG.
2718 PRCSIG is like PIOCSSIG (proc_clear_current_signal).
2719 So basically PR_STEP is the sole argument that must be passed
2720 to proc_run_process (for use in the prrun struct by ioctl). */
2722 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
2723 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2725 /* First cut: ignore pid argument. */
2728 /* Convert signal to host numbering. */
2729 if (signo == 0 || (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_STOP && pi->ignore_next_sigstop))
2732 native_signo = gdb_signal_to_host (signo);
2734 pi->ignore_next_sigstop = 0;
2736 /* Running the process voids all cached registers and status. */
2737 /* Void the threads' caches first. */
2738 proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, invalidate_cache, NULL);
2739 /* Void the process procinfo's caches. */
2740 invalidate_cache (NULL, pi, NULL);
2742 if (ptid.pid () != -1)
2744 /* Resume a specific thread, presumably suppressing the
2746 thread = find_procinfo (ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
2749 if (thread->tid != 0)
2751 /* We're to resume a specific thread, and not the
2752 others. Set the child process's PR_ASYNC flag. */
2753 if (!proc_set_async (pi))
2754 proc_error (pi, "target_resume, set_async", __LINE__);
2756 proc_iterate_over_threads (pi,
2757 make_signal_thread_runnable,
2760 pi = thread; /* Substitute the thread's procinfo
2766 if (!proc_run_process (pi, step, native_signo))
2769 warning (_("resume: target already running. "
2770 "Pretend to resume, and hope for the best!"));
2772 proc_error (pi, "target_resume", __LINE__);
2776 /* Set up to trace signals in the child process. */
2779 procfs_target::pass_signals (gdb::array_view<const unsigned char> pass_signals)
2782 procinfo *pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2785 prfillset (&signals);
2787 for (signo = 0; signo < NSIG; signo++)
2789 int target_signo = gdb_signal_from_host (signo);
2790 if (target_signo < pass_signals.size () && pass_signals[target_signo])
2791 prdelset (&signals, signo);
2794 if (!proc_set_traced_signals (pi, &signals))
2795 proc_error (pi, "pass_signals", __LINE__);
2798 /* Print status information about the child process. */
2801 procfs_target::files_info ()
2803 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
2805 printf_filtered (_("\tUsing the running image of %s %s via /proc.\n"),
2806 inf->attach_flag? "attached": "child",
2807 target_pid_to_str (inferior_ptid).c_str ());
2810 /* Make it die. Wait for it to die. Clean up after it. Note: this
2811 should only be applied to the real process, not to an LWP, because
2812 of the check for parent-process. If we need this to work for an
2813 LWP, it needs some more logic. */
2816 unconditionally_kill_inferior (procinfo *pi)
2820 parent_pid = proc_parent_pid (pi);
2821 if (!proc_kill (pi, SIGKILL))
2822 proc_error (pi, "unconditionally_kill, proc_kill", __LINE__);
2823 destroy_procinfo (pi);
2825 /* If pi is GDB's child, wait for it to die. */
2826 if (parent_pid == getpid ())
2827 /* FIXME: should we use waitpid to make sure we get the right event?
2828 Should we check the returned event? */
2833 ret = waitpid (pi->pid, &status, 0);
2840 /* We're done debugging it, and we want it to go away. Then we want
2841 GDB to forget all about it. */
2844 procfs_target::kill ()
2846 if (inferior_ptid != null_ptid) /* ? */
2848 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
2849 procinfo *pi = find_procinfo (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2852 unconditionally_kill_inferior (pi);
2853 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
2857 /* Forget we ever debugged this thing! */
2860 procfs_target::mourn_inferior ()
2864 if (inferior_ptid != null_ptid)
2866 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
2867 pi = find_procinfo (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
2869 destroy_procinfo (pi);
2872 generic_mourn_inferior ();
2874 maybe_unpush_target ();
2877 /* When GDB forks to create a runnable inferior process, this function
2878 is called on the parent side of the fork. It's job is to do
2879 whatever is necessary to make the child ready to be debugged, and
2880 then wait for the child to synchronize. */
2883 procfs_init_inferior (struct target_ops *ops, int pid)
2889 /* This routine called on the parent side (GDB side)
2890 after GDB forks the inferior. */
2891 if (!target_is_pushed (ops))
2894 pi = create_procinfo (pid, 0);
2896 perror (_("procfs: out of memory in 'init_inferior'"));
2898 if (!open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL))
2899 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
2903 open_procinfo_files // done
2906 procfs_notice_signals
2913 /* If not stopped yet, wait for it to stop. */
2914 if (!(proc_flags (pi) & PR_STOPPED) && !(proc_wait_for_stop (pi)))
2915 dead_procinfo (pi, "init_inferior: wait_for_stop failed", KILL);
2917 /* Save some of the /proc state to be restored if we detach. */
2918 /* FIXME: Why? In case another debugger was debugging it?
2919 We're it's parent, for Ghu's sake! */
2920 if (!proc_get_traced_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sigset))
2921 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_signals", __LINE__);
2922 if (!proc_get_held_signals (pi, &pi->saved_sighold))
2923 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_held_signals", __LINE__);
2924 if (!proc_get_traced_faults (pi, &pi->saved_fltset))
2925 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_faults", __LINE__);
2926 if (!proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, pi->saved_entryset))
2927 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
2928 if (!proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, pi->saved_exitset))
2929 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, get_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
2931 fail = procfs_debug_inferior (pi);
2933 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior (procfs_debug_inferior)", fail);
2935 /* FIXME: logically, we should really be turning OFF run-on-last-close,
2936 and possibly even turning ON kill-on-last-close at this point. But
2937 I can't make that change without careful testing which I don't have
2938 time to do right now... */
2939 /* Turn on run-on-last-close flag so that the child
2940 will die if GDB goes away for some reason. */
2941 if (!proc_set_run_on_last_close (pi))
2942 proc_error (pi, "init_inferior, set_RLC", __LINE__);
2944 /* We now have have access to the lwpid of the main thread/lwp. */
2945 lwpid = proc_get_current_thread (pi);
2947 /* Create a procinfo for the main lwp. */
2948 create_procinfo (pid, lwpid);
2950 /* We already have a main thread registered in the thread table at
2951 this point, but it didn't have any lwp info yet. Notify the core
2952 about it. This changes inferior_ptid as well. */
2953 thread_change_ptid (ptid_t (pid),
2954 ptid_t (pid, lwpid, 0));
2956 gdb_startup_inferior (pid, START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED);
2959 /* When GDB forks to create a new process, this function is called on
2960 the child side of the fork before GDB exec's the user program. Its
2961 job is to make the child minimally debuggable, so that the parent
2962 GDB process can connect to the child and take over. This function
2963 should do only the minimum to make that possible, and to
2964 synchronize with the parent process. The parent process should
2965 take care of the details. */
2968 procfs_set_exec_trap (void)
2970 /* This routine called on the child side (inferior side)
2971 after GDB forks the inferior. It must use only local variables,
2972 because it may be sharing data space with its parent. */
2977 pi = create_procinfo (getpid (), 0);
2979 perror_with_name (_("procfs: create_procinfo failed in child."));
2981 if (open_procinfo_files (pi, FD_CTL) == 0)
2983 proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, open_proc_files", __LINE__);
2984 gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
2985 /* No need to call "dead_procinfo", because we're going to
2990 /* Method for tracing exec syscalls. */
2992 Not all systems with /proc have all the exec* syscalls with the same
2993 names. On the SGI, for example, there is no SYS_exec, but there
2994 *is* a SYS_execv. So, we try to account for that. */
2996 exitset = XNEW (sysset_t);
2997 premptyset (exitset);
2999 praddset (exitset, SYS_exec);
3001 praddset (exitset, SYS_execve);
3003 if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, exitset))
3005 proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
3006 gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
3010 /* FIXME: should this be done in the parent instead? */
3011 /* Turn off inherit on fork flag so that all grand-children
3012 of gdb start with tracing flags cleared. */
3013 if (!proc_unset_inherit_on_fork (pi))
3014 proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, unset_inherit", __LINE__);
3016 /* Turn off run on last close flag, so that the child process
3017 cannot run away just because we close our handle on it.
3018 We want it to wait for the parent to attach. */
3019 if (!proc_unset_run_on_last_close (pi))
3020 proc_warn (pi, "set_exec_trap, unset_RLC", __LINE__);
3022 /* FIXME: No need to destroy the procinfo --
3023 we have our own address space, and we're about to do an exec! */
3024 /*destroy_procinfo (pi);*/
3027 /* This function is called BEFORE gdb forks the inferior process. Its
3028 only real responsibility is to set things up for the fork, and tell
3029 GDB which two functions to call after the fork (one for the parent,
3030 and one for the child).
3032 This function does a complicated search for a unix shell program,
3033 which it then uses to parse arguments and environment variables to
3034 be sent to the child. I wonder whether this code could not be
3035 abstracted out and shared with other unix targets such as
3039 procfs_target::create_inferior (const char *exec_file,
3040 const std::string &allargs,
3041 char **env, int from_tty)
3043 const char *shell_file = get_shell ();
3047 if (strchr (shell_file, '/') == NULL)
3050 /* We will be looking down the PATH to find shell_file. If we
3051 just do this the normal way (via execlp, which operates by
3052 attempting an exec for each element of the PATH until it
3053 finds one which succeeds), then there will be an exec for
3054 each failed attempt, each of which will cause a PR_SYSEXIT
3055 stop, and we won't know how to distinguish the PR_SYSEXIT's
3056 for these failed execs with the ones for successful execs
3057 (whether the exec has succeeded is stored at that time in the
3058 carry bit or some such architecture-specific and
3059 non-ABI-specified place).
3061 So I can't think of anything better than to search the PATH
3062 now. This has several disadvantages: (1) There is a race
3063 condition; if we find a file now and it is deleted before we
3064 exec it, we lose, even if the deletion leaves a valid file
3065 further down in the PATH, (2) there is no way to know exactly
3066 what an executable (in the sense of "capable of being
3067 exec'd") file is. Using access() loses because it may lose
3068 if the caller is the superuser; failing to use it loses if
3069 there are ACLs or some such. */
3073 /* FIXME-maybe: might want "set path" command so user can change what
3074 path is used from within GDB. */
3075 const char *path = getenv ("PATH");
3077 struct stat statbuf;
3080 path = "/bin:/usr/bin";
3082 tryname = (char *) alloca (strlen (path) + strlen (shell_file) + 2);
3083 for (p = path; p != NULL; p = p1 ? p1 + 1: NULL)
3085 p1 = strchr (p, ':');
3090 strncpy (tryname, p, len);
3091 tryname[len] = '\0';
3092 strcat (tryname, "/");
3093 strcat (tryname, shell_file);
3094 if (access (tryname, X_OK) < 0)
3096 if (stat (tryname, &statbuf) < 0)
3098 if (!S_ISREG (statbuf.st_mode))
3099 /* We certainly need to reject directories. I'm not quite
3100 as sure about FIFOs, sockets, etc., but I kind of doubt
3101 that people want to exec() these things. */
3106 /* Not found. This must be an error rather than merely passing
3107 the file to execlp(), because execlp() would try all the
3108 exec()s, causing GDB to get confused. */
3109 error (_("procfs:%d -- Can't find shell %s in PATH"),
3110 __LINE__, shell_file);
3112 shell_file = tryname;
3115 pid = fork_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env, procfs_set_exec_trap,
3116 NULL, NULL, shell_file, NULL);
3118 /* We have something that executes now. We'll be running through
3119 the shell at this point (if startup-with-shell is true), but the
3120 pid shouldn't change. */
3121 add_thread_silent (ptid_t (pid));
3123 procfs_init_inferior (this, pid);
3126 /* An observer for the "inferior_created" event. */
3129 procfs_inferior_created (struct target_ops *ops, int from_tty)
3133 /* Callback for update_thread_list. Calls "add_thread". */
3136 procfs_notice_thread (procinfo *pi, procinfo *thread, void *ptr)
3138 ptid_t gdb_threadid = ptid_t (pi->pid, thread->tid, 0);
3140 thread_info *thr = find_thread_ptid (gdb_threadid);
3141 if (thr == NULL || thr->state == THREAD_EXITED)
3142 add_thread (gdb_threadid);
3147 /* Query all the threads that the target knows about, and give them
3148 back to GDB to add to its list. */
3151 procfs_target::update_thread_list ()
3157 /* Find procinfo for main process. */
3158 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3159 proc_update_threads (pi);
3160 proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, procfs_notice_thread, NULL);
3163 /* Return true if the thread is still 'alive'. This guy doesn't
3164 really seem to be doing his job. Got to investigate how to tell
3165 when a thread is really gone. */
3168 procfs_target::thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
3174 thread = ptid.lwp ();
3175 /* If I don't know it, it ain't alive! */
3176 pi = find_procinfo (proc, thread);
3180 /* If I can't get its status, it ain't alive!
3181 What's more, I need to forget about it! */
3182 if (!proc_get_status (pi))
3184 destroy_procinfo (pi);
3187 /* I couldn't have got its status if it weren't alive, so it's
3192 /* Convert PTID to a string. */
3195 procfs_target::pid_to_str (ptid_t ptid)
3197 if (ptid.lwp () == 0)
3198 return string_printf ("process %d", ptid.pid ());
3200 return string_printf ("LWP %ld", ptid.lwp ());
3203 /* Accepts an integer PID; Returns a string representing a file that
3204 can be opened to get the symbols for the child process. */
3207 procfs_target::pid_to_exec_file (int pid)
3209 static char buf[PATH_MAX];
3210 char name[PATH_MAX];
3212 /* Solaris 11 introduced /proc/<proc-id>/execname. */
3213 xsnprintf (name, sizeof (name), "/proc/%d/execname", pid);
3214 scoped_fd fd (gdb_open_cloexec (name, O_RDONLY, 0));
3215 if (fd.get () < 0 || read (fd.get (), buf, PATH_MAX - 1) < 0)
3217 /* If that fails, fall back to /proc/<proc-id>/path/a.out introduced in
3221 xsnprintf (name, sizeof (name), "/proc/%d/path/a.out", pid);
3222 len = readlink (name, buf, PATH_MAX - 1);
3232 /* Insert a watchpoint. */
3235 procfs_set_watchpoint (ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rwflag,
3241 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (ptid.pid () == -1 ?
3242 inferior_ptid.pid () : ptid.pid (),
3245 /* Translate from GDB's flags to /proc's. */
3246 if (len > 0) /* len == 0 means delete watchpoint. */
3248 switch (rwflag) { /* FIXME: need an enum! */
3249 case hw_write: /* default watchpoint (write) */
3250 pflags = WRITE_WATCHFLAG;
3252 case hw_read: /* read watchpoint */
3253 pflags = READ_WATCHFLAG;
3255 case hw_access: /* access watchpoint */
3256 pflags = READ_WATCHFLAG | WRITE_WATCHFLAG;
3258 case hw_execute: /* execution HW breakpoint */
3259 pflags = EXEC_WATCHFLAG;
3261 default: /* Something weird. Return error. */
3264 if (after) /* Stop after r/w access is completed. */
3265 pflags |= AFTER_WATCHFLAG;
3268 if (!proc_set_watchpoint (pi, addr, len, pflags))
3270 if (errno == E2BIG) /* Typical error for no resources. */
3271 return -1; /* fail */
3272 /* GDB may try to remove the same watchpoint twice.
3273 If a remove request returns no match, don't error. */
3274 if (errno == ESRCH && len == 0)
3275 return 0; /* ignore */
3276 proc_error (pi, "set_watchpoint", __LINE__);
3281 /* Return non-zero if we can set a hardware watchpoint of type TYPE. TYPE
3282 is one of bp_hardware_watchpoint, bp_read_watchpoint, bp_write_watchpoint,
3283 or bp_hardware_watchpoint. CNT is the number of watchpoints used so
3286 Note: procfs_can_use_hw_breakpoint() is not yet used by all
3287 procfs.c targets due to the fact that some of them still define
3288 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint. */
3291 procfs_target::can_use_hw_breakpoint (enum bptype type, int cnt, int othertype)
3293 /* Due to the way that proc_set_watchpoint() is implemented, host
3294 and target pointers must be of the same size. If they are not,
3295 we can't use hardware watchpoints. This limitation is due to the
3296 fact that proc_set_watchpoint() calls
3297 procfs_address_to_host_pointer(); a close inspection of
3298 procfs_address_to_host_pointer will reveal that an internal error
3299 will be generated when the host and target pointer sizes are
3301 struct type *ptr_type = builtin_type (target_gdbarch ())->builtin_data_ptr;
3303 if (sizeof (void *) != TYPE_LENGTH (ptr_type))
3306 /* Other tests here??? */
3311 /* Returns non-zero if process is stopped on a hardware watchpoint
3312 fault, else returns zero. */
3315 procfs_target::stopped_by_watchpoint ()
3319 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3321 if (proc_flags (pi) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
3322 if (proc_why (pi) == PR_FAULTED)
3323 if (proc_what (pi) == FLTWATCH)
3328 /* Returns 1 if the OS knows the position of the triggered watchpoint,
3329 and sets *ADDR to that address. Returns 0 if OS cannot report that
3330 address. This function is only called if
3331 procfs_stopped_by_watchpoint returned 1, thus no further checks are
3332 done. The function also assumes that ADDR is not NULL. */
3335 procfs_target::stopped_data_address (CORE_ADDR *addr)
3339 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3340 return proc_watchpoint_address (pi, addr);
3344 procfs_target::insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
3345 enum target_hw_bp_type type,
3346 struct expression *cond)
3348 if (!target_have_steppable_watchpoint
3349 && !gdbarch_have_nonsteppable_watchpoint (target_gdbarch ()))
3350 /* When a hardware watchpoint fires off the PC will be left at
3351 the instruction following the one which caused the
3352 watchpoint. It will *NOT* be necessary for GDB to step over
3354 return procfs_set_watchpoint (inferior_ptid, addr, len, type, 1);
3356 /* When a hardware watchpoint fires off the PC will be left at
3357 the instruction which caused the watchpoint. It will be
3358 necessary for GDB to step over the watchpoint. */
3359 return procfs_set_watchpoint (inferior_ptid, addr, len, type, 0);
3363 procfs_target::remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
3364 enum target_hw_bp_type type,
3365 struct expression *cond)
3367 return procfs_set_watchpoint (inferior_ptid, addr, 0, 0, 0);
3371 procfs_target::region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len)
3373 /* The man page for proc(4) on Solaris 2.6 and up says that the
3374 system can support "thousands" of hardware watchpoints, but gives
3375 no method for finding out how many; It doesn't say anything about
3376 the allowed size for the watched area either. So we just tell
3381 /* Memory Mappings Functions: */
3383 /* Call a callback function once for each mapping, passing it the
3384 mapping, an optional secondary callback function, and some optional
3385 opaque data. Quit and return the first non-zero value returned
3388 PI is the procinfo struct for the process to be mapped. FUNC is
3389 the callback function to be called by this iterator. DATA is the
3390 optional opaque data to be passed to the callback function.
3391 CHILD_FUNC is the optional secondary function pointer to be passed
3392 to the child function. Returns the first non-zero return value
3393 from the callback function, or zero. */
3396 iterate_over_mappings (procinfo *pi, find_memory_region_ftype child_func,
3398 int (*func) (struct prmap *map,
3399 find_memory_region_ftype child_func,
3402 char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE];
3403 struct prmap *prmaps;
3404 struct prmap *prmap;
3409 /* Get the number of mappings, allocate space,
3410 and read the mappings into prmaps. */
3412 xsnprintf (pathname, sizeof (pathname), "/proc/%d/map", pi->pid);
3414 scoped_fd map_fd (open (pathname, O_RDONLY));
3415 if (map_fd.get () < 0)
3416 proc_error (pi, "iterate_over_mappings (open)", __LINE__);
3418 /* Use stat to determine the file size, and compute
3419 the number of prmap_t objects it contains. */
3420 if (fstat (map_fd.get (), &sbuf) != 0)
3421 proc_error (pi, "iterate_over_mappings (fstat)", __LINE__);
3423 nmap = sbuf.st_size / sizeof (prmap_t);
3424 prmaps = (struct prmap *) alloca ((nmap + 1) * sizeof (*prmaps));
3425 if (read (map_fd.get (), (char *) prmaps, nmap * sizeof (*prmaps))
3426 != (nmap * sizeof (*prmaps)))
3427 proc_error (pi, "iterate_over_mappings (read)", __LINE__);
3429 for (prmap = prmaps; nmap > 0; prmap++, nmap--)
3431 funcstat = (*func) (prmap, child_func, data);
3439 /* Implements the to_find_memory_regions method. Calls an external
3440 function for each memory region.
3441 Returns the integer value returned by the callback. */
3444 find_memory_regions_callback (struct prmap *map,
3445 find_memory_region_ftype func, void *data)
3447 return (*func) ((CORE_ADDR) map->pr_vaddr,
3449 (map->pr_mflags & MA_READ) != 0,
3450 (map->pr_mflags & MA_WRITE) != 0,
3451 (map->pr_mflags & MA_EXEC) != 0,
3452 1, /* MODIFIED is unknown, pass it as true. */
3456 /* External interface. Calls a callback function once for each
3457 mapped memory region in the child process, passing as arguments:
3459 CORE_ADDR virtual_address,
3461 int read, TRUE if region is readable by the child
3462 int write, TRUE if region is writable by the child
3463 int execute TRUE if region is executable by the child.
3465 Stops iterating and returns the first non-zero value returned by
3469 procfs_target::find_memory_regions (find_memory_region_ftype func, void *data)
3471 procinfo *pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3473 return iterate_over_mappings (pi, func, data,
3474 find_memory_regions_callback);
3477 /* Returns an ascii representation of a memory mapping's flags. */
3480 mappingflags (long flags)
3482 static char asciiflags[8];
3484 strcpy (asciiflags, "-------");
3485 if (flags & MA_STACK)
3486 asciiflags[1] = 's';
3487 if (flags & MA_BREAK)
3488 asciiflags[2] = 'b';
3489 if (flags & MA_SHARED)
3490 asciiflags[3] = 's';
3491 if (flags & MA_READ)
3492 asciiflags[4] = 'r';
3493 if (flags & MA_WRITE)
3494 asciiflags[5] = 'w';
3495 if (flags & MA_EXEC)
3496 asciiflags[6] = 'x';
3497 return (asciiflags);
3500 /* Callback function, does the actual work for 'info proc
3504 info_mappings_callback (struct prmap *map, find_memory_region_ftype ignore,
3507 unsigned int pr_off;
3509 pr_off = (unsigned int) map->pr_offset;
3511 if (gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch ()) == 32)
3512 printf_filtered ("\t%#10lx %#10lx %#10lx %#10x %7s\n",
3513 (unsigned long) map->pr_vaddr,
3514 (unsigned long) map->pr_vaddr + map->pr_size - 1,
3515 (unsigned long) map->pr_size,
3517 mappingflags (map->pr_mflags));
3519 printf_filtered (" %#18lx %#18lx %#10lx %#10x %7s\n",
3520 (unsigned long) map->pr_vaddr,
3521 (unsigned long) map->pr_vaddr + map->pr_size - 1,
3522 (unsigned long) map->pr_size,
3524 mappingflags (map->pr_mflags));
3529 /* Implement the "info proc mappings" subcommand. */
3532 info_proc_mappings (procinfo *pi, int summary)
3535 return; /* No output for summary mode. */
3537 printf_filtered (_("Mapped address spaces:\n\n"));
3538 if (gdbarch_ptr_bit (target_gdbarch ()) == 32)
3539 printf_filtered ("\t%10s %10s %10s %10s %7s\n",
3546 printf_filtered (" %18s %18s %10s %10s %7s\n",
3553 iterate_over_mappings (pi, NULL, NULL, info_mappings_callback);
3554 printf_filtered ("\n");
3557 /* Implement the "info proc" command. */
3560 procfs_target::info_proc (const char *args, enum info_proc_what what)
3562 procinfo *process = NULL;
3563 procinfo *thread = NULL;
3580 error (_("Not supported on this target."));
3583 gdb_argv built_argv (args);
3584 for (char *arg : built_argv)
3586 if (isdigit (arg[0]))
3588 pid = strtoul (arg, &tmp, 10);
3590 tid = strtoul (++tmp, NULL, 10);
3592 else if (arg[0] == '/')
3594 tid = strtoul (arg + 1, NULL, 10);
3598 procinfo_up temporary_procinfo;
3600 pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
3602 error (_("No current process: you must name one."));
3605 /* Have pid, will travel.
3606 First see if it's a process we're already debugging. */
3607 process = find_procinfo (pid, 0);
3608 if (process == NULL)
3610 /* No. So open a procinfo for it, but
3611 remember to close it again when finished. */
3612 process = create_procinfo (pid, 0);
3613 temporary_procinfo.reset (process);
3614 if (!open_procinfo_files (process, FD_CTL))
3615 proc_error (process, "info proc, open_procinfo_files", __LINE__);
3619 thread = create_procinfo (pid, tid);
3623 printf_filtered (_("process %d flags:\n"), process->pid);
3624 proc_prettyprint_flags (proc_flags (process), 1);
3625 if (proc_flags (process) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
3626 proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (process), proc_what (process), 1);
3627 if (proc_get_nthreads (process) > 1)
3628 printf_filtered ("Process has %d threads.\n",
3629 proc_get_nthreads (process));
3633 printf_filtered (_("thread %d flags:\n"), thread->tid);
3634 proc_prettyprint_flags (proc_flags (thread), 1);
3635 if (proc_flags (thread) & (PR_STOPPED | PR_ISTOP))
3636 proc_prettyprint_why (proc_why (thread), proc_what (thread), 1);
3640 info_proc_mappings (process, 0);
3645 /* Modify the status of the system call identified by SYSCALLNUM in
3646 the set of syscalls that are currently traced/debugged.
3648 If ENTRY_OR_EXIT is set to PR_SYSENTRY, then the entry syscalls set
3649 will be updated. Otherwise, the exit syscalls set will be updated.
3651 If MODE is FLAG_SET, then traces will be enabled. Otherwise, they
3652 will be disabled. */
3655 proc_trace_syscalls_1 (procinfo *pi, int syscallnum, int entry_or_exit,
3656 int mode, int from_tty)
3660 if (entry_or_exit == PR_SYSENTRY)
3661 sysset = proc_get_traced_sysentry (pi, NULL);
3663 sysset = proc_get_traced_sysexit (pi, NULL);
3666 proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, get_traced_sysset", __LINE__);
3668 if (mode == FLAG_SET)
3669 praddset (sysset, syscallnum);
3671 prdelset (sysset, syscallnum);
3673 if (entry_or_exit == PR_SYSENTRY)
3675 if (!proc_set_traced_sysentry (pi, sysset))
3676 proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, set_traced_sysentry", __LINE__);
3680 if (!proc_set_traced_sysexit (pi, sysset))
3681 proc_error (pi, "proc-trace, set_traced_sysexit", __LINE__);
3686 proc_trace_syscalls (const char *args, int from_tty, int entry_or_exit, int mode)
3690 if (inferior_ptid.pid () <= 0)
3691 error (_("you must be debugging a process to use this command."));
3693 if (args == NULL || args[0] == 0)
3694 error_no_arg (_("system call to trace"));
3696 pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3697 if (isdigit (args[0]))
3699 const int syscallnum = atoi (args);
3701 proc_trace_syscalls_1 (pi, syscallnum, entry_or_exit, mode, from_tty);
3706 proc_trace_sysentry_cmd (const char *args, int from_tty)
3708 proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSENTRY, FLAG_SET);
3712 proc_trace_sysexit_cmd (const char *args, int from_tty)
3714 proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSEXIT, FLAG_SET);
3718 proc_untrace_sysentry_cmd (const char *args, int from_tty)
3720 proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSENTRY, FLAG_RESET);
3724 proc_untrace_sysexit_cmd (const char *args, int from_tty)
3726 proc_trace_syscalls (args, from_tty, PR_SYSEXIT, FLAG_RESET);
3730 _initialize_procfs (void)
3732 gdb::observers::inferior_created.attach (procfs_inferior_created);
3734 add_com ("proc-trace-entry", no_class, proc_trace_sysentry_cmd,
3735 _("Give a trace of entries into the syscall."));
3736 add_com ("proc-trace-exit", no_class, proc_trace_sysexit_cmd,
3737 _("Give a trace of exits from the syscall."));
3738 add_com ("proc-untrace-entry", no_class, proc_untrace_sysentry_cmd,
3739 _("Cancel a trace of entries into the syscall."));
3740 add_com ("proc-untrace-exit", no_class, proc_untrace_sysexit_cmd,
3741 _("Cancel a trace of exits from the syscall."));
3743 add_inf_child_target (&the_procfs_target);
3746 /* =================== END, GDB "MODULE" =================== */
3750 /* miscellaneous stubs: */
3752 /* The following satisfy a few random symbols mostly created by the
3753 solaris threads implementation, which I will chase down later. */
3755 /* Return a pid for which we guarantee we will be able to find a
3759 procfs_first_available (void)
3761 return ptid_t (procinfo_list ? procinfo_list->pid : -1);
3764 /* =================== GCORE .NOTE "MODULE" =================== */
3767 procfs_do_thread_registers (bfd *obfd, ptid_t ptid,
3768 char *note_data, int *note_size,
3769 enum gdb_signal stop_signal)
3771 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (ptid);
3772 gdb_gregset_t gregs;
3773 gdb_fpregset_t fpregs;
3774 unsigned long merged_pid;
3776 merged_pid = ptid.lwp () << 16 | ptid.pid ();
3778 /* This part is the old method for fetching registers.
3779 It should be replaced by the newer one using regsets
3780 once it is implemented in this platform:
3781 gdbarch_iterate_over_regset_sections(). */
3783 scoped_restore save_inferior_ptid = make_scoped_restore (&inferior_ptid);
3784 inferior_ptid = ptid;
3785 target_fetch_registers (regcache, -1);
3787 fill_gregset (regcache, &gregs, -1);
3788 note_data = (char *) elfcore_write_lwpstatus (obfd,
3794 fill_fpregset (regcache, &fpregs, -1);
3795 note_data = (char *) elfcore_write_prfpreg (obfd,
3804 struct procfs_corefile_thread_data {
3808 enum gdb_signal stop_signal;
3812 procfs_corefile_thread_callback (procinfo *pi, procinfo *thread, void *data)
3814 struct procfs_corefile_thread_data *args
3815 = (struct procfs_corefile_thread_data *) data;
3819 ptid_t ptid = ptid_t (pi->pid, thread->tid, 0);
3821 args->note_data = procfs_do_thread_registers (args->obfd, ptid,
3830 find_signalled_thread (struct thread_info *info, void *data)
3832 if (info->suspend.stop_signal != GDB_SIGNAL_0
3833 && info->ptid.pid () == inferior_ptid.pid ())
3839 static enum gdb_signal
3840 find_stop_signal (void)
3842 struct thread_info *info =
3843 iterate_over_threads (find_signalled_thread, NULL);
3846 return info->suspend.stop_signal;
3848 return GDB_SIGNAL_0;
3852 procfs_target::make_corefile_notes (bfd *obfd, int *note_size)
3854 gdb_gregset_t gregs;
3855 char fname[16] = {'\0'};
3856 char psargs[80] = {'\0'};
3857 procinfo *pi = find_procinfo_or_die (inferior_ptid.pid (), 0);
3858 char *note_data = NULL;
3859 const char *inf_args;
3860 struct procfs_corefile_thread_data thread_args;
3861 enum gdb_signal stop_signal;
3863 if (get_exec_file (0))
3865 strncpy (fname, lbasename (get_exec_file (0)), sizeof (fname));
3866 fname[sizeof (fname) - 1] = 0;
3867 strncpy (psargs, get_exec_file (0), sizeof (psargs));
3868 psargs[sizeof (psargs) - 1] = 0;
3870 inf_args = get_inferior_args ();
3871 if (inf_args && *inf_args
3872 && (strlen (inf_args)
3873 < ((int) sizeof (psargs) - (int) strlen (psargs))))
3875 strncat (psargs, " ",
3876 sizeof (psargs) - strlen (psargs));
3877 strncat (psargs, inf_args,
3878 sizeof (psargs) - strlen (psargs));
3882 note_data = (char *) elfcore_write_prpsinfo (obfd,
3888 stop_signal = find_stop_signal ();
3890 fill_gregset (get_current_regcache (), &gregs, -1);
3891 note_data = elfcore_write_pstatus (obfd, note_data, note_size,
3892 inferior_ptid.pid (),
3893 stop_signal, &gregs);
3895 thread_args.obfd = obfd;
3896 thread_args.note_data = note_data;
3897 thread_args.note_size = note_size;
3898 thread_args.stop_signal = stop_signal;
3899 proc_iterate_over_threads (pi, procfs_corefile_thread_callback,
3901 note_data = thread_args.note_data;
3903 gdb::optional<gdb::byte_vector> auxv =
3904 target_read_alloc (current_top_target (), TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV, NULL);
3905 if (auxv && !auxv->empty ())
3906 note_data = elfcore_write_note (obfd, note_data, note_size,
3907 "CORE", NT_AUXV, auxv->data (),
3912 /* =================== END GCORE .NOTE "MODULE" =================== */