This change implements NOTE_ABSTIME flag for EVFILT_TIMER, which
specifies that the data field contains absolute time to fire the
event.
To make this useful, data member of the struct kevent must be extended
to 64bit. Using the opportunity, I also added ext members. This
changes struct kevent almost to Apple struct kevent64, except I did
not changed type of ident and udata, the later would cause serious API
incompatibilities.
The type of ident was kept uintptr_t since EVFILT_AIO returns a
pointer in this field, and e.g. CHERI is sensitive to the type
(discussed with brooks, jhb).
Unlike Apple kevent64, symbol versioning allows us to claim ABI
compatibility and still name the new syscall kevent(2). Compat shims
are provided for both host native and compat32.
Requested by: bapt
Reviewed by: bapt, brooks, ngie (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11025
This includes decoding both scheduler policy constants and the sched_param
structure for sched_get_priority_max(), sched_get_priority_min(),
sched_getparam(), sched_getscheduler(), sched_rr_get_interval(),
sched_setparam(), and sched_setscheduler().
The cmd argument passed to extattrctl() is not decoded as a string constant
but is just printed in hex. The value is filesystem-specific but in
practice is only used with UFS1 filesystems.
- dup and dup2 print fd arguments in decimal.
- pread and pwrite are similar to read and write with the addition of the
file offset.
- getdirentries displays the output entries as a string for now and also
prints the value returned in *basep. Eventually the buffer for
getdirentries should perhaps be decoded as an array of dirent
structures.
PR: 214885
Submitted by: Jonathan de Boyne Pollard <J.deBoynePollard-newsgroups@NTLWorld.COM>
Add a new sysdecode_getrusage_who() which decodes the RUSAGE_* constant
passed as the first argument to getrusage(). Use this function in both
kdump and truss to decode the first argument to getrusage().
PR: 215448
Submitted by: Anton Yuzhaninov <citrin+pr@citrin.ru>
MFC after: 1 month
Decoding of the third argument depends on the first one. For doing this,
add a corresponding function to libsysdecode.
Thanks to jhb@ for suggesting this.
Decode the last argument to ioctl() as a pointer rather than an int.
Eventually this could use 'int' for the _IOWINT() case and pointers for
all others.
The last argument to sendto() is a socklen_t value, not a pointer.
Previously, the offset in a system call description specified the
array index of the start of a system call argument. For most system
call arguments this was the same as the index of the argument in the
function signature. 64-bit arguments (off_t and id_t values) passed
on 32-bit platforms use two slots in the array however. This was
handled by adding (QUAD_SLOTS - 1) to the slot indicies of any
subsequent arguments after a 64-bit argument (though written as ("{
Quad, 1 }, { Int, 1 + QUAD_SLOTS }" rather than "{ Quad, 1 }, { Int, 2
+ QUAD_SLOTS - 1 }"). If a system call contained multiple 64-bit
arguments (such as posix_fadvise()), then additional arguments would
need to use 'QUAD_SLOTS * 2' but remember to subtract 2 from the
initial number, etc. In addition, 32-bit powerpc requires 64-bit
arguments to be 64-bit aligned, so if the effective index in the array
of a 64-bit argument is odd, it needs QUAD_ALIGN added to the current
and any subsequent slots. However, if the effective index in the
array of a 64-bit argument was even, QUAD_ALIGN was omitted.
This approach was messy and error prone. This commit replaces it with
automated pre-processing of the system call table to do fixups for
64-bit argument offsets. The offset in a system call description now
indicates the index of an argument in the associated function call's
signature. A fixup function is run against each decoded system call
description during startup on 32-bit platforms. The fixup function
maintains an 'offset' value which holds an offset to be added to each
remaining system call argument's index. Initially offset is 0. When
a 64-bit system call argument is encountered, the offset is first
aligned to a 64-bit boundary (only on powerpc) and then incremented to
account for the second argument slot used by the argument. This
modified 'offset' is then applied to any remaining arguments. This
approach does require a few things that were not previously required:
1) Each system call description must now list arguments in ascending
order (existing ones all do) without using duplicate slots in the
register array. A new assert() should catch any future
descriptions which violate this rule.
2) A system call description is still permitted to omit arguments
(though none currently do), but if the call accepts 64-bit
arguments those cannot be omitted or incorrect results will be
displated on 32-bit systems.
Tested on: amd64 and i386
Prefer ${SRCTOP}/foo over ${.CURDIR}/../../foo and ${SRCTOP}/usr.bin/foo
over ${.CURDIR}/../foo for paths in Makefiles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9932
Sponsored by: Netflix
Silence on: arch@ (twice)
Avoid always using an O(n^2) loop over known syscall structures with
strcmp() on each system call. Instead, use a per-ABI cache indexed by
the system call number. The first 1024 system calls (which should cover
all of the normal system calls in currently-supported ABIs) use a flat array
indexed by the system call number to find system call structure. For other
system calls, a linked list of structures storing an integer to structure
mapping is stored in the ABI. The linked list isn't very smart, but it
should only be used by buggy applications invoking unknown system calls.
This also fixes handling of unknown system calls which currently trigger
a NULL pointer dereference.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Restructure this script so that it generates a header of tables instead
of a source file. The tables are included in a flags.c source file which
provides functions to decode various system call arguments.
For functions that decode an enumeration, the function returns a pointer
to a string for known values and NULL for unknown values.
For functions that do more complex decoding (typically of a bitmask), the
function accepts a pointer to a FILE object (open_memstream() can be used
as a string builder) to which decoded values are written. If the
function operates on a bitmask, the function returns true if any bits
were decoded or false if the entire value was valid. Additionally, the
third argument accepts a pointer to a value to which any undecoded bits
are stored. This pointer can be NULL if the caller doesn't care about
remaining bits.
Convert kdump over to using decoder functions from libsysdecode instead of
mksubr. truss also uses decoders from libsysdecode instead of private
lookup tables, though lookup tables for objects not decoded by kdump remain
in truss for now. Eventually most of these tables should move into
libsysdecode as the automated table generation approach from mksubr is
less stale than the static tables in truss.
Some changes have been made to truss and kdump output:
- The flags passed to open() are now properly decoded in that one of
O_RDONLY, O_RDWR, O_WRONLY, or O_EXEC is always included in a decoded
mask.
- Optional arguments to open(), openat(), and fcntl() are only printed
in kdump if they exist (e.g. the mode is only printed for open() if
O_CREAT is set in the flags).
- Print argument to F_GETLK/SETLK/SETLKW in kdump as a pointer, not int.
- Include all procctl() commands.
- Correctly decode pipe2() flags in truss by not assuming full
open()-like flags with O_RDONLY, etc.
- Decode file flags passed to *chflags() as file flags (UF_* and SF_*)
rather than as a file mode.
- Fix decoding of quotactl() commands by splitting out the two command
components instead of assuming the raw command value matches the
primary command component.
In addition, truss and kdump now build without triggering any warnings.
All of the sysdecode manpages now include the required headers in the
synopsis.
Reviewed by: kib (several older versions), wblock (manpages)
MFC after: 2 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7847
Now that we've switched over to using the vDSO on CloudABI, it becomes a
lot easier for us to phase out old features. System call numbering is no
longer something that's part of the ABI. It's fully based on names. As
long as the numbering used by the kernel and the vDSO is consistent
(which it always is), it's all right.
Let's put this to the test by removing a system call (thread_tcb_set())
that's already unused for quite some time now, but was only left intact
to serve as a placeholder. Sync in the new system call table that uses
alphabetic sorting of system calls.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
trussinfo->curthread must be initialized before calling enter_syscall(),
it is used by t->proc->abi->fetch_args().
Without that truss is segfaulting and the attached program also crash.
Submitted by: Nikita Kozlov (nikita@gandi.net)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7399