freebsd-skq/usr.bin/truss/truss.h

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/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD
*
* Copyright 2001 Jamey Wood
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
#include <sys/queue.h>
#define FOLLOWFORKS 0x00000001
#define RELATIVETIMESTAMPS 0x00000002
#define ABSOLUTETIMESTAMPS 0x00000004
#define NOSIGS 0x00000008
#define EXECVEARGS 0x00000010
#define EXECVEENVS 0x00000020
#define COUNTONLY 0x00000040
#define DISPLAYTIDS 0x00000080
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct procinfo;
struct syscall;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct trussinfo;
/*
* The lookup of normal system calls are optimized by using a fixed
* array for the first 1024 system calls that can be indexed directly.
* Unknown system calls with other IDs are stored in a linked list.
*/
#define SYSCALL_NORMAL_COUNT 1024
struct extra_syscall {
STAILQ_ENTRY(extra_syscall) entries;
struct syscall *sc;
u_int number;
};
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct procabi {
const char *type;
enum sysdecode_abi abi;
truss: improved support for decoding compat32 arguments Currently running `truss -a -e` does not decode any argument values for freebsd32_* syscalls (open/readlink/etc.) This change checks whether a syscall starts with freebsd{32,64}_ and if so strips that prefix when looking up the syscall information. To ensure that the truss logs include the real syscall name we create a copy of the syscall information struct with the updated. The other problem is that when reading string array values, truss naively iterates over an array of char* and fetches the pointer value. This will result in arguments not being loaded if the pointer is not aligned to sizeof(void*), which can happens in the compat32 case. If it happens to be aligned, we would end up printing every other value. To fix this problem, this changes adds a pointer_size member to the procabi struct and uses that to correctly read indirect arguments as 64/32 bit addresses in the the compat32 case (and also compat64 on CheriBSD). The motivating use-case for this change is using truss for 64-bit programs on a CHERI system, but most of the diff also applies to 32-bit compat on a 64-bit system, so I'm upstreaming this instead of keeping it as a local CheriBSD patch. Output of `truss -aef ldd32 /usr/bin/ldd32` before: 39113: freebsd32_mmap(0x0,0x1000,0x3,0x1002,0xffffffff,0x0,0x0) = 543440896 (0x20644000) 39113: freebsd32_ioctl(0x1,0x402c7413,0xffffd2a0) = 0 (0x0) /usr/bin/ldd32: 39113: write(1,"/usr/bin/ldd32:\n",16) = 16 (0x10) 39113: fork() = 39114 (0x98ca) 39114: <new process> 39114: freebsd32_execve(0xffffd97e,0xffffd680,0x20634000) EJUSTRETURN 39114: freebsd32_mmap(0x0,0x20000,0x3,0x1002,0xffffffff,0x0,0x0) = 541237248 (0x2042a000) 39114: freebsd32_mprotect(0x20427000,0x1000,0x1) = 0 (0x0) 39114: issetugid() = 0 (0x0) 39114: openat(AT_FDCWD,"/etc/libmap32.conf",O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC,00) ERR#2 'No such file or directory' 39114: openat(AT_FDCWD,"/var/run/ld-elf32.so.hints",O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC,00) = 3 (0x3) 39114: read(3,"Ehnt\^A\0\0\0\M^@\0\0\0#\0\0\0\0"...,128) = 128 (0x80) 39114: freebsd32_fstat(0x3,0xffffbd98) = 0 (0x0) 39114: freebsd32_pread(0x3,0x2042f000,0x23,0x80,0x0) = 35 (0x23) 39114: close(3) = 0 (0x0) 39114: openat(AT_FDCWD,"/usr/lib32/libc.so.7",O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC|O_VERIFY,00) = 3 (0x3) 39114: freebsd32_fstat(0x3,0xffffc7d0) = 0 (0x0) 39114: freebsd32_mmap(0x0,0x1000,0x1,0x40002,0x3,0x0,0x0) = 541368320 (0x2044a000) After: 783: freebsd32_mmap(0x0,4096,PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANON|MAP_ALIGNED(12),-1,0x0) = 543543296 (0x2065d000) 783: freebsd32_ioctl(1,TIOCGETA,0xffffd7b0) = 0 (0x0) /usr/bin/ldd32: 783: write(1,"/usr/bin/ldd32:\n",16) = 16 (0x10) 784: <new process> 783: fork() = 784 (0x310) 784: freebsd32_execve("/usr/bin/ldd32",[ "(null)" ],[ "LD_32_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_PROGNAME=/usr/bin/ldd32", "LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_PROGNAME=/usr/bin/ldd32", "LD_32_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS=yes", "LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS=yes", "USER=root", "LOGNAME=root", "HOME=/root", "SHELL=/bin/csh", "BLOCKSIZE=K", "MAIL=/var/mail/root", "MM_CHARSET=UTF-8", "LANG=C.UTF-8", "PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/root/bin", "TERM=vt100", "HOSTTYPE=FreeBSD", "VENDOR=amd", "OSTYPE=FreeBSD", "MACHTYPE=x86_64", "SHLVL=1", "PWD=/root", "GROUP=wheel", "HOST=freebsd-amd64", "EDITOR=vi", "PAGER=less" ]) EJUSTRETURN 784: freebsd32_mmap(0x0,135168,PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANON,-1,0x0) = 541212672 (0x20424000) 784: freebsd32_mprotect(0x20421000,4096,PROT_READ) = 0 (0x0) 784: issetugid() = 0 (0x0) 784: sigfastblock(0x1,0x204234fc) = 0 (0x0) 784: open("/etc/libmap32.conf",O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC,00) ERR#2 'No such file or directory' 784: open("/var/run/ld-elf32.so.hints",O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC,00) = 3 (0x3) 784: read(3,"Ehnt\^A\0\0\0\M^@\0\0\0\v\0\0\0"...,128) = 128 (0x80) 784: freebsd32_fstat(3,{ mode=-r--r--r-- ,inode=18680,size=32768,blksize=0 }) = 0 (0x0) 784: freebsd32_pread(3,"/usr/lib32\0",11,0x80) = 11 (0xb) Reviewed By: jhb Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27625
2021-03-25 11:12:17 +00:00
size_t pointer_size;
const char *compat_prefix;
STAILQ_HEAD(, extra_syscall) extra_syscalls;
struct syscall *syscalls[SYSCALL_NORMAL_COUNT];
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
};
/*
* This is confusingly named. It holds per-thread state about the
2015-10-08 00:31:11 +00:00
* currently executing system call. syscall.h defines a struct
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
* syscall that holds metadata used to format system call arguments.
*
* NB: args[] stores the raw argument values (e.g. from registers)
* passed to the system call. s_args[] stores a string representation
* of a system call's arguments. These do not necessarily map one to
* one. A system call description may omit individual arguments
* (padding) or combine adjacent arguments (e.g. when passing an off_t
* argument on a 32-bit system). The nargs member contains the count
* of valid pointers in s_args[], not args[].
*/
struct current_syscall {
struct syscall *sc;
unsigned int number;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
unsigned int nargs;
unsigned long args[10];
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
char *s_args[10]; /* the printable arguments */
};
struct threadinfo
{
LIST_ENTRY(threadinfo) entries;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct procinfo *proc;
lwpid_t tid;
int in_syscall;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct current_syscall cs;
struct timespec before;
struct timespec after;
};
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
struct procinfo {
LIST_ENTRY(procinfo) entries;
pid_t pid;
struct procabi *abi;
LIST_HEAD(, threadinfo) threadlist;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
};
struct trussinfo
{
int flags;
int strsize;
FILE *outfile;
2002-08-05 12:22:55 +00:00
struct timespec start_time;
struct threadinfo *curthread;
Several changes to truss. - Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated among all the backends has been moved to one place. - Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops. This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace(). Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid(). Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value. - Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the entire tree instead of separate summaries per process. - Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the table in syscalls.c. - Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed before it returns from exec. - Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by libc). - Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring a statically defined table of handlers in main.c. - The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least arm. - The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7. - Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs to match the in-kernel argument fetch code. - For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the 64-bit array. Reviewed by: kib (earlier version) Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version) Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc) MFC after: 1 month Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
2015-09-30 19:13:32 +00:00
LIST_HEAD(, procinfo) proclist;
};