This change is a refactoring cleanup to improve support for compat32
syscalls (and compat64 on CHERI systems). Each process ABI now has it's
own struct sycall instead of using one global list. The list of all
syscalls is replaced with a list of seen syscalls. Looking up the syscall
argument passing convention now interates over the fixed-size array instead
of using a link-list that's populated on startup so we no longer need the
init_syscall() function.
The actual functional changes are in D27625.
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27636
shm_open2 is similar to shm_open, except it also takes shmflags and optional
name to label the anonymous region for, e.g., debugging purposes.
The appropriate support for decoding shmflags was added to libsysdecode in
r358115.
This is a part of D23733.
Reviewed by: kaktus
This removes all of the architecture-specific functions from truss.
A per-ABI structure is still needed to map syscall numbers to names
and FreeBSD errno values to ABI error values as well as hold syscall
counters. However, the linker set of ABI structures is now replaced
with a simple table mapping ABI names to structures. This approach
permits sharing the same ABI structure among separate names such as
i386 a.out and ELF binaries as well as ELF v1 vs ELF v2 for powerpc64.
A few differences are visible due to using PT_GET_SC_RET to fetch the
error value of a system call. Note that ktrace/kdump have had the
"new" behaviors for a long time already:
- System calls that return with EJUSTRETURN or ERESTART will now be
noticed and logged as such. Previously sigreturn (which uses
EJUSTRETURN) would report whatever random value was in the register
holding errno from the previous system call for example. Now it
reports EJUSTRETURN.
- System calls that return errno as their error value such as
posix_fallocate() and posix_fadvise() now report non-zero return
values as errors instead of success with a non-zero return value.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20963
Currently truss(1) shows shm_open(SHM_ANON, ...) as shm_open("(null)", ...).
Detect the special value and display it by name.
Reviewed by: jhb, allanjude, tuexen
Approved by: mjg (mentor)
MFC with: r339224
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17461
List enum values on separate lines to minimize diffs as new types are
added. Split the enum values up into groups and use some simple sorting
within groups (scalar enums are sorted by size, then base, all other
groups are generally sorted alphabetically).
No functional change.
- Add a new KTR_STRUCT_ARRAY ktrace record type which dumps an array of
structures.
The structure name in the record payload is preceded by a size_t
containing the size of the individual structures. Use this to
replace the previous code that dumped the kevent arrays dumped for
kevent(). kdump is now able to decode the kevent structures rather
than dumping their contents via a hexdump.
One change from before is that the 'changes' and 'events' arrays are
not marked with separate 'read' and 'write' annotations in kdump
output. Instead, the first array is the 'changes' array, and the
second array (only present if kevent doesn't fail with an error) is
the 'events' array. For kevent(), empty arrays are denoted by an
entry with an array containing zero entries rather than no record.
- Move kevent decoding tables from truss to libsysdecode.
This adds three new functions to decode members of struct kevent:
sysdecode_kevent_filter, sysdecode_kevent_flags, and
sysdecode_kevent_fflags.
kdump uses these helper functions to pretty-print kevent fields.
- Move structure definitions for freebsd11 and freebsd32 kevent
structures to <sys/event.h> so that they can be shared with userland.
The 32-bit structures are only exposed if _WANT_KEVENT32 is defined.
The freebsd11 structures are only exposed if _WANT_FREEBSD11_KEVENT is
defined. The 32-bit freebsd11 structure requires both.
- Decode freebsd11 kevent structures in truss for the compat11.kevent()
system call.
- Log 32-bit kevent structures via ktrace for 32-bit compat kevent()
system calls.
- While here, constify the 'void *data' argument to ktrstruct().
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12470
Specifically, decode the siginfo structure returned by sigtimedwait(),
sigwaitinfo(), and wait6(). While here, also decode the signal number
returned in the second argument to sigwait().
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
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
instead of passing some of that state as arguments to print_syscall() and
print_syscallret(). This just makes the calls of these functions shorter
and easier to read.
CloudABI has approximately 50 system calls that do not depend on the
pointer size of the system. As the ABI is pretty compact, it takes
little effort to each truss(8) the formatting rules for these system
calls. Start off by formatting pointer size independent system calls.
Changes:
- Make it possible to include the CloudABI system call definitions in
FreeBSD userspace builds. Add ${root}/sys to the truss(8) Makefile so
we can pull in <compat/cloudabi/cloudabi_syscalldefs.h>.
- Refactoring: patch up amd64-cloudabi64.c to use the CLOUDABI_*
constants instead of rolling our own table.
- Add table entries for all of the system calls.
- Add new generic formatting types (UInt, IntArray) that we'll be using
to format unsigned integers and arrays of integers.
- Add CloudABI specific formatting types.
Approved by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3836
This uses the kdump(1) utrace support code directly until a common library
is created.
This allows malloc(3) tracing with MALLOC_CONF=utrace:true and rtld tracing
with LD_UTRACE=1. Unknown utrace(2) data is just printed as hex.
PR: 43819 [inspired by]
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3819
This is done by changing get_syscall() to either lookup the known syscall
or add it into the list with the default handlers for printing.
This also simplifies some code to not have to check if the syscall variable
is set or NULL.
Reviewed by: jhb
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3792