address's length (and then overriding it if it "looks wrong"), use the
next argument to the system call to determine the length. This is more
reliable since this is what the kernel depends on anyway and is also
simpler.
integer. Fix the argument decoding to treat this as a quad instead of an
int. This includes using QUAD_ALIGN and QUAD_SLOTS as necessary. To
continue printing IDs in decimal, add a new QuadHex argument type that
prints a 64-bit integer in hex, use QuadHex for the existing off_t arguments,
repurpose Quad to print a 64-bit integer in decimal, and use Quad for id_t
arguments.
This fixes the decoding of wait6(2) and procctl(2) on 32-bit platforms.
probably fallout from the removal of the extra padding argument before
off_t in 7. However, that padding still exists for 32-bit powerpc, so
use QUAD_ALIGN.
- Fix QUAD_ALIGN to be zero for powerpc64. It should only be set to 1
for 32-bit platforms that add padding to align 64-bit arguments.
- 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
arrays generically rather than duplicating a hack in all of the backends.
- Add two new system call argument types and use them instead of StringArray
for the argument and environment arguments execve and linux_execve.
- Honor the -a/-e flags in the handling of these new types.
- Instead of printing "<missing argument>" when the decoding is disabled,
print the raw pointer value.
Before truss would fetch 100 string pointers and happily walk off the end
of the array if it never found a NULL. This also means for a short argv
list it could fail entirely if the 100 string pointers spanned into an
unmapped page.
Instead, fetch page-aligned blocks of string pointers in a loop fetching
each string until a NULL is found.
While here, make use of the open memstream file descriptor instead of
allocating a temporary array. This allows us to fetch each string once
instead of twice.
- Print the ident value as decimal instead of hexadecimal for filter types
that use "small" values such as file descriptors and PIDs.
- Decode NOTE_* flags in the fflags field of kevents for several system
filter types.
with open_memstream() to build the string for each argument. This allows
for more complicated argument building without resorting to intermediate
malloc's, etc.
Related, the strsig*() functions no longer return allocated strings but
use a static global buffer instead.
- Don't exit if get_struct() fails, instead print the raw pointer value to
match all other argument decoding cases.
- Use an xlat table instead of a home-rolled switch for the operation name.
- Display the nested socketcall args structure as a structure instead of as
two inline arguments.
sigqueue, sigreturn, sigsuspend, sigtimedwait, sigwait, sigwaitinfo, and
thr_kill.
- Print signal sets as a structure (with {}'s) and in particular use this to
differentiate empty sets from a NULL pointer.
- Decode arguments for some other system calls: issetugid, pipe2, sysarch
(operations are only decoded for amd64 and i386), and thr_self.
especially useful now that libc's open() always calls openat(). While here,
fix a few other things:
- Decode the mode argument passed to access(), eaccess(), and faccessat().
- Decode the atfd paramete to pretty-print AT_FDCWD.
- Decode the special AT_* flags used with some of the *at() system calls.
- Decode arguments for fchmod(), lchmod(), fchown(), lchown(), eaccess(),
and futimens().
- Decode both of the timeval structures passed to futimes() instead of just
the first one.
length. In particular, instead of blinding fetching 1k blocks, do an initial
fetch up to the end of the current page followed by page-sized fetches up to
the maximum size. Previously if the 1k buffer crossed a page boundary and
the second page was not valid, the entire operation would fail.
in a separate word from the _count. This does not permit both items to
be updated atomically in a portable manner. As a result, sem_post()
must always perform a system call to safely clear _has_waiters.
This change removes the _has_waiters field and instead uses the high bit
of _count as the _has_waiters flag. A new umtx object type (_usem2) and
two new umtx operations are added (SEM_WAIT2 and SEM_WAKE2) to implement
these semantics. The older operations are still supported under the
COMPAT_FREEBSD9/10 options. The POSIX semaphore API in libc has
been updated to use the new implementation. Note that the new
implementation is not compatible with the previous implementation.
However, this only affects static binaries (which cannot be helped by
symbol versioning). Binaries using a dynamic libc will continue to work
fine. SEM_MAGIC has been bumped so that mismatched binaries will error
rather than corrupting a shared semaphore. In addition, a padding field
has been added to sem_t so that it remains the same size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D961
Reported by: adrian
Reviewed by: kib, jilles (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Norse
Older binaries are still permitted to use these flags.
PR: 193961 (exp-run in ports)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D848
Reviewed by: kib
- Retire long time unused (basically always unused) sys__umtx_lock()
and sys__umtx_unlock() syscalls
- struct umtx and their supporting definitions
- UMUTEX_ERROR_CHECK flag
- Retire UMTX_OP_LOCK/UMTX_OP_UNLOCK from _umtx_op() syscall
__FreeBSD_version is not bumped yet because it is expected that further
breakages to the umtx interface will follow up in the next days.
However there will be a final bump when necessary.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
Reviewed by: jhb
exhausted.
- Add a new protect(1) command that can be used to set or revoke protection
from arbitrary processes. Similar to ktrace it can apply a change to all
existing descendants of a process as well as future descendants.
- Add a new procctl(2) system call that provides a generic interface for
control operations on processes (as opposed to the debugger-specific
operations provided by ptrace(2)). procctl(2) uses a combination of
idtype_t and an id to identify the set of processes on which to operate
similar to wait6().
- Add a PROC_SPROTECT control operation to manage the protection status
of a set of processes. MADV_PROTECT still works for backwards
compatability.
- Add a p_flag2 to struct proc (and a corresponding ki_flag2 to kinfo_proc)
the first bit of which is used to track if P_PROTECT should be inherited
by new child processes.
Reviewed by: kib, jilles (earlier version)
Approved by: re (delphij)
MFC after: 1 month
- Don't treat an options argument of 0 to wait4() as an error in
kdump.
- Decode the wait options passed to wait4() and wait6() in truss
and decode the returned rusage and exit status.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
an address in the first 2GB of the process's address space. This flag should
have the same semantics as the same flag on Linux.
To facilitate this, add a new parameter to vm_map_find() that specifies an
optional maximum virtual address. While here, fix several callers of
vm_map_find() to use a VMFS_* constant for the findspace argument instead of
TRUE and FALSE.
Reviewed by: alc
Approved by: re (kib)
address alignment of mappings.
- MAP_ALIGNED(n) requests a mapping aligned on a boundary of (1 << n).
Requests for n >= number of bits in a pointer or less than the size of
a page fail with EINVAL. This matches the API provided by NetBSD.
- MAP_ALIGNED_SUPER is a special case of MAP_ALIGNED. It can be used
to optimize the chances of using large pages. By default it will align
the mapping on a large page boundary (the system is free to choose any
large page size to align to that seems best for the mapping request).
However, if the object being mapped is already using large pages, then
it will align the virtual mapping to match the existing large pages in
the object instead.
- Internally, VMFS_ALIGNED_SPACE is now renamed to VMFS_SUPER_SPACE, and
VMFS_ALIGNED_SPACE(n) is repurposed for specifying a specific alignment.
MAP_ALIGNED(n) maps to using VMFS_ALIGNED_SPACE(n), while
MAP_ALIGNED_SUPER maps to VMFS_SUPER_SPACE.
- mmap() of a device object now uses VMFS_OPTIMAL_SPACE rather than
explicitly using VMFS_SUPER_SPACE. All device objects are forced to
use a specific color on creation, so VMFS_OPTIMAL_SPACE is effectively
equivalent.
Reviewed by: alc
MFC after: 1 month
allows userland application to use the following macros:
timespecclear, timespecisset, timespeccmp, timespecadd,
timespecsub;
timevalclear, timevalisset, timevalcmp.
MFC after: 1 month
r195175. Remove all definitions, documentation, and usage.
fifo_misc.c:
Remove all kqueue tests as fifo_io.c performs all those that
would have remained.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 3 weeks
X-MFC note: don't change vlan_link_state() function signature
i386-fbsd.c. Add pipe(2) to syscall table to decode it's pointer
argument properly and re-add special handling for pipe(2) return value
to print_syscall_ret().
PR: bin/120870
Approved by: trasz (mentor)
containing 64-bit arguments would have explicit padding.
On 64-bit platforms there was no padding, so the dummy
argument was not covering anything. On 32-bit platforms
with weak alignment (i.e. i386) the 64-bit argument did
not need to be aligned, so there too an aditional argument
was introduced. On 32-bit platforms with strong alignment
(i.e. PowerPC) the dummy argument in fact cover the padding.
By elimininating the dummy argument, 64-bit platforms now
have 1 argument less. This also applies to 32-bit platforms
with weak alignment. On PowerPC this doesn't matter, because
the padding is still there. We just don't "name" it.
Deal with those 3 cases.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
rename, __getcwd, shutdown, getrlimit, setrlimit, _umtx_lock, _umtx_unlock,
pathconf, truncate, ftruncate, kill
- Decode more arguments of open, mprot, *stat, and fcntl.
- Convert all constant-macro and bitfield decoding to lookup tables; much
cleaner than previous code.
- Print the timestamp of process exit and signal reception when -d or -D are in
use
- Try six times with 1/2 second delay to debug the child
PR: bin/52190 (updated)
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
Approved by: alfred
type which is a String type that has no -s limitations applied to it.
Change most Strings in the code to Names and add a few extra syscalls,
namely munmap, read, rename and symlink. This was enough to facilitate
following file descriptor allocations in the code more easily and
getting a hint at what's being read/written from/to files. More
syscalls should really be added.
While here, fix an off-by-one bug in the buffer truncation code and
add a fflush so that truss's output reflects the syscall that the
program is stuck in.
Sponsored by: Sophos/Activestate
MFC after: 2 weeks
also occupies a single slot. There's no need for any special handling
of Quads. While here, remove the silly make_quad() function. We have
the 2 longs on 32-bit machines already lined up in the argument array,
so we can fetch the Quad with a simple cast.
Before:
lseek(1,0x123456789,0xd0d0d0d0d0d0d0d0) = 4886718345 (0x123456789)
After:
lseek(1,0x123456789,SEEK_SET) = 4886718345 (0x123456789)
result buffer, so we need to format it ourselves. The problem is
that the length is stored as the return value from readlink, so we
need to pass the return value from our syscall into print_arg.
Motivated by: truss garbage on my screen from reading /etc/malloc.conf.
Fd_set and Sigaction structures. Use these for printing the arguments
to sigaction(), nanosleep(), select(), poll(), gettimeofday(),
clock_gettime(), recvfrom(), getitimer() and setitimer().
This is based on Dan's patch from the PR but I've hacked it for
style and some other issues. While Dan has checked this patch, any
goofs are probably my fault.
(The PR also contains support for the dual return values of pipe().
These will follow once I've ported that support to platforms other
than i386.)
PR: 52190
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
is that fseeko() fails in very predictable and frequent ways on ia64.
This is because the offset is actually an address in the process'
address space, which on ia64 can be larger than long (for lseek) or
off_t (for fseeko). The crux is the signedness. The register stack
and memory stack are in region 4 on ia64. This means that the sign bit
is 1. The large positive virtual address is wrongly interpreted as
a negative file offset.
There's no quick fix. Even if you get around the API by using a
SEEK_SET up to LONG_MAX and follow it up with a SEEK_CUR for the
remainder, the kernel simply cannot deal with it. and the second
seek will just fail.
Therefore, this change does not actually fix the root cause. It just
makes sure we're not spitting out all kinds of garbage or that the
get_struct() function in particular does not cause truss(1) to exit.
This, I might add, invariably happened way too soon for truss(1) to
be of any use on ia64...
o Syscall return values do not fit in int on 64-bit architectures.
Change the type of retval in <arch>_syscall_exit() to long and
change the prototype of said function to return a long as well.
o Change the prototype of print_syscall_ret() to take a long for
the return address and change the format string accordingly.
o Replace the code sequence
tmp = malloc(X);
sprintf(tmp, format, ...);
with X by definition too small on 64-bit platforms by
asprintf(&tmp, format, ...);
With these changes the output makes sense again, although it does
mess up the tabulation on ia64. Go widescreen...
Not tested on: alpha, sparc64.
AF_INET6 and AF_UNIX sockaddrs, and will recognize accept(), bind(),
connect(), getpeername() and getsockname() as syscalls taking sockaddr
arguments. Some enterprising soul might want to add (and test) support
for the send() / recv() family of syscalls as well.
MFC after: 1 week
Correct usage: one of {-p pid, command} is required.
Open output file when command line is fully analyzed: incorrect `truss -o f'
command does not create an empty file anymore.