freebsd-skq/usr.bin/truss/main.c
Peter Wemm 8789393452 recognize "FreeBSD ELF" as an executable type
close() takes a fd, not a char * :-)
1997-12-06 14:41:41 +00:00

204 lines
4.8 KiB
C

/*
* The main module for truss. Suprisingly simple, but, then, the other
* files handle the bulk of the work. And, of course, the kernel has to
* do a lot of the work :).
*/
/*
* $Id: main.c,v 1.2 1997/12/06 14:39:30 peter Exp $
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <sys/pioctl.h>
extern int setup_and_wait(char **);
extern int start_tracing(int, int);
extern void i386_syscall_entry(int, int);
extern void i386_syscall_exit(int, int);
extern void i386_linux_syscall_entry(int, int);
extern void i386_linux_syscall_exit(int, int);
/*
* These should really be parameterized -- I don't like having globals,
* but this is the easiest way, right now, to deal with them.
*/
int pid = 0;
int nosigs = 0;
FILE *outfile = stderr;
char *prog;
int Procfd;
char progtype[50]; /* OS and type of executable */
static inline void
usage(void) {
fprintf(stderr, "usage: %s [-o <file>] [-S] { [-p <pid> ] | "
"[ <command> <args>] }\n", prog);
exit(1);
}
struct ex_types {
char *type;
void (*enter_syscall)(int, int);
void (*exit_syscall)(int, int);
} ex_types[] = {
{ "FreeBSD a.out", i386_syscall_entry, i386_syscall_exit },
{ "FreeBSD ELF", i386_syscall_entry, i386_syscall_exit },
{ "Linux ELF", i386_linux_syscall_entry, i386_linux_syscall_exit },
{ 0, 0, 0 },
};
/*
* Set the execution type. This is called after every exec, and when
* a process is first monitored. The procfs pseudo-file "etype" has
* the execution module type -- see /proc/curproc/etype for an example.
*/
static struct ex_types *
set_etype() {
struct ex_types *funcs;
char etype[24];
char progtype[32];
int fd;
sprintf(etype, "/proc/%d/etype", pid);
if ((fd = open(etype, O_RDONLY)) == -1) {
strcpy(progtype, "FreeBSD a.out");
} else {
int len = read(fd, progtype, sizeof(progtype));
progtype[len-1] = '\0';
close(fd);
}
for (funcs = ex_types; funcs->type; funcs++)
if (!strcmp(funcs->type, progtype))
break;
return funcs;
}
main(int ac, char **av) {
int mask;
int c;
int i;
char **command;
struct procfs_status pfs;
char etype[25];
struct ex_types *funcs;
int fd;
int in_exec = 0;
prog = av[0];
while ((c = getopt(ac, av, "p:o:S")) != EOF) {
switch (c) {
case 'p': /* specified pid */
pid = atoi(optarg);
break;
case 'o': /* Specified output file */
if ((outfile = fopen(optarg, "w")) == NULL) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s: cannot open %s\n", av[0], optarg);
exit(1);
}
break;
case 'S': /* Don't trace signals */
nosigs = 1;
break;
default:
usage();
}
}
ac -= optind; av += optind;
if (ac && pid != 0)
usage();
/*
* If truss starts the process itself, it will ignore some signals --
* they should be passed off to the process, which may or may not
* exit. If, however, we are examining an already-running process,
* then we restore the event mask on these same signals.
*/
if (pid == 0) { /* Start a command ourselves */
command = av;
pid = setup_and_wait(command);
signal(SIGINT, SIG_IGN);
signal(SIGTERM, SIG_IGN);
signal(SIGQUIT, SIG_IGN);
} else {
extern void restore_proc(int);
signal(SIGINT, restore_proc);
signal(SIGTERM, restore_proc);
signal(SIGQUIT, restore_proc);
}
/*
* At this point, if we started the process, it is stopped waiting to
* be woken up, either in exit() or in execve().
*/
Procfd = start_tracing(pid, S_EXEC | S_SCE | S_SCX | S_CORE | S_EXIT |
(nosigs ? 0 : S_SIG));
pfs.why = 0;
funcs = set_etype();
/*
* At this point, it's a simple loop, waiting for the process to
* stop, finding out why, printing out why, and then continuing it.
* All of the grunt work is done in the support routines.
*/
do {
int val = 0;
if (ioctl(Procfd, PIOCWAIT, &pfs) == -1)
perror("PIOCWAIT top of loop");
else {
switch(i = pfs.why) {
case S_SCE:
funcs->enter_syscall(pid, pfs.val);
break;
case S_SCX:
/*
* This is so we don't get two messages for an exec -- one
* for the S_EXEC, and one for the syscall exit. It also,
* conveniently, ensures that the first message printed out
* isn't the return-from-syscall used to create the process.
*/
if (in_exec) {
in_exec = 0;
break;
}
funcs->exit_syscall(pid, pfs.val);
break;
case S_SIG:
fprintf(outfile, "SIGNAL %d\n", pfs.val);
break;
case S_EXIT:
fprintf (outfile, "process exit, rval = %d\n", pfs.val);
break;
case S_EXEC:
funcs = set_etype();
in_exec = 1;
break;
default:
fprintf (outfile, "Process stopped because of: %d\n", i);
break;
}
}
if (ioctl(Procfd, PIOCCONT, &val) == -1)
perror("PIOCCONT");
} while (pfs.why != S_EXIT);
return 0;
}