freebsd-skq/usr.bin/truss/syscall.h
Marcel Moolenaar 1bcb5f5a96 Port truss(1) to 64-bit architectures:
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.
2003-11-09 03:48:13 +00:00

50 lines
1.6 KiB
C

/*
* See i386-fbsd.c for copyright and license terms.
*
* System call arguments come in several flavours:
* Hex -- values that should be printed in hex (addresses)
* Octal -- Same as above, but octal
* Int -- normal integer values (file descriptors, for example)
* String -- pointers to sensible data. Note that we treat read() and
* write() arguments as such, even though they may *not* be
* printable data.
* Ptr -- pointer to some specific structure. Just print as hex for now.
* Quad -- a double-word value. e.g., lseek(int, offset_t, int)
* Stat -- a pointer to a stat buffer. Currently unused.
* Ioctl -- an ioctl command. Woefully limited.
*
* In addition, the pointer types (String, Ptr) may have OUT masked in --
* this means that the data is set on *return* from the system call -- or
* IN (meaning that the data is passed *into* the system call).
*/
/*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
enum Argtype { None = 1, Hex, Octal, Int, String, Ptr, Stat, Ioctl, Quad,
Signal, Sockaddr, StringArray };
#define ARG_MASK 0xff
#define OUT 0x100
#define IN /*0x20*/0
struct syscall_args {
enum Argtype type;
int offset;
};
struct syscall {
const char *name;
int ret_type; /* 0, 1, or 2 return values */
int nargs; /* actual number of meaningful arguments */
/* Hopefully, no syscalls with > 10 args */
struct syscall_args args[10];
};
struct syscall *get_syscall(const char*);
char *get_string(int, void*, int);
char *print_arg(int, struct syscall_args *, unsigned long*);
void print_syscall(struct trussinfo *, const char *, int, char **);
void print_syscall_ret(struct trussinfo *, const char *, int, char **, int,
long);