Convert struct target_ops to C++
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / linux-nat.c
1 /* GNU/Linux native-dependent code common to multiple platforms.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2001-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #include "defs.h"
21 #include "inferior.h"
22 #include "infrun.h"
23 #include "target.h"
24 #include "nat/linux-nat.h"
25 #include "nat/linux-waitpid.h"
26 #include "gdb_wait.h"
27 #include <unistd.h>
28 #include <sys/syscall.h>
29 #include "nat/gdb_ptrace.h"
30 #include "linux-nat.h"
31 #include "nat/linux-ptrace.h"
32 #include "nat/linux-procfs.h"
33 #include "nat/linux-personality.h"
34 #include "linux-fork.h"
35 #include "gdbthread.h"
36 #include "gdbcmd.h"
37 #include "regcache.h"
38 #include "regset.h"
39 #include "inf-child.h"
40 #include "inf-ptrace.h"
41 #include "auxv.h"
42 #include <sys/procfs.h> /* for elf_gregset etc. */
43 #include "elf-bfd.h" /* for elfcore_write_* */
44 #include "gregset.h" /* for gregset */
45 #include "gdbcore.h" /* for get_exec_file */
46 #include <ctype.h> /* for isdigit */
47 #include <sys/stat.h> /* for struct stat */
48 #include <fcntl.h> /* for O_RDONLY */
49 #include "inf-loop.h"
50 #include "event-loop.h"
51 #include "event-top.h"
52 #include <pwd.h>
53 #include <sys/types.h>
54 #include <dirent.h>
55 #include "xml-support.h"
56 #include <sys/vfs.h>
57 #include "solib.h"
58 #include "nat/linux-osdata.h"
59 #include "linux-tdep.h"
60 #include "symfile.h"
61 #include "agent.h"
62 #include "tracepoint.h"
63 #include "buffer.h"
64 #include "target-descriptions.h"
65 #include "filestuff.h"
66 #include "objfiles.h"
67 #include "nat/linux-namespaces.h"
68 #include "fileio.h"
69
70 #ifndef SPUFS_MAGIC
71 #define SPUFS_MAGIC 0x23c9b64e
72 #endif
73
74 /* This comment documents high-level logic of this file.
75
76 Waiting for events in sync mode
77 ===============================
78
79 When waiting for an event in a specific thread, we just use waitpid,
80 passing the specific pid, and not passing WNOHANG.
81
82 When waiting for an event in all threads, waitpid is not quite good:
83
84 - If the thread group leader exits while other threads in the thread
85 group still exist, waitpid(TGID, ...) hangs. That waitpid won't
86 return an exit status until the other threads in the group are
87 reaped.
88
89 - When a non-leader thread execs, that thread just vanishes without
90 reporting an exit (so we'd hang if we waited for it explicitly in
91 that case). The exec event is instead reported to the TGID pid.
92
93 The solution is to always use -1 and WNOHANG, together with
94 sigsuspend.
95
96 First, we use non-blocking waitpid to check for events. If nothing is
97 found, we use sigsuspend to wait for SIGCHLD. When SIGCHLD arrives,
98 it means something happened to a child process. As soon as we know
99 there's an event, we get back to calling nonblocking waitpid.
100
101 Note that SIGCHLD should be blocked between waitpid and sigsuspend
102 calls, so that we don't miss a signal. If SIGCHLD arrives in between,
103 when it's blocked, the signal becomes pending and sigsuspend
104 immediately notices it and returns.
105
106 Waiting for events in async mode (TARGET_WNOHANG)
107 =================================================
108
109 In async mode, GDB should always be ready to handle both user input
110 and target events, so neither blocking waitpid nor sigsuspend are
111 viable options. Instead, we should asynchronously notify the GDB main
112 event loop whenever there's an unprocessed event from the target. We
113 detect asynchronous target events by handling SIGCHLD signals. To
114 notify the event loop about target events, the self-pipe trick is used
115 --- a pipe is registered as waitable event source in the event loop,
116 the event loop select/poll's on the read end of this pipe (as well on
117 other event sources, e.g., stdin), and the SIGCHLD handler writes a
118 byte to this pipe. This is more portable than relying on
119 pselect/ppoll, since on kernels that lack those syscalls, libc
120 emulates them with select/poll+sigprocmask, and that is racy
121 (a.k.a. plain broken).
122
123 Obviously, if we fail to notify the event loop if there's a target
124 event, it's bad. OTOH, if we notify the event loop when there's no
125 event from the target, linux_nat_wait will detect that there's no real
126 event to report, and return event of type TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE.
127 This is mostly harmless, but it will waste time and is better avoided.
128
129 The main design point is that every time GDB is outside linux-nat.c,
130 we have a SIGCHLD handler installed that is called when something
131 happens to the target and notifies the GDB event loop. Whenever GDB
132 core decides to handle the event, and calls into linux-nat.c, we
133 process things as in sync mode, except that the we never block in
134 sigsuspend.
135
136 While processing an event, we may end up momentarily blocked in
137 waitpid calls. Those waitpid calls, while blocking, are guarantied to
138 return quickly. E.g., in all-stop mode, before reporting to the core
139 that an LWP hit a breakpoint, all LWPs are stopped by sending them
140 SIGSTOP, and synchronously waiting for the SIGSTOP to be reported.
141 Note that this is different from blocking indefinitely waiting for the
142 next event --- here, we're already handling an event.
143
144 Use of signals
145 ==============
146
147 We stop threads by sending a SIGSTOP. The use of SIGSTOP instead of another
148 signal is not entirely significant; we just need for a signal to be delivered,
149 so that we can intercept it. SIGSTOP's advantage is that it can not be
150 blocked. A disadvantage is that it is not a real-time signal, so it can only
151 be queued once; we do not keep track of other sources of SIGSTOP.
152
153 Two other signals that can't be blocked are SIGCONT and SIGKILL. But we can't
154 use them, because they have special behavior when the signal is generated -
155 not when it is delivered. SIGCONT resumes the entire thread group and SIGKILL
156 kills the entire thread group.
157
158 A delivered SIGSTOP would stop the entire thread group, not just the thread we
159 tkill'd. But we never let the SIGSTOP be delivered; we always intercept and
160 cancel it (by PTRACE_CONT without passing SIGSTOP).
161
162 We could use a real-time signal instead. This would solve those problems; we
163 could use PTRACE_GETSIGINFO to locate the specific stop signals sent by GDB.
164 But we would still have to have some support for SIGSTOP, since PTRACE_ATTACH
165 generates it, and there are races with trying to find a signal that is not
166 blocked.
167
168 Exec events
169 ===========
170
171 The case of a thread group (process) with 3 or more threads, and a
172 thread other than the leader execs is worth detailing:
173
174 On an exec, the Linux kernel destroys all threads except the execing
175 one in the thread group, and resets the execing thread's tid to the
176 tgid. No exit notification is sent for the execing thread -- from the
177 ptracer's perspective, it appears as though the execing thread just
178 vanishes. Until we reap all other threads except the leader and the
179 execing thread, the leader will be zombie, and the execing thread will
180 be in `D (disc sleep)' state. As soon as all other threads are
181 reaped, the execing thread changes its tid to the tgid, and the
182 previous (zombie) leader vanishes, giving place to the "new"
183 leader. */
184
185 #ifndef O_LARGEFILE
186 #define O_LARGEFILE 0
187 #endif
188
189 struct linux_nat_target *linux_target;
190
191 /* Does the current host support PTRACE_GETREGSET? */
192 enum tribool have_ptrace_getregset = TRIBOOL_UNKNOWN;
193
194 /* The method to call, if any, when a new thread is attached. */
195 static void (*linux_nat_new_thread) (struct lwp_info *);
196
197 /* The method to call, if any, when a thread is destroyed. */
198 static void (*linux_nat_delete_thread) (struct arch_lwp_info *);
199
200 /* The method to call, if any, when a new fork is attached. */
201 static linux_nat_new_fork_ftype *linux_nat_new_fork;
202
203 /* The method to call, if any, when a process is no longer
204 attached. */
205 static linux_nat_forget_process_ftype *linux_nat_forget_process_hook;
206
207 /* Hook to call prior to resuming a thread. */
208 static void (*linux_nat_prepare_to_resume) (struct lwp_info *);
209
210 /* The method to call, if any, when the siginfo object needs to be
211 converted between the layout returned by ptrace, and the layout in
212 the architecture of the inferior. */
213 static int (*linux_nat_siginfo_fixup) (siginfo_t *,
214 gdb_byte *,
215 int);
216
217 /* The saved to_close method, inherited from inf-ptrace.c.
218 Called by our to_close. */
219 static void (*super_close) (struct target_ops *);
220
221 static unsigned int debug_linux_nat;
222 static void
223 show_debug_linux_nat (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
224 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
225 {
226 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module is %s.\n"),
227 value);
228 }
229
230 struct simple_pid_list
231 {
232 int pid;
233 int status;
234 struct simple_pid_list *next;
235 };
236 struct simple_pid_list *stopped_pids;
237
238 /* Whether target_thread_events is in effect. */
239 static int report_thread_events;
240
241 /* Async mode support. */
242
243 /* The read/write ends of the pipe registered as waitable file in the
244 event loop. */
245 static int linux_nat_event_pipe[2] = { -1, -1 };
246
247 /* True if we're currently in async mode. */
248 #define linux_is_async_p() (linux_nat_event_pipe[0] != -1)
249
250 /* Flush the event pipe. */
251
252 static void
253 async_file_flush (void)
254 {
255 int ret;
256 char buf;
257
258 do
259 {
260 ret = read (linux_nat_event_pipe[0], &buf, 1);
261 }
262 while (ret >= 0 || (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR));
263 }
264
265 /* Put something (anything, doesn't matter what, or how much) in event
266 pipe, so that the select/poll in the event-loop realizes we have
267 something to process. */
268
269 static void
270 async_file_mark (void)
271 {
272 int ret;
273
274 /* It doesn't really matter what the pipe contains, as long we end
275 up with something in it. Might as well flush the previous
276 left-overs. */
277 async_file_flush ();
278
279 do
280 {
281 ret = write (linux_nat_event_pipe[1], "+", 1);
282 }
283 while (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR);
284
285 /* Ignore EAGAIN. If the pipe is full, the event loop will already
286 be awakened anyway. */
287 }
288
289 static int kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo);
290
291 static int stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data);
292 static int resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data);
293
294 static void block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask);
295 static void restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask);
296
297 struct lwp_info;
298 static struct lwp_info *add_lwp (ptid_t ptid);
299 static void purge_lwp_list (int pid);
300 static void delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid);
301 static struct lwp_info *find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid);
302
303 static int lwp_status_pending_p (struct lwp_info *lp);
304
305 static int sigtrap_is_event (int status);
306 static int (*linux_nat_status_is_event) (int status) = sigtrap_is_event;
307
308 static void save_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lp);
309
310 \f
311 /* LWP accessors. */
312
313 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
314
315 ptid_t
316 ptid_of_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp)
317 {
318 return lwp->ptid;
319 }
320
321 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
322
323 void
324 lwp_set_arch_private_info (struct lwp_info *lwp,
325 struct arch_lwp_info *info)
326 {
327 lwp->arch_private = info;
328 }
329
330 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
331
332 struct arch_lwp_info *
333 lwp_arch_private_info (struct lwp_info *lwp)
334 {
335 return lwp->arch_private;
336 }
337
338 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
339
340 int
341 lwp_is_stopped (struct lwp_info *lwp)
342 {
343 return lwp->stopped;
344 }
345
346 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
347
348 enum target_stop_reason
349 lwp_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lwp)
350 {
351 return lwp->stop_reason;
352 }
353
354 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
355
356 int
357 lwp_is_stepping (struct lwp_info *lwp)
358 {
359 return lwp->step;
360 }
361
362 \f
363 /* Trivial list manipulation functions to keep track of a list of
364 new stopped processes. */
365 static void
366 add_to_pid_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int status)
367 {
368 struct simple_pid_list *new_pid = XNEW (struct simple_pid_list);
369
370 new_pid->pid = pid;
371 new_pid->status = status;
372 new_pid->next = *listp;
373 *listp = new_pid;
374 }
375
376 static int
377 pull_pid_from_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int *statusp)
378 {
379 struct simple_pid_list **p;
380
381 for (p = listp; *p != NULL; p = &(*p)->next)
382 if ((*p)->pid == pid)
383 {
384 struct simple_pid_list *next = (*p)->next;
385
386 *statusp = (*p)->status;
387 xfree (*p);
388 *p = next;
389 return 1;
390 }
391 return 0;
392 }
393
394 /* Return the ptrace options that we want to try to enable. */
395
396 static int
397 linux_nat_ptrace_options (int attached)
398 {
399 int options = 0;
400
401 if (!attached)
402 options |= PTRACE_O_EXITKILL;
403
404 options |= (PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD
405 | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE
406 | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORK
407 | PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK
408 | PTRACE_O_TRACEEXEC);
409
410 return options;
411 }
412
413 /* Initialize ptrace warnings and check for supported ptrace
414 features given PID.
415
416 ATTACHED should be nonzero iff we attached to the inferior. */
417
418 static void
419 linux_init_ptrace (pid_t pid, int attached)
420 {
421 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (attached);
422
423 linux_enable_event_reporting (pid, options);
424 linux_ptrace_init_warnings ();
425 }
426
427 linux_nat_target::~linux_nat_target ()
428 {}
429
430 void
431 linux_nat_target::post_attach (int pid)
432 {
433 linux_init_ptrace (pid, 1);
434 }
435
436 void
437 linux_nat_target::post_startup_inferior (ptid_t ptid)
438 {
439 linux_init_ptrace (ptid_get_pid (ptid), 0);
440 }
441
442 /* Return the number of known LWPs in the tgid given by PID. */
443
444 static int
445 num_lwps (int pid)
446 {
447 int count = 0;
448 struct lwp_info *lp;
449
450 for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lp->next)
451 if (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == pid)
452 count++;
453
454 return count;
455 }
456
457 /* Call delete_lwp with prototype compatible for make_cleanup. */
458
459 static void
460 delete_lwp_cleanup (void *lp_voidp)
461 {
462 struct lwp_info *lp = (struct lwp_info *) lp_voidp;
463
464 delete_lwp (lp->ptid);
465 }
466
467 /* Target hook for follow_fork. On entry inferior_ptid must be the
468 ptid of the followed inferior. At return, inferior_ptid will be
469 unchanged. */
470
471 int
472 linux_nat_target::follow_fork (int follow_child, int detach_fork)
473 {
474 if (!follow_child)
475 {
476 struct lwp_info *child_lp = NULL;
477 int status = W_STOPCODE (0);
478 int has_vforked;
479 ptid_t parent_ptid, child_ptid;
480 int parent_pid, child_pid;
481
482 has_vforked = (inferior_thread ()->pending_follow.kind
483 == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED);
484 parent_ptid = inferior_ptid;
485 child_ptid = inferior_thread ()->pending_follow.value.related_pid;
486 parent_pid = ptid_get_lwp (parent_ptid);
487 child_pid = ptid_get_lwp (child_ptid);
488
489 /* We're already attached to the parent, by default. */
490 child_lp = add_lwp (child_ptid);
491 child_lp->stopped = 1;
492 child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
493
494 /* Detach new forked process? */
495 if (detach_fork)
496 {
497 struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup (delete_lwp_cleanup,
498 child_lp);
499
500 if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL)
501 linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (child_lp);
502
503 /* When debugging an inferior in an architecture that supports
504 hardware single stepping on a kernel without commit
505 6580807da14c423f0d0a708108e6df6ebc8bc83d, the vfork child
506 process starts with the TIF_SINGLESTEP/X86_EFLAGS_TF bits
507 set if the parent process had them set.
508 To work around this, single step the child process
509 once before detaching to clear the flags. */
510
511 /* Note that we consult the parent's architecture instead of
512 the child's because there's no inferior for the child at
513 this point. */
514 if (!gdbarch_software_single_step_p (target_thread_architecture
515 (parent_ptid)))
516 {
517 linux_disable_event_reporting (child_pid);
518 if (ptrace (PTRACE_SINGLESTEP, child_pid, 0, 0) < 0)
519 perror_with_name (_("Couldn't do single step"));
520 if (my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0) < 0)
521 perror_with_name (_("Couldn't wait vfork process"));
522 }
523
524 if (WIFSTOPPED (status))
525 {
526 int signo;
527
528 signo = WSTOPSIG (status);
529 if (signo != 0
530 && !signal_pass_state (gdb_signal_from_host (signo)))
531 signo = 0;
532 ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, child_pid, 0, signo);
533 }
534
535 do_cleanups (old_chain);
536 }
537 else
538 {
539 scoped_restore save_inferior_ptid
540 = make_scoped_restore (&inferior_ptid);
541 inferior_ptid = child_ptid;
542
543 /* Let the thread_db layer learn about this new process. */
544 check_for_thread_db ();
545 }
546
547 if (has_vforked)
548 {
549 struct lwp_info *parent_lp;
550
551 parent_lp = find_lwp_pid (parent_ptid);
552 gdb_assert (linux_supports_tracefork () >= 0);
553
554 if (linux_supports_tracevforkdone ())
555 {
556 if (debug_linux_nat)
557 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
558 "LCFF: waiting for VFORK_DONE on %d\n",
559 parent_pid);
560 parent_lp->stopped = 1;
561
562 /* We'll handle the VFORK_DONE event like any other
563 event, in target_wait. */
564 }
565 else
566 {
567 /* We can't insert breakpoints until the child has
568 finished with the shared memory region. We need to
569 wait until that happens. Ideal would be to just
570 call:
571 - ptrace (PTRACE_SYSCALL, parent_pid, 0, 0);
572 - waitpid (parent_pid, &status, __WALL);
573 However, most architectures can't handle a syscall
574 being traced on the way out if it wasn't traced on
575 the way in.
576
577 We might also think to loop, continuing the child
578 until it exits or gets a SIGTRAP. One problem is
579 that the child might call ptrace with PTRACE_TRACEME.
580
581 There's no simple and reliable way to figure out when
582 the vforked child will be done with its copy of the
583 shared memory. We could step it out of the syscall,
584 two instructions, let it go, and then single-step the
585 parent once. When we have hardware single-step, this
586 would work; with software single-step it could still
587 be made to work but we'd have to be able to insert
588 single-step breakpoints in the child, and we'd have
589 to insert -just- the single-step breakpoint in the
590 parent. Very awkward.
591
592 In the end, the best we can do is to make sure it
593 runs for a little while. Hopefully it will be out of
594 range of any breakpoints we reinsert. Usually this
595 is only the single-step breakpoint at vfork's return
596 point. */
597
598 if (debug_linux_nat)
599 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
600 "LCFF: no VFORK_DONE "
601 "support, sleeping a bit\n");
602
603 usleep (10000);
604
605 /* Pretend we've seen a PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE event,
606 and leave it pending. The next linux_nat_resume call
607 will notice a pending event, and bypasses actually
608 resuming the inferior. */
609 parent_lp->status = 0;
610 parent_lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE;
611 parent_lp->stopped = 1;
612
613 /* If we're in async mode, need to tell the event loop
614 there's something here to process. */
615 if (target_is_async_p ())
616 async_file_mark ();
617 }
618 }
619 }
620 else
621 {
622 struct lwp_info *child_lp;
623
624 child_lp = add_lwp (inferior_ptid);
625 child_lp->stopped = 1;
626 child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
627
628 /* Let the thread_db layer learn about this new process. */
629 check_for_thread_db ();
630 }
631
632 return 0;
633 }
634
635 \f
636 int
637 linux_nat_target::insert_fork_catchpoint (int pid)
638 {
639 return !linux_supports_tracefork ();
640 }
641
642 int
643 linux_nat_target::remove_fork_catchpoint (int pid)
644 {
645 return 0;
646 }
647
648 int
649 linux_nat_target::insert_vfork_catchpoint (int pid)
650 {
651 return !linux_supports_tracefork ();
652 }
653
654 int
655 linux_nat_target::remove_vfork_catchpoint (int pid)
656 {
657 return 0;
658 }
659
660 int
661 linux_nat_target::insert_exec_catchpoint (int pid)
662 {
663 return !linux_supports_tracefork ();
664 }
665
666 int
667 linux_nat_target::remove_exec_catchpoint (int pid)
668 {
669 return 0;
670 }
671
672 int
673 linux_nat_target::set_syscall_catchpoint (int pid, bool needed, int any_count,
674 gdb::array_view<const int> syscall_counts)
675 {
676 if (!linux_supports_tracesysgood ())
677 return 1;
678
679 /* On GNU/Linux, we ignore the arguments. It means that we only
680 enable the syscall catchpoints, but do not disable them.
681
682 Also, we do not use the `syscall_counts' information because we do not
683 filter system calls here. We let GDB do the logic for us. */
684 return 0;
685 }
686
687 /* List of known LWPs, keyed by LWP PID. This speeds up the common
688 case of mapping a PID returned from the kernel to our corresponding
689 lwp_info data structure. */
690 static htab_t lwp_lwpid_htab;
691
692 /* Calculate a hash from a lwp_info's LWP PID. */
693
694 static hashval_t
695 lwp_info_hash (const void *ap)
696 {
697 const struct lwp_info *lp = (struct lwp_info *) ap;
698 pid_t pid = ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid);
699
700 return iterative_hash_object (pid, 0);
701 }
702
703 /* Equality function for the lwp_info hash table. Compares the LWP's
704 PID. */
705
706 static int
707 lwp_lwpid_htab_eq (const void *a, const void *b)
708 {
709 const struct lwp_info *entry = (const struct lwp_info *) a;
710 const struct lwp_info *element = (const struct lwp_info *) b;
711
712 return ptid_get_lwp (entry->ptid) == ptid_get_lwp (element->ptid);
713 }
714
715 /* Create the lwp_lwpid_htab hash table. */
716
717 static void
718 lwp_lwpid_htab_create (void)
719 {
720 lwp_lwpid_htab = htab_create (100, lwp_info_hash, lwp_lwpid_htab_eq, NULL);
721 }
722
723 /* Add LP to the hash table. */
724
725 static void
726 lwp_lwpid_htab_add_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
727 {
728 void **slot;
729
730 slot = htab_find_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, lp, INSERT);
731 gdb_assert (slot != NULL && *slot == NULL);
732 *slot = lp;
733 }
734
735 /* Head of doubly-linked list of known LWPs. Sorted by reverse
736 creation order. This order is assumed in some cases. E.g.,
737 reaping status after killing alls lwps of a process: the leader LWP
738 must be reaped last. */
739 struct lwp_info *lwp_list;
740
741 /* Add LP to sorted-by-reverse-creation-order doubly-linked list. */
742
743 static void
744 lwp_list_add (struct lwp_info *lp)
745 {
746 lp->next = lwp_list;
747 if (lwp_list != NULL)
748 lwp_list->prev = lp;
749 lwp_list = lp;
750 }
751
752 /* Remove LP from sorted-by-reverse-creation-order doubly-linked
753 list. */
754
755 static void
756 lwp_list_remove (struct lwp_info *lp)
757 {
758 /* Remove from sorted-by-creation-order list. */
759 if (lp->next != NULL)
760 lp->next->prev = lp->prev;
761 if (lp->prev != NULL)
762 lp->prev->next = lp->next;
763 if (lp == lwp_list)
764 lwp_list = lp->next;
765 }
766
767 \f
768
769 /* Original signal mask. */
770 static sigset_t normal_mask;
771
772 /* Signal mask for use with sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait, initialized in
773 _initialize_linux_nat. */
774 static sigset_t suspend_mask;
775
776 /* Signals to block to make that sigsuspend work. */
777 static sigset_t blocked_mask;
778
779 /* SIGCHLD action. */
780 struct sigaction sigchld_action;
781
782 /* Block child signals (SIGCHLD and linux threads signals), and store
783 the previous mask in PREV_MASK. */
784
785 static void
786 block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask)
787 {
788 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked. */
789 if (!sigismember (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD))
790 sigaddset (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD);
791
792 sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &blocked_mask, prev_mask);
793 }
794
795 /* Restore child signals mask, previously returned by
796 block_child_signals. */
797
798 static void
799 restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask)
800 {
801 sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, prev_mask, NULL);
802 }
803
804 /* Mask of signals to pass directly to the inferior. */
805 static sigset_t pass_mask;
806
807 /* Update signals to pass to the inferior. */
808 void
809 linux_nat_target::pass_signals (int numsigs, unsigned char *pass_signals)
810 {
811 int signo;
812
813 sigemptyset (&pass_mask);
814
815 for (signo = 1; signo < NSIG; signo++)
816 {
817 int target_signo = gdb_signal_from_host (signo);
818 if (target_signo < numsigs && pass_signals[target_signo])
819 sigaddset (&pass_mask, signo);
820 }
821 }
822
823 \f
824
825 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
826 static int stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data);
827 static int resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data);
828 static int check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (struct lwp_info *lp);
829
830 \f
831
832 /* Destroy and free LP. */
833
834 static void
835 lwp_free (struct lwp_info *lp)
836 {
837 /* Let the arch specific bits release arch_lwp_info. */
838 if (linux_nat_delete_thread != NULL)
839 linux_nat_delete_thread (lp->arch_private);
840 else
841 gdb_assert (lp->arch_private == NULL);
842
843 xfree (lp);
844 }
845
846 /* Traversal function for purge_lwp_list. */
847
848 static int
849 lwp_lwpid_htab_remove_pid (void **slot, void *info)
850 {
851 struct lwp_info *lp = (struct lwp_info *) *slot;
852 int pid = *(int *) info;
853
854 if (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == pid)
855 {
856 htab_clear_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, slot);
857 lwp_list_remove (lp);
858 lwp_free (lp);
859 }
860
861 return 1;
862 }
863
864 /* Remove all LWPs belong to PID from the lwp list. */
865
866 static void
867 purge_lwp_list (int pid)
868 {
869 htab_traverse_noresize (lwp_lwpid_htab, lwp_lwpid_htab_remove_pid, &pid);
870 }
871
872 /* Add the LWP specified by PTID to the list. PTID is the first LWP
873 in the process. Return a pointer to the structure describing the
874 new LWP.
875
876 This differs from add_lwp in that we don't let the arch specific
877 bits know about this new thread. Current clients of this callback
878 take the opportunity to install watchpoints in the new thread, and
879 we shouldn't do that for the first thread. If we're spawning a
880 child ("run"), the thread executes the shell wrapper first, and we
881 shouldn't touch it until it execs the program we want to debug.
882 For "attach", it'd be okay to call the callback, but it's not
883 necessary, because watchpoints can't yet have been inserted into
884 the inferior. */
885
886 static struct lwp_info *
887 add_initial_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
888 {
889 struct lwp_info *lp;
890
891 gdb_assert (ptid_lwp_p (ptid));
892
893 lp = XNEW (struct lwp_info);
894
895 memset (lp, 0, sizeof (struct lwp_info));
896
897 lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue;
898 lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
899
900 lp->ptid = ptid;
901 lp->core = -1;
902
903 /* Add to sorted-by-reverse-creation-order list. */
904 lwp_list_add (lp);
905
906 /* Add to keyed-by-pid htab. */
907 lwp_lwpid_htab_add_lwp (lp);
908
909 return lp;
910 }
911
912 /* Add the LWP specified by PID to the list. Return a pointer to the
913 structure describing the new LWP. The LWP should already be
914 stopped. */
915
916 static struct lwp_info *
917 add_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
918 {
919 struct lwp_info *lp;
920
921 lp = add_initial_lwp (ptid);
922
923 /* Let the arch specific bits know about this new thread. Current
924 clients of this callback take the opportunity to install
925 watchpoints in the new thread. We don't do this for the first
926 thread though. See add_initial_lwp. */
927 if (linux_nat_new_thread != NULL)
928 linux_nat_new_thread (lp);
929
930 return lp;
931 }
932
933 /* Remove the LWP specified by PID from the list. */
934
935 static void
936 delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
937 {
938 struct lwp_info *lp;
939 void **slot;
940 struct lwp_info dummy;
941
942 dummy.ptid = ptid;
943 slot = htab_find_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, &dummy, NO_INSERT);
944 if (slot == NULL)
945 return;
946
947 lp = *(struct lwp_info **) slot;
948 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
949
950 htab_clear_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, slot);
951
952 /* Remove from sorted-by-creation-order list. */
953 lwp_list_remove (lp);
954
955 /* Release. */
956 lwp_free (lp);
957 }
958
959 /* Return a pointer to the structure describing the LWP corresponding
960 to PID. If no corresponding LWP could be found, return NULL. */
961
962 static struct lwp_info *
963 find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid)
964 {
965 struct lwp_info *lp;
966 int lwp;
967 struct lwp_info dummy;
968
969 if (ptid_lwp_p (ptid))
970 lwp = ptid_get_lwp (ptid);
971 else
972 lwp = ptid_get_pid (ptid);
973
974 dummy.ptid = ptid_build (0, lwp, 0);
975 lp = (struct lwp_info *) htab_find (lwp_lwpid_htab, &dummy);
976 return lp;
977 }
978
979 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
980
981 struct lwp_info *
982 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t filter,
983 iterate_over_lwps_ftype callback,
984 void *data)
985 {
986 struct lwp_info *lp, *lpnext;
987
988 for (lp = lwp_list; lp; lp = lpnext)
989 {
990 lpnext = lp->next;
991
992 if (ptid_match (lp->ptid, filter))
993 {
994 if ((*callback) (lp, data) != 0)
995 return lp;
996 }
997 }
998
999 return NULL;
1000 }
1001
1002 /* Update our internal state when changing from one checkpoint to
1003 another indicated by NEW_PTID. We can only switch single-threaded
1004 applications, so we only create one new LWP, and the previous list
1005 is discarded. */
1006
1007 void
1008 linux_nat_switch_fork (ptid_t new_ptid)
1009 {
1010 struct lwp_info *lp;
1011
1012 purge_lwp_list (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
1013
1014 lp = add_lwp (new_ptid);
1015 lp->stopped = 1;
1016
1017 /* This changes the thread's ptid while preserving the gdb thread
1018 num. Also changes the inferior pid, while preserving the
1019 inferior num. */
1020 thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, new_ptid);
1021
1022 /* We've just told GDB core that the thread changed target id, but,
1023 in fact, it really is a different thread, with different register
1024 contents. */
1025 registers_changed ();
1026 }
1027
1028 /* Handle the exit of a single thread LP. */
1029
1030 static void
1031 exit_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
1032 {
1033 struct thread_info *th = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid);
1034
1035 if (th)
1036 {
1037 if (print_thread_events)
1038 printf_unfiltered (_("[%s exited]\n"), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1039
1040 delete_thread (lp->ptid);
1041 }
1042
1043 delete_lwp (lp->ptid);
1044 }
1045
1046 /* Wait for the LWP specified by LP, which we have just attached to.
1047 Returns a wait status for that LWP, to cache. */
1048
1049 static int
1050 linux_nat_post_attach_wait (ptid_t ptid, int *signalled)
1051 {
1052 pid_t new_pid, pid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid);
1053 int status;
1054
1055 if (linux_proc_pid_is_stopped (pid))
1056 {
1057 if (debug_linux_nat)
1058 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1059 "LNPAW: Attaching to a stopped process\n");
1060
1061 /* The process is definitely stopped. It is in a job control
1062 stop, unless the kernel predates the TASK_STOPPED /
1063 TASK_TRACED distinction, in which case it might be in a
1064 ptrace stop. Make sure it is in a ptrace stop; from there we
1065 can kill it, signal it, et cetera.
1066
1067 First make sure there is a pending SIGSTOP. Since we are
1068 already attached, the process can not transition from stopped
1069 to running without a PTRACE_CONT; so we know this signal will
1070 go into the queue. The SIGSTOP generated by PTRACE_ATTACH is
1071 probably already in the queue (unless this kernel is old
1072 enough to use TASK_STOPPED for ptrace stops); but since SIGSTOP
1073 is not an RT signal, it can only be queued once. */
1074 kill_lwp (pid, SIGSTOP);
1075
1076 /* Finally, resume the stopped process. This will deliver the SIGSTOP
1077 (or a higher priority signal, just like normal PTRACE_ATTACH). */
1078 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, pid, 0, 0);
1079 }
1080
1081 /* Make sure the initial process is stopped. The user-level threads
1082 layer might want to poke around in the inferior, and that won't
1083 work if things haven't stabilized yet. */
1084 new_pid = my_waitpid (pid, &status, __WALL);
1085 gdb_assert (pid == new_pid);
1086
1087 if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
1088 {
1089 /* The pid we tried to attach has apparently just exited. */
1090 if (debug_linux_nat)
1091 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LNPAW: Failed to stop %d: %s",
1092 pid, status_to_str (status));
1093 return status;
1094 }
1095
1096 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
1097 {
1098 *signalled = 1;
1099 if (debug_linux_nat)
1100 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1101 "LNPAW: Received %s after attaching\n",
1102 status_to_str (status));
1103 }
1104
1105 return status;
1106 }
1107
1108 void
1109 linux_nat_target::create_inferior (const char *exec_file,
1110 const std::string &allargs,
1111 char **env, int from_tty)
1112 {
1113 maybe_disable_address_space_randomization restore_personality
1114 (disable_randomization);
1115
1116 /* The fork_child mechanism is synchronous and calls target_wait, so
1117 we have to mask the async mode. */
1118
1119 /* Make sure we report all signals during startup. */
1120 pass_signals (0, NULL);
1121
1122 inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env, from_tty);
1123 }
1124
1125 /* Callback for linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads. Attach to PTID if not
1126 already attached. Returns true if a new LWP is found, false
1127 otherwise. */
1128
1129 static int
1130 attach_proc_task_lwp_callback (ptid_t ptid)
1131 {
1132 struct lwp_info *lp;
1133
1134 /* Ignore LWPs we're already attached to. */
1135 lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
1136 if (lp == NULL)
1137 {
1138 int lwpid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid);
1139
1140 if (ptrace (PTRACE_ATTACH, lwpid, 0, 0) < 0)
1141 {
1142 int err = errno;
1143
1144 /* Be quiet if we simply raced with the thread exiting.
1145 EPERM is returned if the thread's task still exists, and
1146 is marked as exited or zombie, as well as other
1147 conditions, so in that case, confirm the status in
1148 /proc/PID/status. */
1149 if (err == ESRCH
1150 || (err == EPERM && linux_proc_pid_is_gone (lwpid)))
1151 {
1152 if (debug_linux_nat)
1153 {
1154 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1155 "Cannot attach to lwp %d: "
1156 "thread is gone (%d: %s)\n",
1157 lwpid, err, safe_strerror (err));
1158 }
1159 }
1160 else
1161 {
1162 std::string reason
1163 = linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason_string (ptid, err);
1164
1165 warning (_("Cannot attach to lwp %d: %s"),
1166 lwpid, reason.c_str ());
1167 }
1168 }
1169 else
1170 {
1171 if (debug_linux_nat)
1172 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1173 "PTRACE_ATTACH %s, 0, 0 (OK)\n",
1174 target_pid_to_str (ptid));
1175
1176 lp = add_lwp (ptid);
1177
1178 /* The next time we wait for this LWP we'll see a SIGSTOP as
1179 PTRACE_ATTACH brings it to a halt. */
1180 lp->signalled = 1;
1181
1182 /* We need to wait for a stop before being able to make the
1183 next ptrace call on this LWP. */
1184 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 1;
1185
1186 /* So that wait collects the SIGSTOP. */
1187 lp->resumed = 1;
1188
1189 /* Also add the LWP to gdb's thread list, in case a
1190 matching libthread_db is not found (or the process uses
1191 raw clone). */
1192 add_thread (lp->ptid);
1193 set_running (lp->ptid, 1);
1194 set_executing (lp->ptid, 1);
1195 }
1196
1197 return 1;
1198 }
1199 return 0;
1200 }
1201
1202 void
1203 linux_nat_target::attach (const char *args, int from_tty)
1204 {
1205 struct lwp_info *lp;
1206 int status;
1207 ptid_t ptid;
1208
1209 /* Make sure we report all signals during attach. */
1210 pass_signals (0, NULL);
1211
1212 TRY
1213 {
1214 inf_ptrace_target::attach (args, from_tty);
1215 }
1216 CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
1217 {
1218 pid_t pid = parse_pid_to_attach (args);
1219 std::string reason = linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason (pid);
1220
1221 if (!reason.empty ())
1222 throw_error (ex.error, "warning: %s\n%s", reason.c_str (), ex.message);
1223 else
1224 throw_error (ex.error, "%s", ex.message);
1225 }
1226 END_CATCH
1227
1228 /* The ptrace base target adds the main thread with (pid,0,0)
1229 format. Decorate it with lwp info. */
1230 ptid = ptid_build (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid),
1231 ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid),
1232 0);
1233 thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, ptid);
1234
1235 /* Add the initial process as the first LWP to the list. */
1236 lp = add_initial_lwp (ptid);
1237
1238 status = linux_nat_post_attach_wait (lp->ptid, &lp->signalled);
1239 if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
1240 {
1241 if (WIFEXITED (status))
1242 {
1243 int exit_code = WEXITSTATUS (status);
1244
1245 target_terminal::ours ();
1246 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
1247 if (exit_code == 0)
1248 error (_("Unable to attach: program exited normally."));
1249 else
1250 error (_("Unable to attach: program exited with code %d."),
1251 exit_code);
1252 }
1253 else if (WIFSIGNALED (status))
1254 {
1255 enum gdb_signal signo;
1256
1257 target_terminal::ours ();
1258 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
1259
1260 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WTERMSIG (status));
1261 error (_("Unable to attach: program terminated with signal "
1262 "%s, %s."),
1263 gdb_signal_to_name (signo),
1264 gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1265 }
1266
1267 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1268 _("unexpected status %d for PID %ld"),
1269 status, (long) ptid_get_lwp (ptid));
1270 }
1271
1272 lp->stopped = 1;
1273
1274 /* Save the wait status to report later. */
1275 lp->resumed = 1;
1276 if (debug_linux_nat)
1277 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1278 "LNA: waitpid %ld, saving status %s\n",
1279 (long) ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid), status_to_str (status));
1280
1281 lp->status = status;
1282
1283 /* We must attach to every LWP. If /proc is mounted, use that to
1284 find them now. The inferior may be using raw clone instead of
1285 using pthreads. But even if it is using pthreads, thread_db
1286 walks structures in the inferior's address space to find the list
1287 of threads/LWPs, and those structures may well be corrupted.
1288 Note that once thread_db is loaded, we'll still use it to list
1289 threads and associate pthread info with each LWP. */
1290 linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid),
1291 attach_proc_task_lwp_callback);
1292
1293 if (target_can_async_p ())
1294 target_async (1);
1295 }
1296
1297 /* Get pending signal of THREAD as a host signal number, for detaching
1298 purposes. This is the signal the thread last stopped for, which we
1299 need to deliver to the thread when detaching, otherwise, it'd be
1300 suppressed/lost. */
1301
1302 static int
1303 get_detach_signal (struct lwp_info *lp)
1304 {
1305 enum gdb_signal signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1306
1307 /* If we paused threads momentarily, we may have stored pending
1308 events in lp->status or lp->waitstatus (see stop_wait_callback),
1309 and GDB core hasn't seen any signal for those threads.
1310 Otherwise, the last signal reported to the core is found in the
1311 thread object's stop_signal.
1312
1313 There's a corner case that isn't handled here at present. Only
1314 if the thread stopped with a TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED does
1315 stop_signal make sense as a real signal to pass to the inferior.
1316 Some catchpoint related events, like
1317 TARGET_WAITKIND_(V)FORK|EXEC|SYSCALL, have their stop_signal set
1318 to GDB_SIGNAL_SIGTRAP when the catchpoint triggers. But,
1319 those traps are debug API (ptrace in our case) related and
1320 induced; the inferior wouldn't see them if it wasn't being
1321 traced. Hence, we should never pass them to the inferior, even
1322 when set to pass state. Since this corner case isn't handled by
1323 infrun.c when proceeding with a signal, for consistency, neither
1324 do we handle it here (or elsewhere in the file we check for
1325 signal pass state). Normally SIGTRAP isn't set to pass state, so
1326 this is really a corner case. */
1327
1328 if (lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
1329 signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0; /* a pending ptrace event, not a real signal. */
1330 else if (lp->status)
1331 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status));
1332 else if (target_is_non_stop_p () && !is_executing (lp->ptid))
1333 {
1334 struct thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid);
1335
1336 if (tp->suspend.waitstatus_pending_p)
1337 signo = tp->suspend.waitstatus.value.sig;
1338 else
1339 signo = tp->suspend.stop_signal;
1340 }
1341 else if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
1342 {
1343 struct target_waitstatus last;
1344 ptid_t last_ptid;
1345
1346 get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last);
1347
1348 if (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid) == ptid_get_lwp (last_ptid))
1349 {
1350 struct thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid);
1351
1352 signo = tp->suspend.stop_signal;
1353 }
1354 }
1355
1356 if (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0)
1357 {
1358 if (debug_linux_nat)
1359 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1360 "GPT: lwp %s has no pending signal\n",
1361 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1362 }
1363 else if (!signal_pass_state (signo))
1364 {
1365 if (debug_linux_nat)
1366 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1367 "GPT: lwp %s had signal %s, "
1368 "but it is in no pass state\n",
1369 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1370 gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1371 }
1372 else
1373 {
1374 if (debug_linux_nat)
1375 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1376 "GPT: lwp %s has pending signal %s\n",
1377 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1378 gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1379
1380 return gdb_signal_to_host (signo);
1381 }
1382
1383 return 0;
1384 }
1385
1386 /* Detach from LP. If SIGNO_P is non-NULL, then it points to the
1387 signal number that should be passed to the LWP when detaching.
1388 Otherwise pass any pending signal the LWP may have, if any. */
1389
1390 static void
1391 detach_one_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int *signo_p)
1392 {
1393 int lwpid = ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid);
1394 int signo;
1395
1396 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0 || WIFSTOPPED (lp->status));
1397
1398 if (debug_linux_nat && lp->status)
1399 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "DC: Pending %s for %s on detach.\n",
1400 strsignal (WSTOPSIG (lp->status)),
1401 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1402
1403 /* If there is a pending SIGSTOP, get rid of it. */
1404 if (lp->signalled)
1405 {
1406 if (debug_linux_nat)
1407 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1408 "DC: Sending SIGCONT to %s\n",
1409 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1410
1411 kill_lwp (lwpid, SIGCONT);
1412 lp->signalled = 0;
1413 }
1414
1415 if (signo_p == NULL)
1416 {
1417 /* Pass on any pending signal for this LWP. */
1418 signo = get_detach_signal (lp);
1419 }
1420 else
1421 signo = *signo_p;
1422
1423 /* Preparing to resume may try to write registers, and fail if the
1424 lwp is zombie. If that happens, ignore the error. We'll handle
1425 it below, when detach fails with ESRCH. */
1426 TRY
1427 {
1428 if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL)
1429 linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp);
1430 }
1431 CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
1432 {
1433 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
1434 throw_exception (ex);
1435 }
1436 END_CATCH
1437
1438 if (ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, lwpid, 0, signo) < 0)
1439 {
1440 int save_errno = errno;
1441
1442 /* We know the thread exists, so ESRCH must mean the lwp is
1443 zombie. This can happen if one of the already-detached
1444 threads exits the whole thread group. In that case we're
1445 still attached, and must reap the lwp. */
1446 if (save_errno == ESRCH)
1447 {
1448 int ret, status;
1449
1450 ret = my_waitpid (lwpid, &status, __WALL);
1451 if (ret == -1)
1452 {
1453 warning (_("Couldn't reap LWP %d while detaching: %s"),
1454 lwpid, strerror (errno));
1455 }
1456 else if (!WIFEXITED (status) && !WIFSIGNALED (status))
1457 {
1458 warning (_("Reaping LWP %d while detaching "
1459 "returned unexpected status 0x%x"),
1460 lwpid, status);
1461 }
1462 }
1463 else
1464 {
1465 error (_("Can't detach %s: %s"), target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1466 safe_strerror (save_errno));
1467 }
1468 }
1469 else if (debug_linux_nat)
1470 {
1471 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1472 "PTRACE_DETACH (%s, %s, 0) (OK)\n",
1473 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1474 strsignal (signo));
1475 }
1476
1477 delete_lwp (lp->ptid);
1478 }
1479
1480 static int
1481 detach_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
1482 {
1483 /* We don't actually detach from the thread group leader just yet.
1484 If the thread group exits, we must reap the zombie clone lwps
1485 before we're able to reap the leader. */
1486 if (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid) != ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid))
1487 detach_one_lwp (lp, NULL);
1488 return 0;
1489 }
1490
1491 void
1492 linux_nat_target::detach (inferior *inf, int from_tty)
1493 {
1494 struct lwp_info *main_lwp;
1495 int pid = inf->pid;
1496
1497 /* Don't unregister from the event loop, as there may be other
1498 inferiors running. */
1499
1500 /* Stop all threads before detaching. ptrace requires that the
1501 thread is stopped to sucessfully detach. */
1502 iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), stop_callback, NULL);
1503 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
1504 they're no longer running. */
1505 iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), stop_wait_callback, NULL);
1506
1507 iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (pid), detach_callback, NULL);
1508
1509 /* Only the initial process should be left right now. */
1510 gdb_assert (num_lwps (pid) == 1);
1511
1512 main_lwp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (pid));
1513
1514 if (forks_exist_p ())
1515 {
1516 /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid is being detached
1517 from, but there are other viable forks to debug. Detach from
1518 the current fork, and context-switch to the first
1519 available. */
1520 linux_fork_detach (from_tty);
1521 }
1522 else
1523 {
1524 target_announce_detach (from_tty);
1525
1526 /* Pass on any pending signal for the last LWP. */
1527 int signo = get_detach_signal (main_lwp);
1528
1529 detach_one_lwp (main_lwp, &signo);
1530
1531 detach_success (inf);
1532 }
1533 }
1534
1535 /* Resume execution of the inferior process. If STEP is nonzero,
1536 single-step it. If SIGNAL is nonzero, give it that signal. */
1537
1538 static void
1539 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (struct lwp_info *lp, int step,
1540 enum gdb_signal signo)
1541 {
1542 lp->step = step;
1543
1544 /* stop_pc doubles as the PC the LWP had when it was last resumed.
1545 We only presently need that if the LWP is stepped though (to
1546 handle the case of stepping a breakpoint instruction). */
1547 if (step)
1548 {
1549 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid);
1550
1551 lp->stop_pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
1552 }
1553 else
1554 lp->stop_pc = 0;
1555
1556 if (linux_nat_prepare_to_resume != NULL)
1557 linux_nat_prepare_to_resume (lp);
1558 linux_target->low_resume (lp->ptid, step, signo);
1559
1560 /* Successfully resumed. Clear state that no longer makes sense,
1561 and mark the LWP as running. Must not do this before resuming
1562 otherwise if that fails other code will be confused. E.g., we'd
1563 later try to stop the LWP and hang forever waiting for a stop
1564 status. Note that we must not throw after this is cleared,
1565 otherwise handle_zombie_lwp_error would get confused. */
1566 lp->stopped = 0;
1567 lp->core = -1;
1568 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON;
1569 registers_changed_ptid (lp->ptid);
1570 }
1571
1572 /* Called when we try to resume a stopped LWP and that errors out. If
1573 the LWP is no longer in ptrace-stopped state (meaning it's zombie,
1574 or about to become), discard the error, clear any pending status
1575 the LWP may have, and return true (we'll collect the exit status
1576 soon enough). Otherwise, return false. */
1577
1578 static int
1579 check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (struct lwp_info *lp)
1580 {
1581 /* If we get an error after resuming the LWP successfully, we'd
1582 confuse !T state for the LWP being gone. */
1583 gdb_assert (lp->stopped);
1584
1585 /* We can't just check whether the LWP is in 'Z (Zombie)' state,
1586 because even if ptrace failed with ESRCH, the tracee may be "not
1587 yet fully dead", but already refusing ptrace requests. In that
1588 case the tracee has 'R (Running)' state for a little bit
1589 (observed in Linux 3.18). See also the note on ESRCH in the
1590 ptrace(2) man page. Instead, check whether the LWP has any state
1591 other than ptrace-stopped. */
1592
1593 /* Don't assume anything if /proc/PID/status can't be read. */
1594 if (linux_proc_pid_is_trace_stopped_nowarn (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)) == 0)
1595 {
1596 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON;
1597 lp->status = 0;
1598 lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
1599 return 1;
1600 }
1601 return 0;
1602 }
1603
1604 /* Like linux_resume_one_lwp_throw, but no error is thrown if the LWP
1605 disappears while we try to resume it. */
1606
1607 static void
1608 linux_resume_one_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1609 {
1610 TRY
1611 {
1612 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (lp, step, signo);
1613 }
1614 CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
1615 {
1616 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
1617 throw_exception (ex);
1618 }
1619 END_CATCH
1620 }
1621
1622 /* Resume LP. */
1623
1624 static void
1625 resume_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1626 {
1627 if (lp->stopped)
1628 {
1629 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_ptid (lp->ptid);
1630
1631 if (inf->vfork_child != NULL)
1632 {
1633 if (debug_linux_nat)
1634 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1635 "RC: Not resuming %s (vfork parent)\n",
1636 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1637 }
1638 else if (!lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
1639 {
1640 if (debug_linux_nat)
1641 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1642 "RC: Resuming sibling %s, %s, %s\n",
1643 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1644 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1645 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo))
1646 : "0"),
1647 step ? "step" : "resume");
1648
1649 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, step, signo);
1650 }
1651 else
1652 {
1653 if (debug_linux_nat)
1654 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1655 "RC: Not resuming sibling %s (has pending)\n",
1656 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1657 }
1658 }
1659 else
1660 {
1661 if (debug_linux_nat)
1662 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1663 "RC: Not resuming sibling %s (not stopped)\n",
1664 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
1665 }
1666 }
1667
1668 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. If LWP is EXCEPT, do nothing.
1669 Resume LWP with the last stop signal, if it is in pass state. */
1670
1671 static int
1672 linux_nat_resume_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *except)
1673 {
1674 enum gdb_signal signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1675
1676 if (lp == except)
1677 return 0;
1678
1679 if (lp->stopped)
1680 {
1681 struct thread_info *thread;
1682
1683 thread = find_thread_ptid (lp->ptid);
1684 if (thread != NULL)
1685 {
1686 signo = thread->suspend.stop_signal;
1687 thread->suspend.stop_signal = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1688 }
1689 }
1690
1691 resume_lwp (lp, 0, signo);
1692 return 0;
1693 }
1694
1695 static int
1696 resume_clear_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
1697 {
1698 lp->resumed = 0;
1699 lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
1700 return 0;
1701 }
1702
1703 static int
1704 resume_set_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
1705 {
1706 lp->resumed = 1;
1707 lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue;
1708 return 0;
1709 }
1710
1711 void
1712 linux_nat_target::resume (ptid_t ptid, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1713 {
1714 struct lwp_info *lp;
1715 int resume_many;
1716
1717 if (debug_linux_nat)
1718 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1719 "LLR: Preparing to %s %s, %s, inferior_ptid %s\n",
1720 step ? "step" : "resume",
1721 target_pid_to_str (ptid),
1722 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1723 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"),
1724 target_pid_to_str (inferior_ptid));
1725
1726 /* A specific PTID means `step only this process id'. */
1727 resume_many = (ptid_equal (minus_one_ptid, ptid)
1728 || ptid_is_pid (ptid));
1729
1730 /* Mark the lwps we're resuming as resumed. */
1731 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resume_set_callback, NULL);
1732
1733 /* See if it's the current inferior that should be handled
1734 specially. */
1735 if (resume_many)
1736 lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
1737 else
1738 lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
1739 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
1740
1741 /* Remember if we're stepping. */
1742 lp->last_resume_kind = step ? resume_step : resume_continue;
1743
1744 /* If we have a pending wait status for this thread, there is no
1745 point in resuming the process. But first make sure that
1746 linux_nat_wait won't preemptively handle the event - we
1747 should never take this short-circuit if we are going to
1748 leave LP running, since we have skipped resuming all the
1749 other threads. This bit of code needs to be synchronized
1750 with linux_nat_wait. */
1751
1752 if (lp->status && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status))
1753 {
1754 if (!lp->step
1755 && WSTOPSIG (lp->status)
1756 && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (lp->status)))
1757 {
1758 if (debug_linux_nat)
1759 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1760 "LLR: Not short circuiting for ignored "
1761 "status 0x%x\n", lp->status);
1762
1763 /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue
1764 this thread with a signal? */
1765 gdb_assert (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1766 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status));
1767 lp->status = 0;
1768 }
1769 }
1770
1771 if (lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
1772 {
1773 /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue
1774 this thread with a signal? */
1775 gdb_assert (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1776
1777 if (debug_linux_nat)
1778 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1779 "LLR: Short circuiting for status 0x%x\n",
1780 lp->status);
1781
1782 if (target_can_async_p ())
1783 {
1784 target_async (1);
1785 /* Tell the event loop we have something to process. */
1786 async_file_mark ();
1787 }
1788 return;
1789 }
1790
1791 if (resume_many)
1792 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, linux_nat_resume_callback, lp);
1793
1794 if (debug_linux_nat)
1795 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1796 "LLR: %s %s, %s (resume event thread)\n",
1797 step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
1798 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
1799 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1800 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"));
1801
1802 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, step, signo);
1803
1804 if (target_can_async_p ())
1805 target_async (1);
1806 }
1807
1808 /* Send a signal to an LWP. */
1809
1810 static int
1811 kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo)
1812 {
1813 int ret;
1814
1815 errno = 0;
1816 ret = syscall (__NR_tkill, lwpid, signo);
1817 if (errno == ENOSYS)
1818 {
1819 /* If tkill fails, then we are not using nptl threads, a
1820 configuration we no longer support. */
1821 perror_with_name (("tkill"));
1822 }
1823 return ret;
1824 }
1825
1826 /* Handle a GNU/Linux syscall trap wait response. If we see a syscall
1827 event, check if the core is interested in it: if not, ignore the
1828 event, and keep waiting; otherwise, we need to toggle the LWP's
1829 syscall entry/exit status, since the ptrace event itself doesn't
1830 indicate it, and report the trap to higher layers. */
1831
1832 static int
1833 linux_handle_syscall_trap (struct lwp_info *lp, int stopping)
1834 {
1835 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus;
1836 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = target_thread_architecture (lp->ptid);
1837 int syscall_number = (int) gdbarch_get_syscall_number (gdbarch, lp->ptid);
1838
1839 if (stopping)
1840 {
1841 /* If we're stopping threads, there's a SIGSTOP pending, which
1842 makes it so that the LWP reports an immediate syscall return,
1843 followed by the SIGSTOP. Skip seeing that "return" using
1844 PTRACE_CONT directly, and let stop_wait_callback collect the
1845 SIGSTOP. Later when the thread is resumed, a new syscall
1846 entry event. If we didn't do this (and returned 0), we'd
1847 leave a syscall entry pending, and our caller, by using
1848 PTRACE_CONT to collect the SIGSTOP, skips the syscall return
1849 itself. Later, when the user re-resumes this LWP, we'd see
1850 another syscall entry event and we'd mistake it for a return.
1851
1852 If stop_wait_callback didn't force the SIGSTOP out of the LWP
1853 (leaving immediately with LWP->signalled set, without issuing
1854 a PTRACE_CONT), it would still be problematic to leave this
1855 syscall enter pending, as later when the thread is resumed,
1856 it would then see the same syscall exit mentioned above,
1857 followed by the delayed SIGSTOP, while the syscall didn't
1858 actually get to execute. It seems it would be even more
1859 confusing to the user. */
1860
1861 if (debug_linux_nat)
1862 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1863 "LHST: ignoring syscall %d "
1864 "for LWP %ld (stopping threads), "
1865 "resuming with PTRACE_CONT for SIGSTOP\n",
1866 syscall_number,
1867 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
1868
1869 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
1870 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), 0, 0);
1871 lp->stopped = 0;
1872 return 1;
1873 }
1874
1875 /* Always update the entry/return state, even if this particular
1876 syscall isn't interesting to the core now. In async mode,
1877 the user could install a new catchpoint for this syscall
1878 between syscall enter/return, and we'll need to know to
1879 report a syscall return if that happens. */
1880 lp->syscall_state = (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1881 ? TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN
1882 : TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY);
1883
1884 if (catch_syscall_enabled ())
1885 {
1886 if (catching_syscall_number (syscall_number))
1887 {
1888 /* Alright, an event to report. */
1889 ourstatus->kind = lp->syscall_state;
1890 ourstatus->value.syscall_number = syscall_number;
1891
1892 if (debug_linux_nat)
1893 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1894 "LHST: stopping for %s of syscall %d"
1895 " for LWP %ld\n",
1896 lp->syscall_state
1897 == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1898 ? "entry" : "return",
1899 syscall_number,
1900 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
1901 return 0;
1902 }
1903
1904 if (debug_linux_nat)
1905 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1906 "LHST: ignoring %s of syscall %d "
1907 "for LWP %ld\n",
1908 lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1909 ? "entry" : "return",
1910 syscall_number,
1911 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
1912 }
1913 else
1914 {
1915 /* If we had been syscall tracing, and hence used PT_SYSCALL
1916 before on this LWP, it could happen that the user removes all
1917 syscall catchpoints before we get to process this event.
1918 There are two noteworthy issues here:
1919
1920 - When stopped at a syscall entry event, resuming with
1921 PT_STEP still resumes executing the syscall and reports a
1922 syscall return.
1923
1924 - Only PT_SYSCALL catches syscall enters. If we last
1925 single-stepped this thread, then this event can't be a
1926 syscall enter. If we last single-stepped this thread, this
1927 has to be a syscall exit.
1928
1929 The points above mean that the next resume, be it PT_STEP or
1930 PT_CONTINUE, can not trigger a syscall trace event. */
1931 if (debug_linux_nat)
1932 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1933 "LHST: caught syscall event "
1934 "with no syscall catchpoints."
1935 " %d for LWP %ld, ignoring\n",
1936 syscall_number,
1937 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
1938 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
1939 }
1940
1941 /* The core isn't interested in this event. For efficiency, avoid
1942 stopping all threads only to have the core resume them all again.
1943 Since we're not stopping threads, if we're still syscall tracing
1944 and not stepping, we can't use PTRACE_CONT here, as we'd miss any
1945 subsequent syscall. Simply resume using the inf-ptrace layer,
1946 which knows when to use PT_SYSCALL or PT_CONTINUE. */
1947
1948 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1949 return 1;
1950 }
1951
1952 /* Handle a GNU/Linux extended wait response. If we see a clone
1953 event, we need to add the new LWP to our list (and not report the
1954 trap to higher layers). This function returns non-zero if the
1955 event should be ignored and we should wait again. If STOPPING is
1956 true, the new LWP remains stopped, otherwise it is continued. */
1957
1958 static int
1959 linux_handle_extended_wait (struct lwp_info *lp, int status)
1960 {
1961 int pid = ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid);
1962 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus;
1963 int event = linux_ptrace_get_extended_event (status);
1964
1965 /* All extended events we currently use are mid-syscall. Only
1966 PTRACE_EVENT_STOP is delivered more like a signal-stop, but
1967 you have to be using PTRACE_SEIZE to get that. */
1968 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY;
1969
1970 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK
1971 || event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE)
1972 {
1973 unsigned long new_pid;
1974 int ret;
1975
1976 ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, pid, 0, &new_pid);
1977
1978 /* If we haven't already seen the new PID stop, wait for it now. */
1979 if (! pull_pid_from_list (&stopped_pids, new_pid, &status))
1980 {
1981 /* The new child has a pending SIGSTOP. We can't affect it until it
1982 hits the SIGSTOP, but we're already attached. */
1983 ret = my_waitpid (new_pid, &status, __WALL);
1984 if (ret == -1)
1985 perror_with_name (_("waiting for new child"));
1986 else if (ret != new_pid)
1987 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1988 _("wait returned unexpected PID %d"), ret);
1989 else if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
1990 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1991 _("wait returned unexpected status 0x%x"), status);
1992 }
1993
1994 ourstatus->value.related_pid = ptid_build (new_pid, new_pid, 0);
1995
1996 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK)
1997 {
1998 /* The arch-specific native code may need to know about new
1999 forks even if those end up never mapped to an
2000 inferior. */
2001 if (linux_nat_new_fork != NULL)
2002 linux_nat_new_fork (lp, new_pid);
2003 }
2004
2005 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK
2006 && linux_fork_checkpointing_p (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid)))
2007 {
2008 /* Handle checkpointing by linux-fork.c here as a special
2009 case. We don't want the follow-fork-mode or 'catch fork'
2010 to interfere with this. */
2011
2012 /* This won't actually modify the breakpoint list, but will
2013 physically remove the breakpoints from the child. */
2014 detach_breakpoints (ptid_build (new_pid, new_pid, 0));
2015
2016 /* Retain child fork in ptrace (stopped) state. */
2017 if (!find_fork_pid (new_pid))
2018 add_fork (new_pid);
2019
2020 /* Report as spurious, so that infrun doesn't want to follow
2021 this fork. We're actually doing an infcall in
2022 linux-fork.c. */
2023 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
2024
2025 /* Report the stop to the core. */
2026 return 0;
2027 }
2028
2029 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK)
2030 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED;
2031 else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK)
2032 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED;
2033 else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE)
2034 {
2035 struct lwp_info *new_lp;
2036
2037 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2038
2039 if (debug_linux_nat)
2040 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2041 "LHEW: Got clone event "
2042 "from LWP %d, new child is LWP %ld\n",
2043 pid, new_pid);
2044
2045 new_lp = add_lwp (ptid_build (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid), new_pid, 0));
2046 new_lp->stopped = 1;
2047 new_lp->resumed = 1;
2048
2049 /* If the thread_db layer is active, let it record the user
2050 level thread id and status, and add the thread to GDB's
2051 list. */
2052 if (!thread_db_notice_clone (lp->ptid, new_lp->ptid))
2053 {
2054 /* The process is not using thread_db. Add the LWP to
2055 GDB's list. */
2056 target_post_attach (ptid_get_lwp (new_lp->ptid));
2057 add_thread (new_lp->ptid);
2058 }
2059
2060 /* Even if we're stopping the thread for some reason
2061 internal to this module, from the perspective of infrun
2062 and the user/frontend, this new thread is running until
2063 it next reports a stop. */
2064 set_running (new_lp->ptid, 1);
2065 set_executing (new_lp->ptid, 1);
2066
2067 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
2068 {
2069 /* This can happen if someone starts sending signals to
2070 the new thread before it gets a chance to run, which
2071 have a lower number than SIGSTOP (e.g. SIGUSR1).
2072 This is an unlikely case, and harder to handle for
2073 fork / vfork than for clone, so we do not try - but
2074 we handle it for clone events here. */
2075
2076 new_lp->signalled = 1;
2077
2078 /* We created NEW_LP so it cannot yet contain STATUS. */
2079 gdb_assert (new_lp->status == 0);
2080
2081 /* Save the wait status to report later. */
2082 if (debug_linux_nat)
2083 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2084 "LHEW: waitpid of new LWP %ld, "
2085 "saving status %s\n",
2086 (long) ptid_get_lwp (new_lp->ptid),
2087 status_to_str (status));
2088 new_lp->status = status;
2089 }
2090 else if (report_thread_events)
2091 {
2092 new_lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED;
2093 new_lp->status = status;
2094 }
2095
2096 return 1;
2097 }
2098
2099 return 0;
2100 }
2101
2102 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC)
2103 {
2104 if (debug_linux_nat)
2105 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2106 "LHEW: Got exec event from LWP %ld\n",
2107 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
2108
2109 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD;
2110 ourstatus->value.execd_pathname
2111 = xstrdup (linux_proc_pid_to_exec_file (pid));
2112
2113 /* The thread that execed must have been resumed, but, when a
2114 thread execs, it changes its tid to the tgid, and the old
2115 tgid thread might have not been resumed. */
2116 lp->resumed = 1;
2117 return 0;
2118 }
2119
2120 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE)
2121 {
2122 if (current_inferior ()->waiting_for_vfork_done)
2123 {
2124 if (debug_linux_nat)
2125 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2126 "LHEW: Got expected PTRACE_EVENT_"
2127 "VFORK_DONE from LWP %ld: stopping\n",
2128 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
2129
2130 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE;
2131 return 0;
2132 }
2133
2134 if (debug_linux_nat)
2135 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2136 "LHEW: Got PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE "
2137 "from LWP %ld: ignoring\n",
2138 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
2139 return 1;
2140 }
2141
2142 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
2143 _("unknown ptrace event %d"), event);
2144 }
2145
2146 /* Suspend waiting for a signal. We're mostly interested in
2147 SIGCHLD/SIGINT. */
2148
2149 static void
2150 wait_for_signal ()
2151 {
2152 if (debug_linux_nat)
2153 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "linux-nat: about to sigsuspend\n");
2154 sigsuspend (&suspend_mask);
2155
2156 /* If the quit flag is set, it means that the user pressed Ctrl-C
2157 and we're debugging a process that is running on a separate
2158 terminal, so we must forward the Ctrl-C to the inferior. (If the
2159 inferior is sharing GDB's terminal, then the Ctrl-C reaches the
2160 inferior directly.) We must do this here because functions that
2161 need to block waiting for a signal loop forever until there's an
2162 event to report before returning back to the event loop. */
2163 if (!target_terminal::is_ours ())
2164 {
2165 if (check_quit_flag ())
2166 target_pass_ctrlc ();
2167 }
2168 }
2169
2170 /* Wait for LP to stop. Returns the wait status, or 0 if the LWP has
2171 exited. */
2172
2173 static int
2174 wait_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
2175 {
2176 pid_t pid;
2177 int status = 0;
2178 int thread_dead = 0;
2179 sigset_t prev_mask;
2180
2181 gdb_assert (!lp->stopped);
2182 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0);
2183
2184 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked for sigsuspend avoiding a race below. */
2185 block_child_signals (&prev_mask);
2186
2187 for (;;)
2188 {
2189 pid = my_waitpid (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), &status, __WALL | WNOHANG);
2190 if (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD)
2191 {
2192 /* The thread has previously exited. We need to delete it
2193 now because if this was a non-leader thread execing, we
2194 won't get an exit event. See comments on exec events at
2195 the top of the file. */
2196 thread_dead = 1;
2197 if (debug_linux_nat)
2198 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: %s vanished.\n",
2199 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2200 }
2201 if (pid != 0)
2202 break;
2203
2204 /* Bugs 10970, 12702.
2205 Thread group leader may have exited in which case we'll lock up in
2206 waitpid if there are other threads, even if they are all zombies too.
2207 Basically, we're not supposed to use waitpid this way.
2208 tkill(pid,0) cannot be used here as it gets ESRCH for both
2209 for zombie and running processes.
2210
2211 As a workaround, check if we're waiting for the thread group leader and
2212 if it's a zombie, and avoid calling waitpid if it is.
2213
2214 This is racy, what if the tgl becomes a zombie right after we check?
2215 Therefore always use WNOHANG with sigsuspend - it is equivalent to
2216 waiting waitpid but linux_proc_pid_is_zombie is safe this way. */
2217
2218 if (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)
2219 && linux_proc_pid_is_zombie (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)))
2220 {
2221 thread_dead = 1;
2222 if (debug_linux_nat)
2223 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2224 "WL: Thread group leader %s vanished.\n",
2225 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2226 break;
2227 }
2228
2229 /* Wait for next SIGCHLD and try again. This may let SIGCHLD handlers
2230 get invoked despite our caller had them intentionally blocked by
2231 block_child_signals. This is sensitive only to the loop of
2232 linux_nat_wait_1 and there if we get called my_waitpid gets called
2233 again before it gets to sigsuspend so we can safely let the handlers
2234 get executed here. */
2235 wait_for_signal ();
2236 }
2237
2238 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
2239
2240 if (!thread_dead)
2241 {
2242 gdb_assert (pid == ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
2243
2244 if (debug_linux_nat)
2245 {
2246 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2247 "WL: waitpid %s received %s\n",
2248 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
2249 status_to_str (status));
2250 }
2251
2252 /* Check if the thread has exited. */
2253 if (WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status))
2254 {
2255 if (report_thread_events
2256 || ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid) == ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid))
2257 {
2258 if (debug_linux_nat)
2259 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: LWP %d exited.\n",
2260 ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid));
2261
2262 /* If this is the leader exiting, it means the whole
2263 process is gone. Store the status to report to the
2264 core. Store it in lp->waitstatus, because lp->status
2265 would be ambiguous (W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0). */
2266 store_waitstatus (&lp->waitstatus, status);
2267 return 0;
2268 }
2269
2270 thread_dead = 1;
2271 if (debug_linux_nat)
2272 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "WL: %s exited.\n",
2273 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2274 }
2275 }
2276
2277 if (thread_dead)
2278 {
2279 exit_lwp (lp);
2280 return 0;
2281 }
2282
2283 gdb_assert (WIFSTOPPED (status));
2284 lp->stopped = 1;
2285
2286 if (lp->must_set_ptrace_flags)
2287 {
2288 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid));
2289 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (inf->attach_flag);
2290
2291 linux_enable_event_reporting (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), options);
2292 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 0;
2293 }
2294
2295 /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */
2296 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP)
2297 {
2298 /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up
2299 recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry
2300 on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here
2301 on. */
2302 status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP);
2303 if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 1))
2304 return wait_lwp (lp);
2305 }
2306 else
2307 {
2308 /* Almost all other ptrace-stops are known to be outside of system
2309 calls, with further exceptions in linux_handle_extended_wait. */
2310 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2311 }
2312
2313 /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */
2314 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP
2315 && linux_is_extended_waitstatus (status))
2316 {
2317 if (debug_linux_nat)
2318 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2319 "WL: Handling extended status 0x%06x\n",
2320 status);
2321 linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status);
2322 return 0;
2323 }
2324
2325 return status;
2326 }
2327
2328 /* Send a SIGSTOP to LP. */
2329
2330 static int
2331 stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2332 {
2333 if (!lp->stopped && !lp->signalled)
2334 {
2335 int ret;
2336
2337 if (debug_linux_nat)
2338 {
2339 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2340 "SC: kill %s **<SIGSTOP>**\n",
2341 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2342 }
2343 errno = 0;
2344 ret = kill_lwp (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), SIGSTOP);
2345 if (debug_linux_nat)
2346 {
2347 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2348 "SC: lwp kill %d %s\n",
2349 ret,
2350 errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK");
2351 }
2352
2353 lp->signalled = 1;
2354 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0);
2355 }
2356
2357 return 0;
2358 }
2359
2360 /* Request a stop on LWP. */
2361
2362 void
2363 linux_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp)
2364 {
2365 stop_callback (lwp, NULL);
2366 }
2367
2368 /* See linux-nat.h */
2369
2370 void
2371 linux_stop_and_wait_all_lwps (void)
2372 {
2373 /* Stop all LWP's ... */
2374 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_callback, NULL);
2375
2376 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
2377 they're no longer running. */
2378 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_wait_callback, NULL);
2379 }
2380
2381 /* See linux-nat.h */
2382
2383 void
2384 linux_unstop_all_lwps (void)
2385 {
2386 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid,
2387 resume_stopped_resumed_lwps, &minus_one_ptid);
2388 }
2389
2390 /* Return non-zero if LWP PID has a pending SIGINT. */
2391
2392 static int
2393 linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (int pid)
2394 {
2395 sigset_t pending, blocked, ignored;
2396
2397 linux_proc_pending_signals (pid, &pending, &blocked, &ignored);
2398
2399 if (sigismember (&pending, SIGINT)
2400 && !sigismember (&ignored, SIGINT))
2401 return 1;
2402
2403 return 0;
2404 }
2405
2406 /* Set a flag in LP indicating that we should ignore its next SIGINT. */
2407
2408 static int
2409 set_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2410 {
2411 /* If a thread has a pending SIGINT, consume it; otherwise, set a
2412 flag to consume the next one. */
2413 if (lp->stopped && lp->status != 0 && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status)
2414 && WSTOPSIG (lp->status) == SIGINT)
2415 lp->status = 0;
2416 else
2417 lp->ignore_sigint = 1;
2418
2419 return 0;
2420 }
2421
2422 /* If LP does not have a SIGINT pending, then clear the ignore_sigint flag.
2423 This function is called after we know the LWP has stopped; if the LWP
2424 stopped before the expected SIGINT was delivered, then it will never have
2425 arrived. Also, if the signal was delivered to a shared queue and consumed
2426 by a different thread, it will never be delivered to this LWP. */
2427
2428 static void
2429 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp)
2430 {
2431 if (!lp->ignore_sigint)
2432 return;
2433
2434 if (!linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid)))
2435 {
2436 if (debug_linux_nat)
2437 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2438 "MCIS: Clearing bogus flag for %s\n",
2439 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2440 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2441 }
2442 }
2443
2444 /* Fetch the possible triggered data watchpoint info and store it in
2445 LP.
2446
2447 On some archs, like x86, that use debug registers to set
2448 watchpoints, it's possible that the way to know which watched
2449 address trapped, is to check the register that is used to select
2450 which address to watch. Problem is, between setting the watchpoint
2451 and reading back which data address trapped, the user may change
2452 the set of watchpoints, and, as a consequence, GDB changes the
2453 debug registers in the inferior. To avoid reading back a stale
2454 stopped-data-address when that happens, we cache in LP the fact
2455 that a watchpoint trapped, and the corresponding data address, as
2456 soon as we see LP stop with a SIGTRAP. If GDB changes the debug
2457 registers meanwhile, we have the cached data we can rely on. */
2458
2459 static int
2460 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (struct lwp_info *lp)
2461 {
2462 scoped_restore save_inferior_ptid = make_scoped_restore (&inferior_ptid);
2463 inferior_ptid = lp->ptid;
2464
2465 if (linux_target->low_stopped_by_watchpoint ())
2466 {
2467 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2468 lp->stopped_data_address_p
2469 = linux_target->low_stopped_data_address (&lp->stopped_data_address);
2470 }
2471
2472 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2473 }
2474
2475 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a watchpoint. */
2476
2477 int
2478 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_watchpoint ()
2479 {
2480 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2481
2482 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2483
2484 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2485 }
2486
2487 int
2488 linux_nat_target::stopped_data_address (CORE_ADDR *addr_p)
2489 {
2490 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2491
2492 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2493
2494 *addr_p = lp->stopped_data_address;
2495
2496 return lp->stopped_data_address_p;
2497 }
2498
2499 /* Commonly any breakpoint / watchpoint generate only SIGTRAP. */
2500
2501 static int
2502 sigtrap_is_event (int status)
2503 {
2504 return WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP;
2505 }
2506
2507 /* Set alternative SIGTRAP-like events recognizer. If
2508 breakpoint_inserted_here_p there then gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break will be
2509 applied. */
2510
2511 void
2512 linux_nat_set_status_is_event (struct target_ops *t,
2513 int (*status_is_event) (int status))
2514 {
2515 linux_nat_status_is_event = status_is_event;
2516 }
2517
2518 /* Wait until LP is stopped. */
2519
2520 static int
2521 stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2522 {
2523 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_ptid (lp->ptid);
2524
2525 /* If this is a vfork parent, bail out, it is not going to report
2526 any SIGSTOP until the vfork is done with. */
2527 if (inf->vfork_child != NULL)
2528 return 0;
2529
2530 if (!lp->stopped)
2531 {
2532 int status;
2533
2534 status = wait_lwp (lp);
2535 if (status == 0)
2536 return 0;
2537
2538 if (lp->ignore_sigint && WIFSTOPPED (status)
2539 && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT)
2540 {
2541 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2542
2543 errno = 0;
2544 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), 0, 0);
2545 lp->stopped = 0;
2546 if (debug_linux_nat)
2547 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2548 "PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (%s) "
2549 "(discarding SIGINT)\n",
2550 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
2551 errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK");
2552
2553 return stop_wait_callback (lp, NULL);
2554 }
2555
2556 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp);
2557
2558 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
2559 {
2560 /* The thread was stopped with a signal other than SIGSTOP. */
2561
2562 if (debug_linux_nat)
2563 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2564 "SWC: Pending event %s in %s\n",
2565 status_to_str ((int) status),
2566 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2567
2568 /* Save the sigtrap event. */
2569 lp->status = status;
2570 gdb_assert (lp->signalled);
2571 save_stop_reason (lp);
2572 }
2573 else
2574 {
2575 /* We caught the SIGSTOP that we intended to catch, so
2576 there's no SIGSTOP pending. */
2577
2578 if (debug_linux_nat)
2579 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2580 "SWC: Expected SIGSTOP caught for %s.\n",
2581 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2582
2583 /* Reset SIGNALLED only after the stop_wait_callback call
2584 above as it does gdb_assert on SIGNALLED. */
2585 lp->signalled = 0;
2586 }
2587 }
2588
2589 return 0;
2590 }
2591
2592 /* Return non-zero if LP has a wait status pending. Discard the
2593 pending event and resume the LWP if the event that originally
2594 caused the stop became uninteresting. */
2595
2596 static int
2597 status_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2598 {
2599 /* Only report a pending wait status if we pretend that this has
2600 indeed been resumed. */
2601 if (!lp->resumed)
2602 return 0;
2603
2604 if (!lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2605 return 0;
2606
2607 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT
2608 || lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT)
2609 {
2610 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid);
2611 CORE_ADDR pc;
2612 int discard = 0;
2613
2614 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
2615
2616 if (pc != lp->stop_pc)
2617 {
2618 if (debug_linux_nat)
2619 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2620 "SC: PC of %s changed. was=%s, now=%s\n",
2621 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
2622 paddress (target_gdbarch (), lp->stop_pc),
2623 paddress (target_gdbarch (), pc));
2624 discard = 1;
2625 }
2626
2627 #if !USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2628 else if (!breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
2629 {
2630 if (debug_linux_nat)
2631 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2632 "SC: previous breakpoint of %s, at %s gone\n",
2633 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
2634 paddress (target_gdbarch (), lp->stop_pc));
2635
2636 discard = 1;
2637 }
2638 #endif
2639
2640 if (discard)
2641 {
2642 if (debug_linux_nat)
2643 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2644 "SC: pending event of %s cancelled.\n",
2645 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2646
2647 lp->status = 0;
2648 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
2649 return 0;
2650 }
2651 }
2652
2653 return 1;
2654 }
2655
2656 /* Count the LWP's that have had events. */
2657
2658 static int
2659 count_events_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2660 {
2661 int *count = (int *) data;
2662
2663 gdb_assert (count != NULL);
2664
2665 /* Select only resumed LWPs that have an event pending. */
2666 if (lp->resumed && lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2667 (*count)++;
2668
2669 return 0;
2670 }
2671
2672 /* Select the LWP (if any) that is currently being single-stepped. */
2673
2674 static int
2675 select_singlestep_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2676 {
2677 if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_step
2678 && lp->status != 0)
2679 return 1;
2680 else
2681 return 0;
2682 }
2683
2684 /* Returns true if LP has a status pending. */
2685
2686 static int
2687 lwp_status_pending_p (struct lwp_info *lp)
2688 {
2689 /* We check for lp->waitstatus in addition to lp->status, because we
2690 can have pending process exits recorded in lp->status and
2691 W_EXITCODE(0,0) happens to be 0. */
2692 return lp->status != 0 || lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2693 }
2694
2695 /* Select the Nth LWP that has had an event. */
2696
2697 static int
2698 select_event_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2699 {
2700 int *selector = (int *) data;
2701
2702 gdb_assert (selector != NULL);
2703
2704 /* Select only resumed LWPs that have an event pending. */
2705 if (lp->resumed && lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2706 if ((*selector)-- == 0)
2707 return 1;
2708
2709 return 0;
2710 }
2711
2712 /* Called when the LWP stopped for a signal/trap. If it stopped for a
2713 trap check what caused it (breakpoint, watchpoint, trace, etc.),
2714 and save the result in the LWP's stop_reason field. If it stopped
2715 for a breakpoint, decrement the PC if necessary on the lwp's
2716 architecture. */
2717
2718 static void
2719 save_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lp)
2720 {
2721 struct regcache *regcache;
2722 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
2723 CORE_ADDR pc;
2724 CORE_ADDR sw_bp_pc;
2725 #if USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2726 siginfo_t siginfo;
2727 #endif
2728
2729 gdb_assert (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON);
2730 gdb_assert (lp->status != 0);
2731
2732 if (!linux_nat_status_is_event (lp->status))
2733 return;
2734
2735 regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid);
2736 gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
2737
2738 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
2739 sw_bp_pc = pc - gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch);
2740
2741 #if USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2742 if (linux_nat_get_siginfo (lp->ptid, &siginfo))
2743 {
2744 if (siginfo.si_signo == SIGTRAP)
2745 {
2746 if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_BRKPT (siginfo.si_code)
2747 && GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_HWBKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2748 {
2749 /* The si_code is ambiguous on this arch -- check debug
2750 registers. */
2751 if (!check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp))
2752 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2753 }
2754 else if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_BRKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2755 {
2756 /* If we determine the LWP stopped for a SW breakpoint,
2757 trust it. Particularly don't check watchpoint
2758 registers, because at least on s390, we'd find
2759 stopped-by-watchpoint as long as there's a watchpoint
2760 set. */
2761 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2762 }
2763 else if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_HWBKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2764 {
2765 /* This can indicate either a hardware breakpoint or
2766 hardware watchpoint. Check debug registers. */
2767 if (!check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp))
2768 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2769 }
2770 else if (siginfo.si_code == TRAP_TRACE)
2771 {
2772 if (debug_linux_nat)
2773 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2774 "CSBB: %s stopped by trace\n",
2775 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2776
2777 /* We may have single stepped an instruction that
2778 triggered a watchpoint. In that case, on some
2779 architectures (such as x86), instead of TRAP_HWBKPT,
2780 si_code indicates TRAP_TRACE, and we need to check
2781 the debug registers separately. */
2782 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp);
2783 }
2784 }
2785 }
2786 #else
2787 if ((!lp->step || lp->stop_pc == sw_bp_pc)
2788 && software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (),
2789 sw_bp_pc))
2790 {
2791 /* The LWP was either continued, or stepped a software
2792 breakpoint instruction. */
2793 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2794 }
2795
2796 if (hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
2797 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2798
2799 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON)
2800 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp);
2801 #endif
2802
2803 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT)
2804 {
2805 if (debug_linux_nat)
2806 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2807 "CSBB: %s stopped by software breakpoint\n",
2808 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2809
2810 /* Back up the PC if necessary. */
2811 if (pc != sw_bp_pc)
2812 regcache_write_pc (regcache, sw_bp_pc);
2813
2814 /* Update this so we record the correct stop PC below. */
2815 pc = sw_bp_pc;
2816 }
2817 else if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT)
2818 {
2819 if (debug_linux_nat)
2820 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2821 "CSBB: %s stopped by hardware breakpoint\n",
2822 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2823 }
2824 else if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT)
2825 {
2826 if (debug_linux_nat)
2827 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2828 "CSBB: %s stopped by hardware watchpoint\n",
2829 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
2830 }
2831
2832 lp->stop_pc = pc;
2833 }
2834
2835
2836 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a software breakpoint. */
2837
2838 int
2839 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_sw_breakpoint ()
2840 {
2841 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2842
2843 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2844
2845 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2846 }
2847
2848 /* Implement the supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint method. */
2849
2850 int
2851 linux_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint ()
2852 {
2853 return USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO;
2854 }
2855
2856 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a hardware
2857 breakpoint/watchpoint. */
2858
2859 int
2860 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_hw_breakpoint ()
2861 {
2862 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2863
2864 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2865
2866 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2867 }
2868
2869 /* Implement the supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint method. */
2870
2871 int
2872 linux_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint ()
2873 {
2874 return USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO;
2875 }
2876
2877 /* Select one LWP out of those that have events pending. */
2878
2879 static void
2880 select_event_lwp (ptid_t filter, struct lwp_info **orig_lp, int *status)
2881 {
2882 int num_events = 0;
2883 int random_selector;
2884 struct lwp_info *event_lp = NULL;
2885
2886 /* Record the wait status for the original LWP. */
2887 (*orig_lp)->status = *status;
2888
2889 /* In all-stop, give preference to the LWP that is being
2890 single-stepped. There will be at most one, and it will be the
2891 LWP that the core is most interested in. If we didn't do this,
2892 then we'd have to handle pending step SIGTRAPs somehow in case
2893 the core later continues the previously-stepped thread, as
2894 otherwise we'd report the pending SIGTRAP then, and the core, not
2895 having stepped the thread, wouldn't understand what the trap was
2896 for, and therefore would report it to the user as a random
2897 signal. */
2898 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
2899 {
2900 event_lp = iterate_over_lwps (filter,
2901 select_singlestep_lwp_callback, NULL);
2902 if (event_lp != NULL)
2903 {
2904 if (debug_linux_nat)
2905 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2906 "SEL: Select single-step %s\n",
2907 target_pid_to_str (event_lp->ptid));
2908 }
2909 }
2910
2911 if (event_lp == NULL)
2912 {
2913 /* Pick one at random, out of those which have had events. */
2914
2915 /* First see how many events we have. */
2916 iterate_over_lwps (filter, count_events_callback, &num_events);
2917 gdb_assert (num_events > 0);
2918
2919 /* Now randomly pick a LWP out of those that have had
2920 events. */
2921 random_selector = (int)
2922 ((num_events * (double) rand ()) / (RAND_MAX + 1.0));
2923
2924 if (debug_linux_nat && num_events > 1)
2925 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2926 "SEL: Found %d events, selecting #%d\n",
2927 num_events, random_selector);
2928
2929 event_lp = iterate_over_lwps (filter,
2930 select_event_lwp_callback,
2931 &random_selector);
2932 }
2933
2934 if (event_lp != NULL)
2935 {
2936 /* Switch the event LWP. */
2937 *orig_lp = event_lp;
2938 *status = event_lp->status;
2939 }
2940
2941 /* Flush the wait status for the event LWP. */
2942 (*orig_lp)->status = 0;
2943 }
2944
2945 /* Return non-zero if LP has been resumed. */
2946
2947 static int
2948 resumed_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
2949 {
2950 return lp->resumed;
2951 }
2952
2953 /* Check if we should go on and pass this event to common code.
2954 Return the affected lwp if we are, or NULL otherwise. */
2955
2956 static struct lwp_info *
2957 linux_nat_filter_event (int lwpid, int status)
2958 {
2959 struct lwp_info *lp;
2960 int event = linux_ptrace_get_extended_event (status);
2961
2962 lp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (lwpid));
2963
2964 /* Check for stop events reported by a process we didn't already
2965 know about - anything not already in our LWP list.
2966
2967 If we're expecting to receive stopped processes after
2968 fork, vfork, and clone events, then we'll just add the
2969 new one to our list and go back to waiting for the event
2970 to be reported - the stopped process might be returned
2971 from waitpid before or after the event is.
2972
2973 But note the case of a non-leader thread exec'ing after the
2974 leader having exited, and gone from our lists. The non-leader
2975 thread changes its tid to the tgid. */
2976
2977 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && lp == NULL
2978 && (WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP && event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC))
2979 {
2980 /* A multi-thread exec after we had seen the leader exiting. */
2981 if (debug_linux_nat)
2982 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2983 "LLW: Re-adding thread group leader LWP %d.\n",
2984 lwpid);
2985
2986 lp = add_lwp (ptid_build (lwpid, lwpid, 0));
2987 lp->stopped = 1;
2988 lp->resumed = 1;
2989 add_thread (lp->ptid);
2990 }
2991
2992 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && !lp)
2993 {
2994 if (debug_linux_nat)
2995 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
2996 "LHEW: saving LWP %ld status %s in stopped_pids list\n",
2997 (long) lwpid, status_to_str (status));
2998 add_to_pid_list (&stopped_pids, lwpid, status);
2999 return NULL;
3000 }
3001
3002 /* Make sure we don't report an event for the exit of an LWP not in
3003 our list, i.e. not part of the current process. This can happen
3004 if we detach from a program we originally forked and then it
3005 exits. */
3006 if (!WIFSTOPPED (status) && !lp)
3007 return NULL;
3008
3009 /* This LWP is stopped now. (And if dead, this prevents it from
3010 ever being continued.) */
3011 lp->stopped = 1;
3012
3013 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && lp->must_set_ptrace_flags)
3014 {
3015 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid));
3016 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (inf->attach_flag);
3017
3018 linux_enable_event_reporting (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), options);
3019 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 0;
3020 }
3021
3022 /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */
3023 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP)
3024 {
3025 /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up
3026 recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry
3027 on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here
3028 on. */
3029 status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP);
3030 if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 0))
3031 return NULL;
3032 }
3033 else
3034 {
3035 /* Almost all other ptrace-stops are known to be outside of system
3036 calls, with further exceptions in linux_handle_extended_wait. */
3037 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
3038 }
3039
3040 /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */
3041 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP
3042 && linux_is_extended_waitstatus (status))
3043 {
3044 if (debug_linux_nat)
3045 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3046 "LLW: Handling extended status 0x%06x\n",
3047 status);
3048 if (linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status))
3049 return NULL;
3050 }
3051
3052 /* Check if the thread has exited. */
3053 if (WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status))
3054 {
3055 if (!report_thread_events
3056 && num_lwps (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid)) > 1)
3057 {
3058 if (debug_linux_nat)
3059 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3060 "LLW: %s exited.\n",
3061 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3062
3063 /* If there is at least one more LWP, then the exit signal
3064 was not the end of the debugged application and should be
3065 ignored. */
3066 exit_lwp (lp);
3067 return NULL;
3068 }
3069
3070 /* Note that even if the leader was ptrace-stopped, it can still
3071 exit, if e.g., some other thread brings down the whole
3072 process (calls `exit'). So don't assert that the lwp is
3073 resumed. */
3074 if (debug_linux_nat)
3075 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3076 "LWP %ld exited (resumed=%d)\n",
3077 ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), lp->resumed);
3078
3079 /* Dead LWP's aren't expected to reported a pending sigstop. */
3080 lp->signalled = 0;
3081
3082 /* Store the pending event in the waitstatus, because
3083 W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0. */
3084 store_waitstatus (&lp->waitstatus, status);
3085 return lp;
3086 }
3087
3088 /* Make sure we don't report a SIGSTOP that we sent ourselves in
3089 an attempt to stop an LWP. */
3090 if (lp->signalled
3091 && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP)
3092 {
3093 lp->signalled = 0;
3094
3095 if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop)
3096 {
3097 if (debug_linux_nat)
3098 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3099 "LLW: resume_stop SIGSTOP caught for %s.\n",
3100 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3101 }
3102 else
3103 {
3104 /* This is a delayed SIGSTOP. Filter out the event. */
3105
3106 if (debug_linux_nat)
3107 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3108 "LLW: %s %s, 0, 0 (discard delayed SIGSTOP)\n",
3109 lp->step ?
3110 "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
3111 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3112
3113 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
3114 gdb_assert (lp->resumed);
3115 return NULL;
3116 }
3117 }
3118
3119 /* Make sure we don't report a SIGINT that we have already displayed
3120 for another thread. */
3121 if (lp->ignore_sigint
3122 && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT)
3123 {
3124 if (debug_linux_nat)
3125 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3126 "LLW: Delayed SIGINT caught for %s.\n",
3127 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3128
3129 /* This is a delayed SIGINT. */
3130 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
3131
3132 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
3133 if (debug_linux_nat)
3134 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3135 "LLW: %s %s, 0, 0 (discard SIGINT)\n",
3136 lp->step ?
3137 "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
3138 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3139 gdb_assert (lp->resumed);
3140
3141 /* Discard the event. */
3142 return NULL;
3143 }
3144
3145 /* Don't report signals that GDB isn't interested in, such as
3146 signals that are neither printed nor stopped upon. Stopping all
3147 threads can be a bit time-consuming so if we want decent
3148 performance with heavily multi-threaded programs, especially when
3149 they're using a high frequency timer, we'd better avoid it if we
3150 can. */
3151 if (WIFSTOPPED (status))
3152 {
3153 enum gdb_signal signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (status));
3154
3155 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
3156 {
3157 /* Only do the below in all-stop, as we currently use SIGSTOP
3158 to implement target_stop (see linux_nat_stop) in
3159 non-stop. */
3160 if (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_INT && signal_pass_state (signo) == 0)
3161 {
3162 /* If ^C/BREAK is typed at the tty/console, SIGINT gets
3163 forwarded to the entire process group, that is, all LWPs
3164 will receive it - unless they're using CLONE_THREAD to
3165 share signals. Since we only want to report it once, we
3166 mark it as ignored for all LWPs except this one. */
3167 iterate_over_lwps (pid_to_ptid (ptid_get_pid (lp->ptid)),
3168 set_ignore_sigint, NULL);
3169 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
3170 }
3171 else
3172 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp);
3173 }
3174
3175 /* When using hardware single-step, we need to report every signal.
3176 Otherwise, signals in pass_mask may be short-circuited
3177 except signals that might be caused by a breakpoint. */
3178 if (!lp->step
3179 && WSTOPSIG (status) && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (status))
3180 && !linux_wstatus_maybe_breakpoint (status))
3181 {
3182 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, signo);
3183 if (debug_linux_nat)
3184 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3185 "LLW: %s %s, %s (preempt 'handle')\n",
3186 lp->step ?
3187 "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
3188 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
3189 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
3190 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo))
3191 : "0"));
3192 return NULL;
3193 }
3194 }
3195
3196 /* An interesting event. */
3197 gdb_assert (lp);
3198 lp->status = status;
3199 save_stop_reason (lp);
3200 return lp;
3201 }
3202
3203 /* Detect zombie thread group leaders, and "exit" them. We can't reap
3204 their exits until all other threads in the group have exited. */
3205
3206 static void
3207 check_zombie_leaders (void)
3208 {
3209 struct inferior *inf;
3210
3211 ALL_INFERIORS (inf)
3212 {
3213 struct lwp_info *leader_lp;
3214
3215 if (inf->pid == 0)
3216 continue;
3217
3218 leader_lp = find_lwp_pid (pid_to_ptid (inf->pid));
3219 if (leader_lp != NULL
3220 /* Check if there are other threads in the group, as we may
3221 have raced with the inferior simply exiting. */
3222 && num_lwps (inf->pid) > 1
3223 && linux_proc_pid_is_zombie (inf->pid))
3224 {
3225 if (debug_linux_nat)
3226 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3227 "CZL: Thread group leader %d zombie "
3228 "(it exited, or another thread execd).\n",
3229 inf->pid);
3230
3231 /* A leader zombie can mean one of two things:
3232
3233 - It exited, and there's an exit status pending
3234 available, or only the leader exited (not the whole
3235 program). In the latter case, we can't waitpid the
3236 leader's exit status until all other threads are gone.
3237
3238 - There are 3 or more threads in the group, and a thread
3239 other than the leader exec'd. See comments on exec
3240 events at the top of the file. We could try
3241 distinguishing the exit and exec cases, by waiting once
3242 more, and seeing if something comes out, but it doesn't
3243 sound useful. The previous leader _does_ go away, and
3244 we'll re-add the new one once we see the exec event
3245 (which is just the same as what would happen if the
3246 previous leader did exit voluntarily before some other
3247 thread execs). */
3248
3249 if (debug_linux_nat)
3250 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3251 "CZL: Thread group leader %d vanished.\n",
3252 inf->pid);
3253 exit_lwp (leader_lp);
3254 }
3255 }
3256 }
3257
3258 /* Convenience function that is called when the kernel reports an exit
3259 event. This decides whether to report the event to GDB as a
3260 process exit event, a thread exit event, or to suppress the
3261 event. */
3262
3263 static ptid_t
3264 filter_exit_event (struct lwp_info *event_child,
3265 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus)
3266 {
3267 ptid_t ptid = event_child->ptid;
3268
3269 if (num_lwps (ptid_get_pid (ptid)) > 1)
3270 {
3271 if (report_thread_events)
3272 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED;
3273 else
3274 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
3275
3276 exit_lwp (event_child);
3277 }
3278
3279 return ptid;
3280 }
3281
3282 static ptid_t
3283 linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus,
3284 int target_options)
3285 {
3286 sigset_t prev_mask;
3287 enum resume_kind last_resume_kind;
3288 struct lwp_info *lp;
3289 int status;
3290
3291 if (debug_linux_nat)
3292 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: enter\n");
3293
3294 /* The first time we get here after starting a new inferior, we may
3295 not have added it to the LWP list yet - this is the earliest
3296 moment at which we know its PID. */
3297 if (ptid_is_pid (inferior_ptid))
3298 {
3299 /* Upgrade the main thread's ptid. */
3300 thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid,
3301 ptid_build (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid),
3302 ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid), 0));
3303
3304 lp = add_initial_lwp (inferior_ptid);
3305 lp->resumed = 1;
3306 }
3307
3308 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked until the sigsuspend below. */
3309 block_child_signals (&prev_mask);
3310
3311 /* First check if there is a LWP with a wait status pending. */
3312 lp = iterate_over_lwps (ptid, status_callback, NULL);
3313 if (lp != NULL)
3314 {
3315 if (debug_linux_nat)
3316 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3317 "LLW: Using pending wait status %s for %s.\n",
3318 status_to_str (lp->status),
3319 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3320 }
3321
3322 /* But if we don't find a pending event, we'll have to wait. Always
3323 pull all events out of the kernel. We'll randomly select an
3324 event LWP out of all that have events, to prevent starvation. */
3325
3326 while (lp == NULL)
3327 {
3328 pid_t lwpid;
3329
3330 /* Always use -1 and WNOHANG, due to couple of a kernel/ptrace
3331 quirks:
3332
3333 - If the thread group leader exits while other threads in the
3334 thread group still exist, waitpid(TGID, ...) hangs. That
3335 waitpid won't return an exit status until the other threads
3336 in the group are reapped.
3337
3338 - When a non-leader thread execs, that thread just vanishes
3339 without reporting an exit (so we'd hang if we waited for it
3340 explicitly in that case). The exec event is reported to
3341 the TGID pid. */
3342
3343 errno = 0;
3344 lwpid = my_waitpid (-1, &status, __WALL | WNOHANG);
3345
3346 if (debug_linux_nat)
3347 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3348 "LNW: waitpid(-1, ...) returned %d, %s\n",
3349 lwpid, errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK");
3350
3351 if (lwpid > 0)
3352 {
3353 if (debug_linux_nat)
3354 {
3355 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3356 "LLW: waitpid %ld received %s\n",
3357 (long) lwpid, status_to_str (status));
3358 }
3359
3360 linux_nat_filter_event (lwpid, status);
3361 /* Retry until nothing comes out of waitpid. A single
3362 SIGCHLD can indicate more than one child stopped. */
3363 continue;
3364 }
3365
3366 /* Now that we've pulled all events out of the kernel, resume
3367 LWPs that don't have an interesting event to report. */
3368 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid,
3369 resume_stopped_resumed_lwps, &minus_one_ptid);
3370
3371 /* ... and find an LWP with a status to report to the core, if
3372 any. */
3373 lp = iterate_over_lwps (ptid, status_callback, NULL);
3374 if (lp != NULL)
3375 break;
3376
3377 /* Check for zombie thread group leaders. Those can't be reaped
3378 until all other threads in the thread group are. */
3379 check_zombie_leaders ();
3380
3381 /* If there are no resumed children left, bail. We'd be stuck
3382 forever in the sigsuspend call below otherwise. */
3383 if (iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resumed_callback, NULL) == NULL)
3384 {
3385 if (debug_linux_nat)
3386 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit (no resumed LWP)\n");
3387
3388 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED;
3389
3390 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3391 return minus_one_ptid;
3392 }
3393
3394 /* No interesting event to report to the core. */
3395
3396 if (target_options & TARGET_WNOHANG)
3397 {
3398 if (debug_linux_nat)
3399 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit (ignore)\n");
3400
3401 ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
3402 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3403 return minus_one_ptid;
3404 }
3405
3406 /* We shouldn't end up here unless we want to try again. */
3407 gdb_assert (lp == NULL);
3408
3409 /* Block until we get an event reported with SIGCHLD. */
3410 wait_for_signal ();
3411 }
3412
3413 gdb_assert (lp);
3414
3415 status = lp->status;
3416 lp->status = 0;
3417
3418 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
3419 {
3420 /* Now stop all other LWP's ... */
3421 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_callback, NULL);
3422
3423 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
3424 they're no longer running. */
3425 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_wait_callback, NULL);
3426 }
3427
3428 /* If we're not waiting for a specific LWP, choose an event LWP from
3429 among those that have had events. Giving equal priority to all
3430 LWPs that have had events helps prevent starvation. */
3431 if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid) || ptid_is_pid (ptid))
3432 select_event_lwp (ptid, &lp, &status);
3433
3434 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
3435
3436 /* Now that we've selected our final event LWP, un-adjust its PC if
3437 it was a software breakpoint, and we can't reliably support the
3438 "stopped by software breakpoint" stop reason. */
3439 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT
3440 && !USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO)
3441 {
3442 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid);
3443 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
3444 int decr_pc = gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch);
3445
3446 if (decr_pc != 0)
3447 {
3448 CORE_ADDR pc;
3449
3450 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
3451 regcache_write_pc (regcache, pc + decr_pc);
3452 }
3453 }
3454
3455 /* We'll need this to determine whether to report a SIGSTOP as
3456 GDB_SIGNAL_0. Need to take a copy because resume_clear_callback
3457 clears it. */
3458 last_resume_kind = lp->last_resume_kind;
3459
3460 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
3461 {
3462 /* In all-stop, from the core's perspective, all LWPs are now
3463 stopped until a new resume action is sent over. */
3464 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, resume_clear_callback, NULL);
3465 }
3466 else
3467 {
3468 resume_clear_callback (lp, NULL);
3469 }
3470
3471 if (linux_nat_status_is_event (status))
3472 {
3473 if (debug_linux_nat)
3474 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3475 "LLW: trap ptid is %s.\n",
3476 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3477 }
3478
3479 if (lp->waitstatus.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
3480 {
3481 *ourstatus = lp->waitstatus;
3482 lp->waitstatus.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
3483 }
3484 else
3485 store_waitstatus (ourstatus, status);
3486
3487 if (debug_linux_nat)
3488 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "LLW: exit\n");
3489
3490 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3491
3492 if (last_resume_kind == resume_stop
3493 && ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
3494 && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP)
3495 {
3496 /* A thread that has been requested to stop by GDB with
3497 target_stop, and it stopped cleanly, so report as SIG0. The
3498 use of SIGSTOP is an implementation detail. */
3499 ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
3500 }
3501
3502 if (ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED
3503 || ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED)
3504 lp->core = -1;
3505 else
3506 lp->core = linux_common_core_of_thread (lp->ptid);
3507
3508 if (ourstatus->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED)
3509 return filter_exit_event (lp, ourstatus);
3510
3511 return lp->ptid;
3512 }
3513
3514 /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status
3515 to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. */
3516
3517 static int
3518 resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
3519 {
3520 ptid_t *wait_ptid_p = (ptid_t *) data;
3521
3522 if (!lp->stopped)
3523 {
3524 if (debug_linux_nat)
3525 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3526 "RSRL: NOT resuming LWP %s, not stopped\n",
3527 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3528 }
3529 else if (!lp->resumed)
3530 {
3531 if (debug_linux_nat)
3532 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3533 "RSRL: NOT resuming LWP %s, not resumed\n",
3534 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3535 }
3536 else if (lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
3537 {
3538 if (debug_linux_nat)
3539 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3540 "RSRL: NOT resuming LWP %s, has pending status\n",
3541 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid));
3542 }
3543 else
3544 {
3545 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (lp->ptid);
3546 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
3547
3548 TRY
3549 {
3550 CORE_ADDR pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
3551 int leave_stopped = 0;
3552
3553 /* Don't bother if there's a breakpoint at PC that we'd hit
3554 immediately, and we're not waiting for this LWP. */
3555 if (!ptid_match (lp->ptid, *wait_ptid_p))
3556 {
3557 if (breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
3558 leave_stopped = 1;
3559 }
3560
3561 if (!leave_stopped)
3562 {
3563 if (debug_linux_nat)
3564 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3565 "RSRL: resuming stopped-resumed LWP %s at "
3566 "%s: step=%d\n",
3567 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid),
3568 paddress (gdbarch, pc),
3569 lp->step);
3570
3571 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
3572 }
3573 }
3574 CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
3575 {
3576 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
3577 throw_exception (ex);
3578 }
3579 END_CATCH
3580 }
3581
3582 return 0;
3583 }
3584
3585 ptid_t
3586 linux_nat_target::wait (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus,
3587 int target_options)
3588 {
3589 ptid_t event_ptid;
3590
3591 if (debug_linux_nat)
3592 {
3593 char *options_string;
3594
3595 options_string = target_options_to_string (target_options);
3596 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3597 "linux_nat_wait: [%s], [%s]\n",
3598 target_pid_to_str (ptid),
3599 options_string);
3600 xfree (options_string);
3601 }
3602
3603 /* Flush the async file first. */
3604 if (target_is_async_p ())
3605 async_file_flush ();
3606
3607 /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status
3608 to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. LWPs get
3609 in this state if we find them stopping at a time we're not
3610 interested in reporting the event (target_wait on a
3611 specific_process, for example, see linux_nat_wait_1), and
3612 meanwhile the event became uninteresting. Don't bother resuming
3613 LWPs we're not going to wait for if they'd stop immediately. */
3614 if (target_is_non_stop_p ())
3615 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, resume_stopped_resumed_lwps, &ptid);
3616
3617 event_ptid = linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid, ourstatus, target_options);
3618
3619 /* If we requested any event, and something came out, assume there
3620 may be more. If we requested a specific lwp or process, also
3621 assume there may be more. */
3622 if (target_is_async_p ()
3623 && ((ourstatus->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE
3624 && ourstatus->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED)
3625 || !ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid)))
3626 async_file_mark ();
3627
3628 return event_ptid;
3629 }
3630
3631 /* Kill one LWP. */
3632
3633 static void
3634 kill_one_lwp (pid_t pid)
3635 {
3636 /* PTRACE_KILL may resume the inferior. Send SIGKILL first. */
3637
3638 errno = 0;
3639 kill_lwp (pid, SIGKILL);
3640 if (debug_linux_nat)
3641 {
3642 int save_errno = errno;
3643
3644 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3645 "KC: kill (SIGKILL) %ld, 0, 0 (%s)\n", (long) pid,
3646 save_errno ? safe_strerror (save_errno) : "OK");
3647 }
3648
3649 /* Some kernels ignore even SIGKILL for processes under ptrace. */
3650
3651 errno = 0;
3652 ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, pid, 0, 0);
3653 if (debug_linux_nat)
3654 {
3655 int save_errno = errno;
3656
3657 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3658 "KC: PTRACE_KILL %ld, 0, 0 (%s)\n", (long) pid,
3659 save_errno ? safe_strerror (save_errno) : "OK");
3660 }
3661 }
3662
3663 /* Wait for an LWP to die. */
3664
3665 static void
3666 kill_wait_one_lwp (pid_t pid)
3667 {
3668 pid_t res;
3669
3670 /* We must make sure that there are no pending events (delayed
3671 SIGSTOPs, pending SIGTRAPs, etc.) to make sure the current
3672 program doesn't interfere with any following debugging session. */
3673
3674 do
3675 {
3676 res = my_waitpid (pid, NULL, __WALL);
3677 if (res != (pid_t) -1)
3678 {
3679 if (debug_linux_nat)
3680 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
3681 "KWC: wait %ld received unknown.\n",
3682 (long) pid);
3683 /* The Linux kernel sometimes fails to kill a thread
3684 completely after PTRACE_KILL; that goes from the stop
3685 point in do_fork out to the one in get_signal_to_deliver
3686 and waits again. So kill it again. */
3687 kill_one_lwp (pid);
3688 }
3689 }
3690 while (res == pid);
3691
3692 gdb_assert (res == -1 && errno == ECHILD);
3693 }
3694
3695 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. */
3696
3697 static int
3698 kill_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
3699 {
3700 kill_one_lwp (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
3701 return 0;
3702 }
3703
3704 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. */
3705
3706 static int
3707 kill_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
3708 {
3709 kill_wait_one_lwp (ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
3710 return 0;
3711 }
3712
3713 /* Kill the fork children of any threads of inferior INF that are
3714 stopped at a fork event. */
3715
3716 static void
3717 kill_unfollowed_fork_children (struct inferior *inf)
3718 {
3719 struct thread_info *thread;
3720
3721 ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS (thread)
3722 if (thread->inf == inf)
3723 {
3724 struct target_waitstatus *ws = &thread->pending_follow;
3725
3726 if (ws->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED
3727 || ws->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED)
3728 {
3729 ptid_t child_ptid = ws->value.related_pid;
3730 int child_pid = ptid_get_pid (child_ptid);
3731 int child_lwp = ptid_get_lwp (child_ptid);
3732
3733 kill_one_lwp (child_lwp);
3734 kill_wait_one_lwp (child_lwp);
3735
3736 /* Let the arch-specific native code know this process is
3737 gone. */
3738 linux_nat_forget_process (child_pid);
3739 }
3740 }
3741 }
3742
3743 void
3744 linux_nat_target::kill ()
3745 {
3746 /* If we're stopped while forking and we haven't followed yet,
3747 kill the other task. We need to do this first because the
3748 parent will be sleeping if this is a vfork. */
3749 kill_unfollowed_fork_children (current_inferior ());
3750
3751 if (forks_exist_p ())
3752 linux_fork_killall ();
3753 else
3754 {
3755 ptid_t ptid = pid_to_ptid (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
3756
3757 /* Stop all threads before killing them, since ptrace requires
3758 that the thread is stopped to sucessfully PTRACE_KILL. */
3759 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_callback, NULL);
3760 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
3761 they're no longer running. */
3762 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_wait_callback, NULL);
3763
3764 /* Kill all LWP's ... */
3765 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_callback, NULL);
3766
3767 /* ... and wait until we've flushed all events. */
3768 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_wait_callback, NULL);
3769 }
3770
3771 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
3772 }
3773
3774 void
3775 linux_nat_target::mourn_inferior ()
3776 {
3777 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
3778
3779 purge_lwp_list (pid);
3780
3781 if (! forks_exist_p ())
3782 /* Normal case, no other forks available. */
3783 inf_ptrace_target::mourn_inferior ();
3784 else
3785 /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid has exited, but
3786 there are other viable forks to debug. Delete the exiting
3787 one and context-switch to the first available. */
3788 linux_fork_mourn_inferior ();
3789
3790 /* Let the arch-specific native code know this process is gone. */
3791 linux_nat_forget_process (pid);
3792 }
3793
3794 /* Convert a native/host siginfo object, into/from the siginfo in the
3795 layout of the inferiors' architecture. */
3796
3797 static void
3798 siginfo_fixup (siginfo_t *siginfo, gdb_byte *inf_siginfo, int direction)
3799 {
3800 int done = 0;
3801
3802 if (linux_nat_siginfo_fixup != NULL)
3803 done = linux_nat_siginfo_fixup (siginfo, inf_siginfo, direction);
3804
3805 /* If there was no callback, or the callback didn't do anything,
3806 then just do a straight memcpy. */
3807 if (!done)
3808 {
3809 if (direction == 1)
3810 memcpy (siginfo, inf_siginfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
3811 else
3812 memcpy (inf_siginfo, siginfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
3813 }
3814 }
3815
3816 static enum target_xfer_status
3817 linux_xfer_siginfo (enum target_object object,
3818 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3819 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
3820 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3821 {
3822 int pid;
3823 siginfo_t siginfo;
3824 gdb_byte inf_siginfo[sizeof (siginfo_t)];
3825
3826 gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO);
3827 gdb_assert (readbuf || writebuf);
3828
3829 pid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
3830 if (pid == 0)
3831 pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
3832
3833 if (offset > sizeof (siginfo))
3834 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3835
3836 errno = 0;
3837 ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo);
3838 if (errno != 0)
3839 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3840
3841 /* When GDB is built as a 64-bit application, ptrace writes into
3842 SIGINFO an object with 64-bit layout. Since debugging a 32-bit
3843 inferior with a 64-bit GDB should look the same as debugging it
3844 with a 32-bit GDB, we need to convert it. GDB core always sees
3845 the converted layout, so any read/write will have to be done
3846 post-conversion. */
3847 siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 0);
3848
3849 if (offset + len > sizeof (siginfo))
3850 len = sizeof (siginfo) - offset;
3851
3852 if (readbuf != NULL)
3853 memcpy (readbuf, inf_siginfo + offset, len);
3854 else
3855 {
3856 memcpy (inf_siginfo + offset, writebuf, len);
3857
3858 /* Convert back to ptrace layout before flushing it out. */
3859 siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 1);
3860
3861 errno = 0;
3862 ptrace (PTRACE_SETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo);
3863 if (errno != 0)
3864 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3865 }
3866
3867 *xfered_len = len;
3868 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
3869 }
3870
3871 static enum target_xfer_status
3872 linux_nat_xfer_osdata (enum target_object object,
3873 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3874 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
3875 ULONGEST *xfered_len);
3876
3877 static enum target_xfer_status
3878 linux_proc_xfer_spu (enum target_object object,
3879 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3880 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3881 ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len);
3882
3883 static enum target_xfer_status
3884 linux_proc_xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
3885 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3886 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3887 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len);
3888
3889 enum target_xfer_status
3890 linux_nat_target::xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
3891 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3892 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3893 ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3894 {
3895 enum target_xfer_status xfer;
3896
3897 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO)
3898 return linux_xfer_siginfo (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3899 offset, len, xfered_len);
3900
3901 /* The target is connected but no live inferior is selected. Pass
3902 this request down to a lower stratum (e.g., the executable
3903 file). */
3904 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY && ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
3905 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
3906
3907 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV)
3908 return memory_xfer_auxv (this, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3909 offset, len, xfered_len);
3910
3911 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA)
3912 return linux_nat_xfer_osdata (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3913 offset, len, xfered_len);
3914
3915 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SPU)
3916 return linux_proc_xfer_spu (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3917 offset, len, xfered_len);
3918
3919 /* GDB calculates all addresses in the largest possible address
3920 width.
3921 The address width must be masked before its final use - either by
3922 linux_proc_xfer_partial or inf_ptrace_target::xfer_partial.
3923
3924 Compare ADDR_BIT first to avoid a compiler warning on shift overflow. */
3925
3926 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY)
3927 {
3928 int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch ());
3929
3930 if (addr_bit < (sizeof (ULONGEST) * HOST_CHAR_BIT))
3931 offset &= ((ULONGEST) 1 << addr_bit) - 1;
3932 }
3933
3934 xfer = linux_proc_xfer_partial (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3935 offset, len, xfered_len);
3936 if (xfer != TARGET_XFER_EOF)
3937 return xfer;
3938
3939 return inf_ptrace_target::xfer_partial (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3940 offset, len, xfered_len);
3941 }
3942
3943 int
3944 linux_nat_target::thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
3945 {
3946 /* As long as a PTID is in lwp list, consider it alive. */
3947 return find_lwp_pid (ptid) != NULL;
3948 }
3949
3950 /* Implement the to_update_thread_list target method for this
3951 target. */
3952
3953 void
3954 linux_nat_target::update_thread_list ()
3955 {
3956 struct lwp_info *lwp;
3957
3958 /* We add/delete threads from the list as clone/exit events are
3959 processed, so just try deleting exited threads still in the
3960 thread list. */
3961 delete_exited_threads ();
3962
3963 /* Update the processor core that each lwp/thread was last seen
3964 running on. */
3965 ALL_LWPS (lwp)
3966 {
3967 /* Avoid accessing /proc if the thread hasn't run since we last
3968 time we fetched the thread's core. Accessing /proc becomes
3969 noticeably expensive when we have thousands of LWPs. */
3970 if (lwp->core == -1)
3971 lwp->core = linux_common_core_of_thread (lwp->ptid);
3972 }
3973 }
3974
3975 const char *
3976 linux_nat_target::pid_to_str (ptid_t ptid)
3977 {
3978 static char buf[64];
3979
3980 if (ptid_lwp_p (ptid)
3981 && (ptid_get_pid (ptid) != ptid_get_lwp (ptid)
3982 || num_lwps (ptid_get_pid (ptid)) > 1))
3983 {
3984 snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "LWP %ld", ptid_get_lwp (ptid));
3985 return buf;
3986 }
3987
3988 return normal_pid_to_str (ptid);
3989 }
3990
3991 const char *
3992 linux_nat_target::thread_name (struct thread_info *thr)
3993 {
3994 return linux_proc_tid_get_name (thr->ptid);
3995 }
3996
3997 /* Accepts an integer PID; Returns a string representing a file that
3998 can be opened to get the symbols for the child process. */
3999
4000 char *
4001 linux_nat_target::pid_to_exec_file (int pid)
4002 {
4003 return linux_proc_pid_to_exec_file (pid);
4004 }
4005
4006 /* Implement the to_xfer_partial target method using /proc/<pid>/mem.
4007 Because we can use a single read/write call, this can be much more
4008 efficient than banging away at PTRACE_PEEKTEXT. */
4009
4010 static enum target_xfer_status
4011 linux_proc_xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
4012 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
4013 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
4014 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
4015 {
4016 LONGEST ret;
4017 int fd;
4018 char filename[64];
4019
4020 if (object != TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY)
4021 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4022
4023 /* Don't bother for one word. */
4024 if (len < 3 * sizeof (long))
4025 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4026
4027 /* We could keep this file open and cache it - possibly one per
4028 thread. That requires some juggling, but is even faster. */
4029 xsnprintf (filename, sizeof filename, "/proc/%ld/mem",
4030 ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid));
4031 fd = gdb_open_cloexec (filename, ((readbuf ? O_RDONLY : O_WRONLY)
4032 | O_LARGEFILE), 0);
4033 if (fd == -1)
4034 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4035
4036 /* Use pread64/pwrite64 if available, since they save a syscall and can
4037 handle 64-bit offsets even on 32-bit platforms (for instance, SPARC
4038 debugging a SPARC64 application). */
4039 #ifdef HAVE_PREAD64
4040 ret = (readbuf ? pread64 (fd, readbuf, len, offset)
4041 : pwrite64 (fd, writebuf, len, offset));
4042 #else
4043 ret = lseek (fd, offset, SEEK_SET);
4044 if (ret != -1)
4045 ret = (readbuf ? read (fd, readbuf, len)
4046 : write (fd, writebuf, len));
4047 #endif
4048
4049 close (fd);
4050
4051 if (ret == -1 || ret == 0)
4052 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4053 else
4054 {
4055 *xfered_len = ret;
4056 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
4057 }
4058 }
4059
4060
4061 /* Enumerate spufs IDs for process PID. */
4062 static LONGEST
4063 spu_enumerate_spu_ids (int pid, gdb_byte *buf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len)
4064 {
4065 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch ());
4066 LONGEST pos = 0;
4067 LONGEST written = 0;
4068 char path[128];
4069 DIR *dir;
4070 struct dirent *entry;
4071
4072 xsnprintf (path, sizeof path, "/proc/%d/fd", pid);
4073 dir = opendir (path);
4074 if (!dir)
4075 return -1;
4076
4077 rewinddir (dir);
4078 while ((entry = readdir (dir)) != NULL)
4079 {
4080 struct stat st;
4081 struct statfs stfs;
4082 int fd;
4083
4084 fd = atoi (entry->d_name);
4085 if (!fd)
4086 continue;
4087
4088 xsnprintf (path, sizeof path, "/proc/%d/fd/%d", pid, fd);
4089 if (stat (path, &st) != 0)
4090 continue;
4091 if (!S_ISDIR (st.st_mode))
4092 continue;
4093
4094 if (statfs (path, &stfs) != 0)
4095 continue;
4096 if (stfs.f_type != SPUFS_MAGIC)
4097 continue;
4098
4099 if (pos >= offset && pos + 4 <= offset + len)
4100 {
4101 store_unsigned_integer (buf + pos - offset, 4, byte_order, fd);
4102 written += 4;
4103 }
4104 pos += 4;
4105 }
4106
4107 closedir (dir);
4108 return written;
4109 }
4110
4111 /* Implement the to_xfer_partial interface for the TARGET_OBJECT_SPU
4112 object type, using the /proc file system. */
4113
4114 static enum target_xfer_status
4115 linux_proc_xfer_spu (enum target_object object,
4116 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
4117 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
4118 ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
4119 {
4120 char buf[128];
4121 int fd = 0;
4122 int ret = -1;
4123 int pid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
4124
4125 if (!annex)
4126 {
4127 if (!readbuf)
4128 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
4129 else
4130 {
4131 LONGEST l = spu_enumerate_spu_ids (pid, readbuf, offset, len);
4132
4133 if (l < 0)
4134 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
4135 else if (l == 0)
4136 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4137 else
4138 {
4139 *xfered_len = (ULONGEST) l;
4140 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
4141 }
4142 }
4143 }
4144
4145 xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "/proc/%d/fd/%s", pid, annex);
4146 fd = gdb_open_cloexec (buf, writebuf? O_WRONLY : O_RDONLY, 0);
4147 if (fd <= 0)
4148 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
4149
4150 if (offset != 0
4151 && lseek (fd, (off_t) offset, SEEK_SET) != (off_t) offset)
4152 {
4153 close (fd);
4154 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4155 }
4156
4157 if (writebuf)
4158 ret = write (fd, writebuf, (size_t) len);
4159 else if (readbuf)
4160 ret = read (fd, readbuf, (size_t) len);
4161
4162 close (fd);
4163
4164 if (ret < 0)
4165 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
4166 else if (ret == 0)
4167 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4168 else
4169 {
4170 *xfered_len = (ULONGEST) ret;
4171 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
4172 }
4173 }
4174
4175
4176 /* Parse LINE as a signal set and add its set bits to SIGS. */
4177
4178 static void
4179 add_line_to_sigset (const char *line, sigset_t *sigs)
4180 {
4181 int len = strlen (line) - 1;
4182 const char *p;
4183 int signum;
4184
4185 if (line[len] != '\n')
4186 error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line);
4187
4188 p = line;
4189 signum = len * 4;
4190 while (len-- > 0)
4191 {
4192 int digit;
4193
4194 if (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
4195 digit = *p - '0';
4196 else if (*p >= 'a' && *p <= 'f')
4197 digit = *p - 'a' + 10;
4198 else
4199 error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line);
4200
4201 signum -= 4;
4202
4203 if (digit & 1)
4204 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 1);
4205 if (digit & 2)
4206 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 2);
4207 if (digit & 4)
4208 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 3);
4209 if (digit & 8)
4210 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 4);
4211
4212 p++;
4213 }
4214 }
4215
4216 /* Find process PID's pending signals from /proc/pid/status and set
4217 SIGS to match. */
4218
4219 void
4220 linux_proc_pending_signals (int pid, sigset_t *pending,
4221 sigset_t *blocked, sigset_t *ignored)
4222 {
4223 char buffer[PATH_MAX], fname[PATH_MAX];
4224
4225 sigemptyset (pending);
4226 sigemptyset (blocked);
4227 sigemptyset (ignored);
4228 xsnprintf (fname, sizeof fname, "/proc/%d/status", pid);
4229 gdb_file_up procfile = gdb_fopen_cloexec (fname, "r");
4230 if (procfile == NULL)
4231 error (_("Could not open %s"), fname);
4232
4233 while (fgets (buffer, PATH_MAX, procfile.get ()) != NULL)
4234 {
4235 /* Normal queued signals are on the SigPnd line in the status
4236 file. However, 2.6 kernels also have a "shared" pending
4237 queue for delivering signals to a thread group, so check for
4238 a ShdPnd line also.
4239
4240 Unfortunately some Red Hat kernels include the shared pending
4241 queue but not the ShdPnd status field. */
4242
4243 if (startswith (buffer, "SigPnd:\t"))
4244 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending);
4245 else if (startswith (buffer, "ShdPnd:\t"))
4246 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending);
4247 else if (startswith (buffer, "SigBlk:\t"))
4248 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, blocked);
4249 else if (startswith (buffer, "SigIgn:\t"))
4250 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, ignored);
4251 }
4252 }
4253
4254 static enum target_xfer_status
4255 linux_nat_xfer_osdata (enum target_object object,
4256 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
4257 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
4258 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
4259 {
4260 gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA);
4261
4262 *xfered_len = linux_common_xfer_osdata (annex, readbuf, offset, len);
4263 if (*xfered_len == 0)
4264 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4265 else
4266 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
4267 }
4268
4269 static void
4270 cleanup_target_stop (void *arg)
4271 {
4272 ptid_t *ptid = (ptid_t *) arg;
4273
4274 gdb_assert (arg != NULL);
4275
4276 /* Unpause all */
4277 target_continue_no_signal (*ptid);
4278 }
4279
4280 std::vector<static_tracepoint_marker>
4281 linux_nat_target::static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid (const char *strid)
4282 {
4283 char s[IPA_CMD_BUF_SIZE];
4284 struct cleanup *old_chain;
4285 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
4286 std::vector<static_tracepoint_marker> markers;
4287 const char *p = s;
4288 ptid_t ptid = ptid_build (pid, 0, 0);
4289 static_tracepoint_marker marker;
4290
4291 /* Pause all */
4292 target_stop (ptid);
4293
4294 memcpy (s, "qTfSTM", sizeof ("qTfSTM"));
4295 s[sizeof ("qTfSTM")] = 0;
4296
4297 agent_run_command (pid, s, strlen (s) + 1);
4298
4299 old_chain = make_cleanup (cleanup_target_stop, &ptid);
4300
4301 while (*p++ == 'm')
4302 {
4303 do
4304 {
4305 parse_static_tracepoint_marker_definition (p, &p, &marker);
4306
4307 if (strid == NULL || marker.str_id == strid)
4308 markers.push_back (std::move (marker));
4309 }
4310 while (*p++ == ','); /* comma-separated list */
4311
4312 memcpy (s, "qTsSTM", sizeof ("qTsSTM"));
4313 s[sizeof ("qTsSTM")] = 0;
4314 agent_run_command (pid, s, strlen (s) + 1);
4315 p = s;
4316 }
4317
4318 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4319
4320 return markers;
4321 }
4322
4323 /* target_is_async_p implementation. */
4324
4325 int
4326 linux_nat_target::is_async_p ()
4327 {
4328 return linux_is_async_p ();
4329 }
4330
4331 /* target_can_async_p implementation. */
4332
4333 int
4334 linux_nat_target::can_async_p ()
4335 {
4336 /* We're always async, unless the user explicitly prevented it with the
4337 "maint set target-async" command. */
4338 return target_async_permitted;
4339 }
4340
4341 int
4342 linux_nat_target::supports_non_stop ()
4343 {
4344 return 1;
4345 }
4346
4347 /* to_always_non_stop_p implementation. */
4348
4349 int
4350 linux_nat_target::always_non_stop_p ()
4351 {
4352 return 1;
4353 }
4354
4355 /* True if we want to support multi-process. To be removed when GDB
4356 supports multi-exec. */
4357
4358 int linux_multi_process = 1;
4359
4360 int
4361 linux_nat_target::supports_multi_process ()
4362 {
4363 return linux_multi_process;
4364 }
4365
4366 int
4367 linux_nat_target::supports_disable_randomization ()
4368 {
4369 #ifdef HAVE_PERSONALITY
4370 return 1;
4371 #else
4372 return 0;
4373 #endif
4374 }
4375
4376 /* SIGCHLD handler that serves two purposes: In non-stop/async mode,
4377 so we notice when any child changes state, and notify the
4378 event-loop; it allows us to use sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait_1
4379 above to wait for the arrival of a SIGCHLD. */
4380
4381 static void
4382 sigchld_handler (int signo)
4383 {
4384 int old_errno = errno;
4385
4386 if (debug_linux_nat)
4387 ui_file_write_async_safe (gdb_stdlog,
4388 "sigchld\n", sizeof ("sigchld\n") - 1);
4389
4390 if (signo == SIGCHLD
4391 && linux_nat_event_pipe[0] != -1)
4392 async_file_mark (); /* Let the event loop know that there are
4393 events to handle. */
4394
4395 errno = old_errno;
4396 }
4397
4398 /* Callback registered with the target events file descriptor. */
4399
4400 static void
4401 handle_target_event (int error, gdb_client_data client_data)
4402 {
4403 inferior_event_handler (INF_REG_EVENT, NULL);
4404 }
4405
4406 /* Create/destroy the target events pipe. Returns previous state. */
4407
4408 static int
4409 linux_async_pipe (int enable)
4410 {
4411 int previous = linux_is_async_p ();
4412
4413 if (previous != enable)
4414 {
4415 sigset_t prev_mask;
4416
4417 /* Block child signals while we create/destroy the pipe, as
4418 their handler writes to it. */
4419 block_child_signals (&prev_mask);
4420
4421 if (enable)
4422 {
4423 if (gdb_pipe_cloexec (linux_nat_event_pipe) == -1)
4424 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4425 "creating event pipe failed.");
4426
4427 fcntl (linux_nat_event_pipe[0], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
4428 fcntl (linux_nat_event_pipe[1], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
4429 }
4430 else
4431 {
4432 close (linux_nat_event_pipe[0]);
4433 close (linux_nat_event_pipe[1]);
4434 linux_nat_event_pipe[0] = -1;
4435 linux_nat_event_pipe[1] = -1;
4436 }
4437
4438 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
4439 }
4440
4441 return previous;
4442 }
4443
4444 /* target_async implementation. */
4445
4446 void
4447 linux_nat_target::async (int enable)
4448 {
4449 if (enable)
4450 {
4451 if (!linux_async_pipe (1))
4452 {
4453 add_file_handler (linux_nat_event_pipe[0],
4454 handle_target_event, NULL);
4455 /* There may be pending events to handle. Tell the event loop
4456 to poll them. */
4457 async_file_mark ();
4458 }
4459 }
4460 else
4461 {
4462 delete_file_handler (linux_nat_event_pipe[0]);
4463 linux_async_pipe (0);
4464 }
4465 return;
4466 }
4467
4468 /* Stop an LWP, and push a GDB_SIGNAL_0 stop status if no other
4469 event came out. */
4470
4471 static int
4472 linux_nat_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp, void *data)
4473 {
4474 if (!lwp->stopped)
4475 {
4476 if (debug_linux_nat)
4477 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
4478 "LNSL: running -> suspending %s\n",
4479 target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid));
4480
4481
4482 if (lwp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop)
4483 {
4484 if (debug_linux_nat)
4485 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
4486 "linux-nat: already stopping LWP %ld at "
4487 "GDB's request\n",
4488 ptid_get_lwp (lwp->ptid));
4489 return 0;
4490 }
4491
4492 stop_callback (lwp, NULL);
4493 lwp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
4494 }
4495 else
4496 {
4497 /* Already known to be stopped; do nothing. */
4498
4499 if (debug_linux_nat)
4500 {
4501 if (find_thread_ptid (lwp->ptid)->stop_requested)
4502 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
4503 "LNSL: already stopped/stop_requested %s\n",
4504 target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid));
4505 else
4506 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
4507 "LNSL: already stopped/no "
4508 "stop_requested yet %s\n",
4509 target_pid_to_str (lwp->ptid));
4510 }
4511 }
4512 return 0;
4513 }
4514
4515 void
4516 linux_nat_target::stop (ptid_t ptid)
4517 {
4518 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, linux_nat_stop_lwp, NULL);
4519 }
4520
4521 void
4522 linux_nat_target::close ()
4523 {
4524 /* Unregister from the event loop. */
4525 if (is_async_p ())
4526 async (0);
4527
4528 inf_ptrace_target::close ();
4529 }
4530
4531 /* When requests are passed down from the linux-nat layer to the
4532 single threaded inf-ptrace layer, ptids of (lwpid,0,0) form are
4533 used. The address space pointer is stored in the inferior object,
4534 but the common code that is passed such ptid can't tell whether
4535 lwpid is a "main" process id or not (it assumes so). We reverse
4536 look up the "main" process id from the lwp here. */
4537
4538 struct address_space *
4539 linux_nat_target::thread_address_space (ptid_t ptid)
4540 {
4541 struct lwp_info *lwp;
4542 struct inferior *inf;
4543 int pid;
4544
4545 if (ptid_get_lwp (ptid) == 0)
4546 {
4547 /* An (lwpid,0,0) ptid. Look up the lwp object to get at the
4548 tgid. */
4549 lwp = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
4550 pid = ptid_get_pid (lwp->ptid);
4551 }
4552 else
4553 {
4554 /* A (pid,lwpid,0) ptid. */
4555 pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid);
4556 }
4557
4558 inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
4559 gdb_assert (inf != NULL);
4560 return inf->aspace;
4561 }
4562
4563 /* Return the cached value of the processor core for thread PTID. */
4564
4565 int
4566 linux_nat_target::core_of_thread (ptid_t ptid)
4567 {
4568 struct lwp_info *info = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
4569
4570 if (info)
4571 return info->core;
4572 return -1;
4573 }
4574
4575 /* Implementation of to_filesystem_is_local. */
4576
4577 int
4578 linux_nat_target::filesystem_is_local ()
4579 {
4580 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
4581
4582 if (inf->fake_pid_p || inf->pid == 0)
4583 return 1;
4584
4585 return linux_ns_same (inf->pid, LINUX_NS_MNT);
4586 }
4587
4588 /* Convert the INF argument passed to a to_fileio_* method
4589 to a process ID suitable for passing to its corresponding
4590 linux_mntns_* function. If INF is non-NULL then the
4591 caller is requesting the filesystem seen by INF. If INF
4592 is NULL then the caller is requesting the filesystem seen
4593 by the GDB. We fall back to GDB's filesystem in the case
4594 that INF is non-NULL but its PID is unknown. */
4595
4596 static pid_t
4597 linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (struct inferior *inf)
4598 {
4599 if (inf == NULL || inf->fake_pid_p || inf->pid == 0)
4600 return getpid ();
4601 else
4602 return inf->pid;
4603 }
4604
4605 /* Implementation of to_fileio_open. */
4606
4607 int
4608 linux_nat_target::fileio_open (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4609 int flags, int mode, int warn_if_slow,
4610 int *target_errno)
4611 {
4612 int nat_flags;
4613 mode_t nat_mode;
4614 int fd;
4615
4616 if (fileio_to_host_openflags (flags, &nat_flags) == -1
4617 || fileio_to_host_mode (mode, &nat_mode) == -1)
4618 {
4619 *target_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
4620 return -1;
4621 }
4622
4623 fd = linux_mntns_open_cloexec (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4624 filename, nat_flags, nat_mode);
4625 if (fd == -1)
4626 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4627
4628 return fd;
4629 }
4630
4631 /* Implementation of to_fileio_readlink. */
4632
4633 gdb::optional<std::string>
4634 linux_nat_target::fileio_readlink (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4635 int *target_errno)
4636 {
4637 char buf[PATH_MAX];
4638 int len;
4639
4640 len = linux_mntns_readlink (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4641 filename, buf, sizeof (buf));
4642 if (len < 0)
4643 {
4644 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4645 return {};
4646 }
4647
4648 return std::string (buf, len);
4649 }
4650
4651 /* Implementation of to_fileio_unlink. */
4652
4653 int
4654 linux_nat_target::fileio_unlink (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4655 int *target_errno)
4656 {
4657 int ret;
4658
4659 ret = linux_mntns_unlink (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4660 filename);
4661 if (ret == -1)
4662 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4663
4664 return ret;
4665 }
4666
4667 /* Implementation of the to_thread_events method. */
4668
4669 void
4670 linux_nat_target::thread_events (int enable)
4671 {
4672 report_thread_events = enable;
4673 }
4674
4675 linux_nat_target::linux_nat_target ()
4676 {
4677 /* We don't change the stratum; this target will sit at
4678 process_stratum and thread_db will set at thread_stratum. This
4679 is a little strange, since this is a multi-threaded-capable
4680 target, but we want to be on the stack below thread_db, and we
4681 also want to be used for single-threaded processes. */
4682 }
4683
4684 /* Register a method to call whenever a new thread is attached. */
4685 void
4686 linux_nat_set_new_thread (struct target_ops *t,
4687 void (*new_thread) (struct lwp_info *))
4688 {
4689 /* Save the pointer. We only support a single registered instance
4690 of the GNU/Linux native target, so we do not need to map this to
4691 T. */
4692 linux_nat_new_thread = new_thread;
4693 }
4694
4695 /* Register a method to call whenever a new thread is attached. */
4696 void
4697 linux_nat_set_delete_thread (struct target_ops *t,
4698 void (*delete_thread) (struct arch_lwp_info *))
4699 {
4700 /* Save the pointer. We only support a single registered instance
4701 of the GNU/Linux native target, so we do not need to map this to
4702 T. */
4703 linux_nat_delete_thread = delete_thread;
4704 }
4705
4706 /* See declaration in linux-nat.h. */
4707
4708 void
4709 linux_nat_set_new_fork (struct target_ops *t,
4710 linux_nat_new_fork_ftype *new_fork)
4711 {
4712 /* Save the pointer. */
4713 linux_nat_new_fork = new_fork;
4714 }
4715
4716 /* See declaration in linux-nat.h. */
4717
4718 void
4719 linux_nat_set_forget_process (struct target_ops *t,
4720 linux_nat_forget_process_ftype *fn)
4721 {
4722 /* Save the pointer. */
4723 linux_nat_forget_process_hook = fn;
4724 }
4725
4726 /* See declaration in linux-nat.h. */
4727
4728 void
4729 linux_nat_forget_process (pid_t pid)
4730 {
4731 if (linux_nat_forget_process_hook != NULL)
4732 linux_nat_forget_process_hook (pid);
4733 }
4734
4735 /* Register a method that converts a siginfo object between the layout
4736 that ptrace returns, and the layout in the architecture of the
4737 inferior. */
4738 void
4739 linux_nat_set_siginfo_fixup (struct target_ops *t,
4740 int (*siginfo_fixup) (siginfo_t *,
4741 gdb_byte *,
4742 int))
4743 {
4744 /* Save the pointer. */
4745 linux_nat_siginfo_fixup = siginfo_fixup;
4746 }
4747
4748 /* Register a method to call prior to resuming a thread. */
4749
4750 void
4751 linux_nat_set_prepare_to_resume (struct target_ops *t,
4752 void (*prepare_to_resume) (struct lwp_info *))
4753 {
4754 /* Save the pointer. */
4755 linux_nat_prepare_to_resume = prepare_to_resume;
4756 }
4757
4758 /* See linux-nat.h. */
4759
4760 int
4761 linux_nat_get_siginfo (ptid_t ptid, siginfo_t *siginfo)
4762 {
4763 int pid;
4764
4765 pid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid);
4766 if (pid == 0)
4767 pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid);
4768
4769 errno = 0;
4770 ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, siginfo);
4771 if (errno != 0)
4772 {
4773 memset (siginfo, 0, sizeof (*siginfo));
4774 return 0;
4775 }
4776 return 1;
4777 }
4778
4779 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
4780
4781 ptid_t
4782 current_lwp_ptid (void)
4783 {
4784 gdb_assert (ptid_lwp_p (inferior_ptid));
4785 return inferior_ptid;
4786 }
4787
4788 void
4789 _initialize_linux_nat (void)
4790 {
4791 add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd ("lin-lwp", class_maintenance,
4792 &debug_linux_nat, _("\
4793 Set debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module."), _("\
4794 Show debugging of GNU/Linux lwp module."), _("\
4795 Enables printf debugging output."),
4796 NULL,
4797 show_debug_linux_nat,
4798 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
4799
4800 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("linux-namespaces", class_maintenance,
4801 &debug_linux_namespaces, _("\
4802 Set debugging of GNU/Linux namespaces module."), _("\
4803 Show debugging of GNU/Linux namespaces module."), _("\
4804 Enables printf debugging output."),
4805 NULL,
4806 NULL,
4807 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
4808
4809 /* Save this mask as the default. */
4810 sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &normal_mask);
4811
4812 /* Install a SIGCHLD handler. */
4813 sigchld_action.sa_handler = sigchld_handler;
4814 sigemptyset (&sigchld_action.sa_mask);
4815 sigchld_action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART;
4816
4817 /* Make it the default. */
4818 sigaction (SIGCHLD, &sigchld_action, NULL);
4819
4820 /* Make sure we don't block SIGCHLD during a sigsuspend. */
4821 sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &suspend_mask);
4822 sigdelset (&suspend_mask, SIGCHLD);
4823
4824 sigemptyset (&blocked_mask);
4825
4826 lwp_lwpid_htab_create ();
4827 }
4828 \f
4829
4830 /* FIXME: kettenis/2000-08-26: The stuff on this page is specific to
4831 the GNU/Linux Threads library and therefore doesn't really belong
4832 here. */
4833
4834 /* Return the set of signals used by the threads library in *SET. */
4835
4836 void
4837 lin_thread_get_thread_signals (sigset_t *set)
4838 {
4839 sigemptyset (set);
4840
4841 /* NPTL reserves the first two RT signals, but does not provide any
4842 way for the debugger to query the signal numbers - fortunately
4843 they don't change. */
4844 sigaddset (set, __SIGRTMIN);
4845 sigaddset (set, __SIGRTMIN + 1);
4846 }
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