X-Git-Url: http://git.efficios.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=gdb%2Fhppah-nat.c;h=03157ed2ecab04cb7b479b87a117122c4a3c251f;hb=53a5351d907ef4eacd463a48a86d35b2b70b9f60;hp=138697b1dda49520fe822266ba9d870f9d454217;hpb=ec68a93f893461c86887f8824e783003b490b5db;p=deliverable%2Fbinutils-gdb.git diff --git a/gdb/hppah-nat.c b/gdb/hppah-nat.c index 138697b1dd..03157ed2ec 100644 --- a/gdb/hppah-nat.c +++ b/gdb/hppah-nat.c @@ -1,88 +1,39 @@ -/* Machine-dependent hooks for the unix child process stratum, for HPUX PA-RISC. - - Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 +/* Native support code for HPUX PA-RISC. + Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Contributed by the Center for Software Science at the University of Utah (pa-gdb-bugs@cs.utah.edu). -This file is part of GDB. + This file is part of GDB. -This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify -it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by -the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or -(at your option) any later version. + This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. -This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, -but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of -MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the -GNU General Public License for more details. + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. -You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License -along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software -Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software + Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, + Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #include "defs.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "target.h" #include +#include "gdbcore.h" +#include +#include extern CORE_ADDR text_end; -static void fetch_register (); - -/* This function simply calls ptrace with the given arguments. - It exists so that all calls to ptrace are isolated in this - machine-dependent file. */ -int -call_ptrace (request, pid, addr, data) - int request, pid; - PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE addr; - int data; -{ - return ptrace (request, pid, addr, data, 0); -} - -void -kill_inferior () -{ - if (inferior_pid == 0) - return; - ptrace (PT_EXIT, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 0, 0, 0); - wait ((int *)0); - target_mourn_inferior (); -} - -/* Start debugging the process whose number is PID. */ -int -attach (pid) - int pid; -{ - errno = 0; - ptrace (PT_ATTACH, pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 0, 0, 0); - if (errno) - perror_with_name ("ptrace"); - attach_flag = 1; - return pid; -} - -/* Stop debugging the process whose number is PID - and continue it with signal number SIGNAL. - SIGNAL = 0 means just continue it. */ - -void -detach (signal) - int signal; -{ - errno = 0; - ptrace (PT_DETACH, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 1, signal, 0); - if (errno) - perror_with_name ("ptrace"); - attach_flag = 0; -} - -/* Fetch all registers, or just one, from the child process. */ +static void fetch_register PARAMS ((int)); void fetch_inferior_registers (regno) @@ -95,6 +46,9 @@ fetch_inferior_registers (regno) fetch_register (regno); } +/* Our own version of the offsetof macro, since we can't assume ANSI C. */ +#define HPPAH_OFFSETOF(type, member) ((int) (&((type *) 0)->member)) + /* Store our register values back into the inferior. If REGNO is -1, do this for all registers. Otherwise, REGNO specifies which register (so we can save time). */ @@ -105,139 +59,209 @@ store_inferior_registers (regno) { register unsigned int regaddr; char buf[80]; - extern char registers[]; register int i; unsigned int offset = U_REGS_OFFSET; int scratch; if (regno >= 0) { - regaddr = register_addr (regno, offset); - errno = 0; - if (regno == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regno == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) - { - scratch = *(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)] | 0x3; - ptrace (PT_WUREGS, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, - scratch, 0); - if (errno != 0) - { - sprintf (buf, "writing register number %d(%d)", regno, i); - perror_with_name (buf); - } - } + unsigned int addr, len, offset; + + if (CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (regno)) + return; + + offset = 0; + len = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); + + /* Requests for register zero actually want the save_state's + ss_flags member. As RM says: "Oh, what a hack!" */ + if (regno == 0) + { + save_state_t ss; + addr = HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_flags); + len = sizeof (ss.ss_flags); + + /* Note that ss_flags is always an int, no matter what + REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(0) says. Assuming all HP-UX PA machines + are big-endian, put it at the least significant end of the + value, and zap the rest of the buffer. */ + offset = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (0) - len; + } + + /* Floating-point registers come from the ss_fpblock area. */ + else if (regno >= FP0_REGNUM) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_fpblock) + + (REGISTER_BYTE (regno) - REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM))); + + /* Wide registers come from the ss_wide area. + I think it's more PC to test (ss_flags & SS_WIDEREGS) to select + between ss_wide and ss_narrow than to use the raw register size. + But checking ss_flags would require an extra ptrace call for + every register reference. Bleah. */ + else if (len == 8) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_wide) + + REGISTER_BYTE (regno)); + + /* Narrow registers come from the ss_narrow area. Note that + ss_narrow starts with gr1, not gr0. */ + else if (len == 4) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_narrow) + + (REGISTER_BYTE (regno) - REGISTER_BYTE (1))); else - for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i += sizeof(int)) - { - errno = 0; - ptrace (PT_WUREGS, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, - *(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno) + i], 0); - if (errno != 0) - { - sprintf (buf, "writing register number %d(%d)", regno, i); - perror_with_name (buf); - } - regaddr += sizeof(int); - } - } - else - { - for (regno = 0; regno < NUM_REGS; regno++) + internal_error ("hppah-nat.c (write_register): unexpected register size"); + +#ifdef GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA_20W + /* Unbelieveable. The PC head and tail must be written in 64bit hunks + or we will get an error. Worse yet, the oddball ptrace/ttrace + layering will not allow us to perform a 64bit register store. + + What a crock. */ + if (regno == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regno == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM && len == 8) + { + CORE_ADDR temp; + + temp = *(CORE_ADDR *)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)]; + + /* Set the priv level (stored in the low two bits of the PC. */ + temp |= 0x3; + + ttrace_write_reg_64 (inferior_pid, (CORE_ADDR)addr, (CORE_ADDR)&temp); + + /* If we fail to write the PC, give a true error instead of + just a warning. */ + if (errno != 0) + { + char *err = safe_strerror (errno); + char *msg = alloca (strlen (err) + 128); + sprintf (msg, "writing `%s' register: %s", + REGISTER_NAME (regno), err); + perror_with_name (msg); + } + return; + } + + /* Another crock. HPUX complains if you write a nonzero value to + the high part of IPSW. What will it take for HP to catch a + clue about building sensible interfaces? */ + if (regno == IPSW_REGNUM && len == 8) + *(int *)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)] = 0; +#endif + + for (i = 0; i < len; i += sizeof (int)) { - if (CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (regno)) - continue; - regaddr = register_addr (regno, offset); - errno = 0; - if (regno == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regno == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) - { - scratch = *(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)] | 0x3; - ptrace (PT_WUREGS, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, - scratch, 0); - if (errno != 0) - { - sprintf (buf, "writing register number %d(%d)", regno, i); - perror_with_name (buf); - } - } - else - for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i += sizeof(int)) - { - errno = 0; - ptrace (PT_WUREGS, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, - *(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno) + i], 0); - if (errno != 0) - { - sprintf (buf, "writing register number %d(%d)", regno, i); - perror_with_name (buf); - } - regaddr += sizeof(int); - } + errno = 0; + call_ptrace (PT_WUREGS, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr + i, + *(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno) + i]); + if (errno != 0) + { + /* Warning, not error, in case we are attached; sometimes + the kernel doesn't let us at the registers. */ + char *err = safe_strerror (errno); + char *msg = alloca (strlen (err) + 128); + sprintf (msg, "writing `%s' register: %s", + REGISTER_NAME (regno), err); + /* If we fail to write the PC, give a true error instead of + just a warning. */ + if (regno == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regno == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) + perror_with_name (msg); + else + warning (msg); + return; + } } } - return; + else + for (regno = 0; regno < NUM_REGS; regno++) + store_inferior_registers (regno); } -/* Fetch one register. */ +/* Fetch a register's value from the process's U area. */ static void fetch_register (regno) int regno; { - register unsigned int regaddr; char buf[MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE]; - char mess[128]; /* For messages */ - register int i; + unsigned int addr, len, offset; + int i; - /* Offset of registers within the u area. */ - unsigned int offset; + offset = 0; + len = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); - offset = U_REGS_OFFSET; + /* Requests for register zero actually want the save_state's + ss_flags member. As RM says: "Oh, what a hack!" */ + if (regno == 0) + { + save_state_t ss; + addr = HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_flags); + len = sizeof (ss.ss_flags); - regaddr = register_addr (regno, offset); - for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i += sizeof (int)) + /* Note that ss_flags is always an int, no matter what + REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(0) says. Assuming all HP-UX PA machines + are big-endian, put it at the least significant end of the + value, and zap the rest of the buffer. */ + offset = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (0) - len; + memset (buf, 0, sizeof (buf)); + } + + /* Floating-point registers come from the ss_fpblock area. */ + else if (regno >= FP0_REGNUM) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_fpblock) + + (REGISTER_BYTE (regno) - REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM))); + + /* Wide registers come from the ss_wide area. + I think it's more PC to test (ss_flags & SS_WIDEREGS) to select + between ss_wide and ss_narrow than to use the raw register size. + But checking ss_flags would require an extra ptrace call for + every register reference. Bleah. */ + else if (len == 8) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_wide) + + REGISTER_BYTE (regno)); + + /* Narrow registers come from the ss_narrow area. Note that + ss_narrow starts with gr1, not gr0. */ + else if (len == 4) + addr = (HPPAH_OFFSETOF (save_state_t, ss_narrow) + + (REGISTER_BYTE (regno) - REGISTER_BYTE (1))); + + else + internal_error ("hppa-nat.c (fetch_register): unexpected register size"); + + for (i = 0; i < len; i += sizeof (int)) { errno = 0; - *(int *) &buf[i] = ptrace (PT_RUREGS, inferior_pid, - (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, 0, 0); - regaddr += sizeof (int); + /* Copy an int from the U area to buf. Fill the least + significant end if len != raw_size. */ + * (int *) &buf[offset + i] = + call_ptrace (PT_RUREGS, inferior_pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr + i, 0); if (errno != 0) { - sprintf (mess, "reading register %s (#%d)", reg_names[regno], regno); - perror_with_name (mess); + /* Warning, not error, in case we are attached; sometimes + the kernel doesn't let us at the registers. */ + char *err = safe_strerror (errno); + char *msg = alloca (strlen (err) + 128); + sprintf (msg, "reading `%s' register: %s", + REGISTER_NAME (regno), err); + warning (msg); + return; } } + + /* If we're reading an address from the instruction address queue, + mask out the bottom two bits --- they contain the privilege + level. */ if (regno == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regno == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) - buf[3] &= ~0x3; + buf[len - 1] &= ~0x3; + supply_register (regno, buf); } -/* Resume execution of the inferior process. - If STEP is nonzero, single-step it. - If SIGNAL is nonzero, give it that signal. */ - -void -child_resume (step, signal) - int step; - int signal; -{ - errno = 0; - - /* An address of (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 1 tells ptrace to continue from where - it was. (If GDB wanted it to start some other way, we have already - written a new PC value to the child.) */ - - if (step) - ptrace (PT_SINGLE, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 1, signal, 0); - else - ptrace (PT_CONTIN, inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 1, signal, 0); - - if (errno) - perror_with_name ("ptrace"); -} /* Copy LEN bytes to or from inferior's memory starting at MEMADDR to debugger memory starting at MYADDR. Copy to inferior if WRITE is nonzero. - + Returns the length copied, which is either the LEN argument or zero. This xfer function does not do partial moves, since child_ops doesn't allow memory operations to cross below us in the target stack @@ -249,53 +273,84 @@ child_xfer_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len, write, target) char *myaddr; int len; int write; - struct target_ops *target; /* ignored */ + struct target_ops *target; /* ignored */ { register int i; /* Round starting address down to longword boundary. */ - register CORE_ADDR addr = memaddr & - sizeof (int); + register CORE_ADDR addr = memaddr & - (CORE_ADDR)(sizeof (int)); /* Round ending address up; get number of longwords that makes. */ register int count - = (((memaddr + len) - addr) + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int); - /* Allocate buffer of that many longwords. */ - register int *buffer = (int *) alloca (count * sizeof (int)); + = (((memaddr + len) - addr) + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int); + + /* Allocate buffer of that many longwords. + Note -- do not use alloca to allocate this buffer since there is no + guarantee of when the buffer will actually be deallocated. + + This routine can be called over and over with the same call chain; + this (in effect) would pile up all those alloca requests until a call + to alloca was made from a point higher than this routine in the + call chain. */ + register int *buffer = (int *) xmalloc (count * sizeof (int)); if (write) { /* Fill start and end extra bytes of buffer with existing memory data. */ - - if (addr != memaddr || len < (int)sizeof (int)) { - /* Need part of initial word -- fetch it. */ - buffer[0] = ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, - inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, 0, 0); - } + if (addr != memaddr || len < (int) sizeof (int)) + { + /* Need part of initial word -- fetch it. */ + buffer[0] = call_ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, + inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, 0); + } if (count > 1) /* FIXME, avoid if even boundary */ { buffer[count - 1] - = ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, inferior_pid, - (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) (addr + (count - 1) * sizeof (int)), - 0, 0); + = call_ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, + inferior_pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) (addr + + (count - 1) * sizeof (int)), + 0); } /* Copy data to be written over corresponding part of buffer */ - - bcopy (myaddr, (char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), len); + memcpy ((char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), myaddr, len); /* Write the entire buffer. */ - for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += sizeof (int)) { -/* The HP-UX kernel crashes if you use PT_WDUSER to write into the text - segment. FIXME -- does it work to write into the data segment using - WIUSER, or do these idiots really expect us to figure out which segment - the address is in, so we can use a separate system call for it??! */ + int pt_status; + int pt_request; + /* The HP-UX kernel crashes if you use PT_WDUSER to write into the + text segment. FIXME -- does it work to write into the data + segment using WIUSER, or do these idiots really expect us to + figure out which segment the address is in, so we can use a + separate system call for it??! */ errno = 0; - ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_WIUSER : PT_WDUSER, inferior_pid, - (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, - buffer[i], 0); - if (errno) - return 0; + pt_request = (addr < text_end) ? PT_WIUSER : PT_WDUSER; + pt_status = call_ptrace (pt_request, + inferior_pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, + buffer[i]); + + /* Did we fail? Might we've guessed wrong about which + segment this address resides in? Try the other request, + and see if that works... */ + if ((pt_status == -1) && errno) + { + errno = 0; + pt_request = (pt_request == PT_WIUSER) ? PT_WDUSER : PT_WIUSER; + pt_status = call_ptrace (pt_request, + inferior_pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, + buffer[i]); + + /* No, we still fail. Okay, time to punt. */ + if ((pt_status == -1) && errno) + { + free (buffer); + return 0; + } + } } } else @@ -304,15 +359,803 @@ child_xfer_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len, write, target) for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += sizeof (int)) { errno = 0; - buffer[i] = ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, - inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, 0, 0); + buffer[i] = call_ptrace (addr < text_end ? PT_RIUSER : PT_RDUSER, + inferior_pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) addr, 0); if (errno) - return 0; + { + free (buffer); + return 0; + } QUIT; } /* Copy appropriate bytes out of the buffer. */ - bcopy ((char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), myaddr, len); + memcpy (myaddr, (char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), len); } + free (buffer); return len; } + + +void +child_post_follow_inferior_by_clone () +{ + int status; + + /* This function is used when following both the parent and child + of a fork. In this case, the debugger clones itself. The original + debugger follows the parent, the clone follows the child. The + original detaches from the child, delivering a SIGSTOP to it to + keep it from running away until the clone can attach itself. + + At this point, the clone has attached to the child. Because of + the SIGSTOP, we must now deliver a SIGCONT to the child, or it + won't behave properly. */ + status = kill (inferior_pid, SIGCONT); +} + + +void +child_post_follow_vfork (parent_pid, followed_parent, child_pid, followed_child) + int parent_pid; + int followed_parent; + int child_pid; + int followed_child; +{ + /* Are we a debugger that followed the parent of a vfork? If so, + then recall that the child's vfork event was delivered to us + first. And, that the parent was suspended by the OS until the + child's exec or exit events were received. + + Upon receiving that child vfork, then, we were forced to remove + all breakpoints in the child and continue it so that it could + reach the exec or exit point. + + But also recall that the parent and child of a vfork share the + same address space. Thus, removing bp's in the child also + removed them from the parent. + + Now that the child has safely exec'd or exited, we must restore + the parent's breakpoints before we continue it. Else, we may + cause it run past expected stopping points. */ + if (followed_parent) + { + reattach_breakpoints (parent_pid); + } + + /* Are we a debugger that followed the child of a vfork? If so, + then recall that we don't actually acquire control of the child + until after it has exec'd or exited. */ + if (followed_child) + { + /* If the child has exited, then there's nothing for us to do. + In the case of an exec event, we'll let that be handled by + the normal mechanism that notices and handles exec events, in + resume(). */ + } +} + +/* Format a process id, given PID. Be sure to terminate + this with a null--it's going to be printed via a "%s". */ +char * +hppa_pid_to_str (pid) + pid_t pid; +{ + /* Static because address returned */ + static char buf[30]; + + /* Extra NULLs for paranoia's sake */ + sprintf (buf, "process %d\0\0\0\0", pid); + + return buf; +} + +/* Format a thread id, given TID. Be sure to terminate + this with a null--it's going to be printed via a "%s". + + Note: This is a core-gdb tid, not the actual system tid. + See infttrace.c for details. */ +char * +hppa_tid_to_str (tid) + pid_t tid; +{ + /* Static because address returned */ + static char buf[30]; + + /* Extra NULLs for paranoia's sake */ + sprintf (buf, "system thread %d\0\0\0\0", tid); + + return buf; +} + +#if !defined (GDB_NATIVE_HPUX_11) + +/* The following code is a substitute for the infttrace.c versions used + with ttrace() in HPUX 11. */ + +/* This value is an arbitrary integer. */ +#define PT_VERSION 123456 + +/* This semaphore is used to coordinate the child and parent processes + after a fork(), and before an exec() by the child. See + parent_attach_all for details. */ + +typedef struct +{ + int parent_channel[2]; /* Parent "talks" to [1], child "listens" to [0] */ + int child_channel[2]; /* Child "talks" to [1], parent "listens" to [0] */ +} +startup_semaphore_t; + +#define SEM_TALK (1) +#define SEM_LISTEN (0) + +static startup_semaphore_t startup_semaphore; + +extern int parent_attach_all PARAMS ((int, PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE, int)); + +#ifdef PT_SETTRC +/* This function causes the caller's process to be traced by its + parent. This is intended to be called after GDB forks itself, + and before the child execs the target. + + Note that HP-UX ptrace is rather funky in how this is done. + If the parent wants to get the initial exec event of a child, + it must set the ptrace event mask of the child to include execs. + (The child cannot do this itself.) This must be done after the + child is forked, but before it execs. + + To coordinate the parent and child, we implement a semaphore using + pipes. After SETTRC'ing itself, the child tells the parent that + it is now traceable by the parent, and waits for the parent's + acknowledgement. The parent can then set the child's event mask, + and notify the child that it can now exec. + + (The acknowledgement by parent happens as a result of a call to + child_acknowledge_created_inferior.) */ + +int +parent_attach_all (pid, addr, data) + int pid; + PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE addr; + int data; +{ + int pt_status = 0; + + /* We need a memory home for a constant. */ + int tc_magic_child = PT_VERSION; + int tc_magic_parent = 0; + + /* The remainder of this function is only useful for HPUX 10.0 and + later, as it depends upon the ability to request notification + of specific kinds of events by the kernel. */ +#if defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + + /* Notify the parent that we're potentially ready to exec(). */ + write (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_TALK], + &tc_magic_child, + sizeof (tc_magic_child)); + + /* Wait for acknowledgement from the parent. */ + read (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_LISTEN], + &tc_magic_parent, + sizeof (tc_magic_parent)); + if (tc_magic_child != tc_magic_parent) + warning ("mismatched semaphore magic"); + + /* Discard our copy of the semaphore. */ + (void) close (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_LISTEN]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_TALK]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_LISTEN]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_TALK]); +#endif + + return 0; +} +#endif + +int +hppa_require_attach (pid) + int pid; +{ + int pt_status; + CORE_ADDR pc; + CORE_ADDR pc_addr; + unsigned int regs_offset; + + /* Are we already attached? There appears to be no explicit way to + answer this via ptrace, so we try something which should be + innocuous if we are attached. If that fails, then we assume + we're not attached, and so attempt to make it so. */ + + errno = 0; + regs_offset = U_REGS_OFFSET; + pc_addr = register_addr (PC_REGNUM, regs_offset); + pc = call_ptrace (PT_READ_U, pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) pc_addr, 0); + + if (errno) + { + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_ATTACH, pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 0, 0); + + if (errno) + return -1; + + /* Now we really are attached. */ + errno = 0; + } + attach_flag = 1; + return pid; +} + +int +hppa_require_detach (pid, signal) + int pid; + int signal; +{ + errno = 0; + call_ptrace (PT_DETACH, pid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) 1, signal); + errno = 0; /* Ignore any errors. */ + return pid; +} + +/* Since ptrace doesn't support memory page-protection events, which + are used to implement "hardware" watchpoints on HP-UX, these are + dummy versions, which perform no useful work. */ + +void +hppa_enable_page_protection_events (pid) + int pid; +{ +} + +void +hppa_disable_page_protection_events (pid) + int pid; +{ +} + +int +hppa_insert_hw_watchpoint (pid, start, len, type) + int pid; + CORE_ADDR start; + LONGEST len; + int type; +{ + error ("Hardware watchpoints not implemented on this platform."); +} + +int +hppa_remove_hw_watchpoint (pid, start, len, type) + int pid; + CORE_ADDR start; + LONGEST len; + enum bptype type; +{ + error ("Hardware watchpoints not implemented on this platform."); +} + +int +hppa_can_use_hw_watchpoint (type, cnt, ot) + enum bptype type; + int cnt; + enum bptype ot; +{ + return 0; +} + +int +hppa_range_profitable_for_hw_watchpoint (pid, start, len) + int pid; + CORE_ADDR start; + LONGEST len; +{ + error ("Hardware watchpoints not implemented on this platform."); +} + +char * +hppa_pid_or_tid_to_str (id) + pid_t id; +{ + /* In the ptrace world, there are only processes. */ + return hppa_pid_to_str (id); +} + +/* This function has no meaning in a non-threaded world. Thus, we + return 0 (FALSE). See the use of "hppa_prepare_to_proceed" in + hppa-tdep.c. */ + +pid_t +hppa_switched_threads (pid) + pid_t pid; +{ + return (pid_t) 0; +} + +void +hppa_ensure_vforking_parent_remains_stopped (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This assumes that the vforked parent is presently stopped, and + that the vforked child has just delivered its first exec event. + Calling kill() this way will cause the SIGTRAP to be delivered as + soon as the parent is resumed, which happens as soon as the + vforked child is resumed. See wait_for_inferior for the use of + this function. */ + kill (pid, SIGTRAP); +} + +int +hppa_resume_execd_vforking_child_to_get_parent_vfork () +{ + return 1; /* Yes, the child must be resumed. */ +} + +void +require_notification_of_events (pid) + int pid; +{ +#if defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + int pt_status; + ptrace_event_t ptrace_events; + + /* Instruct the kernel as to the set of events we wish to be + informed of. (This support does not exist before HPUX 10.0. + We'll assume if PT_SET_EVENT_MASK has not been defined by + , then we're being built on pre-10.0.) */ + memset (&ptrace_events, 0, sizeof (ptrace_events)); + + /* Note: By default, all signals are visible to us. If we wish + the kernel to keep certain signals hidden from us, we do it + by calling sigdelset (ptrace_events.pe_signals, signal) for + each such signal here, before doing PT_SET_EVENT_MASK. */ + sigemptyset (&ptrace_events.pe_signals); + + ptrace_events.pe_set_event = 0; + + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_SIGNAL; + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_EXEC; + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_FORK; + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_VFORK; + /* ??rehrauer: Add this one when we're prepared to catch it... + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_EXIT; + */ + + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_SET_EVENT_MASK, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & ptrace_events, + sizeof (ptrace_events)); + if (errno) + perror_with_name ("ptrace"); + if (pt_status < 0) + return; +#endif +} + +void +require_notification_of_exec_events (pid) + int pid; +{ +#if defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + int pt_status; + ptrace_event_t ptrace_events; + + /* Instruct the kernel as to the set of events we wish to be + informed of. (This support does not exist before HPUX 10.0. + We'll assume if PT_SET_EVENT_MASK has not been defined by + , then we're being built on pre-10.0.) */ + memset (&ptrace_events, 0, sizeof (ptrace_events)); + + /* Note: By default, all signals are visible to us. If we wish + the kernel to keep certain signals hidden from us, we do it + by calling sigdelset (ptrace_events.pe_signals, signal) for + each such signal here, before doing PT_SET_EVENT_MASK. */ + sigemptyset (&ptrace_events.pe_signals); + + ptrace_events.pe_set_event = 0; + + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_EXEC; + /* ??rehrauer: Add this one when we're prepared to catch it... + ptrace_events.pe_set_event |= PTRACE_EXIT; + */ + + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_SET_EVENT_MASK, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & ptrace_events, + sizeof (ptrace_events)); + if (errno) + perror_with_name ("ptrace"); + if (pt_status < 0) + return; +#endif +} + +/* This function is called by the parent process, with pid being the + ID of the child process, after the debugger has forked. */ + +void +child_acknowledge_created_inferior (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* We need a memory home for a constant. */ + int tc_magic_parent = PT_VERSION; + int tc_magic_child = 0; + + /* The remainder of this function is only useful for HPUX 10.0 and + later, as it depends upon the ability to request notification + of specific kinds of events by the kernel. */ +#if defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + /* Wait for the child to tell us that it has forked. */ + read (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_LISTEN], + &tc_magic_child, + sizeof (tc_magic_child)); + + /* Notify the child that it can exec. + + In the infttrace.c variant of this function, we set the child's + event mask after the fork but before the exec. In the ptrace + world, it seems we can't set the event mask until after the exec. */ + write (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_TALK], + &tc_magic_parent, + sizeof (tc_magic_parent)); + + /* We'd better pause a bit before trying to set the event mask, + though, to ensure that the exec has happened. We don't want to + wait() on the child, because that'll screw up the upper layers + of gdb's execution control that expect to see the exec event. + + After an exec, the child is no longer executing gdb code. Hence, + we can't have yet another synchronization via the pipes. We'll + just sleep for a second, and hope that's enough delay... */ + sleep (1); + + /* Instruct the kernel as to the set of events we wish to be + informed of. */ + require_notification_of_exec_events (pid); + + /* Discard our copy of the semaphore. */ + (void) close (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_LISTEN]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.parent_channel[SEM_TALK]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_LISTEN]); + (void) close (startup_semaphore.child_channel[SEM_TALK]); +#endif +} + +void +child_post_startup_inferior (pid) + int pid; +{ + require_notification_of_events (pid); +} + +void +child_post_attach (pid) + int pid; +{ + require_notification_of_events (pid); +} + +int +child_insert_fork_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch forks prior to HPUX 10.0"); +#else + /* Enable reporting of fork events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_remove_fork_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch forks prior to HPUX 10.0"); +#else + /* Disable reporting of fork events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_insert_vfork_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch vforks prior to HPUX 10.0"); +#else + /* Enable reporting of vfork events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_remove_vfork_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch vforks prior to HPUX 10.0"); +#else + /* Disable reporting of vfork events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_has_forked (pid, childpid) + int pid; + int *childpid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE) + *childpid = 0; + return 0; +#else + int pt_status; + ptrace_state_t ptrace_state; + + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & ptrace_state, + sizeof (ptrace_state)); + if (errno) + perror_with_name ("ptrace"); + if (pt_status < 0) + return 0; + + if (ptrace_state.pe_report_event & PTRACE_FORK) + { + *childpid = ptrace_state.pe_other_pid; + return 1; + } + + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_has_vforked (pid, childpid) + int pid; + int *childpid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE) + *childpid = 0; + return 0; + +#else + int pt_status; + ptrace_state_t ptrace_state; + + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & ptrace_state, + sizeof (ptrace_state)); + if (errno) + perror_with_name ("ptrace"); + if (pt_status < 0) + return 0; + + if (ptrace_state.pe_report_event & PTRACE_VFORK) + { + *childpid = ptrace_state.pe_other_pid; + return 1; + } + + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_can_follow_vfork_prior_to_exec () +{ + /* ptrace doesn't allow this. */ + return 0; +} + +int +child_insert_exec_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch execs prior to HPUX 10.0"); + +#else + /* Enable reporting of exec events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_remove_exec_catchpoint (pid) + int pid; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_SET_EVENT_MASK) + error ("Unable to catch execs prior to HPUX 10.0"); + +#else + /* Disable reporting of exec events from the kernel. */ + /* ??rehrauer: For the moment, we're always enabling these events, + and just ignoring them if there's no catchpoint to catch them. */ + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_has_execd (pid, execd_pathname) + int pid; + char **execd_pathname; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.0 and later. */ +#if !defined(PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE) + *execd_pathname = NULL; + return 0; + +#else + int pt_status; + ptrace_state_t ptrace_state; + + errno = 0; + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_GET_PROCESS_STATE, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & ptrace_state, + sizeof (ptrace_state)); + if (errno) + perror_with_name ("ptrace"); + if (pt_status < 0) + return 0; + + if (ptrace_state.pe_report_event & PTRACE_EXEC) + { + char *exec_file = target_pid_to_exec_file (pid); + *execd_pathname = savestring (exec_file, strlen (exec_file)); + return 1; + } + + return 0; +#endif +} + +int +child_reported_exec_events_per_exec_call () +{ + return 2; /* ptrace reports the event twice per call. */ +} + +int +child_has_syscall_event (pid, kind, syscall_id) + int pid; + enum target_waitkind *kind; + int *syscall_id; +{ + /* This request is only available on HPUX 10.30 and later, via + the ttrace interface. */ + + *kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; + *syscall_id = -1; + return 0; +} + +char * +child_pid_to_exec_file (pid) + int pid; +{ + static char exec_file_buffer[1024]; + int pt_status; + CORE_ADDR top_of_stack; + char four_chars[4]; + int name_index; + int i; + int saved_inferior_pid; + boolean done; + +#ifdef PT_GET_PROCESS_PATHNAME + /* As of 10.x HP-UX, there's an explicit request to get the pathname. */ + pt_status = call_ptrace (PT_GET_PROCESS_PATHNAME, + pid, + (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) exec_file_buffer, + sizeof (exec_file_buffer) - 1); + if (pt_status == 0) + return exec_file_buffer; +#endif + + /* It appears that this request is broken prior to 10.30. + If it fails, try a really, truly amazingly gross hack + that DDE uses, of pawing through the process' data + segment to find the pathname. */ + + top_of_stack = 0x7b03a000; + name_index = 0; + done = 0; + + /* On the chance that pid != inferior_pid, set inferior_pid + to pid, so that (grrrr!) implicit uses of inferior_pid get + the right id. */ + + saved_inferior_pid = inferior_pid; + inferior_pid = pid; + + /* Try to grab a null-terminated string. */ + while (!done) + { + if (target_read_memory (top_of_stack, four_chars, 4) != 0) + { + inferior_pid = saved_inferior_pid; + return NULL; + } + for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) + { + exec_file_buffer[name_index++] = four_chars[i]; + done = (four_chars[i] == '\0'); + if (done) + break; + } + top_of_stack += 4; + } + + if (exec_file_buffer[0] == '\0') + { + inferior_pid = saved_inferior_pid; + return NULL; + } + + inferior_pid = saved_inferior_pid; + return exec_file_buffer; +} + +void +pre_fork_inferior () +{ + int status; + + status = pipe (startup_semaphore.parent_channel); + if (status < 0) + { + warning ("error getting parent pipe for startup semaphore"); + return; + } + + status = pipe (startup_semaphore.child_channel); + if (status < 0) + { + warning ("error getting child pipe for startup semaphore"); + return; + } +} + + +/* Check to see if the given thread is alive. + + This is a no-op, as ptrace doesn't support threads, so we just + return "TRUE". */ + +int +child_thread_alive (pid) + int pid; +{ + return 1; +} + +#endif /* ! GDB_NATIVE_HPUX_11 */