gdbsupport: convert FILEIO_* macros to an enum
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / linux-nat.c
1 /* GNU/Linux native-dependent code common to multiple platforms.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2001-2022 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 "gdbsupport/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 "gdbsupport/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 "gdbsupport/agent.h"
62 #include "tracepoint.h"
63 #include "gdbsupport/buffer.h"
64 #include "target-descriptions.h"
65 #include "gdbsupport/filestuff.h"
66 #include "objfiles.h"
67 #include "nat/linux-namespaces.h"
68 #include "gdbsupport/block-signals.h"
69 #include "gdbsupport/fileio.h"
70 #include "gdbsupport/scope-exit.h"
71 #include "gdbsupport/gdb-sigmask.h"
72 #include "gdbsupport/common-debug.h"
73 #include <unordered_map>
74
75 /* This comment documents high-level logic of this file.
76
77 Waiting for events in sync mode
78 ===============================
79
80 When waiting for an event in a specific thread, we just use waitpid,
81 passing the specific pid, and not passing WNOHANG.
82
83 When waiting for an event in all threads, waitpid is not quite good:
84
85 - If the thread group leader exits while other threads in the thread
86 group still exist, waitpid(TGID, ...) hangs. That waitpid won't
87 return an exit status until the other threads in the group are
88 reaped.
89
90 - When a non-leader thread execs, that thread just vanishes without
91 reporting an exit (so we'd hang if we waited for it explicitly in
92 that case). The exec event is instead reported to the TGID pid.
93
94 The solution is to always use -1 and WNOHANG, together with
95 sigsuspend.
96
97 First, we use non-blocking waitpid to check for events. If nothing is
98 found, we use sigsuspend to wait for SIGCHLD. When SIGCHLD arrives,
99 it means something happened to a child process. As soon as we know
100 there's an event, we get back to calling nonblocking waitpid.
101
102 Note that SIGCHLD should be blocked between waitpid and sigsuspend
103 calls, so that we don't miss a signal. If SIGCHLD arrives in between,
104 when it's blocked, the signal becomes pending and sigsuspend
105 immediately notices it and returns.
106
107 Waiting for events in async mode (TARGET_WNOHANG)
108 =================================================
109
110 In async mode, GDB should always be ready to handle both user input
111 and target events, so neither blocking waitpid nor sigsuspend are
112 viable options. Instead, we should asynchronously notify the GDB main
113 event loop whenever there's an unprocessed event from the target. We
114 detect asynchronous target events by handling SIGCHLD signals. To
115 notify the event loop about target events, an event pipe is used
116 --- the pipe is registered as waitable event source in the event loop,
117 the event loop select/poll's on the read end of this pipe (as well on
118 other event sources, e.g., stdin), and the SIGCHLD handler marks the
119 event pipe to raise an event. This is more portable than relying on
120 pselect/ppoll, since on kernels that lack those syscalls, libc
121 emulates them with select/poll+sigprocmask, and that is racy
122 (a.k.a. plain broken).
123
124 Obviously, if we fail to notify the event loop if there's a target
125 event, it's bad. OTOH, if we notify the event loop when there's no
126 event from the target, linux_nat_wait will detect that there's no real
127 event to report, and return event of type TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE.
128 This is mostly harmless, but it will waste time and is better avoided.
129
130 The main design point is that every time GDB is outside linux-nat.c,
131 we have a SIGCHLD handler installed that is called when something
132 happens to the target and notifies the GDB event loop. Whenever GDB
133 core decides to handle the event, and calls into linux-nat.c, we
134 process things as in sync mode, except that the we never block in
135 sigsuspend.
136
137 While processing an event, we may end up momentarily blocked in
138 waitpid calls. Those waitpid calls, while blocking, are guarantied to
139 return quickly. E.g., in all-stop mode, before reporting to the core
140 that an LWP hit a breakpoint, all LWPs are stopped by sending them
141 SIGSTOP, and synchronously waiting for the SIGSTOP to be reported.
142 Note that this is different from blocking indefinitely waiting for the
143 next event --- here, we're already handling an event.
144
145 Use of signals
146 ==============
147
148 We stop threads by sending a SIGSTOP. The use of SIGSTOP instead of another
149 signal is not entirely significant; we just need for a signal to be delivered,
150 so that we can intercept it. SIGSTOP's advantage is that it can not be
151 blocked. A disadvantage is that it is not a real-time signal, so it can only
152 be queued once; we do not keep track of other sources of SIGSTOP.
153
154 Two other signals that can't be blocked are SIGCONT and SIGKILL. But we can't
155 use them, because they have special behavior when the signal is generated -
156 not when it is delivered. SIGCONT resumes the entire thread group and SIGKILL
157 kills the entire thread group.
158
159 A delivered SIGSTOP would stop the entire thread group, not just the thread we
160 tkill'd. But we never let the SIGSTOP be delivered; we always intercept and
161 cancel it (by PTRACE_CONT without passing SIGSTOP).
162
163 We could use a real-time signal instead. This would solve those problems; we
164 could use PTRACE_GETSIGINFO to locate the specific stop signals sent by GDB.
165 But we would still have to have some support for SIGSTOP, since PTRACE_ATTACH
166 generates it, and there are races with trying to find a signal that is not
167 blocked.
168
169 Exec events
170 ===========
171
172 The case of a thread group (process) with 3 or more threads, and a
173 thread other than the leader execs is worth detailing:
174
175 On an exec, the Linux kernel destroys all threads except the execing
176 one in the thread group, and resets the execing thread's tid to the
177 tgid. No exit notification is sent for the execing thread -- from the
178 ptracer's perspective, it appears as though the execing thread just
179 vanishes. Until we reap all other threads except the leader and the
180 execing thread, the leader will be zombie, and the execing thread will
181 be in `D (disc sleep)' state. As soon as all other threads are
182 reaped, the execing thread changes its tid to the tgid, and the
183 previous (zombie) leader vanishes, giving place to the "new"
184 leader. */
185
186 #ifndef O_LARGEFILE
187 #define O_LARGEFILE 0
188 #endif
189
190 struct linux_nat_target *linux_target;
191
192 /* Does the current host support PTRACE_GETREGSET? */
193 enum tribool have_ptrace_getregset = TRIBOOL_UNKNOWN;
194
195 /* When true, print debug messages relating to the linux native target. */
196
197 static bool debug_linux_nat;
198
199 /* Implement 'show debug linux-nat'. */
200
201 static void
202 show_debug_linux_nat (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
203 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
204 {
205 gdb_printf (file, _("Debugging of GNU/Linux native targets is %s.\n"),
206 value);
207 }
208
209 /* Print a linux-nat debug statement. */
210
211 #define linux_nat_debug_printf(fmt, ...) \
212 debug_prefixed_printf_cond (debug_linux_nat, "linux-nat", fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__)
213
214 /* Print "linux-nat" enter/exit debug statements. */
215
216 #define LINUX_NAT_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT \
217 scoped_debug_enter_exit (debug_linux_nat, "linux-nat")
218
219 struct simple_pid_list
220 {
221 int pid;
222 int status;
223 struct simple_pid_list *next;
224 };
225 static struct simple_pid_list *stopped_pids;
226
227 /* Whether target_thread_events is in effect. */
228 static int report_thread_events;
229
230 static int kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo);
231
232 static int stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp);
233
234 static void block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask);
235 static void restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask);
236
237 struct lwp_info;
238 static struct lwp_info *add_lwp (ptid_t ptid);
239 static void purge_lwp_list (int pid);
240 static void delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid);
241 static struct lwp_info *find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid);
242
243 static int lwp_status_pending_p (struct lwp_info *lp);
244
245 static void save_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lp);
246
247 static bool proc_mem_file_is_writable ();
248 static void close_proc_mem_file (pid_t pid);
249 static void open_proc_mem_file (ptid_t ptid);
250
251 /* Return TRUE if LWP is the leader thread of the process. */
252
253 static bool
254 is_leader (lwp_info *lp)
255 {
256 return lp->ptid.pid () == lp->ptid.lwp ();
257 }
258
259 \f
260 /* LWP accessors. */
261
262 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
263
264 ptid_t
265 ptid_of_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp)
266 {
267 return lwp->ptid;
268 }
269
270 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
271
272 void
273 lwp_set_arch_private_info (struct lwp_info *lwp,
274 struct arch_lwp_info *info)
275 {
276 lwp->arch_private = info;
277 }
278
279 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
280
281 struct arch_lwp_info *
282 lwp_arch_private_info (struct lwp_info *lwp)
283 {
284 return lwp->arch_private;
285 }
286
287 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
288
289 int
290 lwp_is_stopped (struct lwp_info *lwp)
291 {
292 return lwp->stopped;
293 }
294
295 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
296
297 enum target_stop_reason
298 lwp_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lwp)
299 {
300 return lwp->stop_reason;
301 }
302
303 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
304
305 int
306 lwp_is_stepping (struct lwp_info *lwp)
307 {
308 return lwp->step;
309 }
310
311 \f
312 /* Trivial list manipulation functions to keep track of a list of
313 new stopped processes. */
314 static void
315 add_to_pid_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int status)
316 {
317 struct simple_pid_list *new_pid = XNEW (struct simple_pid_list);
318
319 new_pid->pid = pid;
320 new_pid->status = status;
321 new_pid->next = *listp;
322 *listp = new_pid;
323 }
324
325 static int
326 pull_pid_from_list (struct simple_pid_list **listp, int pid, int *statusp)
327 {
328 struct simple_pid_list **p;
329
330 for (p = listp; *p != NULL; p = &(*p)->next)
331 if ((*p)->pid == pid)
332 {
333 struct simple_pid_list *next = (*p)->next;
334
335 *statusp = (*p)->status;
336 xfree (*p);
337 *p = next;
338 return 1;
339 }
340 return 0;
341 }
342
343 /* Return the ptrace options that we want to try to enable. */
344
345 static int
346 linux_nat_ptrace_options (int attached)
347 {
348 int options = 0;
349
350 if (!attached)
351 options |= PTRACE_O_EXITKILL;
352
353 options |= (PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD
354 | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE
355 | PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORK
356 | PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK
357 | PTRACE_O_TRACEEXEC);
358
359 return options;
360 }
361
362 /* Initialize ptrace and procfs warnings and check for supported
363 ptrace features given PID.
364
365 ATTACHED should be nonzero iff we attached to the inferior. */
366
367 static void
368 linux_init_ptrace_procfs (pid_t pid, int attached)
369 {
370 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (attached);
371
372 linux_enable_event_reporting (pid, options);
373 linux_ptrace_init_warnings ();
374 linux_proc_init_warnings ();
375 }
376
377 linux_nat_target::~linux_nat_target ()
378 {}
379
380 void
381 linux_nat_target::post_attach (int pid)
382 {
383 linux_init_ptrace_procfs (pid, 1);
384 }
385
386 /* Implement the virtual inf_ptrace_target::post_startup_inferior method. */
387
388 void
389 linux_nat_target::post_startup_inferior (ptid_t ptid)
390 {
391 linux_init_ptrace_procfs (ptid.pid (), 0);
392 }
393
394 /* Return the number of known LWPs in the tgid given by PID. */
395
396 static int
397 num_lwps (int pid)
398 {
399 int count = 0;
400
401 for (const lwp_info *lp ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED : all_lwps ())
402 if (lp->ptid.pid () == pid)
403 count++;
404
405 return count;
406 }
407
408 /* Deleter for lwp_info unique_ptr specialisation. */
409
410 struct lwp_deleter
411 {
412 void operator() (struct lwp_info *lwp) const
413 {
414 delete_lwp (lwp->ptid);
415 }
416 };
417
418 /* A unique_ptr specialisation for lwp_info. */
419
420 typedef std::unique_ptr<struct lwp_info, lwp_deleter> lwp_info_up;
421
422 /* Target hook for follow_fork. */
423
424 void
425 linux_nat_target::follow_fork (inferior *child_inf, ptid_t child_ptid,
426 target_waitkind fork_kind, bool follow_child,
427 bool detach_fork)
428 {
429 inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork (child_inf, child_ptid, fork_kind,
430 follow_child, detach_fork);
431
432 if (!follow_child)
433 {
434 bool has_vforked = fork_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED;
435 ptid_t parent_ptid = inferior_ptid;
436 int parent_pid = parent_ptid.lwp ();
437 int child_pid = child_ptid.lwp ();
438
439 /* We're already attached to the parent, by default. */
440 lwp_info *child_lp = add_lwp (child_ptid);
441 child_lp->stopped = 1;
442 child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
443
444 /* Detach new forked process? */
445 if (detach_fork)
446 {
447 int child_stop_signal = 0;
448 bool detach_child = true;
449
450 /* Move CHILD_LP into a unique_ptr and clear the source pointer
451 to prevent us doing anything stupid with it. */
452 lwp_info_up child_lp_ptr (child_lp);
453 child_lp = nullptr;
454
455 linux_target->low_prepare_to_resume (child_lp_ptr.get ());
456
457 /* When debugging an inferior in an architecture that supports
458 hardware single stepping on a kernel without commit
459 6580807da14c423f0d0a708108e6df6ebc8bc83d, the vfork child
460 process starts with the TIF_SINGLESTEP/X86_EFLAGS_TF bits
461 set if the parent process had them set.
462 To work around this, single step the child process
463 once before detaching to clear the flags. */
464
465 /* Note that we consult the parent's architecture instead of
466 the child's because there's no inferior for the child at
467 this point. */
468 if (!gdbarch_software_single_step_p (target_thread_architecture
469 (parent_ptid)))
470 {
471 int status;
472
473 linux_disable_event_reporting (child_pid);
474 if (ptrace (PTRACE_SINGLESTEP, child_pid, 0, 0) < 0)
475 perror_with_name (_("Couldn't do single step"));
476 if (my_waitpid (child_pid, &status, 0) < 0)
477 perror_with_name (_("Couldn't wait vfork process"));
478 else
479 {
480 detach_child = WIFSTOPPED (status);
481 child_stop_signal = WSTOPSIG (status);
482 }
483 }
484
485 if (detach_child)
486 {
487 int signo = child_stop_signal;
488
489 if (signo != 0
490 && !signal_pass_state (gdb_signal_from_host (signo)))
491 signo = 0;
492 ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, child_pid, 0, signo);
493
494 close_proc_mem_file (child_pid);
495 }
496 }
497
498 if (has_vforked)
499 {
500 lwp_info *parent_lp = find_lwp_pid (parent_ptid);
501 linux_nat_debug_printf ("waiting for VFORK_DONE on %d", parent_pid);
502 parent_lp->stopped = 1;
503
504 /* We'll handle the VFORK_DONE event like any other
505 event, in target_wait. */
506 }
507 }
508 else
509 {
510 struct lwp_info *child_lp;
511
512 child_lp = add_lwp (child_ptid);
513 child_lp->stopped = 1;
514 child_lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
515 }
516 }
517
518 \f
519 int
520 linux_nat_target::insert_fork_catchpoint (int pid)
521 {
522 return 0;
523 }
524
525 int
526 linux_nat_target::remove_fork_catchpoint (int pid)
527 {
528 return 0;
529 }
530
531 int
532 linux_nat_target::insert_vfork_catchpoint (int pid)
533 {
534 return 0;
535 }
536
537 int
538 linux_nat_target::remove_vfork_catchpoint (int pid)
539 {
540 return 0;
541 }
542
543 int
544 linux_nat_target::insert_exec_catchpoint (int pid)
545 {
546 return 0;
547 }
548
549 int
550 linux_nat_target::remove_exec_catchpoint (int pid)
551 {
552 return 0;
553 }
554
555 int
556 linux_nat_target::set_syscall_catchpoint (int pid, bool needed, int any_count,
557 gdb::array_view<const int> syscall_counts)
558 {
559 /* On GNU/Linux, we ignore the arguments. It means that we only
560 enable the syscall catchpoints, but do not disable them.
561
562 Also, we do not use the `syscall_counts' information because we do not
563 filter system calls here. We let GDB do the logic for us. */
564 return 0;
565 }
566
567 /* List of known LWPs, keyed by LWP PID. This speeds up the common
568 case of mapping a PID returned from the kernel to our corresponding
569 lwp_info data structure. */
570 static htab_t lwp_lwpid_htab;
571
572 /* Calculate a hash from a lwp_info's LWP PID. */
573
574 static hashval_t
575 lwp_info_hash (const void *ap)
576 {
577 const struct lwp_info *lp = (struct lwp_info *) ap;
578 pid_t pid = lp->ptid.lwp ();
579
580 return iterative_hash_object (pid, 0);
581 }
582
583 /* Equality function for the lwp_info hash table. Compares the LWP's
584 PID. */
585
586 static int
587 lwp_lwpid_htab_eq (const void *a, const void *b)
588 {
589 const struct lwp_info *entry = (const struct lwp_info *) a;
590 const struct lwp_info *element = (const struct lwp_info *) b;
591
592 return entry->ptid.lwp () == element->ptid.lwp ();
593 }
594
595 /* Create the lwp_lwpid_htab hash table. */
596
597 static void
598 lwp_lwpid_htab_create (void)
599 {
600 lwp_lwpid_htab = htab_create (100, lwp_info_hash, lwp_lwpid_htab_eq, NULL);
601 }
602
603 /* Add LP to the hash table. */
604
605 static void
606 lwp_lwpid_htab_add_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
607 {
608 void **slot;
609
610 slot = htab_find_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, lp, INSERT);
611 gdb_assert (slot != NULL && *slot == NULL);
612 *slot = lp;
613 }
614
615 /* Head of doubly-linked list of known LWPs. Sorted by reverse
616 creation order. This order is assumed in some cases. E.g.,
617 reaping status after killing alls lwps of a process: the leader LWP
618 must be reaped last. */
619
620 static intrusive_list<lwp_info> lwp_list;
621
622 /* See linux-nat.h. */
623
624 lwp_info_range
625 all_lwps ()
626 {
627 return lwp_info_range (lwp_list.begin ());
628 }
629
630 /* See linux-nat.h. */
631
632 lwp_info_safe_range
633 all_lwps_safe ()
634 {
635 return lwp_info_safe_range (lwp_list.begin ());
636 }
637
638 /* Add LP to sorted-by-reverse-creation-order doubly-linked list. */
639
640 static void
641 lwp_list_add (struct lwp_info *lp)
642 {
643 lwp_list.push_front (*lp);
644 }
645
646 /* Remove LP from sorted-by-reverse-creation-order doubly-linked
647 list. */
648
649 static void
650 lwp_list_remove (struct lwp_info *lp)
651 {
652 /* Remove from sorted-by-creation-order list. */
653 lwp_list.erase (lwp_list.iterator_to (*lp));
654 }
655
656 \f
657
658 /* Signal mask for use with sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait, initialized in
659 _initialize_linux_nat. */
660 static sigset_t suspend_mask;
661
662 /* Signals to block to make that sigsuspend work. */
663 static sigset_t blocked_mask;
664
665 /* SIGCHLD action. */
666 static struct sigaction sigchld_action;
667
668 /* Block child signals (SIGCHLD and linux threads signals), and store
669 the previous mask in PREV_MASK. */
670
671 static void
672 block_child_signals (sigset_t *prev_mask)
673 {
674 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked. */
675 if (!sigismember (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD))
676 sigaddset (&blocked_mask, SIGCHLD);
677
678 gdb_sigmask (SIG_BLOCK, &blocked_mask, prev_mask);
679 }
680
681 /* Restore child signals mask, previously returned by
682 block_child_signals. */
683
684 static void
685 restore_child_signals_mask (sigset_t *prev_mask)
686 {
687 gdb_sigmask (SIG_SETMASK, prev_mask, NULL);
688 }
689
690 /* Mask of signals to pass directly to the inferior. */
691 static sigset_t pass_mask;
692
693 /* Update signals to pass to the inferior. */
694 void
695 linux_nat_target::pass_signals
696 (gdb::array_view<const unsigned char> pass_signals)
697 {
698 int signo;
699
700 sigemptyset (&pass_mask);
701
702 for (signo = 1; signo < NSIG; signo++)
703 {
704 int target_signo = gdb_signal_from_host (signo);
705 if (target_signo < pass_signals.size () && pass_signals[target_signo])
706 sigaddset (&pass_mask, signo);
707 }
708 }
709
710 \f
711
712 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
713 static int stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp);
714 static int resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, const ptid_t wait_ptid);
715 static int check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (struct lwp_info *lp);
716
717 \f
718
719 /* Destroy and free LP. */
720
721 lwp_info::~lwp_info ()
722 {
723 /* Let the arch specific bits release arch_lwp_info. */
724 linux_target->low_delete_thread (this->arch_private);
725 }
726
727 /* Traversal function for purge_lwp_list. */
728
729 static int
730 lwp_lwpid_htab_remove_pid (void **slot, void *info)
731 {
732 struct lwp_info *lp = (struct lwp_info *) *slot;
733 int pid = *(int *) info;
734
735 if (lp->ptid.pid () == pid)
736 {
737 htab_clear_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, slot);
738 lwp_list_remove (lp);
739 delete lp;
740 }
741
742 return 1;
743 }
744
745 /* Remove all LWPs belong to PID from the lwp list. */
746
747 static void
748 purge_lwp_list (int pid)
749 {
750 htab_traverse_noresize (lwp_lwpid_htab, lwp_lwpid_htab_remove_pid, &pid);
751 }
752
753 /* Add the LWP specified by PTID to the list. PTID is the first LWP
754 in the process. Return a pointer to the structure describing the
755 new LWP.
756
757 This differs from add_lwp in that we don't let the arch specific
758 bits know about this new thread. Current clients of this callback
759 take the opportunity to install watchpoints in the new thread, and
760 we shouldn't do that for the first thread. If we're spawning a
761 child ("run"), the thread executes the shell wrapper first, and we
762 shouldn't touch it until it execs the program we want to debug.
763 For "attach", it'd be okay to call the callback, but it's not
764 necessary, because watchpoints can't yet have been inserted into
765 the inferior. */
766
767 static struct lwp_info *
768 add_initial_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
769 {
770 gdb_assert (ptid.lwp_p ());
771
772 lwp_info *lp = new lwp_info (ptid);
773
774
775 /* Add to sorted-by-reverse-creation-order list. */
776 lwp_list_add (lp);
777
778 /* Add to keyed-by-pid htab. */
779 lwp_lwpid_htab_add_lwp (lp);
780
781 return lp;
782 }
783
784 /* Add the LWP specified by PID to the list. Return a pointer to the
785 structure describing the new LWP. The LWP should already be
786 stopped. */
787
788 static struct lwp_info *
789 add_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
790 {
791 struct lwp_info *lp;
792
793 lp = add_initial_lwp (ptid);
794
795 /* Let the arch specific bits know about this new thread. Current
796 clients of this callback take the opportunity to install
797 watchpoints in the new thread. We don't do this for the first
798 thread though. See add_initial_lwp. */
799 linux_target->low_new_thread (lp);
800
801 return lp;
802 }
803
804 /* Remove the LWP specified by PID from the list. */
805
806 static void
807 delete_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
808 {
809 lwp_info dummy (ptid);
810
811 void **slot = htab_find_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, &dummy, NO_INSERT);
812 if (slot == NULL)
813 return;
814
815 lwp_info *lp = *(struct lwp_info **) slot;
816 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
817
818 htab_clear_slot (lwp_lwpid_htab, slot);
819
820 /* Remove from sorted-by-creation-order list. */
821 lwp_list_remove (lp);
822
823 /* Release. */
824 delete lp;
825 }
826
827 /* Return a pointer to the structure describing the LWP corresponding
828 to PID. If no corresponding LWP could be found, return NULL. */
829
830 static struct lwp_info *
831 find_lwp_pid (ptid_t ptid)
832 {
833 int lwp;
834
835 if (ptid.lwp_p ())
836 lwp = ptid.lwp ();
837 else
838 lwp = ptid.pid ();
839
840 lwp_info dummy (ptid_t (0, lwp));
841 return (struct lwp_info *) htab_find (lwp_lwpid_htab, &dummy);
842 }
843
844 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
845
846 struct lwp_info *
847 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t filter,
848 gdb::function_view<iterate_over_lwps_ftype> callback)
849 {
850 for (lwp_info *lp : all_lwps_safe ())
851 {
852 if (lp->ptid.matches (filter))
853 {
854 if (callback (lp) != 0)
855 return lp;
856 }
857 }
858
859 return NULL;
860 }
861
862 /* Update our internal state when changing from one checkpoint to
863 another indicated by NEW_PTID. We can only switch single-threaded
864 applications, so we only create one new LWP, and the previous list
865 is discarded. */
866
867 void
868 linux_nat_switch_fork (ptid_t new_ptid)
869 {
870 struct lwp_info *lp;
871
872 purge_lwp_list (inferior_ptid.pid ());
873
874 lp = add_lwp (new_ptid);
875 lp->stopped = 1;
876
877 /* This changes the thread's ptid while preserving the gdb thread
878 num. Also changes the inferior pid, while preserving the
879 inferior num. */
880 thread_change_ptid (linux_target, inferior_ptid, new_ptid);
881
882 /* We've just told GDB core that the thread changed target id, but,
883 in fact, it really is a different thread, with different register
884 contents. */
885 registers_changed ();
886 }
887
888 /* Handle the exit of a single thread LP. */
889
890 static void
891 exit_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
892 {
893 struct thread_info *th = find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
894
895 if (th)
896 {
897 if (print_thread_events)
898 gdb_printf (_("[%s exited]\n"),
899 target_pid_to_str (lp->ptid).c_str ());
900
901 delete_thread (th);
902 }
903
904 delete_lwp (lp->ptid);
905 }
906
907 /* Wait for the LWP specified by LP, which we have just attached to.
908 Returns a wait status for that LWP, to cache. */
909
910 static int
911 linux_nat_post_attach_wait (ptid_t ptid, int *signalled)
912 {
913 pid_t new_pid, pid = ptid.lwp ();
914 int status;
915
916 if (linux_proc_pid_is_stopped (pid))
917 {
918 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Attaching to a stopped process");
919
920 /* The process is definitely stopped. It is in a job control
921 stop, unless the kernel predates the TASK_STOPPED /
922 TASK_TRACED distinction, in which case it might be in a
923 ptrace stop. Make sure it is in a ptrace stop; from there we
924 can kill it, signal it, et cetera.
925
926 First make sure there is a pending SIGSTOP. Since we are
927 already attached, the process can not transition from stopped
928 to running without a PTRACE_CONT; so we know this signal will
929 go into the queue. The SIGSTOP generated by PTRACE_ATTACH is
930 probably already in the queue (unless this kernel is old
931 enough to use TASK_STOPPED for ptrace stops); but since SIGSTOP
932 is not an RT signal, it can only be queued once. */
933 kill_lwp (pid, SIGSTOP);
934
935 /* Finally, resume the stopped process. This will deliver the SIGSTOP
936 (or a higher priority signal, just like normal PTRACE_ATTACH). */
937 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, pid, 0, 0);
938 }
939
940 /* Make sure the initial process is stopped. The user-level threads
941 layer might want to poke around in the inferior, and that won't
942 work if things haven't stabilized yet. */
943 new_pid = my_waitpid (pid, &status, __WALL);
944 gdb_assert (pid == new_pid);
945
946 if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
947 {
948 /* The pid we tried to attach has apparently just exited. */
949 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Failed to stop %d: %s", pid,
950 status_to_str (status).c_str ());
951 return status;
952 }
953
954 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
955 {
956 *signalled = 1;
957 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Received %s after attaching",
958 status_to_str (status).c_str ());
959 }
960
961 return status;
962 }
963
964 void
965 linux_nat_target::create_inferior (const char *exec_file,
966 const std::string &allargs,
967 char **env, int from_tty)
968 {
969 maybe_disable_address_space_randomization restore_personality
970 (disable_randomization);
971
972 /* The fork_child mechanism is synchronous and calls target_wait, so
973 we have to mask the async mode. */
974
975 /* Make sure we report all signals during startup. */
976 pass_signals ({});
977
978 inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env, from_tty);
979
980 open_proc_mem_file (inferior_ptid);
981 }
982
983 /* Callback for linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads. Attach to PTID if not
984 already attached. Returns true if a new LWP is found, false
985 otherwise. */
986
987 static int
988 attach_proc_task_lwp_callback (ptid_t ptid)
989 {
990 struct lwp_info *lp;
991
992 /* Ignore LWPs we're already attached to. */
993 lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
994 if (lp == NULL)
995 {
996 int lwpid = ptid.lwp ();
997
998 if (ptrace (PTRACE_ATTACH, lwpid, 0, 0) < 0)
999 {
1000 int err = errno;
1001
1002 /* Be quiet if we simply raced with the thread exiting.
1003 EPERM is returned if the thread's task still exists, and
1004 is marked as exited or zombie, as well as other
1005 conditions, so in that case, confirm the status in
1006 /proc/PID/status. */
1007 if (err == ESRCH
1008 || (err == EPERM && linux_proc_pid_is_gone (lwpid)))
1009 {
1010 linux_nat_debug_printf
1011 ("Cannot attach to lwp %d: thread is gone (%d: %s)",
1012 lwpid, err, safe_strerror (err));
1013
1014 }
1015 else
1016 {
1017 std::string reason
1018 = linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason_string (ptid, err);
1019
1020 warning (_("Cannot attach to lwp %d: %s"),
1021 lwpid, reason.c_str ());
1022 }
1023 }
1024 else
1025 {
1026 linux_nat_debug_printf ("PTRACE_ATTACH %s, 0, 0 (OK)",
1027 ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1028
1029 lp = add_lwp (ptid);
1030
1031 /* The next time we wait for this LWP we'll see a SIGSTOP as
1032 PTRACE_ATTACH brings it to a halt. */
1033 lp->signalled = 1;
1034
1035 /* We need to wait for a stop before being able to make the
1036 next ptrace call on this LWP. */
1037 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 1;
1038
1039 /* So that wait collects the SIGSTOP. */
1040 lp->resumed = 1;
1041
1042 /* Also add the LWP to gdb's thread list, in case a
1043 matching libthread_db is not found (or the process uses
1044 raw clone). */
1045 add_thread (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1046 set_running (linux_target, lp->ptid, true);
1047 set_executing (linux_target, lp->ptid, true);
1048 }
1049
1050 return 1;
1051 }
1052 return 0;
1053 }
1054
1055 void
1056 linux_nat_target::attach (const char *args, int from_tty)
1057 {
1058 struct lwp_info *lp;
1059 int status;
1060 ptid_t ptid;
1061
1062 /* Make sure we report all signals during attach. */
1063 pass_signals ({});
1064
1065 try
1066 {
1067 inf_ptrace_target::attach (args, from_tty);
1068 }
1069 catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
1070 {
1071 pid_t pid = parse_pid_to_attach (args);
1072 std::string reason = linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason (pid);
1073
1074 if (!reason.empty ())
1075 throw_error (ex.error, "warning: %s\n%s", reason.c_str (),
1076 ex.what ());
1077 else
1078 throw_error (ex.error, "%s", ex.what ());
1079 }
1080
1081 /* The ptrace base target adds the main thread with (pid,0,0)
1082 format. Decorate it with lwp info. */
1083 ptid = ptid_t (inferior_ptid.pid (),
1084 inferior_ptid.pid ());
1085 thread_change_ptid (linux_target, inferior_ptid, ptid);
1086
1087 /* Add the initial process as the first LWP to the list. */
1088 lp = add_initial_lwp (ptid);
1089
1090 status = linux_nat_post_attach_wait (lp->ptid, &lp->signalled);
1091 if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
1092 {
1093 if (WIFEXITED (status))
1094 {
1095 int exit_code = WEXITSTATUS (status);
1096
1097 target_terminal::ours ();
1098 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
1099 if (exit_code == 0)
1100 error (_("Unable to attach: program exited normally."));
1101 else
1102 error (_("Unable to attach: program exited with code %d."),
1103 exit_code);
1104 }
1105 else if (WIFSIGNALED (status))
1106 {
1107 enum gdb_signal signo;
1108
1109 target_terminal::ours ();
1110 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
1111
1112 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WTERMSIG (status));
1113 error (_("Unable to attach: program terminated with signal "
1114 "%s, %s."),
1115 gdb_signal_to_name (signo),
1116 gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1117 }
1118
1119 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1120 _("unexpected status %d for PID %ld"),
1121 status, (long) ptid.lwp ());
1122 }
1123
1124 lp->stopped = 1;
1125
1126 open_proc_mem_file (lp->ptid);
1127
1128 /* Save the wait status to report later. */
1129 lp->resumed = 1;
1130 linux_nat_debug_printf ("waitpid %ld, saving status %s",
1131 (long) lp->ptid.pid (),
1132 status_to_str (status).c_str ());
1133
1134 lp->status = status;
1135
1136 /* We must attach to every LWP. If /proc is mounted, use that to
1137 find them now. The inferior may be using raw clone instead of
1138 using pthreads. But even if it is using pthreads, thread_db
1139 walks structures in the inferior's address space to find the list
1140 of threads/LWPs, and those structures may well be corrupted.
1141 Note that once thread_db is loaded, we'll still use it to list
1142 threads and associate pthread info with each LWP. */
1143 linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads (lp->ptid.pid (),
1144 attach_proc_task_lwp_callback);
1145 }
1146
1147 /* Ptrace-detach the thread with pid PID. */
1148
1149 static void
1150 detach_one_pid (int pid, int signo)
1151 {
1152 if (ptrace (PTRACE_DETACH, pid, 0, signo) < 0)
1153 {
1154 int save_errno = errno;
1155
1156 /* We know the thread exists, so ESRCH must mean the lwp is
1157 zombie. This can happen if one of the already-detached
1158 threads exits the whole thread group. In that case we're
1159 still attached, and must reap the lwp. */
1160 if (save_errno == ESRCH)
1161 {
1162 int ret, status;
1163
1164 ret = my_waitpid (pid, &status, __WALL);
1165 if (ret == -1)
1166 {
1167 warning (_("Couldn't reap LWP %d while detaching: %s"),
1168 pid, safe_strerror (errno));
1169 }
1170 else if (!WIFEXITED (status) && !WIFSIGNALED (status))
1171 {
1172 warning (_("Reaping LWP %d while detaching "
1173 "returned unexpected status 0x%x"),
1174 pid, status);
1175 }
1176 }
1177 else
1178 error (_("Can't detach %d: %s"),
1179 pid, safe_strerror (save_errno));
1180 }
1181 else
1182 linux_nat_debug_printf ("PTRACE_DETACH (%d, %s, 0) (OK)",
1183 pid, strsignal (signo));
1184 }
1185
1186 /* Get pending signal of THREAD as a host signal number, for detaching
1187 purposes. This is the signal the thread last stopped for, which we
1188 need to deliver to the thread when detaching, otherwise, it'd be
1189 suppressed/lost. */
1190
1191 static int
1192 get_detach_signal (struct lwp_info *lp)
1193 {
1194 enum gdb_signal signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1195
1196 /* If we paused threads momentarily, we may have stored pending
1197 events in lp->status or lp->waitstatus (see stop_wait_callback),
1198 and GDB core hasn't seen any signal for those threads.
1199 Otherwise, the last signal reported to the core is found in the
1200 thread object's stop_signal.
1201
1202 There's a corner case that isn't handled here at present. Only
1203 if the thread stopped with a TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED does
1204 stop_signal make sense as a real signal to pass to the inferior.
1205 Some catchpoint related events, like
1206 TARGET_WAITKIND_(V)FORK|EXEC|SYSCALL, have their stop_signal set
1207 to GDB_SIGNAL_SIGTRAP when the catchpoint triggers. But,
1208 those traps are debug API (ptrace in our case) related and
1209 induced; the inferior wouldn't see them if it wasn't being
1210 traced. Hence, we should never pass them to the inferior, even
1211 when set to pass state. Since this corner case isn't handled by
1212 infrun.c when proceeding with a signal, for consistency, neither
1213 do we handle it here (or elsewhere in the file we check for
1214 signal pass state). Normally SIGTRAP isn't set to pass state, so
1215 this is really a corner case. */
1216
1217 if (lp->waitstatus.kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
1218 signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0; /* a pending ptrace event, not a real signal. */
1219 else if (lp->status)
1220 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status));
1221 else
1222 {
1223 struct thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1224
1225 if (target_is_non_stop_p () && !tp->executing ())
1226 {
1227 if (tp->has_pending_waitstatus ())
1228 {
1229 /* If the thread has a pending event, and it was stopped with a
1230 signal, use that signal to resume it. If it has a pending
1231 event of another kind, it was not stopped with a signal, so
1232 resume it without a signal. */
1233 if (tp->pending_waitstatus ().kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED)
1234 signo = tp->pending_waitstatus ().sig ();
1235 else
1236 signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1237 }
1238 else
1239 signo = tp->stop_signal ();
1240 }
1241 else if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
1242 {
1243 ptid_t last_ptid;
1244 process_stratum_target *last_target;
1245
1246 get_last_target_status (&last_target, &last_ptid, nullptr);
1247
1248 if (last_target == linux_target
1249 && lp->ptid.lwp () == last_ptid.lwp ())
1250 signo = tp->stop_signal ();
1251 }
1252 }
1253
1254 if (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0)
1255 {
1256 linux_nat_debug_printf ("lwp %s has no pending signal",
1257 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1258 }
1259 else if (!signal_pass_state (signo))
1260 {
1261 linux_nat_debug_printf
1262 ("lwp %s had signal %s but it is in no pass state",
1263 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (), gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1264 }
1265 else
1266 {
1267 linux_nat_debug_printf ("lwp %s has pending signal %s",
1268 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
1269 gdb_signal_to_string (signo));
1270
1271 return gdb_signal_to_host (signo);
1272 }
1273
1274 return 0;
1275 }
1276
1277 /* Detach from LP. If SIGNO_P is non-NULL, then it points to the
1278 signal number that should be passed to the LWP when detaching.
1279 Otherwise pass any pending signal the LWP may have, if any. */
1280
1281 static void
1282 detach_one_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int *signo_p)
1283 {
1284 int lwpid = lp->ptid.lwp ();
1285 int signo;
1286
1287 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0 || WIFSTOPPED (lp->status));
1288
1289 /* If the lwp/thread we are about to detach has a pending fork event,
1290 there is a process GDB is attached to that the core of GDB doesn't know
1291 about. Detach from it. */
1292
1293 /* Check in lwp_info::status. */
1294 if (WIFSTOPPED (lp->status) && linux_is_extended_waitstatus (lp->status))
1295 {
1296 int event = linux_ptrace_get_extended_event (lp->status);
1297
1298 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK)
1299 {
1300 unsigned long child_pid;
1301 int ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, lp->ptid.lwp (), 0, &child_pid);
1302 if (ret == 0)
1303 detach_one_pid (child_pid, 0);
1304 else
1305 perror_warning_with_name (_("Failed to detach fork child"));
1306 }
1307 }
1308
1309 /* Check in lwp_info::waitstatus. */
1310 if (lp->waitstatus.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED
1311 || lp->waitstatus.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED)
1312 detach_one_pid (lp->waitstatus.child_ptid ().pid (), 0);
1313
1314
1315 /* Check in thread_info::pending_waitstatus. */
1316 thread_info *tp = find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1317 if (tp->has_pending_waitstatus ())
1318 {
1319 const target_waitstatus &ws = tp->pending_waitstatus ();
1320
1321 if (ws.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED
1322 || ws.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED)
1323 detach_one_pid (ws.child_ptid ().pid (), 0);
1324 }
1325
1326 /* Check in thread_info::pending_follow. */
1327 if (tp->pending_follow.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED
1328 || tp->pending_follow.kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED)
1329 detach_one_pid (tp->pending_follow.child_ptid ().pid (), 0);
1330
1331 if (lp->status != 0)
1332 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Pending %s for %s on detach.",
1333 strsignal (WSTOPSIG (lp->status)),
1334 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1335
1336 /* If there is a pending SIGSTOP, get rid of it. */
1337 if (lp->signalled)
1338 {
1339 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Sending SIGCONT to %s",
1340 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1341
1342 kill_lwp (lwpid, SIGCONT);
1343 lp->signalled = 0;
1344 }
1345
1346 if (signo_p == NULL)
1347 {
1348 /* Pass on any pending signal for this LWP. */
1349 signo = get_detach_signal (lp);
1350 }
1351 else
1352 signo = *signo_p;
1353
1354 /* Preparing to resume may try to write registers, and fail if the
1355 lwp is zombie. If that happens, ignore the error. We'll handle
1356 it below, when detach fails with ESRCH. */
1357 try
1358 {
1359 linux_target->low_prepare_to_resume (lp);
1360 }
1361 catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
1362 {
1363 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
1364 throw;
1365 }
1366
1367 detach_one_pid (lwpid, signo);
1368
1369 delete_lwp (lp->ptid);
1370 }
1371
1372 static int
1373 detach_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
1374 {
1375 /* We don't actually detach from the thread group leader just yet.
1376 If the thread group exits, we must reap the zombie clone lwps
1377 before we're able to reap the leader. */
1378 if (lp->ptid.lwp () != lp->ptid.pid ())
1379 detach_one_lwp (lp, NULL);
1380 return 0;
1381 }
1382
1383 void
1384 linux_nat_target::detach (inferior *inf, int from_tty)
1385 {
1386 struct lwp_info *main_lwp;
1387 int pid = inf->pid;
1388
1389 /* Don't unregister from the event loop, as there may be other
1390 inferiors running. */
1391
1392 /* Stop all threads before detaching. ptrace requires that the
1393 thread is stopped to successfully detach. */
1394 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t (pid), stop_callback);
1395 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
1396 they're no longer running. */
1397 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t (pid), stop_wait_callback);
1398
1399 /* We can now safely remove breakpoints. We don't this in earlier
1400 in common code because this target doesn't currently support
1401 writing memory while the inferior is running. */
1402 remove_breakpoints_inf (current_inferior ());
1403
1404 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t (pid), detach_callback);
1405
1406 /* Only the initial process should be left right now. */
1407 gdb_assert (num_lwps (pid) == 1);
1408
1409 main_lwp = find_lwp_pid (ptid_t (pid));
1410
1411 if (forks_exist_p ())
1412 {
1413 /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid is being detached
1414 from, but there are other viable forks to debug. Detach from
1415 the current fork, and context-switch to the first
1416 available. */
1417 linux_fork_detach (from_tty);
1418 }
1419 else
1420 {
1421 target_announce_detach (from_tty);
1422
1423 /* Pass on any pending signal for the last LWP. */
1424 int signo = get_detach_signal (main_lwp);
1425
1426 detach_one_lwp (main_lwp, &signo);
1427
1428 detach_success (inf);
1429 }
1430
1431 close_proc_mem_file (pid);
1432 }
1433
1434 /* Resume execution of the inferior process. If STEP is nonzero,
1435 single-step it. If SIGNAL is nonzero, give it that signal. */
1436
1437 static void
1438 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (struct lwp_info *lp, int step,
1439 enum gdb_signal signo)
1440 {
1441 lp->step = step;
1442
1443 /* stop_pc doubles as the PC the LWP had when it was last resumed.
1444 We only presently need that if the LWP is stepped though (to
1445 handle the case of stepping a breakpoint instruction). */
1446 if (step)
1447 {
1448 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1449
1450 lp->stop_pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
1451 }
1452 else
1453 lp->stop_pc = 0;
1454
1455 linux_target->low_prepare_to_resume (lp);
1456 linux_target->low_resume (lp->ptid, step, signo);
1457
1458 /* Successfully resumed. Clear state that no longer makes sense,
1459 and mark the LWP as running. Must not do this before resuming
1460 otherwise if that fails other code will be confused. E.g., we'd
1461 later try to stop the LWP and hang forever waiting for a stop
1462 status. Note that we must not throw after this is cleared,
1463 otherwise handle_zombie_lwp_error would get confused. */
1464 lp->stopped = 0;
1465 lp->core = -1;
1466 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON;
1467 registers_changed_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1468 }
1469
1470 /* Called when we try to resume a stopped LWP and that errors out. If
1471 the LWP is no longer in ptrace-stopped state (meaning it's zombie,
1472 or about to become), discard the error, clear any pending status
1473 the LWP may have, and return true (we'll collect the exit status
1474 soon enough). Otherwise, return false. */
1475
1476 static int
1477 check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (struct lwp_info *lp)
1478 {
1479 /* If we get an error after resuming the LWP successfully, we'd
1480 confuse !T state for the LWP being gone. */
1481 gdb_assert (lp->stopped);
1482
1483 /* We can't just check whether the LWP is in 'Z (Zombie)' state,
1484 because even if ptrace failed with ESRCH, the tracee may be "not
1485 yet fully dead", but already refusing ptrace requests. In that
1486 case the tracee has 'R (Running)' state for a little bit
1487 (observed in Linux 3.18). See also the note on ESRCH in the
1488 ptrace(2) man page. Instead, check whether the LWP has any state
1489 other than ptrace-stopped. */
1490
1491 /* Don't assume anything if /proc/PID/status can't be read. */
1492 if (linux_proc_pid_is_trace_stopped_nowarn (lp->ptid.lwp ()) == 0)
1493 {
1494 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON;
1495 lp->status = 0;
1496 lp->waitstatus.set_ignore ();
1497 return 1;
1498 }
1499 return 0;
1500 }
1501
1502 /* Like linux_resume_one_lwp_throw, but no error is thrown if the LWP
1503 disappears while we try to resume it. */
1504
1505 static void
1506 linux_resume_one_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1507 {
1508 try
1509 {
1510 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (lp, step, signo);
1511 }
1512 catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
1513 {
1514 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
1515 throw;
1516 }
1517 }
1518
1519 /* Resume LP. */
1520
1521 static void
1522 resume_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1523 {
1524 if (lp->stopped)
1525 {
1526 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1527
1528 if (inf->vfork_child != NULL)
1529 {
1530 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Not resuming %s (vfork parent)",
1531 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1532 }
1533 else if (!lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
1534 {
1535 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Resuming sibling %s, %s, %s",
1536 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
1537 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1538 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo))
1539 : "0"),
1540 step ? "step" : "resume");
1541
1542 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, step, signo);
1543 }
1544 else
1545 {
1546 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Not resuming sibling %s (has pending)",
1547 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1548 }
1549 }
1550 else
1551 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Not resuming sibling %s (not stopped)",
1552 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1553 }
1554
1555 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. If LWP is EXCEPT, do nothing.
1556 Resume LWP with the last stop signal, if it is in pass state. */
1557
1558 static int
1559 linux_nat_resume_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, struct lwp_info *except)
1560 {
1561 enum gdb_signal signo = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
1562
1563 if (lp == except)
1564 return 0;
1565
1566 if (lp->stopped)
1567 {
1568 struct thread_info *thread;
1569
1570 thread = find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1571 if (thread != NULL)
1572 {
1573 signo = thread->stop_signal ();
1574 thread->set_stop_signal (GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1575 }
1576 }
1577
1578 resume_lwp (lp, 0, signo);
1579 return 0;
1580 }
1581
1582 static int
1583 resume_clear_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
1584 {
1585 lp->resumed = 0;
1586 lp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
1587 return 0;
1588 }
1589
1590 static int
1591 resume_set_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
1592 {
1593 lp->resumed = 1;
1594 lp->last_resume_kind = resume_continue;
1595 return 0;
1596 }
1597
1598 void
1599 linux_nat_target::resume (ptid_t scope_ptid, int step, enum gdb_signal signo)
1600 {
1601 struct lwp_info *lp;
1602
1603 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Preparing to %s %s, %s, inferior_ptid %s",
1604 step ? "step" : "resume",
1605 scope_ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
1606 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1607 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"),
1608 inferior_ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
1609
1610 /* Mark the lwps we're resuming as resumed and update their
1611 last_resume_kind to resume_continue. */
1612 iterate_over_lwps (scope_ptid, resume_set_callback);
1613
1614 lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
1615 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
1616
1617 /* Remember if we're stepping. */
1618 lp->last_resume_kind = step ? resume_step : resume_continue;
1619
1620 /* If we have a pending wait status for this thread, there is no
1621 point in resuming the process. But first make sure that
1622 linux_nat_wait won't preemptively handle the event - we
1623 should never take this short-circuit if we are going to
1624 leave LP running, since we have skipped resuming all the
1625 other threads. This bit of code needs to be synchronized
1626 with linux_nat_wait. */
1627
1628 if (lp->status && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status))
1629 {
1630 if (!lp->step
1631 && WSTOPSIG (lp->status)
1632 && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (lp->status)))
1633 {
1634 linux_nat_debug_printf
1635 ("Not short circuiting for ignored status 0x%x", lp->status);
1636
1637 /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue
1638 this thread with a signal? */
1639 gdb_assert (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1640 signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (lp->status));
1641 lp->status = 0;
1642 }
1643 }
1644
1645 if (lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
1646 {
1647 /* FIXME: What should we do if we are supposed to continue
1648 this thread with a signal? */
1649 gdb_assert (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1650
1651 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Short circuiting for status 0x%x",
1652 lp->status);
1653
1654 if (target_can_async_p ())
1655 {
1656 target_async (true);
1657 /* Tell the event loop we have something to process. */
1658 async_file_mark ();
1659 }
1660 return;
1661 }
1662
1663 /* No use iterating unless we're resuming other threads. */
1664 if (scope_ptid != lp->ptid)
1665 iterate_over_lwps (scope_ptid, [=] (struct lwp_info *info)
1666 {
1667 return linux_nat_resume_callback (info, lp);
1668 });
1669
1670 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s %s, %s (resume event thread)",
1671 step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
1672 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
1673 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
1674 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"));
1675
1676 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, step, signo);
1677 }
1678
1679 /* Send a signal to an LWP. */
1680
1681 static int
1682 kill_lwp (int lwpid, int signo)
1683 {
1684 int ret;
1685
1686 errno = 0;
1687 ret = syscall (__NR_tkill, lwpid, signo);
1688 if (errno == ENOSYS)
1689 {
1690 /* If tkill fails, then we are not using nptl threads, a
1691 configuration we no longer support. */
1692 perror_with_name (("tkill"));
1693 }
1694 return ret;
1695 }
1696
1697 /* Handle a GNU/Linux syscall trap wait response. If we see a syscall
1698 event, check if the core is interested in it: if not, ignore the
1699 event, and keep waiting; otherwise, we need to toggle the LWP's
1700 syscall entry/exit status, since the ptrace event itself doesn't
1701 indicate it, and report the trap to higher layers. */
1702
1703 static int
1704 linux_handle_syscall_trap (struct lwp_info *lp, int stopping)
1705 {
1706 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus;
1707 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = target_thread_architecture (lp->ptid);
1708 thread_info *thread = find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
1709 int syscall_number = (int) gdbarch_get_syscall_number (gdbarch, thread);
1710
1711 if (stopping)
1712 {
1713 /* If we're stopping threads, there's a SIGSTOP pending, which
1714 makes it so that the LWP reports an immediate syscall return,
1715 followed by the SIGSTOP. Skip seeing that "return" using
1716 PTRACE_CONT directly, and let stop_wait_callback collect the
1717 SIGSTOP. Later when the thread is resumed, a new syscall
1718 entry event. If we didn't do this (and returned 0), we'd
1719 leave a syscall entry pending, and our caller, by using
1720 PTRACE_CONT to collect the SIGSTOP, skips the syscall return
1721 itself. Later, when the user re-resumes this LWP, we'd see
1722 another syscall entry event and we'd mistake it for a return.
1723
1724 If stop_wait_callback didn't force the SIGSTOP out of the LWP
1725 (leaving immediately with LWP->signalled set, without issuing
1726 a PTRACE_CONT), it would still be problematic to leave this
1727 syscall enter pending, as later when the thread is resumed,
1728 it would then see the same syscall exit mentioned above,
1729 followed by the delayed SIGSTOP, while the syscall didn't
1730 actually get to execute. It seems it would be even more
1731 confusing to the user. */
1732
1733 linux_nat_debug_printf
1734 ("ignoring syscall %d for LWP %ld (stopping threads), resuming with "
1735 "PTRACE_CONT for SIGSTOP", syscall_number, lp->ptid.lwp ());
1736
1737 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
1738 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, lp->ptid.lwp (), 0, 0);
1739 lp->stopped = 0;
1740 return 1;
1741 }
1742
1743 /* Always update the entry/return state, even if this particular
1744 syscall isn't interesting to the core now. In async mode,
1745 the user could install a new catchpoint for this syscall
1746 between syscall enter/return, and we'll need to know to
1747 report a syscall return if that happens. */
1748 lp->syscall_state = (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1749 ? TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN
1750 : TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY);
1751
1752 if (catch_syscall_enabled ())
1753 {
1754 if (catching_syscall_number (syscall_number))
1755 {
1756 /* Alright, an event to report. */
1757 if (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY)
1758 ourstatus->set_syscall_entry (syscall_number);
1759 else if (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN)
1760 ourstatus->set_syscall_return (syscall_number);
1761 else
1762 gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected syscall state");
1763
1764 linux_nat_debug_printf
1765 ("stopping for %s of syscall %d for LWP %ld",
1766 (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1767 ? "entry" : "return"), syscall_number, lp->ptid.lwp ());
1768
1769 return 0;
1770 }
1771
1772 linux_nat_debug_printf
1773 ("ignoring %s of syscall %d for LWP %ld",
1774 (lp->syscall_state == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
1775 ? "entry" : "return"), syscall_number, lp->ptid.lwp ());
1776 }
1777 else
1778 {
1779 /* If we had been syscall tracing, and hence used PT_SYSCALL
1780 before on this LWP, it could happen that the user removes all
1781 syscall catchpoints before we get to process this event.
1782 There are two noteworthy issues here:
1783
1784 - When stopped at a syscall entry event, resuming with
1785 PT_STEP still resumes executing the syscall and reports a
1786 syscall return.
1787
1788 - Only PT_SYSCALL catches syscall enters. If we last
1789 single-stepped this thread, then this event can't be a
1790 syscall enter. If we last single-stepped this thread, this
1791 has to be a syscall exit.
1792
1793 The points above mean that the next resume, be it PT_STEP or
1794 PT_CONTINUE, can not trigger a syscall trace event. */
1795 linux_nat_debug_printf
1796 ("caught syscall event with no syscall catchpoints. %d for LWP %ld, "
1797 "ignoring", syscall_number, lp->ptid.lwp ());
1798 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
1799 }
1800
1801 /* The core isn't interested in this event. For efficiency, avoid
1802 stopping all threads only to have the core resume them all again.
1803 Since we're not stopping threads, if we're still syscall tracing
1804 and not stepping, we can't use PTRACE_CONT here, as we'd miss any
1805 subsequent syscall. Simply resume using the inf-ptrace layer,
1806 which knows when to use PT_SYSCALL or PT_CONTINUE. */
1807
1808 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
1809 return 1;
1810 }
1811
1812 /* Handle a GNU/Linux extended wait response. If we see a clone
1813 event, we need to add the new LWP to our list (and not report the
1814 trap to higher layers). This function returns non-zero if the
1815 event should be ignored and we should wait again. If STOPPING is
1816 true, the new LWP remains stopped, otherwise it is continued. */
1817
1818 static int
1819 linux_handle_extended_wait (struct lwp_info *lp, int status)
1820 {
1821 int pid = lp->ptid.lwp ();
1822 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus = &lp->waitstatus;
1823 int event = linux_ptrace_get_extended_event (status);
1824
1825 /* All extended events we currently use are mid-syscall. Only
1826 PTRACE_EVENT_STOP is delivered more like a signal-stop, but
1827 you have to be using PTRACE_SEIZE to get that. */
1828 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY;
1829
1830 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK
1831 || event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE)
1832 {
1833 unsigned long new_pid;
1834 int ret;
1835
1836 ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, pid, 0, &new_pid);
1837
1838 /* If we haven't already seen the new PID stop, wait for it now. */
1839 if (! pull_pid_from_list (&stopped_pids, new_pid, &status))
1840 {
1841 /* The new child has a pending SIGSTOP. We can't affect it until it
1842 hits the SIGSTOP, but we're already attached. */
1843 ret = my_waitpid (new_pid, &status, __WALL);
1844 if (ret == -1)
1845 perror_with_name (_("waiting for new child"));
1846 else if (ret != new_pid)
1847 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1848 _("wait returned unexpected PID %d"), ret);
1849 else if (!WIFSTOPPED (status))
1850 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1851 _("wait returned unexpected status 0x%x"), status);
1852 }
1853
1854 ptid_t child_ptid (new_pid, new_pid);
1855
1856 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK || event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK)
1857 {
1858 open_proc_mem_file (child_ptid);
1859
1860 /* The arch-specific native code may need to know about new
1861 forks even if those end up never mapped to an
1862 inferior. */
1863 linux_target->low_new_fork (lp, new_pid);
1864 }
1865 else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE)
1866 {
1867 linux_target->low_new_clone (lp, new_pid);
1868 }
1869
1870 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK
1871 && linux_fork_checkpointing_p (lp->ptid.pid ()))
1872 {
1873 /* Handle checkpointing by linux-fork.c here as a special
1874 case. We don't want the follow-fork-mode or 'catch fork'
1875 to interfere with this. */
1876
1877 /* This won't actually modify the breakpoint list, but will
1878 physically remove the breakpoints from the child. */
1879 detach_breakpoints (ptid_t (new_pid, new_pid));
1880
1881 /* Retain child fork in ptrace (stopped) state. */
1882 if (!find_fork_pid (new_pid))
1883 add_fork (new_pid);
1884
1885 /* Report as spurious, so that infrun doesn't want to follow
1886 this fork. We're actually doing an infcall in
1887 linux-fork.c. */
1888 ourstatus->set_spurious ();
1889
1890 /* Report the stop to the core. */
1891 return 0;
1892 }
1893
1894 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_FORK)
1895 ourstatus->set_forked (child_ptid);
1896 else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK)
1897 ourstatus->set_vforked (child_ptid);
1898 else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE)
1899 {
1900 struct lwp_info *new_lp;
1901
1902 ourstatus->set_ignore ();
1903
1904 linux_nat_debug_printf
1905 ("Got clone event from LWP %d, new child is LWP %ld", pid, new_pid);
1906
1907 new_lp = add_lwp (ptid_t (lp->ptid.pid (), new_pid));
1908 new_lp->stopped = 1;
1909 new_lp->resumed = 1;
1910
1911 /* If the thread_db layer is active, let it record the user
1912 level thread id and status, and add the thread to GDB's
1913 list. */
1914 if (!thread_db_notice_clone (lp->ptid, new_lp->ptid))
1915 {
1916 /* The process is not using thread_db. Add the LWP to
1917 GDB's list. */
1918 target_post_attach (new_lp->ptid.lwp ());
1919 add_thread (linux_target, new_lp->ptid);
1920 }
1921
1922 /* Even if we're stopping the thread for some reason
1923 internal to this module, from the perspective of infrun
1924 and the user/frontend, this new thread is running until
1925 it next reports a stop. */
1926 set_running (linux_target, new_lp->ptid, true);
1927 set_executing (linux_target, new_lp->ptid, true);
1928
1929 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
1930 {
1931 /* This can happen if someone starts sending signals to
1932 the new thread before it gets a chance to run, which
1933 have a lower number than SIGSTOP (e.g. SIGUSR1).
1934 This is an unlikely case, and harder to handle for
1935 fork / vfork than for clone, so we do not try - but
1936 we handle it for clone events here. */
1937
1938 new_lp->signalled = 1;
1939
1940 /* We created NEW_LP so it cannot yet contain STATUS. */
1941 gdb_assert (new_lp->status == 0);
1942
1943 /* Save the wait status to report later. */
1944 linux_nat_debug_printf
1945 ("waitpid of new LWP %ld, saving status %s",
1946 (long) new_lp->ptid.lwp (), status_to_str (status).c_str ());
1947 new_lp->status = status;
1948 }
1949 else if (report_thread_events)
1950 {
1951 new_lp->waitstatus.set_thread_created ();
1952 new_lp->status = status;
1953 }
1954
1955 return 1;
1956 }
1957
1958 return 0;
1959 }
1960
1961 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC)
1962 {
1963 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Got exec event from LWP %ld", lp->ptid.lwp ());
1964
1965 /* Close the previous /proc/PID/mem file for this inferior,
1966 which was using the address space which is now gone.
1967 Reading/writing from this file would return 0/EOF. */
1968 close_proc_mem_file (lp->ptid.pid ());
1969
1970 /* Open a new file for the new address space. */
1971 open_proc_mem_file (lp->ptid);
1972
1973 ourstatus->set_execd
1974 (make_unique_xstrdup (linux_proc_pid_to_exec_file (pid)));
1975
1976 /* The thread that execed must have been resumed, but, when a
1977 thread execs, it changes its tid to the tgid, and the old
1978 tgid thread might have not been resumed. */
1979 lp->resumed = 1;
1980 return 0;
1981 }
1982
1983 if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE)
1984 {
1985 linux_nat_debug_printf
1986 ("Got PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK_DONE from LWP %ld",
1987 lp->ptid.lwp ());
1988 ourstatus->set_vfork_done ();
1989 return 0;
1990 }
1991
1992 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1993 _("unknown ptrace event %d"), event);
1994 }
1995
1996 /* Suspend waiting for a signal. We're mostly interested in
1997 SIGCHLD/SIGINT. */
1998
1999 static void
2000 wait_for_signal ()
2001 {
2002 linux_nat_debug_printf ("about to sigsuspend");
2003 sigsuspend (&suspend_mask);
2004
2005 /* If the quit flag is set, it means that the user pressed Ctrl-C
2006 and we're debugging a process that is running on a separate
2007 terminal, so we must forward the Ctrl-C to the inferior. (If the
2008 inferior is sharing GDB's terminal, then the Ctrl-C reaches the
2009 inferior directly.) We must do this here because functions that
2010 need to block waiting for a signal loop forever until there's an
2011 event to report before returning back to the event loop. */
2012 if (!target_terminal::is_ours ())
2013 {
2014 if (check_quit_flag ())
2015 target_pass_ctrlc ();
2016 }
2017 }
2018
2019 /* Wait for LP to stop. Returns the wait status, or 0 if the LWP has
2020 exited. */
2021
2022 static int
2023 wait_lwp (struct lwp_info *lp)
2024 {
2025 pid_t pid;
2026 int status = 0;
2027 int thread_dead = 0;
2028 sigset_t prev_mask;
2029
2030 gdb_assert (!lp->stopped);
2031 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0);
2032
2033 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked for sigsuspend avoiding a race below. */
2034 block_child_signals (&prev_mask);
2035
2036 for (;;)
2037 {
2038 pid = my_waitpid (lp->ptid.lwp (), &status, __WALL | WNOHANG);
2039 if (pid == -1 && errno == ECHILD)
2040 {
2041 /* The thread has previously exited. We need to delete it
2042 now because if this was a non-leader thread execing, we
2043 won't get an exit event. See comments on exec events at
2044 the top of the file. */
2045 thread_dead = 1;
2046 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s vanished.",
2047 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2048 }
2049 if (pid != 0)
2050 break;
2051
2052 /* Bugs 10970, 12702.
2053 Thread group leader may have exited in which case we'll lock up in
2054 waitpid if there are other threads, even if they are all zombies too.
2055 Basically, we're not supposed to use waitpid this way.
2056 tkill(pid,0) cannot be used here as it gets ESRCH for both
2057 for zombie and running processes.
2058
2059 As a workaround, check if we're waiting for the thread group leader and
2060 if it's a zombie, and avoid calling waitpid if it is.
2061
2062 This is racy, what if the tgl becomes a zombie right after we check?
2063 Therefore always use WNOHANG with sigsuspend - it is equivalent to
2064 waiting waitpid but linux_proc_pid_is_zombie is safe this way. */
2065
2066 if (lp->ptid.pid () == lp->ptid.lwp ()
2067 && linux_proc_pid_is_zombie (lp->ptid.lwp ()))
2068 {
2069 thread_dead = 1;
2070 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Thread group leader %s vanished.",
2071 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2072 break;
2073 }
2074
2075 /* Wait for next SIGCHLD and try again. This may let SIGCHLD handlers
2076 get invoked despite our caller had them intentionally blocked by
2077 block_child_signals. This is sensitive only to the loop of
2078 linux_nat_wait_1 and there if we get called my_waitpid gets called
2079 again before it gets to sigsuspend so we can safely let the handlers
2080 get executed here. */
2081 wait_for_signal ();
2082 }
2083
2084 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
2085
2086 if (!thread_dead)
2087 {
2088 gdb_assert (pid == lp->ptid.lwp ());
2089
2090 linux_nat_debug_printf ("waitpid %s received %s",
2091 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
2092 status_to_str (status).c_str ());
2093
2094 /* Check if the thread has exited. */
2095 if (WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status))
2096 {
2097 if (report_thread_events
2098 || lp->ptid.pid () == lp->ptid.lwp ())
2099 {
2100 linux_nat_debug_printf ("LWP %d exited.", lp->ptid.pid ());
2101
2102 /* If this is the leader exiting, it means the whole
2103 process is gone. Store the status to report to the
2104 core. Store it in lp->waitstatus, because lp->status
2105 would be ambiguous (W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0). */
2106 lp->waitstatus = host_status_to_waitstatus (status);
2107 return 0;
2108 }
2109
2110 thread_dead = 1;
2111 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s exited.",
2112 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2113 }
2114 }
2115
2116 if (thread_dead)
2117 {
2118 exit_lwp (lp);
2119 return 0;
2120 }
2121
2122 gdb_assert (WIFSTOPPED (status));
2123 lp->stopped = 1;
2124
2125 if (lp->must_set_ptrace_flags)
2126 {
2127 inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (linux_target, lp->ptid.pid ());
2128 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (inf->attach_flag);
2129
2130 linux_enable_event_reporting (lp->ptid.lwp (), options);
2131 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 0;
2132 }
2133
2134 /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */
2135 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP)
2136 {
2137 /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up
2138 recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry
2139 on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here
2140 on. */
2141 status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP);
2142 if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 1))
2143 return wait_lwp (lp);
2144 }
2145 else
2146 {
2147 /* Almost all other ptrace-stops are known to be outside of system
2148 calls, with further exceptions in linux_handle_extended_wait. */
2149 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2150 }
2151
2152 /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */
2153 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP
2154 && linux_is_extended_waitstatus (status))
2155 {
2156 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Handling extended status 0x%06x", status);
2157 linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status);
2158 return 0;
2159 }
2160
2161 return status;
2162 }
2163
2164 /* Send a SIGSTOP to LP. */
2165
2166 static int
2167 stop_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
2168 {
2169 if (!lp->stopped && !lp->signalled)
2170 {
2171 int ret;
2172
2173 linux_nat_debug_printf ("kill %s **<SIGSTOP>**",
2174 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2175
2176 errno = 0;
2177 ret = kill_lwp (lp->ptid.lwp (), SIGSTOP);
2178 linux_nat_debug_printf ("lwp kill %d %s", ret,
2179 errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK");
2180
2181 lp->signalled = 1;
2182 gdb_assert (lp->status == 0);
2183 }
2184
2185 return 0;
2186 }
2187
2188 /* Request a stop on LWP. */
2189
2190 void
2191 linux_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp)
2192 {
2193 stop_callback (lwp);
2194 }
2195
2196 /* See linux-nat.h */
2197
2198 void
2199 linux_stop_and_wait_all_lwps (void)
2200 {
2201 /* Stop all LWP's ... */
2202 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_callback);
2203
2204 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
2205 they're no longer running. */
2206 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_wait_callback);
2207 }
2208
2209 /* See linux-nat.h */
2210
2211 void
2212 linux_unstop_all_lwps (void)
2213 {
2214 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid,
2215 [] (struct lwp_info *info)
2216 {
2217 return resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (info, minus_one_ptid);
2218 });
2219 }
2220
2221 /* Return non-zero if LWP PID has a pending SIGINT. */
2222
2223 static int
2224 linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (int pid)
2225 {
2226 sigset_t pending, blocked, ignored;
2227
2228 linux_proc_pending_signals (pid, &pending, &blocked, &ignored);
2229
2230 if (sigismember (&pending, SIGINT)
2231 && !sigismember (&ignored, SIGINT))
2232 return 1;
2233
2234 return 0;
2235 }
2236
2237 /* Set a flag in LP indicating that we should ignore its next SIGINT. */
2238
2239 static int
2240 set_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp)
2241 {
2242 /* If a thread has a pending SIGINT, consume it; otherwise, set a
2243 flag to consume the next one. */
2244 if (lp->stopped && lp->status != 0 && WIFSTOPPED (lp->status)
2245 && WSTOPSIG (lp->status) == SIGINT)
2246 lp->status = 0;
2247 else
2248 lp->ignore_sigint = 1;
2249
2250 return 0;
2251 }
2252
2253 /* If LP does not have a SIGINT pending, then clear the ignore_sigint flag.
2254 This function is called after we know the LWP has stopped; if the LWP
2255 stopped before the expected SIGINT was delivered, then it will never have
2256 arrived. Also, if the signal was delivered to a shared queue and consumed
2257 by a different thread, it will never be delivered to this LWP. */
2258
2259 static void
2260 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (struct lwp_info *lp)
2261 {
2262 if (!lp->ignore_sigint)
2263 return;
2264
2265 if (!linux_nat_has_pending_sigint (lp->ptid.lwp ()))
2266 {
2267 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Clearing bogus flag for %s",
2268 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2269 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2270 }
2271 }
2272
2273 /* Fetch the possible triggered data watchpoint info and store it in
2274 LP.
2275
2276 On some archs, like x86, that use debug registers to set
2277 watchpoints, it's possible that the way to know which watched
2278 address trapped, is to check the register that is used to select
2279 which address to watch. Problem is, between setting the watchpoint
2280 and reading back which data address trapped, the user may change
2281 the set of watchpoints, and, as a consequence, GDB changes the
2282 debug registers in the inferior. To avoid reading back a stale
2283 stopped-data-address when that happens, we cache in LP the fact
2284 that a watchpoint trapped, and the corresponding data address, as
2285 soon as we see LP stop with a SIGTRAP. If GDB changes the debug
2286 registers meanwhile, we have the cached data we can rely on. */
2287
2288 static int
2289 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (struct lwp_info *lp)
2290 {
2291 scoped_restore save_inferior_ptid = make_scoped_restore (&inferior_ptid);
2292 inferior_ptid = lp->ptid;
2293
2294 if (linux_target->low_stopped_by_watchpoint ())
2295 {
2296 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2297 lp->stopped_data_address_p
2298 = linux_target->low_stopped_data_address (&lp->stopped_data_address);
2299 }
2300
2301 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2302 }
2303
2304 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a watchpoint. */
2305
2306 bool
2307 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_watchpoint ()
2308 {
2309 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2310
2311 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2312
2313 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT;
2314 }
2315
2316 bool
2317 linux_nat_target::stopped_data_address (CORE_ADDR *addr_p)
2318 {
2319 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2320
2321 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2322
2323 *addr_p = lp->stopped_data_address;
2324
2325 return lp->stopped_data_address_p;
2326 }
2327
2328 /* Commonly any breakpoint / watchpoint generate only SIGTRAP. */
2329
2330 bool
2331 linux_nat_target::low_status_is_event (int status)
2332 {
2333 return WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP;
2334 }
2335
2336 /* Wait until LP is stopped. */
2337
2338 static int
2339 stop_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
2340 {
2341 inferior *inf = find_inferior_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2342
2343 /* If this is a vfork parent, bail out, it is not going to report
2344 any SIGSTOP until the vfork is done with. */
2345 if (inf->vfork_child != NULL)
2346 return 0;
2347
2348 if (!lp->stopped)
2349 {
2350 int status;
2351
2352 status = wait_lwp (lp);
2353 if (status == 0)
2354 return 0;
2355
2356 if (lp->ignore_sigint && WIFSTOPPED (status)
2357 && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT)
2358 {
2359 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2360
2361 errno = 0;
2362 ptrace (PTRACE_CONT, lp->ptid.lwp (), 0, 0);
2363 lp->stopped = 0;
2364 linux_nat_debug_printf
2365 ("PTRACE_CONT %s, 0, 0 (%s) (discarding SIGINT)",
2366 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
2367 errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "OK");
2368
2369 return stop_wait_callback (lp);
2370 }
2371
2372 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp);
2373
2374 if (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP)
2375 {
2376 /* The thread was stopped with a signal other than SIGSTOP. */
2377
2378 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Pending event %s in %s",
2379 status_to_str ((int) status).c_str (),
2380 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2381
2382 /* Save the sigtrap event. */
2383 lp->status = status;
2384 gdb_assert (lp->signalled);
2385 save_stop_reason (lp);
2386 }
2387 else
2388 {
2389 /* We caught the SIGSTOP that we intended to catch. */
2390
2391 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Expected SIGSTOP caught for %s.",
2392 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2393
2394 lp->signalled = 0;
2395
2396 /* If we are waiting for this stop so we can report the thread
2397 stopped then we need to record this status. Otherwise, we can
2398 now discard this stop event. */
2399 if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop)
2400 {
2401 lp->status = status;
2402 save_stop_reason (lp);
2403 }
2404 }
2405 }
2406
2407 return 0;
2408 }
2409
2410 /* Return non-zero if LP has a wait status pending. Discard the
2411 pending event and resume the LWP if the event that originally
2412 caused the stop became uninteresting. */
2413
2414 static int
2415 status_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
2416 {
2417 /* Only report a pending wait status if we pretend that this has
2418 indeed been resumed. */
2419 if (!lp->resumed)
2420 return 0;
2421
2422 if (!lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2423 return 0;
2424
2425 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT
2426 || lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT)
2427 {
2428 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2429 CORE_ADDR pc;
2430 int discard = 0;
2431
2432 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
2433
2434 if (pc != lp->stop_pc)
2435 {
2436 linux_nat_debug_printf ("PC of %s changed. was=%s, now=%s",
2437 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
2438 paddress (target_gdbarch (), lp->stop_pc),
2439 paddress (target_gdbarch (), pc));
2440 discard = 1;
2441 }
2442
2443 #if !USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2444 else if (!breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
2445 {
2446 linux_nat_debug_printf ("previous breakpoint of %s, at %s gone",
2447 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
2448 paddress (target_gdbarch (), lp->stop_pc));
2449
2450 discard = 1;
2451 }
2452 #endif
2453
2454 if (discard)
2455 {
2456 linux_nat_debug_printf ("pending event of %s cancelled.",
2457 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2458
2459 lp->status = 0;
2460 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
2461 return 0;
2462 }
2463 }
2464
2465 return 1;
2466 }
2467
2468 /* Count the LWP's that have had events. */
2469
2470 static int
2471 count_events_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, int *count)
2472 {
2473 gdb_assert (count != NULL);
2474
2475 /* Select only resumed LWPs that have an event pending. */
2476 if (lp->resumed && lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2477 (*count)++;
2478
2479 return 0;
2480 }
2481
2482 /* Select the LWP (if any) that is currently being single-stepped. */
2483
2484 static int
2485 select_singlestep_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
2486 {
2487 if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_step
2488 && lp->status != 0)
2489 return 1;
2490 else
2491 return 0;
2492 }
2493
2494 /* Returns true if LP has a status pending. */
2495
2496 static int
2497 lwp_status_pending_p (struct lwp_info *lp)
2498 {
2499 /* We check for lp->waitstatus in addition to lp->status, because we
2500 can have pending process exits recorded in lp->status and
2501 W_EXITCODE(0,0) happens to be 0. */
2502 return lp->status != 0 || lp->waitstatus.kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2503 }
2504
2505 /* Select the Nth LWP that has had an event. */
2506
2507 static int
2508 select_event_lwp_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, int *selector)
2509 {
2510 gdb_assert (selector != NULL);
2511
2512 /* Select only resumed LWPs that have an event pending. */
2513 if (lp->resumed && lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
2514 if ((*selector)-- == 0)
2515 return 1;
2516
2517 return 0;
2518 }
2519
2520 /* Called when the LWP stopped for a signal/trap. If it stopped for a
2521 trap check what caused it (breakpoint, watchpoint, trace, etc.),
2522 and save the result in the LWP's stop_reason field. If it stopped
2523 for a breakpoint, decrement the PC if necessary on the lwp's
2524 architecture. */
2525
2526 static void
2527 save_stop_reason (struct lwp_info *lp)
2528 {
2529 struct regcache *regcache;
2530 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
2531 CORE_ADDR pc;
2532 CORE_ADDR sw_bp_pc;
2533 #if USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2534 siginfo_t siginfo;
2535 #endif
2536
2537 gdb_assert (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON);
2538 gdb_assert (lp->status != 0);
2539
2540 if (!linux_target->low_status_is_event (lp->status))
2541 return;
2542
2543 inferior *inf = find_inferior_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2544 if (inf->starting_up)
2545 return;
2546
2547 regcache = get_thread_regcache (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2548 gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
2549
2550 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
2551 sw_bp_pc = pc - gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch);
2552
2553 #if USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO
2554 if (linux_nat_get_siginfo (lp->ptid, &siginfo))
2555 {
2556 if (siginfo.si_signo == SIGTRAP)
2557 {
2558 if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_BRKPT (siginfo.si_code)
2559 && GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_HWBKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2560 {
2561 /* The si_code is ambiguous on this arch -- check debug
2562 registers. */
2563 if (!check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp))
2564 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2565 }
2566 else if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_BRKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2567 {
2568 /* If we determine the LWP stopped for a SW breakpoint,
2569 trust it. Particularly don't check watchpoint
2570 registers, because, at least on s390, we'd find
2571 stopped-by-watchpoint as long as there's a watchpoint
2572 set. */
2573 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2574 }
2575 else if (GDB_ARCH_IS_TRAP_HWBKPT (siginfo.si_code))
2576 {
2577 /* This can indicate either a hardware breakpoint or
2578 hardware watchpoint. Check debug registers. */
2579 if (!check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp))
2580 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2581 }
2582 else if (siginfo.si_code == TRAP_TRACE)
2583 {
2584 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s stopped by trace",
2585 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2586
2587 /* We may have single stepped an instruction that
2588 triggered a watchpoint. In that case, on some
2589 architectures (such as x86), instead of TRAP_HWBKPT,
2590 si_code indicates TRAP_TRACE, and we need to check
2591 the debug registers separately. */
2592 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp);
2593 }
2594 }
2595 }
2596 #else
2597 if ((!lp->step || lp->stop_pc == sw_bp_pc)
2598 && software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (),
2599 sw_bp_pc))
2600 {
2601 /* The LWP was either continued, or stepped a software
2602 breakpoint instruction. */
2603 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2604 }
2605
2606 if (hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
2607 lp->stop_reason = TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2608
2609 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_NO_REASON)
2610 check_stopped_by_watchpoint (lp);
2611 #endif
2612
2613 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT)
2614 {
2615 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s stopped by software breakpoint",
2616 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2617
2618 /* Back up the PC if necessary. */
2619 if (pc != sw_bp_pc)
2620 regcache_write_pc (regcache, sw_bp_pc);
2621
2622 /* Update this so we record the correct stop PC below. */
2623 pc = sw_bp_pc;
2624 }
2625 else if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT)
2626 {
2627 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s stopped by hardware breakpoint",
2628 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2629 }
2630 else if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT)
2631 {
2632 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s stopped by hardware watchpoint",
2633 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2634 }
2635
2636 lp->stop_pc = pc;
2637 }
2638
2639
2640 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a software breakpoint. */
2641
2642 bool
2643 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_sw_breakpoint ()
2644 {
2645 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2646
2647 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2648
2649 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT;
2650 }
2651
2652 /* Implement the supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint method. */
2653
2654 bool
2655 linux_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint ()
2656 {
2657 return USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO;
2658 }
2659
2660 /* Returns true if the LWP had stopped for a hardware
2661 breakpoint/watchpoint. */
2662
2663 bool
2664 linux_nat_target::stopped_by_hw_breakpoint ()
2665 {
2666 struct lwp_info *lp = find_lwp_pid (inferior_ptid);
2667
2668 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
2669
2670 return lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_HW_BREAKPOINT;
2671 }
2672
2673 /* Implement the supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint method. */
2674
2675 bool
2676 linux_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint ()
2677 {
2678 return USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO;
2679 }
2680
2681 /* Select one LWP out of those that have events pending. */
2682
2683 static void
2684 select_event_lwp (ptid_t filter, struct lwp_info **orig_lp, int *status)
2685 {
2686 int num_events = 0;
2687 int random_selector;
2688 struct lwp_info *event_lp = NULL;
2689
2690 /* Record the wait status for the original LWP. */
2691 (*orig_lp)->status = *status;
2692
2693 /* In all-stop, give preference to the LWP that is being
2694 single-stepped. There will be at most one, and it will be the
2695 LWP that the core is most interested in. If we didn't do this,
2696 then we'd have to handle pending step SIGTRAPs somehow in case
2697 the core later continues the previously-stepped thread, as
2698 otherwise we'd report the pending SIGTRAP then, and the core, not
2699 having stepped the thread, wouldn't understand what the trap was
2700 for, and therefore would report it to the user as a random
2701 signal. */
2702 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
2703 {
2704 event_lp = iterate_over_lwps (filter, select_singlestep_lwp_callback);
2705 if (event_lp != NULL)
2706 {
2707 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Select single-step %s",
2708 event_lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2709 }
2710 }
2711
2712 if (event_lp == NULL)
2713 {
2714 /* Pick one at random, out of those which have had events. */
2715
2716 /* First see how many events we have. */
2717 iterate_over_lwps (filter,
2718 [&] (struct lwp_info *info)
2719 {
2720 return count_events_callback (info, &num_events);
2721 });
2722 gdb_assert (num_events > 0);
2723
2724 /* Now randomly pick a LWP out of those that have had
2725 events. */
2726 random_selector = (int)
2727 ((num_events * (double) rand ()) / (RAND_MAX + 1.0));
2728
2729 if (num_events > 1)
2730 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Found %d events, selecting #%d",
2731 num_events, random_selector);
2732
2733 event_lp
2734 = (iterate_over_lwps
2735 (filter,
2736 [&] (struct lwp_info *info)
2737 {
2738 return select_event_lwp_callback (info,
2739 &random_selector);
2740 }));
2741 }
2742
2743 if (event_lp != NULL)
2744 {
2745 /* Switch the event LWP. */
2746 *orig_lp = event_lp;
2747 *status = event_lp->status;
2748 }
2749
2750 /* Flush the wait status for the event LWP. */
2751 (*orig_lp)->status = 0;
2752 }
2753
2754 /* Return non-zero if LP has been resumed. */
2755
2756 static int
2757 resumed_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
2758 {
2759 return lp->resumed;
2760 }
2761
2762 /* Check if we should go on and pass this event to common code.
2763
2764 If so, save the status to the lwp_info structure associated to LWPID. */
2765
2766 static void
2767 linux_nat_filter_event (int lwpid, int status)
2768 {
2769 struct lwp_info *lp;
2770 int event = linux_ptrace_get_extended_event (status);
2771
2772 lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid_t (lwpid));
2773
2774 /* Check for events reported by anything not in our LWP list. */
2775 if (lp == nullptr)
2776 {
2777 if (WIFSTOPPED (status))
2778 {
2779 if (WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP && event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC)
2780 {
2781 /* A non-leader thread exec'ed after we've seen the
2782 leader zombie, and removed it from our lists (in
2783 check_zombie_leaders). The non-leader thread changes
2784 its tid to the tgid. */
2785 linux_nat_debug_printf
2786 ("Re-adding thread group leader LWP %d after exec.",
2787 lwpid);
2788
2789 lp = add_lwp (ptid_t (lwpid, lwpid));
2790 lp->stopped = 1;
2791 lp->resumed = 1;
2792 add_thread (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2793 }
2794 else
2795 {
2796 /* A process we are controlling has forked and the new
2797 child's stop was reported to us by the kernel. Save
2798 its PID and go back to waiting for the fork event to
2799 be reported - the stopped process might be returned
2800 from waitpid before or after the fork event is. */
2801 linux_nat_debug_printf
2802 ("Saving LWP %d status %s in stopped_pids list",
2803 lwpid, status_to_str (status).c_str ());
2804 add_to_pid_list (&stopped_pids, lwpid, status);
2805 }
2806 }
2807 else
2808 {
2809 /* Don't report an event for the exit of an LWP not in our
2810 list, i.e. not part of any inferior we're debugging.
2811 This can happen if we detach from a program we originally
2812 forked and then it exits. However, note that we may have
2813 earlier deleted a leader of an inferior we're debugging,
2814 in check_zombie_leaders. Re-add it back here if so. */
2815 for (inferior *inf : all_inferiors (linux_target))
2816 {
2817 if (inf->pid == lwpid)
2818 {
2819 linux_nat_debug_printf
2820 ("Re-adding thread group leader LWP %d after exit.",
2821 lwpid);
2822
2823 lp = add_lwp (ptid_t (lwpid, lwpid));
2824 lp->resumed = 1;
2825 add_thread (linux_target, lp->ptid);
2826 break;
2827 }
2828 }
2829 }
2830
2831 if (lp == nullptr)
2832 return;
2833 }
2834
2835 /* This LWP is stopped now. (And if dead, this prevents it from
2836 ever being continued.) */
2837 lp->stopped = 1;
2838
2839 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && lp->must_set_ptrace_flags)
2840 {
2841 inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (linux_target, lp->ptid.pid ());
2842 int options = linux_nat_ptrace_options (inf->attach_flag);
2843
2844 linux_enable_event_reporting (lp->ptid.lwp (), options);
2845 lp->must_set_ptrace_flags = 0;
2846 }
2847
2848 /* Handle GNU/Linux's syscall SIGTRAPs. */
2849 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SYSCALL_SIGTRAP)
2850 {
2851 /* No longer need the sysgood bit. The ptrace event ends up
2852 recorded in lp->waitstatus if we care for it. We can carry
2853 on handling the event like a regular SIGTRAP from here
2854 on. */
2855 status = W_STOPCODE (SIGTRAP);
2856 if (linux_handle_syscall_trap (lp, 0))
2857 return;
2858 }
2859 else
2860 {
2861 /* Almost all other ptrace-stops are known to be outside of system
2862 calls, with further exceptions in linux_handle_extended_wait. */
2863 lp->syscall_state = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
2864 }
2865
2866 /* Handle GNU/Linux's extended waitstatus for trace events. */
2867 if (WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGTRAP
2868 && linux_is_extended_waitstatus (status))
2869 {
2870 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Handling extended status 0x%06x", status);
2871
2872 if (linux_handle_extended_wait (lp, status))
2873 return;
2874 }
2875
2876 /* Check if the thread has exited. */
2877 if (WIFEXITED (status) || WIFSIGNALED (status))
2878 {
2879 if (!report_thread_events && !is_leader (lp))
2880 {
2881 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s exited.",
2882 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2883
2884 /* If this was not the leader exiting, then the exit signal
2885 was not the end of the debugged application and should be
2886 ignored. */
2887 exit_lwp (lp);
2888 return;
2889 }
2890
2891 /* Note that even if the leader was ptrace-stopped, it can still
2892 exit, if e.g., some other thread brings down the whole
2893 process (calls `exit'). So don't assert that the lwp is
2894 resumed. */
2895 linux_nat_debug_printf ("LWP %ld exited (resumed=%d)",
2896 lp->ptid.lwp (), lp->resumed);
2897
2898 /* Dead LWP's aren't expected to reported a pending sigstop. */
2899 lp->signalled = 0;
2900
2901 /* Store the pending event in the waitstatus, because
2902 W_EXITCODE(0,0) == 0. */
2903 lp->waitstatus = host_status_to_waitstatus (status);
2904 return;
2905 }
2906
2907 /* Make sure we don't report a SIGSTOP that we sent ourselves in
2908 an attempt to stop an LWP. */
2909 if (lp->signalled
2910 && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP)
2911 {
2912 lp->signalled = 0;
2913
2914 if (lp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop)
2915 {
2916 linux_nat_debug_printf ("resume_stop SIGSTOP caught for %s.",
2917 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2918 }
2919 else
2920 {
2921 /* This is a delayed SIGSTOP. Filter out the event. */
2922
2923 linux_nat_debug_printf
2924 ("%s %s, 0, 0 (discard delayed SIGSTOP)",
2925 lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
2926 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2927
2928 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
2929 gdb_assert (lp->resumed);
2930 return;
2931 }
2932 }
2933
2934 /* Make sure we don't report a SIGINT that we have already displayed
2935 for another thread. */
2936 if (lp->ignore_sigint
2937 && WIFSTOPPED (status) && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGINT)
2938 {
2939 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Delayed SIGINT caught for %s.",
2940 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2941
2942 /* This is a delayed SIGINT. */
2943 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2944
2945 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
2946 linux_nat_debug_printf ("%s %s, 0, 0 (discard SIGINT)",
2947 lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
2948 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
2949 gdb_assert (lp->resumed);
2950
2951 /* Discard the event. */
2952 return;
2953 }
2954
2955 /* Don't report signals that GDB isn't interested in, such as
2956 signals that are neither printed nor stopped upon. Stopping all
2957 threads can be a bit time-consuming, so if we want decent
2958 performance with heavily multi-threaded programs, especially when
2959 they're using a high frequency timer, we'd better avoid it if we
2960 can. */
2961 if (WIFSTOPPED (status))
2962 {
2963 enum gdb_signal signo = gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (status));
2964
2965 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
2966 {
2967 /* Only do the below in all-stop, as we currently use SIGSTOP
2968 to implement target_stop (see linux_nat_stop) in
2969 non-stop. */
2970 if (signo == GDB_SIGNAL_INT && signal_pass_state (signo) == 0)
2971 {
2972 /* If ^C/BREAK is typed at the tty/console, SIGINT gets
2973 forwarded to the entire process group, that is, all LWPs
2974 will receive it - unless they're using CLONE_THREAD to
2975 share signals. Since we only want to report it once, we
2976 mark it as ignored for all LWPs except this one. */
2977 iterate_over_lwps (ptid_t (lp->ptid.pid ()), set_ignore_sigint);
2978 lp->ignore_sigint = 0;
2979 }
2980 else
2981 maybe_clear_ignore_sigint (lp);
2982 }
2983
2984 /* When using hardware single-step, we need to report every signal.
2985 Otherwise, signals in pass_mask may be short-circuited
2986 except signals that might be caused by a breakpoint, or SIGSTOP
2987 if we sent the SIGSTOP and are waiting for it to arrive. */
2988 if (!lp->step
2989 && WSTOPSIG (status) && sigismember (&pass_mask, WSTOPSIG (status))
2990 && (WSTOPSIG (status) != SIGSTOP
2991 || !find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lp->ptid)->stop_requested)
2992 && !linux_wstatus_maybe_breakpoint (status))
2993 {
2994 linux_resume_one_lwp (lp, lp->step, signo);
2995 linux_nat_debug_printf
2996 ("%s %s, %s (preempt 'handle')",
2997 lp->step ? "PTRACE_SINGLESTEP" : "PTRACE_CONT",
2998 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
2999 (signo != GDB_SIGNAL_0
3000 ? strsignal (gdb_signal_to_host (signo)) : "0"));
3001 return;
3002 }
3003 }
3004
3005 /* An interesting event. */
3006 gdb_assert (lp);
3007 lp->status = status;
3008 save_stop_reason (lp);
3009 }
3010
3011 /* Detect zombie thread group leaders, and "exit" them. We can't reap
3012 their exits until all other threads in the group have exited. */
3013
3014 static void
3015 check_zombie_leaders (void)
3016 {
3017 for (inferior *inf : all_inferiors ())
3018 {
3019 struct lwp_info *leader_lp;
3020
3021 if (inf->pid == 0)
3022 continue;
3023
3024 leader_lp = find_lwp_pid (ptid_t (inf->pid));
3025 if (leader_lp != NULL
3026 /* Check if there are other threads in the group, as we may
3027 have raced with the inferior simply exiting. Note this
3028 isn't a watertight check. If the inferior is
3029 multi-threaded and is exiting, it may be we see the
3030 leader as zombie before we reap all the non-leader
3031 threads. See comments below. */
3032 && num_lwps (inf->pid) > 1
3033 && linux_proc_pid_is_zombie (inf->pid))
3034 {
3035 /* A zombie leader in a multi-threaded program can mean one
3036 of three things:
3037
3038 #1 - Only the leader exited, not the whole program, e.g.,
3039 with pthread_exit. Since we can't reap the leader's exit
3040 status until all other threads are gone and reaped too,
3041 we want to delete the zombie leader right away, as it
3042 can't be debugged, we can't read its registers, etc.
3043 This is the main reason we check for zombie leaders
3044 disappearing.
3045
3046 #2 - The whole thread-group/process exited (a group exit,
3047 via e.g. exit(3), and there is (or will be shortly) an
3048 exit reported for each thread in the process, and then
3049 finally an exit for the leader once the non-leaders are
3050 reaped.
3051
3052 #3 - There are 3 or more threads in the group, and a
3053 thread other than the leader exec'd. See comments on
3054 exec events at the top of the file.
3055
3056 Ideally we would never delete the leader for case #2.
3057 Instead, we want to collect the exit status of each
3058 non-leader thread, and then finally collect the exit
3059 status of the leader as normal and use its exit code as
3060 whole-process exit code. Unfortunately, there's no
3061 race-free way to distinguish cases #1 and #2. We can't
3062 assume the exit events for the non-leaders threads are
3063 already pending in the kernel, nor can we assume the
3064 non-leader threads are in zombie state already. Between
3065 the leader becoming zombie and the non-leaders exiting
3066 and becoming zombie themselves, there's a small time
3067 window, so such a check would be racy. Temporarily
3068 pausing all threads and checking to see if all threads
3069 exit or not before re-resuming them would work in the
3070 case that all threads are running right now, but it
3071 wouldn't work if some thread is currently already
3072 ptrace-stopped, e.g., due to scheduler-locking.
3073
3074 So what we do is we delete the leader anyhow, and then
3075 later on when we see its exit status, we re-add it back.
3076 We also make sure that we only report a whole-process
3077 exit when we see the leader exiting, as opposed to when
3078 the last LWP in the LWP list exits, which can be a
3079 non-leader if we deleted the leader here. */
3080 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Thread group leader %d zombie "
3081 "(it exited, or another thread execd), "
3082 "deleting it.",
3083 inf->pid);
3084 exit_lwp (leader_lp);
3085 }
3086 }
3087 }
3088
3089 /* Convenience function that is called when the kernel reports an exit
3090 event. This decides whether to report the event to GDB as a
3091 process exit event, a thread exit event, or to suppress the
3092 event. */
3093
3094 static ptid_t
3095 filter_exit_event (struct lwp_info *event_child,
3096 struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus)
3097 {
3098 ptid_t ptid = event_child->ptid;
3099
3100 if (!is_leader (event_child))
3101 {
3102 if (report_thread_events)
3103 ourstatus->set_thread_exited (0);
3104 else
3105 ourstatus->set_ignore ();
3106
3107 exit_lwp (event_child);
3108 }
3109
3110 return ptid;
3111 }
3112
3113 static ptid_t
3114 linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus,
3115 target_wait_flags target_options)
3116 {
3117 sigset_t prev_mask;
3118 enum resume_kind last_resume_kind;
3119 struct lwp_info *lp;
3120 int status;
3121
3122 linux_nat_debug_printf ("enter");
3123
3124 /* The first time we get here after starting a new inferior, we may
3125 not have added it to the LWP list yet - this is the earliest
3126 moment at which we know its PID. */
3127 if (ptid.is_pid () && find_lwp_pid (ptid) == nullptr)
3128 {
3129 ptid_t lwp_ptid (ptid.pid (), ptid.pid ());
3130
3131 /* Upgrade the main thread's ptid. */
3132 thread_change_ptid (linux_target, ptid, lwp_ptid);
3133 lp = add_initial_lwp (lwp_ptid);
3134 lp->resumed = 1;
3135 }
3136
3137 /* Make sure SIGCHLD is blocked until the sigsuspend below. */
3138 block_child_signals (&prev_mask);
3139
3140 /* First check if there is a LWP with a wait status pending. */
3141 lp = iterate_over_lwps (ptid, status_callback);
3142 if (lp != NULL)
3143 {
3144 linux_nat_debug_printf ("Using pending wait status %s for %s.",
3145 status_to_str (lp->status).c_str (),
3146 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
3147 }
3148
3149 /* But if we don't find a pending event, we'll have to wait. Always
3150 pull all events out of the kernel. We'll randomly select an
3151 event LWP out of all that have events, to prevent starvation. */
3152
3153 while (lp == NULL)
3154 {
3155 pid_t lwpid;
3156
3157 /* Always use -1 and WNOHANG, due to couple of a kernel/ptrace
3158 quirks:
3159
3160 - If the thread group leader exits while other threads in the
3161 thread group still exist, waitpid(TGID, ...) hangs. That
3162 waitpid won't return an exit status until the other threads
3163 in the group are reaped.
3164
3165 - When a non-leader thread execs, that thread just vanishes
3166 without reporting an exit (so we'd hang if we waited for it
3167 explicitly in that case). The exec event is reported to
3168 the TGID pid. */
3169
3170 errno = 0;
3171 lwpid = my_waitpid (-1, &status, __WALL | WNOHANG);
3172
3173 linux_nat_debug_printf ("waitpid(-1, ...) returned %d, %s",
3174 lwpid,
3175 errno ? safe_strerror (errno) : "ERRNO-OK");
3176
3177 if (lwpid > 0)
3178 {
3179 linux_nat_debug_printf ("waitpid %ld received %s",
3180 (long) lwpid,
3181 status_to_str (status).c_str ());
3182
3183 linux_nat_filter_event (lwpid, status);
3184 /* Retry until nothing comes out of waitpid. A single
3185 SIGCHLD can indicate more than one child stopped. */
3186 continue;
3187 }
3188
3189 /* Now that we've pulled all events out of the kernel, resume
3190 LWPs that don't have an interesting event to report. */
3191 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid,
3192 [] (struct lwp_info *info)
3193 {
3194 return resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (info, minus_one_ptid);
3195 });
3196
3197 /* ... and find an LWP with a status to report to the core, if
3198 any. */
3199 lp = iterate_over_lwps (ptid, status_callback);
3200 if (lp != NULL)
3201 break;
3202
3203 /* Check for zombie thread group leaders. Those can't be reaped
3204 until all other threads in the thread group are. */
3205 check_zombie_leaders ();
3206
3207 /* If there are no resumed children left, bail. We'd be stuck
3208 forever in the sigsuspend call below otherwise. */
3209 if (iterate_over_lwps (ptid, resumed_callback) == NULL)
3210 {
3211 linux_nat_debug_printf ("exit (no resumed LWP)");
3212
3213 ourstatus->set_no_resumed ();
3214
3215 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3216 return minus_one_ptid;
3217 }
3218
3219 /* No interesting event to report to the core. */
3220
3221 if (target_options & TARGET_WNOHANG)
3222 {
3223 linux_nat_debug_printf ("exit (ignore)");
3224
3225 ourstatus->set_ignore ();
3226 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3227 return minus_one_ptid;
3228 }
3229
3230 /* We shouldn't end up here unless we want to try again. */
3231 gdb_assert (lp == NULL);
3232
3233 /* Block until we get an event reported with SIGCHLD. */
3234 wait_for_signal ();
3235 }
3236
3237 gdb_assert (lp);
3238
3239 status = lp->status;
3240 lp->status = 0;
3241
3242 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
3243 {
3244 /* Now stop all other LWP's ... */
3245 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_callback);
3246
3247 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
3248 they're no longer running. */
3249 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, stop_wait_callback);
3250 }
3251
3252 /* If we're not waiting for a specific LWP, choose an event LWP from
3253 among those that have had events. Giving equal priority to all
3254 LWPs that have had events helps prevent starvation. */
3255 if (ptid == minus_one_ptid || ptid.is_pid ())
3256 select_event_lwp (ptid, &lp, &status);
3257
3258 gdb_assert (lp != NULL);
3259
3260 /* Now that we've selected our final event LWP, un-adjust its PC if
3261 it was a software breakpoint, and we can't reliably support the
3262 "stopped by software breakpoint" stop reason. */
3263 if (lp->stop_reason == TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SW_BREAKPOINT
3264 && !USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO)
3265 {
3266 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (linux_target, lp->ptid);
3267 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
3268 int decr_pc = gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch);
3269
3270 if (decr_pc != 0)
3271 {
3272 CORE_ADDR pc;
3273
3274 pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
3275 regcache_write_pc (regcache, pc + decr_pc);
3276 }
3277 }
3278
3279 /* We'll need this to determine whether to report a SIGSTOP as
3280 GDB_SIGNAL_0. Need to take a copy because resume_clear_callback
3281 clears it. */
3282 last_resume_kind = lp->last_resume_kind;
3283
3284 if (!target_is_non_stop_p ())
3285 {
3286 /* In all-stop, from the core's perspective, all LWPs are now
3287 stopped until a new resume action is sent over. */
3288 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid, resume_clear_callback);
3289 }
3290 else
3291 {
3292 resume_clear_callback (lp);
3293 }
3294
3295 if (linux_target->low_status_is_event (status))
3296 {
3297 linux_nat_debug_printf ("trap ptid is %s.",
3298 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
3299 }
3300
3301 if (lp->waitstatus.kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
3302 {
3303 *ourstatus = lp->waitstatus;
3304 lp->waitstatus.set_ignore ();
3305 }
3306 else
3307 *ourstatus = host_status_to_waitstatus (status);
3308
3309 linux_nat_debug_printf ("exit");
3310
3311 restore_child_signals_mask (&prev_mask);
3312
3313 if (last_resume_kind == resume_stop
3314 && ourstatus->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
3315 && WSTOPSIG (status) == SIGSTOP)
3316 {
3317 /* A thread that has been requested to stop by GDB with
3318 target_stop, and it stopped cleanly, so report as SIG0. The
3319 use of SIGSTOP is an implementation detail. */
3320 ourstatus->set_stopped (GDB_SIGNAL_0);
3321 }
3322
3323 if (ourstatus->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED
3324 || ourstatus->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED)
3325 lp->core = -1;
3326 else
3327 lp->core = linux_common_core_of_thread (lp->ptid);
3328
3329 if (ourstatus->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED)
3330 return filter_exit_event (lp, ourstatus);
3331
3332 return lp->ptid;
3333 }
3334
3335 /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status
3336 to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. */
3337
3338 static int
3339 resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (struct lwp_info *lp, const ptid_t wait_ptid)
3340 {
3341 if (!lp->stopped)
3342 {
3343 linux_nat_debug_printf ("NOT resuming LWP %s, not stopped",
3344 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
3345 }
3346 else if (!lp->resumed)
3347 {
3348 linux_nat_debug_printf ("NOT resuming LWP %s, not resumed",
3349 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
3350 }
3351 else if (lwp_status_pending_p (lp))
3352 {
3353 linux_nat_debug_printf ("NOT resuming LWP %s, has pending status",
3354 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
3355 }
3356 else
3357 {
3358 struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (linux_target, lp->ptid);
3359 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = regcache->arch ();
3360
3361 try
3362 {
3363 CORE_ADDR pc = regcache_read_pc (regcache);
3364 int leave_stopped = 0;
3365
3366 /* Don't bother if there's a breakpoint at PC that we'd hit
3367 immediately, and we're not waiting for this LWP. */
3368 if (!lp->ptid.matches (wait_ptid))
3369 {
3370 if (breakpoint_inserted_here_p (regcache->aspace (), pc))
3371 leave_stopped = 1;
3372 }
3373
3374 if (!leave_stopped)
3375 {
3376 linux_nat_debug_printf
3377 ("resuming stopped-resumed LWP %s at %s: step=%d",
3378 lp->ptid.to_string ().c_str (), paddress (gdbarch, pc),
3379 lp->step);
3380
3381 linux_resume_one_lwp_throw (lp, lp->step, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
3382 }
3383 }
3384 catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
3385 {
3386 if (!check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone (lp))
3387 throw;
3388 }
3389 }
3390
3391 return 0;
3392 }
3393
3394 ptid_t
3395 linux_nat_target::wait (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus,
3396 target_wait_flags target_options)
3397 {
3398 ptid_t event_ptid;
3399
3400 linux_nat_debug_printf ("[%s], [%s]", ptid.to_string ().c_str (),
3401 target_options_to_string (target_options).c_str ());
3402
3403 /* Flush the async file first. */
3404 if (target_is_async_p ())
3405 async_file_flush ();
3406
3407 /* Resume LWPs that are currently stopped without any pending status
3408 to report, but are resumed from the core's perspective. LWPs get
3409 in this state if we find them stopping at a time we're not
3410 interested in reporting the event (target_wait on a
3411 specific_process, for example, see linux_nat_wait_1), and
3412 meanwhile the event became uninteresting. Don't bother resuming
3413 LWPs we're not going to wait for if they'd stop immediately. */
3414 if (target_is_non_stop_p ())
3415 iterate_over_lwps (minus_one_ptid,
3416 [=] (struct lwp_info *info)
3417 {
3418 return resume_stopped_resumed_lwps (info, ptid);
3419 });
3420
3421 event_ptid = linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid, ourstatus, target_options);
3422
3423 /* If we requested any event, and something came out, assume there
3424 may be more. If we requested a specific lwp or process, also
3425 assume there may be more. */
3426 if (target_is_async_p ()
3427 && ((ourstatus->kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE
3428 && ourstatus->kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED)
3429 || ptid != minus_one_ptid))
3430 async_file_mark ();
3431
3432 return event_ptid;
3433 }
3434
3435 /* Kill one LWP. */
3436
3437 static void
3438 kill_one_lwp (pid_t pid)
3439 {
3440 /* PTRACE_KILL may resume the inferior. Send SIGKILL first. */
3441
3442 errno = 0;
3443 kill_lwp (pid, SIGKILL);
3444
3445 if (debug_linux_nat)
3446 {
3447 int save_errno = errno;
3448
3449 linux_nat_debug_printf
3450 ("kill (SIGKILL) %ld, 0, 0 (%s)", (long) pid,
3451 save_errno != 0 ? safe_strerror (save_errno) : "OK");
3452 }
3453
3454 /* Some kernels ignore even SIGKILL for processes under ptrace. */
3455
3456 errno = 0;
3457 ptrace (PTRACE_KILL, pid, 0, 0);
3458 if (debug_linux_nat)
3459 {
3460 int save_errno = errno;
3461
3462 linux_nat_debug_printf
3463 ("PTRACE_KILL %ld, 0, 0 (%s)", (long) pid,
3464 save_errno ? safe_strerror (save_errno) : "OK");
3465 }
3466 }
3467
3468 /* Wait for an LWP to die. */
3469
3470 static void
3471 kill_wait_one_lwp (pid_t pid)
3472 {
3473 pid_t res;
3474
3475 /* We must make sure that there are no pending events (delayed
3476 SIGSTOPs, pending SIGTRAPs, etc.) to make sure the current
3477 program doesn't interfere with any following debugging session. */
3478
3479 do
3480 {
3481 res = my_waitpid (pid, NULL, __WALL);
3482 if (res != (pid_t) -1)
3483 {
3484 linux_nat_debug_printf ("wait %ld received unknown.", (long) pid);
3485
3486 /* The Linux kernel sometimes fails to kill a thread
3487 completely after PTRACE_KILL; that goes from the stop
3488 point in do_fork out to the one in get_signal_to_deliver
3489 and waits again. So kill it again. */
3490 kill_one_lwp (pid);
3491 }
3492 }
3493 while (res == pid);
3494
3495 gdb_assert (res == -1 && errno == ECHILD);
3496 }
3497
3498 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. */
3499
3500 static int
3501 kill_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
3502 {
3503 kill_one_lwp (lp->ptid.lwp ());
3504 return 0;
3505 }
3506
3507 /* Callback for iterate_over_lwps. */
3508
3509 static int
3510 kill_wait_callback (struct lwp_info *lp)
3511 {
3512 kill_wait_one_lwp (lp->ptid.lwp ());
3513 return 0;
3514 }
3515
3516 /* Kill the fork children of any threads of inferior INF that are
3517 stopped at a fork event. */
3518
3519 static void
3520 kill_unfollowed_fork_children (struct inferior *inf)
3521 {
3522 for (thread_info *thread : inf->non_exited_threads ())
3523 {
3524 struct target_waitstatus *ws = &thread->pending_follow;
3525
3526 if (ws->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED
3527 || ws->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED)
3528 {
3529 ptid_t child_ptid = ws->child_ptid ();
3530 int child_pid = child_ptid.pid ();
3531 int child_lwp = child_ptid.lwp ();
3532
3533 kill_one_lwp (child_lwp);
3534 kill_wait_one_lwp (child_lwp);
3535
3536 /* Let the arch-specific native code know this process is
3537 gone. */
3538 linux_target->low_forget_process (child_pid);
3539 }
3540 }
3541 }
3542
3543 void
3544 linux_nat_target::kill ()
3545 {
3546 /* If we're stopped while forking and we haven't followed yet,
3547 kill the other task. We need to do this first because the
3548 parent will be sleeping if this is a vfork. */
3549 kill_unfollowed_fork_children (current_inferior ());
3550
3551 if (forks_exist_p ())
3552 linux_fork_killall ();
3553 else
3554 {
3555 ptid_t ptid = ptid_t (inferior_ptid.pid ());
3556
3557 /* Stop all threads before killing them, since ptrace requires
3558 that the thread is stopped to successfully PTRACE_KILL. */
3559 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_callback);
3560 /* ... and wait until all of them have reported back that
3561 they're no longer running. */
3562 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, stop_wait_callback);
3563
3564 /* Kill all LWP's ... */
3565 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_callback);
3566
3567 /* ... and wait until we've flushed all events. */
3568 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, kill_wait_callback);
3569 }
3570
3571 target_mourn_inferior (inferior_ptid);
3572 }
3573
3574 void
3575 linux_nat_target::mourn_inferior ()
3576 {
3577 int pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
3578
3579 purge_lwp_list (pid);
3580
3581 close_proc_mem_file (pid);
3582
3583 if (! forks_exist_p ())
3584 /* Normal case, no other forks available. */
3585 inf_ptrace_target::mourn_inferior ();
3586 else
3587 /* Multi-fork case. The current inferior_ptid has exited, but
3588 there are other viable forks to debug. Delete the exiting
3589 one and context-switch to the first available. */
3590 linux_fork_mourn_inferior ();
3591
3592 /* Let the arch-specific native code know this process is gone. */
3593 linux_target->low_forget_process (pid);
3594 }
3595
3596 /* Convert a native/host siginfo object, into/from the siginfo in the
3597 layout of the inferiors' architecture. */
3598
3599 static void
3600 siginfo_fixup (siginfo_t *siginfo, gdb_byte *inf_siginfo, int direction)
3601 {
3602 /* If the low target didn't do anything, then just do a straight
3603 memcpy. */
3604 if (!linux_target->low_siginfo_fixup (siginfo, inf_siginfo, direction))
3605 {
3606 if (direction == 1)
3607 memcpy (siginfo, inf_siginfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
3608 else
3609 memcpy (inf_siginfo, siginfo, sizeof (siginfo_t));
3610 }
3611 }
3612
3613 static enum target_xfer_status
3614 linux_xfer_siginfo (enum target_object object,
3615 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3616 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
3617 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3618 {
3619 int pid;
3620 siginfo_t siginfo;
3621 gdb_byte inf_siginfo[sizeof (siginfo_t)];
3622
3623 gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO);
3624 gdb_assert (readbuf || writebuf);
3625
3626 pid = inferior_ptid.lwp ();
3627 if (pid == 0)
3628 pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
3629
3630 if (offset > sizeof (siginfo))
3631 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3632
3633 errno = 0;
3634 ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo);
3635 if (errno != 0)
3636 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3637
3638 /* When GDB is built as a 64-bit application, ptrace writes into
3639 SIGINFO an object with 64-bit layout. Since debugging a 32-bit
3640 inferior with a 64-bit GDB should look the same as debugging it
3641 with a 32-bit GDB, we need to convert it. GDB core always sees
3642 the converted layout, so any read/write will have to be done
3643 post-conversion. */
3644 siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 0);
3645
3646 if (offset + len > sizeof (siginfo))
3647 len = sizeof (siginfo) - offset;
3648
3649 if (readbuf != NULL)
3650 memcpy (readbuf, inf_siginfo + offset, len);
3651 else
3652 {
3653 memcpy (inf_siginfo + offset, writebuf, len);
3654
3655 /* Convert back to ptrace layout before flushing it out. */
3656 siginfo_fixup (&siginfo, inf_siginfo, 1);
3657
3658 errno = 0;
3659 ptrace (PTRACE_SETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, &siginfo);
3660 if (errno != 0)
3661 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3662 }
3663
3664 *xfered_len = len;
3665 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
3666 }
3667
3668 static enum target_xfer_status
3669 linux_nat_xfer_osdata (enum target_object object,
3670 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3671 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
3672 ULONGEST *xfered_len);
3673
3674 static enum target_xfer_status
3675 linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial (gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3676 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len);
3677
3678 enum target_xfer_status
3679 linux_nat_target::xfer_partial (enum target_object object,
3680 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
3681 const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3682 ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len, ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3683 {
3684 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO)
3685 return linux_xfer_siginfo (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3686 offset, len, xfered_len);
3687
3688 /* The target is connected but no live inferior is selected. Pass
3689 this request down to a lower stratum (e.g., the executable
3690 file). */
3691 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY && inferior_ptid == null_ptid)
3692 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
3693
3694 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV)
3695 return memory_xfer_auxv (this, object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3696 offset, len, xfered_len);
3697
3698 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA)
3699 return linux_nat_xfer_osdata (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3700 offset, len, xfered_len);
3701
3702 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY)
3703 {
3704 /* GDB calculates all addresses in the largest possible address
3705 width. The address width must be masked before its final use
3706 by linux_proc_xfer_partial.
3707
3708 Compare ADDR_BIT first to avoid a compiler warning on shift overflow. */
3709 int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch ());
3710
3711 if (addr_bit < (sizeof (ULONGEST) * HOST_CHAR_BIT))
3712 offset &= ((ULONGEST) 1 << addr_bit) - 1;
3713
3714 /* If /proc/pid/mem is writable, don't fallback to ptrace. If
3715 the write via /proc/pid/mem fails because the inferior execed
3716 (and we haven't seen the exec event yet), a subsequent ptrace
3717 poke would incorrectly write memory to the post-exec address
3718 space, while the core was trying to write to the pre-exec
3719 address space. */
3720 if (proc_mem_file_is_writable ())
3721 return linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial (readbuf, writebuf,
3722 offset, len, xfered_len);
3723 }
3724
3725 return inf_ptrace_target::xfer_partial (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
3726 offset, len, xfered_len);
3727 }
3728
3729 bool
3730 linux_nat_target::thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
3731 {
3732 /* As long as a PTID is in lwp list, consider it alive. */
3733 return find_lwp_pid (ptid) != NULL;
3734 }
3735
3736 /* Implement the to_update_thread_list target method for this
3737 target. */
3738
3739 void
3740 linux_nat_target::update_thread_list ()
3741 {
3742 /* We add/delete threads from the list as clone/exit events are
3743 processed, so just try deleting exited threads still in the
3744 thread list. */
3745 delete_exited_threads ();
3746
3747 /* Update the processor core that each lwp/thread was last seen
3748 running on. */
3749 for (lwp_info *lwp : all_lwps ())
3750 {
3751 /* Avoid accessing /proc if the thread hasn't run since we last
3752 time we fetched the thread's core. Accessing /proc becomes
3753 noticeably expensive when we have thousands of LWPs. */
3754 if (lwp->core == -1)
3755 lwp->core = linux_common_core_of_thread (lwp->ptid);
3756 }
3757 }
3758
3759 std::string
3760 linux_nat_target::pid_to_str (ptid_t ptid)
3761 {
3762 if (ptid.lwp_p ()
3763 && (ptid.pid () != ptid.lwp ()
3764 || num_lwps (ptid.pid ()) > 1))
3765 return string_printf ("LWP %ld", ptid.lwp ());
3766
3767 return normal_pid_to_str (ptid);
3768 }
3769
3770 const char *
3771 linux_nat_target::thread_name (struct thread_info *thr)
3772 {
3773 return linux_proc_tid_get_name (thr->ptid);
3774 }
3775
3776 /* Accepts an integer PID; Returns a string representing a file that
3777 can be opened to get the symbols for the child process. */
3778
3779 const char *
3780 linux_nat_target::pid_to_exec_file (int pid)
3781 {
3782 return linux_proc_pid_to_exec_file (pid);
3783 }
3784
3785 /* Object representing an /proc/PID/mem open file. We keep one such
3786 file open per inferior.
3787
3788 It might be tempting to think about only ever opening one file at
3789 most for all inferiors, closing/reopening the file as we access
3790 memory of different inferiors, to minimize number of file
3791 descriptors open, which can otherwise run into resource limits.
3792 However, that does not work correctly -- if the inferior execs and
3793 we haven't processed the exec event yet, and, we opened a
3794 /proc/PID/mem file, we will get a mem file accessing the post-exec
3795 address space, thinking we're opening it for the pre-exec address
3796 space. That is dangerous as we can poke memory (e.g. clearing
3797 breakpoints) in the post-exec memory by mistake, corrupting the
3798 inferior. For that reason, we open the mem file as early as
3799 possible, right after spawning, forking or attaching to the
3800 inferior, when the inferior is stopped and thus before it has a
3801 chance of execing.
3802
3803 Note that after opening the file, even if the thread we opened it
3804 for subsequently exits, the open file is still usable for accessing
3805 memory. It's only when the whole process exits or execs that the
3806 file becomes invalid, at which point reads/writes return EOF. */
3807
3808 class proc_mem_file
3809 {
3810 public:
3811 proc_mem_file (ptid_t ptid, int fd)
3812 : m_ptid (ptid), m_fd (fd)
3813 {
3814 gdb_assert (m_fd != -1);
3815 }
3816
3817 ~proc_mem_file ()
3818 {
3819 linux_nat_debug_printf ("closing fd %d for /proc/%d/task/%ld/mem",
3820 m_fd, m_ptid.pid (), m_ptid.lwp ());
3821 close (m_fd);
3822 }
3823
3824 DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (proc_mem_file);
3825
3826 int fd ()
3827 {
3828 return m_fd;
3829 }
3830
3831 private:
3832 /* The LWP this file was opened for. Just for debugging
3833 purposes. */
3834 ptid_t m_ptid;
3835
3836 /* The file descriptor. */
3837 int m_fd = -1;
3838 };
3839
3840 /* The map between an inferior process id, and the open /proc/PID/mem
3841 file. This is stored in a map instead of in a per-inferior
3842 structure because we need to be able to access memory of processes
3843 which don't have a corresponding struct inferior object. E.g.,
3844 with "detach-on-fork on" (the default), and "follow-fork parent"
3845 (also default), we don't create an inferior for the fork child, but
3846 we still need to remove breakpoints from the fork child's
3847 memory. */
3848 static std::unordered_map<int, proc_mem_file> proc_mem_file_map;
3849
3850 /* Close the /proc/PID/mem file for PID. */
3851
3852 static void
3853 close_proc_mem_file (pid_t pid)
3854 {
3855 proc_mem_file_map.erase (pid);
3856 }
3857
3858 /* Open the /proc/PID/mem file for the process (thread group) of PTID.
3859 We actually open /proc/PID/task/LWP/mem, as that's the LWP we know
3860 exists and is stopped right now. We prefer the
3861 /proc/PID/task/LWP/mem form over /proc/LWP/mem to avoid tid-reuse
3862 races, just in case this is ever called on an already-waited
3863 LWP. */
3864
3865 static void
3866 open_proc_mem_file (ptid_t ptid)
3867 {
3868 auto iter = proc_mem_file_map.find (ptid.pid ());
3869 gdb_assert (iter == proc_mem_file_map.end ());
3870
3871 char filename[64];
3872 xsnprintf (filename, sizeof filename,
3873 "/proc/%d/task/%ld/mem", ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
3874
3875 int fd = gdb_open_cloexec (filename, O_RDWR | O_LARGEFILE, 0).release ();
3876
3877 if (fd == -1)
3878 {
3879 warning (_("opening /proc/PID/mem file for lwp %d.%ld failed: %s (%d)"),
3880 ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp (),
3881 safe_strerror (errno), errno);
3882 return;
3883 }
3884
3885 proc_mem_file_map.emplace (std::piecewise_construct,
3886 std::forward_as_tuple (ptid.pid ()),
3887 std::forward_as_tuple (ptid, fd));
3888
3889 linux_nat_debug_printf ("opened fd %d for lwp %d.%ld",
3890 fd, ptid.pid (), ptid.lwp ());
3891 }
3892
3893 /* Helper for linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial and
3894 proc_mem_file_is_writable. FD is the already opened /proc/pid/mem
3895 file, and PID is the pid of the corresponding process. The rest of
3896 the arguments are like linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial's. */
3897
3898 static enum target_xfer_status
3899 linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial_fd (int fd, int pid,
3900 gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3901 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len,
3902 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3903 {
3904 ssize_t ret;
3905
3906 gdb_assert (fd != -1);
3907
3908 /* Use pread64/pwrite64 if available, since they save a syscall and can
3909 handle 64-bit offsets even on 32-bit platforms (for instance, SPARC
3910 debugging a SPARC64 application). */
3911 #ifdef HAVE_PREAD64
3912 ret = (readbuf ? pread64 (fd, readbuf, len, offset)
3913 : pwrite64 (fd, writebuf, len, offset));
3914 #else
3915 ret = lseek (fd, offset, SEEK_SET);
3916 if (ret != -1)
3917 ret = (readbuf ? read (fd, readbuf, len)
3918 : write (fd, writebuf, len));
3919 #endif
3920
3921 if (ret == -1)
3922 {
3923 linux_nat_debug_printf ("accessing fd %d for pid %d failed: %s (%d)",
3924 fd, pid, safe_strerror (errno), errno);
3925 return TARGET_XFER_E_IO;
3926 }
3927 else if (ret == 0)
3928 {
3929 /* EOF means the address space is gone, the whole process exited
3930 or execed. */
3931 linux_nat_debug_printf ("accessing fd %d for pid %d got EOF",
3932 fd, pid);
3933 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
3934 }
3935 else
3936 {
3937 *xfered_len = ret;
3938 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
3939 }
3940 }
3941
3942 /* Implement the to_xfer_partial target method using /proc/PID/mem.
3943 Because we can use a single read/write call, this can be much more
3944 efficient than banging away at PTRACE_PEEKTEXT. Also, unlike
3945 PTRACE_PEEKTEXT/PTRACE_POKETEXT, this works with running
3946 threads. */
3947
3948 static enum target_xfer_status
3949 linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial (gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf,
3950 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len,
3951 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
3952 {
3953 int pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
3954
3955 auto iter = proc_mem_file_map.find (pid);
3956 if (iter == proc_mem_file_map.end ())
3957 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
3958
3959 int fd = iter->second.fd ();
3960
3961 return linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial_fd (fd, pid, readbuf, writebuf, offset,
3962 len, xfered_len);
3963 }
3964
3965 /* Check whether /proc/pid/mem is writable in the current kernel, and
3966 return true if so. It wasn't writable before Linux 2.6.39, but
3967 there's no way to know whether the feature was backported to older
3968 kernels. So we check to see if it works. The result is cached,
3969 and this is garanteed to be called once early at startup. */
3970
3971 static bool
3972 proc_mem_file_is_writable ()
3973 {
3974 static gdb::optional<bool> writable;
3975
3976 if (writable.has_value ())
3977 return *writable;
3978
3979 writable.emplace (false);
3980
3981 /* We check whether /proc/pid/mem is writable by trying to write to
3982 one of our variables via /proc/self/mem. */
3983
3984 int fd = gdb_open_cloexec ("/proc/self/mem", O_RDWR | O_LARGEFILE, 0).release ();
3985
3986 if (fd == -1)
3987 {
3988 warning (_("opening /proc/self/mem file failed: %s (%d)"),
3989 safe_strerror (errno), errno);
3990 return *writable;
3991 }
3992
3993 SCOPE_EXIT { close (fd); };
3994
3995 /* This is the variable we try to write to. Note OFFSET below. */
3996 volatile gdb_byte test_var = 0;
3997
3998 gdb_byte writebuf[] = {0x55};
3999 ULONGEST offset = (uintptr_t) &test_var;
4000 ULONGEST xfered_len;
4001
4002 enum target_xfer_status res
4003 = linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial_fd (fd, getpid (), nullptr, writebuf,
4004 offset, 1, &xfered_len);
4005
4006 if (res == TARGET_XFER_OK)
4007 {
4008 gdb_assert (xfered_len == 1);
4009 gdb_assert (test_var == 0x55);
4010 /* Success. */
4011 *writable = true;
4012 }
4013
4014 return *writable;
4015 }
4016
4017 /* Parse LINE as a signal set and add its set bits to SIGS. */
4018
4019 static void
4020 add_line_to_sigset (const char *line, sigset_t *sigs)
4021 {
4022 int len = strlen (line) - 1;
4023 const char *p;
4024 int signum;
4025
4026 if (line[len] != '\n')
4027 error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line);
4028
4029 p = line;
4030 signum = len * 4;
4031 while (len-- > 0)
4032 {
4033 int digit;
4034
4035 if (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
4036 digit = *p - '0';
4037 else if (*p >= 'a' && *p <= 'f')
4038 digit = *p - 'a' + 10;
4039 else
4040 error (_("Could not parse signal set: %s"), line);
4041
4042 signum -= 4;
4043
4044 if (digit & 1)
4045 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 1);
4046 if (digit & 2)
4047 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 2);
4048 if (digit & 4)
4049 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 3);
4050 if (digit & 8)
4051 sigaddset (sigs, signum + 4);
4052
4053 p++;
4054 }
4055 }
4056
4057 /* Find process PID's pending signals from /proc/pid/status and set
4058 SIGS to match. */
4059
4060 void
4061 linux_proc_pending_signals (int pid, sigset_t *pending,
4062 sigset_t *blocked, sigset_t *ignored)
4063 {
4064 char buffer[PATH_MAX], fname[PATH_MAX];
4065
4066 sigemptyset (pending);
4067 sigemptyset (blocked);
4068 sigemptyset (ignored);
4069 xsnprintf (fname, sizeof fname, "/proc/%d/status", pid);
4070 gdb_file_up procfile = gdb_fopen_cloexec (fname, "r");
4071 if (procfile == NULL)
4072 error (_("Could not open %s"), fname);
4073
4074 while (fgets (buffer, PATH_MAX, procfile.get ()) != NULL)
4075 {
4076 /* Normal queued signals are on the SigPnd line in the status
4077 file. However, 2.6 kernels also have a "shared" pending
4078 queue for delivering signals to a thread group, so check for
4079 a ShdPnd line also.
4080
4081 Unfortunately some Red Hat kernels include the shared pending
4082 queue but not the ShdPnd status field. */
4083
4084 if (startswith (buffer, "SigPnd:\t"))
4085 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending);
4086 else if (startswith (buffer, "ShdPnd:\t"))
4087 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, pending);
4088 else if (startswith (buffer, "SigBlk:\t"))
4089 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, blocked);
4090 else if (startswith (buffer, "SigIgn:\t"))
4091 add_line_to_sigset (buffer + 8, ignored);
4092 }
4093 }
4094
4095 static enum target_xfer_status
4096 linux_nat_xfer_osdata (enum target_object object,
4097 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
4098 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len,
4099 ULONGEST *xfered_len)
4100 {
4101 gdb_assert (object == TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA);
4102
4103 *xfered_len = linux_common_xfer_osdata (annex, readbuf, offset, len);
4104 if (*xfered_len == 0)
4105 return TARGET_XFER_EOF;
4106 else
4107 return TARGET_XFER_OK;
4108 }
4109
4110 std::vector<static_tracepoint_marker>
4111 linux_nat_target::static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid (const char *strid)
4112 {
4113 char s[IPA_CMD_BUF_SIZE];
4114 int pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
4115 std::vector<static_tracepoint_marker> markers;
4116 const char *p = s;
4117 ptid_t ptid = ptid_t (pid, 0);
4118 static_tracepoint_marker marker;
4119
4120 /* Pause all */
4121 target_stop (ptid);
4122
4123 memcpy (s, "qTfSTM", sizeof ("qTfSTM"));
4124 s[sizeof ("qTfSTM")] = 0;
4125
4126 agent_run_command (pid, s, strlen (s) + 1);
4127
4128 /* Unpause all. */
4129 SCOPE_EXIT { target_continue_no_signal (ptid); };
4130
4131 while (*p++ == 'm')
4132 {
4133 do
4134 {
4135 parse_static_tracepoint_marker_definition (p, &p, &marker);
4136
4137 if (strid == NULL || marker.str_id == strid)
4138 markers.push_back (std::move (marker));
4139 }
4140 while (*p++ == ','); /* comma-separated list */
4141
4142 memcpy (s, "qTsSTM", sizeof ("qTsSTM"));
4143 s[sizeof ("qTsSTM")] = 0;
4144 agent_run_command (pid, s, strlen (s) + 1);
4145 p = s;
4146 }
4147
4148 return markers;
4149 }
4150
4151 /* target_can_async_p implementation. */
4152
4153 bool
4154 linux_nat_target::can_async_p ()
4155 {
4156 /* This flag should be checked in the common target.c code. */
4157 gdb_assert (target_async_permitted);
4158
4159 /* Otherwise, this targets is always able to support async mode. */
4160 return true;
4161 }
4162
4163 bool
4164 linux_nat_target::supports_non_stop ()
4165 {
4166 return true;
4167 }
4168
4169 /* to_always_non_stop_p implementation. */
4170
4171 bool
4172 linux_nat_target::always_non_stop_p ()
4173 {
4174 return true;
4175 }
4176
4177 bool
4178 linux_nat_target::supports_multi_process ()
4179 {
4180 return true;
4181 }
4182
4183 bool
4184 linux_nat_target::supports_disable_randomization ()
4185 {
4186 return true;
4187 }
4188
4189 /* SIGCHLD handler that serves two purposes: In non-stop/async mode,
4190 so we notice when any child changes state, and notify the
4191 event-loop; it allows us to use sigsuspend in linux_nat_wait_1
4192 above to wait for the arrival of a SIGCHLD. */
4193
4194 static void
4195 sigchld_handler (int signo)
4196 {
4197 int old_errno = errno;
4198
4199 if (debug_linux_nat)
4200 gdb_stdlog->write_async_safe ("sigchld\n", sizeof ("sigchld\n") - 1);
4201
4202 if (signo == SIGCHLD)
4203 {
4204 /* Let the event loop know that there are events to handle. */
4205 linux_nat_target::async_file_mark_if_open ();
4206 }
4207
4208 errno = old_errno;
4209 }
4210
4211 /* Callback registered with the target events file descriptor. */
4212
4213 static void
4214 handle_target_event (int error, gdb_client_data client_data)
4215 {
4216 inferior_event_handler (INF_REG_EVENT);
4217 }
4218
4219 /* target_async implementation. */
4220
4221 void
4222 linux_nat_target::async (bool enable)
4223 {
4224 if (enable == is_async_p ())
4225 return;
4226
4227 /* Block child signals while we create/destroy the pipe, as their
4228 handler writes to it. */
4229 gdb::block_signals blocker;
4230
4231 if (enable)
4232 {
4233 if (!async_file_open ())
4234 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "creating event pipe failed.");
4235
4236 add_file_handler (async_wait_fd (), handle_target_event, NULL,
4237 "linux-nat");
4238
4239 /* There may be pending events to handle. Tell the event loop
4240 to poll them. */
4241 async_file_mark ();
4242 }
4243 else
4244 {
4245 delete_file_handler (async_wait_fd ());
4246 async_file_close ();
4247 }
4248 }
4249
4250 /* Stop an LWP, and push a GDB_SIGNAL_0 stop status if no other
4251 event came out. */
4252
4253 static int
4254 linux_nat_stop_lwp (struct lwp_info *lwp)
4255 {
4256 if (!lwp->stopped)
4257 {
4258 linux_nat_debug_printf ("running -> suspending %s",
4259 lwp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
4260
4261
4262 if (lwp->last_resume_kind == resume_stop)
4263 {
4264 linux_nat_debug_printf ("already stopping LWP %ld at GDB's request",
4265 lwp->ptid.lwp ());
4266 return 0;
4267 }
4268
4269 stop_callback (lwp);
4270 lwp->last_resume_kind = resume_stop;
4271 }
4272 else
4273 {
4274 /* Already known to be stopped; do nothing. */
4275
4276 if (debug_linux_nat)
4277 {
4278 if (find_thread_ptid (linux_target, lwp->ptid)->stop_requested)
4279 linux_nat_debug_printf ("already stopped/stop_requested %s",
4280 lwp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
4281 else
4282 linux_nat_debug_printf ("already stopped/no stop_requested yet %s",
4283 lwp->ptid.to_string ().c_str ());
4284 }
4285 }
4286 return 0;
4287 }
4288
4289 void
4290 linux_nat_target::stop (ptid_t ptid)
4291 {
4292 LINUX_NAT_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT;
4293 iterate_over_lwps (ptid, linux_nat_stop_lwp);
4294 }
4295
4296 /* When requests are passed down from the linux-nat layer to the
4297 single threaded inf-ptrace layer, ptids of (lwpid,0,0) form are
4298 used. The address space pointer is stored in the inferior object,
4299 but the common code that is passed such ptid can't tell whether
4300 lwpid is a "main" process id or not (it assumes so). We reverse
4301 look up the "main" process id from the lwp here. */
4302
4303 struct address_space *
4304 linux_nat_target::thread_address_space (ptid_t ptid)
4305 {
4306 struct lwp_info *lwp;
4307 struct inferior *inf;
4308 int pid;
4309
4310 if (ptid.lwp () == 0)
4311 {
4312 /* An (lwpid,0,0) ptid. Look up the lwp object to get at the
4313 tgid. */
4314 lwp = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
4315 pid = lwp->ptid.pid ();
4316 }
4317 else
4318 {
4319 /* A (pid,lwpid,0) ptid. */
4320 pid = ptid.pid ();
4321 }
4322
4323 inf = find_inferior_pid (this, pid);
4324 gdb_assert (inf != NULL);
4325 return inf->aspace;
4326 }
4327
4328 /* Return the cached value of the processor core for thread PTID. */
4329
4330 int
4331 linux_nat_target::core_of_thread (ptid_t ptid)
4332 {
4333 struct lwp_info *info = find_lwp_pid (ptid);
4334
4335 if (info)
4336 return info->core;
4337 return -1;
4338 }
4339
4340 /* Implementation of to_filesystem_is_local. */
4341
4342 bool
4343 linux_nat_target::filesystem_is_local ()
4344 {
4345 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
4346
4347 if (inf->fake_pid_p || inf->pid == 0)
4348 return true;
4349
4350 return linux_ns_same (inf->pid, LINUX_NS_MNT);
4351 }
4352
4353 /* Convert the INF argument passed to a to_fileio_* method
4354 to a process ID suitable for passing to its corresponding
4355 linux_mntns_* function. If INF is non-NULL then the
4356 caller is requesting the filesystem seen by INF. If INF
4357 is NULL then the caller is requesting the filesystem seen
4358 by the GDB. We fall back to GDB's filesystem in the case
4359 that INF is non-NULL but its PID is unknown. */
4360
4361 static pid_t
4362 linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (struct inferior *inf)
4363 {
4364 if (inf == NULL || inf->fake_pid_p || inf->pid == 0)
4365 return getpid ();
4366 else
4367 return inf->pid;
4368 }
4369
4370 /* Implementation of to_fileio_open. */
4371
4372 int
4373 linux_nat_target::fileio_open (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4374 int flags, int mode, int warn_if_slow,
4375 fileio_error *target_errno)
4376 {
4377 int nat_flags;
4378 mode_t nat_mode;
4379 int fd;
4380
4381 if (fileio_to_host_openflags (flags, &nat_flags) == -1
4382 || fileio_to_host_mode (mode, &nat_mode) == -1)
4383 {
4384 *target_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
4385 return -1;
4386 }
4387
4388 fd = linux_mntns_open_cloexec (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4389 filename, nat_flags, nat_mode);
4390 if (fd == -1)
4391 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4392
4393 return fd;
4394 }
4395
4396 /* Implementation of to_fileio_readlink. */
4397
4398 gdb::optional<std::string>
4399 linux_nat_target::fileio_readlink (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4400 fileio_error *target_errno)
4401 {
4402 char buf[PATH_MAX];
4403 int len;
4404
4405 len = linux_mntns_readlink (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4406 filename, buf, sizeof (buf));
4407 if (len < 0)
4408 {
4409 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4410 return {};
4411 }
4412
4413 return std::string (buf, len);
4414 }
4415
4416 /* Implementation of to_fileio_unlink. */
4417
4418 int
4419 linux_nat_target::fileio_unlink (struct inferior *inf, const char *filename,
4420 fileio_error *target_errno)
4421 {
4422 int ret;
4423
4424 ret = linux_mntns_unlink (linux_nat_fileio_pid_of (inf),
4425 filename);
4426 if (ret == -1)
4427 *target_errno = host_to_fileio_error (errno);
4428
4429 return ret;
4430 }
4431
4432 /* Implementation of the to_thread_events method. */
4433
4434 void
4435 linux_nat_target::thread_events (int enable)
4436 {
4437 report_thread_events = enable;
4438 }
4439
4440 linux_nat_target::linux_nat_target ()
4441 {
4442 /* We don't change the stratum; this target will sit at
4443 process_stratum and thread_db will set at thread_stratum. This
4444 is a little strange, since this is a multi-threaded-capable
4445 target, but we want to be on the stack below thread_db, and we
4446 also want to be used for single-threaded processes. */
4447 }
4448
4449 /* See linux-nat.h. */
4450
4451 int
4452 linux_nat_get_siginfo (ptid_t ptid, siginfo_t *siginfo)
4453 {
4454 int pid;
4455
4456 pid = ptid.lwp ();
4457 if (pid == 0)
4458 pid = ptid.pid ();
4459
4460 errno = 0;
4461 ptrace (PTRACE_GETSIGINFO, pid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) 0, siginfo);
4462 if (errno != 0)
4463 {
4464 memset (siginfo, 0, sizeof (*siginfo));
4465 return 0;
4466 }
4467 return 1;
4468 }
4469
4470 /* See nat/linux-nat.h. */
4471
4472 ptid_t
4473 current_lwp_ptid (void)
4474 {
4475 gdb_assert (inferior_ptid.lwp_p ());
4476 return inferior_ptid;
4477 }
4478
4479 void _initialize_linux_nat ();
4480 void
4481 _initialize_linux_nat ()
4482 {
4483 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("linux-nat", class_maintenance,
4484 &debug_linux_nat, _("\
4485 Set debugging of GNU/Linux native target."), _(" \
4486 Show debugging of GNU/Linux native target."), _(" \
4487 When on, print debug messages relating to the GNU/Linux native target."),
4488 nullptr,
4489 show_debug_linux_nat,
4490 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
4491
4492 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("linux-namespaces", class_maintenance,
4493 &debug_linux_namespaces, _("\
4494 Set debugging of GNU/Linux namespaces module."), _("\
4495 Show debugging of GNU/Linux namespaces module."), _("\
4496 Enables printf debugging output."),
4497 NULL,
4498 NULL,
4499 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
4500
4501 /* Install a SIGCHLD handler. */
4502 sigchld_action.sa_handler = sigchld_handler;
4503 sigemptyset (&sigchld_action.sa_mask);
4504 sigchld_action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART;
4505
4506 /* Make it the default. */
4507 sigaction (SIGCHLD, &sigchld_action, NULL);
4508
4509 /* Make sure we don't block SIGCHLD during a sigsuspend. */
4510 gdb_sigmask (SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &suspend_mask);
4511 sigdelset (&suspend_mask, SIGCHLD);
4512
4513 sigemptyset (&blocked_mask);
4514
4515 lwp_lwpid_htab_create ();
4516
4517 proc_mem_file_is_writable ();
4518 }
4519 \f
4520
4521 /* FIXME: kettenis/2000-08-26: The stuff on this page is specific to
4522 the GNU/Linux Threads library and therefore doesn't really belong
4523 here. */
4524
4525 /* NPTL reserves the first two RT signals, but does not provide any
4526 way for the debugger to query the signal numbers - fortunately
4527 they don't change. */
4528 static int lin_thread_signals[] = { __SIGRTMIN, __SIGRTMIN + 1 };
4529
4530 /* See linux-nat.h. */
4531
4532 unsigned int
4533 lin_thread_get_thread_signal_num (void)
4534 {
4535 return sizeof (lin_thread_signals) / sizeof (lin_thread_signals[0]);
4536 }
4537
4538 /* See linux-nat.h. */
4539
4540 int
4541 lin_thread_get_thread_signal (unsigned int i)
4542 {
4543 gdb_assert (i < lin_thread_get_thread_signal_num ());
4544 return lin_thread_signals[i];
4545 }