Commit Graph

19 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
fvdl d99705e941 Put back Emmanuel's sigfilter hooks, as decided by Core. 2003-12-20 19:01:29 +00:00
manu b23b73b953 Introduce lwp_emuldata and the associated hooks. No hook is provided for the
exec case, as the emulation already has the ability to intercept that
with the e_proc_exec hook. It is the responsability of the emulation to
take appropriaye action about lwp_emuldata in e_proc_exec.

Patch reviewed by Christos.
2003-12-20 18:22:16 +00:00
jdolecek 0e253cf5f5 back the sigfilter emulation hook change off 2003-12-05 21:12:42 +00:00
manu 18e13eee35 Add a sigfilter emulation hook. It is used at the beginning of kpsignal2()
so that a specific emulation has the oportunity to filter out some signals.

if sigfilter returns 0, then no signal is sent by kpsignal2().

There is another place where signals can be generated: trapsignal. Since this
function is already an emulation hook, no call to the sigfilter hook was
introduced in trapsignal.

This is needed to emulate the softsignal feature in COMPAT_DARWIN (signals
sent as Mach exception messages)
2003-12-03 20:24:51 +00:00
chs 939df36e55 add support for non-executable mappings (where the hardware allows this)
and make the stack and heap non-executable by default.  the changes
fall into two basic catagories:

 - pmap and trap-handler changes.  these are all MD:
   = alpha: we already track per-page execute permission with the (software)
	PG_EXEC bit, so just have the trap handler pay attention to it.
   = i386: use a new GDT segment for %cs for processes that have no
	executable mappings above a certain threshold (currently the
	bottom of the stack).  track per-page execute permission with
	the last unused PTE bit.
   = powerpc/ibm4xx: just use the hardware exec bit.
   = powerpc/oea: we already track per-page exec bits, but the hardware only
	implements non-exec mappings at the segment level.  so track the
	number of executable mappings in each segment and turn on the no-exec
	segment bit iff the count is 0.  adjust the trap handler to deal.
   = sparc (sun4m): fix our use of the hardware protection bits.
	fix the trap handler to recognize text faults.
   = sparc64: split the existing unified TSB into data and instruction TSBs,
	and only load TTEs into the appropriate TSB(s) for the permissions.
	fix the trap handler to check for execute permission.
   = not yet implemented: amd64, hppa, sh5

 - changes in all the emulations that put a signal trampoline on the stack.
   instead, we now put the trampoline into a uvm_aobj and map that into
   the process separately.

originally from openbsd, adapted for netbsd by me.
2003-08-24 17:52:28 +00:00
jdolecek f50246965e handle __HAVE_MINIMAL_EMUL 2002-11-10 20:59:03 +00:00
jdolecek 1524c4bf08 set struct emul's nsysent to compat SYS_NSYSENT, not SYS_MAXSYSCALL 2002-11-01 19:26:21 +00:00
manu 80ee637534 - Introduce a e_fault field in struct proc to provide emulation specific
memory fault handler. IRIX uses irix_vm_fault, and all other emulation
use NULL, which means to use uvm_fault.

- While we are there, explicitely set to NULL the uninitialized fields in
struct emul: e_fault and e_sysctl on most ports

- e_fault is used by the trap handler, for now only on mips. In order to avoid
intrusive modifications in UVM, the function pointed by e_fault does not
has exactly the same protoype as uvm_fault:
int uvm_fault __P((struct vm_map *, vaddr_t, vm_fault_t, vm_prot_t));
int e_fault __P((struct proc *, vaddr_t, vm_fault_t, vm_prot_t));

- In IRIX share groups, all the VM space is shared, except one page.
This bounds us to have different VM spaces and synchronize modifications
to the VM space accross share group members. We need an IRIX specific hook
to the page fault handler in order to propagate VM space modifications
caused by page faults.
2002-09-21 21:14:54 +00:00
thorpej 27f38656ef Add missing const. 2002-05-05 08:23:03 +00:00
lukem dab6ef8b56 add RCSIDs (including regeneration of files as appropriate) 2001-11-13 02:07:52 +00:00
thorpej bfaf142ff6 Add sunos32_setregs(), thus making sunos32 compile again. 2001-09-20 20:52:26 +00:00
jdolecek ef8abe0767 Make the setregs hook emulation-specific, rather than executable
format specific.
Struct emul has a e_setregs hook back, which points to emulation-specific
setregs function. es_setregs of struct execsw now only points to
optional executable-specific setup function (this is only used for
ECOFF).
2001-09-18 19:36:32 +00:00
christos 0f380fac15 Add an e_trapsignal member to struct emul, so that emulated processes can
send the appropriate signal depending on the trap type.
2001-06-18 02:00:48 +00:00
manu a7cdf998ec Removed obsoletes EMUL_NO_BSD_ASYNCIO_PIPE and EMUL_NO_SIGIO_ON_READ flags.
Async I/O OS specifities should now handled in OS specific code. Linux
has been done, but other emulation should be handled. See case LINUX_F_SETFL
in sys/compat/linux/common/linux_file.c:linux_sys_fcntl() for more details.

The data that has been collected yet:

                                  Net Free Open Linux SunOS AIX OSF1 Darwin
send SIGIO to write end of pipe		Y  N    N     N     N    N   Y     Y
send SIGIO to read end of pipe      Y  Y    N     N     N    ?   Y     ?
send SIGIO to write end of socket   Y  Y    Y     N     N    Y   Y     Y
send SIGIO to read end of socket    Y  Y    Y     Y     Y    ?   Y     ?
2001-06-16 21:44:27 +00:00
mrg 6a89288a37 use _KERNEL_OPT. 2001-05-30 11:37:21 +00:00
manu 7e6929fe90 Changed EMUL_BSD_ASYNCIO_PIPE to EMUL_NO_BSD_ASYNCIO_PIPE, so that
the native emulation (NetBSD) does not have a flag.
2001-05-07 09:55:12 +00:00
manu 5a6b8191b5 Added two flags to emulation packages:
EMUL_BSD_ASYNCIO_PIPE notes that the emulated binaries expect the original
BSD pipe behavior for asynchronous I/O, which is to fire SIGIO on read() and
write(). OSes without this flag do not expect any SIGIO to be fired on
read() and write() for pipes, even when async I/O was requested. As far as
we know, the OSes that need EMUL_BSD_ASYNCIO_PIPE are NetBSD, OSF/1 and
Darwin.

EMUL_NO_SIGIO_ON_READ notes that the emulated binaries that requested
asynchrnous I/O expect the reader process to be notified by a SIGIO, but
not the writer process. OSes without this flag expect the reader and the
writer to be notified when some data has arrived or when some data have been
read. As far as we know, the OSes that need EMUL_NO_SIGIO_ON_READ are Linux
and SunOS.
2001-05-06 19:09:52 +00:00
mrg f973f47b9c s/sunos_sendsig/sunos32_sendsig/ 2001-02-05 12:48:13 +00:00
mrg 3fbaadb80d initial support for sunos binaries running on a 64 bit sparc64 kernel.
some programs work, many do not yet.
2001-02-02 07:28:54 +00:00