hostid of the machine rather than always getting "0". Tested with
hostid(1) from solaris-2.8 and with lmhostid (part of FlexLM) for solaris.
Approved by atatat@.
from here: set p_execsw to the new thing, and call
the new emulation's syscall_intern()
XXX there are more differences to kern_exec.c, sa/ras
related afaics, this is harmliss for now since
netbsd32 doesn't support multithreaded programs yet --
one day one execve() implementation should be shared
by native and netbsd32 code.
PR#23470, with minor updates by me. This is only the syscall support
from that PR, for now.
Changes: port over fix from FreeBSD for multicast address generation.
Changed bcopy to memcpy. For now, #ifdef notyet the portions of
kern_uuid.c that are meant to be used by (currently nonexistent) other
things in the kernel. Added syscall to COMPAT_FREEBSD as well, though
that's currently not useful, as any program new enough to use this call
also uses other syscalls we don't (yet) emulate.
- delete ktrsyscall32()
- add a check #ifdef _LP64 to do the conversion if P_32 is set to the
standard ktrsyscall()
- add a couple of similar _LP64/P_32 checks to the systrace code.
this should get systrace working for 32 bit apps as well as complete
ktrace support for "trace_enter/trace_exit" using platforms such as amd64.
XXX: systrace isn't supported on sparc64 currently... (it doesn't use
trace_enter/trace_exit, or have it's own calls to systrace_xxx()...)
the main purpose of this function is to adjust the "argsize" value of
the ktrace syscall record, otherwise userland will see N/2 (rounded
down) arguments instead of N.
raised the exception, don't release the lock, this causes a crash (the lock
shall be released by the process that took it). Wakeup the thread instead,
it will release the lock itself.
emul.darwin.init.pid instead of emul.darwin.init_pid, and so on.
This breaks backward compatibility with the pre-dynamic sysctl(8) for
emul.darwin, but it has never been available in a formal release, so
it should be alright.
remote process. This new implementation also passes all the test programs
I've written so far.
- When exceptions come from traps, no UNIX signal should evet be sent.
- Add a lock to ensure a debugger handles only one exception at a time
- Use a structure to hold flavor and behavior in exception ports, instead
of stuffing the two argument into an int.
- Implement new Mach services: thread_suspend, thread_resume and thread_abort
- Implement Darwin's ptrace PT_ATTACHEXC and PT_THUPDATE commands
- Handle NULL second argument correctly in sigprocmask.
- One mistake in the last commit (darwin_tracesig prototype)
fit what it does.
The softsignal feature is used in Darwin to trace processes. When the
traced process gets a signal, this raises an exception. The debugger will
receive the exception message, use ptrace with PT_THUPDATE to pass the
signal to the child or discard it, and then it will send a reply to the
exception message, to resume the child.
With the hook at the beginnng of kpsignal2, we are in the context of the
signal sender, which can be the kill(1) command, for instance. We cannot
afford to sleep until the debugger tells us if the signal should be
delivered or not.
Therefore, the hook to generate the Mach exception must be in the traced
process context. That was we can sleep awaiting for the debugger opinion
about the signal, this is not a problem. The hook is hence located into
issignal, at the place where normally SIGCHILD is sent to the debugger,
whereas the traced process is stopped. If the hook returns 0, we bypass
thoses operations, the Mach exception mecanism will take care of notifying
the debugger (through a Mach exception), and stop the faulting thread.
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.
argument, large sigset), and the older sigprocset (no old set argument,
small sigset). It feature old set argument and small sigset.
We now emulates this correctly.
Add some methods to IOFramebuffer (DARWIN_IOFBSETBOUNDS,
DARWIN_IOFBSETCURSORVISIBLE) and to IOHIDSystem (DARWIN_IOHIDPOSTEVENT),
all are unimplemented empty shells.
receiver namespace.
While we are there, refactor mach_msg_overwrite by splitting it into
several smaller functions. It had grown too big to be easily maintainable.
Gone are the old kern_sysctl(), cpu_sysctl(), hw_sysctl(),
vfs_sysctl(), etc, routines, along with sysctl_int() et al. Now all
nodes are registered with the tree, and nodes can be added (or
removed) easily, and I/O to and from the tree is handled generically.
Since the nodes are registered with the tree, the mapping from name to
number (and back again) can now be discovered, instead of having to be
hard coded. Adding new nodes to the tree is likewise much simpler --
the new infrastructure handles almost all the work for simple types,
and just about anything else can be done with a small helper function.
All existing nodes are where they were before (numerically speaking),
so all existing consumers of sysctl information should notice no
difference.
PS - I'm sorry, but there's a distinct lack of documentation at the
moment. I'm working on sysctl(3/8/9) right now, and I promise to
watch out for buses.
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)
Exceptions coming from a trap are generated from darwin_trapsignal()
softsignals are from darwin_sigfilter(), a function that is called
from darwin_trapsignal() and from kpsignal2() [the latter from a
emulation specific hook which is not yet committed]
Make some sanity checks to avoid sending data to a port with no receiver.
See http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2003/12/01/0008.html and
follow-ups for details.