1 |
/* |
2 |
* sigsegv.cpp - SIGSEGV signals support |
3 |
* |
4 |
* Derived from Bruno Haible's work on his SIGSEGV library for clisp |
5 |
* <http://clisp.sourceforge.net/> |
6 |
* |
7 |
* MacOS X support derived from the post by Timothy J. Wood to the |
8 |
* omnigroup macosx-dev list: |
9 |
* Mach Exception Handlers 101 (Was Re: ptrace, gdb) |
10 |
* tjw@omnigroup.com Sun, 4 Jun 2000 |
11 |
* www.omnigroup.com/mailman/archive/macosx-dev/2000-June/002030.html |
12 |
* |
13 |
* Basilisk II (C) 1997-2002 Christian Bauer |
14 |
* |
15 |
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
16 |
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
17 |
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or |
18 |
* (at your option) any later version. |
19 |
* |
20 |
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
21 |
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
22 |
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
23 |
* GNU General Public License for more details. |
24 |
* |
25 |
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
26 |
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
27 |
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA |
28 |
*/ |
29 |
|
30 |
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H |
31 |
#include <unistd.h> |
32 |
#endif |
33 |
|
34 |
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H |
35 |
#include "config.h" |
36 |
#endif |
37 |
|
38 |
#include <list> |
39 |
#include <signal.h> |
40 |
#include "sigsegv.h" |
41 |
|
42 |
#ifndef NO_STD_NAMESPACE |
43 |
using std::list; |
44 |
#endif |
45 |
|
46 |
// Return value type of a signal handler (standard type if not defined) |
47 |
#ifndef RETSIGTYPE |
48 |
#define RETSIGTYPE void |
49 |
#endif |
50 |
|
51 |
// Type of the system signal handler |
52 |
typedef RETSIGTYPE (*signal_handler)(int); |
53 |
|
54 |
// User's SIGSEGV handler |
55 |
static sigsegv_fault_handler_t sigsegv_fault_handler = 0; |
56 |
|
57 |
// Function called to dump state if we can't handle the fault |
58 |
static sigsegv_state_dumper_t sigsegv_state_dumper = 0; |
59 |
|
60 |
// Actual SIGSEGV handler installer |
61 |
static bool sigsegv_do_install_handler(int sig); |
62 |
|
63 |
|
64 |
/* |
65 |
* Instruction decoding aids |
66 |
*/ |
67 |
|
68 |
// Transfer size |
69 |
enum transfer_size_t { |
70 |
SIZE_UNKNOWN, |
71 |
SIZE_BYTE, |
72 |
SIZE_WORD, |
73 |
SIZE_LONG |
74 |
}; |
75 |
|
76 |
// Transfer type |
77 |
typedef sigsegv_transfer_type_t transfer_type_t; |
78 |
|
79 |
#if (defined(powerpc) || defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc__)) |
80 |
// Addressing mode |
81 |
enum addressing_mode_t { |
82 |
MODE_UNKNOWN, |
83 |
MODE_NORM, |
84 |
MODE_U, |
85 |
MODE_X, |
86 |
MODE_UX |
87 |
}; |
88 |
|
89 |
// Decoded instruction |
90 |
struct instruction_t { |
91 |
transfer_type_t transfer_type; |
92 |
transfer_size_t transfer_size; |
93 |
addressing_mode_t addr_mode; |
94 |
unsigned int addr; |
95 |
char ra, rd; |
96 |
}; |
97 |
|
98 |
static void powerpc_decode_instruction(instruction_t *instruction, unsigned int nip, unsigned int * gpr) |
99 |
{ |
100 |
// Get opcode and divide into fields |
101 |
unsigned int opcode = *((unsigned int *)nip); |
102 |
unsigned int primop = opcode >> 26; |
103 |
unsigned int exop = (opcode >> 1) & 0x3ff; |
104 |
unsigned int ra = (opcode >> 16) & 0x1f; |
105 |
unsigned int rb = (opcode >> 11) & 0x1f; |
106 |
unsigned int rd = (opcode >> 21) & 0x1f; |
107 |
signed int imm = (signed short)(opcode & 0xffff); |
108 |
|
109 |
// Analyze opcode |
110 |
transfer_type_t transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_UNKNOWN; |
111 |
transfer_size_t transfer_size = SIZE_UNKNOWN; |
112 |
addressing_mode_t addr_mode = MODE_UNKNOWN; |
113 |
switch (primop) { |
114 |
case 31: |
115 |
switch (exop) { |
116 |
case 23: // lwzx |
117 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
118 |
case 55: // lwzux |
119 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
120 |
case 87: // lbzx |
121 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
122 |
case 119: // lbzux |
123 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
124 |
case 151: // stwx |
125 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
126 |
case 183: // stwux |
127 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
128 |
case 215: // stbx |
129 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
130 |
case 247: // stbux |
131 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
132 |
case 279: // lhzx |
133 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
134 |
case 311: // lhzux |
135 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
136 |
case 343: // lhax |
137 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
138 |
case 375: // lhaux |
139 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
140 |
case 407: // sthx |
141 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_X; break; |
142 |
case 439: // sthux |
143 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_UX; break; |
144 |
} |
145 |
break; |
146 |
|
147 |
case 32: // lwz |
148 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
149 |
case 33: // lwzu |
150 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
151 |
case 34: // lbz |
152 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
153 |
case 35: // lbzu |
154 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
155 |
case 36: // stw |
156 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
157 |
case 37: // stwu |
158 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
159 |
case 38: // stb |
160 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
161 |
case 39: // stbu |
162 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
163 |
case 40: // lhz |
164 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
165 |
case 41: // lhzu |
166 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
167 |
case 42: // lha |
168 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
169 |
case 43: // lhau |
170 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
171 |
case 44: // sth |
172 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_NORM; break; |
173 |
case 45: // sthu |
174 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; addr_mode = MODE_U; break; |
175 |
} |
176 |
|
177 |
// Calculate effective address |
178 |
unsigned int addr = 0; |
179 |
switch (addr_mode) { |
180 |
case MODE_X: |
181 |
case MODE_UX: |
182 |
if (ra == 0) |
183 |
addr = gpr[rb]; |
184 |
else |
185 |
addr = gpr[ra] + gpr[rb]; |
186 |
break; |
187 |
case MODE_NORM: |
188 |
case MODE_U: |
189 |
if (ra == 0) |
190 |
addr = (signed int)(signed short)imm; |
191 |
else |
192 |
addr = gpr[ra] + (signed int)(signed short)imm; |
193 |
break; |
194 |
default: |
195 |
break; |
196 |
} |
197 |
|
198 |
// Commit decoded instruction |
199 |
instruction->addr = addr; |
200 |
instruction->addr_mode = addr_mode; |
201 |
instruction->transfer_type = transfer_type; |
202 |
instruction->transfer_size = transfer_size; |
203 |
instruction->ra = ra; |
204 |
instruction->rd = rd; |
205 |
} |
206 |
#endif |
207 |
|
208 |
|
209 |
/* |
210 |
* OS-dependant SIGSEGV signals support section |
211 |
*/ |
212 |
|
213 |
#if HAVE_SIGINFO_T |
214 |
// Generic extended signal handler |
215 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER sigsegv_fault_handler |
216 |
#if defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) |
217 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGBUS) |
218 |
#else |
219 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
220 |
#endif |
221 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, siginfo_t *sip, void *scp |
222 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, sip, scp |
223 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS sip->si_addr |
224 |
#if defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) |
225 |
#if (defined(i386) || defined(__i386__)) |
226 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION (((struct sigcontext *)scp)->sc_eip) |
227 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE ((unsigned int *)&(((struct sigcontext *)scp)->sc_edi)) /* EDI is the first GPR (even below EIP) in sigcontext */ |
228 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION ix86_skip_instruction |
229 |
#endif |
230 |
#endif |
231 |
#if defined(__linux__) |
232 |
#if (defined(i386) || defined(__i386__)) |
233 |
#include <sys/ucontext.h> |
234 |
#define SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS (((ucontext_t *)scp)->uc_mcontext.gregs) |
235 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS[14] /* should use REG_EIP instead */ |
236 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned int *)SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS |
237 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION ix86_skip_instruction |
238 |
#endif |
239 |
#if (defined(x86_64) || defined(__x86_64__)) |
240 |
#include <sys/ucontext.h> |
241 |
#define SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS (((ucontext_t *)scp)->uc_mcontext.gregs) |
242 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS[16] /* should use REG_RIP instead */ |
243 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned long *)SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS |
244 |
#endif |
245 |
#if (defined(ia64) || defined(__ia64__)) |
246 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION (((struct sigcontext *)scp)->sc_ip & ~0x3ULL) /* slot number is in bits 0 and 1 */ |
247 |
#endif |
248 |
#if (defined(powerpc) || defined(__powerpc__)) |
249 |
#include <sys/ucontext.h> |
250 |
#define SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS (((ucontext_t *)scp)->uc_mcontext.regs) |
251 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION (SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS->nip) |
252 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned int *)&SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS->nip, (unsigned int *)(SIGSEGV_CONTEXT_REGS->gpr) |
253 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION powerpc_skip_instruction |
254 |
#endif |
255 |
#endif |
256 |
#endif |
257 |
|
258 |
#if HAVE_SIGCONTEXT_SUBTERFUGE |
259 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER sigsegv_fault_handler |
260 |
// Linux kernels prior to 2.4 ? |
261 |
#if defined(__linux__) |
262 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
263 |
#if (defined(i386) || defined(__i386__)) |
264 |
#include <asm/sigcontext.h> |
265 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, struct sigcontext scs |
266 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, scs |
267 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scs.cr2 |
268 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION scs.eip |
269 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned int *)(&scs) |
270 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION ix86_skip_instruction |
271 |
#endif |
272 |
#if (defined(sparc) || defined(__sparc__)) |
273 |
#include <asm/sigcontext.h> |
274 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp, char *addr |
275 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp, addr |
276 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS addr |
277 |
#endif |
278 |
#if (defined(powerpc) || defined(__powerpc__)) |
279 |
#include <asm/sigcontext.h> |
280 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, struct sigcontext *scp |
281 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, scp |
282 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scp->regs->dar |
283 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION scp->regs->nip |
284 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned int *)&scp->regs->nip, (unsigned int *)(scp->regs->gpr) |
285 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION powerpc_skip_instruction |
286 |
#endif |
287 |
#if (defined(alpha) || defined(__alpha__)) |
288 |
#include <asm/sigcontext.h> |
289 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
290 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
291 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS get_fault_address(scp) |
292 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION scp->sc_pc |
293 |
|
294 |
// From Boehm's GC 6.0alpha8 |
295 |
static sigsegv_address_t get_fault_address(struct sigcontext *scp) |
296 |
{ |
297 |
unsigned int instruction = *((unsigned int *)(scp->sc_pc)); |
298 |
unsigned long fault_address = scp->sc_regs[(instruction >> 16) & 0x1f]; |
299 |
fault_address += (signed long)(signed short)(instruction & 0xffff); |
300 |
return (sigsegv_address_t)fault_address; |
301 |
} |
302 |
#endif |
303 |
#endif |
304 |
|
305 |
// Irix 5 or 6 on MIPS |
306 |
#if (defined(sgi) || defined(__sgi)) && (defined(SYSTYPE_SVR4) || defined(__SYSTYPE_SVR4)) |
307 |
#include <ucontext.h> |
308 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
309 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
310 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scp->sc_badvaddr |
311 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
312 |
#endif |
313 |
|
314 |
// HP-UX |
315 |
#if (defined(hpux) || defined(__hpux__)) |
316 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
317 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
318 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scp->sc_sl.sl_ss.ss_narrow.ss_cr21 |
319 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) FAULT_HANDLER(SIGBUS) |
320 |
#endif |
321 |
|
322 |
// OSF/1 on Alpha |
323 |
#if defined(__osf__) |
324 |
#include <ucontext.h> |
325 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
326 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
327 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scp->sc_traparg_a0 |
328 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
329 |
#endif |
330 |
|
331 |
// AIX |
332 |
#if defined(_AIX) |
333 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
334 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
335 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS scp->sc_jmpbuf.jmp_context.o_vaddr |
336 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
337 |
#endif |
338 |
|
339 |
// NetBSD or FreeBSD |
340 |
#if defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) |
341 |
#if (defined(m68k) || defined(__m68k__)) |
342 |
#include <m68k/frame.h> |
343 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
344 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
345 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS get_fault_address(scp) |
346 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGSEGV) |
347 |
|
348 |
// Use decoding scheme from BasiliskII/m68k native |
349 |
static sigsegv_address_t get_fault_address(struct sigcontext *scp) |
350 |
{ |
351 |
struct sigstate { |
352 |
int ss_flags; |
353 |
struct frame ss_frame; |
354 |
}; |
355 |
struct sigstate *state = (struct sigstate *)scp->sc_ap; |
356 |
char *fault_addr; |
357 |
switch (state->ss_frame.f_format) { |
358 |
case 7: /* 68040 access error */ |
359 |
/* "code" is sometimes unreliable (i.e. contains NULL or a bogus address), reason unknown */ |
360 |
fault_addr = state->ss_frame.f_fmt7.f_fa; |
361 |
break; |
362 |
default: |
363 |
fault_addr = (char *)code; |
364 |
break; |
365 |
} |
366 |
return (sigsegv_address_t)fault_addr; |
367 |
} |
368 |
#else |
369 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, void *scp, char *addr |
370 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp, addr |
371 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS addr |
372 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGBUS) |
373 |
#endif |
374 |
#endif |
375 |
|
376 |
// MacOS X, not sure which version this works in. Under 10.1 |
377 |
// vm_protect does not appear to work from a signal handler. Under |
378 |
// 10.2 signal handlers get siginfo type arguments but the si_addr |
379 |
// field is the address of the faulting instruction and not the |
380 |
// address that caused the SIGBUS. Maybe this works in 10.0? In any |
381 |
// case with Mach exception handlers there is a way to do what this |
382 |
// was meant to do. |
383 |
#ifndef HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS |
384 |
#if defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__) |
385 |
#if (defined(ppc) || defined(__ppc__)) |
386 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp |
387 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS sig, code, scp |
388 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS get_fault_address(scp) |
389 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION scp->sc_ir |
390 |
#define SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS FAULT_HANDLER(SIGBUS) |
391 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE (unsigned int *)&scp->sc_ir, &((unsigned int *) scp->sc_regs)[2] |
392 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION powerpc_skip_instruction |
393 |
|
394 |
// Use decoding scheme from SheepShaver |
395 |
static sigsegv_address_t get_fault_address(struct sigcontext *scp) |
396 |
{ |
397 |
unsigned int nip = (unsigned int) scp->sc_ir; |
398 |
unsigned int * gpr = &((unsigned int *) scp->sc_regs)[2]; |
399 |
instruction_t instr; |
400 |
|
401 |
powerpc_decode_instruction(&instr, nip, gpr); |
402 |
return (sigsegv_address_t)instr.addr; |
403 |
} |
404 |
#endif |
405 |
#endif |
406 |
#endif |
407 |
#endif |
408 |
|
409 |
#if HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS |
410 |
|
411 |
// This can easily be extended to other Mach systems, but really who |
412 |
// uses HURD (oops GNU/HURD), Darwin/x86, NextStep, Rhapsody, or CMU |
413 |
// Mach 2.5/3.0? |
414 |
#if defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__) |
415 |
|
416 |
#include <sys/types.h> |
417 |
#include <stdlib.h> |
418 |
#include <stdio.h> |
419 |
#include <pthread.h> |
420 |
|
421 |
/* |
422 |
* If you are familiar with MIG then you will understand the frustration |
423 |
* that was necessary to get these embedded into C++ code by hand. |
424 |
*/ |
425 |
extern "C" { |
426 |
#include <mach/mach.h> |
427 |
#include <mach/mach_error.h> |
428 |
|
429 |
extern boolean_t exc_server(mach_msg_header_t *, mach_msg_header_t *); |
430 |
extern kern_return_t catch_exception_raise(mach_port_t, mach_port_t, |
431 |
mach_port_t, exception_type_t, exception_data_t, mach_msg_type_number_t); |
432 |
extern kern_return_t exception_raise(mach_port_t, mach_port_t, mach_port_t, |
433 |
exception_type_t, exception_data_t, mach_msg_type_number_t); |
434 |
extern kern_return_t exception_raise_state(mach_port_t, exception_type_t, |
435 |
exception_data_t, mach_msg_type_number_t, thread_state_flavor_t *, |
436 |
thread_state_t, mach_msg_type_number_t, thread_state_t, mach_msg_type_number_t *); |
437 |
extern kern_return_t exception_raise_state_identity(mach_port_t, mach_port_t, mach_port_t, |
438 |
exception_type_t, exception_data_t, mach_msg_type_number_t, thread_state_flavor_t *, |
439 |
thread_state_t, mach_msg_type_number_t, thread_state_t, mach_msg_type_number_t *); |
440 |
} |
441 |
|
442 |
// Could make this dynamic by looking for a result of MIG_ARRAY_TOO_LARGE |
443 |
#define HANDLER_COUNT 64 |
444 |
|
445 |
// structure to tuck away existing exception handlers |
446 |
typedef struct _ExceptionPorts { |
447 |
mach_msg_type_number_t maskCount; |
448 |
exception_mask_t masks[HANDLER_COUNT]; |
449 |
exception_handler_t handlers[HANDLER_COUNT]; |
450 |
exception_behavior_t behaviors[HANDLER_COUNT]; |
451 |
thread_state_flavor_t flavors[HANDLER_COUNT]; |
452 |
} ExceptionPorts; |
453 |
|
454 |
// exception handler thread |
455 |
static pthread_t exc_thread; |
456 |
|
457 |
// place where old exception handler info is stored |
458 |
static ExceptionPorts ports; |
459 |
|
460 |
// our exception port |
461 |
static mach_port_t _exceptionPort = MACH_PORT_NULL; |
462 |
|
463 |
#define MACH_CHECK_ERROR(name,ret) \ |
464 |
if (ret != KERN_SUCCESS) { \ |
465 |
mach_error(#name, ret); \ |
466 |
exit (1); \ |
467 |
} |
468 |
|
469 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS code[1] |
470 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION get_fault_instruction(thread, state) |
471 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER (code[0] == KERN_PROTECTION_FAILURE) && sigsegv_fault_handler |
472 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST mach_port_t thread, exception_data_t code, ppc_thread_state_t *state |
473 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS thread, code, &state |
474 |
#define SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION powerpc_skip_instruction |
475 |
#define SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE &state->srr0, &state->r0 |
476 |
|
477 |
// Given a suspended thread, stuff the current instruction and |
478 |
// registers into state. |
479 |
// |
480 |
// It would have been nice to have this be ppc/x86 independant which |
481 |
// could have been done easily with a thread_state_t instead of |
482 |
// ppc_thread_state_t, but because of the way this is called it is |
483 |
// easier to do it this way. |
484 |
#if (defined(ppc) || defined(__ppc__)) |
485 |
static inline sigsegv_address_t get_fault_instruction(mach_port_t thread, ppc_thread_state_t *state) |
486 |
{ |
487 |
kern_return_t krc; |
488 |
mach_msg_type_number_t count; |
489 |
|
490 |
count = MACHINE_THREAD_STATE_COUNT; |
491 |
krc = thread_get_state(thread, MACHINE_THREAD_STATE, (thread_state_t)state, &count); |
492 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (thread_get_state, krc); |
493 |
|
494 |
return (sigsegv_address_t)state->srr0; |
495 |
} |
496 |
#endif |
497 |
|
498 |
// Since there can only be one exception thread running at any time |
499 |
// this is not a problem. |
500 |
#define MSG_SIZE 512 |
501 |
static char msgbuf[MSG_SIZE]; |
502 |
static char replybuf[MSG_SIZE]; |
503 |
|
504 |
/* |
505 |
* This is the entry point for the exception handler thread. The job |
506 |
* of this thread is to wait for exception messages on the exception |
507 |
* port that was setup beforehand and to pass them on to exc_server. |
508 |
* exc_server is a MIG generated function that is a part of Mach. |
509 |
* Its job is to decide what to do with the exception message. In our |
510 |
* case exc_server calls catch_exception_raise on our behalf. After |
511 |
* exc_server returns, it is our responsibility to send the reply. |
512 |
*/ |
513 |
static void * |
514 |
handleExceptions(void *priv) |
515 |
{ |
516 |
mach_msg_header_t *msg, *reply; |
517 |
kern_return_t krc; |
518 |
|
519 |
msg = (mach_msg_header_t *)msgbuf; |
520 |
reply = (mach_msg_header_t *)replybuf; |
521 |
|
522 |
for (;;) { |
523 |
krc = mach_msg(msg, MACH_RCV_MSG, MSG_SIZE, MSG_SIZE, |
524 |
_exceptionPort, 0, MACH_PORT_NULL); |
525 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR(mach_msg, krc); |
526 |
|
527 |
if (!exc_server(msg, reply)) { |
528 |
fprintf(stderr, "exc_server hated the message\n"); |
529 |
exit(1); |
530 |
} |
531 |
|
532 |
krc = mach_msg(reply, MACH_SEND_MSG, reply->msgh_size, 0, |
533 |
msg->msgh_local_port, 0, MACH_PORT_NULL); |
534 |
if (krc != KERN_SUCCESS) { |
535 |
fprintf(stderr, "Error sending message to original reply port, krc = %d, %s", |
536 |
krc, mach_error_string(krc)); |
537 |
exit(1); |
538 |
} |
539 |
} |
540 |
} |
541 |
#endif |
542 |
#endif |
543 |
|
544 |
|
545 |
/* |
546 |
* Instruction skipping |
547 |
*/ |
548 |
|
549 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION |
550 |
// Decode and skip X86 instruction |
551 |
#if (defined(i386) || defined(__i386__)) |
552 |
#if defined(__linux__) |
553 |
enum { |
554 |
X86_REG_EIP = 14, |
555 |
X86_REG_EAX = 11, |
556 |
X86_REG_ECX = 10, |
557 |
X86_REG_EDX = 9, |
558 |
X86_REG_EBX = 8, |
559 |
X86_REG_ESP = 7, |
560 |
X86_REG_EBP = 6, |
561 |
X86_REG_ESI = 5, |
562 |
X86_REG_EDI = 4 |
563 |
}; |
564 |
#endif |
565 |
#if defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) |
566 |
enum { |
567 |
X86_REG_EIP = 10, |
568 |
X86_REG_EAX = 7, |
569 |
X86_REG_ECX = 6, |
570 |
X86_REG_EDX = 5, |
571 |
X86_REG_EBX = 4, |
572 |
X86_REG_ESP = 13, |
573 |
X86_REG_EBP = 2, |
574 |
X86_REG_ESI = 1, |
575 |
X86_REG_EDI = 0 |
576 |
}; |
577 |
#endif |
578 |
// FIXME: this is partly redundant with the instruction decoding phase |
579 |
// to discover transfer type and register number |
580 |
static inline int ix86_step_over_modrm(unsigned char * p) |
581 |
{ |
582 |
int mod = (p[0] >> 6) & 3; |
583 |
int rm = p[0] & 7; |
584 |
int offset = 0; |
585 |
|
586 |
// ModR/M Byte |
587 |
switch (mod) { |
588 |
case 0: // [reg] |
589 |
if (rm == 5) return 4; // disp32 |
590 |
break; |
591 |
case 1: // disp8[reg] |
592 |
offset = 1; |
593 |
break; |
594 |
case 2: // disp32[reg] |
595 |
offset = 4; |
596 |
break; |
597 |
case 3: // register |
598 |
return 0; |
599 |
} |
600 |
|
601 |
// SIB Byte |
602 |
if (rm == 4) { |
603 |
if (mod == 0 && (p[1] & 7) == 5) |
604 |
offset = 5; // disp32[index] |
605 |
else |
606 |
offset++; |
607 |
} |
608 |
|
609 |
return offset; |
610 |
} |
611 |
|
612 |
static bool ix86_skip_instruction(unsigned int * regs) |
613 |
{ |
614 |
unsigned char * eip = (unsigned char *)regs[X86_REG_EIP]; |
615 |
|
616 |
if (eip == 0) |
617 |
return false; |
618 |
|
619 |
transfer_type_t transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_UNKNOWN; |
620 |
transfer_size_t transfer_size = SIZE_LONG; |
621 |
|
622 |
int reg = -1; |
623 |
int len = 0; |
624 |
|
625 |
// Operand size prefix |
626 |
if (*eip == 0x66) { |
627 |
eip++; |
628 |
len++; |
629 |
transfer_size = SIZE_WORD; |
630 |
} |
631 |
|
632 |
// Decode instruction |
633 |
switch (eip[0]) { |
634 |
case 0x0f: |
635 |
switch (eip[1]) { |
636 |
case 0xb6: // MOVZX r32, r/m8 |
637 |
case 0xb7: // MOVZX r32, r/m16 |
638 |
switch (eip[2] & 0xc0) { |
639 |
case 0x80: |
640 |
reg = (eip[2] >> 3) & 7; |
641 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
642 |
break; |
643 |
case 0x40: |
644 |
reg = (eip[2] >> 3) & 7; |
645 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
646 |
break; |
647 |
case 0x00: |
648 |
reg = (eip[2] >> 3) & 7; |
649 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
650 |
break; |
651 |
} |
652 |
len += 3 + ix86_step_over_modrm(eip + 2); |
653 |
break; |
654 |
} |
655 |
break; |
656 |
case 0x8a: // MOV r8, r/m8 |
657 |
transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; |
658 |
case 0x8b: // MOV r32, r/m32 (or 16-bit operation) |
659 |
switch (eip[1] & 0xc0) { |
660 |
case 0x80: |
661 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
662 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
663 |
break; |
664 |
case 0x40: |
665 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
666 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
667 |
break; |
668 |
case 0x00: |
669 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
670 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD; |
671 |
break; |
672 |
} |
673 |
len += 2 + ix86_step_over_modrm(eip + 1); |
674 |
break; |
675 |
case 0x88: // MOV r/m8, r8 |
676 |
transfer_size = SIZE_BYTE; |
677 |
case 0x89: // MOV r/m32, r32 (or 16-bit operation) |
678 |
switch (eip[1] & 0xc0) { |
679 |
case 0x80: |
680 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
681 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; |
682 |
break; |
683 |
case 0x40: |
684 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
685 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; |
686 |
break; |
687 |
case 0x00: |
688 |
reg = (eip[1] >> 3) & 7; |
689 |
transfer_type = SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_STORE; |
690 |
break; |
691 |
} |
692 |
len += 2 + ix86_step_over_modrm(eip + 1); |
693 |
break; |
694 |
} |
695 |
|
696 |
if (transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_UNKNOWN) { |
697 |
// Unknown machine code, let it crash. Then patch the decoder |
698 |
return false; |
699 |
} |
700 |
|
701 |
if (transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD && reg != -1) { |
702 |
static const int x86_reg_map[8] = { |
703 |
X86_REG_EAX, X86_REG_ECX, X86_REG_EDX, X86_REG_EBX, |
704 |
X86_REG_ESP, X86_REG_EBP, X86_REG_ESI, X86_REG_EDI |
705 |
}; |
706 |
|
707 |
if (reg < 0 || reg >= 8) |
708 |
return false; |
709 |
|
710 |
int rloc = x86_reg_map[reg]; |
711 |
switch (transfer_size) { |
712 |
case SIZE_BYTE: |
713 |
regs[rloc] = (regs[rloc] & ~0xff); |
714 |
break; |
715 |
case SIZE_WORD: |
716 |
regs[rloc] = (regs[rloc] & ~0xffff); |
717 |
break; |
718 |
case SIZE_LONG: |
719 |
regs[rloc] = 0; |
720 |
break; |
721 |
} |
722 |
} |
723 |
|
724 |
#if DEBUG |
725 |
printf("%08x: %s %s access", regs[X86_REG_EIP], |
726 |
transfer_size == SIZE_BYTE ? "byte" : transfer_size == SIZE_WORD ? "word" : "long", |
727 |
transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD ? "read" : "write"); |
728 |
|
729 |
if (reg != -1) { |
730 |
static const char * x86_reg_str_map[8] = { |
731 |
"eax", "ecx", "edx", "ebx", |
732 |
"esp", "ebp", "esi", "edi" |
733 |
}; |
734 |
printf(" %s register %%%s", transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD ? "to" : "from", x86_reg_str_map[reg]); |
735 |
} |
736 |
printf(", %d bytes instruction\n", len); |
737 |
#endif |
738 |
|
739 |
regs[X86_REG_EIP] += len; |
740 |
return true; |
741 |
} |
742 |
#endif |
743 |
|
744 |
// Decode and skip PPC instruction |
745 |
#if (defined(powerpc) || defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc__)) |
746 |
static bool powerpc_skip_instruction(unsigned int * nip_p, unsigned int * regs) |
747 |
{ |
748 |
instruction_t instr; |
749 |
powerpc_decode_instruction(&instr, *nip_p, regs); |
750 |
|
751 |
if (instr.transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_UNKNOWN) { |
752 |
// Unknown machine code, let it crash. Then patch the decoder |
753 |
return false; |
754 |
} |
755 |
|
756 |
#if DEBUG |
757 |
printf("%08x: %s %s access", *nip_p, |
758 |
instr.transfer_size == SIZE_BYTE ? "byte" : instr.transfer_size == SIZE_WORD ? "word" : "long", |
759 |
instr.transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD ? "read" : "write"); |
760 |
|
761 |
if (instr.addr_mode == MODE_U || instr.addr_mode == MODE_UX) |
762 |
printf(" r%d (ra = %08x)\n", instr.ra, instr.addr); |
763 |
if (instr.transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD) |
764 |
printf(" r%d (rd = 0)\n", instr.rd); |
765 |
#endif |
766 |
|
767 |
if (instr.addr_mode == MODE_U || instr.addr_mode == MODE_UX) |
768 |
regs[instr.ra] = instr.addr; |
769 |
if (instr.transfer_type == SIGSEGV_TRANSFER_LOAD) |
770 |
regs[instr.rd] = 0; |
771 |
|
772 |
*nip_p += 4; |
773 |
return true; |
774 |
} |
775 |
#endif |
776 |
#endif |
777 |
|
778 |
// Fallbacks |
779 |
#ifndef SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION |
780 |
#define SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION SIGSEGV_INVALID_PC |
781 |
#endif |
782 |
|
783 |
// SIGSEGV recovery supported ? |
784 |
#if defined(SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS) && defined(SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST) && defined(SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS) |
785 |
#define HAVE_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY |
786 |
#endif |
787 |
|
788 |
|
789 |
/* |
790 |
* SIGSEGV global handler |
791 |
*/ |
792 |
|
793 |
#if defined(HAVE_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY) || defined(HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS) |
794 |
// This function handles the badaccess to memory. |
795 |
// It is called from the signal handler or the exception handler. |
796 |
static bool handle_badaccess(SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST) |
797 |
{ |
798 |
sigsegv_address_t fault_address = (sigsegv_address_t)SIGSEGV_FAULT_ADDRESS; |
799 |
sigsegv_address_t fault_instruction = (sigsegv_address_t)SIGSEGV_FAULT_INSTRUCTION; |
800 |
|
801 |
// Call user's handler and reinstall the global handler, if required |
802 |
switch (sigsegv_fault_handler(fault_address, fault_instruction)) { |
803 |
case SIGSEGV_RETURN_SUCCESS: |
804 |
return true; |
805 |
|
806 |
#if HAVE_SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION |
807 |
case SIGSEGV_RETURN_SKIP_INSTRUCTION: |
808 |
// Call the instruction skipper with the register file |
809 |
// available |
810 |
if (SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION(SIGSEGV_REGISTER_FILE)) { |
811 |
#ifdef HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS |
812 |
// Unlike UNIX signals where the thread state |
813 |
// is modified off of the stack, in Mach we |
814 |
// need to actually call thread_set_state to |
815 |
// have the register values updated. |
816 |
kern_return_t krc; |
817 |
|
818 |
krc = thread_set_state(thread, |
819 |
MACHINE_THREAD_STATE, (thread_state_t)state, |
820 |
MACHINE_THREAD_STATE_COUNT); |
821 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (thread_get_state, krc); |
822 |
#endif |
823 |
return true; |
824 |
} |
825 |
break; |
826 |
#endif |
827 |
} |
828 |
|
829 |
// We can't do anything with the fault_address, dump state? |
830 |
if (sigsegv_state_dumper != 0) |
831 |
sigsegv_state_dumper(fault_address, fault_instruction); |
832 |
|
833 |
return false; |
834 |
} |
835 |
#endif |
836 |
|
837 |
|
838 |
/* |
839 |
* There are two mechanisms for handling a bad memory access, |
840 |
* Mach exceptions and UNIX signals. The implementation specific |
841 |
* code appears below. Its reponsibility is to call handle_badaccess |
842 |
* which is the routine that handles the fault in an implementation |
843 |
* agnostic manner. The implementation specific code below is then |
844 |
* reponsible for checking whether handle_badaccess was able |
845 |
* to handle the memory access error and perform any implementation |
846 |
* specific tasks necessary afterwards. |
847 |
*/ |
848 |
|
849 |
#ifdef HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS |
850 |
/* |
851 |
* We need to forward all exceptions that we do not handle. |
852 |
* This is important, there are many exceptions that may be |
853 |
* handled by other exception handlers. For example debuggers |
854 |
* use exceptions and the exception hander is in another |
855 |
* process in such a case. (Timothy J. Wood states in his |
856 |
* message to the list that he based this code on that from |
857 |
* gdb for Darwin.) |
858 |
*/ |
859 |
static inline kern_return_t |
860 |
forward_exception(mach_port_t thread_port, |
861 |
mach_port_t task_port, |
862 |
exception_type_t exception_type, |
863 |
exception_data_t exception_data, |
864 |
mach_msg_type_number_t data_count, |
865 |
ExceptionPorts *oldExceptionPorts) |
866 |
{ |
867 |
kern_return_t kret; |
868 |
unsigned int portIndex; |
869 |
mach_port_t port; |
870 |
exception_behavior_t behavior; |
871 |
thread_state_flavor_t flavor; |
872 |
thread_state_t thread_state; |
873 |
mach_msg_type_number_t thread_state_count; |
874 |
|
875 |
for (portIndex = 0; portIndex < oldExceptionPorts->maskCount; portIndex++) { |
876 |
if (oldExceptionPorts->masks[portIndex] & (1 << exception_type)) { |
877 |
// This handler wants the exception |
878 |
break; |
879 |
} |
880 |
} |
881 |
|
882 |
if (portIndex >= oldExceptionPorts->maskCount) { |
883 |
fprintf(stderr, "No handler for exception_type = %d. Not fowarding\n", exception_type); |
884 |
return KERN_FAILURE; |
885 |
} |
886 |
|
887 |
port = oldExceptionPorts->handlers[portIndex]; |
888 |
behavior = oldExceptionPorts->behaviors[portIndex]; |
889 |
flavor = oldExceptionPorts->flavors[portIndex]; |
890 |
|
891 |
/* |
892 |
fprintf(stderr, "forwarding exception, port = 0x%x, behaviour = %d, flavor = %d\n", port, behavior, flavor); |
893 |
*/ |
894 |
|
895 |
if (behavior != EXCEPTION_DEFAULT) { |
896 |
thread_state_count = THREAD_STATE_MAX; |
897 |
kret = thread_get_state (thread_port, flavor, thread_state, |
898 |
&thread_state_count); |
899 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (thread_get_state, kret); |
900 |
} |
901 |
|
902 |
switch (behavior) { |
903 |
case EXCEPTION_DEFAULT: |
904 |
// fprintf(stderr, "forwarding to exception_raise\n"); |
905 |
kret = exception_raise(port, thread_port, task_port, exception_type, |
906 |
exception_data, data_count); |
907 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (exception_raise, kret); |
908 |
break; |
909 |
case EXCEPTION_STATE: |
910 |
// fprintf(stderr, "forwarding to exception_raise_state\n"); |
911 |
kret = exception_raise_state(port, exception_type, exception_data, |
912 |
data_count, &flavor, |
913 |
thread_state, thread_state_count, |
914 |
thread_state, &thread_state_count); |
915 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (exception_raise_state, kret); |
916 |
break; |
917 |
case EXCEPTION_STATE_IDENTITY: |
918 |
// fprintf(stderr, "forwarding to exception_raise_state_identity\n"); |
919 |
kret = exception_raise_state_identity(port, thread_port, task_port, |
920 |
exception_type, exception_data, |
921 |
data_count, &flavor, |
922 |
thread_state, thread_state_count, |
923 |
thread_state, &thread_state_count); |
924 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (exception_raise_state_identity, kret); |
925 |
break; |
926 |
default: |
927 |
fprintf(stderr, "forward_exception got unknown behavior\n"); |
928 |
break; |
929 |
} |
930 |
|
931 |
if (behavior != EXCEPTION_DEFAULT) { |
932 |
kret = thread_set_state (thread_port, flavor, thread_state, |
933 |
thread_state_count); |
934 |
MACH_CHECK_ERROR (thread_set_state, kret); |
935 |
} |
936 |
|
937 |
return KERN_SUCCESS; |
938 |
} |
939 |
|
940 |
/* |
941 |
* This is the code that actually handles the exception. |
942 |
* It is called by exc_server. For Darwin 5 Apple changed |
943 |
* this a bit from how this family of functions worked in |
944 |
* Mach. If you are familiar with that it is a little |
945 |
* different. The main variation that concerns us here is |
946 |
* that code is an array of exception specific codes and |
947 |
* codeCount is a count of the number of codes in the code |
948 |
* array. In typical Mach all exceptions have a code |
949 |
* and sub-code. It happens to be the case that for a |
950 |
* EXC_BAD_ACCESS exception the first entry is the type of |
951 |
* bad access that occurred and the second entry is the |
952 |
* faulting address so these entries correspond exactly to |
953 |
* how the code and sub-code are used on Mach. |
954 |
* |
955 |
* This is a MIG interface. No code in Basilisk II should |
956 |
* call this directley. This has to have external C |
957 |
* linkage because that is what exc_server expects. |
958 |
*/ |
959 |
kern_return_t |
960 |
catch_exception_raise(mach_port_t exception_port, |
961 |
mach_port_t thread, |
962 |
mach_port_t task, |
963 |
exception_type_t exception, |
964 |
exception_data_t code, |
965 |
mach_msg_type_number_t codeCount) |
966 |
{ |
967 |
ppc_thread_state_t state; |
968 |
kern_return_t krc; |
969 |
|
970 |
if ((exception == EXC_BAD_ACCESS) && (codeCount >= 2)) { |
971 |
if (handle_badaccess(SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS)) |
972 |
return KERN_SUCCESS; |
973 |
} |
974 |
|
975 |
// In Mach we do not need to remove the exception handler. |
976 |
// If we forward the exception, eventually some exception handler |
977 |
// will take care of this exception. |
978 |
krc = forward_exception(thread, task, exception, code, codeCount, &ports); |
979 |
|
980 |
return krc; |
981 |
} |
982 |
#endif |
983 |
|
984 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY |
985 |
// Handle bad memory accesses with signal handler |
986 |
static void sigsegv_handler(SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGLIST) |
987 |
{ |
988 |
// Call handler and reinstall the global handler, if required |
989 |
if (handle_badaccess(SIGSEGV_FAULT_HANDLER_ARGS)) { |
990 |
#if (defined(HAVE_SIGACTION) ? defined(SIGACTION_NEED_REINSTALL) : defined(SIGNAL_NEED_REINSTALL)) |
991 |
sigsegv_do_install_handler(sig); |
992 |
#endif |
993 |
return; |
994 |
} |
995 |
|
996 |
// Failure: reinstall default handler for "safe" crash |
997 |
#define FAULT_HANDLER(sig) signal(sig, SIG_DFL); |
998 |
SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS |
999 |
#undef FAULT_HANDLER |
1000 |
} |
1001 |
#endif |
1002 |
|
1003 |
|
1004 |
/* |
1005 |
* SIGSEGV handler initialization |
1006 |
*/ |
1007 |
|
1008 |
#if defined(HAVE_SIGINFO_T) |
1009 |
static bool sigsegv_do_install_handler(int sig) |
1010 |
{ |
1011 |
// Setup SIGSEGV handler to process writes to frame buffer |
1012 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION |
1013 |
struct sigaction sigsegv_sa; |
1014 |
sigemptyset(&sigsegv_sa.sa_mask); |
1015 |
sigsegv_sa.sa_sigaction = sigsegv_handler; |
1016 |
sigsegv_sa.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO; |
1017 |
return (sigaction(sig, &sigsegv_sa, 0) == 0); |
1018 |
#else |
1019 |
return (signal(sig, (signal_handler)sigsegv_handler) != SIG_ERR); |
1020 |
#endif |
1021 |
} |
1022 |
#endif |
1023 |
|
1024 |
#if defined(HAVE_SIGCONTEXT_SUBTERFUGE) |
1025 |
static bool sigsegv_do_install_handler(int sig) |
1026 |
{ |
1027 |
// Setup SIGSEGV handler to process writes to frame buffer |
1028 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION |
1029 |
struct sigaction sigsegv_sa; |
1030 |
sigemptyset(&sigsegv_sa.sa_mask); |
1031 |
sigsegv_sa.sa_handler = (signal_handler)sigsegv_handler; |
1032 |
sigsegv_sa.sa_flags = 0; |
1033 |
#if !EMULATED_68K && defined(__NetBSD__) |
1034 |
sigaddset(&sigsegv_sa.sa_mask, SIGALRM); |
1035 |
sigsegv_sa.sa_flags |= SA_ONSTACK; |
1036 |
#endif |
1037 |
return (sigaction(sig, &sigsegv_sa, 0) == 0); |
1038 |
#else |
1039 |
return (signal(sig, (signal_handler)sigsegv_handler) != SIG_ERR); |
1040 |
#endif |
1041 |
} |
1042 |
#endif |
1043 |
|
1044 |
#if defined(HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS) |
1045 |
static bool sigsegv_do_install_handler(sigsegv_fault_handler_t handler) |
1046 |
{ |
1047 |
/* |
1048 |
* Except for the exception port functions, this should be |
1049 |
* pretty much stock Mach. If later you choose to support |
1050 |
* other Mach's besides Darwin, just check for __MACH__ |
1051 |
* here and __APPLE__ where the actual differences are. |
1052 |
*/ |
1053 |
#if defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__) |
1054 |
if (sigsegv_fault_handler != NULL) { |
1055 |
sigsegv_fault_handler = handler; |
1056 |
return true; |
1057 |
} |
1058 |
|
1059 |
kern_return_t krc; |
1060 |
|
1061 |
// create the the exception port |
1062 |
krc = mach_port_allocate(mach_task_self(), |
1063 |
MACH_PORT_RIGHT_RECEIVE, &_exceptionPort); |
1064 |
if (krc != KERN_SUCCESS) { |
1065 |
mach_error("mach_port_allocate", krc); |
1066 |
return false; |
1067 |
} |
1068 |
|
1069 |
// add a port send right |
1070 |
krc = mach_port_insert_right(mach_task_self(), |
1071 |
_exceptionPort, _exceptionPort, |
1072 |
MACH_MSG_TYPE_MAKE_SEND); |
1073 |
if (krc != KERN_SUCCESS) { |
1074 |
mach_error("mach_port_insert_right", krc); |
1075 |
return false; |
1076 |
} |
1077 |
|
1078 |
// get the old exception ports |
1079 |
ports.maskCount = sizeof (ports.masks) / sizeof (ports.masks[0]); |
1080 |
krc = thread_get_exception_ports(mach_thread_self(), EXC_MASK_BAD_ACCESS, ports.masks, |
1081 |
&ports.maskCount, ports.handlers, ports.behaviors, ports.flavors); |
1082 |
if (krc != KERN_SUCCESS) { |
1083 |
mach_error("thread_get_exception_ports", krc); |
1084 |
return false; |
1085 |
} |
1086 |
|
1087 |
// set the new exception port |
1088 |
// |
1089 |
// We could have used EXCEPTION_STATE_IDENTITY instead of |
1090 |
// EXCEPTION_DEFAULT to get the thread state in the initial |
1091 |
// message, but it turns out that in the common case this is not |
1092 |
// neccessary. If we need it we can later ask for it from the |
1093 |
// suspended thread. |
1094 |
// |
1095 |
// Even with THREAD_STATE_NONE, Darwin provides the program |
1096 |
// counter in the thread state. The comments in the header file |
1097 |
// seem to imply that you can count on the GPR's on an exception |
1098 |
// as well but just to be safe I use MACHINE_THREAD_STATE because |
1099 |
// you have to ask for all of the GPR's anyway just to get the |
1100 |
// program counter. In any case because of update effective |
1101 |
// address from immediate and update address from effective |
1102 |
// addresses of ra and rb modes (as good an name as any for these |
1103 |
// addressing modes) used in PPC instructions, you will need the |
1104 |
// GPR state anyway. |
1105 |
krc = thread_set_exception_ports(mach_thread_self(), EXC_MASK_BAD_ACCESS, _exceptionPort, |
1106 |
EXCEPTION_DEFAULT, MACHINE_THREAD_STATE); |
1107 |
if (krc != KERN_SUCCESS) { |
1108 |
mach_error("thread_set_exception_ports", krc); |
1109 |
return false; |
1110 |
} |
1111 |
|
1112 |
// create the exception handler thread |
1113 |
if (pthread_create(&exc_thread, NULL, &handleExceptions, NULL) != 0) { |
1114 |
(void)fprintf(stderr, "creation of exception thread failed\n"); |
1115 |
return false; |
1116 |
} |
1117 |
|
1118 |
// do not care about the exception thread any longer, let is run standalone |
1119 |
(void)pthread_detach(exc_thread); |
1120 |
|
1121 |
sigsegv_fault_handler = handler; |
1122 |
return true; |
1123 |
#else |
1124 |
return false; |
1125 |
#endif |
1126 |
} |
1127 |
#endif |
1128 |
|
1129 |
bool sigsegv_install_handler(sigsegv_fault_handler_t handler) |
1130 |
{ |
1131 |
#if defined(HAVE_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY) |
1132 |
bool success = true; |
1133 |
#define FAULT_HANDLER(sig) success = success && sigsegv_do_install_handler(sig); |
1134 |
SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS |
1135 |
#undef FAULT_HANDLER |
1136 |
if (success) |
1137 |
sigsegv_fault_handler = handler; |
1138 |
return success; |
1139 |
#elif defined(HAVE_MACH_EXCEPTIONS) |
1140 |
return sigsegv_do_install_handler(handler); |
1141 |
#else |
1142 |
// FAIL: no siginfo_t nor sigcontext subterfuge is available |
1143 |
return false; |
1144 |
#endif |
1145 |
} |
1146 |
|
1147 |
|
1148 |
/* |
1149 |
* SIGSEGV handler deinitialization |
1150 |
*/ |
1151 |
|
1152 |
void sigsegv_deinstall_handler(void) |
1153 |
{ |
1154 |
// We do nothing for Mach exceptions, the thread would need to be |
1155 |
// suspended if not already so, and we might mess with other |
1156 |
// exception handlers that came after we registered ours. There is |
1157 |
// no need to remove the exception handler, in fact this function is |
1158 |
// not called anywhere in Basilisk II. |
1159 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY |
1160 |
sigsegv_fault_handler = 0; |
1161 |
#define FAULT_HANDLER(sig) signal(sig, SIG_DFL); |
1162 |
SIGSEGV_ALL_SIGNALS |
1163 |
#undef FAULT_HANDLER |
1164 |
#endif |
1165 |
} |
1166 |
|
1167 |
|
1168 |
/* |
1169 |
* Set callback function when we cannot handle the fault |
1170 |
*/ |
1171 |
|
1172 |
void sigsegv_set_dump_state(sigsegv_state_dumper_t handler) |
1173 |
{ |
1174 |
sigsegv_state_dumper = handler; |
1175 |
} |
1176 |
|
1177 |
|
1178 |
/* |
1179 |
* Test program used for configure/test |
1180 |
*/ |
1181 |
|
1182 |
#ifdef CONFIGURE_TEST_SIGSEGV_RECOVERY |
1183 |
#include <stdio.h> |
1184 |
#include <stdlib.h> |
1185 |
#include <fcntl.h> |
1186 |
#include <sys/mman.h> |
1187 |
#include "vm_alloc.h" |
1188 |
|
1189 |
static int page_size; |
1190 |
static volatile char * page = 0; |
1191 |
static volatile int handler_called = 0; |
1192 |
|
1193 |
static sigsegv_return_t sigsegv_test_handler(sigsegv_address_t fault_address, sigsegv_address_t instruction_address) |
1194 |
{ |
1195 |
handler_called++; |
1196 |
if ((fault_address - 123) != page) |
1197 |
exit(1); |
1198 |
if (vm_protect((char *)((unsigned long)fault_address & -page_size), page_size, VM_PAGE_READ | VM_PAGE_WRITE) != 0) |
1199 |
exit(1); |
1200 |
return SIGSEGV_RETURN_SUCCESS; |
1201 |
} |
1202 |
|
1203 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION |
1204 |
static sigsegv_return_t sigsegv_insn_handler(sigsegv_address_t fault_address, sigsegv_address_t instruction_address) |
1205 |
{ |
1206 |
if (((unsigned long)fault_address - (unsigned long)page) < page_size) |
1207 |
return SIGSEGV_RETURN_SKIP_INSTRUCTION; |
1208 |
return SIGSEGV_RETURN_FAILURE; |
1209 |
} |
1210 |
#endif |
1211 |
|
1212 |
int main(void) |
1213 |
{ |
1214 |
if (vm_init() < 0) |
1215 |
return 1; |
1216 |
|
1217 |
page_size = getpagesize(); |
1218 |
if ((page = (char *)vm_acquire(page_size)) == VM_MAP_FAILED) |
1219 |
return 1; |
1220 |
|
1221 |
if (vm_protect((char *)page, page_size, VM_PAGE_READ) < 0) |
1222 |
return 1; |
1223 |
|
1224 |
if (!sigsegv_install_handler(sigsegv_test_handler)) |
1225 |
return 1; |
1226 |
|
1227 |
page[123] = 45; |
1228 |
page[123] = 45; |
1229 |
|
1230 |
if (handler_called != 1) |
1231 |
return 1; |
1232 |
|
1233 |
#ifdef HAVE_SIGSEGV_SKIP_INSTRUCTION |
1234 |
if (!sigsegv_install_handler(sigsegv_insn_handler)) |
1235 |
return 1; |
1236 |
|
1237 |
if (vm_protect((char *)page, page_size, VM_PAGE_READ | VM_PAGE_WRITE) < 0) |
1238 |
return 1; |
1239 |
|
1240 |
for (int i = 0; i < page_size; i++) |
1241 |
page[i] = (i + 1) % page_size; |
1242 |
|
1243 |
if (vm_protect((char *)page, page_size, VM_PAGE_NOACCESS) < 0) |
1244 |
return 1; |
1245 |
|
1246 |
#define TEST_SKIP_INSTRUCTION(TYPE) do { \ |
1247 |
const unsigned int TAG = 0x12345678; \ |
1248 |
TYPE data = *((TYPE *)(page + sizeof(TYPE))); \ |
1249 |
volatile unsigned int effect = data + TAG; \ |
1250 |
if (effect != TAG) \ |
1251 |
return 1; \ |
1252 |
} while (0) |
1253 |
|
1254 |
TEST_SKIP_INSTRUCTION(unsigned char); |
1255 |
TEST_SKIP_INSTRUCTION(unsigned short); |
1256 |
TEST_SKIP_INSTRUCTION(unsigned int); |
1257 |
#endif |
1258 |
|
1259 |
vm_exit(); |
1260 |
return 0; |
1261 |
} |
1262 |
#endif |