/* Native-dependent code for FreeBSD/i386. Copyright (C) 2001-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "defs.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "regcache.h" #include "target.h" #include #include #include #include #include "fbsd-nat.h" #include "i386-tdep.h" #include "x86-nat.h" #include "x86-xstate.h" #include "x86-bsd-nat.h" #include "i386-bsd-nat.h" /* Resume execution of the inferior process. If STEP is nonzero, single-step it. If SIGNAL is nonzero, give it that signal. */ static void i386fbsd_resume (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid, int step, enum gdb_signal signal) { pid_t pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid); int request = PT_STEP; if (pid == -1) /* Resume all threads. This only gets used in the non-threaded case, where "resume all threads" and "resume inferior_ptid" are the same. */ pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid); if (!step) { struct regcache *regcache = get_current_regcache (); ULONGEST eflags; /* Workaround for a bug in FreeBSD. Make sure that the trace flag is off when doing a continue. There is a code path through the kernel which leaves the flag set when it should have been cleared. If a process has a signal pending (such as SIGALRM) and we do a PT_STEP, the process never really has a chance to run because the kernel needs to notify the debugger that a signal is being sent. Therefore, the process never goes through the kernel's trap() function which would normally clear it. */ regcache_cooked_read_unsigned (regcache, I386_EFLAGS_REGNUM, &eflags); if (eflags & 0x0100) regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, I386_EFLAGS_REGNUM, eflags & ~0x0100); request = PT_CONTINUE; } /* An addres of (caddr_t) 1 tells ptrace to continue from where it was. (If GDB wanted it to start some other way, we have already written a new PC value to the child.) */ if (ptrace (request, pid, (caddr_t) 1, gdb_signal_to_host (signal)) == -1) perror_with_name (("ptrace")); } /* Support for debugging kernel virtual memory images. */ #include #include "bsd-kvm.h" static int i386fbsd_supply_pcb (struct regcache *regcache, struct pcb *pcb) { /* The following is true for FreeBSD 4.7: The pcb contains %eip, %ebx, %esp, %ebp, %esi, %edi and %gs. This accounts for all callee-saved registers specified by the psABI and then some. Here %esp contains the stack pointer at the point just after the call to cpu_switch(). From this information we reconstruct the register state as it would look when we just returned from cpu_switch(). */ /* The stack pointer shouldn't be zero. */ if (pcb->pcb_esp == 0) return 0; pcb->pcb_esp += 4; regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EDI_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_edi); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_ESI_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_esi); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EBP_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_ebp); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_ESP_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_esp); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EBX_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_ebx); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EIP_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_eip); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_GS_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_gs); return 1; } #ifdef PT_GETXSTATE_INFO /* Implement the to_read_description method. */ static const struct target_desc * i386fbsd_read_description (struct target_ops *ops) { static int xsave_probed; static uint64_t xcr0; if (!xsave_probed) { struct ptrace_xstate_info info; if (ptrace (PT_GETXSTATE_INFO, ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid), (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) &info, sizeof (info)) == 0) { x86bsd_xsave_len = info.xsave_len; xcr0 = info.xsave_mask; } xsave_probed = 1; } if (x86bsd_xsave_len == 0) xcr0 = X86_XSTATE_SSE_MASK; return i386_target_description (xcr0); } #endif void _initialize_i386fbsd_nat (void) { struct target_ops *t; /* Add some extra features to the common *BSD/i386 target. */ t = i386bsd_target (); #ifdef PT_GETXSTATE_INFO t->to_read_description = i386fbsd_read_description; #endif t->to_resume = i386fbsd_resume; fbsd_nat_add_target (t); /* Support debugging kernel virtual memory images. */ bsd_kvm_add_target (i386fbsd_supply_pcb); #ifdef KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP /* Normally signal frames are detected via i386fbsd_sigtramp_p. However, FreeBSD 9.2 through 10.1 do not include the page holding the signal code in core dumps. These releases do provide a kern.proc.sigtramp. sysctl that returns the location of the signal trampoline for a running process. We fetch the location of the current (gdb) process and use this to identify signal frames in core dumps from these releases. */ { int mib[4]; struct kinfo_sigtramp kst; size_t len; mib[0] = CTL_KERN; mib[1] = KERN_PROC; mib[2] = KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP; mib[3] = getpid (); len = sizeof (kst); if (sysctl (mib, 4, &kst, &len, NULL, 0) == 0) { i386fbsd_sigtramp_start_addr = (uintptr_t) kst.ksigtramp_start; i386fbsd_sigtramp_end_addr = (uintptr_t) kst.ksigtramp_end; } } #endif }