This is to add build fingerprint and product name/version to
microdumps. Conversely to what happens in the case of minidumps
with MIME fields, due to the nature of minidumps, extra metadata
cannot be reliably injected after the dump is completed.
This CL adds the plumbing to inject two optional fields plus the
corresponding tests.
BUG=chromium:410294
R=thestig@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1125153008
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1456 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
The current code is relying on info->si_pid to figure out whether
the exception handler was triggered by a signal coming from the kernel
(that will re-trigger until the cause that triggered the signal has
been cleared) or from user-space e.g., kill -SIGNAL pid, which will NOT
automatically re-trigger in the next signal handler in the chain.
While the intentions are good (manually re-triggering user-space
signals), the current implementation mistakenly looks at the si_pid
field in siginfo_t, assuming that it is coming from the kernel if
si_pid == 0.
This is wrong. siginfo_t, in fact, is a union and si_pid is meaningful
only for userspace signals. For signals originated by the kernel,
instead, si_pid overlaps with si_addr (the faulting address).
As a matter of facts, the current implementation is mistakenly
re-triggering the signal using tgkill for most of the kernel-space
signals (unless the fault address is exactly 0x0).
This is not completelly correct for the case of SIGSEGV/SIGBUS. The
next handler in the chain will stil see the signal, but the |siginfo|
and the |context| arguments of the handler will be meaningless
(retriggering a signal with tgkill doesn't preserve them).
Therefore, if the next handler in the chain expects those arguments
to be set, it will fail.
Concretelly, this is causing problems to WebView. In some rare
circumstances, the next handler in the chain is a user-space runtime
which does SIGSEGV handling to implement speculative null pointer
managed exceptions (see as an example
http://www.mono-project.com/docs/advanced/runtime/docs/exception-handling/)
The fix herein proposed consists in using the si_code (see SI_FROMUSER
macros) to determine whether a signal is coming form the kernel
(and therefore just re-establish the next signal handler) or from
userspace (and use the tgkill logic).
Repro case:
This issue is visible in Chrome for Android with this simple repro case:
- Add a non-null pointer dereference in the codebase:
*((volatile int*)0xbeef) = 42
Without this change: the next handler (the libc trap) prints:
F/libc ( 595): Fatal signal 11 (SIGSEGV), code 1, fault addr 0x487
where 0x487 is actually the PID of the process (which is wrong).
With this change: the next handler prints:
F/libc ( 595): Fatal signal 11 (SIGSEGV), code 1, fault addr 0xbeef
which is the correct answer.
BUG=chromium:481937
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/6844002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1454 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
Despite the fact that many places imply that sigaction and rt_sigaction
are essentially the same, rt_sigaction's signature is actually
different-- it takes the size of the kernel's sigset_t as an extra argument.
BUG=473973
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1447 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
On Android L+, signal and sigaction symbols are provided by libsigchain
that override the system's versions. There is a bug in these functions
where they essentially ignore requests to install SIG_DFL.
Workaround this issue by explicitly performing a syscall to
__NR_rt_sigaction to install SIG_DFL on Android.
BUG=473973
Patch by Chris Hopman <cjhopman@chromium.org>
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/1804002/
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1438 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
Microdumps are a very lightweight variant of minidumps. They are meant
to dump a minimal crash report on the system log (logcat on Android),
containing only the state of the crashing thread.
This is to deal with cases where the user has opted out from crash
uploading but we still want to generate meaningful information on the
device to pull a stacktrace for development purposes.
Conversely to conventional stack traces (e.g. the one generated by
Android's debuggerd or Chromium's base::stacktrace) microdumps do NOT
require unwind tables to be present in the target binary. This allows
to save precious binary size (~1.5 MB for Chrome on Arm, ~10 MB on
arm64).
More information and design doc on crbug.com/410294
BUG=chromium:410294
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1398 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
This is an initial attempt to add Arm64 (aarch64) support to Breakpad for
Linux / Android platforms. This CL adds the Arm64 data structures, but does
not yet implement the Android getcontext support or CPUFillFromThreadInfo /
CPUFillFromUContext.
BUG=354405,335641
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/1354002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1301 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
SIGABRT can be generated internally, usually by calling abort(),
or externally by another process. When the signal is generated
by the kernel, info->si_pid is 0 and the signal is treated in the
same way as an exception (SIGSEGV, etc.), but the assumption
that the exception happens again upon return from the handler
is wrong, so we must have a special case for this.
Original CL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/734002/
BUG=chromium:303075
TEST=tested with Alt-VolumeUp-X on Chrome OS
A=semenzato@chromium.orgR=semenzato@google.com
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/754002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1233 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
When there are upwards of 200 threads in a crashing process, each having an
8KB stack, this can result in a huge, 1.8MB minidump file. So I added a
parameter that, if set, can compel the minidump writer to dump less stack.
More specifically, if the writer expects to go over the limit (due to the
number of threads), then it will dump less of a thread's stack after the
first 20 threads.
There are two ways to specify the limit, depending on how you write minidumps:
1) If you call WriteMinidump() directly, there's now a version of the
function that takes the minidump size limit as an argument.
2) If you use the ExceptionHandler class, the MinidumpDescriptor object you
pass to it now has a set_size_limit() method you would call before
passing it to the constructor.
BUG=chromium-os:31447, chromium:154546
TEST=Wrote a size-limit unittest; Ran unittests
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/487002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1082 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
Breakpad can be used on processes where a mistaken
library saves then restores one of our signal handlers
with 'signal' instead of 'sigaction'.
This loses the SA_SIGINFO flag associated with the
Breakpad handler, and in some cases (e.g. Android/ARM
kernels), the values of the 'info' and 'uc' parameters
that ExceptionHandler::SignalHandler() receives will
be completely bogus, leading to a crash when the function
is executed (and of course, no minidump generation).
To work-around this, have SignalHandler() check the state
of the flag. If it is incorrectly unset, re-register with
'sigaction' and the correct flag, then return. The signal
will be re-thrown, and this time the function will be
called with the correct values.
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/481002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1067 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
If none of the installed ExceptionHandlers handle a signal (their
FilterCallbacks or HandlerCallbacks all return false), then the signal
should be delivered to the signal handlers that were previously
installed.
This requires that old_handlers_ become a static vector so that we can
restore the handlers in the static HandleSignal.
Currently it is also restoring signals in ~ExceptionHandler (if there
are no others). This should not be required since our documentation
states that a process can only have one ExceptionHandler for which
install_handlers is true (and so we get the correct behavior if we
simply leave our handlers installed forever), but even the tests
themselves violate that.
Patch by Chris Hopman <cjhopman@chromium.org>
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/440002/
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1025 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
This adds a minimalistic implementation of getcontext()
for Android/ARM and Android/x86. The provided code is
in assembly and only implements the bare minimum required
by Breakpad to get the current processor state.
Note that:
- The FPU state is not saved to the ucontext_t on ARM.
(that's actually the main difference with a normal
getcontext() implementation).
This is normal. On Linux/ARM, such state must be
obtained with PTRACE_GETVFPREGS instead. This will
be implemented in a future patch.
- On x86, only the 'regular' FPU state is saved, to
mimic the GLibc/i386 implementation. The state of
SSE/SSE2/etc registers is not part of the upstream
getcontext() implementation.
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/444002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1024 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
This small patch allows the build of the tools and processor
when targetting Android with the Automake/Autconf build.
Not that these necessarily work correctly at the moment,
but there is no need for --disable-tools --disable-processor
now when using --host=arm-linux-androideabi or
--host=i686-linux-android.
+ Modify android/run-checks.sh to build all binaries with
the Automake build.
+ Tiny fix for --abi=x86 in android/run-checks.sh
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/438002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1018 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
This patch remove many Android-specific #ifdefs from the Breakpad
source code. This is achieved by providing "fixed-up" platform
headers (e.g. <signal.h> or <sys/user,h>), in the new directory
src/common/android/include/, which masks differences between
the NDK and GLibc headers.
The old "android_link.h" and "android_ucontext.h" are moved
and renamed.
This also requires putting this directory as the first
include path during Android-hosted builds, hence the
modification of Makefile.am and configure.ac
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/434002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1017 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
where the minidump should be created, without the need of opening any other
file.
BUG=None
TEST=Run unit-tests.
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1007 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
Ted Mielczarek:
> You could try backing out r989, although Mozilla has been running with that
> patch for months without issue.
Me:
> src/client/windows/handler/exception_handler.cc in r989 appears to have
> formatting problems, an unwanted property change, and no real Breakpad review
> history, so maybe we should back it out anyway until the proper process is
> followed.
NACL Tests nacl_integration failures:
http://build.chromium.org/p/chromium/builders/NACL%20Tests/builds/30138
chrome src/native_client/tests/inbrowser_crash_test/crash_dump_tester.py says
that the observed failures are a symptom of crash_service.exe itself crashing.
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@998 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e