1. Fixing ExceptionHandlerTest.FirstChanceHandlerRuns:
exit() is not an async-signal-safe function (http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html)
2. Fixing entry point signature in minidump_dump
Changed "const char* argv[]" to "char* argv[]" to match the standard entry point signature
3. Updating .gitignore to exclude unit test artifacts
Change-Id: I9662898d0bd97769621fb6476a720105821c60f0
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/562356
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Ivan Penkov <ivanpe@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Joshua Peraza <jperaza@chromium.org>
When rolling this into Chrome, we got compile failures due to
DoNullPointerDereference being undefined but the new FirstChanceHandlerRuns
tests depends on this and was still defined.
The fix is to only enable the FirstChanceHandlerRuns test on non-asan builds.
Bug:
Change-Id: I5a3da0a21e2d0dd663ffc01137496d16905293a6
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/544186
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This change adds the option for Breakpad hosts to register a callback
that gets the first chance to handle an exception. The handler will
return true if it handled the exception and false otherwise.
The primary use case is V8's trap-based bounds checking support for
WebAssembly.
Bug:
Change-Id: I5aa5b87d1229f1cef905a00404fa2027ee86be56
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/509994
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This preserves full build ids in minidumps, which are useful for
tracking down the right version of system libraries from Linux
distributions.
The default build id produced by GNU binutils' ld is a 160-bit SHA-1
hash of some parts of the binary, which is exactly 20 bytes:
https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs-2.26/ld/Options.html#index-g_t_002d_002dbuild_002did-292
The bulk of the changes here are to change the signatures of the
FileID methods to use a wasteful_vector instead of raw pointers, since
build ids can be of arbitrary length.
The previous change that added support for this in the processor code
preserved the return value of `Minidump::debug_identifier()` as the
current `GUID+age` treatment for backwards-compatibility, and exposed
the full build id from `Minidump::code_identifier()`, which was
previously stubbed out for Linux dumps. This change keeps the debug ID
in the `dump_syms` output the same to match.
R=mark@chromium.org, thestig@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1688743002 .
When LLVM sees an attempt to dereference a NULL pointer, it will generate
invalid opcodes (undefined behavior) which leads to SIGILL which breaks
this unittest. Upstream's recommendation in this case is to add volatile
markings to get the actual dereference to happen.
This is documented in the blog post under "Dereferencing a NULL Pointer":
http://blog.llvm.org/2011/05/what-every-c-programmer-should-know.html
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1473 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
There are a bunch of tests that use invalid memory acesses (on purpose)
to trigger a crash so that we can detect things are dumped correctly.
When we run under ASAN, it catches those accesses and the breaks the
testing flow.
For now, use the existing ADDRESS_SANITIZER symbol to disable more tests.
Ideally we'd use a compile-time attribute to disable ASAN on a few funcs,
but that seems to be broken atm.
BUG=chromium:293519
BUG=chromium:304575
TEST=ran unittests under ASAN and they now pass
TEST=ran unittests w/out asan/clang and they still pass
R=benchan@chromium.org
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/884002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1255 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
Three unit tests were failing on recent ARM devices (e.g. Galaxy Nexus
or Nexus 4), while ran properly on older ones (e.g. Nexus S).
The main issue is that the instruction cache needs to be explicitely
cleared on ARM after writing machine code bytes to a malloc()-ed
page with PROT_EXEC.
Review URL: https://breakpad.appspot.com/540002
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1132 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
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
When a variable is used to set (and lookup) MappingInfo's "start_addr"
field, it needs to match types -- which is "uintptr_t". When Chrome OS
updated the 'make' that's used for building, the 32-bit "char *" had
sign-extended when cast up to a u_int64_t -- maybe because pointers were
unsigned before and then changed to be signed -- and that caused the address
lookup to fail.
BUG=chromium-os:25355
TEST=Ran Breakpad unittests
A=mkrebs@chromium.org
Review URL: http://breakpad.appspot.com/345001
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@908 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e
We've gotten mixed advice from the lawyery types about whether this
matters. But it's easy enough to do.
a=jimblandy, r=nealsid
git-svn-id: http://google-breakpad.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@517 4c0a9323-5329-0410-9bdc-e9ce6186880e