Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2016 10:07:15 +0300 From: Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com> To: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> Cc: Andrey Chernov <ache@freebsd.org>, src-committers@freebsd.org, svn-src-all@freebsd.org, svn-src-head@freebsd.org Subject: Re: svn commit: r304928 - in head/lib/libc: amd64/sys i386/sys sys Message-ID: <20160829070715.GQ83214@kib.kiev.ua> In-Reply-To: <20160829065813.GP83214@kib.kiev.ua> References: <201608272303.u7RN3N0D078505@repo.freebsd.org> <80ad9e03-74bc-8c99-666f-787772bef2b9@freebsd.org> <20160828015210.GI83214@kib.kiev.ua> <1595604.93PBdSz0kX@ralph.baldwin.cx> <20160829065813.GP83214@kib.kiev.ua>
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On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 09:58:13AM +0300, Konstantin Belousov wrote: > On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 04:09:51PM -0700, John Baldwin wrote: > > OTOH, given that we explicitly documented it as not being true, I suspect > > any applications that are using ptrace() are going off the documentation, not > > the implementation artifact. Note that Linux's ptrace() documents the same > > requirement as before this change (caller is required to clear errno), so I > > doubt there is any actual software out there that expects the > > FreeBSD-specific behavior. Given that and the extra maintenance overhead of > > having to dink with errno in assembly on X architectures, I'd rather we keep > > the old language in the manpage and remove the 'errno' frobbing in the system > > call wrappers. To be honest, my first response to this commit was one of > > surprise that we modify errno directly as that is inconsistent with other > > system calls. (I haven't looked to see if any other system call wrappers > > modify errno for non-error cases.) > > The problematic calls are PT_PEEK_I and PT_PEEK_D, as far as I understand. > > I dug into the ptrace(2) consumers, I found a lot of things using > it which I would not expect to use, besides usual suspects of gdb > lldb libunwind reptyr etc. Most surprising was that even high-profile > consumers including gdb sometimes fail to check errno after PT_PEEK. On > the other hand, I did not found a case in gdb where errno is checked > after PT_PEEK but not zeroed before the syscall. > > I almost agreed with you after the reading, but then I decided to look > into glibc just in case. What I found there is really fascinating. > From glibc/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux: > res = INLINE_SYSCALL (ptrace, 4, request, pid, addr, data); > if (res >= 0 && request > 0 && request < 4) > { > __set_errno (0); > return ret; > } > #define PTRACE_PEEKTEXT 1 > #define PTRACE_PEEKDATA 2 > #define PTRACE_PEEKUSR 3 > > In the end, I might consider changing the ptrace wrappers into > consolidated C source, it would look like that > > int > ptrace(int request, pid_t pid, caddr_t addr, int data) > { > > errno = 0; > return (__sys_ptrace(request, pid, addr, data)); > } And Solaris libc, where ptrace() is the wrapper around procfs, starts its implementation this way: usr/src/lib/libc/i386/sys/ptrace.c /* * Process the request. */ errno = 0; switch (request) { case 1: /* PTRACE_PEEKTEXT */ case 2: /* PTRACE_PEEKDATA */
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