delve/pkg/proc/native/threads_linux.go
Josh Stone d0d2d47885 proc/native/linux: try to use process_vm_readv/writev
This change adds `ProcessVmRead` and `ProcessVmWrite` wrappers around
the syscalls `process_vm_readv` and `process_vm_writev`, available since
Linux 3.2. These follow the same permission model as `ptrace`, but they
don't actually require being attached, which means they can be called
directly from any thread in the debugger. They also use `iovec` to write
entire blocks at once, rather than having to peek/poke each `uintptr`.

These wrappers are used in `Thread.ReadMemory` and `WriteMemory`, still
falling back to `ptrace` if that fails for any reason.  Notably,
`process_vm_writev` respects memory protection, so it can't modify
read-only memory like `ptrace`. This frequently occurs when writing
breakpoints in read-only `.text`, so to avoid a lot of wasted `EFAULT`
calls, we only try `process_vm_writev` for larger writes.
2020-02-29 08:25:31 -08:00

117 lines
2.6 KiB
Go

package native
import (
"fmt"
sys "golang.org/x/sys/unix"
"github.com/go-delve/delve/pkg/proc"
)
type WaitStatus sys.WaitStatus
// OSSpecificDetails hold Linux specific
// process details.
type OSSpecificDetails struct {
delayedSignal int
registers sys.PtraceRegs
running bool
}
func (t *Thread) stop() (err error) {
err = sys.Tgkill(t.dbp.pid, t.ID, sys.SIGSTOP)
if err != nil {
err = fmt.Errorf("stop err %s on thread %d", err, t.ID)
return
}
return
}
// Stopped returns whether the thread is stopped at
// the operating system level.
func (t *Thread) Stopped() bool {
state := status(t.ID, t.dbp.os.comm)
return state == StatusTraceStop || state == StatusTraceStopT
}
func (t *Thread) resume() error {
sig := t.os.delayedSignal
t.os.delayedSignal = 0
return t.resumeWithSig(sig)
}
func (t *Thread) resumeWithSig(sig int) (err error) {
t.os.running = true
t.dbp.execPtraceFunc(func() { err = PtraceCont(t.ID, sig) })
return
}
func (t *Thread) singleStep() (err error) {
for {
t.dbp.execPtraceFunc(func() { err = sys.PtraceSingleStep(t.ID) })
if err != nil {
return err
}
wpid, status, err := t.dbp.waitFast(t.ID)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if (status == nil || status.Exited()) && wpid == t.dbp.pid {
t.dbp.postExit()
rs := 0
if status != nil {
rs = status.ExitStatus()
}
return proc.ErrProcessExited{Pid: t.dbp.pid, Status: rs}
}
if wpid == t.ID && status.StopSignal() == sys.SIGTRAP {
return nil
}
}
}
func (t *Thread) Blocked() bool {
regs, err := t.Registers(false)
if err != nil {
return false
}
pc := regs.PC()
fn := t.BinInfo().PCToFunc(pc)
if fn != nil && ((fn.Name == "runtime.futex") || (fn.Name == "runtime.usleep") || (fn.Name == "runtime.clone")) {
return true
}
return false
}
func (t *Thread) WriteMemory(addr uintptr, data []byte) (written int, err error) {
if t.dbp.exited {
return 0, proc.ErrProcessExited{Pid: t.dbp.pid}
}
if len(data) == 0 {
return
}
// ProcessVmWrite can't poke read-only memory like ptrace, so don't
// even bother for small writes -- likely breakpoints and such.
if len(data) > sys.SizeofPtr {
written, _ = ProcessVmWrite(t.ID, addr, data)
}
if written == 0 {
t.dbp.execPtraceFunc(func() { written, err = sys.PtracePokeData(t.ID, addr, data) })
}
return
}
func (t *Thread) ReadMemory(data []byte, addr uintptr) (n int, err error) {
if t.dbp.exited {
return 0, proc.ErrProcessExited{Pid: t.dbp.pid}
}
if len(data) == 0 {
return
}
n, _ = ProcessVmRead(t.ID, addr, data)
if n == 0 {
t.dbp.execPtraceFunc(func() { n, err = sys.PtracePeekData(t.ID, addr, data) })
}
return
}