Bug #320116. sockaddr_rc might contain some padding which might not be
initialized. Explicitly check the sockaddr_rc fields are set. That also
produces better diagnostics about which field is unitialized.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13404
Enable wrappers for syscalls prlimit64, process_vm_readv, process_vm_writev,
needed by the following tests:
- none/tests/rlimit64_nofile and
- none/tests/process_vm_readv_writev.
The change also adds definitions for several system calls for MIPS64.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13400
This change removes option to define shared-memory-alignment for MIPS,
instead default value (0x40000) from MIPS Linux kernel will be used.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13389
MIPS uses different values for socket types.
This is protected by ARCH_HAS_SOCKET_TYPES in Linux kernel and we introduce
it here too. This is important for log-socket feature, and it resolves the
issue reported in https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=313267#c21.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13359
Necessary changes to Valgrind to support MIPS64LE on Linux.
Minor cleanup/style changes embedded in the patch as well.
The change corresponds to r2687 in VEX.
Patch written by Dejan Jevtic and Petar Jovanovic.
More information about this issue:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=313267
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13292
From: Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@citrix.com>
Under Xen the toolstack is responsible for managing the domains in
the system, e.g. creating, destroying, and otherwise manipulating
them.
To do this it uses a number of ioctls on the /proc/xen/privcmd
device. Most of these (the MMAPBATCH ones) simply set things up such
that a subsequenct mmap call will map the desired guest memory. Since
valgrind has no way of knowing what the memory contains we assume
that it is all initialised (to do otherwise would require valgrind to
be observing the complete state of the system and not just the given
process).
The most interesting ioctl is XEN_IOCTL_PRIVCMD_HYPERCALL which
allows the toolstack to make arbitrary hypercalls. Although the
mechanism here is specific to the OS of the guest running the
toolstack the hypercalls themselves are defined solely by the
hypervisor. Therefore I have split support for this ioctl into a part
in syswrap-linux.c which handles the ioctl itself and passes things
onto a new syswrap-xen.c which handles the specifics of the
hypercalls themselves. Porting this to another OS should just be a
matter of wiring up syswrap-$OS.c to decode the ioctl and call into
syswrap-xen.c. In the future we may want to split this into
syswrap-$ARCH-xen.c but for now this is x86 only.
The hypercall coverage here is pretty small but is enough to get
reasonable(-ish) results out of the xl toolstack when listing,
creating and destroying domains.
One issue is that the hypercalls which are exlusively used by the
toolstacks (as opposed to those used by guest operating systems) are
not considered a stable ABI, since the hypervisor and the lowlevel
tools are considered a matched pair. This covers the sysctl and
domctl hypercalls which are a fairly large chunk of the support
here. I'm not sure how to solve this without invoking a massive
amount of duplication. Right now this targets the Xen unstable
interface (which will shortly be released as Xen 4.2), perhaps I can
get away with deferring this problem until the first change .
On the plus side the vast majority of hypercalls are not of interest
to the toolstack (they are used by guests) so we can get away without
implementing them.
Note: a hypercall only reads as many words from the ioctl arg
struct as there are actual arguments to that hypercall and the
toolstack only initialises the arguments which are used. However
there is no space in the DEFN_PRE_TEMPLATE prototype to allow this to
be communicated from syswrap-xen.c back to syswrap-linux.c. Since a
hypercall can have at most 5 arguments I have hackily stolen ARG8 for
this purpose.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12963
The header file has been extended with the missing syscall numbers for MIPS,
and sys_prlimit64 has been enabled. This will make none/tests/rlimit64_nofile
pass.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12752
vki_signalfn_t has been incorrectly defined in vki-mips32-linux.h, and that
caused warnings elsewhere.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12687
The value VKI_ELF_NGREG is now defined with the the help of operator sizeof.
Incorrect size triggered an assertion in the file coredump-elf.c.
The issue was reported as coredump problem at:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=270777
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12677
on amd64, vki_modify_ldt_t was defined as void (not very clear why).
sizeof (void) cannot be taken (or more precisely can be taken,
but nobody knows what that means and what gcc does).
So, uncommended the (supposedly) correct definition of the type.
Note that I checked the definition on debian 6.0, kernel 2.6.32
and the structure is still ok.
Still needed to look at the other platforms not properly
handling the *SETTID and the SETTLS flags in clone PRE_READ
logic and/or not defining the type vki_modify_ldt_t
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12589
errno codes in asm-generic/errno-base.h (on linux).
The error strings were obtained by calling strerror natively in
Linux.
Extend vki-linux.h accordingly. vki-darwin.h already had
those errno codes.
Add testcase. This fixes#287858.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12316
* configure.in support
* new supp file darwin11.supp
* comment out many intercepts in mc_replace_strmem.c and
vg_replace_malloc.c that are apparently unnecessary for Darwin
* add minimal handling for the following new syscalls and mach traps:
mach_port_set_context
task_get_exception_ports
getaudit_addr
psynch_mutexwait
psynch_mutexdrop
psynch_cvbroad
psynch_cvsignal
psynch_cvwait
psynch_rw_rdlock
psynch_rw_wrlock
psynch_rw_unlock
psynch_cvclrprepost
* wqthread_hijack on amd64-darwin: deal with
tst->os_state.pthread having an apparently different offset,
which caused an assertion failure
* m_debuginfo: for 32 bit processes on Lion, use the DebugInfoFSM
cleanup added in r12041/12042 to handle apparently new dyld
behaviour, which is to map text areas r-- first and only
vm_protect them later to r-x.
The following cleanups remain to be done
* remove apparently pointless, commented out wrapper macro
invokations in mc_replace_strmem.c, eg
//MEMMOVE(VG_Z_DYLD, memmove)
(or determine that they are still necessary, and uncomment)
* ditto in vg_replace_malloc.c, plus general VGO_darwin cleanups
there
* write proper syscall wrappers for
mach_port_set_context
task_get_exception_ports
getaudit_addr
psynch_mutexwait
psynch_mutexdrop
psynch_cvbroad
psynch_cvsignal
psynch_cvwait
psynch_rw_rdlock
psynch_rw_wrlock
psynch_rw_unlock
psynch_cvclrprepost
These are currently just no-ops and may be causing Memcheck to
report false undef-value errors
* figure out why it doesn't work properly unless built with gcc-4.2 on
Lion.
gcc-4.2 is the "normal" gcc (i686-apple-darwin11-gcc-4.2.1). Plain
gcc is the hybrid gcc-front-end clang-back-end thing
(i686-apple-darwin11-llvm-gcc-4.2). Whereas on Snow Leopard, plain
gcc is the normal gcc.
The symptoms of the failure are that wqthread_hijack in
syswrap-amd64-linux.c hits this /*NOTREACHED*/ vg_assert(0); right
at the end (you need a pretty complex threaded app to trigger this),
which makes me think that either ML_(wqthread_continue_NORETURN) or
call_on_new_stack_0_1 do return, which they are not expected to.
* figure out if some of the uninitialised value errors reported in
system libraries on are caused by Memcheck being confused by LLVM
generated code, as per bug #242137
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12043