github.com/fjballest/golang@v0.0.0-20151209143359-e4c5fe594ca8/src/runtime/signal_amd64x.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2013 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 // +build amd64 amd64p32 6 // +build darwin dragonfly freebsd linux nacl netbsd openbsd solaris 7 8 package runtime 9 10 import ( 11 "runtime/internal/sys" 12 "unsafe" 13 ) 14 15 func dumpregs(c *sigctxt) { 16 print("rax ", hex(c.rax()), "\n") 17 print("rbx ", hex(c.rbx()), "\n") 18 print("rcx ", hex(c.rcx()), "\n") 19 print("rdx ", hex(c.rdx()), "\n") 20 print("rdi ", hex(c.rdi()), "\n") 21 print("rsi ", hex(c.rsi()), "\n") 22 print("rbp ", hex(c.rbp()), "\n") 23 print("rsp ", hex(c.rsp()), "\n") 24 print("r8 ", hex(c.r8()), "\n") 25 print("r9 ", hex(c.r9()), "\n") 26 print("r10 ", hex(c.r10()), "\n") 27 print("r11 ", hex(c.r11()), "\n") 28 print("r12 ", hex(c.r12()), "\n") 29 print("r13 ", hex(c.r13()), "\n") 30 print("r14 ", hex(c.r14()), "\n") 31 print("r15 ", hex(c.r15()), "\n") 32 print("rip ", hex(c.rip()), "\n") 33 print("rflags ", hex(c.rflags()), "\n") 34 print("cs ", hex(c.cs()), "\n") 35 print("fs ", hex(c.fs()), "\n") 36 print("gs ", hex(c.gs()), "\n") 37 } 38 39 var crashing int32 40 41 // May run during STW, so write barriers are not allowed. 42 // 43 //go:nowritebarrierrec 44 func sighandler(sig uint32, info *siginfo, ctxt unsafe.Pointer, gp *g) { 45 _g_ := getg() 46 c := &sigctxt{info, ctxt} 47 48 if sig == _SIGPROF { 49 sigprof(uintptr(c.rip()), uintptr(c.rsp()), 0, gp, _g_.m) 50 return 51 } 52 53 if GOOS == "darwin" { 54 // x86-64 has 48-bit virtual addresses. The top 16 bits must echo bit 47. 55 // The hardware delivers a different kind of fault for a malformed address 56 // than it does for an attempt to access a valid but unmapped address. 57 // OS X 10.9.2 mishandles the malformed address case, making it look like 58 // a user-generated signal (like someone ran kill -SEGV ourpid). 59 // We pass user-generated signals to os/signal, or else ignore them. 60 // Doing that here - and returning to the faulting code - results in an 61 // infinite loop. It appears the best we can do is rewrite what the kernel 62 // delivers into something more like the truth. The address used below 63 // has very little chance of being the one that caused the fault, but it is 64 // malformed, it is clearly not a real pointer, and if it does get printed 65 // in real life, people will probably search for it and find this code. 66 // There are no Google hits for b01dfacedebac1e or 0xb01dfacedebac1e 67 // as I type this comment. 68 if sig == _SIGSEGV && c.sigcode() == _SI_USER { 69 c.set_sigcode(_SI_USER + 1) 70 c.set_sigaddr(0xb01dfacedebac1e) 71 } 72 } 73 74 flags := int32(_SigThrow) 75 if sig < uint32(len(sigtable)) { 76 flags = sigtable[sig].flags 77 } 78 if c.sigcode() != _SI_USER && flags&_SigPanic != 0 { 79 // Make it look like a call to the signal func. 80 // Have to pass arguments out of band since 81 // augmenting the stack frame would break 82 // the unwinding code. 83 gp.sig = sig 84 gp.sigcode0 = uintptr(c.sigcode()) 85 gp.sigcode1 = uintptr(c.sigaddr()) 86 gp.sigpc = uintptr(c.rip()) 87 88 if GOOS == "darwin" { 89 // Work around Leopard bug that doesn't set FPE_INTDIV. 90 // Look at instruction to see if it is a divide. 91 // Not necessary in Snow Leopard (si_code will be != 0). 92 if sig == _SIGFPE && gp.sigcode0 == 0 { 93 pc := (*[4]byte)(unsafe.Pointer(gp.sigpc)) 94 i := 0 95 if pc[i]&0xF0 == 0x40 { // 64-bit REX prefix 96 i++ 97 } else if pc[i] == 0x66 { // 16-bit instruction prefix 98 i++ 99 } 100 if pc[i] == 0xF6 || pc[i] == 0xF7 { 101 gp.sigcode0 = _FPE_INTDIV 102 } 103 } 104 } 105 106 pc := uintptr(c.rip()) 107 sp := uintptr(c.rsp()) 108 109 // If we don't recognize the PC as code 110 // but we do recognize the top pointer on the stack as code, 111 // then assume this was a call to non-code and treat like 112 // pc == 0, to make unwinding show the context. 113 if pc != 0 && findfunc(pc) == nil && findfunc(*(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(sp))) != nil { 114 pc = 0 115 } 116 117 // Only push runtime.sigpanic if pc != 0. 118 // If pc == 0, probably panicked because of a 119 // call to a nil func. Not pushing that onto sp will 120 // make the trace look like a call to runtime.sigpanic instead. 121 // (Otherwise the trace will end at runtime.sigpanic and we 122 // won't get to see who faulted.) 123 if pc != 0 { 124 if sys.RegSize > sys.PtrSize { 125 sp -= sys.PtrSize 126 *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(sp)) = 0 127 } 128 sp -= sys.PtrSize 129 *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(sp)) = pc 130 c.set_rsp(uint64(sp)) 131 } 132 c.set_rip(uint64(funcPC(sigpanic))) 133 return 134 } 135 136 if c.sigcode() == _SI_USER || flags&_SigNotify != 0 { 137 if sigsend(sig) { 138 return 139 } 140 } 141 142 if flags&_SigKill != 0 { 143 exit(2) 144 } 145 146 if flags&_SigThrow == 0 { 147 return 148 } 149 150 _g_.m.throwing = 1 151 _g_.m.caughtsig.set(gp) 152 153 if crashing == 0 { 154 startpanic() 155 } 156 157 if sig < uint32(len(sigtable)) { 158 print(sigtable[sig].name, "\n") 159 } else { 160 print("Signal ", sig, "\n") 161 } 162 163 print("PC=", hex(c.rip()), " m=", _g_.m.id, "\n") 164 if _g_.m.lockedg != nil && _g_.m.ncgo > 0 && gp == _g_.m.g0 { 165 print("signal arrived during cgo execution\n") 166 gp = _g_.m.lockedg 167 } 168 print("\n") 169 170 level, _, docrash := gotraceback() 171 if level > 0 { 172 goroutineheader(gp) 173 tracebacktrap(uintptr(c.rip()), uintptr(c.rsp()), 0, gp) 174 if crashing > 0 && gp != _g_.m.curg && _g_.m.curg != nil && readgstatus(_g_.m.curg)&^_Gscan == _Grunning { 175 // tracebackothers on original m skipped this one; trace it now. 176 goroutineheader(_g_.m.curg) 177 traceback(^uintptr(0), ^uintptr(0), 0, gp) 178 } else if crashing == 0 { 179 tracebackothers(gp) 180 print("\n") 181 } 182 dumpregs(c) 183 } 184 185 if docrash { 186 crashing++ 187 if crashing < sched.mcount { 188 // There are other m's that need to dump their stacks. 189 // Relay SIGQUIT to the next m by sending it to the current process. 190 // All m's that have already received SIGQUIT have signal masks blocking 191 // receipt of any signals, so the SIGQUIT will go to an m that hasn't seen it yet. 192 // When the last m receives the SIGQUIT, it will fall through to the call to 193 // crash below. Just in case the relaying gets botched, each m involved in 194 // the relay sleeps for 5 seconds and then does the crash/exit itself. 195 // In expected operation, the last m has received the SIGQUIT and run 196 // crash/exit and the process is gone, all long before any of the 197 // 5-second sleeps have finished. 198 print("\n-----\n\n") 199 raiseproc(_SIGQUIT) 200 usleep(5 * 1000 * 1000) 201 } 202 crash() 203 } 204 205 exit(2) 206 }