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authorpbrook <pbrook@c046a42c-6fe2-441c-8c8c-71466251a162>2009-04-21 01:41:10 +0000
committerpbrook <pbrook@c046a42c-6fe2-441c-8c8c-71466251a162>2009-04-21 01:41:10 +0000
commit0b1bcb00fb2baf5f3227dd9cd849fa69bf50d7a8 (patch)
tree8306c1a98cbc08e5c99e04c9ab6278ac6e1099be /linux-user/signal.c
parente4474235d8b0a3a8603dcce8088f2a282a4e4925 (diff)
downloadqemu-0b1bcb00fb2baf5f3227dd9cd849fa69bf50d7a8.zip
MIPS signal handling fixes.
Also fixes a register corruption bug in do_sigreturn. When "returning" from sigreturn we are actually restoring the virtual cpu state from the signal frame. This is actually surprisingly hard to observe in practice. Typically an thread be blocked in a FUTEX_WAIT call when the signal arrives, so the effect is a spurious syscall success and the introduction of a subtle race condition. On x86/arm a syscall modifies a single word sized register, so do_sigreturn can just return that value. On MIPS a syscall clobbers multiple registers, so we need additional smarts. My solution is to invent a magic errno value that means "don't touch CPU state". git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/qemu/trunk@7194 c046a42c-6fe2-441c-8c8c-71466251a162
Diffstat (limited to 'linux-user/signal.c')
-rw-r--r--linux-user/signal.c105
1 files changed, 101 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/linux-user/signal.c b/linux-user/signal.c
index 4abc5fa180..742d52a2ac 100644
--- a/linux-user/signal.c
+++ b/linux-user/signal.c
@@ -2313,6 +2313,21 @@ struct sigframe {
target_sigset_t sf_mask;
};
+struct target_ucontext {
+ target_ulong uc_flags;
+ target_ulong uc_link;
+ target_stack_t uc_stack;
+ struct target_sigcontext uc_mcontext;
+ target_sigset_t uc_sigmask;
+};
+
+struct target_rt_sigframe {
+ uint32_t rs_ass[4]; /* argument save space for o32 */
+ uint32_t rs_code[2]; /* signal trampoline */
+ struct target_siginfo rs_info;
+ struct target_ucontext rs_uc;
+};
+
/* Install trampoline to jump back from signal handler */
static inline int install_sigtramp(unsigned int *tramp, unsigned int syscall)
{
@@ -2592,7 +2607,7 @@ long do_sigreturn(CPUState *regs)
/* I am not sure this is right, but it seems to work
* maybe a problem with nested signals ? */
regs->CP0_EPC = 0;
- return 0;
+ return -TARGET_QEMU_ESIGRETURN;
badframe:
force_sig(TARGET_SIGSEGV/*, current*/);
@@ -2603,13 +2618,95 @@ static void setup_rt_frame(int sig, struct target_sigaction *ka,
target_siginfo_t *info,
target_sigset_t *set, CPUState *env)
{
- fprintf(stderr, "setup_rt_frame: not implemented\n");
+ struct target_rt_sigframe *frame;
+ abi_ulong frame_addr;
+ int i;
+
+ frame_addr = get_sigframe(ka, env, sizeof(*frame));
+ if (!lock_user_struct(VERIFY_WRITE, frame, frame_addr, 0))
+ goto give_sigsegv;
+
+ install_sigtramp(frame->rs_code, TARGET_NR_rt_sigreturn);
+
+ copy_siginfo_to_user(&frame->rs_info, info);
+
+ __put_user(0, &frame->rs_uc.uc_flags);
+ __put_user(0, &frame->rs_uc.uc_link);
+ __put_user(target_sigaltstack_used.ss_sp, &frame->rs_uc.uc_stack.ss_sp);
+ __put_user(target_sigaltstack_used.ss_size, &frame->rs_uc.uc_stack.ss_size);
+ __put_user(sas_ss_flags(get_sp_from_cpustate(env)),
+ &frame->rs_uc.uc_stack.ss_flags);
+
+ setup_sigcontext(env, &frame->rs_uc.uc_mcontext);
+
+ for(i = 0; i < TARGET_NSIG_WORDS; i++) {
+ __put_user(set->sig[i], &frame->rs_uc.uc_sigmask.sig[i]);
+ }
+
+ /*
+ * Arguments to signal handler:
+ *
+ * a0 = signal number
+ * a1 = pointer to struct siginfo
+ * a2 = pointer to struct ucontext
+ *
+ * $25 and PC point to the signal handler, $29 points to the
+ * struct sigframe.
+ */
+ env->active_tc.gpr[ 4] = sig;
+ env->active_tc.gpr[ 5] = frame_addr
+ + offsetof(struct target_rt_sigframe, rs_info);
+ env->active_tc.gpr[ 6] = frame_addr
+ + offsetof(struct target_rt_sigframe, rs_uc);
+ env->active_tc.gpr[29] = frame_addr;
+ env->active_tc.gpr[31] = frame_addr
+ + offsetof(struct target_rt_sigframe, rs_code);
+ /* The original kernel code sets CP0_EPC to the handler
+ * since it returns to userland using eret
+ * we cannot do this here, and we must set PC directly */
+ env->active_tc.PC = env->active_tc.gpr[25] = ka->_sa_handler;
+ unlock_user_struct(frame, frame_addr, 1);
+ return;
+
+give_sigsegv:
+ unlock_user_struct(frame, frame_addr, 1);
+ force_sig(TARGET_SIGSEGV/*, current*/);
+ return;
}
long do_rt_sigreturn(CPUState *env)
{
- fprintf(stderr, "do_rt_sigreturn: not implemented\n");
- return -TARGET_ENOSYS;
+ struct target_rt_sigframe *frame;
+ abi_ulong frame_addr;
+ sigset_t blocked;
+
+#if defined(DEBUG_SIGNAL)
+ fprintf(stderr, "do_rt_sigreturn\n");
+#endif
+ frame_addr = env->active_tc.gpr[29];
+ if (!lock_user_struct(VERIFY_READ, frame, frame_addr, 1))
+ goto badframe;
+
+ target_to_host_sigset(&blocked, &frame->rs_uc.uc_sigmask);
+ sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &blocked, NULL);
+
+ if (restore_sigcontext(env, &frame->rs_uc.uc_mcontext))
+ goto badframe;
+
+ if (do_sigaltstack(frame_addr +
+ offsetof(struct target_rt_sigframe, rs_uc.uc_stack),
+ 0, get_sp_from_cpustate(env)) == -EFAULT)
+ goto badframe;
+
+ env->active_tc.PC = env->CP0_EPC;
+ /* I am not sure this is right, but it seems to work
+ * maybe a problem with nested signals ? */
+ env->CP0_EPC = 0;
+ return -TARGET_QEMU_ESIGRETURN;
+
+badframe:
+ force_sig(TARGET_SIGSEGV/*, current*/);
+ return 0;
}
#elif defined(TARGET_SH4)