Exception handling was *still* printing addresses as 44 bit values,
but Windows supports a 48 bit virtual address space since Windows
8.1. Fix that.
Fixes: e1254add73 ("Cygwin: Allow accessing 48 bit address space in Windows 8.1 or later")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
These have no effect on x86_64. Retain a few occurrences of __cdecl
in files imported from other sources.
Also retain all occurrences of WINAPI, even though the latter is
simply a macro that expands to __stdcall. Most of these occurrences
are associated with Windows API functions, and removing them might
make the code confusing instead of simpler.
Leave x86_64 CPU-specific code and #error out when trying to build
for another target. Access special registers CPU-agnostic.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- When Ctrl-C terminates a non-cygwin process on a pseudo console,
pty master attaches to the pseudo console first, and send
CTRL_C_EVENT. If the non-cygwin process closes the pseudo console
before the pty master calls FreeConsole(), the pty master process
will crash. With this patch, pty master process takes over the
ownership of the pseudo console, and closes it by myself.
- The recent commit "Cygwin: pinfo: Fix exit code when non-cygwin app
exits by Ctrl-C." did not fix enough the issue. If a non-cygwin app
is reading the console, it will not return STATUS_CONTROL_C_EXIT
even if it is terminated by Ctrl-C. As a result, the previous patch
does not take effect.
This patch solves this issue by setting sigExeced to SIGINT in
ctrl_c_handler(). In addition, sigExeced will be cleared if the app
does not terminated within predetermined time period. The reason is
that the app does not seem to be terminated by the signal sigExeced.
- The commit "Cygwin: console: Restore CTRL_BREAK_EVENT handling."
was accidentally mixed with experimental code in exceptions.cc.
Due to this, non-cygwin app receives CTRL_C_EVENT twice in the
following scenario.
1) Run 'sleep 10 | <non-cygwin app>'
2) Hit Ctrl-C.
3) The non-cygwin app receives CTRL_C_EVENT twice.
This patch reverts the code with the problem.
- The recent change by the commit "Cygwin: console: Redesign handling
of special keys." breaks the handling of CTRL_BREAK_EVENT. The login
shell in console exits on Ctrl-Break key. This patch fixes the issue.
- This patch commonize the code which processes special keys in pty
and console to improve maintanancibility. As a result, some small
bugs have been fixed.
- Currently, Ctrl-Z, Ctrl-\ and SIGWINCH does not work in console
if the process does not call read() or select(). This is because
these are processed in process_input_message() which is called
from read() or select(). This is a long standing issue of console.
Addresses:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2020-May/244898.htmlhttps://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-February/247779.html
With this patch, new thread which handles only input signals is
introduced so that Crtl-Z, etc. work without calling read() or
select(). Ctrl-S and Ctrl-Q are also handled in this thread.
- Currently, thread created by pthread_create() is not suspended by
the signal SIGTSTP. For example, even if a process with a thread
is suspended by Ctrl-Z, the thread continues running. This patch
fixes the issue.
Currently, when using CYGWIN's error_start facility, the faulting
process isn't stopped while the error_start process is started when the
fault is caused by an exception. (it even seems possible in theory that
the faulting process could have exited before the error_start process
attaches).
This leads to e.g. the core dump written by CYGWIN='error_start=dumper'
in response to an exception being non-deterministic.
Remove the waitloop argument from try_to_debug(), only used in the
exception case, so the faulting process busy-waits until the error_start
process attaches.
Code archaeology to determine why the code is this way didn't really
turn up any answers, but this seems a low-risk change, as this only
changes the behaviour when:
- a debugger isn't already attached
- an error_start is specified in CYGWIN env var
- an exception has occurred which will be translated to a signal
If error_start invokes something which doesn't attach using
DebugActiveProcess(), we will spin indefinitely, but that will also
currently occur for any of the existing other uses of try_to_debug(),
which default to waitloop=TRUE.
This is necessary in order to be consistent with the following comment
in the definition of _Unwind_RaiseException() in the GCC source file
libgcc/unwind-seh.c:
The exception handler installed in crt0 will continue any GCC
exception that reaches there (and isn't marked non-continuable).
Previously we failed to do this and, as a consequence, the C++ runtime
didn't call std::terminate after an unhandled exception.
This fixes the problem reported here:
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2019-October/242795.htmlhttps://sourceware.org/pipermail/cygwin/2020-August/245897.html
This patch has been inspired by the Linux kernel patch
294f69e662d1 compiler_attributes.h: Add 'fallthrough' pseudo keyword for switch/case use
written by Joe Perches <joe AT perches DOT com> based on an idea from
Dan Carpenter <dan DOT carpenter AT oracle DOT com>. The following text
is from the original log message:
Reserve the pseudo keyword 'fallthrough' for the ability to convert the
various case block /* fallthrough */ style comments to appear to be an
actual reserved word with the same gcc case block missing fallthrough
warning capability.
All switch/case blocks now should end in one of:
break;
fallthrough;
goto <label>;
return [expression];
continue;
In C mode, GCC supports the __fallthrough__ attribute since 7.1,
the same time the warning and the comment parsing were introduced.
Cygwin-only: add an explicit -Wimplicit-fallthrough=5 to the build
flags.
NSIG is a deprecated symbol only visible under MISC visibility.
_NSIG is used widely instead, and on most systems NSIG is
defined in terms of _NSIG.
Follow suit: Change NSIG to _NSIG throughout and change visiblity
of NSIG to be defined only in __MISC_VISIBLE case.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Rather than waiting for signalfd_select_wait in a thread, which is racy,
create a global event "my_pendingsigs_evt" which is set and reset by
wait_sig depending only on the fact if blocked signals are pending or not.
This in turn allows to WFMO on this event in select as soon as signalfds
are present in the read descriptor set. Select's peek and verify
will then check if one of the present signalfds is affected.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On sigwaitinfo or reading from a signalfd, signal processing sets up
signal handling via sigdelayed even if the handler address is NULL.
This doesn't have any impact on sigwaitinfo scenarios (or at least, I
wasn't able to come up with a reproducer) but it breaks signalfd
scenarios, where eventually a call to call_signal_handler from
sigdelayed will try to call the NULL function.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In case SA_SIGINFO flag is given, the signal handler may change
the context and the application is supposed to pick up from the
changed context. So far we don't do that, so the context given
to the signal handler is basically read-only, unless the signal
handler calls setcontext or swapcontext.
For a start, restore the thread's signal mask from the uc_sigmask
value of the context given to the signal handler.
If that's feasible for Cygwin, we restore the entire context from
the context changed by the signal handler in a followup patch.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Rename files timer.* to posix_timer.*.
- Reimplement using an OS timer rather than a handcrafted wait loop.
- Use a Slim R/W Lock for synchronization.
- Drop timer chaining. It doesn't server a purpose since all timers
are local only.
- Rename ttstart to itimer_tracker to better reflect its purpose.
It's not the anchor for a timer chain anymore anyway.
- Drop fixup_timers_after_fork. Everything is process-local, nothing
gets inherited.
- Rename timer_tracker::disarm_event to disarm_overrun_event for
better readability.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Allow the signal thread to recognize we're called in consequence of
select on a signalfd. If the signal is part of the wait mask, don't
call any signal handler and don't remove the signal from the queue,
so a subsequent read (or sigwaitinfo/sigtimedwait) still gets the
signal. Instead, just signal the event object at
_cygtls::signalfd_select_wait for the thread running select.
The addition of signalfd_select_wait to _cygtls unearthed the alignment
problem of the context member again. To make sure this doesn't get lost,
improve the related comment in the header file so that this (hopefully)
doesn't get lost (again).
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This new function returns the name of the calling thread; works for both
cygthreads and pthreads. All calls to cygthread::name(/*void*/) replaced
by calls to mythreadname(/*void*/).
The third argument of RtlLookupFunctionEntry actually is documented as
_Inout_opt_ for both x64 and ARM, although generic doc says _Out_ only.
* exceptions.cc (__unwind_single_frame): Initialize hist variable.
GDB since commit 24cdb46e [1] can report and use these names.
Add utility function SetThreadName(), which sends a thread name to the
debugger.
Use that:
- to set the default thread name for main thread and newly created pthreads.
- in pthread_setname_np() for user thread names.
- for helper thread names in cygthread::create()
- for helper threads which are created directly with CreateThread.
Note that there can still be anonymous threads, created by system or
injected DLLs.
[1] https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=binutils-gdb.git;h=24cdb46e9f0a694b4fbc11085e094857f08c0419
Bump GPLv2+ to GPLv3+ for some files, clarify BSD 2-clause.
Everything else stays under GPLv3+.
New Linking Exception exempts resulting executables from LGPLv3 section 4.
Add CONTRIBUTORS file to keep track of licensing.
Remove 'Copyright Red Hat Inc' comments.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Don't use u_char, u_short, u_int or u_long in Cygwin, unless it refers
to the Winsock types. Use u_intN_t in BSD-based sources, unsigned char
where strings are concerned, uintN_t otherwise. Also:
* net.cc: Fix comment, we're not using u_long anymore.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
GCC 5 switched from C89 to C11 by default. This implies a change from
GNU to C99 inline by default, which have very different meanings of
extern inline vs. static inline:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Inline.html
Marking these as gnu_inline retains the previous behaviour.
winsup/cygwin/
* exceptions.cc (exception::handle): Change debugging to int to fix
an always-true boolean comparison warning.
* include/cygwin/config.h (__getreent): Mark gnu_inline.
* winbase.h (ilockcmpexch, ilockcmpexch64): Ditto.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
* cygtls.h (_cygtls::wait_signal_arrived): Renamed from
set_signal_arrived.
(_cygtls::set_signal_arrived): New function signalling signal_arrived.
(_cygtls::reset_signal_arrived): Don't reset will_wait_for_signal.
(_cygtls::unwait_signal_arrived): New function only resetting
will_wait_for_signal.
(class wait_signal_arrived): Rename from set_signal_arrived.
Accommodate name change throughout Cygwin.
(wait_signal_arrived::~wait_signal_arrived): Call
_cygtls::unwait_signal_arrived. Add comment.
* cygserver_ipc.h (ipc_set_proc_info): Fetch signal_arrived handle
via call to _cygtls::get_signal_arrived.
* exceptions.cc (_cygtls::interrupt_setup): Signal signal_arrived via
call to _cygtls::set_signal_arrived.
(_cygtls::handle_SIGCONT): Ditto.
* fhandler_socket.cc (fhandler_socket::wait_for_events): Generate
WSAEVENT array prior to entering wait loop. Add cancel event object
if available. Remove calls to pthread_testcancel and just call
pthread::static_cancel_self if the cancel event object is signalled.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>