X-Git-Url: http://erislabs.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2Fc-stack.c;h=6802665f59f9cf5f7965bd1f40a8030bc0b8c4bb;hb=a0dc688369a937a657cdf8d35f362c3068b0af9a;hp=96bd2bf6016422df169d3aa48540bb14c485e65b;hpb=4b2f21b36a615728ebf2a0e1bc2c8def175703a8;p=gnulib.git diff --git a/lib/c-stack.c b/lib/c-stack.c index 96bd2bf60..6802665f5 100644 --- a/lib/c-stack.c +++ b/lib/c-stack.c @@ -53,6 +53,9 @@ #if ! HAVE_STACK_T && ! defined stack_t typedef struct sigaltstack stack_t; #endif +#ifndef SIGSTKSZ +# define SIGSTKSZ 16384 +#endif #include #include @@ -68,6 +71,10 @@ typedef struct sigaltstack stack_t; # define STDERR_FILENO 2 #endif +#if HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV +# include +#endif + #include "c-stack.h" #include "exitfail.h" @@ -110,7 +117,101 @@ die (int signo) abort (); } -#if HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK +#if (HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK \ + && HAVE_STACK_OVERFLOW_HANDLING) || HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV + +/* Storage for the alternate signal stack. */ +static union +{ + char buffer[SIGSTKSZ]; + + /* These other members are for proper alignment. There's no + standard way to guarantee stack alignment, but this seems enough + in practice. */ + long double ld; + long l; + void *p; +} alternate_signal_stack; + +static void +null_action (int signo __attribute__ ((unused))) +{ +} + +#endif /* SIGALTSTACK || LIBSIGSEGV */ + +/* Only use libsigsegv if we need it; platforms like Solaris can + detect stack overflow without the overhead of an external + library. */ +#if HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV && ! HAVE_XSI_STACK_OVERFLOW_HEURISTIC + +/* Nonzero if general segv handler could not be installed. */ +static volatile int segv_handler_missing; + +/* Handle a segmentation violation and exit if it cannot be stack + overflow. This function is async-signal-safe. */ + +static int segv_handler (void *address __attribute__ ((unused)), + int serious) +{ +# if DEBUG + { + char buf[1024]; + sprintf (buf, "segv_handler serious=%d\n", serious); + write (STDERR_FILENO, buf, strlen (buf)); + } +# endif + + /* If this fault is not serious, return 0 to let the stack overflow + handler take a shot at it. */ + if (!serious) + return 0; + die (SIGSEGV); +} + +/* Handle a segmentation violation that is likely to be a stack + overflow and exit. This function is async-signal-safe. */ + +static void overflow_handler (int, stackoverflow_context_t) + __attribute__ ((noreturn)); +static void +overflow_handler (int emergency, + stackoverflow_context_t context __attribute__ ((unused))) +{ +# if DEBUG + { + char buf[1024]; + sprintf (buf, "overflow_handler emergency=%d segv_handler_missing=%d\n", + emergency, segv_handler_missing); + write (STDERR_FILENO, buf, strlen (buf)); + } +# endif + + die ((!emergency || segv_handler_missing) ? 0 : SIGSEGV); +} + +int +c_stack_action (void (*action) (int)) +{ + segv_action = action ? action : null_action; + program_error_message = _("program error"); + stack_overflow_message = _("stack overflow"); + + /* Always install the overflow handler. */ + if (stackoverflow_install_handler (overflow_handler, + alternate_signal_stack.buffer, + sizeof alternate_signal_stack.buffer)) + { + errno = ENOTSUP; + return -1; + } + /* Try installing a general handler; if it fails, then treat all + segv as stack overflow. */ + segv_handler_missing = sigsegv_install_handler (segv_handler); + return 0; +} + +#elif HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_STACK_OVERFLOW_HANDLING /* Direction of the C runtime stack. This function is async-signal-safe. */ @@ -126,19 +227,6 @@ find_stack_direction (char const *addr) } # endif -/* Storage for the alternate signal stack. */ -static union -{ - char buffer[SIGSTKSZ]; - - /* These other members are for proper alignment. There's no - standard way to guarantee stack alignment, but this seems enough - in practice. */ - long double ld; - long l; - void *p; -} alternate_signal_stack; - # if SIGACTION_WORKS /* Handle a segmentation violation and exit. This function is @@ -155,7 +243,14 @@ segv_handler (int signo, siginfo_t *info, # if ! HAVE_XSI_STACK_OVERFLOW_HEURISTIC /* We can't easily determine whether it is a stack overflow; so assume that the rest of our program is perfect (!) and that - this segmentation violation is a stack overflow. */ + this segmentation violation is a stack overflow. + + Note that although both Linux and Solaris provide + sigaltstack, SA_ONSTACK, and SA_SIGINFO, currently only + Solaris satisfies the XSI heueristic. This is because + Solaris populates uc_stack with the details of the + interrupted stack, while Linux populates it with the details + of the current stack. */ signo = 0; # else /* If the faulting address is within the stack, or within one @@ -189,24 +284,6 @@ segv_handler (int signo, siginfo_t *info, } # endif -static void -null_action (int signo __attribute__ ((unused))) -{ -} - -/* Set up ACTION so that it is invoked on C stack overflow. Return -1 - (setting errno) if this cannot be done. - - When ACTION is called, it is passed an argument equal to SIGSEGV - for a segmentation violation that does not appear related to stack - overflow, and is passed zero otherwise. On many platforms it is - hard to tell; when in doubt, zero is passed. - - A null ACTION acts like an action that does nothing. - - ACTION must be async-signal-safe. ACTION together with its callees - must not require more than SIGSTKSZ bytes of stack space. */ - int c_stack_action (void (*action) (int)) { @@ -240,7 +317,8 @@ c_stack_action (void (*action) (int)) return sigaction (SIGSEGV, &act, NULL); } -#else /* ! (HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK) */ +#else /* ! ((HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK + && HAVE_STACK_OVERFLOW_HANDLING) || HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV) */ int c_stack_action (void (*action) (int) __attribute__ ((unused)))