| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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When rolling this into Chrome, we got compile failures due to
DoNullPointerDereference being undefined but the new FirstChanceHandlerRuns
tests depends on this and was still defined.
The fix is to only enable the FirstChanceHandlerRuns test on non-asan builds.
Bug:
Change-Id: I5a3da0a21e2d0dd663ffc01137496d16905293a6
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/544186
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
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This change adds the option for Breakpad hosts to register a callback
that gets the first chance to handle an exception. The handler will
return true if it handled the exception and false otherwise.
The primary use case is V8's trap-based bounds checking support for
WebAssembly.
Bug:
Change-Id: I5aa5b87d1229f1cef905a00404fa2027ee86be56
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/509994
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
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The bfd and gold linkers create segments like this: r/x, r/w where
the r/x segment covers the start of the ELF file.
lld's segments look like this: r, r/x, r/w where the r segment covers
the start of the ELF file.
So we cannot rely on the location of the r/x to tell where the start
of the ELF is. But we can still rely on the r and r/x mappings being
adjacent. So what we do is when we see an r segment followed by an r/x,
merge the r into the r/x and claim that it is executable. This way,
the minidump writer will continue to see a single executable segment
covering the entire executable.
Testing: "make check" passes when breakpad is compiled with
lld compiled from trunk (requires bug fix from LLVM r303689).
Also patched change into chromium and tested these builds:
$ cat args.gn
is_chrome_branded = true
is_debug = false
is_official_build = true
use_lld = true
allow_posix_link_time_opt = false
is_cfi = false
$ cat args.gn
target_os = "android"
target_cpu = "arm"
is_debug = false
is_official_build = true
is_chrome_branded = true
With both builds breakpad_unittests passes and
chrome/chrome_modern_public_apk create good minidumps after navigating
to chrome://inducebrowsercrashforrealz (checked that minidump contains
stack trace entry for content::HandleDebugURL).
Bug: chromium:716484
Change-Id: Ib6ed3a8420b83acf4a5962843930fb006734cb95
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/513610
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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Follow up to https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/484479/, which
does not compile on arm64.
Bug: chromium:725754
Change-Id: Iaa6fbc332564909a10e2602a1026c14fb25625f4
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/515044
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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The layout of Elf32_Nhdr and Elf64_Nhdr is the same, so remove
templating and code that extracts the elfclass from the ELF file.
Testing: "make check" and breakpad_unittests when patched into
chromium.
Bug: chromium:716484
Change-Id: I41442cfff48afc6ae1a5b604d22b67550a910376
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/514450
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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Also adds waits for all child processes spawned in MinidumpWriterTest.
Bug: 725754
Change-Id: I3248925993dede2c113ab1989b322a9d9c8f24bd
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/513480
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
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When writing a minidump on Linux, we called clone() in
linux/handler/exception_handler.cc with the CLONE_FILES flag. If the
parent process died while the child waited for the continuation signal,
the write side of the pipe 'fdes' stayed open in the child. The child
would not receive a SIGPIPE and would wait forever.
To fix this, we clone without CLONE_FILES and then close the
read-side of fdes in the master before the ptrace call. That way, if the
master dies, the child will receive a SIGPIPE and will die, too.
To test this I added a sleep() call before SendContinueSignalToChild()
and then killed the master, manually observing that the child would die,
too.
Bug: 728
Change-Id: Ifd72de835a34e7d9852ae1a362e707fdc6c96c7e
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/464708
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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Try to read the trace's registers by PTRACE_GETREGS if kernel doesn't support PTRACE_GETREGSET.
Bug:
Change-Id: I881f3a868789747ca217f22a93370c6914881f9a
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/484479
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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Because we can't determine the top of userspace mappable memory
directly, we rely on the fact that the process stack is allocated at the
top of the address space (minus some randomization). Anything after that
should not count as free space.
BUG=695382
Change-Id: I68453aac9732c2bd4b87236b234518068dec6640
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/446100
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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BUG=703599
Change-Id: I5623705edc41644495aa4f2389056d255e22da8e
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/459617
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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If the crashing thread doesn't reference the principal mapping we can
assume that not only is that thread uninteresting from a debugging
perspective, the whole crash is uninteresting. In that case we should
not generate a minidump at all.
BUG=703599
Change-Id: Ia25bbb8adb79d04dcaf3992c3d2474f3b9b1f796
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/457338
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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This change is fixing LinuxPtraceDumperTest.SanitizeStackCopy
test case.
Change-Id: I1eb3becfd4b3660bc5529b5d2a5e35db0b6eb6e0
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/458277
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
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Rather than relying on the process stack having all the things that
should/shouldn't be sanitized, create synthetic stacks to test all of
the important cases.
BUG=664460
Change-Id: I959266390e94d6fb83ca8ef11ac19fac89e68c31
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/446108
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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The address space of every Android Java process is approximately 50%
mapped, which means that sanitization tends to be ineffective because
most string fragments are plausibly pointers into some mapping.
For example, the zygote on 32 bit devices has the following mappings
made by dalvik and this covers all 4 byte strings starting with a
character between 0x13 and 0x52 (which includes all uppercase characters
up to and including 'R').
12c00000-12d16000
12d16000-32c00000
32c00000-32c01000
32c01000-52c00000
In order to perform stack unwinding we only need pointers into the stack
of the thread in question, and pointers to executable mappings. If we
reduce the set of considered mappings to those mappings alone, then only
~2% of the address space is left unelided.
BUG=664460
Change-Id: I1cc27821659acfb91d658f42a83a24c176505a88
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/446500
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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This addresses a bug in commit 049a1532 that meant that the PC of the
crashing thread was always used to determine whether to include a stack,
instead of using the PC of the thread in question.
BUG=664460
Change-Id: Idcbd5db751e5c00941a1be28607389961c0c75d7
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/446499
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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src/client/linux/microdump_writer/microdump_writer_unittest.cc:98:47: error:
ignoring return value of 'ssize_t write(int, const void*, size_t)',
declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Werror=unused-result]
write(STDOUT_FILENO, identifiable_string, 0);
Change-Id: I3f2305fbec0dbd1464de9aeff051e7cba2ee69a2
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/438545
Reviewed-by: Ivan Penkov <ivanpe@chromium.org>
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See: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/430050/
BUG=664460
Change-Id: I3cbfbd5b00725bd501f06427eebd976267c4f617
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/438444
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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BUG=664460
Change-Id: I40d8567c659e97415db65cb308c0d39391c44353
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/438364
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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This makes the parameters stored in the MinidumpDescriptor structure
functional for minidumps, analogously to how they are applied to
microdumps.
BUG=664460
Change-Id: I7578e7a1638cea8f0445b18d4bbdaf5e0a32d808
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/435380
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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In order to sanitize the stack contents we erase any pointer-aligned
word that could not be interpreted as a pointer into one of the
processes' memory mappings, or a small integer (+/-4096).
This still retains enough information to unwind stack frames, and also
to recover some register values.
BUG=682278
Change-Id: I541a13b2e92a9d1aea2c06a50bd769a9e25601d3
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/430050
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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Follow-up CL to add relevant code to the copy constructor and assignment
operator for MinidumpDescriptor
BUG=664460
Change-Id: I71c0ad01d8686a9215a718cebc9d11a215ea342c
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/430711
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
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This CL makes it possible to skip a dump if the crashing thread doesn't
have any pointers to a given module. The concrete use case is WebView
where we would like to skip generating microdump output when webview
is unreferenced by the stack and thus cannot be responsible for the
crash in a way that would be debuggable.
The range of interesting addresses is chosen by examining the process
mappings to find the one that contains a pointer that is known to be in
the right shared object (i.e. an appropriately chosen function pointer)
passed from the client.
If the extracted stack does not contain a pointer in this range, then we
do not generate a microdump. If the stack extraction fails, we still
generate a microdump (without a stack).
BUG=664460
Change-Id: If19406a13168264f7751245fc39591bd6cdbf5df
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/419476
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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BUG=
Change-Id: Ie4d190c68ecbd8709874a3f1ceb872b94b36914f
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/419036
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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Commit 7a8980997d0e0dcf3f3a5d8ccf3c1d8c2840ea27 introduced additional
tests into MicrodumpWriterTest, two of which throw warnings which break
"make check" under default settings on Linux, because the Makefiles are
configured with -Werror=sign-compare.
This patch just makes the signedness of the assertion arguments match.
Change-Id: Ib522f44205c84f91bc9b93276fad60ebbf005f60
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/418938
Reviewed-by: Tobias Sargeant <tobiasjs@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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If signal_fd is -1 still, we end up calling close(-1). Not generally
a problem, but it's bad form, and coverity is upset by it.
Change-Id: I46f9c7ca4be7b43af5b609dd8e3f03a0700af418
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/414544
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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Change-Id: I11542ea9b702055e8f0b99c26cad2fea8681bce0
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/417824
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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The stack interest range is passed in MicrodumpExtraInfo from the client.
If the extracted stack does not contain a pointer in this range, then we
assume that this is not a WebView crash, and do not generate a microdump.
If the stack extraction fails, we still generate a microdump (without a
stack).
BUG=664460
Change-Id: Ic762497f76f074a3621c7ec88a8c20ed768b9211
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/412781
Reviewed-by: Primiano Tucci <primiano@chromium.org>
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Change-Id: I09c90d496edc67d4cad3e2b99f4347dc04713bdb
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/414357
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
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BUG=616774
R=primiano@chromium.org, torne@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2087413002 .
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On Linux, breakpad relies on /proc/[pid]/maps to associate symbols from
addresses. ChromeOS' hugepage implementation replaces some segments
with anonymous private pages, which is a restriction of current
implementation in Linux kernel at the time of writing. Thus, breakpad
can no longer symbolize addresses from those text segments replaced by
hugepages.
This patch tries to recover the mappings. Because hugepages are always
inserted in between some .text sections, it tries to infer the names and
offsets of the segments, by looking at segments immediately precede and
succeed them.
For example, a text segment before hugepage optimization
02001000-03002000 r-xp /opt/google/chrome/chrome
can be broken into
02001000-02200000 r-xp /opt/google/chrome/chrome
02200000-03000000 r-xp
03000000-03002000 r-xp /opt/google/chrome/chrome
BUG=crbug.com/628040
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2161713002 .
Patch from Ting-Yuan (Leo) Huang <laszio@chromium.org>.
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This change is resolving an issue that was caused by the combination of:
- Android system libraries being relro packed in N+.
- Breakpad dealing with relro packed libraries in a hack way.
This is a fix for http://crbug/611824.
I also found an use-after-free issue (bug in Minidump::SeekToStreamType). I disallowed the MinidumpStreamInfo copy and assign constructors and the compiler detected another similar issue in Minidump::Print. Then I disabled the copy and assign constructors for most classes in minidump.h (just in case). There are a couple of classes where I couldn't disallow them (since assign is used). This will require a small refactor so I left it out of this CL.
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2060663002 .
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__builtin_trap() causes a SIGTRAP on arm64 (at least with GCC 4.9).
SIGTRAP is not handled by breakpad, causing crashes induced by
__builtin_trap() to be missed.
Note that on x86 and arm, instead, __builtin_trap() raises a SIGILL,
which is already handled by breakapd.
BUG=chromium:614865
R=vapier@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2042853002 .
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BUG=https://bugs.chromium.org/p/google-breakpad/issues/detail?id=699
R=mark@chromium.org, primiano@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2006333002 .
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src/client/linux/minidump_writer/minidump_writer.cc:273 obtains the
stack info by calling GetStackInfo(). That method will return the
stack base address, aligned to the bottom of the memory page that
'stack_pointer' is in. After that it will cap the size of the memory
area to be copied into the minidump to 'max_stack_len', starting from
the base address, if the caller requested so. This will be the case
when collecting reduced stacks, as introduced by this change:
https://breakpad.appspot.com/487002/
In such cases the caller will request 2048 bytes of memory. However
GetStackInfo() will have aligned the base address to the page
boundary, by default 4096 bytes. If the stack, which grows towards the
base address from the top ends before the 2048 bytes of the first
block, then we will not collect any useful part of the stack.
As a fix we skip chunks of 'max_stack_len' bytes starting from
the base address until the stack_pointer is actually contained in the
chunk, which we will add to the minidump file.
BUG=https://bugs.chromium.org/p/google-breakpad/issues/detail?id=695
R=ivanpe@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1959643004 .
Patch from Lars Volker <lv@cloudera.com>.
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BUG=525938
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/2008553002 .
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When a crash occurs as a result of an allocation failure, it is useful
to know approximately what regions of the virtual address space remain
available, so that we know whether the crash should be attributed to
memory fragmentation, or some other cause.
BUG=525938
R=primiano@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1796803003 .
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This fixes the unittest error caused by
https://codereview.chromium.org/1884283002/
TEST=unittest passes on falco board in ChromeOS.
BUG=
R=vapier@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1952083002 .
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(https://breakpad.appspot.com/7714003)
Reason for revert:
It is causing breakpad crash reports to be invalid (see the associated
bug).
Merging empty holes in r-x mappings was originally introduced in
https://breakpad.appspot.com/7714003 to deal with the first generation
of relro packing, which could introduce holes within a .so mapping:
[libchrome.so]
[guard region]
[libchrome.so]
However, the logic is broken for the case of two *different* adjacent
.so mappings with a guard region in the middle:
[libfoo.so]
[guard region]
[libchrome.so]
In this case the guard region is mistakenly associated with libfoo.so,
but that is not the right thing to do. In fact, the second generation of
rerlo packing added the guard region to prevent mmaps from overlapping
and to give room for the non-zero vaddr of relro-packed libraries, which
require an anticipated load bias.
As the first generation of relro packing is not used anymore, there is
no reason to keep this buggy code, which causes failures in decoding
crashes where an arbitrary library is mapped immediately before a rerlo
packed library.
Original issue's description:
> Extend mapping merge to include reserved but unused mappings.
>
> When parsing /proc/pid/maps, current code merges adjacent entries that
> refer to the same library and where the start of the second is equal to
> the end of the first, for example:
>
> 40022000-40025000 r-xp 00000000 b3:11 827 /system/lib/liblog.so
> 40025000-40026000 r--p 00002000 b3:11 827 /system/lib/liblog.so
> 40026000-40027000 rw-p 00003000 b3:11 827 /system/lib/liblog.so
>
> When the system linker loads a library it first reserves all the address
> space required, from the smallest start to the largest end address, using
> an anonymous mapping, and then maps loaded segments inside that reservation.
> If the loaded segments do not fully occupy the reservation this leaves
> gaps, and these gaps prevent merges that should occur from occurring:
>
> 40417000-4044a000 r-xp 00000000 b3:11 820 /system/lib/libjpeg.so
> > 4044a000-4044b000 ---p 00000000 00:00 0
> 4044b000-4044c000 r--p 00033000 b3:11 820 /system/lib/libjpeg.so
> 4044c000-4044d000 rw-p 00034000 b3:11 820 /system/lib/libjpeg.so
>
> Where the segments that follow this gap do not contain executable code
> the failure to merge does not affect breakpad operation. However, where
> they do then the merge needs to occur. Packing relocations in a large
> library splits the executable segment into two, resulting in:
>
> 73b0c000-73b21000 r-xp 00000000 b3:19 786460
> /data/.../libchrome.2160.0.so
> > 73b21000-73d12000 ---p 00000000 00:00 0
> 73d12000-75a90000 r-xp 00014000 b3:19 786460
> /data/.../libchrome.2160.0.so
> 75a90000-75c0d000 rw-p 01d91000 b3:19 786460
> /data/.../libchrome.2160.0.so
>
> Here the mapping at 73d12000-75a90000 must be merged into 73b0c000-73b21000
> so that breakpad correctly calculates the base address for text.
>
> This change enables the full merge by also merging anonymous maps which
> result from unused reservation, identified as '---p' with offset 0, and
> which follow on from an executable mapping, into that executable mapping.
>
> BUG=chromium:394703
BUG=chromium:499747
R=primiano@chromium.org, rmcilroy@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1923383002 .
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This preserves full build ids in minidumps, which are useful for
tracking down the right version of system libraries from Linux
distributions.
The default build id produced by GNU binutils' ld is a 160-bit SHA-1
hash of some parts of the binary, which is exactly 20 bytes:
https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs-2.26/ld/Options.html#index-g_t_002d_002dbuild_002did-292
The bulk of the changes here are to change the signatures of the
FileID methods to use a wasteful_vector instead of raw pointers, since
build ids can be of arbitrary length.
The previous change that added support for this in the processor code
preserved the return value of `Minidump::debug_identifier()` as the
current `GUID+age` treatment for backwards-compatibility, and exposed
the full build id from `Minidump::code_identifier()`, which was
previously stubbed out for Linux dumps. This change keeps the debug ID
in the `dump_syms` output the same to match.
R=mark@chromium.org, thestig@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1688743002 .
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BUG=585534
R=primiano@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1750033002 .
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The Linux dumpers use absolute paths for shared libraries referenced by
dumps, so they fail to locate them if the crash originated in a chroot.
This CL enables callers to specify a root prefix, which is prepended to
mapping paths before opening them.
BUG=chromium:591792
TEST=make check
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1761023002/
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If the Linux minidump writer crashes while writing a dump, the dump
might contain some useful information, but the header will be empty
because TypedMDRVA's destructor flushes the data, and the header var
doesn't go out of scope until the end of the `Dump` method. This
fixes that problem by putting the header in a shorter block scope.
We've seen this problem in some Android dumps in the wild, like:
https://crash-stats.mozilla.com/report/index/cef5b777-02d1-43c2-bf40-133ab2160209
R=thestig@chromium.org
BUG=https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1247978
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1696573003 .
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Adding remaining mips n64 support including stackwalker.
BUG=None
TEST=manually tested on Linux/Android
R=vapier@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1418453011 .
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Fix some copy/paste errors from commit 41440eaa.
BUG=None
R=thestig@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1564293002 .
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Also fix lint errors.
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1562273002 .
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cpu_features_entries is empty on AArch64 and causes tautological-compare
warning when compiling with Clang.
A=dskiba@google.com
Original Review: https://codereview.chromium.org/1562223002/
BUG=chromium:539781
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1566893002 .
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A=thakis@chromium.org
BUG=chromium:573250
Original Review: https://codereview.chromium.org/1551963002/
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1551983002 .
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R=ted.mielczarek@gmail.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1137423004 .
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Although strictly the GPU fingerprint is defined by the build fingerprint,
there is not currently a straightforward mapping from build fingerprint
to useful GPU / GL driver information.
In order to aid debugging of WebView crashes that occur in GL drivers,
and to better understand the range of drivers and versions for feature
blacklisting purposes, it is useful to have GPU fingerprints in breakpad
microdumps.
Landing this patch on behalf of Tobias Sargeant<tobiasjs@chromium.org>
BUG=chromium:536769
R=primiano@chromium.org, thestig@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1334473003 .
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On Android the size of the alternate stack can be very small (8k).
Even if breakpad uses sigaltstack to increase the size of the alternate
stack during initialization, that call affects only the main thread.
On Android, the libc's pthread initializer reset the sigaltstack to 8k.
When entering a signal handler, the kernel typically pushes the context
on the alternate stack. On arm64, sizeof(CrashContext) is ~5k, which
leaves 3k of usable stack for breakpad.
On top of that, breakpad allocates another struct CrashContext on the
stack. In the case of Android arm64, then, breakpad ends up using
5k + 5k > 8k of stack, which causes a stack overflow.
This got unnoticed in Android L, as the alternate stack didn't have
red-zones between them, so breakpad was often happily overflowing onto
the next thread's stack. This is not the case anymore [1].
This CL moves the CrashContext into a global variable. It should be
safe as the ExceptionHandlers are serialized on a mutex.
[1] https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/595752f623ae88f7e4193a6e531a0805f1c6c4dc
BUG=374
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1354923002 .
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