The x86-64 frame pointer-based unwind method will accept values
that aren't valid for the frame pointer register and the return address.
This fixes it to reject non-8-byte-aligned frame pointers, as
well as non-canonical addresses for the return address it finds.
A colleague of mine asked me why Breakpad gave a bad stack
for a crash in our crash-stats system:
https://crash-stats.mozilla.com/report/index/a472c842-2c7b-4ca7-a267-478cf2160405
Digging in, it turns out that the function in frame 0 is a leaf function,
so MSVC doesn't generate an entry in the unwind table for it, so
dump_syms doesn't produce a STACK CFI entry for it in the symbol file.
The stackwalker tries frame pointer unwinding, and %rbp is set to a
value that sort-of works, so it produces a garbage frame 1 and then
is lost. Either of the two checks in this patch would have stopped
the stackwalker from using the frame pointer.
It's possible we could do something smarter on the dump_syms side,
like enumerating all functions and outputing some default STACK CFI rule
for those that don't have unwind info, but that wouldn't fix crashes
from existing builds without re-dumping symbols for them. In any event,
these checks should always pass for valid frame pointer-using functions.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1263001
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1902783002 .
Currently an inlined function in a namespace in DWARF will
be given a name comprised of just `namespace::`. This is due
to a logic error in ComputeQualifiedName, where it doesn't
handle an empty `unqualified_name` properly.
We apparently have a fair number of these in our Mac builds,
an example of the DWARF that's being mishandled looks like:
0x117eda40: TAG_namespace [5] *
AT_name( "js" )
AT_decl_file( "../../dist/include/js/Utility.h" )
AT_decl_line( 35 )
0x11808500: TAG_subprogram [251] *
AT_low_pc( 0x0000000002f12110 )
AT_high_pc( 0x0000000002f1216b )
AT_APPLE_omit_frame_ptr( 0x01 )
AT_frame_base( rsp )
AT_abstract_origin( {0x0000000011800a4f}"_ZN2js40TraceManuallyBarrieredGenericPointerEdgeEP8JSTracerPPNS_2gc4CellEPKc" )
AT_MIPS_linkage_name( "_ZN2js40TraceManuallyBarrieredGenericPointerEdgeEP8JSTracerPPNS_2gc4CellEPKc" )
AT_name( "TraceManuallyBarrieredGenericPointerEdge" )
AT_decl_file( "/builds/slave/rel-m-rel-m64_bld-000000000000/build/js/src/gc/Marking.cpp" )
AT_decl_line( 547 )
AT_external( 0x01 )
AT_APPLE_optimized( 0x01 )
AT_inline( DW_INL_inlined )
This turned a few instances of this in the file I was testing on into
`<name omitted>`, which seems to just be a symptom of the
"DW_AT_abstract_origin comes later in the file" issue. (Which is probably
also worth fixing given that it occurs some 29k times when dumping
symbols from Firefox's XUL binary, but it's a separate issue.)
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1887033002 .
I ran minidump_dump on a dump from Firefox on my Windows 10 machine
and noticed some streams that Breakpad didn't have names for.
Looking in minidumpapiset.h in the Windows 10 SDK finds these values
in MINIDUMP_STREAM_TYPE. There are also struct definitions for the
stream data for some of them (all but JavaScriptData), but I don't have
a particular need for those currently.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1884943002 .
Doing a `make -jN check` from a fresh build breaks (and has probably been
broken for a while). linux_client_unittest_shlib is missing $(TEST_LIBS)
from its _DEPENDENCIES. The automake manual says if _DEPENDENCIES are not
specified they'll be computed from _LDADD, but we are specifying it and just
leaving out $(TEST_LIBS).
R=vapier@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1870733005 .
GCC will still warn about unused return value with the form:
if (write(...));
Instead, change the semi-colon to an empty set of braces.
BUG=chromium:428478
TEST=build+test still works
It is often helpful to check if a particular symbol file dumped by
dump_syms actually matches a version of a binary file we have. The
symbol output contains an ID which can be used to see if it matches
the binary file. Unfortunately, this ID is internally calculated
and not a standard hash of the binary file. Being able to output the
header information only will allow users to determine whether their
symbol file is up to date or not.
R=jochen@chromium.org
BUG=561447
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1864823002 .
Patch from David Yen <dyen@chromium.org>.
Some projects will get build break because the comipler is confused when
searches for the standard stdio.h. Rename the wrapper file to avoid that.
renamed: src/common/stdio.h -> src/common/stdio_wrapper.h
modified: src/processor/minidump.cc
modified: src/processor/dump_context.cc
modified: src/processor/logging.cc
modified: src/processor/minidump.cc
modified: src/processor/minidump_processor.cc
modified: src/processor/stackwalk_common.cc
modified: src/processor/symbolic_constants_win.cc
R=mark@chromium.org, labath@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1864603002 .
Patch from Yunxiao Ma <yxma@google.com>.
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 .
Based on changes for ARM, ARM64 and X86, the support for
MIPS and MIPS64 is added in microdump.
TEST=microdump_stackwalk ~/microdump-mips32.dmp symbols/
BUG=microdump_stackwalk failing for mips architectures
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1731923002/
Some of the symbols in the stack trace are not found in the .dynsym
section but were located in the full symbol table .symtab section
instead. This was causing some of our stack traces to be incomplete or
point to incorrect function names.
Since we only output function names, there are actually not that many
more symbols located in .symtab that aren't in .dynsym. It is better to
simply output all symbols found so our stack traces are complete.
R=mark@chromium.org, thestig@chromium.org
BUG=561447
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1824063002 .
Patch from David Yen <dyen@chromium.org>.
The code as it stands allocates a chunk of memory of arbitrary size and places an object into it. It stores a pointer to that object and memory into a list telling the compiler that it is a pointer to a char. When the compiler deletes the objects in the list it thinks that the list contains pointers to chars - not pointers to arbitrarily sized regions of memory.
This is fixing an issue that will reproduces when the following optimization (C++ sized dealocation) is enabled: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2013/n3536.html
The fix is to explicitly call the non-sized delete operator, and the library code that supports malloc/free/new/delete will figure out the size of the block of memory from the pointer being passed in.
Patch provided by Darryl Gove.
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1788473002 .
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/
Properly handle microdump processing, when the system_log file contains an incomplete microdump section at the top. The processor will process the first complete microdump section.
R=primiano@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1742843002 .
Because tools/windows/symupload/symupload.cc uses `nullptr` (which
requires VS2010), the CLSID comparison is only performed for msdia100.dll
and later. When compiling with an older (or future) CLSID_DiaSource, we
retain the existing behaviour (i.e. fail if CoCreateInstance fails).
R=ivanpe@chromium.org
BUG=https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1236343
Linux make check is failing for mips, mips64, arm, arm64
with error:
"fatal error: mach/arm/vm_types.h: No such file or directory" in case of arm,
"../src/third_party/mac_headers/mach/machine/vm_types.h:37:2: error: #error architecture not supported" in case of mips/mips64
This was partially fixed in https://codereview.chromium.org/1645673002/.
Here excluding src/common/mac/macho_reader_unittest for hosts other than x86/x86-64.
BUG=make check failure for linux mips
TEST=make check pass
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1692933002 .
G GL_VERSION|GL_VENDOR|GL_RENDERER.
The GPU version, vendor and renderer are extracted during microdump parsing and populated in the appropriate fields in the SystemInfo struct.
This is to match the changes introduced in crrev.com/1343713002 and crrev.com/1334473003
BUG=chromium:536769
R=primiano@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1678463002 .
This patch changes MDCVInfoELF (which is currently unused, apparently
a vestigal bit of code landed as part of Solaris support) into a supported
CodeView format that simply contains a build id as raw bytes.
Modern ELF toolchains support build ids nicely:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Developer_Guide/compiling-build-id.html
It would be useful to have the original build ids of loaded modules in
Linux minidumps, since tools like Fedora's darkserver allow querying by build
id and the current Breakpad code truncates the build id to the size of a GUID,
which loses information:
https://darkserver.fedoraproject.org/
A follow-up patch will change the Linux minidump generation code to produce
MDCVInfoELF in minidumps instead of MDCVInfoPDB70. This patch should be landed
first to ensure that crash processors are able to handle this format before
dumps are generated containing it.
The full build id is exposed as the return value of Minidump::code_identifier(),
which currently just returns "id" for modules in Linux dumps. For
backwards-compatibility, Minidump::debug_identifier() continues to treat
the build id as a GUID, so debug identifiers for existing modules will not
change.
BUG=
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1675413002 .
The method -[NSString stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:] has been
deprecated with 10.11 OS X SDK and 9.0 iOS SDK. The recommended method is
-[NSString stringByAddingPercentEncodingWithAllowedCharacters:] available
since 10.9 OS X SDK and 7.0 iOS SDK.
Use the new method when available using URLQueryAllowedCharacterSet to get
the same encoded string.
BUG=https://bugs.chromium.org/p/google-breakpad/issues/detail?id=675
BUG=569158
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1680663002 .
This updates the GYP build for the processor component (on windows).
- adds/removes references to files which were added or removed from the
repository
- includes build/common.gypi in the gyp files: needed to correctly
detect the OS (I think, the generated MSVC solutions were broken
without it)
- conditionally compiles code platform-specific code for the given
platform
After this minidump processor nearly compiles with VS2013: the generated
project is correct, but some files still have compilation errors.
Disclaimer: I have not tested the GYP changes on non-windows platform,
as there does not seem to be anyone using it there.
BUG=
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1643633004 .
The dump_syms_mac tool only works for the system it is being built for
(it doesn't support running on ELFs for a diff target), and it builds
only for x86 currently.
If you look at the mac header:
src/third_party/mac_headers/mach/machine/vm_types.h
it will #error for non x86/arm systems, and the arm header is not in
our source tree.
Tweak the build so it's only compiled when targetting x86 systems.
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`make check` pass
R=ted.mielczarek@gmail.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1645673002 .
Newer gcc versions default to -Werror=narrowing when using newer C++
standards (which we do). This causes issues when we try to stuff a
value like 0xea into a char -- the value is out of range for signed
char bytes. That's when gcc throws an error:
.../bytereader_unittest.cc: In member function 'virtual void Reader_DW_EH_PE_absptr4_Test::TestBody()':
.../bytereader_unittest.cc:400:55: error: narrowing conversion of '234' from 'int' to 'char' inside { } [-Wnarrowing]
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`make check` passes
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1605153004 .
Should have no real impact on the build. Just pulling in the latest
versions from the latest autoconf/automake versions.
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`make && make install` still works
Some systems provide prebuilt copies of gmock/gtest (such as Chromium
OS). Add a configure flag so they can take advantage of that. This
allows for a smaller checkout as they don't need to include the full
testing/ tree.
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`make check` passes w/--enable-system-test-libs
TEST=`make check` passes w/--disable-system-test-libs
R=thestig@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1638653002 .
When building with -gsplit-dwarf, the generated dwo files are left behind
even when you `make clean`. Fix that up.
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`./configure CXXFLAGS='-O -gsplit-dwarf' && make && make clean` removes dwo files now
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1633893002 .
The current makefile ends up building ~17 copies of the gtest/gmock
objects -- every test that refers to the cc files directly will have
its own copy. This is because the build doesn't know if CFLAGS and
such have changed between each target (and in some cases, they are).
Create a new libtesting.a target to hold a single copy of these files
and update all of the unittests to link that in. This speeds up the
build a bit especially when you aren't using ccache.
This does mean we can no longer build gtest/gmock with unique flags,
but we haven't wanted that so far, so clearly no one wants that.
BUG=chromium:579384
TEST=`make check` passes
R=thestig@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1633903002 .