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BUG=none R=mark CC=google-breakpad-dev@googlegroups.com Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1357773004 . Patch from Andy Bonventre <andybons@chromium.org>.
98 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
98 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
# How To Add Breakpad To Your Linux Application
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This document is an overview of using the Breakpad client libraries on Linux.
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## Building the Breakpad libraries
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Breakpad provides an Autotools build system that will build both the Linux
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client libraries and the processor libraries. Running `./configure && make` in
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the Breakpad source directory will produce
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**src/client/linux/libbreakpad\_client.a**, which contains all the code
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necessary to produce minidumps from an application.
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## Integrating Breakpad into your Application
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First, configure your build process to link **libbreakpad\_client.a** into your
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binary, and set your include paths to include the **src** directory in the
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**google-breakpad** source tree. Next, include the exception handler header: ```
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# include "client/linux/handler/exception_handler.h"
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```
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Now you can instantiate an `ExceptionHandler` object. Exception handling is active for the lifetime of the `ExceptionHandler` object, so you should instantiate it as early as possible in your application's startup process, and keep it alive for as close to shutdown as possible. To do anything useful, the `ExceptionHandler` constructor requires a path where it can write minidumps, as well as a callback function to receive information about minidumps that were written:
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```
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static bool dumpCallback(const google_breakpad::MinidumpDescriptor& descriptor,
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void* context, bool succeeded) { printf("Dump path: %s\n", descriptor.path());
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return succeeded; }
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void crash() { volatile int* a = (int*)(NULL); *a = 1; }
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int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { google_breakpad::MinidumpDescriptor
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descriptor("/tmp"); google_breakpad::ExceptionHandler eh(descriptor, NULL,
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dumpCallback, NULL, true, -1); crash(); return 0; } ```
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Compiling and running this example should produce a minidump file in /tmp, and
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it should print the minidump filename before exiting. You can read more about
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the other parameters to the `ExceptionHandler` constructor <a
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href='http://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/source/browse/trunk/src/client/linux/handler/exception_handler.h'>in
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the exception_handler.h source file</a>.
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**Note**: You should do as little work as possible in the callback function.
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Your application is in an unsafe state. It may not be safe to allocate memory or
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call functions from other shared libraries. The safest thing to do is `fork` and
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`exec` a new process to do any work you need to do. If you must do some work in
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the callback, the Breakpad source contains <a
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href='http://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/source/browse/trunk/src/common/linux/linux_libc_support.h'>some
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simple reimplementations of libc functions</a>, to avoid calling directly into
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libc, as well as <a href='http://code.google.com/p/linux-syscall-support/'>a
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header file for making Linux system calls</a> (in **src/third\_party/lss**) to
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avoid calling into other shared libraries.
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## Sending the minidump file
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In a real application, you would want to handle the minidump in some way, likely
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by sending it to a server for analysis. The Breakpad source tree contains <a
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href='http://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/source/browse/#svn/trunk/src/common/linux'>some
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HTTP upload source</a> that you might find useful, as well as <a
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href='http://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/source/browse/#svn/trunk/src/tools/linux/symupload'>a
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minidump upload tool</a>.
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## Producing symbols for your application
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To produce useful stack traces, Breakpad requires you to convert the debugging
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symbols in your binaries to <a
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href='http://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/wiki/SymbolFiles'>text-format
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symbol files</a>. First, ensure that you've compiled your binaries with `-g` to
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include debugging symbols. Next, compile the `dump_syms` tool by running
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`configure && make` in the Breakpad source directory. Next, run `dump_syms` on
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your binaries to produce the text-format symbols. For example, if your main
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binary was named `test`: `$ google-breakpad/src/tools/linux/dump_syms/dump_syms
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./test > test.sym
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`
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In order to use these symbols with the `minidump_stackwalk` tool, you will need
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to place them in a specific directory structure. The first line of the symbol
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file contains the information you need to produce this directory structure, for
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example (your output will vary): `$ head -n1 test.sym MODULE Linux x86_64
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6EDC6ACDB282125843FD59DA9C81BD830 test $ mkdir -p
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./symbols/test/6EDC6ACDB282125843FD59DA9C81BD830 $ mv test.sym
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./symbols/test/6EDC6ACDB282125843FD59DA9C81BD830
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`
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You may also find the <a
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href='http://mxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/source/toolkit/crashreporter/tools/symbolstore.py'>symbolstore.py</a>
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script in the Mozilla repository useful, as it encapsulates these steps.
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## Processing the minidump to produce a stack trace
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Breakpad includes a tool called `minidump_stackwalk` which can take a minidump
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plus its corresponding text-format symbols and produce a symbolized stacktrace.
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It should be in the **google-breakpad/src/processor** directory if you compiled
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the Breakpad source using the directions above. Simply pass it the minidump and
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the symbol path as commandline parameters:
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`google-breakpad/src/processor/minidump_stackwalk minidump.dmp ./symbols
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` It produces verbose output on stderr, and the stacktrace on stdout, so you may
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want to redirect stderr.
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