Mercurial > hg > octave-kai > gnulib-hg
view lib/c-stack.c @ 17463:203c036eb0c6
bootstrap: support checksum utils without a --status option
* build-aux/bootstrap: Only look for sha1sum if updating po files.
Add sha1 to the list of supported checksum utils since it's now
supported through adjustments below.
(update_po_files): Remove the use of --status
in a way that will suppress all error messages, but since this is
only used to minimize updates, it shouldn't cause an issue.
Exit early if there is a problem updating the po file checksums.
(find_tool): Remove the check for --version support as this
is optional as per commit 86186b17. Don't even check for the
presence of the command as if that is needed, it's supported
through configuring prerequisites in bootstrap.conf.
Prompt that when a tool isn't found, one can define an environment
variable to add to the hardcoded search list.
author | Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 08 Aug 2013 11:08:49 +0100 |
parents | e542fd46ad6f |
children |
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/* Stack overflow handling. Copyright (C) 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ /* Written by Paul Eggert. */ /* NOTES: A program that uses alloca, dynamic arrays, or large local variables may extend the stack by more than a page at a time. If so, when the stack overflows the operating system may not detect the overflow until the program uses the array, and this module may incorrectly report a program error instead of a stack overflow. To avoid this problem, allocate only small objects on the stack; a program should be OK if it limits single allocations to a page or less. Allocate larger arrays in static storage, or on the heap (e.g., with malloc). Yes, this is a pain, but we don't know of any better solution that is portable. No attempt has been made to deal with multithreaded applications. */ #include <config.h> #ifndef __attribute__ # if __GNUC__ < 3 # define __attribute__(x) # endif #endif #include "gettext.h" #define _(msgid) gettext (msgid) #include <errno.h> #include <signal.h> #if ! HAVE_STACK_T && ! defined stack_t typedef struct sigaltstack stack_t; #endif #ifndef SIGSTKSZ # define SIGSTKSZ 16384 #elif HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV && SIGSTKSZ < 16384 /* libsigsegv 2.6 through 2.8 have a bug where some architectures use more than the Linux default of an 8k alternate stack when deciding if a fault was caused by stack overflow. */ # undef SIGSTKSZ # define SIGSTKSZ 16384 #endif #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> /* Posix 2001 declares ucontext_t in <ucontext.h>, Posix 200x in <signal.h>. */ #if HAVE_UCONTEXT_H # include <ucontext.h> #endif #include <unistd.h> #if HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV # include <sigsegv.h> #endif #include "c-stack.h" #include "exitfail.h" #include "ignore-value.h" #if defined SA_ONSTACK && defined SA_SIGINFO # define SIGINFO_WORKS 1 #else # define SIGINFO_WORKS 0 # ifndef SA_ONSTACK # define SA_ONSTACK 0 # endif #endif extern char *program_name; /* The user-specified action to take when a SEGV-related program error or stack overflow occurs. */ static void (* volatile segv_action) (int); /* Translated messages for program errors and stack overflow. Do not translate them in the signal handler, since gettext is not async-signal-safe. */ static char const * volatile program_error_message; static char const * volatile stack_overflow_message; /* Output an error message, then exit with status EXIT_FAILURE if it appears to have been a stack overflow, or with a core dump otherwise. This function is async-signal-safe. */ static _Noreturn void die (int signo) { char const *message; #if !SIGINFO_WORKS && !HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV /* 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. */ signo = 0; #endif /* !SIGINFO_WORKS && !HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV */ segv_action (signo); message = signo ? program_error_message : stack_overflow_message; ignore_value (write (STDERR_FILENO, program_name, strlen (program_name))); ignore_value (write (STDERR_FILENO, ": ", 2)); ignore_value (write (STDERR_FILENO, message, strlen (message))); ignore_value (write (STDERR_FILENO, "\n", 1)); if (! signo) _exit (exit_failure); raise (signo); abort (); } #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 _Noreturn 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 # if SIGINFO_WORKS /* Handle a segmentation violation and exit. This function is async-signal-safe. */ static _Noreturn void segv_handler (int signo, siginfo_t *info, void *context __attribute__ ((unused))) { /* Clear SIGNO if it seems to have been a stack overflow. */ # 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. Note that although both Linux and Solaris provide sigaltstack, SA_ONSTACK, and SA_SIGINFO, currently only Solaris satisfies the XSI heuristic. 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 (0 < info->si_code) { /* If the faulting address is within the stack, or within one page of the stack, assume that it is a stack overflow. */ ucontext_t const *user_context = context; char const *stack_base = user_context->uc_stack.ss_sp; size_t stack_size = user_context->uc_stack.ss_size; char const *faulting_address = info->si_addr; size_t page_size = sysconf (_SC_PAGESIZE); size_t s = faulting_address - stack_base + page_size; if (s < stack_size + 2 * page_size) signo = 0; # if DEBUG { char buf[1024]; sprintf (buf, "segv_handler fault=%p base=%p size=%lx page=%lx signo=%d\n", faulting_address, stack_base, (unsigned long) stack_size, (unsigned long) page_size, signo); write (STDERR_FILENO, buf, strlen (buf)); } # endif } # endif die (signo); } # endif int c_stack_action (void (*action) (int)) { int r; stack_t st; struct sigaction act; st.ss_flags = 0; # if SIGALTSTACK_SS_REVERSED /* Irix mistakenly treats ss_sp as the upper bound, rather than lower bound, of the alternate stack. */ st.ss_sp = alternate_signal_stack.buffer + SIGSTKSZ - sizeof (void *); st.ss_size = sizeof alternate_signal_stack.buffer - sizeof (void *); # else st.ss_sp = alternate_signal_stack.buffer; st.ss_size = sizeof alternate_signal_stack.buffer; # endif r = sigaltstack (&st, NULL); if (r != 0) return r; segv_action = action ? action : null_action; program_error_message = _("program error"); stack_overflow_message = _("stack overflow"); sigemptyset (&act.sa_mask); # if SIGINFO_WORKS /* POSIX 1003.1-2001 says SA_RESETHAND implies SA_NODEFER, but this is not true on Solaris 8 at least. It doesn't hurt to use SA_NODEFER here, so leave it in. */ act.sa_flags = SA_NODEFER | SA_ONSTACK | SA_RESETHAND | SA_SIGINFO; act.sa_sigaction = segv_handler; # else act.sa_flags = SA_NODEFER | SA_ONSTACK | SA_RESETHAND; act.sa_handler = die; # endif # if FAULT_YIELDS_SIGBUS if (sigaction (SIGBUS, &act, NULL) < 0) return -1; # endif return sigaction (SIGSEGV, &act, NULL); } #else /* ! ((HAVE_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_DECL_SIGALTSTACK && HAVE_STACK_OVERFLOW_HANDLING) || HAVE_LIBSIGSEGV) */ int c_stack_action (void (*action) (int) __attribute__ ((unused))) { errno = ENOTSUP; return -1; } #endif