|
@@ -105,6 +105,44 @@ int setjmp_wrapper(void (*proc)(void *, void *), ...)
|
|
|
|
|
|
void os_dump_core(void)
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
+ int pid;
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
signal(SIGSEGV, SIG_DFL);
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ /*
|
|
|
+ * We are about to SIGTERM this entire process group to ensure that
|
|
|
+ * nothing is around to run after the kernel exits. The
|
|
|
+ * kernel wants to abort, not die through SIGTERM, so we
|
|
|
+ * ignore it here.
|
|
|
+ */
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ signal(SIGTERM, SIG_IGN);
|
|
|
+ kill(0, SIGTERM);
|
|
|
+ /*
|
|
|
+ * Most of the other processes associated with this UML are
|
|
|
+ * likely sTopped, so give them a SIGCONT so they see the
|
|
|
+ * SIGTERM.
|
|
|
+ */
|
|
|
+ kill(0, SIGCONT);
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ /*
|
|
|
+ * Now, having sent signals to everyone but us, make sure they
|
|
|
+ * die by ptrace. Processes can survive what's been done to
|
|
|
+ * them so far - the mechanism I understand is receiving a
|
|
|
+ * SIGSEGV and segfaulting immediately upon return. There is
|
|
|
+ * always a SIGSEGV pending, and (I'm guessing) signals are
|
|
|
+ * processed in numeric order so the SIGTERM (signal 15 vs
|
|
|
+ * SIGSEGV being signal 11) is never handled.
|
|
|
+ *
|
|
|
+ * Run a waitpid loop until we get some kind of error.
|
|
|
+ * Hopefully, it's ECHILD, but there's not a lot we can do if
|
|
|
+ * it's something else. Tell os_kill_ptraced_process not to
|
|
|
+ * wait for the child to report its death because there's
|
|
|
+ * nothing reasonable to do if that fails.
|
|
|
+ */
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ while ((pid = waitpid(-1, NULL, WNOHANG)) > 0)
|
|
|
+ os_kill_ptraced_process(pid, 0);
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
abort();
|
|
|
}
|