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105 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
105 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
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<!--
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Copyright 2021 The Crashpad Authors. All rights reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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You may obtain a copy of the License at
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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limitations under the License.
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-->
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# iOS Crashpad Overview Design
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[TOC]
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## iOS Limitations
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Crashpad on other platforms captures exceptions out-of-process. The iOS sandbox,
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however, restricts applications from delegating work to separate processes.
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This limitation means Crashpad on iOS must combine the work of the handler and
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the client into the same process as the main application.
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## The Crashpad In-Process Handler
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In-process handling comes with a number of limitations and difficulties. It is
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not possible to catch the specific Mach exception `EXC_CRASH`, so certain groups
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of crashes cannot be captured. This includes some major ones, like out-of-memory
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crashes. This also introduces difficulties in capturing all the relevant crash
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data and writing the minidump, as the process itself is in an unsafe state.
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While handling an exception, the handler may not, for example:
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- Allocate memory.
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- Use libc, or most any library call.
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While handling an exception, the handler may only:
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- Use audited syscalls.
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- access memory via `vm_read`.
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In conjunction with Crashpad’s existing minidump writer and structural
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limitations of the minidump format, it is not possible to write a minidump
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immediately from the crash handler. Instead, an intermediate dump is written
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when a handler would normally write a minidump (such as during an exception or a
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forced dump without crashing). The intermediate dump file will be converted to
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a minidump on the next run (or when the application decides it's safe to do so).
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During Crashpad initialization, the handler gathers basic system information
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and opens a pending intermediate dump adjacent to the Crashpad database.
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## The Crashpad IntermediateDump Format
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Due to the limitations of in-process handling, an intermediate dump file is
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written during exceptions. The data is streamed to a file, which will be used to
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generate a final minidump when appropriate.
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The file format is similar to binary JSON, supporting keyed properties, maps and
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arrays.
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- `Property` [key:int, length:int, value:intarray]
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- `StartMap` [key:int], followed by repeating Properties until `EndMap`
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- `StartArray` [key:int], followed by repeating Maps until `EndArray`
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- `EndMap`, `EndArray`, `EndDocument`
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Similar to JSON, maps can contain other maps, arrays and properties.
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## The Crashpad In-Process Client
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Other Crashpad platforms handle exceptions and upload minidumps out-of-process.
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On iOS, everything must happen in-process. Once started, the client will
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automatically handle exceptions and capture the crashed process state in an
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intermediate dump file. Converting that intermediate dump file into a minidump
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is likely not safe to do from within a crashed process, and uploading a minidump
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is definitely unsafe to do at crash time. Applications are expected to process
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intermediate dumps into pending minidumps and begin processing pending
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minidumps, possibly for upload, at suitable times following the next application
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restart.
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### `ProcessIntermediateDumps`
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For performance and stability reasons applications may choose the correct time
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to convert intermediate dumps, as well as append metadata to the pending
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intermediate dumps. This is expected to happen during application startup, when
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suitable. After converting, a minidump will be written to the Crashpad database,
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similar to how other platforms write a minidump on exception handling. If
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uploading is enabled, this minidump will also be immediately uploaded. New
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intermediate dumps generated by exceptions or by
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`CRASHPAD_SIMULATE_CRASH_AND_DEFER_PROCESSING` will will not be processed until
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the next call to `ProcessIntermediateDumps`. Conversely,
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`CRASHPAD_SIMULATE_CRASH` can be called when the client has no performance or
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stability concerns. In this case, intermediate dumps are automatically
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converted to minidumps and immediately eligable for uploading.
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### `StartProcesingPendingReports`
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For similar reasons, applications may choose the correct time to begin uploading
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pending reports, such as when ideal network conditions exist. By default,
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clients start with uploading disabled. Applications should call this API when
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it is determined that it is appropriate to do so (such as on a few seconds after
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startup, or when network connectivity is appropriate).
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