After 9e79ea1da719, it no longer makes sense for crashpad_util_test_lib
to “hide” in util/util_test.gyp. All of util/test is moved to its own
top-level directory, test, which all other test code is allowed to
depend on. test, too, is allowed to depend on all other non-test code.
In a future change, when crashpad_util_test_lib gains a dependency on
crashpad_client, it won’t look so weird for something in util (even
though it’s in util/test) to depend on something in client, because the
thing that needs to depend on client will live in test, not util.
BUG=crashpad:33
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1051533002
Now that Chrome’s about:crashes displays the crash report UUID, I wanted
to add it to the minidump. In the future, we may be able to index these
on the server. This will also help identify dumps that correspond to the
same event once we’re equipped to convert between different formats.
Ideally, this new field is populated with the same UUID used locally in
the crash report database. To make this work,
CrashReportDatabase::NewReport must carry the UUID. This was actually
part of CrashReportDatabaseWin’s private extension to NewReport, so that
extension subclass can now be cleaned up.
TEST=crashpad_minidump_test MinidumpCrashpadInfoWriter.*,
crashpad_client_test CrashReportDatabaseTest.NewCrashReport
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1000263003
Rather than accepting the path to the database’s parent directory, this
now accepts the path to the database itself. Using the parent directory
proved cumbersome in practice. When testing crashpad_handler with a
variety of databases, it is useful to be able to specify
--database=/tmp/crashpad_database, --database=/tmp/crashpad_database_2,
etc. The old interface required that these directories be created as a
separate step, and would put the actual database at
/tmp/crashpad_database/Crashpad. This was contrary to the operation of
most tools and interfaces, which would only require that /tmp exist and
would put the database at /tmp/crashpad_database.
TEST=crashpad_client_test
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/991393002
This makes it possible to #include "client/settings.h" for the interface
even on Windows. Although Settings is not currently implemented on
Windows (bug crashpad:13), it’s easier to have the interface declaration
available without having to have it be guarded.
TEST=crashpad_client_test SettingsTest.*
BUG=
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/987383002
This is only implemented for CrashReportDatabaseMac, because
CrashReportDatabaseWin does not currently have a Settings object. See
bug crashpad:13.
TEST=crashpad_client_test CrashReportDatabaseTest.*
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/995853003
A couple of the problems related to not having a C++11 library:
- You can’t put const elements into a std::vector<>, so
CrashReportDatabase::GetPendingReports() and
CrashReportDatabase::GetCompletedReports() need to change. There was
no data-safety benefit to const elements.
- std::string::pop_back() does not exist, another mechanism must be
used to trim strings in BreakpadHTTPFormParametersFromMinidump().
One relates to a feature that does not exist in 10.6:
- The O_CLOEXEC flag to open() was introduced in 10.7. Although it
would be possible to use fcntl(..., F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC) on 10.6, the
O_CLOEXEC behavior is just removed from
CrashReportDatabaseMac::ObtainReportLock(), in line with other open()
calls in Crashpad.
And one was a real bug:
- #define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS before #including <inttypes.h> to get
format macros like SCNx32, used in UUID::InitializeFromString().
TEST=* (gyp_crashpad.py -Dmac_sdk=10.6 -Dmac_deployment_target=10.6)
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/987693004
As there are no extended file attributes available on all Windows file
systems (NTFS supports alternate data streams, but Chrome still supports
running on FAT), instead of using metadata attached to the file, metadata
is stored separately in a simple record-based file and keyed by UUID.
Initially, I attempted a metadata file beside each report, each locked
separately more closely mirroring the Mac implementation. But given the
expected number of of active reports (in the 10s to 100s range?) and the
size of the metadata for each, simply storing it all in one file is much
less complicated when considering error situations.
If the serialization/deserialization becomes a measurable problem, it
could be optimized at some complexity by reading/writing only as
necessary, or optimizing the storage.
R=mark@chromium.org, rsesek@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/867363003
A crash handler needs a way to clean up after itself it it calls
CrashReportDatabase::PrepareCrashReport() to begin writing a new crash
report, but then encounters an error that renders the crash report
unusable. The new ErrorWritingCrashReport() method allows it to
communicate to the database that a previously-prepared crash report
should be removed without ever being promoted to a completed report
pending upload.
TEST=client_test CrashReportDatabaseTest.ErrorWritingCrashReport
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/904533002
- Dependency on compat required for sys/types.h inclusion for ssize_t.
- Test impl of stat to avoid #error
- FileHandle isn't int on Windows.
client_test no longer links though, as it's still lacking an
implementation of CrashReportDatabase of course.
R=rsesek@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/875043004