Adds a new client API which allows causing an exception in another
process. This is accomplished by injecting a thread that calls
RaiseException(). A special exception code is used that indicates to the
handler that the exception arguments contain a thread id and exception
code, which are in turn used to fabricate an exception record. This is
so that the API can allow the client to "blame" a particular thread in
the target process.
The target process must also be a registered Crashpad client, as the
normal exception mechanism is used to handle the exception.
The injection of a thread is used instead of DebugBreakProcess() which
does not cause the UnhandledExceptionFilter() to be executed.
NtCreateThreadEx() is used in lieu of CreateRemoteThread() as it allows
passing of a flag which avoids calling DllMain()s. This is necessary to
allow thread creation to succeed even when the target process is
deadlocked on the loader lock.
BUG=crashpad:103
Change-Id: I797007bd2b1e3416afe3f37a6566c0cdb259b106
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/339263
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This was done in Chromium’s local copy of Crashpad in 562827afb599. This
change is similar to that one, except more care was taken to avoid
including headers from a .cc or _test.cc when already included by the
associated .h. Rather than using <stddef.h> for size_t, Crashpad has
always used <sys/types.h>, so that’s used here as well.
This updates mini_chromium to 8a2363f486e3a0dc562a68884832d06d28d38dcc,
which removes base/basictypes.h.
e128dcf10122 Remove base/move.h; use std::move() instead of Pass()
8a2363f486e3 Move basictypes.h to macros.h
R=avi@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1566713002 .
FILE_TYPE_CHAR handles can't be inherited via
PROC_THREAD_ATTRIBUTE_HANDLE_LIST, or CreateProcess() fails with
GetLastError() == 1450 on Windows 7.
I confirmed that an fprintf(stderr, ...) in HandlerMain() does make it
to the console when running tests even after this.
See bug for more discussion.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:77
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1473793002 .
This requires Windows NT 6.0 (Vista and Server 2008). On earlier
operating system versions, the existing behavior of inheriting all
inheritable handles is retained.
BUG=crashpad:69
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1427273003 .
This consolidates all of the twisted casts and comments that discuss how
HANDLEs are really only 32 bits wide even in 64-bit processes on 64-bit
operating systems into a single location.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1422503015 .
Allowing the client to create its own pipe name string caused a race
between client and server. Instead, in this mode, the server now creates
the pipe name along with a pipe, and returns it to its client via a
--handshake-handle. This guarantees that by the time the client gets the
pipe name, the server has already created it.
Ephemeral mode is now implied by --handshake-handle. The --persistent
option is gone. --persistent mode is enabled when using --pipe-name.
BUG=crashpad:69
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1432563003 .
For multiprocess architectures, this method allows the pipe used for
registration to be obtained from CrashpadHandler, even when
CrashpadHandler chooses its own name. This may happen if the handler is
not running on a well-known pipe name but was instead started by
CrashpadHandler::StartHandler(). If Chrome uses this interface, for
example, the browser process will need to call
CrashpadClient::GetHandlerIPCPipe() and pass the pipe name to its child
processes.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1427163004 .
Fixes two incorrect usages of ssize_t/off_t being implicitly converted
to bool. As such, I think it's worth the cost of the additional !! on
BOOL returning Win32 functions.
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1408123006 .
I thought I had confirmed that this still allocated and ignored the flag
on older OSs, but I must have not had the PLOG active yet? I'm not sure
what I did. (I might try to blame VMware as it has an annoying habit of
caching old binaries when you use it's "Shared Folders" feature to point
at the dev machine's build dir.)
I confirmed that it does work on Win8 and Win10 but doesn't on Win XP
and Win 7.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:52
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1405243002 .
Capture the memory for the loader lock (can be inspected by !cs), as
well as all locks that were created with .DebugInfo which can be viewed
with !locks.
e.g.
0:000> !cs ntdll!LdrpLoaderLock
-----------------------------------------
Critical section = 0x778d6410 (ntdll!LdrpLoaderLock+0x0)
DebugInfo = 0x778d6b6c
NOT LOCKED
LockSemaphore = 0x0
SpinCount = 0x04000000
0:000> !locks -v
CritSec ntdll!RtlpProcessHeapsListLock+0 at 778d7620
LockCount NOT LOCKED
RecursionCount 0
OwningThread 0
EntryCount 0
ContentionCount 0
CritSec +7a0248 at 007a0248
LockCount NOT LOCKED
RecursionCount 0
OwningThread 0
EntryCount 0
ContentionCount 0
CritSec crashy_program!g_critical_section_with_debug_info+0 at 01342c48
LockCount NOT LOCKED
RecursionCount 0
OwningThread 0
EntryCount 0
ContentionCount 0
CritSec crashy_program!crashpad::`anonymous namespace'::g_test_critical_section+0 at 01342be0
WaiterWoken No
LockCount 0
RecursionCount 1
OwningThread 34b8
EntryCount 0
ContentionCount 0
*** Locked
Scanned 4 critical sections
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:52
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1392093003 .
Windows requires the connection to the handler to do anything, so it
can't really be implemented or tested without CrashpadClient and the
connection machinery.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:53
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1356383002 .
This replaces the registration server, and adds dispatch to a delegate
on crash requests.
(As you are already aware) we went around in circles on trying to come
up with a slightly-too-fancy threading design. All of them seemed to
have problems when it comes to out of order events, and orderly
shutdown, so I've gone back to something not-too-fancy.
Two named pipe instances (that clients connect to) are created. These
are used only for registration (which should take <1ms), so 2 should be
sufficient to avoid any waits. When a client registers, we duplicate
an event to it, which is used to signal when it wants a dump taken.
The server registers threadpool waits on that event, and also on the
process handle (which will be signalled when the client process exits).
These requests (in particular the taking of the dump) are serviced
on the threadpool, which avoids us needing to manage those threads,
but still allows parallelism in taking dumps. On process termination,
we use an IO Completion Port to post a message back to the main thread
to request cleanup. This complexity is necessary so that we can
unregister the threadpool waits without being on the threadpool, which
we need to do synchronously so that we can be sure that no further
callbacks will execute (and expect to have the client data around
still).
In a followup, I will readd support for DumpWithoutCrashing -- I don't
think it will be too difficult now that we have an orderly way to
clean up client records in the server.
R=cpu@chromium.org, mark@chromium.org, jschuh@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1,crashpad:45
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1301853002 .