Remove stl_util from Crashpad. This also updates mini_chromium to
4f3cfc8e7c2b7d77f94f41a32c3ec84a6920f05d to remove stl_util from there
as well.
4f3cfc8e7c2b Remove stl_util from mini_chromium
BUG=chromium:555865
Change-Id: I8ecb1639a258dd233d524834ed205a4fcc641bac
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/438865
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
I haven't been able to reproduce this locally, but we see errors in
crash dumps where the unloaded module list consists of a number of
modules with invalid names and implausible addresses. My assumption is
that RTL_UNLOAD_EVENT_TRACE isn't correct for some OS levels. Instead of
trying to finesse and test that, use RtlGetUnloadEventTraceEx() instead
of RtlGetUnloadEventTrace(), which returns an element size. (This
function is Vista+ which is why it wasn't used the first time around.)
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=chromium:620175
Change-Id: I4d7080a03623276f9c1c038d6e7329af70e4a64c
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/421564
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This eliminates all constructors, but nearly all points of use were
using the default constructor to initialize a UUID member variable as in
uuid_(). This syntax will still produce a zeroed-out UUID.
While compiling, for example, minidump_rva_list_writer.cc:
In file included from ../../minidump/minidump_rva_list_writer.h:25:0,
from ../../minidump/minidump_rva_list_writer.cc:15:
../../minidump/minidump_extensions.h:412:8: error: ignoring packed attribute because of unpacked non-POD field ‘crashpad::UUID crashpad::MinidumpCrashpadInfo::report_id’ [-Werror]
UUID report_id;
^~~~~~~~~
../../minidump/minidump_extensions.h:424:8: error: ignoring packed attribute because of unpacked non-POD field ‘crashpad::UUID crashpad::MinidumpCrashpadInfo::client_id’ [-Werror]
UUID client_id;
^~~~~~~~~
Tested with:
- GCC 4.9 from NDK r13 targeting arm with SDK 16
- GCC 4.9 from NDK r13 targeting arm64 with SDK 21
- GCC 6.2 targeting x86_64
BUG=crashpad:30
Change-Id: Iec6b1557441b69d75246f2f75c59c4158fb7ca29
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/409641
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
This makes Doxygen’s output more actionable by setting QUIET = YES to
suppress verbose progress spew, and WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED = NO to prevent
warnings for undocumented classes and members from being generated. The
latter is too noisy, producing 721 warnings in the current codebase.
The remaining warnings produced by Doxygen were useful and actionable.
They fell into two categories: abuses of Doxygen’s markup syntax, and
missing (or misspelled) parameter documentation. In a small number of
cases, pass-through parameters had intentionally been left undocumented.
In these cases, they are now given blank \param descriptions. This is
not optimal, but there doesn’t appear to be any other way to tell
Doxygen to allow a single parameter to be undocumented.
Some tricky Doxygen errors were resolved by asking it to not enter
directiores that we do not provide documentation in (such as the
“on-platform” compat directories, compat/mac and compat/win, as well as
compat/non_cxx11_lib) while allowing it to enter the
“off-platform” directories that we do document (compat/non_mac and
compat/non_win).
A Doxygen run (doc/support/generate_doxygen.sh) now produces no output
at all. It would produce warnings if any were triggered.
Not directly related, but still relevant to documentation,
doc/support/generate.sh is updated to remove temporary removals of
now-extinct files and directories. doc/appengine/README is updated so
that a consistent path to “goapp” is used throughout the file.
Change-Id: I300730c04de4d3340551ea3086ca70cc5ff862d1
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/408812
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
The Windows 10 loader starts a few extra threads before main(). In a few
of the test cases, the tests were relying on thread ordering (generally,
the test thread being at index #1). Instead, use other signals to find
the correct thread to verify.
R=mark@chromium.org
Change-Id: Icb1f5a8fdf3a0ea6d82ab65960dbcb650965f269
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/407073
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Previously, StartHandler() launched the handler process, then connected
over a pipe to register for crash handling. Instead, the initial client
can create and inherit handles to the handler and pass those handle
values and other data (addresses, etc.) on the command line.
This should improve startup time as there's no need to synchronize with
the process at startup, and allows avoiding a call to CreateProcess()
directly in StartHandler(), which is important for registration for
crash reporting from DllMain().
Incidentally adds new utility functions for string/number conversion and
string splitting.
Note: API change; UseHandler() is removed for all platforms.
BUG=chromium:567850,chromium:656800
Change-Id: I1602724183cb107f805f109674c53e95841b24fd
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/400015
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This switches the default behaviour of crashpad_handler.exe to be a
/subsystem:windows app, so that normal usage won't cause a console to be
popped up. At the same time, creates a copy of crashpad_handler.exe in
the output dir named crashpad_handler.com. The .com doesn't affect
normal operation, as the way StartHandler() uses CreateProcess()
requires a real path to a file. However, when run from a command prompt,
.com are found before .exe, so editbin the .com to be to a console app,
which will be run in preference to the exe when run as just
"crashpad_handler", as one tends to do from a command prompt when
debugging. That is:
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug>where crashpad_handler
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug\crashpad_handler.com
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug\crashpad_handler.exe
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug>crashpad_handler --help
Usage: crashpad_handler [OPTION]...
...
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug>crashpad_handler.exe --help
<no output>
d:\src\crashpad\crashpad\out\Debug>crashpad_handler.com --help
Usage: crashpad_handler.com [OPTION]...
...
We also use the .com file in test invocations so that output streams
will be visible.
R=mark@chromium.org
Change-Id: I1a27f88472d491b2a1d76e63c45e6415d9f679c0
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/371578
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
When crashy_test_program's SomeCrashyFunction is inlined into
CrashyMain, cdb doesn't demangle the decorated form of an anonymous
namespace (?A0x12345678) into the expected `anonymous namespace' string.
I experienced this in Release_x64 and Release modes using MSVS 2015
update 3 (14.0.25420.1, cl 19.00.24213.1) and cdb versions 10.0.10240.9
and 10.0.14321.1024.
BUG=crashpad:129
Change-Id: I0a665b88891c271253adccd9b2b414fcaac26c8f
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/368730
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
The limit was being reset per-thread, which isn't how it was intended or
documented. Add test to confirm the limit is more-or-less respected.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:111
Change-Id: Ifae9f1ce2afcc2d6c6832db46f9b5c36adb35b42
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/346131
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Because DumpAndCrashTargetProcess() suspends the process, the thread
suspend count is one too high for all threads other than the injection
one in the thread snapshots. Compensate for this when we detect this
type of exception.
BUG=crashpad:103
Change-Id: Ib77112fddf5324fc0e43f598604e56f77d67ff54
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/340372
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
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>
Add a user-configurable cap on the amount of memory that is gathered by
dereferencing thread stacks. (SyzyAsan stores a tremendously large
number of pointers on the stack, so the dumps were ending up in the ~25M
range.)
Also reduce the range around pointers somewhat.
Change-Id: I6bce57d86bd2f6a796e1580c530909e089ec00ed
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/338463
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
One possible cause for this would be a register "pointing" to the edge of an
inaccessible range. Having these zero-sized ranges doesn't break the minidump,
but it causes a warning when opening in windbg.
Also drop user-supplied zero-length memory ranges for the same reason.
BUG=crashpad:104
Change-Id: I2c5acc54f04fb617806cecd87ac4ad5db93f3db8
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/339210
Reviewed-by: Bruce Dawson <brucedawson@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
In debug builds, the extra memory is sometimes getting captured
(probably by a stale stack pointer), so disable this test for now to
un-red the bots. We can probably fix it by moving this one test to a
separate binary (or perhaps just removing it, I'm not sure it's that
useful anyway above and beyond the unit test.)
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:101
Change-Id: I98a58a467fb4a4d9f84d2e0d020a031a0ea9743c
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/334821
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Kasko needs a way to read crash keys from out of process. This API
reuses the functionality of PEImageAnnotationsReader.
Change-Id: I2f3bbc358212e6f50235183e9dbb4e5a2cf989cf
This is a reupload of https://codereview.chromium.org/1586433003/ but
for gerrit.
Change-Id: I2f3bbc358212e6f50235183e9dbb4e5a2cf989cf
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/322550
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@google.com>
The previous approach was nice for its simplicity, but unfortunately
didn't work when the compiler decided to do some of its confounded
"optimization".
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:86, chromium:571144
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1563273004 .
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 .
Fix some warnings when compiling crashpad with VC++ 2015 Update 1.
Warning 4302 occurs if you convert from a pointer to a <sizeof(void*)
integer in one cast, because this often indicates an accidental pointer
truncation which can be a bug in 64-bit builds.
Warning 4577 warns that noexcept will not be enforced, but we don't want
it to be enforced anyway, so I disabled it. The full warning is:
warning C4577: 'noexcept' used with no exception handling mode specified
termination on exception is not guaranteed. Specify /EHsc
BUG=440500
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1527803002 .
Patch from Bruce Dawson <brucedawson@chromium.org>.
The BaseName() was added because system DLLs were being reported by
GetFileVersionInfo()/VerQueryValue() as having major file versions of
6.2 instead of 10.0 on Windows 10 when accessed by full path, but not
by BaseName(). The PEImageReader gets the correct version from the
in-memory images, 10.0.
This trick didn't work on Windows XP, where two copies of comctl32.dll
were found loaded into the process, one with a major file version of
5.82 and the other with 6.0. Giving GetFileVersionInfo() the BaseName()
would result in it returning information from one of these, which would
cause the version to not match when the PEImageReader was looking at the
other.
All of these GetFileVersionInfo() quirks make me glad that we're not
using it anymore (outside of the test).
Because of the version numbers involved (NT 6.2 = Windows 8, where
GetVersion()/GetVersionEx() start behaving differently for
non-manifested applications) and the fact that GetFileVersionInfo()
and VerQueryValue() seem to report 10.0 even with full paths on Windows
10 in applications manifested to run on that OS, the BaseName() thing is
restricted to Windows 8 and higher.
TEST=crashpad_snapshot_test PEImageReader.VSFixedFileInfo_AllModules
BUG=crashpad:78
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1493933002 .
Don't call GetFileVersionInfo(), which calls LoadLibrary() to be able to
access the module's resources. Loading modules from the crashy process
into the handler process can cause trouble. The Crashpad handler
definitely doesn't want to run arbitrary modules' module initializer
code.
Since the VS_FIXEDFILEINFO needed is already in memory in the remote
process' address space, just access it from there.
BUG=crashpad:78
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1475023004 .
On Win 7 in a debug configuration, walking all locks was gathering
hundreds of thousands of locks, causing test timeouts to be exceeded in
debug. On user machines, UnhandledExceptionHandler() could have timed
out too. For now, only grab the loader lock as it's the most interesting
one. Unfortunately, this means that !locks won't work for now.
In the future, we may want to figure out a signalling mechanism so that
the client can note other interesting locks to be grabbed, and just
avoid walking the list entirely.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=chromium:546288
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1475033005 .
This reverts commit b3464d96f5fc0d82f860651b7918626dfbd80d65.
It was temporarily landed to be able to run as the DEPS version in Chrome.
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1474223002 .
On Win 7 in a debug configuration, this was gathering hundreds of
thousands of locks, causing test timeouts to be exceeded. On user
machines, UnhandledExceptionHandler() probably would have timed out
also. Arbitrarily cap the number of locks captured, as we don't have a
pressing need for anything other than the LoaderLock anyway.
In the future, we may want to figure out a signalling mechanism so that
the client can note other interesting locks to be grabbed, and just
avoid walking the list entirely.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=chromium:546288
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1475033005 .
This log spam from end_to_end_test.py indicated that
GetFileVersionInfo() was being called three times per module:
[3076:3424:20151123,102817.290:WARNING module_version.cc:29]
GetFileVersionInfoSize: ...\crashpad\out\Release_x64\crashy_program.exe:
The specified resource type cannot be found in the image file. (1813)
[3076:3424:20151123,102817.291:WARNING module_version.cc:29]
GetFileVersionInfoSize: ...\crashpad\out\Release_x64\crashy_program.exe:
The specified resource type cannot be found in the image file. (1813)
[3076:3424:20151123,102817.291:WARNING module_version.cc:29]
GetFileVersionInfoSize: ...\crashpad\out\Release_x64\crashy_program.exe:
The specified resource type cannot be found in the image file. (1813)
This is unnecessary. It only needs to be called once.
We may want to avoid logging in GetModuleVersionAndType() when
GetLastError() is ERROR_RESOURCE_TYPE_NOT_FOUND.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1472963002 .
This is better because now end_to_end_test.py fails immediately with
[1180:9020:20151106,145204.830:ERROR registration_protocol_win.cc:39] CreateFile: The system cannot find the file specified. (0x2)
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:75
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1409693011 .
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 .
This is necessary for 64 bit tools installed on a 64 bit OS, but with
the tests run from a 32 bit Python. (sigh)
Doesn't happen on bots, but comes up occasionally testing on VMs.
R=mark@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1425153003 .
I considered writing the CodeView records to the minidump, but I didn't
find a ton of docs and debugging is only lightly supported (e.g.
http://www.debuginfo.com/articles/gendebuginfo.html#debuggersandformats
and it doesn't attempt to load at all on more recent Visual Studios).
As we won't be generating symbols in this format, and we don't expect to
have symbols for any weird modules that get injected into us in the
wild, it seems like we don't lose anything by just ignoring them.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:47
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1430773003 .
Previously, crashpad_handler made its own receive right, and transferred
a corresponding send right to its client. There are two advantages to
making the receive right in the client:
- It is possible to monitor the receive right for a port-destroyed
notificaiton in the client, allowing the handler to be restarted if
it dies.
- For the future run-from-launchd mode (bug crashpad:25), the handler
will obtain its receive right from the bootstrap server instead of
making its own. Having the handler get its receive right from
different sources allows more code to be shared than if it were to
sometimes get a receive right and sometimes make a receive right and
transfer a send right.
This includes a restructuring in crashpad_client_mac.cc that will make
it easier to give it an option to restart crashpad_handler if it dies.
The handler starting logic should all behave the same as before.
BUG=crashpad:68
R=rsesek@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1409073013 .
This allows better code sharing in crashpad_handler’s main(). It doesn’t
look like much of an improvement now, but a separate change will cause
the Mac ExceptionHandlerServer() to be constructed with an argument. It
will be beneficial for Mac and Windows to be able to share the Run()
call.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1402333004 .
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 .
Getting closer... Some tests passed on the last run, but the ones that
rely on having ntdll symbols fail on the bot. With `_NT_SYMBOL_PATH`
set, cdb will be able to download the PDBs so will be able to dump
data for `ntdll!_PEB`, etc.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:46
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1402643002 .
Oops, was passing the out dir (...\crashpad\out), not the binary dir
(...\crashpad\out\Debug). Didn't notice because I was running the
script directly, rather than via run_tests.py. :/
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:46
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1394343005 .
I'd like to write some `expect(1)`-style tests (possibly using
http://pexpect.readthedocs.org/en/stable/) to verify that various windbg
commands that I'm adding support for do actually work when consuming
minidumps in real life.
For the moment, this is just the beginnings of a stub as I don't know if
bots even have windbg/cdb installed.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:20, crashpad:46, crashpad:52
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1396943002 .
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 makes the basics of !peb work in windbg, however, pointed-to things
are not yet retrieved. For full functionality, a variety of pointers in
the PEB also needs to be walked and captured.
e.g.
Previously:
0:000> .ecxr
eax=00000007 ebx=7e383000 ecx=c3f9a943 edx=00000000 esi=006d62d0 edi=003c9280
eip=00384828 esp=005bf634 ebp=005bf638 iopl=0 nv up ei pl zr na pe nc
cs=0023 ss=002b ds=002b es=002b fs=0053 gs=002b efl=00010246
crashy_program!crashpad::`anonymous namespace'::SomeCrashyFunction+0x28:
00384828 c7002a000000 mov dword ptr [eax],2Ah ds:002b:00000007=????????
0:000> !peb
PEB at 7e383000
error 1 InitTypeRead( nt!_PEB at 7e383000)...
Now:
0:000> .ecxr
eax=00000007 ebx=7f958000 ecx=02102f4d edx=00000000 esi=00e162d0 edi=01389280
eip=01344828 esp=00c2fb64 ebp=00c2fb68 iopl=0 nv up ei pl zr na pe nc
cs=0023 ss=002b ds=002b es=002b fs=0053 gs=002b efl=00010246
crashy_program!crashpad::`anonymous namespace'::SomeCrashyFunction+0x28:
01344828 c7002a000000 mov dword ptr [eax],2Ah ds:002b:00000007=????????
0:000> !peb
PEB at 7f958000
InheritedAddressSpace: No
ReadImageFileExecOptions: No
BeingDebugged: No
ImageBaseAddress: 01340000
Ldr 77ec8b40
*** unable to read Ldr table at 77ec8b40
SubSystemData: 00000000
ProcessHeap: 00e10000
ProcessParameters: 00e114e0
CurrentDirectory: '< Name not readable >'
WindowTitle: '< Name not readable >'
ImageFile: '< Name not readable >'
CommandLine: '< Name not readable >'
DllPath: '< Name not readable >'
Environment: 00000000
Unable to read Environment string.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:46
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1364053002 .
Removes the bitness-specific targets in favour of pulling binaries from
the other build directory. This is to avoid the added complexity of
duplicating all the targets for the x86 in x64 build.
Overall, mostly templatizing more functions to support the
wow64-flavoured structures. The only additional functionality required
is reading the x86 TEB that's chained from the x64 TEB when running
as WOW64.
The crashing child test was switched to a manual CreateProcess because
it needs to launch a binary other than itself.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:50
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1349313003 .
A few function implementations that were missing, various switches
for functions/functionality that didn't exist on XP, and far too long
figuring out what exactly was wrong with SYSTEM_PROCESS_INFORMATION
on x86 (the "alignment_for_x86" fields).
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1, crashpad:50, chromium:531663
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1336823002 .
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 .
Now that we have a multiprocess test harness, add a test for
ProcessReaderWin for reading from a child.
Parent test code wasn't closing handles properly; fix that.
R=rsesek@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1160843006
Retrieve context and save to thread context. NtQueryInformationThread
is no longer required (right now?) because to retrieve the CONTEXT, the
thread needs to be Suspend/ResumeThread'd anyway, and the return value
of SuspendThread is the previous SuspendCount.
I haven't handle the x86 case yet -- that would ideally be via
Wow64GetThreadContext (I think) but unfortunately that's Vista+, so I'll
likely need to to a bit of fiddling to get that sorted out. (It's actually
likely going to be NtQueryInformationThread again, but one thing at a
time for now.)
R=cpu@chromium.org, rsesek@chromium.orgTBR=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1133203002
The next big piece of functionality in snapshot. There's a bit more
grubbing around in the NT internals than would be nice, and it has
made me start to question the value avoiding MinidumpWriteDump. But
this seems to extract most of the data we need (I haven't pulled
the cpu context yet, but I hope that won't be too hard.)
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1131473005
The main goal was to get the beginnings of module iteration and retrieval
of CrashpadInfo in snapshot. The main change for that is to move
crashpad_info_client_options[_test] down out of mac/.
This also requires adding some of the supporting code of snapshot in
ProcessReaderWin, ProcessSnapshotWin, and ModuleSnapshotWin. These are
partially copied from Mac or stubbed out with lots of TODO annotations.
This is a bit unfortunate, but seemed like the most productive way to
make progress incrementally. That is, it's mostly placeholder at the
moment, but hopefully has the right shape for things to come.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1052813002
Mostly size_t <-> unsigned int warnings, but I also had a mistake in
PROCESS_BASIC_INFORMATION, the pids are 32-on-32 and 64-on-64.
The Windows build is still x86 until https://codereview.chromium.org/981333002/.
I don't think I'll bother maintaining the x86 build for now, though we will probably
need it for x86 OSs in the future. It should be straightforward to revive it once we
need it, and have bots to support it.
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/983103004