diff options
author | Masoud Asgharifard Sharbiani <masouds@google.com> | 2007-07-22 11:12:28 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@woody.linux-foundation.org> | 2007-07-22 11:03:37 -0700 |
commit | abd4f7505bafdd6c5319fe3cb5caf9af6104e17a (patch) | |
tree | a543fce720331dbf6194a2c0471f36b7727b9736 /include/linux/signal.h | |
parent | 5fa63fccc579ac609fc7f86d29ccb3a2edf910d7 (diff) |
x86: i386-show-unhandled-signals-v3
This patch makes the i386 behave the same way that x86_64 does when a
segfault happens. A line gets printed to the kernel log so that tools
that need to check for failures can behave more uniformly between
debug.show_unhandled_signals sysctl variable to 0 (or by doing echo 0 >
/proc/sys/debug/exception-trace)
Also, all of the lines being printed are now using printk_ratelimit() to
deny the ability of DoS from a local user with a program like the
following:
main()
{
while (1)
if (!fork()) *(int *)0 = 0;
}
This new revision also includes the fix that Andrew did which got rid of
new sysctl that was added to the system in earlier versions of this.
Also, 'show-unhandled-signals' sysctl has been renamed back to the old
'exception-trace' to avoid breakage of people's scripts.
AK: Enabling by default for i386 will be likely controversal, but let's see what happens
AK: Really folks, before complaining just fix your segfaults
AK: I bet this will find a lot of silent issues
Signed-off-by: Masoud Sharbiani <masouds@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de>
[ Personally, I've found the complaints useful on x86-64, so I'm all for
this. That said, I wonder if we could do it more prettily.. -Linus ]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/signal.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/linux/signal.h | 3 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/signal.h b/include/linux/signal.h index ea91abe740da..0ae338866240 100644 --- a/include/linux/signal.h +++ b/include/linux/signal.h @@ -237,12 +237,15 @@ extern int group_send_sig_info(int sig, struct siginfo *info, struct task_struct extern int __group_send_sig_info(int, struct siginfo *, struct task_struct *); extern long do_sigpending(void __user *, unsigned long); extern int sigprocmask(int, sigset_t *, sigset_t *); +extern int show_unhandled_signals; struct pt_regs; extern int get_signal_to_deliver(siginfo_t *info, struct k_sigaction *return_ka, struct pt_regs *regs, void *cookie); extern struct kmem_cache *sighand_cachep; +int unhandled_signal(struct task_struct *tsk, int sig); + /* * In POSIX a signal is sent either to a specific thread (Linux task) * or to the process as a whole (Linux thread group). How the signal |