blob: 51fb94076fcf92628c6e06674051bd1de232a934 (
plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
|
/*
* Copyright (C) 2002 Jeff Dike (jdike@karaya.com)
* Licensed under the GPL
*/
#include "linux/sys.h"
#include "linux/ptrace.h"
#include "asm/errno.h"
#include "asm/unistd.h"
#include "asm/ptrace.h"
#include "asm/current.h"
#include "sysdep/syscalls.h"
#include "kern_util.h"
#include "syscall.h"
void handle_syscall(union uml_pt_regs *r)
{
struct pt_regs *regs = container_of(r, struct pt_regs, regs);
long result;
int syscall;
#ifdef UML_CONFIG_SYSCALL_DEBUG
int index;
index = record_syscall_start(UPT_SYSCALL_NR(r));
#endif
syscall_trace(r, 0);
current->thread.nsyscalls++;
nsyscalls++;
/* This should go in the declaration of syscall, but when I do that,
* strace -f -c bash -c 'ls ; ls' breaks, sometimes not tracing
* children at all, sometimes hanging when bash doesn't see the first
* ls exit.
* The assembly looks functionally the same to me. This is
* gcc version 4.0.1 20050727 (Red Hat 4.0.1-5)
* in case it's a compiler bug.
*/
syscall = UPT_SYSCALL_NR(r);
if((syscall >= NR_syscalls) || (syscall < 0))
result = -ENOSYS;
else result = EXECUTE_SYSCALL(syscall, regs);
REGS_SET_SYSCALL_RETURN(r->skas.regs, result);
syscall_trace(r, 1);
#ifdef UML_CONFIG_SYSCALL_DEBUG
record_syscall_end(index, result);
#endif
}
|