glib/gbacktrace.c

253 lines
5.4 KiB
C
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1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
/* GLIB - Library of useful routines for C programming
* Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Peter Mattis, Spencer Kimball and Josh MacDonald
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Library General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the
* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*/
#include <signal.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/times.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "glib.h"
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H
#include <sys/select.h>
#endif /* HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H */
#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
#include <string.h> /* for bzero on BSD systems */
#endif
#ifndef NO_FD_SET
# define SELECT_MASK fd_set
#else
# ifndef _AIX
typedef long fd_mask;
# endif
# if defined(_IBMR2)
# define SELECT_MASK void
# else
# define SELECT_MASK int
# endif
#endif
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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static void stack_trace (char **args);
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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extern volatile gboolean glib_on_error_halt;
volatile gboolean glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
void
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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g_on_error_query (const gchar *prg_name)
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{
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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static const gchar *query1 = "[E]xit, [H]alt";
static const gchar *query2 = ", show [S]tack trace";
static const gchar *query3 = " or [P]roceed";
gchar buf[16];
if (!prg_name)
prg_name = g_get_prgname ();
retry:
if (prg_name)
fprintf (stdout,
"%s (pid:%u): %s%s%s: ",
prg_name,
(guint) getpid (),
query1,
query2,
query3);
else
fprintf (stdout,
"(process:%u): %s%s: ",
(guint) getpid (),
query1,
query3);
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fflush (stdout);
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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fgets (buf, 8, stdin);
if ((buf[0] == 'E' || buf[0] == 'e')
&& buf[1] == '\n')
_exit (0);
else if ((buf[0] == 'P' || buf[0] == 'p')
&& buf[1] == '\n')
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
return;
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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else if (prg_name
&& (buf[0] == 'S' || buf[0] == 's')
&& buf[1] == '\n')
{
g_on_error_stack_trace (prg_name);
goto retry;
}
else if ((buf[0] == 'H' || buf[0] == 'h')
&& buf[1] == '\n')
{
while (glib_on_error_halt)
;
glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
return;
}
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
else
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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goto retry;
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}
void
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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g_on_error_stack_trace (const gchar *prg_name)
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{
pid_t pid;
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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gchar buf[16];
gchar *args[4] = { "gdb", NULL, NULL, NULL };
if (!prg_name)
return;
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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sprintf (buf, "%u", (guint) getpid ());
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
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args[1] = (gchar*) prg_name;
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args[2] = buf;
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
pid = fork ();
if (pid == 0)
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
{
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
stack_trace (args);
_exit (0);
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
}
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
else if (pid == (pid_t) -1)
{
perror ("unable to fork gdb");
return;
}
while (glib_on_error_halt)
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
;
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
}
static gboolean stack_trace_done = FALSE;
static void
stack_trace_sigchld (int signum)
{
stack_trace_done = TRUE;
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
}
static void
stack_trace (char **args)
{
pid_t pid;
int in_fd[2];
int out_fd[2];
SELECT_MASK fdset;
SELECT_MASK readset;
struct timeval tv;
int sel, index, state;
char buffer[256];
char c;
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
stack_trace_done = FALSE;
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
signal (SIGCHLD, stack_trace_sigchld);
if ((pipe (in_fd) == -1) || (pipe (out_fd) == -1))
{
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
perror ("unable to open pipe");
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
_exit (0);
}
pid = fork ();
if (pid == 0)
{
close (0); dup (in_fd[0]); /* set the stdin to the in pipe */
close (1); dup (out_fd[1]); /* set the stdout to the out pipe */
close (2); dup (out_fd[1]); /* set the stderr to the out pipe */
execvp (args[0], args); /* exec gdb */
perror ("exec failed");
_exit (0);
}
else if (pid == (pid_t) -1)
{
removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to Mon Aug 24 02:08:56 1998 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> * glib.h: * gstring.c: * gstrfuncs.c: (g_vsprintf): removed this function which was not publically exported in glib.h. to export it, it should have been named differently in the first place, since its semantics differ from vsprintf(). apart from that, it was a possible cause for problems since it worked on a previously allocated memory area and was used in a lot places of glib. exporting it would have been a guararant for problems with threaded programs. (g_printf_string_upper_bound): exported this function to return a string size, guarranteed to be big enough to hold the fully expanded format+args string. added 'q', 'L' and 'll' flag handling. in fact, the newly allocated area is in most cases much bigger than required. (g_strdup_vprintf()): new function returning a newly allocated string containing the contents of *format and associated args (size is calculated with g_printf_string_upper_bound()). (g_strdup_printf): new function which wraps g_strdup_vprintf(). * configure.in: check for va_copy() or __va_copy() alternatively. check whether va_lists can be copyied by value. * glib.h: provide a definition for G_VA_COPY. * glib.h: * gmessages.c: (g_logv): (g_vsnprintf): pass va_lists by value, not by reference, since this causes problems on platforms that implement va_list as as arrays. internaly, use G_VA_COPY (new_arg, org_arg); va_end (new_arg); to produce a second va_list variable, if multiple passes are required. changed all callers. * glib.h: * gerror.h: renamed g_debug() to g_on_error_query(), cleaned up a bit. renamed g_stack_trace() to g_on_error_stack_trace() since both functions cluttered different namespaces. there is an appropriate comment in glib.h now that explains the unix and gdb specific dependencies of both functions. removed g_attach_process(). g_on_error_stack_trace() should probably be handled with caution, i've seem several different linux versions (2.0.x) become unstable after invokation of this function.
1998-08-24 07:26:53 +02:00
perror ("unable to fork");
1998-06-11 01:21:14 +02:00
_exit (0);
}
FD_ZERO (&fdset);
FD_SET (out_fd[0], &fdset);
write (in_fd[1], "backtrace\n", 10);
write (in_fd[1], "p x = 0\n", 8);
write (in_fd[1], "quit\n", 5);
index = 0;
state = 0;
while (1)
{
readset = fdset;
tv.tv_sec = 1;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
sel = select (FD_SETSIZE, &readset, NULL, NULL, &tv);
if (sel == -1)
break;
if ((sel > 0) && (FD_ISSET (out_fd[0], &readset)))
{
if (read (out_fd[0], &c, 1))
{
switch (state)
{
case 0:
if (c == '#')
{
state = 1;
index = 0;
buffer[index++] = c;
}
break;
case 1:
buffer[index++] = c;
if ((c == '\n') || (c == '\r'))
{
buffer[index] = 0;
fprintf (stdout, "%s", buffer);
state = 0;
index = 0;
}
break;
default:
break;
}
}
}
else if (stack_trace_done)
break;
}
close (in_fd[0]);
close (in_fd[1]);
close (out_fd[0]);
close (out_fd[1]);
_exit (0);
}