* gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop
@ 2006-12-13 9:58 Denis PILAT
2006-12-13 13:37 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Denis PILAT @ 2006-12-13 9:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gdb-patches
I've found that if you revert the argument of gdbserver, means writing
the program's name before the COMM argument, it goes into an infinite
loop, and as the CTRL+C does not work, you have to kill the process from
an other shell.
In gdbserver/server.c, the loop in question does the remote_open on the
wrong passed argument (argv[1]) which unfortunately is the binary file
you'd expect to open so remote_open does not exit on error.
I think either we could check that we pass correct argument before using
start_inferior(), this is executing before the loop. The bellow patch is
in that sense.
Or we find a way to exit the loop by adding a test in it. May be by
adding something in remote_open to let it fail.
I'd like your opinion about that
Thanks
--
Denis Pilat / STMicroelectronics
Index: server.c
===================================================================
--- server.c (revision 544)
+++ server.c (working copy)
@@ -408,6 +408,13 @@ main (int argc, char *argv[])
if (pid == 0)
{
+ if (access (argv[2], F_OK) != 0)
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, "File %s does not exist.\n",argv[2]);
+ gdbserver_usage ();
+ exit (0);
+ }
+
/* Wait till we are at first instruction in program. */
signal = start_inferior (&argv[2], &status);
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop
2006-12-13 9:58 gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop Denis PILAT
@ 2006-12-13 13:37 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2006-12-13 15:46 ` Denis PILAT
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Jacobowitz @ 2006-12-13 13:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Denis PILAT; +Cc: gdb-patches
On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 10:58:14AM +0100, Denis PILAT wrote:
> I've found that if you revert the argument of gdbserver, means writing
> the program's name before the COMM argument, it goes into an infinite
> loop, and as the CTRL+C does not work, you have to kill the process from
> an other shell.
>
> In gdbserver/server.c, the loop in question does the remote_open on the
> wrong passed argument (argv[1]) which unfortunately is the binary file
> you'd expect to open so remote_open does not exit on error.
>
> I think either we could check that we pass correct argument before using
> start_inferior(), this is executing before the loop. The bellow patch is
> in that sense.
>
> Or we find a way to exit the loop by adding a test in it. May be by
> adding something in remote_open to let it fail.
I doubt it's in an infinite loop. It's probably sleeping, "waiting"
for a connection. We ought to allow C-c when no debugger is
connected yet. It'd be nice if remote_open wouldn't open ordinary
files, too.
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop
2006-12-13 13:37 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
@ 2006-12-13 15:46 ` Denis PILAT
2006-12-30 15:45 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Denis PILAT @ 2006-12-13 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Denis PILAT, gdb-patches
Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 10:58:14AM +0100, Denis PILAT wrote:
>> I've found that if you revert the argument of gdbserver, means writing
>> the program's name before the COMM argument, it goes into an infinite
>> loop, and as the CTRL+C does not work, you have to kill the process from
>> an other shell.
>>
>> In gdbserver/server.c, the loop in question does the remote_open on the
>> wrong passed argument (argv[1]) which unfortunately is the binary file
>> you'd expect to open so remote_open does not exit on error.
>>
>> I think either we could check that we pass correct argument before using
>> start_inferior(), this is executing before the loop. The bellow patch is
>> in that sense.
>>
>> Or we find a way to exit the loop by adding a test in it. May be by
>> adding something in remote_open to let it fail.
>
> I doubt it's in an infinite loop. It's probably sleeping, "waiting"
> for a connection. We ought to allow C-c when no debugger is
> connected yet. It'd be nice if remote_open wouldn't open ordinary
> files, too.
>
Yes it's waiting for a connection but as arguments are wrongs it can
wait for long ...
You're right, preventing remote_open from opening ordinary files would
exit the loop.
But may be it would be better to open only character device (S_ISCHR
macro) than excluding ordinary files (S_ISREG macro). It's up to you !
Here is a patch where I made a test to open only character device. If
you right with that solution I'll propose a patch with a ChangeLog and
so on.
I took this opportunity to remove a warning on a strncpy() usage.
I'm wondering about the compilation of this code under windows. I never
compiled a gdbserver on windows, is there any gdbserver hosted under
windows ?
--
Denis
Index: remote-utils.c
===================================================================
--- remote-utils.c (revision 544)
+++ remote-utils.c (working copy)
@@ -36,6 +36,7 @@
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
+#include <sys/stat.h>
#ifndef HAVE_SOCKLEN_T
typedef int socklen_t;
@@ -68,10 +69,24 @@ void
remote_open (char *name)
{
int save_fcntl_flags;
-
- if (!strchr (name, ':'))
+ char *port_str;
+
+ port_str = strchr (name, ':');
+
+ /* if name is not of kind "HOST:PORT" it must be tty device. */
+ if (!port_str)
{
- remote_desc = open (name, O_RDWR);
+ struct stat status;
+ int stat_result;
+ remote_desc = -1;
+
+ /* Open only character device. */
+ stat_result = stat(name, &status);
+ if (!stat_result && S_ISCHR(status.st_mode))
+ {
+ remote_desc = open (name, O_RDWR);
+ }
+
if (remote_desc < 0)
perror_with_name ("Could not open remote device");
@@ -123,14 +138,11 @@ remote_open (char *name)
}
else
{
- char *port_str;
int port;
struct sockaddr_in sockaddr;
socklen_t tmp;
int tmp_desc;
- port_str = strchr (name, ':');
-
port = atoi (port_str + 1);
tmp_desc = socket (PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
@@ -650,7 +662,7 @@ prepare_resume_reply (char *buf, char st
CORE_ADDR addr;
int i;
- strncpy (buf, "watch:", 6);
+ buf = strncpy (buf, "watch:", 6);
buf += 6;
addr = (*the_target->stopped_data_address) ();
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop
2006-12-13 15:46 ` Denis PILAT
@ 2006-12-30 15:45 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-01-03 9:08 ` Denis PILAT
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Jacobowitz @ 2006-12-30 15:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Denis PILAT; +Cc: gdb-patches
On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 04:45:53PM +0100, Denis PILAT wrote:
> But may be it would be better to open only character device (S_ISCHR
> macro) than excluding ordinary files (S_ISREG macro). It's up to you !
Good idea. FIFOs are OK too. I've committed a nicer version of this.
> I took this opportunity to remove a warning on a strncpy() usage.
Why did it warn? I omitted this bit, because I don't see any reason
(or any warning).
> I'm wondering about the compilation of this code under windows. I never
> compiled a gdbserver on windows, is there any gdbserver hosted under
> windows ?
If you were working against HEAD, you'd see that there was now - but
we don't support serial ports there, so it's not a problem. It's all
#ifdef'd out.
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery
2006-12-30 Denis PILAT <denis.pilat@st.com>
Daniel Jacobowitz <dan@codesourcery.com>
* remote-utils.c (remote_open): Check the type of specified
serial port devices before opening them.
* server.c (main): Kill the inferior if an error occurs during
the first remote_open.
Index: remote-utils.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/gdbserver/remote-utils.c,v
retrieving revision 1.34
diff -u -p -r1.34 remote-utils.c
--- remote-utils.c 16 Nov 2006 15:08:25 -0000 1.34
+++ remote-utils.c 30 Dec 2006 15:23:37 -0000
@@ -52,6 +52,8 @@
#if HAVE_ARPA_INET_H
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#endif
+#include <sys/stat.h>
+#include <errno.h>
#if USE_WIN32API
#include <winsock.h>
@@ -94,13 +96,25 @@ remote_open (char *name)
#if defined(F_SETFL) && defined (FASYNC)
int save_fcntl_flags;
#endif
-
- if (!strchr (name, ':'))
+ char *port_str;
+
+ port_str = strchr (name, ':');
+ if (port_str == NULL)
{
#ifdef USE_WIN32API
error ("Only <host>:<port> is supported on this platform.");
#else
- remote_desc = open (name, O_RDWR);
+ struct stat statbuf;
+
+ if (stat (name, &statbuf) == 0
+ && (S_ISCHR (statbuf.st_mode) || S_ISFIFO (statbuf.st_mode)))
+ remote_desc = open (name, O_RDWR);
+ else
+ {
+ errno = EINVAL;
+ remote_desc = -1;
+ }
+
if (remote_desc < 0)
perror_with_name ("Could not open remote device");
Index: server.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c,v
retrieving revision 1.42
diff -u -p -r1.42 server.c
--- server.c 16 Nov 2006 15:08:25 -0000 1.42
+++ server.c 30 Dec 2006 15:23:37 -0000
@@ -614,6 +614,13 @@ main (int argc, char *argv[])
}
}
+ if (setjmp (toplevel))
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, "Killing inferior\n");
+ kill_inferior ();
+ exit (1);
+ }
+
while (1)
{
remote_open (argv[1]);
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: gdbserver with reversed arguments goes into an infinite loop
2006-12-30 15:45 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
@ 2007-01-03 9:08 ` Denis PILAT
0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Denis PILAT @ 2007-01-03 9:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Denis PILAT, gdb-patches
Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 04:45:53PM +0100, Denis PILAT wrote:
>
>> But may be it would be better to open only character device (S_ISCHR
>> macro) than excluding ordinary files (S_ISREG macro). It's up to you !
>>
>
> Good idea. FIFOs are OK too. I've committed a nicer version of this.
>
>
>> I took this opportunity to remove a warning on a strncpy() usage.
>>
>
> Why did it warn? I omitted this bit, because I don't see any reason
> (or any warning).
>
>
>> I'm wondering about the compilation of this code under windows. I never
>> compiled a gdbserver on windows, is there any gdbserver hosted under
>> windows ?
>>
>
> If you were working against HEAD, you'd see that there was now - but
> we don't support serial ports there, so it's not a problem. It's all
> #ifdef'd out.
>
>
Daniel,
Thanks for your commit, I was working on a 6.5 version, so far from the
HEAD.
About the warning, gcc4.1.1 emit the following:
remote-utils.c:653: warning: value computed is not used
I think it is because the returned value of strncpy is not used but it
seems to be a gcc4.1 problem. Moreover it occures only in -01 or -02.
About your patch, the infinite loop has gone but I'm having a
segmentation fault when argument are reversed.
I'm about to propose a patch in a new mail to avoid confusion.
Denis
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
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