Bug in rev 1.3 of sys/i386/linux/linux_ptrace.c
Bruce Evans
bde at zeta.org.au
Tue Apr 15 06:22:19 PDT 2003
On Mon, 14 Apr 2003, Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 14, 2003 at 04:12:06PM -0400, John Baldwin wrote:
> > In the linux_ptrace() function there is the following code:
> *snip*
> > /* not currently stopped */
> > if ((p->p_flag & (P_TRACED|P_WAITED)) == 0) {
> > error = EBUSY;
> > goto fail;
> > }
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Now, since we've already checked P_TRACED above, this last
> > check will never fail. The diff in rev 1.3 was:
> >
> > - if (p->p_stat != SSTOP || (p->p_flag & P_WAITED) == 0) {
> > + if ((p->p_flag & (P_TRACED|P_WAITED)) == 0) {
> >
> > So should this be (P_STOPPED|P_WAITED) instead? Or maybe just
> > (P_STOPPED_TRACE|P_WAITED)?
>
> I don't know the difference between P_STOPPED and P_STOPPED_TRACE
> but yes, we should check whether the process is stopped. The
> equivalent in sys/kern/sys_process.c is:
>
> if (!P_SHOULDSTOP(p) || (p->p_flag & P_WAITED) == 0) {
>
> P_SHOULDSTOP(p) expands to:
>
> ((p)->p_flag & P_STOPPED)
>
> Using P_STOPPED makes us bug-for-bug compatible...
Isn't it, er, terrific to have not completelty trivial signal and
ptrace code rotting differently in 1 + ${N_ARCH} * ${N_COMPAT} places ;-).
Bruce
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