On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 5:23 PM, Dan Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In the last episode (Dec 03), Vlad GALU said: >> I'm running a statically linked binary, which I've built inside a >> jail. The jail's libc & co are in sync with the host's. Truss then >> shows this: >> >> -- cut here -- >> -- UNKNOWN SYSCALL 1048532 -- >> -- UNKNOWN SYSCALL 1048532 -- > > Is this a threaded app that you attached truss to after it was started? > The method that truss uses to catch syscall enter/exit events doesn't > indicate whether the event is an enter or an exit, so if you attach > while a syscall is active, truss handles the exit event as if it were a > syscall entry event, and never gets back in synch. It gets worse with > threaded apps because each thread is another chance to get out of > synch. Try this patch: > > Index: i386-fbsd.c > =================================================================== > RCS file: /home/ncvs/src/usr.bin/truss/i386-fbsd.c,v > retrieving revision 1.29 > diff -u -p -r1.29 i386-fbsd.c > --- i386-fbsd.c 28 Jul 2007 23:15:04 -0000 1.29 > +++ i386-fbsd.c 3 Dec 2008 15:20:09 -0000 > @@ -149,7 +149,14 @@ i386_syscall_entry(struct trussinfo *tru > fsc.name = > (syscall_num < 0 || syscall_num > nsyscalls) ? NULL : > syscallnames[syscall_num]; > if (!fsc.name) { > - fprintf(trussinfo->outfile, "-- UNKNOWN SYSCALL %d --\n", syscall_num); > + fprintf(trussinfo->outfile, "-- UNKNOWN SYSCALL %u (0x%08x) --\n", > syscall_num, syscall_num); > + if ((unsigned int)syscall_num > 0x1000) { > + /* When attaching to a running process, we have a 50-50 chance > + of attaching to a process waiting in a syscall, which means > + our first trap is an exit instead of an entry and we're out > + of synch. Reset our flag */ > + trussinfo->curthread->in_syscall = 0; > + } > } > > if (fsc.name && (trussinfo->flags & FOLLOWFORKS) > > > -- > Dan Nelson > [EMAIL PROTECTED] >
Hi Dan, You were right, this application was indeed threaded. The messages still occur, although at a slightly lower rate. One other thing that's not particularly helpful is this: -- cut here-- read(1074283119,"\M-Ry\^A\0",7356800) = 4 (0x4) -- and here -- I obviously don't have that many descriptors in my process. I can live with the malformed message, but it's a PITA not to know which fd the read was actually made from :( -- ~/.signature: no such file or directory _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"