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Re: [non-stop] 08/10 linux native support
On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 10:17:25PM +0100, Pedro Alves wrote:
> > This may be trouble. Sometimes the thread state is not
> > atomically updated, so peeking at it right after creation but before
> > an event can fail.
> >
>
> Oh, that's not nice. Is this something that's worth and/or possible
> to fix in libthreaddb?
I don't remember whether it's fixed in current libthread_db, or else
impossible to fix due to the kernel interfaces involved. There's
tension between having the thread on the list early enough and having
its entry be correct. I know I wrote a related kernel patch, which
was never merged. libthread_db is better about this than it used to
be though.
> > Why is it necessary? We already know the ptid since we made them
> > independent of thread_db TID some time ago. attach_thread should cope
> > if the thread is already in GDB's thread list when the event
> > eventually arrives. So we should be able to just add the new
> > thread directly.
>
> That's right, the only thing we'll miss if we do that, is the
> thread_db id of the thread in output like:
>
> [New Thread 0xf7e11b90 (LWP 26100)]
> ^^^^^^^^
> And info threads:
>
> 2 Thread 0xf7e11b90 (LWP 26100) (running)
> ^^^^^^^^
>
> Those will only show up on the next stop event (of any thread).
> It may take a while, if all threads are running (unless we do
> momentarily stop threads trick).
Oh, dear. Options:
- delay the notification until thread_db discovers the thread,
if libthread_db is already active
- display the notification without the thread ID; we'll have the
LWP ID and we could add the GDB thread number
- go with your code and fix broken situations as they arise
I'm undecided. Note that your code is unnecessarily quadratic, by the
way. It'll walk the entire thread list; we could just load the new
thread since we know its LWP ID. libthread_db may still do a walk in
that case though...
> > SIGKILL should work even if the thread is stopped.
>
> I think I'll need a SIGCONT as well in that case. For some
> reason, I wasn't getting that to work all the times. I'll
> experiment some more.
Kernels may vary in this regard. Your code seems reasonable.
PTRACE_KILL is supposed to be just SIGKILL + PTRACE_CONT, and SIGKILL
is supposed to work even on stopped processes, but the details come
and go... as you know, signal handling is a very touchy area and hard
to write tests for.
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery