From: Kingsley Cheung <kingsley@aurema.com>
To: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>
Cc: davidm@hpl.hp.com, davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com,
peter@chubb.wattle.id.au, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
Daniel Jacobowitz <dan@debian.org>
Subject: Re: /proc visibility patch breaks GDB, etc.
Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2004 08:59:41 +1100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20040227085941.A21764@aurema.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20040226120959.35b284ff.akpm@osdl.org>; from akpm@osdl.org on Thu, Feb 26, 2004 at 12:09:59PM -0800
On Thu, Feb 26, 2004 at 12:09:59PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com> wrote:
> >
> > >>>>> On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 22:44:10 -0800, Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> said:
> >
> > Andrew> Peter Chubb <peter@chubb.wattle.id.au> wrote:
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> In fs/proc/base.c:proc_pid_lookup(), the patch
> > >>
> > >> read_unlock(&tasklist_lock); if (!task) goto out; + if
> > >> (!thread_group_leader(task)) + goto out_drop_task;
> > >>
> > >> inode = proc_pid_make_inode(dir->i_sb, task, PROC_TGID_INO);
> > >>
> > >> means that threads other than the thread group leader don't
> > >> appear in the /proc top-level directory. Programs that are
> > >> informed via pid of events can no longer find the appropriate
> > >> process -- for example, using gdb on a multi-threaded process, or
> > >> profiling using perfmon.
> > >>
> > >> The immediate symptom is GDB saying: Could not open
> > >> /proc/757/status when 757 is a TID not a PID.
> >
> > Andrew> What does `ls /proc/757' say? Presumably no such file or
> > Andrew> directory? It's fairly bizare behaviour to be able to open
> > Andrew> files which don't exist according to readdir, which is why
> > Andrew> we made that change.
> >
> > Excuse, but this seems seriously FOOBAR. I understand that it's
> > interesting to see the thread-leader/thread relationship, but surely
> > that's no reason to break backwards compatibility and the ability to
> > look up _any_ task's info via /proc/PID/.
>
> Well you can't look them up - you can only open them. But I take your
> point. In another life, these things would appear under a special
> /proc/magical_directory_which_has_dopey_semantics.
>
> > A program that only wants
> > to show "processes" (thread-group leaders) can simply read
> > /proc/PID/status and ignore the entries for which Tgid != PPid.
> >
> > Perhaps you could put relative symlinks in task/? Something like
> > this:
> >
> > $ ls -l /proc/self/task
> > dr-xr-xr-x 3 davidm users 0 Feb 26 11:37 13494 -> ..
> > dr-xr-xr-x 3 davidm users 0 Feb 26 11:37 13495 -> ../../13495
> >
> > perhaps?
>
> Well the contents of /proc/pid/task are OK at present.
>
> I guess we should revert that change.
Ah, so there was some fundamental reason behind that behaviour!
Perhaps then a comment or two in the code to explain that such
behaviour (prior to change) is intended in proc_pid_lookup()? That
way it will be clear that is intended behaviour.
Am I correct to assume though that the corresponding change in
proc_task_lookup() should stay? The existing behaviour there was that
one could do say,
cat /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/stat, where tid could be any thread and not
a part of the thread group pid.
The patch that broke backwards compatibility for GDB likewise changed
that. It enforces that tid must be a part of the pid thread group.
--
Kingsley
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-02-26 22:07 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-02-26 6:27 /proc visibility patch breaks GDB, etc Peter Chubb
2004-02-26 6:44 ` Andrew Morton
2004-02-26 16:02 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2004-02-26 19:39 ` David Mosberger
2004-02-26 20:09 ` Andrew Morton
2004-02-26 21:59 ` Kingsley Cheung [this message]
2004-02-26 22:14 ` Peter Chubb
2004-02-26 23:19 ` Andrew Morton
2004-02-26 23:29 ` Kingsley Cheung
2004-02-26 23:48 ` Peter Chubb
2004-02-26 20:10 ` Peter Chubb
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