/* * Create NUM_THREADS threads which print "1" and sleep in pause(). * Then create another thread which prints "2", and re-execs the program. * The leader then either sleeps in pause(), or exits if $LEADER_EXIT is set. * This triggers "execve'ed thread replaces thread leader" case. * * gcc -Wall -Os -o threaded_execve threaded_execve.c * * Try running it under strace like this: * * # Should not be confused by traced execve-ing thread * # replacing traced leader: * strace -oLOG -f ./threaded_execve * * # Same, but different output mode. Output after execve * # should go into leader's LOG. file, not into execve'ed * # thread's log file: * strace -oLOG -ff ./threaded_execve * * # Should not be confused by non-traced execve-ing thread * # replacing traced leader: * strace -oLOG ./threaded_execve * ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ * In Linux 3.2, non-traced execve-ing thread does not * become traced after execve, even though it has pid == leader's pid * after execve. And yet, strace's waitpid doesn't return ECHILD. * * # Run for NUM seconds, not just one second. * # Watch top to check for memory leaks in strace: * strace -oLOG -f ./threaded_execve * */ #define NUM_THREADS 1 #define _GNU_SOURCE 1 #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* Define clone2 for all arches */ #ifdef __ia64__ extern int __clone2(int (*fn) (void *), void *child_stack_base, size_t stack_size, int flags, void *arg, ...); #define clone2 __clone2 #elif defined(__metag__) #define clone2(func, stack_base, size, flags, arg...) \ clone(func, stack_base, flags, arg) #else #define clone2(func, stack_base, size, flags, arg...) \ clone(func, (stack_base) + (size), flags, arg) #endif /* Direct calls to syscalls, avoiding libc wrappers */ #define syscall_tgkill(pid, tid, sig) syscall(__NR_tgkill, (pid), (tid), (sig)) #define syscall_getpid() syscall(__NR_getpid) #define syscall_gettid() syscall(__NR_gettid) #define syscall_exit(v) syscall(__NR_exit, (v)); static char my_name[PATH_MAX]; static int leader_final_action; static int thread1(void *unused) { write(1, "1", 1); for(;;) pause(); return 0; } static int thread2(void *unused) { char buf[64]; sprintf(buf, "%d", leader_final_action); write(1, "2", 1); usleep(20*1000); /* This fails with ENOENT if leader has exited by now! :) */ execl("/proc/self/exe", "exe", "exe", buf, NULL); /* So fall back to resolved name */ execl(my_name, "exe", "exe", buf, NULL); for(;;) pause(); return 0; } static void thread_leader(void) { /* malloc gives sufficiently aligned buffer. * long buf[] does not! (on ia64). */ int cnt = NUM_THREADS; while (--cnt >= 0) { /* As seen in pthread_create(): */ clone2(thread1, malloc(16 * 1024), 16 * 1024, 0 | CLONE_VM | CLONE_FS | CLONE_FILES | CLONE_SIGHAND | CLONE_THREAD | CLONE_SYSVSEM | 0 /* no signal to send on death */ , NULL); usleep(20*1000); } clone2(thread2, malloc(16 * 1024), 16 * 1024, 0 | CLONE_VM | CLONE_FS | CLONE_FILES | CLONE_SIGHAND | CLONE_THREAD | CLONE_SYSVSEM | 0 /* no signal to send on death */ , NULL); /* Various states leader can be while other thread execve's: */ switch (leader_final_action % 3) { case 0: syscall_exit(42); /* leader is dead */ case 1: for(;;) pause(); /* leader is in syscall */ default: for(;;) continue; /* leader is in userspace */ } } int main(int argc, char **argv) { if (readlink("/proc/self/exe", my_name, sizeof(my_name)-1) <= 0) return 1; setbuf(stdout, NULL); if (argv[1] && strcmp(argv[1], "exe") == 0) { leader_final_action = atoi(argv[2]) + 1; thread_leader(); } printf("%d: thread leader\n", getpid()); alarm(argv[1] ? atoi(argv[1]) : 1); thread_leader(); return 0; }