In a SIGILL handler, how can I skip the offending

2020-07-18 03:00发布

问题:

I'm going JIT code generation, and I want to insert invalid opcodes into the stream in order to perform some meta-debugging. Everything is fine and good until it hits the instruction, at which point the thing goes into an infinite loop of illegal instruction to signal handler and back.

Is there any way I can set the thing to simply skip the bad instruction?

回答1:

It's very hacky and UNPORTABLE but:

void sighandler (int signo, siginfo_t si, void *data) {
    ucontext_t *uc = (ucontext_t *)data;

    int instruction_length = /* the length of the "instruction" to skip */

    uc->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_RIP] += instruction_length;
}

install the sighandler like that:

struct sigaction sa, osa;
sa.sa_flags = SA_ONSTACK | SA_RESTART | SA_SIGINFO;
sa.sa_sigaction = sighandler;
sigaction(SIGILL, &sa, &osa);

That could work if you know how far to skip (and it's a Intel proc) :-)



回答2:

You can also try another approach (if it applies to your case): you can use a SIGTRAP which is easier to manage.

void sigtrap_handler(int sig){
    printf("Process %d received sigtrap %d.\n", getpid(),sig);
}

signal(SIGTRAP,sigtrap_handler);
asm("int3"); // causes a SIGTRAP