#include "git-compat-util.h" #include "strbuf.h" #include "strvec.h" #include "trace2.h" /* * We need more complex parsing in stat_parent_pid() and * parse_proc_stat() below than a dumb fscanf(). That's because while * the statcomm field is surrounded by parentheses, the process itself * is free to insert any arbitrary byte sequence its its name. That * can include newlines, spaces, closing parentheses etc. * * See do_task_stat() in fs/proc/array.c in linux.git, this is in * contrast with the escaped version of the name found in * /proc/%d/status. * * So instead of using fscanf() we'll read N bytes from it, look for * the first "(", and then the last ")", anything in-between is our * process name. * * How much N do we need? On Linux /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max is 2^15 by * default, but it can be raised set to values of up to 2^22. So * that's 7 digits for a PID. We have 2 PIDs in the first four fields * we're interested in, so 2 * 7 = 14. * * We then have 3 spaces between those four values, and we'd like to * get to the space between the 4th and the 5th (the "pgrp" field) to * make sure we read the entire "ppid" field. So that brings us up to * 14 + 3 + 1 = 18. Add the two parentheses around the "comm" value * and it's 20. The "state" value itself is then one character (now at * 21). * * Finally the maximum length of the "comm" name itself is 15 * characters, e.g. a setting of "123456789abcdefg" will be truncated * to "123456789abcdef". See PR_SET_NAME in prctl(2). So all in all * we'd need to read 21 + 15 = 36 bytes. * * Let's just read 2^6 (64) instead for good measure. If PID_MAX ever * grows past 2^22 we'll be future-proof. We'll then anchor at the * last ")" we find to locate the parent PID. */ #define STAT_PARENT_PID_READ_N 64 static int parse_proc_stat(struct strbuf *sb, struct strbuf *name, int *statppid) { const char *comm_lhs = strchr(sb->buf, '('); const char *comm_rhs = strrchr(sb->buf, ')'); const char *ppid_lhs, *ppid_rhs; char *p; pid_t ppid; if (!comm_lhs || !comm_rhs) goto bad_kernel; /* * We're at the ")", that's followed by " X ", where X is a * single "state" character. So advance by 4 bytes. */ ppid_lhs = comm_rhs + 4; /* * Read until the space between the "ppid" and "pgrp" fields * to make sure we're anchored after the untruncated "ppid" * field.. */ ppid_rhs = strchr(ppid_lhs, ' '); if (!ppid_rhs) goto bad_kernel; ppid = strtol(ppid_lhs, &p, 10); if (ppid_rhs == p) { const char *comm = comm_lhs + 1; size_t commlen = comm_rhs - comm; strbuf_add(name, comm, commlen); *statppid = ppid; return 0; } bad_kernel: /* * We were able to read our STAT_PARENT_PID_READ_N bytes from * /proc/%d/stat, but the content is bad. Broken kernel? * Should not happen, but handle it gracefully. */ return -1; } static int stat_parent_pid(pid_t pid, struct strbuf *name, int *statppid) { struct strbuf procfs_path = STRBUF_INIT; struct strbuf sb = STRBUF_INIT; FILE *fp; int ret = -1; /* try to use procfs if it's present. */ strbuf_addf(&procfs_path, "/proc/%d/stat", pid); fp = fopen(procfs_path.buf, "r"); if (!fp) goto cleanup; /* * We could be more strict here and assert that we read at * least STAT_PARENT_PID_READ_N. My reading of procfs(5) is * that on any modern kernel (at least since 2.6.0 released in * 2003) even if all the mandatory numeric fields were zero'd * out we'd get at least 100 bytes, but let's just check that * we got anything at all and trust the parse_proc_stat() * function to handle its "Bad Kernel?" error checking. */ if (!strbuf_fread(&sb, STAT_PARENT_PID_READ_N, fp)) goto cleanup; if (parse_proc_stat(&sb, name, statppid) < 0) goto cleanup; ret = 0; cleanup: if (fp) fclose(fp); strbuf_release(&procfs_path); strbuf_release(&sb); return ret; } static void push_ancestry_name(struct strvec *names, pid_t pid) { struct strbuf name = STRBUF_INIT; int ppid; if (stat_parent_pid(pid, &name, &ppid) < 0) goto cleanup; strvec_push(names, name.buf); /* * Both errors and reaching the end of the process chain are * reported as fields of 0 by proc(5) */ if (ppid) push_ancestry_name(names, ppid); cleanup: strbuf_release(&name); return; } void trace2_collect_process_info(enum trace2_process_info_reason reason) { struct strvec names = STRVEC_INIT; if (!trace2_is_enabled()) return; switch (reason) { case TRACE2_PROCESS_INFO_EXIT: /* * The Windows version of this calls its * get_peak_memory_info() here. We may want to insert * similar process-end statistics here in the future. */ break; case TRACE2_PROCESS_INFO_STARTUP: push_ancestry_name(&names, getppid()); if (names.nr) trace2_cmd_ancestry(names.v); strvec_clear(&names); break; } return; }