@@ -25,6 +25,18 @@ impl Drop for Handler {
2525 }
2626}
2727
28+ #[ cfg( any(
29+ target_os = "linux" ,
30+ target_os = "freebsd" ,
31+ target_os = "hurd" ,
32+ target_os = "macos" ,
33+ target_os = "netbsd" ,
34+ target_os = "openbsd" ,
35+ target_os = "solaris" ,
36+ target_os = "illumos" ,
37+ ) ) ]
38+ mod thread_info;
39+
2840#[ cfg( any(
2941 target_os = "linux" ,
3042 target_os = "freebsd" ,
@@ -46,22 +58,13 @@ mod imp {
4658 use libc:: { mmap64, mprotect, munmap} ;
4759
4860 use super :: Handler ;
49- use crate :: cell :: Cell ;
61+ use super :: thread_info :: { delete_current_info , set_current_info , with_current_info } ;
5062 use crate :: ops:: Range ;
5163 use crate :: sync:: OnceLock ;
5264 use crate :: sync:: atomic:: { Atomic , AtomicBool , AtomicPtr , AtomicUsize , Ordering } ;
5365 use crate :: sys:: pal:: unix:: os;
54- use crate :: { io, mem, ptr, thread} ;
55-
56- // We use a TLS variable to store the address of the guard page. While TLS
57- // variables are not guaranteed to be signal-safe, this works out in practice
58- // since we make sure to write to the variable before the signal stack is
59- // installed, thereby ensuring that the variable is always allocated when
60- // the signal handler is called.
61- thread_local ! {
62- // FIXME: use `Range` once that implements `Copy`.
63- static GUARD : Cell <( usize , usize ) > = const { Cell :: new( ( 0 , 0 ) ) } ;
64- }
66+ use crate :: thread:: with_current_name;
67+ use crate :: { io, mem, panic, ptr} ;
6568
6669 // Signal handler for the SIGSEGV and SIGBUS handlers. We've got guard pages
6770 // (unmapped pages) at the end of every thread's stack, so if a thread ends
@@ -93,29 +96,37 @@ mod imp {
9396 info : * mut libc:: siginfo_t ,
9497 _data : * mut libc:: c_void ,
9598 ) {
96- let ( start, end) = GUARD . get ( ) ;
9799 // SAFETY: this pointer is provided by the system and will always point to a valid `siginfo_t`.
98- let addr = unsafe { ( * info) . si_addr ( ) . addr ( ) } ;
100+ let fault_addr = unsafe { ( * info) . si_addr ( ) . addr ( ) } ;
101+
102+ // `with_current_info` expects that the process aborts after it is
103+ // called. If the signal was not caused by a memory access, this might
104+ // not be true. We detect this by noticing that the `si_addr` field is
105+ // zero if the signal is synthetic.
106+ if fault_addr == 0 {
107+ return ;
108+ }
99109
100- // If the faulting address is within the guard page, then we print a
101- // message saying so and abort.
102- if start <= addr && addr < end {
103- thread:: with_current_name ( |name| {
104- let name = name. unwrap_or ( "<unknown>" ) ;
110+ with_current_info ( |thread_info| {
111+ // If the faulting address is within the guard page, then we print a
112+ // message saying so and abort.
113+ if let Some ( thread_info) = thread_info
114+ && thread_info. guard_page_range . contains ( & fault_addr)
115+ {
116+ let name = thread_info. thread_name . as_deref ( ) . unwrap_or ( "<unknown>" ) ;
105117 rtprintpanic ! ( "\n thread '{name}' has overflowed its stack\n " ) ;
106- } ) ;
107-
108- rtabort ! ( "stack overflow" ) ;
109- } else {
110- // Unregister ourselves by reverting back to the default behavior.
111- // SAFETY: assuming all platforms define struct sigaction as "zero-initializable"
112- let mut action: sigaction = unsafe { mem:: zeroed ( ) } ;
113- action. sa_sigaction = SIG_DFL ;
114- // SAFETY: pray this is a well-behaved POSIX implementation of fn sigaction
115- unsafe { sigaction ( signum, & action, ptr:: null_mut ( ) ) } ;
116-
117- // See comment above for why this function returns.
118- }
118+ rtabort ! ( "stack overflow" ) ;
119+ } else {
120+ // Unregister ourselves by reverting back to the default behavior.
121+ // SAFETY: assuming all platforms define struct sigaction as "zero-initializable"
122+ let mut action: sigaction = unsafe { mem:: zeroed ( ) } ;
123+ action. sa_sigaction = SIG_DFL ;
124+ // SAFETY: pray this is a well-behaved POSIX implementation of fn sigaction
125+ unsafe { sigaction ( signum, & action, ptr:: null_mut ( ) ) } ;
126+
127+ // See comment above for why this function returns.
128+ }
129+ } )
119130 }
120131
121132 static PAGE_SIZE : Atomic < usize > = AtomicUsize :: new ( 0 ) ;
@@ -128,9 +139,7 @@ mod imp {
128139 pub unsafe fn init ( ) {
129140 PAGE_SIZE . store ( os:: page_size ( ) , Ordering :: Relaxed ) ;
130141
131- // Always write to GUARD to ensure the TLS variable is allocated.
132- let guard = unsafe { install_main_guard ( ) . unwrap_or ( 0 ..0 ) } ;
133- GUARD . set ( ( guard. start , guard. end ) ) ;
142+ let mut guard_page_range = unsafe { install_main_guard ( ) } ;
134143
135144 // SAFETY: assuming all platforms define struct sigaction as "zero-initializable"
136145 let mut action: sigaction = unsafe { mem:: zeroed ( ) } ;
@@ -145,7 +154,13 @@ mod imp {
145154 let handler = unsafe { make_handler ( true ) } ;
146155 MAIN_ALTSTACK . store ( handler. data , Ordering :: Relaxed ) ;
147156 mem:: forget ( handler) ;
157+
158+ if let Some ( guard_page_range) = guard_page_range. take ( ) {
159+ let thread_name = with_current_name ( |name| name. map ( Box :: from) ) ;
160+ set_current_info ( guard_page_range, thread_name) ;
161+ }
148162 }
163+
149164 action. sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO | SA_ONSTACK ;
150165 action. sa_sigaction = signal_handler as sighandler_t ;
151166 // SAFETY: only overriding signals if the default is set
@@ -214,9 +229,10 @@ mod imp {
214229 }
215230
216231 if !main_thread {
217- // Always write to GUARD to ensure the TLS variable is allocated.
218- let guard = unsafe { current_guard ( ) } . unwrap_or ( 0 ..0 ) ;
219- GUARD . set ( ( guard. start , guard. end ) ) ;
232+ if let Some ( guard_page_range) = unsafe { current_guard ( ) } {
233+ let thread_name = with_current_name ( |name| name. map ( Box :: from) ) ;
234+ set_current_info ( guard_page_range, thread_name) ;
235+ }
220236 }
221237
222238 // SAFETY: assuming stack_t is zero-initializable
@@ -261,6 +277,8 @@ mod imp {
261277 // a mapping that started one page earlier, so walk back a page and unmap from there.
262278 unsafe { munmap ( data. sub ( page_size) , sigstack_size + page_size) } ;
263279 }
280+
281+ delete_current_info ( ) ;
264282 }
265283
266284 /// Modern kernels on modern hardware can have dynamic signal stack sizes.
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