Introduce a new test case that is derived from test-resume-sig, but
using the SA_SIGINFO sigaction() flag. This case is referred in the
linux kernel sources as "realtime" signal handler, and is handled
differently in the kernel on many architectures and in libunwind as
well.
Program test-coredump-unwind was modified to map backing files based on
virtual addresses instead of segment numbers.
The crasher.c is a program that essentially calls some functions and
then writes to invalid address causing a crash. Before that, it detects
which executables are mapped to which virtual addresses and writes this
information to a file suitable for consumption by test-coredump-unwind.
The mapping information is obtained form /proc/self/maps, so currently
it only works on linux.
The test itself is a shell script, which first runs the program and then
runs test-coredump-unwind on the resulting core and address space
map file to check whether the stack trace obtained from the dump roughly
corresponds to what it should look like.
Signed-off-by: Martin Milata <mmilata@redhat.com>
We'd like to avoid calls to all malloc related functions
so libunwind is still usable from such allocators.
Signed-off-by: Paul Pluzhnikov <ppluzhnikov@google.com>
This test case relies on old libunwind internals such as the arm_stackframe.
Since the ARM extbtl-parser now operates on the DWARF model directly the
arm-extbl-test isn't of any particular use anymore.
Signed-off-by: Ken Werner <ken.werner@linaro.org>