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Manual Pages for UNIX Darwin command on man ptrace

PTRACE(2) BSD System Calls Manual PTRACE(2)

NAME

ppttrraaccee - process tracing and debugging

SYNOPSIS

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int ppttrraaccee(int request, pidt pid, caddrt addr, int data);

DESCRIPTION

ppttrraaccee() provides tracing and debugging facilities. It allows one process (the tracing process) to control another (the traced process). Most of the time, the traced process runs normally, but when it receives a signal (see sigaction(2)), it stops. The tracing process is expected to notice this via wait(2) or the delivery of a SIGCHLD signal, examine the state of the stopped process, and cause it to terminate or continue as appropriate. ppttrraaccee() is the mechanism by which all this happens. The request argument specifies what operation is being performed; the meaning of the rest of the arguments depends on the operation, but except for one special case noted below, all ppttrraaccee() calls are made by the tracing process, and the pid argument specifies the process ID of the traced process. request can be: PTTRACEME This request is one of two used by the traced process; it

declares that the process expects to be traced by its par-

ent. All the other arguments are ignored. (If the parent

process does not expect to trace the child, it will proba-

bly be rather confused by the results; once the traced process stops, it cannot be made to continue except via ppttrraaccee().) When a process has used this request and calls execve(2) or any of the routines built on it (such as

execv(3)), it will stop before executing the first instruc-

tion of the new image. Also, any setuid or setgid bits on the executable being executed will be ignored. PTDENYATTACH This request is the other operation used by the traced process; it allows a process that is not currently being traced to deny future traces by its parent. All other arguments are ignored. If the process is currently being

traced, it will exit with the exit status of ENOTSUP; oth-

erwise, it sets a flag that denies future traces. An attempt by the parent to trace a process which has set this flag will result in a segmentation violation in the parent. PTCONTINUE The traced process continues execution. addr is an address specifying the place where execution is to be resumed (a

new value for the program counter), or (caddrt)1 to indi-

cate that execution is to pick up where it left off. data provides a signal number to be delivered to the traced process as it resumes execution, or 0 if no signal is to be sent. PTSTEP The traced process continues execution for a single step. The parameters are identical to those passed to PTCONTINUE. PTKILL The traced process terminates, as if PTCONTINUE had been used with SIGKILL given as the signal to be delivered.

PTATTACH This request allows a process to gain control of an other-

wise unrelated process and begin tracing it. It does not

need any cooperation from the to-be-traced process. In

this case, pid specifies the process ID of the to-be-traced

process, and the other two arguments are ignored. This request requires that the target process must have the same real UID as the tracing process, and that it must not be executing a setuid or setgid executable. (If the tracing process is running as root, these restrictions do not

apply.) The tracing process will see the newly-traced

process stop and may then control it as if it had been traced all along. PTDETACH This request is like PTCONTINUE, except that it does not allow specifying an alternate place to continue execution, and after it succeeds, the traced process is no longer traced and continues execution normally. EERRRROORRSS

Some requests can cause ppttrraaccee() to return -1 as a non-error value; to

disambiguate, errno can be set to 0 before the call and checked after-

wards. The possible errors are: [ESRCH] No process having the specified process ID exists. [EINVAL] ++oo A process attempted to use PTATTACH on itself. ++oo The request was not one of the legal requests. ++oo The signal number (in data) to PTCONTINUE was neither 0 nor a legal signal number. ++oo PTGETREGS, PTSETREGS, PTGETFPREGS, or PTSETFPREGS was attempted on a process with no valid register set. (This is normally true only of system processes.) [EBUSY] ++oo PTATTACH was attempted on a process that was already being traced. ++oo A request attempted to manipulate a process that was being traced by some process other than the one making the request. ++oo A request (other than PTATTACH) specified a process that wasn't stopped. [EPERM] ++oo A request (other than PTATTACH) attempted to manipulate a process that wasn't being traced at all. ++oo An attempt was made to use PTATTACH on a process in violation of the requirements listed under PTATTACH above. BSD November 7, 1994 BSD




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