/src/Python-3.8.3/Modules/faulthandler.c
Line  | Count  | Source  | 
1  |  | #include "Python.h"  | 
2  |  | #include "pycore_initconfig.h"  | 
3  |  | #include "pycore_traceback.h"  | 
4  |  | #include "pythread.h"  | 
5  |  | #include <signal.h>  | 
6  |  | #include <object.h>  | 
7  |  | #include <frameobject.h>  | 
8  |  | #include <signal.h>  | 
9  |  | #if defined(HAVE_PTHREAD_SIGMASK) && !defined(HAVE_BROKEN_PTHREAD_SIGMASK)  | 
10  |  | #  include <pthread.h>  | 
11  |  | #endif  | 
12  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
13  |  | #  include <windows.h>  | 
14  |  | #endif  | 
15  |  | #ifdef HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H  | 
16  |  | #  include <sys/resource.h>  | 
17  |  | #endif  | 
18  |  |  | 
19  |  | /* Allocate at maximum 100 MiB of the stack to raise the stack overflow */  | 
20  | 0  | #define STACK_OVERFLOW_MAX_SIZE (100 * 1024 * 1024)  | 
21  |  |  | 
22  |  | #define FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
23  |  |  | 
24  |  | #ifndef MS_WINDOWS  | 
25  |  |    /* register() is useless on Windows, because only SIGSEGV, SIGABRT and  | 
26  |  |       SIGILL can be handled by the process, and these signals can only be used  | 
27  |  |       with enable(), not using register() */  | 
28  |  | #  define FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
29  |  | #endif  | 
30  |  |  | 
31  | 0  | #define PUTS(fd, str) _Py_write_noraise(fd, str, strlen(str))  | 
32  |  |  | 
33  |  | _Py_IDENTIFIER(enable);  | 
34  |  | _Py_IDENTIFIER(fileno);  | 
35  |  | _Py_IDENTIFIER(flush);  | 
36  |  | _Py_IDENTIFIER(stderr);  | 
37  |  |  | 
38  |  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
39  |  | typedef struct sigaction _Py_sighandler_t;  | 
40  |  | #else  | 
41  |  | typedef PyOS_sighandler_t _Py_sighandler_t;  | 
42  |  | #endif  | 
43  |  |  | 
44  |  | typedef struct { | 
45  |  |     int signum;  | 
46  |  |     int enabled;  | 
47  |  |     const char* name;  | 
48  |  |     _Py_sighandler_t previous;  | 
49  |  |     int all_threads;  | 
50  |  | } fault_handler_t;  | 
51  |  |  | 
52  |  | static struct { | 
53  |  |     int enabled;  | 
54  |  |     PyObject *file;  | 
55  |  |     int fd;  | 
56  |  |     int all_threads;  | 
57  |  |     PyInterpreterState *interp;  | 
58  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
59  |  |     void *exc_handler;  | 
60  |  | #endif  | 
61  |  | } fatal_error = {0, NULL, -1, 0}; | 
62  |  |  | 
63  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
64  |  | static struct { | 
65  |  |     PyObject *file;  | 
66  |  |     int fd;  | 
67  |  |     PY_TIMEOUT_T timeout_us;   /* timeout in microseconds */  | 
68  |  |     int repeat;  | 
69  |  |     PyInterpreterState *interp;  | 
70  |  |     int exit;  | 
71  |  |     char *header;  | 
72  |  |     size_t header_len;  | 
73  |  |     /* The main thread always holds this lock. It is only released when  | 
74  |  |        faulthandler_thread() is interrupted before this thread exits, or at  | 
75  |  |        Python exit. */  | 
76  |  |     PyThread_type_lock cancel_event;  | 
77  |  |     /* released by child thread when joined */  | 
78  |  |     PyThread_type_lock running;  | 
79  |  | } thread;  | 
80  |  | #endif  | 
81  |  |  | 
82  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
83  |  | typedef struct { | 
84  |  |     int enabled;  | 
85  |  |     PyObject *file;  | 
86  |  |     int fd;  | 
87  |  |     int all_threads;  | 
88  |  |     int chain;  | 
89  |  |     _Py_sighandler_t previous;  | 
90  |  |     PyInterpreterState *interp;  | 
91  |  | } user_signal_t;  | 
92  |  |  | 
93  |  | static user_signal_t *user_signals;  | 
94  |  |  | 
95  |  | /* the following macros come from Python: Modules/signalmodule.c */  | 
96  |  | #ifndef NSIG  | 
97  |  | # if defined(_NSIG)  | 
98  |  | #  define NSIG _NSIG            /* For BSD/SysV */  | 
99  |  | # elif defined(_SIGMAX)  | 
100  |  | #  define NSIG (_SIGMAX + 1)    /* For QNX */  | 
101  |  | # elif defined(SIGMAX)  | 
102  |  | #  define NSIG (SIGMAX + 1)     /* For djgpp */  | 
103  |  | # else  | 
104  |  | #  define NSIG 64               /* Use a reasonable default value */  | 
105  |  | # endif  | 
106  |  | #endif  | 
107  |  |  | 
108  |  | static void faulthandler_user(int signum);  | 
109  |  | #endif /* FAULTHANDLER_USER */  | 
110  |  |  | 
111  |  |  | 
112  |  | static fault_handler_t faulthandler_handlers[] = { | 
113  |  | #ifdef SIGBUS  | 
114  |  |     {SIGBUS, 0, "Bus error", }, | 
115  |  | #endif  | 
116  |  | #ifdef SIGILL  | 
117  |  |     {SIGILL, 0, "Illegal instruction", }, | 
118  |  | #endif  | 
119  |  |     {SIGFPE, 0, "Floating point exception", }, | 
120  |  |     {SIGABRT, 0, "Aborted", }, | 
121  |  |     /* define SIGSEGV at the end to make it the default choice if searching the  | 
122  |  |        handler fails in faulthandler_fatal_error() */  | 
123  |  |     {SIGSEGV, 0, "Segmentation fault", } | 
124  |  | };  | 
125  |  | static const size_t faulthandler_nsignals = \  | 
126  |  |     Py_ARRAY_LENGTH(faulthandler_handlers);  | 
127  |  |  | 
128  |  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGALTSTACK  | 
129  |  | static stack_t stack;  | 
130  |  | static stack_t old_stack;  | 
131  |  | #endif  | 
132  |  |  | 
133  |  |  | 
134  |  | /* Get the file descriptor of a file by calling its fileno() method and then  | 
135  |  |    call its flush() method.  | 
136  |  |  | 
137  |  |    If file is NULL or Py_None, use sys.stderr as the new file.  | 
138  |  |    If file is an integer, it will be treated as file descriptor.  | 
139  |  |  | 
140  |  |    On success, return the file descriptor and write the new file into *file_ptr.  | 
141  |  |    On error, return -1. */  | 
142  |  |  | 
143  |  | static int  | 
144  |  | faulthandler_get_fileno(PyObject **file_ptr)  | 
145  | 0  | { | 
146  | 0  |     PyObject *result;  | 
147  | 0  |     long fd_long;  | 
148  | 0  |     int fd;  | 
149  | 0  |     PyObject *file = *file_ptr;  | 
150  |  | 
  | 
151  | 0  |     if (file == NULL || file == Py_None) { | 
152  | 0  |         file = _PySys_GetObjectId(&PyId_stderr);  | 
153  | 0  |         if (file == NULL) { | 
154  | 0  |             PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError, "unable to get sys.stderr");  | 
155  | 0  |             return -1;  | 
156  | 0  |         }  | 
157  | 0  |         if (file == Py_None) { | 
158  | 0  |             PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError, "sys.stderr is None");  | 
159  | 0  |             return -1;  | 
160  | 0  |         }  | 
161  | 0  |     }  | 
162  | 0  |     else if (PyLong_Check(file)) { | 
163  | 0  |         fd = _PyLong_AsInt(file);  | 
164  | 0  |         if (fd == -1 && PyErr_Occurred())  | 
165  | 0  |             return -1;  | 
166  | 0  |         if (fd < 0) { | 
167  | 0  |             PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,  | 
168  | 0  |                             "file is not a valid file descripter");  | 
169  | 0  |             return -1;  | 
170  | 0  |         }  | 
171  | 0  |         *file_ptr = NULL;  | 
172  | 0  |         return fd;  | 
173  | 0  |     }  | 
174  |  |  | 
175  | 0  |     result = _PyObject_CallMethodId(file, &PyId_fileno, NULL);  | 
176  | 0  |     if (result == NULL)  | 
177  | 0  |         return -1;  | 
178  |  |  | 
179  | 0  |     fd = -1;  | 
180  | 0  |     if (PyLong_Check(result)) { | 
181  | 0  |         fd_long = PyLong_AsLong(result);  | 
182  | 0  |         if (0 <= fd_long && fd_long < INT_MAX)  | 
183  | 0  |             fd = (int)fd_long;  | 
184  | 0  |     }  | 
185  | 0  |     Py_DECREF(result);  | 
186  |  | 
  | 
187  | 0  |     if (fd == -1) { | 
188  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError,  | 
189  | 0  |                         "file.fileno() is not a valid file descriptor");  | 
190  | 0  |         return -1;  | 
191  | 0  |     }  | 
192  |  |  | 
193  | 0  |     result = _PyObject_CallMethodId(file, &PyId_flush, NULL);  | 
194  | 0  |     if (result != NULL)  | 
195  | 0  |         Py_DECREF(result);  | 
196  | 0  |     else { | 
197  |  |         /* ignore flush() error */  | 
198  | 0  |         PyErr_Clear();  | 
199  | 0  |     }  | 
200  | 0  |     *file_ptr = file;  | 
201  | 0  |     return fd;  | 
202  | 0  | }  | 
203  |  |  | 
204  |  | /* Get the state of the current thread: only call this function if the current  | 
205  |  |    thread holds the GIL. Raise an exception on error. */  | 
206  |  | static PyThreadState*  | 
207  |  | get_thread_state(void)  | 
208  | 0  | { | 
209  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate = _PyThreadState_UncheckedGet();  | 
210  | 0  |     if (tstate == NULL) { | 
211  |  |         /* just in case but very unlikely... */  | 
212  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError,  | 
213  | 0  |                         "unable to get the current thread state");  | 
214  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
215  | 0  |     }  | 
216  | 0  |     return tstate;  | 
217  | 0  | }  | 
218  |  |  | 
219  |  | static void  | 
220  |  | faulthandler_dump_traceback(int fd, int all_threads,  | 
221  |  |                             PyInterpreterState *interp)  | 
222  | 0  | { | 
223  | 0  |     static volatile int reentrant = 0;  | 
224  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate;  | 
225  |  | 
  | 
226  | 0  |     if (reentrant)  | 
227  | 0  |         return;  | 
228  |  |  | 
229  | 0  |     reentrant = 1;  | 
230  |  |  | 
231  |  |     /* SIGSEGV, SIGFPE, SIGABRT, SIGBUS and SIGILL are synchronous signals and  | 
232  |  |        are thus delivered to the thread that caused the fault. Get the Python  | 
233  |  |        thread state of the current thread.  | 
234  |  |  | 
235  |  |        PyThreadState_Get() doesn't give the state of the thread that caused the  | 
236  |  |        fault if the thread released the GIL, and so this function cannot be  | 
237  |  |        used. Read the thread specific storage (TSS) instead: call  | 
238  |  |        PyGILState_GetThisThreadState(). */  | 
239  | 0  |     tstate = PyGILState_GetThisThreadState();  | 
240  |  | 
  | 
241  | 0  |     if (all_threads) { | 
242  | 0  |         (void)_Py_DumpTracebackThreads(fd, NULL, tstate);  | 
243  | 0  |     }  | 
244  | 0  |     else { | 
245  | 0  |         if (tstate != NULL)  | 
246  | 0  |             _Py_DumpTraceback(fd, tstate);  | 
247  | 0  |     }  | 
248  |  | 
  | 
249  | 0  |     reentrant = 0;  | 
250  | 0  | }  | 
251  |  |  | 
252  |  | static PyObject*  | 
253  |  | faulthandler_dump_traceback_py(PyObject *self,  | 
254  |  |                                PyObject *args, PyObject *kwargs)  | 
255  | 0  | { | 
256  | 0  |     static char *kwlist[] = {"file", "all_threads", NULL}; | 
257  | 0  |     PyObject *file = NULL;  | 
258  | 0  |     int all_threads = 1;  | 
259  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate;  | 
260  | 0  |     const char *errmsg;  | 
261  | 0  |     int fd;  | 
262  |  | 
  | 
263  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwargs,  | 
264  | 0  |         "|Oi:dump_traceback", kwlist,  | 
265  | 0  |         &file, &all_threads))  | 
266  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
267  |  |  | 
268  | 0  |     fd = faulthandler_get_fileno(&file);  | 
269  | 0  |     if (fd < 0)  | 
270  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
271  |  |  | 
272  | 0  |     tstate = get_thread_state();  | 
273  | 0  |     if (tstate == NULL)  | 
274  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
275  |  |  | 
276  | 0  |     if (all_threads) { | 
277  | 0  |         errmsg = _Py_DumpTracebackThreads(fd, NULL, tstate);  | 
278  | 0  |         if (errmsg != NULL) { | 
279  | 0  |             PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError, errmsg);  | 
280  | 0  |             return NULL;  | 
281  | 0  |         }  | 
282  | 0  |     }  | 
283  | 0  |     else { | 
284  | 0  |         _Py_DumpTraceback(fd, tstate);  | 
285  | 0  |     }  | 
286  |  |  | 
287  | 0  |     if (PyErr_CheckSignals())  | 
288  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
289  |  |  | 
290  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
291  | 0  | }  | 
292  |  |  | 
293  |  | static void  | 
294  |  | faulthandler_disable_fatal_handler(fault_handler_t *handler)  | 
295  | 0  | { | 
296  | 0  |     if (!handler->enabled)  | 
297  | 0  |         return;  | 
298  | 0  |     handler->enabled = 0;  | 
299  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
300  | 0  |     (void)sigaction(handler->signum, &handler->previous, NULL);  | 
301  |  | #else  | 
302  |  |     (void)signal(handler->signum, handler->previous);  | 
303  |  | #endif  | 
304  | 0  | }  | 
305  |  |  | 
306  |  |  | 
307  |  | /* Handler for SIGSEGV, SIGFPE, SIGABRT, SIGBUS and SIGILL signals.  | 
308  |  |  | 
309  |  |    Display the current Python traceback, restore the previous handler and call  | 
310  |  |    the previous handler.  | 
311  |  |  | 
312  |  |    On Windows, don't explicitly call the previous handler, because the Windows  | 
313  |  |    signal handler would not be called (for an unknown reason). The execution of  | 
314  |  |    the program continues at faulthandler_fatal_error() exit, but the same  | 
315  |  |    instruction will raise the same fault (signal), and so the previous handler  | 
316  |  |    will be called.  | 
317  |  |  | 
318  |  |    This function is signal-safe and should only call signal-safe functions. */  | 
319  |  |  | 
320  |  | static void  | 
321  |  | faulthandler_fatal_error(int signum)  | 
322  | 0  | { | 
323  | 0  |     const int fd = fatal_error.fd;  | 
324  | 0  |     size_t i;  | 
325  | 0  |     fault_handler_t *handler = NULL;  | 
326  | 0  |     int save_errno = errno;  | 
327  |  | 
  | 
328  | 0  |     if (!fatal_error.enabled)  | 
329  | 0  |         return;  | 
330  |  |  | 
331  | 0  |     for (i=0; i < faulthandler_nsignals; i++) { | 
332  | 0  |         handler = &faulthandler_handlers[i];  | 
333  | 0  |         if (handler->signum == signum)  | 
334  | 0  |             break;  | 
335  | 0  |     }  | 
336  | 0  |     if (handler == NULL) { | 
337  |  |         /* faulthandler_nsignals == 0 (unlikely) */  | 
338  | 0  |         return;  | 
339  | 0  |     }  | 
340  |  |  | 
341  |  |     /* restore the previous handler */  | 
342  | 0  |     faulthandler_disable_fatal_handler(handler);  | 
343  |  | 
  | 
344  | 0  |     PUTS(fd, "Fatal Python error: ");  | 
345  | 0  |     PUTS(fd, handler->name);  | 
346  | 0  |     PUTS(fd, "\n\n");  | 
347  |  | 
  | 
348  | 0  |     faulthandler_dump_traceback(fd, fatal_error.all_threads,  | 
349  | 0  |                                 fatal_error.interp);  | 
350  |  | 
  | 
351  | 0  |     errno = save_errno;  | 
352  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
353  |  |     if (signum == SIGSEGV) { | 
354  |  |         /* don't explicitly call the previous handler for SIGSEGV in this signal  | 
355  |  |            handler, because the Windows signal handler would not be called */  | 
356  |  |         return;  | 
357  |  |     }  | 
358  |  | #endif  | 
359  |  |     /* call the previous signal handler: it is called immediately if we use  | 
360  |  |        sigaction() thanks to SA_NODEFER flag, otherwise it is deferred */  | 
361  | 0  |     raise(signum);  | 
362  | 0  | }  | 
363  |  |  | 
364  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
365  |  | static int  | 
366  |  | faulthandler_ignore_exception(DWORD code)  | 
367  |  | { | 
368  |  |     /* bpo-30557: ignore exceptions which are not errors */  | 
369  |  |     if (!(code & 0x80000000)) { | 
370  |  |         return 1;  | 
371  |  |     }  | 
372  |  |     /* bpo-31701: ignore MSC and COM exceptions  | 
373  |  |        E0000000 + code */  | 
374  |  |     if (code == 0xE06D7363 /* MSC exception ("Emsc") */ | 
375  |  |         || code == 0xE0434352 /* COM Callable Runtime exception ("ECCR") */) { | 
376  |  |         return 1;  | 
377  |  |     }  | 
378  |  |     /* Interesting exception: log it with the Python traceback */  | 
379  |  |     return 0;  | 
380  |  | }  | 
381  |  |  | 
382  |  | static LONG WINAPI  | 
383  |  | faulthandler_exc_handler(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS *exc_info)  | 
384  |  | { | 
385  |  |     const int fd = fatal_error.fd;  | 
386  |  |     DWORD code = exc_info->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode;  | 
387  |  |     DWORD flags = exc_info->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionFlags;  | 
388  |  |  | 
389  |  |     if (faulthandler_ignore_exception(code)) { | 
390  |  |         /* ignore the exception: call the next exception handler */  | 
391  |  |         return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;  | 
392  |  |     }  | 
393  |  |  | 
394  |  |     PUTS(fd, "Windows fatal exception: ");  | 
395  |  |     switch (code)  | 
396  |  |     { | 
397  |  |     /* only format most common errors */  | 
398  |  |     case EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION: PUTS(fd, "access violation"); break;  | 
399  |  |     case EXCEPTION_FLT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO: PUTS(fd, "float divide by zero"); break;  | 
400  |  |     case EXCEPTION_FLT_OVERFLOW: PUTS(fd, "float overflow"); break;  | 
401  |  |     case EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO: PUTS(fd, "int divide by zero"); break;  | 
402  |  |     case EXCEPTION_INT_OVERFLOW: PUTS(fd, "integer overflow"); break;  | 
403  |  |     case EXCEPTION_IN_PAGE_ERROR: PUTS(fd, "page error"); break;  | 
404  |  |     case EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW: PUTS(fd, "stack overflow"); break;  | 
405  |  |     default:  | 
406  |  |         PUTS(fd, "code 0x");  | 
407  |  |         _Py_DumpHexadecimal(fd, code, 8);  | 
408  |  |     }  | 
409  |  |     PUTS(fd, "\n\n");  | 
410  |  |  | 
411  |  |     if (code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION) { | 
412  |  |         /* disable signal handler for SIGSEGV */  | 
413  |  |         for (size_t i=0; i < faulthandler_nsignals; i++) { | 
414  |  |             fault_handler_t *handler = &faulthandler_handlers[i];  | 
415  |  |             if (handler->signum == SIGSEGV) { | 
416  |  |                 faulthandler_disable_fatal_handler(handler);  | 
417  |  |                 break;  | 
418  |  |             }  | 
419  |  |         }  | 
420  |  |     }  | 
421  |  |  | 
422  |  |     faulthandler_dump_traceback(fd, fatal_error.all_threads,  | 
423  |  |                                 fatal_error.interp);  | 
424  |  |  | 
425  |  |     /* call the next exception handler */  | 
426  |  |     return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;  | 
427  |  | }  | 
428  |  | #endif  | 
429  |  |  | 
430  |  | /* Install the handler for fatal signals, faulthandler_fatal_error(). */  | 
431  |  |  | 
432  |  | static int  | 
433  |  | faulthandler_enable(void)  | 
434  | 0  | { | 
435  | 0  |     if (fatal_error.enabled) { | 
436  | 0  |         return 0;  | 
437  | 0  |     }  | 
438  | 0  |     fatal_error.enabled = 1;  | 
439  |  | 
  | 
440  | 0  |     for (size_t i=0; i < faulthandler_nsignals; i++) { | 
441  | 0  |         fault_handler_t *handler;  | 
442  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
443  | 0  |         struct sigaction action;  | 
444  | 0  | #endif  | 
445  | 0  |         int err;  | 
446  |  | 
  | 
447  | 0  |         handler = &faulthandler_handlers[i];  | 
448  | 0  |         assert(!handler->enabled);  | 
449  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
450  | 0  |         action.sa_handler = faulthandler_fatal_error;  | 
451  | 0  |         sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask);  | 
452  |  |         /* Do not prevent the signal from being received from within  | 
453  |  |            its own signal handler */  | 
454  | 0  |         action.sa_flags = SA_NODEFER;  | 
455  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGALTSTACK  | 
456  | 0  |         if (stack.ss_sp != NULL) { | 
457  |  |             /* Call the signal handler on an alternate signal stack  | 
458  |  |                provided by sigaltstack() */  | 
459  | 0  |             action.sa_flags |= SA_ONSTACK;  | 
460  | 0  |         }  | 
461  | 0  | #endif  | 
462  | 0  |         err = sigaction(handler->signum, &action, &handler->previous);  | 
463  |  | #else  | 
464  |  |         handler->previous = signal(handler->signum,  | 
465  |  |                 faulthandler_fatal_error);  | 
466  |  |         err = (handler->previous == SIG_ERR);  | 
467  |  | #endif  | 
468  | 0  |         if (err) { | 
469  | 0  |             PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_RuntimeError);  | 
470  | 0  |             return -1;  | 
471  | 0  |         }  | 
472  |  |  | 
473  | 0  |         handler->enabled = 1;  | 
474  | 0  |     }  | 
475  |  |  | 
476  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
477  |  |     assert(fatal_error.exc_handler == NULL);  | 
478  |  |     fatal_error.exc_handler = AddVectoredExceptionHandler(1, faulthandler_exc_handler);  | 
479  |  | #endif  | 
480  | 0  |     return 0;  | 
481  | 0  | }  | 
482  |  |  | 
483  |  | static PyObject*  | 
484  |  | faulthandler_py_enable(PyObject *self, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwargs)  | 
485  | 0  | { | 
486  | 0  |     static char *kwlist[] = {"file", "all_threads", NULL}; | 
487  | 0  |     PyObject *file = NULL;  | 
488  | 0  |     int all_threads = 1;  | 
489  | 0  |     int fd;  | 
490  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate;  | 
491  |  | 
  | 
492  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwargs,  | 
493  | 0  |         "|Oi:enable", kwlist, &file, &all_threads))  | 
494  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
495  |  |  | 
496  | 0  |     fd = faulthandler_get_fileno(&file);  | 
497  | 0  |     if (fd < 0)  | 
498  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
499  |  |  | 
500  | 0  |     tstate = get_thread_state();  | 
501  | 0  |     if (tstate == NULL)  | 
502  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
503  |  |  | 
504  | 0  |     Py_XINCREF(file);  | 
505  | 0  |     Py_XSETREF(fatal_error.file, file);  | 
506  | 0  |     fatal_error.fd = fd;  | 
507  | 0  |     fatal_error.all_threads = all_threads;  | 
508  | 0  |     fatal_error.interp = tstate->interp;  | 
509  |  | 
  | 
510  | 0  |     if (faulthandler_enable() < 0) { | 
511  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
512  | 0  |     }  | 
513  |  |  | 
514  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
515  | 0  | }  | 
516  |  |  | 
517  |  | static void  | 
518  |  | faulthandler_disable(void)  | 
519  | 0  | { | 
520  | 0  |     if (fatal_error.enabled) { | 
521  | 0  |         fatal_error.enabled = 0;  | 
522  | 0  |         for (size_t i=0; i < faulthandler_nsignals; i++) { | 
523  | 0  |             fault_handler_t *handler;  | 
524  | 0  |             handler = &faulthandler_handlers[i];  | 
525  | 0  |             faulthandler_disable_fatal_handler(handler);  | 
526  | 0  |         }  | 
527  | 0  |     }  | 
528  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
529  |  |     if (fatal_error.exc_handler != NULL) { | 
530  |  |         RemoveVectoredExceptionHandler(fatal_error.exc_handler);  | 
531  |  |         fatal_error.exc_handler = NULL;  | 
532  |  |     }  | 
533  |  | #endif  | 
534  | 0  |     Py_CLEAR(fatal_error.file);  | 
535  | 0  | }  | 
536  |  |  | 
537  |  | static PyObject*  | 
538  |  | faulthandler_disable_py(PyObject *self, PyObject *Py_UNUSED(ignored))  | 
539  | 0  | { | 
540  | 0  |     if (!fatal_error.enabled) { | 
541  | 0  |         Py_RETURN_FALSE;  | 
542  | 0  |     }  | 
543  | 0  |     faulthandler_disable();  | 
544  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_TRUE;  | 
545  | 0  | }  | 
546  |  |  | 
547  |  | static PyObject*  | 
548  |  | faulthandler_is_enabled(PyObject *self, PyObject *Py_UNUSED(ignored))  | 
549  | 0  | { | 
550  | 0  |     return PyBool_FromLong(fatal_error.enabled);  | 
551  | 0  | }  | 
552  |  |  | 
553  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
554  |  |  | 
555  |  | static void  | 
556  |  | faulthandler_thread(void *unused)  | 
557  | 0  | { | 
558  | 0  |     PyLockStatus st;  | 
559  | 0  |     const char* errmsg;  | 
560  | 0  |     int ok;  | 
561  | 0  | #if defined(HAVE_PTHREAD_SIGMASK) && !defined(HAVE_BROKEN_PTHREAD_SIGMASK)  | 
562  | 0  |     sigset_t set;  | 
563  |  |  | 
564  |  |     /* we don't want to receive any signal */  | 
565  | 0  |     sigfillset(&set);  | 
566  | 0  |     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &set, NULL);  | 
567  | 0  | #endif  | 
568  |  | 
  | 
569  | 0  |     do { | 
570  | 0  |         st = PyThread_acquire_lock_timed(thread.cancel_event,  | 
571  | 0  |                                          thread.timeout_us, 0);  | 
572  | 0  |         if (st == PY_LOCK_ACQUIRED) { | 
573  | 0  |             PyThread_release_lock(thread.cancel_event);  | 
574  | 0  |             break;  | 
575  | 0  |         }  | 
576  |  |         /* Timeout => dump traceback */  | 
577  | 0  |         assert(st == PY_LOCK_FAILURE);  | 
578  |  | 
  | 
579  | 0  |         _Py_write_noraise(thread.fd, thread.header, (int)thread.header_len);  | 
580  |  | 
  | 
581  | 0  |         errmsg = _Py_DumpTracebackThreads(thread.fd, thread.interp, NULL);  | 
582  | 0  |         ok = (errmsg == NULL);  | 
583  |  | 
  | 
584  | 0  |         if (thread.exit)  | 
585  | 0  |             _exit(1);  | 
586  | 0  |     } while (ok && thread.repeat);  | 
587  |  |  | 
588  |  |     /* The only way out */  | 
589  | 0  |     PyThread_release_lock(thread.running);  | 
590  | 0  | }  | 
591  |  |  | 
592  |  | static void  | 
593  |  | cancel_dump_traceback_later(void)  | 
594  | 0  | { | 
595  |  |     /* Notify cancellation */  | 
596  | 0  |     PyThread_release_lock(thread.cancel_event);  | 
597  |  |  | 
598  |  |     /* Wait for thread to join */  | 
599  | 0  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(thread.running, 1);  | 
600  | 0  |     PyThread_release_lock(thread.running);  | 
601  |  |  | 
602  |  |     /* The main thread should always hold the cancel_event lock */  | 
603  | 0  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(thread.cancel_event, 1);  | 
604  |  | 
  | 
605  | 0  |     Py_CLEAR(thread.file);  | 
606  | 0  |     if (thread.header) { | 
607  | 0  |         PyMem_Free(thread.header);  | 
608  | 0  |         thread.header = NULL;  | 
609  | 0  |     }  | 
610  | 0  | }  | 
611  |  |  | 
612  | 0  | #define SEC_TO_US (1000 * 1000)  | 
613  |  |  | 
614  |  | static char*  | 
615  |  | format_timeout(_PyTime_t us)  | 
616  | 0  | { | 
617  | 0  |     unsigned long sec, min, hour;  | 
618  | 0  |     char buffer[100];  | 
619  |  |  | 
620  |  |     /* the downcast is safe: the caller check that 0 < us <= LONG_MAX */  | 
621  | 0  |     sec = (unsigned long)(us / SEC_TO_US);  | 
622  | 0  |     us %= SEC_TO_US;  | 
623  |  | 
  | 
624  | 0  |     min = sec / 60;  | 
625  | 0  |     sec %= 60;  | 
626  | 0  |     hour = min / 60;  | 
627  | 0  |     min %= 60;  | 
628  |  | 
  | 
629  | 0  |     if (us != 0) { | 
630  | 0  |         PyOS_snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer),  | 
631  | 0  |                       "Timeout (%lu:%02lu:%02lu.%06u)!\n",  | 
632  | 0  |                       hour, min, sec, (unsigned int)us);  | 
633  | 0  |     }  | 
634  | 0  |     else { | 
635  | 0  |         PyOS_snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer),  | 
636  | 0  |                       "Timeout (%lu:%02lu:%02lu)!\n",  | 
637  | 0  |                       hour, min, sec);  | 
638  | 0  |     }  | 
639  | 0  |     return _PyMem_Strdup(buffer);  | 
640  | 0  | }  | 
641  |  |  | 
642  |  | static PyObject*  | 
643  |  | faulthandler_dump_traceback_later(PyObject *self,  | 
644  |  |                                    PyObject *args, PyObject *kwargs)  | 
645  | 0  | { | 
646  | 0  |     static char *kwlist[] = {"timeout", "repeat", "file", "exit", NULL}; | 
647  | 0  |     PyObject *timeout_obj;  | 
648  | 0  |     _PyTime_t timeout, timeout_us;  | 
649  | 0  |     int repeat = 0;  | 
650  | 0  |     PyObject *file = NULL;  | 
651  | 0  |     int fd;  | 
652  | 0  |     int exit = 0;  | 
653  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate;  | 
654  | 0  |     char *header;  | 
655  | 0  |     size_t header_len;  | 
656  |  | 
  | 
657  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwargs,  | 
658  | 0  |         "O|iOi:dump_traceback_later", kwlist,  | 
659  | 0  |         &timeout_obj, &repeat, &file, &exit))  | 
660  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
661  |  |  | 
662  | 0  |     if (_PyTime_FromSecondsObject(&timeout, timeout_obj,  | 
663  | 0  |                                   _PyTime_ROUND_TIMEOUT) < 0) { | 
664  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
665  | 0  |     }  | 
666  | 0  |     timeout_us = _PyTime_AsMicroseconds(timeout, _PyTime_ROUND_TIMEOUT);  | 
667  | 0  |     if (timeout_us <= 0) { | 
668  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "timeout must be greater than 0");  | 
669  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
670  | 0  |     }  | 
671  |  |     /* Limit to LONG_MAX seconds for format_timeout() */  | 
672  | 0  |     if (timeout_us >= PY_TIMEOUT_MAX || timeout_us / SEC_TO_US >= LONG_MAX) { | 
673  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_OverflowError,  | 
674  | 0  |                         "timeout value is too large");  | 
675  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
676  | 0  |     }  | 
677  |  |  | 
678  | 0  |     tstate = get_thread_state();  | 
679  | 0  |     if (tstate == NULL)  | 
680  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
681  |  |  | 
682  | 0  |     fd = faulthandler_get_fileno(&file);  | 
683  | 0  |     if (fd < 0)  | 
684  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
685  |  |  | 
686  |  |     /* format the timeout */  | 
687  | 0  |     header = format_timeout(timeout_us);  | 
688  | 0  |     if (header == NULL)  | 
689  | 0  |         return PyErr_NoMemory();  | 
690  | 0  |     header_len = strlen(header);  | 
691  |  |  | 
692  |  |     /* Cancel previous thread, if running */  | 
693  | 0  |     cancel_dump_traceback_later();  | 
694  |  | 
  | 
695  | 0  |     Py_XINCREF(file);  | 
696  | 0  |     Py_XSETREF(thread.file, file);  | 
697  | 0  |     thread.fd = fd;  | 
698  |  |     /* the downcast is safe: we check that 0 < timeout_us < PY_TIMEOUT_MAX */  | 
699  | 0  |     thread.timeout_us = (PY_TIMEOUT_T)timeout_us;  | 
700  | 0  |     thread.repeat = repeat;  | 
701  | 0  |     thread.interp = tstate->interp;  | 
702  | 0  |     thread.exit = exit;  | 
703  | 0  |     thread.header = header;  | 
704  | 0  |     thread.header_len = header_len;  | 
705  |  |  | 
706  |  |     /* Arm these locks to serve as events when released */  | 
707  | 0  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(thread.running, 1);  | 
708  |  | 
  | 
709  | 0  |     if (PyThread_start_new_thread(faulthandler_thread, NULL) == PYTHREAD_INVALID_THREAD_ID) { | 
710  | 0  |         PyThread_release_lock(thread.running);  | 
711  | 0  |         Py_CLEAR(thread.file);  | 
712  | 0  |         PyMem_Free(header);  | 
713  | 0  |         thread.header = NULL;  | 
714  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError,  | 
715  | 0  |                         "unable to start watchdog thread");  | 
716  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
717  | 0  |     }  | 
718  |  |  | 
719  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
720  | 0  | }  | 
721  |  |  | 
722  |  | static PyObject*  | 
723  |  | faulthandler_cancel_dump_traceback_later_py(PyObject *self,  | 
724  |  |                                             PyObject *Py_UNUSED(ignored))  | 
725  | 0  | { | 
726  | 0  |     cancel_dump_traceback_later();  | 
727  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
728  | 0  | }  | 
729  |  | #endif  /* FAULTHANDLER_LATER */  | 
730  |  |  | 
731  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
732  |  | static int  | 
733  |  | faulthandler_register(int signum, int chain, _Py_sighandler_t *p_previous)  | 
734  | 0  | { | 
735  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
736  | 0  |     struct sigaction action;  | 
737  | 0  |     action.sa_handler = faulthandler_user;  | 
738  | 0  |     sigemptyset(&action.sa_mask);  | 
739  |  |     /* if the signal is received while the kernel is executing a system  | 
740  |  |        call, try to restart the system call instead of interrupting it and  | 
741  |  |        return EINTR. */  | 
742  | 0  |     action.sa_flags = SA_RESTART;  | 
743  | 0  |     if (chain) { | 
744  |  |         /* do not prevent the signal from being received from within its  | 
745  |  |            own signal handler */  | 
746  | 0  |         action.sa_flags = SA_NODEFER;  | 
747  | 0  |     }  | 
748  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGALTSTACK  | 
749  | 0  |     if (stack.ss_sp != NULL) { | 
750  |  |         /* Call the signal handler on an alternate signal stack  | 
751  |  |            provided by sigaltstack() */  | 
752  | 0  |         action.sa_flags |= SA_ONSTACK;  | 
753  | 0  |     }  | 
754  | 0  | #endif  | 
755  | 0  |     return sigaction(signum, &action, p_previous);  | 
756  |  | #else  | 
757  |  |     _Py_sighandler_t previous;  | 
758  |  |     previous = signal(signum, faulthandler_user);  | 
759  |  |     if (p_previous != NULL)  | 
760  |  |         *p_previous = previous;  | 
761  |  |     return (previous == SIG_ERR);  | 
762  |  | #endif  | 
763  | 0  | }  | 
764  |  |  | 
765  |  | /* Handler of user signals (e.g. SIGUSR1).  | 
766  |  |  | 
767  |  |    Dump the traceback of the current thread, or of all threads if  | 
768  |  |    thread.all_threads is true.  | 
769  |  |  | 
770  |  |    This function is signal safe and should only call signal safe functions. */  | 
771  |  |  | 
772  |  | static void  | 
773  |  | faulthandler_user(int signum)  | 
774  | 0  | { | 
775  | 0  |     user_signal_t *user;  | 
776  | 0  |     int save_errno = errno;  | 
777  |  | 
  | 
778  | 0  |     user = &user_signals[signum];  | 
779  | 0  |     if (!user->enabled)  | 
780  | 0  |         return;  | 
781  |  |  | 
782  | 0  |     faulthandler_dump_traceback(user->fd, user->all_threads, user->interp);  | 
783  |  | 
  | 
784  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
785  | 0  |     if (user->chain) { | 
786  | 0  |         (void)sigaction(signum, &user->previous, NULL);  | 
787  | 0  |         errno = save_errno;  | 
788  |  |  | 
789  |  |         /* call the previous signal handler */  | 
790  | 0  |         raise(signum);  | 
791  |  | 
  | 
792  | 0  |         save_errno = errno;  | 
793  | 0  |         (void)faulthandler_register(signum, user->chain, NULL);  | 
794  | 0  |         errno = save_errno;  | 
795  | 0  |     }  | 
796  |  | #else  | 
797  |  |     if (user->chain) { | 
798  |  |         errno = save_errno;  | 
799  |  |         /* call the previous signal handler */  | 
800  |  |         user->previous(signum);  | 
801  |  |     }  | 
802  |  | #endif  | 
803  | 0  | }  | 
804  |  |  | 
805  |  | static int  | 
806  |  | check_signum(int signum)  | 
807  | 0  | { | 
808  | 0  |     for (size_t i=0; i < faulthandler_nsignals; i++) { | 
809  | 0  |         if (faulthandler_handlers[i].signum == signum) { | 
810  | 0  |             PyErr_Format(PyExc_RuntimeError,  | 
811  | 0  |                          "signal %i cannot be registered, "  | 
812  | 0  |                          "use enable() instead",  | 
813  | 0  |                          signum);  | 
814  | 0  |             return 0;  | 
815  | 0  |         }  | 
816  | 0  |     }  | 
817  | 0  |     if (signum < 1 || NSIG <= signum) { | 
818  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "signal number out of range");  | 
819  | 0  |         return 0;  | 
820  | 0  |     }  | 
821  | 0  |     return 1;  | 
822  | 0  | }  | 
823  |  |  | 
824  |  | static PyObject*  | 
825  |  | faulthandler_register_py(PyObject *self,  | 
826  |  |                          PyObject *args, PyObject *kwargs)  | 
827  | 0  | { | 
828  | 0  |     static char *kwlist[] = {"signum", "file", "all_threads", "chain", NULL}; | 
829  | 0  |     int signum;  | 
830  | 0  |     PyObject *file = NULL;  | 
831  | 0  |     int all_threads = 1;  | 
832  | 0  |     int chain = 0;  | 
833  | 0  |     int fd;  | 
834  | 0  |     user_signal_t *user;  | 
835  | 0  |     _Py_sighandler_t previous;  | 
836  | 0  |     PyThreadState *tstate;  | 
837  | 0  |     int err;  | 
838  |  | 
  | 
839  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwargs,  | 
840  | 0  |         "i|Oii:register", kwlist,  | 
841  | 0  |         &signum, &file, &all_threads, &chain))  | 
842  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
843  |  |  | 
844  | 0  |     if (!check_signum(signum))  | 
845  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
846  |  |  | 
847  | 0  |     tstate = get_thread_state();  | 
848  | 0  |     if (tstate == NULL)  | 
849  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
850  |  |  | 
851  | 0  |     fd = faulthandler_get_fileno(&file);  | 
852  | 0  |     if (fd < 0)  | 
853  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
854  |  |  | 
855  | 0  |     if (user_signals == NULL) { | 
856  | 0  |         user_signals = PyMem_Malloc(NSIG * sizeof(user_signal_t));  | 
857  | 0  |         if (user_signals == NULL)  | 
858  | 0  |             return PyErr_NoMemory();  | 
859  | 0  |         memset(user_signals, 0, NSIG * sizeof(user_signal_t));  | 
860  | 0  |     }  | 
861  | 0  |     user = &user_signals[signum];  | 
862  |  | 
  | 
863  | 0  |     if (!user->enabled) { | 
864  | 0  |         err = faulthandler_register(signum, chain, &previous);  | 
865  | 0  |         if (err) { | 
866  | 0  |             PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_OSError);  | 
867  | 0  |             return NULL;  | 
868  | 0  |         }  | 
869  |  |  | 
870  | 0  |         user->previous = previous;  | 
871  | 0  |     }  | 
872  |  |  | 
873  | 0  |     Py_XINCREF(file);  | 
874  | 0  |     Py_XSETREF(user->file, file);  | 
875  | 0  |     user->fd = fd;  | 
876  | 0  |     user->all_threads = all_threads;  | 
877  | 0  |     user->chain = chain;  | 
878  | 0  |     user->interp = tstate->interp;  | 
879  | 0  |     user->enabled = 1;  | 
880  |  | 
  | 
881  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
882  | 0  | }  | 
883  |  |  | 
884  |  | static int  | 
885  |  | faulthandler_unregister(user_signal_t *user, int signum)  | 
886  | 0  | { | 
887  | 0  |     if (!user->enabled)  | 
888  | 0  |         return 0;  | 
889  | 0  |     user->enabled = 0;  | 
890  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION  | 
891  | 0  |     (void)sigaction(signum, &user->previous, NULL);  | 
892  |  | #else  | 
893  |  |     (void)signal(signum, user->previous);  | 
894  |  | #endif  | 
895  | 0  |     Py_CLEAR(user->file);  | 
896  | 0  |     user->fd = -1;  | 
897  | 0  |     return 1;  | 
898  | 0  | }  | 
899  |  |  | 
900  |  | static PyObject*  | 
901  |  | faulthandler_unregister_py(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
902  | 0  | { | 
903  | 0  |     int signum;  | 
904  | 0  |     user_signal_t *user;  | 
905  | 0  |     int change;  | 
906  |  | 
  | 
907  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "i:unregister", &signum))  | 
908  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
909  |  |  | 
910  | 0  |     if (!check_signum(signum))  | 
911  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
912  |  |  | 
913  | 0  |     if (user_signals == NULL)  | 
914  | 0  |         Py_RETURN_FALSE;  | 
915  |  |  | 
916  | 0  |     user = &user_signals[signum];  | 
917  | 0  |     change = faulthandler_unregister(user, signum);  | 
918  | 0  |     return PyBool_FromLong(change);  | 
919  | 0  | }  | 
920  |  | #endif   /* FAULTHANDLER_USER */  | 
921  |  |  | 
922  |  |  | 
923  |  | static void  | 
924  |  | faulthandler_suppress_crash_report(void)  | 
925  | 0  | { | 
926  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
927  |  |     UINT mode;  | 
928  |  |  | 
929  |  |     /* Configure Windows to not display the Windows Error Reporting dialog */  | 
930  |  |     mode = SetErrorMode(SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX);  | 
931  |  |     SetErrorMode(mode | SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX);  | 
932  |  | #endif  | 
933  |  | 
  | 
934  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H  | 
935  | 0  |     struct rlimit rl;  | 
936  |  |  | 
937  |  |     /* Disable creation of core dump */  | 
938  | 0  |     if (getrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE, &rl) == 0) { | 
939  | 0  |         rl.rlim_cur = 0;  | 
940  | 0  |         setrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE, &rl);  | 
941  | 0  |     }  | 
942  | 0  | #endif  | 
943  |  | 
  | 
944  |  | #ifdef _MSC_VER  | 
945  |  |     /* Visual Studio: configure abort() to not display an error message nor  | 
946  |  |        open a popup asking to report the fault. */  | 
947  |  |     _set_abort_behavior(0, _WRITE_ABORT_MSG | _CALL_REPORTFAULT);  | 
948  |  | #endif  | 
949  | 0  | }  | 
950  |  |  | 
951  |  | static PyObject *  | 
952  |  | faulthandler_read_null(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
953  | 0  | { | 
954  | 0  |     volatile int *x;  | 
955  | 0  |     volatile int y;  | 
956  |  | 
  | 
957  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
958  | 0  |     x = NULL;  | 
959  | 0  |     y = *x;  | 
960  | 0  |     return PyLong_FromLong(y);  | 
961  |  | 
  | 
962  | 0  | }  | 
963  |  |  | 
964  |  | static void  | 
965  |  | faulthandler_raise_sigsegv(void)  | 
966  | 0  | { | 
967  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
968  |  | #if defined(MS_WINDOWS)  | 
969  |  |     /* For SIGSEGV, faulthandler_fatal_error() restores the previous signal  | 
970  |  |        handler and then gives back the execution flow to the program (without  | 
971  |  |        explicitly calling the previous error handler). In a normal case, the  | 
972  |  |        SIGSEGV was raised by the kernel because of a fault, and so if the  | 
973  |  |        program retries to execute the same instruction, the fault will be  | 
974  |  |        raised again.  | 
975  |  |  | 
976  |  |        Here the fault is simulated by a fake SIGSEGV signal raised by the  | 
977  |  |        application. We have to raise SIGSEGV at lease twice: once for  | 
978  |  |        faulthandler_fatal_error(), and one more time for the previous signal  | 
979  |  |        handler. */  | 
980  |  |     while(1)  | 
981  |  |         raise(SIGSEGV);  | 
982  |  | #else  | 
983  | 0  |     raise(SIGSEGV);  | 
984  | 0  | #endif  | 
985  | 0  | }  | 
986  |  |  | 
987  |  | static PyObject *  | 
988  |  | faulthandler_sigsegv(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
989  | 0  | { | 
990  | 0  |     int release_gil = 0;  | 
991  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "|i:_sigsegv", &release_gil))  | 
992  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
993  |  |  | 
994  | 0  |     if (release_gil) { | 
995  | 0  |         Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS  | 
996  | 0  |         faulthandler_raise_sigsegv();  | 
997  | 0  |         Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS  | 
998  | 0  |     } else { | 
999  | 0  |         faulthandler_raise_sigsegv();  | 
1000  | 0  |     }  | 
1001  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
1002  | 0  | }  | 
1003  |  |  | 
1004  |  | static void  | 
1005  |  | faulthandler_fatal_error_thread(void *plock)  | 
1006  | 0  | { | 
1007  |  | #ifndef __clang__  | 
1008  |  |     PyThread_type_lock *lock = (PyThread_type_lock *)plock;  | 
1009  |  | #endif  | 
1010  |  | 
  | 
1011  | 0  |     Py_FatalError("in new thread"); | 
1012  |  | 
  | 
1013  |  | #ifndef __clang__  | 
1014  |  |     /* Issue #28152: Py_FatalError() is declared with  | 
1015  |  |        __attribute__((__noreturn__)).  GCC emits a warning without  | 
1016  |  |        "PyThread_release_lock()" (compiler bug?), but Clang is smarter and  | 
1017  |  |        emits a warning on the return. */  | 
1018  |  |  | 
1019  |  |     /* notify the caller that we are done */  | 
1020  |  |     PyThread_release_lock(lock);  | 
1021  |  | #endif  | 
1022  | 0  | }  | 
1023  |  |  | 
1024  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1025  |  | faulthandler_fatal_error_c_thread(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
1026  | 0  | { | 
1027  | 0  |     long thread;  | 
1028  | 0  |     PyThread_type_lock lock;  | 
1029  |  | 
  | 
1030  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1031  |  | 
  | 
1032  | 0  |     lock = PyThread_allocate_lock();  | 
1033  | 0  |     if (lock == NULL)  | 
1034  | 0  |         return PyErr_NoMemory();  | 
1035  |  |  | 
1036  | 0  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(lock, WAIT_LOCK);  | 
1037  |  | 
  | 
1038  | 0  |     thread = PyThread_start_new_thread(faulthandler_fatal_error_thread, lock);  | 
1039  | 0  |     if (thread == -1) { | 
1040  | 0  |         PyThread_free_lock(lock);  | 
1041  | 0  |         PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError, "unable to start the thread");  | 
1042  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
1043  | 0  |     }  | 
1044  |  |  | 
1045  |  |     /* wait until the thread completes: it will never occur, since Py_FatalError()  | 
1046  |  |        exits the process immediately. */  | 
1047  | 0  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(lock, WAIT_LOCK);  | 
1048  | 0  |     PyThread_release_lock(lock);  | 
1049  | 0  |     PyThread_free_lock(lock);  | 
1050  |  | 
  | 
1051  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
1052  | 0  | }  | 
1053  |  |  | 
1054  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1055  |  | faulthandler_sigfpe(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
1056  | 0  | { | 
1057  |  |     /* Do an integer division by zero: raise a SIGFPE on Intel CPU, but not on  | 
1058  |  |        PowerPC. Use volatile to disable compile-time optimizations. */  | 
1059  | 0  |     volatile int x = 1, y = 0, z;  | 
1060  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1061  | 0  |     z = x / y;  | 
1062  |  |     /* If the division by zero didn't raise a SIGFPE (e.g. on PowerPC),  | 
1063  |  |        raise it manually. */  | 
1064  | 0  |     raise(SIGFPE);  | 
1065  |  |     /* This line is never reached, but we pretend to make something with z  | 
1066  |  |        to silence a compiler warning. */  | 
1067  | 0  |     return PyLong_FromLong(z);  | 
1068  | 0  | }  | 
1069  |  |  | 
1070  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1071  |  | faulthandler_sigabrt(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
1072  | 0  | { | 
1073  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1074  | 0  |     abort();  | 
1075  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
1076  | 0  | }  | 
1077  |  |  | 
1078  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1079  |  | faulthandler_fatal_error_py(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
1080  | 0  | { | 
1081  | 0  |     char *message;  | 
1082  | 0  |     int release_gil = 0;  | 
1083  | 0  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "y|i:fatal_error", &message, &release_gil))  | 
1084  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
1085  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1086  | 0  |     if (release_gil) { | 
1087  | 0  |         Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS  | 
1088  | 0  |         Py_FatalError(message);  | 
1089  | 0  |         Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS  | 
1090  | 0  |     }  | 
1091  | 0  |     else { | 
1092  | 0  |         Py_FatalError(message);  | 
1093  | 0  |     }  | 
1094  | 0  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
1095  | 0  | }  | 
1096  |  |  | 
1097  |  | #if defined(HAVE_SIGALTSTACK) && defined(HAVE_SIGACTION)  | 
1098  |  | #define FAULTHANDLER_STACK_OVERFLOW  | 
1099  |  |  | 
1100  |  | static uintptr_t  | 
1101  |  | stack_overflow(uintptr_t min_sp, uintptr_t max_sp, size_t *depth)  | 
1102  | 0  | { | 
1103  |  |     /* Allocate (at least) 4096 bytes on the stack at each call.  | 
1104  |  |  | 
1105  |  |        bpo-23654, bpo-38965: use volatile keyword to prevent tail call  | 
1106  |  |        optimization. */  | 
1107  | 0  |     volatile unsigned char buffer[4096];  | 
1108  | 0  |     uintptr_t sp = (uintptr_t)&buffer;  | 
1109  | 0  |     *depth += 1;  | 
1110  | 0  |     if (sp < min_sp || max_sp < sp)  | 
1111  | 0  |         return sp;  | 
1112  | 0  |     buffer[0] = 1;  | 
1113  | 0  |     buffer[4095] = 0;  | 
1114  | 0  |     return stack_overflow(min_sp, max_sp, depth);  | 
1115  | 0  | }  | 
1116  |  |  | 
1117  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1118  |  | faulthandler_stack_overflow(PyObject *self, PyObject *Py_UNUSED(ignored))  | 
1119  | 0  | { | 
1120  | 0  |     size_t depth, size;  | 
1121  | 0  |     uintptr_t sp = (uintptr_t)&depth;  | 
1122  | 0  |     uintptr_t stop, lower_limit, upper_limit;  | 
1123  |  | 
  | 
1124  | 0  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1125  | 0  |     depth = 0;  | 
1126  |  | 
  | 
1127  | 0  |     if (STACK_OVERFLOW_MAX_SIZE <= sp) { | 
1128  | 0  |         lower_limit = sp - STACK_OVERFLOW_MAX_SIZE;  | 
1129  | 0  |     }  | 
1130  | 0  |     else { | 
1131  | 0  |         lower_limit = 0;  | 
1132  | 0  |     }  | 
1133  |  | 
  | 
1134  | 0  |     if (UINTPTR_MAX - STACK_OVERFLOW_MAX_SIZE >= sp) { | 
1135  | 0  |         upper_limit = sp + STACK_OVERFLOW_MAX_SIZE;  | 
1136  | 0  |     }  | 
1137  | 0  |     else { | 
1138  | 0  |         upper_limit = UINTPTR_MAX;  | 
1139  | 0  |     }  | 
1140  |  | 
  | 
1141  | 0  |     stop = stack_overflow(lower_limit, upper_limit, &depth);  | 
1142  | 0  |     if (sp < stop)  | 
1143  | 0  |         size = stop - sp;  | 
1144  | 0  |     else  | 
1145  | 0  |         size = sp - stop;  | 
1146  | 0  |     PyErr_Format(PyExc_RuntimeError,  | 
1147  | 0  |         "unable to raise a stack overflow (allocated %zu bytes "  | 
1148  | 0  |         "on the stack, %zu recursive calls)",  | 
1149  | 0  |         size, depth);  | 
1150  | 0  |     return NULL;  | 
1151  | 0  | }  | 
1152  |  | #endif   /* defined(HAVE_SIGALTSTACK) && defined(HAVE_SIGACTION) */  | 
1153  |  |  | 
1154  |  |  | 
1155  |  | static int  | 
1156  |  | faulthandler_traverse(PyObject *module, visitproc visit, void *arg)  | 
1157  | 0  | { | 
1158  | 0  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
1159  | 0  |     Py_VISIT(thread.file);  | 
1160  | 0  | #endif  | 
1161  | 0  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
1162  | 0  |     if (user_signals != NULL) { | 
1163  | 0  |         for (size_t signum=0; signum < NSIG; signum++)  | 
1164  | 0  |             Py_VISIT(user_signals[signum].file);  | 
1165  | 0  |     }  | 
1166  | 0  | #endif  | 
1167  | 0  |     Py_VISIT(fatal_error.file);  | 
1168  | 0  |     return 0;  | 
1169  | 0  | }  | 
1170  |  |  | 
1171  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
1172  |  | static PyObject *  | 
1173  |  | faulthandler_raise_exception(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)  | 
1174  |  | { | 
1175  |  |     unsigned int code, flags = 0;  | 
1176  |  |     if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "I|I:_raise_exception", &code, &flags))  | 
1177  |  |         return NULL;  | 
1178  |  |     faulthandler_suppress_crash_report();  | 
1179  |  |     RaiseException(code, flags, 0, NULL);  | 
1180  |  |     Py_RETURN_NONE;  | 
1181  |  | }  | 
1182  |  | #endif  | 
1183  |  |  | 
1184  |  | PyDoc_STRVAR(module_doc,  | 
1185  |  | "faulthandler module.");  | 
1186  |  |  | 
1187  |  | static PyMethodDef module_methods[] = { | 
1188  |  |     {"enable", | 
1189  |  |      (PyCFunction)(void(*)(void))faulthandler_py_enable, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS,  | 
1190  |  |      PyDoc_STR("enable(file=sys.stderr, all_threads=True): " | 
1191  |  |                "enable the fault handler")},  | 
1192  |  |     {"disable", faulthandler_disable_py, METH_NOARGS, | 
1193  |  |      PyDoc_STR("disable(): disable the fault handler")}, | 
1194  |  |     {"is_enabled", faulthandler_is_enabled, METH_NOARGS, | 
1195  |  |      PyDoc_STR("is_enabled()->bool: check if the handler is enabled")}, | 
1196  |  |     {"dump_traceback", | 
1197  |  |      (PyCFunction)(void(*)(void))faulthandler_dump_traceback_py, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS,  | 
1198  |  |      PyDoc_STR("dump_traceback(file=sys.stderr, all_threads=True): " | 
1199  |  |                "dump the traceback of the current thread, or of all threads "  | 
1200  |  |                "if all_threads is True, into file")},  | 
1201  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
1202  |  |     {"dump_traceback_later", | 
1203  |  |      (PyCFunction)(void(*)(void))faulthandler_dump_traceback_later, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS,  | 
1204  |  |      PyDoc_STR("dump_traceback_later(timeout, repeat=False, file=sys.stderrn, exit=False):\n" | 
1205  |  |                "dump the traceback of all threads in timeout seconds,\n"  | 
1206  |  |                "or each timeout seconds if repeat is True. If exit is True, "  | 
1207  |  |                "call _exit(1) which is not safe.")},  | 
1208  |  |     {"cancel_dump_traceback_later", | 
1209  |  |      faulthandler_cancel_dump_traceback_later_py, METH_NOARGS,  | 
1210  |  |      PyDoc_STR("cancel_dump_traceback_later():\ncancel the previous call " | 
1211  |  |                "to dump_traceback_later().")},  | 
1212  |  | #endif  | 
1213  |  |  | 
1214  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
1215  |  |     {"register", | 
1216  |  |      (PyCFunction)(void(*)(void))faulthandler_register_py, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS,  | 
1217  |  |      PyDoc_STR("register(signum, file=sys.stderr, all_threads=True, chain=False): " | 
1218  |  |                "register a handler for the signal 'signum': dump the "  | 
1219  |  |                "traceback of the current thread, or of all threads if "  | 
1220  |  |                "all_threads is True, into file")},  | 
1221  |  |     {"unregister", | 
1222  |  |      (PyCFunction)(void(*)(void))faulthandler_unregister_py, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS,  | 
1223  |  |      PyDoc_STR("unregister(signum): unregister the handler of the signal " | 
1224  |  |                 "'signum' registered by register()")},  | 
1225  |  | #endif  | 
1226  |  |  | 
1227  |  |     {"_read_null", faulthandler_read_null, METH_NOARGS, | 
1228  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_read_null(): read from NULL, raise " | 
1229  |  |                "a SIGSEGV or SIGBUS signal depending on the platform")},  | 
1230  |  |     {"_sigsegv", faulthandler_sigsegv, METH_VARARGS, | 
1231  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_sigsegv(release_gil=False): raise a SIGSEGV signal")}, | 
1232  |  |     {"_fatal_error_c_thread", faulthandler_fatal_error_c_thread, METH_NOARGS, | 
1233  |  |      PyDoc_STR("fatal_error_c_thread(): " | 
1234  |  |                "call Py_FatalError() in a new C thread.")},  | 
1235  |  |     {"_sigabrt", faulthandler_sigabrt, METH_NOARGS, | 
1236  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_sigabrt(): raise a SIGABRT signal")}, | 
1237  |  |     {"_sigfpe", (PyCFunction)faulthandler_sigfpe, METH_NOARGS, | 
1238  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_sigfpe(): raise a SIGFPE signal")}, | 
1239  |  |     {"_fatal_error", faulthandler_fatal_error_py, METH_VARARGS, | 
1240  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_fatal_error(message): call Py_FatalError(message)")}, | 
1241  |  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_STACK_OVERFLOW  | 
1242  |  |     {"_stack_overflow", faulthandler_stack_overflow, METH_NOARGS, | 
1243  |  |      PyDoc_STR("_stack_overflow(): recursive call to raise a stack overflow")}, | 
1244  |  | #endif  | 
1245  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
1246  |  |     {"_raise_exception", faulthandler_raise_exception, METH_VARARGS, | 
1247  |  |      PyDoc_STR("raise_exception(code, flags=0): Call RaiseException(code, flags).")}, | 
1248  |  | #endif  | 
1249  |  |     {NULL, NULL}  /* sentinel */ | 
1250  |  | };  | 
1251  |  |  | 
1252  |  | static struct PyModuleDef module_def = { | 
1253  |  |     PyModuleDef_HEAD_INIT,  | 
1254  |  |     "faulthandler",  | 
1255  |  |     module_doc,  | 
1256  |  |     0, /* non-negative size to be able to unload the module */  | 
1257  |  |     module_methods,  | 
1258  |  |     NULL,  | 
1259  |  |     faulthandler_traverse,  | 
1260  |  |     NULL,  | 
1261  |  |     NULL  | 
1262  |  | };  | 
1263  |  |  | 
1264  |  | PyMODINIT_FUNC  | 
1265  |  | PyInit_faulthandler(void)  | 
1266  | 0  | { | 
1267  | 0  |     PyObject *m = PyModule_Create(&module_def);  | 
1268  | 0  |     if (m == NULL)  | 
1269  | 0  |         return NULL;  | 
1270  |  |  | 
1271  |  |     /* Add constants for unit tests */  | 
1272  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
1273  |  |     /* RaiseException() codes (prefixed by an underscore) */  | 
1274  |  |     if (PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "_EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION",  | 
1275  |  |                                 EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION)) { | 
1276  |  |         goto error;  | 
1277  |  |     }  | 
1278  |  |     if (PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "_EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO",  | 
1279  |  |                                 EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO)) { | 
1280  |  |         goto error;  | 
1281  |  |     }  | 
1282  |  |     if (PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "_EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW",  | 
1283  |  |                                 EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW)) { | 
1284  |  |         goto error;  | 
1285  |  |     }  | 
1286  |  |  | 
1287  |  |     /* RaiseException() flags (prefixed by an underscore) */  | 
1288  |  |     if (PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "_EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE",  | 
1289  |  |                                 EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE)) { | 
1290  |  |         goto error;  | 
1291  |  |     }  | 
1292  |  |     if (PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "_EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE_EXCEPTION",  | 
1293  |  |                                 EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE_EXCEPTION)) { | 
1294  |  |         goto error;  | 
1295  |  |     }  | 
1296  |  | #endif  | 
1297  |  |  | 
1298  | 0  |     return m;  | 
1299  |  | 
  | 
1300  |  | #ifdef MS_WINDOWS  | 
1301  |  | error:  | 
1302  |  |     Py_DECREF(m);  | 
1303  |  |     return NULL;  | 
1304  |  | #endif  | 
1305  | 0  | }  | 
1306  |  |  | 
1307  |  | static int  | 
1308  |  | faulthandler_init_enable(void)  | 
1309  | 0  | { | 
1310  | 0  |     PyObject *module = PyImport_ImportModule("faulthandler"); | 
1311  | 0  |     if (module == NULL) { | 
1312  | 0  |         return -1;  | 
1313  | 0  |     }  | 
1314  |  |  | 
1315  | 0  |     PyObject *res = _PyObject_CallMethodId(module, &PyId_enable, NULL);  | 
1316  | 0  |     Py_DECREF(module);  | 
1317  | 0  |     if (res == NULL) { | 
1318  | 0  |         return -1;  | 
1319  | 0  |     }  | 
1320  | 0  |     Py_DECREF(res);  | 
1321  |  | 
  | 
1322  | 0  |     return 0;  | 
1323  | 0  | }  | 
1324  |  |  | 
1325  |  | PyStatus  | 
1326  |  | _PyFaulthandler_Init(int enable)  | 
1327  | 14  | { | 
1328  | 14  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGALTSTACK  | 
1329  | 14  |     int err;  | 
1330  |  |  | 
1331  |  |     /* Try to allocate an alternate stack for faulthandler() signal handler to  | 
1332  |  |      * be able to allocate memory on the stack, even on a stack overflow. If it  | 
1333  |  |      * fails, ignore the error. */  | 
1334  | 14  |     stack.ss_flags = 0;  | 
1335  |  |     /* bpo-21131: allocate dedicated stack of SIGSTKSZ*2 bytes, instead of just  | 
1336  |  |        SIGSTKSZ bytes. Calling the previous signal handler in faulthandler  | 
1337  |  |        signal handler uses more than SIGSTKSZ bytes of stack memory on some  | 
1338  |  |        platforms. */  | 
1339  | 14  |     stack.ss_size = SIGSTKSZ * 2;  | 
1340  | 14  |     stack.ss_sp = PyMem_Malloc(stack.ss_size);  | 
1341  | 14  |     if (stack.ss_sp != NULL) { | 
1342  | 14  |         err = sigaltstack(&stack, &old_stack);  | 
1343  | 14  |         if (err) { | 
1344  | 0  |             PyMem_Free(stack.ss_sp);  | 
1345  | 0  |             stack.ss_sp = NULL;  | 
1346  | 0  |         }  | 
1347  | 14  |     }  | 
1348  | 14  | #endif  | 
1349  | 14  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
1350  | 14  |     thread.file = NULL;  | 
1351  | 14  |     thread.cancel_event = PyThread_allocate_lock();  | 
1352  | 14  |     thread.running = PyThread_allocate_lock();  | 
1353  | 14  |     if (!thread.cancel_event || !thread.running) { | 
1354  | 0  |         return _PyStatus_ERR("failed to allocate locks for faulthandler"); | 
1355  | 0  |     }  | 
1356  | 14  |     PyThread_acquire_lock(thread.cancel_event, 1);  | 
1357  | 14  | #endif  | 
1358  |  |  | 
1359  | 14  |     if (enable) { | 
1360  | 0  |         if (faulthandler_init_enable() < 0) { | 
1361  | 0  |             return _PyStatus_ERR("failed to enable faulthandler"); | 
1362  | 0  |         }  | 
1363  | 0  |     }  | 
1364  | 14  |     return _PyStatus_OK();  | 
1365  | 14  | }  | 
1366  |  |  | 
1367  |  | void _PyFaulthandler_Fini(void)  | 
1368  | 0  | { | 
1369  | 0  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_LATER  | 
1370  |  |     /* later */  | 
1371  | 0  |     if (thread.cancel_event) { | 
1372  | 0  |         cancel_dump_traceback_later();  | 
1373  | 0  |         PyThread_release_lock(thread.cancel_event);  | 
1374  | 0  |         PyThread_free_lock(thread.cancel_event);  | 
1375  | 0  |         thread.cancel_event = NULL;  | 
1376  | 0  |     }  | 
1377  | 0  |     if (thread.running) { | 
1378  | 0  |         PyThread_free_lock(thread.running);  | 
1379  | 0  |         thread.running = NULL;  | 
1380  | 0  |     }  | 
1381  | 0  | #endif  | 
1382  |  | 
  | 
1383  | 0  | #ifdef FAULTHANDLER_USER  | 
1384  |  |     /* user */  | 
1385  | 0  |     if (user_signals != NULL) { | 
1386  | 0  |         for (size_t signum=0; signum < NSIG; signum++) { | 
1387  | 0  |             faulthandler_unregister(&user_signals[signum], signum);  | 
1388  | 0  |         }  | 
1389  | 0  |         PyMem_Free(user_signals);  | 
1390  | 0  |         user_signals = NULL;  | 
1391  | 0  |     }  | 
1392  | 0  | #endif  | 
1393  |  |  | 
1394  |  |     /* fatal */  | 
1395  | 0  |     faulthandler_disable();  | 
1396  | 0  | #ifdef HAVE_SIGALTSTACK  | 
1397  | 0  |     if (stack.ss_sp != NULL) { | 
1398  |  |         /* Fetch the current alt stack */  | 
1399  | 0  |         stack_t current_stack;  | 
1400  | 0  |         memset(¤t_stack, 0, sizeof(current_stack));  | 
1401  | 0  |         if (sigaltstack(NULL, ¤t_stack) == 0) { | 
1402  | 0  |             if (current_stack.ss_sp == stack.ss_sp) { | 
1403  |  |                 /* The current alt stack is the one that we installed.  | 
1404  |  |                  It is safe to restore the old stack that we found when  | 
1405  |  |                  we installed ours */  | 
1406  | 0  |                 sigaltstack(&old_stack, NULL);  | 
1407  | 0  |             } else { | 
1408  |  |                 /* Someone switched to a different alt stack and didn't  | 
1409  |  |                    restore ours when they were done (if they're done).  | 
1410  |  |                    There's not much we can do in this unlikely case */  | 
1411  | 0  |             }  | 
1412  | 0  |         }  | 
1413  | 0  |         PyMem_Free(stack.ss_sp);  | 
1414  |  |         stack.ss_sp = NULL;  | 
1415  | 0  |     }  | 
1416  | 0  | #endif  | 
1417  | 0  | }  |