| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2002 - 2007 Jeff Dike (jdike@{addtoit,linux.intel}.com) |
| * Licensed under the GPL |
| */ |
| |
| #include "linux/kernel.h" |
| #include "linux/ptrace.h" |
| #include "kern_util.h" |
| #include "sysdep/ptrace.h" |
| #include "sysdep/syscalls.h" |
| |
| extern int syscall_table_size; |
| #define NR_SYSCALLS (syscall_table_size / sizeof(void *)) |
| |
| void handle_syscall(struct uml_pt_regs *r) |
| { |
| struct pt_regs *regs = container_of(r, struct pt_regs, regs); |
| long result; |
| int syscall; |
| |
| syscall_trace(r, 0); |
| |
| /* |
| * This should go in the declaration of syscall, but when I do that, |
| * strace -f -c bash -c 'ls ; ls' breaks, sometimes not tracing |
| * children at all, sometimes hanging when bash doesn't see the first |
| * ls exit. |
| * The assembly looks functionally the same to me. This is |
| * gcc version 4.0.1 20050727 (Red Hat 4.0.1-5) |
| * in case it's a compiler bug. |
| */ |
| syscall = UPT_SYSCALL_NR(r); |
| if ((syscall >= NR_SYSCALLS) || (syscall < 0)) |
| result = -ENOSYS; |
| else result = EXECUTE_SYSCALL(syscall, regs); |
| |
| REGS_SET_SYSCALL_RETURN(r->gp, result); |
| |
| syscall_trace(r, 1); |
| } |