On Sat, 18 Nov 2006 02:09:46 +0100, Folkert van Heusden wrote:
>I found that sometimes processes disappear on some heavily used system
>of mine without any logging. So I've written a patch against 2.6.18.2
>which emits logging when a process emits a fatal signal.
>
>Signed-off-by: Folkert van Heusden <[email protected]>
>
>--- linux-2.6.18.2/kernel/signal.c 2006-11-04 02:33:58.000000000 +0100
>+++ linux-2.6.18.2.new/kernel/signal.c 2006-11-17 15:59:13.000000000 +0100
>@@ -706,6 +706,15 @@
> struct sigqueue * q = NULL;
> int ret = 0;
>
>+ if (sig == SIGQUIT || sig == SIGILL || sig == SIGTRAP ||
>+ sig == SIGABRT || sig == SIGBUS || sig == SIGFPE ||
>+ sig == SIGSEGV || sig == SIGXCPU || sig == SIGXFSZ ||
>+ sig == SIGSYS || sig == SIGSTKFLT)
>+ {
>+ printk(KERN_WARNING "Sig %d send to %d owned by %d.%d (%s)\n",
>+ sig, t -> pid, t -> uid, t -> gid, t -> comm);
>+ }
>+
> /*
> * fast-pathed signals for kernel-internal things like SIGSTOP
> * or SIGKILL.
NAK.
1. It lets any user DOS the system.
2. Your definition of "fatal" signals is wrong. Several of these
signals can be caught, and user-space sometimes does that for
good reason. FPE and SEGV are definitely often caught, BUS and
ILL may be caught, and I suspect TRAP to be common in debugging
sessions.
3. It puts policy in the kernel. Policy decisions belong in user-space.
In this case, the policy decision is whether this type of logging
is desired for a given process or not.
4. If this is about detecting the loss of specific processes
(network services say), then the problem can be solved in
user-space by using a separate monitor process, or by
controlling the processes via ptrace.
At a minimum, the logging needs to be conditionalised on a
per-process setting, and it should also be delayed until the
point where a signal causes a process to be killed.
/Mikael
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