xref: /illumos-gate/usr/src/man/man3lib/libproc.3lib (revision 4e5ef1cee66fbfbbd2b3e56b81e2bb5700f4a59e)
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12.\" Copyright 2018 Joyent, Inc.
13.\" Copyright (c) 2019 Carlos Neira <cneirabustos@gmail.com>
14.\" Copyright 2019 OmniOS Community Edition (OmniOSce) Association.
15.\"
16.Dd February 22, 2019
17.Dt LIBPROC 3LIB
18.Os
19.Sh NAME
20.Nm libproc
21.Nd process control library
22.Sh SYNOPSIS
23.Lb libproc
24.In libproc.h
25.Sh DESCRIPTION
26The
27.Nm
28library provides consumers a general series of interfaces to inspect
29and control both live processes and core files.
30It is intended for introspection tools such as debuggers by providing a
31high-level interface to the /proc file system
32.Pf ( Xr proc 4 ) .
33.Pp
34The
35.Nm
36library provides interfaces that focus on:
37.Bl -bullet -offset indent
38.It
39Creating and attaching to live process, core files, and arbitrary ELF
40objects.
41.It
42Interrogating the state of a process or core file.
43.It
44Manipulating the current state of a process or thread.
45.It
46Interrogating the state of threads of a process or core file.
47.It
48Running system calls in the context of another process.
49.It
50Various utilities for iterating process and core file file descriptors,
51mappings, symbols, and more.
52.It
53Various utilities to support debugging tools.
54.El
55.Ss Live Processes
56The
57.Nm
58library can be used to manipulate running processes and to create new
59ones.
60To manipulate an existing process first
61.Em grab
62it with the
63.Fn Pgrab
64function.
65A process is generally stopped as a side effect of grabbing it.
66Callers must exercise caution, as if they do not use the library correctly, or
67they terminate unexpectedly, a process may remain stopped.
68.Pp
69Unprivileged users may only grab their own processes.
70Users with the privilege
71.Brq Sy PRIV_PROC_OWNER
72may manipulate processes that they do not own; however, additional
73restrictions as described in
74.Xr privileges 5
75apply.
76.Pp
77In addition, the
78.Fn Pcreate
79and
80.Fn Pxcreate
81functions may be used to create processes which are always controlled by
82the library.
83.Ss Core Files
84The
85.Nm
86library has the ability to open and interpret core files produced by
87processes on the system.
88Process core dump generation is controlled by the
89.Xr coreadm 1M
90command.
91In addition, the library has the ability to understand and interpret core dumps
92generated by Linux kernel and can provide a subset of its functionality on such
93core files, provided the original binary is also present.
94.Pp
95Not all functions in the
96.Nm
97library are valid for core files.
98In general, none of the commands which manipulate the current state of a process
99or thread or that try to force system calls on a victim process will work.
100Furthermore several of the information and iteration interfaces are limited
101based on the data that is available in the core file.
102For example, if the core file is of a process that omits the frame pointer, the
103ability to iterate the stack will be limited.
104.Pp
105Use the
106.Fn Pgrab_core
107or
108.Fn Pfgrab_core
109function to open a core file.
110Use the
111.Fn Pgrab_file
112function to open an ELF object file.
113This is useful for obtaining information stored in ELF headers and
114sections.
115.Ss Debug Information
116Many of the operations in the library rely on debug information being
117present in a process and its associated libraries.
118The library leverages symbol table information, CTF data
119.Pq Xr ctf 4
120sections, and frame unwinding information based on the use of an ABI
121defined frame pointer, e\&.g\&.
122.Sy %ebp
123and
124.Sy %rbp
125on x86 systems.
126.Pp
127Some software providers strip programs of this information or build
128their executables such that the information will not be present in a
129core dump.
130To deal with this fact, the library is able to consume information that is not
131present in the core file or the running process.
132It can both consume it from the underlying executable and it also supports
133finding it from related ELF objects that are linked to it via the
134.Sy .gnu_debuglink
135and the
136.Sy .note.gnu.build-id
137ELF sections.
138.Ss Iteration Interfaces
139The
140.Nm
141library provides the ability to iterate over the following aspects of a
142process or core file:
143.Bl -bullet -offset indent
144.It
145Active threads
146.It
147Active and zombie threads
148.It
149All non-system processes
150.It
151All process mappings
152.It
153All objects in a process
154.It
155The environment
156.It
157The symbol table
158.It
159Stack frames
160.It
161File Descriptors
162.El
163.Ss System Call Injection
164The
165.Nm
166library allows the caller to force system calls to be executed in the
167context of the running process.
168This can be used both as a tool for introspection, allowing one to get
169information outside its current context as well as performing modifications to a
170process.
171.Pp
172These functions run in the context of the calling process.
173This is often an easier way of getting non-exported information about a
174process from the system.
175For example, the
176.Xr pfiles 1
177command uses this interface to get more detailed information about a
178process's open file descriptors, which it would not have access to
179otherwise.
180.Sh INTERFACES
181The shared object
182.Sy libproc.so.1
183provides the public interfaces defined below.
184See
185.Xr Intro 3
186for additional information on shared object interfaces.
187Functions are organized into categories that describe their purpose.
188Individual functions are documented in their own manual pages.
189.Ss Creation, Grabbing, and Releasing
190The following routines are related to creating library handles,
191grabbing cores, processes, and threads, and releasing those resources.
192.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
193.It Sy Lfree Ta Sy Lgrab
194.It Sy Lgrab_error Ta Sy Pcreate
195.It Sy Pcreate_agent Ta Sy Pcreate_callback
196.It Sy Pcreate_error Ta Sy Pdestroy_agent
197.It Sy Pfgrab_core Ta Sy Pfree
198.It Sy Pgrab Ta Sy Pgrab_core
199.It Sy Pgrab_error Ta Sy Pgrab_file
200.It Sy Pgrab_ops Ta Sy Prelease
201.It Sy Preopen Ta Sy Pxcreate
202.El
203.Ss Process interrogation and manipulation
204The following routines obtain information about a process and allow
205manipulation of the process itself.
206.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
207.It Sy Paddr_to_ctf Ta Sy Paddr_to_loadobj
208.It Sy Paddr_to_map Ta Sy Paddr_to_text_map
209.It Sy Pasfd Ta Sy Pclearfault
210.It Sy Pclearsig Ta Sy Pcontent
211.It Sy Pcred Ta Sy Pctlfd
212.It Sy Pdelbkpt Ta Sy Pdelwapt
213.It Sy Pdstop Ta Sy Pexecname
214.It Sy Pfault Ta Sy Pfgcore
215.It Sy Pgcore Ta Sy Pgetareg
216.It Sy Pgetauxval Ta Sy Pgetauxvec
217.It Sy Pgetenv Ta Sy Pisprocdir
218.It Sy Pissyscall_prev Ta Sy Plmid
219.It Sy Plmid_to_loadobj Ta Sy Plmid_to_map
220.It Sy Plookup_by_addr Ta Sy Plookup_by_name
221.It Sy Plwp_alt_stack Ta Sy Plwp_getfpregs
222.It Sy Plwp_getname Ta Sy Plwp_getpsinfo
223.It Sy Plwp_getregs Ta Sy Plwp_getspymaster
224.It Sy Plwp_main_stack Ta Sy Plwp_setfpregs
225.It Sy Plwp_setregs Ta Sy Plwp_stack
226.It Sy Pname_to_ctf Ta Sy Pname_to_loadobj
227.It Sy Pname_to_map Ta Sy Pobjname
228.It Sy Pobjname_resolved Ta Sy Pplatform
229.It Sy Ppltdest Ta Sy Ppriv
230.It Sy Ppsinfo Ta Sy Pputareg
231.It Sy Prd_agent Ta Sy Pread
232.It Sy Pread_string Ta Sy Preset_maps
233.It Sy Psetbkpt Ta Sy Psecflags
234.It Sy Psetcred Ta Sy Psetfault
235.It Sy Psetflags Ta Sy Psetpriv
236.It Sy Psetrun Ta Sy Psetsignal
237.It Sy Psetsysentry Ta Sy Psetsysexit
238.It Sy Psetwapt Ta Sy Psetzoneid
239.It Sy Psignal Ta Sy Pstate
240.It Sy Pstatus Ta Sy Pstop
241.It Sy Pstopstatus Ta Sy Psync
242.It Sy Psysentry Ta Sy Psysexit
243.It Sy Puname Ta Sy Punsetflags
244.It Sy Pupdate_maps Ta Sy Pupdate_syms
245.It Sy Pwait Ta Sy Pwrite
246.It Sy Pxecbkpt Ta Sy Pxecwapt
247.It Sy Pxlookup_by_addr Ta Sy Pxlookup_by_addr_resolved
248.It Sy Pxlookup_by_name Ta Sy Pzonename
249.It Sy Pzonepath Ta Sy Pzoneroot Ta
250.El
251.Ss Thread interrogation and manipulation
252The following routines obtain information about a thread and allow
253manipulation of the thread itself.
254.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
255.It Sy Lalt_stack Ta Sy Lclearfault
256.It Sy Lclearsig Ta Sy Lctlfd
257.It Sy Ldstop Ta Sy Lgetareg
258.It Sy Lmain_stack Ta Sy Lprochandle
259.It Sy Lpsinfo Ta Sy Lputareg
260.It Sy Lsetrun Ta Sy Lstack
261.It Sy Lstate Ta Sy Lstatus
262.It Sy Lstop Ta Sy Lsync
263.It Sy Lwait Ta Sy Lxecbkpt
264.It Sy Lxecwapt Ta ""
265.El
266.Ss System Call Injection
267The following routines are used to inject specific system calls and have
268them run in the context of a process.
269.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
270.It Sy pr_access Ta Sy pr_close
271.It Sy pr_creat Ta Sy pr_door_info
272.It Sy pr_exit Ta Sy pr_fcntl
273.It Sy pr_fstat Ta Sy pr_fstat64
274.It Sy pr_fstatvfs Ta Sy pr_getitimer
275.It Sy pr_getpeername Ta Sy pr_getpeerucred
276.It Sy pr_getprojid Ta Sy pr_getrctl
277.It Sy pr_getrlimit Ta Sy pr_getrlimit64
278.It Sy pr_getsockname Ta Sy pr_getsockopt
279.It Sy pr_gettaskid Ta Sy pr_getzoneid
280.It Sy pr_ioctl Ta Sy pr_link
281.It Sy pr_llseek Ta Sy pr_lseek
282.It Sy pr_lstat Ta Sy pr_lstat64
283.It Sy pr_memcntl Ta Sy pr_meminfo
284.It Sy pr_mmap Ta Sy pr_munmap
285.It Sy pr_open Ta Sy pr_processor_bind
286.It Sy pr_rename Ta Sy pr_setitimer
287.It Sy pr_setrctl Ta Sy pr_setrlimit
288.It Sy pr_setrlimit64 Ta Sy pr_settaskid
289.It Sy pr_sigaction Ta Sy pr_stat
290.It Sy pr_stat64 Ta Sy pr_statvfs
291.It Sy pr_unlink Ta Sy pr_waitid
292.El
293.Ss Iteration routines
294These routines are used to iterate over the contents of a process.
295.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
296.It Sy Penv_iter Ta Sy Plwp_iter
297.It Sy Plwp_iter_all Ta Sy Pmapping_iter
298.It Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved Ta Sy Pobject_iter
299.It Sy Pobject_iter_resolved Ta Sy Pstack_iter
300.It Sy Psymbol_iter Ta Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr
301.It Sy Psymbol_iter_by_lmid Ta Sy Psymbol_iter_by_name
302.It Sy Pxsymbol_iter Ta Sy Pfdinfo_iter
303.El
304.Ss Utility routines
305The following routines are utilities that are useful to consumers of the
306library.
307.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
308.It Sy Perror_printf Ta Sy proc_arg_grab
309.It Sy proc_arg_psinfo Ta Sy proc_arg_xgrab
310.It Sy proc_arg_xpsinfo Ta Sy proc_content2str
311.It Sy proc_dmodelname Ta Sy proc_finistdio
312.It Sy proc_fltname Ta Sy proc_fltset2str
313.It Sy proc_flushstdio Ta Sy proc_proc_get_auxv
314.It Sy proc_get_cred Ta Sy proc_get_priv
315.It Sy proc_get_psinfo Ta Sy proc_get_status
316.It Sy proc_get_initstdio Ta Sy proc_lwp_in_set
317.It Sy proc_lwp_range_valid Ta Sy proc_signame
318.It Sy proc_sigset2str Ta Sy proc_str2content
319.It Sy proc_str2flt Ta Sy proc_str2fltset
320.It Sy proc_str2sig Ta Sy proc_str2sigset
321.It Sy proc_str2sys Ta Sy proc_str2sysset
322.It Sy proc_sysname Ta Sy proc_sysset2str
323.It Sy proc_unctrl_psinfo Ta ""
324.El
325.Ss x86 Specific Routines
326The following routines are specific to the x86, 32-bit and 64-bit,
327versions of the
328.Nm
329library.
330.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
331.It Sy Pldt Ta Sy proc_get_ldt
332.El
333.Ss SPARC specific Routines
334The following functions are specific to the SPARC, 32-bit and 64-bit,
335versions of the
336.Nm
337library.
338.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
339.It Sy Plwp_getgwindows Ta Sy Plwp_getxregs
340.It Sy Plwp_setxregs Ta Sy ""
341.El
342.Pp
343The following functions are specific to the 64-bit SPARC version of the
344.Nm
345library.
346.Bl -column -offset indent ".Sy Pmapping_iter_resolved" ".Sy Psymbol_iter_by_addr"
347.It Sy Plwp_getasrs Ta Sy Plwp_setasrs
348.El
349.Sh PROCESS STATES
350Every process handle that exists in
351.Nm
352has a state.
353In some cases, such as for core files, these states are static.
354In other cases, such as handles that correspond to a running process or a
355created process, these states are dynamic and change based on actions taken in
356the library.
357The state can be obtained with the
358.Xr Pstate 3PROC
359function.
360.Pp
361The various states are:
362.Bl -tag -width Dv -offset indent
363.It Dv PS_RUN
364An actively running process.
365This may be a process that was obtained by creating it with functions such as
366.Xr Pcreate 3PROC
367or by grabbing an existing process such as
368.Xr Pgrab 3PROC .
369.It Dv PS_STOP
370An active process that is no longer executing.
371A process may stop for many reasons such as an explicit stop request (through
372.Xr pstop 1
373for example) or if a tracing event is hit.
374.Pp
375The reason a process is stopped may be obtained through the thread's
376.Vt lwpstatus_t
377structure read directly from /proc or obtained through the
378.Xr Lstatus 3PROC
379function.
380.It Dv PS_LOST
381Control over the process has been lost.
382This may happen when the process executes a new image requiring a different set
383of privileges.
384To resume control call
385.Xr Preopen 3PROC .
386For more information on losing control of a process, see
387.Xr proc 4 .
388.It Dv PS_UNDEAD
389A zombie process.
390It has terminated, but it has not been cleaned up yet by its parent.
391For more on the conditions of becoming a zombie, see
392.Xr exec 2 .
393.It Dv PS_DEAD
394Processes in this state are always core files.
395See the earlier section
396.Sx Core Files
397for more information on working with core files.
398.It Dv PS_IDLE
399A process that has never been run.
400This is always the case for handles that refer to files as the files cannot be
401executed.
402Those process handles are obtained through calling
403.Xr Pgrab_file 3PROC .
404.El
405.Pp
406Many functions relating to tracing processes, for example
407.Xr Psignal 3PROC ,
408.Xr Psetsignal 3PROC ,
409.Xr Psetfault 3PROC ,
410.Xr Psysentry 3PROC ,
411and others, mention that they only act upon
412.Em Active Processes .
413This specifically refers to processes whose state are in
414.Dv PS_RUN
415and
416.Dv PS_STOP .
417Process handles in the other states have no notion of settable tracing
418flags, though core files
419.Pq type Dv PS_DEAD
420may have a read-only snapshot of their tracing settings available.
421.Sh TYPES
422The
423.Nm
424library uses many types that come from the /proc file system
425.Pq Xr proc 4
426and the ELF format
427.Pq Xr elf 3ELF .
428However, it also defines the following types:
429.Pp
430.Vt struct ps_prochandle
431.Pp
432The
433.Vt struct ps_prochandle
434is an opaque handle to the library and the core element of control for a
435process.
436Consumers obtain pointers to a handle through the use of the
437.Fn Pcreate ,
438.Fn Pgrab ,
439and related functions.
440When a caller is done with a handle, then it should call one of the
441.Fn Pfree
442and
443.Fn Prelease
444functions to relinquish the handle, release associated resources, and
445potentially set the process to run again.
446.Pp
447.Vt struct ps_lwphandle
448.Pp
449The
450.Vt struct ps_lwphandle
451is analogous to the
452.Vt struct ps_prochandle ,
453but it represents the control of an individual thread, rather than a
454process.
455Consumers obtain pointers to a handle through the
456.Fn Lgrab
457function and relinquish it with the
458.Fn Lfree
459function.
460.Pp
461.Vt core_content_t
462.Pp
463The
464.Vt core_content_t
465is a value which describes the various content types of core files.
466These are used in functions such as
467.Xr Pcontent 3PROC
468and
469.Xr Pgcore 3PROC
470to describe and control the types of content that get included.
471Various content types may be included together through a bitwise-inclusive-OR.
472The default system core contents are controlled with the
473.Xr coreadm 1M
474tool.
475The following table lists the current set of core contents in the system, though
476the set may increase over time.
477The string after the macro is the human readable string that corresponds with
478the constant and is used by
479.Xr coreadm 1M ,
480.Xr proc_content2str 3PROC ,
481and
482.Xr proc_str2content 3PROC .
483.Bl -tag -offset indent -width indent
484.It Dv CC_CONTENT_STACK ("stack")
485The contents include the process stack.
486Note, this only covers the main thread's stack.
487The stack of other threads is covered by
488.Dv CC_CONTENT_ANON .
489.It Dv CC_CONTENT_HEAP ("heap")
490The contents include the process heap.
491.It Dv CC_CONTENT_SHFILE ("shfile")
492The contents include shared mappings that are backed by files (e.g.
493mapped through
494.Xr mmap 2
495with the
496.Dv MAP_SHARED
497flag).
498.It Dv CC_CONTENT_SHANNON ("shannon")
499The contents include shared mappings that are backed by anonymous memory
500(e.g. mapped through
501.Xr mmap 2
502with the
503.Dv MAP_SHARED
504and
505.Dv MAP_ANON
506flags).
507.It Dv CC_CONTENT_RODATA ("rodata")
508The contents include private read-only file mappings, such as shared
509library text.
510.It Dv CC_CONTENT_ANON ("anon")
511The contents include private anonymous mappings.
512This includes the stacks of threads which are not the main thread.
513.It Dv CC_CONTENT_SHM ("shm")
514The contents include system V shared memory.
515.It Dv CC_CONTENT_ISM ("ism")
516The contents include ISM (intimate shared memory) mappings.
517.It Dv CC_CONTENT_DISM ("dism")
518The contents include DISM (dynamic shared memory) mappings.
519.It Dv CC_CONTENT_CTF ("ctf")
520The contents include
521.Xr ctf 4
522(Compact C Type Format) information.
523Note, not all objects in the process may have CTF information available.
524.It Dv CC_CONTENT_SYMTAB ("symtab")
525The contents include the symbol table.
526Note, not all objects in the process may have a symbol table available.
527.It Dv CC_CONTENT_ALL ("all")
528This value indicates that all of the above content values are present.
529Note that additional values may be added in the future, in which case
530the value of the symbol will be updated to include them.
531Comparisons with
532.Dv CC_CONTENT_ALL
533should validate all the expected bits are set by an expression such as
534.Li (c & CC_CONTENT_ALL) == CC_CONTENT_ALL .
535.It Dv CC_CONTENT_NONE ("none")
536This value indicates that there is no content present.
537.It Dv CC_CONTENT_DEFAULT ("default")
538The content includes the following set of default values:
539.Dv CC_CONTENT_STACK ,
540.Dv CC_CONTENT_HEAP ,
541.Dv CC_CONTENT_ISM ,
542.Dv CC_CONTENT_DISM ,
543.Dv CC_CONTENT_SHM ,
544.Dv CC_CONTENT_SHANON ,
545.Dv CC_CONTENT_TEXT ,
546.Dv CC_CONTENT_DATA ,
547.Dv CC_CONTENT_RODATA ,
548.Dv CC_CONTENT_ANON ,
549.Dv CC_CONTENT_CTF ,
550and
551.Dv CC_CONTENT_SYMTAB .
552Note that the default may change.
553Comparisons with CC_CONTENT_DEFAULT should validate that all of the expected
554bits are set with an expression such as
555.Li (c\ &\ CC_CONTENT_DEFAULT)\ ==\ CC_CONTENT_DEFAULT .
556.It Dv CC_CONTENT_INVALID
557This indicates that the contents are invalid.
558.El
559.Pp
560.Vt prfdinfo_t
561.Pp
562The
563.Vt prfdinfo_t
564structure is used with the
565.Fn Pfdinfo_iter
566function which describes information about a file descriptor.
567The structure is defined as follows:
568.Bd -literal
569typedef struct prfdinfo {
570	int		pr_fd;
571	mode_t		pr_mode;
572	uid_t		pr_uid;
573	gid_t		pr_gid;
574	major_t		pr_major;	/* think stat.st_dev */
575	minor_t		pr_minor;
576	major_t		pr_rmajor;	/* think stat.st_rdev */
577	minor_t		pr_rminor;
578	ino64_t		pr_ino;
579	off64_t		pr_offset;
580	off64_t		pr_size;
581	int		pr_fileflags;	/* fcntl(F_GETXFL), etc */
582	int		pr_fdflags;	/* fcntl(F_GETFD), etc. */
583	char		pr_path[MAXPATHLEN];
584} prfdinfo_t;
585.Ed
586.Pp
587The structure has similar information to that found in the
588.Sy stat
589structure that's used as part of the stat family of system calls,
590defined in
591.Xr stat 2 .
592The member
593.Sy pr_fd
594contains the number of the file descriptor of the file.
595The members
596.Fa pr_mode ,
597.Fa pr_uid ,
598.Fa pr_gid ,
599.Fa pr_ino ,
600and
601.Fa pr_size
602are the same as the members
603.Fa st_mode ,
604.Fa st_uid ,
605.Fa st_gid ,
606.Fa st_ino ,
607and
608.Fa st_size
609in the
610.Fa stat
611structure.
612.Pp
613The
614.Fa pr_major
615and
616.Fa pr_minor
617members contain the major and minor numbers of the device containing the
618directory for this file.
619This is similar to the
620.Fa st_dev
621member of the
622.Vt stat
623structure, except that it is broken out into its major and minor components.
624The
625.Fa pr_rmajor
626and
627.Fa pr_rminor
628members are similar in spirit to
629.Fa pr_major
630and
631.Fa pr_minor ;
632however, they are equivalent to the
633.Fa st_rdev
634member of the
635.Vt stat
636structure and thus have meaning for special character and block files.
637.Pp
638The
639.Fa pr_offset
640member contains the current seek offset of the file descriptor.
641The
642.Fa pr_fileflags
643and
644.Fa pr_fdflags
645members contain the flags that would have been returned by a call to
646.Xr fcntl 2
647with the arguments
648.Dv F_GETXFL
649and
650.Dv F_GETFD
651respectively.
652.Pp
653.Vt prsyminfo_t
654.Pp
655The
656.Vt prsyminfo_t
657structure is used with the various symbol look up functions
658.Fn Pxlookup_by_name ,
659.Fn Pxlookup_by_addr ,
660and
661.Fn Pxlookup_by_addr_resolved
662which describes additional information about a symbol.
663The structure is defined as follows:
664.Bd -literal
665typedef struct prsyminfo {
666        const char      *prs_object;            /* object name */
667        const char      *prs_name;              /* symbol name */
668        Lmid_t          prs_lmid;               /* link map id */
669        uint_t          prs_id;                 /* symbol id */
670        uint_t          prs_table;              /* symbol table id */
671} prsyminfo_t;
672.Ed
673.Pp
674The member
675.Fa prs_object
676points to a string that contains the name of the object file, if known,
677that the symbol comes from.
678The member
679.Fa prs_name
680points to the name of the symbol, if known.
681This may be unknown due to a stripped binary that contains no symbol table.
682The member
683.Fa prs_lmid
684indicates the link map identifier that the symbol was found on.
685For more information on link map identifiers refer to the
686.%B Linker and Libraries Guide
687and
688.Xr dlopen 3C .
689.Pp
690The members
691.Fa prs_id
692and
693.Fa prs_table
694can be used to determine both the symbol table that the entry came from
695and which entry in the table it corresponds to.
696If the value of
697.Fa prs_table
698is
699.Dv PR_SYMTAB
700then it came from the ELF standard symbol table.
701However, if it is instead
702.Dv PR_DYNSYM ,
703then that indicates that it comes from the process's dynamic section.
704.Pp
705.Vt proc_lwp_f
706.Pp
707The
708.Vt proc_lwp_f
709is a function pointer type that is used with the
710.Fn Plwp_iter
711function.
712It is defined as
713.Sy typedef
714.Ft int
715.Fo proc_lwp_f
716.Fa "void *"
717.Fa "const lwpstatus_t *"
718.Fc .
719The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies,
720while the second has the thread's status information and is defined in
721.Xr proc 4 .
722For additional information on using this type, see
723.Xr Plwp_iter 3PROC .
724.Pp
725.Vt proc_lwp_all_f
726.Pp
727The
728.Vt proc_lwp_all_f
729is a function pointer type that is used with the
730.Fn Plwp_iter_all
731function.
732It is defined as
733.Sy typedef
734.Ft int
735.Fo proc_lwp_all_f
736.Fa "void *"
737.Fa "const lwpstatus_t *"
738.Fa "const lwpsinfo_t *"
739.Fc .
740The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
741The second and third arguments contain the thread's status and
742thread-specific
743.Xr ps 1
744information respectively.
745Both structures are defined in
746.Xr proc 4 .
747For additional information on using this type, see
748.Xr Plwp_iter_all 3PROC .
749.Pp
750.Vt proc_walk_f
751.Pp
752The
753.Vt proc_walk_f
754is a function pointer type that is used with the
755.Fn proc_walk
756function.
757It is defined as
758.Sy typedef
759.Ft int
760.Fo proc_walk_f
761.Fa "psinfo_t *"
762.Fa "lwpsinfo_t *"
763.Fa "void *"
764.Fc .
765The first argument contains the process
766.Xr ps 1
767information and the second argument contains the representative thread's
768.Xr ps 1
769information.
770Both structures are defined in
771.Xr proc 4 .
772The final argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
773For more information on using this, see
774.Xr proc_walk 3PROC .
775.Pp
776.Vt proc_map_f
777.Pp
778The
779.Vt proc_map_f
780is a function pointer type that is used with the
781.Fn Pmapping_iter ,
782.Fn Pmapping_iter_resolved ,
783.Fn Pobject_iter ,
784and
785.Fn Pobject_iter_resolved
786functions.
787It is defined as
788.Sy typedef
789.Ft int
790.Fo proc_map_f
791.Fa "void *"
792.Fa "const prmap_t *"
793.Fa "const char *"
794.Fc .
795The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
796The second argument is describes the mapping information and is defined
797in
798.Xr proc 4 .
799The final argument contains the name of the mapping or object file in
800question.
801For additional information on using this type, see
802.Xr Pmapping_iter 3PROC .
803.Pp
804.Vt proc_env_f
805.Pp
806The
807.Vt proc_env_f
808is a function pointer type that is used with the
809.Fn Penv_iter
810function.
811It is defined as
812.Sy typedef
813.Ft int
814.Fo proc_env_f
815.Fa "void *"
816.Fa "struct ps_prochandle *"
817.Fa "uintptr_t"
818.Fa "const char *"
819.Fc .
820The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
821The second argument is a pointer to the
822.Vt struct ps_prochandle
823that the callback was passed to.
824The third argument is the address of the environment variable in the process.
825The fourth argument is the environment variable.
826Values in the environment follow the convention of the form
827.Em variable=value .
828For more information on environment variables see
829.Xr exec 2
830and
831.Xr environ 5 .
832For additional information on using this type, see
833.Xr Penv_iter 3PROC .
834.Pp
835.Vt proc_sym_f
836.Pp
837The
838.Vt proc_sym_f
839is a function pointer type that is used with the
840.Fn Psmbol_iter ,
841.Fn Psymbol_iter_by_addr ,
842.Fn Psymbol_iter_by_name ,
843and
844.Fn Psymbol_iter_by_lmid
845functions.
846It is defined as
847.Sy typedef
848.Ft int
849.Fo proc_sym_f
850.Fa "void *"
851.Fa "const GElf_Sym *"
852.Fa "const char *"
853.Fc .
854The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user supplies.
855The second argument is a pointer to the ELF symbol information in a
85632-bit and 64-bit neutral form.
857See
858.Xr elf 3ELF
859and
860.Xr gelf 3ELF
861for more information on it.
862The final argument points to a character string that has the name of the symbol.
863For additional information on using this type, see
864.Xr Psymbol_iter 3PROC ,
865.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_addr 3PROC ,
866.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_name 3PROC ,
867and
868.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_lmid 3PROC .
869.Pp
870.Vt proc_xsym_f
871.Pp
872The
873.Vt proc_xsym_f
874is a function pointer type that is used with the
875.Fn Pxsymbol_iter
876function.
877It is defined as
878.Sy typedef
879.Ft int
880.Fo proc_xsym_f
881.Fa "void *"
882.Fa "const GElf_Sym *"
883.Fa "const char *"
884.Fa "const prsyminfo_t *"
885.Fc .
886The first three arguments are identical to those of
887.Vt proc_sym_f .
888The final argument contains additional information about the symbol
889itself.
890The members of the
891.Vt prsyminfo_t
892are defined earlier in this section.
893For additional information on using this type, see
894.Xr Pxsymbol_iter 3PROC .
895.Pp
896.Vt proc_stack_f
897.Pp
898The
899.Vt proc_stack_f
900is a function pointer type that is used with the
901.Fn Pstack_iter
902function.
903It is defined as
904.Sy typedef
905.Ft int
906.Fo proc_stack_f
907.Fa "void *"
908.Fa "prgregset_t"
909.Fa "uint_t"
910.Fa "const long *"
911.Fc .
912The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
913The second argument's contents are platform specific.
914The registers that contain stack information, usually the stack pointer and
915frame pointer, will be filled in to point to an entry.
916The
917.Vt prgregset_t
918is defined in
919.Xr proc 4 .
920.Pp
921The third argument contains the number of arguments to the current stack
922frame and the fourth argument contains an array of addresses that
923correspond to the arguments to that stack function.
924The value of the third argument dictates the number of entries in the fourth
925argument.
926For additional information on using this type, see
927.Xr Pstack_iter 3PROC .
928.Pp
929.Vt proc_fdinfo_f
930.Pp
931The
932.Vt proc_fdinfo_f
933is a function pointer type that is used with the
934.Fn Pfdinfo_iter
935function.
936It is defined as
937.Sy typedef
938.Ft int
939.Fo proc_fdinfo_f
940.Fa "void *"
941.Fa "prfdinfo_t *"
942.Fc .
943The first argument is a pointer to an argument that the user specifies.
944The second argument contains information about an open file descriptor.
945The members of the
946.Vt prfdinfo_t
947are defined earlier in this section.
948For additional information on using this type, see
949.Xr Pfdinfo_iter 3PROC .
950.Sh PROGRAMMING NOTES
951When working with live processes, whether from the
952.Xr Pgrab 3PROC
953or
954.Xr Pcreate 3PROC
955family of functions, there are some additional considerations.
956Importantly, if a process calls any of the
957.Xr exec 2
958suite of functions, much of the state information that is obtained,
959particularly that about mappings in the process will be invalid.
960Callers must ensure that they call
961.Xr Preset_maps 3PROC
962when they hold a process handle across an exec.
963In addition, users of the library should familiarize themselves with the
964.Sy PROGRAMMING NOTES
965section of the
966.Xr proc 4
967manual page, which discusses issues of privileges and security.
968.Sh DEBUGGING
969The library provides a means for obtaining additional debugging
970information.
971The output itself is not part of the
972.Nm
973library's stable interface.
974Setting the environment variable
975.Ev LIBPROC_DEBUG
976to some value will print information to standard error.
977For example,
978.Ev LIBPROC_DEBUG Ns = Ns Em please .
979.Sh LOCKING
980Most functions operate on a handle to a process in the form of a
981.Vt "struct ps_prochandle *" .
982Unless otherwise indicated, the library does not provide any
983synchronization for different routines that are operating on the
984.Sy same
985.Nm
986library handle.
987It is up to the caller to ensure that only a single thread is using a handle at
988any given time.
989Multiple threads may call
990.Nm
991library routines at the same time as long as each thread is using a
992different handle.
993.Pp
994Each individual function notes its
995.Sy MT-Level
996section.
997The MT-Level of a routine that matches the above description will refer to this
998manual page.
999If it does not, then it refers to the standard attributes in
1000.Xr attributes 5 .
1001.Sh INTERFACE STABILITY
1002.Sy Uncommitted
1003.Pp
1004While the library is considered an uncommitted interface, and is still
1005evolving, changes that break compatibility have been uncommon and this
1006trend is expected to continue.
1007It is documented to allow consumers, whether part of illumos or outside of it,
1008to understand the libarary and make use of it with the understanding that
1009changes may occur which break both source and binary compatibility.
1010.Sh SEE ALSO
1011.Xr gcore 1 ,
1012.Xr mdb 1 ,
1013.Xr proc 1 ,
1014.Xr ps 1 ,
1015.Xr coreadm 1M ,
1016.Xr exec 2 ,
1017.Xr fcntl 2 ,
1018.Xr stat 2 ,
1019.Xr Intro 3 ,
1020.Xr dlopen 3C ,
1021.Xr elf 3ELF ,
1022.Xr ctf 4 ,
1023.Xr proc 4 ,
1024.Xr attributes 5 ,
1025.Xr environ 5 ,
1026.Xr privileges 5
1027.Pp
1028.Rs
1029.%T Linkers and Libraries Guide
1030.Re
1031.Pp
1032.Xr Lfree 3PROC ,
1033.Xr Lgrab 3PROC ,
1034.Xr Lgrab_error 3PROC ,
1035.Xr Pcreate 3PROC ,
1036.Xr Pcreate_agent 3PROC ,
1037.Xr Pcreate_callback 3PROC ,
1038.Xr Pcreate_error 3PROC ,
1039.Xr Pdestroy_agent 3PROC ,
1040.Xr Pfgrab_core 3PROC ,
1041.Xr Pfree 3PROC ,
1042.Xr Pgrab 3PROC ,
1043.Xr Pgrab_core 3PROC ,
1044.Xr Pgrab_error 3PROC ,
1045.Xr Pgrab_file 3PROC ,
1046.Xr Pgrab_ops 3PROC ,
1047.Xr Prelease 3PROC ,
1048.Xr Preopen 3PROC ,
1049.Xr Pxcreate 3PROC
1050.Pp
1051.Xr Paddr_to_ctf 3PROC ,
1052.Xr Paddr_to_loadobj 3PROC ,
1053.Xr Paddr_to_map 3PROC ,
1054.Xr Paddr_to_text_map 3PROC ,
1055.Xr Pasfd 3PROC ,
1056.Xr Pclearfault 3PROC ,
1057.Xr Pclearsig 3PROC ,
1058.Xr Pcontent 3PROC ,
1059.Xr Pcred 3PROC ,
1060.Xr Pctlfd 3PROC ,
1061.Xr Pdelbkpt 3PROC ,
1062.Xr Pdelwapt 3PROC ,
1063.Xr Pdstop 3PROC ,
1064.Xr Pexecname 3PROC ,
1065.Xr Pfault 3PROC ,
1066.Xr Pfgcore 3PROC ,
1067.Xr Pgcore 3PROC ,
1068.Xr Pgetareg 3PROC ,
1069.Xr Pgetauxval 3PROC ,
1070.Xr Pgetauxvec 3PROC ,
1071.Xr Pgetenv 3PROC ,
1072.Xr Pisprocdir 3PROC ,
1073.Xr Pissyscall_prev 3PROC ,
1074.Xr Plmid 3PROC ,
1075.Xr Plmid_to_loadobj 3PROC ,
1076.Xr Plmid_to_map 3PROC ,
1077.Xr Plookup_by_addr 3PROC ,
1078.Xr Plookup_by_name 3PROC ,
1079.Xr Plwp_alt_stack 3PROC ,
1080.Xr Plwp_getfpregs 3PROC ,
1081.Xr Plwp_getpsinfo 3PROC ,
1082.Xr Plwp_getregs 3PROC ,
1083.Xr Plwp_getspymaster 3PROC ,
1084.Xr Plwp_main_stack 3PROC ,
1085.Xr Plwp_setfpregs 3PROC ,
1086.Xr Plwp_setregs 3PROC ,
1087.Xr Plwp_stack 3PROC ,
1088.Xr Pname_to_ctf 3PROC ,
1089.Xr Pname_to_loadobj 3PROC ,
1090.Xr Pname_to_map 3PROC ,
1091.Xr Pobjname 3PROC ,
1092.Xr Pobjname_resolved 3PROC ,
1093.Xr Pplatform 3PROC ,
1094.Xr Ppltdest 3PROC ,
1095.Xr Ppriv 3PROC ,
1096.Xr Ppsinfo 3PROC ,
1097.Xr Pputareg 3PROC ,
1098.Xr Prd_agent 3PROC ,
1099.Xr Pread 3PROC ,
1100.Xr Pread_string 3PROC ,
1101.Xr Preset_maps 3PROC ,
1102.Xr Psecflags 3PROC ,
1103.Xr Psetbkpt 3PROC ,
1104.Xr Psetcred 3PROC ,
1105.Xr Psetfault 3PROC ,
1106.Xr Psetflags 3PROC ,
1107.Xr Psetpriv 3PROC ,
1108.Xr Psetrun 3PROC ,
1109.Xr Psetsignal 3PROC ,
1110.Xr Psetsysentry 3PROC ,
1111.Xr Psetsysexit 3PROC ,
1112.Xr Psetwapt 3PROC ,
1113.Xr Psetzoneid 3PROC ,
1114.Xr Psignal 3PROC ,
1115.Xr Pstate 3PROC ,
1116.Xr Pstatus 3PROC ,
1117.Xr Pstop 3PROC ,
1118.Xr Pstopstatus 3PROC ,
1119.Xr Psync 3PROC ,
1120.Xr Psysentry 3PROC ,
1121.Xr Psysexit 3PROC ,
1122.Xr Puname 3PROC ,
1123.Xr Punsetflags 3PROC ,
1124.Xr Pupdate_maps 3PROC ,
1125.Xr Pupdate_syms 3PROC ,
1126.Xr Pwait 3PROC ,
1127.Xr Pwrite 3PROC ,
1128.Xr Pxecbkpt 3PROC ,
1129.Xr Pxecwapt 3PROC ,
1130.Xr Pxlookup_by_addr 3PROC ,
1131.Xr Pxlookup_by_addr_resolved 3PROC ,
1132.Xr Pxlookup_by_name 3PROC ,
1133.Xr Pzonename 3PROC ,
1134.Xr Pzonepath 3PROC ,
1135.Xr Pzoneroot 3PROC
1136.Pp
1137.Xr Lalt_stack 3PROC ,
1138.Xr Lclearfault 3PROC ,
1139.Xr Lclearsig 3PROC ,
1140.Xr Lctlfd 3PROC ,
1141.Xr Ldstop 3PROC ,
1142.Xr Lgetareg 3PROC ,
1143.Xr Lmain_stack 3PROC ,
1144.Xr Lprochandle 3PROC ,
1145.Xr Lpsinfo 3PROC ,
1146.Xr Lputareg 3PROC ,
1147.Xr Lsetrun 3PROC ,
1148.Xr Lstack 3PROC ,
1149.Xr Lstate 3PROC ,
1150.Xr Lstatus 3PROC ,
1151.Xr Lstop 3PROC ,
1152.Xr Lsync 3PROC ,
1153.Xr Lwait 3PROC ,
1154.Xr Lxecbkpt 3PROC ,
1155.Xr Lxecwapt 3PROC
1156.Pp
1157.Xr pr_access 3PROC ,
1158.Xr pr_close 3PROC ,
1159.Xr pr_creat 3PROC ,
1160.Xr pr_door_info 3PROC ,
1161.Xr pr_exit 3PROC ,
1162.Xr pr_fcntl 3PROC ,
1163.Xr pr_fstat 3PROC ,
1164.Xr pr_fstat64 3PROC ,
1165.Xr pr_fstatvfs 3PROC ,
1166.Xr pr_getitimer 3PROC ,
1167.Xr pr_getpeername 3PROC ,
1168.Xr pr_getpeerucred 3PROC ,
1169.Xr pr_getprojid 3PROC ,
1170.Xr pr_getrctl 3PROC ,
1171.Xr pr_getrlimit 3PROC ,
1172.Xr pr_getrlimit64 3PROC ,
1173.Xr pr_getsockname 3PROC ,
1174.Xr pr_getsockopt 3PROC ,
1175.Xr pr_gettaskid 3PROC ,
1176.Xr pr_getzoneid 3PROC ,
1177.Xr pr_ioctl 3PROC ,
1178.Xr pr_link 3PROC ,
1179.Xr pr_llseek 3PROC ,
1180.Xr pr_lseek 3PROC ,
1181.Xr pr_lstat 3PROC ,
1182.Xr pr_lstat64 3PROC ,
1183.Xr pr_memcntl 3PROC ,
1184.Xr pr_meminfo 3PROC ,
1185.Xr pr_mmap 3PROC ,
1186.Xr pr_munmap 3PROC ,
1187.Xr pr_open 3PROC ,
1188.Xr pr_processor_bind 3PROC ,
1189.Xr pr_rename 3PROC ,
1190.Xr pr_setitimer 3PROC ,
1191.Xr pr_setrctl 3PROC ,
1192.Xr pr_setrlimit 3PROC ,
1193.Xr pr_setrlimit64 3PROC ,
1194.Xr pr_settaskid 3PROC ,
1195.Xr pr_sigaction 3PROC ,
1196.Xr pr_stat 3PROC ,
1197.Xr pr_stat64 3PROC ,
1198.Xr pr_statvfs 3PROC ,
1199.Xr pr_unlink 3PROC ,
1200.Xr pr_waitid 3PROC ,
1201.Pp
1202.Xr Penv_iter 3PROC ,
1203.Xr Plwp_iter 3PROC ,
1204.Xr Plwp_iter_all 3PROC ,
1205.Xr Pmapping_iter 3PROC ,
1206.Xr Pmapping_iter_resolved 3PROC ,
1207.Xr Pobject_iter 3PROC ,
1208.Xr Pobject_iter_resolved 3PROC ,
1209.Xr Pstack_iter 3PROC ,
1210.Xr Psymbol_iter 3PROC ,
1211.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_addr 3PROC ,
1212.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_lmid 3PROC ,
1213.Xr Psymbol_iter_by_name 3PROC ,
1214.Xr Pxsymbol_iter 3PROC ,
1215.Xr Pfdinfo_iter 3PROC
1216.Pp
1217.Xr Perror_printf 3PROC ,
1218.Xr proc_arg_grab 3PROC ,
1219.Xr proc_arg_psinfo 3PROC ,
1220.Xr proc_arg_xgrab 3PROC ,
1221.Xr proc_arg_xpsinfo 3PROC ,
1222.Xr proc_content2str 3PROC ,
1223.Xr proc_dmodelname 3PROC ,
1224.Xr proc_finistdio 3PROC ,
1225.Xr proc_fltname 3PROC ,
1226.Xr proc_fltset2str 3PROC ,
1227.Xr proc_flushstdio 3PROC ,
1228.Xr proc_get_auxv 3PROC ,
1229.Xr proc_get_cred 3PROC ,
1230.Xr proc_get_priv 3PROC ,
1231.Xr proc_get_psinfo 3PROC ,
1232.Xr proc_get_status 3PROC ,
1233.Xr proc_initstdio 3PROC ,
1234.Xr proc_lwp_in_set 3PROC ,
1235.Xr proc_lwp_range_valid 3PROC ,
1236.Xr proc_signame 3PROC ,
1237.Xr proc_sigset2str 3PROC ,
1238.Xr proc_str2content 3PROC ,
1239.Xr proc_str2flt 3PROC ,
1240.Xr proc_str2fltset 3PROC ,
1241.Xr proc_str2sig 3PROC ,
1242.Xr proc_str2sigset 3PROC ,
1243.Xr proc_str2sys 3PROC ,
1244.Xr proc_str2sysset 3PROC ,
1245.Xr proc_sysname 3PROC ,
1246.Xr proc_sysset2str 3PROC ,
1247.Xr proc_unctrl_psinfo 3PROC ,
1248.Xr proc_walk 3PROC
1249.Pp
1250.Xr Pldt 3PROC ,
1251.Xr proc_get_ldt 3PROC ,
1252.Pp
1253.Xr Plwp_getgwindows 3PROC ,
1254.Xr Plwp_getxregs 3PROC ,
1255.Xr Plwp_setxregs 3PROC ,
1256.Pp
1257.Xr Plwp_getasrs 3PROC ,
1258.Xr Plwp_setasrs 3PROC
1259