@@ -512,8 +512,7 @@ void signal_init(void)
}
}
-#if !defined(TARGET_OPENRISC) && !defined(TARGET_UNICORE32) && \
- !defined(TARGET_X86_64)
+#if !(defined(TARGET_X86_64) || defined(TARGET_UNICORE32))
/* Force a synchronously taken signal. The kernel force_sig() function
* also forces the signal to "not blocked, not ignored", but for QEMU
* that work is done in process_pending_signals().
@@ -531,9 +530,6 @@ static void force_sig(int sig)
info._sifields._kill._uid = 0;
queue_signal(env, info.si_signo, QEMU_SI_KILL, &info);
}
-#endif
-
-#if !(defined(TARGET_X86_64) || defined(TARGET_UNICORE32))
/* Force a SIGSEGV if we couldn't write to memory trying to set
* up the signal frame. oldsig is the signal we were trying to handle
@@ -541,22 +537,13 @@ static void force_sig(int sig)
*/
static void force_sigsegv(int oldsig)
{
- CPUState *cpu = thread_cpu;
- CPUArchState *env = cpu->env_ptr;
- target_siginfo_t info;
-
if (oldsig == SIGSEGV) {
/* Make sure we don't try to deliver the signal again; this will
* end up with handle_pending_signal() calling dump_core_and_abort().
*/
sigact_table[oldsig - 1]._sa_handler = TARGET_SIG_DFL;
}
- info.si_signo = TARGET_SIGSEGV;
- info.si_errno = 0;
- info.si_code = TARGET_SI_KERNEL;
- info._sifields._kill._pid = 0;
- info._sifields._kill._uid = 0;
- queue_signal(env, info.si_signo, QEMU_SI_KILL, &info);
+ force_sig(TARGET_SIGSEGV);
}
#endif
Now that we have a force_sig() with the semantics we need, we can implement force_sigsegv() to call it rather than open-coding the call to queue_signal(). Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> --- linux-user/signal.c | 17 ++--------------- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)