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170 lines
7.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
170 lines
7.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
==============
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Crash Reporter
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==============
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Overview
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========
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The **crash reporter** is a subsystem to record and manage application
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crash data.
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While the subsystem is known as *crash reporter*, it helps to think of
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it more as a *process dump manager*. This is because the heart of this
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subsystem is really managing process dump files and these files are
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created not only from process crashes but also from hangs and other
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exceptional events.
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The crash reporter subsystem is composed of a number of pieces working
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together.
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Breakpad
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Breakpad is a library and set of tools to make collecting process
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information (notably dumps from crashes) easy. Breakpad is a 3rd
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party project (originaly developed by Google) that is imported into
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the tree.
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Dump files
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Breakpad produces files called *dump files* that hold process data
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(stacks, heap data, etc).
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Crash Reporter Client
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The crash reporter client is a standalone executable that is launched
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to handle dump files. This application optionally submits crashes to
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Mozilla (or the configured server).
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How Main-Process Crash Handling Works
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=====================================
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The crash handler is hooked up very early in the Gecko process lifetime.
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It all starts in ``XREMain::XRE_mainInit()`` from ``nsAppRunner.cpp``.
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Assuming crash reporting is enabled, this startup function registers an
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exception handler for the process and tells the crash reporter subsystem
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about basic metadata such as the application name and version.
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The registration of the crash reporter exception handler doubles as
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initialization of the crash reporter itself. This happens in
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``CrashReporter::SetExceptionHandler()`` from ``nsExceptionHandler.cpp``.
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The crash reporter figures out what application to use for reporting
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dumped crashes and where to store these dump files on disk. The Breakpad
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exception handler (really just a mechanism for dumping process state) is
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initialized as part of this function. The Breakpad exception handler is
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a ``google_breakpad::ExceptionHandler`` instance and it's stored as
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``gExceptionHandler``.
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As the application runs, various other systems may write *annotations*
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or *notes* to the crash reporter to indicate state of the application,
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help with possible reasons for a current or future crash, etc. These are
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performed via ``CrashReporter::AnnotateCrashReport()`` and
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``CrashReporter::AppendAppNotesToCrashReport()`` from
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``nsExceptionHandler.h``.
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For well running applications, this is all that happens. However, if a
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crash or similar exceptional event occurs (such as a hang), we need to
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write a crash report.
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When an event worthy of writing a dump occurs, the Breakpad exception
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handler is invoked and Breakpad does its thing. When Breakpad has
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finished, it calls back into ``CrashReporter::MinidumpCallback()`` from
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``nsExceptionHandler.cpp`` to tell the crash reporter about what was
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written.
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``MinidumpCallback()`` performs a number of actions once a dump has been
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written. It writes a file with the time of the crash so other systems can
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easily determine the time of the last crash. It supplements the dump
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file with an *extra* file containing Mozilla-specific metadata. This data
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includes the annotations set via ``CrashReporter::AnnotateCrashReport()``
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as well as time since last crash, whether garbage collection was active at
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the time of the crash, memory statistics, etc.
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If the *crash reporter client* is enabled, ``MinidumpCallback()`` invokes
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it. It simply tries to create a new *crash reporter client* process (e.g.
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*crashreporter.exe*) with the path to the written minidump file as an
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argument.
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The *crash reporter client* performs a number of roles. There's a lot going
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on, so you may want to look at ``main()`` in ``crashreporter.cpp``. First,
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it verifies the dump data is sane. If it isn't (e.g. required metadata is
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missing), the dump data is ignored. If dump data looks sane, the dump data
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is moved into the *pending* directory for the configured data directory
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(defined via the ``MOZ_CRASHREPORTER_DATA_DIRECTORY`` environment variable
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or from the UI). Once this is done, the main crash reporter UI is displayed
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via ``UIShowCrashUI()``. The crash reporter UI is platform specific: there
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are separate versions for Windows, OS X, and various \*NIX presentation
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flavors (such as GTK). The basic gist is a dialog is displayed to the user
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and the user has the opportunity to submit this dump data to a remote
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server.
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If a dump is submitted via the crash reporter, the raw dump files are
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removed from the *pending* directory and a file containing the
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crash ID from the remote server for the submitted dump is created in the
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*submitted* directory.
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If the user chooses not to submit a dump in the crash reporter UI, the dump
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files are deleted.
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And that's pretty much what happens when a crash/dump is written!
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Plugin and Child Process Crashes
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================================
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Crashes in plugin and child processes are also managed by the crash
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reporting subsystem.
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Child process crashes are handled by the ``mozilla::dom::CrashReporterParent``
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class defined in ``dom/ipc``. When a child process crashes, the toplevel IPDL
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actor should check for it by calling TakeMinidump in its ``ActorDestroy``
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Method: see ``mozilla::plugins::PluginModuleParent::ActorDestroy`` and
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``mozilla::plugins::PluginModuleParent::ProcessFirstMinidump``. That method
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is responsible for calling
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``mozilla::dom::CrashReporterParent::GenerateCrashReportForMinidump`` with
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appropriate crash annotations specific to the crash. All child-process
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crashes are annotated with a ``ProcessType`` annotation, such as "content" or
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"plugin".
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Submission of child process crashes is handled by application code. This
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code prompts the user to submit crashes in context-appropriate UI and then
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submits the crashes using ``CrashSubmit.jsm``.
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Flash Process Crashes
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=====================
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On Windows Vista+, the Adobe Flash plugin creates two extra processes in its
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Firefox plugin to implement OS-level sandboxing. In order to catch crashes in
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these processes, Firefox injects a crash report handler into the process using the code at ``InjectCrashReporter.cpp``. When these crashes occur, the
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ProcessType=plugin annotation is present, and an additional annotation
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FlashProcessDump has the value "Sandbox" or "Broker".
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Plugin Hangs
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============
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Plugin hangs are handled as crash reports. If a plugin doesn't respond to an
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IPC message after 60 seconds, the plugin IPC code will take minidumps of all
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of the processes involved and then kill the plugin.
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In this case, there will be only one .ini file with the crash report metadata,
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but there will be multiple dump files: at least one for the browser process and
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one for the plugin process, and perhaps also additional dumps for the Flash
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sandbox and broker processes. All of these files are submitted together as a
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unit. Before submission, the filenames of the files are linked:
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- **uuid.ini** - *annotations, includes an additional_minidumps field*
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- **uuid.dmp** - *plugin process dump file*
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- **uuid-<other>.dmp** - *other process dump file as listed in additional_minidumps*
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Browser Hangs
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=============
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There is a feature of Firefox that will crash Firefox if it stops processing
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messages after a certain period of time. This feature doesn't work well and is
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disabled by default. See ``xpcom/threads/HangMonitor.cpp``. Hang crashes
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are annotated with ``Hang=1``.
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about:crashes
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=============
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If the crash reporter subsystem is enabled, the *about:crashes*
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page will be registered with the application. This page provides
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information about previous and submitted crashes.
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It is also possible to submit crashes from *about:crashes*.
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