Just In Time Debugging (JITD) is a way for Fuchsia to suspend processes that crash so that interested parties can debug/process them later. This permits interesting flows such as attaching zxdb to a program that crashed overnight, when the debugger was not attached/running.
This is done by storing process in exceptions in a special place called the “Process Limbo”. This place will keep those processes suspended until some other agent comes and releases them.
See Implementation for more details about how it works.
One of the great benefits of the Process Limbo is to be able to catch crashing processes in the wild, without the need to have already running debuggers. This is specially useful for situations where the debugger cannot be running, such as driver startup. For such cases, having an active Process Limbo can provide an invaluable source of debugging information.
There are two ways of enabling the Process Limbo:
There's an ffx plugin that permits the user to query the current state of the limbo:
$ ffx debug limbo --help Usage: ffx debug limbo <command> [<args>] control the process limbo on the target Options: --help display usage information Commands: status query the status of the process limbo. enable enable the process limbo. It will now begin to capture crashing processes. disable disable the process limbo. Will free any pending processes waiting in it. list lists the processes currently waiting on limbo. The limbo must be active. release release a process from limbo. The limbo must be active. See 'ffx help <command>' for more information on a specific command.
Manual activation works only if you have a way to send commands to the system. But some development environments run software earlier that the user can interact with (or run a debugger). Drivers are a good example of this. For those cases, having the Process Limbo active from the start lets you catch driver crashes as they occur while the driver is spinning up, which is normally the hardest part to debug.
In order to do this, there is a configuration that has to be set into the build:
fx set <YOUR CONFIG> --with-base //src/developer/forensics:exceptions_enable_jitd_on_startup
Or add this label to the base_package_labels
in your build args. You can still use the Process Limbo CLI tool to disable and manipulate the limbo afterwards. Then you will need to push an update to your device for this to take an effect.
NOTE: Driver initialization is finicky and freezing crashing process can leave the system in an undefined state and “hang” it, so your mileage may vary when using this feature, especially for very early drivers.
The main user of JITD is zxdb, which is able to attach to a process waiting in the limbo. When starting zxdb, it will display the processes that are waiting in it:
$ ffx debug connect Connecting (use "disconnect" to cancel)... Connected successfully. 👉 To get started, try "status" or "help". Processes waiting on exception: 272401: crasher Type "attach <pid>" to reconnect. [zxdb] attach 272401 Process 1 [Running] koid=272401 crashed Attached Process 1 [Running] koid=272401 crasher [Warning] Received thread exception for an unknown thread. [zxdb] thread # State Koid Name ▶ 1 Blocked (Exception) 272403 initial-thread [zxdb] frame ▶ 0 blind_write(volatile unsigned int*) • crasher.c:22 (inline) 1 main(int, char**) • crasher.c:201 2 start_main(const start_params*) • __libc_start_main.c:93 3 __libc_start_main(zx_handle_t, int (*)(int, char**, char**)) • __libc_start_main.c:165 4 _start + 0x14 [zxdb] list 17 int (*func)(volatile unsigned int*); 18 const char* desc; 19 } command_t; 20 21 int blind_write(volatile unsigned int* addr) { ▶ 22 *addr = 0xBAD1DEA; 23 return 0; 24 } 25 26 int blind_read(volatile unsigned int* addr) { return (int)(*addr); } 27 28 int blind_execute(volatile unsigned int* addr) { 29 void (*func)(void) = (void*)addr; 30 func(); 31 return 0;
Within zxdb you can also do help process-limbo
to get more information about how to use it.
The Process Limbo presents itself as a FIDL service, which is what the Process Limbo CLI tool and zxdb use. The FIDL protocol is defined in //sdk/fidl/fuchsia.exception/process_limbo.fidl
.
When a process throws an exception, Zircon will generate an associated exception handle
. It will then look if there are any listeners in any associated exception channels that might be interested in handling that exception. That is how debuggers such as zxdb get the exceptions from running processes. See the exceptions handling for more details.
But when there are no more exception handlers left, either because there weren't any or they all decided to pass on handling it, the root job has an exclusive handler called crashsvc
. Once an exception has reached the Crash Service, it is understood that it has “crashed” and that no program was able to handle it. The Crash Service will then dump the crashing stack trace to the logs and pass the exception over to the Exception Broker
.
The Exception Broker is in charge of deciding what is to be done with a crashing exception, depending on the actual system configuration. It might decide to create a minidump file and dump a crash report, send the exception over to the Process Limbo or kill the process.
The Exception Broker is aware of the Process Limbo and whether it is active or not. When it receives an exception, it will check whether the Process Limbo is enabled. If so, it will pass the exception handle over to it. This is the same Process Limbo exposed by the FIDL service.