/* This file is used to test the 'catch syscall' feature on GDB. Please, if you are going to edit this file DO NOT change the syscalls being called (nor the order of them). If you really must do this, then take a look at catch-syscall.exp and modify there too. Written by Sergio Durigan Junior September, 2008 */ #include #include #include #include /* These are the syscalls numbers used by the test. */ int close_syscall = SYS_close; int chroot_syscall = SYS_chroot; /* GDB had a bug where it couldn't catch syscall number 0 (PR 16297). In most GNU/Linux architectures, syscall number 0 is restart_syscall, which can't be called from userspace. However, the "read" syscall is zero on x86_64. */ int read_syscall = SYS_read; #ifdef SYS_pipe int pipe_syscall = SYS_pipe; #else int pipe2_syscall = SYS_pipe2; #endif int write_syscall = SYS_write; int exit_group_syscall = SYS_exit_group; int main (void) { int fd[2]; char buf1[2] = "a"; char buf2[2]; /* A close() with a wrong argument. We are only interested in the syscall. */ close (-1); chroot ("."); pipe (fd); write (fd[1], buf1, sizeof (buf1)); read (fd[0], buf2, sizeof (buf2)); /* The last syscall. Do not change this. */ _exit (0); }