1 PROC(4)                 File Formats and Configurations                PROC(4)
   2 
   3 
   4 
   5 NAME
   6        proc - /proc, the process file system
   7 
   8 DESCRIPTION
   9        /proc is a file system that provides access to the state of each
  10        process and light-weight process (lwp) in the system. The name of each
  11        entry in the /proc directory is a decimal number corresponding to a
  12        process-ID. These entries are themselves subdirectories. Access to
  13        process state is provided by additional files contained within each
  14        subdirectory; the hierarchy is described more completely below. In this
  15        document, ``/proc file'' refers to a non-directory file within the
  16        hierarchy rooted at /proc. The owner of each /proc file and
  17        subdirectory is determined by the user-ID of the process.
  18 
  19 
  20        /proc can be mounted on any mount point, in addition to the standard
  21        /proc mount point, and can be mounted several places at once. Such
  22        additional mounts are allowed in order to facilitate the confinement of
  23        processes to subtrees of the file system via chroot(1M) and yet allow
  24        such processes access to commands like ps(1).
  25 
  26 
  27        Standard system calls are used to access /proc files: open(2),
  28        close(2), read(2), and write(2) (including readv(2), writev(2),
  29        pread(2), and pwrite(2)). Most files describe process state and can
  30        only be opened for reading. ctl and lwpctl (control) files permit
  31        manipulation of process state and can only be opened for writing. as
  32        (address space) files contain the image of the running process and can
  33        be opened for both reading and writing. An open for writing allows
  34        process control; a read-only open allows inspection but not control. In
  35        this document, we refer to the process as open for reading or writing
  36        if any of its associated /proc files is open for reading or writing.
  37 
  38 
  39        In general, more than one process can open the same /proc file at the
  40        same time. Exclusive open is an advisory mechanism provided to allow
  41        controlling processes to avoid collisions with each other. A process
  42        can obtain exclusive control of a target process, with respect to other
  43        cooperating processes, if it successfully opens any /proc file in the
  44        target process for writing (the as or ctl files, or the lwpctl file of
  45        any lwp) while specifying O_EXCL in the open(2). Such an open will fail
  46        if the target process is already open for writing (that is, if an as,
  47        ctl, or lwpctl file is already open for writing). There can be any
  48        number of concurrent read-only opens; O_EXCL is ignored on opens for
  49        reading. It is recommended that the first open for writing by a
  50        controlling process use the O_EXCL flag; multiple controlling processes
  51        usually result in chaos.
  52 
  53 
  54        If a process opens one of its own /proc files for writing, the open
  55        succeeds regardless of O_EXCL and regardless of whether some other
  56        process has the process open for writing. Self-opens do not count when
  57        another process attempts an exclusive open. (A process cannot exclude a
  58        debugger by opening itself for writing and the application of a
  59        debugger cannot prevent a process from opening itself.) All self-opens
  60        for writing are forced to be close-on-exec (see the F_SETFD operation
  61        of fcntl(2)).
  62 
  63 
  64        Data may be transferred from or to any locations in the address space
  65        of the traced process by applying lseek(2) to position the as file at
  66        the virtual address of interest followed by read(2) or write(2) (or by
  67        using pread(2) or pwrite(2) for the combined operation). The address-
  68        map files /proc/pid/map and /proc/pid/xmap can be read to determine the
  69        accessible areas (mappings) of the address space. I/O transfers may
  70        span contiguous mappings. An I/O request extending into an unmapped
  71        area is truncated at the boundary. A write request beginning at an
  72        unmapped virtual address fails with EIO; a read request beginning at an
  73        unmapped virtual address returns zero (an end-of-file indication).
  74 
  75 
  76        Information and control operations are provided through additional
  77        files.  <procfs.h> contains definitions of data structures and message
  78        formats used with these files. Some of these definitions involve the
  79        use of sets of flags. The set types sigset_t, fltset_t, and sysset_t
  80        correspond, respectively, to signal, fault, and system call
  81        enumerations defined in <sys/signal.h>, <sys/fault.h>, and
  82        <sys/syscall.h>.   Each set type is large enough to hold flags for its
  83        own enumeration. Although they are of different sizes, they have a
  84        common structure and can be manipulated by these macros:
  85 
  86          prfillset(&set);         /* turn on all flags in set */
  87          premptyset(&set);        /* turn off all flags in set */
  88          praddset(&set,     flag);        /* turn on the specified flag */
  89          prdelset(&set,     flag);        /* turn off the specified flag */
  90          r = prismember(&set, flag);  /* != 0 iff flag is turned on */
  91 
  92 
  93 
  94        One of prfillset() or premptyset() must be used to initialize set
  95        before it is used in any other operation. flag must be a member of the
  96        enumeration corresponding to set.
  97 
  98 
  99        Every process contains at least one light-weight process, or lwp.  Each
 100        lwp represents a flow of execution that is independently scheduled by
 101        the operating system. All lwps in a process share its address space as
 102        well as many other attributes. Through the use of lwpctl and ctl files
 103        as described below, it is possible to affect individual lwps in a
 104        process or to affect all of them at once, depending on the operation.
 105 
 106 
 107        When the process has more than one lwp, a representative lwp is chosen
 108        by the system for certain process status files and control operations.
 109        The representative lwp is a stopped lwp only if all of the process's
 110        lwps are stopped; is stopped on an event of interest only if all of the
 111        lwps are so stopped (excluding PR_SUSPENDED lwps); is in a PR_REQUESTED
 112        stop only if there are no other events of interest to be found; or,
 113        failing everything else, is in a PR_SUSPENDED stop (implying that the
 114        process is deadlocked). See the description of the status file for
 115        definitions of stopped states. See the PCSTOP control operation for the
 116        definition of ``event of interest''.
 117 
 118 
 119        The representative lwp remains fixed (it will be chosen again on the
 120        next operation) as long as all of the lwps are stopped on events of
 121        interest or are in a PR_SUSPENDED stop and the PCRUN control operation
 122        is not applied to any of them.
 123 
 124 
 125        When applied to the process control file, every /proc control operation
 126        that must act on an lwp uses the same algorithm to choose which lwp to
 127        act upon. Together with synchronous stopping (see PCSET), this enables
 128        a debugger to control a multiple-lwp process using only the process-
 129        level status and control files if it so chooses. More fine-grained
 130        control can be achieved using the lwp-specific files.
 131 
 132 
 133        The system supports two process data models, the traditional 32-bit
 134        data model in which ints, longs and pointers are all 32 bits wide (the
 135        ILP32 data model), and on some platforms the 64-bit data model in which
 136        longs and pointers, but not ints, are 64 bits in width (the LP64 data
 137        model). In the LP64 data model some system data types, notably size_t,
 138        off_t, time_t and dev_t, grow from 32 bits to 64 bits as well.
 139 
 140 
 141        The /proc interfaces described here are available to both 32-bit and
 142        64-bit controlling processes. However, many operations attempted by a
 143        32-bit controlling process on a 64-bit target process will fail with
 144        EOVERFLOW because the address space range of a 32-bit process cannot
 145        encompass a 64-bit process or because the data in some 64-bit system
 146        data type cannot be compressed to fit into the corresponding 32-bit
 147        type without loss of information. Operations that fail in this
 148        circumstance include reading and writing the address space, reading the
 149        address-map files, and setting the target process's registers. There is
 150        no restriction on operations applied by a 64-bit process to either a
 151        32-bit or a 64-bit target processes.
 152 
 153 
 154        The format of the contents of any /proc file depends on the data model
 155        of the observer (the controlling process), not on the data model of the
 156        target process. A 64-bit debugger does not have to translate the
 157        information it reads from a /proc file for a 32-bit process from 32-bit
 158        format to 64-bit format. However, it usually has to be aware of the
 159        data model of the target process. The pr_dmodel field of the status
 160        files indicates the target process's data model.
 161 
 162 
 163        To help deal with system data structures that are read from 32-bit
 164        processes, a 64-bit controlling program can be compiled with the C
 165        preprocessor symbol _SYSCALL32 defined before system header files are
 166        included. This makes explicit 32-bit fixed-width data structures (like
 167        cstruct stat32) visible to the 64-bit program. See types32.h(3HEAD).
 168 
 169 DIRECTORY STRUCTURE
 170        At the top level, the directory /proc contains entries each of which
 171        names an existing process in the system. These entries are themselves
 172        directories. Except where otherwise noted, the files described below
 173        can be opened for reading only. In addition, if a process becomes a
 174        zombie (one that has exited but whose parent has not yet performed a
 175        wait(3C) upon it), most of its associated /proc files disappear from
 176        the hierarchy; subsequent attempts to open them, or to read or write
 177        files opened before the process exited, will elicit the error ENOENT.
 178 
 179 
 180        Although process state and consequently the contents of /proc files can
 181        change from instant to instant, a single read(2) of a /proc file is
 182        guaranteed to return a sane representation of state; that is, the read
 183        will be atomic with respect to the state of the process. No such
 184        guarantee applies to successive reads applied to a /proc file for a
 185        running process. In addition, atomicity is not guaranteed for I/O
 186        applied to the as (address-space) file for a running process or for a
 187        process whose address space contains memory shared by another running
 188        process.
 189 
 190 
 191        A number of structure definitions are used to describe the files. These
 192        structures may grow by the addition of elements at the end in future
 193        releases of the system and it is not legitimate for a program to assume
 194        that they will not.
 195 
 196 STRUCTURE OF /proc/pid
 197        A given directory /proc/pid contains the following entries. A process
 198        can use the invisible alias /proc/self if it wishes to open one of its
 199        own /proc files (invisible in the sense that the name ``self'' does not
 200        appear in a directory listing of /proc obtained from ls(1),
 201        getdents(2), or readdir(3C)).
 202 
 203    contracts
 204        A directory containing references to the contracts held by the process.
 205        Each entry is a symlink to the contract's directory under
 206        /system/contract.  See contract(4).
 207 
 208    as
 209        Contains the address-space image of the process; it can be opened for
 210        both reading and writing. lseek(2) is used to position the file at the
 211        virtual address of interest and then the address space can be examined
 212        or changed through read(2) or write(2) (or by using pread(2) or
 213        pwrite(2) for the combined operation).
 214 
 215    ctl
 216        A write-only file to which structured messages are written directing
 217        the system to change some aspect of the process's state or control its
 218        behavior in some way. The seek offset is not relevant when writing to
 219        this file. Individual lwps also have associated lwpctl files in the lwp
 220        subdirectories. A control message may be written either to the
 221        process's ctl file or to a specific lwpctl file with operation-specific
 222        effects. The effect of a control message is immediately reflected in
 223        the state of the process visible through appropriate status and
 224        information files. The types of control messages are described in
 225        detail later. See CONTROL MESSAGES.
 226 
 227    status
 228        Contains state information about the process and the representative
 229        lwp. The file contains a pstatus structure which contains an embedded
 230        lwpstatus structure for the representative lwp, as follows:
 231 
 232          typedef struct pstatus {
 233               int pr_flags;            /* flags (see below) */
 234               int pr_nlwp;             /* number of active lwps in the process */
 235               int pr_nzomb;            /* number of zombie lwps in the process */
 236               pid_tpr_pid;             /* process id */
 237               pid_tpr_ppid;            /* parent process id */
 238               pid_tpr_pgid;            /* process group id */
 239               pid_tpr_sid;             /* session id */
 240               id_t pr_aslwpid;         /* obsolete */
 241               id_t pr_agentid;         /* lwp-id of the agent lwp, if any */
 242               sigset_t pr_sigpend;     /* set of process pending signals */
 243               uintptr_t pr_brkbase;    /* virtual address of the process heap */
 244               size_t pr_brksize;       /* size of the process heap, in bytes */
 245               uintptr_t pr_stkbase;    /* virtual address of the process stack */
 246               size_tpr_stksize;        /* size of the process stack, in bytes */
 247               timestruc_t pr_utime;    /* process user cpu time */
 248               timestruc_t pr_stime;    /* process system cpu time */
 249               timestruc_t pr_cutime;   /* sum of children's user times */
 250               timestruc_t pr_cstime;   /* sum of children's system times */
 251               sigset_t pr_sigtrace;    /* set of traced signals */
 252               fltset_t pr_flttrace;    /* set of traced faults */
 253               sysset_t pr_sysentry;    /* set of system calls traced on entry */
 254               sysset_t pr_sysexit;     /* set of system calls traced on exit */
 255               char pr_dmodel;          /* data model of the process */
 256               taskid_t pr_taskid;      /* task id */
 257               projid_t pr_projid;      /* project id */
 258               zoneid_t pr_zoneid;      /* zone id */
 259               lwpstatus_t pr_lwp;      /* status of the representative lwp */
 260          } pstatus_t;
 261 
 262 
 263 
 264        pr_flags is a bit-mask holding the following process flags. For
 265        convenience, it also contains the lwp flags for the representative lwp,
 266        described later.
 267 
 268        PR_ISSYS
 269                     process is a system process (see PCSTOP).
 270 
 271 
 272        PR_VFORKP
 273                     process is the parent of a vforked child (see PCWATCH).
 274 
 275 
 276        PR_FORK
 277                     process has its inherit-on-fork mode set (see PCSET).
 278 
 279 
 280        PR_RLC
 281                     process has its run-on-last-close mode set (see PCSET).
 282 
 283 
 284        PR_KLC
 285                     process has its kill-on-last-close mode set (see PCSET).
 286 
 287 
 288        PR_ASYNC
 289                     process has its asynchronous-stop mode set (see PCSET).
 290 
 291 
 292        PR_MSACCT
 293                     Set by default in all processes to indicate that
 294                     microstate accounting is enabled. However, this flag has
 295                     been deprecated and no longer has any effect.  Microstate
 296                     accounting may not be disabled; however, it is still
 297                     possible to toggle the flag.
 298 
 299 
 300        PR_MSFORK
 301                     Set by default in all processes to indicate that
 302                     microstate accounting will be enabled for processes that
 303                     this parent forks(). However, this flag has been
 304                     deprecated and no longer has any effect. It is possible to
 305                     toggle this flag; however, it is not possible to disable
 306                     microstate accounting.
 307 
 308 
 309        PR_BPTADJ
 310                     process has its breakpoint adjustment mode set (see
 311                     PCSET).
 312 
 313 
 314        PR_PTRACE
 315                     process has its ptrace-compatibility mode set (see PCSET).
 316 
 317 
 318 
 319        pr_nlwp is the total number of active lwps in the process. pr_nzomb is
 320        the total number of zombie lwps in the process. A zombie lwp is a non-
 321        detached lwp that has terminated but has not been reaped with
 322        thr_join(3C) or pthread_join(3C).
 323 
 324 
 325        pr_pid, pr_ppid, pr_pgid, and pr_sid are, respectively, the process ID,
 326        the ID of the process's parent, the process's process group ID, and the
 327        process's session ID.
 328 
 329 
 330        pr_aslwpid is obsolete and is always zero.
 331 
 332 
 333        pr_agentid is the lwp-ID for the /proc agent lwp (see the PCAGENT
 334        control operation). It is zero if there is no agent lwp in the process.
 335 
 336 
 337        pr_sigpend identifies asynchronous signals pending for the process.
 338 
 339 
 340        pr_brkbase is the virtual address of the process heap and pr_brksize is
 341        its size in bytes. The address formed by the sum of these values is the
 342        process break (see brk(2)). pr_stkbase and pr_stksize are,
 343        respectively, the virtual address of the process stack and its size in
 344        bytes. (Each lwp runs on a separate stack; the distinguishing
 345        characteristic of the process stack is that the operating system will
 346        grow it when necessary.)
 347 
 348 
 349        pr_utime, pr_stime, pr_cutime, and pr_cstime are, respectively, the
 350        user CPU and system CPU time consumed by the process, and the
 351        cumulative user CPU and system CPU time consumed by the process's
 352        children, in seconds and nanoseconds.
 353 
 354 
 355        pr_sigtrace and pr_flttrace contain, respectively, the set of signals
 356        and the set of hardware faults that are being traced (see PCSTRACE and
 357        PCSFAULT).
 358 
 359 
 360        pr_sysentry and pr_sysexit contain, respectively, the sets of system
 361        calls being traced on entry and exit (see PCSENTRY and PCSEXIT).
 362 
 363 
 364        pr_dmodel indicates the data model of the process. Possible values are:
 365 
 366        PR_MODEL_ILP32
 367                           process data model is ILP32.
 368 
 369 
 370        PR_MODEL_LP64
 371                           process data model is LP64.
 372 
 373 
 374        PR_MODEL_NATIVE
 375                           process data model is native.
 376 
 377 
 378 
 379        The pr_taskid, pr_projid, and pr_zoneid fields contain respectively,
 380        the numeric IDs of the task, project, and zone in which the process was
 381        running.
 382 
 383 
 384        The constant PR_MODEL_NATIVE reflects the data model of the controlling
 385        process, that is, its value is PR_MODEL_ILP32 or PR_MODEL_LP64
 386        according to whether the controlling process has been compiled as a
 387        32-bit program or a 64-bit program, respectively.
 388 
 389 
 390        pr_lwp contains the status information for the representative lwp:
 391 
 392          typedef struct lwpstatus {
 393            int pr_flags;              /* flags (see below) */
 394            id_t pr_lwpid;             /* specific lwp identifier */
 395            short pr_why;              /* reason for lwp stop, if stopped */
 396            short pr_what;             /* more detailed reason */
 397            short pr_cursig;           /* current signal, if any */
 398            siginfo_t pr_info;         /* info associated with signal or fault */
 399            sigset_t pr_lwppend;       /* set of signals pending to the lwp */
 400            sigset_t pr_lwphold;       /* set of signals blocked by the lwp */
 401            struct sigaction pr_action;/* signal action for current signal */
 402            stack_t pr_altstack;       /* alternate signal stack info */
 403            uintptr_t pr_oldcontext;   /* address of previous ucontext */
 404            short pr_syscall;          /* system call number (if in syscall) */
 405            short pr_nsysarg;          /* number of arguments to this syscall */
 406            int pr_errno;              /* errno for failed syscall */
 407            long pr_sysarg[PRSYSARGS]; /* arguments to this syscall */
 408            long pr_rval1;             /* primary syscall return value */
 409            long pr_rval2;             /* second syscall return value, if any */
 410            char pr_clname[PRCLSZ];    /* scheduling class name */
 411            timestruc_t pr_tstamp;     /* real-time time stamp of stop */
 412            timestruc_t pr_utime;      /* lwp user cpu time */
 413            timestruc_t pr_stime;      /* lwp system cpu time */
 414            uintptr_t pr_ustack;       /* stack boundary data (stack_t) address */
 415            ulong_t pr_instr;          /* current instruction */
 416            prgregset_t pr_reg;        /* general registers */
 417            prfpregset_t pr_fpreg;     /* floating-point registers */
 418          } lwpstatus_t;
 419 
 420 
 421 
 422        pr_flags is a bit-mask holding the following lwp flags. For
 423        convenience, it also contains the process flags, described previously.
 424 
 425        PR_STOPPED
 426                      The lwp is stopped.
 427 
 428 
 429        PR_ISTOP
 430                      The lwp is stopped on an event of interest (see PCSTOP).
 431 
 432 
 433        PR_DSTOP
 434                      The lwp has a stop directive in effect (see PCSTOP).
 435 
 436 
 437        PR_STEP
 438                      The lwp has a single-step directive in effect (see
 439                      PCRUN).
 440 
 441 
 442        PR_ASLEEP
 443                      The lwp is in an interruptible sleep within a system
 444                      call.
 445 
 446 
 447        PR_PCINVAL
 448                      The lwp's current instruction (pr_instr) is undefined.
 449 
 450 
 451        PR_DETACH
 452                      This is a detached lwp (see pthread_create(3C) and
 453                      pthread_join(3C)).
 454 
 455 
 456        PR_DAEMON
 457                      This is a daemon lwp (see pthread_create(3C)).
 458 
 459 
 460        PR_ASLWP
 461                      This flag is obsolete and is never set.
 462 
 463 
 464        PR_AGENT
 465                      This is the /proc agent lwp for the process.
 466 
 467 
 468 
 469        pr_lwpid names the specific lwp.
 470 
 471 
 472        pr_why and pr_what together describe, for a stopped lwp, the reason for
 473        the stop. Possible values of pr_why and the associated pr_what are:
 474 
 475        PR_REQUESTED
 476                         indicates that the stop occurred in response to a stop
 477                         directive, normally because PCSTOP was applied or
 478                         because another lwp stopped on an event of interest
 479                         and the asynchronous-stop flag (see PCSET) was not set
 480                         for the process. pr_what is unused in this case.
 481 
 482 
 483        PR_SIGNALLED
 484                         indicates that the lwp stopped on receipt of a signal
 485                         (see PCSTRACE); pr_what holds the signal number that
 486                         caused the stop (for a newly-stopped lwp, the same
 487                         value is in pr_cursig).
 488 
 489 
 490        PR_FAULTED
 491                         indicates that the lwp stopped on incurring a hardware
 492                         fault (see PCSFAULT); pr_what holds the fault number
 493                         that caused the stop.
 494 
 495 
 496        PR_SYSENTRY
 497        PR_SYSEXIT
 498                         indicate a stop on entry to or exit from a system call
 499                         (see PCSENTRY and PCSEXIT); pr_what holds the system
 500                         call number.
 501 
 502 
 503        PR_JOBCONTROL
 504                         indicates that the lwp stopped due to the default
 505                         action of a job control stop signal (see
 506                         sigaction(2)); pr_what holds the stopping signal
 507                         number.
 508 
 509 
 510        PR_SUSPENDED
 511                         indicates that the lwp stopped due to internal
 512                         synchronization of lwps within the process. pr_what is
 513                         unused in this case.
 514 
 515 
 516 
 517        pr_cursig names the current signal, that is, the next signal to be
 518        delivered to the lwp, if any. pr_info, when the lwp is in a
 519        PR_SIGNALLED or PR_FAULTED stop, contains additional information
 520        pertinent to the particular signal or fault (see <sys/siginfo.h>).
 521 
 522 
 523        pr_lwppend identifies any synchronous or directed signals pending for
 524        the lwp. pr_lwphold identifies those signals whose delivery is being
 525        blocked by the lwp (the signal mask).
 526 
 527 
 528        pr_action contains the signal action information pertaining to the
 529        current signal (see sigaction(2)); it is undefined if pr_cursig is
 530        zero. pr_altstack contains the alternate signal stack information for
 531        the lwp (see sigaltstack(2)).
 532 
 533 
 534        pr_oldcontext, if not zero, contains the address on the lwp stack of a
 535        ucontext structure describing the previous user-level context (see
 536        ucontext.h(3HEAD)). It is non-zero only if the lwp is executing in the
 537        context of a signal handler.
 538 
 539 
 540        pr_syscall is the number of the system call, if any, being executed by
 541        the lwp; it is non-zero if and only if the lwp is stopped on
 542        PR_SYSENTRY or PR_SYSEXIT, or is asleep within a system call (
 543        PR_ASLEEP is set). If pr_syscall is non-zero, pr_nsysarg is the number
 544        of arguments to the system call and pr_sysarg contains the actual
 545        arguments.
 546 
 547 
 548        pr_rval1, pr_rval2, and pr_errno are defined only if the lwp is stopped
 549        on PR_SYSEXIT or if the PR_VFORKP flag is set. If pr_errno is zero,
 550        pr_rval1 and pr_rval2 contain the return values from the system call.
 551        Otherwise, pr_errno contains the error number for the failing system
 552        call (see <sys/errno.h>).
 553 
 554 
 555        pr_clname contains the name of the lwp's scheduling class.
 556 
 557 
 558        pr_tstamp, if the lwp is stopped, contains a time stamp marking when
 559        the lwp stopped, in real time seconds and nanoseconds since an
 560        arbitrary time in the past.
 561 
 562 
 563        pr_utime is the amount of user level CPU time used by this LWP.
 564 
 565 
 566        pr_stime is the amount of system level CPU time used by this LWP.
 567 
 568 
 569        pr_ustack is the virtual address of the stack_t that contains the stack
 570        boundaries for this LWP. See getustack(2) and _stack_grow(3C).
 571 
 572 
 573        pr_instr contains the machine instruction to which the lwp's program
 574        counter refers. The amount of data retrieved from the process is
 575        machine-dependent. On SPARC based machines, it is a 32-bit word. On
 576        x86-based machines, it is a single byte. In general, the size is that
 577        of the machine's smallest instruction. If PR_PCINVAL is set, pr_instr
 578        is undefined; this occurs whenever the lwp is not stopped or when the
 579        program counter refers to an invalid virtual address.
 580 
 581 
 582        pr_reg is an array holding the contents of a stopped lwp's general
 583        registers.
 584 
 585        SPARC
 586                             On SPARC-based machines, the predefined constants
 587                             R_G0 ... R_G7, R_O0 ... R_O7, R_L0 ... R_L7, R_I0
 588                             ...  R_I7, R_PC, R_nPC, and R_Y can be used as
 589                             indices to refer to the corresponding registers;
 590                             previous register windows can be read from their
 591                             overflow locations on the stack (however, see the
 592                             gwindows file in the /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid
 593                             subdirectory).
 594 
 595 
 596        SPARC V8 (32-bit)
 597                             For SPARC V8 (32-bit) controlling processes, the
 598                             predefined constants R_PSR, R_WIM, and R_TBR can
 599                             be used as indices to refer to the corresponding
 600                             special registers. For SPARC V9 (64-bit)
 601                             controlling processes, the predefined constants
 602                             R_CCR, R_ASI, and R_FPRS can be used as indices to
 603                             refer to the corresponding special registers.
 604 
 605 
 606        x86 (32-bit)
 607                             For 32-bit x86 processes, the predefined constants
 608                             listed belowcan be used as indices to refer to the
 609                             corresponding registers.
 610 
 611                               SS
 612                               UESP
 613                               EFL
 614                               CS
 615                               EIP
 616                               ERR
 617                               TRAPNO
 618                               EAX
 619                               ECX
 620                               EDX
 621                               EBX
 622                               ESP
 623                               EBP
 624                               ESI
 625                               EDI
 626                               DS
 627                               ES
 628                               GS
 629 
 630                             The preceding constants are listed in
 631                             <sys/regset.h>.
 632 
 633                             Note that a 32-bit process can run on an x86
 634                             64-bit system, using the constants listed above.
 635 
 636 
 637        x86 (64-bit)
 638                             To read the registers of a 32- or a 64-bit
 639                             process, a 64-bit x86 process should use the
 640                             predefined constants listed below.
 641 
 642                               REG_GSBASE
 643                               REG_FSBASE
 644                               REG_DS
 645                               REG_ES
 646                               REG_GS
 647                               REG_FS
 648                               REG_SS
 649                               REG_RSP
 650                               REG_RFL
 651                               REG_CS
 652                               REG_RIP
 653                               REG_ERR
 654                               REG_TRAPNO
 655                               REG_RAX
 656                               REG_RCX
 657                               REG_RDX
 658                               REG_RBX
 659                               REG_RBP
 660                               REG_RSI
 661                               REG_RDI
 662                               REG_R8
 663                               REG_R9
 664                               REG_R10
 665                               REG_R11
 666                               REG_R12
 667                               REG_R13
 668                               REG_R14
 669                               REG_R15
 670 
 671                             The preceding constants are listed in
 672                             <sys/regset.h>.
 673 
 674 
 675 
 676        pr_fpreg is a structure holding the contents of the floating-point
 677        registers.
 678 
 679 
 680        SPARC registers, both general and floating-point, as seen by a 64-bit
 681        controlling process are the V9 versions of the registers, even if the
 682        target process is a 32-bit (V8) process. V8 registers are a subset of
 683        the V9 registers.
 684 
 685 
 686        If the lwp is not stopped, all register values are undefined.
 687 
 688    psinfo
 689        Contains miscellaneous information about the process and the
 690        representative lwp needed by the ps(1) command. psinfo remains
 691        accessible after a process becomes a zombie. The file contains a psinfo
 692        structure which contains an embedded lwpsinfo structure for the
 693        representative lwp, as follows:
 694 
 695          typedef struct psinfo {
 696              int pr_flag;             /* process flags (DEPRECATED: see below) */
 697              int pr_nlwp;             /* number of active lwps in the process */
 698              int pr_nzomb;            /* number of zombie lwps in the process */
 699              pid_t pr_pid;            /* process id */
 700              pid_t pr_ppid;           /* process id of parent */
 701              pid_t pr_pgid;           /* process id of process group leader */
 702              pid_t pr_sid;            /* session id */
 703              uid_t pr_uid;            /* real user id */
 704              uid_t pr_euid;           /* effective user id */
 705              gid_t pr_gid;            /* real group id */
 706              gid_t pr_egid;           /* effective group id */
 707              uintptr_t pr_addr;       /* address of process */
 708              size_t pr_size;          /* size of process image in Kbytes */
 709              size_t pr_rssize;        /* resident set size in Kbytes */
 710              dev_t pr_ttydev;         /* controlling tty device (or PRNODEV) */
 711              ushort_t pr_pctcpu;      /* % of recent cpu time used by all lwps */
 712              ushort_t pr_pctmem;      /* % of system memory used by process */
 713              timestruc_t pr_start;    /* process start time, from the epoch */
 714              timestruc_t pr_time;     /* cpu time for this process */
 715              timestruc_t pr_ctime;    /* cpu time for reaped children */
 716              char pr_fname[PRFNSZ];   /* name of exec'ed file */
 717              char pr_psargs[PRARGSZ]; /* initial characters of arg list */
 718              int pr_wstat;            /* if zombie, the wait() status */
 719              int pr_argc;             /* initial argument count */
 720              uintptr_t pr_argv;       /* address of initial argument vector */
 721              uintptr_t pr_envp;       /* address of initial environment vector */
 722              char pr_dmodel;          /* data model of the process */
 723              lwpsinfo_t pr_lwp;       /* information for representative lwp */
 724              taskid_t pr_taskid;      /* task id */
 725              projid_t pr_projid;      /* project id */
 726              poolid_t pr_poolid;      /* pool id */
 727              zoneid_t pr_zoneid;      /* zone id */
 728              ctid_t pr_contract;      /* process contract id */
 729          } psinfo_t;
 730 
 731 
 732 
 733        Some of the entries in psinfo, such as pr_addr, refer to internal
 734        kernel data structures and should not be expected to retain their
 735        meanings across different versions of the operating system.
 736 
 737 
 738        psinfo_t.pr_flag is a deprecated interface that should no longer be
 739        used.  Applications currently relying on the SSYS bit in pr_flag should
 740        migrate to checking PR_ISSYS in the pstatus structure's pr_flags field.
 741 
 742 
 743        pr_pctcpu and pr_pctmem are 16-bit binary fractions in the range 0.0 to
 744        1.0 with the binary point to the right of the high-order bit (1.0 ==
 745        0x8000). pr_pctcpu is the summation over all lwps in the process.
 746 
 747 
 748        pr_lwp contains the ps(1) information for the representative lwp.  If
 749        the process is a zombie, pr_nlwp, pr_nzomb, and pr_lwp.pr_lwpid are
 750        zero and the other fields of pr_lwp are undefined:
 751 
 752          typedef struct lwpsinfo {
 753              int pr_flag;             /* lwp flags (DEPRECATED: see below) */
 754              id_t pr_lwpid;           /* lwp id */
 755              uintptr_t pr_addr;       /* internal address of lwp */
 756              uintptr_t pr_wchan;      /* wait addr for sleeping lwp */
 757              char pr_stype;           /* synchronization event type */
 758              char pr_state;           /* numeric lwp state */
 759              char pr_sname;           /* printable character for pr_state */
 760              char pr_nice;            /* nice for cpu usage */
 761              short pr_syscall;        /* system call number (if in syscall) */
 762              char pr_oldpri;          /* pre-SVR4, low value is high priority */
 763              char pr_cpu;             /* pre-SVR4, cpu usage for scheduling */
 764              int pr_pri;              /* priority, high value = high priority */
 765              ushort_t pr_pctcpu;      /* % of recent cpu time used by this lwp */
 766              timestruc_t pr_start;    /* lwp start time, from the epoch */
 767              timestruc_t pr_time;     /* cpu time for this lwp */
 768              char pr_clname[PRCLSZ];  /* scheduling class name */
 769              char pr_name[PRFNSZ];    /* name of system lwp */
 770              processorid_t pr_onpro;  /* processor which last ran this lwp */
 771              processorid_t pr_bindpro;/* processor to which lwp is bound */
 772              psetid_t pr_bindpset;    /* processor set to which lwp is bound */
 773              lgrp_id_t pr_lgrp          /* home lgroup */
 774          } lwpsinfo_t;
 775 
 776 
 777 
 778        Some of the entries in lwpsinfo, such as pr_addr, pr_wchan, pr_stype,
 779        pr_state, and pr_name, refer to internal kernel data structures and
 780        should not be expected to retain their meanings across different
 781        versions of the operating system.
 782 
 783 
 784        lwpsinfo_t.pr_flag is a deprecated interface that should no longer be
 785        used.
 786 
 787 
 788        pr_pctcpu is a 16-bit binary fraction, as described above. It
 789        represents the CPU time used by the specific lwp. On a multi-processor
 790        machine, the maximum value is 1/N, where N is the number of CPUs.
 791 
 792 
 793        pr_contract is the id of the process contract of which the process is a
 794        member. See contract(4) and process(4).
 795 
 796    cred
 797        Contains a description of the credentials associated with the process:
 798 
 799          typedef struct prcred {
 800               uid_t pr_euid;      /* effective user id */
 801               uid_t pr_ruid;      /* real user id */
 802               uid_t pr_suid;      /* saved user id (from exec) */
 803               gid_t pr_egid;      /* effective group id */
 804               gid_t pr_rgid;      /* real group id */
 805               gid_t pr_sgid;      /* saved group id (from exec) */
 806               int pr_ngroups;     /* number of supplementary groups */
 807               gid_t pr_groups[1]; /* array of supplementary groups */
 808          } prcred_t;
 809 
 810 
 811 
 812 
 813        The array of associated supplementary groups in pr_groups is of
 814        variable length; the cred file contains all of the supplementary
 815        groups.  pr_ngroups indicates the number of supplementary groups. (See
 816        also the PCSCRED and PCSCREDX control operations.)
 817 
 818    priv
 819        Contains a description of the privileges associated with the process:
 820 
 821          typedef struct prpriv {
 822               uint32_t        pr_nsets;      /* number of privilege set */
 823               uint32_t        pr_setsize;    /* size of privilege set */
 824               uint32_t        pr_infosize;   /* size of supplementary data */
 825               priv_chunk_t    pr_sets[1];    /* array of sets */
 826          } prpriv_t;
 827 
 828 
 829 
 830        The actual dimension of the pr_sets[] field is
 831 
 832          pr_sets[pr_nsets][pr_setsize]
 833 
 834 
 835 
 836        which is followed by additional information about the process state
 837        pr_infosize bytes in size.
 838 
 839 
 840        The full size of the structure can be computed using
 841        PRIV_PRPRIV_SIZE(prpriv_t *).
 842 
 843    secflags
 844        This file contains the security-flags of the process.  It contains a
 845        description of the security flags associated with the process.
 846 
 847          typedef struct prsecflags {
 848               uint32_t pr_version;          /* ABI Versioning of this structure */
 849               secflagset_t pr_effective;    /* Effective flags */
 850               secflagset_t pr_inherit; /* Inheritable flags */
 851               secflagset_t pr_lower;        /* Lower flags */
 852               secflagset_t pr_upper;        /* Upper flags */
 853          } prsecflags_t;
 854 
 855 
 856 
 857        The pr_version field is a version number for the structure, currently
 858        PRSECFLAGS_VERSION_1.
 859 
 860    sigact
 861        Contains an array of sigaction structures describing the current
 862        dispositions of all signals associated with the traced process (see
 863        sigaction(2)). Signal numbers are displaced by 1 from array indices, so
 864        that the action for signal number n appears in position n-1 of the
 865        array.
 866 
 867    auxv
 868        Contains the initial values of the process's aux vector in an array of
 869        auxv_t structures (see <sys/auxv.h>). The values   are those that were
 870        passed by the operating system as startup information to the dynamic
 871        linker.
 872 
 873    ldt
 874        This file exists only on x86-based machines. It is non-empty only if
 875        the process has established a local descriptor table (LDT). If non-
 876        empty, the file contains the array of currently active LDT entries in
 877        an array of elements of type struct ssd, defined in <sys/sysi86.h>, one
 878        element for each active LDT entry.
 879 
 880    map, xmap
 881        Contain information about the virtual address map of the process. The
 882        map file contains an array of prmap structures while the xmap file
 883        contains an array of prxmap structures. Each structure describes a
 884        contiguous virtual address region in the address space of the traced
 885        process:
 886 
 887          typedef struct prmap {
 888               uintptr_tpr_vaddr;         /* virtual address of mapping */
 889               size_t pr_size;            /* size of mapping in bytes */
 890               char pr_mapname[PRMAPSZ];  /* name in /proc/pid/object */
 891               offset_t pr_offset;        /* offset into mapped object, if any */
 892               int pr_mflags;             /* protection and attribute flags */
 893               int pr_pagesize;           /* pagesize for this mapping in bytes */
 894               int pr_shmid;              /* SysV shared memory identifier */
 895          } prmap_t;
 896 
 897 
 898 
 899          typedef struct prxmap {
 900               uintptr_t pr_vaddr;        /* virtual address of mapping */
 901               size_t pr_size;            /* size of mapping in bytes */
 902               char pr_mapname[PRMAPSZ];  /* name in /proc/pid/object */
 903               offset_t pr_offset;        /* offset into mapped object, if any */
 904               int pr_mflags;             /* protection and attribute flags */
 905               int pr_pagesize;           /* pagesize for this mapping in bytes */
 906               int pr_shmid;              /* SysV shared memory identifier */
 907               dev_t pr_dev;              /* device of mapped object, if any */
 908               uint64_t pr_ino;           /* inode of mapped object, if any */
 909               size_t pr_rss;             /* pages of resident memory */
 910               size_t pr_anon;            /* pages of resident anonymous memory */
 911               size_t pr_locked;          /* pages of locked memory */
 912               uint64_t pr_hatpagesize;   /* pagesize of mapping */
 913          } prxmap_t;
 914 
 915 
 916 
 917 
 918        pr_vaddr is the virtual address of the mapping within the traced
 919        process and pr_size is its size in bytes. pr_mapname, if it does not
 920        contain a null string, contains the name of a file in the object
 921        directory (see below) that can be opened read-only to obtain a file
 922        descriptor for the mapped file associated with the mapping. This
 923        enables a debugger to find object file symbol tables without having to
 924        know the real path names of the executable file and shared libraries of
 925        the process. pr_offset is the 64-bit offset within the mapped file (if
 926        any) to which the virtual address is mapped.
 927 
 928 
 929        pr_mflags is a bit-mask of protection and attribute flags:
 930 
 931        MA_READ
 932                         mapping is readable by the traced process.
 933 
 934 
 935        MA_WRITE
 936                         mapping is writable by the traced process.
 937 
 938 
 939        MA_EXEC
 940                         mapping is executable by the traced process.
 941 
 942 
 943        MA_SHARED
 944                         mapping changes are shared by the mapped object.
 945 
 946 
 947        MA_ISM
 948                         mapping is intimate shared memory (shared MMU
 949                         resources)
 950 
 951 
 952        MAP_NORESERVE
 953                         mapping does not have swap space reserved (mapped with
 954                         MAP_NORESERVE)
 955 
 956 
 957        MA_SHM
 958                         mapping System V shared memory
 959 
 960 
 961 
 962        A contiguous area of the address space having the same underlying
 963        mapped object may appear as multiple mappings due to varying read,
 964        write, and execute attributes. The underlying mapped object does not
 965        change over the range of a single mapping. An I/O operation to a
 966        mapping marked MA_SHARED fails if applied at a virtual address not
 967        corresponding to a valid page in the underlying mapped object. A write
 968        to a MA_SHARED mapping that is not marked MA_WRITE fails. Reads and
 969        writes to private mappings always succeed. Reads and writes to unmapped
 970        addresses fail.
 971 
 972 
 973        pr_pagesize is the page size for the mapping, currently always the
 974        system pagesize.
 975 
 976 
 977        pr_shmid is the shared memory identifier, if any, for the mapping. Its
 978        value is -1 if the mapping is not System V shared memory. See
 979        shmget(2).
 980 
 981 
 982        pr_dev is the device of the mapped object, if any, for the mapping. Its
 983        value is PRNODEV (-1) if the mapping does not have a device.
 984 
 985 
 986        pr_ino is the inode of the mapped object, if any, for the mapping. Its
 987        contents are only valid if pr_dev is not PRNODEV.
 988 
 989 
 990        pr_rss is the number of resident pages of memory for the mapping. The
 991        number of resident bytes for the mapping may be determined by
 992        multiplying pr_rss by the page size given by pr_pagesize.
 993 
 994 
 995        pr_anon is the number of resident anonymous memory pages (pages which
 996        are private to this process) for the mapping.
 997 
 998 
 999        pr_locked is the number of locked pages for the mapping. Pages which
1000        are locked are always resident in memory.
1001 
1002 
1003        pr_hatpagesize is the size, in bytes, of the HAT (MMU) translation for
1004        the mapping. pr_hatpagesize may be different than pr_pagesize. The
1005        possible values are hardware architecture specific, and may change over
1006        a mapping's lifetime.
1007 
1008    rmap
1009        Contains information about the reserved address ranges of the process.
1010        The file contains an array of prmap structures, as defined above for
1011        the map file. Each structure describes a contiguous virtual address
1012        region in the address space of the traced process that is reserved by
1013        the system in the sense that an mmap(2) system call that does not
1014        specify MAP_FIXED will not use any part of it for the new mapping.
1015        Examples of such reservations include the address ranges reserved for
1016        the process stack and the individual thread stacks of a multi-threaded
1017        process.
1018 
1019    cwd
1020        A symbolic link to the process's current working directory. See
1021        chdir(2).  A readlink(2) of /proc/pid/cwd yields a null string.
1022        However, it can be opened, listed, and searched as a directory, and can
1023        be the target of chdir(2).
1024 
1025    root
1026        A symbolic link to the process's root directory.  /proc/pid/root can
1027        differ from the system root directory if the process or one of its
1028        ancestors executed chroot(2) as super user. It has the same semantics
1029        as /proc/pid/cwd.
1030 
1031    fd
1032        A directory containing references to the open files of the process.
1033        Each entry is a decimal number corresponding to an open file descriptor
1034        in the process.
1035 
1036 
1037        If an entry refers to a regular file, it can be opened with normal file
1038        system semantics but, to ensure that the controlling process cannot
1039        gain greater access than the controlled process, with no file access
1040        modes other than its read/write open modes in the controlled process.
1041        If an entry refers to a directory, it can be accessed with the same
1042        semantics as /proc/pid/cwd. An attempt to open any other type of entry
1043        fails with EACCES.
1044 
1045    object
1046        A directory containing read-only files with names corresponding to the
1047        pr_mapname entries in the map and pagedata files. Opening such a file
1048        yields a file descriptor for the underlying mapped file associated with
1049        an address-space mapping in the process. The file name a.out appears in
1050        the directory as an alias for the process's executable file.
1051 
1052 
1053        The object directory makes it possible for a controlling process to
1054        gain access to the object file and any shared libraries (and
1055        consequently the symbol tables) without having to know the actual path
1056        names of the executable files.
1057 
1058    path
1059        A directory containing symbolic links to files opened by the process.
1060        The directory includes one entry for cwd and root. The directory also
1061        contains a numerical entry for each file descriptor in the fd
1062        directory, and entries matching those in the object directory. If this
1063        information is not available, any attempt to read the contents of the
1064        symbolic link will fail. This is most common for files that do not
1065        exist in the filesystem namespace (such as FIFOs and sockets), but can
1066        also happen for regular files. For the file descriptor entries, the
1067        path may be different from the one used by the process to open the
1068        file.
1069 
1070    pagedata
1071        Opening the page data file enables tracking of address space references
1072        and modifications on a per-page basis.
1073 
1074 
1075        A read(2) of the page data file descriptor returns structured page data
1076        and atomically clears the page data maintained for the file by the
1077        system. That is to say, each read returns data collected since the last
1078        read; the first read returns data collected since the file was opened.
1079        When the call completes, the read buffer contains the following
1080        structure as its header and thereafter contains a number of section
1081        header structures and associated byte arrays that must be accessed by
1082        walking linearly through the buffer.
1083 
1084          typedef struct prpageheader {
1085              timestruc_t pr_tstamp; /* real time stamp, time of read() */
1086              ulong_t pr_nmap;       /* number of address space mappings */
1087              ulong_t pr_npage;      /* total number of pages */
1088          } prpageheader_t;
1089 
1090 
1091 
1092        The header is followed by pr_nmap prasmap structures and associated
1093        data arrays. The prasmap structure contains the following elements:
1094 
1095          typedef struct prasmap {
1096              uintptr_t pr_vaddr;        /* virtual address of mapping */
1097              ulong_t pr_npage;          /* number of pages in mapping */
1098              char pr_mapname[PRMAPSZ];  /* name in /proc/pid/object */
1099              offset_t pr_offset;        /* offset into mapped object, if any */
1100              int pr_mflags;             /* protection and attribute flags */
1101              int pr_pagesize;           /* pagesize for this mapping in bytes */
1102              int pr_shmid;              /* SysV shared memory identifier */
1103          } prasmap_t;
1104 
1105 
1106 
1107        Each section header is followed by pr_npage bytes, one byte for each
1108        page in the mapping, plus 0-7 null bytes at the end so that the next
1109        prasmap structure begins on an eight-byte aligned boundary. Each data
1110        byte may contain these flags:
1111 
1112        PG_REFERENCED
1113                         page has been referenced.
1114 
1115 
1116        PG_MODIFIED
1117                         page has been modified.
1118 
1119 
1120 
1121        If the read buffer is not large enough to contain all of the page data,
1122        the read fails with E2BIG and the page data is not cleared. The
1123        required size of the read buffer can be determined through fstat(2).
1124        Application of lseek(2) to the page data file descriptor is
1125        ineffective; every read starts from the beginning of the file. Closing
1126        the page data file descriptor terminates the system overhead associated
1127        with collecting the data.
1128 
1129 
1130        More than one page data file descriptor for the same process can be
1131        opened, up to a system-imposed limit per traced process. A read of one
1132        does not affect the data being collected by the system for the others.
1133        An open of the page data file will fail with ENOMEM if the system-
1134        imposed limit would be exceeded.
1135 
1136    watch
1137        Contains an array of prwatch structures, one for each watched area
1138        established by the PCWATCH control operation. See PCWATCH for details.
1139 
1140    usage
1141        Contains process usage information described by a prusage structure
1142        which contains at least the following fields:
1143 
1144          typedef struct prusage {
1145              id_t pr_lwpid;           /* lwp id.  0: process or defunct */
1146              int pr_count;            /* number of contributing lwps */
1147              timestruc_t pr_tstamp;   /* real time stamp, time of read() */
1148              timestruc_t pr_create;   /* process/lwp creation time stamp */
1149              timestruc_t pr_term;     /* process/lwp termination time stamp */
1150              timestruc_t pr_rtime;    /* total lwp real (elapsed) time */
1151              timestruc_t pr_utime;    /* user level CPU time */
1152              timestruc_t pr_stime;    /* system call CPU time */
1153              timestruc_t pr_ttime;    /* other system trap CPU time */
1154              timestruc_t pr_tftime;   /* text page fault sleep time */
1155              timestruc_t pr_dftime;   /* data page fault sleep time */
1156              timestruc_t pr_kftime;   /* kernel page fault sleep time */
1157              timestruc_t pr_ltime;    /* user lock wait sleep time */
1158              timestruc_t pr_slptime;  /* all other sleep time */
1159              timestruc_t pr_wtime;    /* wait-cpu (latency) time */
1160              timestruc_t pr_stoptime; /* stopped time */
1161              ulong_t pr_minf;         /* minor page faults */
1162              ulong_t pr_majf;         /* major page faults */
1163              ulong_t pr_nswap;        /* swaps */
1164              ulong_t pr_inblk;        /* input blocks */
1165              ulong_t pr_oublk;        /* output blocks */
1166              ulong_t pr_msnd;         /* messages sent */
1167              ulong_t pr_mrcv;         /* messages received */
1168              ulong_t pr_sigs;         /* signals received */
1169              ulong_t pr_vctx;         /* voluntary context switches */
1170              ulong_t pr_ictx;         /* involuntary context switches */
1171              ulong_t pr_sysc;         /* system calls */
1172              ulong_t pr_ioch;         /* chars read and written */
1173          } prusage_t;
1174 
1175 
1176 
1177        Microstate accounting is now continuously enabled. While this
1178        information was previously an estimate, if microstate accounting were
1179        not enabled, the current information is now never an estimate
1180        represents time the process has spent in various states.
1181 
1182    lstatus
1183        Contains a prheader structure followed by an array of lwpstatus
1184        structures, one for each active lwp in the process (see also
1185        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpstatus, below). The prheader structure describes
1186        the number and size of the array entries that follow.
1187 
1188          typedef struct prheader {
1189              long pr_nent;        /* number of entries */
1190              size_t pr_entsize;   /* size of each entry, in bytes */
1191          } prheader_t;
1192 
1193 
1194 
1195        The lwpstatus structure may grow by the addition of elements at the end
1196        in future releases of the system. Programs must use pr_entsize in the
1197        file header to index through the array. These comments apply to all
1198        /proc files that include a prheader structure (lpsinfo and lusage,
1199        below).
1200 
1201    lpsinfo
1202        Contains a prheader structure followed by an array of lwpsinfo
1203        structures, one for eachactive and zombie lwp in the process. See also
1204        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpsinfo, below.
1205 
1206    lusage
1207        Contains a prheader structure followed by an array of prusage
1208        structures, one for each active lwp in the process, plus an additional
1209        element at the beginning that contains the summation over all defunct
1210        lwps (lwps that once existed but no longer exist in the process).
1211        Excluding the pr_lwpid, pr_tstamp, pr_create, and pr_term entries, the
1212        entry-by-entry summation over all these structures is the definition of
1213        the process usage information obtained from the usage file. (See also
1214        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpusage, below.)
1215 
1216    lwp
1217        A directory containing entries each of which names an active or zombie
1218        lwp within the process. These entries are themselves directories
1219        containing additional files as described below. Only the lwpsinfo file
1220        exists in the directory of a zombie lwp.
1221 
1222 STRUCTURE OF /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid
1223        A given directory /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid contains the following entries:
1224 
1225    lwpctl
1226        Write-only control file. The messages written to this file affect the
1227        specific lwp rather than the representative lwp, as is the case for the
1228        process's ctl file.
1229 
1230    lwpstatus
1231        lwp-specific state information. This file contains the lwpstatus
1232        structure for the specific lwp as described above for the
1233        representative lwp in the process's status file.
1234 
1235    lwpsinfo
1236        lwp-specific ps(1) information. This file contains the lwpsinfo
1237        structure for the specific lwp as described above for the
1238        representative lwp in the process's psinfo file. The lwpsinfo file
1239        remains accessible after an lwp becomes a zombie.
1240 
1241    lwpusage
1242        This file contains the prusage structure for the specific lwp as
1243        described above for the process's usage file.
1244 
1245    gwindows
1246        This file exists only on SPARC based machines. If it is non-empty, it
1247        contains a gwindows_t structure, defined in <sys/regset.h>, with   the
1248        values of those SPARC register windows that could not be stored on the
1249        stack when the lwp stopped. Conditions under which register windows are
1250        not stored on the stack are: the stack pointer refers to nonexistent
1251        process memory or the stack pointer is improperly aligned. If the lwp
1252        is not stopped or if there are no register windows that could not be
1253        stored on the stack, the file is empty (the usual case).
1254 
1255    xregs
1256        Extra state registers. The extra state register set is architecture
1257        dependent; this file is empty if the system does not support extra
1258        state registers. If the file is non-empty, it contains an architecture
1259        dependent structure of type prxregset_t, defined in <procfs.h>, with
1260        the values of the lwp's extra state registers. If the lwp is not
1261        stopped, all register values are undefined. See also the PCSXREG
1262        control operation, below.
1263 
1264    asrs
1265        This file exists only for 64-bit SPARC V9 processes. It contains an
1266        asrset_t structure, defined in <sys/regset.h>, containing the values of
1267        the lwp's platform-dependent ancillary state registers. If the lwp is
1268        not stopped, all register values are undefined. See also the PCSASRS
1269        control operation, below.
1270 
1271    spymaster
1272        For an agent lwp (see PCAGENT), this file contains a psinfo_t structure
1273        that corresponds to the process that created the agent lwp at the time
1274        the agent was created. This structure is identical to that retrieved
1275        via the psinfo file, with one modification: the pr_time field does not
1276        correspond to the CPU time for the process, but rather to the creation
1277        time of the agent lwp.
1278 
1279    templates
1280        A directory which contains references to the active templates for the
1281        lwp, named by the contract type. Changes made to an active template
1282        descriptor do not affect the original template which was activated,
1283        though they do affect the active template. It is not possible to
1284        activate an active template descriptor.  See contract(4).
1285 
1286 CONTROL MESSAGES
1287        Process state changes are effected through messages written to a
1288        process's ctl file or to an individual lwp's lwpctl file. All control
1289        messages consist of a long that names the specific operation followed
1290        by additional data containing the operand, if any.
1291 
1292 
1293        Multiple control messages may be combined in a single write(2) (or
1294        writev(2)) to a control file, but no partial writes are permitted. That
1295        is, each control message, operation code plus operand, if any, must be
1296        presented in its entirety to the write(2) and not in pieces over
1297        several system calls. If a control operation fails, no subsequent
1298        operations contained in the same write(2) are attempted.
1299 
1300 
1301        Descriptions of the allowable control messages follow. In all cases,
1302        writing a message to a control file for a process or lwp that has
1303        terminated elicits the error ENOENT.
1304 
1305    PCSTOP PCDSTOP PCWSTOP PCTWSTOP
1306        When applied to the process control file, PCSTOP directs all lwps to
1307        stop and waits for them to stop, PCDSTOP directs all lwps to stop
1308        without waiting for them to stop, and PCWSTOP simply waits for all lwps
1309        to stop.  When applied to an lwp control file, PCSTOP directs the
1310        specific lwp to stop and waits until it has stopped, PCDSTOP directs
1311        the specific lwp to stop without waiting for it to stop, and PCWSTOP
1312        simply waits for the specific lwp to stop. When applied to an lwp
1313        control file, PCSTOP and PCWSTOP complete when the lwp stops on an
1314        event of interest, immediately if already so stopped; when applied to
1315        the process control file, they complete when every lwp has stopped
1316        either on an event of interest or on a PR_SUSPENDED stop.
1317 
1318 
1319        PCTWSTOP is identical to PCWSTOP except that it enables the operation
1320        to time out, to avoid waiting forever for a process or lwp that may
1321        never stop on an event of interest. PCTWSTOP takes a long operand
1322        specifying a number of milliseconds; the wait will terminate
1323        successfully after the specified number of milliseconds even if the
1324        process or lwp has not stopped; a timeout value of zero makes the
1325        operation identical to PCWSTOP.
1326 
1327 
1328        An ``event of interest'' is either a PR_REQUESTED stop or a stop that
1329        has been specified in the process's tracing flags (set by PCSTRACE,
1330        PCSFAULT, PCSENTRY, and PCSEXIT). PR_JOBCONTROL and PR_SUSPENDED stops
1331        are specifically not events of interest. (An lwp may stop twice due to
1332        a stop signal, first showing PR_SIGNALLED if the signal is traced and
1333        again showing PR_JOBCONTROL if the lwp is set running without clearing
1334        the signal.) If PCSTOP or PCDSTOP is applied to an lwp that is stopped,
1335        but not on an event of interest, the stop directive takes effect when
1336        the lwp is restarted by the competing mechanism. At that time, the lwp
1337        enters a PR_REQUESTED stop before executing any user-level code.
1338 
1339 
1340        A write of a control message that blocks is interruptible by a signal
1341        so that, for example, an alarm(2) can be set to avoid waiting forever
1342        for a process or lwp that may never stop on an event of interest. If
1343        PCSTOP is interrupted, the lwp stop directives remain in effect even
1344        though the write(2) returns an error. (Use of PCTWSTOP with a non-zero
1345        timeout is recommended over PCWSTOP with an alarm(2).)
1346 
1347 
1348        A system process (indicated by the PR_ISSYS flag) never executes at
1349        user level, has no user-level address space visible through /proc, and
1350        cannot be stopped. Applying one of these operations to a system process
1351        or any of its lwps elicits the error EBUSY.
1352 
1353    PCRUN
1354        Make an lwp runnable again after a stop. This operation takes a long
1355        operand containing zero or more of the following flags:
1356 
1357        PRCSIG
1358                    clears the current signal, if any (see PCCSIG).
1359 
1360 
1361        PRCFAULT
1362                    clears the current fault, if any (see PCCFAULT).
1363 
1364 
1365        PRSTEP
1366                    directs the lwp to execute a single machine instruction. On
1367                    completion of the instruction, a trace trap occurs. If
1368                    FLTTRACE is being traced, the lwp stops; otherwise, it is
1369                    sent SIGTRAP. If SIGTRAP is being traced and is not
1370                    blocked, the lwp stops. When the lwp stops on an event of
1371                    interest, the single-step directive is cancelled, even if
1372                    the stop occurs before the instruction is executed. This
1373                    operation requires hardware and operating system support
1374                    and may not be implemented on all processors. It is
1375                    implemented on SPARC and x86-based machines.
1376 
1377 
1378        PRSABORT
1379                    is meaningful only if the lwp is in a PR_SYSENTRY stop or
1380                    is marked PR_ASLEEP; it instructs the lwp to abort
1381                    execution of the system call (see PCSENTRY and PCSEXIT).
1382 
1383 
1384        PRSTOP
1385                    directs the lwp to stop again as soon as possible after
1386                    resuming execution (see PCDSTOP). In particular, if the lwp
1387                    is stopped on PR_SIGNALLED or PR_FAULTED, the next stop
1388                    will show PR_REQUESTED, no other stop will have intervened,
1389                    and the lwp will not have executed any user-level code.
1390 
1391 
1392 
1393        When applied to an lwp control file, PCRUN clears any outstanding
1394        directed-stop request and makes the specific lwp runnable. The
1395        operation fails with EBUSY if the specific lwp is not stopped on an
1396        event of interest or has not been directed to stop or if the agent lwp
1397        exists and this is not the agent lwp (see PCAGENT).
1398 
1399 
1400        When applied to the process control file, a representative lwp is
1401        chosen for the operation as described for /proc/pid/status. The
1402        operation fails with EBUSY if the representative lwp is not stopped on
1403        an event of interest or has not been directed to stop or if the agent
1404        lwp exists.  If PRSTEP or PRSTOP was requested, the representative lwp
1405        is made runnable and its outstanding directed-stop request is cleared;
1406        otherwise all outstanding directed-stop requests are cleared and, if it
1407        was stopped on an event of interest, the representative lwp is marked
1408        PR_REQUESTED. If, as a consequence, all lwps are in the PR_REQUESTED or
1409        PR_SUSPENDED stop state, all lwps showing PR_REQUESTED are made
1410        runnable.
1411 
1412    PCSTRACE
1413        Define a set of signals to be traced in the process. The receipt of one
1414        of these signals by an lwp causes the lwp to stop. The set of signals
1415        is defined using an operand sigset_t contained in the control message.
1416        Receipt of SIGKILL cannot be traced; if specified, it is silently
1417        ignored.
1418 
1419 
1420        If a signal that is included in an lwp's held signal set (the signal
1421        mask) is sent to the lwp, the signal is not received and does not cause
1422        a stop until it is removed from the held signal set, either by the lwp
1423        itself or by setting the held signal set with PCSHOLD.
1424 
1425    PCCSIG
1426        The current signal, if any, is cleared from the specific or
1427        representative lwp.
1428 
1429    PCSSIG
1430        The current signal and its associated signal information for the
1431        specific or representative lwp are set according to the contents of the
1432        operand siginfo structure (see <sys/siginfo.h>).   If the specified
1433        signal number is zero, the current signal is cleared. The semantics of
1434        this operation are different from those of kill(2) in that the signal
1435        is delivered to the lwp immediately after execution is resumed (even if
1436        it is being blocked) and an additional PR_SIGNALLED stop does not
1437        intervene even if the signal is traced. Setting the current signal to
1438        SIGKILL terminates the process immediately.
1439 
1440    PCKILL
1441        If applied to the process control file, a signal is sent to the process
1442        with semantics identical to those of kill(2). If applied to an lwp
1443        control file, a directed signal is sent to the specific lwp. The signal
1444        is named in a long operand contained in the message. Sending SIGKILL
1445        terminates the process immediately.
1446 
1447    PCUNKILL
1448        A signal is deleted, that is, it is removed from the set of pending
1449        signals. If applied to the process control file, the signal is deleted
1450        from the process's pending signals. If applied to an lwp control file,
1451        the signal is deleted from the lwp's pending signals. The current
1452        signal (if any) is unaffected. The signal is named in a long operand in
1453        the control message. It is an error (EINVAL) to attempt to delete
1454        SIGKILL.
1455 
1456    PCSHOLD
1457        Set the set of held signals for the specific or representative lwp
1458        (signals whose delivery will be blocked if sent to the lwp). The set of
1459        signals is specified with a sigset_t operand. SIGKILL and SIGSTOP
1460        cannot be held; if specified, they are silently ignored.
1461 
1462    PCSFAULT
1463        Define a set of hardware faults to be traced in the process. On
1464        incurring one of these faults, an lwp stops. The set is defined via the
1465        operand fltset_t structure. Fault names are defined in <sys/fault.h>
1466        and include the following. Some of these may not occur on all
1467        processors; there may be processor-specific faults in addition to
1468        these.
1469 
1470        FLTILL
1471                     illegal instruction
1472 
1473 
1474        FLTPRIV
1475                     privileged instruction
1476 
1477 
1478        FLTBPT
1479                     breakpoint trap
1480 
1481 
1482        FLTTRACE
1483                     trace trap (single-step)
1484 
1485 
1486        FLTWATCH
1487                     watchpoint trap
1488 
1489 
1490        FLTACCESS
1491                     memory access fault (bus error)
1492 
1493 
1494        FLTBOUNDS
1495                     memory bounds violation
1496 
1497 
1498        FLTIOVF
1499                     integer overflow
1500 
1501 
1502        FLTIZDIV
1503                     integer zero divide
1504 
1505 
1506        FLTFPE
1507                     floating-point exception
1508 
1509 
1510        FLTSTACK
1511                     unrecoverable stack fault
1512 
1513 
1514        FLTPAGE
1515                     recoverable page fault
1516 
1517 
1518 
1519        When not traced, a fault normally results in the posting of a signal to
1520        the lwp that incurred the fault. If an lwp stops on a fault, the signal
1521        is posted to the lwp when execution is resumed unless the fault is
1522        cleared by PCCFAULT or by the PRCFAULT option of PCRUN. FLTPAGE is an
1523        exception; no signal is posted. The pr_info field in the lwpstatus
1524        structure identifies the signal to be sent and contains machine-
1525        specific information about the fault.
1526 
1527    PCCFAULT
1528        The current fault, if any, is cleared; the associated signal will not
1529        be sent to the specific or representative lwp.
1530 
1531    PCSENTRY PCSEXIT
1532        These control operations instruct the process's lwps to stop on entry
1533        to or exit from specified system calls. The set of system calls to be
1534        traced is defined via an operand sysset_t structure.
1535 
1536 
1537        When entry to a system call is being traced, an lwp stops after having
1538        begun the call to the system but before the system call arguments have
1539        been fetched from the lwp. When exit from a system call is being
1540        traced, an lwp stops on completion of the system call just prior to
1541        checking for signals and returning to user level. At this point, all
1542        return values have been stored into the lwp's registers.
1543 
1544 
1545        If an lwp is stopped on entry to a system call (PR_SYSENTRY) or when
1546        sleeping in an interruptible system call (PR_ASLEEP is set), it may be
1547        instructed to go directly to system call exit by specifying the
1548        PRSABORT flag in a PCRUN control message. Unless exit from the system
1549        call is being traced, the lwp returns to user level showing EINTR.
1550 
1551    PCWATCH
1552        Set or clear a watched area in the controlled process from a prwatch
1553        structure operand:
1554 
1555          typedef struct prwatch {
1556              uintptr_t pr_vaddr;  /* virtual address of watched area */
1557              size_t pr_size;      /* size of watched area in bytes */
1558              int pr_wflags;       /* watch type flags */
1559          } prwatch_t;
1560 
1561 
1562 
1563        pr_vaddr specifies the virtual address of an area of memory to be
1564        watched in the controlled process. pr_size specifies the size of the
1565        area, in bytes. pr_wflags specifies the type of memory access to be
1566        monitored as a bit-mask of the following flags:
1567 
1568        WA_READ
1569                        read access
1570 
1571 
1572        WA_WRITE
1573                        write access
1574 
1575 
1576        WA_EXEC
1577                        execution access
1578 
1579 
1580        WA_TRAPAFTER
1581                        trap after the instruction completes
1582 
1583 
1584 
1585        If pr_wflags is non-empty, a watched area is established for the
1586        virtual address range specified by pr_vaddr and pr_size. If pr_wflags
1587        is empty, any previously-established watched area starting at the
1588        specified virtual address is cleared; pr_size is ignored.
1589 
1590 
1591        A watchpoint is triggered when an lwp in the traced process makes a
1592        memory reference that covers at least one byte of a watched area and
1593        the memory reference is as specified in pr_wflags. When an lwp triggers
1594        a watchpoint, it incurs a watchpoint trap. If FLTWATCH is being traced,
1595        the lwp stops; otherwise, it is sent a SIGTRAP signal; if SIGTRAP is
1596        being traced and is not blocked, the lwp stops.
1597 
1598 
1599        The watchpoint trap occurs before the instruction completes unless
1600        WA_TRAPAFTER was specified, in which case it occurs after the
1601        instruction completes. If it occurs before completion, the memory is
1602        not modified. If it occurs after completion, the memory is modified (if
1603        the access is a write access).
1604 
1605 
1606        Physical i/o is an exception for watchpoint traps. In this instance,
1607        there is no guarantee that memory before the watched area has already
1608        been modified (or in the case of WA_TRAPAFTER, that the memory
1609        following the watched area has not been modified) when the watchpoint
1610        trap occurs and the lwp stops.
1611 
1612 
1613        pr_info in the lwpstatus structure contains information pertinent to
1614        the watchpoint trap. In particular, the si_addr field contains the
1615        virtual address of the memory reference that triggered the watchpoint,
1616        and the si_code field contains one of TRAP_RWATCH, TRAP_WWATCH, or
1617        TRAP_XWATCH, indicating read, write, or execute access, respectively.
1618        The si_trapafter field is zero unless WA_TRAPAFTER is in effect for
1619        this watched area; non-zero indicates that the current instruction is
1620        not the instruction that incurred the watchpoint trap. The si_pc field
1621        contains the virtual address of the instruction that incurred the trap.
1622 
1623 
1624        A watchpoint trap may be triggered while executing a system call that
1625        makes reference to the traced process's memory. The lwp that is
1626        executing the system call incurs the watchpoint trap while still in the
1627        system call. If it stops as a result, the lwpstatus structure contains
1628        the system call number and its arguments. If the lwp does not stop, or
1629        if it is set running again without clearing the signal or fault, the
1630        system call fails with EFAULT. If WA_TRAPAFTER was specified, the
1631        memory reference will have completed and the memory will have been
1632        modified (if the access was a write access) when the watchpoint trap
1633        occurs.
1634 
1635 
1636        If more than one of WA_READ, WA_WRITE, and WA_EXEC is specified for a
1637        watched area, and a single instruction incurs more than one of the
1638        specified types, only one is reported when the watchpoint trap occurs.
1639        The precedence is WA_EXEC, WA_READ, WA_WRITE (WA_EXEC and WA_READ take
1640        precedence over WA_WRITE), unless WA_TRAPAFTER was specified, in which
1641        case it is WA_WRITE, WA_READ, WA_EXEC (WA_WRITE takes precedence).
1642 
1643 
1644        PCWATCH fails with EINVAL if an attempt is made to specify overlapping
1645        watched areas or if pr_wflags contains flags other than those specified
1646        above. It fails with ENOMEM if an attempt is made to establish more
1647        watched areas than the system can support (the system can support
1648        thousands).
1649 
1650 
1651        The child of a vfork(2) borrows the parent's address space. When a
1652        vfork(2) is executed by a traced process, all watched areas established
1653        for the parent are suspended until the child terminates or performs an
1654        exec(2). Any watched areas established independently in the child are
1655        cancelled when the parent resumes after the child's termination or
1656        exec(2). PCWATCH fails with EBUSY if applied to the parent of a
1657        vfork(2) before the child has terminated or performed an exec(2).  The
1658        PR_VFORKP flag is set in the pstatus structure for such a parent
1659        process.
1660 
1661 
1662        Certain accesses of the traced process's address space by the operating
1663        system are immune to watchpoints. The initial construction of a signal
1664        stack frame when a signal is delivered to an lwp will not trigger a
1665        watchpoint trap even if the new frame covers watched areas of the
1666        stack. Once the signal handler is entered, watchpoint traps occur
1667        normally. On SPARC based machines, register window overflow and
1668        underflow will not trigger watchpoint traps, even if the register
1669        window save areas cover watched areas of the stack.
1670 
1671 
1672        Watched areas are not inherited by child processes, even if the traced
1673        process's inherit-on-fork mode, PR_FORK, is set (see PCSET, below).
1674        All watched areas are cancelled when the traced process performs a
1675        successful exec(2).
1676 
1677    PCSET PCUNSET
1678        PCSET sets one or more modes of operation for the traced process.
1679        PCUNSET unsets these modes. The modes to be set or unset are specified
1680        by flags in an operand long in the control message:
1681 
1682        PR_FORK
1683                     (inherit-on-fork): When set, the process's tracing flags
1684                     and its inherit-on-fork mode are inherited by the child of
1685                     a fork(2), fork1(2), or vfork(2). When unset, child
1686                     processes start with all tracing flags cleared.
1687 
1688 
1689        PR_RLC
1690                     (run-on-last-close): When set and the last writable /proc
1691                     file descriptor referring to the traced process or any of
1692                     its lwps is closed, all of the process's tracing flags and
1693                     watched areas are cleared, any outstanding stop directives
1694                     are canceled, and if any lwps are stopped on events of
1695                     interest, they are set running as though PCRUN had been
1696                     applied to them. When unset, the process's tracing flags
1697                     and watched areas are retained and lwps are not set
1698                     running on last close.
1699 
1700 
1701        PR_KLC
1702                     (kill-on-last-close): When set and the last writable /proc
1703                     file descriptor referring to the traced process or any of
1704                     its lwps is closed, the process is terminated with
1705                     SIGKILL.
1706 
1707 
1708        PR_ASYNC
1709                     (asynchronous-stop): When set, a stop on an event of
1710                     interest by one lwp does not directly affect any other lwp
1711                     in the process. When unset and an lwp stops on an event of
1712                     interest other than PR_REQUESTED, all other lwps in the
1713                     process are directed to stop.
1714 
1715 
1716        PR_MSACCT
1717                     (microstate accounting): Microstate accounting is now
1718                     continuously enabled.  This flag is deprecated and no
1719                     longer has any effect upon microstate accounting.
1720                     Applications may toggle this flag; however, microstate
1721                     accounting will remain enabled regardless.
1722 
1723 
1724        PR_MSFORK
1725                     (inherit microstate accounting): All processes now inherit
1726                     microstate accounting, as it is continuously enabled. This
1727                     flag has been deprecated and its use no longer has any
1728                     effect upon the behavior of microstate accounting.
1729 
1730 
1731        PR_BPTADJ
1732                     (breakpoint trap pc adjustment): On x86-based machines, a
1733                     breakpoint trap leaves the program counter (the EIP)
1734                     referring to the breakpointed instruction plus one byte.
1735                     When PR_BPTADJ is set, the system will adjust the program
1736                     counter back to the location of the breakpointed
1737                     instruction when the lwp stops on a breakpoint. This flag
1738                     has no effect on SPARC based machines, where breakpoint
1739                     traps leave the program counter referring to the
1740                     breakpointed instruction.
1741 
1742 
1743        PR_PTRACE
1744                     (ptrace-compatibility): When set, a stop on an event of
1745                     interest by the traced process is reported to the parent
1746                     of the traced process by wait(3C), SIGTRAP is sent to the
1747                     traced process when it executes a successful exec(2),
1748                     setuid/setgid flags are not honored for execs performed by
1749                     the traced process, any exec of an object file that the
1750                     traced process cannot read fails, and the process dies
1751                     when its parent dies. This mode is deprecated; it is
1752                     provided only to allow ptrace(3C) to be implemented as a
1753                     library function using /proc.
1754 
1755 
1756 
1757        It is an error (EINVAL) to specify flags other than those described
1758        above or to apply these operations to a system process. The current
1759        modes are reported in the pr_flags field of /proc/pid/status and
1760        /proc/pid/lwp/lwp/lwpstatus.
1761 
1762    PCSREG
1763        Set the general registers for the specific or representative lwp
1764        according to the operand prgregset_t structure.
1765 
1766 
1767        On SPARC based systems, only the condition-code bits of the processor-
1768        status register (R_PSR) of SPARC V8 (32-bit) processes can be modified
1769        by PCSREG. Other privileged registers cannot be modified at all.
1770 
1771 
1772        On x86-based systems, only certain bits of the flags register (EFL) can
1773        be modified by PCSREG: these include the condition codes, direction-
1774        bit, and overflow-bit.
1775 
1776 
1777        PCSREG fails with EBUSY if the lwp is not stopped on an event of
1778        interest.
1779 
1780    PCSVADDR
1781        Set the address at which execution will resume for the specific or
1782        representative lwp from the operand long. On SPARC based systems, both
1783        %pc and %npc are set, with %npc set to the instruction following the
1784        virtual address. On x86-based systems, only %eip is set. PCSVADDR fails
1785        with EBUSY if the lwp is not stopped on an event of interest.
1786 
1787    PCSFPREG
1788        Set the floating-point registers for the specific or representative lwp
1789        according to the operand prfpregset_t structure. An error (EINVAL) is
1790        returned if the system does not support floating-point operations (no
1791        floating-point hardware and the system does not emulate floating-point
1792        machine instructions). PCSFPREG fails with EBUSY if the lwp is not
1793        stopped on an event of interest.
1794 
1795    PCSXREG
1796        Set the extra state registers for the specific or representative lwp
1797        according to the architecture-dependent operand prxregset_t structure.
1798        An error (EINVAL) is returned if the system does not support extra
1799        state registers. PCSXREG fails with EBUSY if the lwp is not stopped on
1800        an event of interest.
1801 
1802    PCSASRS
1803        Set the ancillary state registers for the specific or representative
1804        lwp according to the SPARC V9 platform-dependent operand asrset_t
1805        structure.  An error (EINVAL) is returned if either the target process
1806        or the controlling process is not a 64-bit SPARC V9 process. Most of
1807        the ancillary state registers are privileged registers that cannot be
1808        modified. Only those that can be modified are set; all others are
1809        silently ignored. PCSASRS fails with EBUSY if the lwp is not stopped on
1810        an event of interest.
1811 
1812    PCAGENT
1813        Create an agent lwp in the controlled process with register values from
1814        the operand prgregset_t structure (see PCSREG, above). The agent lwp is
1815        created in the stopped state showing PR_REQUESTED and with its held
1816        signal set (the signal mask) having all signals except SIGKILL and
1817        SIGSTOP blocked.
1818 
1819 
1820        The PCAGENT operation fails with EBUSY unless the process is fully
1821        stopped via /proc, that is, unless all of the lwps in the process are
1822        stopped either on events of interest or on PR_SUSPENDED, or are stopped
1823        on PR_JOBCONTROL and have been directed to stop via PCDSTOP.  It fails
1824        with EBUSY if an agent lwp already exists. It fails with ENOMEM if
1825        system resources for creating new lwps have been exhausted.
1826 
1827 
1828        Any PCRUN operation applied to the process control file or to the
1829        control file of an lwp other than the agent lwp fails with EBUSY as
1830        long as the agent lwp exists. The agent lwp must be caused to terminate
1831        by executing the SYS_lwp_exit system call trap before the process can
1832        be restarted.
1833 
1834 
1835        Once the agent lwp is created, its lwp-ID can be found by reading the
1836        process status file. To facilitate opening the agent lwp's control and
1837        status files, the directory name /propc/pid/lwp/agent is accepted for
1838        lookup operations as an invisible alias for /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid, lwpid
1839        being the lwp-ID of the agent lwp (invisible in the sense that the name
1840        ``agent'' does not appear in a directory listing of /proc/pid/lwp
1841        obtained from ls(1), getdents(2), or readdir(3C)).
1842 
1843 
1844        The purpose of the agent lwp is to perform operations in the controlled
1845        process on behalf of the controlling process: to gather information not
1846        directly available via /proc files, or in general to make the process
1847        change state in ways not directly available via /proc control
1848        operations. To make use of an agent lwp, the controlling process must
1849        be capable of making it execute system calls (specifically, the
1850        SYS_lwp_exit system call trap). The register values given to the agent
1851        lwp on creation are typically the registers of the representative lwp,
1852        so that the agent lwp can use its stack.
1853 
1854 
1855        If the controlling process neglects to force the agent lwp to execute
1856        the SYS_lwp_exit system call (due to either logic error or fatal
1857        failure on the part of the controlling process), the agent lwp will
1858        remain in the target process.  For purposes of being able to debug
1859        these otherwise rogue agents, information as to the creator of the
1860        agent lwp is reflected in that lwp's spymaster file in /proc. Should
1861        the target process generate a core dump with the agent lwp in place,
1862        this information will be available via the NT_SPYMASTER note in the
1863        core file (see core(4)).
1864 
1865 
1866        The agent lwp is not allowed to execute any variation of the SYS_fork
1867        or SYS_exec system call traps. Attempts to do so yield ENOTSUP to the
1868        agent lwp.
1869 
1870 
1871        Symbolic constants for system call trap numbers like SYS_lwp_exit and
1872        SYS_lwp_create can be found in the header file <sys/syscall.h>.
1873 
1874    PCREAD PCWRITE
1875        Read or write the target process's address space via a priovec
1876        structure operand:
1877 
1878          typedef struct priovec {
1879              void *pio_base;      /* buffer in controlling process */
1880              size_t pio_len;      /* size of read/write request in bytes */
1881              off_t pio_offset;    /* virtual address in target process */
1882          } priovec_t;
1883 
1884 
1885 
1886        These operations have the same effect as pread(2) and pwrite(2),
1887        respectively, of the target process's address space file. The
1888        difference is that more than one PCREAD or PCWRITE control operation
1889        can be written to the control file at once, and they can be
1890        interspersed with other control operations in a single write to the
1891        control file. This is useful, for example, when planting many
1892        breakpoint instructions in the process's address space, or when
1893        stepping over a breakpointed instruction. Unlike pread(2) and
1894        pwrite(2), no provision is made for partial reads or writes; if the
1895        operation cannot be performed completely, it fails with EIO.
1896 
1897    PCNICE
1898        The traced process's nice(2) value is incremented by the amount in the
1899        operand long. Only a process with the {PRIV_PROC_PRIOCNTL} privilege
1900        asserted in its effective set can better a process's priority in this
1901        way, but any user may lower the priority. This operation is not
1902        meaningful for all scheduling classes.
1903 
1904    PCSCRED
1905        Set the target process credentials to the values contained in the
1906        prcred_t structure operand (see /proc/pid/cred). The effective, real,
1907        and saved user-IDs and group-IDs of the target process are set. The
1908        target process's supplementary groups are not changed; the pr_ngroups
1909        and pr_groups members of the structure operand are ignored. Only the
1910        privileged processes can perform this operation; for all others it
1911        fails with EPERM.
1912 
1913    PCSCREDX
1914        Operates like PCSCRED but also sets the supplementary groups; the
1915        length of the data written with this control operation should be
1916        "sizeof (prcred_t) + sizeof (gid_t) * (#groups - 1)".
1917 
1918    PCSPRIV
1919        Set the target process privilege to the values contained in the
1920        prpriv_t operand (see /proc/pid/priv). The effective, permitted,
1921        inheritable, and limit sets are all changed. Privilege flags can also
1922        be set. The process is made privilege aware unless it can relinquish
1923        privilege awareness. See privileges(5).
1924 
1925 
1926        The limit set of the target process cannot be grown. The other
1927        privilege sets must be subsets of the intersection of the effective set
1928        of the calling process with the new limit set of the target process or
1929        subsets of the original values of the sets in the target process.
1930 
1931 
1932        If any of the above restrictions are not met, EPERM is returned. If the
1933        structure written is improperly formatted, EINVAL is returned.
1934 
1935 PROGRAMMING NOTES
1936        For security reasons, except for the psinfo, usage, lpsinfo, lusage,
1937        lwpsinfo, and lwpusage files, which are world-readable, and except for
1938        privileged processes, an open of a /proc file fails unless both the
1939        user-ID and group-ID of the caller match those of the traced process
1940        and the process's object file is readable by the caller. The effective
1941        set of the caller is a superset of both the inheritable and the
1942        permitted set of the target process. The limit set of the caller is a
1943        superset of the limit set of the target process. Except for the world-
1944        readable files just mentioned, files corresponding to setuid and setgid
1945        processes can be opened only by the appropriately privileged process.
1946 
1947 
1948        A process that is missing the basic privilege {PRIV_PROC_INFO} cannot
1949        see any processes under /proc that it cannot send a signal to.
1950 
1951 
1952        A process that has {PRIV_PROC_OWNER} asserted in its effective set can
1953        open any file for reading. To manipulate or control a process, the
1954        controlling process must have at least as many privileges in its
1955        effective set as the target process has in its effective, inheritable,
1956        and permitted sets. The limit set of the controlling process must be a
1957        superset of the limit set of the target process. Additional
1958        restrictions apply if any of the uids of the target process are 0. See
1959        privileges(5).
1960 
1961 
1962        Even if held by a privileged process, an open process or lwp file
1963        descriptor (other than file descriptors for the world-readable files)
1964        becomes invalid if the traced process performs an exec(2) of a
1965        setuid/setgid object file or an object file that the traced process
1966        cannot read. Any operation performed on an invalid file descriptor,
1967        except close(2), fails with EAGAIN. In this situation, if any tracing
1968        flags are set and the process or any lwp file descriptor is open for
1969        writing, the process will have been directed to stop and its run-on-
1970        last-close flag will have been set (see PCSET). This enables a
1971        controlling process (if it has permission) to reopen the /proc files to
1972        get new valid file descriptors, close the invalid file descriptors,
1973        unset the run-on-last-close flag (if desired), and proceed. Just
1974        closing the invalid file descriptors causes the traced process to
1975        resume execution with all tracing flags cleared. Any process not
1976        currently open for writing via /proc, but that has left-over tracing
1977        flags from a previous open, and that executes a setuid/setgid or
1978        unreadable object file, will not be stopped but will have all its
1979        tracing flags cleared.
1980 
1981 
1982        To wait for one or more of a set of processes or lwps to stop or
1983        terminate, /proc file descriptors (other than those obtained by opening
1984        the cwd or root directories or by opening files in the fd or object
1985        directories) can be used in a poll(2) system call. When requested and
1986        returned, either of the polling events POLLPRI or POLLWRNORM indicates
1987        that the process or lwp stopped on an event of interest. Although they
1988        cannot be requested, the polling events POLLHUP, POLLERR, and POLLNVAL
1989        may be returned. POLLHUP indicates that the process or lwp has
1990        terminated. POLLERR indicates that the file descriptor has become
1991        invalid. POLLNVAL is returned immediately if POLLPRI or POLLWRNORM is
1992        requested on a file descriptor referring to a system process (see
1993        PCSTOP). The requested events may be empty to wait simply for
1994        termination.
1995 
1996 FILES
1997        /proc
1998 
1999            directory (list of processes)
2000 
2001 
2002        /proc/pid
2003 
2004            specific process directory
2005 
2006 
2007        /proc/self
2008 
2009            alias for a process's own directory
2010 
2011 
2012        /proc/pid/as
2013 
2014            address space file
2015 
2016 
2017        /proc/pid/ctl
2018 
2019            process control file
2020 
2021 
2022        /proc/pid/status
2023 
2024            process status
2025 
2026 
2027        /proc/pid/lstatus
2028 
2029            array of lwp status structs
2030 
2031 
2032        /proc/pid/psinfo
2033 
2034            process ps(1) info
2035 
2036 
2037        /proc/pid/lpsinfo
2038 
2039            array of lwp ps(1) info structs
2040 
2041 
2042        /proc/pid/map
2043 
2044            address space map
2045 
2046 
2047        /proc/pid/xmap
2048 
2049            extended address space map
2050 
2051 
2052        /proc/pid/rmap
2053 
2054            reserved address map
2055 
2056 
2057        /proc/pid/cred
2058 
2059            process credentials
2060 
2061 
2062        /proc/pid/priv
2063 
2064            process privileges
2065 
2066 
2067        /proc/pid/sigact
2068 
2069            process signal actions
2070 
2071 
2072        /proc/pid/auxv
2073 
2074            process aux vector
2075 
2076 
2077        /proc/pid/ldt
2078 
2079            process LDT (x86 only)
2080 
2081 
2082        /proc/pid/usage
2083 
2084            process usage
2085 
2086 
2087        /proc/pid/lusage
2088 
2089            array of lwp usage structs
2090 
2091 
2092        /proc/pid/path
2093 
2094            symbolic links to process open files
2095 
2096 
2097        /proc/pid/pagedata
2098 
2099            process page data
2100 
2101 
2102        /proc/pid/watch
2103 
2104            active watchpoints
2105 
2106 
2107        /proc/pid/cwd
2108 
2109            alias for the current working directory
2110 
2111 
2112        /proc/pid/root
2113 
2114            alias for the root directory
2115 
2116 
2117        /proc/pid/fd
2118 
2119            directory (list of open files)
2120 
2121 
2122        /proc/pid/fd/*
2123 
2124            aliases for process's open files
2125 
2126 
2127        /proc/pid/object
2128 
2129            directory (list of mapped files)
2130 
2131 
2132        /proc/pid/object/a.out
2133 
2134            alias for process's executable file
2135 
2136 
2137        /proc/pid/object/*
2138 
2139            aliases for other mapped files
2140 
2141 
2142        /proc/pid/lwp
2143 
2144            directory (list of lwps)
2145 
2146 
2147        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid
2148 
2149            specific lwp directory
2150 
2151 
2152        /proc/pid/lwp/agent
2153 
2154            alias for the agent lwp directory
2155 
2156 
2157        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpctl
2158 
2159            lwp control file
2160 
2161 
2162        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpstatus
2163 
2164            lwp status
2165 
2166 
2167        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpsinfo
2168 
2169            lwp ps(1) info
2170 
2171 
2172        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/lwpusage
2173 
2174            lwp usage
2175 
2176 
2177        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/gwindows
2178 
2179            register windows (SPARC only)
2180 
2181 
2182        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/xregs
2183 
2184            extra state registers
2185 
2186 
2187        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/asrs
2188 
2189            ancillary state registers (SPARC V9 only)
2190 
2191 
2192        /proc/pid/lwp/lwpid/spymaster
2193 
2194            For an agent LWP, the controlling process
2195 
2196 
2197 SEE ALSO
2198        ls(1), ps(1), chroot(1M), alarm(2), brk(2), chdir(2), chroot(2),
2199        close(2), creat(2), dup(2), exec(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), fork1(2),
2200        fstat(2), getdents(2), getustack(2), kill(2), lseek(2), mmap(2),
2201        nice(2), open(2), poll(2), pread(2), ptrace(3C), pwrite(2), read(2),
2202        readlink(2), readv(2), shmget(2), sigaction(2), sigaltstack(2),
2203        vfork(2), write(2), writev(2), _stack_grow(3C), readdir(3C),
2204        pthread_create(3C), pthread_join(3C), siginfo.h(3HEAD),
2205        signal.h(3HEAD), thr_create(3C), thr_join(3C), types32.h(3HEAD),
2206        ucontext.h(3HEAD), wait(3C), contract(4), core(4), process(4),
2207        lfcompile(5), privileges(5), security-flags(5)
2208 
2209 DIAGNOSTICS
2210        Errors that can occur in addition to the errors normally associated
2211        with file system access:
2212 
2213        E2BIG
2214                     Data to be returned in a read(2) of the page data file
2215                     exceeds the size of the read buffer provided by the
2216                     caller.
2217 
2218 
2219        EACCES
2220                     An attempt was made to examine a process that ran under a
2221                     different uid than the controlling process and
2222                     {PRIV_PROC_OWNER} was not asserted in the effective set.
2223 
2224 
2225        EAGAIN
2226                     The traced process has performed an exec(2) of a
2227                     setuid/setgid object file or of an object file that it
2228                     cannot read; all further operations on the process or lwp
2229                     file descriptor (except close(2)) elicit this error.
2230 
2231 
2232        EBUSY
2233                     PCSTOP, PCDSTOP, PCWSTOP, or PCTWSTOP was applied to a
2234                     system process; an exclusive open(2) was attempted on a
2235                     /proc file for a process already open for writing; PCRUN,
2236                     PCSREG, PCSVADDR, PCSFPREG, or PCSXREG was applied to a
2237                     process or lwp not stopped on an event of interest; an
2238                     attempt was made to mount /proc when it was already
2239                     mounted; PCAGENT was applied to a process that was not
2240                     fully stopped or that already had an agent lwp.
2241 
2242 
2243        EINVAL
2244                     In general, this means that some invalid argument was
2245                     supplied to a system call. A non-exhaustive list of
2246                     conditions eliciting this error includes: a control
2247                     message operation code is undefined; an out-of-range
2248                     signal number was specified with PCSSIG, PCKILL, or
2249                     PCUNKILL; SIGKILL was specified with PCUNKILL; PCSFPREG
2250                     was applied on a system that does not support floating-
2251                     point operations; PCSXREG was applied on a system that
2252                     does not support extra state registers.
2253 
2254 
2255        EINTR
2256                     A signal was received by the controlling process while
2257                     waiting for the traced process or lwp to stop via PCSTOP,
2258                     PCWSTOP, or PCTWSTOP.
2259 
2260 
2261        EIO
2262                     A write(2) was attempted at an illegal address in the
2263                     traced process.
2264 
2265 
2266        ENOENT
2267                     The traced process or lwp has terminated after being
2268                     opened. The basic privilege {PRIV_PROC_INFO} is not
2269                     asserted in the effective set of the calling process and
2270                     the calling process cannot send a signal to the target
2271                     process.
2272 
2273 
2274        ENOMEM
2275                     The system-imposed limit on the number of page data file
2276                     descriptors was reached on an open of /proc/pid/pagedata;
2277                     an attempt was made with PCWATCH to establish more watched
2278                     areas than the system can support; the PCAGENT operation
2279                     was issued when the system was out of resources for
2280                     creating lwps.
2281 
2282 
2283        ENOSYS
2284                     An attempt was made to perform an unsupported operation
2285                     (such as creat(2), link(2), or unlink(2)) on an entry in
2286                     /proc.
2287 
2288 
2289        EOVERFLOW
2290                     A 32-bit controlling process attempted to read or write
2291                     the as file or attempted to read the map, rmap, or
2292                     pagedata file of a 64-bit target process. A 32-bit
2293                     controlling process attempted to apply one of the control
2294                     operations PCSREG, PCSXREG, PCSVADDR, PCWATCH, PCAGENT,
2295                     PCREAD, PCWRITE to a 64-bit target process.
2296 
2297 
2298        EPERM
2299                     The process that issued the PCSCRED or PCSCREDX operation
2300                     did not have the {PRIV_PROC_SETID} privilege asserted in
2301                     its effective set, or the process that issued the PCNICE
2302                     operation did not have the {PRIV_PROC_PRIOCNTL} in its
2303                     effective set.
2304 
2305                     An attempt was made to control a process of which the E,
2306                     P, and I privilege sets were not a subset of the effective
2307                     set of the controlling process or the limit set of the
2308                     controlling process is not a superset of limit set of the
2309                     controlled process.
2310 
2311                     Any of the uids of the target process are 0 or an attempt
2312                     was made to change any of the uids to 0 using PCSCRED and
2313                     the security policy imposed additional restrictions. See
2314                     privileges(5).
2315 
2316 
2317 NOTES
2318        Descriptions of structures in this document include only interesting
2319        structure elements, not filler and padding fields, and may show
2320        elements out of order for descriptive clarity. The actual structure
2321        definitions are contained in <procfs.h>.
2322 
2323 BUGS
2324        Because the old ioctl(2)-based version of /proc is currently supported
2325        for binary compatibility with old applications, the top-level directory
2326        for a process, /proc/pid, is not world-readable, but it is world-
2327        searchable. Thus, anyone can open /proc/pid/psinfo even though ls(1)
2328        applied to /proc/pid will fail for anyone but the owner or an
2329        appropriately privileged process. Support for the old ioctl(2)-based
2330        version of /proc will be dropped in a future release, at which time the
2331        top-level directory for a process will be made world-readable.
2332 
2333 
2334        On SPARC based machines, the types gregset_t and fpregset_t defined in
2335        <sys/regset.h> are similar to but not the same as the types prgregset_t
2336        and prfpregset_t defined in <procfs.h>.
2337 
2338 
2339 
2340                                  June 6, 2016                          PROC(4)