Official builds of Chrome support crash dumping and reporting using the Google crash servers. This is a guide to how this works.
Breakpad is an open source library which we use for crash reporting across all three platforms (Linux, Mac and Windows). For Linux, a substantial amount of work was required to support cross-process dumping. At the time of writing this code is currently forked from the upstream breakpad repo. While this situation remains, the forked code lives in breakpad/linux. The upstream repo is mirrored in breakpad/src.
The code currently supports i386 only. Getting x86-64 to work should only be a minor amount of work.
Breakpad deals in a file format called ‘minidumps’. This is a Microsoft format and thus is defined by in-memory structures which are dumped, raw, to disk. The main header file for this file format is breakpad/src/google_breakpad/common/minidump_format.h.
At the top level, the minidump file format is a list of key-value pairs. Many of the keys are defined by the minidump format and contain cross-platform representations of stacks, threads etc. For Linux we also define a number of custom keys containing /proc/cpuinfo, lsb-release etc. These are defined in breakpad/linux/minidump_format_linux.h.
Exceptional conditions (such as invalid memory references, floating point exceptions, etc) are signaled by synchronous signals to the thread which caused them. Synchronous signals are always run on the thread which triggered them as opposed to asynchronous signals which can be handled by any thread in a thread-group which hasn't masked that signal.
All the signals that we wish to catch are synchronous except SIGABRT, and we can always arrange to send SIGABRT to a specific thread. Thus, we find the crashing thread by looking at the current thread in the signal handler.
The signal handlers run on a pre-allocated stack in case the crash was triggered by a stack overflow.
Once we have started handling the signal, we have to assume that the address space is compromised. In order not to fall prey to this and crash (again) in the crash handler, we observe some rules:
In order to avoid calling into libc we have a couple of header files which wrap the system calls (linux_syscall_support.h) and reimplement a tiny subset of libc (linux_libc_support.h).
The simple case occurs when the browser process crashes. Here we catch the signal and clone a new process to perform the dumping. We have to use a new process because a process cannot ptrace itself.
The dumping process then ptrace attaches to all the threads in the crashed process and writes out a minidump to /tmp. This is generic breakpad code.
Then we reach the Chrome specific parts in chrome/app/breakpad_linux.cc. Here we construct another temporary file and write a MIME wrapping of the crash dump ready for uploading. We then fork off wget to upload the file. Based on Debian popcorn, wget is very commonly installed (much more so than libcurl) and wget handles the HTTPS gubbins for us.
In the case of a crash in the renderer, we don't want the renderer handling the crash dumping itself. In the future we will sandbox the renderer and allowing it the authority to crash dump itself is too much.
Thus, we split the crash dumping in two parts: the gathering of information which is done in process and the external dumping which is done out of process. In the case above, the latter half was done in a cloned child. In this case, the browser process handles it.
When renderers are forked off, they have a UNIX DGRAM socket in file descriptor 4. The signal handler then calls into Chrome specific code (chrome/renderer/render_crash_handler_linux.cc) when it would otherwise clone. The Chrome specific code sends a datagram to the socket which contains:
The kernel enforces that the renderer isn‘t lying in the CREDENTIALS structure so it can’t ask the browser to crash dump another process.
The browser then performs the ptrace and minidump writing which would otherwise be performed in the cloned process and does the MIME wrapping the uploading as normal.
Once the browser has finished getting information from the crashed renderer via ptrace, it writes a byte to the file descriptor which was passed from the renderer. The renderer than wakes up (because it was blocking on reading from the other end) and rethrows the signal to itself. It then appears to crash ‘normally’ and other parts of the browser notice the abnormal termination and display the sad tab.
-Dlinux_breakpad=1
../build/gyp_chromium -Dlinux_breakpad=1 ninja -C out/Debug chrome
env CHROME_HEADLESS=1 ./out/Debug/chrome-wrapper
about:crash
to trigger a crash in the renderer process.~/.config/chromium/Crash Reports
.