| // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. | 
 | // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style | 
 | // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. | 
 |  | 
 | package runtime | 
 |  | 
 | import ( | 
 | 	"runtime/internal/atomic" | 
 | 	"runtime/internal/sys" | 
 | 	"unsafe" | 
 | ) | 
 |  | 
 | // The code in this file implements stack trace walking for all architectures. | 
 | // The most important fact about a given architecture is whether it uses a link register. | 
 | // On systems with link registers, the prologue for a non-leaf function stores the | 
 | // incoming value of LR at the bottom of the newly allocated stack frame. | 
 | // On systems without link registers, the architecture pushes a return PC during | 
 | // the call instruction, so the return PC ends up above the stack frame. | 
 | // In this file, the return PC is always called LR, no matter how it was found. | 
 | // | 
 | // To date, the opposite of a link register architecture is an x86 architecture. | 
 | // This code may need to change if some other kind of non-link-register | 
 | // architecture comes along. | 
 | // | 
 | // The other important fact is the size of a pointer: on 32-bit systems the LR | 
 | // takes up only 4 bytes on the stack, while on 64-bit systems it takes up 8 bytes. | 
 | // Typically this is ptrSize. | 
 | // | 
 | // As an exception, amd64p32 had ptrSize == 4 but the CALL instruction still | 
 | // stored an 8-byte return PC onto the stack. To accommodate this, we used regSize | 
 | // as the size of the architecture-pushed return PC. | 
 | // | 
 | // usesLR is defined below in terms of minFrameSize, which is defined in | 
 | // arch_$GOARCH.go. ptrSize and regSize are defined in stubs.go. | 
 |  | 
 | const usesLR = sys.MinFrameSize > 0 | 
 |  | 
 | var skipPC uintptr | 
 |  | 
 | func tracebackinit() { | 
 | 	// Go variable initialization happens late during runtime startup. | 
 | 	// Instead of initializing the variables above in the declarations, | 
 | 	// schedinit calls this function so that the variables are | 
 | 	// initialized and available earlier in the startup sequence. | 
 | 	skipPC = funcPC(skipPleaseUseCallersFrames) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // Traceback over the deferred function calls. | 
 | // Report them like calls that have been invoked but not started executing yet. | 
 | func tracebackdefers(gp *g, callback func(*stkframe, unsafe.Pointer) bool, v unsafe.Pointer) { | 
 | 	var frame stkframe | 
 | 	for d := gp._defer; d != nil; d = d.link { | 
 | 		fn := d.fn | 
 | 		if fn == nil { | 
 | 			// Defer of nil function. Args don't matter. | 
 | 			frame.pc = 0 | 
 | 			frame.fn = funcInfo{} | 
 | 			frame.argp = 0 | 
 | 			frame.arglen = 0 | 
 | 			frame.argmap = nil | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			frame.pc = fn.fn | 
 | 			f := findfunc(frame.pc) | 
 | 			if !f.valid() { | 
 | 				print("runtime: unknown pc in defer ", hex(frame.pc), "\n") | 
 | 				throw("unknown pc") | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			frame.fn = f | 
 | 			frame.argp = uintptr(deferArgs(d)) | 
 | 			var ok bool | 
 | 			frame.arglen, frame.argmap, ok = getArgInfoFast(f, true) | 
 | 			if !ok { | 
 | 				frame.arglen, frame.argmap = getArgInfo(&frame, f, true, fn) | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		frame.continpc = frame.pc | 
 | 		if !callback((*stkframe)(noescape(unsafe.Pointer(&frame))), v) { | 
 | 			return | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | const sizeofSkipFunction = 256 | 
 |  | 
 | // This function is defined in asm.s to be sizeofSkipFunction bytes long. | 
 | func skipPleaseUseCallersFrames() | 
 |  | 
 | // Generic traceback. Handles runtime stack prints (pcbuf == nil), | 
 | // the runtime.Callers function (pcbuf != nil), as well as the garbage | 
 | // collector (callback != nil).  A little clunky to merge these, but avoids | 
 | // duplicating the code and all its subtlety. | 
 | // | 
 | // The skip argument is only valid with pcbuf != nil and counts the number | 
 | // of logical frames to skip rather than physical frames (with inlining, a | 
 | // PC in pcbuf can represent multiple calls). If a PC is partially skipped | 
 | // and max > 1, pcbuf[1] will be runtime.skipPleaseUseCallersFrames+N where | 
 | // N indicates the number of logical frames to skip in pcbuf[0]. | 
 | func gentraceback(pc0, sp0, lr0 uintptr, gp *g, skip int, pcbuf *uintptr, max int, callback func(*stkframe, unsafe.Pointer) bool, v unsafe.Pointer, flags uint) int { | 
 | 	if skip > 0 && callback != nil { | 
 | 		throw("gentraceback callback cannot be used with non-zero skip") | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Don't call this "g"; it's too easy get "g" and "gp" confused. | 
 | 	if ourg := getg(); ourg == gp && ourg == ourg.m.curg { | 
 | 		// The starting sp has been passed in as a uintptr, and the caller may | 
 | 		// have other uintptr-typed stack references as well. | 
 | 		// If during one of the calls that got us here or during one of the | 
 | 		// callbacks below the stack must be grown, all these uintptr references | 
 | 		// to the stack will not be updated, and gentraceback will continue | 
 | 		// to inspect the old stack memory, which may no longer be valid. | 
 | 		// Even if all the variables were updated correctly, it is not clear that | 
 | 		// we want to expose a traceback that begins on one stack and ends | 
 | 		// on another stack. That could confuse callers quite a bit. | 
 | 		// Instead, we require that gentraceback and any other function that | 
 | 		// accepts an sp for the current goroutine (typically obtained by | 
 | 		// calling getcallersp) must not run on that goroutine's stack but | 
 | 		// instead on the g0 stack. | 
 | 		throw("gentraceback cannot trace user goroutine on its own stack") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	level, _, _ := gotraceback() | 
 |  | 
 | 	var ctxt *funcval // Context pointer for unstarted goroutines. See issue #25897. | 
 |  | 
 | 	if pc0 == ^uintptr(0) && sp0 == ^uintptr(0) { // Signal to fetch saved values from gp. | 
 | 		if gp.syscallsp != 0 { | 
 | 			pc0 = gp.syscallpc | 
 | 			sp0 = gp.syscallsp | 
 | 			if usesLR { | 
 | 				lr0 = 0 | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			pc0 = gp.sched.pc | 
 | 			sp0 = gp.sched.sp | 
 | 			if usesLR { | 
 | 				lr0 = gp.sched.lr | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			ctxt = (*funcval)(gp.sched.ctxt) | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	nprint := 0 | 
 | 	var frame stkframe | 
 | 	frame.pc = pc0 | 
 | 	frame.sp = sp0 | 
 | 	if usesLR { | 
 | 		frame.lr = lr0 | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	waspanic := false | 
 | 	cgoCtxt := gp.cgoCtxt | 
 | 	printing := pcbuf == nil && callback == nil | 
 |  | 
 | 	// If the PC is zero, it's likely a nil function call. | 
 | 	// Start in the caller's frame. | 
 | 	if frame.pc == 0 { | 
 | 		if usesLR { | 
 | 			frame.pc = *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(frame.sp)) | 
 | 			frame.lr = 0 | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			frame.pc = uintptr(*(*sys.Uintreg)(unsafe.Pointer(frame.sp))) | 
 | 			frame.sp += sys.RegSize | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	f := findfunc(frame.pc) | 
 | 	if !f.valid() { | 
 | 		if callback != nil || printing { | 
 | 			print("runtime: unknown pc ", hex(frame.pc), "\n") | 
 | 			tracebackHexdump(gp.stack, &frame, 0) | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if callback != nil { | 
 | 			throw("unknown pc") | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		return 0 | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	frame.fn = f | 
 |  | 
 | 	var cache pcvalueCache | 
 |  | 
 | 	lastFuncID := funcID_normal | 
 | 	n := 0 | 
 | 	for n < max { | 
 | 		// Typically: | 
 | 		//	pc is the PC of the running function. | 
 | 		//	sp is the stack pointer at that program counter. | 
 | 		//	fp is the frame pointer (caller's stack pointer) at that program counter, or nil if unknown. | 
 | 		//	stk is the stack containing sp. | 
 | 		//	The caller's program counter is lr, unless lr is zero, in which case it is *(uintptr*)sp. | 
 | 		f = frame.fn | 
 | 		if f.pcsp == 0 { | 
 | 			// No frame information, must be external function, like race support. | 
 | 			// See golang.org/issue/13568. | 
 | 			break | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		// Found an actual function. | 
 | 		// Derive frame pointer and link register. | 
 | 		if frame.fp == 0 { | 
 | 			// Jump over system stack transitions. If we're on g0 and there's a user | 
 | 			// goroutine, try to jump. Otherwise this is a regular call. | 
 | 			if flags&_TraceJumpStack != 0 && gp == gp.m.g0 && gp.m.curg != nil { | 
 | 				switch f.funcID { | 
 | 				case funcID_morestack: | 
 | 					// morestack does not return normally -- newstack() | 
 | 					// gogo's to curg.sched. Match that. | 
 | 					// This keeps morestack() from showing up in the backtrace, | 
 | 					// but that makes some sense since it'll never be returned | 
 | 					// to. | 
 | 					frame.pc = gp.m.curg.sched.pc | 
 | 					frame.fn = findfunc(frame.pc) | 
 | 					f = frame.fn | 
 | 					frame.sp = gp.m.curg.sched.sp | 
 | 					cgoCtxt = gp.m.curg.cgoCtxt | 
 | 				case funcID_systemstack: | 
 | 					// systemstack returns normally, so just follow the | 
 | 					// stack transition. | 
 | 					frame.sp = gp.m.curg.sched.sp | 
 | 					cgoCtxt = gp.m.curg.cgoCtxt | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			frame.fp = frame.sp + uintptr(funcspdelta(f, frame.pc, &cache)) | 
 | 			if !usesLR { | 
 | 				// On x86, call instruction pushes return PC before entering new function. | 
 | 				frame.fp += sys.RegSize | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		var flr funcInfo | 
 | 		if topofstack(f, gp.m != nil && gp == gp.m.g0) { | 
 | 			frame.lr = 0 | 
 | 			flr = funcInfo{} | 
 | 		} else if usesLR && f.funcID == funcID_jmpdefer { | 
 | 			// jmpdefer modifies SP/LR/PC non-atomically. | 
 | 			// If a profiling interrupt arrives during jmpdefer, | 
 | 			// the stack unwind may see a mismatched register set | 
 | 			// and get confused. Stop if we see PC within jmpdefer | 
 | 			// to avoid that confusion. | 
 | 			// See golang.org/issue/8153. | 
 | 			if callback != nil { | 
 | 				throw("traceback_arm: found jmpdefer when tracing with callback") | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			frame.lr = 0 | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			var lrPtr uintptr | 
 | 			if usesLR { | 
 | 				if n == 0 && frame.sp < frame.fp || frame.lr == 0 { | 
 | 					lrPtr = frame.sp | 
 | 					frame.lr = *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(lrPtr)) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				if frame.lr == 0 { | 
 | 					lrPtr = frame.fp - sys.RegSize | 
 | 					frame.lr = uintptr(*(*sys.Uintreg)(unsafe.Pointer(lrPtr))) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			flr = findfunc(frame.lr) | 
 | 			if !flr.valid() { | 
 | 				// This happens if you get a profiling interrupt at just the wrong time. | 
 | 				// In that context it is okay to stop early. | 
 | 				// But if callback is set, we're doing a garbage collection and must | 
 | 				// get everything, so crash loudly. | 
 | 				doPrint := printing | 
 | 				if doPrint && gp.m.incgo && f.funcID == funcID_sigpanic { | 
 | 					// We can inject sigpanic | 
 | 					// calls directly into C code, | 
 | 					// in which case we'll see a C | 
 | 					// return PC. Don't complain. | 
 | 					doPrint = false | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				if callback != nil || doPrint { | 
 | 					print("runtime: unexpected return pc for ", funcname(f), " called from ", hex(frame.lr), "\n") | 
 | 					tracebackHexdump(gp.stack, &frame, lrPtr) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				if callback != nil { | 
 | 					throw("unknown caller pc") | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		frame.varp = frame.fp | 
 | 		if !usesLR { | 
 | 			// On x86, call instruction pushes return PC before entering new function. | 
 | 			frame.varp -= sys.RegSize | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		// If framepointer_enabled and there's a frame, then | 
 | 		// there's a saved bp here. | 
 | 		if frame.varp > frame.sp && (framepointer_enabled && GOARCH == "amd64" || GOARCH == "arm64") { | 
 | 			frame.varp -= sys.RegSize | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		// Derive size of arguments. | 
 | 		// Most functions have a fixed-size argument block, | 
 | 		// so we can use metadata about the function f. | 
 | 		// Not all, though: there are some variadic functions | 
 | 		// in package runtime and reflect, and for those we use call-specific | 
 | 		// metadata recorded by f's caller. | 
 | 		if callback != nil || printing { | 
 | 			frame.argp = frame.fp + sys.MinFrameSize | 
 | 			var ok bool | 
 | 			frame.arglen, frame.argmap, ok = getArgInfoFast(f, callback != nil) | 
 | 			if !ok { | 
 | 				frame.arglen, frame.argmap = getArgInfo(&frame, f, callback != nil, ctxt) | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		ctxt = nil // ctxt is only needed to get arg maps for the topmost frame | 
 |  | 
 | 		// Determine frame's 'continuation PC', where it can continue. | 
 | 		// Normally this is the return address on the stack, but if sigpanic | 
 | 		// is immediately below this function on the stack, then the frame | 
 | 		// stopped executing due to a trap, and frame.pc is probably not | 
 | 		// a safe point for looking up liveness information. In this panicking case, | 
 | 		// the function either doesn't return at all (if it has no defers or if the | 
 | 		// defers do not recover) or it returns from one of the calls to | 
 | 		// deferproc a second time (if the corresponding deferred func recovers). | 
 | 		// In the latter case, use a deferreturn call site as the continuation pc. | 
 | 		frame.continpc = frame.pc | 
 | 		if waspanic { | 
 | 			if frame.fn.deferreturn != 0 { | 
 | 				frame.continpc = frame.fn.entry + uintptr(frame.fn.deferreturn) + 1 | 
 | 				// Note: this may perhaps keep return variables alive longer than | 
 | 				// strictly necessary, as we are using "function has a defer statement" | 
 | 				// as a proxy for "function actually deferred something". It seems | 
 | 				// to be a minor drawback. (We used to actually look through the | 
 | 				// gp._defer for a defer corresponding to this function, but that | 
 | 				// is hard to do with defer records on the stack during a stack copy.) | 
 | 				// Note: the +1 is to offset the -1 that | 
 | 				// stack.go:getStackMap does to back up a return | 
 | 				// address make sure the pc is in the CALL instruction. | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				frame.continpc = 0 | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		if callback != nil { | 
 | 			if !callback((*stkframe)(noescape(unsafe.Pointer(&frame))), v) { | 
 | 				return n | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		if pcbuf != nil { | 
 | 			pc := frame.pc | 
 | 			// backup to CALL instruction to read inlining info (same logic as below) | 
 | 			tracepc := pc | 
 | 			// Normally, pc is a return address. In that case, we want to look up | 
 | 			// file/line information using pc-1, because that is the pc of the | 
 | 			// call instruction (more precisely, the last byte of the call instruction). | 
 | 			// Callers expect the pc buffer to contain return addresses and do the | 
 | 			// same -1 themselves, so we keep pc unchanged. | 
 | 			// When the pc is from a signal (e.g. profiler or segv) then we want | 
 | 			// to look up file/line information using pc, and we store pc+1 in the | 
 | 			// pc buffer so callers can unconditionally subtract 1 before looking up. | 
 | 			// See issue 34123. | 
 | 			// The pc can be at function entry when the frame is initialized without | 
 | 			// actually running code, like runtime.mstart. | 
 | 			if (n == 0 && flags&_TraceTrap != 0) || waspanic || pc == f.entry { | 
 | 				pc++ | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				tracepc-- | 
 | 			} | 
 |  | 
 | 			// If there is inlining info, record the inner frames. | 
 | 			if inldata := funcdata(f, _FUNCDATA_InlTree); inldata != nil { | 
 | 				inltree := (*[1 << 20]inlinedCall)(inldata) | 
 | 				for { | 
 | 					ix := pcdatavalue(f, _PCDATA_InlTreeIndex, tracepc, &cache) | 
 | 					if ix < 0 { | 
 | 						break | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					if inltree[ix].funcID == funcID_wrapper && elideWrapperCalling(lastFuncID) { | 
 | 						// ignore wrappers | 
 | 					} else if skip > 0 { | 
 | 						skip-- | 
 | 					} else if n < max { | 
 | 						(*[1 << 20]uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(pcbuf))[n] = pc | 
 | 						n++ | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					lastFuncID = inltree[ix].funcID | 
 | 					// Back up to an instruction in the "caller". | 
 | 					tracepc = frame.fn.entry + uintptr(inltree[ix].parentPc) | 
 | 					pc = tracepc + 1 | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			// Record the main frame. | 
 | 			if f.funcID == funcID_wrapper && elideWrapperCalling(lastFuncID) { | 
 | 				// Ignore wrapper functions (except when they trigger panics). | 
 | 			} else if skip > 0 { | 
 | 				skip-- | 
 | 			} else if n < max { | 
 | 				(*[1 << 20]uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(pcbuf))[n] = pc | 
 | 				n++ | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			lastFuncID = f.funcID | 
 | 			n-- // offset n++ below | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		if printing { | 
 | 			// assume skip=0 for printing. | 
 | 			// | 
 | 			// Never elide wrappers if we haven't printed | 
 | 			// any frames. And don't elide wrappers that | 
 | 			// called panic rather than the wrapped | 
 | 			// function. Otherwise, leave them out. | 
 |  | 
 | 			// backup to CALL instruction to read inlining info (same logic as below) | 
 | 			tracepc := frame.pc | 
 | 			if (n > 0 || flags&_TraceTrap == 0) && frame.pc > f.entry && !waspanic { | 
 | 				tracepc-- | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			// If there is inlining info, print the inner frames. | 
 | 			if inldata := funcdata(f, _FUNCDATA_InlTree); inldata != nil { | 
 | 				inltree := (*[1 << 20]inlinedCall)(inldata) | 
 | 				for { | 
 | 					ix := pcdatavalue(f, _PCDATA_InlTreeIndex, tracepc, nil) | 
 | 					if ix < 0 { | 
 | 						break | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					if (flags&_TraceRuntimeFrames) != 0 || showframe(f, gp, nprint == 0, inltree[ix].funcID, lastFuncID) { | 
 | 						name := funcnameFromNameoff(f, inltree[ix].func_) | 
 | 						file, line := funcline(f, tracepc) | 
 | 						print(name, "(...)\n") | 
 | 						print("\t", file, ":", line, "\n") | 
 | 						nprint++ | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					lastFuncID = inltree[ix].funcID | 
 | 					// Back up to an instruction in the "caller". | 
 | 					tracepc = frame.fn.entry + uintptr(inltree[ix].parentPc) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			if (flags&_TraceRuntimeFrames) != 0 || showframe(f, gp, nprint == 0, f.funcID, lastFuncID) { | 
 | 				// Print during crash. | 
 | 				//	main(0x1, 0x2, 0x3) | 
 | 				//		/home/rsc/go/src/runtime/x.go:23 +0xf | 
 | 				// | 
 | 				name := funcname(f) | 
 | 				file, line := funcline(f, tracepc) | 
 | 				if name == "runtime.gopanic" { | 
 | 					name = "panic" | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				print(name, "(") | 
 | 				argp := (*[100]uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(frame.argp)) | 
 | 				for i := uintptr(0); i < frame.arglen/sys.PtrSize; i++ { | 
 | 					if i >= 10 { | 
 | 						print(", ...") | 
 | 						break | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					if i != 0 { | 
 | 						print(", ") | 
 | 					} | 
 | 					print(hex(argp[i])) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				print(")\n") | 
 | 				print("\t", file, ":", line) | 
 | 				if frame.pc > f.entry { | 
 | 					print(" +", hex(frame.pc-f.entry)) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				if gp.m != nil && gp.m.throwing > 0 && gp == gp.m.curg || level >= 2 { | 
 | 					print(" fp=", hex(frame.fp), " sp=", hex(frame.sp), " pc=", hex(frame.pc)) | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				print("\n") | 
 | 				nprint++ | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			lastFuncID = f.funcID | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		n++ | 
 |  | 
 | 		if f.funcID == funcID_cgocallback_gofunc && len(cgoCtxt) > 0 { | 
 | 			ctxt := cgoCtxt[len(cgoCtxt)-1] | 
 | 			cgoCtxt = cgoCtxt[:len(cgoCtxt)-1] | 
 |  | 
 | 			// skip only applies to Go frames. | 
 | 			// callback != nil only used when we only care | 
 | 			// about Go frames. | 
 | 			if skip == 0 && callback == nil { | 
 | 				n = tracebackCgoContext(pcbuf, printing, ctxt, n, max) | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		waspanic = f.funcID == funcID_sigpanic | 
 | 		injectedCall := waspanic || f.funcID == funcID_asyncPreempt | 
 |  | 
 | 		// Do not unwind past the bottom of the stack. | 
 | 		if !flr.valid() { | 
 | 			break | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		// Unwind to next frame. | 
 | 		frame.fn = flr | 
 | 		frame.pc = frame.lr | 
 | 		frame.lr = 0 | 
 | 		frame.sp = frame.fp | 
 | 		frame.fp = 0 | 
 | 		frame.argmap = nil | 
 |  | 
 | 		// On link register architectures, sighandler saves the LR on stack | 
 | 		// before faking a call. | 
 | 		if usesLR && injectedCall { | 
 | 			x := *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(frame.sp)) | 
 | 			frame.sp += sys.MinFrameSize | 
 | 			if GOARCH == "arm64" { | 
 | 				// arm64 needs 16-byte aligned SP, always | 
 | 				frame.sp += sys.PtrSize | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			f = findfunc(frame.pc) | 
 | 			frame.fn = f | 
 | 			if !f.valid() { | 
 | 				frame.pc = x | 
 | 			} else if funcspdelta(f, frame.pc, &cache) == 0 { | 
 | 				frame.lr = x | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if printing { | 
 | 		n = nprint | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Note that panic != nil is okay here: there can be leftover panics, | 
 | 	// because the defers on the panic stack do not nest in frame order as | 
 | 	// they do on the defer stack. If you have: | 
 | 	// | 
 | 	//	frame 1 defers d1 | 
 | 	//	frame 2 defers d2 | 
 | 	//	frame 3 defers d3 | 
 | 	//	frame 4 panics | 
 | 	//	frame 4's panic starts running defers | 
 | 	//	frame 5, running d3, defers d4 | 
 | 	//	frame 5 panics | 
 | 	//	frame 5's panic starts running defers | 
 | 	//	frame 6, running d4, garbage collects | 
 | 	//	frame 6, running d2, garbage collects | 
 | 	// | 
 | 	// During the execution of d4, the panic stack is d4 -> d3, which | 
 | 	// is nested properly, and we'll treat frame 3 as resumable, because we | 
 | 	// can find d3. (And in fact frame 3 is resumable. If d4 recovers | 
 | 	// and frame 5 continues running, d3, d3 can recover and we'll | 
 | 	// resume execution in (returning from) frame 3.) | 
 | 	// | 
 | 	// During the execution of d2, however, the panic stack is d2 -> d3, | 
 | 	// which is inverted. The scan will match d2 to frame 2 but having | 
 | 	// d2 on the stack until then means it will not match d3 to frame 3. | 
 | 	// This is okay: if we're running d2, then all the defers after d2 have | 
 | 	// completed and their corresponding frames are dead. Not finding d3 | 
 | 	// for frame 3 means we'll set frame 3's continpc == 0, which is correct | 
 | 	// (frame 3 is dead). At the end of the walk the panic stack can thus | 
 | 	// contain defers (d3 in this case) for dead frames. The inversion here | 
 | 	// always indicates a dead frame, and the effect of the inversion on the | 
 | 	// scan is to hide those dead frames, so the scan is still okay: | 
 | 	// what's left on the panic stack are exactly (and only) the dead frames. | 
 | 	// | 
 | 	// We require callback != nil here because only when callback != nil | 
 | 	// do we know that gentraceback is being called in a "must be correct" | 
 | 	// context as opposed to a "best effort" context. The tracebacks with | 
 | 	// callbacks only happen when everything is stopped nicely. | 
 | 	// At other times, such as when gathering a stack for a profiling signal | 
 | 	// or when printing a traceback during a crash, everything may not be | 
 | 	// stopped nicely, and the stack walk may not be able to complete. | 
 | 	if callback != nil && n < max && frame.sp != gp.stktopsp { | 
 | 		print("runtime: g", gp.goid, ": frame.sp=", hex(frame.sp), " top=", hex(gp.stktopsp), "\n") | 
 | 		print("\tstack=[", hex(gp.stack.lo), "-", hex(gp.stack.hi), "] n=", n, " max=", max, "\n") | 
 | 		throw("traceback did not unwind completely") | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	return n | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // reflectMethodValue is a partial duplicate of reflect.makeFuncImpl | 
 | // and reflect.methodValue. | 
 | type reflectMethodValue struct { | 
 | 	fn     uintptr | 
 | 	stack  *bitvector // ptrmap for both args and results | 
 | 	argLen uintptr    // just args | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // getArgInfoFast returns the argument frame information for a call to f. | 
 | // It is short and inlineable. However, it does not handle all functions. | 
 | // If ok reports false, you must call getArgInfo instead. | 
 | // TODO(josharian): once we do mid-stack inlining, | 
 | // call getArgInfo directly from getArgInfoFast and stop returning an ok bool. | 
 | func getArgInfoFast(f funcInfo, needArgMap bool) (arglen uintptr, argmap *bitvector, ok bool) { | 
 | 	return uintptr(f.args), nil, !(needArgMap && f.args == _ArgsSizeUnknown) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // getArgInfo returns the argument frame information for a call to f | 
 | // with call frame frame. | 
 | // | 
 | // This is used for both actual calls with active stack frames and for | 
 | // deferred calls or goroutines that are not yet executing. If this is an actual | 
 | // call, ctxt must be nil (getArgInfo will retrieve what it needs from | 
 | // the active stack frame). If this is a deferred call or unstarted goroutine, | 
 | // ctxt must be the function object that was deferred or go'd. | 
 | func getArgInfo(frame *stkframe, f funcInfo, needArgMap bool, ctxt *funcval) (arglen uintptr, argmap *bitvector) { | 
 | 	arglen = uintptr(f.args) | 
 | 	if needArgMap && f.args == _ArgsSizeUnknown { | 
 | 		// Extract argument bitmaps for reflect stubs from the calls they made to reflect. | 
 | 		switch funcname(f) { | 
 | 		case "reflect.makeFuncStub", "reflect.methodValueCall": | 
 | 			// These take a *reflect.methodValue as their | 
 | 			// context register. | 
 | 			var mv *reflectMethodValue | 
 | 			var retValid bool | 
 | 			if ctxt != nil { | 
 | 				// This is not an actual call, but a | 
 | 				// deferred call or an unstarted goroutine. | 
 | 				// The function value is itself the *reflect.methodValue. | 
 | 				mv = (*reflectMethodValue)(unsafe.Pointer(ctxt)) | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				// This is a real call that took the | 
 | 				// *reflect.methodValue as its context | 
 | 				// register and immediately saved it | 
 | 				// to 0(SP). Get the methodValue from | 
 | 				// 0(SP). | 
 | 				arg0 := frame.sp + sys.MinFrameSize | 
 | 				mv = *(**reflectMethodValue)(unsafe.Pointer(arg0)) | 
 | 				// Figure out whether the return values are valid. | 
 | 				// Reflect will update this value after it copies | 
 | 				// in the return values. | 
 | 				retValid = *(*bool)(unsafe.Pointer(arg0 + 3*sys.PtrSize)) | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			if mv.fn != f.entry { | 
 | 				print("runtime: confused by ", funcname(f), "\n") | 
 | 				throw("reflect mismatch") | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			bv := mv.stack | 
 | 			arglen = uintptr(bv.n * sys.PtrSize) | 
 | 			if !retValid { | 
 | 				arglen = uintptr(mv.argLen) &^ (sys.PtrSize - 1) | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			argmap = bv | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // tracebackCgoContext handles tracing back a cgo context value, from | 
 | // the context argument to setCgoTraceback, for the gentraceback | 
 | // function. It returns the new value of n. | 
 | func tracebackCgoContext(pcbuf *uintptr, printing bool, ctxt uintptr, n, max int) int { | 
 | 	var cgoPCs [32]uintptr | 
 | 	cgoContextPCs(ctxt, cgoPCs[:]) | 
 | 	var arg cgoSymbolizerArg | 
 | 	anySymbolized := false | 
 | 	for _, pc := range cgoPCs { | 
 | 		if pc == 0 || n >= max { | 
 | 			break | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if pcbuf != nil { | 
 | 			(*[1 << 20]uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(pcbuf))[n] = pc | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if printing { | 
 | 			if cgoSymbolizer == nil { | 
 | 				print("non-Go function at pc=", hex(pc), "\n") | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				c := printOneCgoTraceback(pc, max-n, &arg) | 
 | 				n += c - 1 // +1 a few lines down | 
 | 				anySymbolized = true | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		n++ | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if anySymbolized { | 
 | 		arg.pc = 0 | 
 | 		callCgoSymbolizer(&arg) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return n | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func printcreatedby(gp *g) { | 
 | 	// Show what created goroutine, except main goroutine (goid 1). | 
 | 	pc := gp.gopc | 
 | 	f := findfunc(pc) | 
 | 	if f.valid() && showframe(f, gp, false, funcID_normal, funcID_normal) && gp.goid != 1 { | 
 | 		printcreatedby1(f, pc) | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func printcreatedby1(f funcInfo, pc uintptr) { | 
 | 	print("created by ", funcname(f), "\n") | 
 | 	tracepc := pc // back up to CALL instruction for funcline. | 
 | 	if pc > f.entry { | 
 | 		tracepc -= sys.PCQuantum | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	file, line := funcline(f, tracepc) | 
 | 	print("\t", file, ":", line) | 
 | 	if pc > f.entry { | 
 | 		print(" +", hex(pc-f.entry)) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	print("\n") | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func traceback(pc, sp, lr uintptr, gp *g) { | 
 | 	traceback1(pc, sp, lr, gp, 0) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // tracebacktrap is like traceback but expects that the PC and SP were obtained | 
 | // from a trap, not from gp->sched or gp->syscallpc/gp->syscallsp or getcallerpc/getcallersp. | 
 | // Because they are from a trap instead of from a saved pair, | 
 | // the initial PC must not be rewound to the previous instruction. | 
 | // (All the saved pairs record a PC that is a return address, so we | 
 | // rewind it into the CALL instruction.) | 
 | // If gp.m.libcall{g,pc,sp} information is available, it uses that information in preference to | 
 | // the pc/sp/lr passed in. | 
 | func tracebacktrap(pc, sp, lr uintptr, gp *g) { | 
 | 	if gp.m.libcallsp != 0 { | 
 | 		// We're in C code somewhere, traceback from the saved position. | 
 | 		traceback1(gp.m.libcallpc, gp.m.libcallsp, 0, gp.m.libcallg.ptr(), 0) | 
 | 		return | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	traceback1(pc, sp, lr, gp, _TraceTrap) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func traceback1(pc, sp, lr uintptr, gp *g, flags uint) { | 
 | 	// If the goroutine is in cgo, and we have a cgo traceback, print that. | 
 | 	if iscgo && gp.m != nil && gp.m.ncgo > 0 && gp.syscallsp != 0 && gp.m.cgoCallers != nil && gp.m.cgoCallers[0] != 0 { | 
 | 		// Lock cgoCallers so that a signal handler won't | 
 | 		// change it, copy the array, reset it, unlock it. | 
 | 		// We are locked to the thread and are not running | 
 | 		// concurrently with a signal handler. | 
 | 		// We just have to stop a signal handler from interrupting | 
 | 		// in the middle of our copy. | 
 | 		atomic.Store(&gp.m.cgoCallersUse, 1) | 
 | 		cgoCallers := *gp.m.cgoCallers | 
 | 		gp.m.cgoCallers[0] = 0 | 
 | 		atomic.Store(&gp.m.cgoCallersUse, 0) | 
 |  | 
 | 		printCgoTraceback(&cgoCallers) | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	var n int | 
 | 	if readgstatus(gp)&^_Gscan == _Gsyscall { | 
 | 		// Override registers if blocked in system call. | 
 | 		pc = gp.syscallpc | 
 | 		sp = gp.syscallsp | 
 | 		flags &^= _TraceTrap | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	// Print traceback. By default, omits runtime frames. | 
 | 	// If that means we print nothing at all, repeat forcing all frames printed. | 
 | 	n = gentraceback(pc, sp, lr, gp, 0, nil, _TracebackMaxFrames, nil, nil, flags) | 
 | 	if n == 0 && (flags&_TraceRuntimeFrames) == 0 { | 
 | 		n = gentraceback(pc, sp, lr, gp, 0, nil, _TracebackMaxFrames, nil, nil, flags|_TraceRuntimeFrames) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if n == _TracebackMaxFrames { | 
 | 		print("...additional frames elided...\n") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	printcreatedby(gp) | 
 |  | 
 | 	if gp.ancestors == nil { | 
 | 		return | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	for _, ancestor := range *gp.ancestors { | 
 | 		printAncestorTraceback(ancestor) | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // printAncestorTraceback prints the traceback of the given ancestor. | 
 | // TODO: Unify this with gentraceback and CallersFrames. | 
 | func printAncestorTraceback(ancestor ancestorInfo) { | 
 | 	print("[originating from goroutine ", ancestor.goid, "]:\n") | 
 | 	for fidx, pc := range ancestor.pcs { | 
 | 		f := findfunc(pc) // f previously validated | 
 | 		if showfuncinfo(f, fidx == 0, funcID_normal, funcID_normal) { | 
 | 			printAncestorTracebackFuncInfo(f, pc) | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if len(ancestor.pcs) == _TracebackMaxFrames { | 
 | 		print("...additional frames elided...\n") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	// Show what created goroutine, except main goroutine (goid 1). | 
 | 	f := findfunc(ancestor.gopc) | 
 | 	if f.valid() && showfuncinfo(f, false, funcID_normal, funcID_normal) && ancestor.goid != 1 { | 
 | 		printcreatedby1(f, ancestor.gopc) | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // printAncestorTraceback prints the given function info at a given pc | 
 | // within an ancestor traceback. The precision of this info is reduced | 
 | // due to only have access to the pcs at the time of the caller | 
 | // goroutine being created. | 
 | func printAncestorTracebackFuncInfo(f funcInfo, pc uintptr) { | 
 | 	name := funcname(f) | 
 | 	if inldata := funcdata(f, _FUNCDATA_InlTree); inldata != nil { | 
 | 		inltree := (*[1 << 20]inlinedCall)(inldata) | 
 | 		ix := pcdatavalue(f, _PCDATA_InlTreeIndex, pc, nil) | 
 | 		if ix >= 0 { | 
 | 			name = funcnameFromNameoff(f, inltree[ix].func_) | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	file, line := funcline(f, pc) | 
 | 	if name == "runtime.gopanic" { | 
 | 		name = "panic" | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	print(name, "(...)\n") | 
 | 	print("\t", file, ":", line) | 
 | 	if pc > f.entry { | 
 | 		print(" +", hex(pc-f.entry)) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	print("\n") | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func callers(skip int, pcbuf []uintptr) int { | 
 | 	sp := getcallersp() | 
 | 	pc := getcallerpc() | 
 | 	gp := getg() | 
 | 	var n int | 
 | 	systemstack(func() { | 
 | 		n = gentraceback(pc, sp, 0, gp, skip, &pcbuf[0], len(pcbuf), nil, nil, 0) | 
 | 	}) | 
 | 	return n | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func gcallers(gp *g, skip int, pcbuf []uintptr) int { | 
 | 	return gentraceback(^uintptr(0), ^uintptr(0), 0, gp, skip, &pcbuf[0], len(pcbuf), nil, nil, 0) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // showframe reports whether the frame with the given characteristics should | 
 | // be printed during a traceback. | 
 | func showframe(f funcInfo, gp *g, firstFrame bool, funcID, childID funcID) bool { | 
 | 	g := getg() | 
 | 	if g.m.throwing > 0 && gp != nil && (gp == g.m.curg || gp == g.m.caughtsig.ptr()) { | 
 | 		return true | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return showfuncinfo(f, firstFrame, funcID, childID) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // showfuncinfo reports whether a function with the given characteristics should | 
 | // be printed during a traceback. | 
 | func showfuncinfo(f funcInfo, firstFrame bool, funcID, childID funcID) bool { | 
 | 	level, _, _ := gotraceback() | 
 | 	if level > 1 { | 
 | 		// Show all frames. | 
 | 		return true | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if !f.valid() { | 
 | 		return false | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if funcID == funcID_wrapper && elideWrapperCalling(childID) { | 
 | 		return false | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	name := funcname(f) | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Special case: always show runtime.gopanic frame | 
 | 	// in the middle of a stack trace, so that we can | 
 | 	// see the boundary between ordinary code and | 
 | 	// panic-induced deferred code. | 
 | 	// See golang.org/issue/5832. | 
 | 	if name == "runtime.gopanic" && !firstFrame { | 
 | 		return true | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	return contains(name, ".") && (!hasPrefix(name, "runtime.") || isExportedRuntime(name)) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // isExportedRuntime reports whether name is an exported runtime function. | 
 | // It is only for runtime functions, so ASCII A-Z is fine. | 
 | func isExportedRuntime(name string) bool { | 
 | 	const n = len("runtime.") | 
 | 	return len(name) > n && name[:n] == "runtime." && 'A' <= name[n] && name[n] <= 'Z' | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // elideWrapperCalling reports whether a wrapper function that called | 
 | // function id should be elided from stack traces. | 
 | func elideWrapperCalling(id funcID) bool { | 
 | 	// If the wrapper called a panic function instead of the | 
 | 	// wrapped function, we want to include it in stacks. | 
 | 	return !(id == funcID_gopanic || id == funcID_sigpanic || id == funcID_panicwrap) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | var gStatusStrings = [...]string{ | 
 | 	_Gidle:      "idle", | 
 | 	_Grunnable:  "runnable", | 
 | 	_Grunning:   "running", | 
 | 	_Gsyscall:   "syscall", | 
 | 	_Gwaiting:   "waiting", | 
 | 	_Gdead:      "dead", | 
 | 	_Gcopystack: "copystack", | 
 | 	_Gpreempted: "preempted", | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func goroutineheader(gp *g) { | 
 | 	gpstatus := readgstatus(gp) | 
 |  | 
 | 	isScan := gpstatus&_Gscan != 0 | 
 | 	gpstatus &^= _Gscan // drop the scan bit | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Basic string status | 
 | 	var status string | 
 | 	if 0 <= gpstatus && gpstatus < uint32(len(gStatusStrings)) { | 
 | 		status = gStatusStrings[gpstatus] | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		status = "???" | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Override. | 
 | 	if gpstatus == _Gwaiting && gp.waitreason != waitReasonZero { | 
 | 		status = gp.waitreason.String() | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	// approx time the G is blocked, in minutes | 
 | 	var waitfor int64 | 
 | 	if (gpstatus == _Gwaiting || gpstatus == _Gsyscall) && gp.waitsince != 0 { | 
 | 		waitfor = (nanotime() - gp.waitsince) / 60e9 | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	print("goroutine ", gp.goid, " [", status) | 
 | 	if isScan { | 
 | 		print(" (scan)") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if waitfor >= 1 { | 
 | 		print(", ", waitfor, " minutes") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if gp.lockedm != 0 { | 
 | 		print(", locked to thread") | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	print("]:\n") | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func tracebackothers(me *g) { | 
 | 	level, _, _ := gotraceback() | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Show the current goroutine first, if we haven't already. | 
 | 	g := getg() | 
 | 	gp := g.m.curg | 
 | 	if gp != nil && gp != me { | 
 | 		print("\n") | 
 | 		goroutineheader(gp) | 
 | 		traceback(^uintptr(0), ^uintptr(0), 0, gp) | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	lock(&allglock) | 
 | 	for _, gp := range allgs { | 
 | 		if gp == me || gp == g.m.curg || readgstatus(gp) == _Gdead || isSystemGoroutine(gp, false) && level < 2 { | 
 | 			continue | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		print("\n") | 
 | 		goroutineheader(gp) | 
 | 		// Note: gp.m == g.m occurs when tracebackothers is | 
 | 		// called from a signal handler initiated during a | 
 | 		// systemstack call. The original G is still in the | 
 | 		// running state, and we want to print its stack. | 
 | 		if gp.m != g.m && readgstatus(gp)&^_Gscan == _Grunning { | 
 | 			print("\tgoroutine running on other thread; stack unavailable\n") | 
 | 			printcreatedby(gp) | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			traceback(^uintptr(0), ^uintptr(0), 0, gp) | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	unlock(&allglock) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // tracebackHexdump hexdumps part of stk around frame.sp and frame.fp | 
 | // for debugging purposes. If the address bad is included in the | 
 | // hexdumped range, it will mark it as well. | 
 | func tracebackHexdump(stk stack, frame *stkframe, bad uintptr) { | 
 | 	const expand = 32 * sys.PtrSize | 
 | 	const maxExpand = 256 * sys.PtrSize | 
 | 	// Start around frame.sp. | 
 | 	lo, hi := frame.sp, frame.sp | 
 | 	// Expand to include frame.fp. | 
 | 	if frame.fp != 0 && frame.fp < lo { | 
 | 		lo = frame.fp | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if frame.fp != 0 && frame.fp > hi { | 
 | 		hi = frame.fp | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	// Expand a bit more. | 
 | 	lo, hi = lo-expand, hi+expand | 
 | 	// But don't go too far from frame.sp. | 
 | 	if lo < frame.sp-maxExpand { | 
 | 		lo = frame.sp - maxExpand | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if hi > frame.sp+maxExpand { | 
 | 		hi = frame.sp + maxExpand | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	// And don't go outside the stack bounds. | 
 | 	if lo < stk.lo { | 
 | 		lo = stk.lo | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if hi > stk.hi { | 
 | 		hi = stk.hi | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	// Print the hex dump. | 
 | 	print("stack: frame={sp:", hex(frame.sp), ", fp:", hex(frame.fp), "} stack=[", hex(stk.lo), ",", hex(stk.hi), ")\n") | 
 | 	hexdumpWords(lo, hi, func(p uintptr) byte { | 
 | 		switch p { | 
 | 		case frame.fp: | 
 | 			return '>' | 
 | 		case frame.sp: | 
 | 			return '<' | 
 | 		case bad: | 
 | 			return '!' | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		return 0 | 
 | 	}) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // Does f mark the top of a goroutine stack? | 
 | func topofstack(f funcInfo, g0 bool) bool { | 
 | 	return f.funcID == funcID_goexit || | 
 | 		f.funcID == funcID_mstart || | 
 | 		f.funcID == funcID_mcall || | 
 | 		f.funcID == funcID_morestack || | 
 | 		f.funcID == funcID_rt0_go || | 
 | 		f.funcID == funcID_externalthreadhandler || | 
 | 		// asmcgocall is TOS on the system stack because it | 
 | 		// switches to the system stack, but in this case we | 
 | 		// can come back to the regular stack and still want | 
 | 		// to be able to unwind through the call that appeared | 
 | 		// on the regular stack. | 
 | 		(g0 && f.funcID == funcID_asmcgocall) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // isSystemGoroutine reports whether the goroutine g must be omitted | 
 | // in stack dumps and deadlock detector. This is any goroutine that | 
 | // starts at a runtime.* entry point, except for runtime.main, | 
 | // runtime.handleAsyncEvent (wasm only) and sometimes runtime.runfinq. | 
 | // | 
 | // If fixed is true, any goroutine that can vary between user and | 
 | // system (that is, the finalizer goroutine) is considered a user | 
 | // goroutine. | 
 | func isSystemGoroutine(gp *g, fixed bool) bool { | 
 | 	// Keep this in sync with cmd/trace/trace.go:isSystemGoroutine. | 
 | 	f := findfunc(gp.startpc) | 
 | 	if !f.valid() { | 
 | 		return false | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if f.funcID == funcID_runtime_main || f.funcID == funcID_handleAsyncEvent { | 
 | 		return false | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if f.funcID == funcID_runfinq { | 
 | 		// We include the finalizer goroutine if it's calling | 
 | 		// back into user code. | 
 | 		if fixed { | 
 | 			// This goroutine can vary. In fixed mode, | 
 | 			// always consider it a user goroutine. | 
 | 			return false | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		return !fingRunning | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return hasPrefix(funcname(f), "runtime.") | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // SetCgoTraceback records three C functions to use to gather | 
 | // traceback information from C code and to convert that traceback | 
 | // information into symbolic information. These are used when printing | 
 | // stack traces for a program that uses cgo. | 
 | // | 
 | // The traceback and context functions may be called from a signal | 
 | // handler, and must therefore use only async-signal safe functions. | 
 | // The symbolizer function may be called while the program is | 
 | // crashing, and so must be cautious about using memory.  None of the | 
 | // functions may call back into Go. | 
 | // | 
 | // The context function will be called with a single argument, a | 
 | // pointer to a struct: | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		Context uintptr | 
 | //	} | 
 | // | 
 | // In C syntax, this struct will be | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		uintptr_t Context; | 
 | //	}; | 
 | // | 
 | // If the Context field is 0, the context function is being called to | 
 | // record the current traceback context. It should record in the | 
 | // Context field whatever information is needed about the current | 
 | // point of execution to later produce a stack trace, probably the | 
 | // stack pointer and PC. In this case the context function will be | 
 | // called from C code. | 
 | // | 
 | // If the Context field is not 0, then it is a value returned by a | 
 | // previous call to the context function. This case is called when the | 
 | // context is no longer needed; that is, when the Go code is returning | 
 | // to its C code caller. This permits the context function to release | 
 | // any associated resources. | 
 | // | 
 | // While it would be correct for the context function to record a | 
 | // complete a stack trace whenever it is called, and simply copy that | 
 | // out in the traceback function, in a typical program the context | 
 | // function will be called many times without ever recording a | 
 | // traceback for that context. Recording a complete stack trace in a | 
 | // call to the context function is likely to be inefficient. | 
 | // | 
 | // The traceback function will be called with a single argument, a | 
 | // pointer to a struct: | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		Context    uintptr | 
 | //		SigContext uintptr | 
 | //		Buf        *uintptr | 
 | //		Max        uintptr | 
 | //	} | 
 | // | 
 | // In C syntax, this struct will be | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		uintptr_t  Context; | 
 | //		uintptr_t  SigContext; | 
 | //		uintptr_t* Buf; | 
 | //		uintptr_t  Max; | 
 | //	}; | 
 | // | 
 | // The Context field will be zero to gather a traceback from the | 
 | // current program execution point. In this case, the traceback | 
 | // function will be called from C code. | 
 | // | 
 | // Otherwise Context will be a value previously returned by a call to | 
 | // the context function. The traceback function should gather a stack | 
 | // trace from that saved point in the program execution. The traceback | 
 | // function may be called from an execution thread other than the one | 
 | // that recorded the context, but only when the context is known to be | 
 | // valid and unchanging. The traceback function may also be called | 
 | // deeper in the call stack on the same thread that recorded the | 
 | // context. The traceback function may be called multiple times with | 
 | // the same Context value; it will usually be appropriate to cache the | 
 | // result, if possible, the first time this is called for a specific | 
 | // context value. | 
 | // | 
 | // If the traceback function is called from a signal handler on a Unix | 
 | // system, SigContext will be the signal context argument passed to | 
 | // the signal handler (a C ucontext_t* cast to uintptr_t). This may be | 
 | // used to start tracing at the point where the signal occurred. If | 
 | // the traceback function is not called from a signal handler, | 
 | // SigContext will be zero. | 
 | // | 
 | // Buf is where the traceback information should be stored. It should | 
 | // be PC values, such that Buf[0] is the PC of the caller, Buf[1] is | 
 | // the PC of that function's caller, and so on.  Max is the maximum | 
 | // number of entries to store.  The function should store a zero to | 
 | // indicate the top of the stack, or that the caller is on a different | 
 | // stack, presumably a Go stack. | 
 | // | 
 | // Unlike runtime.Callers, the PC values returned should, when passed | 
 | // to the symbolizer function, return the file/line of the call | 
 | // instruction.  No additional subtraction is required or appropriate. | 
 | // | 
 | // On all platforms, the traceback function is invoked when a call from | 
 | // Go to C to Go requests a stack trace. On linux/amd64, linux/ppc64le, | 
 | // and freebsd/amd64, the traceback function is also invoked when a | 
 | // signal is received by a thread that is executing a cgo call. The | 
 | // traceback function should not make assumptions about when it is | 
 | // called, as future versions of Go may make additional calls. | 
 | // | 
 | // The symbolizer function will be called with a single argument, a | 
 | // pointer to a struct: | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		PC      uintptr // program counter to fetch information for | 
 | //		File    *byte   // file name (NUL terminated) | 
 | //		Lineno  uintptr // line number | 
 | //		Func    *byte   // function name (NUL terminated) | 
 | //		Entry   uintptr // function entry point | 
 | //		More    uintptr // set non-zero if more info for this PC | 
 | //		Data    uintptr // unused by runtime, available for function | 
 | //	} | 
 | // | 
 | // In C syntax, this struct will be | 
 | // | 
 | //	struct { | 
 | //		uintptr_t PC; | 
 | //		char*     File; | 
 | //		uintptr_t Lineno; | 
 | //		char*     Func; | 
 | //		uintptr_t Entry; | 
 | //		uintptr_t More; | 
 | //		uintptr_t Data; | 
 | //	}; | 
 | // | 
 | // The PC field will be a value returned by a call to the traceback | 
 | // function. | 
 | // | 
 | // The first time the function is called for a particular traceback, | 
 | // all the fields except PC will be 0. The function should fill in the | 
 | // other fields if possible, setting them to 0/nil if the information | 
 | // is not available. The Data field may be used to store any useful | 
 | // information across calls. The More field should be set to non-zero | 
 | // if there is more information for this PC, zero otherwise. If More | 
 | // is set non-zero, the function will be called again with the same | 
 | // PC, and may return different information (this is intended for use | 
 | // with inlined functions). If More is zero, the function will be | 
 | // called with the next PC value in the traceback. When the traceback | 
 | // is complete, the function will be called once more with PC set to | 
 | // zero; this may be used to free any information. Each call will | 
 | // leave the fields of the struct set to the same values they had upon | 
 | // return, except for the PC field when the More field is zero. The | 
 | // function must not keep a copy of the struct pointer between calls. | 
 | // | 
 | // When calling SetCgoTraceback, the version argument is the version | 
 | // number of the structs that the functions expect to receive. | 
 | // Currently this must be zero. | 
 | // | 
 | // The symbolizer function may be nil, in which case the results of | 
 | // the traceback function will be displayed as numbers. If the | 
 | // traceback function is nil, the symbolizer function will never be | 
 | // called. The context function may be nil, in which case the | 
 | // traceback function will only be called with the context field set | 
 | // to zero.  If the context function is nil, then calls from Go to C | 
 | // to Go will not show a traceback for the C portion of the call stack. | 
 | // | 
 | // SetCgoTraceback should be called only once, ideally from an init function. | 
 | func SetCgoTraceback(version int, traceback, context, symbolizer unsafe.Pointer) { | 
 | 	if version != 0 { | 
 | 		panic("unsupported version") | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if cgoTraceback != nil && cgoTraceback != traceback || | 
 | 		cgoContext != nil && cgoContext != context || | 
 | 		cgoSymbolizer != nil && cgoSymbolizer != symbolizer { | 
 | 		panic("call SetCgoTraceback only once") | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	cgoTraceback = traceback | 
 | 	cgoContext = context | 
 | 	cgoSymbolizer = symbolizer | 
 |  | 
 | 	// The context function is called when a C function calls a Go | 
 | 	// function. As such it is only called by C code in runtime/cgo. | 
 | 	if _cgo_set_context_function != nil { | 
 | 		cgocall(_cgo_set_context_function, context) | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | var cgoTraceback unsafe.Pointer | 
 | var cgoContext unsafe.Pointer | 
 | var cgoSymbolizer unsafe.Pointer | 
 |  | 
 | // cgoTracebackArg is the type passed to cgoTraceback. | 
 | type cgoTracebackArg struct { | 
 | 	context    uintptr | 
 | 	sigContext uintptr | 
 | 	buf        *uintptr | 
 | 	max        uintptr | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // cgoContextArg is the type passed to the context function. | 
 | type cgoContextArg struct { | 
 | 	context uintptr | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // cgoSymbolizerArg is the type passed to cgoSymbolizer. | 
 | type cgoSymbolizerArg struct { | 
 | 	pc       uintptr | 
 | 	file     *byte | 
 | 	lineno   uintptr | 
 | 	funcName *byte | 
 | 	entry    uintptr | 
 | 	more     uintptr | 
 | 	data     uintptr | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // cgoTraceback prints a traceback of callers. | 
 | func printCgoTraceback(callers *cgoCallers) { | 
 | 	if cgoSymbolizer == nil { | 
 | 		for _, c := range callers { | 
 | 			if c == 0 { | 
 | 				break | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			print("non-Go function at pc=", hex(c), "\n") | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		return | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	var arg cgoSymbolizerArg | 
 | 	for _, c := range callers { | 
 | 		if c == 0 { | 
 | 			break | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		printOneCgoTraceback(c, 0x7fffffff, &arg) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	arg.pc = 0 | 
 | 	callCgoSymbolizer(&arg) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // printOneCgoTraceback prints the traceback of a single cgo caller. | 
 | // This can print more than one line because of inlining. | 
 | // Returns the number of frames printed. | 
 | func printOneCgoTraceback(pc uintptr, max int, arg *cgoSymbolizerArg) int { | 
 | 	c := 0 | 
 | 	arg.pc = pc | 
 | 	for c <= max { | 
 | 		callCgoSymbolizer(arg) | 
 | 		if arg.funcName != nil { | 
 | 			// Note that we don't print any argument | 
 | 			// information here, not even parentheses. | 
 | 			// The symbolizer must add that if appropriate. | 
 | 			println(gostringnocopy(arg.funcName)) | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			println("non-Go function") | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		print("\t") | 
 | 		if arg.file != nil { | 
 | 			print(gostringnocopy(arg.file), ":", arg.lineno, " ") | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		print("pc=", hex(pc), "\n") | 
 | 		c++ | 
 | 		if arg.more == 0 { | 
 | 			break | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return c | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // callCgoSymbolizer calls the cgoSymbolizer function. | 
 | func callCgoSymbolizer(arg *cgoSymbolizerArg) { | 
 | 	call := cgocall | 
 | 	if panicking > 0 || getg().m.curg != getg() { | 
 | 		// We do not want to call into the scheduler when panicking | 
 | 		// or when on the system stack. | 
 | 		call = asmcgocall | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if msanenabled { | 
 | 		msanwrite(unsafe.Pointer(arg), unsafe.Sizeof(cgoSymbolizerArg{})) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	call(cgoSymbolizer, noescape(unsafe.Pointer(arg))) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // cgoContextPCs gets the PC values from a cgo traceback. | 
 | func cgoContextPCs(ctxt uintptr, buf []uintptr) { | 
 | 	if cgoTraceback == nil { | 
 | 		return | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	call := cgocall | 
 | 	if panicking > 0 || getg().m.curg != getg() { | 
 | 		// We do not want to call into the scheduler when panicking | 
 | 		// or when on the system stack. | 
 | 		call = asmcgocall | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	arg := cgoTracebackArg{ | 
 | 		context: ctxt, | 
 | 		buf:     (*uintptr)(noescape(unsafe.Pointer(&buf[0]))), | 
 | 		max:     uintptr(len(buf)), | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if msanenabled { | 
 | 		msanwrite(unsafe.Pointer(&arg), unsafe.Sizeof(arg)) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	call(cgoTraceback, noescape(unsafe.Pointer(&arg))) | 
 | } |