WinDbg: using commands for the condition in .if - windbg

WinDbg has the .if statement for conditional execution of commands:
.if (Condition) { Commands } .else { Commands }
For Condition, it's not possible to use WinDbg commands. Is there any indirect way of using commands for the condition, e.g. through pseudo registers?
Example task to accomplish:
If a logfile is already opened, do nothing. If no logfile is open, use .logopen /t /u /d
With .logfile, I can find out whether a log is open or not. But how to parse that output and how to assign the result to a pseudo register?
Any other way without pseudo registers is also welcome.
As the example may not seem very useful, consider the following tasks which can be automated by scripting or the .cmdtree window:
Loading the correct version of SOS, e.g. .if (lm m clr == clr) { .loadby sos clr } .elseif (lm m mscorwks == mscorwks) {.loadby sos mscorwks}
Things I always forget to do, e.g. .if (| == myprocess) {.childdbg 1; .sympath+ mydir}

I tested this and it loads the correct sos.dll if it finds clr in the list of modules:
.foreach (module {lm1m} ) { .if ($sicmp("${module}","clr") == 0) {.echo FOUND ${module}; .loadby sos.dll clr} }
You can easily extend it using .elsif and comparing module with "mscorwks".
As for checking for your process, I attached to calc.exe and ran | which gives me: . 0 id: 6bc attach name: C:\Windows\system32\calc.exe
I only want the last token so I can skip the first six by specifying /pS 6 to .foreach. The following uses a wildcard comparison for *calc.exe and if found, tells the debugger to debug child processes:
.foreach /pS 6 (token {|}) {.echo ${token}; .if($spat("${token}","*calc.exe") == 1) {.echo FOUND MY APP;.childdbg 1} .else {.echo FAILED TO FIND MY APP} }
Also tested and worked.
ps. my debugger version is 6.2.8400.0

Related

Configure ac code fails to detect libXI presence

I am currently executing the configure script of gtk. It tests for the presence of XInput, and it stops the execution with the error message:"configure: error: *** XInput2 extension not found. Check 'config.log' for more details.
Looking at config.log, it says "configure:23050: error: *** XInput2 extension not found. Check 'config.log' for more details."
So, the same except for the line number.
Then I decided to look at configure.ac. There I found the full Xi detection test that it is:
if $PKG_CONFIG --exists "xi" ; then
X_PACKAGES="$X_PACKAGES xi"
GTK_PACKAGES_FOR_X="$GTK_PACKAGES_FOR_X xi"
AC_CHECK_HEADER(X11/extensions/XInput2.h,
have_xinput2=yes
AC_DEFINE(XINPUT_2, 1, [Define to 1 if XInput 2.0 is available]))
gtk_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$LIBS -lXi"
# Note that we also check that the XIScrollClassInfo struct is defined,
# because at least Ubuntu Oneiric seems to have XIAllowTouchEvents(), but not the XIScrollClassInfo struct.
AC_CHECK_FUNC([XIAllowTouchEvents],
[AC_CHECK_MEMBER([XIScrollClassInfo.number],
have_xinput2_2=yes
AC_DEFINE(XINPUT_2_2, 1, [Define to 1 if XInput 2.2 is available]),
have_xinput2_2=no,
[[#include <X11/extensions/XInput2.h>]])])
LIBS="$gtk_save_LIBS"
if test "x$have_xinput2_2" = "xyes"; then
X_EXTENSIONS="$X_EXTENSIONS XI2.2"
else
X_EXTENSIONS="$X_EXTENSIONS XI2"
fi
fi
AS_IF([test "x$have_xinput2" != "xyes"],
[AC_MSG_ERROR([*** XInput2 extension not found. Check 'config.log' for more details.])])
I am no expert about setting configure.ac, but I thought that this line: "if $PKG_CONFIG --exists "xi" ; then" would be satisfied by this parameter that I pass to configure:
PKG_CONFIG_PATH=:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xi-1.5.0/lib/pkgconfig/
Also this line:
AC_CHECK_HEADER(X11/extensions/XInput2.h,
have_xinput2=yes
AC_DEFINE(XINPUT_2, 1, [Define to 1 if XInput 2.0 is available]))
could not have been satisfied by this parameter that I pass to configure?
CPPFLAGS=-I/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xi-1.5.0/include/
I am a bit lost as to why it doesn't detect nothing.
A curious point that I read in the documentation is that there is a parameter called: --disable-xinput.
Well I am passing it to configure and it obviously didn't disable the test. So I would appreciate any suggestions about how to change the test to try to figure out what is wrong with it (or with my system)
Solution found
If I replace:
if $PKG_CONFIG --exists "xi" ; then
on configure.ac, by:
if $PKG_CONFIG --print-errors --exists "xi" ; then
and then execute autoconf, it will generate a new configure based on this "new" configure.ac that will print all the required libraries that should be passed to configure.
First it was the .pc file of libXi, then the pc. file of Inputproto (that I had to download and install) an so on. I also really had to add libXi's include dir to CPPFLAGS, so it could find XInput2.h.
My final configure command was:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Glib-2.41.2/lib/ CPPFLAGS="-I/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/X11-1.4.4/include/ -I/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xorgproto-2018.1/include/ -I/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xi-1.5.0/include/" LDFLAGS="-L/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/X11-1.4.4/lib/" ./configure --prefix=/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Gtk+-3.4.0 PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Glib-2.41.2/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Atk-2.15.4/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Pango-1.30.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Cairo-1.10.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Gdk-pixbuf-2.30.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Pixman-0.18.4/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Fontconfig-2.8.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Freetype-2.2.1/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/Png-1.2.14/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xi-1.5.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Inputproto-1.5.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/X11-1.4.4/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xorgproto-2018.1/share/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xcb-1.4/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Pthread-stubs-0.1/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xau-1.0.0/lib/pkgconfig/:/media/34GB/Arquivos-de-Programas-Linux/xorg/Xext-1.1.1/lib/pkgconfig/

SCP command not working in karate project - it throws command error:cannot run program scp.exe: CreateProcess error=2 [duplicate]

I'm trying to execute bash script using karate. I'm able to execute the script from karate-config.js and also from .feature file. I'm also able to pass the arguments to the script.
The problem is, that if the script fails (exits with something else than 0) the test execution continues and finishes as succesfull.
I found out that when the script echo-es something then i can access it as a result of the script so I could possibly echo the exit value and do assertion on it (in some re-usable feature), but this seems like a workaround rather than a valid clean solution. Is there some clean way of accessing the exit code without echo-ing it? Am I missing on something?
script
#!/bin/bash
#possible solution
#echo 3
exit 3;
karate-config.js
var result = karate.exec('script.sh arg1')
feture file
def result = karate.exec('script.sh arg1')
Great timing. We very recently did some work for CLI testing which I am sure you can use effectively. Here is a thread on Twitter: https://twitter.com/maxandersen/status/1276431309276151814
And we have just released version 0.9.6.RC4 and new we have a new karate.fork() option that returns an instance of Command on which you can call exitCode
Here's an example:
* def proc = karate.fork('script.sh arg1')
* proc.waitSync()
* match proc.exitCode == 0
You can get more ideas here: https://github.com/intuit/karate/issues/1191#issuecomment-650087023
Note that the argument to karate.fork() can take multiple forms. If you are using karate.exec() (which will block until the process completes) the same arguments work.
string - full command line as seen above
string array - e.g. ['script.sh', 'arg1']
json where the keys can be
line - string (OR)
args - string array
env - optional environment properties (as JSON)
redirectErrorStream - boolean, true by default which means Sys.err appears in Sys.out
workingDir - working directory
useShell - default false, auto-prepend cmd /c or sh -c depending on OS
And since karate.fork() is async, you need to call waitSync() if needed as in the example above.
Do provide feedback and we can tweak further if needed.
EDIT: here's a very advanced example that shows how to listen to the process output / log, collect the log, and conditionally exit: fork-listener.feature
Another answer which can be a useful reference: Conditional match based on OS
And here's how to use cURL for advanced HTTP tests ! https://stackoverflow.com/a/73230200/143475
In case you need to do a lot of local file manipulation, you can use the karate.toJavaFile() utility so you can convert a relative path or a "prefixed" path to an absolute path.
* def file = karate.toJavaFile('classpath:some/file.txt')
* def path = file.getPath()

Return code of scheduled task prefixed with 0x8007000 in list view, registered as 0 in the event log

I am currently trying to setup monitoring of windows scheduled tasks in Zabbix. It seemed easy enough to just monitor the Microsoft-Windows-TaskScheduler/Operational event log filtered by 201 events and regexing on the return code, but when I started simulating errors to test the monitoring, nothing happened.
It turns out that all our windows 2012 servers always log "return code 0" in the event log, even though it actually, sort of, displays it correctly in the Task Scheduler list view. When I say "sort of", it's because the "Last Run Result" actually displays 0x80070001 if the exit code of the program run by the scheduled task is 1.
I have spend a lot of time tweaking the settings, like user account, Run only when user is logged on, Run whether user is logged on or not, setting path on the action, Run with highest privileges, Configure for Vista/7/2012, etc. Nothing helped.
Finally I did some testing on my local machine, Windows 7, and a 2008R2 server, both of which just worked as expected.
The specific task I was testing ran a PowerShell script, using -Command so that it properly propagates the exit, but to rule out any PS issues I also tested with a batch file containing "exit 1" and finally with a small C# console program, that just returns whatever you supply on the command line.
PS, batch and console program all work fine on 7 and 2008, but they all fail in the same manner on 2012.
I've google this to death, but keep coming up short. Apparently 0x80070005 and other similar error codes are have some meaning, but that's not what happens in my case. In my case it seems that my exit code is bitwise or'ed with 0x80070000.
I should note that in all the cases, even 2012, the program started by the task, actually executes and run to the end, it's just the exit code which is handled weirdly.
Following is the output from the test runs:
From Powershell (my shell writes :( if $LASTEXITCODE > 0 ):
54 :( .\ExitCodeTest.exe 1
55 :( $LASTEXITCODE
1
56 :) .\ExitCodeTest.exe 10
57 :( $LASTEXITCODE
10
Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard:
Last Run Result (from list view): 0xA
Event 201 from event log Microsoft-Windows-TaskScheduler/Operational:
Task Scheduler successfully completed task "\ErrorTest" ,
instance "{b67a26cf-7fd8-461a-93d9-a5e48e72e558}" ,
action "D:\Tasks\ExitCodeTest.exe" with return code 10.
Windows Server 2012 Datacenter (notice that the return code in the event log is 0):
Last Run Result (from list view): 0x8007000A
Event 201 from event log Microsoft-Windows-TaskScheduler/Operational:
Task Scheduler successfully completed task "\error test" ,
instance "{2bde46b8-2858-4772-a7ec-d66b29d893a6}" ,
action "D:\Tasks\ExitCodeTest.exe" with return code 0.
Source for ExitCodeTest.exe:
static void Main( string[] args )
{
int exitCode = 0;
if ( args.Length > 0 )
{
exitCode = Convert.ToInt32( args[0] );
}
Environment.Exit( exitCode );
}
Please help, I am at my wits end.
Thanks,
John
(this is NOT an answer, but StackOverflow is refusing to let me add comments - when I click 'add comment', browser scrolls to top of page :-/)
You may be misinterpreting the Last Run Result column. According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Task_Scheduler), LRR values of 0, 1 and 10 are common. Ignore the 0x8007 prefix - this just indicates a WIN32 error code transformed into an HRESULT (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg567305.aspx).
Try running the test and forcing an exit code of something other than 1 or 10 to see if this influences LRR.
This does not explain of course why action return code is 0 in 2012. Error code 10 is defined as 'environment is incorrect'. Could it be that 2012 server does not want to run 32bit executable?
One other suggestion (and I'm a little out of my depth); according to (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.environment.exit(v=vs.110).aspx): "Exit requires the caller to have permission to call unmanaged code. The return statement does not.". Might be worth re-compiling ExitCodeTest as follows:
static int Main(string[] args)
{
int exitCode = 0;
if ( args.Length > 0 )
{
exitCode = Convert.ToInt32( args[0] );
}
return exitCode;
}
I'm seeing a similar issue on Server 2012 with a batch file that looks like it succeeds, shows a return value of 0 in event log, but a Last Run Result of 0x80070001.
I see MSFT has a hotfix available for Server 2012 which might address this issue:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/3003689
I had this problem and fixed it this way.
Instead of calling a batch file move the commands into the actions section of the scheduled task.
I realize this may not work for you as some batch files are long.
I suspect it has to do with circumventing security on a scheduled task -- if you can change the batch file then you could get a scheduled task to run as the identity without windows being the wiser.

Julia, handle keyboard interrupt

Title says it all. How can I handle or catch a SIGINT in julia? From the docs I assumed I just wanted to catch InterruptException using a try/catch block like the following
try
while true
println("go go go")
end
catch ex
println("caught something")
if isa(ex, InterruptException)
println("it was an interrupt")
end
end
But I never enter the catch block when I kill the program with ^C.
edit: The code above works as expected from the julia REPL, just not in a script.
I see the same behavior as alto, namely that SIGINT kills the entire process when my code is run as a script but that it is caught as an error when run in the REPL. My version is quite up to date and looks rather similar to that of tholy:
julia> versioninfo()
Julia Version 0.3.7
Commit cb9bcae* (2015-03-23 21:36 UTC)
Platform Info:
System: Linux (x86_64-linux-gnu)
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3610QM CPU # 2.30GHz
WORD_SIZE: 64
BLAS: libopenblas (DYNAMIC_ARCH NO_AFFINITY Sandybridge)
LAPACK: libopenblas
LIBM: libopenlibm
LLVM: libLLVM-3.3
Digging through the source, I found hints that Julia's interrupt behavior is determined by an jl_exit_on_sigint option, which can be set via a ccall. jl_exit_on_sigint is 0 for the REPL, but it looks as if init.c sets it to 1 when running a Julia program file from the command line.
Adding the appropriate ccall makes alto's code works regardless of the calling environment:
ccall(:jl_exit_on_sigint, Void, (Cint,), 0)
try
while true
println("go go go")
end
catch ex
println("caught something")
if isa(ex, InterruptException)
println("it was an interrupt")
end
end
This does seem to be a bit of a hack. Is there a more elegant way of selecting the interrupt behavior of the environment? The default seems quite sensible, but perhaps there should be a command line option to override it.
For julia >= 1.5, there is Base.exit_on_sigint. From the docs (retrieved on 20220419)
Set exit_on_sigint flag of the julia runtime. If false, Ctrl-C (SIGINT) is capturable as InterruptException in try block. This is the default behavior in REPL, any code run via -e and -E and in Julia script run with -i option.
Works for me. I'm running
julia> versioninfo()
Julia Version 0.3.0-prerelease+695
Commit 47915f3* (2013-12-27 05:27 UTC)
DEBUG build
Platform Info:
System: Linux (x86_64-linux-gnu)
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU L 640 # 2.13GHz
WORD_SIZE: 64
BLAS: libopenblas (USE64BITINT DYNAMIC_ARCH NO_AFFINITY)
LAPACK: libopenblas
LIBM: libopenlibm
but I expect it's not necessary to be fully up-to-date for this to work (I'd guess 0.2 should be fine too).

Using devenv to pass preprocessor variables to Intel Fortran compiler

I'm using VS 2008 with Intel(R) Fortran Compiler version 10.1.025.
To build my solution I'm using a batch file with the following syntax:
devenv /rebuild "Release|Win32" "c:...\solution.sln" /Project "ProjectName_InTheSolution"
Using the configuration "Release|Win32" I specify, in VS ProjectProperties->Fortran->Proprocessor->Preprocessor Definitions the value "test".
Inside my code I'm testing if the "test" variable is define which is working everything correctly.
Any one know any way to change the "Preprocessor Definitions" of the fortran compiler using the command line ? I want to add also the value "commandLine" so would be "test;commandline" in the "Preprocessor Definitions".
Some notes:
1) I have to use the devenv.exe
2) I don't want to change neither the source code or the project file prior the compilation
3) I can use environment variable to pass option (if there is any way, I try the CL but didn't work)
Thanks in advance
Thanks for your answer but maybe I didn't understand completely your solution, but this is what I tried:
1)I change the "Additional Options" (AO) to /Dtest and:
1.1) If I compile from the Visual Studio or Command Line the check "!DEC$ IF DEFINED (test)" is true
2)I changed the AO to "$(DEFINE)" and:
2.1) From Visual Studio I see warnings: "command line warning #10161: unrecognized source type '$(DEFINE)'; object file assumed ifort " and the check "!DEC$ IF DEFINED (test)" is false
2.2) I add the Define variable to "User environment variables", same error from 2.1
3) I change the AO to "/D$(DEFINE)" I got an error "Bad syntax, '=' expected while processing '#$(define)' fortcom "
4) I change the AO to "$(DEFINE)" and SET DEFINE=/test, and didn't work either, the "!DEC$ IF DEFINED (test)" is false
#cup I think I need to understand a little better your solution, if you please could give me an additional information about your solution would be very appreciated.
What I'm trying to do is this:
program main
integer:: ii
!DEC$ IF DEFINED (test)
ii = 72
!DEC$ ENDIF
!DEC$ IF DEFINED (test2)
ii = 80
!DEC$ ENDIF
print *, "this is up to column ", ii
end
Now I want to control from the command line which part of code will be compiled, doing something like this:
1) from the command line: set define=test
2) devenv elephant.sln /build
3) run debug/elephant.exe -> get "72"
4) from the command line: set define=test2
5) devenv elephant.sln /build
6) run debug/elephant.exe -> get "80"
This is possible ?
Thanks in advance,
rui
Try this
1) Create the following F77 program
program main
integer:: ii
! ,-- column 73
ii = 72 +8
print *, "this is up to column ", ii
end
2) Create a solution for the above program, say elephant.sln
If you just build and run, it should display "this is up to column 72"
3) Pop up project properties, under Fortran/Command Line, add $(DEFINES) in the Additional Options Box.
4) Save and exit
5) set DEFINES=/extend_source:72
6) devenv elephant.sln /build
7) run debug/elephant.exe - you should get 72
8) set DEFINES=/extend_source:80
9) devenv elephant.sln /build
10) run debug/elephant.exe - you should get 80.
11) If you wish to add more /D options, stick it in the DEFINES environment variable.
Basically don't use preprocessor defines - just dump your settings into the DEFINES environment variable and it will be picked up by the Additional Options.