ast_coredumper: Refactor the pid determination process

In order to get a dump of the running process, we need to find the
pid of the main asterisk process.  This can be tricky if there are
also instances of "asterisk -r" running or if an alternate location
for asterisk.conf was specified on the command line with the -C
option that also specified an alternation location for the pid file.

So now...

1. We find the asterisk executable with "which" or the --asterisk-bin
   command line option.
2. If there's only 1 process with an executable path that matches,
   we use that pid.  If not...
3. We try "<asterisk-bin> -rx 'core show settings'" and parse the
   output to find the pidfile, then read that for the pid.  If that
   didn't work...
4. We get a list of all the pids matching <asterisk-bin> and look
   in /proc/<pid>/cmdline for a -C argument and retry the "core show
   settings" using the same -C option.  We can't parse the output
   of "ps" to get the -C path because it may contain spaces.  The
   contents of /proc/<pid>/cmdline are delimited by NULLs.  For BSDs
   we may have to mount /proc first. :(

ASTERISK-28221
Reported by: Andrew Nagy

Change-Id: I8aa1f3f912f949df2b5348908803c636bde1d57c
This commit is contained in:
George Joseph
2018-12-24 10:42:36 -07:00
committed by Sean Bright
parent 08e6cb6480
commit 3efe5061d5

View File

@@ -372,29 +372,85 @@ fi
# Timestamp to use for output files # Timestamp to use for output files
df=${tarball_uniqueid:-$(${DATEFORMAT})} df=${tarball_uniqueid:-$(${DATEFORMAT})}
if [ -z "$asterisk_bin" ]; then if [ x"$asterisk_bin" = x ]; then
asterisk_bin=$(which asterisk) asterisk_bin=$(which asterisk)
fi fi
if $running || $RUNNING ; then if $running || $RUNNING ; then
# We need to go through some gyrations to find the pid of the running # We need to go through some gyrations to find the pid of the running
# MAIN asterisk process and not someone or something running asterisk -r. # MAIN asterisk process and not someone or something running asterisk -r.
# The pid file may NOT be in /var/run/asterisk so we need to find any
# running asterisk process and see if -C was specified on the command unset pid
# line. The chances of more than 1 asterisk instance running with
# different -C options is so unlikely that we're going to ignore it. # Simplest case first...
# pids=$(pgrep -f "$asterisk_bin")
# 'ps axo command' should work on Linux (back to CentOS6) and FreeBSD. pidcount=$(echo $pids | wc -w)
# If asterisk was started with -C, get the asterisk.conf file.
# If it wasn't, assume /etc/asterisk/asterisk.conf if [ $pidcount -eq 0 ] ; then
astetcconf=`ps axo command | sed -n -r -e "s/.*asterisk\s+.*-C\s+([^ ]+).*/\1/gp" | tail -1` >&2 echo "Asterisk is not running"
[ x$astetcconf = x ] && astetcconf=/etc/asterisk/asterisk.conf exit 1
# Now parse out astrundir and cat asterisk.pid fi
astrundir=$(sed -n -r -e "s/astrundir\s+[=>]+\s+(.*)/\1/gp" $astetcconf)
pid=$(cat $astrundir/asterisk.pid 2>/dev/null || : ) # Single process, great.
if [ x$pid = x ] ; then if [ $pidcount -eq 1 ] ; then
echo "Asterisk is not running" pid=$pids
else echo "Found a single asterisk instance running as process $pid"
fi
# More than 1 asterisk process running
if [ x"$pid" = x ] ; then
# More than 1 process running, let's try asking asterisk for it's
# pidfile
pidfile=$("$asterisk_bin" -rx "core show settings" 2>/dev/null | sed -n -r -e "s/^\s*pid file:\s+(.*)/\1/gpi")
# We found it
if [ x"$pidfile" != x -a -f "$pidfile" ] ; then
pid=$(cat "$pidfile")
echo "Found pidfile $pidfile with process $pid"
fi
fi
# It's possible that asterisk was started with the -C option which means the
# control socket and pidfile might not be where we expect. We're going to
# have to parse the process arguments to see if -C was specified.
# The first process that has a -C argument determines which config
# file to use to find the pidfile of the main process.
# NOTE: The ps command doesn't quote command line arguments that it
# displays so we need to look in /proc/<pid>/cmdline.
if [ x"$pid" = x ] ; then
# BSDs might not mount /proc by default :(
mounted_proc=0
if uname -o | grep -qi "bsd" ; then
if ! mount | grep -qi "/proc" ; then
echo "Temporarily mounting /proc"
mounted_proc=1
mount -t procfs proc /proc
fi
fi
for p in $pids ; do
# Fields in cmdline are delimited by NULLs
astetcconf=$(sed -n -r -e "s/.*\x00-C\x00([^\x00]+).*/\1/gp" /proc/$p/cmdline)
if [ x"$astetcconf" != x ] ; then
pidfile=$("$asterisk_bin" -C "$astetcconf" -rx "core show settings" 2>/dev/null | sed -n -r -e "s/^\s*pid file:\s+(.*)/\1/gpi")
if [ x"$pidfile" != x -a -f "$pidfile" ] ; then
pid=$(cat "$pidfile")
echo "Found pidfile $pidfile the hard way with process $pid"
break
fi
fi
done
if [ $mounted_proc -eq 1 ] ; then
echo "Unmounting /proc"
umount /proc
fi
fi
if [ x"$pid" = x ] ; then
>&2 echo "Can't determine pid of the running asterisk instance"
exit 1
fi
if $RUNNING ; then if $RUNNING ; then
answer=Y answer=Y
else else
@@ -409,7 +465,6 @@ if $running || $RUNNING ; then
echo "Skipping dump of running process" echo "Skipping dump of running process"
fi fi
fi fi
fi
if [ "${#COREDUMPS[@]}" -eq 0 ] ; then if [ "${#COREDUMPS[@]}" -eq 0 ] ; then
echo "No coredumps found" echo "No coredumps found"