With this CL, I believe the runtime always knows
the frame size during the gc walk. There is no fallback
to "assume entire stack frame of caller" anymore.
R=golang-dev, khr, cshapiro, dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/11374044
Design at http://golang.org/s/go12symtab.
This enables some cleanup of the garbage collector metadata
that will be done in future CLs.
This CL does not move the old symtab and pclntab back into
an unmapped section of the file. That's a bit tricky and will be
done separately.
Fixes#4020.
R=golang-dev, dave, cshapiro, iant, r
CC=golang-dev, nigeltao
https://golang.org/cl/11085043
Until now, the goroutine state has been scattered during the
execution of newstack and oldstack. It's all there, and those routines
know how to get back to a working goroutine, but other pieces of
the system, like stack traces, do not. If something does interrupt
the newstack or oldstack execution, the rest of the system can't
understand the goroutine. For example, if newstack decides there
is an overflow and calls throw, the stack tracer wouldn't dump the
goroutine correctly.
For newstack to save a useful state snapshot, it needs to be able
to rewind the PC in the function that triggered the split back to
the beginning of the function. (The PC is a few instructions in, just
after the call to morestack.) To make that possible, we change the
prologues to insert a jmp back to the beginning of the function
after the call to morestack. That is, the prologue used to be roughly:
TEXT myfunc
check for split
jmpcond nosplit
call morestack
nosplit:
sub $xxx, sp
Now an extra instruction is inserted after the call:
TEXT myfunc
start:
check for split
jmpcond nosplit
call morestack
jmp start
nosplit:
sub $xxx, sp
The jmp is not executed directly. It is decoded and simulated by
runtime.rewindmorestack to discover the beginning of the function,
and then the call to morestack returns directly to the start label
instead of to the jump instruction. So logically the jmp is still
executed, just not by the cpu.
The prologue thus repeats in the case of a function that needs a
stack split, but against the cost of the split itself, the extra few
instructions are noise. The repeated prologue has the nice effect of
making a stack split double-check that the new stack is big enough:
if morestack happens to return on a too-small stack, we'll now notice
before corruption happens.
The ability for newstack to rewind to the beginning of the function
should help preemption too. If newstack decides that it was called
for preemption instead of a stack split, it now has the goroutine state
correctly paused if rescheduling is needed, and when the goroutine
can run again, it can return to the start label on its original stack
and re-execute the split check.
Here is an example of a split stack overflow showing the full
trace, without any special cases in the stack printer.
(This one was triggered by making the split check incorrect.)
runtime: newstack framesize=0x0 argsize=0x18 sp=0x6aebd0 stack=[0x6b0000, 0x6b0fa0]
morebuf={pc:0x69f5b sp:0x6aebd8 lr:0x0}
sched={pc:0x68880 sp:0x6aebd0 lr:0x0 ctxt:0x34e700}
runtime: split stack overflow: 0x6aebd0 < 0x6b0000
fatal error: runtime: split stack overflow
goroutine 1 [stack split]:
runtime.mallocgc(0x290, 0x100000000, 0x1)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/zmalloc_darwin_amd64.c:21 fp=0x6aebd8
runtime.new()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/zmalloc_darwin_amd64.c:682 +0x5b fp=0x6aec08
go/build.(*Context).Import(0x5ae340, 0xc210030c71, 0xa, 0xc2100b4380, 0x1b, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/go/build/build.go:424 +0x3a fp=0x6b00a0
main.loadImport(0xc210030c71, 0xa, 0xc2100b4380, 0x1b, 0xc2100b42c0, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/pkg.go:249 +0x371 fp=0x6b01a8
main.(*Package).load(0xc21017c800, 0xc2100b42c0, 0xc2101828c0, 0x0, 0x0, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/pkg.go:431 +0x2801 fp=0x6b0c98
main.loadPackage(0x369040, 0x7, 0xc2100b42c0, 0x0)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/pkg.go:709 +0x857 fp=0x6b0f80
----- stack segment boundary -----
main.(*builder).action(0xc2100902a0, 0x0, 0x0, 0xc2100e6c00, 0xc2100e5750, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/build.go:539 +0x437 fp=0x6b14a0
main.(*builder).action(0xc2100902a0, 0x0, 0x0, 0xc21015b400, 0x2, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/build.go:528 +0x1d2 fp=0x6b1658
main.(*builder).test(0xc2100902a0, 0xc210092000, 0x0, 0x0, 0xc21008ff60, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/test.go:622 +0x1b53 fp=0x6b1f68
----- stack segment boundary -----
main.runTest(0x5a6b20, 0xc21000a020, 0x2, 0x2)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/test.go:366 +0xd09 fp=0x6a5cf0
main.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/cmd/go/main.go:161 +0x4f9 fp=0x6a5f78
runtime.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:183 +0x92 fp=0x6a5fa0
runtime.goexit()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:1266 fp=0x6a5fa8
And here is a seg fault during oldstack:
SIGSEGV: segmentation violation
PC=0x1b2a6
runtime.oldstack()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/stack.c:159 +0x76
runtime.lessstack()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/asm_amd64.s:270 +0x22
goroutine 1 [stack unsplit]:
fmt.(*pp).printArg(0x2102e64e0, 0xe5c80, 0x2102c9220, 0x73, 0x0, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/fmt/print.go:818 +0x3d3 fp=0x221031e6f8
fmt.(*pp).doPrintf(0x2102e64e0, 0x12fb20, 0x2, 0x221031eb98, 0x1, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/fmt/print.go:1183 +0x15cb fp=0x221031eaf0
fmt.Sprintf(0x12fb20, 0x2, 0x221031eb98, 0x1, 0x1, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/fmt/print.go:234 +0x67 fp=0x221031eb40
flag.(*stringValue).String(0x2102c9210, 0x1, 0x0)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/flag/flag.go:180 +0xb3 fp=0x221031ebb0
flag.(*FlagSet).Var(0x2102f6000, 0x293d38, 0x2102c9210, 0x143490, 0xa, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/flag/flag.go:633 +0x40 fp=0x221031eca0
flag.(*FlagSet).StringVar(0x2102f6000, 0x2102c9210, 0x143490, 0xa, 0x12fa60, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/flag/flag.go:550 +0x91 fp=0x221031ece8
flag.(*FlagSet).String(0x2102f6000, 0x143490, 0xa, 0x12fa60, 0x0, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/flag/flag.go:563 +0x87 fp=0x221031ed38
flag.String(0x143490, 0xa, 0x12fa60, 0x0, 0x161950, ...)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/flag/flag.go:570 +0x6b fp=0x221031ed80
testing.init()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/testing/testing.go:-531 +0xbb fp=0x221031edc0
strings_test.init()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/strings/strings_test.go:1115 +0x62 fp=0x221031ef70
main.init()
strings/_test/_testmain.go:90 +0x3d fp=0x221031ef78
runtime.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:180 +0x8a fp=0x221031efa0
runtime.goexit()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:1269 fp=0x221031efa8
goroutine 2 [runnable]:
runtime.MHeap_Scavenger()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/mheap.c:438
runtime.goexit()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:1269
created by runtime.main
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:166
rax 0x23ccc0
rbx 0x23ccc0
rcx 0x0
rdx 0x38
rdi 0x2102c0170
rsi 0x221032cfe0
rbp 0x221032cfa0
rsp 0x7fff5fbff5b0
r8 0x2102c0120
r9 0x221032cfa0
r10 0x221032c000
r11 0x104ce8
r12 0xe5c80
r13 0x1be82baac718
r14 0x13091135f7d69200
r15 0x0
rip 0x1b2a6
rflags 0x10246
cs 0x2b
fs 0x0
gs 0x0
Fixes#5723.
R=r, dvyukov, go.peter.90, dave, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/10360048
Remove unnecessary ( ) around == in && clause.
Add { } around multiline if body, even though it's one statement.
Add runtime: prefix to printed errors.
R=cshapiro, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9685047
It is a caching wrapper around SysAlloc() that can allocate small chunks.
Use it for symtab allocations. Reduces number of symtab walks from 4 to 3
(reduces buildfuncs time from 10ms to 7.5ms on a large binary,
reduces initial heap size by 680K on the same binary).
Also can be used for type info allocation, itab allocation.
There are also several places in GC where we do the same thing,
they can be changed to use persistentalloc().
Also can be used in FixAlloc, because each instance of FixAlloc allocates
in 128K regions, which is too eager.
Reincarnation of committed and rolled back https://golang.org/cl/9805043
The latent bugs that it revealed are fixed:
https://golang.org/cl/9837049https://golang.org/cl/9778048
R=golang-dev, khr
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9778049
A nosplits was assumed to have no argument information and no
pointer map. However, nosplits created by the linker often
have both. This change uses the pointer map size as an
alternate source of argument size when processing a nosplit.
In addition, the symbol table construction pointer map size
and argument size consistency check is strengthened. If a
nptrs is greater than 0 it must be equal to the number of
argument words.
R=golang-dev, khr, khr
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9666047
With this change the compiler emits a bitmap for each function
covering its stack frame arguments area. If an argument word
is known to contain a pointer, a bit is set. The garbage
collector reads this information when scanning the stack by
frames and uses it to ignores locations known to not contain a
pointer.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, daniel.morsing, dvyukov, khr, khr, iant, cshapiro
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9223046
multiple failures on amd64
««« original CL description
runtime: introduce helper persistentalloc() function
It is a caching wrapper around SysAlloc() that can allocate small chunks.
Use it for symtab allocations. Reduces number of symtab walks from 4 to 3
(reduces buildfuncs time from 10ms to 7.5ms on a large binary,
reduces initial heap size by 680K on the same binary).
Also can be used for type info allocation, itab allocation.
There are also several places in GC where we do the same thing,
they can be changed to use persistentalloc().
Also can be used in FixAlloc, because each instance of FixAlloc allocates
in 128K regions, which is too eager.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, khr
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9805043
»»»
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9822043
It is a caching wrapper around SysAlloc() that can allocate small chunks.
Use it for symtab allocations. Reduces number of symtab walks from 4 to 3
(reduces buildfuncs time from 10ms to 7.5ms on a large binary,
reduces initial heap size by 680K on the same binary).
Also can be used for type info allocation, itab allocation.
There are also several places in GC where we do the same thing,
they can be changed to use persistentalloc().
Also can be used in FixAlloc, because each instance of FixAlloc allocates
in 128K regions, which is too eager.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, khr
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9805043
Variables in data sections of 32-bit executables interfere with
garbage collector's ability to free objects and/or unnecessarily
slow down the garbage collector.
This changeset moves some static variables to .noptr sections.
'files' in symtab.c is now allocated dynamically.
R=golang-dev, dvyukov, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9786044
This provides a way to generate core dumps when people need them.
The settings are:
GOTRACEBACK=0 no traceback on panic, just exit
GOTRACEBACK=1 default - traceback on panic, then exit
GOTRACEBACK=2 traceback including runtime frames on panic, then exit
GOTRACEBACK=crash traceback including runtime frames on panic, then crash
Fixes#3257.
R=golang-dev, devon.odell, r, daniel.morsing, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7666044
runtime: double-check that symbol table is sorted
If the symbol table is unsorted, the binary search in findfunc
will not find its func, which will make stack traces stop early.
When the garbage collector starts using the stack tracer,
that would be a serious problem.
The unsorted symbol addresses came from from two things:
1. The symbols in an ELF object are not necessarily sorted,
so sort them before adding them to the symbol list.
2. The __i686.get_pc_thunk.bx symbol is present in multiple
object files and was having its address adjusted multiple
times, producing an incorrect address in the symbol table.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7440044
This CL changes the encoding used for the Go symbol table,
stored in the binary and used at run time. It does not change
any of the semantics or structure: the bits are just packed
a little differently.
The comment at the top of runtime/symtab.c describes the new format.
Compared to the Go 1.0 format, the main changes are:
* Store symbol addresses as full-pointer-sized host-endian values.
(For 6g, this means addresses are 64-bit little-endian.)
* Store other values (frame sizes and so on) varint-encoded.
The second change more than compensates for the first:
for the godoc binary on OS X/amd64, the new symbol table
is 8% smaller than the old symbol table (1,425,668 down from 1,546,276).
This is a required step for allowing the host linker (gcc) to write
the final Go binary, since it will have to fill in the symbol address slots
(so the slots must be host-endian) and on 64-bit systems it may
choose addresses above 4 GB.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7403054
Previously, the func structure contained an inaccurate value for
the args member and a 0 value for the locals member.
This change populates the func structure with args and locals
values computed by the compiler. The number of args was
already available in the ATEXT instruction. The number of
locals is now passed through in the new ALOCALS instruction.
This change also switches the unit of args and locals to be
bytes, just like the frame member, instead of 32-bit words.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, cshapiro, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7399045
Change the stack unwinding code to compensate for the dynamic
relocation of symbols.
Change the gc instruction GC_CALL to use a relative offset instead of
an absolute address.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7248048
Useful for debugging of runtime bugs.
+ Do not print "stack segment boundary" unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
+ Do not traceback system goroutines unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7098050
The Plan 9 symbol table format defines big-endian symbol values
for portability, but we want to be able to generate an ELF object file
and let the host linker link it, as part of the solution to issue 4069.
The symbol table itself, since it is loaded into memory at run time,
must be filled in by the final host linker, using relocation directives
to set the symbol values. On a little-endian machine, the linker will
only fill in little-endian values during relocation, so we are forced
to use little-endian symbol values.
To preserve most of the original portability of the symbol table
format, we make the table itself say whether it uses big- or
little-endian values. If the table begins with the magic sequence
fe ff ff ff 00 00
then the actual table begins after those six bytes and contains
little-endian symbol values. Otherwise, the table is in the original
format and contains big-endian symbol values. The magic sequence
looks like an "end of table" entry (the fifth byte is zero), so legacy
readers will see a little-endian table as an empty table.
All the gc architectures are little-endian today, so the practical
effect of this CL is to make all the generated tables little-endian,
but if a big-endian system comes along, ld will not generate
the magic sequence, and the various readers will fall back to the
original big-endian interpretation.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7066043
This CL makes the runtime understand that the type of
the len or cap of a map, slice, or string is 'int', not 'int32',
and it is also careful to distinguish between function arguments
and results of type 'int' vs type 'int32'.
In the runtime, the new typedefs 'intgo' and 'uintgo' refer
to Go int and uint. The C types int and uint continue to be
unavailable (cause intentional compile errors).
This CL does not change the meaning of int, but it should make
the eventual change of the meaning of int on amd64 a bit
smoother.
Update #2188.
R=iant, r, dave, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6551067
A fault during malloc might lead to the program's
first call to findfunc, which would in turn call malloc.
Don't do that.
Fixes#1777.
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5689047
Right now, GOTRACEBACK=0 means do not show any stack traces.
Unset means the default behavior (declutter by hiding runtime routines).
This CL makes GOTRACEBACK=2 mean include the runtime routines.
It avoids having to recompile the runtime when you want to see
the runtime in the tracebacks.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5633050
Collapse the arch,os-specific directories into the main directory
by renaming xxx/foo.c to foo_xxx.c, and so on.
There are no substantial edits here, except to the Makefile.
The assumption is that the Go tool will #define GOOS_darwin
and GOARCH_amd64 and will make any file named something
like signals_darwin.h available as signals_GOOS.h during the
build. This replaces what used to be done with -I$(GOOS).
There is still work to be done to make runtime build with
standard tools, but this is a big step. After this we will have
to write a script to generate all the generated files so they
can be checked in (instead of generated during the build).
R=r, iant, r, lucio.dere
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5490053
Make the stack traces more readable for new
Go programmers while preserving their utility for old hands.
- Change status number [4] to string.
- Elide frames in runtime package (internal details).
- Swap file:line and arguments.
- Drop 'created by' for main goroutine.
- Show goroutines in order of allocation:
implies main goroutine first if nothing else.
There is no option to get the extra frames back.
Uncomment 'return 1' at the bottom of symtab.c.
$ 6.out
throw: all goroutines are asleep - deadlock!
goroutine 1 [chan send]:
main.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:22 +0x8a
goroutine 2 [select (no cases)]:
main.sel()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:11 +0x18
created by main.main
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:19 +0x23
goroutine 3 [chan receive]:
main.recv(0xf8400010a0, 0x0)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:15 +0x2e
created by main.main
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:20 +0x50
goroutine 4 [chan receive (nil chan)]:
main.recv(0x0, 0x0)
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:15 +0x2e
created by main.main
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:21 +0x66
$
$ 6.out index
panic: runtime error: index out of range
goroutine 1 [running]:
main.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:25 +0xb9
$
$ 6.out nil
panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference
[signal 0xb code=0x1 addr=0x0 pc=0x22ca]
goroutine 1 [running]:
main.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:28 +0x211
$
$ 6.out panic
panic: panic
goroutine 1 [running]:
main.main()
/Users/rsc/g/go/src/pkg/runtime/x.go:30 +0x101
$
R=golang-dev, qyzhai, n13m3y3r, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4907048
The data race can lead to reads of partially
initialized concurrently mutated symbol data.
The change also adds a simple sanity test
for Caller() and FuncForPC().
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4817058
Avoid getting out of synch when a function, such as main.init,
has no associated line number information. Without this the
function before main.init can skip the PC all the way to the
next function, which will cause the next function's line table
to be associated with main.init, and leave subsequent
functions with the wrong line numbers.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4426055
Follow morestack, so that crashes during a stack split
give complete traces. Also mark stack segment boundaries
as an aid to debugging.
Correct various line number bugs with yet another attempt
at interpreting the pc/ln table. This one has a chance at
being correct, because I based it on reading src/cmd/ld/lib.c
instead of on reading the documentation.
Fixes#1138.
Fixes#1430.
Fixes#1461.
throw: runtime: split stack overflow
runtime.throw+0x3e /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/runtime/runtime.c:78
runtime.throw(0x81880af, 0xf75c8b18)
runtime.newstack+0xad /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:728
runtime.newstack()
runtime.morestack+0x4f /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/runtime/386/asm.s:184
runtime.morestack()
----- morestack called from stack: -----
runtime.new+0x1a /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/runtime/malloc.c:288
runtime.new(0x1, 0x0, 0x0)
gongo.makeBoard+0x33 /tmp/Gongo/gongo_robot_test.go:344
gongo.makeBoard(0x809d238, 0x1, 0xf76092c8, 0x1)
----- stack segment boundary -----
gongo.checkEasyScore+0xcc /tmp/Gongo/gongo_robot_test.go:287
gongo.checkEasyScore(0xf764b710, 0x0, 0x809d238, 0x1)
gongo.TestEasyScore+0x8c /tmp/Gongo/gongo_robot_test.go:255
gongo.TestEasyScore(0xf764b710, 0x818a990)
testing.tRunner+0x2f /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/testing/testing.go:132
testing.tRunner(0xf764b710, 0xf763b5dc, 0x0)
runtime.goexit /home/rsc/g/go2/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:149
runtime.goexit()
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4000053
Prefix all external symbols in runtime by runtime·,
to avoid conflicts with possible symbols of the same
name in linked-in C libraries. The obvious conflicts
are printf, malloc, and free, but hide everything to
avoid future pain.
The symbols left alone are:
** known to cgo **
_cgo_free
_cgo_malloc
libcgo_thread_start
initcgo
ncgocall
** known to linker **
_rt0_$GOARCH
_rt0_$GOARCH_$GOOS
text
etext
data
end
pclntab
epclntab
symtab
esymtab
** known to C compiler **
_divv
_modv
_div64by32
etc (arch specific)
Tested on darwin/386, darwin/amd64, linux/386, linux/amd64.
Built (but not tested) for freebsd/386, freebsd/amd64, linux/arm, windows/386.
R=r, PeterGo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2899041
That is, move the pc/ln table and the symbol table
into the read-only data segment. This eliminates
the need for a special load command to map the
symbol table into memory, which makes the
information available on systems that couldn't handle
the magic load to 0x99000000, like NaCl and ARM QEMU
and Linux without config_highmem=y. It also
eliminates an #ifdef and some clumsy code to
find the symbol table on Windows.
The bad news is that the binary appears to be bigger
than it used to be. This is not actually the case, though:
the same amount of data is being mapped into memory
as before, and the tables are still read-only, so they're
still shared across multiple instances of the binary as
they were before. The difference is just that the tables
aren't squirreled away in some section that "size" doesn't
know to look at.
This is a checkpoint.
It probably breaks Windows and breaks NaCl more
than it used to be broken, but those will be fixed.
The logic involving -s needs to be revisited too.
Fixes#871.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2587041
* correct symbol table size
* do not reorder functions in output
* traceback
* signal handling
* use same code for go + defer
* handle leaf functions in symbol table
R=kaib, dpx
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/884041
because they are in package runtime.
another step to enforcing package boundaries.
R=r
DELTA=732 (114 added, 93 deleted, 525 changed)
OCL=35811
CL=35824
* change ldt0setup to set GS itself; nacl won't let us do it.
* change breakpoint to INT $3 so 8l can translate to HLT for nacl.
* panic if closure is needed on nacl.
* do not try to access symbol table on nacl.
* mmap in 64kB chunks.
nacl support:
* system calls, threading, locks.
R=r
DELTA=365 (357 added, 5 deleted, 3 changed)
OCL=34880
CL=34906