thread_write_state - Write one aspect of thread state.
#include <zircon/syscalls.h>
zx_status_t zx_thread_write_state(zx_handle_t handle,
uint32_t kind,
const void* buffer,
size_t buffer_size);
zx_thread_write_state()
writes one aspect of state of the thread. The thread
state may only be written when the thread is halted for an exception or the
thread is suspended.
The thread state is highly processor specific. See the structures in zircon/syscalls/debug.h for the contents of the structures on each platform.
See zx_thread_read_state()
for the list of available states
and their corresponding values.
ARM has a variable amount of debug breakpoints and watchpoints. For this
architecture, zx_thread_state_debug_regs_t
is big enough to hold the maximum
amount of breakpoints possible. But in most cases a given CPU implementation
holds a lesser amount, meaning that the upper values beyond the limit are not
used.
The kernel will write all the available registers in the hardware independent of the given breakpoint/watchpoint count value. This means that all the correct state must be set for the call.
You can get the current state of the registers by calling
zx_thread_read_state()
.
handle must be of type ZX_OBJ_TYPE_THREAD and have ZX_RIGHT_WRITE.
zx_thread_write_state()
returns ZX_OK on success.
In the event of failure, a negative error value is returned.
ZX_ERR_BAD_HANDLE handle is not a valid handle.
ZX_ERR_WRONG_TYPE handle is not that of a thread.
ZX_ERR_ACCESS_DENIED handle lacks ZX_RIGHT_WRITE.
ZX_ERR_INVALID_ARGS kind is not valid, buffer is an invalid pointer, buffer_size doesn't match the size of the structure expected for kind or the given values to set are not valid.
ZX_ERR_NO_MEMORY Failure due to lack of memory. There is no good way for userspace to handle this (unlikely) error. In a future build this error will no longer occur.
ZX_ERR_BAD_STATE The thread is not stopped at a point where state is available. The thread state may only be read when the thread is stopped due to an exception.
ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED kind is not supported. This can happen, for example, when trying to read a register set that is not supported by the hardware the program is currently running on.