_stack_grow - express an intention to extend the stack
#include <ucontext.h> void *_stack_grow(void *addr);
The _stack_grow() function indicates to the system that the stack is about to be extended to the address specified by addr. If extending the stack to this address would violate the stack boundaries as retreived by stack_getbounds(3C), a SIGSEGV is raised.
If the disposition of SIGSEGV is SIG_DFL, the process is terminated and a core dump is generated. If the application has installed its own SIGSEGV handler to run on the alternate signal stack, the signal information passed to the handler will be such that a call to stack_violation(3C) with these parameters returns 1.
The addr argument is a biased stack pointer value. See the Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide.
This function has no effect if the specified address, addr, is within the bounds of the current stack.
If the _stack_grow() function succeeds and does not detect a stack violation, it returns addr.
The _stack_grow() function does not actually adjust the stack pointer register. The caller is responsible for manipulating the stack pointer register once _stack_grow() returns.
The _stack_grow() function is typically invoked by code created by the compilation environment prior to executing code that modifies the stack pointer. It can also be used by hand-written assembly routines to allocate stack-based storage safely.
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
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stack_getbounds(3C), stack_inbounds(3C), stack_violation(3C), attributes(5)
Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide
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