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authorPedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>2023-06-07 10:38:14 +0100
committerPedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>2023-07-06 17:57:48 +0100
commit31a56a22c45d76df4c597439f337e3f75ac3065c (patch)
tree556d93758f3f61ceba629139ff7cbd49145e8b22 /gdbserver
parentc0c3bb70f2f13e07295041cdf24a4d2997fe99a4 (diff)
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Linux: Avoid pread64/pwrite64 for high memory addresses (PR gdb/30525)
Since commit 05c06f318fd9 ("Linux: Access memory even if threads are running"), GDB prefers pread64/pwrite64 to access inferior memory instead of ptrace. That change broke reading shared libraries on SPARC64 Linux, as reported by PR gdb/30525 ("gdb cannot read shared libraries on SPARC64"). On SPARC64 Linux, surprisingly (to me), userspace shared libraries are mapped at high 64-bit addresses: (gdb) info sharedlibrary Cannot access memory at address 0xfff80001002011e0 Cannot access memory at address 0xfff80001002011d8 Cannot access memory at address 0xfff80001002011d8 From To Syms Read Shared Object Library 0xfff80001000010a0 0xfff8000100021f80 Yes (*) /lib64/ld-linux.so.2 (*): Shared library is missing debugging information. Those addresses are 64-bit addresses with the high bits set. When interpreted as signed, they're negative. The Linux kernel rejects pread64/pwrite64 if the offset argument of type off_t (a signed type) is negative, which happens if the memory address we're accessing has its high bit set. See linux/fs/read_write.c sys_pread64 and sys_pwrite64 in Linux. Thankfully, lseek does not fail in that situation. So the fix is to use the 'lseek + read|write' path if the offset would be negative. Fix this in both native GDB and GDBserver. Tested on a SPARC64 GNU/Linux and x86-64 GNU/Linux. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30525 Change-Id: I79c724f918037ea67b7396fadb521bc9d1b10dc5
Diffstat (limited to 'gdbserver')
-rw-r--r--gdbserver/linux-low.cc29
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/gdbserver/linux-low.cc b/gdbserver/linux-low.cc
index 8ab1669..651f219 100644
--- a/gdbserver/linux-low.cc
+++ b/gdbserver/linux-low.cc
@@ -5377,21 +5377,26 @@ proc_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *readbuf,
{
int bytes;
- /* If pread64 is available, use it. It's faster if the kernel
- supports it (only one syscall), and it's 64-bit safe even on
- 32-bit platforms (for instance, SPARC debugging a SPARC64
- application). */
+ /* Use pread64/pwrite64 if available, since they save a syscall
+ and can handle 64-bit offsets even on 32-bit platforms (for
+ instance, SPARC debugging a SPARC64 application). But only
+ use them if the offset isn't so high that when cast to off_t
+ it'd be negative, as seen on SPARC64. pread64/pwrite64
+ outright reject such offsets. lseek does not. */
#ifdef HAVE_PREAD64
- bytes = (readbuf != nullptr
- ? pread64 (fd, readbuf, len, memaddr)
- : pwrite64 (fd, writebuf, len, memaddr));
-#else
- bytes = -1;
- if (lseek (fd, memaddr, SEEK_SET) != -1)
+ if ((off_t) memaddr >= 0)
bytes = (readbuf != nullptr
- ? read (fd, readbuf, len)
- : write (fd, writebuf, len));
+ ? pread64 (fd, readbuf, len, memaddr)
+ : pwrite64 (fd, writebuf, len, memaddr));
+ else
#endif
+ {
+ bytes = -1;
+ if (lseek (fd, memaddr, SEEK_SET) != -1)
+ bytes = (readbuf != nullptr
+ ? read (fd, readbuf, len)
+ : write (fd, writebuf, len));
+ }
if (bytes < 0)
return errno;