/* Shared library support for IRIX. Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file was created using portions of irix5-nat.c originally contributed to GDB by Ian Lance Taylor. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "defs.h" #include "symtab.h" #include "bfd.h" /* FIXME: ezannoni/2004-02-13 Verify that the include below is really needed. */ #include "symfile.h" #include "objfiles.h" #include "gdbcore.h" #include "target.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "gdbthread.h" #include "solist.h" #include "solib.h" #include "solib-irix.h" /* Link map info to include in an allocate so_list entry. Unlike some of the other solib backends, this (Irix) backend chooses to decode the link map info obtained from the target and store it as (mostly) CORE_ADDRs which need no further decoding. This is more convenient because there are three different link map formats to worry about. We use a single routine (fetch_lm_info) to read (and decode) the target specific link map data. */ struct lm_info { CORE_ADDR addr; /* address of obj_info or obj_list struct on target (from which the following information is obtained). */ CORE_ADDR next; /* address of next item in list. */ CORE_ADDR reloc_offset; /* amount to relocate by */ CORE_ADDR pathname_addr; /* address of pathname */ int pathname_len; /* length of pathname */ }; /* It's not desirable to use the system header files to obtain the structure of the obj_list or obj_info structs. Therefore, we use a platform neutral representation which has been derived from the IRIX header files. */ typedef struct { gdb_byte b[4]; } gdb_int32_bytes; typedef struct { gdb_byte b[8]; } gdb_int64_bytes; /* The "old" obj_list struct. This is used with old (o32) binaries. The ``data'' member points at a much larger and more complicated struct which we will only refer to by offsets. See fetch_lm_info(). */ struct irix_obj_list { gdb_int32_bytes data; gdb_int32_bytes next; gdb_int32_bytes prev; }; /* The ELF32 and ELF64 versions of the above struct. The oi_magic value corresponds to the ``data'' value in the "old" struct. When this value is 0xffffffff, the data will be in one of the following formats. The ``oi_size'' field is used to decide which one we actually have. */ struct irix_elf32_obj_info { gdb_int32_bytes oi_magic; gdb_int32_bytes oi_size; gdb_int32_bytes oi_next; gdb_int32_bytes oi_prev; gdb_int32_bytes oi_ehdr; gdb_int32_bytes oi_orig_ehdr; gdb_int32_bytes oi_pathname; gdb_int32_bytes oi_pathname_len; }; struct irix_elf64_obj_info { gdb_int32_bytes oi_magic; gdb_int32_bytes oi_size; gdb_int64_bytes oi_next; gdb_int64_bytes oi_prev; gdb_int64_bytes oi_ehdr; gdb_int64_bytes oi_orig_ehdr; gdb_int64_bytes oi_pathname; gdb_int32_bytes oi_pathname_len; gdb_int32_bytes padding; }; /* Union of all of the above (plus a split out magic field). */ union irix_obj_info { gdb_int32_bytes magic; struct irix_obj_list ol32; struct irix_elf32_obj_info oi32; struct irix_elf64_obj_info oi64; }; /* MIPS sign extends its 32 bit addresses. We could conceivably use extract_typed_address here, but to do so, we'd have to construct an appropriate type. Calling extract_signed_integer seems simpler. */ static CORE_ADDR extract_mips_address (void *addr, int len, enum bfd_endian byte_order) { return extract_signed_integer (addr, len, byte_order); } /* Fetch and return the link map data associated with ADDR. Note that this routine automatically determines which (of three) link map formats is in use by the target. */ static struct lm_info fetch_lm_info (CORE_ADDR addr) { enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch); struct lm_info li; union irix_obj_info buf; li.addr = addr; /* The smallest region that we'll need is for buf.ol32. We'll read that first. We'll read more of the buffer later if we have to deal with one of the other cases. (We don't want to incur a memory error if we were to read a larger region that generates an error due to being at the end of a page or the like.) */ read_memory (addr, (char *) &buf, sizeof (buf.ol32)); if (extract_unsigned_integer (buf.magic.b, sizeof (buf.magic), byte_order) != 0xffffffff) { /* Use buf.ol32... */ char obj_buf[432]; CORE_ADDR obj_addr = extract_mips_address (&buf.ol32.data, sizeof (buf.ol32.data), byte_order); li.next = extract_mips_address (&buf.ol32.next, sizeof (buf.ol32.next), byte_order); read_memory (obj_addr, obj_buf, sizeof (obj_buf)); li.pathname_addr = extract_mips_address (&obj_buf[236], 4, byte_order); li.pathname_len = 0; /* unknown */ li.reloc_offset = extract_mips_address (&obj_buf[196], 4, byte_order) - extract_mips_address (&obj_buf[248], 4, byte_order); } else if (extract_unsigned_integer (buf.oi32.oi_size.b, sizeof (buf.oi32.oi_size), byte_order) == sizeof (buf.oi32)) { /* Use buf.oi32... */ /* Read rest of buffer. */ read_memory (addr + sizeof (buf.ol32), ((char *) &buf) + sizeof (buf.ol32), sizeof (buf.oi32) - sizeof (buf.ol32)); /* Fill in fields using buffer contents. */ li.next = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi32.oi_next, sizeof (buf.oi32.oi_next), byte_order); li.reloc_offset = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi32.oi_ehdr, sizeof (buf.oi32.oi_ehdr), byte_order) - extract_mips_address (&buf.oi32.oi_orig_ehdr, sizeof (buf.oi32.oi_orig_ehdr), byte_order); li.pathname_addr = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi32.oi_pathname, sizeof (buf.oi32.oi_pathname), byte_order); li.pathname_len = extract_unsigned_integer (buf.oi32.oi_pathname_len.b, sizeof (buf.oi32. oi_pathname_len), byte_order); } else if (extract_unsigned_integer (buf.oi64.oi_size.b, sizeof (buf.oi64.oi_size), byte_order) == sizeof (buf.oi64)) { /* Use buf.oi64... */ /* Read rest of buffer. */ read_memory (addr + sizeof (buf.ol32), ((char *) &buf) + sizeof (buf.ol32), sizeof (buf.oi64) - sizeof (buf.ol32)); /* Fill in fields using buffer contents. */ li.next = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi64.oi_next, sizeof (buf.oi64.oi_next), byte_order); li.reloc_offset = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi64.oi_ehdr, sizeof (buf.oi64.oi_ehdr), byte_order) - extract_mips_address (&buf.oi64.oi_orig_ehdr, sizeof (buf.oi64.oi_orig_ehdr), byte_order); li.pathname_addr = extract_mips_address (&buf.oi64.oi_pathname, sizeof (buf.oi64.oi_pathname), byte_order); li.pathname_len = extract_unsigned_integer (buf.oi64.oi_pathname_len.b, sizeof (buf.oi64. oi_pathname_len), byte_order); } else { error (_("Unable to fetch shared library obj_info or obj_list info.")); } return li; } /* The symbol which starts off the list of shared libraries. */ #define DEBUG_BASE "__rld_obj_head" static void *base_breakpoint; static CORE_ADDR debug_base; /* Base of dynamic linker structures */ /* LOCAL FUNCTION locate_base -- locate the base address of dynamic linker structs SYNOPSIS CORE_ADDR locate_base (void) DESCRIPTION For both the SunOS and SVR4 shared library implementations, if the inferior executable has been linked dynamically, there is a single address somewhere in the inferior's data space which is the key to locating all of the dynamic linker's runtime structures. This address is the value of the symbol defined by the macro DEBUG_BASE. The job of this function is to find and return that address, or to return 0 if there is no such address (the executable is statically linked for example). For SunOS, the job is almost trivial, since the dynamic linker and all of it's structures are statically linked to the executable at link time. Thus the symbol for the address we are looking for has already been added to the minimal symbol table for the executable's objfile at the time the symbol file's symbols were read, and all we have to do is look it up there. Note that we explicitly do NOT want to find the copies in the shared library. The SVR4 version is much more complicated because the dynamic linker and it's structures are located in the shared C library, which gets run as the executable's "interpreter" by the kernel. We have to go to a lot more work to discover the address of DEBUG_BASE. Because of this complexity, we cache the value we find and return that value on subsequent invocations. Note there is no copy in the executable symbol tables. Irix 5 is basically like SunOS. Note that we can assume nothing about the process state at the time we need to find this address. We may be stopped on the first instruc- tion of the interpreter (C shared library), the first instruction of the executable itself, or somewhere else entirely (if we attached to the process for example). */ static CORE_ADDR locate_base (void) { struct minimal_symbol *msymbol; CORE_ADDR address = 0; msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol (DEBUG_BASE, NULL, symfile_objfile); if ((msymbol != NULL) && (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol) != 0)) { address = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol); } return (address); } /* LOCAL FUNCTION disable_break -- remove the "mapping changed" breakpoint SYNOPSIS static int disable_break () DESCRIPTION Removes the breakpoint that gets hit when the dynamic linker completes a mapping change. */ static int disable_break (void) { int status = 1; /* Note that breakpoint address and original contents are in our address space, so we just need to write the original contents back. */ if (deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (target_gdbarch, base_breakpoint) != 0) { status = 0; } base_breakpoint = NULL; /* Note that it is possible that we have stopped at a location that is different from the location where we inserted our breakpoint. On mips-irix, we can actually land in __dbx_init(), so we should not check the PC against our breakpoint address here. See procfs.c for more details. */ return (status); } /* LOCAL FUNCTION enable_break -- arrange for dynamic linker to hit breakpoint SYNOPSIS int enable_break (void) DESCRIPTION This functions inserts a breakpoint at the entry point of the main executable, where all shared libraries are mapped in. */ static int enable_break (void) { if (symfile_objfile != NULL && has_stack_frames ()) { struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame (); struct address_space *aspace = get_frame_address_space (frame); CORE_ADDR entry_point; if (!entry_point_address_query (&entry_point)) return 0; base_breakpoint = deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint (target_gdbarch, aspace, entry_point); if (base_breakpoint != NULL) return 1; } return 0; } /* LOCAL FUNCTION irix_solib_create_inferior_hook -- shared library startup support SYNOPSIS void solib_create_inferior_hook (int from_tty) DESCRIPTION When gdb starts up the inferior, it nurses it along (through the shell) until it is ready to execute it's first instruction. At this point, this function gets called via expansion of the macro SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK. For SunOS executables, this first instruction is typically the one at "_start", or a similar text label, regardless of whether the executable is statically or dynamically linked. The runtime startup code takes care of dynamically linking in any shared libraries, once gdb allows the inferior to continue. For SVR4 executables, this first instruction is either the first instruction in the dynamic linker (for dynamically linked executables) or the instruction at "start" for statically linked executables. For dynamically linked executables, the system first exec's /lib/libc.so.N, which contains the dynamic linker, and starts it running. The dynamic linker maps in any needed shared libraries, maps in the actual user executable, and then jumps to "start" in the user executable. For both SunOS shared libraries, and SVR4 shared libraries, we can arrange to cooperate with the dynamic linker to discover the names of shared libraries that are dynamically linked, and the base addresses to which they are linked. This function is responsible for discovering those names and addresses, and saving sufficient information about them to allow their symbols to be read at a later time. FIXME Between enable_break() and disable_break(), this code does not properly handle hitting breakpoints which the user might have set in the startup code or in the dynamic linker itself. Proper handling will probably have to wait until the implementation is changed to use the "breakpoint handler function" method. Also, what if child has exit()ed? Must exit loop somehow. */ static void irix_solib_create_inferior_hook (int from_tty) { struct inferior *inf; struct thread_info *tp; inf = current_inferior (); /* If we are attaching to the inferior, the shared libraries have already been mapped, so nothing more to do. */ if (inf->attach_flag) return; if (!enable_break ()) { warning (_("shared library handler failed to enable breakpoint")); return; } /* Now run the target. It will eventually hit the breakpoint, at which point all of the libraries will have been mapped in and we can go groveling around in the dynamic linker structures to find out what we need to know about them. */ tp = inferior_thread (); clear_proceed_status (); inf->stop_soon = STOP_QUIETLY; tp->stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; do { target_resume (pid_to_ptid (-1), 0, tp->stop_signal); wait_for_inferior (0); } while (tp->stop_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP); /* We are now either at the "mapping complete" breakpoint (or somewhere else, a condition we aren't prepared to deal with anyway), so adjust the PC as necessary after a breakpoint, disable the breakpoint, and add any shared libraries that were mapped in. */ if (!disable_break ()) { warning (_("shared library handler failed to disable breakpoint")); } /* solib_add will call reinit_frame_cache. But we are stopped in the startup code and we might not have symbols for the startup code, so heuristic_proc_start could be called and will put out an annoying warning. Delaying the resetting of stop_soon until after symbol loading suppresses the warning. */ solib_add ((char *) 0, 0, (struct target_ops *) 0, auto_solib_add); inf->stop_soon = NO_STOP_QUIETLY; } /* LOCAL FUNCTION current_sos -- build a list of currently loaded shared objects SYNOPSIS struct so_list *current_sos () DESCRIPTION Build a list of `struct so_list' objects describing the shared objects currently loaded in the inferior. This list does not include an entry for the main executable file. Note that we only gather information directly available from the inferior --- we don't examine any of the shared library files themselves. The declaration of `struct so_list' says which fields we provide values for. */ static struct so_list * irix_current_sos (void) { enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch); int addr_size = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT; CORE_ADDR lma; char addr_buf[8]; struct so_list *head = 0; struct so_list **link_ptr = &head; int is_first = 1; struct lm_info lm; /* Make sure we've looked up the inferior's dynamic linker's base structure. */ if (!debug_base) { debug_base = locate_base (); /* If we can't find the dynamic linker's base structure, this must not be a dynamically linked executable. Hmm. */ if (!debug_base) return 0; } read_memory (debug_base, addr_buf, addr_size); lma = extract_mips_address (addr_buf, addr_size, byte_order); while (lma) { lm = fetch_lm_info (lma); if (!is_first) { int errcode; char *name_buf; int name_size; struct so_list *new = (struct so_list *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct so_list)); struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, new); memset (new, 0, sizeof (*new)); new->lm_info = xmalloc (sizeof (struct lm_info)); make_cleanup (xfree, new->lm_info); *new->lm_info = lm; /* Extract this shared object's name. */ name_size = lm.pathname_len; if (name_size == 0) name_size = SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1; if (name_size >= SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE) { name_size = SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1; warning ("current_sos: truncating name of %d characters to only %d characters", lm.pathname_len, name_size); } target_read_string (lm.pathname_addr, &name_buf, name_size, &errcode); if (errcode != 0) warning (_("Can't read pathname for load map: %s."), safe_strerror (errcode)); else { strncpy (new->so_name, name_buf, name_size); new->so_name[name_size] = '\0'; xfree (name_buf); strcpy (new->so_original_name, new->so_name); } new->next = 0; *link_ptr = new; link_ptr = &new->next; discard_cleanups (old_chain); } is_first = 0; lma = lm.next; } return head; } /* LOCAL FUNCTION irix_open_symbol_file_object SYNOPSIS void irix_open_symbol_file_object (void *from_tty) DESCRIPTION If no open symbol file, attempt to locate and open the main symbol file. On IRIX, this is the first link map entry. If its name is here, we can open it. Useful when attaching to a process without first loading its symbol file. If FROM_TTYP dereferences to a non-zero integer, allow messages to be printed. This parameter is a pointer rather than an int because open_symbol_file_object() is called via catch_errors() and catch_errors() requires a pointer argument. */ static int irix_open_symbol_file_object (void *from_ttyp) { enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch); int addr_size = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT; CORE_ADDR lma; char addr_buf[8]; struct lm_info lm; struct cleanup *cleanups; int errcode; int from_tty = *(int *) from_ttyp; char *filename; if (symfile_objfile) if (!query (_("Attempt to reload symbols from process? "))) return 0; if ((debug_base = locate_base ()) == 0) return 0; /* failed somehow... */ /* First link map member should be the executable. */ read_memory (debug_base, addr_buf, addr_size); lma = extract_mips_address (addr_buf, addr_size, byte_order); if (lma == 0) return 0; /* failed somehow... */ lm = fetch_lm_info (lma); if (lm.pathname_addr == 0) return 0; /* No filename. */ /* Now fetch the filename from target memory. */ target_read_string (lm.pathname_addr, &filename, SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1, &errcode); if (errcode) { warning (_("failed to read exec filename from attached file: %s"), safe_strerror (errcode)); return 0; } cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, filename); /* Have a pathname: read the symbol file. */ symbol_file_add_main (filename, from_tty); do_cleanups (cleanups); return 1; } /* LOCAL FUNCTION irix_special_symbol_handling -- additional shared library symbol handling SYNOPSIS void irix_special_symbol_handling () DESCRIPTION Once the symbols from a shared object have been loaded in the usual way, we are called to do any system specific symbol handling that is needed. For SunOS4, this consisted of grunging around in the dynamic linkers structures to find symbol definitions for "common" symbols and adding them to the minimal symbol table for the runtime common objfile. However, for IRIX, there's nothing to do. */ static void irix_special_symbol_handling (void) { } /* Using the solist entry SO, relocate the addresses in SEC. */ static void irix_relocate_section_addresses (struct so_list *so, struct target_section *sec) { sec->addr += so->lm_info->reloc_offset; sec->endaddr += so->lm_info->reloc_offset; } /* Free the lm_info struct. */ static void irix_free_so (struct so_list *so) { xfree (so->lm_info); } /* Clear backend specific state. */ static void irix_clear_solib (void) { debug_base = 0; } /* Return 1 if PC lies in the dynamic symbol resolution code of the run time loader. */ static int irix_in_dynsym_resolve_code (CORE_ADDR pc) { return 0; } struct target_so_ops irix_so_ops; /* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */ extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_irix_solib; void _initialize_irix_solib (void) { irix_so_ops.relocate_section_addresses = irix_relocate_section_addresses; irix_so_ops.free_so = irix_free_so; irix_so_ops.clear_solib = irix_clear_solib; irix_so_ops.solib_create_inferior_hook = irix_solib_create_inferior_hook; irix_so_ops.special_symbol_handling = irix_special_symbol_handling; irix_so_ops.current_sos = irix_current_sos; irix_so_ops.open_symbol_file_object = irix_open_symbol_file_object; irix_so_ops.in_dynsym_resolve_code = irix_in_dynsym_resolve_code; irix_so_ops.bfd_open = solib_bfd_open; }