/* Target-dependent code for GNU/Linux, architecture independent. Copyright (C) 2009-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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 "svr4-tls-tdep.h" #include "solib-svr4.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "objfiles.h" #include "cli/cli-cmds.h" #include struct svr4_tls_gdbarch_data { /* Method for looking up TLS DTV. */ get_tls_dtv_addr_ftype *get_tls_dtv_addr = nullptr; /* Method for looking up the TLS DTP offset. */ get_tls_dtp_offset_ftype *get_tls_dtp_offset = nullptr; /* Cached libc value for TLS lookup purposes. */ enum svr4_tls_libc libc = svr4_tls_libc_unknown; }; static const registry::key svr4_tls_gdbarch_data_handle; static struct svr4_tls_gdbarch_data * get_svr4_tls_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch) { struct svr4_tls_gdbarch_data *result = svr4_tls_gdbarch_data_handle.get (gdbarch); if (result == nullptr) result = svr4_tls_gdbarch_data_handle.emplace (gdbarch); return result; } /* When true, force internal TLS address lookup instead of lookup via the thread stratum. */ static bool force_internal_tls_address_lookup = false; /* For TLS lookup purposes, use heuristics to decide whether program was linked against MUSL or GLIBC. */ static enum svr4_tls_libc libc_tls_sniffer (struct gdbarch *gdbarch) { /* Check for cached libc value. */ svr4_tls_gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data = get_svr4_tls_gdbarch_data (gdbarch); if (gdbarch_data->libc != svr4_tls_libc_unknown) return gdbarch_data->libc; svr4_tls_libc libc = svr4_tls_libc_unknown; /* Fetch the program interpreter. */ std::optional interp_name_holder = svr4_find_program_interpreter (); if (interp_name_holder) { /* A dynamically linked program linked against MUSL will have a "ld-musl-" in its interpreter name. (Two examples of MUSL interpreter names are "/lib/ld-musl-x86_64.so.1" and "lib/ld-musl-aarch64.so.1".) If it's not found, assume GLIBC. */ const char *interp_name = (const char *) interp_name_holder->data (); if (strstr (interp_name, "/ld-musl-") != nullptr) libc = svr4_tls_libc_musl; else libc = svr4_tls_libc_glibc; gdbarch_data->libc = libc; return libc; } /* If there is no interpreter name, it's statically linked. For programs with TLS data, a program statically linked against MUSL will have the symbols 'main_tls' and 'builtin_tls'. If both of these are present, assume that it was statically linked against MUSL, otherwise assume GLIBC. */ if (lookup_minimal_symbol (current_program_space, "main_tls").minsym != nullptr && lookup_minimal_symbol (current_program_space, "builtin_tls").minsym != nullptr) libc = svr4_tls_libc_musl; else libc = svr4_tls_libc_glibc; gdbarch_data->libc = libc; return libc; } /* Implement gdbarch method, get_thread_local_address, for architectures which provide a method for determining the DTV and possibly the DTP offset. */ CORE_ADDR svr4_tls_get_thread_local_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR lm_addr, CORE_ADDR offset) { svr4_tls_gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data = get_svr4_tls_gdbarch_data (gdbarch); /* Use the target's get_thread_local_address method when: - No method has been provided for finding the TLS DTV. or - The thread stratum has been pushed (at some point) onto the target stack, except when 'force_internal_tls_address_lookup' has been set. The idea here is to prefer use of of the target's thread_stratum method since it should be more accurate. */ if (gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtv_addr == nullptr || (find_target_at (thread_stratum) != nullptr && !force_internal_tls_address_lookup)) { struct target_ops *target = current_inferior ()->top_target (); return target->get_thread_local_address (ptid, lm_addr, offset); } else { /* Details, found below, regarding TLS layout is for the GNU C library (glibc) and the MUSL C library (musl), circa 2024. While some of this layout is defined by the TLS ABI, some of it, such as how/where to find the DTV pointer in the TCB, is not. A good source of ABI info for some architectures can be found in "ELF Handling For Thread-Local Storage" by Ulrich Drepper. That document is worth consulting even for architectures not described there, since the general approach and terminology is used regardless. Some architectures, such as aarch64, are not described in that document, so some details had to ferreted out using the glibc source code. Likewise, the MUSL source code was consulted for details which differ from GLIBC. */ enum svr4_tls_libc libc = libc_tls_sniffer (gdbarch); int mod_id; if (libc == svr4_tls_libc_glibc) mod_id = glibc_link_map_to_tls_module_id (lm_addr); else /* Assume MUSL. */ mod_id = musl_link_map_to_tls_module_id (lm_addr); if (mod_id == 0) throw_error (TLS_GENERIC_ERROR, _("Unable to determine TLS module id")); /* Use the architecture specific DTV fetcher to obtain the DTV. */ CORE_ADDR dtv_addr = gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtv_addr (gdbarch, ptid, libc); /* In GLIBC, The DTV (dynamic thread vector) is an array of structs consisting of two fields, the first of which is a pointer to the TLS block of interest. (The second field is a pointer that assists with memory management, but that's not of interest here.) Also, the 0th entry is the generation number, but although it's a single scalar, the 0th entry is padded to be the same size as all the rest. Thus each element of the DTV array is two pointers in size. In MUSL, the DTV is simply an array of pointers. The 0th entry is still the generation number, but contains no padding aside from that which is needed to make it pointer sized. */ int m; /* Multiplier, for size of DTV entry. */ switch (libc) { case svr4_tls_libc_glibc: m = 2; break; default: m = 1; break; } /* Obtain TLS block address. Module ids start at 1, so there's no need to adjust it to skip over the 0th entry of the DTV, which is the generation number. */ CORE_ADDR dtv_elem_addr = dtv_addr + mod_id * m * (gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT); gdb::byte_vector buf (gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT); if (target_read_memory (dtv_elem_addr, buf.data (), buf.size ()) != 0) throw_error (TLS_GENERIC_ERROR, _("Unable to fetch TLS block address")); const struct builtin_type *builtin = builtin_type (gdbarch); CORE_ADDR tls_block_addr = gdbarch_pointer_to_address (gdbarch, builtin->builtin_data_ptr, buf.data ()); /* When the TLS block addr is 0 or -1, this usually indicates that the TLS storage hasn't been allocated yet. (In GLIBC, some architectures use 0 while others use -1.) */ if (tls_block_addr == 0 || tls_block_addr == (CORE_ADDR) -1) throw_error (TLS_NOT_ALLOCATED_YET_ERROR, _("TLS not allocated yet")); /* MUSL (and perhaps other C libraries, though not GLIBC) have TLS implementations for some architectures which, for some reason, have DTV entries which must be negatively offset by DTP_OFFSET in order to obtain the TLS block address. DTP_OFFSET is a constant in the MUSL sources - these offsets, when they're non-zero, seem to be either 0x800 or 0x8000, and are present for riscv[32/64], powerpc[32/64], m68k, and mips. Use the architecture specific get_tls_dtp_offset method, if present, to obtain this offset. */ ULONGEST dtp_offset = gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtp_offset == nullptr ? 0 : gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtp_offset (gdbarch, ptid, libc); return tls_block_addr - dtp_offset + offset; } } /* See svr4-tls-tdep.h. */ void svr4_tls_register_tls_methods (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch *gdbarch, get_tls_dtv_addr_ftype *get_tls_dtv_addr, get_tls_dtp_offset_ftype *get_tls_dtp_offset) { gdb_assert (get_tls_dtv_addr != nullptr); svr4_tls_gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data = get_svr4_tls_gdbarch_data (gdbarch); gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtv_addr = get_tls_dtv_addr; gdbarch_data->get_tls_dtp_offset = get_tls_dtp_offset; } void _initialize_svr4_tls_tdep (); void _initialize_svr4_tls_tdep () { add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("force-internal-tls-address-lookup", class_obscure, &force_internal_tls_address_lookup, _("\ Set to force internal TLS address lookup."), _("\ Show whether GDB is forced to use internal TLS address lookup."), _("\ When resolving addresses for TLS (Thread Local Storage) variables,\n\ GDB will attempt to use facilities provided by the thread library (i.e.\n\ libthread_db). If those facilities aren't available, GDB will fall\n\ back to using some internal (to GDB), but possibly less accurate\n\ mechanisms to resolve the addresses for TLS variables. When this flag\n\ is set, GDB will force use of the fall-back TLS resolution mechanisms.\n\ This flag is used by some GDB tests to ensure that the internal fallback\n\ code is exercised and working as expected. The default is to not force\n\ the internal fall-back mechanisms to be used."), NULL, NULL, &maintenance_set_cmdlist, &maintenance_show_cmdlist); }