/* Emulation of eBPF helpers. Copyright (C) 2020-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB, the GNU debugger. 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 . */ /* BPF programs rely on the existence of several helper functions, which are provided by the kernel. This simulator provides an implementation of the helpers, which can be customized by the user. */ /* This must come before any other includes. */ #include "defs.h" #define WANT_CPU_BPFBF #define WANT_CPU bpfbf #include "sim-main.h" #include "cgen-mem.h" #include "cgen-ops.h" #include "cpu.h" #include "bpf-helpers.h" /* bpf_trace_printk is a printk-like facility for debugging. In the kernel, it appends a line to the Linux's tracing debugging interface. In this simulator, it uses the simulator's tracing interface instead. The format tags recognized by this helper are: %d, %i, %u, %x, %ld, %li, %lu, %lx, %lld, %lli, %llu, %llx, %p, %s A maximum of three tags are supported. This helper returns the number of bytes written, or a negative value in case of failure. */ int bpf_trace_printk (SIM_CPU *current_cpu) { va_list ap; SIM_DESC sd = CPU_STATE (current_cpu); DI fmt_address; uint32_t size, tags_processed; size_t i, bytes_written = 0; /* The first argument is the format string, which is passed as a pointer in %r1. */ fmt_address = GET_H_GPR (1); /* The second argument is the length of the format string, as an unsigned 32-bit number in %r2. */ size = GET_H_GPR (2); /* Read the format string from the memory pointed by %r2, printing out the stuff as we go. There is a maximum of three format tags supported, which are read from %r3, %r4 and %r5 respectively. */ for (i = 0, tags_processed = 0; i < size;) { UDI value; QI c = GETMEMUQI (current_cpu, CPU_PC_GET (current_cpu), fmt_address + i); switch (c) { case '%': /* Check we are not exceeding the limit of three format tags. */ if (tags_processed > 2) return -1; /* XXX look for kernel error code. */ /* Depending on the kind of tag, extract the value from the proper argument. */ if (i++ >= size) return -1; /* XXX look for kernel error code. */ value = GET_H_GPR (3 + tags_processed); switch ((GETMEMUQI (current_cpu, CPU_PC_GET (current_cpu), fmt_address + i))) { case 'd': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%d", (int) value); break; case 'i': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%i", (int) value); break; case 'u': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%u", (unsigned int) value); break; case 'x': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%x", (unsigned int) value); break; case 'l': { if (i++ >= size) return -1; switch (GETMEMUQI (current_cpu, CPU_PC_GET (current_cpu), fmt_address + i)) { case 'd': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%ld", (long) value); break; case 'i': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%li", (long) value); break; case 'u': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%lu", (unsigned long) value); break; case 'x': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%lx", (unsigned long) value); break; case 'l': { if (i++ >= size) return -1; switch (GETMEMUQI (current_cpu, CPU_PC_GET (current_cpu), fmt_address + i)) { case 'd': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%lld", (long long) value); break; case 'i': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%lli", (long long) value); break; case 'u': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%llu", (unsigned long long) value); break; case 'x': trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%llx", (unsigned long long) value); break; default: assert (0); break; } break; } default: assert (0); break; } break; } default: /* XXX completeme */ assert (0); break; } tags_processed++; i++; break; case '\0': i = size; break; default: trace_printf (sd, current_cpu, "%c", c); bytes_written++; i++; break; } } return bytes_written; }