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The support for unwinding through functions which do not build a frame pointer seems broken for arm-elf. Consider the attached example. It is basically main -> c -> b -> a (X '->' Y meaning "X calls Y"). the calls to printf are here only to avoid sibcall optimization. With gcc 3.2, we will get a one-line prologue for a, b, c and main : a: str lr, [sp, #-4]! [...] Alas, getting a backtrace from 'a' will not work properly: (gdb) file d Reading symbols from d...done. (gdb) target sim Connected to the simulator. (gdb) load d [...] (gdb) b a Breakpoint 1 at 0x8228: file a.c, line 5. (gdb) r Starting program: /cardiff.a/guitton/fsf/gdb-head-merge/tmp/test/d Breakpoint 1, a () at a.c:5 5 printf ("HERE I AM J.H."); (gdb) bt #0 a () at a.c:5 #1 0x00824000 in ?? () There is a 'address minus one' thing going on. Indeed, 0x00824000 is not a valid address, it should be 0x00008240: (gdb) x/i 0x00008240 0x8240 <b+8>: ldr r0, [pc, #8] ; 0x8250 <b+24> This problem is in arm_make_prologue_cache. Indeed, for testing if a register has been saved on the stack, arm_make_prologue_cache should compare the field addr of the saved reg table to -1, according to trad-frame.h. It compare it to 0! That's where the 'address minus -1' thing comes from. The first patch is a fix for this bug (obv.dif). It seems straight forward to me. I run the gdb testsuite on a arm-elf simulator, it fixes 150 failures. No regression. Still, there is another bug: (gdb) bt #0 a () at a.c:5 #1 0x00008240 in b () at b.c:4 #2 0x00008240 in b () at b.c:4 For some reason that I don't understand completely (and that's the [RFC] part of this email), in arm_scan_prologue the choice has been made not to get lr from the stack if the prologue is "str lr, [sp, #4]!". I just want to point out that getting it from the stack (my second patch, lr.dif) fixes the problem: (gdb) bt #0 a () at a.c:5 #1 0x00008240 in b () at b.c:4 #2 0x0000825c in c () at c.c:4 #3 0x00008278 in main () at d.c:2 I don't thing that's a good idea to consider that these one-line-prologue functions are frameless, even if they don't build a frame pointer. Opinions/ideas? Tested against the testsuite on the arm simulator, I get no regression and no fix. (the baseline debugger includes my first patch) -- Jerome
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obv.dif
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lr.dif
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example.txt
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