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Re: [RFA] Fix "break foo" when `foo's prologue ends before line table
- From: Joel Brobecker <brobecker at adacore dot com>
- To: Eli Zaretskii <eliz at gnu dot org>
- Cc: gdb-patches at sourceware dot org
- Date: Mon, 11 May 2009 14:56:44 +0200
- Subject: Re: [RFA] Fix "break foo" when `foo's prologue ends before line table
- References: <83skjebbef.fsf@gnu.org>
> Line table:
>
> line 6 at 0x1748
> line 8 at 0x1750
> line 9 at 0x1756
> line 11 at 0x176b
> line 13 at 0x177b
> line 14 at 0x1780
[...]
> Here's the disassembly of `main', in case someone thinks that
> skip_prologue function didn't do a good job (I think it did a
> reasonable job, but I'm far from being an expert on prologue
> analysis):
Here is what the prologue looks like:
> Dump of assembler code for function main:
> 0x0000172c <main+0>: push %ebp
> 0x0000172d <main+1>: mov %esp,%ebp
> 0x0000172f <main+3>: sub $0x8,%esp
> 0x00001732 <main+6>: and $0xfffffff0,%esp
[this is where GDB thinks the prologue stops]
> 0x00001735 <main+9>: mov $0x0,%eax
> 0x0000173a <main+14>: add $0xf,%eax
> 0x0000173d <main+17>: add $0xf,%eax
> 0x00001740 <main+20>: shr $0x4,%eax
> 0x00001743 <main+23>: shl $0x4,%eax
> 0x00001746 <main+26>: sub %eax,%esp
[this is the last instruction before the first line of code
according to the line table]
Regarding your question above, it really depends on whether you
consider the second part of the code above as prologue or not.
What the code above does is making sure that the stack is properly
aligned. I am sure that some people would want to consider this
as part of the prologue, and I wouldn't disagree, but others
could argue the opposite, and I wouldn't disagree either.
Regardless of that, however, we should really look at what
"break FUNCTION" is supposed to be doing. And looking at the doc,
it says: ``Specifies the line that begins the body of the function''
(this matches what I thought it should be doing intuitively).
So, regardless of what GDB should be doing in terms of prologue
analysis, I think we should still try to find the first line
as you're doing in your patch.
> + ALL_PSYMTABS (objfile, p)
> + {
> + if (FILENAME_CMP (symtab->filename, p->filename) != 0)
> + continue;
> + PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB (p);
> + }
> +
> + /* Loop over all symtabs for the function's file, looking for an
> + entry in a lineinfo table whose PC is in the range
> + [FUNC_START..FUNC_END] and whose line number is the smallest. */
> + ALL_SYMTABS (objfile, s)
I am wondering if this looping over all PSYMTAB and SYMTABs is really
necessary. Is the symtab associated to your symbol not sufficient?
Also, instead of returning the line whose number is the smallest,
I would return the smallest PC, as we're trying to skip the minimum
before inserting the breakpoint. This means that your iteration on
the line table can stop as soon as you've found a non-zero line
that's inside your function address range.
--
Joel