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RE: [RFC] Fix MIPS frame prologue scan problem
- From: "Pierre Muller" <pierre dot muller at ics-cnrs dot unistra dot fr>
- To: "'Maciej W. Rozycki'" <macro at codesourcery dot com>
- Cc: "'GDB Patches'" <gdb-patches at sourceware dot org>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2012 08:52:43 +0200
- Subject: RE: [RFC] Fix MIPS frame prologue scan problem
- References: <00a501cd495e$db6adea0$92409be0$@muller@ics-cnrs.unistra.fr> <alpine.DEB.1.10.1206212329420.23962@tp.orcam.me.uk>
> -----Message d'origine-----
> De?: gdb-patches-owner@sourceware.org [mailto:gdb-patches-
> owner@sourceware.org] De la part de Maciej W. Rozycki
> Envoyé?: vendredi 22 juin 2012 01:12
> À?: Pierre Muller
> Cc?: 'GDB Patches'
> Objet?: Re: [RFC] Fix MIPS frame prologue scan problem
>
> Hi Pierre,
>
> Sorry about the delay, I've been swamped with stuff recently.
Thanks for your reply.
> On Wed, 13 Jun 2012, Pierre Muller wrote:
>
> > I am trying to extend the Free Pascal compiler to support
> > MIPS architecture.
> >
> > From what I read so far, register $s8 (register number 30) can be used
> as
> > a frame register,
> > but when I set $s8 to the value of the stack pointer ($sp, register
number
> > 29)
> > I get all my locals and parameter of functions wrong.
> >
> > I traced it down to the fact that GDB seems to use a
> > 'virtual' frame pointer register called $fp,
> > but which is miscalculated in my case.
> >
> > In GCC generated code, $s8 register gets the same value as
> > $sp register, so that this problem does not show up in that case,
> > but for me, if I have a prologue that reserves 80 bytes,
> > I will typically get
> >
> > # Reserve 80 bytes for locals and area for called function parameters
> > addi $sp,$sp,-80
> > # Save $ra and $s8 registers, there could be others...
> > sw $ra,44($sp)
> > sw $s8,40($sp)
> > # Set $s8 to function entry value of $sp
> > addi $s8,$sp,80
> >
> > Analysis of first instruction leads to setting of
> > frame_offset to 80.
> >
> > The problem is that when the last instruction
> > is analyzed by mips32_scan_prologue,
> > it switches the frame_reg from $sp to $s8,
> > but does not modify frame_offset value.
> > This leads to a frame pointer $fp
> > being computed as $s8 + frame_offset
> > which is equal to $sp + 2*frame_offset.
> > Thus all my locals are wrong :(
> >
> > Substraction of the constant in the last addi instruction (low_word)
> > to frame_offset seems to cure my problem.
>
> Well, to put it short, you're not supposed to do that if you want to
> follow the MIPS ABI. The MIPS processor has no hardware stack and the
> software implementation of the stack has been made such that there is
> generally no need to arrange for a hard frame pointer (in a register
> separate from the stack pointer), except where dynamic stack allocation
> is used (alloca in C terms).
I tried to read several MIPS documents,
and the message was not that clear to me...
> Therefore the right place to look for how the hard frame pointer has been
> specified is the "Dynamic Allocation of Stack Space" section in Chapter 3
> "Machine Interface" of the MIPS psABI document:
>
> "When a function requires dynamically allocated stack space it manifests a
> frame pointer on entry to the function. The frame pointer is kept in a
> callee-saved register so that it is not changed across subsequent function
> calls. Dynamic stack allocation requires the following steps.
>
> 1. On function entry, the function adjusts the stack pointer by the size
> of the static stack frame. The frame pointer is then set to this
> initial sp value and is used for referencing the static elements
> within the stack frame, performing the normal function of the stack
> pointer."
>
> So in fact both GCC and GDB are correct, you're not supposed to add a
> constant to the stack pointer when calculating the value of the frame
> pointer -- it is supposed to hold the value of the stack pointer *after*
> the frame has been allocated (in other words any frame offsets are
> non-negative).
Our current problem is that we don't yet knoow the
stacksize that we need for the function while we generate
its code, so that using a frame pointer at previous value of stack pointer
makes this
really easier for now.
> You need to adjust your code generated (BTW, note that the
> convention assumed by the ABI is to use non-trapping arithmetic; I'm
Is this the difference between
ADDI and ADDIU?
I thought it was only a signed/unsigned difference,
Do that mean that you never generate any exception if you use the U version?
I am really new to MIPS assembly...
> assuming that you deliberately want to trap on overflows to detect the
> stack pointer crossing the user/kernel segment boundary, right?).
Not really as explained above ...
> NB I suggest that you get real debug information generated as well; it
> can be stabs if DWARF-2 is too difficult to start with. The heuristic
> unwinder is really the last-chance attempt made by GDB to find its way
> around, can only be relied on when applied to conservative code and is
> best avoided if possible.
But my problem is really that
GDB found my I do generate stabs debugging information,
and give parameters and locals
offsets relative to frame pointer.
But in mips32_scan_prologue,
the first
ADDI $s8,$sp,LocalSize
instruction,
interpreted it in mips32_scan_prologue function
but ended up with a wrong position of my
non-ABI standard frame pointer
because it changed frame pointer register from sp to s8 register,
but kept frame_offset value as set by the
SUBI $sp, $sp, LocalSize
instruction
analyzed before.
Thus GDB wrongly ends up with a
frame pointer located a
value of $s8 register (as from ADDI instruction analysis)
+ LocalSize (from SUBI instruction)
This means that of
$sp is say at address addr
$s8 is at addr +LocalSize
and the virtual frame pointer
$fp at $s8 + LocalSize = addr + 2 * LocalSize
This means that it would be better to remove
analysis of the ADDI $s8, $sp, LocalSize
than to leave the current behavior.
I think that we should either use my proposed patch,
or completely remove the analysis of this ADDI $s8, $sp, LocalSize...
> I hope this helps, good luck with your port!
>
> Maciej
Thanks,
Pierre