[PATCH] Handle loading improper core files gracefully in the mips backend.
Maciej W. Rozycki
macro@imgtec.com
Tue Jan 12 18:30:00 GMT 2016
On Tue, 12 Jan 2016, Luis Machado wrote:
> > > The data above leads gdbarch_info_fill to assign default_bfd_arch to
> > > info->bfd_arch_info here:
> > >
> > > /* From the default. */
> > > if (info->bfd_arch_info == NULL)
> > > info->bfd_arch_info = default_bfd_arch;
> > >
> > > So the core file essentially turns into a mips-compatible core file.
> >
> > Hmmm. I see. I think we can't really change this, given that there
> > are formats that don't have an architecture. Like, e.g., srec:
> >
> > (gdb) file testsuite/gdb.base/intstr2.srec
> > Reading symbols from testsuite/gdb.base/intstr2.srec...(no debugging
> > symbols found)...done.
Or we could be talking to a live target with no executable selected at
all. This is also why there are settings like `set mips abi ...'
available -- to let the user select the executable model for a target
there's no other source of information about.
> > I also wonder whether the bfd arch detection couldn't be always
> > compiled in, at least for elf. Why does bfd fail to detect that this
> > is an bfd_arch_i386 file in the first place?
The mapping between `e_machine' and `bfd_architecture' is only provided
by individual BFD ELF target backends, via the ELF_MACHINE_CODE and
ELF_ARCH macros.
> It seems bfd also falls back to the default, which is mips in this case.
>
> p bfd_default_vector[0]
> $3 = (const bfd_target *) 0x9beac0 <mips_elf32_trad_be_vec>
Regardless, I'd expect a suitable generic ELF BFD target to be selected,
which is what AFAICT `bfd_check_format' does. It is called by our
`core_open' function and has a `core_file_p' handler, which makes suitable
checks including `e_machine' in particular, except for generic ELF BFD
targets, which are special-cased (and always come last). So in the
absence of specific ELF target support in BFD I'd expect a compatible
generic ELF target to be chosen rather than the default BFD target, which
might be incompatible.
> Sounds like we have a couple issues. The mips backend not handling weird
> abi/isa combinations and GDB not preventing clearly incompatible core files
> from proceeding further into processing in the target's backend?
I have given it some thought and came to a conclusion that we should at
least try being consistent. Which means I think we should not try to
handle files within the MIPS backend which would not be passed in the
first place in an `--enable-targets=all' configuration. Rather than
checking `e_machine' explicitly I'd be leaning towards using BFD to detect
such a situation though, perhaps by using a condition like
if (info.abfd != NULL
&& bfd_get_flavour (info.abfd) == bfd_target_elf_flavour
&& bfd_get_arch (info.abfd) != bfd_arch_mips)
return NULL;
(maybe with an additional error message) though ultimately I think it
would make sense to define different BFD architecture codes for file
formats which by definition carry no architecture information and for ones
that do but are not supported. Then for the formers we could continue
selecting the target using the current algorithm and for the latters we'd
just reject them as incompatible with the given backend -- all somewhere
in generic code so that individual target backends do not have to repeat
it all.
As to ABI, ISA, etc. settings -- these are internal to the MIPS backend,
so its the backend's job to sanitise them.
Maciej
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