[PATCH v5 12/16] [gdb/generic] corefile/bug: Use thread-specific gdbarch when dumping register state to core files

Simon Marchi simon.marchi@polymtl.ca
Fri Sep 8 15:58:38 GMT 2023


On 9/8/23 07:09, Luis Machado via Gdb-patches wrote:
> Could a global maintainer please go through this change and let me know if it is OK? It touches a generic part of gdb.
> 
> Though I don't think it should change the behavior of non-aarch64 targets.
> 
> On 9/7/23 16:20, Luis Machado via Gdb-patches wrote:
>> When we have a core file generated by gdb (via the gcore command), gdb dumps
>> the target description to a note.  During loading of that core file, gdb will
>> first try to load that saved target description.
>>
>> This works fine for almost all architectures. But AArch64 has a few
>> dynamically-generated target descriptions/gdbarch depending on the vector
>> length that was in use at the time the core file was generated.
>>
>> The target description gdb dumps to the core file note is the one generated
>> at the time of attachment/startup.  If, for example, the SVE vector length
>> changed during execution, this would not reflect on the core file, as gdb
>> would still dump the initial target description.
>>
>> Another issue is that the gdbarch potentially doesn't match the thread's
>> real gdbarch, and so things like the register cache may have different formats
>> and sizes.
>>
>> To address this, fetch the thread's architecture before dumping its register
>> state.  That way we will always use the correct target description/gdbarch.
>> ---
>>  gdb/linux-tdep.c | 18 +++++++++++++++++-
>>  1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/gdb/linux-tdep.c b/gdb/linux-tdep.c
>> index b5eee5e108c..7d0976932c6 100644
>> --- a/gdb/linux-tdep.c
>> +++ b/gdb/linux-tdep.c
>> @@ -2099,12 +2099,28 @@ linux_make_corefile_notes (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, bfd *obfd, int *note_size)
>>  					  stop_signal);
>>  
>>    if (signalled_thr != nullptr)
>> -    linux_corefile_thread (signalled_thr, &thread_args);
>> +    {
>> +      /* On some architectures, like AArch64, each thread can have a distinct
>> +	 gdbarch (due to scalable extensions), and using the inferior gdbarch
>> +	 is incorrect.
>> +
>> +	 Fetch each thread's gdbarch and pass it down to the lower layers so
>> +	 we can dump the right set of registers.  */
>> +      thread_args.gdbarch = target_thread_architecture (signalled_thr->ptid);
>> +      linux_corefile_thread (signalled_thr, &thread_args);
>> +    }
>>    for (thread_info *thr : current_inferior ()->non_exited_threads ())
>>      {
>>        if (thr == signalled_thr)
>>  	continue;
>>  
>> +      /* On some architectures, like AArch64, each thread can have a distinct
>> +	 gdbarch (due to scalable extensions), and using the inferior gdbarch
>> +	 is incorrect.
>> +
>> +	 Fetch each thread's gdbarch and pass it down to the lower layers so
>> +	 we can dump the right set of registers.  */
>> +      thread_args.gdbarch = target_thread_architecture (thr->ptid);
>>        linux_corefile_thread (thr, &thread_args);
>>      }
>>  
> 

Makes sense to me:

Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>

I think the linux_corefile_thread_data structure is not useful nowadays.
It was probably used through some callback's void pointer before.  But
now linux_corefile_thread could be changed to accept individual
arguments instead, it would make things simpler.  Would you mind doing
this change as a cleanup on top of this series?  Or you can do it before
if you prefer.

Please remind me, does an AArch64 core file contain one target
description per thread, to account for the fact that different threads
could have different register layouts?  Or right now we just hope that
all threads use the same target description (which might be different
from what the inferior started with)?

Simon


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