* Register variables in stabs
@ 2001-08-20 16:17 Mark Kettenis
2001-08-20 16:23 ` H . J . Lu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Mark Kettenis @ 2001-08-20 16:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gdb
The run-time dynamic linker (/lib/ld-linux.so.2) on my systems
contains the following seemingly bogus stab (output from objdump
--stabs):
Symnum n_type n_othr n_desc n_value n_strx String
2074 RSYM 0 1496 ffffffff 27890 buf:r(0,40)=*(0,41)=ar(0,1);0;-1;(0,2)
which means that buf is a pointer to an array of some type which lives
in register number 0xffffffff or -1. Of course -1 isn't a valid
register number, and my recent register renumbering patches for the
i386 map this bogus number onto NUM_REGS + NUM_PSEUDO_REGS, which
forces GDB to complain about the symbol. Before my change GDB would
keep the register number at -1 which resulted in no complaint. My
question now is why the register number -1 is used. Is this a
compiler bug, or has -1 a special meaning.
Depending on the answer to the question above: should we leave
negative register numbers alone (as GDB does for most other targets)
and not warn about them, or is it OK to complain?
Mark
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2001-08-20 16:17 Register variables in stabs Mark Kettenis
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