From: Michael Eager <eager@eagercon.com>
To: Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@false.org>
Cc: gdb@sources.redhat.com
Subject: Re: Incorrect breakpoint address w no stabs
Date: Tue, 03 Oct 2006 02:38:00 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4521CD1F.20609@eagercon.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20061001181609.GA5065@nevyn.them.org>
Quick follow-up.
This problem doesn't happen if all object files use
DWARF or no debugging. If the executable has mixed
stabs/DWARF, then the problem shows up.
I don't need to support mixed debugging formats after
all, so your initial advice to avoid stabs is the clear winner.
I submitted a bug report to the GDB bug system. It
didn't tell me the bug number, so go figure.
Thanks for the help.
Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> I'm going to do some guesswork here. The very first response to any
> question involving stabs is the usual one: don't. Use DWARF-2 instead.
> But given who's asking the question, I assume you've already considered
> that option :-)
>
> What version of GDB are you working with?
>
> On Sun, Oct 01, 2006 at 10:47:16AM -0700, Michael Eager wrote:
>> When gdb gets the symbol __fini, it finds the correct
>> address in lookup_minimal_symbol. In find_pc_sect_psymtab,
>> it locates the partial symbol which contains the address.
>> In parse_breakpoint_sals it searches the line table for
>> that psym to find the line which supposedly contains the
>> address.
>
> There have been a lot of problems with this code over the years...
>
>> But the range of addresses for the psym is incorrect,
>> so the wrong psym has been selected for the line search.
>> At the end of read_dbx_symtab, the routine has "cleaned
>> up" the psym for the last object file with debug info
>> by setting psym->texthigh to be the last location in
>> the section. That range is incorrect, and in my test
>> case, includes the .o which contains __fini. Texthigh
>> should be set to the end of the object file with stabs.
>>
>> First root cause: read_dbx_symtab does not set the
>> end address for a psym correctly. Is there any way
>> to correctly locate the end of the object file? Or
>> the end of a function containing stabs? (I don't think
>> that there is any way to identify the end of the last
>> .o with stabs.) Is the code at the end of read_dbx_symtab
>> really needed?
>
> Stabs normally do not mark the end of functions. There's a GNU
> extension for this when using gcc -gstabs+ (see dbxout_function_end);
> there will be an N_FUN with an empty name and it will mark the size of
> the function as its value. GDB knows how to parse these.
>
> The current use of text_size doesn't make any sense to me. In any
> case texthigh in psymtabs is sometimes conservative and we can't
> expect it to be reliable.
>
>> Second root cause: gdb has translated a symbol to
>> an address, which it gets right. It goes on to try to
>> translate the address to a line number, which it gets
>> incorrect. IMO, that second translation doesn't seem
>> necessary. There's no reason that I can think of to try
>> to convert from a symbol to a line number. The symbol is
>> the location for the break (modulo stepping over prologue
>> code). I'd also guess that most symbols are not in
>> ranges covered by a line table.
>
> Not sure what you mean; almost every symbol is in a range covered
> by a line table. Do you mean specifically in minsym_found? That
> does seem strange.
>
>> It would seem that this problem would make it impossible
>> to place a breakpoint at any function which was compiled
>> without -g. I'm not sure that this is actually the
>> case, so there must be something else going on. If this
>> were the case, I think that there would be many bug
>> reports about the problem.
>
> It is not the case.
>
> There's two things that could be changed: we could avoid looking up
> line numbers for minimal symbols, or we could make find_pc_sect_line
> do something saner.
>
> Do you have the N_FUN end stabs? I can't see how this could blow up
> the way you described, if you did.
>
--
Michael Eager eager@eagercon.com
1960 Park Blvd., Palo Alto, CA 94306 650-325-8077
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-10-03 2:38 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-10-01 17:47 Michael Eager
2006-10-01 18:16 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2006-10-01 20:50 ` Michael Eager
2006-10-01 23:23 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2006-10-03 2:38 ` Michael Eager [this message]
2006-10-03 3:10 ` Michael Snyder
2006-10-03 4:41 ` Michael Eager
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