This is the mail archive of the gdb-patches@sourceware.org mailing list for the GDB project.


Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]
Other format: [Raw text]

Re: [patch] STT_GNU_IFUNC support


On Wed, 17 Feb 2010 15:46:15 +0100, Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 03:19:12PM +0100, Jan Kratochvil wrote:
> > (C) Print just the bare ifunc-resolver address for "p strcmp".
> > 
> > +(CACHE) = + possibility: Cache the pointer in GDB.
> > 
> > "Regular users" just print "strcmp (...)" and do not print "strcmp" which
> > possibly makes (C) a viable option.
> 
> I don't know.  What about "disassemble strcmp" - I think it should
> disassemble the same thing that will show up in the assembly as "call
> 0x$hex <strcmp>".  But maybe automatically disassembling strcmp_sse is
> more useful.

According to the reply to Pedro Alves
	http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-02/msg00428.html
I will follow now that "strcmp" means the unresolved gnu-ifunc resolver.
(and "disassemble strcmp" disassembles just the gnu-ifunc resolver)


> Hmm.  I guess that leaves "break strcmp" in a weird place since strcmp
> will only be called once.  Maybe a breakpoint on an indirect function
> should also set a breakpoint on the target of the indirect function?
> This is slightly awkward to implement because there's no debug hook
> after the indirect function returns; we'd have to do that
> automatically to set the second breakpoint, or risk missing calls.

OK, nice catch.

GDB automatically calls "strcmp" from glibc (which is the resolver), not the
'glibc@plt' (which acts as a regular function hiding gnu-ifunc at all)..

Probably to break at the "strcmp" resolver and when it is hit the first time
then GDB can easily move the breakpoint to the resolved "strcmp_sse" function
by internally executing GDB "finish" call and using the returned address.

It would contradict that GDB should deal only with the gnu-ifunc resolver for
"strcmp", though.


> Inferior calls are hundreds of times slower than symbol lookups.  GDB
> can do a lot of symbol lookups behind the scenes, for instance "info
> func" will do a lookup_symbol for every function.  Since native x86_64
> Linux inferior calls are only hundreds of times slower, you may not
> notice this as much.  On a slower target, or a remote target, it may
> be thousands of times slower.

What if GDB prefers to use "strcmp@plt" instead of "strcmp" when GDB finds
"strcmp" is a gnu-ifunc symbol.  It will save the new GDB framework to deal
with the .got.plt addresses.


Thanks,
Jan


Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]