]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git/blame - gdb/solib-svr4.c
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-basic.exp, gdb.dwarf2/dw2-intercu.exp: Run tests
[thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / solib-svr4.c
CommitLineData
ab31aa69 1/* Handle SVR4 shared libraries for GDB, the GNU Debugger.
2f4950cd
AC
2
3 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999,
e4bbbda8
MK
4 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004
5 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
13437d4b
KB
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
22 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
23
13437d4b
KB
24#include "defs.h"
25
13437d4b 26#include "elf/external.h"
21479ded 27#include "elf/common.h"
f7856c8f 28#include "elf/mips.h"
13437d4b
KB
29
30#include "symtab.h"
31#include "bfd.h"
32#include "symfile.h"
33#include "objfiles.h"
34#include "gdbcore.h"
13437d4b 35#include "target.h"
13437d4b 36#include "inferior.h"
13437d4b
KB
37
38#include "solist.h"
39#include "solib-svr4.h"
40
2f4950cd
AC
41#include "bfd-target.h"
42#include "exec.h"
43
21479ded 44#ifndef SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS
e5e2b9ff 45#define SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS() svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets ()
21479ded
KB
46#endif
47
e5e2b9ff
KB
48static struct link_map_offsets *svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets (void);
49static struct link_map_offsets *legacy_fetch_link_map_offsets (void);
d5a921c9 50static int svr4_have_link_map_offsets (void);
1c4dcb57 51
e5e2b9ff
KB
52/* fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data is a handle used to obtain the
53 architecture specific link map offsets fetching function. */
21479ded 54
e5e2b9ff 55static struct gdbarch_data *fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data;
1c4dcb57 56
21479ded
KB
57/* legacy_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets_hook is a pointer to a function
58 which is used to fetch link map offsets. It will only be set
7095b863 59 by solib-legacy.c, if at all. */
e5e2b9ff 60
7095b863 61struct link_map_offsets *(*legacy_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets_hook) (void) = 0;
21479ded 62
13437d4b
KB
63/* Link map info to include in an allocated so_list entry */
64
65struct lm_info
66 {
67 /* Pointer to copy of link map from inferior. The type is char *
68 rather than void *, so that we may use byte offsets to find the
69 various fields without the need for a cast. */
70 char *lm;
71 };
72
73/* On SVR4 systems, a list of symbols in the dynamic linker where
74 GDB can try to place a breakpoint to monitor shared library
75 events.
76
77 If none of these symbols are found, or other errors occur, then
78 SVR4 systems will fall back to using a symbol as the "startup
79 mapping complete" breakpoint address. */
80
13437d4b
KB
81static char *solib_break_names[] =
82{
83 "r_debug_state",
84 "_r_debug_state",
85 "_dl_debug_state",
86 "rtld_db_dlactivity",
1f72e589 87 "_rtld_debug_state",
4c0122c8
JB
88
89 /* On the 64-bit PowerPC, the linker symbol with the same name as
90 the C function points to a function descriptor, not to the entry
91 point. The linker symbol whose name is the C function name
92 prefixed with a '.' points to the function's entry point. So
93 when we look through this table, we ignore symbols that point
94 into the data section (thus skipping the descriptor's symbol),
95 and eventually try this one, giving us the real entry point
96 address. */
97 "._dl_debug_state",
98
13437d4b
KB
99 NULL
100};
13437d4b
KB
101
102#define BKPT_AT_SYMBOL 1
103
ab31aa69 104#if defined (BKPT_AT_SYMBOL)
13437d4b
KB
105static char *bkpt_names[] =
106{
107#ifdef SOLIB_BKPT_NAME
108 SOLIB_BKPT_NAME, /* Prefer configured name if it exists. */
109#endif
110 "_start",
ad3dcc5c 111 "__start",
13437d4b
KB
112 "main",
113 NULL
114};
115#endif
116
13437d4b
KB
117static char *main_name_list[] =
118{
119 "main_$main",
120 NULL
121};
122
ae0167b9
AC
123/* Macro to extract an address from a solib structure. When GDB is
124 configured for some 32-bit targets (e.g. Solaris 2.7 sparc), BFD is
125 configured to handle 64-bit targets, so CORE_ADDR is 64 bits. We
126 have to extract only the significant bits of addresses to get the
127 right address when accessing the core file BFD.
128
129 Assume that the address is unsigned. */
13437d4b
KB
130
131#define SOLIB_EXTRACT_ADDRESS(MEMBER) \
ae0167b9 132 extract_unsigned_integer (&(MEMBER), sizeof (MEMBER))
13437d4b
KB
133
134/* local data declarations */
135
13437d4b
KB
136/* link map access functions */
137
138static CORE_ADDR
139LM_ADDR (struct so_list *so)
140{
141 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
142
58bc91c9
MH
143 return (CORE_ADDR) extract_signed_integer (so->lm_info->lm + lmo->l_addr_offset,
144 lmo->l_addr_size);
13437d4b
KB
145}
146
147static CORE_ADDR
148LM_NEXT (struct so_list *so)
149{
150 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
151
ae0167b9
AC
152 /* Assume that the address is unsigned. */
153 return extract_unsigned_integer (so->lm_info->lm + lmo->l_next_offset,
154 lmo->l_next_size);
13437d4b
KB
155}
156
157static CORE_ADDR
158LM_NAME (struct so_list *so)
159{
160 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
161
ae0167b9
AC
162 /* Assume that the address is unsigned. */
163 return extract_unsigned_integer (so->lm_info->lm + lmo->l_name_offset,
164 lmo->l_name_size);
13437d4b
KB
165}
166
13437d4b
KB
167static int
168IGNORE_FIRST_LINK_MAP_ENTRY (struct so_list *so)
169{
170 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
171
ae0167b9
AC
172 /* Assume that the address is unsigned. */
173 return extract_unsigned_integer (so->lm_info->lm + lmo->l_prev_offset,
174 lmo->l_prev_size) == 0;
13437d4b
KB
175}
176
13437d4b
KB
177static CORE_ADDR debug_base; /* Base of dynamic linker structures */
178static CORE_ADDR breakpoint_addr; /* Address where end bkpt is set */
179
180/* Local function prototypes */
181
182static int match_main (char *);
183
87f84c9d 184static CORE_ADDR bfd_lookup_symbol (bfd *, char *, flagword);
13437d4b
KB
185
186/*
187
188 LOCAL FUNCTION
189
190 bfd_lookup_symbol -- lookup the value for a specific symbol
191
192 SYNOPSIS
193
87f84c9d 194 CORE_ADDR bfd_lookup_symbol (bfd *abfd, char *symname, flagword sect_flags)
13437d4b
KB
195
196 DESCRIPTION
197
198 An expensive way to lookup the value of a single symbol for
199 bfd's that are only temporary anyway. This is used by the
200 shared library support to find the address of the debugger
201 interface structures in the shared library.
202
87f84c9d
JB
203 If SECT_FLAGS is non-zero, only match symbols in sections whose
204 flags include all those in SECT_FLAGS.
205
13437d4b
KB
206 Note that 0 is specifically allowed as an error return (no
207 such symbol).
208 */
209
210static CORE_ADDR
87f84c9d 211bfd_lookup_symbol (bfd *abfd, char *symname, flagword sect_flags)
13437d4b 212{
435b259c 213 long storage_needed;
13437d4b
KB
214 asymbol *sym;
215 asymbol **symbol_table;
216 unsigned int number_of_symbols;
217 unsigned int i;
218 struct cleanup *back_to;
219 CORE_ADDR symaddr = 0;
220
221 storage_needed = bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound (abfd);
222
223 if (storage_needed > 0)
224 {
225 symbol_table = (asymbol **) xmalloc (storage_needed);
4efb68b1 226 back_to = make_cleanup (xfree, symbol_table);
13437d4b
KB
227 number_of_symbols = bfd_canonicalize_symtab (abfd, symbol_table);
228
229 for (i = 0; i < number_of_symbols; i++)
230 {
231 sym = *symbol_table++;
6314a349 232 if (strcmp (sym->name, symname) == 0
87f84c9d 233 && (sym->section->flags & sect_flags) == sect_flags)
13437d4b
KB
234 {
235 /* Bfd symbols are section relative. */
236 symaddr = sym->value + sym->section->vma;
237 break;
238 }
239 }
240 do_cleanups (back_to);
241 }
242
243 if (symaddr)
244 return symaddr;
245
246 /* On FreeBSD, the dynamic linker is stripped by default. So we'll
247 have to check the dynamic string table too. */
248
249 storage_needed = bfd_get_dynamic_symtab_upper_bound (abfd);
250
251 if (storage_needed > 0)
252 {
253 symbol_table = (asymbol **) xmalloc (storage_needed);
4efb68b1 254 back_to = make_cleanup (xfree, symbol_table);
13437d4b
KB
255 number_of_symbols = bfd_canonicalize_dynamic_symtab (abfd, symbol_table);
256
257 for (i = 0; i < number_of_symbols; i++)
258 {
259 sym = *symbol_table++;
87f84c9d 260
6314a349 261 if (strcmp (sym->name, symname) == 0
87f84c9d 262 && (sym->section->flags & sect_flags) == sect_flags)
13437d4b
KB
263 {
264 /* Bfd symbols are section relative. */
265 symaddr = sym->value + sym->section->vma;
266 break;
267 }
268 }
269 do_cleanups (back_to);
270 }
271
272 return symaddr;
273}
274
13437d4b
KB
275/*
276
277 LOCAL FUNCTION
278
279 elf_locate_base -- locate the base address of dynamic linker structs
280 for SVR4 elf targets.
281
282 SYNOPSIS
283
284 CORE_ADDR elf_locate_base (void)
285
286 DESCRIPTION
287
288 For SVR4 elf targets the address of the dynamic linker's runtime
289 structure is contained within the dynamic info section in the
290 executable file. The dynamic section is also mapped into the
291 inferior address space. Because the runtime loader fills in the
292 real address before starting the inferior, we have to read in the
293 dynamic info section from the inferior address space.
294 If there are any errors while trying to find the address, we
295 silently return 0, otherwise the found address is returned.
296
297 */
298
299static CORE_ADDR
300elf_locate_base (void)
301{
7be0c536 302 struct bfd_section *dyninfo_sect;
13437d4b
KB
303 int dyninfo_sect_size;
304 CORE_ADDR dyninfo_addr;
305 char *buf;
306 char *bufend;
307 int arch_size;
308
309 /* Find the start address of the .dynamic section. */
310 dyninfo_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (exec_bfd, ".dynamic");
311 if (dyninfo_sect == NULL)
312 return 0;
313 dyninfo_addr = bfd_section_vma (exec_bfd, dyninfo_sect);
314
315 /* Read in .dynamic section, silently ignore errors. */
316 dyninfo_sect_size = bfd_section_size (exec_bfd, dyninfo_sect);
317 buf = alloca (dyninfo_sect_size);
318 if (target_read_memory (dyninfo_addr, buf, dyninfo_sect_size))
319 return 0;
320
321 /* Find the DT_DEBUG entry in the the .dynamic section.
322 For mips elf we look for DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP, mips elf apparently has
323 no DT_DEBUG entries. */
324
325 arch_size = bfd_get_arch_size (exec_bfd);
326 if (arch_size == -1) /* failure */
327 return 0;
328
329 if (arch_size == 32)
330 { /* 32-bit elf */
331 for (bufend = buf + dyninfo_sect_size;
332 buf < bufend;
333 buf += sizeof (Elf32_External_Dyn))
334 {
335 Elf32_External_Dyn *x_dynp = (Elf32_External_Dyn *) buf;
336 long dyn_tag;
337 CORE_ADDR dyn_ptr;
338
339 dyn_tag = bfd_h_get_32 (exec_bfd, (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_tag);
340 if (dyn_tag == DT_NULL)
341 break;
342 else if (dyn_tag == DT_DEBUG)
343 {
344 dyn_ptr = bfd_h_get_32 (exec_bfd,
345 (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
346 return dyn_ptr;
347 }
13437d4b
KB
348 else if (dyn_tag == DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP)
349 {
350 char *pbuf;
743b930b 351 int pbuf_size = TARGET_PTR_BIT / HOST_CHAR_BIT;
13437d4b 352
743b930b 353 pbuf = alloca (pbuf_size);
13437d4b
KB
354 /* DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP contains a pointer to the address
355 of the dynamic link structure. */
356 dyn_ptr = bfd_h_get_32 (exec_bfd,
357 (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
743b930b 358 if (target_read_memory (dyn_ptr, pbuf, pbuf_size))
13437d4b 359 return 0;
743b930b 360 return extract_unsigned_integer (pbuf, pbuf_size);
13437d4b 361 }
13437d4b
KB
362 }
363 }
364 else /* 64-bit elf */
365 {
366 for (bufend = buf + dyninfo_sect_size;
367 buf < bufend;
368 buf += sizeof (Elf64_External_Dyn))
369 {
370 Elf64_External_Dyn *x_dynp = (Elf64_External_Dyn *) buf;
371 long dyn_tag;
372 CORE_ADDR dyn_ptr;
373
374 dyn_tag = bfd_h_get_64 (exec_bfd, (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_tag);
375 if (dyn_tag == DT_NULL)
376 break;
377 else if (dyn_tag == DT_DEBUG)
378 {
379 dyn_ptr = bfd_h_get_64 (exec_bfd,
380 (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
381 return dyn_ptr;
382 }
743b930b
KB
383 else if (dyn_tag == DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP)
384 {
385 char *pbuf;
386 int pbuf_size = TARGET_PTR_BIT / HOST_CHAR_BIT;
387
388 pbuf = alloca (pbuf_size);
389 /* DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP contains a pointer to the address
390 of the dynamic link structure. */
391 dyn_ptr = bfd_h_get_64 (exec_bfd,
392 (bfd_byte *) x_dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
393 if (target_read_memory (dyn_ptr, pbuf, pbuf_size))
394 return 0;
395 return extract_unsigned_integer (pbuf, pbuf_size);
396 }
13437d4b
KB
397 }
398 }
399
400 /* DT_DEBUG entry not found. */
401 return 0;
402}
403
13437d4b
KB
404/*
405
406 LOCAL FUNCTION
407
408 locate_base -- locate the base address of dynamic linker structs
409
410 SYNOPSIS
411
412 CORE_ADDR locate_base (void)
413
414 DESCRIPTION
415
416 For both the SunOS and SVR4 shared library implementations, if the
417 inferior executable has been linked dynamically, there is a single
418 address somewhere in the inferior's data space which is the key to
419 locating all of the dynamic linker's runtime structures. This
420 address is the value of the debug base symbol. The job of this
421 function is to find and return that address, or to return 0 if there
422 is no such address (the executable is statically linked for example).
423
424 For SunOS, the job is almost trivial, since the dynamic linker and
425 all of it's structures are statically linked to the executable at
426 link time. Thus the symbol for the address we are looking for has
427 already been added to the minimal symbol table for the executable's
428 objfile at the time the symbol file's symbols were read, and all we
429 have to do is look it up there. Note that we explicitly do NOT want
430 to find the copies in the shared library.
431
432 The SVR4 version is a bit more complicated because the address
433 is contained somewhere in the dynamic info section. We have to go
434 to a lot more work to discover the address of the debug base symbol.
435 Because of this complexity, we cache the value we find and return that
436 value on subsequent invocations. Note there is no copy in the
437 executable symbol tables.
438
439 */
440
441static CORE_ADDR
442locate_base (void)
443{
13437d4b
KB
444 /* Check to see if we have a currently valid address, and if so, avoid
445 doing all this work again and just return the cached address. If
446 we have no cached address, try to locate it in the dynamic info
d5a921c9
KB
447 section for ELF executables. There's no point in doing any of this
448 though if we don't have some link map offsets to work with. */
13437d4b 449
d5a921c9 450 if (debug_base == 0 && svr4_have_link_map_offsets ())
13437d4b
KB
451 {
452 if (exec_bfd != NULL
453 && bfd_get_flavour (exec_bfd) == bfd_target_elf_flavour)
454 debug_base = elf_locate_base ();
13437d4b
KB
455 }
456 return (debug_base);
13437d4b
KB
457}
458
459/*
460
461 LOCAL FUNCTION
462
463 first_link_map_member -- locate first member in dynamic linker's map
464
465 SYNOPSIS
466
467 static CORE_ADDR first_link_map_member (void)
468
469 DESCRIPTION
470
471 Find the first element in the inferior's dynamic link map, and
472 return its address in the inferior. This function doesn't copy the
473 link map entry itself into our address space; current_sos actually
474 does the reading. */
475
476static CORE_ADDR
477first_link_map_member (void)
478{
479 CORE_ADDR lm = 0;
13437d4b
KB
480 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
481 char *r_map_buf = xmalloc (lmo->r_map_size);
b8c9b27d 482 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, r_map_buf);
13437d4b
KB
483
484 read_memory (debug_base + lmo->r_map_offset, r_map_buf, lmo->r_map_size);
485
ae0167b9
AC
486 /* Assume that the address is unsigned. */
487 lm = extract_unsigned_integer (r_map_buf, lmo->r_map_size);
13437d4b
KB
488
489 /* FIXME: Perhaps we should validate the info somehow, perhaps by
490 checking r_version for a known version number, or r_state for
491 RT_CONSISTENT. */
492
493 do_cleanups (cleanups);
494
13437d4b
KB
495 return (lm);
496}
497
13437d4b
KB
498/*
499
500 LOCAL FUNCTION
501
502 open_symbol_file_object
503
504 SYNOPSIS
505
506 void open_symbol_file_object (void *from_tty)
507
508 DESCRIPTION
509
510 If no open symbol file, attempt to locate and open the main symbol
511 file. On SVR4 systems, this is the first link map entry. If its
512 name is here, we can open it. Useful when attaching to a process
513 without first loading its symbol file.
514
515 If FROM_TTYP dereferences to a non-zero integer, allow messages to
516 be printed. This parameter is a pointer rather than an int because
517 open_symbol_file_object() is called via catch_errors() and
518 catch_errors() requires a pointer argument. */
519
520static int
521open_symbol_file_object (void *from_ttyp)
522{
523 CORE_ADDR lm, l_name;
524 char *filename;
525 int errcode;
526 int from_tty = *(int *)from_ttyp;
527 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
528 char *l_name_buf = xmalloc (lmo->l_name_size);
b8c9b27d 529 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, l_name_buf);
13437d4b
KB
530
531 if (symfile_objfile)
532 if (!query ("Attempt to reload symbols from process? "))
533 return 0;
534
535 if ((debug_base = locate_base ()) == 0)
536 return 0; /* failed somehow... */
537
538 /* First link map member should be the executable. */
539 if ((lm = first_link_map_member ()) == 0)
540 return 0; /* failed somehow... */
541
542 /* Read address of name from target memory to GDB. */
543 read_memory (lm + lmo->l_name_offset, l_name_buf, lmo->l_name_size);
544
ae0167b9
AC
545 /* Convert the address to host format. Assume that the address is
546 unsigned. */
547 l_name = extract_unsigned_integer (l_name_buf, lmo->l_name_size);
13437d4b
KB
548
549 /* Free l_name_buf. */
550 do_cleanups (cleanups);
551
552 if (l_name == 0)
553 return 0; /* No filename. */
554
555 /* Now fetch the filename from target memory. */
556 target_read_string (l_name, &filename, SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1, &errcode);
557
558 if (errcode)
559 {
560 warning ("failed to read exec filename from attached file: %s",
561 safe_strerror (errcode));
562 return 0;
563 }
564
b8c9b27d 565 make_cleanup (xfree, filename);
13437d4b 566 /* Have a pathname: read the symbol file. */
1adeb98a 567 symbol_file_add_main (filename, from_tty);
13437d4b
KB
568
569 return 1;
570}
13437d4b
KB
571
572/* LOCAL FUNCTION
573
574 current_sos -- build a list of currently loaded shared objects
575
576 SYNOPSIS
577
578 struct so_list *current_sos ()
579
580 DESCRIPTION
581
582 Build a list of `struct so_list' objects describing the shared
583 objects currently loaded in the inferior. This list does not
584 include an entry for the main executable file.
585
586 Note that we only gather information directly available from the
587 inferior --- we don't examine any of the shared library files
588 themselves. The declaration of `struct so_list' says which fields
589 we provide values for. */
590
591static struct so_list *
592svr4_current_sos (void)
593{
594 CORE_ADDR lm;
595 struct so_list *head = 0;
596 struct so_list **link_ptr = &head;
597
598 /* Make sure we've looked up the inferior's dynamic linker's base
599 structure. */
600 if (! debug_base)
601 {
602 debug_base = locate_base ();
603
604 /* If we can't find the dynamic linker's base structure, this
605 must not be a dynamically linked executable. Hmm. */
606 if (! debug_base)
607 return 0;
608 }
609
610 /* Walk the inferior's link map list, and build our list of
611 `struct so_list' nodes. */
612 lm = first_link_map_member ();
613 while (lm)
614 {
615 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
616 struct so_list *new
617 = (struct so_list *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct so_list));
b8c9b27d 618 struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, new);
13437d4b
KB
619
620 memset (new, 0, sizeof (*new));
621
622 new->lm_info = xmalloc (sizeof (struct lm_info));
b8c9b27d 623 make_cleanup (xfree, new->lm_info);
13437d4b
KB
624
625 new->lm_info->lm = xmalloc (lmo->link_map_size);
b8c9b27d 626 make_cleanup (xfree, new->lm_info->lm);
13437d4b
KB
627 memset (new->lm_info->lm, 0, lmo->link_map_size);
628
629 read_memory (lm, new->lm_info->lm, lmo->link_map_size);
630
631 lm = LM_NEXT (new);
632
633 /* For SVR4 versions, the first entry in the link map is for the
634 inferior executable, so we must ignore it. For some versions of
635 SVR4, it has no name. For others (Solaris 2.3 for example), it
636 does have a name, so we can no longer use a missing name to
637 decide when to ignore it. */
638 if (IGNORE_FIRST_LINK_MAP_ENTRY (new))
639 free_so (new);
640 else
641 {
642 int errcode;
643 char *buffer;
644
645 /* Extract this shared object's name. */
646 target_read_string (LM_NAME (new), &buffer,
647 SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1, &errcode);
648 if (errcode != 0)
649 {
650 warning ("current_sos: Can't read pathname for load map: %s\n",
651 safe_strerror (errcode));
652 }
653 else
654 {
655 strncpy (new->so_name, buffer, SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1);
656 new->so_name[SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1] = '\0';
b8c9b27d 657 xfree (buffer);
13437d4b
KB
658 strcpy (new->so_original_name, new->so_name);
659 }
660
661 /* If this entry has no name, or its name matches the name
662 for the main executable, don't include it in the list. */
663 if (! new->so_name[0]
664 || match_main (new->so_name))
665 free_so (new);
666 else
667 {
668 new->next = 0;
669 *link_ptr = new;
670 link_ptr = &new->next;
671 }
672 }
673
674 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
675 }
676
677 return head;
678}
679
bc4a16ae
EZ
680/* Get the address of the link_map for a given OBJFILE. Loop through
681 the link maps, and return the address of the one corresponding to
682 the given objfile. Note that this function takes into account that
683 objfile can be the main executable, not just a shared library. The
684 main executable has always an empty name field in the linkmap. */
685
686CORE_ADDR
687svr4_fetch_objfile_link_map (struct objfile *objfile)
688{
689 CORE_ADDR lm;
690
691 if ((debug_base = locate_base ()) == 0)
692 return 0; /* failed somehow... */
693
694 /* Position ourselves on the first link map. */
695 lm = first_link_map_member ();
696 while (lm)
697 {
698 /* Get info on the layout of the r_debug and link_map structures. */
699 struct link_map_offsets *lmo = SVR4_FETCH_LINK_MAP_OFFSETS ();
700 int errcode;
701 char *buffer;
702 struct lm_info objfile_lm_info;
703 struct cleanup *old_chain;
704 CORE_ADDR name_address;
705 char *l_name_buf = xmalloc (lmo->l_name_size);
706 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, l_name_buf);
707
708 /* Set up the buffer to contain the portion of the link_map
709 structure that gdb cares about. Note that this is not the
710 whole link_map structure. */
711 objfile_lm_info.lm = xmalloc (lmo->link_map_size);
712 make_cleanup (xfree, objfile_lm_info.lm);
713 memset (objfile_lm_info.lm, 0, lmo->link_map_size);
714
715 /* Read the link map into our internal structure. */
716 read_memory (lm, objfile_lm_info.lm, lmo->link_map_size);
717
718 /* Read address of name from target memory to GDB. */
719 read_memory (lm + lmo->l_name_offset, l_name_buf, lmo->l_name_size);
720
ae0167b9
AC
721 /* Extract this object's name. Assume that the address is
722 unsigned. */
723 name_address = extract_unsigned_integer (l_name_buf, lmo->l_name_size);
bc4a16ae
EZ
724 target_read_string (name_address, &buffer,
725 SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE - 1, &errcode);
726 make_cleanup (xfree, buffer);
727 if (errcode != 0)
728 {
729 warning ("svr4_fetch_objfile_link_map: Can't read pathname for load map: %s\n",
730 safe_strerror (errcode));
731 }
732 else
733 {
734 /* Is this the linkmap for the file we want? */
735 /* If the file is not a shared library and has no name,
736 we are sure it is the main executable, so we return that. */
737 if ((buffer && strcmp (buffer, objfile->name) == 0)
738 || (!(objfile->flags & OBJF_SHARED) && (strcmp (buffer, "") == 0)))
739 {
740 do_cleanups (old_chain);
741 return lm;
742 }
743 }
ae0167b9
AC
744 /* Not the file we wanted, continue checking. Assume that the
745 address is unsigned. */
746 lm = extract_unsigned_integer (objfile_lm_info.lm + lmo->l_next_offset,
747 lmo->l_next_size);
bc4a16ae
EZ
748 do_cleanups (old_chain);
749 }
750 return 0;
751}
13437d4b
KB
752
753/* On some systems, the only way to recognize the link map entry for
754 the main executable file is by looking at its name. Return
755 non-zero iff SONAME matches one of the known main executable names. */
756
757static int
758match_main (char *soname)
759{
760 char **mainp;
761
762 for (mainp = main_name_list; *mainp != NULL; mainp++)
763 {
764 if (strcmp (soname, *mainp) == 0)
765 return (1);
766 }
767
768 return (0);
769}
770
13437d4b
KB
771/* Return 1 if PC lies in the dynamic symbol resolution code of the
772 SVR4 run time loader. */
13437d4b
KB
773static CORE_ADDR interp_text_sect_low;
774static CORE_ADDR interp_text_sect_high;
775static CORE_ADDR interp_plt_sect_low;
776static CORE_ADDR interp_plt_sect_high;
777
d7fa2ae2
KB
778static int
779svr4_in_dynsym_resolve_code (CORE_ADDR pc)
13437d4b
KB
780{
781 return ((pc >= interp_text_sect_low && pc < interp_text_sect_high)
782 || (pc >= interp_plt_sect_low && pc < interp_plt_sect_high)
783 || in_plt_section (pc, NULL));
784}
13437d4b 785
2f4950cd
AC
786/* Given an executable's ABFD and target, compute the entry-point
787 address. */
788
789static CORE_ADDR
790exec_entry_point (struct bfd *abfd, struct target_ops *targ)
791{
792 /* KevinB wrote ... for most targets, the address returned by
793 bfd_get_start_address() is the entry point for the start
794 function. But, for some targets, bfd_get_start_address() returns
795 the address of a function descriptor from which the entry point
796 address may be extracted. This address is extracted by
797 gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr(). The method
798 gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr() is the merely the identify
799 function for targets which don't use function descriptors. */
800 return gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (current_gdbarch,
801 bfd_get_start_address (abfd),
802 targ);
803}
13437d4b
KB
804
805/*
806
807 LOCAL FUNCTION
808
809 enable_break -- arrange for dynamic linker to hit breakpoint
810
811 SYNOPSIS
812
813 int enable_break (void)
814
815 DESCRIPTION
816
817 Both the SunOS and the SVR4 dynamic linkers have, as part of their
818 debugger interface, support for arranging for the inferior to hit
819 a breakpoint after mapping in the shared libraries. This function
820 enables that breakpoint.
821
822 For SunOS, there is a special flag location (in_debugger) which we
823 set to 1. When the dynamic linker sees this flag set, it will set
824 a breakpoint at a location known only to itself, after saving the
825 original contents of that place and the breakpoint address itself,
826 in it's own internal structures. When we resume the inferior, it
827 will eventually take a SIGTRAP when it runs into the breakpoint.
828 We handle this (in a different place) by restoring the contents of
829 the breakpointed location (which is only known after it stops),
830 chasing around to locate the shared libraries that have been
831 loaded, then resuming.
832
833 For SVR4, the debugger interface structure contains a member (r_brk)
834 which is statically initialized at the time the shared library is
835 built, to the offset of a function (_r_debug_state) which is guaran-
836 teed to be called once before mapping in a library, and again when
837 the mapping is complete. At the time we are examining this member,
838 it contains only the unrelocated offset of the function, so we have
839 to do our own relocation. Later, when the dynamic linker actually
840 runs, it relocates r_brk to be the actual address of _r_debug_state().
841
842 The debugger interface structure also contains an enumeration which
843 is set to either RT_ADD or RT_DELETE prior to changing the mapping,
844 depending upon whether or not the library is being mapped or unmapped,
845 and then set to RT_CONSISTENT after the library is mapped/unmapped.
846 */
847
848static int
849enable_break (void)
850{
851 int success = 0;
852
13437d4b
KB
853#ifdef BKPT_AT_SYMBOL
854
855 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
856 char **bkpt_namep;
857 asection *interp_sect;
858
859 /* First, remove all the solib event breakpoints. Their addresses
860 may have changed since the last time we ran the program. */
861 remove_solib_event_breakpoints ();
862
13437d4b
KB
863 interp_text_sect_low = interp_text_sect_high = 0;
864 interp_plt_sect_low = interp_plt_sect_high = 0;
865
866 /* Find the .interp section; if not found, warn the user and drop
867 into the old breakpoint at symbol code. */
868 interp_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (exec_bfd, ".interp");
869 if (interp_sect)
870 {
871 unsigned int interp_sect_size;
872 char *buf;
8ad2fcde
KB
873 CORE_ADDR load_addr = 0;
874 int load_addr_found = 0;
f8766ec1 875 struct so_list *so;
e4f7b8c8 876 bfd *tmp_bfd = NULL;
2f4950cd 877 struct target_ops *tmp_bfd_target;
e4f7b8c8
MS
878 int tmp_fd = -1;
879 char *tmp_pathname = NULL;
13437d4b
KB
880 CORE_ADDR sym_addr = 0;
881
882 /* Read the contents of the .interp section into a local buffer;
883 the contents specify the dynamic linker this program uses. */
884 interp_sect_size = bfd_section_size (exec_bfd, interp_sect);
885 buf = alloca (interp_sect_size);
886 bfd_get_section_contents (exec_bfd, interp_sect,
887 buf, 0, interp_sect_size);
888
889 /* Now we need to figure out where the dynamic linker was
890 loaded so that we can load its symbols and place a breakpoint
891 in the dynamic linker itself.
892
893 This address is stored on the stack. However, I've been unable
894 to find any magic formula to find it for Solaris (appears to
895 be trivial on GNU/Linux). Therefore, we have to try an alternate
896 mechanism to find the dynamic linker's base address. */
e4f7b8c8
MS
897
898 tmp_fd = solib_open (buf, &tmp_pathname);
899 if (tmp_fd >= 0)
900 tmp_bfd = bfd_fdopenr (tmp_pathname, gnutarget, tmp_fd);
901
13437d4b
KB
902 if (tmp_bfd == NULL)
903 goto bkpt_at_symbol;
904
905 /* Make sure the dynamic linker's really a useful object. */
906 if (!bfd_check_format (tmp_bfd, bfd_object))
907 {
908 warning ("Unable to grok dynamic linker %s as an object file", buf);
909 bfd_close (tmp_bfd);
910 goto bkpt_at_symbol;
911 }
912
2f4950cd
AC
913 /* Now convert the TMP_BFD into a target. That way target, as
914 well as BFD operations can be used. Note that closing the
915 target will also close the underlying bfd. */
916 tmp_bfd_target = target_bfd_reopen (tmp_bfd);
917
f8766ec1
KB
918 /* On a running target, we can get the dynamic linker's base
919 address from the shared library table. */
920 solib_add (NULL, 0, NULL, auto_solib_add);
921 so = master_so_list ();
922 while (so)
8ad2fcde 923 {
f8766ec1 924 if (strcmp (buf, so->so_original_name) == 0)
8ad2fcde
KB
925 {
926 load_addr_found = 1;
f8766ec1 927 load_addr = LM_ADDR (so);
8ad2fcde
KB
928 break;
929 }
f8766ec1 930 so = so->next;
8ad2fcde
KB
931 }
932
933 /* Otherwise we find the dynamic linker's base address by examining
934 the current pc (which should point at the entry point for the
935 dynamic linker) and subtracting the offset of the entry point. */
936 if (!load_addr_found)
2f4950cd
AC
937 load_addr = (read_pc ()
938 - exec_entry_point (tmp_bfd, tmp_bfd_target));
13437d4b
KB
939
940 /* Record the relocated start and end address of the dynamic linker
d7fa2ae2 941 text and plt section for svr4_in_dynsym_resolve_code. */
13437d4b
KB
942 interp_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (tmp_bfd, ".text");
943 if (interp_sect)
944 {
945 interp_text_sect_low =
946 bfd_section_vma (tmp_bfd, interp_sect) + load_addr;
947 interp_text_sect_high =
948 interp_text_sect_low + bfd_section_size (tmp_bfd, interp_sect);
949 }
950 interp_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (tmp_bfd, ".plt");
951 if (interp_sect)
952 {
953 interp_plt_sect_low =
954 bfd_section_vma (tmp_bfd, interp_sect) + load_addr;
955 interp_plt_sect_high =
956 interp_plt_sect_low + bfd_section_size (tmp_bfd, interp_sect);
957 }
958
959 /* Now try to set a breakpoint in the dynamic linker. */
960 for (bkpt_namep = solib_break_names; *bkpt_namep != NULL; bkpt_namep++)
961 {
87f84c9d
JB
962 /* On ABI's that use function descriptors, there are usually
963 two linker symbols associated with each C function: one
964 pointing at the actual entry point of the machine code,
965 and one pointing at the function's descriptor. The
966 latter symbol has the same name as the C function.
967
968 What we're looking for here is the machine code entry
969 point, so we are only interested in symbols in code
970 sections. */
971 sym_addr = bfd_lookup_symbol (tmp_bfd, *bkpt_namep, SEC_CODE);
13437d4b
KB
972 if (sym_addr != 0)
973 break;
974 }
975
2f4950cd
AC
976 /* We're done with both the temporary bfd and target. Remember,
977 closing the target closes the underlying bfd. */
978 target_close (tmp_bfd_target, 0);
13437d4b
KB
979
980 if (sym_addr != 0)
981 {
982 create_solib_event_breakpoint (load_addr + sym_addr);
983 return 1;
984 }
985
986 /* For whatever reason we couldn't set a breakpoint in the dynamic
987 linker. Warn and drop into the old code. */
988 bkpt_at_symbol:
989 warning ("Unable to find dynamic linker breakpoint function.\nGDB will be unable to debug shared library initializers\nand track explicitly loaded dynamic code.");
990 }
13437d4b
KB
991
992 /* Scan through the list of symbols, trying to look up the symbol and
993 set a breakpoint there. Terminate loop when we/if we succeed. */
994
995 breakpoint_addr = 0;
996 for (bkpt_namep = bkpt_names; *bkpt_namep != NULL; bkpt_namep++)
997 {
998 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol (*bkpt_namep, NULL, symfile_objfile);
999 if ((msymbol != NULL) && (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol) != 0))
1000 {
1001 create_solib_event_breakpoint (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol));
1002 return 1;
1003 }
1004 }
1005
1006 /* Nothing good happened. */
1007 success = 0;
1008
1009#endif /* BKPT_AT_SYMBOL */
1010
13437d4b
KB
1011 return (success);
1012}
1013
1014/*
1015
1016 LOCAL FUNCTION
1017
1018 special_symbol_handling -- additional shared library symbol handling
1019
1020 SYNOPSIS
1021
1022 void special_symbol_handling ()
1023
1024 DESCRIPTION
1025
1026 Once the symbols from a shared object have been loaded in the usual
1027 way, we are called to do any system specific symbol handling that
1028 is needed.
1029
ab31aa69 1030 For SunOS4, this consisted of grunging around in the dynamic
13437d4b
KB
1031 linkers structures to find symbol definitions for "common" symbols
1032 and adding them to the minimal symbol table for the runtime common
1033 objfile.
1034
ab31aa69
KB
1035 However, for SVR4, there's nothing to do.
1036
13437d4b
KB
1037 */
1038
1039static void
1040svr4_special_symbol_handling (void)
1041{
13437d4b
KB
1042}
1043
e2a44558
KB
1044/* Relocate the main executable. This function should be called upon
1045 stopping the inferior process at the entry point to the program.
1046 The entry point from BFD is compared to the PC and if they are
1047 different, the main executable is relocated by the proper amount.
1048
1049 As written it will only attempt to relocate executables which
1050 lack interpreter sections. It seems likely that only dynamic
1051 linker executables will get relocated, though it should work
1052 properly for a position-independent static executable as well. */
1053
1054static void
1055svr4_relocate_main_executable (void)
1056{
1057 asection *interp_sect;
1058 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc ();
1059
1060 /* Decide if the objfile needs to be relocated. As indicated above,
1061 we will only be here when execution is stopped at the beginning
1062 of the program. Relocation is necessary if the address at which
1063 we are presently stopped differs from the start address stored in
1064 the executable AND there's no interpreter section. The condition
1065 regarding the interpreter section is very important because if
1066 there *is* an interpreter section, execution will begin there
1067 instead. When there is an interpreter section, the start address
1068 is (presumably) used by the interpreter at some point to start
1069 execution of the program.
1070
1071 If there is an interpreter, it is normal for it to be set to an
1072 arbitrary address at the outset. The job of finding it is
1073 handled in enable_break().
1074
1075 So, to summarize, relocations are necessary when there is no
1076 interpreter section and the start address obtained from the
1077 executable is different from the address at which GDB is
1078 currently stopped.
1079
1080 [ The astute reader will note that we also test to make sure that
1081 the executable in question has the DYNAMIC flag set. It is my
1082 opinion that this test is unnecessary (undesirable even). It
1083 was added to avoid inadvertent relocation of an executable
1084 whose e_type member in the ELF header is not ET_DYN. There may
1085 be a time in the future when it is desirable to do relocations
1086 on other types of files as well in which case this condition
1087 should either be removed or modified to accomodate the new file
1088 type. (E.g, an ET_EXEC executable which has been built to be
1089 position-independent could safely be relocated by the OS if
1090 desired. It is true that this violates the ABI, but the ABI
1091 has been known to be bent from time to time.) - Kevin, Nov 2000. ]
1092 */
1093
1094 interp_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (exec_bfd, ".interp");
1095 if (interp_sect == NULL
1096 && (bfd_get_file_flags (exec_bfd) & DYNAMIC) != 0
2f4950cd 1097 && (exec_entry_point (exec_bfd, &exec_ops) != pc))
e2a44558
KB
1098 {
1099 struct cleanup *old_chain;
1100 struct section_offsets *new_offsets;
1101 int i, changed;
1102 CORE_ADDR displacement;
1103
1104 /* It is necessary to relocate the objfile. The amount to
1105 relocate by is simply the address at which we are stopped
1106 minus the starting address from the executable.
1107
1108 We relocate all of the sections by the same amount. This
1109 behavior is mandated by recent editions of the System V ABI.
1110 According to the System V Application Binary Interface,
1111 Edition 4.1, page 5-5:
1112
1113 ... Though the system chooses virtual addresses for
1114 individual processes, it maintains the segments' relative
1115 positions. Because position-independent code uses relative
1116 addressesing between segments, the difference between
1117 virtual addresses in memory must match the difference
1118 between virtual addresses in the file. The difference
1119 between the virtual address of any segment in memory and
1120 the corresponding virtual address in the file is thus a
1121 single constant value for any one executable or shared
1122 object in a given process. This difference is the base
1123 address. One use of the base address is to relocate the
1124 memory image of the program during dynamic linking.
1125
1126 The same language also appears in Edition 4.0 of the System V
1127 ABI and is left unspecified in some of the earlier editions. */
1128
2f4950cd 1129 displacement = pc - exec_entry_point (exec_bfd, &exec_ops);
e2a44558
KB
1130 changed = 0;
1131
13fc0c2f
KB
1132 new_offsets = xcalloc (symfile_objfile->num_sections,
1133 sizeof (struct section_offsets));
b8c9b27d 1134 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, new_offsets);
e2a44558
KB
1135
1136 for (i = 0; i < symfile_objfile->num_sections; i++)
1137 {
1138 if (displacement != ANOFFSET (symfile_objfile->section_offsets, i))
1139 changed = 1;
1140 new_offsets->offsets[i] = displacement;
1141 }
1142
1143 if (changed)
1144 objfile_relocate (symfile_objfile, new_offsets);
1145
1146 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1147 }
1148}
1149
13437d4b
KB
1150/*
1151
1152 GLOBAL FUNCTION
1153
1154 svr4_solib_create_inferior_hook -- shared library startup support
1155
1156 SYNOPSIS
1157
7095b863 1158 void svr4_solib_create_inferior_hook ()
13437d4b
KB
1159
1160 DESCRIPTION
1161
1162 When gdb starts up the inferior, it nurses it along (through the
1163 shell) until it is ready to execute it's first instruction. At this
1164 point, this function gets called via expansion of the macro
1165 SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK.
1166
1167 For SunOS executables, this first instruction is typically the
1168 one at "_start", or a similar text label, regardless of whether
1169 the executable is statically or dynamically linked. The runtime
1170 startup code takes care of dynamically linking in any shared
1171 libraries, once gdb allows the inferior to continue.
1172
1173 For SVR4 executables, this first instruction is either the first
1174 instruction in the dynamic linker (for dynamically linked
1175 executables) or the instruction at "start" for statically linked
1176 executables. For dynamically linked executables, the system
1177 first exec's /lib/libc.so.N, which contains the dynamic linker,
1178 and starts it running. The dynamic linker maps in any needed
1179 shared libraries, maps in the actual user executable, and then
1180 jumps to "start" in the user executable.
1181
1182 For both SunOS shared libraries, and SVR4 shared libraries, we
1183 can arrange to cooperate with the dynamic linker to discover the
1184 names of shared libraries that are dynamically linked, and the
1185 base addresses to which they are linked.
1186
1187 This function is responsible for discovering those names and
1188 addresses, and saving sufficient information about them to allow
1189 their symbols to be read at a later time.
1190
1191 FIXME
1192
1193 Between enable_break() and disable_break(), this code does not
1194 properly handle hitting breakpoints which the user might have
1195 set in the startup code or in the dynamic linker itself. Proper
1196 handling will probably have to wait until the implementation is
1197 changed to use the "breakpoint handler function" method.
1198
1199 Also, what if child has exit()ed? Must exit loop somehow.
1200 */
1201
e2a44558 1202static void
13437d4b
KB
1203svr4_solib_create_inferior_hook (void)
1204{
e2a44558
KB
1205 /* Relocate the main executable if necessary. */
1206 svr4_relocate_main_executable ();
1207
d5a921c9
KB
1208 if (!svr4_have_link_map_offsets ())
1209 {
1210 warning ("no shared library support for this OS / ABI");
1211 return;
1212
1213 }
1214
13437d4b
KB
1215 if (!enable_break ())
1216 {
1217 warning ("shared library handler failed to enable breakpoint");
1218 return;
1219 }
1220
ab31aa69
KB
1221#if defined(_SCO_DS)
1222 /* SCO needs the loop below, other systems should be using the
13437d4b
KB
1223 special shared library breakpoints and the shared library breakpoint
1224 service routine.
1225
1226 Now run the target. It will eventually hit the breakpoint, at
1227 which point all of the libraries will have been mapped in and we
1228 can go groveling around in the dynamic linker structures to find
1229 out what we need to know about them. */
1230
1231 clear_proceed_status ();
c0236d92 1232 stop_soon = STOP_QUIETLY;
13437d4b
KB
1233 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
1234 do
1235 {
39f77062 1236 target_resume (pid_to_ptid (-1), 0, stop_signal);
13437d4b
KB
1237 wait_for_inferior ();
1238 }
1239 while (stop_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP);
c0236d92 1240 stop_soon = NO_STOP_QUIETLY;
ab31aa69 1241#endif /* defined(_SCO_DS) */
13437d4b
KB
1242}
1243
1244static void
1245svr4_clear_solib (void)
1246{
1247 debug_base = 0;
1248}
1249
1250static void
1251svr4_free_so (struct so_list *so)
1252{
b8c9b27d
KB
1253 xfree (so->lm_info->lm);
1254 xfree (so->lm_info);
13437d4b
KB
1255}
1256
6bb7be43
JB
1257
1258/* Clear any bits of ADDR that wouldn't fit in a target-format
1259 data pointer. "Data pointer" here refers to whatever sort of
1260 address the dynamic linker uses to manage its sections. At the
1261 moment, we don't support shared libraries on any processors where
1262 code and data pointers are different sizes.
1263
1264 This isn't really the right solution. What we really need here is
1265 a way to do arithmetic on CORE_ADDR values that respects the
1266 natural pointer/address correspondence. (For example, on the MIPS,
1267 converting a 32-bit pointer to a 64-bit CORE_ADDR requires you to
1268 sign-extend the value. There, simply truncating the bits above
1269 TARGET_PTR_BIT, as we do below, is no good.) This should probably
1270 be a new gdbarch method or something. */
1271static CORE_ADDR
1272svr4_truncate_ptr (CORE_ADDR addr)
1273{
1274 if (TARGET_PTR_BIT == sizeof (CORE_ADDR) * 8)
1275 /* We don't need to truncate anything, and the bit twiddling below
1276 will fail due to overflow problems. */
1277 return addr;
1278 else
1279 return addr & (((CORE_ADDR) 1 << TARGET_PTR_BIT) - 1);
1280}
1281
1282
749499cb
KB
1283static void
1284svr4_relocate_section_addresses (struct so_list *so,
1285 struct section_table *sec)
1286{
6bb7be43
JB
1287 sec->addr = svr4_truncate_ptr (sec->addr + LM_ADDR (so));
1288 sec->endaddr = svr4_truncate_ptr (sec->endaddr + LM_ADDR (so));
749499cb
KB
1289}
1290
6bb7be43 1291
e5e2b9ff
KB
1292/* Fetch a link_map_offsets structure for native targets using struct
1293 definitions from link.h. See solib-legacy.c for the function
1294 which does the actual work.
1295
1296 Note: For non-native targets (i.e. cross-debugging situations),
1297 a target specific fetch_link_map_offsets() function should be
1298 defined and registered via set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets(). */
1299
1300static struct link_map_offsets *
1301legacy_fetch_link_map_offsets (void)
1302{
1303 if (legacy_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets_hook)
1304 return legacy_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets_hook ();
1305 else
1306 {
1307 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1308 "legacy_fetch_link_map_offsets called without legacy "
1309 "link_map support enabled.");
1310 return 0;
1311 }
1312}
1313
1314/* Fetch a link_map_offsets structure using the method registered in the
1315 architecture vector. */
1316
1317static struct link_map_offsets *
1318svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets (void)
1319{
1320 struct link_map_offsets *(*flmo)(void) =
451fbdda 1321 gdbarch_data (current_gdbarch, fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data);
e5e2b9ff
KB
1322
1323 if (flmo == NULL)
1324 {
1325 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1326 "svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets: fetch_link_map_offsets "
1327 "method not defined for this architecture.");
1328 return 0;
1329 }
1330 else
1331 return (flmo ());
1332}
1333
d5a921c9
KB
1334/* Return 1 if a link map offset fetcher has been defined, 0 otherwise. */
1335static int
1336svr4_have_link_map_offsets (void)
1337{
1338 struct link_map_offsets *(*flmo)(void) =
1339 gdbarch_data (current_gdbarch, fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data);
1340 if (flmo == NULL
1341 || (flmo == legacy_fetch_link_map_offsets
1342 && legacy_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets_hook == NULL))
1343 return 0;
1344 else
1345 return 1;
1346}
1347
1c4dcb57 1348/* set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets() is intended to be called by
e5e2b9ff
KB
1349 a <arch>_gdbarch_init() function. It is used to establish an
1350 architecture specific link_map_offsets fetcher for the architecture
1351 being defined. */
1c4dcb57 1352
21479ded 1353void
e5e2b9ff
KB
1354set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1355 struct link_map_offsets *(*flmo) (void))
21479ded 1356{
030f20e1 1357 deprecated_set_gdbarch_data (gdbarch, fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data, flmo);
21479ded
KB
1358}
1359
6ac5df3a
MK
1360/* Initialize the architecture-specific link_map_offsets fetcher.
1361 This is called after <arch>_gdbarch_init() has set up its `struct
1362 gdbarch' for the new architecture, and is only called if the
1363 link_map_offsets fetcher isn't already initialized (which is
1364 usually done by calling set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets()
1365 above in <arch>_gdbarch_init()). Therefore we attempt to provide a
1366 reasonable alternative (for native targets anyway) if the
1367 <arch>_gdbarch_init() fails to call
e5e2b9ff 1368 set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets(). */
1c4dcb57 1369
e5e2b9ff
KB
1370static void *
1371init_fetch_link_map_offsets (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
21479ded 1372{
6ac5df3a 1373 return legacy_fetch_link_map_offsets;
21479ded
KB
1374}
1375
e4bbbda8
MK
1376/* Most OS'es that have SVR4-style ELF dynamic libraries define a
1377 `struct r_debug' and a `struct link_map' that are binary compatible
1378 with the origional SVR4 implementation. */
1379
1380/* Fetch (and possibly build) an appropriate `struct link_map_offsets'
1381 for an ILP32 SVR4 system. */
1382
1383struct link_map_offsets *
1384svr4_ilp32_fetch_link_map_offsets (void)
1385{
1386 static struct link_map_offsets lmo;
1387 static struct link_map_offsets *lmp = NULL;
1388
1389 if (lmp == NULL)
1390 {
1391 lmp = &lmo;
1392
1393 /* Everything we need is in the first 8 bytes. */
1394 lmo.r_debug_size = 8;
1395 lmo.r_map_offset = 4;
1396 lmo.r_map_size = 4;
1397
1398 /* Everything we need is in the first 20 bytes. */
1399 lmo.link_map_size = 20;
1400 lmo.l_addr_offset = 0;
1401 lmo.l_addr_size = 4;
1402 lmo.l_name_offset = 4;
1403 lmo.l_name_size = 4;
1404 lmo.l_next_offset = 12;
1405 lmo.l_next_size = 4;
1406 lmo.l_prev_offset = 16;
1407 lmo.l_prev_size = 4;
1408 }
1409
1410 return lmp;
1411}
1412
1413/* Fetch (and possibly build) an appropriate `struct link_map_offsets'
1414 for an LP64 SVR4 system. */
1415
1416struct link_map_offsets *
1417svr4_lp64_fetch_link_map_offsets (void)
1418{
1419 static struct link_map_offsets lmo;
1420 static struct link_map_offsets *lmp = NULL;
1421
1422 if (lmp == NULL)
1423 {
1424 lmp = &lmo;
1425
1426 /* Everything we need is in the first 16 bytes. */
1427 lmo.r_debug_size = 16;
1428 lmo.r_map_offset = 8;
1429 lmo.r_map_size = 8;
1430
1431 /* Everything we need is in the first 40 bytes. */
1432 lmo.link_map_size = 40;
1433 lmo.l_addr_offset = 0;
1434 lmo.l_addr_size = 8;
1435 lmo.l_name_offset = 8;
1436 lmo.l_name_size = 8;
1437 lmo.l_next_offset = 24;
1438 lmo.l_next_size = 8;
1439 lmo.l_prev_offset = 32;
1440 lmo.l_prev_size = 8;
1441 }
1442
1443 return lmp;
1444}
1445\f
1446
13437d4b
KB
1447static struct target_so_ops svr4_so_ops;
1448
a78f21af
AC
1449extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_svr4_solib; /* -Wmissing-prototypes */
1450
13437d4b
KB
1451void
1452_initialize_svr4_solib (void)
1453{
e5e2b9ff 1454 fetch_link_map_offsets_gdbarch_data =
030f20e1 1455 gdbarch_data_register_post_init (init_fetch_link_map_offsets);
21479ded 1456
749499cb 1457 svr4_so_ops.relocate_section_addresses = svr4_relocate_section_addresses;
13437d4b
KB
1458 svr4_so_ops.free_so = svr4_free_so;
1459 svr4_so_ops.clear_solib = svr4_clear_solib;
1460 svr4_so_ops.solib_create_inferior_hook = svr4_solib_create_inferior_hook;
1461 svr4_so_ops.special_symbol_handling = svr4_special_symbol_handling;
1462 svr4_so_ops.current_sos = svr4_current_sos;
1463 svr4_so_ops.open_symbol_file_object = open_symbol_file_object;
d7fa2ae2 1464 svr4_so_ops.in_dynsym_resolve_code = svr4_in_dynsym_resolve_code;
13437d4b
KB
1465
1466 /* FIXME: Don't do this here. *_gdbarch_init() should set so_ops. */
1467 current_target_so_ops = &svr4_so_ops;
1468}