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From: Bill Gatliff <bgat@billgatliff.com>
To: gdb@sourceware.org,  linuxppc-embedded@ozlabs.org
Subject: Re: Gdbserver syscall clobber
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 12:59:42 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <469E550E.5080905@billgatliff.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20070716155348.GA5281@caradoc.them.org>

Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 16, 2007 at 10:43:41AM -0500, Bill Gatliff wrote:
>   
>> recv(4, 0x7ffffd60, 1, 0)               = ? ERESTARTSYS (To be restarted)
>> --- SIGIO (I/O possible) @ 0 (0) ---
>> syscall_4294966784(0xa, 0x7ffffd34, 0x1, 0, 0x1008a3c7, 0x1008b5a3, 0x1008b5a4, 
>>     
>
> That's -512, a.k.a. the errno value used by syscall restarting.  I'd
> say your glibc does not obey the restartable syscall convention used
> by your kernel, and when it tries to restart the syscall the errno
> value is not being replaced by the syscall number.  Check the assembly
> for recv.
>
>   

Very good catch!  Thanks soooo much.  Here's the code, from my libc.a:

00000000 <__libc_recv>:
    0:   94 21 ff d0     stwu    r1,-48(r1)
    4:   90 61 00 14     stw     r3,20(r1)
    8:   90 81 00 18     stw     r4,24(r1)
    c:   90 a1 00 1c     stw     r5,28(r1)
   10:   90 c1 00 20     stw     r6,32(r1)
   14:   81 42 00 0c     lwz     r10,12(r2)
   18:   2c 0a 00 00     cmpwi   r10,0
   1c:   40 82 00 20     bne-    3c <__libc_recv+0x3c>
   20:   38 60 00 0a     li      r3,10
   24:   38 81 00 14     addi    r4,r1,20
   28:   38 00 00 66     li      r0,102
   2c:   44 00 00 02     sc
   30:   38 21 00 30     addi    r1,r1,48
   34:   4c a3 00 20     bnslr+
   38:   48 00 00 00     b       38 <__libc_recv+0x38>

Again, this is 603e on linux-2.4.16 glibc-2.2.5 gcc-2.95.3.  (Odd, I
can't seem to find this function in a statically-linked gdbserver, nor
any reference to it in the gdbserver-6.5 source code).

On the kernel side:

_GLOBAL(DoSyscall)
...
         blrl                    /* Call handler */
         .globl  ret_from_syscall_1
ret_from_syscall_1:
20:     stw     r3,RESULT(r1)   /* Save result */
         li      r10,-_LAST_ERRNO
         cmpl    0,r3,r10
         blt     30f
         neg     r3,r3
         cmpi    0,r3,ERESTARTNOHAND
         bne     22f
         li      r3,EINTR
22:     lwz     r10,_CCR(r1)    /* Set SO bit in CR */
         oris    r10,r10,0x1000
         stw     r10,_CCR(r1)
30:     stw     r3,GPR3(r1)     /* Update return value */
         b       ret_from_except
...
ret_from_except:
...
         lwz     r3,_CCR(r1)
...
         mtcrf   0xFF,r3
...
         RFI


Now, I'm a little rusty on PPC asm (I've been doing a lot of ARM
lately), but it looks to me like the kernel is setting bit 0 in CR0
(oris r10, r10, 0x1000) a.k.a LT, but the user side is looking at CR0
(bnslr+) bit 3 a.k.a. SO.  Or maybe the other way around, I'm not sure
after reading Sections 1.2 and 2.1 of the Programming Environments manual.

Or am I misinterpreting something?  I must be, this is well-trodden code
I'm thinking...

The readchar() in gdbserver's remote-utils.c just calls read() on the
file descriptor for the socket.  Still trying to track that code down...



b.g.

-- 
Bill Gatliff
bgat@billgatliff.com

  parent reply	other threads:[~2007-07-18 18:52 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-07-16 15:43 Gdbserver syscall clobber Bill Gatliff
2007-07-16 15:53 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-07-18 17:42   ` Bill Gatliff
2007-07-18 17:59   ` Bill Gatliff [this message]
2007-07-18 18:31     ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-07-23 15:37       ` Bill Gatliff
2007-07-23 15:38       ` Bill Gatliff
2007-07-23 16:06       ` Bill Gatliff
2007-07-23 16:15         ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2007-07-26 16:28           ` Bill Gatliff
2007-07-23 16:19         ` Andreas Schwab

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