• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1 // -*- mode: c++ -*-
2 
3 // Copyright (c) 2010 Google Inc.
4 // All rights reserved.
5 //
6 // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7 // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
8 // met:
9 //
10 //     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
11 // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12 //     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
13 // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
14 // in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
15 // distribution.
16 //     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
17 // contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
18 // this software without specific prior written permission.
19 //
20 // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
21 // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
22 // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
23 // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
24 // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
25 // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
26 // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
27 // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
28 // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
29 // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
30 // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
31 
32 // Original author: Jim Blandy <jimb@mozilla.com> <jimb@red-bean.com>
33 
34 // The DwarfLineToModule class accepts line number information from a
35 // DWARF parser and adds it to a google_breakpad::Module. The Module
36 // can write that data out as a Breakpad symbol file.
37 
38 #ifndef COMMON_LINUX_DWARF_LINE_TO_MODULE_H
39 #define COMMON_LINUX_DWARF_LINE_TO_MODULE_H
40 
41 #include <string>
42 
43 #include "common/module.h"
44 #include "common/dwarf/dwarf2reader.h"
45 #include "common/using_std_string.h"
46 
47 namespace google_breakpad {
48 
49 // A class for producing a vector of google_breakpad::Module::Line
50 // instances from parsed DWARF line number data.
51 //
52 // An instance of this class can be provided as a handler to a
53 // dwarf2reader::LineInfo DWARF line number information parser. The
54 // handler accepts source location information from the parser and
55 // uses it to produce a vector of google_breakpad::Module::Line
56 // objects, referring to google_breakpad::Module::File objects added
57 // to a particular google_breakpad::Module.
58 //
59 // GNU toolchain omitted sections support:
60 // ======================================
61 //
62 // Given the right options, the GNU toolchain will omit unreferenced
63 // functions from the final executable. Unfortunately, when it does so, it
64 // does not remove the associated portions of the DWARF line number
65 // program; instead, it gives the DW_LNE_set_address instructions referring
66 // to the now-deleted code addresses of zero. Given this input, the DWARF
67 // line parser will call AddLine with a series of lines starting at address
68 // zero. For example, here is the output from 'readelf -wl' for a program
69 // with four functions, the first three of which have been omitted:
70 //
71 //   Line Number Statements:
72 //    Extended opcode 2: set Address to 0x0
73 //    Advance Line by 14 to 15
74 //    Copy
75 //    Special opcode 48: advance Address by 3 to 0x3 and Line by 1 to 16
76 //    Special opcode 119: advance Address by 8 to 0xb and Line by 2 to 18
77 //    Advance PC by 2 to 0xd
78 //    Extended opcode 1: End of Sequence
79 //
80 //    Extended opcode 2: set Address to 0x0
81 //    Advance Line by 14 to 15
82 //    Copy
83 //    Special opcode 48: advance Address by 3 to 0x3 and Line by 1 to 16
84 //    Special opcode 119: advance Address by 8 to 0xb and Line by 2 to 18
85 //    Advance PC by 2 to 0xd
86 //    Extended opcode 1: End of Sequence
87 //
88 //    Extended opcode 2: set Address to 0x0
89 //    Advance Line by 19 to 20
90 //    Copy
91 //    Special opcode 48: advance Address by 3 to 0x3 and Line by 1 to 21
92 //    Special opcode 76: advance Address by 5 to 0x8 and Line by 1 to 22
93 //    Advance PC by 2 to 0xa
94 //    Extended opcode 1: End of Sequence
95 //
96 //    Extended opcode 2: set Address to 0x80483a4
97 //    Advance Line by 23 to 24
98 //    Copy
99 //    Special opcode 202: advance Address by 14 to 0x80483b2 and Line by 1 to 25
100 //    Special opcode 76: advance Address by 5 to 0x80483b7 and Line by 1 to 26
101 //    Advance PC by 6 to 0x80483bd
102 //    Extended opcode 1: End of Sequence
103 //
104 // Instead of collecting runs of lines describing code that is not there,
105 // we try to recognize and drop them. Since the linker doesn't explicitly
106 // distinguish references to dropped sections from genuine references to
107 // code at address zero, we must use a heuristic. We have chosen:
108 //
109 // - If a line starts at address zero, omit it. (On the platforms
110 //   breakpad targets, it is extremely unlikely that there will be code
111 //   at address zero.)
112 //
113 // - If a line starts immediately after an omitted line, omit it too.
114 class DwarfLineToModule: public dwarf2reader::LineInfoHandler {
115  public:
116   // As the DWARF line info parser passes us line records, add source
117   // files to MODULE, and add all lines to the end of LINES. LINES
118   // need not be empty. If the parser hands us a zero-length line, we
119   // omit it. If the parser hands us a line that extends beyond the
120   // end of the address space, we clip it. It's up to our client to
121   // sort out which lines belong to which functions; we don't add them
122   // to any particular function in MODULE ourselves.
DwarfLineToModule(Module * module,const string & compilation_dir,vector<Module::Line> * lines)123   DwarfLineToModule(Module *module, const string& compilation_dir,
124                     vector<Module::Line> *lines)
125       : module_(module),
126         compilation_dir_(compilation_dir),
127         lines_(lines),
128         highest_file_number_(-1),
129         omitted_line_end_(0),
130         warned_bad_file_number_(false),
131         warned_bad_directory_number_(false) { }
132 
~DwarfLineToModule()133   ~DwarfLineToModule() { }
134 
135   void DefineDir(const string &name, uint32_t dir_num);
136   void DefineFile(const string &name, int32_t file_num,
137                   uint32_t dir_num, uint64_t mod_time,
138                   uint64_t length);
139   void AddLine(uint64_t address, uint64_t length,
140                uint32_t file_num, uint32_t line_num, uint32_t column_num);
141 
142  private:
143 
144   typedef std::map<uint32_t, string> DirectoryTable;
145   typedef std::map<uint32_t, Module::File *> FileTable;
146 
147   // The module we're contributing debugging info to. Owned by our
148   // client.
149   Module *module_;
150 
151   // The compilation directory for the current compilation unit whose
152   // lines are being accumulated.
153   string compilation_dir_;
154 
155   // The vector of lines we're accumulating. Owned by our client.
156   //
157   // In a Module, as in a breakpad symbol file, lines belong to
158   // specific functions, but DWARF simply assigns lines to addresses;
159   // one must infer the line/function relationship using the
160   // functions' beginning and ending addresses. So we can't add these
161   // to the appropriate function from module_ until we've read the
162   // function info as well. Instead, we accumulate lines here, and let
163   // whoever constructed this sort it all out.
164   vector<Module::Line> *lines_;
165 
166   // A table mapping directory numbers to paths.
167   DirectoryTable directories_;
168 
169   // A table mapping file numbers to Module::File pointers.
170   FileTable files_;
171 
172   // The highest file number we've seen so far, or -1 if we've seen
173   // none.  Used for dynamically defined file numbers.
174   int32_t highest_file_number_;
175 
176   // This is the ending address of the last line we omitted, or zero if we
177   // didn't omit the previous line. It is zero before we have received any
178   // AddLine calls.
179   uint64_t omitted_line_end_;
180 
181   // True if we've warned about:
182   bool warned_bad_file_number_; // bad file numbers
183   bool warned_bad_directory_number_; // bad directory numbers
184 };
185 
186 } // namespace google_breakpad
187 
188 #endif // COMMON_LINUX_DWARF_LINE_TO_MODULE_H
189