forked from OSchip/llvm-project
[lldb] Ignore non-address bits in "memory find" arguments
This removes the non-address bits before we try to use the addresses. Meaning that when results are shown, those results won't show non-address bits either. This follows what "memory read" has done. On the grounds that non-address bits are a property of a pointer, not the memory pointed to. I've added testing and merged the find and read tests into one file. Note that there are no API side changes because "memory find" does not have an equivalent API call. Reviewed By: omjavaid Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117299
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@ -1032,6 +1032,12 @@ protected:
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return false;
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}
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ABISP abi = m_exe_ctx.GetProcessPtr()->GetABI();
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if (abi) {
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low_addr = abi->FixDataAddress(low_addr);
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high_addr = abi->FixDataAddress(high_addr);
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}
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if (high_addr <= low_addr) {
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result.AppendError(
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"starting address must be smaller than ending address");
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@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
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"""
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Test that "memory read" removes non address bits from
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memory read arguments.
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Test that "memory read" and "memory find" remove non address bits from
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address arguments.
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These tests use the top byte ignore feature of AArch64. Which Linux
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always enables.
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"""
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@ -17,10 +20,7 @@ class AArch64LinuxTaggedMemoryReadTestCase(TestBase):
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NO_DEBUG_INFO_TESTCASE = True
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# AArch64 Linux always enables top byte ignore
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@skipUnlessArch("aarch64")
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@skipUnlessPlatform(["linux"])
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def test_tagged_memory_read(self):
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def setup_test(self):
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self.build()
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self.runCmd("file " + self.getBuildArtifact("a.out"), CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET)
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@ -37,6 +37,11 @@ class AArch64LinuxTaggedMemoryReadTestCase(TestBase):
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substrs=['stopped',
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'stop reason = breakpoint'])
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@skipUnlessArch("aarch64")
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@skipUnlessPlatform(["linux"])
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def test_tagged_memory_read(self):
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self.setup_test()
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# If we do not remove non address bits, this can fail in two ways.
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# 1. We attempt to read much more than 16 bytes, probably more than
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# the default 1024 byte read size. Which will error.
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@ -53,3 +58,26 @@ class AArch64LinuxTaggedMemoryReadTestCase(TestBase):
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# Would fail if we don't remove non address bits because 0x56... > 0x34...
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self.expect("memory read ptr2 ptr1+16", patterns=[tagged_addr_pattern], matching=False)
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self.expect("memory read", patterns=[tagged_addr_pattern], matching=False)
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@skipUnlessArch("aarch64")
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@skipUnlessPlatform(["linux"])
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def test_tagged_memory_find(self):
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self.setup_test()
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# If memory find doesn't remove non-address bits one of two
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# things happen.
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# 1. It tries to search a gigantic amount of memory.
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# We're not going to test for this because a failure
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# would take a very long time and perhaps even find the
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# target value randomly.
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# 2. It thinks high address <= low address, which we check below.
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self.runCmd("memory find -s '?' ptr2 ptr1+32")
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self.assertTrue(self.res.Succeeded())
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out = self.res.GetOutput()
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# memory find does not fail when it doesn't find the data.
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# First check we actually got something.
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self.assertRegexpMatches(out, "data found at location: 0x[0-9A-Fa-f]+")
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# Then that the location found does not display the tag bits.
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self.assertNotRegexpMatches(out, "data found at location: 0x(34|56)[0-9A-Fa-f]+")
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@ -5,11 +5,15 @@ static char *set_non_address_bits(char *ptr, size_t tag) {
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return (char *)((size_t)ptr | (tag << 56));
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}
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int main(int argc, char const *argv[]) {
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char buf[32];
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// Global to zero init
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char buf[32];
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int main(int argc, char const *argv[]) {
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char *ptr1 = set_non_address_bits(buf, 0x34);
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char *ptr2 = set_non_address_bits(buf, 0x56);
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// Target value for "memory find"
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buf[15] = '?';
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return 0; // Set break point at this line.
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}
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