Date: Thu, 22 Oct 2015 14:43:36 +0200 From: Mattia Rossi <mattia.rossi.mailinglists@gmail.com> To: Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-arm <freebsd-arm@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: CC core dumping with CLANG 3.7 on armv5 - DREAMPLUG Message-ID: <5628D9F8.8040206@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <5628D958.4060904@gmail.com> References: <5626144F.9060003@gmail.com> <5628873F.7050509@gmail.com> <20151022081551.GB2257@kib.kiev.ua> <5628B0B0.8040804@gmail.com> <20151022111407.GD2257@kib.kiev.ua> <5628D958.4060904@gmail.com>
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Am 22.10.2015 um 14:40 schrieb Mattia Rossi: > > > Am 22.10.2015 um 13:14 schrieb Konstantin Belousov: >> On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 11:47:28AM +0200, Mattia Rossi wrote: >>>> You may disassemble the instruction at the address, and print the >>>> content >>>> of registers: >>>> (gdb) disassemble *0x01eb0868-8,0x01eb0868+8 >>>> (gdb) info registers >>>> >>>> If the cause of your issue is weird codegeneration on ARMv5, it >>>> might be >>>> seen from the data above. On the other hand, this would not help >>>> if the >>>> issue is algorithmic. I am afraid there is not much more to suggest. >>> (gdb) disassemble *0x01eb0868-8,0x01eb0868+8 >>> No function contains specified address. >> Apparently correct syntax is >> disassemble 0x01eb0868-8 0x01eb0868+8 > (gdb) bt > #0 0x01eb0868 in ?? () > (gdb) disassemble 0x01eb0868-8 0x01eb0868+8 > Dump of assembler code from 0x1eb0860 to 0x1eb0870: > 0x01eb0860: add r12, r12, #1 ; 0x1 > 0x01eb0864: and r7, r0, r3 > 0x01eb0868: ldr r1, [r10, r7, lsl #2] > 0x01eb086c: cmp r1, #0 ; 0x0 > End of assembler dump. > (gdb) info registers > r0 0x1e53b 124219 > r1 0x6a 106 > r2 0xc3c3c3c6 -1010580538 > r3 0x5a5a5a59 1515870809 > r4 0x3 3 > r5 0x1fd9f83 33398659 > r6 0x1e53b 124219 > r7 0x4019 16409 > r8 0x22a1708c 581005452 > r9 0xffffffff -1 > r10 0x5a5a5a5a 1515870810 > r11 0xbfbfeb70 -1077941392 > r12 0x1 1 > sp 0xbfbfeb48 -1077941432 > lr 0x8f5c 36700 > pc 0x1eb0868 32180328 > fps 0x0 0 > cpsr 0x60000010 1610612752 > (gdb) > > Still I can't tell anything from that :-/ - way too low level for me Btw. I'm currently using a helloworld program for testing: root@dreamplug:~ # cat helloworld.c /* Hello World program */ #include<stdio.h> main() { printf("Hello World"); } But the problem is independent of the input file
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