Date: Thu, 07 Nov 2019 05:56:05 +0000 From: bugzilla-noreply@freebsd.org To: bugs@FreeBSD.org Subject: [Bug 241773] lldb does not display external variables properly. Message-ID: <bug-241773-227@https.bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/>
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https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=241773 Bug ID: 241773 Summary: lldb does not display external variables properly. Product: Base System Version: 12.0-RELEASE Hardware: Any OS: Any Status: New Severity: Affects Only Me Priority: --- Component: bin Assignee: bugs@FreeBSD.org Reporter: bc979@lafn.org Here is an issue that has plagued me for some time: Using FreeBSD 12.0: testlib.c: #include <sys/stat.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include <strings.h> char id[4]; int sock; void testfunc() { struct stat sb; stat("testlib.c", &sb); strcpy (id, "aa"); sock = 5; printf("Size of testlib.c is %i bytes.\n", (int)sb.st_size); } testprog.c: #include <stdio.h> extern char id[4]; extern int sock; void testfunc(void); int main(int argc, char **argv) { testfunc(); printf ("id = %s\n", id); printf ("sock = %d\n", sock); return 0; } Makefile: all: clean testprog run testprog: cc -Wall -g -c -fPIC -o testlib.o testlib.c cc -shared -Wl,-export-dynamic -o testlib.so testlib.o cc -Wall -g -o testprog ./testlib.so testprog.c clean: rm -f testlib.o testlib.so testprog run: ./testprog Using make: rm -f testlib.o testlib.so testprog cc -Wall -g -c -fPIC -o testlib.o testlib.c cc -shared -Wl,-export-dynamic -o testlib.so testlib.o cc -Wall -g -o testprog ./testlib.so testprog.c ./testprog Size of testlib.c is 268 bytes. id = aa sock = 5 Running lldb: master# lldb testprog (lldb) target create "testprog" Current executable set to 'testprog' (x86_64). (lldb) b main Breakpoint 1: where = testprog`main + 22 at testprog.c:8, address = 0x0000000000201366 (lldb) r Process 34787 launching Process 34787 launched: '/home/doug/zzz/testprog' (x86_64) Process 34787 stopped * thread #1, name = 'testprog', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1 frame #0: 0x0000000000201366 testprog`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffeb38) at testprog.c:8 5 6 void testfunc(void); 7 int main(int argc, char **argv) { -> 8 testfunc(); 9 printf ("id = %s\n", id); 10 printf ("sock = %d\n", sock); 11 return 0; (lldb) n Size of testlib.c is 268 bytes. Process 34787 stopped * thread #1, name = 'testprog', stop reason = step over frame #0: 0x000000000020137f testprog`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffeb38) at testprog.c:9 6 void testfunc(void); 7 int main(int argc, char **argv) { 8 testfunc(); -> 9 printf ("id = %s\n", id); 10 printf ("sock = %d\n", sock); 11 return 0; 12 } (lldb) p id error: use of undeclared identifier 'id' (lldb) p sock error: Couldn't materialize: couldn't get the value of variable sock: testlib.so[0x4004] can't be resolved, testlib.so is not currently loaded error: errored out in DoExecute, couldn't PrepareToExecuteJITExpression (lldb) c id = aa sock = 5 Process 34787 resuming You notice that lldb cannot display values for id or sock. It even gives quite different messages about them. However the program can access the values and it prints them out properly. Why can't lldb see them? How can that be corrected? What is even more interesting is that in the real application there are quite a few of these global variables and lldb can display some of them, just not all. Possibly it has to do with the specific names as DATE generally works. sock and id never seem to work. Now using FreeBSD 12.1: We now have 12.1 with an updated compiler and linker. Things have changed. I added a bit to testprog.c: master# more testprog.c #include <stdio.h> extern char id[4]; extern int sock; int unknown; void testfunc(void); int main(int argc, char **argv) { testfunc(); unknown = 9; printf ("id (%x) = %s\n", (int)&id, id); printf ("sock(%x) = %d\n", (int)&sock, sock); printf ("unknown (%x) = %d\n", (int)&unknown, unknown); return 0; } running it yields: master# ./testprog Size of testlib.c is 268 bytes. id (20400c) = aa sock(204010) = 5 unknown (204008) = 9 That appears to be correct. Everything worked. However, with lldb, instead of error messages I get wrong values: master# lldb testprog (lldb) target create "testprog" Current executable set to 'testprog' (x86_64). (lldb) b main Breakpoint 1: where = testprog`main + 22 at testprog.c:9:3, address = 0x00000000002012f6 (lldb) r Process 6039 launching Process 6039 launched: '/home/doug/zzz/testprog' (x86_64) Process 6039 stopped * thread #1, name = 'testprog', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1 frame #0: 0x00000000002012f6 testprog`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffeb38) at testprog.c:9:3 6 7 void testfunc(void); 8 int main(int argc, char **argv) { -> 9 testfunc(); 10 unknown = 9; 11 printf ("id (%x) = %s\n", (int)&id, id); 12 printf ("sock(%x) = %d\n", (int)&sock, sock); (lldb) n Size of testlib.c is 268 bytes. Process 6039 stopped * thread #1, name = 'testprog', stop reason = step over frame #0: 0x0000000000201307 testprog`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffeb38) at testprog.c:10:11 7 void testfunc(void); 8 int main(int argc, char **argv) { 9 testfunc(); -> 10 unknown = 9; 11 printf ("id (%x) = %s\n", (int)&id, id); 12 printf ("sock(%x) = %d\n", (int)&sock, sock); 13 printf ("unknown (%x) = %d\n", (int)&unknown, unknown); (lldb) Process 6039 stopped * thread #1, name = 'testprog', stop reason = step over frame #0: 0x0000000000201312 testprog`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffeb38) at testprog.c:11:3 8 int main(int argc, char **argv) { 9 testfunc(); 10 unknown = 9; -> 11 printf ("id (%x) = %s\n", (int)&id, id); 12 printf ("sock(%x) = %d\n", (int)&sock, sock); 13 printf ("unknown (%x) = %d\n", (int)&unknown, unknown); 14 return 0; (lldb) p id (char [4]) $0 = "" (lldb) p &id (char (*)[4]) $1 = 0x000000080024d000 (lldb) p unknown (int) $2 = 9 (lldb) p &unknown (int *) $3 = 0x0000000000204008 (lldb) For the variable unknown lldb displays the correct address and value. For id and sock, it displays the wrong address and the value at the wrong address. The correct values are in the proper addresses: x 0x204008 0x00204008: 09 00 00 00 61 61 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ....aa.......... -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.home | help
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