Hi Mr Modra First, thanks for replying. Good thing you are available and can explain things. Second, I tried to run the test suite but… no Makefile, no documentation on how to run these tests… Impossible to continue unless you would point me to some documentation about the tests. Alternatively you could just tell me which test fails and WHY this change is needed. Third, basically when looking if an address is between two borders we include the lower limit and exclude the upper limit. If you want to know if a is between Addrx and Addrx+6 you will use Addrx , Addrx+1 until Addrx+5, excluding Addrx+6. This is because we use zero based array indices in C. This is obvious to you of course. Fourth, the first two loops of « get_frag_from_reloc » use this principle. What bothers me is that with no justification the valid address range is extended by one in the third. These relocations (stored in « reloc_list » ) are created by « create_note_reloc » . The two calls to that function are in « maybe_generate_build_notes » The address of the note is composed of the addition of two numbers, note_offset and desc2_offset, and in those calls to « create_note_reloc » I see a division by 2 that *COULD* explain the behavior you programmed since it is an integer division that rounds towards zero. But if that is the case, why not adding 1 to the division instead of running an additional loop with <= ??? In any case it would be nice if we added some comments to the code to explain why it is there so people reading the code do not pose unwanted questions! :-) Jacob > Le 13 juil. 2023 à 00:33, Alan Modra a écrit : > > On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 05:12:13PM +0200, jacob navia wrote: >> Consider this code: >> >> 1202 static fragS * get_frag_for_reloc (fragS *last_frag, >> 1203 const segment_info_type *seginfo, >> 1204 const struct reloc_list *r) >> 1205 { >> 1206 fragS *f; >> 1207 >> 1208 for (f = last_frag; f != NULL; f = f->fr_next) >> 1209 if (f->fr_address <= r->u.b.r.address >> 1210 && r->u.b.r.address < f->fr_address + f->fr_fix) >> 1211 return f; >> 1212 >> 1213 for (f = seginfo->frchainP->frch_root; f != NULL; f = f->fr_next) >> 1214 if (f->fr_address <= r->u.b.r.address >> 1215 && r->u.b.r.address < f->fr_address + f->fr_fix) >> 1216 return f; >> 1217 >> 1218 for (f = seginfo->frchainP->frch_root; f != NULL; f = f->fr_next) >> 1219 if (f->fr_address <= r->u.b.r.address >> 1220 && r->u.b.r.address <= f->fr_address + f->fr_fix) >> 1221 return f; >> 1222 >> 1223 as_bad_where (r->file, r->line, >> 1224 _("reloc not within (fixed part of) section")); >> 1225 return NULL; >> 1226 } >> >> This function consists of 3 loops: 1208-1211, 1213 to 1216 and 1218 to 1221. >> >> Lines 1213 - 1216 are ALMOST identical to lines 1218 to 1221. The ONLY difference that I can see is that the less in line 1215 is replaced by a less equal in line 1220. >> >> But… why? >> >> This code is searching the fragment that contains a given address in between the start and end addresses of the frags in question, either in the fragment list given by last_frag or in the list given by seginfo. >> >> To know if a fragment is OK you should start with the given address and stop one memory address BEFORE the limit given by fr_address + f->fr_fix. That is what the first two loops are doing. The third loop repeats the second one and changes the less to less equal, so if fr_address+fr_fix is one MORE than the address it will still pass. >> >> Why it is doing that? > > Take out the third loop and run the testsuite. Does anything regress? > >> If that code is correct, it is obvious that we could merge the second and third loops and put a <= in t he second one and erase the third one… UNLESS priority should be given to matches that are less and not less equal, > > That is exactly what needs to happen. > >> what seems incomprehensible … to me. >> >> This change was introduced on Aug 18th 2011 by Mr Alan Modra with the rather terse comment: "(get_frag_for_reloc): New function. ». There are no further comments in the code at all. > > Yes, I'm responsible for lots of suspicious code, but this isn't the > full history of get_frag_for_reloc. > >> This code is run after all relocations are fixed just before the software writes them out. The code is in file « write.c » in the gas directory. Note that this code runs through ALL relocations lists each time for EACH relocation, so it is quite expensive. In general the list data structure is not really optimal here but that is another story. > > The code does not run through all relocations, just those created with > the .reloc directive. > >> Thanks in advance for your help. >> >> Jacob > > -- > Alan Modra > Australia Development Lab, IBM