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From: <lifang_xia@linux.alibaba.com>
To: "'Andrew Burgess'" <aburgess@redhat.com>,
	"'Lifang Xia'" <lifang_xia@c-sky.com>,
	<gdb-patches@sourceware.org>
Subject: 答复: 答复: [PATCH] [RISC-V]: Handling optimized prologue
Date: Wed, 2 Mar 2022 19:37:56 +0800	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <003c01d82e29$f69cd600$e3d68200$@linux.alibaba.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <877d9czmnc.fsf@redhat.com>

> >>
> >> I assume it's the bnez that's causing the problem for the prologue
> >> scan
> > here?
> >>
> >> Not that I really understand what that instruction is about, it
> >> appears to
> > be
> >> branching to the next instruction.  I wonder if this objdump output
> >> is for
> > the
> >> object file, rather than the executable?  I'm guessing the bnez has a
> > reloc
> >> which points at, maybe, the ret at 0x100a8?
> >>
> >> I wonder if a better solution in this case would be to allow the
> >> prologue
> > scan
> >> to skip over forward branches within the prologue, maybe with the
> > limitation
> >> that the destination has to be within the function bounds?
> >>
> >
> > Yes, You are right. bnez cause the prologue scan failed.
> > It's one of the cases I have met. As mentioned before, The optimizer
> > of compiler might shove anything to the prologue.
> > It could be multiple instructions, shift instructions, condition
> > branches ...
> > We can't handle all of instructions from  the ISA specs or vendor
> > extensions here.
> >
> > Actually, if cache is not nullptr, that means we need to build the
> > frame information from prologue. Before the  loop, we get the base
> > address and the prologue_end,  traversing all the prologue is not a
> > bad choice to build the frame(if cache is not nullptr).
> 
> Except right now, if we declare that we know something based on the prologue
> then we can be reasonably sure that what we claim to know is true.
> 
> Under your proposal we would claim to know things for which we actually have
> no knowledge of whether it is true or not, e.g. if some previously unknown
> instruction has adjusted the contents of a register in some way, but we ignore
> the adjustment and just claim to know the previous register contents anyway.
> 
> This then raises the question, would we prefer GDB to say "I don't know", if it's
> not sure, or say "The answer is ....", when that might not be true?
> 
> Are there other targets that do this aggressive prologue scanning?

At first, my idea was that mark the action of storing RA as a flag_could_be_stop and we can stop the scanning  if flag_could_be_stop  or  "cache is nullptr".
But it still not a best choice, it might lost some registers' value which are saved in this frame.
When I saw ARM/NDS32 do this, and I followed them. 

> 
> An alternative might be to offer a new setting, which is off by default, but which
> allows for the aggressive prologue scanning you suggest.
> However, I think such an option would have to include a suitable warning to
> indicate that some prologue instructions might be ignored.

It's not a good choice. This phenomenon occurs frequently when we debug an optimized program.

> 
> I still think you should consider just adding support for forward branches to the
> prologue scanner.  Though any instruction _could_ be moved into the prologue,
> I suspect (guess) the number that actually _do_ get moved up is pretty small.

I thought about doing this, but after discussing it with my colleagues who maintaining the compilers.
There are many instructions that may appear here, and it may not be possible to list them all.

> 
> A different strategy might be to handle unknown instructions based on their
> instruction class (R, I, S, etc).  If the instruction is only touching registers that we
> don't need to preserve over the unwind, or is touching registers for which the
> previous value has already been saved, then maybe we don't need to care about
> the actual meaning of the instruction, we can just mark the destination register
> as unknown and move on.  I think this sounds much closer to what you want.

I can try to find  a way to solve it with your idea. But it may take a few of days.
 
Thanks a lot,
Lifang
> 
> Thanks,
> Andrew
> 
> 
> 
> >
> >> >
> >> > gdb/
> >> > 	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_scan_prologue): Keep scaning if cache is not
> >> NULL.
> >> > ---
> >> >  gdb/riscv-tdep.c | 10 +++++++++-
> >> >  1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
> >> >
> >> > diff --git a/gdb/riscv-tdep.c b/gdb/riscv-tdep.c index
> >> > 886996c..e46d441 100644
> >> > --- a/gdb/riscv-tdep.c
> >> > +++ b/gdb/riscv-tdep.c
> >> > @@ -1987,7 +1987,15 @@ riscv_scan_prologue (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
> >> >        else
> >> >  	{
> >> >  	  end_prologue_addr = cur_pc;
> >> > -	  break;
> >> > +
> >> > +	  /* The optimizer might shove anything into the prologue, if
> >> > +	     we build up cache (cache != NULL) from scanning prologue,
> >> > +	     we just skip what we don't recognize and scan further to
> >> > +	     make cache as complete as possible.  However, if we skip
> >> > +	     prologue, we'll stop immediately on unrecognized
> >> > +	     instruction.  */
> >> > +	  if (cache == NULL)
> >>
> >> Use nullptr not NULL please.
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Andrew
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> > +	    break;
> >> >  	}
> >> >      }
> >> >
> >> > --
> >> > 2.7.4


      reply	other threads:[~2022-03-02 11:38 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2022-03-01  7:32 Lifang Xia
2022-03-01 10:33 ` Andrew Burgess
2022-03-02  2:01   ` 答复: " lifang_xia
2022-03-02 10:14     ` Andrew Burgess
2022-03-02 11:37       ` lifang_xia [this message]

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