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//===-- Address.h -----------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLDB_CORE_ADDRESS_H
#define LLDB_CORE_ADDRESS_H
#include "lldb/lldb-defines.h"
#include "lldb/lldb-forward.h"
#include "lldb/lldb-private-enumerations.h"
#include "lldb/lldb-types.h"
#include <cstddef>
#include <cstdint>
namespace lldb_private {
class Block;
class CompileUnit;
class ExecutionContextScope;
class Function;
class SectionList;
class Stream;
class Symbol;
class SymbolContext;
class Target;
struct LineEntry;
/// \class Address Address.h "lldb/Core/Address.h"
/// A section + offset based address class.
///
/// The Address class allows addresses to be relative to a section that can
/// move during runtime due to images (executables, shared libraries, bundles,
/// frameworks) being loaded at different addresses than the addresses found
/// in the object file that represents them on disk. There are currently two
/// types of addresses for a section:
/// \li file addresses
/// \li load addresses
///
/// File addresses represent the virtual addresses that are in the "on disk"
/// object files. These virtual addresses are converted to be relative to
/// unique sections scoped to the object file so that when/if the addresses
/// slide when the images are loaded/unloaded in memory, we can easily track
/// these changes without having to update every object (compile unit ranges,
/// line tables, function address ranges, lexical block and inlined subroutine
/// address ranges, global and static variables) each time an image is loaded
/// or unloaded.
///
/// Load addresses represent the virtual addresses where each section ends up
/// getting loaded at runtime. Before executing a program, it is common for
/// all of the load addresses to be unresolved. When a DynamicLoader plug-in
/// receives notification that shared libraries have been loaded/unloaded, the
/// load addresses of the main executable and any images (shared libraries)
/// will be resolved/unresolved. When this happens, breakpoints that are in
/// one of these sections can be set/cleared.
class Address {
public:
/// Dump styles allow the Address::Dump(Stream *,DumpStyle) const function
/// to display Address contents in a variety of ways.
enum DumpStyle {
/// Invalid dump style.
DumpStyleInvalid,
/// Display as the section name + offset.
/// \code
/// // address for printf in libSystem.B.dylib as a section name + offset
/// libSystem.B.dylib.__TEXT.__text + 0x0005cfdf
/// \endcode
DumpStyleSectionNameOffset,
/// Display as the section pointer + offset (debug output).
/// \code
/// // address for printf in libSystem.B.dylib as a section pointer +
/// offset (lldb::Section *)0x35cc50 + 0x000000000005cfdf
/// \endcode
DumpStyleSectionPointerOffset,
/// Display as the file address (if any).
/// \code
/// // address for printf in libSystem.B.dylib as a file address
/// 0x000000000005dcff
/// \endcode
///
DumpStyleFileAddress,
/// Display as the file address with the module name prepended (if any).
/// \code
/// // address for printf in libSystem.B.dylib as a file address
/// libSystem.B.dylib[0x000000000005dcff]
/// \endcode
DumpStyleModuleWithFileAddress,
/// Display as the load address (if resolved).
/// \code
/// // address for printf in libSystem.B.dylib as a load address
/// 0x00007fff8306bcff
/// \endcode
DumpStyleLoadAddress,
/// Display the details about what an address resolves to. This can be
/// anything from a symbol context summary (module, function/symbol, and
/// file and line), to information about what the pointer points to if the
/// address is in a section (section of pointers, c strings, etc).
DumpStyleResolvedDescription,
DumpStyleResolvedDescriptionNoModule,
DumpStyleResolvedDescriptionNoFunctionArguments,
/// Elide the function name; display an offset into the current function.
/// Used primarily in disassembly symbolication
DumpStyleNoFunctionName,
/// Detailed symbol context information for an address for all symbol
/// context members.
DumpStyleDetailedSymbolContext,
/// Dereference a pointer at the current address and then lookup the
/// dereferenced address using DumpStyleResolvedDescription
DumpStyleResolvedPointerDescription
};
/// Default constructor.
///
/// Initialize with a invalid section (NULL) and an invalid offset
/// (LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS).
Address() : m_section_wp() {}
/// Copy constructor
///
/// Makes a copy of the another Address object \a rhs.
///
/// \param[in] rhs
/// A const Address object reference to copy.
Address(const Address &rhs)
: m_section_wp(rhs.m_section_wp), m_offset(rhs.m_offset) {}
/// Construct with a section pointer and offset.
///
/// Initialize the address with the supplied \a section and \a offset.
///
/// \param[in] section_sp
/// A section pointer to a valid lldb::Section, or NULL if the
/// address doesn't have a section or will get resolved later.
///
/// \param[in] offset
/// The offset in bytes into \a section.
Address(const lldb::SectionSP &section_sp, lldb::addr_t offset)
: m_section_wp(), // Don't init with section_sp in case section_sp is
// invalid (the weak_ptr will throw)
m_offset(offset) {
if (section_sp)
m_section_wp = section_sp;
}
/// Construct with a virtual address and section list.
///
/// Initialize and resolve the address with the supplied virtual address \a
/// file_addr.
///
/// \param[in] file_addr
/// A virtual file address.
///
/// \param[in] section_list
/// A list of sections, one of which may contain the \a file_addr.
Address(lldb::addr_t file_addr, const SectionList *section_list);
Address(lldb::addr_t abs_addr);
/// Assignment operator.
///
/// Copies the address value from another Address object \a rhs into \a this
/// object.
///
/// \param[in] rhs
/// A const Address object reference to copy.
///
/// \return
/// A const Address object reference to \a this.
const Address &operator=(const Address &rhs);
/// Clear the object's state.
///
/// Sets the section to an invalid value (NULL) and an invalid offset
/// (LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS).
void Clear() {
m_section_wp.reset();
m_offset = LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS;
}
/// Compare two Address objects.
///
/// \param[in] lhs
/// The Left Hand Side const Address object reference.
///
/// \param[in] rhs
/// The Right Hand Side const Address object reference.
///
/// \return
/// -1 if lhs < rhs
/// 0 if lhs == rhs
/// 1 if lhs > rhs
static int CompareFileAddress(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs);
static int CompareLoadAddress(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs,
Target *target);
static int CompareModulePointerAndOffset(const Address &lhs,
const Address &rhs);
// For use with std::map, std::multi_map
class ModulePointerAndOffsetLessThanFunctionObject {
public:
ModulePointerAndOffsetLessThanFunctionObject() = default;
bool operator()(const Address &a, const Address &b) const {
return Address::CompareModulePointerAndOffset(a, b) < 0;
}
};
/// Dump a description of this object to a Stream.
///
/// Dump a description of the contents of this object to the supplied stream
/// \a s. There are many ways to display a section offset based address, and
/// \a style lets the user choose.
///
/// \param[in] s
/// The stream to which to dump the object description.
///
/// \param[in] style
/// The display style for the address.
///
/// \param[in] fallback_style
/// The display style for the address.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if the address was able to be displayed.
/// File and load addresses may be unresolved and it may not be
/// possible to display a valid value, \b false will be returned
/// in such cases.
///
/// \see Address::DumpStyle
bool Dump(Stream *s, ExecutionContextScope *exe_scope, DumpStyle style,
DumpStyle fallback_style = DumpStyleInvalid,
uint32_t addr_byte_size = UINT32_MAX) const;
AddressClass GetAddressClass() const;
/// Get the file address.
///
/// If an address comes from a file on disk that has section relative
/// addresses, then it has a virtual address that is relative to unique
/// section in the object file.
///
/// \return
/// The valid file virtual address, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if
/// the address doesn't have a file virtual address (image is
/// from memory only with no representation on disk).
lldb::addr_t GetFileAddress() const;
/// Get the load address.
///
/// If an address comes from a file on disk that has section relative
/// addresses, then it has a virtual address that is relative to unique
/// section in the object file. Sections get resolved at runtime by
/// DynamicLoader plug-ins as images (executables and shared libraries) get
/// loaded/unloaded. If a section is loaded, then the load address can be
/// resolved.
///
/// \return
/// The valid load virtual address, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if
/// the address is currently not loaded.
lldb::addr_t GetLoadAddress(Target *target) const;
/// Get the load address as a callable code load address.
///
/// This function will first resolve its address to a load address. Then, if
/// the address turns out to be in code address, return the load address
/// that would be required to call or return to. The address might have
/// extra bits set (bit zero will be set to Thumb functions for an ARM
/// target) that are required when changing the program counter to setting a
/// return address.
///
/// \return
/// The valid load virtual address, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if
/// the address is currently not loaded.
lldb::addr_t GetCallableLoadAddress(Target *target,
bool is_indirect = false) const;
/// Get the load address as an opcode load address.
///
/// This function will first resolve its address to a load address. Then, if
/// the address turns out to be in code address, return the load address for
/// an opcode. This address object might have extra bits set (bit zero will
/// be set to Thumb functions for an
/// ARM target) that are required for changing the program counter
/// and this function will remove any bits that are intended for these
/// special purposes. The result of this function can be used to safely
/// write a software breakpoint trap to memory.
///
/// \return
/// The valid load virtual address with extra callable bits
/// removed, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if the address is currently
/// not loaded.
lldb::addr_t GetOpcodeLoadAddress(
Target *target,
AddressClass addr_class = AddressClass::eInvalid) const;
/// Get the section relative offset value.
///
/// \return
/// The current offset, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if this address
/// doesn't contain a valid offset.
lldb::addr_t GetOffset() const { return m_offset; }
/// Check if an address is section offset.
///
/// When converting a virtual file or load address into a section offset
/// based address, we often need to know if, given a section list, if the
/// address was able to be converted to section offset. This function
/// returns true if the current value contained in this object is section
/// offset based.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if the address has a valid section and
/// offset, \b false otherwise.
bool IsSectionOffset() const {
return IsValid() && (GetSection().get() != nullptr);
}
/// Check if the object state is valid.
///
/// A valid Address object contains either a section pointer and
/// offset (for section offset based addresses), or just a valid offset
/// (for absolute addresses that have no section).
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if the offset is valid, \b false
/// otherwise.
bool IsValid() const { return m_offset != LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS; }
/// Get the memory cost of this object.
///
/// \return
/// The number of bytes that this object occupies in memory.
size_t MemorySize() const;
/// Resolve a file virtual address using a section list.
///
/// Given a list of sections, attempt to resolve \a addr as an offset into
/// one of the file sections.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if \a addr was able to be resolved, \b false
/// otherwise.
bool ResolveAddressUsingFileSections(lldb::addr_t addr,
const SectionList *sections);
/// Resolve this address to its containing function and optionally get
/// that function's address range.
///
/// \param[out] sym_ctx
/// The symbol context describing the function in which this address lies
///
/// \parm[out] addr_range_ptr
/// Pointer to the AddressRange to fill in with the function's address
/// range. Caller may pass null if they don't need the address range.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b false if the function/symbol could not be resolved
/// or if the address range was requested and could not be resolved;
/// returns \b true otherwise.
bool ResolveFunctionScope(lldb_private::SymbolContext &sym_ctx,
lldb_private::AddressRange *addr_range_ptr = nullptr);
/// Set the address to represent \a load_addr.
///
/// The address will attempt to find a loaded section within \a target that
/// contains \a load_addr. If successful, this address object will have a
/// valid section and offset. Else this address object will have no section
/// (NULL) and the offset will be \a load_addr.
///
/// \param[in] load_addr
/// A load address from a current process.
///
/// \param[in] target
/// The target to use when trying resolve the address into
/// a section + offset. The Target's SectionLoadList object
/// is used to resolve the address.
///
/// \param[in] allow_section_end
/// If true, treat an address pointing to the end of the module as
/// belonging to that module.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if the load address was resolved to be
/// section/offset, \b false otherwise. It is often ok for an
/// address to not resolve to a section in a module, this often
/// happens for JIT'ed code, or any load addresses on the stack
/// or heap.
bool SetLoadAddress(lldb::addr_t load_addr, Target *target,
bool allow_section_end = false);
bool SetOpcodeLoadAddress(
lldb::addr_t load_addr, Target *target,
AddressClass addr_class = AddressClass::eInvalid,
bool allow_section_end = false);
bool SetCallableLoadAddress(lldb::addr_t load_addr, Target *target);
/// Get accessor for the module for this address.
///
/// \return
/// Returns the Module pointer that this address is an offset
/// in, or NULL if this address doesn't belong in a module, or
/// isn't resolved yet.
lldb::ModuleSP GetModule() const;
/// Get const accessor for the section.
///
/// \return
/// Returns the const lldb::Section pointer that this address is an
/// offset in, or NULL if this address is absolute.
lldb::SectionSP GetSection() const { return m_section_wp.lock(); }
/// Set accessor for the offset.
///
/// \param[in] offset
/// A new offset value for this object.
///
/// \return
/// Returns \b true if the offset changed, \b false otherwise.
bool SetOffset(lldb::addr_t offset) {
bool changed = m_offset != offset;
m_offset = offset;
return changed;
}
void SetRawAddress(lldb::addr_t addr) {
m_section_wp.reset();
m_offset = addr;
}
bool Slide(int64_t offset) {
if (m_offset != LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS) {
m_offset += offset;
return true;
}
return false;
}
/// Set accessor for the section.
///
/// \param[in] section_sp
/// A new lldb::Section pointer to use as the section base. Can
/// be NULL for absolute addresses that are not relative to
/// any section.
void SetSection(const lldb::SectionSP &section_sp) {
m_section_wp = section_sp;
}
void ClearSection() { m_section_wp.reset(); }
/// Reconstruct a symbol context from an address.
///
/// This class doesn't inherit from SymbolContextScope because many address
/// objects have short lifespans. Address objects that are section offset
/// can reconstruct their symbol context by looking up the address in the
/// module found in the section.
///
/// \see SymbolContextScope::CalculateSymbolContext(SymbolContext*)
uint32_t CalculateSymbolContext(SymbolContext *sc,
lldb::SymbolContextItem resolve_scope =
lldb::eSymbolContextEverything) const;
lldb::ModuleSP CalculateSymbolContextModule() const;
CompileUnit *CalculateSymbolContextCompileUnit() const;
Function *CalculateSymbolContextFunction() const;
Block *CalculateSymbolContextBlock() const;
Symbol *CalculateSymbolContextSymbol() const;
bool CalculateSymbolContextLineEntry(LineEntry &line_entry) const;
// Returns true if the section should be valid, but isn't because the shared
// pointer to the section can't be reconstructed from a weak pointer that
// contains a valid weak reference to a section. Returns false if the section
// weak pointer has no reference to a section, or if the section is still
// valid
bool SectionWasDeleted() const;
protected:
// Member variables.
lldb::SectionWP m_section_wp; ///< The section for the address, can be NULL.
lldb::addr_t m_offset = LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS; ///< Offset into section if \a
///< m_section_wp is valid...
// Returns true if the m_section_wp once had a reference to a valid section
// shared pointer, but no longer does. This can happen if we have an address
// from a module that gets unloaded and deleted. This function should only be
// called if GetSection() returns an empty shared pointer and you want to
// know if this address used to have a valid section.
bool SectionWasDeletedPrivate() const;
};
// NOTE: Be careful using this operator. It can correctly compare two
// addresses from the same Module correctly. It can't compare two addresses
// from different modules in any meaningful way, but it will compare the module
// pointers.
//
// To sum things up:
// - works great for addresses within the same module - it works for addresses
// across multiple modules, but don't expect the
// address results to make much sense
//
// This basically lets Address objects be used in ordered collection classes.
bool operator<(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs);
bool operator>(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs);
bool operator==(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs);
bool operator!=(const Address &lhs, const Address &rhs);
} // namespace lldb_private
#endif // LLDB_CORE_ADDRESS_H