[1b34b87] | 1 | \chapter{\CFA Demangler} \label{demangler} |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | \section{Introduction} |
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| 4 | While \CFA is a translator for additional features that C does not support, |
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| 5 | all the extensions compiled down to C code. As a result, the executable file |
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| 6 | marks the DWARF tag \verb|DW_AT_language| with the fixed hexadecimal value for |
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| 7 | the C language. Because it is possible to have one frame in C code and another |
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| 8 | frame in Assembly code, GDB encodes a language flag for each frame. \CFA adds |
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| 9 | to this list, as it is essential to know when a stack frame contains mangled |
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| 10 | names versus C and assembler unmangled names. Thus, GDB must be told \CFA is a |
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| 11 | distinct source-language. |
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| 12 | |
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| 13 | \section{Design Constraints} |
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| 14 | Most GDB targets use the DWARF format. The GDB DWARF reader initializes all |
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| 15 | the appropriate information read from the DIE structures in object or |
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| 16 | executable files, as mentioned in Chapter \ref{GDB}. However, GDB currently |
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| 17 | does not understand the new DWARF language-code assigned to the language \CFA, |
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| 18 | so the DWARF reader must be updated to recognize \CFA. |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | Additionally, when a user enters a name into GDB, GDB needs to lookup if the |
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| 21 | name exists in the program. However, different languages may have different |
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| 22 | hierarchical structure for dynamic scope, so an implementation for nonlocal |
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| 23 | symbol lookup is required, so an appropriate name lookup routine must be added. |
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| 24 | |
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| 25 | \section{Implementation} |
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| 26 | Most of the implementation work discussed below is from reading GDB's internals |
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| 27 | wiki page and understanding how other languages are supported in GDB \cite{Reference5}. |
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| 28 | |
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| 29 | A new entry is added to GDB's list of language definition in |
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| 30 | \verb|gdb/defs.h|. Hence, a new instance of type \verb|struct language_def| |
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| 31 | must be created to add a language definition for \CFA. This instance is the |
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| 32 | entry point for new functions that are only applicable to \CFA. These new |
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| 33 | functions are invoked by GDB during debugging if there are operations that are |
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| 34 | applicable specifically to \CFA. For instance, \CFA can implement its own |
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| 35 | symbol lookup function for non-local variables because \CFA can have a |
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| 36 | different scope hierarchy. The final step for registering \CFA in GDB, as a |
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| 37 | new source language, is adding the instance of type \verb|struct language_def| |
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| 38 | into the list of language definitions, which is found in |
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| 39 | \verb|gdb/language.h|. This setup is shown in listing \ref{cfa-lang-def}. |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | \begin{figure} |
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| 42 | \begin{lstlisting}[style=C++, caption={Language definition declaration for |
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| 43 | \CFA}, label={cfa-lang-def}, basicstyle=\small] |
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| 44 | // In gdb/language.h |
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| 45 | extern const struct language_defn cforall_language_defn; |
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| 46 | |
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| 47 | // In gdb/language.c |
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| 48 | static const struct language_defn *languages[] = { |
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| 49 | &unknown_language_defn, |
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| 50 | &auto_language_defn, |
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| 51 | &c_language_defn, |
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| 52 | ... |
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| 53 | &cforall_language_defn, |
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| 54 | ... |
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| 55 | } |
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| 56 | |
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| 57 | // In gdb/cforall-lang.c |
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| 58 | extern const struct language_defn cforall_language_defn = { |
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| 59 | "cforall", /* Language name */ |
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| 60 | "CForAll", /* Natural name */ |
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| 61 | language_cforall, |
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| 62 | range_check_off, |
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| 63 | case_sensitive_on, |
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| 64 | ... |
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| 65 | cp_lookup_symbol_nonlocal, /* lookup_symbol_nonlocal */ |
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| 66 | ... |
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| 67 | cforall_demangle, /* Language specific demangler */ |
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| 68 | cforall_sniff_from_mangled_name, |
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| 69 | .. |
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| 70 | } |
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| 71 | \end{lstlisting} |
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| 72 | \end{figure} |
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| 73 | |
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| 74 | The next step is updating the DWARF reader, so the reader can translate the |
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| 75 | DWARF code to an enum value defined above. However, this assumes that the |
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| 76 | language has an assigned language code. The language code is a hexadecimal |
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| 77 | literal value assigned to a particular language, which is maintained by |
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| 78 | GCC. For \CFA, the hexadecimal value \verb|0x0025| is added to |
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| 79 | \verb|include/dwarf2.h| to denote \CFA, which is shown in listing |
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| 80 | \ref{cfa-dwarf}. |
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| 81 | \begin{lstlisting}[style=C++, caption={DWARF language code for \CFA}, |
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| 82 | label={cfa-dwarf}, basicstyle=\small] |
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| 83 | // In include/dwarf2.h |
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| 84 | enum dwarf_source_language { // Source language names and codes. |
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| 85 | DW_LANG_C89 = 0x0001, |
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| 86 | ... |
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| 87 | DW_LANG_CForAll = 0x0025, |
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| 88 | } |
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| 89 | \end{lstlisting} |
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| 90 | |
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| 91 | Once the demangler implementation goes into the \verb|libiberty| directory |
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| 92 | along with other demanglers, the demangler can be called by updating the |
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| 93 | language definition defined in listing \ref{cfa-lang-def} with the entry point |
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| 94 | of the \CFA demangler, and adding a check if the current demangling style is |
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| 95 | \verb|CFORALL_DEMANGLING| as seen in listing \ref{cfa-demangler}. GDB then |
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| 96 | automatically invokes this \CFA demangler when GDB detects the source language |
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| 97 | is \CFA. In addition to the automatic invocation of the demangler, GDB provides |
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| 98 | an option to manually set which demangling style to use in the command line |
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| 99 | interface. This option can be turned on for \CFA in GDB by adding a new enum |
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| 100 | value for \CFA in the list of demangling styles along with setting the |
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| 101 | appropriate mask for this style in \verb|include/demangle.h|. After doing this |
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| 102 | step, users can now choose if they want to use the \CFA demangler in GDB by |
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| 103 | calling \verb|set demangle-style <language>|, where the language name is |
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| 104 | defined by the preprocessor macro \verb|CFORALL_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING| in |
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| 105 | listing \ref{cfa-demangler-style}. |
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| 106 | |
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| 107 | \begin{figure} |
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| 108 | \begin{lstlisting}[style=C++, caption={libiberty setup for the \CFA demangler}, |
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| 109 | label={cfa-demangler}, basicstyle=\small] |
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| 110 | // In libiberty/cplus-dem.c |
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| 111 | const struct demangler_engine libiberty_demanglers[] = { |
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| 112 | { |
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| 113 | NO_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING, |
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| 114 | no_demangling, |
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| 115 | "Demangling disabled" |
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| 116 | }, |
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| 117 | ... |
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| 118 | { |
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| 119 | CFORALL_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING, |
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| 120 | cforall_demangling, |
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| 121 | "Cforall style demangling" |
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| 122 | }, |
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| 123 | } |
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| 124 | ... |
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| 125 | char * cplus_demangle(const char *mangled, int options) { |
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| 126 | ... |
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| 127 | /* The V3 ABI demangling is implemented elsewhere. */ |
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| 128 | if (GNU_V3_DEMANGLING || RUST_DEMANGLING || AUTO_DEMANGLING) { ... } |
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| 129 | ... |
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| 130 | if (CFORALL_DEMANGLING) { |
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| 131 | ret = cforall_demangle (mangled, options); |
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| 132 | if (ret) { return ret; } |
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| 133 | } |
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| 134 | } |
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| 135 | \end{lstlisting} |
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| 136 | |
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| 137 | \begin{lstlisting}[style=C++, caption={Setup \CFA demangler style}, |
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| 138 | label={cfa-demangler-style}, basicstyle=\small] |
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| 139 | // In gdb/demangle.h |
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| 140 | #define DMGL_CFORALL (1 << 18) |
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| 141 | ... |
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| 142 | /* If none are set, use 'current_demangling_style' as the default. */ |
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| 143 | #define DMGL_STYLE_MASK |
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| 144 | (DMGL_AUTO|DMGL_GNU|DMGL_LUCID|DMGL_ARM|DMGL_HP|DMGL_EDG|DMGL_GNU_V3 |
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| 145 | |DMGL_JAVA|DMGL_GNAT|DMGL_DLANG|DMGL_RUST|DMGL_CFORALL) |
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| 146 | ... |
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| 147 | extern enum demangling_styles { |
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| 148 | no_demangling = -1, |
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| 149 | unknown_demangling = 0, |
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| 150 | ... |
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| 151 | cforall_demangling = DMGL_CFORALL |
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| 152 | } current_demangling_style; |
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| 153 | ... |
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| 154 | #define CFORALL_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "cforall" |
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| 155 | ... |
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| 156 | #define CFORALL_DEMANGLING (((int)CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE)&DMGL_CFORALL) |
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| 157 | \end{lstlisting} |
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| 158 | \end{figure} |
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| 159 | |
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| 160 | However, the setup for the \CFA demangler above does not demangle mangled |
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| 161 | symbols during symbol-table lookup while the program is in progress. Therefore, |
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| 162 | additional work needs to be done in \verb|gdb/symtab.c|. Prior to looking up |
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| 163 | the symbol, GDB attempts to demangle the name of the symbol, which can either |
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| 164 | be a mangled or unmangled name, to see if it can detect the language, and select |
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| 165 | the appropriate demangler to demangle the symbol. This work enables invocation |
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| 166 | of the \CFA demangler during symbol lookup. |
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| 167 | \begin{lstlisting}[style=C++, caption={\CFA demangler setup for symbol lookup}, |
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| 168 | label={cfa-symstab-setup}, basicstyle=\small] |
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| 169 | // In gdb/symtab.c |
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| 170 | const char * demangle_for_lookup ( const char *name, enum language lang, |
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| 171 | demangle_result_storage &storage ) { |
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| 172 | /* When using C++, D, or Go, demangle the name before doing a |
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| 173 | lookup to use the binary search. */ |
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| 174 | if (lang == language_cplus) { |
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| 175 | char *demangled_name = gdb_demangle(name, DMGL_ANSI|DMGL_PARAMS); |
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| 176 | if (demangled_name != NULL) |
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| 177 | return storage.set_malloc_ptr (demangled_name); |
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| 178 | } |
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| 179 | ... |
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| 180 | else if (lang == language_cforall) { |
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| 181 | char *demangled_name = cforall_demangle (name, 0); |
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| 182 | if (demangled_name != NULL) |
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| 183 | return storage.set_malloc_ptr (demangled_name); |
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| 184 | } |
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| 185 | ... |
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| 186 | } |
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| 187 | \end{lstlisting} |
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| 188 | |
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| 189 | \section{Result} |
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| 190 | The addition of hooks throughout GDB enables the invocation of the new \CFA |
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| 191 | demangler during symbol lookup and during the usage of \verb|binutils| tools |
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| 192 | such as \verb|objdump| and \verb|nm|. Additionally, these \verb|binutils| tools |
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| 193 | also understand \CFA because of the addition of the \CFA language code. |
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| 194 | However, as the language develops, symbol lookup for non-local variables must |
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| 195 | be implemented to produce the correct output. |
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