binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/common-utils.h
Luis Machado 48136e006e New memory-tag commands
Add new commands under the "memory-tag" prefix to allow users to inspect,
modify and check memory tags in different ways.

The available subcommands are the following:

- memory-tag print-logical-tag <expression>: Prints the logical tag for a
  particular address.

- memory-tag withltag <expression> <tag>: Prints the address tagged with the
  logical tag <tag>.

- memory-tag print-allocation-tag <expression>: Prints the allocation tag for
  a particular address.

- memory-tag setatag <expression> <length> <tags>: Sets one or more allocation
  tags to the specified tags.

- memory-tag check <expression>: Checks if the logical tag in <address>
  matches its allocation tag.

These commands make use of the memory tagging gdbarch methods, and are still
available, but disabled, when memory tagging is not supported by the
architecture.

I've pondered about a way to make these commands invisible when memory tagging
is not available, but given the check is at runtime (and support may come and go
based on a process' configuration), that is a bit too late in the process to
either not include the commands or get rid of them.

Ideas are welcome.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2021-03-24  Luis Machado  <luis.machado@linaro.org>

	* printcmd.c: Include gdbsupport/rsp-low.h.
	(memory_tag_list): New static global.
	(process_print_command_args): Factored out of
	print_command_1.
	(print_command_1): Use process_print_command_args.
	(show_addr_not_tagged, show_memory_tagging_unsupported)
	(memory_tag_command, memory_tag_print_tag_command)
	(memory_tag_print_logical_tag_command)
	(memory_tag_print_allocation_tag_command, parse_with_logical_tag_input)
	(memory_tag_with_logical_tag_command, parse_set_allocation_tag_input)
	(memory_tag_set_allocation_tag_command, memory_tag_check_command): New
	functions.
	(_initialize_printcmd): Add "memory-tag" prefix and subcommands.

gdbsupport/ChangeLog:

2021-03-24  Luis Machado  <luis.machado@linaro.org>

	* rsp-low.cc (fromhex, hex2bin): Move to ...
	* common-utils.cc: ... here.
	(fromhex) Change error message text to not be RSP-specific.
	* rsp-low.h (fromhex, hex2bin): Move to ...
	* common-utils.h: ... here.
2021-03-24 14:57:53 -03:00

210 lines
7.0 KiB
C++

/* Shared general utility routines for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright (C) 1986-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#ifndef COMMON_COMMON_UTILS_H
#define COMMON_COMMON_UTILS_H
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include "gdbsupport/byte-vector.h"
#include "poison.h"
/* If possible, define FUNCTION_NAME, a macro containing the name of
the function being defined. Since this macro may not always be
defined, all uses must be protected by appropriate macro definition
checks (Eg: "#ifdef FUNCTION_NAME").
Version 2.4 and later of GCC define a magical variable `__PRETTY_FUNCTION__'
which contains the name of the function currently being defined.
This is broken in G++ before version 2.6.
C9x has a similar variable called __func__, but prefer the GCC one since
it demangles C++ function names. */
#if (GCC_VERSION >= 2004)
#define FUNCTION_NAME __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
#else
#if defined __STDC_VERSION__ && __STDC_VERSION__ >= 199901L
#define FUNCTION_NAME __func__ /* ARI: func */
#endif
#endif
#include "gdb_string_view.h"
/* xmalloc(), xrealloc() and xcalloc() have already been declared in
"libiberty.h". */
/* Like xmalloc, but zero the memory. */
void *xzalloc (size_t);
template <typename T>
static void
xfree (T *ptr)
{
static_assert (IsFreeable<T>::value, "Trying to use xfree with a non-POD \
data type. Use operator delete instead.");
if (ptr != NULL)
#ifdef GNULIB_NAMESPACE
GNULIB_NAMESPACE::free (ptr); /* ARI: free */
#else
free (ptr); /* ARI: free */
#endif
}
/* Like asprintf and vasprintf, but return the string, throw an error
if no memory. */
char *xstrprintf (const char *format, ...) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 2);
char *xstrvprintf (const char *format, va_list ap)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 0);
/* Like snprintf, but throw an error if the output buffer is too small. */
int xsnprintf (char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (3, 4);
/* Returns a std::string built from a printf-style format string. */
std::string string_printf (const char* fmt, ...)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 2);
/* Like string_printf, but takes a va_list. */
std::string string_vprintf (const char* fmt, va_list args)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 0);
/* Like string_printf, but appends to DEST instead of returning a new
std::string. */
void string_appendf (std::string &dest, const char* fmt, ...)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (2, 3);
/* Like string_appendf, but takes a va_list. */
void string_vappendf (std::string &dest, const char* fmt, va_list args)
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (2, 0);
/* Make a copy of the string at PTR with LEN characters
(and add a null character at the end in the copy).
Uses malloc to get the space. Returns the address of the copy. */
char *savestring (const char *ptr, size_t len);
/* Extract the next word from ARG. The next word is defined as either,
everything up to the next space, or, if the next word starts with either
a single or double quote, then everything up to the closing quote. The
enclosing quotes are not returned in the result string. The pointer in
ARG is updated to point to the first character after the end of the
word, or, for quoted words, the first character after the closing
quote. */
std::string extract_string_maybe_quoted (const char **arg);
/* The strerror() function can return NULL for errno values that are
out of range. Provide a "safe" version that always returns a
printable string. This version is also thread-safe. */
extern const char *safe_strerror (int);
/* Version of startswith that takes string_view arguments. Return
true if the start of STRING matches PATTERN, false otherwise. */
static inline bool
startswith (gdb::string_view string, gdb::string_view pattern)
{
return (string.length () >= pattern.length ()
&& strncmp (string.data (), pattern.data (), pattern.length ()) == 0);
}
ULONGEST strtoulst (const char *num, const char **trailer, int base);
/* Skip leading whitespace characters in INP, returning an updated
pointer. If INP is NULL, return NULL. */
extern char *skip_spaces (char *inp);
/* A const-correct version of the above. */
extern const char *skip_spaces (const char *inp);
/* Skip leading non-whitespace characters in INP, returning an updated
pointer. If INP is NULL, return NULL. */
extern char *skip_to_space (char *inp);
/* A const-correct version of the above. */
extern const char *skip_to_space (const char *inp);
/* Assumes that V is an argv for a program, and iterates through
freeing all the elements. */
extern void free_vector_argv (std::vector<char *> &v);
/* Return true if VALUE is in [LOW, HIGH]. */
template <typename T>
static bool
in_inclusive_range (T value, T low, T high)
{
return value >= low && value <= high;
}
/* Ensure that V is aligned to an N byte boundary (N's assumed to be a
power of 2). Round up/down when necessary. Examples of correct
use include:
addr = align_up (addr, 8); -- VALUE needs 8 byte alignment
write_memory (addr, value, len);
addr += len;
and:
sp = align_down (sp - len, 16); -- Keep SP 16 byte aligned
write_memory (sp, value, len);
Note that uses such as:
write_memory (addr, value, len);
addr += align_up (len, 8);
and:
sp -= align_up (len, 8);
write_memory (sp, value, len);
are typically not correct as they don't ensure that the address (SP
or ADDR) is correctly aligned (relying on previous alignment to
keep things right). This is also why the methods are called
"align_..." instead of "round_..." as the latter reads better with
this incorrect coding style. */
extern ULONGEST align_up (ULONGEST v, int n);
extern ULONGEST align_down (ULONGEST v, int n);
/* Convert hex digit A to a number, or throw an exception. */
extern int fromhex (int a);
/* HEX is a string of characters representing hexadecimal digits.
Convert pairs of hex digits to bytes and store sequentially into
BIN. COUNT is the maximum number of characters to convert. This
will convert fewer characters if the number of hex characters
actually seen is odd, or if HEX terminates before COUNT characters.
Returns the number of characters actually converted. */
extern int hex2bin (const char *hex, gdb_byte *bin, int count);
/* Like the above, but return a gdb::byte_vector. */
gdb::byte_vector hex2bin (const char *hex);
#endif /* COMMON_COMMON_UTILS_H */