Re: [PATCHSET] saner elf compat
From: Al Viro
Date: Tue Dec 22 2020 - 15:05:37 EST
On Wed, Dec 16, 2020 at 09:44:53AM +0000, Maciej W. Rozycki wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Dec 2020, Al Viro wrote:
>
> > > It may be worth pushing through GDB's gdb.threads/tls-core.exp test case,
> > > making sure no UNSUPPORTED results have been produced due to resource
> > > limits preventing a core from being dumped (and no FAILs, of course), with
> > > o32/n32 native GDB. This should guarantee our output is still as expected
> > > by an interpreter. Sadly I'm currently not set up for such testing though
> > > eventually I mean to.
> >
> > Umm... What triple does one use for n32 gdb?
>
> I don't think there's a standardised one, just configure with CC/CXX set
> for n32 compilation, e.g.:
>
> $ /path/to/configure CC="gcc -mabi=n32" CXX="g++ -mabi=n32"
>
> (and any other options set as usually). This has to be with CC/CXX rather
> than CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS so that it is guaranteed to be never overridden with
> any logic that might do any fiddling with compilation options. This will
> set up the test suite accordingly.
>
> NB this may already be the compiler's default, depending on how it was
> configured, i.e. if `--with-abi=n32' was used, in which case no extra
> options will be required. I don't know if any standard MIPS distribution
> does it though; 64-bit MIPS/Debian might. This will be reported with `gcc
> --help -v', somewhere along the way.
>
> Let me know if there are issues with this approach.
FWIW, on debian/mips64el (both stretch and buster) the test fails with the
distro kernels (4.9- and 4.19-based) as well as with 5.10-rc1 and
5.10-rc1+that series, all in the same way:
[Current thread is 1 (LWP 4154)]
(gdb) p/x foo
Cannot find thread-local storage for LWP 4154, executable file <pathname>
Cannot find thread-local variables on this target
buster has libc6-2.28, so that should be fine for the test in question
(libthread_db definitely recent enough). That was n32 gdb; considering
how much time it had taken to build that sucker I hadn't tried o32
yet.
Note that it's not just with native coredumps - gcore-produced ones give
the same result. That was gdb from binutils-gdb.git; I'm not familiar
with gdb guts to start debugging it, so if you have any suggestions
in that direction that do not include a full rebuild... In any case,
I won't get around to that until the next week.
Incidentally, build time is bloody awful - 3 days, with qemu-3.1 on
3.5GHz amd64 host, all spent pretty much entirely in userland (both
from guest and host POV). g++-8 is atrociously slow...
That said, I don't see what in that series could possibly mess the
things up for tls, while leaving the registers working; the only
thing that realistically might've been fucked up is prstatus layout
(and possibly size), and that would've screwed the registers as
well.