[lldb-dev] PATCH for REVIEW - Fix [Bug 15038] LLDB does not support printing wide-character variables on Linux
Thirumurthi, Ashok
ashok.thirumurthi at intel.com
Mon Apr 1 14:50:43 PDT 2013
Hi Enrico,
Ø If we go this route, the same thing might have to be done for ValueObject::ReadPointedString() which does the same kind of “unbounded read”
I see. Looking through the code base for methods that call GetMaximumSizeOfStringSummary, I see that there are a number of code paths to handle. The attached patch lowers the fix so that this functionality can be used as needed via a helper method in Process to validate an unbounded read.
Ø But I am inclined to believe the best option would be to adopt your ProcessMonitor fix that reads smaller and smaller chunks and then returns the number of bytes read and no error
Well, the unbounded read is a characteristic of the use case (i.e. string reads), not the implementation. The behavior of the plug-in under this type of request is implementation specific, and an error is always reasonable since there was a failure to read the requested size in bytes. My point is that the corner case of null terminator in the last 8-byte read needs to be tested and fixed.
Ø What troubles me a little with the overall idea of this patch is that we are putting a workaround for a lower-level issue in higher-level code.
Ø I would prefer, if we do this, that at least we put the code around #if defined (__linux__), as in:
Ø What we have here is a Linux-specific implementation issue
Note that the issue can appear with any ptrace implementation. So, I lowered the fix to the ProcessPOSIX plugin, which is consistent with the case of eErrorTypePOSIX.
Thanks again for the feedback,
- Ashok
From: Enrico Granata [mailto:egranata at apple.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2013 2:39 PM
To: Thirumurthi, Ashok
Cc: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] PATCH for REVIEW - Fix [Bug 15038] LLDB does not support printing wide-character variables on Linux
Hi,
now I pretty much see where you are coming from.
What we have here is a Linux-specific implementation issue (which of course is not going to get fixed anytime soon :-)
What troubles me a little with the overall idea of this patch is that we are putting a workaround for a lower-level issue in higher-level code.
If we go this route, the same thing might have to be done for ValueObject::ReadPointedString() which does the same kind of “unbounded read”
I would prefer, if we do this, that at least we put the code around #if defined (__linux__), as in:
if (error.Fail() || data_read == 0)
{
+ bool found = false;
#if defined (__linux__)
+ if (data_read && error.GetType() == eErrorTypePOSIX) {
+ // Determine if a null terminator was found in spite of an out-of-bounds read
+ if (error.GetError() == EIO || error.GetError() == EFAULT) {
+ char* buffer = reinterpret_cast<char *>(buffer_sp->GetBytes());
+ char terminator[4] = {'\0', '\0', '\0', '\0'};
+ assert(sizeof(terminator) >= type_size && "Atempting to read a wchar with more than 4 bytes per character!");
+
+ for (size_t i = 0; !found && (i + type_size <= data_read); i += type_size)
+ if (::strncmp(&buffer[i], terminator, type_size) == 0)
+ found = true; // null terminator
+ }
+ }
#endif
+ if (!found) {
+ stream.Printf("unable to read data");
+ return true;
}
}
This will maintain a clean behavior for non-Linux systems (and other systems with a similarly broken API can opt-in this behavior by adding themselves to the ifdef)
But I am inclined to believe the best option would be to adopt your ProcessMonitor fix that reads smaller and smaller chunks and then returns the number of bytes read and no error - that would make all unbounded-read-based calls just work without having to add Linux-specific patches around (main issue being that now we all have to remember that anything that reads a string-like thing has to add a similar workaround or cause Linux unhappiness)
If that is not going to be viable, or will take some time, I don’t want to keep you blocked, so I would suggest:
- commit this patch with #ifdef markers to keep it Linux-only
- file a bugzilla issue to make process reads as functional as possible on Linux
Thoughts?
Enrico Granata
✉ egranata@.com<mailto:egranata@.com>
✆ 27683
On Mar 28, 2013, at 8:39 AM, "Thirumurthi, Ashok" <ashok.thirumurthi at intel.com<mailto:ashok.thirumurthi at intel.com>> wrote:
Thanks for the feedback, Enrico,
I’m relying on the fact that when the wstring is larger than the default size (1GB in your example), we won’t get a ptrace error like EIO or EFAULT. So, there will be no search for a null terminator.
If we can’t rely on the null terminator, it’s hard to know if a different error occurred. The trouble is that there is inconsistency in the PTRACE_PEEK implementation on Linux that is more or less arbitrary (sigh), so the out-of-bounds read can generate EIO or EFAULT. In particular, EIO can mean a number of things:
“request is invalid, or an attempt was made to read from or write to an invalid area in the parent's or child's memory, or there was a word-alignment violation, or an invalid signal was specified during a restart request.” –http://linux.die.net/man/2/ptrace
In addition, the Linux ProcessMonitor reads in 8-byte chunks, so ReadUTFBufferAndDumpToStream will probably fail (for the right reasons) in the case where at least part of the null terminator was in that block. I see that as an implementation detail that can be resolved in ProcessMonitor by reading smaller chunks until PTRACE_PEEK succeeds (i.e. a good follow-up patch).
Do let me know if you feel this is okay to commit as is. Cheers,
- Ashok
From: Enrico Granata [mailto:egranata at apple.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2013 6:18 PM
To: Thirumurthi, Ashok
Cc: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu>
Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] PATCH for REVIEW - Fix [Bug 15038] LLDB does not support printing wide-character variables on Linux
Hi Ashok,
thanks for submitting an LLDB patch :)
I have looked at the code and while I see where the patch is coming from, I see a potential issue with it.
The code in ReadUTFBufferAndDumpToStream, which is what you are editing, is meant to work on a partial string (i.e. one that does not have a NULL terminator at the end). The reason for that is that you might have a wstring that is 1GB long and we would not want to try and read all of it and then display it. What we do is pick a size and only extract that much data. For obvious reasons, your string might be longer than our upper boundary, so you would get a chunk of valid bytes and then no end-of-buffer marker.
It looks like your code would fail in that case and produce no summary for a string if an EIO was received before \0.
Is there any reason why you can’t just check if (error == EIO and data_read > 0) and if so treat this as a “partial string” condition and keep going?
Would that break/crash anything?
Best,
Enrico Granata
✉ egranata@.com<mailto:egranata@>
✆ 27683
On Mar 27, 2013, at 2:52 PM, "Thirumurthi, Ashok" <ashok.thirumurthi at intel.com<mailto:ashok.thirumurthi at intel.com>> wrote:
The root cause for Bug 15038 is a ptrace EIO that can occur because we don't know the size of a (UTF) string and so read a fixed number of characters for strings. The attached fix accepts EIO in the case where data has been read and a null terminator of the correct size and alignment was found.
- Ashok
-----Original Message-----
From: lldb-dev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:lldb-dev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu> [mailto:lldb-dev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu] On Behalf Ofbugzilla-daemon at llvm.org<mailto:bugzilla-daemon at llvm.org>
Sent: Tuesday, January 22, 2013 10:13 AM
To: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu>
Subject: [lldb-dev] [Bug 15038] New: LLDB does not support printing wide-character variables on Linux
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15038
Bug #: 15038
Summary: LLDB does not support printing wide-character
variables on Linux
Product: lldb
Version: unspecified
Platform: PC
OS/Version: Linux
Status: NEW
Severity: enhancement
Priority: P
Component: All Bugs
AssignedTo: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu>
ReportedBy: daniel.malea at intel.com<mailto:daniel.malea at intel.com>
Classification: Unclassified
Printing a variable of wchar_t type does not behave as expected and results in garbage being printed on the screen.
To reproduce, remove the @expectedFailureLinux decorator from TestChar1632T.py and TestCxxWCharT.py and run:
python dotest.py --executable <path-to-lldb> lang/cpp/char1632_t lang/cpp/wchar_t
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