binutils-gdb/libctf/ctf-archive.c

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libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
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/* CTF archive files.
Copyright (C) 2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of libctf.
libctf 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, 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; see the file COPYING. If not see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <ctf-impl.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <elf.h>
libctf: fix a number of build problems found on Solaris and NetBSD - Use of nonportable <endian.h> - Use of qsort_r - Use of zlib without appropriate magic to pull in the binutils zlib - Use of off64_t without checking (fixed by dropping the unused fields that need off64_t entirely) - signedness problems due to long being too short a type on 32-bit platforms: ctf_id_t is now 'unsigned long', and CTF_ERR must be used only for functions that return ctf_id_t - One lingering use of bzero() and of <sys/errno.h> All fixed, using code from gnulib where possible. Relatedly, set cts_size in a couple of places it was missed (string table and symbol table loading upon ctf_bfdopen()). binutils/ * objdump.c (make_ctfsect): Drop cts_type, cts_flags, and cts_offset. * readelf.c (shdr_to_ctf_sect): Likewise. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_sect_t): Drop cts_type, cts_flags, and cts_offset. (ctf_id_t): This is now an unsigned type. (CTF_ERR): Cast it to ctf_id_t. Note that it should only be used for ctf_id_t-returning functions. libctf/ * Makefile.am (ZLIB): New. (ZLIBINC): Likewise. (AM_CFLAGS): Use them. (libctf_a_LIBADD): New, for LIBOBJS. * configure.ac: Check for zlib, endian.h, and qsort_r. * ctf-endian.h: New, providing htole64 and le64toh. * swap.h: Code style fixes. (bswap_identity_64): New. * qsort_r.c: New, from gnulib (with one added #include). * ctf-decls.h: New, providing a conditional qsort_r declaration, and unconditional definitions of MIN and MAX. * ctf-impl.h: Use it. Do not use <sys/errno.h>. (ctf_set_errno): Now returns unsigned long. * ctf-util.c (ctf_set_errno): Adjust here too. * ctf-archive.c: Use ctf-endian.h. (ctf_arc_open_by_offset): Use memset, not bzero. Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_arc_write): Drop debugging dependent on the size of off_t. * ctf-create.c: Provide a definition of roundup if not defined. (ctf_create): Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_add_reftype): Do not check if type IDs are below zero. (ctf_add_slice): Likewise. (ctf_add_typedef): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Cast error-returning ssize_t's to size_t when known error-free. Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_add_member_encoded): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (enumcmp): Likewise. (enumadd): Likewise. (membcmp): Likewise. (ctf_add_type): Likewise. Cast error-returning ssize_t's to size_t when known error-free. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_is_slice): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int: use CTF_ERR for functions returning ctf_type_id. (ctf_dump_label): Likewise. (ctf_dump_objts): Likewise. * ctf-labels.c (ctf_label_topmost): Likewise. (ctf_label_iter): Likewise. (ctf_label_info): Likewise. * ctf-lookup.c (ctf_func_args): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types): Cast to size_t where appropriate. (ctf_bufopen): Likewise. Use zlib types as needed. * ctf-types.c (ctf_member_iter): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_size): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. Cast to size_t where appropriate. (ctf_type_kind_unsliced): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_type_rvisit): Likewise. * ctf-open-bfd.c (ctf_bfdopen): Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_simple_open): Likewise. (ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect): Likewise. Set cts_size properly. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * aclocal.m4: Likewise. * config.h: Likewise. * configure: Likewise.
2019-05-31 11:10:51 +02:00
#include "ctf-endian.h"
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
#include <sys/mman.h>
#endif
static off_t arc_write_one_ctf (ctf_file_t * f, int fd, size_t threshold);
static ctf_file_t *ctf_arc_open_by_offset (const struct ctf_archive *arc,
const ctf_sect_t *symsect,
const ctf_sect_t *strsect,
size_t offset, int *errp);
static int sort_modent_by_name (const void *one, const void *two, void *n);
static void *arc_mmap_header (int fd, size_t headersz);
static void *arc_mmap_file (int fd, size_t size);
static int arc_mmap_writeout (int fd, void *header, size_t headersz,
const char **errmsg);
static int arc_mmap_unmap (void *header, size_t headersz, const char **errmsg);
/* bsearch() internal state. */
static __thread char *search_nametbl;
/* Write out a CTF archive. The entries in CTF_FILES are referenced by name:
the names are passed in the names array, which must have CTF_FILES entries.
Returns 0 on success, or an errno, or an ECTF_* value. */
int
ctf_arc_write (const char *file, ctf_file_t ** ctf_files, size_t ctf_file_cnt,
const char **names, size_t threshold)
{
const char *errmsg;
struct ctf_archive *archdr;
int fd;
size_t i;
char dummy = 0;
size_t headersz;
ssize_t namesz;
size_t ctf_startoffs; /* Start of the section we are working over. */
char *nametbl = NULL; /* The name table. */
char *np;
off_t nameoffs;
struct ctf_archive_modent *modent;
ctf_dprintf ("Writing archive %s with %lu files\n", file,
(unsigned long) ctf_file_cnt);
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
if ((fd = open (file, O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_CLOEXEC, 0666)) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): cannot create %s: %s\n";
goto err;
}
/* Figure out the size of the mmap()ed header, including the
ctf_archive_modent array. We assume that all of this needs no
padding: a likely assumption, given that it's all made up of
uint64_t's. */
headersz = sizeof (struct ctf_archive)
+ (ctf_file_cnt * sizeof (uint64_t) * 2);
ctf_dprintf ("headersz is %lu\n", (unsigned long) headersz);
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
/* From now on we work in two pieces: an mmap()ed region from zero up to the
headersz, and a region updated via write() starting after that, containing
all the tables. Platforms that do not support mmap() just use write(). */
ctf_startoffs = headersz;
if (lseek (fd, ctf_startoffs - 1, SEEK_SET) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): cannot extend file while writing %s: %s\n";
goto err_close;
}
if (write (fd, &dummy, 1) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): cannot extend file while writing %s: %s\n";
goto err_close;
}
if ((archdr = arc_mmap_header (fd, headersz)) == NULL)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot mmap() %s: %s\n";
goto err_close;
}
/* Fill in everything we can, which is everything other than the name
table offset. */
archdr->ctfa_magic = htole64 (CTFA_MAGIC);
archdr->ctfa_nfiles = htole64 (ctf_file_cnt);
archdr->ctfa_ctfs = htole64 (ctf_startoffs);
/* We could validate that all CTF files have the same data model, but
since any reasonable construction process will be building things of
only one bitness anyway, this is pretty pointless, so just use the
model of the first CTF file for all of them. (It *is* valid to
create an empty archive: the value of ctfa_model is irrelevant in
this case, but we must be sure not to dereference uninitialized
memory.) */
if (ctf_file_cnt > 0)
archdr->ctfa_model = htole64 (ctf_getmodel (ctf_files[0]));
/* Now write out the CTFs: ctf_archive_modent array via the mapping,
ctfs via write(). The names themselves have not been written yet: we
track them in a local strtab until the time is right, and sort the
modents array after construction.
The name table is not sorted. */
for (i = 0, namesz = 0; i < le64toh (archdr->ctfa_nfiles); i++)
namesz += strlen (names[i]) + 1;
nametbl = malloc (namesz);
if (nametbl == NULL)
{
errmsg = "Error writing named CTF to %s: %s\n";
goto err_unmap;
}
for (i = 0, namesz = 0,
modent = (ctf_archive_modent_t *) ((char *) archdr
+ sizeof (struct ctf_archive));
i < le64toh (archdr->ctfa_nfiles); i++)
{
off_t off;
strcpy (&nametbl[namesz], names[i]);
off = arc_write_one_ctf (ctf_files[i], fd, threshold);
if ((off < 0) && (off > -ECTF_BASE))
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot determine file "
"position while writing %s: %s";
goto err_free;
}
if (off < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot write CTF file to %s: %s\n";
errno = off * -1;
goto err_free;
}
modent->name_offset = htole64 (namesz);
modent->ctf_offset = htole64 (off - ctf_startoffs);
namesz += strlen (names[i]) + 1;
modent++;
}
ctf_qsort_r ((ctf_archive_modent_t *) ((char *) archdr
+ sizeof (struct ctf_archive)),
le64toh (archdr->ctfa_nfiles),
sizeof (struct ctf_archive_modent), sort_modent_by_name,
nametbl);
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
/* Now the name table. */
if ((nameoffs = lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_CUR)) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot get current file position "
"in %s: %s\n";
goto err_free;
}
archdr->ctfa_names = htole64 (nameoffs);
np = nametbl;
while (namesz > 0)
{
ssize_t len;
if ((len = write (fd, np, namesz)) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot write name table in %s: %s\n";
goto err_free;
}
namesz -= len;
np += len;
}
free (nametbl);
if (arc_mmap_writeout (fd, archdr, headersz, &errmsg) < 0)
goto err_unmap;
if (arc_mmap_unmap (archdr, headersz, &errmsg) < 0)
goto err_unlink;
if (close (fd) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_write(): Cannot close after writing to %s: %s\n";
goto err_unlink;
}
return 0;
err_free:
free (nametbl);
err_unmap:
arc_mmap_unmap (archdr, headersz, NULL);
err_close:
close (fd);
err_unlink:
unlink (file);
err:
ctf_dprintf (errmsg, file, errno < ECTF_BASE ? strerror (errno) :
ctf_errmsg (errno));
return errno;
}
/* Write one CTF file out. Return the file position of the written file (or
rather, of the file-size uint64_t that precedes it): negative return is a
negative errno or ctf_errno value. On error, the file position may no longer
be at the end of the file. */
static off_t
arc_write_one_ctf (ctf_file_t * f, int fd, size_t threshold)
{
off_t off, end_off;
uint64_t ctfsz = 0;
char *ctfszp;
size_t ctfsz_len;
int (*writefn) (ctf_file_t * fp, int fd);
if ((off = lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_CUR)) < 0)
return errno * -1;
if (f->ctf_size > threshold)
writefn = ctf_compress_write;
else
writefn = ctf_write;
/* This zero-write turns into the size in a moment. */
ctfsz_len = sizeof (ctfsz);
ctfszp = (char *) &ctfsz;
while (ctfsz_len > 0)
{
ssize_t writelen = write (fd, ctfszp, ctfsz_len);
if (writelen < 0)
return errno * -1;
ctfsz_len -= writelen;
ctfszp += writelen;
}
if (writefn (f, fd) != 0)
return f->ctf_errno * -1;
if ((end_off = lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_CUR)) < 0)
return errno * -1;
ctfsz = htole64 (end_off - off);
if ((lseek (fd, off, SEEK_SET)) < 0)
return errno * -1;
/* ... here. */
ctfsz_len = sizeof (ctfsz);
ctfszp = (char *) &ctfsz;
while (ctfsz_len > 0)
{
ssize_t writelen = write (fd, ctfszp, ctfsz_len);
if (writelen < 0)
return errno * -1;
ctfsz_len -= writelen;
ctfszp += writelen;
}
end_off = LCTF_ALIGN_OFFS (end_off, 8);
if ((lseek (fd, end_off, SEEK_SET)) < 0)
return errno * -1;
return off;
}
/* qsort() function to sort the array of struct ctf_archive_modents into
ascending name order. */
static int
sort_modent_by_name (const void *one, const void *two, void *n)
{
const struct ctf_archive_modent *a = one;
const struct ctf_archive_modent *b = two;
char *nametbl = n;
return strcmp (&nametbl[le64toh (a->name_offset)],
&nametbl[le64toh (b->name_offset)]);
}
/* bsearch() function to search for a given name in the sorted array of struct
ctf_archive_modents. */
static int
search_modent_by_name (const void *key, const void *ent)
{
const char *k = key;
const struct ctf_archive_modent *v = ent;
return strcmp (k, &search_nametbl[le64toh (v->name_offset)]);
}
/* A trivial wrapper: open a CTF archive, from data in a buffer (which the
caller must preserve until ctf_arc_close() time). Returns the archive, or
NULL and an error in *err (if not NULL). */
struct ctf_archive *
ctf_arc_bufopen (const void *buf, size_t size _libctf_unused_, int *errp)
{
struct ctf_archive *arc = (struct ctf_archive *) buf;
if (le64toh (arc->ctfa_magic) != CTFA_MAGIC)
{
if (errp)
*errp = ECTF_FMT;
return NULL;
}
return arc;
}
/* Open a CTF archive. Returns the archive, or NULL and an error in *err (if
not NULL). */
struct ctf_archive *
ctf_arc_open_internal (const char *filename, int *errp)
{
const char *errmsg;
int fd;
struct stat s;
struct ctf_archive *arc; /* (Actually the whole file.) */
libctf_init_debug();
if ((fd = open (filename, O_RDONLY)) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_open(): cannot open %s: %s\n";
goto err;
}
if (fstat (fd, &s) < 0)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_open(): cannot stat %s: %s\n";
goto err_close;
}
if ((arc = arc_mmap_file (fd, s.st_size)) == NULL)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_open(): Cannot read in %s: %s\n";
goto err_close;
}
if (le64toh (arc->ctfa_magic) != CTFA_MAGIC)
{
errmsg = "ctf_arc_open(): Invalid magic number";
errno = ECTF_FMT;
goto err_unmap;
}
/* This horrible hack lets us know how much to unmap when the file is
closed. (We no longer need the magic number, and the mapping
is private.) */
arc->ctfa_magic = s.st_size;
close (fd);
return arc;
err_unmap:
arc_mmap_unmap (arc, s.st_size, NULL);
err_close:
close (fd);
err:
if (errp)
*errp = errno;
ctf_dprintf (errmsg, filename, errno < ECTF_BASE ? strerror (errno) :
ctf_errmsg (errno));
return NULL;
}
/* Close an archive. */
void
ctf_arc_close_internal (struct ctf_archive *arc)
{
if (arc == NULL)
return;
/* See the comment in ctf_arc_open(). */
arc_mmap_unmap (arc, arc->ctfa_magic, NULL);
}
/* Public entry point: close an archive, or CTF file. */
void
ctf_arc_close (ctf_archive_t *arc)
{
if (arc == NULL)
return;
if (arc->ctfi_is_archive)
ctf_arc_close_internal (arc->ctfi_archive);
else
ctf_file_close (arc->ctfi_file);
free ((void *) arc->ctfi_symsect.cts_data);
free ((void *) arc->ctfi_strsect.cts_data);
free (arc->ctfi_data);
free (arc);
}
/* Return the ctf_file_t with the given name, or NULL if none, setting 'err' if
non-NULL. A name of NULL means to open the default file. */
static ctf_file_t *
ctf_arc_open_by_name_internal (const struct ctf_archive *arc,
const ctf_sect_t *symsect,
const ctf_sect_t *strsect,
const char *name, int *errp)
{
struct ctf_archive_modent *modent;
if (name == NULL)
name = _CTF_SECTION; /* The default name. */
ctf_dprintf ("ctf_arc_open_by_name(%s): opening\n", name);
modent = (ctf_archive_modent_t *) ((char *) arc
+ sizeof (struct ctf_archive));
search_nametbl = (char *) arc + le64toh (arc->ctfa_names);
modent = bsearch (name, modent, le64toh (arc->ctfa_nfiles),
sizeof (struct ctf_archive_modent),
search_modent_by_name);
/* This is actually a common case and normal operation: no error
debug output. */
if (modent == NULL)
{
if (errp)
*errp = ECTF_ARNNAME;
return NULL;
}
return ctf_arc_open_by_offset (arc, symsect, strsect,
le64toh (modent->ctf_offset), errp);
}
/* Return the ctf_file_t with the given name, or NULL if none, setting 'err' if
non-NULL. A name of NULL means to open the default file.
Use the specified string and symbol table sections.
Public entry point. */
ctf_file_t *
ctf_arc_open_by_name_sections (const ctf_archive_t *arc,
const ctf_sect_t *symsect,
const ctf_sect_t *strsect,
const char *name,
int *errp)
{
if (arc->ctfi_is_archive)
{
ctf_file_t *ret;
ret = ctf_arc_open_by_name_internal (arc->ctfi_archive, symsect, strsect,
name, errp);
if (ret)
ret->ctf_archive = (ctf_archive_t *) arc;
return ret;
}
if ((name != NULL) && (strcmp (name, _CTF_SECTION) != 0))
{
if (errp)
*errp = ECTF_ARNNAME;
return NULL;
}
arc->ctfi_file->ctf_archive = (ctf_archive_t *) arc;
/* Bump the refcount so that the user can ctf_file_close() it. */
arc->ctfi_file->ctf_refcnt++;
return arc->ctfi_file;
}
/* Return the ctf_file_t with the given name, or NULL if none, setting 'err' if
non-NULL. A name of NULL means to open the default file.
Public entry point. */
ctf_file_t *
ctf_arc_open_by_name (const ctf_archive_t *arc, const char *name, int *errp)
{
const ctf_sect_t *symsect = &arc->ctfi_symsect;
const ctf_sect_t *strsect = &arc->ctfi_strsect;
if (symsect->cts_name == NULL)
symsect = NULL;
if (strsect->cts_name == NULL)
strsect = NULL;
return ctf_arc_open_by_name_sections (arc, symsect, strsect, name, errp);
}
/* Return the ctf_file_t at the given ctfa_ctfs-relative offset, or NULL if
none, setting 'err' if non-NULL. */
static ctf_file_t *
ctf_arc_open_by_offset (const struct ctf_archive *arc,
const ctf_sect_t *symsect,
const ctf_sect_t *strsect, size_t offset,
int *errp)
{
ctf_sect_t ctfsect;
ctf_file_t *fp;
ctf_dprintf ("ctf_arc_open_by_offset(%lu): opening\n", (unsigned long) offset);
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
libctf: fix a number of build problems found on Solaris and NetBSD - Use of nonportable <endian.h> - Use of qsort_r - Use of zlib without appropriate magic to pull in the binutils zlib - Use of off64_t without checking (fixed by dropping the unused fields that need off64_t entirely) - signedness problems due to long being too short a type on 32-bit platforms: ctf_id_t is now 'unsigned long', and CTF_ERR must be used only for functions that return ctf_id_t - One lingering use of bzero() and of <sys/errno.h> All fixed, using code from gnulib where possible. Relatedly, set cts_size in a couple of places it was missed (string table and symbol table loading upon ctf_bfdopen()). binutils/ * objdump.c (make_ctfsect): Drop cts_type, cts_flags, and cts_offset. * readelf.c (shdr_to_ctf_sect): Likewise. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_sect_t): Drop cts_type, cts_flags, and cts_offset. (ctf_id_t): This is now an unsigned type. (CTF_ERR): Cast it to ctf_id_t. Note that it should only be used for ctf_id_t-returning functions. libctf/ * Makefile.am (ZLIB): New. (ZLIBINC): Likewise. (AM_CFLAGS): Use them. (libctf_a_LIBADD): New, for LIBOBJS. * configure.ac: Check for zlib, endian.h, and qsort_r. * ctf-endian.h: New, providing htole64 and le64toh. * swap.h: Code style fixes. (bswap_identity_64): New. * qsort_r.c: New, from gnulib (with one added #include). * ctf-decls.h: New, providing a conditional qsort_r declaration, and unconditional definitions of MIN and MAX. * ctf-impl.h: Use it. Do not use <sys/errno.h>. (ctf_set_errno): Now returns unsigned long. * ctf-util.c (ctf_set_errno): Adjust here too. * ctf-archive.c: Use ctf-endian.h. (ctf_arc_open_by_offset): Use memset, not bzero. Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_arc_write): Drop debugging dependent on the size of off_t. * ctf-create.c: Provide a definition of roundup if not defined. (ctf_create): Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_add_reftype): Do not check if type IDs are below zero. (ctf_add_slice): Likewise. (ctf_add_typedef): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Cast error-returning ssize_t's to size_t when known error-free. Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_add_member_encoded): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (enumcmp): Likewise. (enumadd): Likewise. (membcmp): Likewise. (ctf_add_type): Likewise. Cast error-returning ssize_t's to size_t when known error-free. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_is_slice): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int: use CTF_ERR for functions returning ctf_type_id. (ctf_dump_label): Likewise. (ctf_dump_objts): Likewise. * ctf-labels.c (ctf_label_topmost): Likewise. (ctf_label_iter): Likewise. (ctf_label_info): Likewise. * ctf-lookup.c (ctf_func_args): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types): Cast to size_t where appropriate. (ctf_bufopen): Likewise. Use zlib types as needed. * ctf-types.c (ctf_member_iter): Drop CTF_ERR usage for functions returning int. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_size): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. Cast to size_t where appropriate. (ctf_type_kind_unsliced): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_type_rvisit): Likewise. * ctf-open-bfd.c (ctf_bfdopen): Drop cts_type, cts_flags and cts_offset. (ctf_simple_open): Likewise. (ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect): Likewise. Set cts_size properly. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * aclocal.m4: Likewise. * config.h: Likewise. * configure: Likewise.
2019-05-31 11:10:51 +02:00
memset (&ctfsect, 0, sizeof (ctf_sect_t));
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
2019-04-24 12:30:17 +02:00
offset += le64toh (arc->ctfa_ctfs);
ctfsect.cts_name = _CTF_SECTION;
ctfsect.cts_size = le64toh (*((uint64_t *) ((char *) arc + offset)));
ctfsect.cts_entsize = 1;
ctfsect.cts_data = (void *) ((char *) arc + offset + sizeof (uint64_t));
fp = ctf_bufopen (&ctfsect, symsect, strsect, errp);
if (fp)
ctf_setmodel (fp, le64toh (arc->ctfa_model));
return fp;
}
/* Raw iteration over all CTF files in an archive. We pass the raw data for all
CTF files in turn to the specified callback function. */
static int
ctf_archive_raw_iter_internal (const struct ctf_archive *arc,
ctf_archive_raw_member_f *func, void *data)
{
int rc;
size_t i;
struct ctf_archive_modent *modent;
const char *nametbl;
modent = (ctf_archive_modent_t *) ((char *) arc
+ sizeof (struct ctf_archive));
nametbl = (((const char *) arc) + le64toh (arc->ctfa_names));
for (i = 0; i < le64toh (arc->ctfa_nfiles); i++)
{
const char *name;
char *fp;
name = &nametbl[le64toh (modent[i].name_offset)];
fp = ((char *) arc + le64toh (arc->ctfa_ctfs)
+ le64toh (modent[i].ctf_offset));
if ((rc = func (name, (void *) (fp + sizeof (uint64_t)),
le64toh (*((uint64_t *) fp)), data)) != 0)
return rc;
}
return 0;
}
/* Raw iteration over all CTF files in an archive: public entry point.
Returns -EINVAL if not supported for this sort of archive. */
int
ctf_archive_raw_iter (const ctf_archive_t *arc,
ctf_archive_raw_member_f * func, void *data)
{
if (arc->ctfi_is_archive)
return ctf_archive_raw_iter_internal (arc->ctfi_archive, func, data);
return -EINVAL; /* Not supported. */
}
/* Iterate over all CTF files in an archive. We pass all CTF files in turn to
the specified callback function. */
static int
ctf_archive_iter_internal (const ctf_archive_t *wrapper,
const struct ctf_archive *arc,
const ctf_sect_t *symsect,
const ctf_sect_t *strsect,
ctf_archive_member_f *func, void *data)
{
int rc;
size_t i;
ctf_file_t *f;
struct ctf_archive_modent *modent;
const char *nametbl;
modent = (ctf_archive_modent_t *) ((char *) arc
+ sizeof (struct ctf_archive));
nametbl = (((const char *) arc) + le64toh (arc->ctfa_names));
for (i = 0; i < le64toh (arc->ctfa_nfiles); i++)
{
const char *name;
name = &nametbl[le64toh (modent[i].name_offset)];
if ((f = ctf_arc_open_by_name_internal (arc, symsect, strsect,
name, &rc)) == NULL)
return rc;
f->ctf_archive = (ctf_archive_t *) wrapper;
if ((rc = func (f, name, data)) != 0)
{
ctf_file_close (f);
return rc;
}
ctf_file_close (f);
}
return 0;
}
/* Iterate over all CTF files in an archive: public entry point. We pass all
CTF files in turn to the specified callback function. */
int
ctf_archive_iter (const ctf_archive_t *arc, ctf_archive_member_f *func,
void *data)
{
const ctf_sect_t *symsect = &arc->ctfi_symsect;
const ctf_sect_t *strsect = &arc->ctfi_strsect;
if (symsect->cts_name == NULL)
symsect = NULL;
if (strsect->cts_name == NULL)
strsect = NULL;
if (arc->ctfi_is_archive)
return ctf_archive_iter_internal (arc, arc->ctfi_archive, symsect, strsect,
func, data);
return func (arc->ctfi_file, _CTF_SECTION, data);
}
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
/* Map the header in. Only used on new, empty files. */
static void *arc_mmap_header (int fd, size_t headersz)
{
void *hdr;
if ((hdr = mmap (NULL, headersz, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, fd,
0)) == MAP_FAILED)
return NULL;
return hdr;
}
/* mmap() the whole file, for reading only. (Map it writably, but privately: we
need to modify the region, but don't need anyone else to see the
modifications.) */
static void *arc_mmap_file (int fd, size_t size)
{
void *arc;
if ((arc = mmap (NULL, size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE,
fd, 0)) == MAP_FAILED)
return NULL;
return arc;
}
/* Persist the header to disk. */
static int arc_mmap_writeout (int fd _libctf_unused_, void *header,
size_t headersz, const char **errmsg)
{
if (msync (header, headersz, MS_ASYNC) < 0)
{
if (errmsg)
*errmsg = "arc_mmap_writeout(): Cannot sync after writing to %s: %s\n";
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
/* Unmap the region. */
static int arc_mmap_unmap (void *header, size_t headersz, const char **errmsg)
{
if (munmap (header, headersz) < 0)
{
if (errmsg)
*errmsg = "arc_mmap_munmap(): Cannot unmap after writing to %s: %s\n";
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
#else
/* Map the header in. Only used on new, empty files. */
static void *arc_mmap_header (int fd _libctf_unused_, size_t headersz)
libctf: mmappable archives If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of files above a particular size threshold. libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(), copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.) Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback: non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as needed. It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them. (In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive, and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.) To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same fashion.) This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol table just like raw CTF files can. (All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and the typedef names outside.) libctf/ * ctf-archive.c: New. * ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type. (ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration. (ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise. include/ * ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New. (struct ctf_archive): New. (struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise. * ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New. (ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_arc_write): Likewise. (ctf_arc_close): Likewise. (ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise. (ctf_archive_iter): Likewise. (ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise. (ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
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{
void *hdr;
if ((hdr = malloc (headersz)) == NULL)
return NULL;
return hdr;
}
/* Pull in the whole file, for reading only. We assume the current file
position is at the start of the file. */
static void *arc_mmap_file (int fd, size_t size)
{
char *data;
if ((data = malloc (size)) == NULL)
return NULL;
if (ctf_pread (fd, data, size, 0) < 0)
{
free (data);
return NULL;
}
return data;
}
/* Persist the header to disk. */
static int arc_mmap_writeout (int fd, void *header, size_t headersz,
const char **errmsg)
{
ssize_t len;
size_t acc = 0;
char *data = (char *) header;
ssize_t count = headersz;
if ((lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_SET)) < 0)
{
if (errmsg)
*errmsg = "arc_mmap_writeout(): Cannot seek while writing header to "
"%s: %s\n";
return -1;
}
while (headersz > 0)
{
if ((len = write (fd, data, count)) < 0)
{
if (errmsg)
*errmsg = "arc_mmap_writeout(): Cannot write header to %s: %s\n";
return len;
}
if (len == EINTR)
continue;
acc += len;
if (len == 0) /* EOF. */
break;
count -= len;
data += len;
}
return 0;
}
/* Unmap the region. */
static int arc_mmap_unmap (void *header, size_t headersz _libctf_unused_,
const char **errmsg _libctf_unused_)
{
free (header);
return 0;
}
#endif