Consolidate calls to bfd_set_cacheable
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Commit Message
I noticed that some spots in gdb call bfd_set_cacheable after opening
a BFD.
The BFD file cache is a bit odd. BFDs that are opened locally are
unconditionally registered with the cache, and their underlying file
descriptor will always be closed when bfd_cache_close_all is called.
However, only "cacheable" BFDs will be eligible for reopening when
needed -- and by default BFD decides that if a file descriptor is
passed in, then it should not be cacheable. If a non-cacheable BFD's
file descriptor is closed, there is no offical way to reopen it.
gdb needs to call bfd_cache_close_all, because some systems cannot
start an executable when it has an open file descriptor referencing
it.
However, gdb also will sometimes passes an open file descriptor to the
various BFD open functions. And, due to lazy DWARF reading, gdb may
also need to reopen these BFDs.
Rather than having all the callers figure out when exactly to set the
cacheable flag, I think it makes sense to consolidate this logic into
the gdb_bfd.c wrapper functions.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 38.
---
gdb/dwarf2/read.c | 1 -
gdb/gdb_bfd.c | 5 +++++
gdb/machoread.c | 2 --
gdb/solib.c | 3 ---
gdb/symfile.c | 3 ---
5 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
Comments
On 8/4/23 9:19 AM, Tom Tromey wrote:
> I noticed that some spots in gdb call bfd_set_cacheable after opening
> a BFD.
>
> The BFD file cache is a bit odd. BFDs that are opened locally are
> unconditionally registered with the cache, and their underlying file
> descriptor will always be closed when bfd_cache_close_all is called.
> However, only "cacheable" BFDs will be eligible for reopening when
> needed -- and by default BFD decides that if a file descriptor is
> passed in, then it should not be cacheable. If a non-cacheable BFD's
> file descriptor is closed, there is no offical way to reopen it.
>
> gdb needs to call bfd_cache_close_all, because some systems cannot
> start an executable when it has an open file descriptor referencing
> it.
>
> However, gdb also will sometimes passes an open file descriptor to the
> various BFD open functions. And, due to lazy DWARF reading, gdb may
> also need to reopen these BFDs.
>
> Rather than having all the callers figure out when exactly to set the
> cacheable flag, I think it makes sense to consolidate this logic into
> the gdb_bfd.c wrapper functions.
>
> Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 38.
I think the patch seems sensible (just always marks them as cacheable in
GDB APIs that wrap bfd_open). It might be worth explicitly noting in the
log perhaps that the relevant functions always provide a filename (even
if they provide an existing file descriptor) which is why it is safe to
enable reopening.
Reviewed-by: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
>>>>> "John" == John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> writes:
John> I think the patch seems sensible (just always marks them as cacheable in
John> GDB APIs that wrap bfd_open). It might be worth explicitly noting in the
John> log perhaps that the relevant functions always provide a filename (even
John> if they provide an existing file descriptor) which is why it is safe to
John> enable reopening.
Make sense, I'll do that.
John> Reviewed-by: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
I'm going to check it in now.
Tom
@@ -9184,7 +9184,6 @@ try_open_dwop_file (dwarf2_per_objfile *per_objfile,
gnutarget, desc));
if (sym_bfd == NULL)
return NULL;
- bfd_set_cacheable (sym_bfd.get (), 1);
if (!bfd_check_format (sym_bfd.get (), bfd_object))
return NULL;
@@ -564,6 +564,8 @@ gdb_bfd_open (const char *name, const char *target, int fd,
if (abfd == NULL)
return NULL;
+ bfd_set_cacheable (abfd, 1);
+
bfd_cache_debug_printf ("Creating new bfd %s for %s",
host_address_to_string (abfd),
bfd_get_filename (abfd));
@@ -877,6 +879,9 @@ gdb_bfd_fopen (const char *filename, const char *target, const char *mode,
{
bfd *result = bfd_fopen (filename, target, mode, fd);
+ if (result != nullptr)
+ bfd_set_cacheable (result, 1);
+
return gdb_bfd_ref_ptr::new_reference (result);
}
@@ -447,8 +447,6 @@ macho_add_oso_symfile (oso_el *oso, const gdb_bfd_ref_ptr &abfd,
return;
}
- bfd_set_cacheable (abfd.get (), 1);
-
/* Read symbols table. */
storage = bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound (abfd.get ());
symbol_table = (asymbol **) xmalloc (storage);
@@ -430,9 +430,6 @@ solib_bfd_fopen (const char *pathname, int fd)
{
gdb_bfd_ref_ptr abfd (gdb_bfd_open (pathname, gnutarget, fd));
- if (abfd != NULL && !gdb_bfd_has_target_filename (abfd.get ()))
- bfd_set_cacheable (abfd.get (), 1);
-
if (abfd == NULL)
{
/* Arrange to free PATHNAME when the error is thrown. */
@@ -1762,9 +1762,6 @@ symfile_bfd_open (const char *name)
error (_("`%s': can't open to read symbols: %s."), name,
bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
- if (!gdb_bfd_has_target_filename (sym_bfd.get ()))
- bfd_set_cacheable (sym_bfd.get (), 1);
-
if (!bfd_check_format (sym_bfd.get (), bfd_object))
error (_("`%s': can't read symbols: %s."), name,
bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));