zoukankan      html  css  js  c++  java
  • Tutorial: Reverse debugging with GDB 7 (转载)

    Tutorial: Reverse debugging with GDB 7

    Tutorial: Reverse debugging with GDB 7

    by Jay Conrod
    posted on 2009-12-01

    GDB 7 came out a few weeks ago, and one of the major new features is reverse debugging. This allows you to record the execution of a process, then play it backward and forward. This is incredibly useful for fixing those mysterious bugs that are so common in C/C++ programs.

    In this post, I'll give a motivating example of why reverse debugging is so useful, then I'll give a summary of the commands you need to know about. You might also want to look at the official tutorial on the GDB wiki, which is a good reference.

    Here's a typical program we might have in C. It's very simple, but it contains a subtle bug that causes it to crash when we run it.

              #include <stdio.h>
              #include <stdlib.h>
    
              void initialize(int *array, int size) {
              for (int i = 0; i <= size; ++i)
              array[i] = 0;
              }
    
              int main(void) {
              int *p = malloc(sizeof(int));
              int values[10];
    
              *p = 37;
              initialize(values, 10);
              printf("*p = %d
    ", *p);
              free(p);
    
              return 0;
              }
            

    This program is compiled with the following command:

              gcc -ggdb -std=c99 -O0 test.c -o test
            

    When we run this program from the command line, we get a segmentation fault. What happened? We load it into gdb and enable recording:

              (gdb) break main
              Breakpoint 1 at 0x8048449: file test.c, line 11.
              (gdb) run
              Starting program: /home/jay/Code/test/test 
    
              Breakpoint 1, main () at test.c:11
              (gdb) record
              (gdb)
            

    The record command turns on recording. It must be issued after the program has started running, so the beginning of main is a good place to use it. If you are debugging code that runs before main (such as C++ global constructors), you may want to set a breakpoint in _start, the actual entry point of the program.

    Once recording is enabled, we run the program until the segmentation fault occurs:

              (gdb) continue
              Continuing.
              warning: Process record ignores the memory change of instruction at
              address 0xdd45e1 because it can't get the value of the segment 
              register.
    
              Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
              0x0804847b in main () at test.c:15
              (gdb)
            

    After getting a weird warning (which appears to occur inside malloc), we find that the segmentation fault occurs at the call to printf. The only memory operation here is dereferencing p, so we print its value:

              (gdb) print p
              $1 = (int *) 0x0
              (gdb) 
            

    p should not be null! We set it at the beginning with malloc and never changed its value. We can find out where it was changed by setting a watchpoint and using the reverse-continue command. This works just like you would hope: the program runs backwards until the point at which p was changed. Note that we explicitly set a software watchpoint rather than a hardware watchpoint; GDB 7 seems to silently ignore hardware watchpoints when replaying the program.

              (gdb) set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0
              (gdb) watch p
              Watchpoint 2: p
              (gdb) reverse-continue
              Continuing.
              Watchpoint 2: p
    
              Old value = (int *) 0x0
              New value = (int *) 0x804b008
              0x0804842c in initialize (array=0xbffff5c0, size=10) at test.c:6
              (gdb) 
            

    GDB stops on line 6 in the initialize function. Upon closer examination of the loop, we notice the off-by-one error in the condition. Since the array we passed to initialize is adjacent to p on the stack, we overwrite p when we write off the end of the array.

    This kind of error is an example of a buffer overflow, a common bug in C. More severe versions of this bug can create security vulnerabilities. Overflows are usually quite difficult to track down because a variable like p could change many times before taking on a "bad" value like it did here. If we had set a watchpoint at the beginning of a more complex program, the debugger might stop hundreds of times before we found something interesting. More generally, we frequently debug by sneaking up on a fault from the front; if we accidentally pass the fault, we usually have to start over. Reverse debugging allows us to approach a fault much more quickly from behind. We just let the program run normally until we reach a point shortly after a fault has occurred (for instance, when the SIGSEGV signal is received). We then run the program backward until we find what went wrong. The debugger can do pretty much the same things running backward as forward, including setting new watchpoints and breakpoints.

    Before we wrap up, here's a quick summary of useful commands for reverse debugging:

    • record - enable recording mode. This command must be issued while the program is running, and you can only run the program back to the point where this command was issued. There is a performance penalty.
    • reverse-step, reverse-next, reverse-finish, reverse-continue - just like the normal versions of the commands, but in the opposite direction.set exec-direction reverse - switches the program execution direction to reverse. The step, next, finish, continue commands will work in the currect execution direction.
    • set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0 - disables hardware watch points. This is necessary if you want to use watchpoints while running the program in reverse.

    Once again, you need GDB 7 in order to use reverse debugging. It is supplied as part of Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic) and other newer Linux distributions. Since reverse debugging a fairly new feature, it's not as complete as one would hope, so there's an official wish list which contains bugs and feature requests.

    Finally, I'd like to reference Sebastien Duquette's tutorial on reverse debugging, which is where I found out that you need to disable hardware watchpoints. If you're interested in how reverse debugging actually works, Michael Snyder (one of the GDB developers responsible for it) has a short post on StackOverflow about it.


    Comment by Lakshmy m.a posted on Fri Mar 5 09:24:25 2010

    sir, Am a student of model engineering college trikakkara of ernakulam district,kerala,India.we a group of 4 took this rgdb as our mini project.i would like to get some technical support from your side.can you please send me a mail as your respones, sir i couldnt get ur mail id...so that i can mail you we would like to get a tutorial of each reverse commands implementation + its logic we have downloaded the source code of the new version of gdb.7 but we couldnt understand the logic ,since its very lengthy, and we hav a short time to for our mini project section... It will be very helpful if we get the basic idea behind this.


    http://www.jayconrod.com/posts/28/tutorial-reverse-debugging-with-gdb-7

  • 相关阅读:
    hdu 5976 Detachment
    poj 2096 Collecting Bugs
    hdu 4544 湫湫系列故事——消灭兔子
    Educational Codeforces Round 8 B. New Skateboard
    python 迭代器与生成器 区别
    【机器学习】EM算法详细推导和讲解
    【机器学习】极大似然估计详解
    标准sql工单模板
    【机器学习】LDA 浅谈
    Jupyter notebook入门教程
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/yangyingchao/p/3204926.html
Copyright © 2011-2022 走看看