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author | Akshay <[email protected]> | 2023-02-12 06:43:49 +0000 |
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committer | Akshay <[email protected]> | 2023-02-12 06:43:49 +0000 |
commit | 366df8852f503523cc4f9046d82ba9a99dd51d7f (patch) | |
tree | 635884dd5700cdc2a22a8885031aa67816bbe1b0 /docs/posts/call_to_ARMs/index.html | |
parent | 57a1fc656e05e1fcf07e4cff3dc988c6b5c2bc59 (diff) |
new art: lapse
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@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ | |||
33 | <span class="stats-unit">cm</span> | 33 | <span class="stats-unit">cm</span> |
34 |   | 34 |   |
35 | <span class="stats-number"> | 35 | <span class="stats-number"> |
36 | 2.2 | 36 | 2.3 |
37 | </span> | 37 | </span> |
38 | <span class="stats-unit">min</span> | 38 | <span class="stats-unit">min</span> |
39 | </div> | 39 | </div> |
@@ -42,37 +42,60 @@ | |||
42 | Call To ARMs | 42 | Call To ARMs |
43 | </h1> | 43 | </h1> |
44 | <div class="post-text"> | 44 | <div class="post-text"> |
45 | <p>My 4th semester involves ARM programming. And proprietary tooling (Keil C). But we don’t do that here.</p> | 45 | <p>My 4th semester involves ARM programming. And proprietary tooling |
46 | (Keil C). But we don’t do that here.</p> | ||
46 | <h3 id="building">Building</h3> | 47 | <h3 id="building">Building</h3> |
47 | <p>Assembling and linking ARM binaries on non-ARM architecture devices is fairly trivial. I went along with the GNU cross bare metal toolchain binutils, which provides <code>arm-as</code> and <code>arm-ld</code> (among a bunch of other utils that I don’t care about for now).</p> | 48 | <p>Assembling and linking ARM binaries on non-ARM architecture devices |
49 | is fairly trivial. I went along with the GNU cross bare metal toolchain | ||
50 | binutils, which provides <code>arm-as</code> and <code>arm-ld</code> | ||
51 | (among a bunch of other utils that I don’t care about for now).</p> | ||
48 | <p>Assemble <code>.s</code> files with:</p> | 52 | <p>Assemble <code>.s</code> files with:</p> |
49 | <pre class="shell"><code>arm-none-eabi-as main.s -g -march=armv8.1-a -o main.out</code></pre> | 53 | <pre class="shell"><code>arm-none-eabi-as main.s -g -march=armv8.1-a -o main.out</code></pre> |
50 | <p>The <code>-g</code> flag generates extra debugging information that <code>gdb</code> picks up. The <code>-march</code> option establishes target architecture.</p> | 54 | <p>The <code>-g</code> flag generates extra debugging information that |
55 | <code>gdb</code> picks up. The <code>-march</code> option establishes | ||
56 | target architecture.</p> | ||
51 | <p>Link <code>.o</code> files with:</p> | 57 | <p>Link <code>.o</code> files with:</p> |
52 | <pre class="shell"><code>arm-none-eabi-ld main.out -o main</code></pre> | 58 | <pre class="shell"><code>arm-none-eabi-ld main.out -o main</code></pre> |
53 | <h3 id="running-and-debugging">Running (and Debugging)</h3> | 59 | <h3 id="running-and-debugging">Running (and Debugging)</h3> |
54 | <p>Things get interesting here. <code>gdb</code> on your x86 machine cannot read nor execute binaries compiled for ARM. So, we simulate an ARM processor using <code>qemu</code>. Now qemu allows you to run <code>gdbserver</code> on startup. Connecting our local <code>gdb</code> instance to <code>gdbserver</code> gives us a view into the program’s execution. Easy!</p> | 60 | <p>Things get interesting here. <code>gdb</code> on your x86 machine |
55 | <p>Run <code>qemu</code>, with <code>gdbserver</code> on port <code>1234</code>, with our ARM binary, <code>main</code>:</p> | 61 | cannot read nor execute binaries compiled for ARM. So, we simulate an |
62 | ARM processor using <code>qemu</code>. Now qemu allows you to run | ||
63 | <code>gdbserver</code> on startup. Connecting our local <code>gdb</code> | ||
64 | instance to <code>gdbserver</code> gives us a view into the program’s | ||
65 | execution. Easy!</p> | ||
66 | <p>Run <code>qemu</code>, with <code>gdbserver</code> on port | ||
67 | <code>1234</code>, with our ARM binary, <code>main</code>:</p> | ||
56 | <pre class="shell"><code>qemu-arm -singlestep -g 1234 main</code></pre> | 68 | <pre class="shell"><code>qemu-arm -singlestep -g 1234 main</code></pre> |
57 | <p>Start up <code>gdb</code> on your machine, and connect to <code>qemu</code>’s <code>gdbserver</code>:</p> | 69 | <p>Start up <code>gdb</code> on your machine, and connect to |
70 | <code>qemu</code>’s <code>gdbserver</code>:</p> | ||
58 | <pre><code>(gdb) set architecture armv8-a | 71 | <pre><code>(gdb) set architecture armv8-a |
59 | (gdb) target remote localhost:1234 | 72 | (gdb) target remote localhost:1234 |
60 | (gdb) file main | 73 | (gdb) file main |
61 | Reading symbols from main... # yay!</code></pre> | 74 | Reading symbols from main... # yay!</code></pre> |
62 | <h3 id="gdb-enhanced">GDB Enhanced</h3> | 75 | <h3 id="gdb-enhanced">GDB Enhanced</h3> |
63 | <p><code>gdb</code> is cool, but it’s not nearly as comfortable as well fleshed out emulators/IDEs like Keil. Watching registers, CPSR and memory chunks update <em>is</em> pretty fun.</p> | 76 | <p><code>gdb</code> is cool, but it’s not nearly as comfortable as well |
64 | <p>I came across <code>gdb</code>’s TUI mode (hit <code>C-x C-a</code> or type <code>tui enable</code> at the prompt). TUI mode is a godsend. It highlights the current line of execution, shows you disassembly outputs, updated registers, active breakpoints and more.</p> | 77 | fleshed out emulators/IDEs like Keil. Watching registers, CPSR and |
78 | memory chunks update <em>is</em> pretty fun.</p> | ||
79 | <p>I came across <code>gdb</code>’s TUI mode (hit <code>C-x C-a</code> | ||
80 | or type <code>tui enable</code> at the prompt). TUI mode is a godsend. | ||
81 | It highlights the current line of execution, shows you disassembly | ||
82 | outputs, updated registers, active breakpoints and more.</p> | ||
65 | <p><em>But</em>, it is an absolute eyesore.</p> | 83 | <p><em>But</em>, it is an absolute eyesore.</p> |
66 | <p>Say hello to <a href="https://github.com/hugsy/gef">GEF</a>! “GDB Enhanced Features” teaches our old dog some cool new tricks. Here are some additions that made my ARM debugging experience loads better:</p> | 84 | <p>Say hello to <a href="https://github.com/hugsy/gef">GEF</a>! “GDB |
85 | Enhanced Features” teaches our old dog some cool new tricks. Here are | ||
86 | some additions that made my ARM debugging experience loads better:</p> | ||
67 | <ul> | 87 | <ul> |
68 | <li>Memory watches</li> | 88 | <li>Memory watches</li> |
69 | <li>Register watches, with up to 7 levels of deref (overkill, I agree)</li> | 89 | <li>Register watches, with up to 7 levels of deref (overkill, I |
90 | agree)</li> | ||
70 | <li>Stack tracing</li> | 91 | <li>Stack tracing</li> |
71 | </ul> | 92 | </ul> |
72 | <p>And it’s pretty! See for yourself:</p> | 93 | <p>And it’s pretty! See for yourself:</p> |
73 | <p><a href="https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png"><img src="https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png" /></a></p> | 94 | <p><a href="https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png"><img |
95 | src="https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png" /></a></p> | ||
74 | <h3 id="editing">Editing</h3> | 96 | <h3 id="editing">Editing</h3> |
75 | <p>Vim, with <code>syntax off</code> because it dosen’t handle GNU ARM syntax too well.</p> | 97 | <p>Vim, with <code>syntax off</code> because it dosen’t handle GNU ARM |
98 | syntax too well.</p> | ||
76 | 99 | ||
77 | </div> | 100 | </div> |
78 | 101 | ||