[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Qemu-devel] [Bug 1810545] Re: [alpha] Strange exception address reporte
From: |
Peter Maydell |
Subject: |
[Qemu-devel] [Bug 1810545] Re: [alpha] Strange exception address reported |
Date: |
Tue, 08 Jan 2019 11:47:09 -0000 |
commit ac89de40ef5d4eb1704aa now in QEMU git master updates the palcode
guest ROM blob to a version which includes the fix for this bug.
** Changed in: qemu
Status: New => Fix Committed
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of qemu-
devel-ml, which is subscribed to QEMU.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1810545
Title:
[alpha] Strange exception address reported
Status in QEMU:
Fix Committed
Bug description:
For some reason the SIGILL handler receives a different address under
qemu than it used to on real hardware. I don't know specifics about
the hardware used back then – it was some sort of 21264a somewhere
between 600-800 MHz –, and I cannot say anything about the kernel as
well, but I know that it delivered the faulting address +4, while
under qemu it receives +8. I know because CACAO, an early Java JIT
compiler extracts the address from the SIGILL handler and inspects the
code at the faulting site, and it has substracted 4 from the handler
address since the dawn of time, and this used to produce the desired
result on the Alpha hardware. It actually ran on two different Alpha
machines over the years, and both behaved identically.
The handler looks like this:
void handler_sigill(int sig, siginfo_t *siginfo, void *_p)
{
uintptr_t trap_address = (uintptr_t) (((ucontext_t*)
_p)->uc_mcontext.sc_pc) - 4;
}
(paraphrasing, the actual code is here: https://bitbucket.org/cacaovm
/cacao-
staging/src/c8d3fbab864c3243f97629fcfa8d84ba71f38157/src/vm/jit/alpha/linux
/md-os.cpp?at=default&fileviewer=file-view-default#md-os.cpp-65)
I don't know much about the qemu source code and cannot say where this
is coming from at first glance. The gen_invalid function uses pc_next,
which sounds like the next instruction, not the next-to-next ;). In
theory it could actually be the kernel's fault, although I consider
this unlikely.
This is qemu-system-alpha with apparently the last Debian which
existed for Alpha (lenny). The kernel is 2.6.26-2-alpha-generic
(Debian 2.6.26-29). Observed with qemu git 1b3e80082b, but I guess it
is the same with any version.
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1810545/+subscriptions