161 lines
5 KiB
C
161 lines
5 KiB
C
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/* Load and run a MIPS position independent ECOFF file.
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Written by Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
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Public domain. */
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/* This program will load an ECOFF file into memory and execute it.
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The file must have been compiled using the GNU -membedded-pic
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switch to produce position independent code. This will only work
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if this program is run on a MIPS system with the same endianness as
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the ECOFF file. The ECOFF file must be complete. System calls may
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not work correctly.
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There are further restrictions on the file (they could be removed
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by doing some additional programming). The file must be aligned
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such that it does not require any gaps introduced in the data
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segment; the GNU linker produces such files by default. However,
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the file must not assume that the text or data segment is aligned
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on a page boundary. The start address must be at the start of the
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text segment.
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The ECOFF file is run by calling it as though it were a function.
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The address of the data segment is passed as the only argument.
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The file is expected to return an integer value, which will be
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printed. */
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <sys/types.h>
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#include <sys/stat.h>
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/* Structures used in ECOFF files. We assume that a short is two
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bytes and an int is four bytes. This is not much of an assumption,
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since we already assume that we are running on a MIPS host with the
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same endianness as the file we are examining. */
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struct ecoff_filehdr {
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unsigned short f_magic; /* magic number */
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unsigned short f_nscns; /* number of sections */
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unsigned int f_timdat; /* time & date stamp */
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unsigned int f_symptr; /* file pointer to symtab */
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unsigned int f_nsyms; /* number of symtab entries */
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unsigned short f_opthdr; /* sizeof(optional hdr) */
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unsigned short f_flags; /* flags */
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};
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struct ecoff_aouthdr
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{
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unsigned short magic; /* type of file */
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unsigned short vstamp; /* version stamp */
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unsigned int tsize; /* text size in bytes, padded to FW bdry*/
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unsigned int dsize; /* initialized data " " */
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unsigned int bsize; /* uninitialized data " " */
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unsigned int entry; /* entry pt. */
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unsigned int text_start; /* base of text used for this file */
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unsigned int data_start; /* base of data used for this file */
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unsigned int bss_start; /* base of bss used for this file */
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unsigned int gprmask; /* ?? */
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unsigned int cprmask[4]; /* ?? */
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unsigned int gp_value; /* value for gp register */
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};
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#define ECOFF_SCNHDR_SIZE (40)
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static void
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die (s)
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char *s;
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{
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perror (s);
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exit (1);
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}
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int
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main (argc, argv)
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int argc;
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char **argv;
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{
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FILE *f;
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struct stat s;
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char *z;
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struct ecoff_filehdr *fh;
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struct ecoff_aouthdr *ah;
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unsigned int toff;
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char *t, *d;
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int (*pfn) ();
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int ret;
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if (argc != 2)
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{
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fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s file\n", argv[0]);
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exit (1);
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}
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f = fopen (argv[1], "r");
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if (f == NULL)
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die (argv[1]);
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if (stat (argv[1], &s) < 0)
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die ("stat");
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z = (char *) malloc (s.st_size);
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if (z == NULL)
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die ("malloc");
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if (fread (z, 1, s.st_size, f) != s.st_size)
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die ("fread");
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/* We need to figure out the start of the text segment, which is the
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location we are going to call, and the start of the data segment,
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which we are going to pass as an argument. We also need the size
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and start address of the bss segment. This information is all in
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the ECOFF a.out header. */
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fh = (struct ecoff_filehdr *) z;
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if (fh->f_opthdr != sizeof (struct ecoff_aouthdr))
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{
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fprintf (stderr, "%s: unexpected opthdr size: is %u, want %u\n",
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argv[1], (unsigned int) fh->f_opthdr,
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(unsigned int) sizeof (struct ecoff_aouthdr));
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exit (1);
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}
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ah = (struct ecoff_aouthdr *) (z + sizeof (struct ecoff_filehdr));
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if (ah->magic != 0413)
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{
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fprintf (stderr, "%s: bad aouthdr magic number 0%o (want 0413)\n",
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argv[1], (unsigned int) ah->magic);
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exit (1);
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}
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/* We should clear the bss segment at this point. This is the
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ah->bsize bytes starting at ah->bss_start, To do this correctly,
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we would have to make sure our memory block is large enough. It
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so happens that our test case does not have any additional pages
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for the bss segment--it is contained within the data segment.
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So, we don't bother. */
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if (ah->bsize != 0)
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{
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fprintf (stderr,
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"%s: bss segment is %u bytes; non-zero sizes not supported\n",
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argv[1], ah->bsize);
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exit (1);
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}
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/* The text section starts just after all the headers, rounded to a
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16 byte boundary. */
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toff = (sizeof (struct ecoff_filehdr) + sizeof (struct ecoff_aouthdr)
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+ fh->f_nscns * ECOFF_SCNHDR_SIZE);
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toff += 15;
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toff &=~ 15;
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t = z + toff;
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/* The tsize field gives us the start of the data segment. */
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d = z + ah->tsize;
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/* Call the code as a function. */
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pfn = (int (*) ()) t;
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ret = (*pfn) (d);
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printf ("%s ran and returned %d\n", argv[1], ret);
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exit (0);
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}
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