blob: ecc65c92e1859e78c9c0a054be2b29cdf331c13c [file] [log] [blame]
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +01001/*
Paul Beesley1fbc97b2019-01-11 18:26:51 +00002 * Copyright (c) 2018-2019, ARM Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +01003 *
4 * SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
5 */
6
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +01007#include <assert.h>
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +01008#include <stdbool.h>
9#include <stdint.h>
10
Antonio Nino Diaze0f90632018-12-14 00:18:21 +000011#include <arch_helpers.h>
12#include <common/debug.h>
13#include <drivers/console.h>
14
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +010015/* Maximum number of entries in the backtrace to display */
16#define UNWIND_LIMIT 20U
17
18/*
19 * If -fno-omit-frame-pointer is used:
20 *
21 * - AArch64: The AAPCS defines the format of the frame records and mandates the
22 * usage of r29 as frame pointer.
23 *
24 * - AArch32: The format of the frame records is not defined in the AAPCS.
25 * However, at least GCC and Clang use the same format. When they are forced
26 * to only generate A32 code (with -marm), they use r11 as frame pointer and a
27 * similar format as in AArch64. If interworking with T32 is enabled, the
28 * frame pointer is r7 and the format is different. This is not supported by
29 * this implementation of backtrace, so it is needed to use -marm.
30 */
31
32/* Frame records form a linked list in the stack */
33struct frame_record {
34 /* Previous frame record in the list */
35 struct frame_record *parent;
36 /* Return address of the function at this level */
37 uintptr_t return_addr;
38};
39
40static const char *get_el_str(unsigned int el)
41{
42 if (el == 3U) {
43 return "EL3";
44 } else if (el == 2U) {
45 return "EL2";
46 } else {
47 return "S-EL1";
48 }
49}
50
51/*
52 * Returns true if the address points to a virtual address that can be read at
53 * the current EL, false otherwise.
54 */
55#ifdef AARCH64
56static bool is_address_readable(uintptr_t addr)
57{
58 unsigned int el = get_current_el();
59
60 if (el == 3U) {
61 ats1e3r(addr);
62 } else if (el == 2U) {
63 ats1e2r(addr);
64 } else {
65 ats1e1r(addr);
66 }
67
68 isb();
69
70 /* If PAR.F == 1 the address translation was aborted. */
71 if ((read_par_el1() & PAR_F_MASK) != 0U)
72 return false;
73
74 return true;
75}
76#else /* if AARCH32 */
77static bool is_address_readable(uintptr_t addr)
78{
79 unsigned int el = get_current_el();
80
81 if (el == 3U) {
82 write_ats1cpr(addr);
83 } else if (el == 2U) {
84 write_ats1hr(addr);
85 } else {
86 write_ats1cpr(addr);
87 }
88
89 isb();
90
91 /* If PAR.F == 1 the address translation was aborted. */
92 if ((read64_par() & PAR_F_MASK) != 0U)
93 return false;
94
95 return true;
96}
97#endif
98
99/*
100 * Returns true if all the bytes in a given object are in mapped memory and an
101 * LDR using this pointer would succeed, false otherwise.
102 */
103static bool is_valid_object(uintptr_t addr, size_t size)
104{
105 assert(size > 0U);
106
107 if (addr == 0U)
108 return false;
109
110 /* Detect overflows */
111 if ((addr + size) < addr)
112 return false;
113
114 /* A pointer not aligned properly could trigger an alignment fault. */
115 if ((addr & (sizeof(uintptr_t) - 1U)) != 0U)
116 return false;
117
118 /* Check that all the object is readable */
119 for (size_t i = 0; i < size; i++) {
120 if (!is_address_readable(addr + i))
121 return false;
122 }
123
124 return true;
125}
126
127/*
128 * Returns true if the specified address is correctly aligned and points to a
129 * valid memory region.
130 */
131static bool is_valid_jump_address(uintptr_t addr)
132{
133 if (addr == 0U)
134 return false;
135
136 /* Check alignment. Both A64 and A32 use 32-bit opcodes */
137 if ((addr & (sizeof(uint32_t) - 1U)) != 0U)
138 return false;
139
140 if (!is_address_readable(addr))
141 return false;
142
143 return true;
144}
145
146/*
147 * Returns true if the pointer points at a valid frame record, false otherwise.
148 */
149static bool is_valid_frame_record(struct frame_record *fr)
150{
151 return is_valid_object((uintptr_t)fr, sizeof(struct frame_record));
152}
153
154/*
155 * Adjust the frame-pointer-register value by 4 bytes on AArch32 to have the
156 * same layout as AArch64.
157 */
158static struct frame_record *adjust_frame_record(struct frame_record *fr)
159{
160#ifdef AARCH64
161 return fr;
162#else
163 return (struct frame_record *)((uintptr_t)fr - 4U);
164#endif
165}
166
167static void unwind_stack(struct frame_record *fr, uintptr_t current_pc,
168 uintptr_t link_register)
169{
170 uintptr_t call_site;
171 static const char *backtrace_str = "%u: %s: 0x%lx\n";
172 const char *el_str = get_el_str(get_current_el());
173
174 if (!is_valid_frame_record(fr)) {
175 printf("ERROR: Corrupted frame pointer (frame record address = %p)\n",
176 fr);
177 return;
178 }
179
180 if (fr->return_addr != link_register) {
181 printf("ERROR: Corrupted stack (frame record address = %p)\n",
182 fr);
183 return;
184 }
185
186 /* The level 0 of the backtrace is the current backtrace function */
187 printf(backtrace_str, 0U, el_str, current_pc);
188
189 /*
190 * The last frame record pointer in the linked list at the beginning of
191 * the stack should be NULL unless stack is corrupted.
192 */
193 for (unsigned int i = 1U; i < UNWIND_LIMIT; i++) {
194 /* If an invalid frame record is found, exit. */
195 if (!is_valid_frame_record(fr))
196 return;
197 /*
198 * A32 and A64 are fixed length so the address from where the
199 * call was made is the instruction before the return address,
200 * which is always 4 bytes before it.
201 */
202 call_site = fr->return_addr - 4U;
203
204 /*
205 * If the address is invalid it means that the frame record is
206 * probably corrupted.
207 */
208 if (!is_valid_jump_address(call_site))
209 return;
210
211 printf(backtrace_str, i, el_str, call_site);
212
213 fr = adjust_frame_record(fr->parent);
214 }
215
216 printf("ERROR: Max backtrace depth reached\n");
217}
218
219/*
220 * Display a backtrace. The cookie string parameter is displayed along the
221 * trace to help filter the log messages.
222 *
223 * Many things can prevent displaying the expected backtrace. For example,
224 * compiler optimizations can use a branch instead of branch with link when it
225 * detects a tail call. The backtrace level for this caller will not be
226 * displayed, as it does not appear in the call stack anymore. Also, assembly
227 * functions will not be displayed unless they setup AAPCS compliant frame
228 * records on AArch64 and compliant with GCC-specific frame record format on
229 * AArch32.
230 *
231 * Usage of the trace: addr2line can be used to map the addresses to function
232 * and source code location when given the ELF file compiled with debug
233 * information. The "-i" flag is highly recommended to improve display of
Paul Beesley1fbc97b2019-01-11 18:26:51 +0000234 * inlined function. The *.dump files generated when building each image can
Douglas Raillard77414632018-08-21 12:54:45 +0100235 * also be used.
236 *
237 * WARNING: In case of corrupted stack, this function could display security
238 * sensitive information past the beginning of the stack so it must not be used
239 * in production build. This function is only compiled in when ENABLE_BACKTRACE
240 * is set to 1.
241 */
242void backtrace(const char *cookie)
243{
244 uintptr_t return_address = (uintptr_t)__builtin_return_address(0U);
245 struct frame_record *fr = __builtin_frame_address(0U);
246
247 /* Printing the backtrace may crash the system, flush before starting */
248 (void)console_flush();
249
250 fr = adjust_frame_record(fr);
251
252 printf("BACKTRACE: START: %s\n", cookie);
253
254 unwind_stack(fr, (uintptr_t)&backtrace, return_address);
255
256 printf("BACKTRACE: END: %s\n", cookie);
257}