After searching the normal symbol table, look if the binary contains
.gnu_debugdata section. If it does, run LZMA decompression on it, load
the resulting ELF image into memory and call lookup_symbol() on it
again.
lookup_symbol() is modified so that it takes min_dist as a parameter and
only returns a symbol when it finds one that is closer than indicated by
the parameter.
Signed-off-by: Martin Milata <mmilata@redhat.com>
The code for symbol lookup (elfxx.c:lookup_symbol) works by iterating
over symbol tables while maintaing the symbol closest to the supplied
instruction pointer. Whenever this search encountered symbol that was
longer than result buffer, the function returned -UNW_ENOMEM even though
the final symbol wasn't too long.
Signed-off-by: Martin Milata <mmilata@redhat.com>
routine and add address-space argument. This is needed because on
PPC64, a the function-name symbol refers to a function descriptor
(unlike, for example, on ia64, where the @fptr() operator is needed to
refer to a function descriptor). Thus, in order to look up the name
of a function, we need to dereference the function descriptor. To
make matters more "interesting", the function descriptors are normally
resolved by the dynamic linker, so we can't get their values from the
ELF file. Instead, we have to read them from the running image, hence
the need for the address-space argument.
Return -UNW_ENOMEM if string buffer is too small. This makes the routine
compatible with the definition of the unw_get_proc_name(3).
(Logical change 1.63)