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author | iddqd <iddqd@yandex-team.com> | 2024-12-19 10:46:06 +0300 |
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committer | iddqd <iddqd@yandex-team.com> | 2024-12-19 10:59:56 +0300 |
commit | bb0840c0025a75dd3b85b746ebcec7deb7d9fe1c (patch) | |
tree | 85bc5522e873d9d5c37df278f0300c26fe9e729e /contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h | |
parent | 1353077f79bb3547792b2fc86c22a695f0bc76f9 (diff) | |
download | ydb-bb0840c0025a75dd3b85b746ebcec7deb7d9fe1c.tar.gz |
Add contib/libs/breakpad to export
commit_hash:9d85255f8d9249f14105e4626bf4484805b8aed4
Diffstat (limited to 'contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h')
-rw-r--r-- | contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h | 832 |
1 files changed, 832 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h b/contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..83a88612a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/libs/breakpad/src/third_party/libdisasm/libdis.h @@ -0,0 +1,832 @@ +#ifndef LIBDISASM_H +#define LIBDISASM_H + +#include <stdint.h> + +/* 'NEW" types + * __________________________________________________________________________*/ +#ifndef LIBDISASM_QWORD_H /* do not interfere with qword.h */ + #define LIBDISASM_QWORD_H + #ifdef _MSC_VER + typedef __int64 qword_t; + #else + typedef int64_t qword_t; + #endif +#endif + +#include <sys/types.h> + +#ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +#endif + +/* 'NEW" x86 API + * __________________________________________________________________________*/ + + +/* ========================================= Error Reporting */ +/* REPORT CODES + * These are passed to a reporter function passed at initialization. + * Each code determines the type of the argument passed to the reporter; + * this allows the report to recover from errors, or just log them. + */ +enum x86_report_codes { + report_disasm_bounds, /* RVA OUT OF BOUNDS : The disassembler could + not disassemble the supplied RVA as it is + out of the range of the buffer. The + application should store the address and + attempt to determine what section of the + binary it is in, then disassemble the + address from the bytes in that section. + data: uint32_t rva */ + report_insn_bounds, /* INSTRUCTION OUT OF BOUNDS: The disassembler + could not disassemble the instruction as + the instruction would require bytes beyond + the end of the current buffer. This usually + indicated garbage bytes at the end of a + buffer, or an incorrectly-sized buffer. + data: uint32_t rva */ + report_invalid_insn, /* INVALID INSTRUCTION: The disassembler could + not disassemble the instruction as it has an + invalid combination of opcodes and operands. + This will stop automated disassembly; the + application can restart the disassembly + after the invalid instruction. + data: uint32_t rva */ + report_unknown +}; + +/* 'arg' is optional arbitrary data provided by the code passing the + * callback -- for example, it could be 'this' or 'self' in OOP code. + * 'code' is provided by libdisasm, it is one of the above + * 'data' is provided by libdisasm and is context-specific, per the enums */ +typedef void (*DISASM_REPORTER)( enum x86_report_codes code, + void *data, void *arg ); + + +/* x86_report_error : Call the register reporter to report an error */ +void x86_report_error( enum x86_report_codes code, void *data ); + +/* ========================================= Libdisasm Management Routines */ +enum x86_options { /* these can be ORed together */ + opt_none= 0, + opt_ignore_nulls=1, /* ignore sequences of > 4 NULL bytes */ + opt_16_bit=2, /* 16-bit/DOS disassembly */ + opt_att_mnemonics=4, /* use AT&T syntax names for alternate opcode mnemonics */ +}; + +/* management routines */ +/* 'arg' is caller-specific data which is passed as the first argument + * to the reporter callback routine */ +int x86_init( enum x86_options options, DISASM_REPORTER reporter, void *arg); +void x86_set_reporter( DISASM_REPORTER reporter, void *arg); +void x86_set_options( enum x86_options options ); +enum x86_options x86_get_options( void ); +int x86_cleanup(void); + + +/* ========================================= Instruction Representation */ +/* these defines are only intended for use in the array decl's */ +#define MAX_REGNAME 8 + +#define MAX_PREFIX_STR 32 +#define MAX_MNEM_STR 16 +#define MAX_INSN_SIZE 20 /* same as in i386.h */ +#define MAX_OP_STRING 32 /* max possible operand size in string form */ +#define MAX_OP_RAW_STRING 64 /* max possible operand size in raw form */ +#define MAX_OP_XML_STRING 256 /* max possible operand size in xml form */ +#define MAX_NUM_OPERANDS 8 /* max # implicit and explicit operands */ +/* in these, the '2 *' is arbitrary: the max # of operands should require + * more space than the rest of the insn */ +#define MAX_INSN_STRING 512 /* 2 * 8 * MAX_OP_STRING */ +#define MAX_INSN_RAW_STRING 1024 /* 2 * 8 * MAX_OP_RAW_STRING */ +#define MAX_INSN_XML_STRING 4096 /* 2 * 8 * MAX_OP_XML_STRING */ + +enum x86_reg_type { /* NOTE: these may be ORed together */ + reg_gen = 0x00001, /* general purpose */ + reg_in = 0x00002, /* incoming args, ala RISC */ + reg_out = 0x00004, /* args to calls, ala RISC */ + reg_local = 0x00008, /* local vars, ala RISC */ + reg_fpu = 0x00010, /* FPU data register */ + reg_seg = 0x00020, /* segment register */ + reg_simd = 0x00040, /* SIMD/MMX reg */ + reg_sys = 0x00080, /* restricted/system register */ + reg_sp = 0x00100, /* stack pointer */ + reg_fp = 0x00200, /* frame pointer */ + reg_pc = 0x00400, /* program counter */ + reg_retaddr = 0x00800, /* return addr for func */ + reg_cond = 0x01000, /* condition code / flags */ + reg_zero = 0x02000, /* zero register, ala RISC */ + reg_ret = 0x04000, /* return value */ + reg_src = 0x10000, /* array/rep source */ + reg_dest = 0x20000, /* array/rep destination */ + reg_count = 0x40000 /* array/rep/loop counter */ +}; + +/* x86_reg_t : an X86 CPU register */ +typedef struct { + char name[MAX_REGNAME]; + enum x86_reg_type type; /* what register is used for */ + unsigned int size; /* size of register in bytes */ + unsigned int id; /* register ID #, for quick compares */ + unsigned int alias; /* ID of reg this is an alias for */ + unsigned int shift; /* amount to shift aliased reg by */ +} x86_reg_t; + +/* x86_ea_t : an X86 effective address (address expression) */ +typedef struct { + unsigned int scale; /* scale factor */ + x86_reg_t index, base; /* index, base registers */ + int32_t disp; /* displacement */ + char disp_sign; /* is negative? 1/0 */ + char disp_size; /* 0, 1, 2, 4 */ +} x86_ea_t; + +/* x86_absolute_t : an X86 segment:offset address (descriptor) */ +typedef struct { + unsigned short segment; /* loaded directly into CS */ + union { + unsigned short off16; /* loaded directly into IP */ + uint32_t off32; /* loaded directly into EIP */ + } offset; +} x86_absolute_t; + +enum x86_op_type { /* mutually exclusive */ + op_unused = 0, /* empty/unused operand: should never occur */ + op_register = 1, /* CPU register */ + op_immediate = 2, /* Immediate Value */ + op_relative_near = 3, /* Relative offset from IP */ + op_relative_far = 4, /* Relative offset from IP */ + op_absolute = 5, /* Absolute address (ptr16:32) */ + op_expression = 6, /* Address expression (scale/index/base/disp) */ + op_offset = 7, /* Offset from start of segment (m32) */ + op_unknown +}; + +#define x86_optype_is_address( optype ) \ + ( optype == op_absolute || optype == op_offset ) +#define x86_optype_is_relative( optype ) \ + ( optype == op_relative_near || optype == op_relative_far ) +#define x86_optype_is_memory( optype ) \ + ( optype > op_immediate && optype < op_unknown ) + +enum x86_op_datatype { /* these use Intel's lame terminology */ + op_byte = 1, /* 1 byte integer */ + op_word = 2, /* 2 byte integer */ + op_dword = 3, /* 4 byte integer */ + op_qword = 4, /* 8 byte integer */ + op_dqword = 5, /* 16 byte integer */ + op_sreal = 6, /* 4 byte real (single real) */ + op_dreal = 7, /* 8 byte real (double real) */ + op_extreal = 8, /* 10 byte real (extended real) */ + op_bcd = 9, /* 10 byte binary-coded decimal */ + op_ssimd = 10, /* 16 byte : 4 packed single FP (SIMD, MMX) */ + op_dsimd = 11, /* 16 byte : 2 packed double FP (SIMD, MMX) */ + op_sssimd = 12, /* 4 byte : scalar single FP (SIMD, MMX) */ + op_sdsimd = 13, /* 8 byte : scalar double FP (SIMD, MMX) */ + op_descr32 = 14, /* 6 byte Intel descriptor 2:4 */ + op_descr16 = 15, /* 4 byte Intel descriptor 2:2 */ + op_pdescr32 = 16, /* 6 byte Intel pseudo-descriptor 32:16 */ + op_pdescr16 = 17, /* 6 byte Intel pseudo-descriptor 8:24:16 */ + op_bounds16 = 18, /* signed 16:16 lower:upper bounds */ + op_bounds32 = 19, /* signed 32:32 lower:upper bounds */ + op_fpuenv16 = 20, /* 14 byte FPU control/environment data */ + op_fpuenv32 = 21, /* 28 byte FPU control/environment data */ + op_fpustate16 = 22, /* 94 byte FPU state (env & reg stack) */ + op_fpustate32 = 23, /* 108 byte FPU state (env & reg stack) */ + op_fpregset = 24, /* 512 bytes: register set */ + op_fpreg = 25, /* FPU register */ + op_none = 0xFF, /* operand without a datatype (INVLPG) */ +}; + +enum x86_op_access { /* ORed together */ + op_read = 1, + op_write = 2, + op_execute = 4 +}; + +enum x86_op_flags { /* ORed together, but segs are mutually exclusive */ + op_signed = 1, /* signed integer */ + op_string = 2, /* possible string or array */ + op_constant = 4, /* symbolic constant */ + op_pointer = 8, /* operand points to a memory address */ + op_sysref = 0x010, /* operand is a syscall number */ + op_implied = 0x020, /* operand is implicit in the insn */ + op_hardcode = 0x40, /* operand is hardcoded in insn definition */ + /* NOTE: an 'implied' operand is one which can be considered a side + * effect of the insn, e.g. %esp being modified by PUSH or POP. A + * 'hard-coded' operand is one which is specified in the instruction + * definition, e.g. %es:%edi in MOVSB or 1 in ROL Eb, 1. The difference + * is that hard-coded operands are printed by disassemblers and are + * required to re-assemble, while implicit operands are invisible. */ + op_es_seg = 0x100, /* ES segment override */ + op_cs_seg = 0x200, /* CS segment override */ + op_ss_seg = 0x300, /* SS segment override */ + op_ds_seg = 0x400, /* DS segment override */ + op_fs_seg = 0x500, /* FS segment override */ + op_gs_seg = 0x600 /* GS segment override */ +}; + +/* x86_op_t : an X86 instruction operand */ +typedef struct { + enum x86_op_type type; /* operand type */ + enum x86_op_datatype datatype; /* operand size */ + enum x86_op_access access; /* operand access [RWX] */ + enum x86_op_flags flags; /* misc flags */ + union { + /* sizeof will have to work on these union members! */ + /* immediate values */ + char sbyte; + short sword; + int32_t sdword; + qword_t sqword; + unsigned char byte; + unsigned short word; + uint32_t dword; + qword_t qword; + float sreal; + double dreal; + /* misc large/non-native types */ + unsigned char extreal[10]; + unsigned char bcd[10]; + qword_t dqword[2]; + unsigned char simd[16]; + unsigned char fpuenv[28]; + /* offset from segment */ + uint32_t offset; + /* ID of CPU register */ + x86_reg_t reg; + /* offsets from current insn */ + char relative_near; + int32_t relative_far; + /* segment:offset */ + x86_absolute_t absolute; + /* effective address [expression] */ + x86_ea_t expression; + } data; + /* this is needed to make formatting operands more sane */ + void * insn; /* pointer to x86_insn_t owning operand */ +} x86_op_t; + +/* Linked list of x86_op_t; provided for manual traversal of the operand + * list in an insn. Users wishing to add operands to this list, e.g. to add + * implicit operands, should use x86_operand_new in x86_operand_list.h */ +typedef struct x86_operand_list { + x86_op_t op; + struct x86_operand_list *next; +} x86_oplist_t; + +enum x86_insn_group { + insn_none = 0, /* invalid instruction */ + insn_controlflow = 1, + insn_arithmetic = 2, + insn_logic = 3, + insn_stack = 4, + insn_comparison = 5, + insn_move = 6, + insn_string = 7, + insn_bit_manip = 8, + insn_flag_manip = 9, + insn_fpu = 10, + insn_interrupt = 13, + insn_system = 14, + insn_other = 15 +}; + +enum x86_insn_type { + insn_invalid = 0, /* invalid instruction */ + /* insn_controlflow */ + insn_jmp = 0x1001, + insn_jcc = 0x1002, + insn_call = 0x1003, + insn_callcc = 0x1004, + insn_return = 0x1005, + /* insn_arithmetic */ + insn_add = 0x2001, + insn_sub = 0x2002, + insn_mul = 0x2003, + insn_div = 0x2004, + insn_inc = 0x2005, + insn_dec = 0x2006, + insn_shl = 0x2007, + insn_shr = 0x2008, + insn_rol = 0x2009, + insn_ror = 0x200A, + /* insn_logic */ + insn_and = 0x3001, + insn_or = 0x3002, + insn_xor = 0x3003, + insn_not = 0x3004, + insn_neg = 0x3005, + /* insn_stack */ + insn_push = 0x4001, + insn_pop = 0x4002, + insn_pushregs = 0x4003, + insn_popregs = 0x4004, + insn_pushflags = 0x4005, + insn_popflags = 0x4006, + insn_enter = 0x4007, + insn_leave = 0x4008, + /* insn_comparison */ + insn_test = 0x5001, + insn_cmp = 0x5002, + /* insn_move */ + insn_mov = 0x6001, /* move */ + insn_movcc = 0x6002, /* conditional move */ + insn_xchg = 0x6003, /* exchange */ + insn_xchgcc = 0x6004, /* conditional exchange */ + /* insn_string */ + insn_strcmp = 0x7001, + insn_strload = 0x7002, + insn_strmov = 0x7003, + insn_strstore = 0x7004, + insn_translate = 0x7005, /* xlat */ + /* insn_bit_manip */ + insn_bittest = 0x8001, + insn_bitset = 0x8002, + insn_bitclear = 0x8003, + /* insn_flag_manip */ + insn_clear_carry = 0x9001, + insn_clear_zero = 0x9002, + insn_clear_oflow = 0x9003, + insn_clear_dir = 0x9004, + insn_clear_sign = 0x9005, + insn_clear_parity = 0x9006, + insn_set_carry = 0x9007, + insn_set_zero = 0x9008, + insn_set_oflow = 0x9009, + insn_set_dir = 0x900A, + insn_set_sign = 0x900B, + insn_set_parity = 0x900C, + insn_tog_carry = 0x9010, + insn_tog_zero = 0x9020, + insn_tog_oflow = 0x9030, + insn_tog_dir = 0x9040, + insn_tog_sign = 0x9050, + insn_tog_parity = 0x9060, + /* insn_fpu */ + insn_fmov = 0xA001, + insn_fmovcc = 0xA002, + insn_fneg = 0xA003, + insn_fabs = 0xA004, + insn_fadd = 0xA005, + insn_fsub = 0xA006, + insn_fmul = 0xA007, + insn_fdiv = 0xA008, + insn_fsqrt = 0xA009, + insn_fcmp = 0xA00A, + insn_fcos = 0xA00C, + insn_fldpi = 0xA00D, + insn_fldz = 0xA00E, + insn_ftan = 0xA00F, + insn_fsine = 0xA010, + insn_fsys = 0xA020, + /* insn_interrupt */ + insn_int = 0xD001, + insn_intcc = 0xD002, /* not present in x86 ISA */ + insn_iret = 0xD003, + insn_bound = 0xD004, + insn_debug = 0xD005, + insn_trace = 0xD006, + insn_invalid_op = 0xD007, + insn_oflow = 0xD008, + /* insn_system */ + insn_halt = 0xE001, + insn_in = 0xE002, /* input from port/bus */ + insn_out = 0xE003, /* output to port/bus */ + insn_cpuid = 0xE004, + /* insn_other */ + insn_nop = 0xF001, + insn_bcdconv = 0xF002, /* convert to or from BCD */ + insn_szconv = 0xF003 /* change size of operand */ +}; + +/* These flags specify special characteristics of the instruction, such as + * whether the inatruction is privileged or whether it serializes the + * pipeline. + * NOTE : These may not be accurate for all instructions; updates to the + * opcode tables have not been completed. */ +enum x86_insn_note { + insn_note_ring0 = 1, /* Only available in ring 0 */ + insn_note_smm = 2, /* "" in System Management Mode */ + insn_note_serial = 4, /* Serializing instruction */ + insn_note_nonswap = 8, /* Does not swap arguments in att-style formatting */ + insn_note_nosuffix = 16, /* Does not have size suffix in att-style formatting */ +}; + +/* This specifies what effects the instruction has on the %eflags register */ +enum x86_flag_status { + insn_carry_set = 0x1, /* CF */ + insn_zero_set = 0x2, /* ZF */ + insn_oflow_set = 0x4, /* OF */ + insn_dir_set = 0x8, /* DF */ + insn_sign_set = 0x10, /* SF */ + insn_parity_set = 0x20, /* PF */ + insn_carry_or_zero_set = 0x40, + insn_zero_set_or_sign_ne_oflow = 0x80, + insn_carry_clear = 0x100, + insn_zero_clear = 0x200, + insn_oflow_clear = 0x400, + insn_dir_clear = 0x800, + insn_sign_clear = 0x1000, + insn_parity_clear = 0x2000, + insn_sign_eq_oflow = 0x4000, + insn_sign_ne_oflow = 0x8000 +}; + +/* The CPU model in which the insturction first appeared; this can be used + * to mask out instructions appearing in earlier or later models or to + * check the portability of a binary. + * NOTE : These may not be accurate for all instructions; updates to the + * opcode tables have not been completed. */ +enum x86_insn_cpu { + cpu_8086 = 1, /* Intel */ + cpu_80286 = 2, + cpu_80386 = 3, + cpu_80387 = 4, + cpu_80486 = 5, + cpu_pentium = 6, + cpu_pentiumpro = 7, + cpu_pentium2 = 8, + cpu_pentium3 = 9, + cpu_pentium4 = 10, + cpu_k6 = 16, /* AMD */ + cpu_k7 = 32, + cpu_athlon = 48 +}; + +/* CPU ISA subsets: These are derived from the Instruction Groups in + * Intel Vol 1 Chapter 5; they represent subsets of the IA32 ISA but + * do not reflect the 'type' of the instruction in the same way that + * x86_insn_group does. In short, these are AMD/Intel's somewhat useless + * designations. + * NOTE : These may not be accurate for all instructions; updates to the + * opcode tables have not been completed. */ +enum x86_insn_isa { + isa_gp = 1, /* general purpose */ + isa_fp = 2, /* floating point */ + isa_fpumgt = 3, /* FPU/SIMD management */ + isa_mmx = 4, /* Intel MMX */ + isa_sse1 = 5, /* Intel SSE SIMD */ + isa_sse2 = 6, /* Intel SSE2 SIMD */ + isa_sse3 = 7, /* Intel SSE3 SIMD */ + isa_3dnow = 8, /* AMD 3DNow! SIMD */ + isa_sys = 9 /* system instructions */ +}; + +enum x86_insn_prefix { + insn_no_prefix = 0, + insn_rep_zero = 1, /* REPZ and REPE */ + insn_rep_notzero = 2, /* REPNZ and REPNZ */ + insn_lock = 4 /* LOCK: */ +}; + +/* TODO: maybe provide insn_new/free(), and have disasm return new insn_t */ +/* x86_insn_t : an X86 instruction */ +typedef struct { + /* information about the instruction */ + uint32_t addr; /* load address */ + uint32_t offset; /* offset into file/buffer */ + enum x86_insn_group group; /* meta-type, e.g. INS_EXEC */ + enum x86_insn_type type; /* type, e.g. INS_BRANCH */ + enum x86_insn_note note; /* note, e.g. RING0 */ + unsigned char bytes[MAX_INSN_SIZE]; + unsigned char size; /* size of insn in bytes */ + /* 16/32-bit mode settings */ + unsigned char addr_size; /* default address size : 2 or 4 */ + unsigned char op_size; /* default operand size : 2 or 4 */ + /* CPU/instruction set */ + enum x86_insn_cpu cpu; + enum x86_insn_isa isa; + /* flags */ + enum x86_flag_status flags_set; /* flags set or tested by insn */ + enum x86_flag_status flags_tested; + /* stack */ + unsigned char stack_mod; /* 0 or 1 : is the stack modified? */ + int32_t stack_mod_val; /* val stack is modified by if known */ + + /* the instruction proper */ + enum x86_insn_prefix prefix; /* prefixes ORed together */ + char prefix_string[MAX_PREFIX_STR]; /* prefixes [might be truncated] */ + char mnemonic[MAX_MNEM_STR]; + x86_oplist_t *operands; /* list of explicit/implicit operands */ + size_t operand_count; /* total number of operands */ + size_t explicit_count; /* number of explicit operands */ + /* convenience fields for user */ + void *block; /* code block containing this insn */ + void *function; /* function containing this insn */ + int tag; /* tag the insn as seen/processed */ +} x86_insn_t; + + +/* returns 0 if an instruction is invalid, 1 if valid */ +int x86_insn_is_valid( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* DISASSEMBLY ROUTINES + * Canonical order of arguments is + * (buf, buf_len, buf_rva, offset, len, insn, func, arg, resolve_func) + * ...but of course all of these are not used at the same time. + */ + + +/* Function prototype for caller-supplied callback routine + * These callbacks are intended to process 'insn' further, e.g. by + * adding it to a linked list, database, etc */ +typedef void (*DISASM_CALLBACK)( x86_insn_t *insn, void * arg ); + +/* Function prototype for caller-supplied address resolver. + * This routine is used to determine the rva to disassemble next, given + * the 'dest' operand of a jump/call. This allows the caller to resolve + * jump/call targets stored in a register or on the stack, and also allows + * the caller to prevent endless loops by checking if an address has + * already been disassembled. If an address cannot be resolved from the + * operand, or if the address has already been disassembled, this routine + * should return -1; in all other cases the RVA to be disassembled next + * should be returned. */ +typedef int32_t (*DISASM_RESOLVER)( x86_op_t *op, x86_insn_t * current_insn, + void *arg ); + + +/* x86_disasm: Disassemble a single instruction from a buffer of bytes. + * Returns size of instruction in bytes. + * Caller is responsible for calling x86_oplist_free() on + * a reused "insn" to avoid leaking memory when calling this + * function repeatedly. + * buf : Buffer of bytes to disassemble + * buf_len : Length of the buffer + * buf_rva : Load address of the start of the buffer + * offset : Offset in buffer to disassemble + * insn : Structure to fill with disassembled instruction + */ +unsigned int x86_disasm( unsigned char *buf, unsigned int buf_len, + uint32_t buf_rva, unsigned int offset, + x86_insn_t * insn ); + +/* x86_disasm_range: Sequential disassembly of a range of bytes in a buffer, + * invoking a callback function each time an instruction + * is successfully disassembled. The 'range' refers to the + * bytes between 'offset' and 'offset + len' in the buffer; + * 'len' is assumed to be less than the length of the buffer. + * Returns number of instructions processed. + * buf : Buffer of bytes to disassemble (e.g. .text section) + * buf_rva : Load address of buffer (e.g. ELF Virtual Address) + * offset : Offset in buffer to start disassembly at + * len : Number of bytes to disassemble + * func : Callback function to invoke (may be NULL) + * arg : Arbitrary data to pass to callback (may be NULL) + */ +unsigned int x86_disasm_range( unsigned char *buf, uint32_t buf_rva, + unsigned int offset, unsigned int len, + DISASM_CALLBACK func, void *arg ); + +/* x86_disasm_forward: Flow-of-execution disassembly of the bytes in a buffer, + * invoking a callback function each time an instruction + * is successfully disassembled. + * buf : Buffer to disassemble (e.g. .text section) + * buf_len : Number of bytes in buffer + * buf_rva : Load address of buffer (e.g. ELF Virtual Address) + * offset : Offset in buffer to start disassembly at (e.g. entry point) + * func : Callback function to invoke (may be NULL) + * arg : Arbitrary data to pass to callback (may be NULL) + * resolver: Caller-supplied address resolver. If no resolver is + * supplied, a default internal one is used -- however the + * internal resolver does NOT catch loops and could end up + * disassembling forever.. + * r_arg : Arbitrary data to pass to resolver (may be NULL) + */ +unsigned int x86_disasm_forward( unsigned char *buf, unsigned int buf_len, + uint32_t buf_rva, unsigned int offset, + DISASM_CALLBACK func, void *arg, + DISASM_RESOLVER resolver, void *r_arg ); + +/* Instruction operands: these are stored as a list of explicit and + * implicit operands. It is recommended that the 'foreach' routines + * be used to when examining operands for purposes of data flow analysis */ + +/* Operand FOREACH callback: 'arg' is an abritrary parameter passed to the + * foreach routine, 'insn' is the x86_insn_t whose operands are being + * iterated over, and 'op' is the current x86_op_t */ +typedef void (*x86_operand_fn)(x86_op_t *op, x86_insn_t *insn, void *arg); + +/* FOREACH types: these are used to limit the foreach results to + * operands which match a certain "type" (implicit or explicit) + * or which are accessed in certain ways (e.g. read or write). Note + * that this operates on the operand list of single instruction, so + * specifying the 'real' operand type (register, memory, etc) is not + * useful. Note also that by definition Execute Access implies Read + * Access and implies Not Write Access. + * The "type" (implicit or explicit) and the access method can + * be ORed together, e.g. op_wo | op_explicit */ +enum x86_op_foreach_type { + op_any = 0, /* ALL operands (explicit, implicit, rwx) */ + op_dest = 1, /* operands with Write access */ + op_src = 2, /* operands with Read access */ + op_ro = 3, /* operands with Read but not Write access */ + op_wo = 4, /* operands with Write but not Read access */ + op_xo = 5, /* operands with Execute access */ + op_rw = 6, /* operands with Read AND Write access */ + op_implicit = 0x10, /* operands that are implied by the opcode */ + op_explicit = 0x20 /* operands that are not side-effects */ +}; + + +/* free the operand list associated with an instruction -- useful for + * preventing memory leaks when free()ing an x86_insn_t */ +void x86_oplist_free( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* Operand foreach: invokes 'func' with 'insn' and 'arg' as arguments. The + * 'type' parameter is used to select only operands matching specific + * criteria. */ +int x86_operand_foreach( x86_insn_t *insn, x86_operand_fn func, void *arg, + enum x86_op_foreach_type type); + +/* convenience routine: returns count of operands matching 'type' */ +size_t x86_operand_count( x86_insn_t *insn, enum x86_op_foreach_type type ); + +/* accessor functions for the operands */ +x86_op_t * x86_operand_1st( x86_insn_t *insn ); +x86_op_t * x86_operand_2nd( x86_insn_t *insn ); +x86_op_t * x86_operand_3rd( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* these allow libdisasm 2.0 accessor functions to still be used */ +#define x86_get_dest_operand( insn ) x86_operand_1st( insn ) +#define x86_get_src_operand( insn ) x86_operand_2nd( insn ) +#define x86_get_imm_operand( insn ) x86_operand_3rd( insn ) + +/* get size of operand data in bytes */ +unsigned int x86_operand_size( x86_op_t *op ); + +/* Operand Convenience Routines: the following three routines are common + * operations on operands, intended to ease the burden of the programmer. */ + +/* Get Address: return the value of an offset operand, or the offset of + * a segment:offset absolute address */ +uint32_t x86_get_address( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* Get Relative Offset: return as a sign-extended int32_t the near or far + * relative offset operand, or 0 if there is none. There can be only one + * relaive offset operand in an instruction. */ +int32_t x86_get_rel_offset( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* Get Branch Target: return the x86_op_t containing the target of + * a jump or call operand, or NULL if there is no branch target. + * Internally, a 'branch target' is defined as any operand with + * Execute Access set. There can be only one branch target per instruction. */ +x86_op_t * x86_get_branch_target( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* Get Immediate: return the x86_op_t containing the immediate operand + * for this instruction, or NULL if there is no immediate operand. There + * can be only one immediate operand per instruction */ +x86_op_t * x86_get_imm( x86_insn_t *insn ); + +/* Get Raw Immediate Data: returns a pointer to the immediate data encoded + * in the instruction. This is useful for large data types [>32 bits] currently + * not supported by libdisasm, or for determining if the disassembler + * screwed up the conversion of the immediate data. Note that 'imm' in this + * context refers to immediate data encoded at the end of an instruction as + * detailed in the Intel Manual Vol II Chapter 2; it does not refer to the + * 'op_imm' operand (the third operand in instructions like 'mul' */ +unsigned char * x86_get_raw_imm( x86_insn_t *insn ); + + +/* More accessor fuctions, this time for user-defined info... */ +/* set the address (usually RVA) of the insn */ +void x86_set_insn_addr( x86_insn_t *insn, uint32_t addr ); + +/* set the offset (usually offset into file) of the insn */ +void x86_set_insn_offset( x86_insn_t *insn, unsigned int offset ); + +/* set a pointer to the function owning the instruction. The + * type of 'func' is user-defined; libdisasm does not use the func field. */ +void x86_set_insn_function( x86_insn_t *insn, void * func ); + +/* set a pointer to the block of code owning the instruction. The + * type of 'block' is user-defined; libdisasm does not use the block field. */ +void x86_set_insn_block( x86_insn_t *insn, void * block ); + +/* instruction tagging: these routines allow the programmer to mark + * instructions as "seen" in a DFS, for example. libdisasm does not use + * the tag field.*/ +/* set insn->tag to 1 */ +void x86_tag_insn( x86_insn_t *insn ); +/* set insn->tag to 0 */ +void x86_untag_insn( x86_insn_t *insn ); +/* return insn->tag */ +int x86_insn_is_tagged( x86_insn_t *insn ); + + +/* Disassembly formats: + * AT&T is standard AS/GAS-style: "mnemonic\tsrc, dest, imm" + * Intel is standard MASM/NASM/TASM: "mnemonic\tdest,src, imm" + * Native is tab-delimited: "RVA\tbytes\tmnemonic\tdest\tsrc\timm" + * XML is your typical <insn> ... </insn> + * Raw is addr|offset|size|bytes|prefix... see libdisasm_formats.7 + */ +enum x86_asm_format { + unknown_syntax = 0, /* never use! */ + native_syntax, /* header: 35 bytes */ + intel_syntax, /* header: 23 bytes */ + att_syntax, /* header: 23 bytes */ + xml_syntax, /* header: 679 bytes */ + raw_syntax /* header: 172 bytes */ +}; + +/* format (sprintf) an operand into 'buf' using specified syntax */ +int x86_format_operand(x86_op_t *op, char *buf, int len, + enum x86_asm_format format); + +/* format (sprintf) an instruction mnemonic into 'buf' using specified syntax */ +int x86_format_mnemonic(x86_insn_t *insn, char *buf, int len, + enum x86_asm_format format); + +/* format (sprintf) an instruction into 'buf' using specified syntax; + * this includes formatting all operands */ +int x86_format_insn(x86_insn_t *insn, char *buf, int len, enum x86_asm_format); + +/* fill 'buf' with a description of the format's syntax */ +int x86_format_header( char *buf, int len, enum x86_asm_format format); + +/* Endianness of an x86 CPU : 0 is big, 1 is little; always returns 1 */ +unsigned int x86_endian(void); + +/* Default address and operand size in bytes */ +unsigned int x86_addr_size(void); +unsigned int x86_op_size(void); + +/* Size of a machine word in bytes */ +unsigned int x86_word_size(void); + +/* maximum size of a code instruction */ +#define x86_max_inst_size(x) x86_max_insn_size(x) +unsigned int x86_max_insn_size(void); + +/* register IDs of Stack, Frame, Instruction pointer and Flags register */ +unsigned int x86_sp_reg(void); +unsigned int x86_fp_reg(void); +unsigned int x86_ip_reg(void); +unsigned int x86_flag_reg(void); + +/* fill 'reg' struct with details of register 'id' */ +void x86_reg_from_id( unsigned int id, x86_reg_t * reg ); + +/* convenience macro demonstrating how to get an aliased register; proto is + * void x86_get_aliased_reg( x86_reg_t *alias_reg, x86_reg_t *output_reg ) + * where 'alias_reg' is a reg operand and 'output_reg' is filled with the + * register that the operand is an alias for */ +#define x86_get_aliased_reg( alias_reg, output_reg ) \ + x86_reg_from_id( alias_reg->alias, output_reg ) + + +/* ================================== Invariant Instruction Representation */ +/* Invariant instructions are used for generating binary signatures; + * the instruction is modified so that all variant bytes in an instruction + * are replaced with a wildcard byte. + * + * A 'variant byte' is one that is expected to be modified by either the + * static or the dynamic linker: for example, an address encoded in an + * instruction. + * + * By comparing the invariant representation of one instruction [or of a + * sequence of instructions] with the invariant representation of another, + * one determine whether the two invariant representations are from the same + * relocatable object [.o] file. Thus one can use binary signatures [which + * are just sequences of invariant instruction representations] to look for + * library routines which have been statically-linked into a binary. + * + * The invariant routines are faster and smaller than the disassembly + * routines; they can be used to determine the size of an instruction + * without all of the overhead of a full instruction disassembly. + */ + +/* This byte is used to replace variant bytes */ +#define X86_WILDCARD_BYTE 0xF4 + +typedef struct { + enum x86_op_type type; /* operand type */ + enum x86_op_datatype datatype; /* operand size */ + enum x86_op_access access; /* operand access [RWX] */ + enum x86_op_flags flags; /* misc flags */ +} x86_invariant_op_t; + +typedef struct { + unsigned char bytes[64]; /* invariant representation */ + unsigned int size; /* number of bytes in insn */ + enum x86_insn_group group; /* meta-type, e.g. INS_EXEC */ + enum x86_insn_type type; /* type, e.g. INS_BRANCH */ + x86_invariant_op_t operands[3]; /* operands: dest, src, imm */ +} x86_invariant_t; + + +/* return a version of the instruction with the variant bytes masked out */ +size_t x86_invariant_disasm( unsigned char *buf, int buf_len, + x86_invariant_t *inv ); +/* return the size in bytes of the intruction pointed to by 'buf'; + * this used x86_invariant_disasm since it faster than x86_disasm */ +size_t x86_size_disasm( unsigned char *buf, unsigned int buf_len ); + +#ifdef __cplusplus +} +#endif + + +#endif |