John Baldwin ecb65f66c6 Use casts to force an unsigned comparison in db_search_symbol().
On all of our platforms, db_expr_t is a signed integer while
db_addr_t is an unsigned integer value.  db_search_symbol used variables
of type db_expr_t to hold the current offset of the requested address from
the "best" symbol found so far.  This value was initialized to '~0'.
When a new symbol is found from a symbol table, the associated diff for the
new symbol is compared against the existing value as 'if (newdiff < diff)'
to determine if the new symbol had a smaller diff and was thus a closer
match.

On 64-bit MIPS, the '~0' was treated as a negative value (-1).  A lookup
that found a perfect match of an address against a symbol returned a diff
of 0.  However, in signed comparisons, 0 is not less than -1.  As a result,
DDB on 64-bit MIPS never resolved any addresses to symbols.  Workaround
this by using casts to force an unsigned comparison.

Probably the diff returned from db_search_symbol() and X_db_search_symbol()
should be changed to a db_addr_t instead of a db_expr_t as it is an
unsigned value (and is an offset of an address, so should fit in the same
size as an address).

Sponsored by:	DARPA / AFRL
2016-12-14 00:18:12 +00:00
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2015-05-23 14:59:27 +00:00
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2015-05-23 14:59:27 +00:00
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