/* Demangler for the Rust programming language Copyright (C) 2016-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Written by David Tolnay (dtolnay@gmail.com). This file is part of the libiberty library. Libiberty is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. In addition to the permissions in the GNU Library General Public License, the Free Software Foundation gives you unlimited permission to link the compiled version of this file into combinations with other programs, and to distribute those combinations without any restriction coming from the use of this file. (The Library Public License restrictions do apply in other respects; for example, they cover modification of the file, and distribution when not linked into a combined executable.) Libiberty is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with libiberty; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, see . */ #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H #include "config.h" #endif #include "safe-ctype.h" #include #include #include #ifdef HAVE_STRING_H #include #else extern size_t strlen(const char *s); extern int strncmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n); extern void *memset(void *s, int c, size_t n); #endif #include #include "libiberty.h" #include "rust-demangle.h" /* Mangled (legacy) Rust symbols look like this: _$LT$std..sys..fd..FileDesc$u20$as$u20$core..ops..Drop$GT$::drop::hc68340e1baa4987a The original symbol is: ::drop The last component of the path is a 64-bit hash in lowercase hex, prefixed with "h". Rust does not have a global namespace between crates, an illusion which Rust maintains by using the hash to distinguish things that would otherwise have the same symbol. Any path component not starting with a XID_Start character is prefixed with "_". The following escape sequences are used: "," => $C$ "@" => $SP$ "*" => $BP$ "&" => $RF$ "<" => $LT$ ">" => $GT$ "(" => $LP$ ")" => $RP$ "\u{XY}" => $uXY$ A double ".." means "::" and a single "." means "-". The only characters allowed in the mangled symbol are a-zA-Z0-9 and _.:$ */ static const char *hash_prefix = "::h"; static const size_t hash_prefix_len = 3; static const size_t hash_len = 16; static int is_prefixed_hash (const char *start); static int parse_lower_hex_nibble (char nibble); static char parse_legacy_escape (const char **in); /* INPUT: sym: symbol that has been through C++ (gnu v3) demangling This function looks for the following indicators: 1. The hash must consist of "h" followed by 16 lowercase hex digits. 2. As a sanity check, the hash must use between 5 and 15 of the 16 possible hex digits. This is true of 99.9998% of hashes so once in your life you may see a false negative. The point is to notice path components that could be Rust hashes but are probably not, like "haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa". In this case a false positive (non-Rust symbol has an important path component removed because it looks like a Rust hash) is worse than a false negative (the rare Rust symbol is not demangled) so this sets the balance in favor of false negatives. 3. There must be no characters other than a-zA-Z0-9 and _.:$ */ int rust_is_mangled (const char *sym) { size_t len, len_without_hash; const char *end; if (!sym) return 0; len = strlen (sym); if (len <= hash_prefix_len + hash_len) /* Not long enough to contain "::h" + hash + something else */ return 0; len_without_hash = len - (hash_prefix_len + hash_len); if (!is_prefixed_hash (sym + len_without_hash)) return 0; end = sym + len_without_hash; while (sym < end) { if (*sym == '$' || *sym == '.' || *sym == '_' || *sym == ':' || ISALNUM (*sym)) sym++; else return 0; } return 1; } /* A hash is the prefix "::h" followed by 16 lowercase hex digits. The hex digits must contain at least 5 distinct digits. */ static int is_prefixed_hash (const char *str) { const char *end; char seen[16]; size_t i; int count, nibble; if (strncmp (str, hash_prefix, hash_prefix_len)) return 0; str += hash_prefix_len; memset (seen, 0, sizeof(seen)); for (end = str + hash_len; str < end; str++) { nibble = parse_lower_hex_nibble (*str); if (nibble < 0) return 0; seen[nibble] = 1; } /* Count how many distinct digits seen */ count = 0; for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) if (seen[i]) count++; return count >= 5; } /* INPUT: sym: symbol for which rust_is_mangled(sym) returned 1. The input is demangled in-place because the mangled name is always longer than the demangled one. */ void rust_demangle_sym (char *sym) { const char *in; char *out; const char *end; char unescaped; if (!sym) return; in = sym; out = sym; end = sym + strlen (sym) - (hash_prefix_len + hash_len); while (in < end) { if (*in == '$') { unescaped = parse_legacy_escape (&in); if (unescaped) *out++ = unescaped; else /* unexpected escape sequence, skip the rest of this segment. */ while (in < end && *in != ':') *out++ = *in++; } else if (*in == '_') { /* If this is the start of a path component and the next character is an escape sequence, ignore the underscore. The mangler inserts an underscore to make sure the path component begins with a XID_Start character. */ if ((in == sym || in[-1] == ':') && in[1] == '$') in++; else *out++ = *in++; } else if (*in == '.') { if (in[1] == '.') { /* ".." becomes "::" */ *out++ = ':'; *out++ = ':'; in += 2; } else { /* "." becomes "-" */ *out++ = '-'; in++; } } else if (*in == ':' || ISALNUM (*in)) *out++ = *in++; else { /* unexpected character in symbol, not rust_is_mangled. */ *out++ = '?'; /* This is pretty lame, but it's hard to do better. */ *out = '\0'; return; } } *out = '\0'; } /* Return a 0x0-0xf value if the char is 0-9a-f, and -1 otherwise. */ static int parse_lower_hex_nibble (char nibble) { if ('0' <= nibble && nibble <= '9') return nibble - '0'; if ('a' <= nibble && nibble <= 'f') return 0xa + (nibble - 'a'); return -1; } /* Return the unescaped character for a "$...$" escape, or 0 if invalid. */ static char parse_legacy_escape (const char **in) { char c = 0; const char *e; size_t escape_len = 0; int lo_nibble = -1, hi_nibble = -1; if ((*in)[0] != '$') return 0; e = *in + 1; if (e[0] == 'C') { escape_len = 1; c = ','; } else { escape_len = 2; if (e[0] == 'S' && e[1] == 'P') c = '@'; else if (e[0] == 'B' && e[1] == 'P') c = '*'; else if (e[0] == 'R' && e[1] == 'F') c = '&'; else if (e[0] == 'L' && e[1] == 'T') c = '<'; else if (e[0] == 'G' && e[1] == 'T') c = '>'; else if (e[0] == 'L' && e[1] == 'P') c = '('; else if (e[0] == 'R' && e[1] == 'P') c = ')'; else if (e[0] == 'u') { escape_len = 3; hi_nibble = parse_lower_hex_nibble (e[1]); if (hi_nibble < 0) return 0; lo_nibble = parse_lower_hex_nibble (e[2]); if (lo_nibble < 0) return 0; /* Only allow non-control ASCII characters. */ if (hi_nibble > 7) return 0; c = (hi_nibble << 4) | lo_nibble; if (c < 0x20) return 0; } } if (!c || e[escape_len] != '$') return 0; *in += 2 + escape_len; return c; }