Call To ARMs
My 4th semester involves ARM programming. And proprietary tooling (Keil C). But we don’t do that here.
Building
Assembling and linking ARM binaries on non-ARM architecture devices
is fairly trivial. I went along with the GNU cross bare metal toolchain
binutils, which provides arm-as and arm-ld
(among a bunch of other utils that I don’t care about for now).
Assemble .s files with:
arm-none-eabi-as main.s -g -march=armv8.1-a -o main.outThe -g flag generates extra debugging information that
gdb picks up. The -march option establishes
target architecture.
Link .o files with:
arm-none-eabi-ld main.out -o mainRunning (and Debugging)
Things get interesting here. gdb on your x86 machine
cannot read nor execute binaries compiled for ARM. So, we simulate an
ARM processor using qemu. Now qemu allows you to run
gdbserver on startup. Connecting our local gdb
instance to gdbserver gives us a view into the program’s
execution. Easy!
Run qemu, with gdbserver on port
1234, with our ARM binary, main:
qemu-arm -singlestep -g 1234 mainStart up gdb on your machine, and connect to
qemu’s gdbserver:
(gdb) set architecture armv8-a
(gdb) target remote localhost:1234
(gdb) file main
Reading symbols from main...  # yay!GDB Enhanced
gdb is cool, but it’s not nearly as comfortable as well
fleshed out emulators/IDEs like Keil. Watching registers, CPSR and
memory chunks update is pretty fun.
I came across gdb’s TUI mode (hit C-x C-a
or type tui enable at the prompt). TUI mode is a godsend.
It highlights the current line of execution, shows you disassembly
outputs, updated registers, active breakpoints and more.
But, it is an absolute eyesore.
Say hello to GEF! “GDB Enhanced Features” teaches our old dog some cool new tricks. Here are some additions that made my ARM debugging experience loads better:
- Memory watches
- Register watches, with up to 7 levels of deref (overkill, I agree)
- Stack tracing
And it’s pretty! See for yourself:
Editing
Vim, with syntax off because it dosen’t handle GNU ARM
syntax too well.
I'm Akshay, programmer, pixel-artist & programming-language enthusiast.
I am currently building tangled.sh — a new social-enabled code-collaboration platform.
Reach out at oppili@libera.chat.
