xref: /xnu-11215.41.3/doc/debugging/debugging.md (revision 33de042d024d46de5ff4e89f2471de6608e37fa4)
1*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# XNU debugging
2*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
3*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsDebugging XNU through kernel core files or with a live device.
4*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
5*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## Overview
6*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
7*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsXNU’s debugging macros are compatible with Python 3.9+. Please be careful about pulling
8*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsin the latest language features. Some users are living on older Xcodes and may not have the newest
9*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsPython installed.
10*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
11*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## General coding tips
12*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
13*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Imports
14*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
15*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThe current implementation re-exports a lot of submodules through the XNU main module. This leads to some
16*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionssurprising behavior:
17*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
18*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Name collisions at the top level may override methods with unexpected results.
19*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* New imports may change the order of imports, leading to some surpising side effects.
20*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
21*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsPlease avoid `from xnu import *` where possible and always explicitly import only what is
22*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsrequired from other modules.
23*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
24*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Checking the type of an object
25*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
26*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAvoid testing for a `type` explicitly like `type(obj) == type`.
27*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsInstead, always use the inheritance-sensitive `isinstance(obj, type)`.
28*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
29*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Dealing with binary data
30*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
31*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIt’s recommended to use **bytearray**, **bytes**, and **memoryviews** instead of a string.
32*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsSome LLDB APIs no longer accept a string in place of binary data in Python 3.
33*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
34*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Accessing large amounts of binary data (or accessing small amounts frequently)
35*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
36*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIn case you're planning on accessing large contiguous blocks of memory (e.g. reading a whole 10KB of memory),
37*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsor you're accessing small semi-contiguous chunks (e.g. if you're parsing large structured data), then it might
38*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbe hugely beneficial performance-wise to make use of the `io.SBProcessRawIO` class. Furthermore, if you're in
39*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsa hurry and just want to read one specific chunk once, then it might be easier to use `LazyTarget.GetProcess().ReadMemory()`
40*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsdirectly.
41*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
42*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIn other words, avoid the following:
43*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
44*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
45*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsdata_ptr = kern.GetValueFromAddress(start_addr, 'uint8_t *')
46*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionswith open(filepath, 'wb') as f:
47*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    f.write(data_ptr[:4096])
48*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
49*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
50*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAnd instead use:
51*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
52*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
53*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfrom core.io import SBProcessRawIO
54*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsimport shutil
55*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
56*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsio_access = SBProcessRawIO(LazyTarget.GetProcess(), start_addr, 4096)
57*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionswith open(filepath, 'wb') as f:
58*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    shutil.copyfileobj(io_access, f)
59*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
60*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
61*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsOr, if you're in a hurry:
62*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
63*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
64*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionserr = lldb.SBError()
65*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmy_data = LazyTarget.GetProcess().ReadMemory(start_addr, length, err)
66*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsif err.Success():
67*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    # Use my precious data
68*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    pass
69*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
70*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
71*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsFor small semi-contiguous chunks, you can map the whole region and access random chunks from it like so:
72*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
73*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
74*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfrom core.io import SBProcessRawIO
75*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
76*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsio_access = SBProcessRawIO(LazyTarget.GetProcess(), start_addr, size)
77*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsio_access.seek(my_struct_offset)
78*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmy_struct_contents = io_access.read(my_struct_size)
79*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
80*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
81*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNot only that, but you can also tack on a BufferedRandom class on top of the SBProcessRawIO instance, which
82*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsprovides you with buffering (aka caching) in case your random small chunk accesses are repeated:
83*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
84*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
85*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfrom core.io import SBProcessRawIO
86*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfrom io import BufferedRandom
87*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
88*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsio_access = SBProcessRawIO(LazyTarget.GetProcess(), start_addr, size)
89*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbuffered_io = BufferedRandom(io_access)
90*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# And then use buffered_io for your accesses
91*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
92*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
93*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Encoding data to strings and back
94*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
95*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAll strings are now `unicode` and must be converted between binary data and strings explicitly.
96*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWhen no explicit encoding is selected then UTF-8 is the default.
97*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
98*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
99*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmystring = mybytes.decode()
100*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmybytes = mystring.encode()
101*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
102*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIn most cases **utf-8** will work but be careful to be sure that the encoding matches your data.
103*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
104*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThere are two options to consider when trying to get a string out of the raw data without knowing if
105*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthey are valid string or not:
106*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
107*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* **lossy conversion** - escapes all non-standard characters in form of ‘\xNNN’
108*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* **lossless conversion** - maps invalid characters to special unicode range so it can reconstruct
109*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthe string precisely
110*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
111*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWhich to use depends on the transformation goals. The lossy conversion produces a printable string
112*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionswith strange characters in it. The lossless option is meant to be used when a string is only a transport
113*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmechanism and needs to be converted back to original values later.
114*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
115*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsSwitch the method by using `errors` handler during conversion:
116*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
117*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
118*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Lossy escapes invalid chars
119*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsb.decode('utf-8', errors='`backslashreplace'`)
120*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Lossy removes invalid chars
121*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsb.decode('utf-8', errors='ignore')
122*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Loss-less but may likely fail to print()
123*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsb.decode('utf-8', errors='surrogateescape')
124*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
125*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
126*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Dealing with signed numbers
127*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
128*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsPython's int has unlimited precision. This may be surprising for kernel developers who expect
129*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthe behavior follows twos complement.
130*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
131*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAlways use **unsigned()** or **signed()** regardless of what the actual underlying type is
132*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsto ensure that macros use the correct semantics.
133*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
134*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## Testing changes
135*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
136*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsPlease check documentation here: <doc:macro_testing>
137*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
138*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Coding style
139*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
140*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsUse a static analyzer like **pylint** or **flake8** to check the macro source code:
141*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
142*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
143*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m pip install --user pylint flake8
144*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
145*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Run the lint either by setting your path to point to one of the runtimes
146*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# or through python
147*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m pylint <src files/dirs>
148*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m flake8 <src files/dirs>
149*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
150*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
151*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Correctness
152*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
153*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsEnsure the macro matches what LLDB returns from the REPL. For example, compare `showproc(xxx)` with `p/x *(proc_t)xxx`.
154*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
155*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
156*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 1. Run LLDB with debug options set
157*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ DEBUG_XNU_LLDBMACROS=1 xcrun -sdk <sdk> lldb -c core <dsympath>/mach_kernel
158*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
159*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 2. Optionally load modified operating system plugin
160*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) settings set target.process.python-os-plugin-path <srcpath>/tools/lldbmacros/core/operating_system.py
161*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
162*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 3. Load modified scripts
163*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) command script import <srcpath>/tools/lldbmacros/xnu.py
164*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
165*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 4. Exercise macros
166*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
167*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
168*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsDepending on the change, test other targets and architectures (for instance, both Astris and KDP).
169*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
170*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Regression
171*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
172*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThis is simpler than previous step because the goal is to ensure behavior has not changed.
173*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsYou can speed up few things by using local symbols:
174*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
175*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
176*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 1. Get a coredump from a device and kernel UUID
177*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 2. Grab symbols with dsymForUUID
178*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ dsymForUUID --nocache --copyExecutable --copyDestination <dsym path>
179*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
180*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 3. Run lldb with local symbols to avoid dsymForUUID NFS
181*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
182*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ xcrun -sdk <sdk> lldb -c core <dsym_path>/<kernel image>
183*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
184*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
185*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThe actual steps are identical to previous testing. Run of a macro to different file with `-o <outfile>`
186*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsoption. Then run `diff` on the outputs of the baseline and modified code:
187*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
188*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* No environment variables to get baseline
189*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Modified dSYM as described above
190*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
191*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIt’s difficult to make this automated:
192*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
193*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Some macros needs arguments which must be found in a core file.
194*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Some macros take a long time to run against a target (more than 30 minutes). Instead, a core dump
195*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  should be taken and then inspected afterwards, but this ties up a lab device for the duration of the
196*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  test.
197*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Even with coredumps, testing the macros takes too long in our automation system and triggers the
198*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  failsafe timeout.
199*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
200*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Code coverage
201*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
202*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsUse code coverage to check which parts of macros have actually been tested.
203*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsInstall **coverage** lib with:
204*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
205*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
206*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m pip install --user coverage
207*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
208*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
209*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThen collect coverage:.
210*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
211*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
212*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) xnudebug coverage /tmp/coverage.cov showallstacks
213*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
214*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions...
215*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
216*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsCoverage info saved to: "/tmp/coverage.cov"
217*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
218*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
219*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsYou can then run `coverage html --data-file=/tmp/coverage.cov` in your terminal
220*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsto generate an HTML report.
221*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
222*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
223*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsCombine coverage from multiple files:
224*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
225*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
226*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Point PATH to local python where coverage is installed.
227*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ export PATH="$HOME/Library/Python/3.8/bin:$PATH"
228*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
229*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Use --keep to avoid deletion of input files after merge.
230*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ coverage combine --keep <list of .coverage files or dirs to scan>
231*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
232*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Get HTML report or use other subcommands to inspect.
233*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ coverage html
234*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
235*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
236*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIt is possible to start coverage collection **before** importing the operating system library and
237*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsloading macros to check code run during bootstrapping.
238*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
239*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsFor this, you'll need to run coverage manually:
240*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 1. Start LLDB
241*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
242*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 2. Load and start code coverage recording.
243*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) script import coverage
244*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) script cov = coverage.Coverage(data_file=_filepath_)
245*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) script cov.start()
246*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
247*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 3. Load macros
248*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
249*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# 4. Collect the coverage.
250*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) script cov.stop()
251*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) script cov.save()
252*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
253*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Performance testing
254*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
255*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsSome macros can run for a long time. Some code may be costly even if it looks simple because objects
256*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsaren’t cached or too many temporary objects are created. Simple profiling is similar to collecting
257*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionscode coverage.
258*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
259*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsFirst setup your environment:
260*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
261*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
262*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Install gprof2dot
263*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m pip install gprof2dot
264*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Install graphviz
265*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ brew install graphviz
266*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
267*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
268*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThen to profile commands, follow this sequence:
269*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
270*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
271*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(lldb) xnudebug profile /tmp/macro.prof showcurrentstacks
272*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions[... command outputs ...]
273*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
274*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions   Ordered by: cumulative time
275*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions   List reduced from 468 to 30 due to restriction <30>
276*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
277*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions   ncalls  tottime  percall  cumtime  percall filename:lineno(function)
278*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions   [... profiling output ...]
279*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
280*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsProfile info saved to "/tmp/macro.prof"
281*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
282*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
283*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThen to visualize callgraphs in context, in a separate shell:
284*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
285*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
286*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Now convert the file to a colored SVG call graph
287*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ python3 -m gprof2dot -f pstats /tmp/macro.prof -o /tmp/call.dot
288*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ dot -O -T svg /tmp/call.dot
289*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
290*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# and view it in your favourite viewer
291*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions$ open /tmp/call.dot.svg
292*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
293*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
294*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## Debugging your changes
295*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
296*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Get detailed exception report
297*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
298*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThe easiest way to debug an exception is to re-run your macro with the `--debug` option.
299*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThis turns on more detailed output for each stack frame that includes source lines
300*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsand local variables.
301*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
302*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### File a radar
303*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
304*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsTo report an actionable radar, please use re-run your failing macro with `--radar`.
305*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThis will collect additional logs to an archive located in `/tmp`.
306*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
307*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsUse the link provided to create a new radar.
308*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
309*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions### Debugging with pdb
310*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
311*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsYES, It is possible to use a debugger to debug your macro!
312*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
313*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThe steps are similar to testing techniques described above (use scripting interactive mode). There is no point to
314*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsdocument the debugger itself. Lets focus on how to use it on a real life example. The debugger used here is PDB which
315*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsis part of Python installation so works out of the box.
316*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
317*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsProblem: Something wrong is going on with addkext macro. What now?
318*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
319*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (lldb) addkext -N com.apple.driver.AppleT8103PCIeC
320*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Failed to read MachO for address 18446741875027613136 errormessage: seek to offset 2169512 is outside window [0, 1310]
321*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Failed to read MachO for address 18446741875033537424 errormessage: seek to offset 8093880 is outside window [0, 1536]
322*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Failed to read MachO for address 18446741875033568304 errormessage: seek to offset 8124208 is outside window [0, 1536]
323*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	...
324*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	Fetching dSYM for 049b9a29-2efc-32c0-8a7f-5f29c12b870c
325*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Adding dSYM (049b9a29-2efc-32c0-8a7f-5f29c12b870c) for /Library/Caches/com.apple.bni.symbols/bursar.apple.com/dsyms/StarE/AppleEmbeddedPCIE/AppleEmbeddedPCIE-502.100.35~3/049B9A29-2EFC-32C0-8A7F-5F29C12B870C/AppleT8103PCIeC
326*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    section '__TEXT' loaded at 0xfffffe001478c780
327*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
328*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThere is no exception, lot of errors and no output. So what next?
329*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsTry to narrow the problem down to an isolated piece of macro code:
330*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
331*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  1. Try to get values of globals through regular LLDB commands
332*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  2. Use interactive mode and invoke functions with arguments directly.
333*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
334*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAfter inspecting addkext macro code and calling few functions with arguments directly we can see that there is an
335*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsexception in the end. It was just captured in try/catch block. So the simplified reproducer is:
336*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
337*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (lldb) script
338*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    >>> import lldb
339*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    >>> import xnu
340*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    >>> err = lldb.SBError()
341*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    >>> data = xnu.LazyTarget.GetProcess().ReadMemory(0xfffffe0014c0f3f0, 0x000000000001b5d0, err)
342*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    >>> m = macho.MemMacho(data, len(data))
343*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Traceback (most recent call last):
344*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File "<console>", line 1, in <module>
345*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../lldbmacros/macho.py", line 91, in __init__
346*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        self.load(fp)
347*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/MachO.py", line 133, in load
348*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        self.load_header(fh, 0, size)
349*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/MachO.py", line 168, in load_header
350*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        hdr = MachOHeader(self, fh, offset, size, magic, hdr, endian)
351*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/MachO.py", line 209, in __init__
352*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        self.load(fh)
353*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../lldbmacros/macho.py", line 23, in new_load
354*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        _old_MachOHeader_load(s, fh)
355*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/MachO.py", line 287, in load
356*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        fh.seek(seg.offset)
357*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/util.py", line 91, in seek
358*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        self._checkwindow(seekto, "seek")
359*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      File ".../site-packages/macholib/util.py", line 76, in _checkwindow
360*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        raise IOError(
361*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    OSError: seek to offset 9042440 is outside window [0, 112080]
362*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
363*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsClearly an external library is involved and execution flow jumps between dSYM and the library few times.
364*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsLets try to look around with a debugger.
365*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
366*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (lldb) script
367*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	# Prepare data variable as described above.
368*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
369*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	# Run last statement with debugger.
370*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	>>> import pdb
371*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	>>> pdb.run('m = macho.MemMacho(data, len(data))', globals(), locals())
372*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	> <string>(1)<module>()
373*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
374*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	# Show debugger's help
375*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	(Pdb) help
376*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
377*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIt is not possible to break on exception. Python uses them a lot so it is better to put a breakpoint to source
378*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionscode. This puts breakpoint on the IOError exception mentioned above.
379*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
380*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions	(Pdb) break ~/Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/util.py:76
381*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    Breakpoint 4 at ~/Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/util.py:76
382*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
383*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsYou can now single step or continue the execution as usuall for a debugger.
384*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
385*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) cont
386*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    > /Users/tjedlicka/Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/util.py(76)_checkwindow()
387*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> raise IOError(
388*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) bt
389*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Volumes/.../Python3.framework/Versions/3.8/lib/python3.8/bdb.py(580)run()
390*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> exec(cmd, globals, locals)
391*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      <string>(1)<module>()
392*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Volumes/...dSYM/Contents/Resources/Python/lldbmacros/macho.py(91)__init__()
393*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> self.load(fp)
394*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/MachO.py(133)load()
395*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> self.load_header(fh, 0, size)
396*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/MachO.py(168)load_header()
397*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> hdr = MachOHeader(self, fh, offset, size, magic, hdr, endian)
398*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/MachO.py(209)__init__()
399*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> self.load(fh)
400*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Volumes/...dSYM/Contents/Resources/Python/lldbmacros/macho.py(23)new_load()
401*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> _old_MachOHeader_load(s, fh)
402*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/MachO.py(287)load()
403*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> fh.seek(seg.offset)
404*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions      /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/util.py(91)seek()
405*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> self._checkwindow(seekto, "seek")
406*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    > /Users/.../Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/util.py(76)_checkwindow()
407*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> raise IOError(
408*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
409*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
410*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNow we can move a frame above and inspect stopped target:
411*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
412*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    # Show current frame arguments
413*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) up
414*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) a
415*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    self = <fileview [0, 112080] <macho.MemFile object at 0x1075cafd0>>
416*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    offset = 9042440
417*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    whence = 0
418*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
419*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    # globals, local or expressons
420*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) p type(seg.offset)
421*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    <class 'macholib.ptypes.p_uint32'>
422*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) p hex(seg.offset)
423*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    '0x89fa08'
424*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
425*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    # Find attributes of a Python object.
426*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) p dir(section_cls)
427*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    ['__class__', '__cmp__', ... ,'reserved3', 'sectname', 'segname', 'size', 'to_fileobj', 'to_mmap', 'to_str']
428*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) p section_cls.sectname
429*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    <property object at 0x1077bbef0>
430*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
431*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsUnfortunately everything looks correct but there is actually one ineteresting frame in the stack. The one which
432*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsprovides the offset to the seek method. Lets see where we are in the source code.
433*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
434*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) up
435*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    > /Users/tjedlicka/Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages/macholib/MachO.py(287)load()
436*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    -> fh.seek(seg.offset)
437*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    (Pdb) list
438*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    282  	                        not_zerofill = (seg.flags & S_ZEROFILL) != S_ZEROFILL
439*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    283  	                        if seg.offset > 0 and seg.size > 0 and not_zerofill:
440*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    284  	                            low_offset = min(low_offset, seg.offset)
441*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    285  	                        if not_zerofill:
442*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    286  	                            c = fh.tell()
443*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    287  ->	                            fh.seek(seg.offset)
444*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    288  	                            sd = fh.read(seg.size)
445*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    289  	                            seg.add_section_data(sd)
446*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    290  	                            fh.seek(c)
447*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    291  	                        segs.append(seg)
448*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    292  	                # data is a list of segments
449*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
450*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsRunning debugger on working case and stepping through the load() method shows that this code is not present.
451*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThat means we are broken by a library update! Older versions of library do not load data for a section.
452