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Using the command line interface of debug

Reading the address map

The map command shows the areas of memory that the running program is allowed to access:

   debug> map
   Address Map for p1
       Address Range          Size        Access     Object File
   0x08046000..0x0804ffff  0x00002000      RWX     [STACK]
   0x08049000..0x0807bfff  0x00033000      R_X     /usr/lib/libc.so.1
   0x0807c000..0x0807dfff  0x00002000      RWX     /usr/lib/libc.so.1
   0x0807e000..0x0807efff  0x00001000      RWX     /usr/lib/libc.so.1
   0x08300000..0x08300fff  0x00001000      R_X     sget
   0x08301000..0x08301fff  0x00001000      RWX     sget
   0x08302000..0x08303fff  0x00002000      RWX

Jumps or writes to areas outside of those listed will probably result in a segmentation violation. By comparing a suspicious pointer to the address map, you can see if you have a valid address and guess what it might point to. You can determine the segment types from the access permissions; a segment with write permissions (RWX) is (usually) data, containing static and global data symbols; a segment without write permissions (R_X) is (usually) text, containing machine instructions and constant (read-only) data. A writable segment without an associated object file is probably the heap (dynamically allocated space).

For most programs, the number of segments will be constant for the life of the process, but the number of segments may change as the program runs if the program dynamically links to any additional shared objects via dlopen or uses mmap to map the contents of a file or allocate anonymous memory.


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