Name Description Size
error.rs 2025
lib.rs A zero-copy parser for the contents of the `__unwind_info` section of a mach-O binary. Quickly look up the unwinding opcode for an address. Then parse the opcode to find out how to recover the return address and the caller frame's register values. This crate is intended to be fast enough to be used in a sampling profiler. Re-parsing from scratch is cheap and can be done on every sample. For the full unwinding experience, both `__unwind_info` and `__eh_frame` may need to be consulted. The two sections are complementary: `__unwind_info` handles the easy cases, and refers to an `__eh_frame` FDE for the hard cases. Conversely, `__eh_frame` only includes FDEs for functions whose unwinding info cannot be represented in `__unwind_info`. On x86 and x86_64, `__unwind_info` can represent most functions regardless of whether they were compiled with framepointers or without. On arm64, compiling without framepointers is strongly discouraged, and `__unwind_info` can only represent functions which have framepointers or which don't need to restore any registers. As a result, if you have an arm64 binary without framepointers (rare!), then the `__unwind_info` basically just acts as an index for `__eh_frame`, similarly to `.eh_frame_hdr` for ELF. In clang's default configuration for arm64, non-leaf functions have framepointers and leaf functions without stored registers on the stack don't have framepointers. For leaf functions, the return address is kept in the `lr` register for the entire duration of the function. And the unwind info lets you discern between these two types of functions ("frame-based" and "frameless"). # Example ```rust use macho_unwind_info::UnwindInfo; use macho_unwind_info::opcodes::OpcodeX86_64; # fn example(data: &[u8]) -> Result<(), macho_unwind_info::Error> { let unwind_info = UnwindInfo::parse(data)?; if let Some(function) = unwind_info.lookup(0x1234)? { println!("Found function entry covering the address 0x1234:"); let opcode = OpcodeX86_64::parse(function.opcode); println!("0x{:08x}..0x{:08x}: {}", function.start_address, function.end_address, opcode); } # Ok(()) # } ``` 15857
num_display.rs 427
opcodes
raw
reader.rs 934