Your code was most probably compiled as Position-Independent Executable (PIE) to allow Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR). On some systems, gcc is configured to create PIEs by default (that implies the options -pie -fPIE
being passed to gcc).
When you start GDB to debug a PIE, it starts reading addresses from 0
, since your executable was not started yet, and therefore not relocated (in PIEs, all addresses including the .text
section are relocatable and they start at 0
, similar to a dynamic shared object). This is a sample output:
$ gcc -o prog main.c -pie -fPIE
$ gdb -q prog
Reading symbols from prog...(no debugging symbols found)...done.
gdb-peda$ disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x000000000000071a <+0>: push rbp
0x000000000000071b <+1>: mov rbp,rsp
0x000000000000071e <+4>: sub rsp,0x10
0x0000000000000722 <+8>: mov DWORD PTR [rbp-0x4],edi
0x0000000000000725 <+11>: mov QWORD PTR [rbp-0x10],rsi
0x0000000000000729 <+15>: lea rdi,[rip+0x94] # 0x7c4
0x0000000000000730 <+22>: call 0x5d0 <puts@plt>
0x0000000000000735 <+27>: mov eax,0x0
0x000000000000073a <+32>: leave
0x000000000000073b <+33>: ret
End of assembler dump.
As you can see, this shows a similar output to yours, with .text
adresses starting at low values.
Relocation takes place once you start your executable, so after that, your code will be placed at some random address in your process memory:
gdb-peda$ start
...
gdb-peda$ disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x00002b1c8f17271a <+0>: push rbp
0x00002b1c8f17271b <+1>: mov rbp,rsp
=> 0x00002b1c8f17271e <+4>: sub rsp,0x10
0x00002b1c8f172722 <+8>: mov DWORD PTR [rbp-0x4],edi
0x00002b1c8f172725 <+11>: mov QWORD PTR [rbp-0x10],rsi
0x00002b1c8f172729 <+15>: lea rdi,[rip+0x94] # 0x2b1c8f1727c4
0x00002b1c8f172730 <+22>: call 0x2b1c8f1725d0 <puts@plt>
0x00002b1c8f172735 <+27>: mov eax,0x0
0x00002b1c8f17273a <+32>: leave
0x00002b1c8f17273b <+33>: ret
End of assembler dump.
As you can see, the addresses now take "real" values that you can set breakpoints to. Note that usually you will still not see the effect of ASLR in GDB though, since it disables randomization by default (debugging a program with randomized location would be cumbersome). You can check this with show disable-randomization
. If you really want to see the effects of ASLR in your PIE, set disable-randomization off
. Then every run will relocate your code to random addresses.
So the bottom line is: When debugging PIE code, start
your program in GDB first and then figure out the addresses.
Alternatively, you can explicitly disable the creation of PIE code and compile your application using gcc filename.c -o filename -no-pie -fno-PIE
.
My system does not enforce PIE creation by default, so unfortunately I don't know about the implications of disabling PIE on such a system (would be glad to see comments on that).
For a more comprehensive explanation of position-independent code (PIC) in general (which is of utmost importance for shared libraries), have a look at Ulrich Drepper's paper "How to Write Shared Libraries".