1

In the last week I've attempted maybe 3 times to debug a game in DOSBox (Fallout 1 DOS version), and the game uses DOS/4G to extend itself to 32-bit protected mode. The program has a DOS stub which then calls DOS/4G with the game as parameter, which then goes directly for the Linear Executable (LE) header and starts the program there.

I can debug a program with no problems if DOS/4G is not used. Though, from the moment DOS/4G initiates the game, the addresses go nuts and I don't understand why it happens.

From what is on the header, the code segment should start at 0x44000 and have size DB000 (so going up to 0x11EFFF). So far so good, except that on DOSBox Debugger, addresses go to 7 digits, and also happens on Oracle VM VirtualBox with actual MS-DOS 6.22 with OpenWatcom Debugger.

So, does anyone know if DOS/4G or DOS/32 change the relocation addresses? Wouldn't that break the program anyway because of references from different sections? (I'm kind of a beginner on RE)

I'd at least like to know where I am when debugging. If I'm on “random” addresses, I can't compare with IDA and see where I am and go to some address because I've got exactly no idea where the code I see on the debugger is. On OpenWatcom Debugger I don't see a hex dump, but on DOSBox Debugger I do. I've tried to search for the hex values and nothing came up on HxD --> ????? This is confusing, can't be that hard to debug a DOS/4G program.

Any help on understanding what's happening here is appreciated!

1 Answer 1

1

It seems that after a week and hints from other places where I asked this (this may be the 5th place?), and after an experiment with a small program for DOS I compiled with OpenWatcom bound to the DOS/4G extender, I remembered there are breakpoint instructions. So I used one of them, 0xCC, and DOSBox Debugger stopped in the beginning of main(). Now I can know where on IDA is something I see on the debugger.

In this case the debugger wrote this message: Breakpoint trap (INT 3) at <0830:001928A8>, unrelocated address <1:00062898>. On IDA, main() begins at 0x72898. So, from here, 0x1928A8 - 0x72898 = 0x120010 and there's the address where the code section begins on the debugger. Then it's just sum 0x120010 to the IDA addresses to know the debugger equivalent, and subtract 0x120010 to the debugger addresses to know the IDA equivalent. To know where other sections are, I just find some instruction that references them and do the same math. Like here on the debugger an address of a string on the data section is 0x214F6C. On IDA is says that should be 0xF9F4C, so the beginning of the data section is 0x214F6C - 0xF9F4C = 0x11B020.


Still though, if anyone knows, I'd like to know how I can know in a more decent way where the programs are located. On that experiment I made, the code section was on 0x14D000. The data section should be 0x10000 after the code one, but it was not, because it started on 0x163000, so it's not linear as I would expect (actually I would expect the addresses to be those on the file header - not sure why the program is re-relocated or something).

And going back to that data section string address, the instruction is mov eax, 0x214F6C on the debugger, while on IDA (the correct one, I'd say) is mov eax, 0xF9F4C --> DOS/4G modifies the program when it's loading it!? Because this is an hard-coded address, not offset!

4
  • Yes the program may be modified at load time thanks to relocations aka fixups.
    – Igor Skochinsky
    Commented Feb 12, 2022 at 12:58
  • @IgorSkochinsky but on the header it's said that the the code segment must begin at address 0x10000, not whatever DOS/32 or DOS/4G decide (seems they both decide differently, from what I saw here). One puts at 0x1928A8 and the other on 0x222898. Then they have to change all addresses when they load the program. Why not just load as it's specified in the header? Like IDA does, which loads them in the address they should? (In the header, on the "Object Table Layout", the field I mean is called "Relocation base address".) Unless I'm not understanding something here - what am I missing?
    – Edw590
    Commented Feb 13, 2022 at 1:19
  • 1
    The predefined address was probably occupied, so the loader picked something available. The actual address may change depending on the environment and what happened before. Relocations are there for exactly such a situation - they allow the program to be “fixed up” to run at another location from the one it was linked for.
    – Igor Skochinsky
    Commented Feb 16, 2022 at 22:25
  • Ah! Got it. Will have to go read about relocations it seems. It's more complex than I first though. Thank you.
    – Edw590
    Commented Feb 16, 2022 at 23:33

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.