diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/mistranslation/1605611')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/mistranslation/1605611 | 13 |
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/mistranslation/1605611 b/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/mistranslation/1605611 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..99354737 --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/mistranslation/1605611 @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +<think> +Alright, I'm looking at this bug report related to QEMU. The user is experiencing an issue where using the `memsave` command on a 64-bit Windows XP SP2 system results in an "Invalid addr" error. + +Let me break down the details. They successfully used `memsave` on a 32-bit Windows XP SP3 VM, but when trying the same on a 64-bit setup, it fails. The address provided is supposed to be valid for the System EPROCESS struct, and they've already checked that paging isn't causing it. + +The error message mentions an invalid address: `0xfadffd71d040`. This seems like a 64-bit address since it's beyond the 32-bit limit. QEMU's `memsave` is likely having trouble handling such large addresses, possibly due to incorrect translation or limitations in how it processes memory requests for 64-bit targets. + +The categories provided include things like mistranslation, assembly lowering, and others. Since this issue occurs during a memory operation that involves address translation (from guest to host), it points towards a problem in the way QEMU handles addresses, especially when dealing with 64-bit systems. This sounds more like a translation issue rather than an assembly or other category. + +So, I think this falls under "mistranslation" because QEMU isn't correctly mapping the 64-bit address to the target's memory space. +</think> + +mistranslation \ No newline at end of file |