Projet_SETI_RISC-V/riscv-gnu-toolchain/binutils/ChangeLog.git

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2022-08-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-08-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-08-03 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29410 - Argument "&nbsp;0." isn't numeric in numeric gt (>)
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-08-02 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29410
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: Remove non-breaking spaces.
2022-08-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-08-02 Matthew Malcomson <hardenedapple@gmail.com>
ld: aarch64: Update test linker scripts relocs.ld and relocs-ilp32.ld
The updates are to ensure that the .data section exists. This means
that we always have a data section. That means that we don't create a
RWX segment and avoid the corresponding warning.
We get this warning when testing aarch64-none-elf with -mcmodel=tiny.
N.b. this changes quite a few testcases from fail to pass.
2022-08-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-08-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
libctf: Avoid use of uninitialised variables
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_add_ctf_internal): Don't free uninitialised
pointers.
(cherry picked from commit 9ea6fffe1ebec9bd1929c708e044b765eabea258)
2022-08-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29348, BFD_VMA_FMT wrong
There is a problem with my commit 0e3c1eebb2, which replaced
bfd_uint64_t with uint64_t: Some hosts typedef int64_t to long long
even when long is the same size as long long. That confuses the code
choosing one of "l", "ll", or "I64" for BFD_VMA_FMT, and results in
warnings.
Write a direct configure test for the printf int64_t style instead.
This removes the last use of BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG, so delete that.
Note that the changes to configure.com are pure guesswork.
PR 29348
* bfd-in.h (BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG): Don't define.
(BFD_VMA_FMT): Define using BFD_INT64_FMT when 64-bit.
(bfd_vma, bfd_signed_vma): Move comments to 64-bit typedefs.
* configure.ac (BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG): Delete.
(BFD_INT64_FMT): New config test.
* configure.com: Update similarly.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
(cherry picked from commit 1a5178fe284547ef2abd8ae66588c9999d61c524)
2022-08-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-29 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop the linker from complaining about unrecognized DW_FORM_rnglistx and DW_FORM_loclistx attribute formats.
PR 29424
* dwarf2.c (read_attribute_value): Handle DW_FORM_rnglistx and
DW_FORM_loclistx.
2022-07-29 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
ld: Extend ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments to all SPARC targets [PR29411]
As discussed in PR ld/29411, the ld warning
[...] has a LOAD segment with RWX permissions
needs to be disabled on all SPARC targets, not just Solaris/SPARC: the
.plt section is required to be RWX by the 32-bit SPARC ELF psABI and the
64-bit SPARC Compliance Definition 2.4.1. Given that ld only supports
SPARC ELF targets, this patch implements this.
Tested on sparc64-unknown-linux-gnu and sparc-sun-solaris2.11.
2022-07-28 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
ld:
PR ld/29411
* configure.tgt (ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Extend to all
sparc targets. Expand comment.
2022-07-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-27 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: check for the makeinfo version
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-25 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29368
* configure.ac: Check for the makeinfo version.
* configure: Rebuild.
2022-07-26 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop the linker from complaining about RWX segments on sparc-solaris targets.
PR 29411
* configure.tgt (ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Disable for
sparc-solaris configurations.
2022-07-26 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC32 ld test fails with --enable-targets=all
Three pppc32 ld tests fail when spu support is included in the linker
due to this snippet in ld/emulparams/elf32ppc.sh.
if grep -q 'ld_elf32_spu_emulation' ldemul-list.h; then
DATA_START_SYMBOLS="${RELOCATING+*crt1.o(.data .data.* .gnu.linkonce.d.*)
PROVIDE (__spe_handle = .);
*(.data.spehandle)
. += 4 * (DEFINED (__spe_handle) || . != 0);}"
fi
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32.r: Pass with .data section present.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32no.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsso32.r: Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit c138af95731c630a78329fd86076992f82099957)
2022-07-26 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated translations for various sub-directories
2022-07-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-25 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29356 - Execution fails if gprofng is not included in PATH
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29356
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: fixed a problem to execute
gp-display-text in case gprofng is not included in the search
path.
2022-07-25 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29392 - Unexpected line format in summary file
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29392
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: modified a regex, plus the
code to handle the results; renamed a variable to improve the
consistency in naming.
2022-07-25 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29353 - Fix a lay-out issue in the html disassembly files
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29353
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: fixed a problem in the
generation of html for the disassembly where instructions
without arguments were not handled correctly.
2022-07-25 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29352 - Fix the message Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29352
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: the hex subroutine from
the bigint module is now used.
2022-07-25 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix bug 29351 - Move dynamic loading of modules to a later stage
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29351
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: the dynamic loading of
modules occurred too early, resulting in the generation of the
man page to fail in case a module is missing; the loading part is
now done somewhat later in the execution to avoid this problem.
2022-07-25 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Disallow invalid relocations against protected symbols
Since glibc 2.36 will issue warnings for copy relocation against
protected symbols and non-canonical reference to canonical protected
functions, change the linker to always disallow such relocations.
bfd/
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_scan_relocs): Remove check for
elf_has_indirect_extern_access.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): Likewise.
(elf_x86_64_relocate_section): Remove check for
elf_has_no_copy_on_protected.
* elfxx-x86.c (elf_x86_allocate_dynrelocs): Check for building
executable instead of elf_has_no_copy_on_protected.
(_bfd_x86_elf_adjust_dynamic_symbol): Disallow copy relocation
against non-copyable protected symbol.
* elfxx-x86.h (SYMBOL_NO_COPYRELOC): Remove check for
elf_has_no_copy_on_protected.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Expect linker error for PR ld/17709
test.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr17709.rd: Removed.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr17709.err: New file.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr17709.rd: Removed.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr17709.err: New file.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28875-func.err: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Expect linker error for PR
ld/17709 test. Add tests for function pointer against protected
function.
(cherry picked from commit f638657759f5b9b4eb31a1aa6b9fe6e6fb01f4a0)
2022-07-25 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
x86: Make protected symbols local for -shared
Call _bfd_elf_symbol_refs_local_p with local_protected==true. This has
2 noticeable effects for -shared:
* GOT-generating relocations referencing a protected data symbol no
longer lead to a GLOB_DAT (similar to a hidden symbol).
* Direct access relocations (e.g. R_X86_64_PC32) no longer has the
confusing diagnostic below.
__attribute__((visibility("protected"))) void *foo() {
return (void *)foo;
}
// gcc -fpic -shared -fuse-ld=bfd
relocation R_X86_64_PC32 against protected symbol `foo' can not be used when making a shared object
The new behavior matches arm, aarch64 (commit
83c325007c5599fa9b60b8d5f7b84842160e1d1b), and powerpc ports, and other
linkers: gold and ld.lld.
Note: if some code tries to use direct access relocations to take the
address of foo, the pointer equality will break, but the error should be
reported on the executable link, not on the innocent shared object link.
glibc 2.36 will give a warning at relocation resolving time.
With this change, `#define elf_backend_extern_protected_data 1` is no
longer effective. Just remove it.
Remove the test "Run protected-func-1 without PIE" since -fno-pic
address taken operation in the executable doesn't work with protected
symbol in a shared object by default. Similarly, remove
protected-data-1a and protected-data-1b. protected-data-1b can be made
working by removing HAVE_LD_PIE_COPYRELOC from GCC
(https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2022-June/596678.html).
(cherry picked from commit d19a265487eda186b6977d9d15648cda9fad3298)
2022-07-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PowerPC64 .branch_lt address
On seeing PR29369 my suspicion was naturally on a recent powerpc64
change, commit 0ab80031430e. Without a reproducer, I spent time
wondering what could have gone wrong, and while I doubt this patch
would have fixed the PR, there are some improvements that can be made
to cater for user silliness.
I also noticed that when -z relro -z now sections are created out of
order, with .got before .plt in the section headers but .got is laid
out at a higher address. That's due to the address expression for
.branch_lt referencing SIZEOF(.got) and so calling init_os (which
creates a bfd section) for .got before the .plt section is created.
Fix that by ignoring SIZEOF in exp_init_os. Unlike ADDR and LOADADDR
which need to reference section vma and lma respectively, SIZEOF can
and does cope with a missing bfd section by returning zero for its
size, which of course is correct.
PR 29369
* ldlang.c (exp_init_os): Don't create a bfd section for SIZEOF.
* emulparams/elf64ppc.sh (OTHER_RELRO_SECTIONS_2): Revise
.branch_lt address to take into account possible user sections
with alignment larger than 8 bytes.
(cherry picked from commit 5d471bd907be60e9858b22cdf4fd10ddc0f6ee1a)
2022-07-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-22 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
i386: Don't allow GOTOFF relocation against IFUNC symbol for PIC
We can't use the PLT entry as the function address for PIC since the PIC
register may not be set up properly for indirect call.
bfd/
PR ld/27998
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_relocate_section): Don't allow GOTOFF
relocation against IFUNC symbol for PIC.
ld/
PR ld/27998
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27998a.d: Replace -shared with -e bar.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27998b.d: Expect a linker error.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-i386-now.d: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-local-i386-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-i386.s: Replace @GOTOFF with @GOT.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-local-i386.s: Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit 8f29211c3f0a6335c17e0a90396c146facf6dba4)
2022-07-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-21 Peter Bergner <bergner@linux.ibm.com>
PowerPC: Create new MMA instruction masks and use them
The MMA instructions use XX3_MASK|3<<21 as an instruction mask, but that
misses the RC bit/bit 31, so if we disassemble a .long that represents an
MMA instruction except that it also has bit 31 set, we will erroneously
disassemble it to that MMA instruction. We create new masks defines that
contain bit 31 so that doesn't happen anymore.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (XACC_MASK, XX3ACC_MASK): New defines.
(P_GER_MASK, xxmfacc, xxmtacc, xxsetaccz, xvi8ger4pp, xvi8ger4,
xvf16ger2pp, xvf16ger2, xvf32gerpp, xvf32ger, xvi4ger8pp, xvi4ger8,
xvi16ger2spp, xvi16ger2s, xvbf16ger2pp, xvbf16ger2, xvf64gerpp,
xvf64ger, xvi16ger2, xvf16ger2np, xvf32gernp, xvi8ger4spp, xvi16ger2pp,
xvbf16ger2np, xvf64gernp, xvf16ger2pn, xvf32gerpn, xvbf16ger2pn,
xvf64gerpn, xvf16ger2nn, xvf32gernn, xvbf16ger2nn, xvf64gernn: Use them.
(cherry picked from commit 0a246853439422e12a0ccb9191be638aab3987eb)
2022-07-21 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: replace wrong attributes on VCVTDQ2PH{X,Y}
A standalone (without SAE) StaticRounding attribute is meaningless, and
indeed all other similar insns have ATTSyntax there instead. I can only
assume this was some strange copy-and-paste mistake.
(cherry picked from commit ea09fe92596fbb2a5da4595459bfe8b23789ec8d)
2022-07-21 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/Intel: correct AVX512F scatter insn element sizes
I clearly screwed up in 6ff00b5e12e7 ("x86/Intel: correct permitted
operand sizes for AVX512 scatter/gather") giving all AVX512F scatter
insns Dword element size. Update testcases (also their gather parts),
utilizing that there previously were two identical lines each (for no
apparent reason).
(cherry picked from commit 987e8a90fa6541d57b42fef95fae0a7da5a2c9bc)
2022-07-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29390, DW_CFA_AARCH64_negate_ra_state vs. DW_CFA_GNU_window_save
PR 29390
binutils/
* dwarf.c (is_aarch64, DW_CFA_GNU_window_save_name): New.
(display_debug_frames): Use them.
(init_dwarf_regnames_aarch64): Set is_aarch64.
(init_dwarf_regnames_by_elf_machine_code): Clear is_aarch64.
(init_dwarf_regnames_by_bfd_arch_and_mach): Likewise.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pac_ab_key.d: Adjust expected output.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pac_negate_ra_state.d: Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit e4e340a3ff2ccc825f4a40abf947cdf32b3fdbbf)
2022-07-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29337, readelf CU/TU mixup in .gdb_index
Commit 244e19c79111 changed a number of variables in display_gdb_index
to count entries rather than words.
PR 29337
* dwarf.c (display_gdb_index): Correct use of cu_list_elements.
(cherry picked from commit e82295b23d0e52b0dadffb8c0d0b99462cd20fa8)
2022-07-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: fix build error on 32-bit hosts
elf64-ppc.c:11673:33: error: format %lx expects argument of type long unsigned int, but argument 3 has type bfd_vma {aka long long unsigned int} [-Werror=format=]
11673 | fprintf (stderr, "offset = %#lx:", stub_entry->stub_offset);
| ~~~^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | |
| | bfd_vma {aka long long unsigned int}
| long unsigned int
| %#llx
* elf64-ppc.c (dump_stub): Use BFD_VMA_FMT.
(cherry picked from commit 590207aa6ece509eabbc7a51aab87e5d9bcfc869)
2022-07-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Properly check invalid relocation against protected symbol
Only check invalid relocation against protected symbol defined in shared
object.
bfd/
PR ld/29377
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_scan_relocs): Only check invalid
relocation against protected symbol defined in shared object.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): Likewise.
ld/
PR ld/29377
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp: Run PR ld/29377 tests.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29377a.c: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29377b.c: Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit bd0736124c20950ac353f01e5029b7cb5d8a7010)
ld: Pass -nostdlib to compiler with -r
Pass -nostdlib to compiler with -r to avoid unnecessary .o file and
libraries.
PR ld/29377
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp: Pass -nostdlib with -r.
(cherry picked from commit 76e4fa70e79ee959c0e11eaacd4cf863291b1ddb)
2022-07-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-18 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: link libgprofng.so against -lpthread
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-15 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29364
* src/Makefile.am (libgprofng_la_LIBADD): Add -lpthread.
* src/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
2022-07-18 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix regression in build and a race condition in autoreconf
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-14 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29338
* libcollector/configure.ac (AC_CONFIG_HEADERS): Fix a race condition.
* libcollector/configure: Rebuild.
* libcollector/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* common/config.h.in: Rebuild.
* common/lib-config.h.in: Created by autoreconf.
2022-07-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: correct VMOVSH attributes
Both forms were missing VexW0 (thus allowing Evex.W=1 to be encoded by
suitable means, which would cause #UD). The memory operand form further
was using the wrong Masking value, thus allowing zeroing-masking to be
encoded for the store form (which would again cause #UD).
(cherry picked from commit 7e864bf71d55626dce94df26ebaf11f65b4d7b65)
2022-07-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29355, ld segfaults with -r/-q and custom-named section .rela*
The bug testcase uses an output section named .rel or .rela which has
input .data sections mapped to it. The input .data section has
relocations. When counting output relocations SHT_REL and SHT_RELA
section reloc_count is ignored, with the justification that reloc
sections themselves can't have relocations and some backends use
reloc_count in reloc sections. However, the test wrongly used the
output section type (which normally would match input section type).
Fix that. Note that it is arguably wrong for ld to leave the output
.rel/.rela section type as SHT_REL/SHT_RELA when non-empty non-reloc
sections are written to it, but I'm not going to change that since it
might be useful to hand-craft relocs in a data section that is then
written to a SHT_REL/SHT_RELA output section.
PR 29355
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_final_link): Use input section type rather
than output section type to determine whether to exclude using
reloc_count from that section.
(cherry picked from commit 35c5dcc666082f0edf6dd559e46b98d0e7986a2e)
2022-07-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ppc gas: don't leak ppc_hash memory
* config/tc-ppc.c (insn_obstack): New.
(insn_calloc): New function.
(ppc_setup_opcodes): Use insn_obstack for ppc_hash.
(cherry picked from commit a887be69963c40ced36e319e5fb14b3de4b6658b)
Without ppc_md_end since the infrastructure to call that late isn't
available on the branch, and without the multiply overflow check.
2022-07-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
libopcodes/s390: add support for disassembler styling
This commit adds disassembler style to the libopcodes s390
disassembler. This conversion was pretty straight forward, I just
converted the fprintf_func calls to fprintf_styled_func calls and
added an appropriate style.
For testing the new styling I just assembled then disassembled the
source files in gas/testsuite/gas/s390 and manually checked that the
styling looked reasonable.
If the user does not request styled output from objdump, then there
should be no change in the disassembler output after this commit.
2022-07-08 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update version number
Add markers for 2.39 branch
2022-07-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2022-07-07 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix regression in testing for not yet installed version
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-07 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* src/Settings.cc (Settings::read_rc): Read environment variable
GPROFNG_SYSCONFDIR.
* testsuite/lib/Makefile.skel: Export GPROFNG_SYSCONFDIR.
* testsuite/gprofng.display/display.exp: Shorten the list of tests.
2022-07-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix {rs6000_nat_target,aix_thread_target}::wait to not use inferior_ptid
Trying to run a simple program (empty main) on AIX, I get:
(gdb) run
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
Child process unexpectedly missing: There are no child processes..
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304: internal-error: find_inferior_pid: Assertion `pid != 0' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
----- Backtrace -----
0x10ef12a8 gdb_internal_backtrace_1()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:122
0x10ef1470 gdb_internal_backtrace()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:168
0x1004d368 internal_vproblem(internal_problem*, char const*, int, char const*, char*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:396
0x1004d8a8 internal_verror(char const*, int, char const*, char*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:476
0x1004c424 internal_error(char const*, int, char const*, ...)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
0x102ab344 find_inferior_pid(process_stratum_target*, int)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304
0x102ab4a4 find_inferior_ptid(process_stratum_target*, ptid_t)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:318
0x1061bae8 find_thread_ptid(process_stratum_target*, ptid_t)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:519
0x10319e98 handle_inferior_event(execution_control_state*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:5532
0x10315544 fetch_inferior_event()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4221
0x10952e34 inferior_event_handler(inferior_event_type)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inf-loop.c:41
0x1032640c infrun_async_inferior_event_handler(void*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:9548
0x10673188 check_async_event_handlers()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/async-event.c:335
0x1066fce4 gdb_do_one_event()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:214
0x10001a94 start_event_loop()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:411
0x10001ca0 captured_command_loop()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:471
0x10003d74 captured_main(void*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1329
0x10003e48 gdb_main(captured_main_args*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1344
0x10000744 main
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:32
---------------------
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304: internal-error: find_inferior_pid: Assertion `pid != 0' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
This is due to some bit-rot in the AIX port, still relying on the entry
value of inferior_ptid in the wait methods.
Problem #1 is in rs6000_nat_target::wait, here:
/* Ignore terminated detached child processes. */
if (!WIFSTOPPED (status) && pid != inferior_ptid.pid ())
pid = -1;
At this point, waitpid has returned an "exited" status for some pid, so
pid is non-zero. Since inferior_ptid is set to null_ptid on entry, the
pid returned by wait is not equal to `inferior_ptid.pid ()`, so we reset
pid to -1 and go to waiting again. Since there are not more children to
wait for, waitpid then returns -1 so we get here:
if (pid == -1)
{
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr,
_("Child process unexpectedly missing: %s.\n"),
safe_strerror (save_errno));
/* Claim it exited with unknown signal. */
ourstatus->set_signalled (GDB_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN);
return inferior_ptid;
}
We therefore return a "signalled" status with a null_ptid (again,
inferior_ptid is null_ptid). This confuses infrun, because if the
target returns a "signalled" status, it should be coupled with a ptid
for an inferior that exists.
So, the first step is to fix the snippets above to not use
inferior_ptid. In the first snippet, use find_inferior_pid to see if
we know the event process. If there is no inferior with that pid, we
assume it's a detached child process to we ignore the event. That
should be enough to fix the problem, because it should make it so we
won't go into the second snippet. But still, fix the second snippet to
return an "ignore" status. This is copied from inf_ptrace_target::wait,
which is where rs6000_nat_target::wait appears to be copied from in the
first place.
These changes, are not sufficient, as the aix_thread_target, which sits
on top of rs6000_nat_target, also relies on inferior_ptid.
aix_thread_target::wait, by calling pd_update, assumes that
rs6000_nat_target has set inferior_ptid to the appropriate value (the
ptid of the event thread), but that's not the case. pd_update
returns inferior_ptid - null_ptid - and therefore
aix_thread_target::wait returns null_ptid too, and we still hit the
assert shown above.
Fix this by changing pd_activate, pd_update, sync_threadlists and
get_signaled_thread to all avoid using inferior_ptid. Instead, they
accept as a parameter the pid of the process we are working on.
With this patch, I am able to run the program to completion:
(gdb) r
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
[Inferior 1 (process 11010794) exited normally]
As well as break on main:
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x1000036c
(gdb) r
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
Breakpoint 1, 0x1000036c in main ()
(gdb) c
Continuing.
[Inferior 1 (process 26083688) exited normally]
Change-Id: I7c2613bbefe487d75fa1a0c0994423471d961ee9
2022-07-07 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix pedantically invalid DWARF in gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp
The DWARF spec says:
Any debugging information entry representing the declaration of an object,
module, subprogram or type may have DW_AT_decl_file, DW_AT_decl_line and
DW_AT_decl_column attributes, each of whose value is an unsigned integer
^^^^^^^^
constant.
Grepping around the DWARF-assembler-based testcases, I noticed that
gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp emits decl_line with
DW_FORM_sdata, a signed integer form. This commit tweaks it to use
DW_FORM_udata instead.
Unsurprisingly, this:
$ make check \
TESTS="gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp" \
RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
... still passes cleanly for me after this change.
I've noticed this because current llvm-dwarfdump crashed on an
ROCm-internal DWARF-assembler-based testcase that incorrectly used
signed forms for DW_AT_decl_file/DW_AT_decl_line.
The older llvm-dwarfdump found on Ubuntu 20.04 (LLVM 10) reads the
line numbers with signed forms as "0" instead of crashing. Here's the
before/after fix for gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp with that
llvm-dwarfdump version:
$ diff -up before.txt after.txt
--- before.txt 2022-07-07 13:21:28.387690334 +0100
+++ after.txt 2022-07-07 13:21:39.379801092 +0100
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
DW_AT_name ("s")
DW_AT_byte_size (3)
DW_AT_decl_file (0)
- DW_AT_decl_line (0)
+ DW_AT_decl_line (1)
0x0000002f: DW_TAG_member
DW_AT_name ("a")
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@
DW_AT_name ("t")
DW_AT_byte_size (3)
DW_AT_decl_file (0)
- DW_AT_decl_line (0)
+ DW_AT_decl_line (1)
0x00000054: DW_TAG_member
DW_AT_name ("a")
Change-Id: I5c866946356da421ff944019d0eca2607b2b738f
2022-07-07 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Fix typos in code comments
"its" should be "it's".
2022-07-07 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB/testsuite: Add coverage for `print -elements' command
We currently have no coverage for the `print -elements ...' command (or
`p -elements ...' in the shortened form), so add a couple of test cases
mimicking ones using corresponding `set print elements ...' values.
2022-07-07 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement the push_dummy_call gdbarch method
According to "Procedure Calling Convention" in "LoongArch ELF ABI
specification" [1], implement the push_dummy_call gdbarch method
as clear as possible.
[1] https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html#_procedure_calling_convention
2022-07-07 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Added Zfhmin and Zhinxmin.
This commit adds Zfhmin and Zhinxmin extensions (subsets of Zfh and
Zhinx extensions, respectively). In the process supporting Zfhmin and
Zhinxmin extension, this commit also changes how instructions are
categorized considering Zfhmin, Zhinx and Zhinxmin extensions.
Detailed changes,
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN:
flh, fsh, fmv.x.h and fmv.h.x.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fmv.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fneg.h, fabs.h, fsgnj.h, fsgnjn.h, fsgnjx.h,
fadd.h, fsub.h, fmul.h, fdiv.h, fsqrt.h, fmin.h, fmax.h,
fmadd.h, fnmadd.h, fmsub.h, fnmsub.h,
fcvt.w.h, fcvt.wu.h, fcvt.h.w, fcvt.h.wu,
fcvt.l.h, fcvt.lu.h, fcvt.h.l, fcvt.h.lu,
feq.h, flt.h, fle.h, fgt.h, fge.h,
fclass.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN:
fcvt.s.h and fcvt.h.s.
* From INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D:
fcvt.d.h and fcvt.h.d.
* From INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q:
fcvt.q.h and fcvt.h.q.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Change implicit
subsets. Zfh->Zicsr is not needed and Zfh->F is replaced with
Zfh->Zfhmin and Zfhmin->F. Zhinx->Zicsr is not needed and
Zhinx->Zfinx is replaced with Zhinx->Zhinxmin and
Zhinxmin->Zfinx.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added zfhmin and zhinxmin.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Rewrite handling for new
instruction classes.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Updated.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Change error message to include
zfh and zfhmin extensions.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail.s: New complex
error handling test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.d: Renamed from fp-zhinx-insns.d
and refactored.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.s: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Removed INSN_CLASS_ZFH,
INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX and INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX. Added
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN, INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN,
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D and INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Change instruction classes for
Zfh and Zfhmin instructions. Fix `fcvt.h.lu' instruction
(two operand variant) mask.
2022-07-07 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: adjust GPROFNG_VARIANT
GPROFNG_VARIANT depends on compiler options, not on $(host).
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-06 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29116
* libcollector/configure.ac: Adjust GPROFNG_VARIANT.
* libcollector/configure: Rebuild.
2022-07-07 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix disassembling Zfinx with -M numeric
This commit fixes floating point operand register names from ABI ones
to dynamically set ones.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.s: Test new behavior of
Zfinx extension and -M numeric disassembler option.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.d: Likewise.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Use dynamically set GPR
names to disassemble Zfinx instructions.
2022-07-07 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix requirement handling on Zhinx+{D,Q}
This commit fixes how instructions are masked on Zhinx+Z{d,q}inx.
fcvt.h.d and fcvt.d.h require ((D&&Zfh)||(Zdinx&&Zhinx)) and
fcvt.h.q and fcvt.q.h require ((Q&&Zfh)||(Zqinx&&Zhinx)).
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Fix feature gate
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Fix feature gate diagnostics
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zhinx-insns.d: Add Zqinx to -march
for proper testing.
2022-07-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29320, 'struct obstack' declared inside parameter list
PR 29320
* frags.h: Move declaration of struct obstack..
* as.h: ..to here.
2022-07-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-06 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
gprofng: implement a functional gp-display-html
This patch enables the first support for the "gprofng display html" command.
This command works for C/C++ applications on x86_64. Using one or more gprofng
experiment directories as input, a new directory with html files is created.
Through the index.html file in this directory, the performance results may be
viewed in a browser.
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-06-28 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: implement first support for x86_64 and C/C++
2022-07-06 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Copy p_align of PT_GNU_STACK for stack alignment
commit 74e315dbfe5200c473b226e937935fb8ce391489
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Dec 13 19:46:04 2021 -0800
elf: Set p_align to the minimum page size if possible
may ignore p_align of PT_GNU_STACK when copying ELF program header if
the maximum page size is larger than p_align of PT_LOAD segments. Copy
p_align of PT_GNU_STACK since p_align of PT_GNU_STACK describes stack
alignment, not page size,
PR binutils/29319
* elf.c (copy_elf_program_header): Copy p_align of PT_GNU_STACK
for stack alignment.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: make D attribute usable for XOP and FMA4 insns
This once again allows to reduce redundancy in (and size of) the opcode
table.
Don't go as far as also making D work on the two 5-operand XOP insns:
This would significantly complicate the code, as there the first
(immediate) operand would need special treatment in several places.
Note that the .s suffix isn't being enabled to have any effect, for
being deprecated. Whereas neither {load} nor {store} pseudo prefixes
make sense here, as the respective operands are inputs (loads) only
anyway, regardless of order. Hence there is (as before) no way for the
programmer to request the alternative encoding to be used for register-
only insns.
Note further that it is always the first original template which is
retained (and altered), to make sure the same encoding as before is
used for register-only insns. This has the slightly odd (but pre-
existing) effect of XOP register-only insns having XOP.W clear, but FMA4
ones having VEX.W set.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: fold two switch() statements in match_template()
I don't see why two of them were introduced (very long ago) using
similar fall-through logic.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: fix 3-operand insn reverse-matching
The middle operand would have gone entirely unchecked, allowing e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, %esp, %xmm2
to assemble successfully, or e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, $4, %xmm2
causing an internal error. Alongside dealing with this also drop a
related comment, which hasn't been applicable anymore since the
introduction of 3-operand patterns with D set (and which perhaps never
had been logical to be there, as reverse-matched insns don't make it
there in the first place).
2022-07-06 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
Descriptive DWARF operations dump support for DW_AT_rank
DW_AT_rank is a dwarf-5 feature.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: introduce a state stack for .arch
When using just slightly non-trivial combinations of .arch, it can be
quite useful to be able to go back to prior state without needing to
re-invoke perhaps many earlier directives and without needing to invoke
perhaps many "negative" ones. Like some other architectures allow
saving (pushing) and restoring (popping) present/prior state.
For now require the same .code<N> to be in effect for ".arch pop" that
was in effect for the corresponding ".arch push".
Also change the global "no_cond_jump_promotion" to be bool, to match the
new struct field.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: generalize disabling of sub-architectures
I never really understood upon what basis ".arch .no*" options were made
available. Let's not have any "criteria" at all, and simply allow
disabling of all of them. Then we also have all data for a sub-arch in
a single place, as we now only need a single table.
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: permit "default" with .arch
So far there was no way to reset the architecture to that assembly would
start with in the absence of any overrides (command line or directives).
Note that for Intel MCU "default" is merely an alias of "iamcu".
While there also zap a stray @item from the doc section, as noticed
when inspecting the generated output (which still has some quirks, but
those aren't easy to address without re-flowing almost the entire
section).
2022-07-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: don't leak sub-architecture accumulated strings
While it may not be necessary in i386_target_format() (but then setting
the variable to NULL also wouldn't be necessary), at least in the other
cases strings may already have accumulated.
2022-07-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-05 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/exp] Fix internal error when printing C++ pointer-to-member
When running the test-case included with this patch, we run into:
...
(gdb) print ptm^M
$1 = gdb/gdbtypes.h:695: internal-error: loc_bitpos: \
Assertion `m_loc_kind == FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS' failed.^M
...
while printing a c++ pointer-to-member.
Fix this by skipping static fields in cp_find_class_member, such that we have:
...
(gdb) print ptm^M
$1 = &A::i^M
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29294
2022-07-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add gdb.Objfile.is_file attribute
Sometimes an objfile comes from memory and not from a file. It can be
useful to be able to check this from Python, so this patch adds a new
"is_file" attribute.
2022-07-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Make 'import gdb.events' work
Pierre-Marie noticed that, while gdb.events is a Python module, it
can't be imported. This patch changes how this module is created, so
that it can be imported, while also ensuring that the module is always
visible, just as it was in the past.
This new approach required one non-obvious change -- when running
gdb.base/warning.exp, where --data-directory is intentionally not
found, the event registries can now be nullptr. Consequently, this
patch probably also requires
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/189796.html
Note that this patch obsoletes
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/189797.html
2022-07-05 Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
gdb: LoongArch: add orig_a0 into register set
The basic support for LoongArch has been merged into the upstream Linux
kernel since 5.19-rc1 on June 5, 2022. This commit adds orig_a0 which
is added into struct user_pt_regs [1] to match the upstream kernel, and
then the upstream GDB will work with the upstream kernel.
Note that orig_a0 was added into struct user_pt_regs in the development
cycle for merging LoongArch port into the upstream Linux kernel, so
earlier kernels (notably, the product kernel with version 4.19 used in
distros like UOS and Loongnix) don't have it. Inspect
arch/loongarch/include/uapi/asm/ptrace.h in the kernel tree to make sure.
To build upstream GDB for a kernel lacking orig_a0, it's necessary to
revert this commit locally.
[1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/loongarch/include/uapi/asm/ptrace.h#n24
2022-07-05 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
Support for location and range lists for split-dwarf and dwarf-5.
Adding support for location and range lists for split-dwarf and dwarf-5.
Following issues are taken care.
1. Display of the index values for DW_FORM_loclistx and DW_FORM_rnglistx.
2. Display of .debug_loclists.dwo and .debug_rnglists.dwo sections.
* dwarf.c(read_and_display_attr_value): Handle DW_FORM_loclistx
and DW_FORM_rnglistx for .dwo files.
(process_debug_info): Load .debug_loclists.dwo and
.debug_rnglists.dwo if exists.
(load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_loclists and
.debug_rnglists if exists.
Include 2 entries in debug_displays table.
* dwarf.h (enum dwarf_section_display_enum): Include 2 entries.
2022-07-05 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: introduce fake processor type to mark sub-arch entries in cpu_arch[]
This is in preparation of dropping the leading . from the strings.
While there also move PROCESSOR_GENERIC{32,64} from the middle of AMD
entries to near the top.
2022-07-05 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: macro-ize cpu_arch[] entries
Putting individual elements behind macros, besides (imo) improving
readability, will make subsequent (and likely also future) changes less
intrusive.
Utilize this right away to pack the table a little more tightly, by
converting "skip" to bool and putting it earlier in a group of bitfields
together with "len".
2022-07-05 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: de-duplicate sub-architecture strings accumulation
Introduce a helper function to replace 4 instances of similar code. Use
reconcat() to cover the previously explicit free().
2022-07-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-04 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix snafu in rust demangler recursion limit code
2022-07-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
alloc gas seginfo on notes obstack
Lots of memory used in gas should go on this obstack. The patch also
frees all the gas obstacks on exit, which isn't a completely trivial
task.
* subsegs.c (alloc_seginfo): New function.
(subseg_change, subseg_get): Use it.
(subsegs_end): New function.
* as.h (subsegs_end): Declare.
* output-file.c: Include subsegs.h
(stash_frchain_obs): New function.
(output_file_close): Save obstacks attached to output bfd before
closing. Call subsegs_end with the array of obstacks.
2022-07-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
objcopy: bfd_alloc orelocation
This fixes an inconsequential objcopy memory leak. I'd normally
ignore reports of leaks like this one, that are merely one block or
fewer per section processed, since objcopy soon exits and frees all
memory. However I thought it worth providing support for allocating
memory on a bfd objalloc in objcopy and other utils.
PR 29233
* bucomm.c (bfd_xalloc): New function.
* bucomm.h (bfd_xalloc): Declare.
* objcopy.c (copy_relocations_in_section): Use it to allocate
array of reloc pointers. Rewrite code stripping relocs to do
without extra memory allocation.
2022-07-04 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Synchronize libbierty sources with gcc.
2022-07-04 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
Modified changes for split-dwarf and dwarf-5.
* dwarf.c(process_debug_info): Include DW_TAG_skeleton_unit.
(display_debug_str_offsets): While dumping .debug_str_offsets.dwo,
pass proper str_offsets_base to fetch_indexed_string().
(load_separate_debug_files): Skip DWO ID dump for dwarf-5.
2022-07-04 Marcus Nilsson <brainbomb@gmail.com>
opcodes/avr: Implement style support in the disassembler
* disassemble.c: (disassemble_init_for_target): Set
created_styled_output for AVR based targets.
* avr-dis.c: (print_insn_avr): Use fprintf_styled_ftype
instead of fprintf_ftype throughout.
(avr_operand): Pass in and fill disassembler_style when
parsing operands.
2022-07-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Add get/set functions for per_cu->lang/unit_type
The dwarf2_per_cu_data fields lang and unit_type both have a dont-know
initial value (respectively language_unknown and (dwarf_unit_type)0), which
allows us to add certain checks, f.i. checking that that a field is not read
before written.
Add get/set member functions for the two fields as a convenient location to
add such checks, make the fields private to enforce using the member
functions, and add the m_ prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-07-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/testsuite: properly exclude aout in all/weakref1u
Use the (wider) predicate rather than a triplet. This eliminates the sole
i386-msdos failure in the testsuite.
2022-07-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: fold Disp32S and Disp32
The only case where 64-bit code uses non-sign-extended (can also be
considered zero-extended) displacements is when an address size override
is in place for a memory operand (i.e. particularly excluding
displacements of direct branches, which - if at all - are controlled by
operand size, and then are still sign-extended, just from 16 bits).
Hence the distinction in templates is unnecessary, allowing code to be
simplified in a number of places. The only place where logic becomes
more complicated is when signed-ness of relocations is determined in
output_disp().
The other caveat is that Disp64 cannot be specified anymore in an insn
template at the same time as Disp32. Unlike for non-64-bit mode,
templates don't specify displacements for both possible addressing
modes; the necessary adjustment to the expected ones has already been
done in match_template() anyway (but of course the logic there needs
tweaking now). Hence the single template so far doing so is split.
2022-07-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: restore masking of displacement kinds
Commit 7d5e4556a375 rendered the check near the end of what is now
i386_finalize_displacement() entirely dead for AT&T mode, since for
operands involving a displacement .unspecified will always be set. But
the logic there is bogus anyway - Intel syntax operand size specifiers
are of no interest there either. The only thing which matters in the
"displacement only" determination is .baseindex.
Of course when masking displacement kinds we should not at the same time
also mask off other attributes.
Furthermore the type mask returned by lex_got() also needs to be
adjusted: The only case where we want Disp32 (rather than Disp32S) is
when dealing with 32-bit addressing mode in 64-bit code.
2022-07-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86-64: improve handling of branches to absolute addresses
There are two related problems here: The use of "addr32" on a direct
branch would, besides causing a warning, result in operands to be
permitted which mistakenly are refused without "addr32". Plus at some
point not too long ago I'm afraid it may have been me who regressed the
relocation addends emitted for such branches. Correct both problems,
adding a testcase to guard against regressing this again.
2022-07-04 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Update Zihintpause extension version
Because ratified Zihintpause extension has a version number of 2.0
(not 1.0), we should update the number.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Update version
number of Zihintpause extension.
2022-07-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix data race on per_cu->dwarf_version
When building gdb with -fsanitize=thread and gcc 12, and running test-case
gdb.dwarf2/dwz.exp, we run into a data race between thread T2 and the main
thread in the same write:
...
Write of size 1 at 0x7b200000300c:^M
#0 cutu_reader::cutu_reader(dwarf2_per_cu_data*, dwarf2_per_objfile*, \
abbrev_table*, dwarf2_cu*, bool, abbrev_cache*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6252 \
(gdb+0x82f3b3)^M
...
which is here:
...
this_cu->dwarf_version = cu->header.version;
...
Both writes are called from the parallel for in dwarf2_build_psymtabs_hard,
this one directly:
...
#1 process_psymtab_comp_unit gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6774 (gdb+0x8304d7)^M
#2 operator() gdb/dwarf2/read.c:7098 (gdb+0x8317be)^M
#3 operator() gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:163 (gdb+0x872380)^M
...
and this via the PU import:
...
#1 cooked_indexer::ensure_cu_exists(cutu_reader*, dwarf2_per_objfile*, \
sect_offset, bool, bool) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:17964 (gdb+0x85c43b)^M
#2 cooked_indexer::index_imported_unit(cutu_reader*, unsigned char const*, \
abbrev_info const*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18248 (gdb+0x85d8ff)^M
#3 cooked_indexer::index_dies(cutu_reader*, unsigned char const*, \
cooked_index_entry const*, bool) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18302 (gdb+0x85dcdb)^M
#4 cooked_indexer::make_index(cutu_reader*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18443 \
(gdb+0x85e68a)^M
#5 process_psymtab_comp_unit gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6812 (gdb+0x830879)^M
#6 operator() gdb/dwarf2/read.c:7098 (gdb+0x8317be)^M
#7 operator() gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:171 (gdb+0x8723e2)^M
...
Fix this by setting the field earlier, in read_comp_units_from_section.
The write in cutu_reader::cutu_reader() is still needed, in case
read_comp_units_from_section is not used (run the test-case with say, target
board cc-with-gdb-index).
Make the write conditional, such that it doesn't trigger if the field is
already set by read_comp_units_from_section. Instead, verify that the
field already has the value that we're trying to set it to.
Move this logic into into a member function set_version (in analogy to the
already present member function version) to make sure it's used consistenly,
and make the field private in order to enforce access through the member
functions, and rename it to m_dwarf_version.
While we're at it, make sure that the version is set before read, to avoid
say returning true for "per_cu.version () < 5" if "per_cu.version () == 0".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-07-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/early-init-file.exp with -fsanitize=thread
When building gdb with -fsanitize=thread, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/early-init-file.exp: check startup version string has style \
version
...
due to this:
...
warning: Found custom handler for signal 7 (Bus error) preinstalled.^M
warning: Found custom handler for signal 8 (Floating point exception) \
preinstalled.^M
warning: Found custom handler for signal 11 (Segmentation fault) \
preinstalled.^M
Some signal dispositions inherited from the environment (SIG_DFL/SIG_IGN)^M
won't be propagated to spawned programs.^M
...
appearing before the "GNU gdb (GDB) $version" line.
This is similar to the problem fixed by commit f0bbba7886f
("gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: fix when GDB is built with
AddressSanitizer").
In that commit, the problem was fixed by starting gdb with -quiet, but using
that would mean the "GNU gdb (GDB) $version" line that we're trying to check
would disappear.
Fix this instead by updating the regexp to allow the message.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-07-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-07-01 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB/doc: Remove indentation from `print -elements' completion example
Remove indentation from the text of the manual after the example here:
" Completion will in some cases guide you with a suggestion of what
kind of argument an option expects. For example:
(gdb) print -elements <TAB><TAB>
NUMBER unlimited
Here, the option expects a number (e.g., '100'), not literal
'NUMBER'. Such metasyntactical arguments are always presented in
uppercase."
as this is a continuation of the same paragraph.
2022-07-01 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB/doc: Remove extraneous spaces from completion examples
Completion results are usually different when the operation is applied
to a word that is or is not followed by a space. In some cases they are
equivalent, however a space would not be produced if completion was used
earlier on in the word processed.
However in the manual we have completion examples given using a space
that actually prevents the example from working. E.g.:
(gdb) info bre <TAB>
(nothing) and:
(gdb) info bre <TAB><TAB>
Display all 200 possibilities? (y or n)
as it now goes on to propose the entire symbol table, while:
(gdb) info bre<TAB>
(gdb) info breakpoints
does the right thing, but is not what is shown in the manual.
In other cases an extraneous space is used that does not correspond to
the actual completion pattern shown, which gives an impression of
sloppiness.
Remove extraneous spaces then from completion examples as appropriate.
2022-07-01 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add newline to the end of the rnglists displsy.
2022-07-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-30 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB: Add `NUMBER' completion to `set' integer commands
Fix a completion consistency issue with `set' commands accepting integer
values and the special `unlimited' keyword:
(gdb) complete print -elements
print -elements NUMBER
print -elements unlimited
(gdb)
vs:
(gdb) complete set print elements
set print elements unlimited
(gdb)
(there is a space entered at the end of both commands, not shown here)
which also means if you strike <Tab> with `set print elements ' input,
it will, annoyingly, complete to `set print elements unlimited' right
away rather than showing a choice between `NUMBER' and `unlimited'.
Add `NUMBER' then as an available completion for such `set' commands:
(gdb) complete set print elements
set print elements NUMBER
set print elements unlimited
(gdb)
Adjust the testsuite accordingly. Also document the feature in the
Completion section of the manual in addition to the Command Options
section already there.
2022-06-30 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: Expand gdb.cp/mb-ctor.exp to test dynamic allocation
When testing GDB's ability to stop in constructors, gdb.cp/mb-ctor.exp
only tested objects allocated on the stack. This commit adds a couple of
dynamic allocations and tests if GDB can stop in it as well.
2022-06-30 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix implementation of readelf's -wE and -wN options,
* dwarf.c (dwarf_select_sections_by_name): If the entry's value is
zero then clear the corresponding variable.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfo.exp: Expect -WE and -wE
debuginfod tests to fail.
2022-06-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Block SIGTERM in worker threads
With gdb build with gcc-12 and -fsanitize=thread, and test-case
gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp, I run into:
...
WARNING: ThreadSanitizer: data race (pid=9722)^M
Write of size 4 at 0x00000325bc68 by thread T1:^M
#0 handle_sigterm(int) src/gdb/event-top.c:1211 (gdb+0x8ec01f)^M
...
Previous read of size 4 at 0x00000325bc68 by main thread:^M
[failed to restore the stack]^M
^M
Location is global 'sync_quit_force_run' of size 4 at \
0x00000325bc68 (gdb+0x325bc68)^M
...
SUMMARY: ThreadSanitizer: data race gdb/event-top.c:1211 in \
handle_sigterm(int)^M
...
and 3 more data races involving handle_sigterm and locations:
- active_ext_lang
- quit_flag
- heap block of size 40
(XNEW (async_signal_handler) in create_async_signal_handler)
This was reported in PR29297.
The testcase executes a "kill -TERM $gdb_pid", which generates a
process-directed signal.
A process-directed signal can be delivered to any thread, and what we see
here is the fallout of the signal being delivered to a worker thread rather
than the main thread.
Fix this by blocking SIGTERM in the worker threads.
[ I have not been able to reproduce this after it occurred for the first time,
so unfortunately I cannot confirm that the patch fixes the problem. ]
Tested on x86_64-linux, with and without -fsanitize=thread.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29297
2022-06-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: fix column widths in MI compatibility table
In passing I noticed that the column headings for the table of MI
compatibility and breaking changes, were overlapping, at least when
the PDF is generated on my machine.
I propose giving slightly more space to the two version number
columns, this prevents the headers overlapping for me.
2022-06-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-29 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix GDBserver regression due to change to avoid reading shell registers
Simon reported that the recent change to make GDB and GDBserver avoid
reading shell registers caused a GDBserver regression, caught with
ASan while running gdb.server/non-existing-program.exp:
$ /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/../../gdb/../gdbserver/gdbserver stdio non-existing-program
=================================================================
==127719==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x60f0000000e9 at pc 0x55bcbfa301f4 bp 0x7ffd238a7320 sp 0x7ffd238a7310
WRITE of size 1 at 0x60f0000000e9 thread T0
#0 0x55bcbfa301f3 in scoped_restore_tmpl<bool>::~scoped_restore_tmpl() /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/scoped_restore.h:86
#1 0x55bcbfa2ffe9 in post_fork_inferior(int, char const*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/fork-child.cc:120
#2 0x55bcbf9c9199 in linux_process_target::create_inferior(char const*, std::__debug::vector<char*, std::allocator<char*> > const&) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:991
#3 0x55bcbf954549 in captured_main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3941
#4 0x55bcbf9552f0 in main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
#5 0x7ff9d663b0b2 in __libc_start_main (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x240b2)
#6 0x55bcbf8ef2bd in _start (/home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/gdbserver+0x1352bd)
0x60f0000000e9 is located 169 bytes inside of 176-byte region [0x60f000000040,0x60f0000000f0)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7ff9d6c6f0c7 in operator delete(void*) ../../../../src/libsanitizer/asan/asan_new_delete.cpp:160
#1 0x55bcbf910d00 in remove_process(process_info*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/inferiors.cc:164
#2 0x55bcbf9c4ac7 in linux_process_target::remove_linux_process(process_info*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:454
#3 0x55bcbf9cdaa6 in linux_process_target::mourn(process_info*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:1599
#4 0x55bcbf988dc4 in target_mourn_inferior(ptid_t) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/target.cc:205
#5 0x55bcbfa32020 in startup_inferior(process_stratum_target*, int, int, target_waitstatus*, ptid_t*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdb/nat/fork-inferior.c:515
#6 0x55bcbfa2fdeb in post_fork_inferior(int, char const*) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/fork-child.cc:111
#7 0x55bcbf9c9199 in linux_process_target::create_inferior(char const*, std::__debug::vector<char*, std::allocator<char*> > const&) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:991
#8 0x55bcbf954549 in captured_main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3941
#9 0x55bcbf9552f0 in main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
#10 0x7ff9d663b0b2 in __libc_start_main (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x240b2)
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7ff9d6c6e5a7 in operator new(unsigned long) ../../../../src/libsanitizer/asan/asan_new_delete.cpp:99
#1 0x55bcbf910ad0 in add_process(int, int) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/inferiors.cc:144
#2 0x55bcbf9c477d in linux_process_target::add_linux_process_no_mem_file(int, int) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:425
#3 0x55bcbf9c8f4c in linux_process_target::create_inferior(char const*, std::__debug::vector<char*, std::allocator<char*> > const&) /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:985
#4 0x55bcbf954549 in captured_main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3941
#5 0x55bcbf9552f0 in main /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
#6 0x7ff9d663b0b2 in __libc_start_main (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x240b2)
Above we see that in the non-existing-program case, the process gets
deleted before the starting_up flag gets restored to false.
This happens because startup_inferior calls target_mourn_inferior
before throwing an error, and in GDBserver, unlike in GDB, mourning
deletes the process.
Fix this by not using a scoped_restore to manage the starting_up flag,
since we should only clear it when startup_inferior doesn't throw.
Change-Id: I67325d6f81c64de4e89e20e4ec4556f57eac7f6c
2022-06-29 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB/testsuite: Tighten `set print elements' error check
Match the whole error message expected to be given rather than omitting
the part about the "unlimited" keyword. There's no point in omitting
the missing part first, and second with an upcoming change the part in
parentheses will no longer be a fixed string, so doing a full match will
ensure the algorithm correctly builds the message expected here. Also
avoid any wildcard matches.
2022-06-29 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB: Remove extraneous full stops from `set' command error messages
With errors given for bad commands such as `set annotate' or `set width'
we produce an extraneous full stop within parentheses:
(gdb) set annotate
Argument required (integer to set it to.).
(gdb) set width
Argument required (integer to set it to, or "unlimited".).
(gdb)
This is grammatically incorrect, so remove the full stop and adjust the
testsuite accordingly.
2022-06-29 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: improve description of --data-disassemble opcodes output
Extend the description of the MI command --data-disassemble.
Specifically, expand the description of the 'opcodes' field to explain
how the bytes are formatted.
2022-06-29 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Only stack S16..S31 when FPU registers are secure
The FPCCR.TS bit is used to identify if FPU registers are considered
non-secure or secure. If they are secure, then callee saved registers
(S16 to S31) are stacked on exception entry or otherwise skipped.
2022-06-29 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
opcodes/aarch64: split off creation of comment text in disassembler
The function aarch64_print_operand (aarch64-opc.c) is responsible for
converting an instruction operand into the textual representation of
that operand.
In some cases, a comment is included in the operand representation,
though this (currently) only happens for the last operand of the
instruction.
In a future commit I would like to enable the new libopcodes styling
for AArch64, this will allow objdump and GDB[1] to syntax highlight
the disassembler output, however, having operands and comments
combined in a single string like this makes such styling harder.
In this commit, I propose to extend aarch64_print_operand to take a
second buffer. Any comments for the instruction are written into this
extra buffer. The two callers of aarch64_print_operand are then
updated to pass an extra buffer, and print any resulting comment.
In this commit no styling is added, that will come later. However, I
have adjusted the output slightly. Before this commit some comments
would be separated from the instruction operands with a tab character,
while in other cases the comment was separated with two single spaces.
After this commit I use a single tab character in all cases. This
means a few test cases needed updated. If people would prefer me to
move everyone to use the two spaces, then just let me know. Or maybe
there was a good reason why we used a mix of styles, I could probably
figure out a way to maintain the old output exactly if that is
critical.
Other than that, there should be no user visible changes after this
commit.
[1] GDB patches have not been merged yet, but have been posted to the
GDB mailing list:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/190142.html
2022-06-29 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp on ppc
When running the gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp test on ppc, I was
seeing some test failures (or rather errors), that looked like this:
(gdb) watch local
Hardware watchpoint 2: local
has_hw_wp_support: Hardware watchpoint detected
ERROR: no fileid for gcc2-power8
ERROR: Couldn't send delete breakpoints to GDB.
ERROR OCCURED: can't read "gdb_spawn_id": no such variable
while executing
"expect {
-i 1000 -timeout 100
-re ".*A problem internal to GDB has been detected" {
fail "$message (GDB internal error)"
gdb_internal_erro..."
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
What happens is that in break-idempotent.exp we basically do this:
if {[prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" $binfile $srcfile $opts]} {
continue
}
# ....
if {![skip_hw_watchpoint_tests]} {
test_break $always_inserted "watch"
}
The problem with this is that skip_hw_watchpoint_tests, includes this:
if { [istarget "i?86-*-*"]
|| [istarget "x86_64-*-*"]
|| [istarget "ia64-*-*"]
|| [istarget "arm*-*-*"]
|| [istarget "aarch64*-*-*"]
|| ([istarget "powerpc*-*-linux*"] && [has_hw_wp_support])
|| [istarget "s390*-*-*"] } {
return 0
}
For powerpc only we call has_hw_wp_support. This is a caching proc
that runs a test within GDB to detect if we have hardware watchpoint
support or not.
Unfortunately, to run this test we restart GDB, and when the test has
completed, we exit GDB. This means that in break-idempotent.exp, when
we call skip_hw_watchpoint_tests for the first time on powerpc, GDB
will unexpectedly be exited. When we later call delete_breakpoints we
see the errors I reported above.
The fix is to call skip_hw_watchpoint_tests early, before we start GDB
as part of the break-idempotent.exp script, and store the result in a
variable, we can then check this variable in the script as needed.
After this change break-idempotent.exp runs fine on powerpc.
2022-06-29 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop stray NoRex64 from XBEGIN
Presumably this being there was a result of taking CALL as a reference
when adding the RTM insns. But with No_qSuf the attribute has no effect.
2022-06-29 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build when BUILD_MAN is false
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-06-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29131
* gp-display-html/Makefile.am: Set man_MANS only when BUILD_MAN is true.
* src/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* gp-display-html/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* src/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
2022-06-29 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: use $(sysconfdir) instead $(prefix)/etc
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-06-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29191
* src/Makefile.am: Use $(sysconfdir) instead $(prefix)/etc.
* src/Settings.cc: Likewise.
* src/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
2022-06-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ld/x86: skip p_align-1 tests with unsuitable compiler
commit d0e0f9c87a3e results "ERROR: i586-linux-cc does not exist" if
cross-building an i586-linux target without a target compiler
installed.
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp (compiler_honours_aligned): New.
Use it after first testing check_compiler_available.
2022-06-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-28 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb+gdbserver/Linux: avoid reading registers while going through shell
For every stop, Linux GDB and GDBserver save the stopped thread's PC,
in lwp->stop_pc. This is done in save_stop_reason, in both
gdb/linux-nat.c and gdbserver/linux-low.cc. However, while we're
going through the shell after "run", in startup_inferior, we shouldn't
be reading registers, as we haven't yet determined the target's
architecture -- the shell's architecture may not even be the same as
the final inferior's.
In gdb/linux-nat.c, lwp->stop_pc is only needed when the thread has
stopped for a breakpoint, and since when going through the shell, no
breakpoint is going to hit, we could simply teach save_stop_reason to
only record the stop pc when the thread stopped for a breakpoint.
However, in gdbserver/linux-low.cc, lwp->stop_pc is used in more cases
than breakpoint hits (e.g., it's used in tracepoints & the
"while-stepping" feature).
So to avoid GDB vs GDBserver divergence, we apply the same approach to
both implementations.
We set a flag in the inferior (process in GDBserver) whenever it is
being nursed through the shell, and when that flag is set,
save_stop_reason bails out early. While going through the shell,
we'll only ever get process exits (normal or signalled), random
signals, and exec events, so nothing is lost.
Change-Id: If0f01831514d3a74d17efd102875de7d2c6401ad
2022-06-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix gdb build with -fsanitize=thread and gcc 7
When building gdb with system gcc 7.5.0, I run into:
...
gdb/ia64-tdep.c: In function int is_float_or_hfa_type_recurse(type*, type**):
gdb/ia64-tdep.c:3362:1: error: control reaches end of non-void function \
[-Werror=return-type]
...
This is due to PR gcc/81275 - "-fsanitize=thread produce incorrect
-Wreturn-type warning", which has been fixed in gcc-8.
Work around this by moving the default return outside the switch.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-28 Clément Chigot <chigot@adacore.com>
bfd: handle codepage when opening files on MinGW
Even if MS docs say that CP_UTF8 should always be used on newer
applications, forcing it might produce undefined filename if the
encoding isn't UTF-8.
MinGW seems to call ___lc_codepage_func() in order to retrieve the
current thread codepage.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* bfdio.c (_bfd_real_fopen): Retrieve codepage with
___lc_codepage_func() on MinGW.
2022-06-28 Clément Chigot <chigot@adacore.com>
windres: add quotes around preprocessor cmd if needed
This patch ensures that the gcc binary called by windres is quoted if
needed. Otherwise, errors can occur if the gcc is under a folder having
a name containing a space (eg "Program Files").
binutils/
* resrc.c (DEFAULT_PREPROCESSOR): Split into...
(DEFAULT_PREPROCESSOR_CMD): that...
(DEFAULT_PREPROCESSOR_ARGS): and that.
(look_for_default): Add quotes around the command if needed.
(read_rc_file): Adapt to new defines.
2022-06-28 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix the display of the idnex values for DW_FORM_loclistx and DW_FORM_rnglistx. Correct the display of .debug.loclists sections.
PR 29267
* dwarf.c (display_debug_rnglists): New function, broken out of..
(display_debug_ranges): ... here.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Correct calculation of index
displayed for DW_FORM_loclistx and DW_FORM_rnglistx.
* testsuite/binutils-all/x86-64/pr26808.dump: Update expected
output.
2022-06-28 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
ld/x86: skip p_align-1 tests with unsuitable compiler
When the compiler doesn't properly arrange for foo's alignment, there's
no point even trying these tests. Report the situation as a single
"unsupported" test.
2022-06-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: align plt_branch stubs
plt_branch stubs are similar to plt_call stubs in that they branch
via bctr. Align them too.
bfd/
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc_size_one_stub): Align plt_branch stubs as for
plt_call stubs.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/elfv2exe.d: Adjust for plt_branch changes.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc.wf: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr23937.d: Likewise.
2022-06-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: plt_stub_pad
* elf64-ppc.c (plt_stub_pad): Simplify parameters and untangle
from plt_stub_size.
(ppc_size_one_stub): Call plt_stub_size before plt_stub_pad to
provide size. Recalculate size if it might change.
2022-06-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: Tidy stub type changes
It made sense before I started using separate fields for main type and
sub type to add a difference in main type to the type (thus keeping
sub type unchanged). Not so much now.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc_merge_stub): Simplify stub type change.
(ppc_size_one_stub): Likewise.
2022-06-28 Jiangshuai Li <jiangshuai_li@c-sky.com>
gdb:csky add pseudo regs for float and vector regs
In the existing CSKY architecture, there are at most 32 floating
and 16 vector registers. Float registers's count can be configured
as 16 or 32. In the future, the vector registers's count may be
extended to 32.
The bit width of floating-point register is 64bits, and the bit
width of vector register is 128bit.
Special points: in fr0~fr15 and vr0~vr15, each FRx is the lower
64 bits of the corresponding VRx.
Here, we will split each floating-point and vector register to
32bits wide, add the corresponding pseudo registers, and finally
use them for the dwarf registers.
There are 128 pseudo registers in total, s0~s127, including:
1. s0 and s1 correspond to fr0, s4 and s5 correspond to fr1, and so on.
Every two separated pseudo registers correspond to a float register.
2. s0, s1, s2 and s3 correspond to vr0; s4, s5, s6 and s7 correspond to vr1,
and so on. Every four pseudo registers corresponds to a vector register.
Therefore, in s64~s127, there are general registers that are not actually
used. This part is to prepare for the expansion of vector registers to 32
Therefore, in s64~s127, half of the registers are actually unused. This
part is to prepare for the expansion of the vector register to 32.
2022-06-28 Pekka Seppänen <pexu@sourceware.mail.kapsi.fi>
PR29293, elfnn-aarch64.c: def_protected member unintialized
PR 29293
* elfnn-aarch64.c (elfNN_aarch64_link_hash_newfunc): Init def_protected.
2022-06-28 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add 'Sstc' extension and its CSRs
This commit adds "stimecmp / vstimecmp" Extension (Sstc) and its CSRs.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_s_ext): Add 'Sstc'
extension to valid 'S' extension list.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (enum riscv_csr_class): Add CSR classes for
'Sstc' extension. (riscv_csr_address): Add handling for new CSR
classes.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (CSR_STIMECMP, CSR_STIMECMPH,
CSR_VSTIMECMP, CSR_VSTIMECMPH): New CSR macros.
2022-06-28 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add 'Sscofpmf' extension with its CSRs
This commit adds Count Overflow and Mode-Based Filtering Extension
(Sscofpmf) and its CSRs.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_s_ext): Add 'Sscofpmf'
extension to valid 'S' extension list.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (enum riscv_csr_class): Add CSR classes for
'Sscofpmf' extension. (riscv_csr_address): Add handling for new
CSR classes.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (CSR_SCOUNTOVF, CSR_MHPMEVENT3H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT4H, CSR_MHPMEVENT5H, CSR_MHPMEVENT6H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT7H, CSR_MHPMEVENT8H, CSR_MHPMEVENT9H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT10H, CSR_MHPMEVENT11H, CSR_MHPMEVENT12H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT13H, CSR_MHPMEVENT14H, CSR_MHPMEVENT15H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT16H, CSR_MHPMEVENT17H, CSR_MHPMEVENT18H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT19H, CSR_MHPMEVENT20H, CSR_MHPMEVENT21H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT22H, CSR_MHPMEVENT23H, CSR_MHPMEVENT24H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT25H, CSR_MHPMEVENT26H, CSR_MHPMEVENT27H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT28H, CSR_MHPMEVENT29H, CSR_MHPMEVENT30H,
CSR_MHPMEVENT31H): New CSR macros.
2022-06-28 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add 'Smstateen' extension and its CSRs
This commit adds State Enable Extension (Smstateen) and its CSRs.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_s_ext): Add 'Smstateen'
extension to valid 'S' extension list.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (enum riscv_csr_class): Add CSR classes for
'Smstateen' extension. (riscv_csr_address): Add handling for
new CSR classes.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (CSR_MSTATEEN0, CSR_MSTATEEN1,
CSR_MSTATEEN2, CSR_MSTATEEN3, CSR_SSTATEEN0, CSR_SSTATEEN1,
CSR_SSTATEEN2, CSR_SSTATEEN3, CSR_HSTATEEN0, CSR_HSTATEEN1,
CSR_HSTATEEN2, CSR_HSTATEEN3, CSR_MSTATEEN0H, CSR_MSTATEEN1H,
CSR_MSTATEEN2H, CSR_MSTATEEN3H, CSR_HSTATEEN0H, CSR_HSTATEEN1H,
CSR_HSTATEEN2H, CSR_HSTATEEN3H): New CSR macros.
2022-06-28 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add new CSR feature gate handling (RV32,H)
To support feature gate like Smstateen && H, this commit adds certain
CSR feature gate handling. It also changes how RV32-only CSRs are
handled for cleanliness.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_csr_address): Add CSR feature gate
handling for H. Change handling on RV32.
2022-06-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Disable execstack and rwx segments warnings for MIPS targets.
PR 29263
* configure.ac: Fix typo.
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Add mips to targets that need
--warn-execstack to pass first pr29072 test.
2022-06-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-27 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: update bug numbers from Gnats to bugzilla
Some tests link to outdated bug numbers when an XFAIL or a KFAIL happen.
gdb.base/macscp.exp was referencing bug number 555, and the bug 7660
mentions that it used to be 555 on the Gnats system and seems to relate
to the issue at hand.
gdb.base/annota1.exp was referencing bug number 1270, and bug 8375
mentions being number 1270 on Gnats, and mentions annota1 specifically,
so it seemed pretty obvious.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build breaker with --enable-shared
When building gdb with --enable-shared, I run into:
...
ld: build/zlib/libz.a(libz_a-inffast.o): relocation R_X86_64_32S against \
`.rodata' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
ld: build/zlib/libz.a(libz_a-inflate.o): warning: relocation against \
`inflateResetKeep' in read-only section `.text'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make[3]: *** [libbfd.la] Error 1
...
This is a regression since commit a08bdb159bb ("[gdb/build] Fix gdbserver
build with -fsanitize=thread").
The problem is that a single case statement in configure is shared to handle
special requirements for both the host libiberty and host zlib, which has the
effect that only one is handled.
Fix this by handling libiberty and zlib each in its own case statement.
Build on x86_64-linux, with and without --enable-shared.
ChangeLog:
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* configure.ac: Set extra_host_libiberty_configure_flags and
extra_host_zlib_configure_flags in separate case statements.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-06-27 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make GDBserver abort on internal error in development mode
Currently, if GDBserver hits some internal assertion, it exits with
error status, instead of aborting. This makes it harder to debug
GDBserver, as you can't just debug a core file if GDBserver fails an
assertion. I've had to hack the code to make GDBserver abort to debug
something several times before.
I believe the reason it exits instead of aborting, is to prevent
potentially littering the filesystem of smaller embedded targets with
core files. I think I recall Daniel Jacobowitz once saying that many
years ago, but I can't be sure. Anyhow, that seems reasonable to me.
Since we nowadays have a distinction between development and release
modes, I propose to make GDBserver abort on internal error if in
development mode, while keeping the status quo when in release mode.
Thus, after this patch, in development mode, you get:
$ ../gdbserver/gdbserver
../../src/gdbserver/server.cc:3711: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.
captured_main: Assertion `0' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
$
while in release mode, you'll continue to get:
$ ../gdbserver/gdbserver
../../src/gdbserver/server.cc:3711: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.
captured_main: Assertion `0' failed.
$ echo $?
1
I do not think that this requires a separate configure switch.
A "--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver" run on Ubuntu 20.04 ends
up with:
=== gdb Summary ===
# of unexpected core files 29
...
for me, of which 8 are GDBserver core dumps, 7 more than without this
patch.
Change-Id: I6861e08ad71f65a0332c91ec95ca001d130b0e9d
2022-06-27 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Replace a run-time assertion failure with a warning message when parsing corrupt DWARF data.
PR 29289
* dwarf.c (display_debug_names): Replace assert with a warning
message.
Fix NULL pointer indirection when parsing corrupt DWARF data.
PR 29290
* dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Check that debug_info_p
is set before dereferencing it.
Have gold's File_read::do_read() function check the start parameter
PR 23765
* fileread.cc (File_read::do_read): Check start parameter before
computing number of bytes to read.
2022-06-27 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Unwind Non-Secure callbacks from Secure
Without this changeset, the unwinding doesn't take into account
Non-Secure to Secure stack unwinding enablement status and
doesn't choose the proper SP to do the unwinding.
This patch only unwinds the stack when Non-Secure to Secure
unwinding is enabled, previous SP is set w/r to the current mode
(Handler -> msp_s, Thread -> psp_s) and then the Secure stack is
unwound. Ensure thumb bit is set in PSR when needed. Also, drop
thumb bit from PC if set.
2022-06-27 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop bogus warnings about DWARF indexed string offsets being too big.
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_string): Do not use length of first table
in string section as the length of every table in the section.
* testsuite/binutils-all/pr26112.r: Update expected output.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle older python in gdb.python/py-send-packet.py
With python 3.4, I run into:
...
Traceback (most recent call last):^M
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>^M
File
"outputs/gdb.python/py-send-packet/py-send-packet.py", line 128, in \
run_set_global_var_test^M
res = conn.send_packet(b"X%x,4:\x02\x02\x02\x02" % addr)^M
TypeError: Could not convert Python object: b'X%x,4:\x02\x02\x02\x02'.^M
Error while executing Python code.^M
...
while with python 3.6 this works fine.
The type of addr is <class 'gdb.Value'>, so the first thing to try is whether
changing it into a string works:
...
addr_str = "%x" % addr
res = conn.send_packet(b"X%s,4:\x02\x02\x02\x02" % addr_str)
...
which gets us the more detailed:
...
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for %: 'bytes' and 'str'
...
Fix this by avoiding the '%' operator in the byte literal, and use instead:
...
def xpacket_header (addr):
return ("X%x,4:" % addr).encode('ascii')
...
res = conn.send_packet(xpacket_header(addr) + b"\x02\x02\x02\x02")
...
Tested on x86_64-linux, with python 3.4 and 3.6, and a backported version was
tested on the gdb-12-branch in combination with python 2.7.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp for -pie
When running test-case gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp for x86_64-linux with
target board unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie, we run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp: push st0
info register eax^M
eax 0x56550000 1448411136^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp: verify eax == 0x8040000
...
The problem is that the tested instruction (fstsw) only sets $ax, not $eax.
Fix this by verifying $ax instead of $eax.
Tested on x86_64-linux with target boards unix/-m32 and unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Enable some test-cases for x86_64 -m32
When trying to run test-case gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp for x86_64-linux
with target board unix/-m32, it's skipped.
Fix this by using is_x86_like_target instead of istarget "i?86-*linux*".
This exposes a number of duplicates, fix those by making the test names unique.
Likewise in a couple of other test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux with target boards unix/-m32.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Workaround unnecessary .s file with gfortran 4.8
After running test-case gdb.fortran/namelist.exp with gfortran 4.8.5, I'm left
with:
...
$ git sti
On branch master
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
gdb/testsuite/lib/compiler.s
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
...
We're running into PR gcc/60447, which was fixed in gcc 4.9.0.
Workaround this by first copying the source file to the temp dir, such that
the .s file is left there instead:
...
$ ls build/gdb/testsuite/temp/<runtest pid>/
compiler.c compiler.F90 compiler.s
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Skip gdb.fortran/namelist.exp for gfortran 4.8
The test-case gdb.fortran/namelist.exp uses a gfortran feature (emitting
DW_TAG_namelist in the debug info) that has been supported since gfortran 4.9,
see PR gcc/37132.
Skip the test for gfortran 4.8 and earlier. Do this using gcc_major_version,
and update it to be able to handle "gcc_major_version {gfortran-*} f90".
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gfortran 4.8.5, 7.5.0, and 12.1.1.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix parsing of .debug_str_offsets header
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/fission-mix.exp with target board dwarf64
and gcc-12 (defaulting to DWARF5), I run into:
...
(gdb) break func2^M
Offset from DW_FORM_GNU_str_index or DW_FORM_strx pointing outside of \
.debug_str.dwo section in CU at offset 0x0 [in module fission-mix]^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/fission-mix.exp: break func2
...
The .debug_str_offsets section has version 5, so as per the standard it has
it's own header, with initial length and version:
...
Contents of the .debug_str_offsets.dwo section (loaded from fission-mix2.dwo):
Length: 0x1c
Version: 0x5
Index Offset [String]
0 0 build/gdb/testsuite
1 33 GNU C17
2 8f src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/fission-mix-2.c
...
But when trying to read the string offset at index 0 in the table (which
is 0), we start reading at offset 8, which points in the header, at the last
4 bytes of the initial length (it's 12 bytes because of 64-bit dwarf), as well
at the 2-byte version field and 2 bytes of padding, so we get:
...
(gdb) p /x str_offset
$1 = 0x500000000
...
which indeed is an offset that doesn't fit in the .debug_str section.
The offset 8 is based on reader->cu->header.addr_size:
...
static const char *
read_dwo_str_index (const struct die_reader_specs *reader, ULONGEST str_index)
{
ULONGEST str_offsets_base = reader->cu->header.version >= 5
? reader->cu->header.addr_size : 0;
...
which doesn't in look in agreement with the standard.
Note that this happens to give the right answer for 32-bit dwarf and
addr_size == 8, because then we have header size ==
(initial length (4) + version (2) + padding (2)) == 8.
Conversely, for 32-bit dwarf and addr_size == 4 (target board unix/-m32)
we run into a similar problem. It just happens to not trigger the warning,
instead we get the wrong strings, like "func2" for DW_AT_producer and
"build/gdb/testsuite" for DW_AT_name of the DW_TAG_compile_unit DIE.
Fix this by parsing the .debug_str_offsets header in read_dwo_str_index.
Add a FIXME that we should not parse this for every call.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix gdbserver build with -fsanitize=thread
[ Copied from gcc commit 153689603fd ("[gdb/build] Fix gdbserver build with
-fsanitize=thread"). ]
When building gdbserver with -fsanitize=thread (added to CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS) we
run into:
...
ld: ../libiberty/libiberty.a(safe-ctype.o): warning: relocation against \
`__tsan_init' in read-only section `.text'
ld: ../libiberty/libiberty.a(safe-ctype.o): relocation R_X86_64_PC32 \
against symbol `__tsan_init' can not be used when making a shared object; \
recompile with -fPIC
ld: final link failed: bad value
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make[1]: *** [libinproctrace.so] Error 1
...
which looks similar to what is described in commit 78e49486944 ("[gdb/build]
Fix gdbserver build with -fsanitize=address").
The gdbserver component builds a shared library libinproctrace.so, which uses
libiberty and therefore requires the pic variant. The gdbserver Makefile is
setup to use this variant, if available, but it's not there.
Fix this by listing gdbserver in the toplevel configure alongside libcc1, as a
component that needs the libiberty pic variant, setting:
...
extra_host_libiberty_configure_flags=--enable-shared
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
ChangeLog:
2022-06-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* configure.ac: Build libiberty pic variant for gdbserver.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-06-27 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Disable execstack and rwx segments warnings for MIPS targets.
PR 29263
* configure.ac: Move HPPA specific code from here...
* configure.tgt: ... to here. Add similar code for MIPS.
Move code for CRIS, MIPS and HPPA to block at start of file.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-06-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
bfd: prune config.bfd's setting of targ_archs
The final "match all" case can take care of a few explicit entries:
Purge those. Also move s12z* into proper position (the table is
otherwise sorted, after all).
2022-06-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
drop XC16x bits
Commit 04f096fb9e25 ("Move the xc16x target to the obsolete list") moved
the architecture from the "obsolete but still available" to the
"obsolete / support removed" list in config.bfd, making the architecture
impossible to enable (except maybe via "enable everything" options").
Note that I didn't touch */po/*.po{,t} on the assumption that these
would be updated by some (half)automatic means.
2022-06-27 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
Fix location list offset address dump under DW_AT_location (dwarf-5)
For clang compiled objects with dwarf-5, location list offset address dump
under DW_AT_location is corrected, where DW_FORM_loclistx is used. While
dumping the location list offset, the address dumped is wrong where it was
refering to .debug_addr instead of .debug_loclists
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_value): Add base_address as parameter and
use it to access the section offset.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Handle DW_FORM_loclistx form separately.
Pass loclists_base to fetch_indexed_value().
2022-06-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 .branch_lt address
.branch_lt is really an extension of .plt, as is .iplt. We'd like all
of the PLT sections to be fixed relative to .TOC. after stub sizing,
because changes in offset to PLT entries might mean a change in stub
sizes. When -z relro, the relro layout does this by laying out
sections from the end of the relro segment. So for example, a change
in .eh_frame (which happens after stub sizing) will keep the same GOT
to PLT offset when -z relro. Not so when -z norelro, because then the
usual forward layout of section is done and .got is more aligned than
.branch_lt.
* emulparams/elf64ppc.sh: Set .branch_lt address fixed relative
to .got.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/elfv2exe.d: Adjust to suit.
2022-06-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
-z relro relaxation and ld script SIZEOF
A number of targets use assignments like:
. = DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END (SIZEOF (.got.plt) >= 12 ? 12 : 0, .);
(from i386) in linker scripts to put the end of the relro segment past
the header in .got.plt. Examination of testcases like those edited by
this patch instead sees the end of the relro segment being placed at
the start of .got.plt. For the i386 pie1 test:
[ 9] .got.plt PROGBITS 00002000 001000 00000c 04 WA 0 0 4
GNU_RELRO 0x000f90 0x00001f90 0x00001f90 0x00070 0x00070 R 0x1
A map file shows:
.dynamic 0x0000000000001f90 0x70
*(.dynamic)
.dynamic 0x0000000000001f90 0x70 tmpdir/pie1.o
0x0000000000001f90 _DYNAMIC
.got 0x0000000000002000 0x0
*(.got)
.got 0x0000000000002000 0x0 tmpdir/pie1.o
*(.igot)
0x0000000000002ff4 . = DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END (., (SIZEOF (.got.plt) >= 0xc)?0xc:0x0)
.got.plt 0x0000000000002000 0xc
*(.got.plt)
.got.plt 0x0000000000002000 0xc tmpdir/pie1.o
0x0000000000002000 _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_
The DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END value in the map file is weird too. All of
this is triggered by SIZEOF (.got.plt) being evaluated wrongly as
zero. Fix it by taking into account the action of
lang_reset_memory_regions during relaxation.
* ldexp.c (fold_name <SIZEOF>): Use rawsize if size has been reset.
* ldlang.c (lang_size_sections_1): Don't reset processed_vma here.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pie1.d: Adjust to suit.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-06-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-25 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
arm: Define elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0 [PR 18705]
Similar to commit 4fb55bf6a9606eb7b626c30a9f4e71d6c2d4fbb2 for aarch64.
Commit b68a20d6675f1360ea4db50a9835c073675b9889 changed ld to produce
R_ARM_GLOB_DAT but that defeated the purpose of protected visibility
as an optimization. Restore the previous behavior (which matches
ld.lld) by defining elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0.
2022-06-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix corrupt DWARF in dw2-double-set-die-type
The dw2-double-set-die-type.exp test case caused an AddressSanitizer
failure in the new DWARF scanner.
The immediate cause was bad DWARF in the test -- in particular, the
the sibling attribute here:
<2><181>: Abbrev Number: 33 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
<182> DW_AT_external : 1
<183> DW_AT_name : address
<18b> DW_AT_type : <0x171>
<18f> DW_AT_declaration : 1
<190> DW_AT_sibling : <0x1a1>
...
<1><1a1>: Abbrev Number: 23 (DW_TAG_pointer_type)
<1a2> DW_AT_byte_size : 4
<1a3> DW_AT_type : <0x1a7>
...points to a "sibling" DIE that is at a different child depth.
Because this test case doesn't really require sibling attributes, this
patch fixes the problem by removing them from the test.
Note that gdb is not generally robust against malformed DWARF.
Detecting and compensating for this problem would probably be
expensive and, IMO, is better left to some (still hypothetical) DWARF
linter.
2022-06-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix end of CU calculation in cooked_indexer::index_dies
cooked_indexer::index_dies incorrect computes the end of the current
CU in the .debug_info. This isn't readily testable without writing
intentionally corrupt DWARF, but it's apparent through observation: it
is currently based on 'info_ptr', which does not always point to the
start of the CU. This patch fixes the expression. Tested on x86-64
Fedora 34.
2022-06-25 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement loongarch_linux_syscall_next_pc()
When FRAME is at a syscall instruction, return the PC of the next
instruction to be executed.
gdb: LoongArch: Define register numbers and clean up code
This commit defines register numbers of various important registers,
we can use them directly in the related code, and also clean up some
code to make them more clear and readable.
2022-06-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Eliminate TUI/CLI observers duplication
For historical reasons, the CLI and the TUI observers are basically
exact duplicates, except for the downcast:
cli:
struct cli_interp *cli = as_cli_interp (interp);
tui:
struct interp *tui = as_tui_interp (interp);
and how they get at the interpreter's ui_out:
cli:
cli->cli_uiout
tui:
tui->interp_ui_out ()
Since interp_ui_out() is a virtual method that also works for the CLI
interpreter, and, both the CLI and the TUI interpreters inherit from
the same base class (cli_interp_base), we can convert the CLI
observers to cast to cli_interp_base instead and use interp_ui_out()
too. With that, the CLI observers will work for the TUI interpreter
as well. This lets us completely eliminate the TUI observers. That's
what this commit does.
Change-Id: Iaf6cf12dfa200ed3ab203a895a72b69dfedbd6e0
2022-06-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Revert "Delete delete_thread_silent"
Turns out we'll be gaining a new use of this function very soon, the
incoming AMDGPU port needs it. Let's add it back, as it isn't really
hurting anything.
This reverts commit 39b8a8090ed7e8967ceca3655aa5f3a2ae91219d.
2022-06-24 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Update the value of active sp when base sp changes
For Arm Cortex-M33 with security extensions, there are 4 different
stacks pointers (msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s, psp_ns).
When plain "sp" is updated during unwinding of the stack, the active
stack pointer of the 4 stack pointers needs to be kept in sync.
2022-06-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove unneeded calls to get_compiler_info
It is not necessary to call get_compiler_info before calling
test_compiler_info, and, after recent commits that removed setting up
the gcc_compiled, true, and false globals from get_compiler_info,
there is now no longer any need for any test script to call
get_compiler_info directly.
As a result every call to get_compiler_info outside of lib/gdb.exp is
redundant, and this commit removes them all.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove global gcc_compiled from gdb.exp
After this commit the gcc_compiled global is no longer exported from
lib/gdb.exp. In theory we could switch over all uses of gcc_compiled
to instead call test_compiler_info directly, however, I have instead
added a new proc to gdb.exp: 'is_c_compiler_gcc'. I've then updated
the testsuite to call this proc instead of using the global.
Having a new proc specifically for this task means that we have a
single consistent pattern for detecting gcc. By wrapping this logic
within a proc that calls test_compiler_info, rather than using the
global, means that test scripts don't need to call get_compiler_info
before they read the global, simply calling the new proc does
everything in one go.
As a result I've been able to remove the get_compiler_info calls from
all the test scripts that I've touched in this commit.
In some of the tests e.g. gdb.dwarf2/*.exp, the $gcc_compiled flag was
being checked at the top of the script to decide if the whole script
should be skipped or not. In these cases I've called the new proc
directly and removed all uses of gcc_compiled.
In other cases, e.g. most of the gdb.base scripts, there were many
uses of gcc_compiled. In these cases I set a new global gcc_compiled
near the top of the script, and leave the rest of the script
unchanged.
There should be no changes in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Include count of unexpected core files in gdb.sum summary
If GDB, GDBserver, a testcase program, Valgrind, etc. unexpectedly
crash while running the GDB testsuite, and you've setup your machine
such that core files are dumped in the current directory instead of
being shoved somewhere by abrt, apport, or similar (as you should for
proper GDB testing), you'll end up with an unexpected core file in the
$build/gdb/testsuite/ directory.
It can happen that GDB, GDBserver, etc. even crashes _after_ gdb_exit,
during teardown, and thus such a crash won't be noticed by looking at
the gdb.sum file at all. This commit aims at improving that, by
including a new "unexpected core files" line in the testrun summary.
For example, here's what I get on x86-64 Ubuntu 20.04, with this
patch:
=== gdb Summary ===
# of unexpected core files 12 << new info
# of expected passes 107557
# of unexpected failures 35
# of expected failures 77
# of unknown successes 2
# of known failures 114
# of untested testcases 31
# of unsupported tests 139
I have my core pattern setup like this:
$ cat /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
core.%e.%p.%h.%t
That's:
%e: executable filename
%p: pid
%h: hostname
%t: UNIX time of dump
and so I get these core files:
$ ls -1 testsuite/core.*
testsuite/core.connect-with-no.216191.nelson.1656002431
testsuite/core.connect-with-no.217729.nelson.1656002431
testsuite/core.gdb.194247.nelson.1656002423
testsuite/core.gdb.226014.nelson.1656002435
testsuite/core.gdb.232078.nelson.1656002438
testsuite/core.gdb.352268.nelson.1656002441
testsuite/core.gdb.4152093.nelson.1656002337
testsuite/core.gdb.4154515.nelson.1656002338
testsuite/core.gdb.4156668.nelson.1656002339
testsuite/core.gdb.4158871.nelson.1656002341
testsuite/core.gdb.468495.nelson.1656002444
testsuite/core.vgdb.4192247.nelson.1656002366
where we can see that GDB crashed a number of times, but also
Valgrind's vgdb, and a couple testcase programs. Neither of which is
good.
If your core_pattern is just "core" (but why??), then I guess that you
may end up with just a single core file in testsuite/. Still, that is
one core file too many.
Above, we see a couple cores for "connect-with-no", which are the
result of gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp. This is a case
mentioned above -- while the program crashed, that happens during
testcase teardown, and it goes unnoticed (without this commit) by
gdb.sum results. Vis:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp"
...
=== gdb Summary ===
# of unexpected core files 2
# of expected passes 8
...
$
The tests fully passed, but still the testcase program crashed
somehow:
$ ls -1 testsuite/core.*
testsuite/core.connect-with-no.941561.nelson.1656003317
testsuite/core.connect-with-no.941682.nelson.1656003317
Against --target_board=native-extended-gdbserver it's even worse. I
get:
# of unexpected core files 26
and note that when GDBserver hits an assertion failure, it exits with
error, instead of crashing with SIGABRT. I think that should be
changed, at least on development builds, but that would be for another
patch. After such patch, I suspect the number of unexpected cores
will be higher, as there are likely teardown GDBserver assertions that
we're not noticing.
I decided to put this new info in the "gdb Summary" section, as that's
a place people already are used to looking at, either when looking at
the tail of gdb.sum, or when diffing gdb.sum files, and we've already
extended this section before, to include the count of DUPLICATE and
PATH problems, so there's precedent.
Implementation-wise, the new line is appended after DejaGnu is
finished, with a shell script that is invoked by the Makefile. It is
done this way so that serial and parallel testing work the same way.
My initial cut at an implementation was in TCL, straight in
testsuite/lib/check-test-names.exp, where DUPLICATES and PATH are
handled, like so:
@@ -148,6 +159,10 @@ namespace eval ::CheckTestNames {
$counts(paths,$which)
maybe_show_count "# of duplicate test names\t" \
$counts(duplicates,$which)
+
+ set cores [glob -nocomplain -directory $::objdir core*]
+ maybe_show_count "# of unexpected core files\t" \
+ [llength $cores]
}
But that would only work for serial testing, as in parallel testing,
the final gdb.sum is generated by aggregating the results of all the
individual gdb.sum files, and dg-extract-results.sh doesn't know about
our new summary line. And I don't think that dg-extract-results.sh
should be taught about it, since the count of core files is not
something that we want to count many times, once per testcase, and
then add up the subcounts at the end. Every time we count the core
files, we're already counting the final count.
I considered using the Tcl implementation in serial mode, and the
script approach for parallel testing, but that has the obvious
downside of implementing and maintaining the same thing twice. In the
end, I settled on the script approach for serial mode too, which
requires making the "check-single" rule print the tail end of the
gdb.sum file, with a side effect being that if you look at the
terminal after a run (instead of at the gdb.sum file), you'll see the
"gdb Summary" section twice, once without the unexpected core lines
printed, and then another with. IMO, this isn't an issue; when
testing in parallel mode, if you look at the terminal after "make -jN
check", you'll also see multiple "gdb Summary" sections printed.
Change-Id: I190b8d41856d49ad143854b6e3e6ccd7caa04491
2022-06-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Improve core file path detection & put cores in output dir
After a testrun, I noticed that I have some kernel-produced cores for
testcase programs, under build/gdb/testsuite/, which shouldn't be
there:
$ ls -1 testsuite/core.*
testsuite/core.annota1.1274351.nelson.1656004407
testsuite/core.annota3.1288474.nelson.1656004414
testsuite/core.exitsignal.1240674.nelson.1656004391
I have my core pattern setup like this:
$ cat /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
core.%e.%p.%h.%t
That's:
%e: executable filename
%p: pid
%h: hostname
%t: UNIX time of dump
so it's easy to tell which program produced the core from the core
file name.
From above, we can tell that the corresponding testcases are
gdb.base/annota1.exp, gdb.base/annota3.exp and
gdb.base/exitsignal.exp.
At least gdb.base/annota1.exp and gdb.base/annota3.exp have code in
them to delete the core file. However, that isn't working for me,
because said code only looks for cores named exactly either "core" or
"core.PID", and my core_pattern doesn't match that.
Another issue I noticed, is that I have not been running
gdb.base/bigcore.exp, for a similar reason. I get:
Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
The program no longer exists.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: signal SIGABRT
UNTESTED: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: can't generate a core file
But I actually have a core file under the testcase's output dir:
$ find . -name "core.*"
./testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/bigcore/core.bigcore.2306705.nelson.1656005213
$
This commit fixes these things, by adding a find_core_file routine
that searches core files in a way that works with my core pattern as
well. This then also adds a convenience remove_core routine as a
wrapper around find_core_file that removes the found core file.
In addition, it changes some testcases that expect to have their
program dump core, to switch the inferior's cwd to the testcase's
output dir, so that the core is dumped there instead of in
build/gdb/testsuite/. Some testcases were already doing that, but not
all. The idea is that any core file dumped in build/gdb/testsuite/ is
an unexpected core file. The next patch will add a count of such
unexpected core files to gdb.sum.
Another change is that the directory changing is now done with "set
cwd" instead of with "cd". "set cwd" only affects the inferior cwd,
while "cd" affects GDB's cwd too. By using "set cwd" instead of "cd",
if GDB dumps core in these testcases, the GDB core dump will still end
up in build/gdb/testsuite/, and can thus be detected as an unexpected
core.
Change-Id: I45068f21ffd4814350aaa8a3cc65cad5e3107607
2022-06-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make use of RAII in run_inferior_call
In passing I noticed that there are three local variables in
run_inferior_call that are used to save, and then restore some state,
I think these could all be replaced with a RAII style scoped_restore
instead.
Of the three locals that I've changed, the only one that I believe is
now restored in a different location is ui::async, before this commit
the async field was restored after a call to either delete_file_handle
or ui_register_input_event_handler, and after this commit, the field
is restored before these calls. However, I don't believe that either
of these functions depend on the value of the async field, so I
believe the commit is fine.
Tested on x86-64/Linux passes with no regressions.
2022-06-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Delete delete_thread_silent
delete_thread_silent is no longer used anywhere. Delete it.
Change-Id: Iafcec12339861d5ab2e29c14d7b1f884c9e11c0f
2022-06-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-23 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Don't declare cli_set_logging
cli_set_logging is declared but not defined. It's probably a leftover
from whenever interpreters were changed to use inheritance. This
patch removes the declaration. Tested by grep and rebuilding.
Use PyBool_FromLong
I noticed a few spots that were explicitly creating new references to
Py_True or Py_False. It's simpler here to use PyBool_FromLong, so
this patch changes all the places I found.
2022-06-23 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: fix assertion in ppc_build_one_stub with -Os code
save_res stubs aren't written in ppc_build_one_stub, their offsets
(which are zero) should not be checked.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc_build_one_stub): Don't check save_res offsets.
2022-06-23 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PowerPC64: stub debug dump
Let's show the current stub as well as the previous one. Of interest
is the current offset and a new field, id. Check that the build
hash table traversal is in the same order as sizing traversal too.
* elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_stub_hash_entry): Add id.
(struct ppc_link_hash_table): Add stub_id.
(stub_hash_newfunc): Init id and symtype.
(dump_stub): New function, extracted from..
(dump_previous_stub): ..here. Deleted.
(ppc_build_one_stub): Sanity check stub id as well as offset.
Show current stub as well as previous.
(ppc_size_one_stub): Set stub id.
(ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Init stub_id before traversal.
(ppc64_elf_build_stubs): Likewise.
2022-06-23 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
aarch64: Allow PC-relative relocations against protected STT_FUNC for -shared
__attribute__((visibility("protected"))) void *foo() {
return (void *)foo;
}
gcc -fpic -shared -fuse-ld=bfd fails with the confusing diagnostic:
relocation R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21 against symbol `foo' which may bind externally can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
Call _bfd_elf_symbol_refs_local_p with local_protected==true to suppress
the error. The new behavior matches gold and ld.lld.
Note: if some code tries to use direct access relocations to take the
address of foo (likely due to -fno-pic), the pointer equality will
break, but the error should be reported on the executable link, not on
the innocent shared object link. glibc 2.36 will give a warning at
relocation resolving time.
2022-06-23 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
aarch64: Define elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0 [PR 18705]
Follow-up to commit 90b7a5df152a64d2bea20beb438e8b81049a5c30
("aarch64: Disallow copy relocations on protected data").
Commit 32f573bcb3aaa1c9defcad79dbb5851fcc02ae2d changed ld to produce
R_AARCH64_GLOB_DAT but that defeated the purpose of protected visibility
as an optimization. Restore the previous behavior (which matches
ld.lld) by defining elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0.
2022-06-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use std::string for interpreter_p
The global interpreter_p is a manually-managed 'char *'. This patch
changes it to be a std::string instead, and removes some erroneous
comments.
Move mi_interpreter to mi-interp.h
I noticed that touching interps.h caused a lot of recompilation. I
tracked this down to mi-common.h including this file. This patch
moves the MI interpreter to mi-interp.h, which cuts down on
recompilation when modifying interps.h.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in interp
This changes interp::m_name to be a unique_xmalloc_ptr, removing some
manual memory management. It also cleans up the initialization of the
'inited' member, and moves the 'private:' and 'public:' keywords to
their proper spots.
2022-06-22 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
aarch64: Disallow copy relocations on protected data
If an executable has copy relocations for extern protected data, that
can only work if the shared object containing the definition is built
with assumptions (a) the compiler emits GOT-generating relocations (b)
the linker produces R_*_GLOB_DAT instead of R_*_RELATIVE. Otherwise the
shared object uses its own definition directly and the executable
accesses a stale copy. Note: the GOT relocations defeat the purpose of
protected visibility as an optimization, and it turns out this never
worked perfectly.
glibc 2.36 will warn on copy relocations on protected data. Let's
produce a warning at link time, matching ld.lld which has been used on
many aarch64 OSes.
Note: x86 requires GNU_PROPERTY_NO_COPY_ON_PROTECTED to have the error.
This is to largely due to GCC 5's "x86-64: Optimize access to globals in
PIE with copy reloc" which started to use direct access relocations for
external data symbols in -fpie mode.
GCC's aarch64 port does not have the change. Nowadays with most builds
switching to -fpie/-fpic, aarch64 mostly doesn't need to worry about
copy relocations. So for aarch64 we simply don't check
GNU_PROPERTY_NO_COPY_ON_PROTECTED.
2022-06-22 Kumar N, Bhuvanendra <Kavitha.Natarajan@amd.com>
Binutils support for split-dwarf and dwarf-5
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_string): Added new parameter
str_offsets_base to calculate the string offset.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Read DW_AT_str_offsets_base
attribute.
(process_debug_info): While allocating memory and initializing
debug_information, do it for do_debug_info also, if its true.
(load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_str_offsets if exists.
* dwarf.h (struct debug_info): Add str_offsets_base field.
2022-06-22 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Reorder the prefixed extensions which are out of order.
This patch has been pending for almost a year... However, I noticed that
llvm can already re-order the extensions, even if they are out of orders.
Not really sure if they can also re-order the single letter extensions,
but at least we can do this for the multi-letter extensions in binutils.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Removed the code which are
used to check the prefixed extension orders.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x-z.d: Removed since we will help
tp reorder the prefixed extensions for now.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x-z.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-z.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-z.l: Likewise.
2022-06-22 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Use single h extension to control hypervisor CSRs and instructions.
According to the picture 28.1 in the current ISA spec, h is no larger the
multi-letter extension, it is a single extension after v. Therefore, this
patch fix the implementation, and use the single h to control hypervisor
CSRs and instructions, which we promised to do before.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_ext): Added h with version 1.0 after v.
(riscv_supported_std_h_ext): Removed.
(riscv_all_supported_ext): Updated since riscv_supported_std_h_ext is removed.
(riscv_prefix_ext_class): Removed RV_ISA_CLASS_H.
(parse_config): Updated since riscv_prefix_ext_class is removed.
(riscv_recognized_prefixed_ext): Likewise.
(riscv_get_default_ext_version): Likewise.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Handle INSN_CLASS_H for hypervisor instructions.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Likewise.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_csr_class): Added CSR_CLASS_H and CSR_CLASS_H_32 for
hypervisor CSRs.
(riscv_csr_address): Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Updated since hypervisor CSRs are
controlled by single h extension for now.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.d: Added h to architecture string.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-single-prefix-h: Removed since h is no
longer multi-letter extension.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-unknown-h.d: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Control hypervisor CSRs by h extension, rather than
the privileged spec verisons.
* opcode/riscv.h (riscv_insn_class): Added INSN_CLASS_H.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Control hypervisor instructions by h extension.
2022-06-22 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add 'H' to canonical extension ordering
This commit adds 'H' to canonical extension ordering based on current
consensus (not officially ratified as a new ISA specification manual
but discussion for software compatibility is made).
bfd/ChangeLog
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_ext_canonical_order): Add 'H' for
canonical extension ordering based on current consensus.
2022-06-22 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Prepare i18n for required ISA extensions
Some strings returned by the riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext function
contain not just extension names but words like "and" and "or".
This commit wraps such strings with the gettext macro (_) for
internationalization in the future.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Wrap some
strings with the gettext macro to prepare future i18n.
2022-06-22 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix inconsistent error message (range)
This commit fixes inconsistent error message format involving compressed
funct<n> fields. In specific, funct6 had an error message with range
0..2^<n> ("0..64") unlike other funct<n> fields with 0..2^<n>-1
(e.g. funct4 with "0..15").
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_ip): Fix inconsistent error message.
2022-06-22 Marcus Nilsson <brainbomb@gmail.com>
readelf: replace xmalloc with malloc in slurp_relr_relocs
Using xmalloc makes the null check redundant since failing allocation
will exit the program. Instead use malloc and let the error be
conveyed up the call chain.
2022-06-22 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: stub debug dump
powerpc64le-linux-ld is failing the assertion in ppc_build_one_stub,
again apparently, which means a stub will overwrite the tail of a
previous stub. The difficulty with debugging these issues is that
it's not a problem with the stub that triggers the assertion, but the
previous stub in that section. This patch keeps track of the last
stub and adds a debug dump. Hopefully that will help.
* elf64-ppc.c (enum _ppc64_sec_type): Add sec_stub.
(struct _ppc64_elf_section_data): Add u.last_ent.
(dump_previous_stub): New function.
(ppc_build_one_stub): Keep track of previous stub, and dump it
when finding an overlapping stub.
2022-06-22 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29270, DW_FORM_udata signed output
PR 29270
* dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Output DW_FORM_udata
as unsigned.
2022-06-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-21 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
ld: regenerate configure after recent misgeneration
Things work again after this.
ld/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-06-21 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: tests: prune warnings from compiler output
We were failing to call prune_warnings appropriately, leading to
false-positive test failures on some platforms (observed on
sparclinux).
libctf/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/lib/ctf-lib.exp: Prune warnings from compiler and
linker output.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu.exp: Likewise,
and ar output too.
2022-06-21 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: avoid mingw warning
A missing paren led to an intended cast to avoid dependence on the size
of size_t in one argument of ctf_err_warn applying to the wrong type by
mistake.
libctf/ChangeLog:
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_write_mem): Fix cast.
2022-06-21 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: fix linking together multiple objects derived from the same source
Right now, if you compile the same .c input repeatedly with CTF enabled
and different compilation flags, then arrange to link all of these
together, then things misbehave in various ways. libctf may conflate
either inputs (if the .o files have the same name, say if they are
stored in different .a archives), or per-CU outputs when conflicting
types are found: the latter can lead to entirely spurious errors when
it tries to produce multiple per-CU outputs with the same name
(discarding all but the last, but then looking for types in the earlier
ones which have just been thrown away).
Fixing this is multi-pronged. Both inputs and outputs need to be
differentiated in the hashtables libctf keeps them in: inputs with the
same cuname and filename need to be considered distinct as long as they
have different associated CTF dicts, and per-CU outputs need to be
considered distinct as long as they have different associated input
dicts. Right now there is nothing tying the two together other than the
CU name: fix this by introducing a new field in the ctf_dict_t named
ctf_link_in_out, which (for input dicts) points to the associated per-CU
output dict (if any), and for output dicts points to the associated
input dict. At creation time the name used is completely arbitrary:
it's only important that it be distinct if CTF dicts are distinct. So,
when a clash is found, adjust the CU name by sticking the number of
elements in the input on the end. At output time, the CU name will
appear in the linked object, so it matters a little more that it look
slightly less ugly: in conflicting cases, append an incrementing
integer, starting at 0.
This naming scheme is not very helpful, but it's hard to see what else
we can do. The input .o name may be the same. The input .a name is not
even visible to ctf_link, and even *that* might be the same, because
.a's can contain many members with the same name, all of which
participate in the link. All we really know is that the two have
distinct dictionaries with distinct types in them, and at least this way
they are all represented, any any symbols, variables etc referring to
those types are accurately stored.
(As a side-effect this also fixes a use-after-free and double-free when
errors are found during variable or symbol emission.)
Use the opportunity to prevent a couple of sources of problems, to wit
changing the active CU mappings when a link has already been done
(no effect on ld, which doesn't use CU mappings at all), and causing
multiple consecutive ctf_link's to have the same net effect as just
doing the last one (no effect on ld, which only ever does one
ctf_link) rather than having the links be a sort of half-incremental
not-really-intended mess.
libctf/ChangeLog:
PR libctf/29242
* ctf-impl.h (struct ctf_dict) [ctf_link_in_out]: New.
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_emit_type): Set it.
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_add_ctf_internal): Set the input
CU name uniquely when clashes are found.
(ctf_link_add): Document what repeated additions do.
(ctf_new_per_cu_name): New, come up with a consistent
name for a new per-CU dict.
(ctf_link_deduplicating): Use it.
(ctf_create_per_cu): Use it, and ctf_link_in_out, and set
ctf_link_in_out properly. Don't overwrite per-CU dicts with
per-CU dicts relating to different inputs.
(ctf_link_add_cu_mapping): Prevent per-CU mappings being set up
if we already have per-CU outputs.
(ctf_link_one_variable): Adjust ctf_link_per_cu call.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_one_symtypetab): Likewise.
(ctf_link_empty_outputs): New, delete all the ctf_link_outputs
and blank out ctf_link_in_out on the corresponding inputs.
(ctf_link): Clarify the effect of multiple ctf_link calls.
Empty ctf_link_outputs if it already exists rather than
having the old output leak into the new link. Fix a variable
name.
* testsuite/config/default.exp (AR): Add.
(OBJDUMP): Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu.exp: New test.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu*: Main program,
library, and expected results for the test.
2022-06-21 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Document how GDB searches for files when using -s, -e, and -se options
GDB's documentation of the 'file' command says:
If you do not specify a directory and the file is not found in the
GDB working directory, GDB uses the environment variable PATH as a
list of directories to search, just as the shell does when looking
for a program to run.
The same is true for files specified via commandline options -s, -e,
and -se.
This commit adds a cross reference to the file command for these options.
2022-06-21 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Binutils support for dwarf-5 (location and range lists related)
* dwarf.h (struct debug_info): Add rnglists_base field.
* dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Read attribute DW_AT_rnglists_base.
(display_debug_rnglists_list): While handling DW_RLE_base_addressx,
DW_RLE_startx_endx, DW_RLE_startx_length items, pass the proper parameter
value to fetch_indexed_addr(), i.e. fetch the proper entry in .debug_addr section.
(display_debug_ranges): Add rnglists_base to the .debug_rnglists base address.
(load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_addr section, if exists.
Default to disabling the linker warnings about execstack and RWX segments if the target is the HPPA architecture.
PR 29263
* configure.ac (ac_default_ld_warn_execstack): Default to 'no' for
HPPA targets.
(ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Add the --warn-execstack command line
option to the command line when running execstack tests for the
HPPA target.
2022-06-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-20 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Move finish_print out of value_print_options
'finish_print' does not really belong in value_print_options -- this
is consulted only when deciding whether or not to print a value, and
never during the course of printing. This patch removes it from the
structure and makes it a static global in infcmd.c instead.
Tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-06-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29262, memory leak in pr_function_type
PR 29262
* prdbg.c (pr_function_type): Free "s" on failure path.
PR29261, memory leak in parse_stab_struct_fields
PR 29261
* stabs.c (parse_stab_struct_fields): Free "fields" on failure path.
2022-06-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-18 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix assertion failure in copy_type
PR exp/20630 points out a simple way to cause an assertion failure in
copy_type -- but this was found in the wild a few times as well.
copy_type only works for objfile-owned types, but there isn't a deep
reason for this. This patch fixes the bug by updating copy_type to
work for any sort of type.
Better would perhaps be to finally implement type GC, but I still
haven't attempted this.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20630
2022-06-18 Tomoaki Kawada <kawada@kmckk.co.jp>
Fix the sorting algorithm for reloc entries
The optimized insertion sort algorithm in `elf_link_adjust_relocs`
incorrectly assembled "runs" from unsorted entries and inserted them to an
already-sorted prefix, breaking the loop invariants of insertion sort.
This commit updates the run assembly loop to break upon encountering a
non-monotonic change in the sort key.
PR 29259
bfd/
* elflink.c (elf_link_adjust_relocs): Ensure run being inserted
is sorted.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29259.d,
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29259.s,
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29259.t: New test.
2022-06-18 Enze Li <enze.li@hotmail.com>
gdb/python: Export nibbles to python layer
This patch makes it possible to allow Value.format_string() to return
nibbles output.
When we set the parameter of nibbles to True, we can achieve the
displaying binary values in groups of every four bits.
Here's an example:
(gdb) py print (gdb.Value (1230).format_string (format='t', nibbles=True))
0100 1100 1110
(gdb)
Note that the parameter nibbles is only useful if format='t' is also used.
This patch also includes update to the relevant testcase and
documentation.
Tested on x86_64 openSUSE Tumbleweed.
2022-06-18 Enze Li <enze.li@hotmail.com>
gdb/doc: Documentation for the new print command
Document the new command "print nibbles" and add a NEWS entry.
2022-06-18 Enze Li <enze.li@hotmail.com>
gdb: Add new 'print nibbles' feature
Make an introduction of a new print setting that can be set by 'set
print nibbles [on|off]'. The default value if OFF, which can be changed
by user manually. Of course, 'show print nibbles' is also included in
the patch.
The new feature displays binary values by group, with four bits per
group. The motivation for this work is to enhance the readability of
binary values.
Here's a GDB session before this patch is applied.
(gdb) print var_a
$1 = 1230
(gdb) print/t var_a
$2 = 10011001110
With this patch applied, we can use the new print setting to display the
new form of the binary values.
(gdb) print var_a
$1 = 1230
(gdb) print/t var_a
$2 = 10011001110
(gdb) set print nibbles on
(gdb) print/t var_a
$3 = 0100 1100 1110
Tested on x86_64 openSUSE Tumbleweed.
2022-06-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-17 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: NEWS: Move LoongArch gdbserver to the correct section
commit e5ab6af52d38 ("gdbserver: Add LoongArch/Linux support")
was merged into the master since GDB 12, so we should put the
news in the "Changes since GDB 12" section.
Thanks Tom Tromey for your correction [1], sorry for that.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/190122.html
2022-06-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29256, memory leak in obj_elf_section_name
When handling section names in quotes obj_elf_section_name calls
demand_copy_C_string, which puts the name on the gas notes obstack.
Such strings aren't usually freed, since obstack_free frees all more
recently allocated objects as well as its arg. When handling
non-quoted names, obj_elf_section_name mallocs the name. Due to the
mix of allocation strategies it isn't possible for callers to free
names, if that was desirable. Partially fix this by always creating
names on the obstack, which is more efficient anyway. (You still
can't obstack_free on error paths due to the xtensa
tc_canonicalize_section_name.) Also remove a couple of cases where
the name is dup'd for no good reason as far as I know.
PR 29256
* config/obj-elf.c (obj_elf_section_name): Create name on notes
obstack.
(obj_elf_attach_to_group): Don't strdup group name.
(obj_elf_section): Likewise.
(obj_elf_vendor_attribute): Use xmemdup0 rather than xstrndup.
2022-06-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29255, memory leak in make_tempdir
PR 29255
* bucomm.c (make_tempdir, make_tempname): Free template on all
failure paths.
PR29254, memory leak in stab_demangle_v3_arg
PR 29254
* stabs.c (stab_demangle_v3_arg): Free dt on failure path.
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix GDB build with GCC 4.8 & 4.9
With gcc 4.8/4.9, we run into this build failure (and other similar
ones):
/home/palves/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/location.h:224:59: error: could not convert {0, LINE_OFFSET_UNKNOWN} from <brace-enclosed initializer list> to line_offset
struct line_offset line_offset = {0, LINE_OFFSET_UNKNOWN};
^
The issue is that at around the GCC 4.8/4.9 era, a default member
initializer prevented the struct from being an aggregate, so you
cannot use aggregate initialization on them. That rule changed after
GCC 4.9 and GCC 5 & later uses new rules.
Fix this by not using aggregate initialization for struct line_offset.
The default member initization already leaves line_offset as {0,
LINE_OFFSET_UNKNOWN}, so initialization to those values can just go
away. The remaining cases are of the form {0, LINE_OFFSET_NONE}, and
those cases can be better rewritten to delay setting the sign field
until we know we have a valid offset.
Change-Id: I0506ea4a83c5fa2f15e159569db68b3b0a7509b4
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Convert set_location_spec_string to a method
This converts set_location_spec_string to a method of location_spec,
and makes the location_spec::as_string field protected, renaming it to
m_as_string along the way.
Change-Id: Iccfb1654e9fa7808d0512df89e775f9eacaeb9e0
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Convert location_spec_to_string to a method
This converts location_spec_to_string to a method of location_spec,
simplifying the code using it, as it no longer has to use
std::unique_ptr::get().
Change-Id: I621bdad8ea084470a2724163f614578caf8f2dd5
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Convert location_spec_type to a method
This converts location_spec_type to location_spec::type().
Change-Id: Iff4cbfafb1cf3d22adfa142ff939b4a148e52273
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Convert location_spec_empty_p to a method
This converts location_spec_empty_p to a method of location_spec,
simplifying users, as they no longer have to use
std::unique_ptr::get().
Change-Id: I83381a729896f12e1c5a1b4d6d4c2eb1eb6582ff
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Eliminate copy_location_spec
copy_location_spec is just a wrapper around location_spec::clone(), so
remove it and call clone() directly. This simplifies users, as they
no longer have to use std::unique_ptr::get().
Change-Id: I8ce8658589460b98888283b306b315a5b8f73976
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Eliminate the two-level data structures behind location_specs
Currently, there's the location_spec hierarchy, and then some
location_spec subclasses have their own struct type holding all their
data fields.
I.e., there is this:
location_spec
explicit_location_spec
linespec_location_spec
address_location_spec
probe_location_spec
and then these separate types:
explicit_location
linespec_location
where:
explicit_location_spec
has-a explicit_location
linespec_location_spec
has-a linespec_location
This patch eliminates explicit_location and linespec_location,
inlining their members in the corresponding location_spec type.
The location_spec subclasses were the ones currently defined in
location.c, so they are moved to the header. Since the definitions of
the classes are now visible, we no longer need location_spec_deleter.
Some constructors that are used for cloning location_specs, like:
explicit explicit_location_spec (const struct explicit_location *loc)
... were converted to proper copy ctors.
In the process, initialize_explicit_location is eliminated, and some
functions that returned the "data type behind a locspec", like
get_linespec_location are converted to downcast functions, like
as_linespec_location_spec.
Change-Id: Ia31ccef9382b25a52b00fa878c8df9b8cf2a6c5a
2022-06-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
event_location -> location_spec
Currently, GDB internally uses the term "location" for both the
location specification the user input (linespec, explicit location, or
an address location), and for actual resolved locations, like the
breakpoint locations, or the result of decoding a location spec to
SaLs. This is expecially confusing in the breakpoints module, as
struct breakpoint has these two fields:
breakpoint::location;
breakpoint::loc;
"location" is the location spec, and "loc" is the resolved locations.
And then, we have a method called "locations()", which returns the
resolved locations as range...
The location spec type is presently called event_location:
/* Location we used to set the breakpoint. */
event_location_up location;
and it is described like this:
/* The base class for all an event locations used to set a stop event
in the inferior. */
struct event_location
{
and even that is incorrect... Location specs are used for finding
actual locations in the program in scenarios that have nothing to do
with stop events. E.g., "list" works with location specs.
To clean all this confusion up, this patch renames "event_location" to
"location_spec" throughout, and then all the variables that hold a
location spec, they are renamed to include "spec" in their name, like
e.g., "location" -> "locspec". Similarly, functions that work with
location specs, and currently have just "location" in their name are
renamed to include "spec" in their name too.
Change-Id: I5814124798aa2b2003e79496e78f95c74e5eddca
2022-06-17 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build with -Werror=format-truncation
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-06-16 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* configure.ac: Remove -Wno-format-truncation.
* src/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* configure: Rebuild.
* src/Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* common/hwctable.c: Fix -Werror=format-truncation errors.
* src/ipc.cc: Likewise.
* src/parse.cc: Likewise.
2022-06-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-16 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix have_mpx test
When testing on openSUSE Leap 15.4 I ran into this FAIL:
...
FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-mpx-map.exp: NULL address of the pointer
...
and likewise for all the other mpx tests.
The problem is that have_mpx is supposed to return 0, but it doesn't because
it tries to match this output:
...
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP temp/20294/have_mpx-2-20294.x^M
No MPX support^M
No MPX support^M
...
using:
...
&& ![string equal $output "No MPX support\r\n"]]
...
Fix this by matching using a regexp instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
use of uninitialised value in input_file_open
Triggered by a file containing just "#N" or "#A". fgets when hitting
EOF before reading anything returns NULL and does not write to buf.
strchr (buf, '\n') then is reading from uninitialised memory.
* input-file.c (input_file_open): Don't assume buf contains
zero string terminator when fgets returns NULL.
2022-06-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Always free matching vector from bfd_check_format_matches
At least one place calling list_matching_formats failed to free the
"matching" vector from bfd_check_format_matches afterwards. Fix that
by calling free inside list_matching_formats.
binutils/
* bucomm.c (list_matching_formats): Free arg.
* addr2line.c (process_file): Adjust to suit.
* ar.c (open_inarch, ranlib_touch): Likewise.
* coffdump.c (main): Likewise.
* nm.c (display_archive, display_file): Likewise.
* objcopy.c (copy_file): Likewise.
* objdump.c (display_object_bfd): Likewise.
* size.c (display_bfd): Likewise.
* srconv.c (main): Likewise.
ld/
* ldlang.c (load_symbols): Free "matching".
2022-06-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert "Revert "Fix fbsd core matching""
This reverts commit 476288fa2bddecf0f0e13dee826a076309bf01fe.
2022-06-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Restore readelf -wF
Commit 94585d6d4495 resulted in readelf -wF failing with
Unrecognized debug letter option 'F'
binutils/
* dwarf.c (debug_dump_long_opts): Add letter.
(debug_option_table): New, replacing..
(opts_table, letter_table): ..these.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_names): Adjust to suit. Set
do_debug_frames outside of loop.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Similarly.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/i386/ehinterp.d: Use readelf -wF.
2022-06-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29250, readelf erases CIE initial register state
PR 29250
binutils/
* dwarf.c (display_debug_frames): Set col_type[reg] on sizing
pass over FDE to cie->col_type[reg] if CIE specifies reg.
Handle DW_CFA_restore and DW_CFA_restore_extended on second
pass using the same logic. Remove unnecessary casts. Don't
call frame_need_space on second pass over FDE.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/i386/ehinterp.d,
* testsuite/gas/i386/ehinterp.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run it.
2022-06-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-15 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
sim: fix BFD_VMA format arguments on 32-bit hosts [PR gdb/29184]
Noticed format mismatch when attempted to build gdb on i686-linux-gnu
in --enable-64-bit-bfd mode:
sim/../../sim/cris/sim-if.c:576:28:
error: format '%lx' expects argument of type 'long unsigned int',
but argument 4 has type 'bfd_size_type' {aka 'long long unsigned int'} [-Werror=format=]
576 | sim_do_commandf (sd, "memory region 0x%" BFD_VMA_FMT "x,0x%lx",
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
577 | interp_load_addr, interpsiz);
| ~~~~~~~~~
| |
| bfd_size_type {aka long long unsigned int}
While at it fixed format string for time-related types.
2022-06-15 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Check for listeners in emit_exiting_event
I noticed that emit_exiting_event does not check whether there are any
listeners before creating the event object. All other event emitters
do this, so this patch updates this one as well.
2022-06-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add to documentation of Python 'dont_repeat' method
PR python/28533 points out that the Python 'dont_repeat' documentation
is a bit ambiguous about when the method ought to be called. This
patch spells it out.
2022-06-15 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Make sp alias for one of the other stack pointers
For Cortex-M targets, SP register is never detached from msp or
psp, it always has the same value as one of them. Let GDB treat
ARM_SP_REGNUM as an alias similar to what is done in hardware.
2022-06-15 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Track msp and psp
For Arm Cortex-M33 with security extensions, there are 4 different
stack pointers (msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s, psp_ns). To be compatible
with earlier Cortex-M derivates, the msp and psp registers are
aliases for one of the 4 real stack pointer registers.
These are the combinations that exist:
sp -> msp -> msp_s
sp -> msp -> msp_ns
sp -> psp -> psp_s
sp -> psp -> psp_ns
This means that when the GDB client is to show the value of "msp",
the value should always be equal to either "msp_s" or "msp_ns".
Same goes for "psp".
To add a bit more context; GDB does not really use the register msp
(or psp) internally, but they are part of the set of registers which
are provided by the target.xml file. As a result, they will be part
of the set of registers printed by the "info r" command.
Without this particular patch, GDB will hit the assert in the bottom
of arm_cache_get_sp_register function.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29121
2022-06-15 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Fetch initial sp value prior to compare
For Arm Cortex-M33 with security extensions, there are 4 different
stack pointers (msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s, psp_ns). In order to
identify the active one, compare the values of the different
stacks. The value of the initial sp register needs to be fetched to
perform this comparison.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: unify two dis_asm_read_memory functions in disasm.c
After the recent restructuring of the disassembler code, GDB has ended
up with two identical class static functions, both called
dis_asm_read_memory, with identical implementations.
My first thought was to move these out of their respective classes,
and just make them global functions, then I'd only need a single
copy.
And maybe that's the right way to go. But I disliked that by doing
that I loose the encapsulation of the method with the corresponding
disassembler class.
So, instead, I placed the static method into its own class, and had
both the gdb_non_printing_memory_disassembler and gdb_disassembler
classes inherit from this new class as an additional base-class.
In terms of code generated, I don't think there's any significant
difference with this approach, but I think this better reflects how
the function is closely tied to the disassembler.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: refactor the non-printing disassemblers
This commit started from an observation I made while working on some
other disassembler patches, that is, that the function
gdb_buffered_insn_length, is broken ... sort of.
I noticed that the gdb_buffered_insn_length function doesn't set up
the application data field if the disassemble_info structure.
Further, I noticed that some architectures, for example, ARM, require
that the application_data field be set, see gdb_print_insn_arm in
arm-tdep.c.
And so, if we ever use gdb_buffered_insn_length for ARM, then GDB will
likely crash. Which is why I said only "sort of" broken. Right now
we don't use gdb_buffered_insn_length with ARM, so maybe it isn't
broken yet?
Anyway to prove to myself that there was a problem here I extended the
disassembler self tests in disasm-selftests.c to include a test of
gdb_buffered_insn_length. As I run the test for all architectures, I
do indeed see GDB crash for ARM.
To fix this we need gdb_buffered_insn_length to create a disassembler
that inherits from gdb_disassemble_info, but we also need this new
disassembler to not print anything.
And so, I introduce a new gdb_non_printing_disassembler class, this is
a disassembler that doesn't print anything to the output stream.
I then observed that both ARC and S12Z also create non-printing
disassemblers, but these are slightly different. While the
disassembler in gdb_non_printing_disassembler reads the instruction
from a buffer, the ARC and S12Z disassemblers read from target memory
using target_read_code.
And so, I further split gdb_non_printing_disassembler into two
sub-classes, gdb_non_printing_memory_disassembler and
gdb_non_printing_buffer_disassembler.
The new selftests now pass, but otherwise, there should be no user
visible changes after this commit.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: implement the print_insn extension language hook
This commit extends the Python API to include disassembler support.
The motivation for this commit was to provide an API by which the user
could write Python scripts that would augment the output of the
disassembler.
To achieve this I have followed the model of the existing libopcodes
disassembler, that is, instructions are disassembled one by one. This
does restrict the type of things that it is possible to do from a
Python script, i.e. all additional output has to fit on a single line,
but this was all I needed, and creating something more complex would,
I think, require greater changes to how GDB's internal disassembler
operates.
The disassembler API is contained in the new gdb.disassembler module,
which defines the following classes:
DisassembleInfo
Similar to libopcodes disassemble_info structure, has read-only
properties: address, architecture, and progspace. And has methods:
__init__, read_memory, and is_valid.
Each time GDB wants an instruction disassembled, an instance of
this class is passed to a user written disassembler function, by
reading the properties, and calling the methods (and other support
methods in the gdb.disassembler module) the user can perform and
return the disassembly.
Disassembler
This is a base-class which user written disassemblers should
inherit from. This base class provides base implementations of
__init__ and __call__ which the user written disassembler should
override.
DisassemblerResult
This class can be used to hold the result of a call to the
disassembler, it's really just a wrapper around a string (the text
of the disassembled instruction) and a length (in bytes). The user
can return an instance of this class from Disassembler.__call__ to
represent the newly disassembled instruction.
The gdb.disassembler module also provides the following functions:
register_disassembler
This function registers an instance of a Disassembler sub-class
as a disassembler, either for one specific architecture, or, as a
global disassembler for all architectures.
builtin_disassemble
This provides access to GDB's builtin disassembler. A common
use case that I see is augmenting the existing disassembler output.
The user code can call this function to have GDB disassemble the
instruction in the normal way. The user gets back a
DisassemblerResult object, which they can then read in order to
augment the disassembler output in any way they wish.
This function also provides a mechanism to intercept the
disassemblers reads of memory, thus the user can adjust what GDB
sees when it is disassembling.
The included documentation provides a more detailed description of the
API.
There is also a new CLI command added:
maint info python-disassemblers
This command is defined in the Python gdb.disassemblers module, and
can be used to list the currently registered Python disassemblers.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: add extension language print_insn hook
This commit is setup for the next commit.
In the next commit I will add a Python API to intercept the print_insn
calls within GDB, each print_insn call is responsible for
disassembling, and printing one instruction. After the next commit it
will be possible for a user to write Python code that either wraps
around the existing disassembler, or even, in extreme situations,
entirely replaces the existing disassembler.
This commit does not add any new Python API.
What this commit does is put the extension language framework in place
for a print_insn hook. There's a new callback added to 'struct
extension_language_ops', which is then filled in with nullptr for Python
and Guile.
Finally, in the disassembler, the code is restructured so that the new
extension language function ext_lang_print_insn is called before we
delegate to gdbarch_print_insn.
After this, the next commit can focus entirely on providing a Python
implementation of the new print_insn callback.
There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: add new base class to gdb_disassembler
The motivation for this change is an upcoming Python disassembler API
that I would like to add. As part of that change I need to create a
new disassembler like class that contains a disassemble_info and a
gdbarch. The management of these two objects is identical to how we
manage these objects within gdb_disassembler, so it might be tempting
for my new class to inherit from gdb_disassembler.
The problem however, is that gdb_disassembler has a tight connection
between its constructor, and its print_insn method. In the
constructor the ui_file* that is passed in is replaced with a member
variable string_file*, and then in print_insn, the contents of the
member variable string_file are printed to the original ui_file*.
What this means is that the gdb_disassembler class has a tight
coupling between its constructor and print_insn; the class just isn't
intended to be used in a situation where print_insn is not going to be
called, which is how my (upcoming) sub-class would need to operate.
My solution then, is to separate out the management of the
disassemble_info and gdbarch into a new gdb_disassemble_info class,
and make this class a parent of gdb_disassembler.
In arm-tdep.c and mips-tdep.c, where we used to cast the
disassemble_info->application_data to a gdb_disassembler, we can now
cast to a gdb_disassemble_info as we only need to access the gdbarch
information.
Now, my new Python disassembler sub-class will still want to print
things to an output stream, and so we will want access to the
dis_asm_fprintf functionality for printing.
However, rather than move this printing code into the
gdb_disassemble_info base class, I have added yet another level of
hierarchy, a gdb_printing_disassembler, thus the class structure is
now:
struct gdb_disassemble_info {};
struct gdb_printing_disassembler : public gdb_disassemble_info {};
struct gdb_disassembler : public gdb_printing_disassembler {};
In a later commit my new Python disassembler will inherit from
gdb_printing_disassembler.
The reason for adding the additional layer to the class hierarchy is
that in yet another commit I intend to rewrite the function
gdb_buffered_insn_length, and to do this I will be creating yet more
disassembler like classes, however, these will not print anything,
thus I will add a gdb_non_printing_disassembler class that also
inherits from gdb_disassemble_info. Knowing that that change is
coming, I've gone with the above class hierarchy now.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-06-15 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: convert gdbpy_err_fetch to use gdbpy_ref
Convert the gdbpy_err_fetch class to make use of gdbpy_ref, this
removes the need for manual reference count management, and allows the
destructor to be removed.
There should be no functional change after this commit.
I think this cleanup is worth doing on its own, however, in a later
commit I will want to copy instances of gdbpy_err_fetch, and switching
to using gdbpy_ref means that I can rely on the default copy
constructor, without having to add one that handles the reference
counts, so this is good preparation for that upcoming change.
2022-06-15 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop print_operand_value()'s "hex" parameter
For quite some time all callers have been passing 1 / true. While there
fold the final oappend_with_style() calls.
2022-06-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build for gcc < 11
When building trunk on openSUSE Leap 15.3 with system gcc 7.5.0, I run into:
...
In file included from ../bfd/bfd.h:46:0,
from gdb/defs.h:37,
from gdb/debuginfod-support.c:19:
gdb/debuginfod-support.c: In function bool debuginfod_is_enabled():
gdb/../include/diagnostics.h:42:3: error: unknown option after \
#pragma GCC diagnostic kind [-Werror=pragmas]
_Pragma (DIAGNOSTIC_STRINGIFY (GCC diagnostic ignored option))
^
gdb/../include/diagnostics.h:80:3: note: in expansion of macro \
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE ("-Wstringop-overread")
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
gdb/debuginfod-support.c:201:4: note: in expansion of macro \
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD
^
...
The problem is that the warning -Wstringop-overread has been introduced for
gcc 11, and we can only tell gcc to ignore if it knows about it.
Fix this by guarding the DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD definition in
diagnostics.c with '#if __GNUC__ >= 11'.
Tested on x86_64-linux, by completing a build.
2022-06-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29230, segv in lookup_symbol_in_variable_table
The PR23230 testcase uses indexed strings without specifying
SW_AT_str_offsets_base. In this case we left u.str with garbage (from
u.val) which then led to a segfault when attempting to access the
string. Fix that by clearing u.str. The patch also adds missing
sanity checks in the recently committed read_indexed_address and
read_indexed_string functions.
PR 29230
* dwarf2.c (read_indexed_address): Return uint64_t. Sanity check idx.
(read_indexed_string): Use uint64_t for str_offset. Sanity check idx.
(read_attribute_value): Clear u.str for indexed string forms when
DW_AT_str_offsets_base is not yet read or missing.
2022-06-15 Mark Wielaard <mark@klomp.org>
gdb: Always suppress stringop-overread warning in debuginfod-support.c
Just like on s390x with g++ 11.2.1 and ppc64le with g++ 11.3.1 g++ 11
on hppa produces a spurious warning for stringop-overread in
debuginfod_is_enabled for url_view. Just always suppress it on all
arches.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29198
gdb/ChangeLog:
* debuginfod-support.c (debuginfod_is_enabled): Always use
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD.
2022-06-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-14 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng docs: provide help for <rate> == <interval>
The help message from 'gprofng collect app -h', in
the section on <rate> == <interval>, had a dangling
reference to a non-existent manpage. Provide basic
info, including reasons for caution.
gprofng docs: mention HTML / PDF in the gprofng README
The HTML and PDF formats are described in the gprofng tutorial (info
topic "Other Document Formats"). In addition, describe them in the
README because: they are important; they are easily searchable; and the
README is primarily oriented to the person who is installing gprofng,
who may differ from the person who follows a user tutorial.
2022-06-14 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build with -Werror=format-security
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-06-13 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/28968
* src/src/Hist_data.cc (print_row): Make param const.
* src/src/Hist_data.h (print_row): Likewise.
* src/src/Print.h: Remove unused functions and variables.
* src/Print.cc: Fix -Werror=format-security errors.
* src/parse.cc: Likewise.
2022-06-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle unordered dict in gdb.python/py-mi-cmd.exp
When running test-case gdb.python/py-mi-cmd.exp on openSUSE Leap 42.3 with
python 3.4, I occasionally run into:
...
Expecting: ^(-pycmd dct[^M
]+)?(\^done,result={hello="world",times="42"}[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-pycmd dct^M
^done,result={times="42",hello="world"}^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.python/py-mi-cmd.exp: -pycmd dct (unexpected output)
...
The problem is that the data type used here in py-mi-cmd.py:
...
elif argv[0] == "dct":
return {"result": {"hello": "world", "times": 42}}
...
is a dictionary, and only starting version 3.6 are dictionaries insertion
ordered, so using PyDict_Next in serialize_mi_result doesn't guarantee a
fixed order.
Fix this by allowing the alternative order.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement lazy FPU initialization for ravenscar
Some ravenscar runtimes implement lazy FPU handling. On these
runtimes, the FPU is only initialized when a task tries to use it.
Furthermore, the FP registers aren't automatically saved on a task
switch -- instead, the save is deferred until the new task tries to
use the FPU. Furthermore, each task's context area has a flag
indicating whether the FPU has been initialized for this task.
This patch teaches GDB to understand this implementation. When
fetching or storing registers, GDB now checks to see whether the live
FP registers should be used. If not, the task's saved FP registers
will be used if the task has caused FPU initialization.
Currently only AArch64 uses this code. bb-runtimes implements this
for ARM as well, but GDB doesn't yet have an arm-ravenscar-thread.c.
2022-06-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Reimplement ravenscar registers using tables
Currently, the ravenscar-thread implementation for each architecture
is written by hand. However, these are actually written by
copy-paste. It seems better to switch to a table-driven approach.
The previous code also fetched all registers whenever any register was
requested. This is corrected in the new implementation.
2022-06-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bugs in aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c
We found a few bugs in aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c.
First, some of the register offsets were incorrect. The "bb-runtimes"
file for this runtime had the wrong offsets in comments, which GDB
took to be correct. However, those comments didn't account for
alignment. This patch adjusts the offsets.
Next, the "FPU Saved field" is not a register -- it is an
implementation detail of the runtime. This is removed.
Finally, I think the FP registers are actually named V0-V31, and the
"Q" names are pseudo-registers. This patch fixes the comment.
2022-06-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Allow 'interrupt -a' in all-stop mode
PR gdb/17160 points out that "interrupt -a" errors in all-stop mode,
but there's no good reason for this. This patch removes the error.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17160
2022-06-14 Youling Tang <tangyouling@loongson.cn>
gdbserver: Add LoongArch/Linux support
Implement LoongArch/Linux support, including XML target description
handling based on features determined, GPR regset support, and software
breakpoint handling.
In the Linux kernel code of LoongArch, ptrace implements PTRACE_POKEUSR
and PTRACE_PEEKUSR in the arch_ptrace function, so srv_linux_usrregs is
set to yes.
With this patch on LoongArch:
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.server/server-connect.exp"
[...]
# of expected passes 18
[...]
2022-06-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Revert "Fix fbsd core matching"
This reverts commit a7e29f797cecd5a2f73c27838b09eae1f1b6c657.
I accidentally pushed this, so revert.
2022-06-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix regexp in gdb.ada/mi_var_access.exp
With gcc-12 and target board unix/-m32, we run into:
...
(gdb) ^M
Expecting: ^(-var-create A_String_Access \* A_String_Access[^M
]+)?(\^done,name="A_String_Access",numchild="1",.*[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-var-create A_String_Access * A_String_Access^M
^error,msg="Value out of range."^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.ada/mi_var_access.exp: Create varobj (unexpected output)
...
What happens is easier to understand if we take things out of the mi context:
...
$ gdb -q -batch \
outputs/gdb.ada/mi_var_access/mi_access \
-ex "b mi_access.adb:19" \
-ex run \
-ex "p A_String_Access"
...
Breakpoint 1, mi_access () at mi_access.adb:19
19 A_String : String (3 .. 5) := "345"; -- STOP
$1 = (pck.string_access) <error reading variable: Value out of range.>
...
while with target board unix we have instead:
...
$1 = (pck.string_access) 0x431b40 <ada_main.sec_default_sized_stacks>
...
The var-create command samples the value of the variable at a location where
the variable is not yet initialized, and with target board unix we
accidentally hit a valid address, but with target board unix/-m32 that's not
the case.
Fix the FAIL by accepting the error message.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28464
2022-06-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix fbsd core matching
On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 08:59:37AM -0700, John Baldwin wrote:
> On 6/9/22 1:58 AM, Tom de Vries via Gdb-patches wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > With an --enable-targets=all build and target board unix/-m32 I run into a
> > FAIL in test-case gdb.base/corefile.exp:
> > ...
> > (gdb) file outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile^M
> > Reading symbols from outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile...^M
> > (gdb) core-file outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile.core^M
> > warning: core file may not match specified executable file.^M
> > [New LWP 12011]^M
> > Core was generated by `outputs/gdb.base/corefile/co'.^M
> > Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.^M
> > (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/corefile.exp: core-file warning-free
> > ...
> >
> > The warning is there because of this mismatch between core and exec:
> > ...
> > (gdb) p core_bfd->xvec
> > $3 = (const struct bfd_target *) 0x20112a0 <i386_elf32_fbsd_vec>
> > (gdb) p exec_bfd->xvec
> > $4 = (const struct bfd_target *) 0x2010b00 <i386_elf32_vec>
> > ...
> >
> > In the exec case, the detected architecture is i386_elf32_vec because this bit
> > of code in elfcode.h:elf_object_p():
> > ...
> > if (ebd->elf_machine_code != EM_NONE
> > && i_ehdrp->e_ident[EI_OSABI] != ebd->elf_osabi
> > && ebd->elf_osabi != ELFOSABI_NONE)
> > goto got_wrong_format_error;
> > ...
> > prevents i386_elf32_fbsd from matching.
> >
> > Fix the core matching by copying that code to elfcore.h:elf_core_file_p().
> >
> > Tested on x86_64-linux.
> >
> > Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29227
> >
> > Any comments?
Looks good.
> Looking at elfcore.h, it seems to have not gotten changes made to elfcode.h over
> time and is a bit rotted. I suspect that all of changes made in commit 0aabe54e6222
> that added these lines in elfcode.h (along with several other changes) need to
> be applied to this function in elfcore.h, not just adding these lines.
Yes, the commit 0aabe54e6222 changes likely should go in too. I'm a
little wary of adding all the sanity checks to elf_core_file_p since
that might result in some core files not being recognised at all. For
example, despite the FIXME I'd guess leaving out the EI_VERSION check
was deliberate. The following seems reasonable to me. Please test.
2022-06-14 Kavitha Natarajan <kavitha.natarajan@amd.com>
Debug support for global alias variable
Starting with (future) Clang 15 (since
https://reviews.llvm.org/D120989), Clang emits the DWARF information
of global alias variables as DW_TAG_imported_declaration. However,
GDB does not handle it. It incorrectly always reads this tag as
C++/Fortran imported declaration (type alias, namespace alias and
Fortran module). This commit adds support to handle this tag as an
alias variable.
This change fixes the failures in the gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp
testcase with current git Clang. This testcase is also updated to
test nested (recursive) aliases.
2022-06-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16
MIPS should not be using BFD_RELOC_16 for its R_MIPS_16 relocation,
since R_MIPS_16 specifies a 16-bit field in a 32-bit word.
BFD_RELOC_16, emitted by generic code to handle fixups on 16-bit data
directives, expects fixups to operate on the whole of a 16-bit word.
This patch corrects the problem by using BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16, a new bfd
reloc that is used to generate R_MIPS_16. BFD_RELOC_16 is handled in
md_apply_fix for cases where the fixup can be applied at assembly
time. Like BFD_RELOC_8, BFD_RELOC_16 now has no corresponding object
file relocation, and thus .half, .hword, .short and .dc.w must be
resolved at assembly time. BFD_RELOC_MIPS_REL16 is removed by this
patch since it isn't used.
PR 3243
PR 26542
* reloc.c (BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16): Rename from BFD_RELOC_MIPS_REL16.
* elf32-mips.c (mips_reloc_map): Map BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16 to R_MIPS_16.
* elf64-mips.c (mips_reloc_map): Likewise, delete BFD_RELOC_MIPS_REL16.
* elfn32-mips.c (mips_reloc_map): Likewise.
* libbfd.h: Regenerate.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
gas/
* config/tc-mips.c (append_insn): Handle BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16.
(macro_build): Likewise.
(mips_percent_op <%half>): Generate BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16.
(md_apply_fix): Handle BFD_RELOC_16 and BFD_RELOC_MIPS_16 when fx_done.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-mips-elf/reloc-local-overflow.d,
* testsuite/ld-mips-elf/reloc-local-overflow.s: Rewrite.
2022-06-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Correct R_MIPS_16 n32 howto
If the howto is actually used, an all-zero dst_mask will result in
unchanged section contents on attempting to apply R_MIPS_16.
* elfn32-mips.c (elf_mips_howto_table_rela <R_MIPS_16>): Correct
dst_mask.
2022-06-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: applying zero offset to NULL pointer
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_string): Move initialisation of "curr"
and "end" after checking for missing section.
2022-06-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gas dwarf2dbg.c tidy
Make it a little more obvious that remap_debug_filename returns an
allocated string (that should be freed) by returning a char * rather
than const char *. Free a few missed cases in dwarf2dbg.c, and free
other memory allocated in dwarf2dbg.c. Also remove static
initialisation of variables and initialise in dwarf2_init instead,
in order to ensure gas state is saner for oss-fuzz.
* remap.c (remap_debug_filename): Remove const from return.
* as.h (remap_debug_filename): Update prototype.
* config/obj-elf.c (obj_elf_ident): Simplify free of
remap_debug_filename output.
* stabs.c (stabs_generate_asm_file): Likewise.
* dwarf2dbg.c (dirs, dirs_in_use, dirs_allocated, current): Don't
initialise statically..
(dwarf2_init): ..do so here, along with most other static vars.
(assign_file_to_slot): Don't set files_allocated until we
succeed in allocating memory.
(purge_generated_debug): Add bool param, free more stuff if true.
(dwarf2_directive_filename): Adjust purge_generated_debug call.
(process_entries): Don't free line_entry here..
(dwarf2_cleanup): ..do so here instead, new function.
(dwarf2_finish): Call dwarf2_cleanup. When chaining together
subseg line entries, unhook entries from old subseg list.
(dwarf2_directive_loc): Free remap_debug_filename string.
(out_dir_and_file_list): Likewise.
(out_debug_str): Likewise.
2022-06-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.reverse/test_ioctl_TCSETSW.exp with libc debuginfo
When running test-case gdb.reverse/test_ioctl_TCSETSW.exp with glibc debuginfo
installed, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.reverse/test_ioctl_TCSETSW.exp: at TCSETSW call
step^M
__tcsetattr (fd=0, optional_actions=1, termios_p=0x7fffffffcf50) at \
../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tcsetattr.c:45^M
45 {^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.reverse/test_ioctl_TCSETSW.exp: handle TCSETSW
...
The problem is that the step is expected to step over the call to tcsetattr,
but due to glibc debuginfo being installed, we step into the call.
Fix this by using next instead of step.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Avoid warnings in cooked_{read,write}_test for m68hc11
With --enable-targets=all we have:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest"
...
Running selftest regcache::cooked_read_test::m68hc11.
warning: No frame soft register found in the symbol table.
Stack backtrace will not work.
Running selftest regcache::cooked_read_test::m68hc12.
warning: No frame soft register found in the symbol table.
Stack backtrace will not work.
Running selftest regcache::cooked_read_test::m68hc12:HCS12.
warning: No frame soft register found in the symbol table.
Stack backtrace will not work.
...
Likewise for regcache::cooked_write_test.
The warning has no use in the selftest context.
Fix this by skipping the specific selftests.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29224
2022-06-13 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Deal with atomic sequence
We can't put a breakpoint in the middle of a ll/sc atomic sequence,
so look for the end of the sequence and put the breakpoint there.
2022-06-13 Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
gdb: don't use bashism in configure test
Results in configure output like:
```
checking for X... no
/var/tmp/portage/sys-devel/gdb-12.1/work/gdb-12.1/gdb/configure: 18837: test: yes: unexpected operator
checking whether to use babeltrace... auto
```
... when /bin/sh is provided by a POSIX-compliant shell, like dash,
instead of bash.
2022-06-13 Jiangshuai Li <jiangshuai_li@c-sky.com>
gdb:csky add support target-descriptions for CSKY arch
Registers in CSKY architecture included:
1. 32 gprs
2. 16 ars (alternative gprs used for quick interrupt)
3. hi, lo, pc
4. fr0~fr31, fcsr, fid, fesr
5. vr0~vr15
6. ((32 banks) * 32) cr regs (max 32 banks, 32 control regs a bank)
For register names:
Except over control registers, other registers, like gprs, hi, lo ...
are fixed names. Among the 32*32 control registers, some used registers
will have fixed names, others will have a default name "cpxcry". 'x'
refers to bank, y refers index in the bank(a control register in bank
4 with index 14 will has a default name cp4cr14).
For register numbers in GDB:
We assign a fixed number to each register in GDB, like:
r0~r31 with 0~31
hi, lo with 36, 37
fpu/vpu with 40~71
...
described in function csky_get_supported_register_by_index().
Function csky_get_supported_tdesc_registers_count():
To calculate the total number of registers that GDB can analyze,
including those with fixed names and those with default register names.
Function csky_get_supported_register_by_index():
To find a supported struct csky_supported_tdesc_register, return a
struct include name with regnum via index.
Arrays csky_supported_tdesc_feature_names[]:
Include all supported feature names in tdesc-xmls.
We use the information described above to load the register description
file of the target from the stub. When loading, do a little check that
whether the register description file contains SP, LR and PC.
2022-06-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle quotes in gdb_py_module_available
On openSUSE Leap 42.3 with python 3.4, I run into:
...
(gdb) python import pygments^M
Traceback (most recent call last):^M
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>^M
ImportError: No module named 'pygments'^M
Error while executing Python code.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/style.exp: python import pygments
ERROR: unexpected output from python import
...
because gdb_py_module_available doesn't handle the single quotes around the
module name in the ImportError.
Fix this by allowing the single quotes.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: fix incorrect indirection
Commit 384e201e5aec ("x86: properly initialize struct instr_info
instance(s)") was based on an improperly refreshed patch. Correct the
oversight.
2022-06-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: replace global scratch buffer
With its movement to the stack, and with the subsequent desire to
initialize the entire instr_info instances, this has become doubly
inefficient. Individual users have better knowledge of how big a buffer
they need, and in a number of cases going through an intermediate buffer
can be avoided altogether.
Having got confirmation that it wasn't intentional to print memory
operand displacements with inconsistent style, print_displacement() is
now using dis_style_address_offset consistently (eliminating the need
for callers to pass in a style).
While touching print_operand_value() also convert its "hex" parameter to
bool. And while altering (and moving) oappend_immediate(), fold
oappend_maybe_intel_with_style() into its only remaining caller. Finally
where doing adjustments, use snprintf() in favor of sprintf().
2022-06-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: avoid string copy when swapping Vex.W controlled operands
Now that op_out[] is an array of pointers, there's no need anymore to
copy strings. Simply swap the pointers.
2022-06-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: shrink prefix related disassembler state fields
By changing the values used for "artificial" prefix values,
all_prefixes[] can be shrunk to array of unsigned char. All that
additionally needs adjusting is the printing of possible apparently
standalone prefixes when recovering from longjmp(): Simply check
whether any prefixes were successfully decoded, to avoid converting
opcode bytes matching the "artificial" values to prefix mnemonics.
Similarly by re-arranging the bits assigned to PREFIX_* mask values
we can fit all segment register masks in a byte and hence shrink
active_seg_prefix to unsigned char.
Somewhat similarly with last_*_prefix representing offsets into the
opcode being disassembled, signed char is sufficient to hold all possible
values.
2022-06-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: properly initialize struct instr_info instance(s)
Commit 39fb369834a3 ("opcodes: Make i386-dis.c thread-safe") introduced
a lot of uninitialized data. Alan has in particular observed ubsan
taking issue with the loop inverting the order of operands, where
op_riprel[] - an array of bool - can hold values other than 0 or 1.
Move instantiation of struct instr_info into print_insn() (thus having
just a single central point), and make use of C99 dedicated initializers
to fill fields right in the initializer where possible. This way all
fields not explicitly initialized will be zero-filled, which in turn
allows dropping of some other explicit initialization later in the
function or in ckprefix(). Additionally this removes a lot of
indirection, as all "ins->info" uses can simply become "info".
Make one further arrangement though, to limit the amount of data needing
(zero)initializing on every invocation: Convert the op_out structure
member to just an array of pointers, with the actual arrays living
inside print_insn() (and, as befoe, having just their 1st char filled
with nul).
While there, instead of adjusting print_insn()'s forward declaration,
arrange for no such declaration to be needed in the first place.
2022-06-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix self-test failure in addrmap
Mark pointed out that my recent addrmap C++-ficiation changes caused a
regression in the self-tests. This patch fixes the problem by
updating this test not to allocate the mutable addrmap on an obstack.
Remove psymtab_addrmap
While working on addrmaps, I noticed that psymtab_addrmap is no longer
needed now. It was introduced in ancient times as an optimization for
DWARF, but no other symbol reader was ever updated to use it. Now
that DWARF does not use psymtabs, it can be deleted.
Use malloc for mutable addrmaps
Mutable addrmaps currently require an obstack. This was probably done
to avoid having to call splay_tree_delete, but examination of the code
shows that all mutable obstacks have a limited lifetime -- now it's
simple to treat them as ordinary C++ objects, in some cases
stack-allocating them, and have a destructor to make the needed call.
This patch implements this change.
Remove addrmap::create_fixed
addrmap::create_fixed is just a simple wrapper for 'new', so remove it
in favor of uses of 'new'.
Remove addrmap_create_mutable
This removes addrmap_create_mutable in favor of using 'new' at the
spots where the addrmap is created.
Remove addrmap wrapper functions
This removes the various addrmap wrapper functions in favor of simple
method calls on the objects themselves.
Move addrmap classes to addrmap.h
This moves the addrmap class definitions to addrmap.h. This is safe
to do now that the contents are private.
Privacy for addrmap_mutable
This changes addrmap_mutable so that its data members are private.
Privacy for addrmap_fixed
This changes addrmap_fixed so that its data members are private.
It also makes struct addrmap_transition private as well.
Use inheritance for addrmap
This is a simply C++-ification of the basics of addrmap: it uses
virtual methods rather than a table of function pointers, and it
changes the concrete implementations to be subclasses.
2022-06-12 Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Trivial fixes to Cygwin build after 8fea1a81
* Remove a stray semicolon
* Restore dropped nullptr program argument in use of create_process() under CYGWIN
Simplify __USEWIDE
Prior to c6ca3dab dropping support for Cygwin 1.5, __USEWIDE was not
defined for Cygwin 1.5. After that, it's always defined if __CYGWIN__
is, so remove __USEWIDE conditionals inside __CYGWIN__ conditionals.
Simplify cygwin_buf_t
Prior to c6ca3dab dropping support for Cygwin 1.5, cygwin_buf_t was
defined as char for Cygwin 1.5. After that, it's always wchar_t, so
just use that.
2022-06-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix warning-avoidance initialization in xcoffread.c
With the registry rewrite series, on Fedora 34, I started seeing this
error in xcoffread.c:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/xcoffread.c: In function void read_xcoff_symtab(objfile*, legacy_psymtab*):
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/xcoffread.c:948:25: error: main_aux is used uninitialized [-Werror=uninitialized]
948 | union internal_auxent fcn_aux_saved = main_aux;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/xcoffread.c:933:25: note: main_aux declared here
933 | union internal_auxent main_aux;
| ^~~~~~~~
I don't know why this error started suddenly... that seems weird,
because it's not obviously related to the changes I made.
Looking into it, it seems this line was intended to avoid a similar
warning -- but since 'main_aux' is uninitialized at the point where it
is used, this fix was incomplete.
This patch avoids the warning by initializing using "{}". I'm
checking this in.
2022-06-10 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix comparison of unsigned long int to int in record_linux_system_call.
The if statement in case gdb_sys_ioctl in function
record_linux_system_call in file gdb/linux-record.c is as follows:
if (tmpulongest == tdep->ioctl_FIOCLEX
|| tmpulongest == tdep->ioctl_FIONCLEX
....
|| tmpulongest == tdep->ioctl_TCSETSW
...
}
The PowerPC ioctl value for ioctl_TCSETW is 0x802c7415. The variable
ioctl_TCSETW is defined in gdb/linux-record.h as an int. The TCSETW value
has the MSB set to one so it is a negative integer. The comparison of the
unsigned long value tmpulongest to a negative integer value for
ioctl_TCSETSW fails.
This patch changes the declarations for the ioctl_* values in struct
linux_record_tdep to unsigned long to fix the comparisons between
tmpulongest and the tdep->ioctl_* values.
An additional test gdb.reverse/test_ioctl_TCSETSW.exp is added to verify
the gdb record_linux_system_call() if statement for the ioctl TCSETSW
succeeds.
This patch has been tested on Power 10 and Intel with no test failures.
2022-06-10 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC, correct the gdb ioctl values for TCGETS, TCSETS, TCSETSW and TCSETSF.
Some of the ioctl numbers are based on the size of kernel termios structure.
Currently the PowerPC GDB definitions are "hard coded" into the ioctl
number.
The current PowerPC values for TCGETS, TCSETS, TCSETSW and TCSETSF are
defined in gdb/ppc-linux-tdep.c as:
record_tdep->ioctl_TCGETS = 0x403c7413;
record_tdep->ioctl_TCSETS = 0x803c7414;
record_tdep->ioctl_TCSETSW = 0x803c7415;
record_tdep->ioctl_TCSETSF = 0x803c7416;
Where the termios structure size is in hex digits [5:4] as 0x3c.
The definition for the PowerPC termios structure is given in:
arch/powerpc/include/uapi/asm/termbits.h
The size of the termios data structure in this file is 0x2c not 0x3c.
This patch changes the hex digits for the size of the PowerPC termios size
in the ioctl values for TCGETS, TCSETS, TCSETSW and TCSETSF to 0x2c.
This patch also changes the hard coding to generate the number based on a
it easier to update the ioctl numbers.
2022-06-10 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove definition of true/false from gdb_compiler_info
Since pretty much forever the get_compiler_info function has included
these lines:
# Most compilers will evaluate comparisons and other boolean
# operations to 0 or 1.
uplevel \#0 { set true 1 }
uplevel \#0 { set false 0 }
These define global variables true (to 1) and false (to 0).
It seems odd to me that these globals are defined in
get_compiler_info, I guess maybe the original thinking was that if a
compiler had different true/false values then we would detect it there
and define true/false differently.
I don't think we should be bundling this logic into get_compiler_info,
it seems weird to me that in order to use $true/$false a user needs to
first call get_compiler_info.
It would be better I think if each test script that wants these
variables just defined them itself, if in the future we did need
different true/false values based on compiler version then we'd just
do:
if { [test_compiler_info "some_pattern"] } {
# Defined true/false one way...
} else {
# Defined true/false another way...
}
But given the current true/false definitions have been in place since
at least 1999, I suspect this will not be needed any time soon.
Given that the definitions of true/false are so simple, right now my
suggestion is just to define them in each test script that wants
them (there's not that many). If we ever did need more complex logic
then we can always add a function in gdb.exp that sets up these
globals, but that seems overkill for now.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-10 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Document the ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET testsuite variable
This variable is useful when exercising AArch64 multi-arch support (debugging
32-bit AArch32 executables).
Unfortunately it isn't well documented. This patch adds information about it
and explains how to use it.
2022-06-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix XPASS with gcc-12 in gdb.base/vla-struct-fields.exp
With gcc-12, I get for test-case gdb.base/vla-struct-fields.exp:
...
(gdb) print inner_vla_struct_object_size == sizeof(inner_vla_struct_object)^M
$7 = 1^M
(gdb) XPASS: gdb.base/vla-struct-fields.exp: size of inner_vla_struct_object
...
Fix this by limiting the xfailing to gcc-11 and earlier. Also, limit the
xfailing to the equality test.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix timeout in gdb.ada/ghost.exp
On openSUSE Tumbleweed with gcc-12, I run into a timeout:
...
(gdb) print value^M
Multiple matches for value^M
[0] cancel^M
[1] ada.strings.maps.value (<ref> ada.strings.maps.character_mapping; \
character) return character at a-strmap.adb:599^M
[2] pck.value at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/ghost/pck.ads:17^M
[3] system.object_reader.value (<ref> system.object_reader.object_symbol) \
return system.object_reader.uint64 at s-objrea.adb:2279^M
[4] system.traceback.symbolic.value (system.address) return string at \
s-trasym.adb:200^M
> FAIL: gdb.ada/ghost.exp: print value (timeout)
print ghost_value^M
Argument must be choice number^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/ghost.exp: print ghost_value
...
Fix this by prefixing value (as well as the other printed values) with the
package name:
...
(gdb) print pck.value^M
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29055
2022-06-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-09 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Minor fix to Python breakpoint event documentation
I noticed that the Python event documentation referred to the event's
"breakpoint" field as a function, whereas it is actually an attribute.
This patch fixes the error.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/aarch64: fix 32-bit arm compatibility
GDB's ability to run 32-bit ARM processes on an AArch64 native target
is currently broken. The test gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp currently
fails with a timeout.
The cause of these problems is the following three functions:
aarch64_linux_nat_target::thread_architecture
aarch64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers
aarch64_linux_nat_target::store_registers
What has happened, over time, is that these functions have been
modified, forgetting that any particular thread (running on the native
target) might be an ARM thread, or might be an AArch64 thread.
The problems always start with a line similar to this:
aarch64_gdbarch_tdep *tdep
= (aarch64_gdbarch_tdep *) gdbarch_tdep (inf->gdbarch);
The problem with this line is that if 'inf->gdbarch' is an ARM
architecture, then gdbarch_tdep will return a pointer to an
arm_gdbarch_tdep object, not an aarch64_gdbarch_tdep object. The
result of the above cast will, as a consequence, be undefined.
In aarch64_linux_nat_target::thread_architecture, after the undefined
cast we then proceed to make use of TDEP, like this:
if (vq == tdep->vq)
return inf->gdbarch;
Obviously at this point the result is undefined, but, if this check
returns false we then proceed with this code:
struct gdbarch_info info;
info.bfd_arch_info = bfd_lookup_arch (bfd_arch_aarch64, bfd_mach_aarch64);
info.id = (int *) (vq == 0 ? -1 : vq);
return gdbarch_find_by_info (info);
As a consequence we will return an AArch64 gdbarch object for our ARM
thread! Things go downhill from there on.
There are similar problems, with similar undefined behaviour, in the
fetch_registers and store_registers functions.
The solution is to make use of a check like this:
if (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (inf->gdbarch)->bits_per_word == 32)
If the word size is 32 then we know we have an ARM architecture. We
just need to make sure that we perform this check before trying to
read the tdep field.
In aarch64_linux_nat_target::thread_architecture a little reordering,
and the addition of the above check allows us to easily avoid the
undefined behaviour.
For fetch_registers and store_registers I made the decision to split
each of the functions into two new helper functions, and so
aarch64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers now calls to either
aarch64_fetch_registers or aarch32_fetch_registers, and there's a
similar change for store_registers.
One thing I had to decide was whether to place the new aarch32_*
functions into the aarch32-linux-nat.c file. In the end I decided to
NOT place the functions there, but instead leave them in
aarch64-linux-nat.c, my reasoning was this:
The existing functions in that file are shared from arm-linux-nat.c
and aarch64-linux-nat.c, this generic code to support 32-bit ARM
debugging from either native target.
In contrast, the two new aarch32 functions I have added _only_ make
sense when debugging on an AArch64 native target. These function
shouldn't be called from arm-linux-nat.c at all, and so, if we places
the functions into aarch32-linux-nat.c, the functions would be built
into a 32-bit ARM GDB, but never used.
With that said, there's no technical reason why they couldn't go in
aarch32-linux-nat.c, so if that is preferred I'm happy to move them.
After this commit the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp passes.
2022-06-09 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Document and fix exception stack offsets
Add a description of exception entry context stacking and fix next
frame offset (at 0xA8 relative to R0 location) as well as FPU
registers ones (starting at 0x68 relative to R0).
gdb/arm: Simplify logic for updating addresses
Small performance improvement by fetching previous SP value only
once before the loop and reuse it to avoid fetching at every
iteration.
2022-06-09 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET handling
The previous patch that introduced the arm_cc_for_target procedure
moved the ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET global check to that procedure, but forgot
to tell tcl that ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET is a global. As a result,
specifying ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET on the command line actually does
nothing. This fixes it.
Change-Id: I4e33b7633fa665e2f7b8f8c9592a949d74a19153
2022-06-09 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb/arm: Terminate unwinding when LR is 0xffffffff
ARMv7-M Architecture Reference "A2.3.1 Arm core registers" states
that LR is set to 0xffffffff on reset.
ARMv8-M Architecture Reference "B3.3 Registers" states that LR is set
to 0xffffffff on warm reset if Main Extension is implemented,
otherwise the value is unknown.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: solve problems with compiler_info caching
After this commit:
commit 44d469c5f85a4243462b8966722dafa62b602bf5
Date: Tue May 31 16:43:44 2022 +0200
gdb/testsuite: add Fortran compiler identification to GDB
Some regressions were noticed:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-May/189673.html
The problem is associated with how compiler_info variable is cached
between calls to get_compiler_info.
Even before the above commit, get_compiler_info supported two
language, C and C++. Calling get_compiler_info would set the global
compiler_info based on the language passed as an argument to
get_compiler_info, and, in theory, compiler_info would not be updated
for the rest of the dejagnu run.
This obviously is slightly broken behaviour. If the first call to
get_compiler_info was for the C++ language then compiler_info would be
set based on the C++ compiler in use, while if the first call to
get_compiler_info was for the C language then compiler_info would be
set based on the C compiler.
This probably wasn't very noticable, assuming a GCC based test
environment then in most cases the C and C++ compiler would be the
same version.
However, if the user starting playing with CC_FOR_TARGET or
CXX_FOR_TARGET, then they might not get the behaviour they expect.
Except, to make matters worse, most of the time, the user probably
would get the behaviour they expected .... except when they didn't!
I'll explain:
In gdb.exp we try to avoid global variables leaking between test
scripts, this is done with the help of the two procs
gdb_setup_known_globals and gdb_cleanup_globals. All known globals
are recorded before a test script starts, and then, when the test
script ends, any new globals are deleted.
Normally, compiler_info is only set as a result of a test script
calling get_compiler_info or test_compiler_info. This means that the
compiler_info global will not exist when the test script starts, but
will exist when the test script end, and so, the compiler_info
variable is deleted at the end of each test.
This means that, in reality, the compiler_info is recalculated once
for each test script, hence, if a test script just checks on the C
compiler, or just checks on the C++ compiler, then compiler_info will
be correct and the user will get the behaviour they expect.
However, if a single test script tries to check both the C and C++
compiler versions then this will not work (even before the above
commit).
The situation is made worse be the behaviour or the load_lib proc.
This proc (provided by dejagnu) will only load each library once.
This means that if a library defines a global, then this global would
normally be deleted at the end of the first test script that includes
the library.
As future attempts to load the library will not actually reload it,
then the global will not be redefined and would be missing for later
test scripts that also tried to load that library.
To work around this issue we override load_lib in gdb.exp, this new
version adds all globals from the newly loaded library to the list of
globals that should be preserved (not deleted).
And this is where things get interesting for us. The library
trace-support.exp includes calls, at the file scope, to things like
is_amd64_regs_target, which cause get_compiler_info to be called.
This means that after loading the library the compiler_info global is
defined.
Our override of load_lib then decides that this new global has to be
preserved, and adds it to the gdb_persistent_globals array.
From that point on compiler_info will never be recomputed!
This commit addresses all the caching problems by doing the following:
Change the compiler_info global into compiler_info_cache global. This
new global is an array, the keys of this array will be each of the
supported languages, and the values will be the compiler version for
that language.
Now, when we call get_compiler_info, if the compiler information for
the specific language has not been computed, then we do that, and add
it to the cache.
Next, compiler_info_cache is defined by calling
gdb_persistent_global. This automatically adds the global to the list
of persistent globals. Now the cache will not be deleted at the end
of each test script.
This means that, for a single test run, we will compute the compiler
version just once for each language, this result will then be cached
between test scripts.
Finally, the legacy 'gcc_compiled' flag is now only set when we call
get_compiler_info with the language 'c'. Without making this change
the value of 'gcc_compiled' would change each time a new language is
passed to get_compiler_info. If the last language was e.g. Fortran,
then gcc_compiled might be left false.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: handle errors better in test_compiler_info
Now that get_compiler_info might actually fail (if the language is not
handled), then we should try to handle this failure better in
test_compiler_info.
After this commit, if get_compiler_info fails then we will return a
suitable result depending on how the user called test_compiler_info.
If the user does something like:
set version [test_compiler_info "" "unknown-language"]
Then test_compiler_info will return an empty string. My assumption is
that the user will be trying to match 'version' against something, and
the empty string hopefully will not match.
If the user does something like:
if { [test_compiler_info "some_pattern" "unknown-language"] } {
....
}
Then test_compiler_info will return false which seems the obvious
choice.
There should be no change in the test results after this commit.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: make 'c' default language for get/test compiler info
This commit is a minor cleanup for the two functions (in gdb.exp)
get_compiler_info and test_compiler_info.
Instead of using the empty string as the default language, and just
"knowing" that this means the C language. Make this explicit. The
language argument now defaults to "c" if not specified, and the if
chain in get_compiler_info that checks the language not explicitly
handles "c" and gives an error for unknown languages.
This is a good thing, now that the API appears to take a language, if
somebody does:
test_compiler_info "xxxx" "rust"
to check the version of the rust compiler then we will now give an
error rather than just using the C compiler and leaving the user
having to figure out why they are not getting the results they
expect.
After a little grepping, I think the only place we were explicitly
passing the empty string to either get_compiler_info or
test_compiler_info was in gdb_compile_shlib_1, this is now changed to
pass "c" as the default language.
There should be no changes to the test results after this commit.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove get_compiler_info calls from gdb.exp and dwarf.exp
We don't need to call get_compiler_info before calling
test_compiler_info; test_compiler_info includes a call to
get_compiler_info.
This commit cleans up lib/gdb.exp and lib/dwarf.exp a little by
removing some unneeded calls to get_compiler_info. We could do the
same cleanup throughout the testsuite, but I'm leaving that for
another day.
There should be no change in the test results after this commit.
2022-06-09 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: use test_compiler_info in gcc_major_version
The procedure gcc_major_version was earlier using the global variable
compiler_info to retrieve gcc's major version. This is discouraged and
(as can be read in a comment in compiler.c) compiler_info should be
local to get_compiler_info and test_compiler_info.
The preferred way of getting the compiler string is via calling
test_compiler_info without arguments. Gcc_major_version was changed to
do that.
2022-06-09 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
gdb: add Yvan Roux to gdb/MAINTAINERS
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve duplicate test names in gdb.threads/tls.exp
While running the gdb.threads/tls.exp test with a GDB configured
without Python, I noticed some duplicate test names.
This is caused by a call to skip_python_tests that is within a proc
that is called multiple times by the test script. Each call to
skip_python_tests results in a call to 'unsupported', and this causes
the duplicate test names.
After this commit we now call skip_python_tests just once and place
the result into a variable. Now, instead of calling skip_python_tests
multiple times, we just check the variable.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve duplicate test name in gnu_vector.exp
While testing on AArch64 I spotted a duplicate test name in the
gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp test.
This commit adds a 'with_test_prefix' to resolve the duplicate.
While I was in the area I updated a 'gdb_test_multiple' call to make
use of $gdb_test_name.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make throw_perror_with_name static
The throw_perror_with_name function is not used outside of utils.c
right now. And as perror_with_name is just a wrapper around
throw_perror_with_name, then any future calls would be to
perror_with_name.
Lets make throw_perror_with_name static.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-06-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: remove trailing '.' from perror_with_name calls
I ran into this error while working on AArch64 GDB:
Unable to fetch VFP registers.: Invalid argument.
Notice the '.:' in the middle of this error message.
This is because of this call in aarch64-linux-nat.c:
perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VFP registers."));
The perror_with_name function take a string, and adds ': <message>' to
the end the string, so I don't think the string that we pass to
perror_with_name should end in '.'.
This commit removes all of the trailing '.' characters from
perror_with_name calls, which give more readable error messages.
I don't believe that any of these errors are tested in the
testsuite (after a little grepping).
2022-06-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Move CU queue to dwarf2_per_objfile
The CU queue is a member of dwarf2_per_bfd, but it is only used when
expanding CUs. Also, the dwarf2_per_objfile destructor checks the
queue -- however, if the per-BFD object is destroyed first, this will
not work. This was pointed out Lancelot as fallout from the patch to
rewrite the registry system.
This patch avoids this problem by moving the queue to the per-objfile
object.
2022-06-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Change allocation of m_dwarf2_cus
m_dwarf2_cus manually manages the 'dwarf2_cu' pointers it owns. This
patch simplifies the code by changing it to use unique_ptr.
2022-06-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
libopcodes: extend the styling within the i386 disassembler
The i386 disassembler is pretty complex. Most disassembly is done
indirectly; operands are built into buffers within a struct instr_info
instance, before finally being printed later in the disassembly
process.
Sometimes the operand buffers are built in a different order to the
order in which they will eventually be printed.
Each operand can contain multiple components, e.g. multiple registers,
immediates, other textual elements (commas, brackets, etc).
When looking for how to apply styling I guess the ideal solution would
be to move away from the operands being a single string that is built
up, and instead have each operand be a list of "parts", where each
part is some text and a style. Then, when we eventually print the
operand we would loop over the parts and print each part with the
correct style.
But it feels like a huge amount of work to move from where we are
now to that potentially ideal solution. Plus, the above solution
would be pretty complex.
So, instead I propose a .... different solution here, one that works
with the existing infrastructure.
As each operand is built up, piece be piece, we pass through style
information. This style information is then encoded into the operand
buffer (see below for details). After this the code can continue to
operate as it does right now in order to manage the set of operand
buffers.
Then, as each operand is printed we can split the operand buffer into
chunks at the style marker boundaries, with each chunk being printed
with the correct style.
For encoding the style information I use a single character, currently
\002, followed by the style encoded as a single hex digit, followed
again by the \002 character.
This of course relies on there not being more than 16 styles, but that
is currently true, and hopefully will remain true for the foreseeable
future.
The other major concern that has arisen around this work is whether
the escape character could ever be encountered in output naturally
generated by the disassembler. If this did happen then the escape
characters would be stripped from the output, and the wrong styling
would be applied.
However, I don't believe that this is currently a problem.
Disassembler content comes from a number of sources. First there's
content that copied directly from the i386-dis.c file, this is things
like register names, and other syntax elements (brackets, commas,
etc). We can easily check that the i386-dis.c file doesn't contain
our special character.
The next source of content are immediate operands. The text for these
operands is generated by calls into libc. By selecting a
non-printable character we can be confident that this is not something
that libc will generate as part of an immediate representation.
The other output that appears to be from the disassembler is operands
that contain addresses and (possibly) symbol names. It is quite
possible that a symbol name might contain any special character we
could imagine, so is this a problem?
I don't think it is, we don't actually print address and symbol
operands through the disassembler, instead, the disassembler calls
back to the user (objdump, gdb, etc) to print the address and symbol
on its behalf. This content is printed directly to the output stream,
it does not pass through the i386 disassembler output buffers. As a
result, we never check this particular output for styling escape
characters.
In some (not very scientific) benchmarking on my machine,
disassembling a reasonably large (142M) shared library, I'm not seeing
any significant slow down in disassembler speed with this change.
Most instructions are now being fully syntax highlighted when I
disassemble using the --disassembler-color=extended-color option. I'm
sure that there are probably still a few corner cases that need fixing
up, but we can come back to them later I think.
When disassembler syntax highlighting is not being used, then there
should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-06-08 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix gdb.arch/powerpc-power7.exp isel disassembly output.
The following commit changes the output format for the isel instruction on
PowerPC.
commit dd4832bf3efc1bd1797a6b9188260692b8b0db52 Introduces error in test
Author: Dmitry Selyutin <ghostmansd@gmail.com>
Date: Tue May 24 13:46:35 2022 +0000
opcodes: introduce BC field; fix isel
Per Power ISA Version 3.1B 3.3.12, isel uses BC field rather than CRB
field present in binutils sources. Also, per 1.6.2, BC has the same
semantics as BA and BB fields, so this should keep the same flags and
mask, only with the different offset.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c
(BC): Define new field, with the same definition as CRB field,
but with the PPC_OPERAND_CR_BIT flag present.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/a2.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/e500.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power7.d: Update.
<snip>
--- a/gas/testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d
+++ b/gas/testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ Disassembly of section \.text:
.*: (7c 20 07 8c|8c 07 20 7c) ici 1
.*: (7c 03 27 cc|cc 27 03 7c) icread r3,r4
.*: (50 83 65 36|36 65 83 50) rlwimi r3,r4,12,20,27
-.*: (7c 43 27 1e|1e 27 43 7c) isel r2,r3,r4,28
+.*: (7c 43 27 1e|1e 27 43 7c) isel r2,r3,r4,4\*cr7\+lt
The above change breaks the gdb regression test gdb.arch/powerpc-power7.exp
on Power 7, Power 8, Power 9 and Power 10.
This patch updates the regression test gdb.arch/powerpc-power7.exp with
the new expected output for the isel instruction.
The patch has been tested on Power 7 and Power 10 to verify the patch fixes
the test.
2022-06-08 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
aarch64: Add fallback if ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET not set
On Aarch64, you can set ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET to point to the 32-bit
compiler to use when testing gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp and
gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp. If you don't set it, then those
testcases don't run.
I guess that approximately nobody remembers to set ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET.
This commit adds a fallback. If ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET is not set, and
testing for Linux, try arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc,
arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc, arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc as 32-bit
compilers, making sure that the produced executable runs on the target
machine before claiming that the compiler produces useful executables.
Change-Id: Iefe5865d5fc84b4032eaff7f4c5c61582bf75c39
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't encode reloc.size
I expect the encoded reloc.size field originally came from aout
r_length ecoding, but somehow went wrong for 64-bit relocs (which
should have been encoded as 3). Toss all that out, just use a byte
size instead. The changes outside of reloc.c in this patch should
make the code independent of how reloc.size is encoded.
* reloc.c (struct reloc_howto_struct): Increase size field by
one bit. Comment.
(HOWTO_RSIZE): Don't encode size.
(bfd_get_reloc_size): Adjust, and make it an inline function.
(read_reloc, write_reloc): Adjust.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* aout-ns32k.c: Include libbfd.h.
(put_reloc): Don't use howto->size directly. Calculate r_length
using bfd_log2 and bfd_get_reloc_size.
* aoutx.h (swap_std_reloc_out): Likewise.
(aout_link_reloc_link_order): Likewise.
* i386lynx.c (swap_std_reloc_out
* mach-o-i386.c (bfd_mach_o_i386_swap_reloc_out
* pdp11.c (aout_link_reloc_link_order
* coff-arm.c (coff_arm_reloc): Don't use howto->size directly,
use bfd_get_reloc_size instead and adjust switch cases.
* coff-i386.c (coff_i386_reloc): Similarly.
* coff-x86_64.c (coff_amd64_reloc): Likewise.
* cpu-ns32k.c (do_ns32k_reloc): Likewise.
* elf32-arc.c (arc_do_relocation): Likewise.
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
* elf32-bfin.c (bfin_bfd_reloc): Likewise.
* elf32-cr16.c (cr16_elf_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
* elf32-cris.c (cris_elf_pcrel_reloc): Likewise.
* elf32-crx.c (crx_elf_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
* elf32-csky.c (csky_elf_relocate_section): Likewise.
* elf32-d10v.c (extract_rel_addend, insert_rel_addend): Likewise.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_relocate_section): Likewise.
* elf32-m32r.c (m32r_elf_generic_reloc): Likewise.
* elf32-nds32.c (nds32_elf_generic_reloc): Likewise.
* syms.c (_bfd_stab_section_find_nearest_line): Likewise.
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_ppc_relocate_section): Adjust howto.size.
* coff64-rs6000.c (xcoff64_ppc_relocate_section): Likewise.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfin reloc offset checks
These all ought to use bfd_reloc_offset_in_range. In particular, replace
the check using howto->size + 1u.
* elf32-bfin.c (bfin_pcrel24_reloc): Use bfd_reloc_offset_in_range.
(bfin_imm16_reloc, bfin_byte4_reloc, bfin_bfd_reloc),
(bfin_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert reloc howto nits
The "HOWTO size encoding" patch put 1 as the HOWTO size arg for
numerous howtos that are unused, describe dynamic relocs, are markers,
or otherwise are special purpose reloc howtos that don't care about
the size. The idea was to ensure no howto changed by inspecting
object files. Revert those changes, making them zero size.
* coff-alpha.c: Give special purpose reloc howtos a size of zero.
* coff-mcore.c, * elf-hppa.h, * elf-m10300.c, * elf32-arm.c,
* elf32-csky.c, * elf32-m32c.c, * elf32-m68k.c, * elf32-mep.c,
* elf32-mips.c, * elf32-ppc.c, * elf32-rx.c, * elf32-s390.c,
* elf32-spu.c, * elf32-tic6x.c, * elf32-tilepro.c, *elf32-vax.c,
* elf32-xtensa.c, * elf64-alpha.c, * elf64-mips.c,
* elf64-mmix.c, * elf64-ppc.c, * elf64-s390.c, * elfn32-mips.c,
* elfxx-loongarch.c, * elfxx-riscv.c, * elfxx-sparc.c,
* elfxx-tilegx.c, * som.c, * vms-alpha.c: Likewise.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
HOWTO size encoding
This changes the HOWTO macro to encode the howto.size field from a
value given in bytes. This of course requires editing all target
uses of HOWTO, a major pain, but makes it a little nicer to specify
new target HOWTOs. Object files before/after this patch are
unchanged in .data and .rodata.
bfd/
* reloc.c (HOWTO_RSIZE): Encode size in bytes.
(EMPTY_HOWTO): Adjust to keep it all zero.
* aout-ns32k.c, * aoutx.h, * coff-alpha.c, * coff-arm.c,
* coff-i386.c, * coff-mcore.c, * coff-mips.c, * coff-rs6000.c,
* coff-sh.c, * coff-tic30.c, * coff-tic4x.c, * coff-tic54x.c,
* coff-x86_64.c, * coff-z80.c, * coff-z8k.c, * coff64-rs6000.c,
* elf-hppa.h, * elf-m10200.c, * elf-m10300.c, * elf32-arc.c,
* elf32-arm.c, * elf32-avr.c, * elf32-bfin.c, * elf32-cr16.c,
* elf32-cris.c, * elf32-crx.c, * elf32-csky.c, * elf32-d10v.c,
* elf32-d30v.c, * elf32-dlx.c, * elf32-epiphany.c,
* elf32-fr30.c, * elf32-frv.c, * elf32-ft32.c, * elf32-gen.c,
* elf32-h8300.c, * elf32-i386.c, * elf32-ip2k.c, * elf32-iq2000.c,
* elf32-lm32.c, * elf32-m32c.c, * elf32-m32r.c, * elf32-m68hc11.c,
* elf32-m68hc12.c, * elf32-m68k.c, * elf32-mcore.c, * elf32-mep.c,
* elf32-metag.c, * elf32-microblaze.c, * elf32-mips.c,
* elf32-moxie.c, * elf32-msp430.c, * elf32-mt.c, * elf32-nds32.c,
* elf32-nios2.c, * elf32-or1k.c, * elf32-pj.c, * elf32-ppc.c,
* elf32-pru.c, * elf32-rl78.c, * elf32-rx.c, * elf32-s12z.c,
* elf32-s390.c, * elf32-score.c, * elf32-score7.c,
* elf32-sh-relocs.h, * elf32-spu.c, * elf32-tic6x.c,
* elf32-tilepro.c, * elf32-v850.c, * elf32-vax.c,
* elf32-visium.c, * elf32-wasm32.c, * elf32-xc16x.c,
* elf32-xgate.c, * elf32-xstormy16.c, * elf32-xtensa.c,
* elf32-z80.c, * elf64-alpha.c, * elf64-bpf.c, * elf64-gen.c,
* elf64-mips.c, * elf64-mmix.c, * elf64-nfp.c, * elf64-ppc.c,
* elf64-s390.c, * elf64-x86-64.c, * elfn32-mips.c,
* elfnn-aarch64.c, * elfxx-ia64.c, * elfxx-loongarch.c,
* elfxx-mips.c, * elfxx-riscv.c, * elfxx-sparc.c,
* elfxx-tilegx.c, * mach-o-aarch64.c, * mach-o-arm.c,
* mach-o-i386.c, * mach-o-x86-64.c, * pdp11.c, * reloc.c,
* som.c, * vms-alpha.c: Adjust all uses of HOWTO.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
include/
* elf/arc-reloc.def: Adjust all uses of HOWTO.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
HOWTO_RSIZE
Define a helper macro for HOWTO.
* reloc.c (HOWTO_RSIZE): Define.
(HOWTO): Use it.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
elf64-nfp reloc fix
These are all dummy howtos, there is no reason one of them should
have partial_inplace true.
* elf64-nfp.c (elf_nfp_howto_table <R_NFP_IMMED_LO16_I_B>): Don't
set partial_inplace.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
coff-z80 reloc howto fixes
Mostly cosmetic unless attempting to link coff-z80 into another output
format.
* coff-z80.c (howto_table <R_IMM24, R_WORD0, R_WORD1>): Correct size.
(extra_case): Use bfd_{get,put}_24 when applying R_IMM24.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
NONE reloc fixes
Make them all zero size standard do-nothing howtos.
* elf32-csky.c (csky_elf_howto_table <R_CKCORE_NONE>): Correct howto.
* elf32-ft32.c (ft32_elf_howto_table <R_FT32_NONE>): Likewise.
* elf32-gen.c (dummy): Likewise.
* elf32-nds32.c (none_howto): Likewise.
* elf32-nios2.c (elf_nios2_r2_howto_table_rel <R_NIOS2_NONE>):
Likewise.
* elf32-pru.c (elf_pru_howto_table_rel <R_PRU_NONE>): Likewise.
* elf32-v850.c (v800_elf_howto_table <R_V810_NONE>): Likewise.
* elf64-gen.c (dummy): Likewise.
* elfn32-mips.c (elf_mips_howto_table_rela <R_MIPS_NONE): Likewise.
* elfxx-mips.c (none_howto): Likewise.
* reloc.c (none_howto): Likewise.
2022-06-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: double free sb_kill
oss-fuzz hits a flaky crash with a double-free. I think this is due
to gas static state not being reinitialised between testcases, a bug
with oss-fuzz not gas. Anyway, this patch should avoid the problem.
* input-scrub.c (input_scrub_push): Move init of sb_index..
(input_scrub_reinit): ..to here.
2022-06-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use subclasses of windows_process_info
This changes windows_process_info to use virtual methods for its
callbacks, and then changes the two clients of this code to subclass
this class to implement the methods.
I considered using CRTP here, but that would require making the new
structures visible to the compilation of of nat/windows-nat.c. This
seemed like a bit of a pain, so I didn't do it.
This change then lets us change all the per-inferior globals to be
members of the new subclass. Note that there can still only be a
single inferior -- currently there's a single global of the new type.
This is just another step toward possibly implementing multi-inferior
for Windows.
It's possible this could be cleaned up further... ideally I'd like to
move more of the data into the base class. However, because gdb
supports Cygwin and gdbserver does not, and because I don't have a way
to build or test Cygwin, larger refactorings are difficult.
2022-06-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Turn some windows-nat.c static functions into methods
This patch turns some windows-nat.c static functions into methods on
windows_nat_target. This avoids having to reference the
windows_nat_target singleton in some more spots -- a minor code
cleanup.
Allow ASLR to be disabled on Windows
On Windows, it is possible to disable ASLR when creating a process.
This patch adds code to do this, and hooks it up to gdb's existing
disable-randomization feature. Because the Windows documentation
cautions that this isn't available on all versions of Windows, the
CreateProcess wrapper function is updated to make the attempt, and
then fall back to the current approach if it fails.
Introduce wrapper for CreateProcess
This is a small refactoring that introduces a wrapper for the Windows
CreateProcess function. This is done to make the next patch a bit
simpler.
2022-06-07 Enze Li <enze.li@hotmail.com>
Update my email address in gdb/MAINTAINERS
2022-06-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Constify solib_name_from_address
I noticed that solib_name_from_address returned a non-const string,
but it's more appropriate to return const. This patch implements
this. Tested by rebuilding.
2022-06-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/rust] Add missing _() for error call
In commit 1390b65a1b9 ("[gdb/rust] Fix literal truncation") I forgot to add
_() around a string using in an error call.
Fix this by adding the missing _().
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Allow frv::fr300 in selftests
In skip_arch in gdb/selftest-arch.c we skip architecture fr300 because of
PR20946, but the PR has been fixed by commit 0ae60c3ef45 ("Prevent an abort in
the FRV disassembler if the target bfd name is unknown.") in Januari 2017.
Remove the skipping of frv::fr300.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Consolidate "Python API" sections in NEWS
I noticed that the gdb NEWS file had two "Python API" sections in
"Changes since GDB 12". This patch consolidates the two. I chose to
preserve the second one, first because it is longer, and second
because I felt that user command changes should come before API
changes.
Simplify varobj "change" logic
varobj used to store 'print_value' as a C string, where NULL was a
valid value, and so it had logic to handle this situation. However,
at some point this was changed to be a std::string, and so the code
can be simplified in this spot.
2022-06-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove "-break-insert -r" tests
PR mi/14270 points out that mi-break.exp has some tests for an
unimplemented "-r" switch for "-break-insert". This switch was never
implemented, and is not documented -- though it is mentioned in a
comment in the documentation. This patch removes the test and the doc
comment.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14270
2022-06-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Name arch selftests more clearly
When running some all archs selftest I get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest unpack_field_as_long"
Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::A6.
...
By now I know that A6 is an arc architecture, but for others that's less
clear.
Fix this by using unpack_field_as_long::arc::A6 instead.
This then introduces redundant names like arm::arm, so try to avoid those,
though I'm not entirely convinced that that's worth the trouble.
This introduces the following new names:
...
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::am33_2::am33-2.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arc::A6.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arc::A7.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arc::EM.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arc::HS.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arm::ep9312.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arm::iwmmxt.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arm::iwmmxt2.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::arm::xscale.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::bpf::xbpf.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::fr400.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::fr450.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::fr500.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::fr550.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::simple.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::frv::tomcat.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::iq2000::iq10.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::m32c::m16c.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::mep::c5.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::mep::h1.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::nds32::n1.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::nds32::n1h.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::nds32::n1h_v2.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::nds32::n1h_v3.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::nds32::n1h_v3m.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::z80::ez80-adl.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::z80::ez80-z80.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::z80::gbz80.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::z80::r800.
+Running selftest unpack_field_as_long::z80::z180.
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Enable some more print_one_insn selftests
In print_one_insn_test we have this cluster of skipped tests:
...
case bfd_arch_ia64:
case bfd_arch_mep:
case bfd_arch_mips:
case bfd_arch_tic6x:
case bfd_arch_xtensa:
return;
...
Enable some of these, and document in more detail why they're enabled or
skipped.
Likewise, document bfd_arch_or1k because it's an odd case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Fix maint selftest -v print_one_insn
When running the print_one_insn selftests with -v, I get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest -v print_one_insn"
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.
.shor 0x783eRunning selftest print_one_insn::A7.
trap_s 0x1Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC600.
.shor 0x783eRunning selftest print_one_insn::ARC601.
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC700.
trap_s 0x1Running selftest print_one_insn::ARCv2.
trap_s 0x1Running selftest print_one_insn::EM.
trap_s 0x1Running selftest print_one_insn::HS.
trap_s 0x1Running selftest print_one_insn::Loongarch32.
...
The insn is written to gdb_stdout, and there is code in the selftest to add a
newline after the insn, which writes to stream().
The stream() ui_file points into a string buffer, which the disassembler uses
before writing to gdb_stdout, so writing into it after the disassembler has
finished has no effect.
Fix this by using gdb_stdlog and debug_printf (which is what the unit test
infrastructure itself uses) instead, such that we have:
...
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.
.shor 0x783e
Running selftest print_one_insn::A7.
trap_s 0x1
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC600.
.shor 0x783e
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC601.
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC700.
trap_s 0x1
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARCv2.
trap_s 0x1
Running selftest print_one_insn::Loongarch32.
...
Note: I've also removed the printing of arch_name, which would give
us otherwise the redundant:
...
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.
arc .shor 0x783e
Running selftest print_one_insn::A7.
arc trap_s 0x1
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: add missing skip_python_tests call in py-doc-reformat.exp
In commit:
commit 51e8dbe1fbe7d8955589703140ca5eba7b4f1bd7
Date: Mon May 16 19:26:54 2022 +0100
gdb/python: improve formatting of help text for user defined commands
the test that was added (gdb.python/py-doc-reformat.exp) was missing a
call to skip_python_tests. As a result, this test would fail for any
GDB built within Python support.
This commit adds a call to skip_python_tests.
2022-06-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove obsolete Python 2 comment
I found a comment that referred to Python 2, but that is now obsolete
-- the code it refers to is gone. I'm checking in this patch to
remove the comment.
There's a similar comment elsewhere, but I plan to remove that one in
another patch I'm going to submit shortly.
2022-06-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: null dereference in coff_count_linenumbers
* coffgen.c (coff_count_linenumbers): Don't segfault when asymbol
the_bfd is NULL.
asan: uninitialised write in bfd_mach_o_write_contents
* mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_write_contents): Always set
bfd_mach_o_dyld_info_command *_off fields.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/ada] Fix literal truncation
Make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/m2] Fix UB and literal truncation
Rewrite parse_number to use ULONGEST instead of LONGEST, to fix UB errors as
mentioned in PR29163.
Furthermore, make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all
cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29163
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/rust] Fix literal truncation
Make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all cases.
I've used as overflow string: "Integer literal is too large", based
on what I found at
<rust-lang/rust>/src/test/ui/parser/int-literal-too-large-span.rs
but perhaps someone has a better idea.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/pascal] Fix literal truncation
Make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all cases.
The current implementation of parse_number contains a comment about PR16377,
but that's related to C-like languages. In absence of information of whether
the same fix is needed for pascal, take the conservative approach and keep
behaviour for decimals unchanged.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/go] Fix literal truncation
Make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all cases.
The current implementation of parse_number contains a comment about PR16377,
but that's related to C-like languages. In absence of information of whether
the same fix is needed for go, take the conservative approach and keep
behaviour for decimals unchanged.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/fortran] Fix literal truncation
As mentioned in commit 5b758627a18 ("Make gdb.base/parse_number.exp test all
architectures"):
...
There might be a bug that 32-bit fortran truncates 64-bit values to
32-bit, given "p/x 0xffffffffffffffff" returns "0xffffffff".
...
More concretely, we have:
...
$ for arch in i386:x86-64 i386; do \
gdb -q -batch -ex "set arch $arch" -ex "set lang fortran" \
-ex "p /x 0xffffffffffffffff"; \
done
The target architecture is set to "i386:x86-64".
$1 = 0xffffffffffffffff
The target architecture is set to "i386".
$1 = 0xffffffff
...
Fix this by adding a range check in parse_number in gdb/f-exp.y.
Furthermore, make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all
other cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/c] Fix type of 2147483648 and literal truncation
[ Assuming arch i386:x86-64, sizeof (int) == 4,
sizeof (long) == sizeof (long long) == 8. ]
Currently we have (decimal for 0x80000000):
...
(gdb) ptype 2147483648
type = unsigned int
...
According to C language rules, unsigned types cannot be used for decimal
constants, so the type should be long instead (reported in PR16377).
Fix this by making sure the type of 2147483648 is long.
The next interesting case is (decimal for 0x8000000000000000):
...
(gdb) ptype 9223372036854775808
type = unsigned long
...
According to the same rules, unsigned long is incorrect.
Current gcc uses __int128 as type, which is allowed, but we don't have that
available in gdb, so the strict response here would be erroring out with
overflow.
Older gcc without __int128 support, as well as clang use an unsigned type, but with
a warning. Interestingly, clang uses "unsigned long long" while gcc uses
"unsigned long", which seems the better choice.
Given that the compilers allow this as a convience, do the same in gdb
and keep type "unsigned long", and make this explicit in parser and test-case.
Furthermore, make sure we error out on overflow instead of truncating in all
cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux with --enable-targets=all.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16377
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Test more values in gdb.base/parse_numbers.exp
Currently we only test value 0xffffffffffffffff in test-case
gdb.base/parse_numbers.exp.
Test more interesting values, both in decimal and hex format, as well as
negative decimals for language modula-2.
This results in an increase in total tests from 15572 to 847448 (55 times
more tests).
Balance out the increase in runtime by reducing the number of architectures
tested: only test one architecture per sizeof longlong/long/int/short
combination, while keeping the possibility intact to run with all
architectures (through setting a variable in the test-case)
Results in slight reduction of total tests: 15572 -> 13853.
Document interesting cases in the expected results:
- wrapping from unsigned to signed
- truncation
- PR16377: using unsigned types to represent decimal constants in C
Running the test-case with a gdb build with -fsanitize=undefined, we trigger
two UB errors in the modula-2 parser, filed as PR29163.
Tested on x86_64-linux with --enable-targets=all.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix ERROR in gdb.ctf/funcreturn.exp
On openSUSE Tumbleweed (with gcc-12, enabling ctf tests) I run into:
...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ctf/funcreturn.exp.
ERROR: tcl error code NONE
ERROR: Unexpected arguments: \
{print v_double_func} \
{[0-9]+ = {double \(\)} 0x[0-9a-z]+.*} \
{print double function} \
}
...
The problem is a curly brace as fourth argument to gdb_test, which errors out
due to recently introduced more strict argument checking in gdb_test.
Fix the error by removing the brace.
Though this fixes the error for me, due to PR29160 I get only FAILs, so I can't
claim proper testing on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/manythreads.exp with check-read1
When running test-case gdb.threads/manythreads.exp with check-read1, I ran
into this hard-to-reproduce FAIL:
...
[New Thread 0x7ffff7318700 (LWP 31125)]^M
[Thread 0x7ffff7321700 (LWP 31124) exited]^M
[New T^C^M
^M
Thread 769 "manythreads" received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.^M
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff6d66700 (LWP 31287)]^M
0x00007ffff7586a81 in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/manythreads.exp: stop threads 1
...
The matching in the failing gdb_test_multiple is done in an intricate way,
trying to pass on some order and fail on another order.
Fix this by rewriting the regexps to match one line at most, and detecting
invalid order by setting and checking state variables.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29177
2022-06-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Fix warning in print_one_insn::ez80-adl
When running selftest print_one_insn::ez80-adl we run into this warning:
...
Running selftest print_one_insn::ez80-adl.
warning: Unable to determine inferior's software breakpoint type: couldn't
find `_break_handler' function in inferior. Will be used default software \
breakpoint instruction RST 0x08.
...
Fix this by explicitly handling bfd_arch_z80 in print_one_insn_test.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use bool for evregpy_no_listeners_p
I noticed that evregpy_no_listeners_p should return a bool. This
patch makes this change. I'm checking it in.
2022-06-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: heap buffer overflow in _bfd_mips_elf_section_from_shdr
* elfxx-mips.c (_bfd_mips_elf_section_from_shdr): Sanity check
intopt.size and remaining bytes in section for reginfo.
2022-06-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ubsan: undefined shift in frag_align_code
This one needs the same fix too.
* config/tc-i386.h (MAX_MEM_FOR_RS_ALIGN_CODE): Avoid signed
integer overflow.
2022-06-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Fix warning in foreach_arch selftests
When running the selftests, I run into:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest"
...
Running selftest execute_cfa_program::aarch64:ilp32.
warning: A handler for the OS ABI "GNU/Linux" is not built into this
configuration of GDB. Attempting to continue with the default aarch64:ilp32
settings.
...
and likewise for execute_cfa_program::i8086 and
execute_cfa_program::ia64-elf32.
The warning can easily be reproduced outside the selftests by doing:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set arch aarch64:ilp32"
...
and can be prevented by first doing "set osabi none".
Fix the warning by setting osabi to none while doing selftests that iterate
over all architectures.
This causes a regression in the print_one_insn selftests for the ARC
architecture.
The problem is pre-existing, and can be demonstrated (already without this
patch) using:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set osabi none" -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn::A6"
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.
Self test failed: Cannot access memory at address 0x0
Ran 1 unit tests, 1 failed
$
...
For ARC, we use the generic case in print_one_insn_test, containing this code:
...
int kind = gdbarch_breakpoint_kind_from_pc (gdbarch, &pc);
...
insn = gdbarch_sw_breakpoint_from_kind (gdbarch, kind, &bplen);
...
The problem is that with osabi linux we trigger:
...
static int
arc_linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR *pcptr)
{
return trap_size;
}
...
but with osabi none:
...
arc_breakpoint_kind_from_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR *pcptr)
{
size_t length_with_limm = gdb_insn_length (gdbarch, *pcptr);
...
which needs access to memory, and will consequently fail.
Fix this in print_one_insn_test, in the default case, by iterating over
supported osabi's to makes sure we trigger arc_linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc
which will give us a usable instruction to disassemble.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Revert "[gdb] Fix warning in foreach_arch selftests"
This reverts commit fc18b1c5afd ("[gdb] Fix warning in foreach_arch
selftests").
The commit introduced regressions for an --enable-targets=all build:
...
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.^M
Self test failed: Cannot access memory at address 0x0^M
...
and while investigating those I realized that the commit fc18b1c5afd
complicates things by trying to set the current osabi.
So, revert the patch in preparation for a simpler solution.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-03 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: exclude certain ISA extensions from v3/v4 ISA
Like TBM and LWP, XOP and FMA4 also shouldn't be included in v3.
Like AVX512-4VNNIW, AVX512-4FMAPS also shouldn't be included in v4.
2022-06-03 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
gdb: LoongArch: Remove nonportable #include
Don't use gregset.h in *-tdep.c since it's not usable on
hosts that don't have <sys/procfs.h>. It's not needed by
this file, and should only be needed by *-nat.c files.
2022-06-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: asan: mips_gprel_reloc segfault
Similarly for the elf mips support.
* elf32-mips.c (mips_elf_final_gp): Don't segfault on symbols
in any of the bfd_is_const_section sections.
* elf64-mips.c (mips_elf64_final_gp): Likewise.
* elfn32-mips.c (mips_elf_final_gp): Likewise.
2022-06-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: mips_gprel_reloc segfault
Not just the undefined section has a NULL owner, the absolute section
has too. Which means we can't find output_bfd for __gp. Also, may as
well test directly for output_bfd == NULL.
* coff-mips.c (mips_gprel_reloc): Don't segfault on any of
bfd_is_const_section sections.
2022-06-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Detect change instead of init in gdb.mi/mi-var-block.exp
On openSUSE Tumbleweed with target board unix/-m32, I run into:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-block.exp: step at do_block_test 2
Expecting: ^(-var-update \*[^M
]+)?(\^done,changelist=\[{name="foo",in_scope="true",type_changed="false",has_more="0"},
{name="cb",in_scope="true",type_changed="false",has_more="0"}\][^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-var-update *^M
^done,changelist=[{name="foo",in_scope="true",type_changed="false",has_more="0"}]^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-var-block.exp: update all vars: cb foo changed (unexpected output)
...
The problem is that the test-case attempts to detect a change in the cb
variable caused by this initialization:
...
void
do_block_tests ()
{
int cb = 12;
...
but that only works if the stack location happens to be unequal to 12 before
the initialization.
Fix this by first initializing to 0, and then changing the value to 12:
...
- int cb = 12;
+ int cb = 0;
+ cb = 12;
...
and detecting that change.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29195
2022-06-02 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Rearrange and slightly reword the "Location Specification" section
This rearranges and changes the wording of the "Location
Specification" section of the GDB manual in minor ways.
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for "main"
"main" is redeclared with a different type in maint.c. I think this
might have come from my first gdb patch, many many years ago. While I
wonder if this profiling code is actually useful at all any more, in
the meantime it's simple to fix the declaration.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings for "struct coff_symbol"
"struct coff_symbol" is defined in multiple .c files, causing ODR
warnings. This patch renames just the xcoffread.c type.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings for "struct insn_decode_record_t"
"struct insn_decode_record_t" is defined in multiple .c files, causing
ODR warnings. This patch renames the types, and removes the use of
"typedef" here -- this is a C-ism that's no longer needed.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings for "struct insn_info"
"struct insn_info" is defined in multiple .c files, causing ODR
warnings. This patch renames the type in z80-tdep.c, leaving the
other one alone.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings from overlay constants
Some overlay-related constants are duplicated in z80-tdep.c, causing
ODR warnings. This patch renames just the z80-specific ones.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for "enum string_repr_result"
"enum string_repr_result" is defined in multiple .c files, causing ODR
warnings. This patch renames the types.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for "struct find_targ_sec_arg"
"struct find_targ_sec_arg" is defined in multiple .c files, causing
ODR warnings. This patch renames the types.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for "struct stack_item"
"struct stack_item" is defined in multiple .c files, causing ODR
warnings. This patch renames these types.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for "struct instruction_type"
"struct instruction_type" is defined in multiple .c files, causing an
ODR warning. This patch renames the types.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for struct ext_link_map
This renames the solib-dsbt.c copy of "struct ext_link_map" to avoid
an ODR warning.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warning for struct field_info
This renames one of the instance of "struct field_info" to avoid an
ODR warning.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings for struct nextfield
"struct nextfield" is defined in multiple places in GDB. This patch
renames just the stabs one, leaving the DWARF one untouched.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
ODR warnings for struct symloc
"struct symloc" is defined in multiple spots in gdb, causing ODR
warnings. This patch renames these.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix ODR warning in observable.h
observable.h triggers an ODR warning because this line:
extern observable<struct target_ops */* target */> target_changed;
... may be the only declaration of "struct target_ops" in scope
(depending on the particular .c file) -- and this declares it in a
namespace, resulting in confusion.
This patch fixes the problem by adding a forward declaration.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22395
2022-06-02 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement the software_single_step gdbarch method
When execute the following command on LoongArch:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp"
there exist the following failed testcases:
FAIL: gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp: single-step: si (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp: break-cond: side=host: continue to breakpoint: continue to break (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp: break-cond: side=host: p counter (timeout)
Implement the software_single_step gdbarch method to decode the current
branch instruction and determine the address of the next instruction on
LoongArch to fix the above failed testcases.
2022-06-02 Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com>
gdb: Do not add empty sections to the section map
From: Ulrich Weigand <ulrich.weigand@de.ibm.com>
build_objfile_section_table () creates four synthetic sections per
objfile, which are collected by update_section_map () and passed to
std::sort (). When there are a lot of objfiles, for example, when
debugging JITs, the presence of these sections slows down the sorting
significantly.
The output of update_section_map () is used by find_pc_section (),
which can never return any of these sections: their size is 0, so they
cannot be accepted by bsearch_cmp ().
Filter them (and all the other empty sections) out in
insert_section_p (), which is used only by update_section_map ().
2022-06-02 Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Fix a new warning on Cygwin
> ../../gdb/windows-nat.c: In function windows_solib* windows_make_so(const char*, LPVOID):
> ../../gdb/windows-nat.c:714:12: error: declaration of char name [512] shadows a parameter [-Werror=shadow=compatible-local]
> 714 | char name[SO_NAME_MAX_PATH_SIZE];
> | ^~~~
> ../../gdb/windows-nat.c:655:30: note: shadowed declaration is here
> 655 | windows_make_so (const char *name, LPVOID load_addr)
> | ~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~
Fix Cygwin build after 85b25bd9
Fix Cygwin build after 85b25bd9 ("Simplify windows-nat.c solib handling").
Fix Cygwin build after 0578e87f
Fix Cygwin build after 0578e87f ("Remove some globals from
nat/windows-nat.c"). Update code under ifdef __CYGWIN__ for globals
moved to members of struct windows_process_info.
Fix Cygwin build after fcab5839
Fix Cygwin build after fcab5839 ("Implement pid_to_exec_file for Windows
in gdbserver"). That change moves code from gdb/windows-nat.c to
gdb/nat/windows-nat.c, but doesn't add the required typedefs and
includes for parts of that code under ifdef __CYGWIN__.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ubsan: signed integer overflow in atof_generic
Oops.
* atof-generic.c: Include limits.h.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: signed integer overflow in atof_generic
Fix the signed overflows by using unsigned variables and detect
overflow at BUG! comment.
* atof-generic.c (atof_generic): Avoid signed integer overflow.
Return ERROR_EXPONENT_OVERFLOW if exponent overflows a long.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: uninit write _bfd_ecoff_write_object_contents
* ecoff.c (_bfd_ecoff_write_object_contents): zalloc reloc_buff.
asan: null deref in coff_write_relocs
* coffcode.h (coff_write_relocs): Don't deref NULL howto.
ubsan: undefined shift in frag_align_code
* frags.c (MAX_MEM_FOR_RS_ALIGN_CODE): Avoid signed integer
overflow.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gas read_a_source_file #APP processing
This fixes some horrible code using do_scrub_chars. What we had ran
text through do_scrub_chars twice, directly in read_a_source_file and
again via the input_scrub_include_sb call. That's silly, and since
do_scrub_chars is a state machine, possibly wrong. More silliness is
evident in the temporary malloc'd buffer for do_scrub_chars output,
which should have been written directly to sbuf.
So, get rid of the do_scrub_chars call and support functions, leaving
scrubbing to input_scrub_include_sb. I did wonder about #NO_APP
overlapping input_scrub_next_buffer buffers, but that should only
happen if the string starts in one file and finishes in another.
* read.c (scrub_string, scrub_string_end): Delete.
(scrub_from_string): Delete.
(read_a_source_file): Rewrite #APP processing.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
sb_scrub_and_add_sb not draining input string buffer
It is possible for sb_scrub_and_add_sb to not consume all of the input
string buffer. If this happens for reasons explained in the comment,
do_scrub_chars can leave pointers to the string buffer for the next
call. This patch fixes that by ensuring the input is drained. Note
that the behaviour for an empty string buffer is also changed,
avoiding another do_scrub_chars bug where empty input and single char
sized output buffers could result in a write past the end of the
output.
sb.c (sb_scrub_and_add_sb): Loop until all of input sb is
consumed.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: heap buffer overflow in dwarf2_directive_filename
Seen with .file 4294967289 "xxx.c"
* dwarf2dbg.c (assign_file_to_slot): Catch more cases of integer
overflow. Make param i an unsigned int.
2022-06-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: NULL deref in scan_unit_for_symbols
Since commit b43771b045 it has been possible to look up addresses
that match a unit with errors, since ranges are added to a trie while
the unit is being parsed. On error, parse_comp_unit leaves
first_child_die_ptr NULL which results in a NULL info_ptr being passed
to scan_unit_for_symbols. Fix this by setting unit->error.
Also wrap some overlong lines, and fix some formatting errors.
* dwarf2.c: Formatting.
(parse_comp_unit): Set unit->error on err_exit path.
2022-06-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Fix warning in foreach_arch selftests
When running the selftests, I run into:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest"
...
Running selftest execute_cfa_program::aarch64:ilp32.
warning: A handler for the OS ABI "GNU/Linux" is not built into this
configuration of GDB. Attempting to continue with the default aarch64:ilp32
settings.
...
and likewise for execute_cfa_program::i8086 and
execute_cfa_program::ia64-elf32.
The warning can easily be reproduced outside the selftests by doing:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set arch aarch64:ilp32"
...
and can be prevented by first doing "set osabi none".
Fix the warning by setting osabi to none while doing selftests that iterate
over all architectures.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-06-01 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add gdb.current_language and gdb.Frame.language
This adds the gdb.current_language function, which can be used to find
the current language without (1) ever having the value "auto" or (2)
having to parse the output of "show language".
It also adds the gdb.Frame.language, which can be used to find the
language of a given frame. This is normally preferable if one has a
Frame object handy.
2022-06-01 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
[arm] Don't use special treatment for PC
In an exception frame the PC register is extracted from the stack
just like other base registers, so there is no need for a special
treatment.
[arm] Add support for FPU registers in prologue unwinder
The prologue unwinder had support for FPU registers, but only to
calculate the correct offset on the stack, the values were not saved.
2022-06-01 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
[arm] d0..d15 are 64-bit each, not 32-bit
When unwinding the stack, the floating point registers d0 to d15
need to be handled as double words, not words.
Only the first 8 registers have been confirmed fixed with this patch
on a STM32F407-DISC0 board, but the upper 8 registers on Cortex-M33
should be handled in the same way.
The test consisted of running a program compiled with float-abi=hard.
In the main function, a function taking a double as an argument was
called. After the function call, a hardware timer was used to
trigger an interrupt.
In the debug session, a breakpoint was set in the function called
from main to verify the content of the registers using "info float"
and another breakpoint in the interrupt handler was used to check
the same registers using "info float" on frame 2 (the frame just
before the dummy frame created for the signal handler in gdb).
2022-06-01 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
[arm] Cleanup: use hex for offsets
Changed offset from decimal to hex to match architecture reference
manual terminology and keep coherency with the rest of the code.
2022-06-01 Jiangshuai Li <jiangshuai_li@c-sky.com>
gdb:csky save fpu and vdsp info to struct csky_gdbarch_tdep
First, add three variables fpu_abi, fpu_hardfp and vdsp_version
to csky_gdbarch_tdep. They will be initialized from info.abfd in
cskg_gdbarch_init.
Now, they are just used to find a candidate among the list of pre-declared
architectures
Later, they will be used in gdbarch_return_value and gdbarch_push_dummy_call
for funtions described below:
fpu_abi: to check if the bfd is using VAL_CSKY_FPU_ABI_HARD or
VAL_CSKY_FPU_ABI_SOFT
fpu_hardfp: to check if the bfd is using VAL_CSKY_FPU_HARDFP_SINGLE
or VAL_CSKY_FPU_HARDFP_DOUBLE
vdsp_version: to check if a function is returned with CSKY_VRET_REGNUM
2022-06-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: use libiberty xmalloc in bfd/doc/chew.c
We can't use libiberty.a in chew. libiberty is a host library, chew
a build program. Partly revert commit 7273d78f3f7a, instead define
local versions of the libiberty functions. ansidecl.h also isn't
needed.
* doc/chew.c: Don't include libiberty.h or ansidecl.h.
(xmalloc, xrealloc, xstrdup): New functions.
* doc/local.mk (LIBIBERTY): Don't define or use.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-06-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-06-01 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Properly handle IFUNC function pointer reference
Update
commit 68c4956b1401de70173848a6bdf620cb42fa9358
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Tue Apr 26 09:08:54 2022 -0700
x86: Properly handle function pointer reference
to properly handle IFUNC function pointer reference. Since IFUNC symbol
value is only known at run-time, set pointer_equality_needed for IFUNC
function pointer reference in PDE so that it will be resolved to its PLT
entry directly.
bfd/
PR ld/29216
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_scan_relocs): Set pointer_equality_needed
for IFUNC function pointer reference in PDE.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): Likewise.
ld/
PR ld/29216
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc.exp: Run PR ld/29216 test.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/pr29216.c: New file.
2022-05-31 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
i386: Ajdust more tests for opcodes/i386: remove trailing whitespace
This fixes:
FAIL: Build ifunc-1a with -z ibtplt
FAIL: Build ifunc-1a with PIE -z ibtplt
FAIL: Build libno-plt-1b.so
FAIL: No PLT (dynamic 1a)
FAIL: No PLT (dynamic 1b)
FAIL: No PLT (dynamic 1c)
FAIL: No PLT (static 1d)
FAIL: No PLT (PIE 1e)
FAIL: No PLT (PIE 1f)
FAIL: No PLT (PIE 1g)
FAIL: No PLT (dynamic 1h)
FAIL: No PLT (dynamic 1i)
FAIL: No PLT (static 1j)
* ld-i386/libno-plt-1b.dd: Remove trailing whitespaces.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1a.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1b.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1c.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1d.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1e.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1f.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1g.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1h.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1i.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/no-plt-1j.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/plt-main-ibt.dd: Likewise.
* ld-i386/plt-pie-ibt.dd: Likewise.
2022-05-31 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use unique_ptr for objfiles
A while back, I changed objfiles to be held via a shared_ptr. The
idea at the time was that this was a step toward writing to the index
cache in the background, and this would let gdb keep a reference alive
to do so. However, since then we've rewritten the DWARF reader, and
the new index can do this without requiring a shared pointer -- in
fact there are patches pending to implement this.
This patch switches objfile management to unique_ptr, which makes more
sense now.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: fixup common-block.exp for intel compilers
The order in which the variables in info common and info locals are
displayed is compiler (and dwarf) dependent. While all symbols should
be displayed the order is not fixed.
I added a gdb_test_multiple that lets ifx and ifort pass in cases where
only the order differs.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb, testsuite, fortran: fixup mixed-lang-stack for Intel/LLVM compilers
When value-printing a pointer within GDB by default GDB will look for
defined symbols residing at the address of the pointer. For the given
test the Intel/LLVM compiler stacks both display a symbol associated
with a printed pointer while the gnu stack does not. This leads to
failures in the test when running the test with CC_FOR_TARGET='clang'
CXX_FOR_TARGET='clang' F90_FOR_TARGET='flang'"
(gdb) b 37
(gdb) r
(gdb) f 6
(gdb) info args
a = 1
b = 2
c = 3
d = 4 + 5i
f = 0x419ed0 "abcdef"
g = 0x4041a0 <.BSS4>
or CC_FOR_TARGET='icx' CXX_FOR_TARGET='icpx' F90_FOR_TARGET='ifx'"
(gdb) b 37
(gdb) r
(gdb) f 6
(gdb) info args
a = 1
b = 2
c = 3
d = 4 + 5i
f = 0x52eee0 "abcdef"
g = 0x4ca210 <mixed_func_1a_$OBJ>
For the compiled binary the Intel/LLVM compilers both decide to move the
local variable g into the .bss section of their executable. The gnu
stack will keep the variable locally on the stack and not define a
symbol for it.
Since the behavior for Intel/LLVM is actually expected I adapted the
testcase at this point to be a bit more allowing for other outputs.
I added the optional "<SYMBOLNAME>" to the regex testing for g.
The given changes reduce the test fails for Intel/LLVM stack by 4 each.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb, testsuite, fortran: fix double free in mixed-lang-stack.exp
While testing mixed-lang-stack I realized that valgrind actually
complained about a double free in the test.
All done
==2503051==
==2503051== HEAP SUMMARY:
==2503051== in use at exit: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
==2503051== total heap usage: 26 allocs, 27 frees, 87,343 bytes allocated
==2503051==
==2503051== All heap blocks were freed -- no leaks are possible
==2503051==
==2503051== For lists of detected and suppressed errors, rerun with: -s
==2503051== ERROR SUMMARY: 1 errors from 1 contexts (suppressed: 0 from 0)
Reason for this is that in mixed-lang-stack.cpp in mixed_func_1f an
object "derived_type obj" goes on the stack which is then passed-by-value
(so copied) to mixed_func_1g. The default copy-ctor will be called but,
since derived_type contains a heap allocated string and the copy
constructor is not implemented it will only be able to shallow copy the
object. Right after each of the functions the object gets freed - on the
other hand the d'tor of derived_type actually is implemented and calls
free on the heap allocated string which leads to a double free. Instead
of obeying the rule of 3/5 I just got rid of all that since it does not
serve the test. The string is now just a const char* = ".." object
member.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite, fortran: allow additional completions in module.exp
For ifort, ifx, and flang the tests "complete modm" and "complete
modmany" fail. This is because all three emit additional completion
suggestions. These additional suggestions have their origin in symbols
emitted by the compilers which can also be completed from the respective
incomplete word (modm or modmany). For this specific example gfortran
does not emit any additional symbols.
For example, in this test the linkage name for var_a in ifx is
"modmany_mp_var_a_" while gfortran uses "__modmany_MOD_var_a" instead.
Since modmany_mp_var_a can be completed from modm and also modmany they
will get displayed, while gfortran's symbol starts with "__" and thus will
be ignored (it cannot be a completion of a word starting with "m").
Similar things happen in flang and ifort. Some example output is shown
below:
FLANG
(gdb) complete p modm
p modmany
p modmany::var_a
p modmany::var_b
p modmany::var_c
p modmany::var_i
p modmany_
IFX/IFORT
(gdb) complete p modm
p modmany
p modmany._
p modmany::var_a
p modmany::var_b
p modmany::var_c
p modmany::var_i
p modmany_mp_var_a_
p modmany_mp_var_b_
p modmany_mp_var_c_
p modmany_mp_var_i_
GFORTRAN
(gdb) complete p modm
p modmany
p modmany::var_a
p modmany::var_b
p modmany::var_c
p modmany::var_i
I want to emphasize: for Fortran (and also C/C++) the complete command
does not actually check whether its suggestions make sense - all it does
is look for any symbol (in the minimal symbols, partial symbols etc.)
that a given substring can be completed to (meaning that the given substring
is the beginning of the symbol). One can easily produce a similar
output for the gfortran compiled executable. For this look at the
slightly modified "complete p mod" in gfortran:
(gdb) complete p mod
p mod1
p mod1::var_const
...
p mod_1.c
p modcounter
p mode_t
p modf
...
p modify_ldt
p modmany
p modmany::var_a
p modmany::var_b
p modmany::var_c
p modmany::var_i
p module
p module.f90
p module_entry
p moduse
p moduse::var_x
p moduse::var_y
Many of the displayed symbols do not actually work with print:
(gdb) p mode_t
Attempt to use a type name as an expression
(gdb) p mod_1.c
No symbol "mod_1" in current context.
(gdb)
I think that in the given test the output for gfortran only looks nice
"by chance" rather than is actually expected. Expected is any output
that also contains the completions
p modmany
p modmany::var_a
p modmany::var_b
p modmany::var_c
p modmany::var_i
while anythings else can be displayed as well (depending on the
compiler and its emitted symbols).
This, I'd consider all three outputs as valid and expected - one is just
somewhat lucky that gfortran does not produce any additional symbols that
got matched.
The given patch improves test performance for all three compilers
by allowing additional suggested completions inbetween and after
the two given blocks in the test. I did not allow additional print
within the modmany_list block since the output is ordered alphabetically
and there should normally not appear any additional symbols there.
For flang/ifx/ifort I each see 2 failures less (which are exactly the two
complete tests).
As a side note and since I mentioned C++ in the beginning: I also tried
the gdb.cp/completion.exp. The output seems a bit more reasonable,
mainly since C++ actually has a demangler in place and linkage symbols
do not appear in the output of complete. Still, with a poor enough
to-be-completed string one can easily produce similar results:
(gdb) complete p t
...
p typeinfo name for void
p typeinfo name for void const*
p typeinfo name for void*
p typeinfo name for wchar_t
p typeinfo name for wchar_t const*
p typeinfo name for wchar_t*
p t *** List may be truncated, max-completions reached. ***
(gdb) p typeinfo name for void*
No symbol "typeinfo" in current context.
(gdb) complete p B
p BACK_SLASH
p BUF_FIRST
p BUF_LAST
...
p Base
p Base::Base()
p Base::get_foo()
p bad_key_err
p buf
p buffer
p buffer_size
p buflen
p bufsize
p build_charclass.isra
(gdb) p bad_key_err
No symbol "bad_key_err" in current context.
(compiled with gcc/g++ and breaking at main).
This patch is only about making the referenced test more 'fair' for the
other compilers. Generally, I find the behavior of complete a bit
confusing and maybe one wants to change this at some point but this
would be a bigger task.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite, fortran: fix info-types for intel compilers
This info-types.exp test case had a few issues that this patch fixes.
First, the emitted symbol character(kind=1)/character*1 (different
compilers use different naming converntions here) which is checkedin the
test is not actually expected given the test program. There is no
variable of that type in the test. Still, gfortran emits it for every
Fortran program there is. The reason is the way gfortran handles Fortran's
named main program. It generates a wrapper around the Fortran program
that is quite similar to a C main function. This C-like wrapper has
argc and argv arguments for command line argument passing and the argv
pointer type has a base type character(kind=1) DIE emitted at CU scope.
Given the program
program prog
end program prog
the degbug info gfortran emits looks somewhat like
<0><c>: Abbrev Number: 3 (DW_TAG_compile_unit)
...
<1><2f>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
<30> DW_AT_external : 1
<30> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, ...): main
...
<2><51>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_formal_parameter)
<52> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, ...): argc
...
<2><5d>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_formal_parameter)
<5e> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, ...): argv
...
<62> DW_AT_type : <0x77>
...
<2><6a>: Abbrev Number: 0
...
<1><77>: Abbrev Number: 6 (DW_TAG_pointer_type)
<78> DW_AT_byte_size : 8
<79> DW_AT_type : <0x7d>
<1><7d>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_base_type)
<7e> DW_AT_byte_size : 1
<7f> DW_AT_encoding : 8 (unsigned char)
<80> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, ...): character(kind=1)
<1><84>: Abbrev Number: 7 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
<85> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, ...): prog
...
Ifx and flang do not emit any debug info for a wrapper main method so
the type is missing here. There was the possibility of actually adding
a character*1 type variable to the Fortran executable, but both, ifx and
gfortran chose to emit this variable's type as a DW_TAG_string_type of
length one (instead of a character(kind=1), or whatever the respective
compiler naming convention is). While string types are printed as
character*LENGHT in the fortran language part (e.g. when issuing a
'ptype') they do not generate any symbols inside GDB. In read.c it says
/* These dies have a type, but processing them does not create
a symbol or recurse to process the children. Therefore we can
read them on-demand through read_type_die. */
So they did not add any output to 'info types'. Only flang did emit a
character type here.
As adding a type would have a) not solved the problem for ifx and would
have b) somehow hidden the curious behavior of gfortran, instead, the
check for this character type was chagened to optional with the
check_optional_entry to allow for the symbols's absence and to allow
flang and ifx to pass this test as well.
Second, the line checked for s1 was hardcoded as 37 in the test. Given
that the type is actually defined on line 41 (which is what is emitted by
ifx) it even seems wrong. The line check for s1 was changed to actually
check for 41 and a gfortran bug has been filed here
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=105454
The test is now marked as xfail for gfortran.
Third, the whole test of checking for the 'Type s1' in info types seemed
questionable. The type s1 is declared iside the scope of the Fortran
program info_types_test. Its DIE however is emitted as a child of the
whole compilation unit making it visible outside of the program's scope.
The 'info types' command checks for types stored in the GLOBAL_BLOCK,
or STATIC_BLOCKm wgucm according to block.h
The GLOBAL_BLOCK contains all the symbols defined in this compilation
whose scope is the entire program linked together.
The STATIC_BLOCK contains all the symbols whose scope is the
entire compilation excluding other separate compilations.
so for gfortran, the type shows up in the output of 'info types'. For
flang and ifx on the other hand this is not the case. The two compilers
emit the type (correctly) as a child of the Fortran program, thus not
adding it to either, the GLOBAL_BLOCK nor the LOCAL_BLOCK. A bug has
been opened for the gfortran scoping issue:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=105454
While the most correct change might have been removing the check for s1,
the change made here was to only check for this type in case of gfortran
being used as the compiler, as this check also covers the declaration
line issue mentioned above. A comment was added to maybe remove this
check once the scoping issue is resolved (and it starts to fail with
newer gfortran versions). The one used to test these changes was 13.0.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite/lib: add check_optional_entry for GDBInfoSymbols
There was already a similar functionality for the GDBInfoModuleSymbols.
This just extends the GDBInfoSymbols. We will use this feature in a
later commit to make a testcase less GNU specific and more flexible for
other compilers.
Namely, in gdb.fortran/info-types.exp currenlty
GDBInfoSymbols::check_entry is used to verify and test the output of the
info symbols command. The test, however was written with gfortran as a
basis and some of the tests are not fair with e.g. ifx and ifort as
they test for symbols that are not actually required to be emitted. The
lines
GDBInfoSymbols::check_entry "${srcfile}" "" "${character1}"
and
GDBInfoSymbols::check_entry "${srcfile}" "37" "Type s1;"
check for types that are either not used in the source file (character1)
or should not be emitted by the compiler at global scope (s1) thus no
appearing in the info symbols command. In order to fix this we will
later use the newly introduced check_optional_entry over check_entry.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite, fortran: Add '-debug-parameters all' when using ifx/ifort
In order for ifx and ifort to emit all debug entries, even for unused
parameters in modules we have to define the '-debug-parameters all' flag.
This commit adds it to the ifx-*/ifort-* specific flags in gdb.exp.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite, fortran: add compiler dependent types to dynamic-ptype-whatis
The test was earlier not using the compiler dependent type print system
in fortran.exp. I changed this. It should generally improve the test
performance for different compilers. For ifx and gfortran I do not see
any failures.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
testsuite, fortran: add required external keyword
Currenlty, ifx/ifort cannot compile the given executable as it is not
valid Fortran. It is missing the external keyword on the
no_arg_subroutine. Gfortran compiles the example but this is actually
a bug and there is an open gcc ticket for this here:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=50377
Adding the keyword does not change the gfortran compiling of the example.
It will, however, prevent a future fail once 50377 has been addressed.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: disable charset.exp for intel compilers
The test specifically tests for the Fortran CHARACTER(KIND=4) which is
not available in ifx/ifort.
Since the other characters are also printed elsewhere, we disable this
test for the unsupported compilers.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: rename intel next gen c/cpp compilers
The name for icx and icpx in the testsuite was earlier set to 'intel-*'
by the compiler identification. This commit changes this to 'icx-*'.
Note, that currently these names are not used within the testsuite so no
tests have to be adapted here.
2022-05-31 Cristian Sandu <cristian.sandu@intel.com>
Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: add Fortran compiler identification to GDB
This commit adds a separate Fortran compiler identification mechanism to
the testsuite, similar to the existing one for C/C++. Before this
change, the options and version for the Fortran compiler specified when
running the testsuite with F90_FOR_TARGET set, was detected via its
respective C compiler. So running the testsuite as
make check TEST=gdb.fortran/*.exp CC_FOR_TARGET=gcc F90_FOR_TARGET=ifx
or even
make check TEST=gdb.fortran/*.exp F90_FOR_TARGET=ifx
would use the gcc compiler inside the procedures get_compiler_info and
test_compiler_info to identify compiler flags and the compiler version.
This could sometimes lead to unpredictable outputs. It also limited
testsuite execution to combinations where C and Fortran compiler would
come from the same family of compiers (gcc/gfortran, icc/ifort, icx/ifx,
clang/flang ..). This commit enables GDB to detect C and Fortran
compilers independently of each other.
As most/nearly all Fortran compilers have a mechanism for preprocessing
files in a C like fashion we added the exact same meachnism that already
existed for C/CXX. We let GDB preprocess a file with the compilers
Fortran preprocessor and evaluate the preprocessor defined macros in that
file.
This enables GDB to properly run heterogeneous combinations of C and
Fortran compilers such as
CC_FOR_TARGET='gcc' and F90_FOR_TARGET='ifort'
or enables one to run the testsuite without specifying a C compiler as in
make check TESTS=gdb.fortran/*.exp F90_FOR_TARGET='ifx'
make check TESTS=gdb.fortran/*.exp F90_FOR_TARGET='flang'
On the other hand this also requires one to always specify a
identification mechanism for Fortran compilers in the compiler.F90 file.
We added identification for GFORTRAN, FLANG (CLASSIC and LLVM) IFX,
IFORT, and ARMFLANG for now.
Classic and LLVM flang were each tested with their latest releases on
their respective release pages. Both get recognized by the new compiler
identification and we introduced the two names flang-classic and
flang-llvm to distinguish the two. While LLVM flang is not quite mature
enough yet for running the testsuite we still thought it would be a good
idea to include it already. For this we added a case for the fortran_main
procedure. LLVM flang uses 'MAIN__' as opposed to classic flang which
uses 'MAIN_' here.
We did not have the possibility to test ARMFLANG - the versioning scheme
here was extracted from its latest online documentation.
We changed the test_compiler_info procedure to take another optional
argument, the language string, which will be passed though to the
get_compiler_info procedure. Passing 'f90' or 'c++' here will then
trigger the C++/Fortran compiler identification within
get_compiler_info. The latter procedure was extended to also handle
the 'f90' argument (similarly to the already existing 'c++' one).
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: move getting_compiler_info to front of gdb_compile
The procedure gdb_compile queries its options via
[lsearch -exact $options getting_compiler_info]
to check whether or not it was called in with the option
getting_compiler_info. If it was called with this option it would
preprocess some test input to try and figure out the actual compiler
version of the compiler used. While doing this we cannot again try to
figure out the current compiler version via the 'getting_compiler_info'
option as this would cause infinite recursion. As some parts of the
procedure do recursively test for the compiler version to e.g. set
certain flags, at several places gdb_compile there are checks for the
getting_compiler_info option needed.
In the procedure, there was already a variable 'getting_compiler_info'
which was set to the result of the 'lsearch' query and used instead of
again and again looking for getting_compiler_info in the procedure
options. But, this variable was actually set too late within the code.
This lead to a mixture of querying 'getting_compiler_info' or
doing an lserach on the options passed to the procedure.
I found this inconsistent and instead moved the variable
getting_compiler_info to the front of the procedure. It is set to true
or false depending on whether or not the argument is found in the
procedure's options (just as before) and queried instead of doing an
lsearch on the procedure options in the rest of the procedure.
2022-05-31 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
Abdul Basit Ijaz <abdul.b.ijaz@intel.com>
Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: Fix fortran types for Intel compilers.
Newer Intel compilers emit their dwarf type name in a slightly different
format. Therefore, this needs adjustment to make more tests pass in the
Fortran testsuite.
2022-05-31 Abdul Basit Ijaz <abdul.b.ijaz@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: Use -module option for Intel Fortran compilers
The '-J' option is not supported in Intel compilers (ifx and ifort).
The Intel version of the flag is '-module' which serves the same purpose.
2022-05-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove F77_FOR_TARGET support
The last uses of the F77_FOR_TARGET via passing f77 to GDB's compile
procedure were removed in this commit
commit 0ecee54cfd04a60e7ca61ae07c72b20e21390257
Author: Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Jun 29 17:50:47 2011 +0000
over 10 years ago. The last .f files in the testsuite by now are all
being compiled by passing 'f90' to the GDB compile, thus only actually
using F90_FOR_TARGET (array-element.f, block-data.f, subarray.f).
Gfortran in this case is backwards compatible with most f77 code as
claimed on gcc.gnu.org/fortran.
The reason we'd like to get rid of this now is, that we'll be
implementing a Fortran compiler identification mechanism, similar to the
C/Cpp existing ones. It would be using the Fortran preprocessor macro
defines to identify the Fortran compiler version at hand. We found it
inconsequent to only implement this for f90 but, on the other hand, f77
seems deprecated. So, with this commit we remove the remaining lines for
its support.
2022-05-31 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Improve clear command's documentation
Co-Authored-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Change-Id: I9440052fd28f795d6f7c93a4576beadd21f28885
2022-05-31 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Clarify why we unit test matching symbol names with 0xff characters
In the name matching unit tests in gdb/dwarf2/read.c, explain better
why we test symbols with \377 / 0xff characters (Latin1 'ÿ').
Change-Id: I517f13adfff2e4d3cd783fec1d744e2b26e18b8e
2022-05-31 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Improve break-range's documentation
Change-Id: Iac26e1d2e7d8dc8a7d9516e6bdcc5c3fc4af45c8
Explicitly mention yet-unloaded shared libraries in location spec examples
Change-Id: I05639ddb3bf620c7297b57ed286adc3aa926b7b6
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
sparc64 segfault in finish_dynamic_symbol
SYMBOL_REFERENCES_LOCAL can return true for undefined symbols. This
can result in a segfault when running sparc64 ld/testsuite/ld-vsb
tests that expect a failure.
* elfxx-sparc.c (_bfd_sparc_elf_finish_dynamic_symbol): Don't
access u.def.section on non-default visibility undefined symbol.
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ia64 gas: Remove unnecessary init
The whole struct is cleared by alloc_record.
* config/tc-ia64.c (output_prologue, output_prologue_gr): Don't
zero r.record.r.mask.
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
v850_elf_set_note prototype
v850_elf_set_note is declared using an unsigned int note param in
elf32-v850.h but defined with enum c850_notes note in elf32-v850.c.
Current mainline gcc is warning about this. Huh.
* elf32-v850.c (v850_elf_set_note): Make "note" param an
unsigned int.
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Import libiberty from gcc
PR 29200
include/
* ansidecl.h,
* demangle.h: Import from gcc.
libiberty/
* cp-demangle.c,
* testsuite/demangle-expected: Import from gcc.
2022-05-31 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve duplicate test name in gdb.trace/signal.exp
Spotted a duplicate test name in gdb.trace/signal.exp, resolved in
this commit by making use of 'with_test_prefix'.
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Ajdust more tests for opcodes/i386: remove trailing whitespace
git commit 202be274a4 also missed adjusting a few testsuite files.
This fixes
i686-vxworks +FAIL: VxWorks shared library test 1
i686-vxworks +FAIL: VxWorks executable test 1 (dynamic)
2022-05-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Trailing spaces in objdump -r header
git commit 202be274a4 went a little wild in removing trailing spaces
in gas/testsuite/gas/i386/{secidx.d,secrel.d}, causing
x86_64-w64-mingw32 +FAIL: i386 secrel reloc
x86_64-w64-mingw32 +FAIL: i386 secidx reloc
I could have just replaced the trailing space, but let's fix the
objdump output instead. Touches lots of testsuite files.
2022-05-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.trace/signal.exp on x86
Patch
202be274a41a ("opcodes/i386: remove trailing whitespace from insns with zero operands")
causes this regression:
FAIL: gdb.trace/signal.exp: find syscall insn in kill
It's because the test still expects to match a whitespace after the
instruction, which the patch mentioned above removed. Remove the
whitespaces for the regexp.
Change-Id: Ie194273cc942bfd91332d4035f6eec55b7d3a428
2022-05-30 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/manual: Introduce location specs
The current "Specify Location" section of the GDB manual starts with:
"Several @value{GDBN} commands accept arguments that specify a location
of your program's code."
And then, such commands are documented as taking a "location"
argument. For example, here's a representative subset:
@item break @var{location}
@item clear @var{location}
@item until @var{location}
@item list @var{location}
@item edit @var{location}
@itemx info line @var{location}
@item info macros @var{location}
@item trace @var{location}
@item info scope @var{location}
@item maint agent @r{[}-at @var{location}@r{,}@r{]} @var{expression}
The issue here is that "location" isn't really correct for most of
these commands. Instead, the "location" argument is really a
placeholder that represent an umbrella term for all of the
"linespecs", "explicit location", and "address location" input
formats. GDB parses these and then finds the actual code locations
(plural) in the program that match. For example, a "location"
specified like "-function func" will actually match all the code
locations in the program that correspond to the address/file/lineno of
all the functions named "func" in all the loaded programs and shared
libraries of all the inferiors. A location specified like "-function
func -label lab" matches all the addresses of C labels named "lab" in
all functions named "func". Etc.
This means that several of the commands that claim they accept a
"location", actually end up working with multiple locations, and the
manual doesn't explain that all that well. In some cases, the command
will work with all the resolved locations. In other cases, the
command aborts with an error if the location specification resolves to
multiple locations in the program. In other cases, GDB just
arbitrarily and silently picks whatever is the first resolved code
location (which sounds like should be improved).
To clarify this, I propose we use the term "Location Specification",
with shorthand "locaction spec", when we're talking about the user
input, the argument or arguments that is/are passed to commands to
instruct GDB how to find locations of interest. This is distinct from
the actual code locations in the program, which are what GDB finds
based on the user-specified location spec. Then use "location
specification or the shorter "location spec" thoughout instead of
"location" when we're talking about the user input.
Thus, this commit does the following:
- renames the "Specify Location" section of the manual to "Location
Specifications".
- It then introduces the term "Location Specification", with
corresponding shorthand "location spec", as something distinct from
an actual code location in the program. It explains what a concrete
code location is. It explains that a location specification may be
incomplete, and that may match multiple code locations in the
program, or no code location at all. It gives examples. Some
pre-existing examples were moved from the "Set Breaks" section, and
a few new ones that didn't exist yet were added. I think it is
better to have these centralized in this "Location Specification"
section, since all the other commands that accept a location spec
have an xref that points there.
- Goes through the manual, and where "@var{location}" was used for a
command argument, updated it to say "@var{locspec}" instead. At the
same time, tweaks the description of the affected commands to
describe what happens when the location spec resolves to more than
one location. Most commands just did not say anything about that.
One command -- "maint agent -at @var{location}" -- currently says it
accepts a "location", suggesting it can accept address and explicit
locations too, but that's incorrect. In reality, it only accepts
linespecs, so fix it accordingly.
One MI command -- "-trace-find line" -- currently says it accepts a
"line specification", but it can accept address and explicit
locations too, so fix it accordingly.
Special thanks goes to Eli Zaretskii for reviews and rewording
suggestions.
Change-Id: Ic42ad8565e79ca67bfebb22cbb4794ea816fd08b
2022-05-30 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Move 64-bit BFD files from ALL_TARGET_OBS to ALL_64_TARGET_OBS
Doing a 32-bit build with "--enable-targets=all --disable-sim" fails to link
properly.
--
loongarch-tdep.o: In function `loongarch_gdbarch_init':
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:443: undefined reference to `loongarch_r_normal_name'
loongarch-tdep.o: In function `loongarch_fetch_instruction':
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:37: undefined reference to `loongarch_insn_length'
loongarch-tdep.o: In function `loongarch_scan_prologue(gdbarch*, unsigned long long, unsigned long long, frame_info*, trad_frame_cache*) [clone .isra.4]':
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:87: undefined reference to `loongarch_insn_length'
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:88: undefined reference to `loongarch_decode_imm'
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:89: undefined reference to `loongarch_decode_imm'
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:90: undefined reference to `loongarch_decode_imm'
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:91: undefined reference to `loongarch_decode_imm'
binutils-gdb/gdb/loongarch-tdep.c:92: undefined reference to `loongarch_decode_imm'
--
Given the list of 64-bit BFD files in
opcodes/Makefile.am:TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES, it looks like GDB's
ALL_TARGET_OBS list is including files that should be included in
ALL_64_TARGET_OBS instead.
This patch accomplishes this and enables a 32-bit build with
"--enable-targets=all --disable-sim" to complete.
Moving the bpf, tilegx and loongarch files to the correct list means GDB can
find the correct disassembler function instead of finding a null pointer.
We still need the "--disable-sim" switch (or "--enable-64-bit-bfd") to
make a 32-bit build with "--enable-targets=all" complete correctly
2022-05-30 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Fix failing test for armeb-gnu-eabi
The following test fails on the armeb-gnu-eabi target:
FAIL: Unwind information for Armv8.1-M.Mainline PACBTI extension
This patch adjusts the expected output for big endian.
2022-05-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Use a union to avoid casts in bfd/doc/chew.c
This fixes -Wpedantic warnings in chew.c. Conversion between function
and object pointers is not guaranteed. They can even be different
sizes, not that we're likely to encounter build machines like that
nowadays.
PR 29194
* doc/chew.c (pcu): New union typedef.
(dict_type, pc): Use it here. Adjust uses of pc.
(add_to_definition): Make "word" param a pcu. Adjust all uses
of function.
(stinst_type): Delete.
2022-05-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
use libiberty xmalloc in bfd/doc/chew.c
Catch out of memory.
* doc/chew.c: Include libibery.h.
(init_string_with_size, nextword): Replace malloc with xmalloc.
(newentry, add_to_definition): Likewise.
(catchar, catbuf): Replace realloc with xrealloc.
(add_intrinsic): Replace strdup with xstrdup.
* doc/local.mk (LIBIBERTY): Define.
(chew): Link against libiberty.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-05-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Update K&R functions in bfd/doc/chew.c
* doc/chew.c: Update function definitions to ISO C, remove
now unnecessary prototypes.
2022-05-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Reorganise bfd/doc/chew.c a little
This also removes some unused variables, and deletes support for the
"var" keyword which isn't used and was broken. (No means to set
variables, and add_var used push_number inconsistent with its use
elsewhere.)
* doc/chew.c: Move typedefs before variables, variables before
functions.
(die): Move earlier.
(word_type, sstack, ssp): Delete.
(dict_type): Delete var field.
(add_var): Delete.
(compile): Remove "var" support.
2022-05-30 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Add zhinx extension supports.
The zhinx extension is a sub-extension in zfinx, corresponding to
zfh extension but use GPRs instead of FPRs.
This patch expanded the zfh insn class define, since zfh and zhinx
use the same opcodes, thanks for Nelson's works.
changelog in V2: Add missing classes of 'zfh' and 'zhinx' in
"riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext".
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): New extensions.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): New extensions.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zhinx-insns.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zhinx-insns.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): New INSN classes.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c: Modify INSN_CLASS.
2022-05-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-28 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: improve formatting of help text for user defined commands
Consider this command defined in Python (in the file test-cmd.py):
class test_cmd (gdb.Command):
"""
This is the first line.
Indented second line.
This is the third line.
"""
def __init__ (self):
super ().__init__ ("test-cmd", gdb.COMMAND_OBSCURE)
def invoke (self, arg, from_tty):
print ("In test-cmd")
test_cmd()
Now, within a GDB session:
(gdb) source test-cmd.py
(gdb) help test-cmd
This is the first line.
Indented second line.
This is the third line.
(gdb)
I think there's three things wrong here:
1. The leading blank line,
2. The trailing blank line, and
3. Every line is indented from the left edge slightly.
The problem of course, is that GDB is using the Python doc string
verbatim as its help text. While the user has formatted the help text
so that it appears clear within the .py file, this means that the text
appear less well formatted when displayed in the "help" output.
The same problem can be observed for gdb.Parameter objects in their
set/show output.
In this commit I aim to improve the "help" output for commands and
parameters.
To do this I have added gdbpy_fix_doc_string_indentation, a new
function that rewrites the doc string text following the following
rules:
1. Leading blank lines are removed,
2. Trailing blank lines are removed, and
3. Leading whitespace is removed in a "smart" way such that the
relative indentation of lines is retained.
With this commit in place the above example now looks like this:
(gdb) source ~/tmp/test-cmd.py
(gdb) help test-cmd
This is the first line.
Indented second line.
This is the third line.
(gdb)
Which I think is much neater. Notice that the indentation of the
second line is retained. Any blank lines within the help text (not
leading or trailing) will be retained.
I've added a NEWS entry to note that there has been a change in
behaviour, but I didn't update the manual. The existing manual is
suitably vague about how the doc string is used, so I think the new
behaviour is covered just as well by the existing text.
2022-05-28 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> for docs in cmdpy_init
Make use of gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> to hold the documentation
string in cmdpy_init (when creating a custom GDB command in Python).
I think this is all pretty straight forward, the only slight weirdness
is the removal of the call to free toward the end of this function.
Prior to this commit, if an exception was thrown after the GDB command
was created then we would (I think) end up freeing the documentation
string even though the command would remain registered with GDB, which
would surely lead to undefined behaviour.
After this commit we release the doc string at the point that we hand
it over to the command creation routines. If we throw _after_ the
command has been created within GDB then the doc string will be left
live. If we throw during the command creation itself (either from
add_prefix_cmd or add_cmd) then it is up to those functions to free
the doc string (I suspect we don't, but I think in general the
commands are pretty bad at cleaning up after themselves, so I don't
think this is a huge problem).
2022-05-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build with -mx32
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-05-27 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/28983
PR gprofng/29143
* src/Experiment.cc (write_header): Fix argument for ctime.
Fix -Wformat= warnings.
* src/Dbe.cc: Likewise.
* src/DwarfLib.h: Fix [-Wsign-compare] warnings.
* src/Experiment.h: Likewise.
* src/ipc.cc: Fix -Wformat= warnings.
2022-05-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-27 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix crash with "maint print arc"
Luis noticed that "maint print arc" would crash, because the command
handler did not find "show" in the command name, violating an
invariant. This patch fixes the bug by changing the registration to
use add_basic_prefix_cmd instead.
2022-05-27 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
opcodes/i386: remove trailing whitespace from insns with zero operands
While working on another patch[1] I had need to touch this code in
i386-dis.c:
ins->obufp = ins->mnemonicendp;
for (i = strlen (ins->obuf) + prefix_length; i < 6; i++)
oappend (ins, " ");
oappend (ins, " ");
(*ins->info->fprintf_styled_func)
(ins->info->stream, dis_style_mnemonic, "%s", ins->obuf);
What this code does is add whitespace after the instruction mnemonic
and before the instruction operands.
The problem I ran into when working on this code can be seen by
assembling this input file:
.text
nop
retq
Now, when I disassemble, here's the output. I've replaced trailing
whitespace with '_' so that the issue is clearer:
Disassembly of section .text:
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 90 nop
1: c3 retq___
Notice that there's no trailing whitespace after 'nop', but there are
three spaces after 'retq'!
What happens is that instruction mnemonics are emitted into a buffer
instr_info::obuf, then instr_info::mnemonicendp is setup to point to
the '\0' character at the end of the mnemonic.
When we emit the whitespace, this is then added starting at the
mnemonicendp position. Lets consider 'retq', first the buffer is
setup like this:
'r' 'e' 't' 'q' '\0'
Then we add whitespace characters at the '\0', converting the buffer
to this:
'r' 'e' 't' 'q' ' ' ' ' ' ' '\0'
However, 'nop' is actually an alias for 'xchg %rax,%rax', so,
initially, the buffer is setup like this:
'x' 'c' 'h' 'g' '\0'
Then in NOP_Fixup we spot that we have an instruction that is an alias
for 'nop', and adjust the buffer to this:
'n' 'o' 'p' '\0' '\0'
The second '\0' is left over from the original buffer contents.
However, when we rewrite the buffer, we don't afjust mnemonicendp,
which still points at the second '\0' character.
Now, when we insert whitespace we get:
'n' 'o' 'p' '\0' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '\0'
Notice the whitespace is inserted after the first '\0', so, when we
print the buffer, the whitespace is not printed.
The fix for this is pretty easy, I can change NOP_Fixup to adjust
mnemonicendp, but now a bunch of tests start failing, we now produce
whitespace after the 'nop', which the tests don't expect.
So, I could update the tests to expect the whitespace....
...except I'm not a fan of trailing whitespace, so I'd really rather
not.
Turns out, I can pretty easily update the whitespace emitting code to
spot instructions that have zero operands and just not emit any
whitespace in this case. So this is what I've done.
I've left in the fix for NOP_Fixup, I think updating mnemonicendp is
probably a good thing, though this is not really required any more.
I've then updated all the tests that I saw failing to adjust the
expected patterns to account for the change in whitespace.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2022-April/120610.html
2022-05-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Replace bfd_hostptr_t with uintptr_t
bfd_hostptr_t is defined as a type large enough to hold either a long
or a pointer. It mostly appears in the coff backend code in casts.
include/coff/internal.h struct internal_syment and union
internal_auxent have the only uses in data structures, where
comparison with include/coff/external.h and other code reveals that
the type only needs to be large enough for a 32-bit integer or a
pointer. That should mean replacing with uintptr_t is OK.
Remove much of BFD_HOST configury
This patch removes the definition of bfd_uint64_t and bfd_int64_t as
well as most BFD_HOST_* which are now unused.
Remove use of bfd_uint64_t and similar
Requiring C99 means that uses of bfd_uint64_t can be replaced with
uint64_t, and similarly for bfd_int64_t, BFD_HOST_U_64_BIT, and
BFD_HOST_64_BIT. This patch does that, removes #ifdef BFD_HOST_*
and tidies a few places that print 64-bit values.
2022-05-27 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build with --disable-shared
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-05-26 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* libcollector/configure.ac: Use AC_MSG_WARN instead of AC_MSG_ERROR
* libcollector/configure: Rebuild.
2022-05-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/Intel: allow MASM representation of embedded rounding / SAE
MASM doesn't support the separate operand form; the modifier belongs
after the instruction instead. Accept this form alongside the original
(now legacy) one. Short of having access to a MASM version to actually
check in how far "after the instruction" is a precise statement in their
documentation, allow both that and the SDM mandated form where the
modifier is on the last register operand (with a possible immediate
operand following).
Sadly the split out function, at least for the time being, needs to cast
away constness at some point, as the two callers disagree in this
regard.
Adjust some, but not all of the testcases.
2022-05-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: re-work AVX512 embedded rounding / SAE
As a preparatory step to allowing proper non-operand forms of specifying
embedded rounding / SAE, convert the internal representation to non-
operand form. While retaining properties (and in a few cases perhaps
providing more meaningful diagnostics), this means doing away with a few
hundred standalone templates, thus - as a nice side effect - reducing
memory consumption / cache occupancy.
x86/Intel: adjust representation of embedded rounding / SAE
MASM doesn't consider {sae} and alike a separate operand; it is attached
to the last register operand instead, just like spelled out by the SDM.
Make the disassembler follow this first, before also adjusting the
assembler (such that it'll be easy to see that the assembler change
doesn't alter generated code).
2022-05-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/Intel: allow MASM representation of embedded broadcast
MASM doesn't support the {1to<n>} form; DWORD BCST (paralleling
DWORD PTR) and alike are to be used there instead. Accept these forms
alongside the original (now legacy) ones.
Acceptance of the original {1to<n>} operand suffix is retained both for
backwards compatibility and to disambiguate VFPCLASSP{S,D,H} and vector
conversions with shrinking element sizes. I have no insight (yet) into
how MASM expects those to be disambiguated.
Adjust some, but not all of the testcases.
2022-05-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/Intel: adjust representation of embedded broadcast
MASM doesn't support the {1to<n>} form; DWORD BCST (paralleling
DWORD PTR) and alike are to be used there instead. Make the disassembler
follow this first, before also adjusting the assembler (such that it'll
be easy to see that the assembler change doesn't alter generated code).
For VFPCLASSP{S,D,H} and vector conversions with shrinking element sizes
the original {1to<n>} operand suffix is retained, to disambiguate
output. I have no insight (yet) into how MASM expects those to be
disambiguated.
2022-05-27 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fix build with -mx32
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-05-26 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/28983
* libcollector/libcol_util.h (__collector_getsp, __collector_getfp,
__collector_getpc): Adapt for build with -mx32
* libcollector/heaptrace.c: Fix -Wpointer-to-int-cast warnings.
* libcollector/hwprofile.h: Likewise.
* libcollector/mmaptrace.c: Likewise.
* libcollector/synctrace.c: Likewise.
* libcollector/unwind.c: Likewise.
2022-05-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-27 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
ld: cris*-elf: Default to --no-warn-rwx-segment
ld:
configure.tgt (cris-*-*, crisv32-*-* sans *-aout and *-linux): Unless
specified through the --enable-* -option, default to
--no-warn-rwx-segment.
Change-Id: I846bcd3e6762da807b17215a9fe337461ea0d710
2022-05-27 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
cris: bfd: Correct default to no execstack
In the now-historical CRIS glibc port, the default stack permission
was no-exec as in "#define DEFAULT_STACK_PERMS (PF_R|PF_W)", and the
gcc port only emits the executable-stack marker when needed; when
emitting code needing it. In other words, the binutils setting
mismatches. It doesn't matter much, except being confusing and
defaulting to "off" is more sane.
ld:
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp (target_defaults_to_execstack): Switch to 0
for cris*-*-*.
bfd:
* elf32-cris.c (elf_backend_default_execstack): Define to 0.
Change-Id: I52f37598f119b19111c7a6546c00a627fca0f396
2022-05-26 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
aarch64-fbsd-nat: Move definition of debug_regs_probed under HAVE_DBREG.
This fixes the build on older FreeBSD systems without support for
hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.
2022-05-26 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Change psymbol_functions::require_partial_symbols to partial_symbols
The previous patch ensured that partial symbols are read before calling
most of the quick_function's methods.
The psymbol_functions class has the require_partial_symbols method which
serves this exact purpose, and does not need to do it anymore.
This patch renames this method to partial_symbols and makes it an accessor
which asserts that partial symbols have been read at this point.
Regression tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-26 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Require psymtab before calling quick_functions in objfile
The recent DWARF indexer rewrite introduced a regression when debugging
a forking program.
Here is a way to reproduce the issue (there might be other ways, but one
is enough and this one mimics the situation we encountered). Consider a
program which forks, and the child loads a shared library and calls a
function in this shared library:
if (fork () == 0)
{
void *solib = dlopen (some_solib, RTLD_NOW);
void (*foo) () = dlsym (some_solib, "foo");
foo ();
}
Suppose that this program is compiled without debug info, but the shared
library it loads has debug info enabled.
When debugging such program with the following options:
- set detach-on-fork off
- set follow-fork-mode child
we see something like:
(gdb) b foo
Function "foo" not defined.
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) y
Breakpoint 1 (foo) pending.
(gdb) run
Starting program: a.out
[Attaching after process 19720 fork to child process 19723]
[New inferior 2 (process 19723)]
[Switching to process 19723]
Thread 2.1 "a.out" hit Breakpoint 1, 0x00007ffff7fc3101 in foo () from .../libfoo.so
(gdb) list
Fatal signal: Segmentation fault
----- Backtrace -----
0x55a278f77d76 gdb_internal_backtrace_1
../../gdb/bt-utils.c:122
0x55a278f77f83 _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev
../../gdb/bt-utils.c:168
0x55a27940b83b handle_fatal_signal
../../gdb/event-top.c:914
0x55a27940bbb1 handle_sigsegv
../../gdb/event-top.c:987
0x7effec0343bf ???
/build/glibc-sMfBJT/glibc-2.31/nptl/../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/sigaction.c:0
0x55a27924c9d3 _ZNKSt15__uniq_ptr_implI18dwarf2_per_cu_data26dwarf2_per_cu_data_deleterE6_M_ptrEv
/usr/include/c++/9/bits/unique_ptr.h:154
0x55a279248bc9 _ZNKSt10unique_ptrI18dwarf2_per_cu_data26dwarf2_per_cu_data_deleterE3getEv
/usr/include/c++/9/bits/unique_ptr.h:361
0x55a2792ae718 _ZN27dwarf2_base_index_functions23find_last_source_symtabEP7objfile
../../gdb/dwarf2/read.c:3164
0x55a279afb93e _ZN7objfile23find_last_source_symtabEv
../../gdb/symfile-debug.c:139
0x55a279aa3040 _Z20select_source_symtabP6symtab
../../gdb/source.c:365
0x55a279aa22a1 _Z34set_default_source_symtab_and_linev
../../gdb/source.c:268
0x55a27903c44c list_command
../../gdb/cli/cli-cmds.c:1185
0x55a279051233 do_simple_func
../../gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:95
0x55a27905f221 _Z8cmd_funcP16cmd_list_elementPKci
../../gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:2514
0x55a279c3b0ba _Z15execute_commandPKci
../../gdb/top.c:660
0x55a27940a6c3 _Z15command_handlerPKc
../../gdb/event-top.c:598
0x55a27940b032 _Z20command_line_handlerOSt10unique_ptrIcN3gdb13xfree_deleterIcEEE
../../gdb/event-top.c:797
0x55a279caf401 tui_command_line_handler
../../gdb/tui/tui-interp.c:278
0x55a279409098 gdb_rl_callback_handler
../../gdb/event-top.c:230
0x55a279ed5df2 rl_callback_read_char
../../../readline/readline/callback.c:281
0x55a279408bd8 gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper_noexcept
../../gdb/event-top.c:188
0x55a279408de7 gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper
../../gdb/event-top.c:205
0x55a27940a061 _Z19stdin_event_handleriPv
../../gdb/event-top.c:525
0x55a27a23771e handle_file_event
../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:574
0x55a27a237f5f gdb_wait_for_event
../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:700
0x55a27a235d81 _Z16gdb_do_one_eventv
../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:237
0x55a2796c2ef0 start_event_loop
../../gdb/main.c:418
0x55a2796c3217 captured_command_loop
../../gdb/main.c:478
0x55a2796c717b captured_main
../../gdb/main.c:1340
0x55a2796c7217 _Z8gdb_mainP18captured_main_args
../../gdb/main.c:1355
0x55a278d0b381 main
../../gdb/gdb.c:32
---------------------
A fatal error internal to GDB has been detected, further
debugging is not possible. GDB will now terminate.
This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see:
<https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>.
The first issue observed is in the message printed when hitting the
breakpoint. It says that there was a break in the .so file as if there
was no debug info associated with it, but there is. Later, if we try to
display the source where the execution stopped, we have a segfault.
Note that not having the debug info on the main binary is not strictly
required to encounter some issues, it only is to encounter the segfault.
If the main binary has debug information, GDB shows some source form the
main binary, unrelated to where we stopped.
The core of the issue is that GDB never loads the psymtab for the
library. It is not loaded when we first see the .so because in case of
detach-on-fork off, follow-fork-mode child, infrun.c sets
child_inf->symfile_flags = SYMFILE_NO_READ to delay the psymtab loading
as much as possible. If we compare to what was done to handle this
before the new indexer was activated, the psymatb construction for the
shared library was done under
psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching:
bool
psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching (...)
{
for (partial_symtab *ps : require_partial_symbols (objfile))
...
}
The new indexer's expand_symtabs_matching callback does not have a call
to the objfile's require_partial_symbols, so if the partial symbol table
is not loaded at this point, there is no mechanism to fix this.
Instead of requiring each implementation of the quick_functions to check
that partial symbols have been read, I think it is safer to enforce this
when calling the quick functions. The general pattern for calling the
quick functions is:
for (auto *iter : qf)
iter->the_actual_method_call (...)
This patch proposes to wrap the access of the `qf` field with an accessor
which ensures that partial symbols have been read before iterating:
qf_require_partial_symbols. All calls to quick functions are updated
except:
- quick_functions::dump
- quick_functions::read_partial_symbols (from
objfile::require_partial_symbols)
- quick_functions::can_lazily_read_symbols and quick_functions::has_symbols
(from objfile::has_partial_symbols)
Regression tested on x86_64-gnu-linux.
Change-Id: I39a13a937fdbaae613a5cf68864b021000554546
2022-05-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix crash in new DWARF indexer
PR gdb/29128 points out a crash in the new DWARF index code. This
happens if the aranges for a CU claims a PC, but the symtab that is
created during CU expansion does not actually contain the PC. This
can only occur due to bad debuginfo, but at the same time, gdb should
not crash.
This patch fixes the bug and further merges some code into
dwarf2_base_index_functions. This merger helps prevent the same issue
from arising from the other index implementations.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29128
2022-05-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Finalize each cooked index separately
After DWARF has been scanned, the cooked index code does a
"finalization" step in a worker thread. This step combines all the
index entries into a single master list, canonicalizes C++ names, and
splits Ada names to synthesize package names.
While this step is run in the background, gdb will wait for the
results in some situations, and it turns out that this step can be
slow. This is PR symtab/29105.
This can be sped up by parallelizing, at a small memory cost. Now
each index is finalized on its own, in a worker thread. The cost
comes from name canonicalization: if a given non-canonical name is
referred to by multiple indices, there will be N canonical copies (one
per index) rather than just one.
This requires changing the users of the index to iterate over multiple
results. However, this is easily done by introducing a new "chained
range" class.
When run on gdb itself, the memory cost seems rather low -- on my
current machine, "maint space 1" reports no change due to the patch.
For performance testing, using "maint time 1" and "file" will not show
correct results. That approach measures "time to next prompt", but
because the patch only affects background work, this shouldn't (and
doesn't) change. Instead, a simple way to make gdb wait for the
results is to set a breakpoint.
Before:
$ /bin/time -f%e ~/gdb/install/bin/gdb -nx -q -batch \
-ex 'break main' /tmp/gdb
Breakpoint 1 at 0x43ec30: file ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c, line 28.
2.00
After:
$ /bin/time -f%e ./gdb/gdb -nx -q -batch \
-ex 'break main' /tmp/gdb
Breakpoint 1 at 0x43ec30: file ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c, line 28.
0.65
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29105
2022-05-26 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bit-rot in target before_parse function
Copy initialisation over from the elf.em before_parse. Commit
ba951afb999 2022-05-03 changed behaviour on arm and score regarding
exec stack. This patch restores the previous behaviour.
* emultempl/aarch64elf.em (before_parse): Init separate_code,
warn_execstack, no_warn_rwx_segments and default_execstack.
* emultempl/armelf.em (before_parse): Likewise.
* emultempl/scoreelf.em (before_parse): Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp (target_defaults_to_execstack): Return
true for arm and nacl.
2022-05-26 Richard Earnshaw <rearnsha@arm.com>
arm: avoid use of GNU builtin function in s_arm_unwind_save_mixed
Whilst reviewing Luis' proposed change to s_arm_unwind_save_mixed
yesterday I noticed that we were making use of __builting_clzl
directly within the main function, which is not guaranteed to be
portable. Whilst studying the code further, I also realized that it
could be rewritten without using it and also reworked to remove a lot
of unnecessary iterations steps. So this patch does that (and also
removes the source of the warning that Luis was trying to fix).
Finally, with the rewrite we can also simplify the caller of this
routine as the new version can handle all the cases directly.
* config/tc-arm.c (s_arm_unwind_save_mixed): Rewrite without
using __builtin_clzl.
(s_arm_unwind_save): Simplify logic for simple/mixed register saves.
2022-05-26 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/linux-nat: xfer_memory_partial return E_IO on error
When accessing /proc/PID/mem, if pread64/pwrite64/read/write encounters
an error and return -1, linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial return
TARGET_XFER_EOF.
I think it should return TARGET_XFER_E_IO in this case. TARGET_XFER_EOF
is returned when pread64/pwrite64/read/frite returns 0, which indicates
that the address space is gone and the whole process has exited or
execed.
This patch makes this change.
Regression tested on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Change-Id: I6030412459663b8d7933483fdda22a6c2c5d7221
2022-05-26 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/testsuite: prefer gdb_test in gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention
Since ed01945057c "Make gdb_test's question non-optional if specified",
if the question and response parameters are given to gdb_test, the
framework enforces that GDB asks the question. Before this patch, tests
needed to use gdb_test_multiple to enforce this.
This patch updates the gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp testcase to use
gdb_test to check that GDB asks a question. This replaces the more
complicated gdb_test_multiple based implementation.
Tested on x86_64-gnu-linux.
Change-Id: I7216e822ca68f2727e0450970097d74c27c432fe
2022-05-26 Potharla, Rupesh <Rupesh.Potharla@amd.com>
bfd: Add Support for DW_FORM_strx* and DW_FORM_addrx*
2022-05-26 Luca Boccassi <bluca@debian.org>
ld: add --package-metadata
Generate a .note.package FDO package metadata ELF note, following
the spec: https://systemd.io/ELF_PACKAGE_METADATA/
If the jansson library is available at build time (and it is explicitly
enabled), link ld to it, and use it to validate that the input is
correct JSON, to avoid writing garbage to the file. The
configure option --enable-jansson has to be used to explicitly enable
it (error out when not found). This allows bootstrappers (or others who
are not interested) to seamlessly skip it without issues.
2022-05-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-26 Natarajan, Kavitha <Kavitha.Natarajan@amd.com>
Re: Add bionutils support for DWARF v5's DW_OP_addrx
Testsuite files belonging to commit 3ac9da49378c.
2022-05-25 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Show enabled locations with disabled breakpoint parent as "y-"
Currently, breakpoint locations that are enabled while their parent
breakpoint is disabled are displayed with "y" in the Enb colum of
"info breakpoints":
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep n <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x00000000000011b6 in ...
1.2 y 0x00000000000011c2 in ...
1.3 n 0x00000000000011ce in ...
Such locations won't trigger a break, so to avoid confusion, show "y-"
instead. For example:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep n <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y- 0x00000000000011b6 in ...
1.2 y- 0x00000000000011c2 in ...
1.3 n 0x00000000000011ce in ...
The "-" sign is inspired on how the TUI represents breakpoints on the
left side of the source window, with "b-" for a disabled breakpoint.
Change-Id: I9952313743c51bf21b4b380c72360ef7d4396a09
2022-05-25 Natarajan, Kavitha <Kavitha.Natarajan@amd.com>
Add bionutils support for DWARF v5's DW_OP_addrx.
2022-05-25 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: Fix DUPLICATE and PATH regressions throughout
The previous patch to add -prompt/-lbl to gdb_test introduced a
regression: Before, you could specify an explicit empty message to
indicate you didn't want to PASS, like so:
gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN ""
After said patch, gdb_test no longer distinguishes
no-message-specified vs empty-message, so tests that previously would
be silent on PASS, now started emitting PASS messages based on
COMMAND. This in turn introduced a number of PATH/DUPLICATE
violations in the testsuite.
This commit fixes all the regressions I could see.
This patch uses the new -nopass feature introduced in the previous
commit, but tries to avoid it if possible. Most of the patch fixes
DUPLICATE issues the usual way, of using with_test_prefix or explicit
unique messages.
See previous commit's log for more info.
In addition to looking for DUPLICATEs, I also looked for cases where
we would now end up with an empty message in gdb.sum, due to a
gdb_test being passed both no message and empty command. E.g., this
in gdb.ada/bp_reset.exp:
gdb_run_cmd
gdb_test "" "Breakpoint $decimal, foo\\.nested_sub \\(\\).*"
was resulting in this in gdb.sum:
PASS: gdb.ada/bp_reset.exp:
I fixed such cases by passing an explicit message. We may want to
make such cases error out.
Tested on x86_64 GNU/Linux, native and native-extended-gdbserver. I
see zero PATH cases now. I get zero DUPLICATEs with native testing
now. I still see some DUPLICATEs with native-extended-gdbserver, but
those were preexisting, unrelated to the gdb_test change.
Change-Id: I5375f23f073493e0672190a0ec2e847938a580b2
2022-05-25 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Add -nopass option to gdb_test/gdb_test_multiple
The previous patch to add -prompt/-lbl to gdb_test introduced a
regression: Before, you could specify an explicit empty message to
indicate you didn't want to PASS, like so:
gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN ""
After said patch, gdb_test no longer distinguishes
no-message-specified vs empty-message, so tests that previously would
be silent on PASS, now started emitting PASS messages based on
COMMAND. This in turn introduced a number of PATH/DUPLICATE
violations in the testsuite.
I think that not issuing a PASS should be restricted to only a few
cases -- namely in shared routines exported by gdb.exp, which happen
to use gdb_test internally. In tests that iterate an unknown number
of tests exercising some racy scenario. In the latter case, if we
emit PASSes for each iteration, we run into the situation where
different testsuite runs emit a different number of PASSes.
Thus, this patch preserves the current behavior, and, instead, adds a
new "-nopass" option to gdb_test and gdb_test_no_output. Compared to
the old way of supressing PASS with an empty message, this has the
advantage that you can specify a FAIL message that is distinct from
the command string, and, it's also more explicit.
Change-Id: I5375f23f073493e0672190a0ec2e847938a580b2
2022-05-25 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix RV32Q conflict
This commit makes RV32 + 'Q' extension (version 2.2 or later) not
conflicting since this combination is no longer prohibited by the
specification.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Remove conflict
detection that prohibits RV32Q on 'Q' version 2.2 or later.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq.d: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2p0.d: New test
showing RV32IQ fails on 'Q' extension version 2.0.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2p0.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq-isa-2p2.d: New test
showing RV32IQ fails on ISA specification version 2.2.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-ok-rv32iq2p2.d: New test
showing RV32IQ succesds on 'Q' extension version 2.2.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-ok-rv32iq-isa-20190608.d: New test
showing RV32IQ succesds on ISA specification 20190608.
2022-05-25 Dmitry Selyutin <ghostmansd@gmail.com>
opcodes: introduce BC field; fix isel
Per Power ISA Version 3.1B 3.3.12, isel uses BC field rather than CRB
field present in binutils sources. Also, per 1.6.2, BC has the same
semantics as BA and BB fields, so this should keep the same flags and
mask, only with the different offset.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c
(BC): Define new field, with the same definition as CRB field,
but with the PPC_OPERAND_CR_BIT flag present.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/a2.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/e500.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power7.d: Update.
2022-05-25 Dmitry Selyutin <ghostmansd@gmail.com>
ppc: extend opindex to 16 bits
With the upcoming SVP64 extension[0] to PowerPC architecture, it became
evident that PowerPC operand indices no longer fit 8 bits. This patch
switches the underlying type to uint16_t, also introducing a special
typedef so that any future extension goes even smoother.
[0] https://libre-soc.org
include/
* opcode/ppc.h (ppc_opindex_t): New typedef.
(struct powerpc_opcode): Use it.
(PPC_OPINDEX_MAX): Define.
gas/
* write.h (struct fix): Increase size of fx_pcrel_adjust.
Reorganise.
* config/tc-ppc.c (insn_validate): Use ppc_opindex_t for operands.
(md_assemble): Likewise.
(md_apply_fix): Likewise. Mask fx_pcrel_adjust with PPC_OPINDEX_MAX.
(ppc_setup_opcodes): Adjust opcode index assertion.
opcodes/
* ppc-dis.c (skip_optional_operands): Use ppc_opindex_t for
operand pointer.
(lookup_powerpc, lookup_prefix, lookup_vle, lookup_spe2): Likewise.
(print_insn_powerpc): Likewise.
2022-05-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with clang
When running test-case gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with clang 12.0.1, I
get:
...
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: clobbered-registers-O2 ^M
^M
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.^M
gen_movsd (operand0=<optimized out>, operand1=<optimized out>) at \
clobbered-registers-O2.c:31^M
31 return *start_sequence(operand0, operand1);^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: runto: run to start_sequence
...
The problem is that the breakpoint in start_sequence doesn't trigger, because:
- the call to start_sequence in gen_movsd is optimized away, despite the
__attribute__((noinline)), so the actual function start_sequence doesn't get
called, and
- the debug info doesn't contain inlined function info, so there's only one
breakpoint location.
Adding noclone and noipa alongside the noinline attribute doesn't fix this.
Adding the clang-specific attribute optnone in start_sequence does, but since
it inhibits all optimization, that's not a preferred solution in a gdb.opt
test-case, and it would work only for clang and not other compilers that
possibly have the same issue.
Fix this by moving functions start_sequence and gen_movsd into their own
files, as a way of trying harder to enforce noinline/noipa/noclone.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with gcc-12
When running test-case gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with gcc-12, I run
into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: backtracing
print operand0^M
$1 = (unsigned int *) 0x7fffffffd070^M
(gdb) print *operand0^M
$2 = 4195541^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: print operand0
...
The problem is that starting gcc-12, the assignments to x and y in main are
optimized away:
...
int main(void)
{
unsigned x, y;
x = 13;
y = 14;
return (int)gen_movsd (&x, &y);
...
Fix this by making x and y volatile.
Note that the test-case intends to check the handling of debug info for
optimized code in function gen_movsd, so inhibiting optimization in main
doesn't interfere with that.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29161
2022-05-24 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Define LOONGARCH_LINUX_NUM_GREGSET as 45
LOONGARCH_LINUX_NUM_GREGSET should be defined as 45 (32 + 1 + 1 + 11)
due to reserved 11 for extension in glibc, otherwise when execute:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/corefile.exp"
there exists the following failed testcase:
(gdb) core-file /home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile.core
[New LWP 7742]
warning: Unexpected size of section `.reg/7742' in core file.
Core was generated by `/home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile'.
Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
warning: Unexpected size of section `.reg/7742' in core file.
#0 0x000000fff76f4e24 in raise () from /lib/loongarch64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/corefile.exp: core-file warning-free
2022-05-24 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
AArch64: add support for DFP (Decimal Floating point)
This small patch adds support for TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT in
aapcs_is_vfp_call_or_return_candidate_1 and pass_in_v_vfp_candidate,
so that GDB for AArch64 knows how to pass DFP parameters and how to
read DFP results when calling a function.
Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu, with a GCC with DFP support in the PATH,
all of GDB's DFP tests pass.
2022-05-24 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
Merge config/ changes from GCC, to enable DFP on AArch64
2022-04-28 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
config/
* dfp.m4 (enable_decimal_float): Enable BID for AArch64.
libdecnumber/
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-05-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29171, invalid read causing SIGSEGV
The fix here is to pass "section" down to read_and_display_attr_value.
The test in read_and_display_attr_value is a little bit of hardening.
PR 29171
* dwarf.c (display_debug_macro, display_debug_names): Pass section
to read_and_display_attr_value2.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Don't attempt to check for .dwo
section name when section is NULL.
2022-05-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29170, divide by zero displaying fuzzed .debug_names
PR 29170
* dwarf.c (display_debug_names): Don't attempt to display bucket
clashes when bucket count is zero.
PR29169, invalid read displaying fuzzed .gdb_index
PR 29169
* dwarf.c (display_gdb_index): Combine sanity checks. Calculate
element counts, not word counts.
2022-05-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-23 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Tweak the std::hash<> specialization for aarch64_features.
Move the specialization into an explicit std namespace to workaround a
bug in older compilers. GCC 6.4.1 at least fails to compile the previous
version with the following error:
gdb/arch/aarch64.h:48:13: error: specialization of 'template<class _Tp> struct std::hash' in different namespace [-fpermissive]
struct std::hash<aarch64_features>
2022-05-23 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Fix loongarch_iterate_over_regset_sections for non-native targets.
Define a constant for the number of registers stored in a register set
and use this with register_size to compute the size of the
general-purpose register set in core dumps.
This also fixes the build on hosts such as FreeBSD that do not define
an elf_gregset_t type.
2022-05-23 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement the iterate_over_regset_sections gdbarch method
When execute the following command on LoongArch:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/auxv.exp"
there exist the following unsupported and failed testcases:
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: gcore
FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: load core file for info auxv on native core dump
FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: info auxv on native core dump
FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: matching auxv data from live and core
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: info auxv on gcore-created dump
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: matching auxv data from live and gcore
we can see the following messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log:
gcore /home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/auxv/auxv.gcore
Target does not support core file generation.
(gdb) UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: gcore
In order to fix the above issues, implement the iterate_over_regset_sections
gdbarch method to iterate over core file register note sections on LoongArch.
By the way, with this patch, the failed testcases in gdb.base/corefile.exp
and gdb.base/gcore.exp can also be fixed.
2022-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix -prompt handling in gdb_test
With check-read1 I run into:
...
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: not requesting
commit-resumed for target native, no resumed threads^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp: debugging: continue
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit^M
...
The problem is that proc gdb_test doesn't pass down the -prompt option to proc
gdb_test_multiple, due to a typo making this lappend without effect:
...
set opts {}
lappend "-prompt $prompt"
...
Fix this by actually appending to opts.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdbsupport] Fix UB in print-utils.cc:int_string
When building gdb with -fsanitize=undefined, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/access_to_packed_array.exp: set logging enabled on
maint print symbols^M
print-utils.cc:281:29:runtime error: negation of -9223372036854775808 cannot \
be represented in type 'long int'; cast to an unsigned type to negate this \
value to itself
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/access_to_packed_array.exp: maint print symbols
...
By running in a debug session, we find that this happens during printing of:
...
typedef system.storage_elements.storage_offset: \
range -9223372036854775808 .. 9223372036854775807;
...
Possibly, an ada test-case could be created that exercises this in isolation.
The problem is here in int_string, where we negate a val with type LONGEST:
...
return decimal2str ("-", -val, width);
...
Fix this by, as recommend, using "-(ULONGEST)val" instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/exp] Fix UB in scalar_binop
When building gdb with -fsanitize=undefined, I run into:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "p -(-0x7fffffffffffffff - 1)"
src/gdb/valarith.c:1385:10: runtime error: signed integer overflow: \
0 - -9223372036854775808 cannot be represented in type 'long int'
$1 = -9223372036854775808
...
Fix this by performing the substraction in scalar_binop using unsigned types.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/ada] Fix gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp with gcc 7
This test in test-case gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp passes with gcc 8:
...
(gdb) print obj^M
$1 = (n => 3, a => "ABC", value => 93)^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp: print local as interface
...
but fails with gcc 7:
...
(gdb) print obj^M
$1 = ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp: print local as interface
...
More concretely, we have trouble finding the type of obj. With gcc 8:
...
$ gdb -q -batch main -ex "b concrete.adb:20" -ex run -ex "ptype obj"
...
type = <ref> new concrete.intermediate with record
value: integer;
end record
...
and with gcc 7:
...
type = <ref> tagged record null; end record
...
The translation from tagged type to "full view" type happens in
ada_tag_value_at_base_address, where we hit this code:
...
/* Storage_Offset'Last is used to indicate that a dynamic offset to
top is used. In this situation the offset is stored just after
the tag, in the object itself. */
if (offset_to_top == last)
{
struct value *tem = value_addr (tag);
tem = value_ptradd (tem, 1);
tem = value_cast (ptr_type, tem);
offset_to_top = value_as_long (value_ind (tem));
}
...
resulting in an offset_to_top for gcc 8:
...
(gdb) p offset_to_top
$1 = -16
...
and for gcc 7:
...
(gdb) p offset_to_top
$1 = 16
...
The difference is expected, it bisects to gcc commit d0567dc0dbf ("[multiple
changes]") which mentions this change.
There's some code right after the code quoted above that deals with this
change:
...
else if (offset_to_top > 0)
{
/* OFFSET_TO_TOP used to be a positive value to be subtracted
from the base address. This was however incompatible with
C++ dispatch table: C++ uses a *negative* value to *add*
to the base address. Ada's convention has therefore been
changed in GNAT 19.0w 20171023: since then, C++ and Ada
use the same convention. Here, we support both cases by
checking the sign of OFFSET_TO_TOP. */
offset_to_top = -offset_to_top;
}
...
but it's not activated because of the 'else'.
Fix this by removing the 'else'.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc 7.5.0.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29057
2022-05-23 Mark Harmstone <mark@harmstone.com>
ld: use definitions in generate_reloc rather than raw literals
2022-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Skip language auto in gdb.base/parse_number.exp
In test-case gdb.base/parse_number.exp, we skip architecture auto in the
$supported_archs loop, to prevent duplicate testing.
Likewise, skip language auto and its alias local in the $::all_languages
loop. This reduces the number of tests from 17744 to 15572.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-05-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-22 Alok Kumar Sharma <AlokKumar.Sharma@amd.com>
Accept functions with DW_AT_linkage_name present
Currently GDB is not able to debug (Binary generated with Clang) variables
present in shared/private clause of OpenMP Task construct. Please note that
LLVM debugger LLDB is able to debug.
In case of OpenMP, compilers generate artificial functions which are not
present in actual program. This is done to apply parallelism to block of
code.
For non-artifical functions, DW_AT_name attribute should contains the name
exactly as present in actual program.
(Ref# http://wiki.dwarfstd.org/index.php?title=Best_Practices)
Since artificial functions are not present in actual program they not having
DW_AT_name and having DW_AT_linkage_name instead should be fine.
Currently GDB is invalidating any function not havnig DW_AT_name which is why
it is not able to debug OpenMP (Clang).
It should be fair to fallback to check DW_AT_linkage_name in case DW_AT_name
is absent.
2022-05-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Rename base_breakpoint -> code_breakpoint
Even after the previous patches reworking the inheritance of several
breakpoint types, the present breakpoint hierarchy looks a bit
surprising, as we have "breakpoint" as the superclass, and then
"base_breakpoint" inherits from "breakpoint". Like so, simplified:
breakpoint
base_breakpoint
ordinary_breakpoint
internal_breakpoint
momentary_breakpoint
ada_catchpoint
exception_catchpoint
tracepoint
watchpoint
catchpoint
exec_catchpoint
...
The surprising part to me is having "base_breakpoint" being a subclass
of "breakpoint". I'm just refering to naming here -- I mean, you'd
expect that it would be the top level baseclass that would be called
"base".
Just flipping the names of breakpoint and base_breakpoint around
wouldn't be super great for us, IMO, given we think of every type of
*point as a breakpoint at the user visible level. E.g., "info
breakpoints" shows watchpoints, tracepoints, etc. So it makes to call
the top level class breakpoint.
Instead, I propose renaming base_breakpoint to code_breakpoint. The
previous patches made sure that all code breakpoints inherit from
base_breakpoint, so it's fitting. Also, "code breakpoint" contrasts
nicely with a watchpoint also being typically known as a "data
breakpoint".
After this commit, the resulting hierarchy looks like:
breakpoint
code_breakpoint
ordinary_breakpoint
internal_breakpoint
momentary_breakpoint
ada_catchpoint
exception_catchpoint
tracepoint
watchpoint
catchpoint
exec_catchpoint
...
... which makes a lot more sense to me.
I've left this patch as last in the series in case people want to
bikeshed on the naming.
"code" has a nice property that it's exactly as many letters as
"base", so this patch didn't require any reindentation. :-)
Change-Id: Id8dc06683a69fad80d88e674f65e826d6a4e3f66
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Test "set multiple-symbols on" creating multiple breakpoints
To look for code paths that lead to create_breakpoints_sal creating
multiple breakpoints, I ran the whole testsuite with this hack:
--- a/gdb/breakpoint.c
+++ b/gdb/breakpoint.c
@@ -8377,8 +8377,7 @@ create_breakpoints_sal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
int from_tty,
int enabled, int internal, unsigned flags)
{
- if (canonical->pre_expanded)
- gdb_assert (canonical->lsals.size () == 1);
+ gdb_assert (canonical->lsals.size () == 1);
surprisingly, the assert never failed...
The way to get to create_breakpoints_sal with multiple lsals is to use
"set multiple-symbols ask" and then select multiple options from the
menu, like so:
(gdb) set multiple-symbols ask
(gdb) b overload1arg
[0] cancel
[1] all
[2] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg()
[3] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(char)
[4] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(double)
[5] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(float)
[6] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(int)
[7] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(long)
[8] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(short)
[9] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(signed char)
[10] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned char)
[11] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned int)
[12] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned long)
[13] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned short)
> 2-3
Breakpoint 2 at 0x1532: file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc, line 107.
Breakpoint 3 at 0x154b: file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc, line 110.
warning: Multiple breakpoints were set.
Use the "delete" command to delete unwanted breakpoints.
... which would trigger the assert.
This commit makes gdb.cp/ovldbreak.exp test this scenario. It does
that by making set_bp_overloaded take a list of expected created
breakpoints rather than just one breakpoint. It converts the
procedure to use gdb_test_multiple instead of send_gdb/gdb_expect
along the way.
Change-Id: Id87d1e08feb6670440d926f5344e5081f5e37c8e
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make sure momentary breakpoints are always thread-specific
This adds a new ctor to momentary_breakpoints with a few parameters
that are always necessary for momentary breakpoints.
In particular, I noticed that set_std_terminate_breakpoint doesn't
make the breakpoint be thread specific, which looks like a bug to me.
The point of that breakpoint is to intercept std::terminate calls that
happen as result of the called thread throwing an exception that won't
be caught by the dummy frame. If some other thread calls
std::terminate, IMO, it's no different from some other thread calling
exit/_exit, for example.
Change-Id: Ifc5ff4a6d6e58b8c4854d00b86725382d38a1a02
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Momentary breakpoints should have no breakpoint number
Momentary breakpoints have no breakpoint number, their breakpoint
number should be always 0, to avoid constantly incrementing (or
decrementing) the internal breakpoint count.
Indeed, set_momentary_breakpoint installs the created breakpoint
without a number.
However, momentary_breakpoint_from_master incorrectly gives an
internal breakpoint number to the new breakpoint. This commit fixes
that.
Change-Id: Iedcae5432cdf232db9e9a6e1a646d358abd34f95
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Add/tweak intro comments of struct breakpoint and several subclasses
This tweaks the intro comments of the following classes:
internal_breakpoint
momentary_breakpoint
breakpoint
base_breakpoint
watchpoint
catchpoint
Change-Id: If6b31f51ebbb81705fbe5b8435f60ab2c88a98c8
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Move add_location(sal) to base_breakpoint
After the previous patches, only base_breakpoint subclasses use
add_location(sal), so we can move it to base_breakpoint (a.k.a. base
class for code breakpoints).
This requires a few casts here and there, but always at spots where
you can see from context what the breakpoint's type actually is.
I inlined new_single_step_breakpoint into its only caller exactly for
this reason.
I did try to propagate more use of base_breakpoint to avoid casts, but
that turned out unwieldy for this patch.
Change-Id: I49d959322b0fdce5a88a216bb44730fc5dd7c6f8
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Move common bits of catchpoint/exception_catchpoint to breakpoint's ctor
Move common bits of catchpoint and exception_catchpoint to
breakpoint's ctor, to avoid duplicating code.
Change-Id: I3a115180f4d496426522f1d89a3875026aea3cf2
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make catchpoint inherit breakpoint, eliminate init_raw_breakpoint
struct catchpoint's ctor currently calls init_raw_breakpoint, which is
a bit weird, as that ctor-like function takes a sal argument, but
catchpoints don't have code locations.
Instead, make struct catchpoint's ctor add the catchpoint's dummy
location using add_dummy_location.
init_raw_breakpoint uses add_location under the hood, and with a dummy
sal it would ultimately use the breakpoint's gdbarch for the
location's gdbarch, so replace the references to loc->gdbarch (which
is now NULL) in syscall_catchpoint to references to the catchpoint's
gdbarch.
struct catchpoint's ctor was the last user of init_raw_breakpoint, so
this commit eliminates the latter.
Since catchpoint locations aren't code locations, make struct
catchpoint inherit struct breakpoint instead of base_breakpoint. This
let's us delete the tracepoint::re_set override too.
Change-Id: Ib428bf71efb09fdaf399c56e4372b0f41d9c5869
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make breakpoint_address_bits look at the location kind
Software watchpoints allocate a special dummy location using
software_watchpoint_add_no_memory_location, and then
breakpoint_address_bits checks whether the location is that special
location to decide whether the location has a meaninful address to
print.
Introduce a new bp_loc_software_watchpoint location kind, and make
breakpoint_address_bits use bl_address_is_meaningful instead, which
returns false for bp_loc_other, which is in accordance with we
document for bp_location::address:
/* (... snip ...) Valid for all types except
bp_loc_other. */
CORE_ADDR address = 0;
Rename software_watchpoint_add_no_memory_location to
add_dummy_location, and simplify it. This will be used by catchpoints
too in a following patch.
Note that neither "info breakpoints" nor "maint info breakpoints"
actually prints the addresses of watchpoints, but I think it would be
useful to do so in "maint info breakpoints". This approach let's us
implement that in the future.
Change-Id: I50e398f66ef618c31ffa662da755eaba6295aed7
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make exception_catchpoint inherit base_breakpoint instead of catchpoint
exception_catchpoint is really a code breakpoint, with locations set
by sals, re-set like other code breakpoints, etc., so make it inherit
base_breakpoint.
This adds a bit of duplicated code to exception_catchpoint's ctor
(copied from struct catchpoint's ctor), but it will be eliminated in a
following patch.
Change-Id: I9fbb2927491120e9744a4f5e5cb5e6870ca07009
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Refactor momentary breakpoints, eliminate set_raw_breakpoint{,_without_location}
This commit makes set_momentary_breakpoint allocate the breakpoint
type without relying on set_raw_breakpoint, and similarly,
momentary_breakpoint_from_master not rely on
set_raw_breakpoint_without_location. This will let us convert
init_raw_breakpoint to a ctor in a following patch.
The comment about set_raw_breakpoint being used in gdbtk sources is
stale. gdbtk no longer uses it.
Change-Id: Ibbf77731e4b22e18ccebc1b5799bbec0aff28c8a
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Refactor set_internal_breakpoint / internal_breakpoint ctor
This moves initialization of internal_breakpoint's breakpoint fields
to internal_breakpoint's ctor, and stops using
new_breakpoint_from_type for internal_breakpoint breakpoints.
Change-Id: I898ed0565f47cb00e4429f1c6446e6f9a385a78d
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Convert init_ada_exception_catchpoint to a ctor
Currently, init_ada_exception_catchpoint is defined in breakpoint.c, I
presume so it can call the static describe_other_breakpoints function.
I think this is a dependency inversion.
init_ada_exception_catchpoint, being code specific to Ada catchpoints,
should be in ada-lang.c, and describe_other_breakpoints, a core
function, should be exported.
And then, we can convert init_ada_exception_catchpoint to an
ada_catchpoint ctor.
Change-Id: I07695572dabc5a75d3d3740fd9b95db1529406a1
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make ada_catchpoint_location's owner ctor parameter be ada_catchpoint
This commit changes ada_catchpoint_location's ctor from:
ada_catchpoint_location (breakpoint *owner)
to:
ada_catchpoint_location (ada_catchpoint *owner)
just to make the code better document intention.
To do this, we need to move the ada_catchpoint_location type's
definition to after ada_catchpoint is defined, otherwise the compiler
doesn't know that ada_catchpoint is convertible to struct breakpoint.
Change-Id: Id908b2e38bde30b262381e00c5637adb9bf0129d
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
init_breakpoint_sal -> base_breakpoint::base_breakpoint
This converts init_breakpoint_sal to a base_breakpoint constructor.
It removes a use of init_raw_breakpoint.
To avoid manually adding a bunch of parameters to
new_breakpoint_from_type, and manually passing them down to the
constructors of a number of different base_breakpoint subclasses, make
new_breakpoint_from_type a variable template function.
Change-Id: I4cc24133ac4c292f547289ec782fc78e5bbe2510
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Remove "internal" parameter from a couple functions
None of init_breakpoint_sal, create_breakpoint_sal, and
strace_marker_create_breakpoints_sal make use of their "internal"
parameter, so remove it.
Change-Id: I943f3bb44717ade7a7b7547edf8f3ff3c37da435
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
More breakpoint_ops parameter elimination
Remove breakpoint_ops parameters from a few functions that don't need
it.
Change-Id: Ifcf5e1cc688184acbf5e19b8ea60138ebe63cf28
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make a few functions work with base_breakpoint instead of breakpoint
This makes tracepoints inherit from base_breakpoint, since their
locations are code locations. If we do that, then we can eliminate
tracepoint::re_set and tracepoint::decode_location, as they are doing
the same as the base_breakpoint implementations.
With this, all breakpoint types created by new_breakpoint_from_type
are code breakpoints, i.e., base_breakpoint subclasses, and thus we
can make it return a base_breakpoint pointer.
Finally, init_breakpoint_sal can take a base_breakpoint pointer as
"self" pointer too. This will let us convert this function to a
base_breakpoint ctor in a following patch.
Change-Id: I3a4073ff1a4c865f525588095c18dc42b744cb54
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
ranged_breakpoint: move initialization to ctor
Move initialization of ranged_breakpoint's fields to its ctor.
Change-Id: If7b842861f3cc6a429ea329d45598b5852283ba3
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
ranged_breakpoint: use install_breakpoint
This commit replaces a chunk of code in break_range_command by an
equivalent call to install_breakpoint.
Change-Id: I31c06cabd36f5be91740aab029265f678aa78e35
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
ranged_breakpoint: don't use init_raw_breakpoint
ranged_breakpoint's ctor already sets the breakpoint's type to
bp_hardware_breakpoint.
Since this is a "regular" breakpoint, b->pspace should remain NULL.
Thus, the only thing init_raw_breakpoint is needed for, is to add the
breakpoint's location. Do that directly.
Change-Id: I1505de94c3919881c2b300437e2c0da9b05f76bd
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make structs breakpoint/base_breakpoint/catchpoint be abstract
You should never instanciate these types directly.
Change-Id: I8086c74c415eadbd44924bb0ef20f34b5b97ee6f
2022-05-20 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
add_location_to_breakpoint -> breakpoint::add_location
Make add_location_to_breakpoint be a method of struct breakpoint.
A patch later in the series will move this to base_breakpoint, but for
now, it needs to be here.
Change-Id: I5bdc2ec1a7c2d66f26f51bf6f6adc8384a90b129
2022-05-20 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC: Make test gdb.arch/powerpc-power10.exp Endian independent.
The .quad statement stores the 64-bit hex value in Endian order. When used
to store a 64-bit prefix instructions on Big Endian (BE) systems, the .quad
statement stores the 32-bit suffix followed by the 32-bit prefix rather
than the expected order of prefix word followed by the suffix word. GDB
fetches 32-bits at a time when disassembling instructions. The disassembly
on BE gets messed up since GDB fetches the suffix first and interprets it
as a word instruction not a prefixed instruction. When gdb fetches the
prefix part of the instruction, following the initial suffix word, gdb
associates the prefix word incorrectly with the following 32-bits as the
suffix for the instruction when in fact it is the following instruction.
For example on BE we have two prefixed instructions stored using the
.quad statement as follows:
addr word GDB action
---------------------------------------------
1 suffix inst A <- GDB interprets as a word instruction
2 prefix inst A <- GDB uses this prefix with
3 suffix inst B <- this suffix rather than the suffix at addr 1.
4 prefix inst B
This patch changes the .quad statement into two .longs to explicitly store
the prefix followed by the suffix of the instruction.
The patch rearranges the instructions to put all of the word instructions
together followed by the prefix instructions for clarity.
The patch has been tested on Power 10 and Power 7 BE and LE to verify
the change works as expected.
2022-05-20 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove obsolete text from documentation
The documentation says that -enable-pretty-printing is experimental in
7.0 and may change -- that's long enough ago that I think we can say
that this text is no longer correct or useful.
2022-05-20 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop readekf and objdump from aggressively following links.
* dwarf.c (dwarf_select_sections_by_names): Return zero if no
sections were selected.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Likewise.
* dwarf.h: (dwarf_select_sections_by_names): Update prototype.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Update prototype.
* objdump.c (might_need_separate_debug_info): New function.
(dump_bfd): Call new function before attempting to load separate
debug info files.
(main): Do not enable dwarf section dumping for -WK or -WN.
* readelf.c (parse_args): Do not enable dwarf section dumping for
-wK or -wN.
(might_need_separate_debug_info): New function.
(process_object): Call new function before attempting to load
separate debug info files.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfo.exp: Expect -WE and -wE
debuginfod tests to pass.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.Wk: Add extra regexps.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.k: Add extra regexps.
2022-05-20 Jia-Wei Chen <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Update zfinx implement with zicsr.
Update zfinx implement with zicsr, fix missing fcsr use by zfinx.
add zicsr imply by zfinx.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c: New imply.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-pseudo-zfinx.d: New test.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c: Update insn class.
2022-05-20 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Remove RV128-only fmv instructions
As fmv.x.q and fmv.q.x instructions are RV128-only (not RV64-only),
it should be removed until RV128 support for GNU Binutils is required
again.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fmv.x.q-rv64-fail.d: New failure test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fmv.x.q-rv64-fail.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fmv.x.q-rv64-fail.s: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (MATCH_FMV_X_Q, MASK_FMV_X_Q,
MATCH_FMV_Q_X, MASK_FMV_Q_X): Remove RV128-only instructions.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Remove RV128-only instructions.
2022-05-20 Aditya Vidyadhar Kamath <ADITYA.VIDYADHAR.KAMATH@ibm.com>
Fix non-pointer type compilation error in aix-thread.c
In aix-thread.c we use ms->value_address () to get the symbol address.
This triggers the following compiler error...
base operand of '->' has non-pointer type 'bound_minimal_symbol'
... because ms is not a pointer.
This commit fixes this error by using ms.value_address () instead.
2022-05-20 Steinar H. Gunderson <sesse@google.com>
add a trie to map quickly from address range to compilation unit
When using perf to profile large binaries, _bfd_dwarf2_find_nearest_line()
becomes a hotspot, as perf wants to get line number information
(for inline-detection purposes) for each and every sample. In Chromium
in particular (the content_shell binary), this entails going through
475k address ranges, which takes a long time when done repeatedly.
Add a radix-256 trie over the address space to quickly map address to
compilation unit spaces; for content_shell, which is 1.6 GB when some
(but not full) debug information turned is on, we go from 6 ms to
0.006 ms (6 µs) for each lookup from address to compilation unit, a 1000x
speedup.
There is a modest RAM increase of 180 MB in this binary (the existing
linked list over ranges uses about 10 MB, and the entire perf job uses
between 23 GB for a medium-size profile); for smaller binaries with few
ranges, there should be hardly any extra RAM usage at all.
2022-05-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Tidy warn-execstack handling
Make ld and bfd values consistent by swapping values 0 and 2 in
link_info.warn_execstack. This has the benefit of making the value an
"extended" boolean, with 0 meaning no warning, 1 meaning warn, other
values a conditional warning.
Yes, this patch introduces fails on arm/aarch64. Not a problem with
this patch but an arm/aarch64 before_parse problem.
bfd/
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Adjust
warn_execstack test.
include/
* bfdlink.h (warn_execstack): Swap 0 and 2 meaning.
ld/
* configure.ac (DEFAULT_LD_WARN_EXECSTACK): Use values of 0,
1, 2 consistent with link_info.warn_execstack.
* ld.texi: Typo fixes.
* lexsup.c (parse_args): Adjust setting of link_info.warn_execstack.
(elf_static_list_options): Adjust help message conditions.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-05-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-19 Srinath Parvathaneni <srinath.parvathaneni@arm.com>
arm: Fix system register fpcxt_ns and fpcxt_s naming convention.
The current assembler accepts system registers FPCXTNS and FPCXTS for Armv8.1-M
Mainline Instructions VSTR, VLDR, VMRS and VMSR.
Assembler should be also allowing FPCXT_NS, fpcxt_ns, fpcxtns, FPCXT_S, fpcxt_s
and fpcxts. This patch fixes the issue.
2022-05-19 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: use @value{GDBP} in 'info pretty-printer' example
Update the 'info pretty-printer' example in the manual to make use of
@value{GDBP} instead of hard-coding '(gdb)'.
2022-05-19 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: make use of group/end group in 'info pretty-printers' example
The 'info pretty-printers' example is pretty long and consists of many
commands and their output.
Currently, when the pdf manual is generated this example spans a
page-break, with the page-break falling part way through some example
output from GDB.
This commit breaks up the example using @group .... @end group, within
each group is a single GDB command and all its output.
Now, when the pdf manual is created, the page-break is placed after
the output of one GDB command, and before the subsequent command, this
looks much nicer.
2022-05-19 Nikolaos Chatzikonstantinou <nchatz314@gmail.com>
gdb/doc: fix inconsistent info pretty-printer example
The example for 'info pretty-printer' in the manual passes an
object-regexp in some cases, but presents output as though no
object-regexp was passed.
This commit fixes the two mistakes, in one case, fixing the output to
filter based on object-regexp, and in the other, to remove the
object-regexp from the command and leave all the output.
2022-05-19 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix potentially uninitialised variables in the Windows tools
2022-05-19 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: Support displaced stepping on LoongArch
When execute the following command on LoongArch:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/async-shell.exp"
we can see the following message in gdb/testsuite/gdb.sum:
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: displaced stepping
modify support_displaced_stepping to support displaced stepping
on LoongArch.
With this patch:
PASS: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: run &
PASS: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: shell echo foo
PASS: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: interrupt
PASS: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: process stopped
I did the following tests that use support_displaced_stepping
with this patch on LoongArch, there is no failed testcases.
loongson@linux:~/gdb.git$ grep -r support_displaced_stepping gdb/testsuite/gdb.*
gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/disp-step-insn-reloc.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/step-over-no-symbols.exp: if { $displaced != "off" && ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/moribund-step.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/async-shell.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/inferior-died.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp: if {$displaced == "on" && ![support_displaced_stepping]} {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-watch-nonstop.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-ns-stale-regcache.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nonstop.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nsmoribund.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nsintrall.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nsthrexec.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nonstop-exit.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/watchpoint-multi.exp:if [support_displaced_stepping] {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-evthreads.exp:if { ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/step-over-lands-on-breakpoint.exp: if { $displaced != "off" && ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/interrupt-while-step-over.exp: if { ${displaced-stepping} != "off" && ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/step-over-trips-on-watchpoint.exp: if { $displaced != "off" && ![support_displaced_stepping] } {
2022-05-19 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: fix path_join crash with -std=c++17 and -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG
When building GDB with -std=c++17 and -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG=1, I get:
$ ./gdb -nx --data-directory=data-directory -q -ex "maint selftest path_join"
/usr/include/c++/11.2.0/string_view:233: constexpr const value_type& std::basic_string_view<_CharT, _Traits>::operator[](std::basic_string_view<_CharT, _Traits>::size_type) const [with _CharT = char; _Traits = std::char_traits<char>; std::basic_string_view<_CharT, _Traits>::const_reference = const char&; std::basic_string_view<_CharT, _Traits>::size_type = long unsigned int]: Assertion '__pos < this->_M_len' failed.
The problem is that we're passing an empty string_view to
IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH. IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH accesses [0] on that string_view,
which is out-of-bounds.
The reason this is not seen with -std less than c++17 is that our local
copy of string_view (used with C++ < 17) does not have the assert in
operator[], as that wouldn't work in a constexpr method:
https://gitlab.com/gnutools/binutils-gdb/-/blob/5890af36e5112bcbb8d7555e63570f68466e6944/gdbsupport/gdb_string_view.h#L180
IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH is normally used with null-terminated string. It's
fine to pass an empty null-terminated string to IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH,
because index 0 in such a string is valid. But not with an empty
string_view.
Fix that by avoiding the "call" to IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH if the string_view
is empty.
Change-Id: Idf4df961b63f513b3389235e93814c02b89ea32e
2022-05-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
Arm64: force emission of ILP32-dependent relocs
Like the placeholder types added in 04dfe7aa5217 ("Arm64: follow-on to
PR gas/27217 fix"), these are also placeholders which are subsequently
resolved (albeit later, hence this being a separate issue). As for the
resolved types 1 is returned, these pseudo-relocs should also have 1
returned to force retaining of the [eventual] relocations. This is also
spelled out individually for each of them in md_apply_fix().
2022-05-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
COFF: use hash for string table also when copying / stripping
Otherwise the string table may grow and hence e.g. change a final binary
(observed with PE/COFF ones) even if really there's no change. Doing so
in fact reduces the overall amount of code, and in particular the number
of places which need to remain in sync.
Afaics there's no real equivalent to the "traditional_format" field used
when linking, so hashing is always enabled when copying / stripping.
2022-05-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
COFF/PE: keep linker version during objcopy / strip
Neither of the tools is really a linker, so whatever was originally
recorded should be retained rather than being overwritten by these
tools' versions.
COFF/PE: don't leave zero timestamp after objcopy / strip
Fill the timestamp field suitably for _bfd_XXi_only_swap_filehdr_out().
Instead of re-arranging the present if(), fold this logic with that of
copying the optional header.
2022-05-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
COFF: make objcopy / strip honor --keep-file-symbols
So far this option had no effect when used together with e.g.
--strip-debug. Set BSF_FILE on these symbols to change that.
While altering this also join two adjacent blocks of case labeled
statements with identical code.
2022-05-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
don't over-align file positions of PE executable sections
When a sufficiently small alignment was specified via --file-alignment,
individual section alignment shouldn't affect placement within the file.
This involves first of all clearing D_PAGED for images when section and
file alignment together don't permit paging of the image. The involved
comparison against COFF_PAGE_SIZE in turn helped point out (through a
compiler warning) that 'page_size' should be of unsigned type (as in
particular FileAlignment is). This yet in turn pointed out a dubious
error condition (which is being deleted).
For the D_PAGED case I think the enforced file alignment may still be
too high, but I'm wary of changing that logic without knowing of
possible corner cases.
Furthermore file positions in PE should be independent of the alignment
recorded in section headers anyway. Otherwise there are e.g. anomalies
following commit 6f8f6017a0c4 ("PR27567, Linking PE files adds alignment
section flags to executables") in that linking would use information a
subsequent processing step (e.g. stripping) wouldn't have available
anymore, and hence a binary could change in that 2nd step for no actual
reason. (Similarly stripping a binary linked with a linker pre-dating
that commit would change the binary again when stripping it a 2nd time.)
2022-05-19 Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
_bfd_real_fopen should not use ccs parameter on Windows
PR 25713
* bfdio.c (_bfd_real_fopen): Delete ccs string.
2022-05-19 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix canonical extension order (K and J)
This commit fixes canonical extension order to follow the RISC-V ISA
Manual draft-20210402-1271737 or later.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_recognized_prefixed_ext): Fix "K" extension
prefix to be placed before "J".
2022-05-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-18 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Use aarch64_features to describe register features in target descriptions.
Replace the sve bool member of aarch64_features with a vq member that
holds the vector quotient. It is zero if SVE is not present.
Add std::hash<> specialization and operator== so that aarch64_features
can be used as a key with std::unordered_map<>.
Change the various functions that create or lookup aarch64 target
descriptions to accept a const aarch64_features object rather than a
growing number of arguments.
Replace the multi-dimension tdesc_aarch64_list arrays used to cache
target descriptions with unordered_maps indexed by aarch64_feature.
2022-05-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
Arm64: follow-on to PR gas/27217 fix
PR gas/27217
Prior to trying to address PR gas/28888 I noticed anomalies in how
certain insns would / wouldn't be affected in similar ways.
Commit eac4eb8ecb26 ("Fix a problem assembling AArch64 sources when a
relocation is generated against a symbol that has a defined value") had
two copy-and-paste mistakes, passing the wrong type to
aarch64_force_reloc().
It further failed to add placeholder relocation types to that function's
block of case labels leading to a return of 1. While not of interest for
aarch64_force_relocation() (these placeholders are resolved right in
parse_operands()), calls to aarch64_force_reloc() happen before that
resolution would take place.
2022-05-18 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix compile time warning building gold with Clang-14.
* int_encoding.cc (get_length_as_unsigned_LEB_128): Remove
current_length variable.
2022-05-18 Victor Do Nascimento <victor.donascimento@arm.com>
oops - forgot changelog entry for the previous delta.
arm: Add unwind support for mixed register lists
* config/tc-arm.c (parse_reg_list): Add handling of mixed register
types.
(reg_names): Enumerate pseudoregister according to mapped physical
register number.
(s_arm_unwind_save_pseudo): Modify function signature.
(s_arm_unwind_save_core): Likewise.
(s_arm_unwind_save_mixed): New function.
(s_arm_unwind_save): Generate register list mask to pass to nested
functions.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.s: Expand test for mixed
register type lists.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m-readelf.d: Likewise.
2022-05-18 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC: bp-permanent.exp, kill-after-signal fix
Fix changes that didn't make it into commit:
dd9cd55e990bcc9f8448cac38d242d53974b3604.
Fix missing -wrap on gdb_test_multiple in gdb.base/kill-after-signal.exp
that is causing regression test on x86_64-linux with taskset -c 0.
2022-05-18 Yichao Yu <yyc1992@gmail.com>
[AArch64] Return the regnum for PC (32) on aarch64
This will allow the unwind info to explicitly specify a different value
for the return address from the link register.
Such usage, although uncommon, is valid and useful for signal frames.
It is also supported by aadwarf64 from ARM (Note 9 in [1]).
Ref https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2022-May/050091.html
[1] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/2022Q1/aadwarf64/aadwarf64.rst#dwarf-register-names
2022-05-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: shrink op_riprel
It is only ever initialized from a boolean, so it as well as related
variables' types can simply be bool and there's no masking to 32 bits
needed in set_op().
2022-05-18 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add a --no-weak option to nm.
PR 29135
* nm.c (non_weak): New variable.
(filter_symbols): When non-weak is true, ignore weak symbols.
(long_options): Add --no-weak.
(usage): Mention --no-weak.
(main): Handle -W/--no-weak.
* doc/binutils.texi: Document new feature.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* testsuite/binutils-all/nm.exp: Add test of new feature.
* testsuite/binutils-all/no-weak.s: New test source file.
2022-05-18 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Support -prompt and -lbl in gdb_test
This teaches gdb_test to forward the -prompt and -lbl options to
gdb_test_multiple.
The option parsing is done with parse_args.
As a cleanup, instead of using llength and lindex to get at the
positional arguments, use lassign, and check whether the corresponding
variable is empty.
Convert gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp and gdb.xml/tdesc-reload.exp to use
gdb_test -prompt/-lbl instead of gdb_test_multiple as examples.
Change-Id: I243e1296d32c05a421ccef30b63d43a89eaeb4a0
2022-05-18 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Remove unused DWARF PAUTH registers
The AARCH64_DWARF_PAUTH_DMASK and AARCH64_DWARF_PAUTH_CMASK DWARF registers
never made their way into the aadwarf64. The following patch removes these
constants and their use.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26295
2022-05-18 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Rename PAUTH_RA_STATE to RA_SIGN_STATE
The aadwarf64 [1] names this register RA_SIGN_STATE, so update the code to use
the same name.
[1] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aadwarf64/aadwarf64.rst
2022-05-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Simplify unknown lang testing in gdb.base/parse_number.exp
Move testing of language unknown out of the $supported_archs loop in
gdb.base/parse_number.exp. This reduces total amount of tests from 18466 to
17744.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use hex_for_lang in gdb.base/parse_number.exp
In gdb.base/parse_number.exp, add a new proc hex_for_lang that formats a hex
number appropriately for a given language.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Add gdb/syscalls/update-linux-from-src.sh
Add a new script gdb/syscalls/update-linux-from-src.sh, that can be used to
generate *-linux.xml.in files from linux kernel sources, like so:
...
$ ./update-linux-from-src.sh ~/upstream/linux-stable.git
Skipping aarch64-linux.xml.in, no syscall.tbl
Generating amd64-linux.xml.in
Skipping arm-linux.xml.in, use arm-linux.py instead
Skipping bfin-linux.xml.in, no longer supported
Generating i386-linux.xml.in
Generating mips-n32-linux.xml.in
Generating mips-n64-linux.xml.in
Generating mips-o32-linux.xml.in
Generating ppc64-linux.xml.in
Generating ppc-linux.xml.in
Generating s390-linux.xml.in
Generating s390x-linux.xml.in
Generating sparc64-linux.xml.in
Generating sparc-linux.xml.in
...
Update *-linux.xml.in and *-linux.xml using linux kernel tag v5.18-rc6.
2022-05-18 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
AArch64: Enable FP16 by default for Armv9-A.
In Armv9-A SVE is mandatory, and for SVE FP16 is mandatory. This fixes a disconnect
between GCC and binutils where GCC has FP16 on by default and gas doesn't.
include/ChangeLog:
2022-05-16 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_ARCH_V9_FEATURES): Add AARCH64_FEATURE_F16.
2022-05-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: avoid octal numbers being accepted when processing .linefile
Compilers would put decimal numbers there, so I think we should treat
finding octal numbers the same as finding bignums - ignore them as
actually being comments of some very specific form.
2022-05-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: avoid bignum related errors when processing .linefile
Any construct which to the scrubber looks like a C preprocessor
line/file "directive" is converted to .linefile, but the amount of
checking the scrubber does is minimal (albeit it does let through only
decimal digits for the line part of the contruct). Since the scrubber
conversion is further tied to # being a line comment character, anything
which upon closer inspection turns out not to be a line/file "directive"
is supposed to be treated as a comment, i.e. ignored. Therefore we
cannot use get_absolute_expression(), as this may raise errors. Open-
code the function instead, treating everything not resulting in
O_constant as a comment as well.
Furthermore also bounds-check the parsed value. This bounds check tries
to avoid implementation defined behavior (which may be the raising of an
implementation defined signal), but for now makes the assumption that
int has less than 64 bits. The way bfd_signed_vma (which is what offsetT
aliases) is defined in bfd.h for the BFD64 case I cannot really see a
clean way of avoiding this assumption. Omitting the #ifdef, otoh, would
risk "condition is always false" warnings by compilers.
Convert get_linefile_number() to return bool at this occasion as well.
2022-05-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: fold do_repeat{,_with_expander}()
do_repeat_with_expander() already deals with the "no expander" case
quite fine, so there's really little point having two functions. What it
lacks compared with do_repeat() is a call to sb_build(), which can
simply be moved (and the then redundant sb_new() be avoided). Along with
this moving also flip if the main if()'s condition such that the "no
expander" case is handled first.
gas: don't ignore .linefile inside false conditionals
When assembling code previously pre-processed by a C compiler, long
enough comments may have been collapsed into "# <line> <file>"
constructs. If we skip these, line numbers (and possibly even file
names) will be off / wrong in both diagnostics and debug info.
gas: simplify ignore_input()
First of all convert to switch(), in preparation of adding another
directive here which may not be ignored. While doing so drop dead code:
A string the first two characters of which do not match "if" also wont
match "ifdef" or "ifndef".
gas: tweak .irp and alike file/line handling for M68K/MRI
In commit 2ee1792bec22 ("gas: further adjust file/line handling for .irp
and alike") I neglected the need to omit the leading . in M68K/MRI mode.
2022-05-18 Xi Ruoyao <xry111@mengyan1223.wang>
gold: don't invoke IA32 syscall in x86_64 assembly testcase
pr17704a_test.s is a x86_64 assembly file, but it invokes IA32 exit
syscall with "int 0x80". This causes a segfault on kernels with
CONFIG_IA32_EMULATION disabled.
gold/
* testsuite/pr17704a_test.s (_start): Invoke x86_64 exit syscall
instead of its IA32 counterpart.
2022-05-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-17 Nikolaos Chatzikonstantinou <nchatz314@gmail.com>
Fix typo in info page
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdb.python/py-connection.exp with remote targets
After the patch to make gdb_test's question non-optional when
specified, gdb.python/py-connection.exp started failing like so:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.python/py-connection.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
(gdb) PASS: gdb.python/py-connection.exp: info connections while the connection is still around
disconnect^M
Ending remote debugging.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.python/py-connection.exp: kill the inferior
The problem is that "disconnect" when debugging with the native target
asks the user whether to kill the program, while with remote targets,
it doesn't.
Fix it by explicitly killing before disconnecting.
Tested with --target_board unix, native-gdbserver, and native-extended-gdbserver.
Change-Id: Icd85015c76deb84b71894715d43853c1087eba0b
2022-05-17 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
gdb, btrace: Throw an error for empty recordings when replaying starts.
This makes record_btrace_start_replaying() more consistent, as it already
errors out e.g. on a recording with only gaps.
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make gdb_test's question non-optional if specified
gdb_test supports handling scenarios where GDB asks a question before
finishing handling some command. The full prototype of gdb_test is:
# gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN MESSAGE QUESTION RESPONSE
However, QUESTION is a question that GDB _may_ ask, not one that GDB
_must_ ask:
# QUESTION is a question GDB may ask in response to COMMAND, like
# "are you sure?"
# RESPONSE is the response to send if QUESTION appears.
If GDB doesn't raise the question, the test still passes.
I think that this is a misfeature. If GDB regresses and stops asking
a question, the testsuite won't notice. So I think that if a QUESTION
is specified, gdb_test should ensure it comes out of GDB.
Running the testsuite exposed a number of tests that pass
QUESTION/RESPONSE to GDB, but no question comes out. The previous
commits fixed them all, so this commit changes gdb_test's behavior.
A related issue is that gdb_test doesn't enforce that if you specify
QUESTION, that you also specify RESPONSE. I.e., you should pass 1, 2,
3, or 5 arguments to gdb_test, but never 4, or more than 5. Making
gdb_test detect bogus arguments actually regressed some testcases,
also all fixed in previous commits.
Change-Id: I47c39c9034e6a6841129312037a5ca4c5811f0db
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb.base/skip.exp: Don't abuse gdb_test's question support
gdb.base/skip.exp abuses gdb_test's support for answering a GDB
question to do this:
# With gcc 9.2.0 we jump once back to main before entering foo here.
# If that happens try to step a second time.
gdb_test "step" "foo \\(\\) at.*" "step 3" \
"main \\(\\) at .*\r\n$gdb_prompt " "step"
After a patch later in this series, gdb_test will FAIL if GDB does NOT
issue the question, so this test would start failing on older GCCs.
Switch to using gdb_test_multiple instead. There are three spots in
the file that have the same pattern, and they're actually in a
sequence of commands that is repeated those 3 times. Factor all that
out to a procedure.
I don't have gcc 9.2 handy, but I do have gcc 6.5, and that one is
affected as well, so update the comment.
Change-Id: If0a7e3cdf5191b4eec95ce0c8845c3a4d801c39e
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Avoid having to unload file in gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp
gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp's connect_no_symbol_file
does:
gdb_test "file" ".*" "discard symbol table" \
{Discard symbol table from `.*'\? \(y or n\) } "y"
A following patch will make gdb_test expect the question out of GDB if
one is passed down as argument to gdb_test. With that, this test
starts failing. This is because connect_no_symbol_file is called in a
loop, and the first time around, there's a loaded file, so "file" asks
the "Discard symbol table ... ?" question, while in the following
iterations there's no file, so there's no question.
Fix this by not loading a file into GDB in the first place.
Change-Id: I810c036b57842c4c5b47faf340466b0d446d1abc
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix bogus gdb_test invocations
A following patch will make gdb_test error out if bogus arguments are
passed, which exposed bugs in a few testcases:
- gdb.python/py-parameter.exp, passing a spurious "1" as extra
parameter, resulting in:
ERROR: Unexpected arguments: {set test-file-param bar.txt} {The name of the file has been changed to bar.txt} {set new file parameter} 1
- gdb.python/py-xmethods.exp, a missing test message, resulting in
the next gdb_test being interpreted as message, question and
response! With the enforcing patch, this was caught with:
ERROR: Unexpected arguments: {p g.mul<char>('a')} {From Python G<>::mul.*} gdb_test {p g_ptr->mul<char>('a')} {From Python G<>::mul.*} {after: g_ptr->mul<char>('a')}
- gdb.base/pointers.exp, missing a quote.
Change-Id: I66f2db4412025a64121db7347dfb0b48240d46d4
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb.base/scope.exp: Remove bogus gdb_test questions
This test is abusing the QUESTION/RESPONSE feature to send an
alternative command to GDB if the first command fails. Like so:
gdb_test "print 'scope0.c'::filelocal" \
"\\\$$decimal = 1" "print 'scope0.c'::filelocal at main" \
"No symbol \"scope0.c\" in current context.*" \
"print '$srcdir/$subdir/scope0.c'::filelocal"
So if 'scope0.c' doesn't work, we try again with
'$srcdir/$subdir/scope0.c'. I strongly suspect this is really an
obsolete test. I think that if '$srcdir/$subdir/scope0.c' works, then
'scope0.c' should have worked too, thus I'd think that if we pass due
to the question path, then it's a bug. So just remove the question
part passed to gdb_test.
Change-Id: I2acc99285f1d519284051b49693b5441fbdfe3cd
2022-05-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Remove gdb_test questions that GDB doesn't ask
Change-Id: Ib2616dc883e9dc9ee100f6c86d83a921a0113c16
2022-05-17 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Added half-precision floating-point v1.0 instructions.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Added implicit f
and zicsr for zfh.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added default v1.0 version for zfh.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Handle INSN_CLASS_ZFH,
INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH and INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (FLT_CHARS): Added "hH".
(macro): Expand Pseudo M_FLH and M_FSH.
(riscv_pseudo_table): Added .float16 directive.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/float16-be.d: New testcase for .float16.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/float16-le.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/float16.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zfh-insns.d: New testcase for zfh.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zfh-insns.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Added MASK and MATCH encodings for zfh.
* opcode/riscv.h: Added INSN_CLASS and pseudo macros for zfh.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Added zfh instructions.
2022-05-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-16 Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com>
IBM zSystems: Fix left-shifting negative PCRel32 values (PR gas/29152)
s390_insert_operand ()'s val, min and max are encoded PCRel32 values
and need to be left-shifted by 1 before being shown to the user.
Left-shifting negative values is undefined behavior in C, but the
current code does not try to prevent it, causing UBSan to complain.
Fix by casting the values to their unsigned equivalents before
shifting.
2022-05-16 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Reindent gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:handle_file_event
The handle_file_event function has a few unnecessary {} lexical
blocks, presumably because they were originally if blocks, and the
conditions were removed, or something along those lines.
Remove the unnecessary blocks, and reindent.
Change-Id: Iaecbe5c9f4940a80b81dbbc42e51ce506f6aafb2
2022-05-16 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbsupport/event-loop.cc: simplify !HAVE_POLL paths
gdbsupport/event-loop.cc throughout handles the case of use_poll being
true on a system where HAVE_POLL is not defined, by calling
internal_error if that situation ever happens.
Simplify this by moving the "use_poll" global itself under HAVE_POLL,
so that it's way more unlikely to ever end up in such a situation.
Then, move the code that checks the value of use_poll under HAVE_POLL
too, and remove the internal_error calls. Like, from:
if (use_poll)
{
#ifdef HAVE_POLL
// poll code
#else
internal_error (....);
#endif /* HAVE_POLL */
}
else
{
// select code
}
to
#ifdef HAVE_POLL
if (use_poll)
{
// poll code
}
else
#endif /* HAVE_POLL */
{
// select code
}
While at it, make use_poll be a bool. The current code is using
unsigned char most probably to save space, but I don't think it really
matters here.
Co-Authored-By: Youling Tang <tangyouling@loongson.cn>
Change-Id: I0dd74fdd4d393ccd057906df4cd75e8e83c1cdb4
2022-05-16 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
gdb: Fix typo in last change in gdb.texinfo
gdb: Document the 'metadata' styling in GDB displays.
The 'metadata' styling was never documented in the GDB manual.
This fills that gap.
2022-05-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Ada exception regression on Windows
The breakpoint c++-ification series introduced another bug in Ada --
it caused "catch exception" and related commands to fail on Windows.
The problem is that the re_set method calls the wrong superclass
method, so the breakpoint doesn't get correctly re-set when the
runtime offsets change. This patch fixes the problem.
2022-05-16 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix "continue outside of loop" TCL errors
Many test cases had a few lines in the beginning that look like:
if { condition } {
continue
}
Where conditions varied, but were mostly in the form of ![runto_main] or
[skip_*_tests], making it quite clear that this code block was supposed
to finish the test if it entered the code block. This generates TCL
errors, as most of these tests are not inside loops. All cases on which
this was an obvious mistake are changed in this patch.
2022-05-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-13 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove unused field cooked_index::m_start
cooked_index::m_start is unused and can be removed. I think this was
a leftover from a previous approach in the index finalization code,
and then when rewriting it I forgot to remove it.
Tested by rebuilding.
2022-05-13 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement pid_to_exec_file for Windows in gdbserver
I noticed that gdbserver did not implement pid_to_exec_file for
Windows, while gdb did implement it. This patch moves the code to
nat/windows-nat.c, so that it can be shared. This makes the gdbserver
implementation trivial.
Remove windows_process_info::id
I noticed that windows_process_info::id is only used by gdbserver, and
not really necessary. This patch removes it.
Constify target_pid_to_exec_file
This changes target_pid_to_exec_file and target_ops::pid_to_exec_file
to return a "const char *". I couldn't build many of these targets,
but did examine the code by hand -- also, as this only affects the
return type, it's normally pretty safe. This brings gdb and gdbserver
a bit closer, and allows for the removal of a const_cast as well.
Put corefile-run.core into test subdirectory
I noticed that corefile-run.core ends up in the 'runtest' directory.
It's better, when at all possible, for test files to end up in the
test's designated subdirectory. This patch makes this change.
2022-05-13 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Do not double-read minimal symbols for PE COFF
This changes coffread.c to avoid re-reading minimal symbols when
possible. This only works when there are no COFF symbols to be read,
but at least for my mingw builds of gdb, this seems to be the case.
Tested using the AdaCore internal test suite on Windows. I also did
some local builds to ensure that no warnings crept in.
2022-05-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix "gdb --write" with core files
If you load a core file into GDB with the --write option, or "set
write on" (equivalent), and then poke memory expecting it to patch the
core binary, you'll notice something odd -- the write seems to
succeed, but in reality, it doesn't. The value you wrote doesn't
persist. Like so:
$ gdb -q --write -c testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/patch/gcore.test
[New LWP 615986]
Core was generated by `/home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/patch/patch'.
Program terminated with signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
#0 0x0000555555555131 in ?? ()
(gdb) p *(unsigned char *)0x0000555555555131 = 1
$1 = 1 '\001'
(gdb) p *(unsigned char *)0x0000555555555131
$2 = 185 '\271'
(gdb)
Diffing hexdumps of before/after patching, reveals that a "0x1" was
actually written somewhere in the file. The problem is that the "0x1"
was written at the wrong offset in the file...
That happens because _bfd_elf_set_section_contents does this to seek
to the section's offset:
pos = hdr->sh_offset + offset;
if (bfd_seek (abfd, pos, SEEK_SET) != 0
|| bfd_bwrite (location, count, abfd) != count)
return false;
... and 'hdr->sh_offset' is zero, so we seek to just OFFSET, which is
incorrect. The reason 'hdr->sh_offset' is zero is that
kernel-generated core files normally don't even have a section header
table (gdb-generated ones do, but that's more an accident than a
feature), and indeed elf_core_file_p doesn't even try to read sections
at all:
/* Core files are simply standard ELF formatted files that partition
the file using the execution view of the file (program header table)
rather than the linking view. In fact, there is no section header
table in a core file.
The process status information (including the contents of the general
register set) and the floating point register set are stored in a
segment of type PT_NOTE. We handcraft a couple of extra bfd sections
that allow standard bfd access to the general registers (.reg) and the
floating point registers (.reg2). */
bfd_cleanup
elf_core_file_p (bfd *abfd)
Changing _bfd_elf_set_section_contents from:
pos = hdr->sh_offset + offset;
to:
pos = section->filepos + offset;
fixes it. If we do that however, the tail end of
_bfd_elf_set_section_contents ends up as a copy of
_bfd_generic_set_section_contents, so just call the latter, thus
eliminating some duplicate code.
New GDB testcase included, which exercises both patching an executable
and patching a core file. Patching an executable already works
without this fix, because in that case BFD reads in the sections
table. Still, we had no testcase for that yet. In fact, we have no
"set write on" testcases at all, this is the first one.
Tested on x86-64 GNU/Linux, gdb, ld, binutils, and gas.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18227
Change-Id: I0f49f58b48aabab2e269f2959b8fd8a7fe36fdce
2022-05-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Import libiberty from gcc
sim: remove use of PTR
PTR will soon disappear from ansidecl.h. Remove uses in sim. Where
a PTR cast is used in assignment or function args to a void* I've
simply removed the unnecessary (in C) cast rather than replacing with
(void *).
2022-05-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gdb: remove use of PTR
PTR will disappear from ansidecl.h and libiberty on the next import
from gcc. Remove current uses in gdb.
2022-05-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.cp/break-f-std-string.cc with older gcc
When running test-case gdb.cp/break-f-std-string.exp on openSUSE Leap 15.3
with system gcc 7.5.0, I run into:
...
(gdb) whatis /r std::string^M
No symbol "string" in namespace "std".^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.cp/break-f-std-string.exp: _GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1: \
whatis /r std::string
...
The same for gcc 8.2.1, but it passes with gcc 9.3.1.
At source level (as we can observe in the .ii file with -save-temps) we have
indeed:
...
namespace std {
namespace __cxx11 {
typedef basic_string<char> string;
}
}
...
while with gcc 9.3.1, we have instead:
...
namespace std {
namespace __cxx11 {
...
}
typedef basic_string<char> string;
}
...
due to gcc commit 33b43b0d8cd ("Define std::string and related typedefs
outside __cxx11 namespace").
Fix this by adding the missing typedef for gcc version 5 (the first version to
have the dual abi) to 8 (the last version missing aforementioned gcc commit).
Tested on x86_64-linux, with:
- system gcc 7.5.0
- gcc 4.8.5, 8.2.1, 9.3.1, 10.3.0, 11.2.1
- clang 8.0.1, 12.0.1
2022-05-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix an illegal memory access when creating DLLs.
PR 29006
* pe-dll.c (dll_name): Delete, replacing with..
(dll_filename): ..this, moved earlier in file.
(generate_edata): Delete parameters. Don't set up dll_name here..
(pe_process_import_defs): ..instead set up dll_filename and
dll_symname here before returning.
(dll_symname_len): Delete write-only variable.
(pe_dll_generate_implib): Don't set up dll_symname here.
2022-05-12 Mark Wielaard <mark@klomp.org>
gdb: Workaround stringop-overread warning in debuginfod-support.c on powerpc64
Just like on s390x with g++ 11.2.1, ppc64le with g++ 11.3.1 produces a
spurious warning for stringop-overread in debuginfod_is_enabled
for url_view. Also suppress it on powerpc64.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* debuginfod-support.c (debuginfod_is_enabled): Use
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD on powerpc64.
2022-05-12 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Make gdb.ada/float-bits.exp more generic
There are assumptions in the test about the long double format
being used. While the results are OK for i387 128-bit long doubles, it
is not correct for IEEE quad 128-bit long doubles.
Also, depending on the target (64-bit/32-bit), long doubles may not
be available at all. And it may be the case that the compiler for a 64-bit
target doesn't support 128-bit long doubles, but GDB might still support it
internally.
Lastly, not every long double format has invalid values. Some formats
consider all values as valid floating point numbers.
These divergences cause the following FAIL's on aarch64/arm:
FAIL: gdb.ada/float-bits.exp: print val_long_double
FAIL: gdb.ada/float-bits.exp: print val_long_double after assignment
With the above in mind, extend the test a little so it behaves well on
different architectures and so it works with different long double
formats.
Main changes:
- Use long double values appropriate for the long double format.
- Test long double assignment to compiler-generated long
double variables.
- Test long double assignment to GDB internal variables.
Tested on x86_64 (16 PASS), i686 (16 PASS), aarch64 (12 PASS) and arm (9 PASS).
2022-05-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Improve gdb/syscalls/update-linux.sh
Fix two things in update-linux.sh:
- remove use of unnecessary tmp file
- inline gen-header.py into update-linux.sh
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-out-of-range-end-of-seq.exp on aarch64
On aarch64-linux, with test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-out-of-range-end-of-seq.exp I
run into:
...
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: dw2-out-of-range-end-of-seq ^M
^M
Program received signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.^M
main () at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/main.c:1^M
1 /* This testcase is part of GDB, the GNU debugger.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-out-of-range-end-of-seq.exp: runto: run to main
...
There are two problems here:
- the test-case contains a hardcoded "DW_LNS_advance_pc 1" which causes the
breakpoint pointing in the middle of an insn
- the FAIL triggers on aarch64-linux, but not on x86_64-linux, because the
test-case uses 'main_label' as the address of the first and only valid entry
in the line table, and:
- on aarch64-linux, there's no prologue, so main_label and main coincide,
while
- on x86_64-linux, there's a prologue, so main_label is different from main.
Fix these problems by:
- eliminating the use of "DW_LNS_advance_pc 1", and using
"DW_LNE_set_address $main_end" instead, and
- eliminating the use of main_label, using "DW_LNE_set_address $main_start"
instead.
Tested on both x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
2022-05-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
cgen: increase buffer for hash_insn_list
As was done for hash_insn_array in commit d3d1cc7b13b4.
* cgen-dis.c (hash_insn_list): Increase size of buf. Assert
size is large enough.
2022-05-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR29142, segv in ar with empty archive and libdeps specified
PR 29142
* ar.c (main): Properly handle libdeps for zero file_count.
2022-05-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: IBM zSystems: Accept (. - 0x100000000) PCRel32 operands
The new test failed on s390-linux due to bfd_sprintf_vma trimming
output to 32 bits for 32-bit targets. The test was faulty anyway,
expecting zero as the min end of the range is plainly wrong, but
that's what you get if you cast min to int.
* config/tc-s390.c (s390_insert_operand): Print range error using
PRId64.
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-z900-err.l: Correct expected output.
2022-05-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp with --with-expat=no
When doing a gdb build with --with-expat=no, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: determine pipe syscall: \
continue to breakpoint: before pipe call
catch syscall pipe^M
Unknown syscall name 'pipe'.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: determine pipe syscall: \
catch syscall pipe
catch syscall pipe2^M
Unknown syscall name 'pipe2'.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: determine pipe syscall: \
catch syscall pipe2
continue^M
Continuing.^M
[Detaching after vfork from child process 18538]^M
[Inferior 1 (process 18537) exited normally]^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: determine pipe syscall: continue
...
This is a regression since recent commit 5463a15c18b ("[gdb/testsuite] Handle
pipe2 syscall in gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp").
Fix this by using pipe/pipe2 syscall numbers instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-11 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
nm: use -U as an alias for --defines-only, in line with llvm-nm
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp without --enable-targets
When doing a gdb build without --enable-targets, I run into:
...
(gdb) UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: multiple targets: \
s390:31-bit vs s390:64-bit: set architecture s390:64-bit
delete breakpoints^M
(gdb) info breakpoints^M
No breakpoints or watchpoints.^M
(gdb) break -qualified main^M
No symbol table is loaded. Use the "file" command.^M
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at main
...
The problem is that due to recent commit e21d8399303 ("[gdb/testsuite] Remove
target limits in gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp") "clean_restart $binfile" no
longer is called at the end of test_catch_syscall_multi_arch.
Fix this by moving "clean_restart $binfile" back to
test_catch_syscall_multi_arch.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/maint.exp on powerpc64le
On powerpc64le-linux, I ran into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint print objfiles: symtabs
...
The problem is that:
- the "Cooked index in use" line occurs twice in the gdb output:
- once for exec maint, and
- once for "Object file system-supplied DSO".
- the matching of the second "Cooked index in use" also consumes
the "Symtabs:" string, and consequently the corresponding
clause does not trigger and $symtabs remains 0.
Fix this by limiting the output of the command to the exec.
Tested on x86_64-linux and powerpcle-linux.
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Update syscalls/{ppc64,ppc}-linux.xml
Regenerate syscalls/{ppc64,ppc}-linux.xml on a system with 5.14 kernel.
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Remove target limits in gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp
In test-case gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp, proc test_catch_syscall_multi_arch we
test for supported targets using istarget, like so:
...
if { [istarget "i*86-*-*"] || [istarget "x86_64-*-*"] } {
...
} elseif { [istarget "powerpc-*-linux*"] \
|| [istarget "powerpc64*-linux*"] } {
...
...
but the tests excercised there can all be executed if gdb is configured with
--enable-targets=all.
Rewrite the proc to iterate over all cases, and check if the test is supported
by trying "set arch $arch1" and "set arch $arch2".
Tested on x86_64-linux, with:
- a gdb build with --enable-targets=all, and
- a gdb build build with my usual --enable-targets setting (too long to
include here) which means the sparc vs sparc:v9 case is unsupported.
2022-05-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/record] Handle statx system call
When running test-case gdb.reverse/fstatat-reverse.exp with target board
unix/-m32 on openSUSE Tumbleweed, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.reverse/fstatat-reverse.exp: set breakpoint at marker2
continue^M
Continuing.^M
Process record and replay target doesn't support syscall number 383^M
Process record: failed to record execution log.^M
^M
Program stopped.^M
0xf7fc5555 in __kernel_vsyscall ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.reverse/fstatat-reverse.exp: continue to breakpoint: marker2
...
The problems is that while with native we're trying to record these syscalls
(showing strace output):
...
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/", O_RDONLY|O_PATH) = 3
newfstatat(3, ".", {st_mode=S_IFDIR|0755, st_size=146, ...}, 0) = 0
...
with unix/-m32 we have instead:
...
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/", O_RDONLY|O_PATH) = 3
statx(3, ".", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT, STATX_BASIC_STATS, \
{stx_mask=STATX_ALL|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=STATX_ATTR_MOUNT_ROOT, \
stx_mode=S_IFDIR|0755, stx_size=146, ...}) = 0
...
and statx is not supported.
Fix this by adding support for recording syscall statx.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28461
2022-05-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
opcodes cgen: remove use of PTR
Note that opcodes is regenerated with cgen commit d1dd5fcc38e reverted,
due to failure of bpf to compile with that patch applied.
.../opcodes/bpf-opc.c:57:11: error: conversion from long unsigned int to unsigned int changes value from 18446744073709486335 to 4294902015 [-Werror=overflow]
57 | 64, 64, 0xffffffffffff00ff, { { F (F_IMM32) }, { F (F_OFFSET16) }, { F (F_SRCLE) }, { F (F_OP_CODE) }, { F (F_DSTLE) }, { F (F_OP_SRC) }, { F (F_OP_CLASS) }, { 0 } }
plus other similar errors.
cpu/
* mep.opc (print_tpreg, print_spreg): Delete unnecessary
forward declarations. Replace PTR with void *.
* mt.opc (print_dollarhex, print_pcrel): Delete forward decls.
opcodes/
* bpf-desc.c, * bpf-dis.c, * cris-desc.c,
* epiphany-desc.c, * epiphany-dis.c,
* fr30-desc.c, * fr30-dis.c, * frv-desc.c, * frv-dis.c,
* ip2k-desc.c, * ip2k-dis.c, * iq2000-desc.c, * iq2000-dis.c,
* lm32-desc.c, * lm32-dis.c, * m32c-desc.c, * m32c-dis.c,
* m32r-desc.c, * m32r-dis.c, * mep-desc.c, * mep-dis.c,
* mt-desc.c, * mt-dis.c, * or1k-desc.c, * or1k-dis.c,
* xc16x-desc.c, * xc16x-dis.c,
* xstormy16-desc.c, * xstormy16-dis.c: Regenerate.
2022-05-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-10 Youling Tang <tangyouling@loongson.cn>
gdb: mips: Fix large-frame.exp test case failure
$ objdump -d outputs/gdb.base/large-frame/large-frame-O2
0000000120000b20 <func>:
120000b20: 67bdbff0 daddiu sp,sp,-16400
120000b24: ffbc4000 sd gp,16384(sp)
120000b28: 3c1c0002 lui gp,0x2
120000b2c: 679c8210 daddiu gp,gp,-32240
120000b30: 0399e02d daddu gp,gp,t9
120000b34: df998058 ld t9,-32680(gp)
120000b38: ffbf4008 sd ra,16392(sp)
120000b3c: 0411ffd8 bal 120000aa0 <blah>
...
The disassembly of the above func function shows that we may use
instructions such as daddiu/daddu, so add "daddiu $gp,$gp,n",
"daddu $gp,$gp,$t9" and "daddu $gp,$t9,$gp" to the mips32_scan_prologue
function to fix the large-frame.exp test case.
Before applying the patch:
backtrace
#0 blah (a=0xfffffee220) at .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/large-frame-1.c:24
#1 0x0000000120000b44 in func ()
Backtrace stopped: frame did not save the PC
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/large-frame.exp: optimize=-O2: backtrace
# of expected passes 5
# of unexpected failures 1
After applying the patch:
# of expected passes 6
2022-05-10 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Use GDB style to check readbuf and writebuf
The GDB style is to write 'if (readbuf != nullptr)', and the same for
writebuf.
2022-05-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix --disable-threading build
PR build/29110 points out that GDB fails to build on mingw when the
"win32" thread model is in use. It turns out that the Fedora cross
tools using the "posix" thread model, which somehow manages to support
std::future, whereas the win32 model does not.
While looking into this, I found that the configuring with
--disable-threading will also cause a build failure.
This patch fixes this build by introducing a compatibility wrapper for
std::future.
I am not able to test the win32 thread model build, but I'm going to
ask the reporter to try this patch.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29110
2022-05-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix "b f(std::string)" when current language is C
If you try to set a breakpoint at a function such as "b
f(std::string)", and the current language is C, the breakpoint fails
to be set, like so:
(gdb) set language c
break f(std::string)
Function "f(std::string)" not defined.
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n
(gdb)
The problem is that the code in GDB that expands the std::string
typedef hits this in c-typeprint.c:
/* If we have "typedef struct foo {. . .} bar;" do we want to
print it as "struct foo" or as "bar"? Pick the latter for
C++, because C++ folk tend to expect things like "class5
*foo" rather than "struct class5 *foo". We rather
arbitrarily choose to make language_minimal work in a C-like
way. */
if (language == language_c || language == language_minimal)
{
if (type->code () == TYPE_CODE_UNION)
gdb_printf (stream, "union ");
else if (type->code () == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT)
{
if (type->is_declared_class ())
gdb_printf (stream, "class ");
else
gdb_printf (stream, "struct ");
}
else if (type->code () == TYPE_CODE_ENUM)
gdb_printf (stream, "enum ");
}
I.e., std::string is expanded to "class std::..." instead of just
"std::...", and then the "f(class std::..." symbol doesn't exist.
Fix this by making cp-support.c:inspect_type print the expanded
typedef type using the language of the symbol whose type we're
expanding the typedefs for -- in the example in question, the
"std::string" typedef symbol, which is a C++ symbol.
Use type_print_raw_options as it seems to me that in this scenario we
always want raw types, to match the real symbol names.
Adjust the gdb.cp/break-f-std-string.exp testcase to try setting a
breakpoint at "f(std::string)" in both C and C++.
Change-Id: Ib54fab4cf0fd307bfd55bf1dd5056830096a653b
2022-05-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Always pass an explicit language down to c_type_print
The next patch will want to do language->print_type(type, ...), to
print a type in a given language, avoiding a dependency on the current
language. That doesn't work correctly currently, however, because
most language implementations of language_defn::print_type call
c_print_type without passing down the language. There are two
overloads of c_print_type, one that takes a language, and one that
does not. The one that does not uses the current language, defeating
the point of calling language->print_type()...
This commit removes the c_print_type overload that does not take a
language, and adjusts the codebase throughout to always pass down a
language. In most places, there's already an enum language handy.
language_defn::print_type implementations naturally pass down
this->la_language. In a couple spots, like in ada-typeprint.c and
rust-lang.c there's no enum language handy, but the code is written
for a specific language, so we just hardcode the language.
In gnuv3_print_method_ptr, I wasn't sure whether we could hardcode C++
here, and we don't have an enum language handy, so I made it use the
current language, just like today. Can always be improved later.
Change-Id: Ib54fab4cf0fd307bfd55bf1dd5056830096a653b
2022-05-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix "b f(std::string)", always use DMGL_VERBOSE
Currently, on any remotely modern GNU/Linux system,
gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp fails like so:
break 'f(std::string)'
Function "f(std::string)" not defined.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp: gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at 'f(std::string)'
break 'f(std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)'
Function "f(std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)" not defined.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp: DMGL_VERBOSE-demangled f(std::string) is not defined
This testcase was added back in 2011, here:
[patch] Remove DMGL_VERBOSE
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2011-June/083081.html
Back then, the testcase would pass cleanly. It turns out that the
reason it fails today is that the testcase is exercising something in
GDB that only makes sense if the program is built for the pre-C++11
libstc++ ABI. Back then the C++11 ABI didn't exist yet, but nowadays,
you need to compile with -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0 to use the old
ABI. See "Dual ABI" in the libstdc++ manual, at
<https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/manual/using_dual_abi.html>.
If we tweak the gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp testcase to force the old
ABI with -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0, then it passes cleanly.
So why is it that setting a breakpoint at "f(std::string)" fails with
modern ABI, but passes with old ABI?
This is where libiberty demangler's DMGL_VERBOSE option comes in. The
Itanium ABI mangling scheme has a shorthand form for std::string (and
some other types). See
<https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi.html>:
"In addition, the following catalog of abbreviations of the form "Sx" are used:
<substitution> ::= St # ::std::
<substitution> ::= Sa # ::std::allocator
<substitution> ::= Sb # ::std::basic_string
<substitution> ::= Ss # ::std::basic_string < char,
::std::char_traits<char>,
::std::allocator<char> >
<substitution> ::= Si # ::std::basic_istream<char, std::char_traits<char> >
<substitution> ::= So # ::std::basic_ostream<char, std::char_traits<char> >
<substitution> ::= Sd # ::std::basic_iostream<char, std::char_traits<char> >
"
When the libiberty demangler encounters such a abbreviation, by
default, it expands it to the user-friendly typedef "std::string",
"std::iostream", etc.. If OTOH DMGL_VERBOSE is specified, the
abbreviation is expanded to the underlying, non-typedefed fullname
"std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >"
etc. as documented in the Itanium ABI, and pasted above. You can see
the standard abbreviations/substitutions in
libiberty/cp-demangle.c:standard_subs.
Back before Jan's patch in 2011, there were parts of GDB that used
DMGL_VERBOSE, and others that did not, leading to mismatches. The
solution back then was to stop using DMGL_VERBOSE throughout.
GDB has code in place to let users set a breakpoint at a function with
typedefs in its parameters, like "b f(uint32_t)". Demangled function
names as they appear in the symbol tables almost (more on this is in a
bit) never have typedefs in them, so when processing "b f(uint32_t)"
GDB first replaces "uint32_t" for its underlying type, and then sets a
breakpoint on the resulting prototype, in this case "f(unsigned int)".
Now, if DMGL_VERBOSE is _not_ used, then the demangler demangles the
mangled name of a function such as "void f(std::string)" that was
mangled using the standard abbreviations mentioned above really as:
"void f(std::string)".
For example, the mangled name of "void f(std::string)" if you compile
with old pre-C++11 ABI is "_Z1fSs". That uses the abbreviation "Ss",
so if you demangle that without DMGL_VERBOSE, you get:
$ echo "_Z1fSs" | c++filt --no-verbose
f(std::string)
while with DMGL_VERBOSE you'd get:
$ echo "_Z1fSs" | c++filt
f(std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)
If, when the user sets a breakpoint at "f(std::string)", GDB would
replace the std::string typedef for its underlying type using the same
mechanism I mentioned for the "f(uint32_t)" example above, then GDB
would really try to set a breakpoint at "f(std::basic_string<char,
std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)", and that would fail,
as the function symbol GDB knows about for that function, given no
DMGL_VERBOSE, is "f(std::string)".
For this reason, the code that expands typedefs in function parameter
names has an exception for std::string (and other standard
abbreviation types), such that "std::string" is never
typedef-expanded.
And here lies the problem when you try to do "b f(std::string)" with a
program compiled with the C++11 ABI. In that case, std::string
expands to a different underlying type, like so:
f(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)
and this symbol naturally mangles differently, as:
_Z1fNSt7__cxx1112basic_stringIcSt11char_traitsIcESaIcEEE
and then because this doesn't use the shorthand mangling abbreviation
for "std::string" anymore, it always demangles as:
f(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)
Now, when using the C++11 ABI, and you set a breakpoint at
"f(std::string)", GDB's typedefs-in-parameters expansion code hits the
exception for "std::string" and doesn't expand it, so the breakpoint
fails to be inserted, because the symbol that exists is really the
f(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)
one, not "f(std::string)".
So to fix things for C++11 ABI, clearly we need to remove the
"std::string" exception from the typedef-in-parameters expansion
logic. If we do just that, then "b f(std::string)" starts working
with the C++11 ABI.
However, if we do _just_ that, and nothing else, then we break
pre-C++11 ABI...
The solution is then to in addition switch GDB to always use
DMGL_VERBOSE. If we do this, then pre-C++11 ABI symbols works the
same as C++11 ABI symbols overall -- the demangler expands the
standard abbreviation for "std::string" as "std::basic_string<char,
std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >" and letting GDB expand
the "std::string" typedef (etc.) too is no longer a problem.
To avoid getting in the situation where some parts of GDB use
DMGL_VERBOSE and others not, this patch adds wrappers around the
demangler's entry points that GDB uses, and makes those force
DMGL_VERBOSE.
The point of the gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp testcase was to try to
ensure that DMGL_VERBOSE doesn't creep back in:
gdb_test {break 'f(std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >)'} \
{Function ".*" not defined\.} \
"DMGL_VERBOSE-demangled f(std::string) is not defined"
This obviously no longer makes sense to have, since we now depend on
DMGL_VERBOSE. So the patch replaces gdb.cp/no-dmgl-verbose.exp with a
new gdb.cp/break-f-std-string.exp testcase whose purpose is to make
sure that setting a breakpoint at "f(std::string)" works. It
exercises both pre-C++11 ABI and C++11 ABI.
Change-Id: Ib54fab4cf0fd307bfd55bf1dd5056830096a653b
2022-05-10 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix testsuite regressions for unix/-m32 board
This commit fixes two regressions introduced by
891e4190ba705373eec7b374209478215fff5401.
Reason for the failures was, that on a 32 bit machine the maximum
array length as well as the maximum allocatable memory for arrays
(in bytes) both seem to be limited by the maximum value of a 4
byte (signed) Fortran integer. This lead to compiler errors/unexpected
behavior when compiling/running the test with the -m32 board. This
behavior is compiler dependent and can differ for different compiler
implementations, but generally, it seemed like a good idea to simply
avoid such situations.
The affected tests check for GDB's overflow behavior when using KIND
parameters with GDB implemented Fortran intrinsic functions. If these
KIND parameters are too small to fit the actual intrinsic function's
result, an overflow is expected. This was done for 1, 2, and 4
byte overflows. The last one caused problems, as it tried to allocate
arrays of length/byte-size bigger than the 4 byte signed integers which
would then be used with the LBOUND/UBOUND/SIZE intrinsics.
The tests were adapted to only execute the 4 byte overflow tests when
running on targets with 64 bit. For this, the compiled tests evaluate the
byte size of a C_NULL_PTR via C_SIZEOF, both defined in the ISO_C_BINDING
module. The ISO_C_BINDING constant C_NULL_PTR is a Fortran 2003, the
C_SIZEOF a Fortran 2008 extension. Both have been implemented in their
respective compilers for while (e.g. C_SIZEOF is available since
gfortran 4.6). If this byte size evaluates to less than 8 we skip the
4 byte overflow tests in the compiled tests of size.f90 and
lbound-ubound.f90. Similarly, in the lbound-ubound.exp testsfile we skip
the 4 byte overflow tests if the procedure is_64_target evaluates to false.
In size.f90, additionally, the to-be-allocated amount of bytes did not
fit into 4 byte signed integers for some of the arrays, as it was
approximately 4 times the maximum size of a 4 byte signed integer. We
adapted the dimensions of the arrays in question as the meaningfulness
of the test does not suffer from this.
With this patch both test run fine with the unix/-m32 board and
gcc/gfortran (9.4) as well as the standard board file.
We also thought about completely removing the affected test from the
testsuite. We decided against this as the 32 bit identification comes
with Fortran 2008 and removing tests would have decreased coverage.
A last change that happened with this patch was due to gfortran's and
ifx's type resolution when assigning big constants to Fortran Integer*8
variables. Before the above changes this happened in a parameter
statement. Here, both compilers happily accepted a line like
integer*8, parameter :: var = 2147483647 + 5.
After this change the assignment is not done as a parameter
anymore, as this triggered compile time overflow errors. Instead,
the assignment is done dynamically, depending on the kind of machine one
is on. Sadly, just changing this line to
integer*8 :: var
var = 2147483647 + 5
does not work with ifx (or flang for that matter, they behave similarly
here). It will create an integer overflow in the addition as ifx deduces
the type the additon is done in as Integer*4. So var will actually
contain the value -2147483644 after this. The lines
integer*8 :: var
var = 2147483652
on the other hand fail to compile with gfortran (9.4.0) as the compiler
identifies an Integer overflow here. Finally, to make this work with
all three compilers an additional parameter has been introduced
integer*8, parameter :: helper = 2147483647
integer*8 :: var
var = helper + 5.
This works on all 3 compilers as expected.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29053
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29054
2022-05-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Move non-dependent gdb::observers::observable::visit_state outside template
The other day, while looking at the symbols that end up in a GDB
index, I noticed that the gdb::observers::observable::visit_state enum
class appears a number of times:
$ grep VISIT gdb-index-symbol-names.txt
gdb::observers::observable<bpstat*, int>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<bpstat*, int>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<bpstat*, int>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<breakpoint*>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<breakpoint*>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<breakpoint*>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<char const*, char const*>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<char const*, char const*>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<char const*, char const*>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<char const*>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<char const*>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<char const*>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<enum_flags<user_selected_what_flag> >::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<enum_flags<user_selected_what_flag> >::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<enum_flags<user_selected_what_flag> >::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<frame_info*, int>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<frame_info*, int>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<frame_info*, int>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<gdbarch*>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<gdbarch*>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<gdbarch*>::visit_state::VISITING
gdb::observers::observable<gdb_signal>::visit_state::NOT_VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<gdb_signal>::visit_state::VISITED
gdb::observers::observable<gdb_signal>::visit_state::VISITING
[... snip ...]
$ grep VISIT gdb-index-symbol-names.txt | wc -l
72
enum class visit_state is defined inside the class template
observable, but it doesn't have to be, as it does not depend on the
template parameters. This commit moves it out, so that only one such
type exists. This reduces the size of a -O0 -g3 build for me by
around 0.6%, like so:
$ du -b gdb.before gdb.after
164685280 gdb.before
163707424 gdb.fixed
and codesize by some 0.5%.
Change-Id: I405f4ef27b8358fdd22158245b145d849b45658e
2022-05-10 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix compiling binutils/resbin.c with Clang version 14
2022-05-10 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: include percentages in default metrics list
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-05-09 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* src/gprofng.rc: Include percentages in default metrics list.
2022-05-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gprof: remove use of PTR
* basic_blocks.c: Replace uses of PTR with void * throughout.
* cg_arcs.c: Likewise.
* cg_print.c: Likewise.
* hist.c: Likewise.
* source.h: Likewise.
* symtab.c: Likewise.
gas: remove use of PTR
* config/obj-evax.c (evax_symbol_new_hook): Don't cast to PTR.
2022-05-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
opcodes: remove use of PTR
The non-cgen parts of opcodes.
* cr16-dis.c (print_arg): Replace PTR with void *.
* crx-dis.c (print_arg): Likewise.
* rl78-dis.c (print_insn_rl78_common): Don't use PTR cast.
* rx-dis.c (print_insn_rx): Likewise.
* visium-dis.c (print_insn_visium): Likewise.
* z8k-dis.c (print_insn_z8k): Likewise.
2022-05-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfd: remove use of PTR
* coffcode.h (coff_write_object_contents): Don't cast to PTR.
* elf32-csky.c (csky_elf_link_hash_traverse): Remove use of PTR
and PARAMS.
(csky_allocate_dynrelocs): Don't use PTR cast.
* elf32-nios2.c (adjust_dynrelocs, allocate_dynrelocs): Replace
PTR with void *.
* elf32-visium.c (visium_elf_howto_parity_reloc): Likewise.
* elfxx-ia64.c (ia64_elf_reloc): Likewise.
* plugin.c (bfd_plugin_bfd_print_private_bfd_data): Likewise.
include: remove use of PTR
* hashtab.h (HTAB_EMPTY_ENTRY): Replace PTR with void *.
(HTAB_DELETED_ENTRY): Likewise.
2022-05-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-09 Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com>
IBM zSystems: Accept (. - 0x100000000) PCRel32 operands
as does not accept instructions like brasl %r0,.-0x100000000, because
of two problems with the generic overflow check:
1. PCRel32 operands are signed, but are treated as unsigned.
2. The allowed range for these operands is [-(1 << 32), (1 << 32) - 1],
and not [-(1 << 31), (1 << 31) - 1].
Fix both by disabling the generic overflow check - it's not needed,
because s390_insert_operand () performs its own.
gas/
* config/tc-s390.c (md_gather_operands): Set fx_no_overflow.
* testsuite/gas/s390/s390.exp: Add zarch-z900-err.
* testsuite/gas/s390/esa-z900.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/s390/esa-z900.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-z900-err.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-z900-err.s: New test.
2022-05-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix occasional failure in gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp
In bug PR gdb/29036, another failure was reported for the test
gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp. This test sends two commands to GDB as
a single write, and then checks that both commands are executed.
The problem that was encountered here is that the output of the first
command, which looks like this:
^done,value="\"FIRST COMMAND\""
Is actually produced in parts, first the '^done' is printed, then the
',value="\"FIRST COMMAND\"" is printed.
What was happening is that some characters from the second command
were being echoed after the '^done' had been printed, but before the
value part had been printed. To avoid this issue I've relaxed the
pattern that checks for the first command a little. With this fix in
place the occasional failure in this test is no longer showing up.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29036
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Update syscalls/{amd64,i386}-linux.xml
- Add a script syscalls/gen-header.py, based on syscalls/arm-linux.py.
- Add a script syscalls/update-linux.sh (alongside update-freebsd.sh and
update-netbsd.sh).
- Use syscalls/update-linux.sh to update syscalls/{amd64,i386}-linux.xml.in.
- Regenerate syscalls/{amd64,i386}-linux.xml using syscalls/Makefile.
In gdb/syscalls/i386-linux.xml.in, updating has the following notable effect:
...
- <syscall name="madvise1" number="220"/>
- <syscall name="getdents64" number="221"/>
- <syscall name="fcntl64" number="222"/>
+ <syscall name="getdents64" number="220"/>
+ <syscall name="fcntl64" number="221"/>
...
I've verified in ./arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_32.tbl that the numbers are
correct.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Add gdb/syscalls/Makefile
Add a Makefile in gdb/syscalls that can be used to translate
gdb/syscalls/*.xml.in into gdb/syscalls/*.xml.
Calling make reveals that bfin-linux.xml is missing, so add it.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-09 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement the return_value gdbarch method
When execute the following command on LoongArch:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/async.exp"
there exist the following failed testcases:
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: finish& (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: jump& (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: until& (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: set exec-done-display off (GDB internal error)
we can see the following messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log:
finish&
Run till exit from #0 foo () at /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/async.c:9
(gdb) /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/gdbarch.c:2646: internal-error: gdbarch_return_value: Assertion `gdbarch->return_value != NULL' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
In order to fix the above failed testcases, implement the return_value
gdbarch method on LoongArch.
2022-05-09 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix for gdb.base/eof-exit.exp test failures
This fix relates to PR gdb/29032, this makes the test more stable by
ensuring that the Ctrl-D is only sent once the prompt has been
displayed. This issue was also discussed on the mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-April/187670.html
The problem identified in the bug report is that sometimes the Ctrl-D
(that the test sends to GDB) arrives while GDB is processing a
command. When this happens the Ctrl-D is handled differently than if
the Ctrl-D is sent while GDB is waiting for input at a prompt.
The original intent of the test was that the Ctrl-D be sent while GDB
was waiting at a prompt, and that is the case the occurs most often,
but, when the Ctrl-D arrives during command processing, then GDB will
ignore the Ctrl-D, and the test will fail.
This commit ensures the Ctrl-D is always sent while GDB is waiting at
a prompt, which makes this test stable.
But, that still leaves an open question, what should happen when the
Ctrl-D arrives while GDB is processing a command? This commit doesn't
attempt to answer that question, which is while bug PR gdb/29032 will
not be closed once this commit is merged.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29032
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Make btrace maintainer entry more clear
Do:
...
-record btrace <name> <email>
+record
+ btrace <name> <email>
...
to clarify that the listed maintainer is only maintainer of the btrace part of
record.
2022-05-09 Martin Liska <mliska@suse.cz>
ansidecl.h: sync from GCC
include/ChangeLog:
* ansidecl.h: Sync from GCC.
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Support catch syscall pipe2 for i386
With test-case gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp and target board unix/-m32, we run
into:
...
(gdb) catch syscall pipe2^M
Unknown syscall name 'pipe2'.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: determine pipe syscall: catch syscall pipe2
...
Fix this by:
- adding a pipe2 entry in gdb/syscalls/i386-linux.xml.in, and
- regenerating gdb/syscalls/i386-linux.xml using
"xsltproc --output i386-linux.xml apply-defaults.xsl i386-linux.xml.in".
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and unix/-m32.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29056
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle pipe2 syscall in gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp
When running test-case gdb.reverse/pipe-reverse.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed,
I run into:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
^M
Catchpoint 2 (returned from syscall pipe2), in pipe () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: without arguments: \
syscall pipe has returned
...
The current glibc on Tumbleweed is 2.35, which contains commit
"linux: Implement pipe in terms of __NR_pipe2", and consequently syscall pipe2
is used instead of syscall pipe.
Fix this by detecting whether syscall pipe or pipe2 is used before running the
tests.
Tested on x86_64-linux, specifically on:
- openSUSE Tumbleweed (with glibc 2.35), and
- openSUSE Leap 15.3 (with glibc 2.31).
On openSUSE Tumbleweed + target board unix/-m32, this exposes:
...
(gdb) catch syscall pipe2^M
Unknown syscall name 'pipe2'.^M
...
which will be fixed in a folllow-up patch.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29056
2022-05-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Handle pipe2 syscall for amd64
When running test-case gdb.reverse/pipe-reverse.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed,
I run into:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
Process record and replay target doesn't support syscall number 293^M
Process record: failed to record execution log.^M
^M
Program stopped.^M
0x00007ffff7daabdb in pipe () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.reverse/pipe-reverse.exp: continue to breakpoint: marker2
...
The current glibc on Tumbleweed is 2.35, which contains commit
"linux: Implement pipe in terms of __NR_pipe2", and consequently syscall pipe2
is used in stead of syscall pipe.
There is already support added for syscall pipe2 for aarch64 (which only has
syscall pipe2, not syscall pipe), so enable the same for amd64, by:
- adding amd64_sys_pipe2 in enum amd64_syscall
- translating amd64_sys_pipe2 to gdb_sys_pipe2 in amd64_canonicalize_syscall
Tested on x86_64-linux, specifically on:
- openSUSE Tumbleweed (with glibc 2.35), and
- openSUSE Leap 15.3 (with glibc 2.31).
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29056
2022-05-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.tui/scroll.exp with read1
When running test-case gdb.tui/scroll.exp, I get:
...
Box Dump (80 x 8) @ (0, 0):
0 $17 = 16
1 (gdb) p 17
2 $18 = 17
3 (gdb) p 18
4 $19 = 18
5 (gdb) p 19
6 $20 = 19
7 (gdb)
PASS: gdb.tui/scroll.exp: check cmd window in flip layout
...
but with check-read1 I get instead:
...
Box Dump (80 x 8) @ (0, 0):
0 (gdb) 15
1 (gdb) p 16
2 $17 = 16
3 (gdb) p 17
4 $18 = 17
5 (gdb) p 18
6 $19 = 18
7 (gdb) p 19
FAIL: gdb.tui/scroll.exp: check cmd window in flip layout
...
The "p 19" command is handled by Term::command, which sends the command and then
does Term::wait_for "^$gdb_prompt [string_to_regexp $cmd]", which:
- matches the line with "(gdb) p 19", and
- tries to match the following prompt "(gdb) "
The problem is that scrolling results in reissuing output before the "(gdb) p
19", and the second matching triggers on that. Consequently, wait_for no
longer translates gdb output into screen actions, and the screen does not
reflect the result of "p 19".
Fix this by using a new proc wait_for_region_contents, which in contrast to
wait_for can handle a multi-line regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux with make targets check and check-read1.
2022-05-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.cp/casts.exp with -m32
When running test-case gdb.cp/casts.exp with target board unix/-m32, I run
into:
...
(gdb) print (unsigned long long) &gd == gd_value^M
$31 = false^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.cp/casts.exp: print (unsigned long long) &gd == gd_value
...
With some additional printing, we can see in more detail why the comparison
fails:
...
(gdb) print /x &gd^M
$31 = 0xffffc5c8^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/casts.exp: print /x &gd
print /x (unsigned long long)&gd^M
$32 = 0xffffc5c8^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/casts.exp: print /x (unsigned long long)&gd
print /x gd_value^M
$33 = 0xffffffffffffc5c8^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/casts.exp: print /x gd_value
print (unsigned long long) &gd == gd_value^M
$34 = false^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.cp/casts.exp: print (unsigned long long) &gd == gd_value
...
The gd_value is set by this assignment:
...
unsigned long long gd_value = (unsigned long long) &gd;
...
The problem here is directly casting from a pointer to a non-pointer-sized
integer.
Fix this by adding an intermediate cast to std::uintptr_t.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and target board unix/-m32.
2022-05-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle init errors in gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.exp
In OBS, on aarch64-linux, with a gdb 11.1 based package, I run into:
...
(gdb) builtin_spawn -pty^M
new-ui mi /dev/pts/5^M
New UI allocated^M
(gdb) =thread-group-added,id="i1"^M
(gdb) ERROR: MI channel failed
warning: Error detected on fd 11^M
thread 1.1^M
Unknown thread 1.1.^M
(gdb) UNRESOLVED: gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.exp: mode=non-stop: \
test_cli_inferior: reset selection to thread 1.1
...
with many more UNRESOLVED following.
The ERROR is a common problem, filed as
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28561 .
But the many UNRESOLVEDs are due to not checking whether the setup as done in
the test_setup function succeeds or not.
Fix this by:
- making test_setup return an error upon failure
- handling test_setup error at the call site
- adding a "setup done" pass/fail to be turned into an unresolved
in case of error during setup.
Tested on x86_64-linux, by manually triggering the error in
mi_gdb_start_separate_mi_tty.
2022-05-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/catch_ex_std.exp with remote-gdbserver-on-localhost
When running test-case gdb.ada/catch_ex_std.exp on target board
remote-gdbserver-on-localhost, I run into:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
[Inferior 1 (process 15656) exited with code 0177]^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/catch_ex_std.exp: runto: run to main
Remote debugging from host ::1, port 49780^M
/home/vries/foo: error while loading shared libraries: libsome_package.so: \
cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory^M
...
Fix this by adding the usual shared-library + remote-target helper
"gdb_load_shlib $sofile".
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and target board
remote-gdbserver-on-localhost.
2022-05-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp with check-readmore
When running test-case gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp with check-readmore,
I run into:
...
[Inferior 11 (process 7029) exited normally]^M
[Inferior 1 (process 6956) exited normally]^M
FAIL: gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: detach-on-fork=off: \
inferior 1 exited (timeout)
...
The problem is that the regexp consuming the "Inferior exited normally"
messages:
- consumes more than one of those messages at a time, but
- counts only one of those messages.
Fix this by adopting a line-by-line approach, which deals with those messages
one at a time.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native, check-read1 and check-readmore.
2022-05-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-07 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix "catch syscall"
Simon pointed out that some recent patches of mine broke "catch
syscall". Apparently I forgot to finish the conversion of this code
when removing init_catchpoint. This patch completes the conversion
and fixes the bug.
2022-05-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/readline: fix extra 'quit' message problem
After these two commits:
commit 4fb7bc4b147fd30b781ea2dad533956d0362295a
Date: Mon Mar 7 13:49:21 2022 +0000
readline: back-port changes needed to properly detect EOF
commit 91395d97d905c31ac38513e4aaedecb3b25e818f
Date: Tue Feb 15 17:28:03 2022 +0000
gdb: handle bracketed-paste-mode and EOF correctly
It was observed that, if a previous command is selected at the
readline prompt using the up arrow key, then when the command is
accepted (by pressing return) an unexpected 'quit' message will be
printed by GDB. Here's an example session:
(gdb) p 123
$1 = 123
(gdb) p 123
quit
$2 = 123
(gdb)
In this session the second 'p 123' was entered not by typing 'p 123',
but by pressing the up arrow key to select the previous command. It
is important that the up arrow key is used, typing Ctrl-p will not
trigger the bug.
The problem here appears to be readline's EOF detection when handling
multi-character input sequences. I have raised this issue on the
readline mailing list here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-readline/2022-04/msg00012.html
a solution has been proposed here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-readline/2022-04/msg00016.html
This patch includes a test for this issue as well as a back-port of
(the important bits of) readline commit:
commit 2ef9cec8c48ab1ae3a16b1874a49bd1f58eaaca1
Date: Wed May 4 11:18:04 2022 -0400
fix for setting RL_STATE_EOF in callback mode
That commit also includes some updates to the readline documentation
and tests that I have not included in this commit.
With this commit in place the unexpected 'quit' messages are resolved.
2022-05-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix multiple ubsan warnings in i386-dis.c
Commit 39fb369834a3 "opcodes: Make i386-dis.c thread-safe" introduced
a number of casts to bfd_signed_vma that cause undefined behaviour
with a 32-bit libbfd. Revert those changes.
* i386-dis.c (OP_E_memory): Do not cast disp to bfd_signed_vma
for negation.
(get32, get32s): Don't use bfd_signed_vma here.
2022-05-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Fix new linker testsuite failures due to rwx segment test problems
Fix it some more.
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c: Remove commented out elf_backend_* defines.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp (target_defaults_to_execstack): Match
arm*. Delete loongarch.
2022-05-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-07 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC fix for gdb.server/sysroot.exp
On PowerPC, the stop in the printf function is of the form:
Breakpoint 2, 0x00007ffff7c6ab08 in printf@@GLIBC_2.17 () from /lib64/libc.so.6
On other architectures the output looks like:
Breakpoint 2, 0x0000007fb7ea29ac in printf () from /lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
The following patch modifies the printf test by matchine any character
starting immediately after the printf. The test now works for PowerPC
output as well as the output from other architectures.
The test has been run on a Power 10 system and and Intel x86_64 system.
2022-05-06 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix new linker testsuite failures due to rwx segment test problems
2022-05-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce catchpoint class
This introduces a catchpoint class that is used as the base class for
all catchpoints. init_catchpoint is rewritten to be a constructor
instead.
This changes the hierarchy a little -- some catchpoints now inherit
from base_breakpoint whereas previously they did not. This isn't a
problem, as long as re_set is redefined in catchpoint.
2022-05-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add initializers to tracepoint
This adds some initializers to tracepoint. I think right now these
may not be needed, due to obscure rules about zero initialization.
However, this will change in the next patch, and anyway it is clearer
to be explicit.
Remove init_raw_breakpoint_without_location
This removes init_raw_breakpoint_without_location, replacing it with a
constructor on 'breakpoint' itself. The subclasses and callers are
all updated.
Disable copying for breakpoint
It seems to me that breakpoint should use DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN.
This patch does this.
Add constructor to exception_catchpoint
This adds a constructor to exception_catchpoint and simplifies the
caller.
Add constructor to syscall_catchpoint
This adds a constructor to syscall_catchpoint and simplifies the
caller.
Add constructor to signal_catchpoint
This adds a constructor to signal_catchpoint and simplifies the
caller.
Add constructor to solib_catchpoint
This adds a constructor to solib_catchpoint and simplifies the caller.
Add constructor to fork_catchpoint
This adds a constructor to fork_catchpoint and simplifies the caller.
Remove unnecessary line from catch_exec_command_1
catch_exec_command_1 clears the new catchpoint's "exec_pathname"
field, but this is already done by virtue of calling "new".
Constify breakpoint::print_recreate
This constifies breakpoint::print_recreate.
Constify breakpoint::print_mention
This constifies breakpoint::print_mention.
Constify breakpoint::print_one
This constifies breakpoint::print_one.
Constify breakpoint::print_it
This constifies breakpoint::print_it. Doing this pointed out some
code in ada-lang.c that can be simplified a little as well.
Move works_in_software_mode to watchpoint
works_in_software_mode is only useful for watchpoints. This patch
moves it from breakpoint to watchpoint, and changes it to return bool.
Boolify breakpoint::explains_signal
This changes breakpoint::explains_signal to return bool.
Remove breakpoint::ops
The breakpoint::ops field is set but never used. This removes it.
Change print_recreate_thread to a method
This changes print_recreate_thread to be a method on breakpoint. This
function is only used as a helper by print_recreate methods, so I
thought this transformation made sense.
2022-05-06 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC: bp-permanent.exp, kill-after-signal fix
The break point after the stepi on Intel is the entry point of the user
signal handler function test_signal_handler. The code at the break point
looks like:
0x<hex address> <test_signal_handler>: endbr64
On PowerPC with a Linux 5.9 kernel or latter, the address where gdb stops
after the stepi is in the vdso code inserted by the kernel. The code at the
breakpoint looks like:
0x<hex address> <__kernel_start_sigtramp_rt64>: bctrl
This is different from other architectures. As discussed below, recent
kernel changes involving the vdso for PowerPC have been made changes to the
signal handler code flow. PowerPC is now stopping in function
__kernel_start_sigtramp_rt64. PowerPC now requires an additional stepi to
reach the user signal handler unlike other architectures.
The bp-permanent.exp and kill-after-signal tests run fine on PowerPC with an
kernel that is older than Linux 5.9.
The PowerPC 64 signal handler was updated by the Linux kernel 5.9-rc1:
commit id: 0138ba5783ae0dcc799ad401a1e8ac8333790df9
powerpc/64/signal: Balance return predictor stack in signal trampoline
An additional change to the PowerPC 64 signal handler was made in Linux
kernel version 5.11-rc7 :
commit id: 24321ac668e452a4942598533d267805f291fdc9
powerpc/64/signal: Fix regression in __kernel_sigtramp_rt64() semantics
The first kernel change, puts code into the user space signal handler (in
the vdso) as a performance optimization to prevent the call/return stack
from getting out of balance. The patch ensures that the entire
user/kernel/vdso cycle is balanced with the addition of the "brctl"
instruction.
The second patch, fixes the semantics of __kernel_sigtramp_rt64(). A new
symbol is introduced to serve as the jump target from the kernel to the
trampoline which now consists of two parts.
The above changes for PowerPC signal handler, causes gdb to stop in the
kernel code not the user signal handler as expected. The kernel dispatches
to the vdso code which in turn calls into the signal handler. PowerPC is
special in that the kernel is using a vdso instruction (bctrl) to enter the
signal handler.
I do not have access to a system with the first patch but not the second. I did
test on Power 9 with the Linux 5.15.0-27-generic kernel. Both tests fail on
this Power 9 system. The two tests also fail on Power 10 with the Linux
5.14.0-70.9.1.el9_0.ppc64le kernel.
The following patch fixes the issue by checking if gdb stopped at "signal
handler called". If gdb stopped there, the tests verifies gdb is in the kernel
function __kernel_start_sigtramp_rt64 then does an additional stepi to reach the
user signal handler. With the patch below, the tests run without errors on both
the Power 9 and Power 10 systems with out any failures.
2022-05-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfd targmatch.h makefile rule
I hit this just now with a make -j build after touching config.bfd.
mv: cannot stat 'targmatch.new': No such file or directory
make[2]: *** [Makefile:2336: targmatch.h] Error 1
make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs....
Fix that by not removing the target of the rule, a practice that seems
likely to cause parallel running of the rule recipe. The bug goes
back to 1997, the initial c0734708814c commit.
* Makefile.am (targmatch.h): rm the temp file, not targmatch.h.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-05-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp with nopie
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp with
target board unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie/-m32 I run into:
...
(gdb) step^M
26 return 0;^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp: step into foo
...
The problem is that the test-case tries to mimic some gdb_compile_shlib
behaviour using:
...
set flags {additional_flags=-fpic debug}
get_func_info foo $flags
...
but this doesn't work with the target board setting, because we end up doing:
...
gcc locexpr-data-member-location-lib.c -fpic -g -lm -fno-PIE -no-pie -m32 \
-o func_addr23029.x
...
while gdb_compile_shlib properly filters out the -fno-PIE -no-pie.
Consequently, the address for foo determined by get_func_info doesn't match
the actual address of foo.
Fix this by printing the address of foo using the result of gdb_compile_shlib.
2022-05-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use gdb::function_view for gdbarch_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order callback
A rather straightforward patch to change an instance of callback +
void pointer to gdb::function_view, allowing pasing lambdas that
capture, and eliminating the need for the untyped pointer.
Change-Id: I73ed644e7849945265a2c763f79f5456695b0037
2022-05-05 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: use $host instead $target
By mistake, $target was used instead of $host to configure the gprogng build.
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29113
PR gprofng/29116
* configure.ac: Use $host instead $target.
* libcollector/configure.ac: Likewise.
* configure: Rebuild.
* libcollector/configure: Rebuild.
2022-05-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: make regcache's cooked_write_test selftest work with native-extended-gdbserver board
Running
$ make check TESTS="gdb.gdb/unittest.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver"
I get some failures:
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386:intel.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386:x64-32.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386:x64-32:intel.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386:x86-64.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i386:x86-64:intel.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
Running selftest regcache::cooked_write_test::i8086.^M
Self test failed: target already pushed^M
This is because the native-extended-gdbserver automatically connects GDB
to a GDBserver on startup, and therefore pushes a remote target on the
initial inferior. cooked_write_test is currently written in a way that
errors out if the current inferior has a process_stratum_target pushed.
Rewrite it to use scoped_mock_context, so it doesn't depend on the
current inferior (the current one upon entering the function).
Change-Id: I0357f989eacbdecc4bf88b043754451b476052ad
2022-05-05 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Move TILE-Gx files to TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES
TILE-Gx is a 64-bit core, so we should include those files in the
TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES as opposed to TARGET32_LIBOPCODES_CFILES.
Don't define ARCH_cris for BFD64
I believe it is a mistake to define ARCH_cris when BFD64 is defined. It is
a 32-bit architecture, so should be placed outside of the BFD64 block.
2022-05-05 Xi Ruoyao <xry111@mengyan1223.wang>
loongarch: Don't check ABI flags if no code section
Various packages (glib and gtk4 for example) produces data-only objects
using `ld -r -b binary` or `objcopy`, with no elf header flags set. But
these files also have no code sections, so they should be compatible
with all ABIs.
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c (elfNN_loongarch_merge_private_bfd_data):
Skip ABI checks if the input has no code sections.
Reported-by: Wu Xiaotian <yetist@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Wang Xuerui <i@xen0n.name>
2022-05-05 Andreas Krebbel <krebbel@linux.ibm.com>
IBM zSystems: mgrk, mg first operand requires register pair
opcodes/
* s390-opc.c (INSTR_RRF_R0RER): New instruction type.
(MASK_RRF_R0RER): Define mask for new instruction type.
* s390-opc.txt: Use RRF_R0RER for mgrk and RXY_RERRD for mg.
2022-05-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Check NULL pointer before setting ref_real
PR ld/29086
* linker.c (bfd_wrapped_link_hash_lookup): Check NULL pointer
before setting ref_real.
2022-05-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
LTO: Handle __real_SYM reference in IR
When an IR symbol SYM is referenced in IR via __real_SYM, its resolution
should be LDPR_PREVAILING_DEF, not PREVAILING_DEF_IRONLY, since LTO
doesn't know that __real_SYM should be resolved by SYM.
bfd/
PR ld/29086
* linker.c (bfd_wrapped_link_hash_lookup): Mark SYM is referenced
via __real_SYM.
include/
PR ld/29086
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_hash_entry): Add ref_real.
ld/
PR ld/29086
* plugin.c (get_symbols): Resolve SYM definition to
LDPR_PREVAILING_DEF for __real_SYM reference.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run PR ld/29086 test.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr29086.c: New file.
2022-05-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
cris bfd config
cris support will be built into a 32-bit bfd if using --enable-targets=all
on a 32-bit host, so we may as well make targmatch.h include cris.
* config.bfd (cris): Remove #idef BFD64.
2022-05-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 check_relocs
Tidy the dynamic reloc handling code in check_relocs, removing
leftover comments and code from when check_relocs was called as each
object file was read in.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Tidy dynamic reloc
handling code.
(dec_dynrel_count): Do the same here.
2022-05-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix crash when creating index from index
My patches yesterday to unify the DWARF index base classes had a bug
-- namely, I did the wholesale dynamic_cast-to-static_cast too hastily
and introduced a crash. This can be seen by trying to add an index to
a file that has an index, or by running a test like gdb-index-cxx.exp
using the cc-with-debug-names.exp target board.
This patch fixes the crash by introducing a new virtual method and
removing some of the static casts.
2022-05-04 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Fix build failure for aarch64 gdbserver
We're missing an argument.
2022-05-04 Mark Wielaard <mark@klomp.org>
gdb: Workaround stringop-overread warning in debuginfod-support.c on s390x
For some reason g++ 11.2.1 on s390x produces a spurious warning for
stringop-overread in debuginfod_is_enabled for url_view. Add a new
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD macro to suppress this warning.
include/ChangeLog:
* diagnostics.h (DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD): New
macro.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* debuginfod-support.c (debuginfod_is_enabled): Use
DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORE_STRINGOP_OVERREAD on s390x.
2022-05-04 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix GDBserver Aarch64 Linux regression
Luis noticed that the recent changes to gdbserver to make it track
process and threads independently regressed a few gdb.multi/*.exp
tests for aarch64-linux.
We started seeing the following internal error for
gdb.multi/multi-target-continue.exp for example:
Starting program: binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-target-continue/multi-target-continue ^M
Error in re-setting breakpoint 2: Remote connection closed^M
../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:85: internal-error: inferior_thread: Assertion `current_thread_ != nullptr' failed.^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,^M
further debugging may prove unreliable.
A backtrace looks like:
#0 thread_regcache_data (thread=thread@entry=0x0) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/inferiors.cc:120
#1 0x0000aaaaaaabf0e8 in get_thread_regcache (thread=0x0, fetch=fetch@entry=0) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/regcache.cc:31
#2 0x0000aaaaaaad785c in is_64bit_tdesc () at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-aarch64-low.cc:194
#3 0x0000aaaaaaad8a48 in aarch64_target::sw_breakpoint_from_kind (this=<optimized out>, kind=4, size=0xffffffffef04) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-aarch64-low.cc:3226
#4 0x0000aaaaaaabe220 in bp_size (bp=0xaaaaaab6f3d0) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/mem-break.cc:226
#5 check_mem_read (mem_addr=187649984471104, buf=buf@entry=0xaaaaaab625d0 "\006", mem_len=mem_len@entry=56) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/mem-break.cc:1862
#6 0x0000aaaaaaacc660 in read_inferior_memory (memaddr=<optimized out>, myaddr=0xaaaaaab625d0 "\006", len=56) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/target.cc:93
#7 0x0000aaaaaaac3d9c in gdb_read_memory (len=56, myaddr=0xaaaaaab625d0 "\006", memaddr=187649984471104) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:1071
#8 gdb_read_memory (memaddr=187649984471104, myaddr=0xaaaaaab625d0 "\006", len=56) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:1048
#9 0x0000aaaaaaac82a4 in process_serial_event () at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4307
#10 handle_serial_event (err=<optimized out>, client_data=<optimized out>) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4520
#11 0x0000aaaaaaafbcd0 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=block@entry=1) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:700
#12 0x0000aaaaaaafc0b0 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=1) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:596
#13 gdb_do_one_event () at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:237
#14 0x0000aaaaaaacacb0 in start_event_loop () at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3518
#15 captured_main (argc=4, argv=<optimized out>) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3998
#16 0x0000aaaaaaab66dc in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at ../../../repos/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
This sequence of functions is invoked due to a series of conditions:
1 - The probe-based breakpoint mechanism failed (for some reason) so ...
2 - ... gdbserver has to know what type of architecture it is dealing
with so it can pick the right breakpoint kind, so it wants to
check if we have a 64-bit target.
3 - To determine the size of a register, we currently fetch the
current thread's register cache, and the current thread pointer
is now nullptr.
In #3, the current thread is nullptr because gdb_read_memory clears it
on purpose, via set_desired_process, exactly to expose code relying on
the current thread when it shouldn't. It was always possible to end
up in this situation (when the current thread exits), but it was
harder to reproduce before.
This commit fixes it by tweaking is_64bit_tdesc to look at the current
process's tdesc instead of the current thread's tdesc.
Note that the thread's tdesc is itself filled from the process's
tdesc, so this should be equivalent:
struct regcache *
get_thread_regcache (struct thread_info *thread, int fetch)
{
struct regcache *regcache;
regcache = thread_regcache_data (thread);
...
if (regcache == NULL)
{
struct process_info *proc = get_thread_process (thread);
gdb_assert (proc->tdesc != NULL);
regcache = new_register_cache (proc->tdesc);
set_thread_regcache_data (thread, regcache);
}
...
Change-Id: Ibc809d7345e70a2f058b522bdc5cdbdca97e2cdc
2022-05-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/remote: send qSymbol to all inferiors on startup
start_remote_1 calls remote_check_symbols after things are set up to
give the remote side a chance to look up symbols. One call to
remote_check_symbols sets the "general thread", if needed, and sends one
qSymbol packet. However, a remote target could have more than one
process on initial connection, and this would send a qSymbol for only
one of these processes.
Change it to iterate on all the target's inferiors and send a qSymbol
packet for each one.
I tested this by changing gdbserver to spawn two processes on startup:
diff --git a/gdbserver/server.cc b/gdbserver/server.cc
index 33c42714e72..9b682e9f85f 100644
--- a/gdbserver/server.cc
+++ b/gdbserver/server.cc
@@ -3939,6 +3939,7 @@ captured_main (int argc, char *argv[])
/* Wait till we are at first instruction in program. */
target_create_inferior (program_path.get (), program_args);
+ target_create_inferior (program_path.get (), program_args);
/* We are now (hopefully) stopped at the first instruction of
the target process. This assumes that the target process was
Instead of hacking GDBserver, it should also be possible to test this by
starting manually two inferiors on an "extended-remote" connection,
disconnecting from GDBserver (with the disconnect command), and
re-connecting.
I was able to see qSymbol being sent for each inferior:
[remote] Sending packet: $Hgp828dc.828dc#1f
[remote] Packet received: OK
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::#5b
[remote] Packet received: qSymbol:6764625f6167656e745f6764625f74705f686561705f627566666572
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::6764625f6167656e745f6764625f74705f686561705f627566666572#1e
[remote] Packet received: qSymbol:6e70746c5f76657273696f6e
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::6e70746c5f76657273696f6e#4d
[remote] Packet received: OK
[remote] Sending packet: $Hgp828dd.828dd#21
[remote] Packet received: OK
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::#5b
[remote] Packet received: qSymbol:6764625f6167656e745f6764625f74705f686561705f627566666572
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::6764625f6167656e745f6764625f74705f686561705f627566666572#1e
[remote] Packet received: qSymbol:6e70746c5f76657273696f6e
[remote] Sending packet: $qSymbol::6e70746c5f76657273696f6e#4d
[remote] Packet received: OK
Note that there would probably be more work to be done to fully support
this scenario, more things that need to be done for each discovered
inferior instead of just for one.
Change-Id: I21c4ecf6367391e2e389b560f0b4bd906cf6472f
2022-05-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/remote: iterate on pspace inferiors in remote_new_objfile
Commit 152a17495663 ("gdb: prune inferiors at end of
fetch_inferior_event, fix intermittent failure of
gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp") broke some tests with the
native-gdbserver board, such as:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp: detach-on-fork=off: follow-fork=child: break cond on target : vfork: break marker
continue^M
Continuing.^M
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error'^M
I can manually reproduce the issue by running (just the commands that
the test does as a one liner):
$ ./gdb -q --data-directory=data-directory \
testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/step-over-syscall/step-over-vfork \
-ex "tar rem | ../gdbserver/gdbserver - testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/step-over-syscall/step-over-vfork" \
-ex "b main" \
-ex c \
-ex "d 1" \
-ex "set displaced-stepping off" \
-ex "b *0x7ffff7d7ac5a if main == 0" \
-ex "set detach-on-fork off" \
-ex "set follow-fork-mode child" \
-ex c \
-ex "inferior 1" \
-ex "b marker" \
-ex c
... where 0x7ffff7d7ac5a is the exact address of the vfork syscall
(which can be found by looking at gdb.log).
The important part of the above is that a vfork syscall creates inferior
2, then inferior 2 executes until exit, then we switch back to inferior
1 and try to resume it.
The uncaught exception happens here:
#4 0x00005596969d81a9 in error (fmt=0x559692da9e40 "Cannot execute this command while the target is running.\nUse the \"interrupt\" command to stop the target\nand then try again.")
at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:43
#5 0x0000559695af6f66 in remote_target::putpkt_binary (this=0x617000038080, buf=0x559692da4380 "qSymbol::", cnt=9) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:9560
#6 0x0000559695af6aaf in remote_target::putpkt (this=0x617000038080, buf=0x559692da4380 "qSymbol::") at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:9518
#7 0x0000559695ab50dc in remote_target::remote_check_symbols (this=0x617000038080) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:5141
#8 0x0000559695b3cccf in remote_new_objfile (objfile=0x0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:14600
#9 0x0000559693bc52a9 in std::__invoke_impl<void, void (*&)(objfile*), objfile*> (__f=@0x61b0000167f8: 0x559695b3cb1d <remote_new_objfile(objfile*)>) at /usr/include/c++/11.2.0/bits/invoke.h:61
#10 0x0000559693bb2848 in std::__invoke_r<void, void (*&)(objfile*), objfile*> (__fn=@0x61b0000167f8: 0x559695b3cb1d <remote_new_objfile(objfile*)>) at /usr/include/c++/11.2.0/bits/invoke.h:111
#11 0x0000559693b8dddf in std::_Function_handler<void (objfile*), void (*)(objfile*)>::_M_invoke(std::_Any_data const&, objfile*&&) (__functor=..., __args#0=@0x7ffe0bae0590: 0x0) at /usr/include/c++/11.2.0/bits/std_function.h:291
#12 0x00005596956374b2 in std::function<void (objfile*)>::operator()(objfile*) const (this=0x61b0000167f8, __args#0=0x0) at /usr/include/c++/11.2.0/bits/std_function.h:560
#13 0x0000559695633c64 in gdb::observers::observable<objfile*>::notify (this=0x55969ef5c480 <gdb::observers::new_objfile>, args#0=0x0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/observable.h:150
#14 0x0000559695df6cc2 in clear_symtab_users (add_flags=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/symfile.c:2873
#15 0x000055969574c263 in program_space::~program_space (this=0x6120000c8a40, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/progspace.c:154
#16 0x0000559694fc086b in delete_inferior (inf=0x61700003bf80) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:205
#17 0x0000559694fc341f in prune_inferiors () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:390
#18 0x0000559695017ada in fetch_inferior_event () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4293
#19 0x0000559694f629e6 in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inf-loop.c:41
#20 0x0000559695b3b0e3 in remote_async_serial_handler (scb=0x6250001ef100, context=0x6170000380a8) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:14466
#21 0x0000559695c59eb7 in run_async_handler_and_reschedule (scb=0x6250001ef100) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:138
#22 0x0000559695c5a42a in fd_event (error=0, context=0x6250001ef100) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:189
#23 0x00005596969d9ebf in handle_file_event (file_ptr=0x60700005af40, ready_mask=1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:574
#24 0x00005596969da7fa in gdb_wait_for_event (block=0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:700
#25 0x00005596969d8539 in gdb_do_one_event () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:212
If I enable "set debug infrun" just before the last continue, we see:
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
[infrun] clear_proceed_status_thread: 965604.965604.0
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] proceed: addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[infrun] start_step_over: enter
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 0
[infrun] operator(): step-over queue now empty
[infrun] start_step_over: exit
[infrun] resume_1: step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [965604.965604.0] at 0x7ffff7d7ac5c
[infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=965604.0.0, step=0, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0
[infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote
[infrun] proceed: exit
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] do_target_wait: Found 2 inferiors, starting at #1
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 965604.965604.0 [Thread 965604.965604],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = VFORK_DONE
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = VFORK_DONE
[infrun] context_switch: Switching context from 0.0.0 to 965604.965604.0
[infrun] handle_vfork_done: not waiting for a vfork-done event
[infrun] start_step_over: enter
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 0
[infrun] operator(): step-over queue now empty
[infrun] start_step_over: exit
[infrun] resume_1: step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [965604.965604.0] at 0x7ffff7d7ac5c
[infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=965604.0.0, step=0, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0
[infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait
[infrun] reset: reason=handling event
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error'
What happens is:
- After doing the "continue" on inferior 1, the remote target gives us
a VFORK_DONE event. The core ignores it and resumes inferior 1.
- Since prune_inferiors is now called after each handled event, in
fetch_inferior_event, it is called after we handled that VFORK_DONE
event and resumed inferior 1.
- Inferior 2 is pruned, which (see backtrace above) causes its program
space to be deleted, which clears the symtabs for that program space,
which calls the new_objfile observable and remote_new_objfile
observer (with a nullptr objfile, to indicate that the previously
loaded symbols have been discarded), which calls
remote_check_symbols.
remote_check_symbols is the function that sends the qSymbol packet, to
let the remote side ask for symbol addresses. The problem is that the
remote target is working in all-stop / sync mode and is currently
resumed. It has sent a vCont packet to resume the target and is waiting
for a stop reply. It can't send any packets in the mean time. That
causes the exception to be thrown.
This wasn't a problem before, when prune_inferiors was called in
normal_stop, because it was always called at a time the target was not
resumed.
An important observation here is that the new_objfile observable is
invoked for a change in inferior 2's program space (inferior 2's program
space is the current program space). Inferior 2 isn't bound to any
process on the remote side (it has exited, that's why it's being
pruned). It doesn't make sense to try to send a qSymbol packet for a
process that doesn't exist on the remote side. remote_check_symbols
actually attempts to avoid that:
/* The remote side has no concept of inferiors that aren't running
yet, it only knows about running processes. If we're connected
but our current inferior is not running, we should not invite the
remote target to request symbol lookups related to its
(unrelated) current process. */
if (!target_has_execution ())
return;
The problem here is that while inferior 2's program space is the current
program space, inferior 1 is the current inferior. So the check above
passes, since inferior has execution. We therefore try to send a
qSymbol packet for inferior 1 in reaction to a change in inferior 2's
program space, that's wrong.
This exposes a conceptual flaw in remote_new_objfile. The "new_objfile"
event concerns a specific program space, which can concern multiple
inferiors, as inferiors can share a program space. We shouldn't
consider the current inferior at all, but instead all inferiors bound to
the affected program space. Especially since the current inferior can
be unrelated to the current program space at that point.
To be clear, we are in this state because ~program_space sets itself as
the current program space, but there is no more inferior having that
program space to switch to, inferior 2 has already been unlinked.
To fix this, make remote_new_objfile iterate on all inferiors bound to
the affected program space. Remove the target_has_execution check from
remote_check_symbols, replace it with an assert. All callers must
ensure that the current inferior has execution before calling it.
Change-Id: Ica643145bcc03115248290fd310cadab8ec8371c
2022-05-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
Dwarf: rename yet another instance of "index"
As before, on sufficiently old glibc this conflicts with a global
identifier in the library headers. While there also zap the unusual
padding by blanks.
2022-05-04 Martin Liska <mliska@suse.cz>
LTO plugin: sync header file with GCC
include/ChangeLog:
* plugin-api.h (enum ld_plugin_tag): Sync with GCC.
2022-05-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC32 treatment of absolute symbols
As already done for PowerPC64, fix dynamic relocs for absolute symbols.
The patch also tidies the dynamic reloc handling code in check_relocs,
removing leftover comments and code from when check_relocs was called
as each object file was read in.
bfd/
* elf32-ppc.c (ppc_elf_check_relocs): Set isym and ifunc earlier.
Rearrange tests for dynamic relocs, handling absolute symbols.
(allocate_dynrelocs): Don't allocate dynamic relocs for locally
defined absolute symbols.
(ppc_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Similarly.
(ppc_elf_relocate_section): Similarly.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-pie.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-pie.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-reloc.s,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-shared.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-shared.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-static.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs32-static.r: New tests.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp: Run them.
2022-05-04 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
gdbserver: Fix build after adding tls feature to arm tdesc.
2022-05-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-04 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
NEWS: Add a note for TLS support on FreeBSD/arm and FreeBSD/Aarch64.
Read the tpidr register from NT_ARM_TLS on Linux.
gdbserver: Read the tpidr register from NT_ARM_TLS on Linux.
Read the tpidr register from NT_ARM_TLS core dump notes on Linux Aarch64.
Fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register set for native FreeBSD/Aarch64 processes.
This permits resolving TLS variables.
Support TLS variables on FreeBSD/Aarch64.
Derive the pointer to the DTV array from the tpidr register.
Read the tpidr register from NT_ARM_TLS core dump notes on FreeBSD/Aarch64.
Add an aarch64-tls feature which includes the tpidr register.
Fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register set for native FreeBSD/arm processes.
This permits resolving TLS variables.
Support TLS variables on FreeBSD/arm.
Derive the pointer to the DTV array from the tpidruro register.
Read the tpidruro register from NT_ARM_TLS core dump notes on FreeBSD/arm.
Add an arm-tls feature which includes the tpidruro register from CP15.
fbsd-nat: Add helper routines for register sets using PT_[G]SETREGSET.
FreeBSD's kernel has recently added PT_GETREGSET and PT_SETREGSET
operations to fetch a register set named by an ELF note type. These
helper routines provide helpers to check for a register set's
existence, fetch registers for a register set, and store registers to
a register set.
2022-05-03 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Regenerate aclocal.m4 with automake 1.15.1
* aclocal.m4: Regenerate with automake 1.15.1.
2022-05-03 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: track current process as well as current thread
The recent commit 421490af33bf ("gdbserver/linux: Access memory even
if threads are running") caused a regression in
gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp with gdbserver, which I
somehow missed. Like so:
(gdb) print global_var
Cannot access memory at address 0x555555558010
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp: non-stop: access mem (print global_var after writing, inf=2, iter=1)
The problem starts with GDB telling GDBserver to select a thread, via
the Hg packet, which GDBserver complies with, then that thread exits,
and GDB, without knowing the thread is gone, tries to write to memory,
through the context of the previously selected Hg thread.
GDBserver's GDB-facing memory access routines, gdb_read_memory and
gdb_write_memory, call set_desired_thread to make GDBserver re-select
the thread that GDB has selected with the Hg packet. Since the thread
is gone, set_desired_thread returns false, and the memory access
fails.
Now, to access memory, it doesn't really matter which thread is
selected. All we should need is the target process. Even if the
thread that GDB previously selected is gone, and GDB does not yet know
about that exit, it shouldn't matter, GDBserver should still know
which process that thread belonged to.
Fix this by making GDBserver track the current process separately,
like GDB also does. Add a new set_desired_process routine that is
similar to set_desired_thread, but just sets the current process,
leaving the current thread as NULL. Use it in the GDB-facing memory
read and write routines, to avoid failing if the selected thread is
gone, but the process is still around.
Change-Id: I4ff97cb6f42558efbed224b30d5c71f6112d44cd
2022-05-03 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp w/ native-extended-gdbserver
When testing gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp with
--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver, we get:
Running gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp: non-stop: second inferior: runto: run to main
WARNING: Timed out waiting for EOF in server after monitor exit
=== gdb Summary ===
# of expected passes 3
# of unexpected failures 1
# of unsupported tests 1
The problem is that the testcase spawns a second inferior with
-no-connection, and then runto_main does "run", which fails like so:
(gdb) run
Don't know how to run. Try "help target".
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp: non-stop: second inferior: runto: run to main
That "run" above failed because native-extended-gdbserver forces "set
auto-connect-native-target off", to prevent testcases from mistakenly
running programs with the native target, which would exactly be the
case here.
Fix this by letting the second inferior share the first inferior's
connection everywhere except on targets that do reload on run (e.g.,
--target_board=native-gdbserver).
Change-Id: Ib57105a238cbc69c57220e71261219fa55d329ed
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add some additional thread status debug output
While working on this patch:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-January/185109.html
I found it really useful to print the executing/resumed status of all
threads (or all threads in a particular inferior) at various
places (e.g. when a new inferior is started, when GDB attaches, etc).
This debug was originally part of the above patch, but I wanted to
rewrite this as a separate patch and move the code into a new function
in infrun.h, which is what this patch does.
Unless 'set debug infrun on' is in effect, then there should be no
user visible changes after this commit.
2022-05-03 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add a linker warning when creating potentially dangerous executable segments. Add tests, options to disabke and configure switches to choose defaults.
Fix potential arithmetic overflow in the linker's plugin handling code.
PR 29101
* libdep_plugin.c (get_libdeps): Check for overflow when computing
amount of memory to allocate.
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
objdump: fix styled printing of addresses
Previous work to add styled disassembler output missed a case in
objdump_print_addr, which is fixed in this commit.
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: small cleanup in mi-break-qualified.exp
It is not necessary to pass an empty string to mi_gdb_start, passing
the empty string is equivalent to passing no arguments, which is what
we do everywhere else (that we don't need to specify an actual
argument).
The only place we use 'mi_gdb_start ""' is in
gdb.mi/mi-break-qualified.exp, so in this commit I just replace that
with a call to 'mi_gdb_start' - just for consistency.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: change mi_gdb_start to take a list of flags
After this previous commit I was thinking about the API of
mi_gdb_start. I felt that the idea of passing flags as separate
arguments and using 'args' to gather these into a list, though clever,
was not an intuitive API.
In this commit I modify mi_gdb_start so that it expects a single
argument, which should be a list of flags. Thus, where we previously
would have said:
mi_gdb_start separate-mi-tty separate-inferior-tty
We would now say:
mi_gdb_start { separate-mi-tty separate-inferior-tty }
However, it turns out we never actually call mi_gdb_start passing two
arguments in this way at all. We do in some places do this:
mi_gdb_start separate-inferior-tty
But that's fine, a single string like this works equally well as a
single item list, so this will not need updating.
There is also one place where we do this:
eval mi_gdb_start $start_ops
where $start_ops is a list that might contains 0, 1, or 2 items. The
eval here is used to expand the $start_ops list so mi_gdb_start sees
the list contents as separate arguments. In this case we just need to
drop the use of eval.
I think that the new API is more intuitive, but others might
disagree, in which case I can drop this change.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix mi-exec-run.exp with native-extended-gdbserver board
When running with the native-extended-gdbserver board, I currently see
one failure in gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp:
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=separate: mi=separate: force-fail=0: breakpoint hit reported on console (timeout)
In this test the MI interface should be started in a separate tty,
which means we should have a CLI tty and an MI tty, however, this is
not happening. Instead GDB is just started in MI mode and there is no
CLI tty.
The test script tries to switch between the CLI an MI terminals and
look for some expected output on each, however, as there is no CLI
terminal the expected output never arrives, and the test times out.
It turns out that this is not a GDB problem, rather, this is an issue
with argument passing within the test script.
The proc default_mi_gdb_start expects to take a set of flags (strings)
as arguments, each of flag is expected to be a separate argument. The
default_mi_gdb_start proc collects all its arguments into a list using
the special 'args' parameter name, and then iterates over this list to
see which flags were passed.
In mi_gdb_start, which forwards to default_mi_gdb_start, the arguments
are also gathered into the 'args' parameter list, but are then
expanded back to be separate arguments using the eval trick, i.e.:
proc mi_gdb_start { args } {
return [eval default_mi_gdb_start $args]
}
This ensures that when we arrive in default_mi_gdb_start each flag is
a separate argument, rather than appearing as a single list containing
all arguments.
When using the native-extended-gdbserver board however, the file
boards/native-extended-gdbserver.exp is loaded, and this file replaces
the default mi_gdb_start with its own version.
This new mi_gdb_start also gathers the arguments into an 'args' list,
but forgets to expand the arguments out using the eval trick.
As a result, when using the native-extended-gdbserver board, by the
time we get to default_mi_gdb_start, we end up with the args list
containing a single item, which is a list containing all the arguments
the user passed.
What this means is that if the user passes two arguments, then, in
default_mi_gdb_start, instead of seeing two separate arguments, we see
a single argument made by concatenating the two arguments together.
The only place this is a problem is in the test mi-exec-run.exp,
which (as far as I can see) is the only test where we might try to
pass both arguments at the same time. Currently we think we passed
both arguments to mi_gdb_start, but mi_gdb_start behaves as if no
arguments were passed.
This commit fixes the problem by making use of the eval trick within
the native-extended-gdbserver version of mi_gdb_start. After this,
the FAIL listed at the top of this message is resolved.
2022-05-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix failures in gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp with native-extended-gdbserver
When running the gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp test using the
native-extended-gdbserver I see failures like this:
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=main: mi=main: force-fail=1: run failure detected
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=main: mi=separate: force-fail=1: run failure detected
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=separate: mi=separate: force-fail=1: run failure detected
There's a race condition here, so you might see a slightly different
set of failures, but I always see some from the 'run failure detected'
test.
NOTE: I also see an additional test failure:
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=separate: mi=separate: force-fail=0: breakpoint hit reported on console (timeout)
but that is a completely different issue, and is not being addressed
in this commit.
The problem for the 'run failure detected' test is that we end up
in gdb_expect looking for output from two spawn-ids, one from
gdbserver, and one from gdb. We're looking for one output pattern
from each spawn-id, and for the test to pass we need to see both
patterns.
Now, if gdb exits then this is a test failure (this would indicate gdb
crashing, which is bad), so we have an eof pattern associated with
the gdb spawn-id.
However, in this particular test we expect gdbserver to fail to
execute the binary (the test binary is set non-executable), and so we
get an error message from gdbserver (which matches the pattern), and
then gdbserver exits, this is expected.
The problem is that after spotting the pattern from gdbserver, we
often see the eof from gdbserver before we see the pattern from gdb.
If this happens then we drop out of the gdb_expect without ever seeing
the pattern from gdb, and fail the test.
In this commit, I place the spawn-id of gdbserver into a global
variable, and then use this global variable as the -i option within
the gdb_expect.
Now, once we have seen the expected pattern on the gdbserver spawn-id,
the global variable is cleared. After this the gdb_expect no longer
checks the gdbserver spawn-id for additional output, and so never sees
the eof event. This leaves the gdb_expect running, which allows the
pattern from gdb to be seen, and for the test to pass.
I now see no failures relating to 'run failure detected'.
2022-05-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.cp/align.exp with gcc 12.1 / 11.3
Starting with gcc 12.1 / gcc 11.3, for test-case gdb.cp/align.exp we run into:
...
align.cc:29:23: error: invalid application of 'alignof' to a void type^M
29 | unsigned a_void = alignof (void);^M
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~^M
...
Fix this by using __alignof__ instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc 7.5.0, gcc 12.1 and clang 12.0.1.
2022-05-02 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb/debuginfod: Whitespace-only URL should disable debuginfod
Currently debuginfod is disabled when the string of server URLs
is unset or set to be the empty string (via the $DEBUGINFOD_URLS
environment variable or the 'set debuginfod urls' gdb command).
Extend this functionality so that a whitespace-only URL also disables
debuginfod.
Modify a testcase to verify that a whitespace-only URL disables
debuginfod.
2022-05-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove type_wanted parameter from a few functions
The type_wanted value, passed down to the create_sals_from_location
callback, is never used. Remove it.
Change-Id: Ic363ee13f6af593a3e875ff7fe46de130cdc190c
2022-05-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gnulib: update to bd11400942d6
Update the gnulib import to fixes these issues:
- GDB build with clang + glibc < 2.33.
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commit/?id=d6a07b4dc21b3118727743142c678858df442853
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2022-04/msg00072.html
With glibc < 2.33, gnulib (since relatively recently) enables a
replacement for free (see gnulib/import/m4/free.m4). In that path,
clang shows this error:
make[2]: Entering directory '/home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb-clang/gdbsupport'
CXX agent.o
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/agent.cc:20:
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/common-defs.h:95:
../gnulib/import/string.h:636:19: error: exception specification in declaration does not match previous declaration
_GL_EXTERN_C void free (void *) throw ();
^
../gnulib/import/stdlib.h:737:17: note: expanded from macro 'free'
# define free rpl_free
^
../gnulib/import/stdlib.h:739:1: note: previous declaration is here
_GL_FUNCDECL_RPL (free, void, (void *ptr));
^
../gnulib/import/sys/select.h:251:23: note: expanded from macro '_GL_FUNCDECL_RPL'
_GL_FUNCDECL_RPL_1 (rpl_##func, rettype, parameters_and_attributes)
^
<scratch space>:139:1: note: expanded from here
rpl_free
^
The gnulib commit mentioned fixes the exception specification of `free`.
- GDB build on RHEL 7:
CC libgnu_a-openat-proc.o
In file included from /usr/include/string.h:633,
from ./string.h:41,
from ../../../binutils-gdb/gnulib/import/openat-proc.c:30:
./string.h:1105:1: error: expected identifier or '(' before '__extension__'
1105 | _GL_FUNCDECL_SYS (strndup, char *,
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commit/?id=84863a1c4dc8cca8fb0f6f670f67779cdd2d543b
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2022-04/msg00075.html
Change-Id: Ibd51302feece6f385d0c53e0d08921b5d95e2776
2022-05-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Ada catchpoint regression
The breakpoint C++-ification series introduced a regression for Ada
catchpoints. Specifically, commit 2b5ab5b8 ("Convert base breakpoints
to vtable ops") caused these to start failing. I didn't notice this
because testing Ada using a Linux distro compiler requires installing
the GNAT debuginfo, which I hadn't done.
This patch fixes the problem. I'm checking it in.
2022-05-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-05-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.multi/attach-no-multi-process.exp with check-readmore
When running test-case gdb.multi/attach-no-multi-process.exp with
check-readmore, I get:
...
(gdb) attach 13411^M
Attaching to Remote target^M
No unwaited-for children left.^M
(gdb) Reading symbols from attach-no-multi-process...^M
Reading symbols from /lib64/libm.so.6...^M
(No debugging symbols found in /lib64/libm.so.6)^M
Reading symbols from /lib64/libc.so.6...^M
(No debugging symbols found in /lib64/libc.so.6)^M
Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2...^M
(No debugging symbols found in /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2)^M
0x00007f5df1fffc8a in clock_nanosleep@GLIBC_2.2.5 () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
FAIL: gdb.multi/attach-no-multi-process.exp: target_non_stop=off: \
attach to the program via remote (timeout)
...
The problem is that the attach output is matched using gdb_test, which uses
the '$gdb_prompt $' regexp, and this does not handle the case that '(gdb) ' is
not the last available output.
Fix this by using a gdb_test_multiple instead with a '$gdb_prompt ' regexp, so
without the '$' anchor.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native, check-read1 and check-readmore.
2022-05-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-30 Thomas Hebb <tommyhebb@gmail.com>
opcodes: don't assume ELF in riscv, csky, rl78, mep disassemblers
Currently, the get_disassembler() implementations for riscv, csky, and
rl78--and mep_print_insn() for mep--access ELF variants of union fields
without first checking that the bfd actually represents an ELF. This
causes undefined behavior and crashes when disassembling non-ELF files
(the "binary" BFD, for example). Fix that.
2022-04-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove create_breakpoints_sal_default
create_breakpoints_sal_default is just a simple wrapper, so remove it.
Remove allocate_bp_location
allocate_bp_location is just a small wrapper for a method call, so
inline it everywhere.
Constify breakpoint_ops
Now that all breakpoint_ops are statically initialized, they can all
be made const.
Remove breakpoint ops initialization
initialize_breakpoint_ops does not do much any more, so remove it in
favor of statically-initialize objects.
Remove vtable_breakpoint_ops
There's no need to have vtable_breakpoint_ops any more, so remove it
in favor of base_breakpoint_ops.
Remove most fields from breakpoint_ops
At this point, all implementations of breakpoints use the vtable. So,
we can now remove most function pointers from breakpoint_ops and
switch to using methods directly in the callers. Only the two "static
virtual" methods remain in breakpoint_ops.
Remove breakpoint_ops from init_catchpoint
init_catchpoint is only ever passed a single breakpoint_ops pointer,
so remove the parameter.
Remove breakpoint_ops from init_ada_exception_breakpoint
init_ada_exception_breakpoint is only ever passed a single
breakpoint_ops structure, so remove the parameter.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Merge probe and ordinary tracepoints
Right now, probe tracepoints are handled by a separate ops object.
However, they differ only in a small way from ordinary tracepoints,
and furthermore can be distinguished by their event location.
This patch merges the two cases, just as was done for breakpoints.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Merge probe and ordinary breakpoints
Right now, probe breakpoints are handled by a separate ops object.
However, they differ only in a small way from ordinary breakpoints,
and furthermore can be distinguished by their "probe" object.
This patch merges the two cases. This avoids having to introduce a
new bp_ constant (which can be quite subtle to do correctly) and a new
subclass.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove bkpt_base_breakpoint_ops
An earlier patch removed the last use of bkpt_base_breakpoint_ops, so
remove the object entirely.
Convert static marker tracepoints to vtable ops
This converts static marker tracepoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Add bp_static_marker_tracepoint
Because the actual construction of a breakpoint is buried deep in
create_breakpoint, at present it's necessary to have a new bp_
enumerator constant any time a new subclass is needed. Static marker
tracepoints are one such case, so this patch introduces
bp_static_marker_tracepoint and updates various spots to recognize it.
Convert ranged breakpoints to vtable ops
This converts ranged breakpoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops. This
requires introducing a new ranged_breakpoint type, but this is
relatively simple because ranged breakpoints can only be created by
break_range_command.
Convert dprintf to vtable ops
This converts dprintf to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert Ada catchpoints to vtable ops
This converts Ada catchpoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert ordinary breakpoints to vtable ops
This converts "ordinary" breakpoint to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Recall that an ordinary breakpoint is both the kind normally created
by users, and also a base class used by other classes.
Change inheritance of dprintf
The dprintf breakpoint ops is mostly a copy of bpkt_breakpoint_ops,
except it's written out explicitly -- and, importantly, there's
nothing that bpkt_breakpoint_ops overrides that dprintf does not.
This changes dprintf to simply inherit directly, and updates struct
dprintf_breakpoint to reflect the change as well.
Convert momentary breakpoints to vtable ops
This converts momentary breakpoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert internal breakpoints to vtable ops
This converts internal breakpoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert break-catch-throw to vtable ops
This converts break-catch-throw.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert base breakpoints to vtable ops
This converts base breakpoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add some new subclasses of breakpoint
This adds a few new subclasses of breakpoint. The inheritance
hierarchy is chosen to reflect what's already present in
initialize_breakpoint_ops -- it mirrors the way that the _ops
structures are filled in.
This patch also changes new_breakpoint_from_type to create the correct
sublcass based on bptype. This is important due to the somewhat
inverted way in which create_breakpoint works; and in particular later
patches will change some of these entries.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Convert tracepoints to vtable ops
This converts tracepoints to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert watchpoints to vtable ops
This converts watchpoints and masked watchpoints. to use
vtable_breakpoint_ops. For masked watchpoints, a new subclass must be
introduced, and watch_command_1 is changed to create one.
Convert break-catch-load to vtable ops
This converts break-catch-load.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert break-catch-fork to vtable ops
This converts break-catch-fork.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert break-catch-exec to vtable ops
This converts break-catch-exec.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert break-catch-syscall to vtable ops
This converts break-catch-syscall.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
Convert break-catch-sig to use vtable ops
This converts break-catch-sig.c to use vtable_breakpoint_ops.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add a vtable-based breakpoint ops
This adds methods to struct breakpoint. Each method has a similar
signature to a corresponding function in breakpoint_ops, with the
exceptions of create_sals_from_location and create_breakpoints_sal,
which can't be virtual methods on breakpoint -- they are only used
during the construction of breakpoints.
Then, this adds a new vtable_breakpoint_ops structure and populates it
with functions that simply forward a call from breakpoint_ops to the
corresponding virtual method. These are all done with lambdas,
because they are just a stepping stone -- by the end of the series,
this structure will be deleted.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Return bool from breakpoint_ops::print_one
This changes breakpoint_ops::print_one to return bool, and updates all
the implementations and the caller. The caller is changed so that a
NULL check is no longer needed -- something that will be impossible
with a real method.
Delete some unnecessary wrapper functions
This patch deletes a few unnecessary wrapper functions from
breakpoint.c.
Add an assertion to clone_momentary_breakpoint
This adds an assertion to clone_momentary_breakpoint. This will
eventually be removed, but in the meantime is is useful for helping
convince oneself that momentary breakpoints will always use
momentary_breakpoint_ops. This understanding will help when cleaning
up the code later.
Boolify print_solib_event
Change print_solib_event to accept a bool parameter and update the
callers.
Move "catch load" to a new file
The "catch load" code is reasonably self-contained, and so this patch
moves it out of breakpoint.c and into a new file, break-catch-load.c.
One function from breakpoint.c, print_solib_event, now has to be
exposed, but this seems pretty reasonable.
2022-04-29 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: assertion in gprofng/src/Expression.cc:139
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29102
* src/Expression.h: Remove fixupValues.
* src/Expression.cc (Expression::copy): Fix a bug.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
De-duplicate .gdb_index
This de-duplicates variables and types in .gdb_index, making the new
index closer to what gdb generated before the new DWARF scanner
series. Spot-checking the resulting index for gdb itself, it seems
that the new scanner picks up some extra symbols not detected by the
old one. I tested both the new and old versions of gdb on both new
and old versions of the index, and startup time in all cases is
roughly the same (it's worth noting that, for gdb itself, the index no
longer provides any benefit over the DWARF scanner). So, I think this
fixes the size issue with the new index writer.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-04-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix .debug_names regression with new indexer
At AdaCore, we run the internal gdb test suite in several modes,
including one using the .debug_names index. This caught a regression
caused by the new DWARF indexer.
First, the psymtabs-based .debug_names generator was completely wrong.
However, to avoid making the rewrite series even bigger (fixing the
writer will also require rewriting the .debug_names reader), it
attempted to preserve the weirdness.
However, this was not done properly. For example the old writer did
this:
- case STRUCT_DOMAIN:
- return DW_TAG_structure_type;
The new code, instead, simply preserves the actual DWARF tag -- but
this makes future lookups fail, because the .debug_names reader only
looks for DW_TAG_structure_type.
This patch attempts to revert to the old behavior in the writer.
2022-04-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/infrun: make fetch_inferior_event restore thread if exited or signalled
Commit 152a1749566 ("gdb: prune inferiors at end of
fetch_inferior_event, fix intermittent failure of
gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp") introduced some follow-fork-related
test failures, such as:
info inferiors^M
Num Description Connection Executable ^M
* 1 process 634972 1 (native) /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork ^M
2 process 634975 1 (native) /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork ^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: info inferiors
inferior 2^M
[Switching to inferior 2 [process 634975] (/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork)]^M
[Switching to thread 2.1 (Thread 0x7ffff7c9a740 (LWP 634975))]^M
#0 0x00007ffff7d7abf7 in _Fork () from /usr/lib/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: inferior 2
continue^M
Continuing.^M
[Inferior 2 (process 634975) exited normally]^M
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c9a740 (LWP 634972)]^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: continue until exit at continue unfollowed inferior to end
break callee^M
Breakpoint 2 at 0x555555555160: file /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c, line 9.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: break callee
What happens here is:
- inferior 2 is selected
- we continue, leading to inferior 2's exit
- we set breakpoint, expect 2 locations, but only one location is
resolved
Reading between the lines, we understand that inferior 2 got pruned,
when it shouldn't have been.
The issue can be reproduced by hand with:
$ ./gdb -q --data-directory=data-directory testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork -ex "set detach-on-fork off" -ex start -ex "next 2" -ex "inferior 2" -ex "set debug infrun"
...
Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:14
14 int v = 5;
[New inferior 2 (process 637627)]
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
Using host libthread_db library "/usr/lib/../lib/libthread_db.so.1".
17 if (pid == 0) /* set breakpoint here */
[Switching to inferior 2 [process 637627] (/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork)]
[Switching to thread 2.1 (Thread 0x7ffff7c9a740 (LWP 637627))]
#0 0x00007ffff7d7abf7 in _Fork () from /usr/lib/libc.so.6
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
[infrun] clear_proceed_status_thread: 637627.637627.0
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] proceed: addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[infrun] start_step_over: enter
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 0
[infrun] operator(): step-over queue now empty
[infrun] start_step_over: exit
[infrun] proceed: start: resuming threads, all-stop-on-top-of-non-stop
[infrun] proceed: resuming 637627.637627.0
[infrun] resume_1: step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [637627.637627.0] at 0x7ffff7d7abf7
[infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=637627.637627.0, step=0, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0
[infrun] infrun_async: enable=1
[infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait
[infrun] proceed: end: resuming threads, all-stop-on-top-of-non-stop
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target native
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target native
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target native
[infrun] proceed: exit
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] do_target_wait: Found 2 inferiors, starting at #1
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 637627.637627.0 [process 637627],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = EXITED, exit_status = 0
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = EXITED, exit_status = 0
[Inferior 2 (process 637627) exited normally]
[infrun] stop_waiting: stop_waiting
[infrun] stop_all_threads: start: reason=presenting stop to user in all-stop, inf=-1
[infrun] stop_all_threads: pass=0, iterations=0
[infrun] stop_all_threads: 637624.637624.0 not executing
[infrun] stop_all_threads: pass=1, iterations=1
[infrun] stop_all_threads: 637624.637624.0 not executing
[infrun] stop_all_threads: done
[infrun] stop_all_threads: end: reason=presenting stop to user in all-stop, inf=-1
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c9a740 (LWP 637624)]
[infrun] infrun_async: enable=0
[infrun] reset: reason=handling event
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target native, no resumed threads
(gdb) [infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit
(gdb) info inferiors
Num Description Connection Executable
* 1 process 637624 1 (native) /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/foll-fork/foll-fork
(gdb) i th
Id Target Id Frame
* 1 Thread 0x7ffff7c9a740 (LWP 637624) "foll-fork" main () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:17
After handling the EXITED event for inferior 2, inferior 2 should have
stayed the current inferior, which should have prevented it from getting
pruned. When debugging, we find that when getting at the
prune_inferiors call, the current inferior is inferior 1. Further
debugging shows that prior to the call to
clean_up_just_stopped_threads_fsms, the current inferior is inferior 2,
and after, it's inferior 1. Then, back in fetch_inferior_event, the
restore_thread object is disabled, due to:
/* If we got a TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED event, then the
previously selected thread is gone. We have two
choices - switch to no thread selected, or restore the
previously selected thread (now exited). We chose the
later, just because that's what GDB used to do. After
this, "info threads" says "The current thread <Thread
ID 2> has terminated." instead of "No thread
selected.". */
if (!non_stop
&& cmd_done
&& ecs->ws.kind () != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED)
restore_thread.dont_restore ();
So in the end, inferior 1 stays current, and inferior 2 gets wrongfully
pruned.
I'd say clean_up_just_stopped_threads_fsms is the culprit here. It
actually attempts to restore the event_thread to be current at the end,
after the loop (I presume the current thread on entry is always supposed
to be the event thread). But in this case, the event is of kind EXITED,
and ecs->event_thread is not set, so the current inferior isn't
restored.
Fix that by using scoped_restore_current_thread. If there is no current
thread, scoped_restore_current_thread will still restore the current
inferior, and that's what we want.
Random note: the thread_info object for inferior 2's thread is never
freed. It is held (by refcount) by the restore_thread object in
fetch_inferior_event, while the inferior's thread list gets cleared, in
the exit event processing. When the refcount reaches 0 (when the
restore_thread object is destroyed), there's nothing that actually
deletes the thread_info object. And I think that nothing in GDB points
to it anymore, so it leaks. I don't want to fix that in this patch, but
thought it would be good to mention it, in case somebody has an idea for
how to fix that.
Change-Id: Ibc7df543e2c46aad5f3b9250b28c3fb5912be4e8
2022-04-29 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Slightly tweak and clarify target_resume's interface
The current target_resume interface is a bit odd & non-intuitive.
I've found myself explaining it a couple times the recent past, while
reviewing patches that assumed STEP/SIGNAL always applied to the
passed in PTID. It goes like this today:
- if the passed in PTID is a thread, then the step/signal request is
for that thread.
- otherwise, if PTID is a wildcard (all threads or all threads of
process), the step/signal request is for inferior_ptid, and PTID
indicates which set of threads run free.
Because GDB always switches the current thread to "leader" thread
being resumed/stepped/signalled, we can simplify this a bit to:
- step/signal are always for inferior_ptid.
- PTID indicates the set of threads that run free.
Still not ideal, but it's a minimal change and at least there are no
special cases this way.
That's what this patch does. It renames the PTID parameter to
SCOPE_PTID, adds some assertions to target_resume, and tweaks
target_resume's description. In addition, it also renames PTID to
SCOPE_PTID in the remote and linux-nat targets, and simplifies their
implementation a little bit. Other targets could do the same, but
they don't have to.
Change-Id: I02a2ec2ab3a3e9b191de1e9a84f55c17cab7daaf
2022-04-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix libinproctrace.so build on PPC
The recent gnulib import caused a build failure of libinproctrace.so
on PPC:
alloc.c:(.text+0x20): undefined reference to `rpl_malloc'
alloc.c:(.text+0x70): undefined reference to `rpl_realloc'
This patch fixes the problem using the same workaround that was
previously used for free.
2022-04-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Properly handle function pointer reference
Update
commit ebb191adac4ab45498dec0bfaac62f0a33537ba4
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Feb 9 15:51:22 2022 -0800
x86: Disallow invalid relocation against protected symbol
to allow function pointer reference and make sure that PLT entry isn't
used for function reference due to function pointer reference.
bfd/
PR ld/29087
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_scan_relocs): Don't set
pointer_equality_needed nor check non-canonical reference for
function pointer reference.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): Likewise.
ld/
PR ld/29087
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Run PR ld/29087 tests.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-func-3.c: New file.
2022-04-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Check OBJF_NOT_FILENAME in DWARF index code
The DWARF index code currently uses 'stat' to see if an objfile
represents a real file. However, I think it's more correct to check
OBJF_NOT_FILENAME instead.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-04-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove "typedef enum ..."
I noticed a few spots in GDB that use "typedef enum". However, in C++
this isn't as useful, as the tag is automatically entered as a
typedef. This patch removes most uses of "typedef enum" -- the
exceptions being in some nat-* code I can't compile, and
glibc_thread_db.h, which I think is more or less a copy of some C code
from elsewhere.
Tested by rebuilding.
2022-04-28 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix nullptr dereference in block::ranges()
This commit:
commit f5cb8afdd297dd68273d98a10fbfd350dff918d8
Date: Sun Feb 6 22:27:53 2022 -0500
gdb: remove BLOCK_RANGES macro
introduces a potential nullptr dereference in block::ranges, this is
breaking most tests, e.g. gdb.base/break.exp is failing for me.
In the above patch BLOCK_CONTIGUOUS_P is changed from this:
#define BLOCK_CONTIGUOUS_P(bl) (BLOCK_RANGES (bl) == nullptr \
|| BLOCK_NRANGES (bl) <= 1)
to this:
#define BLOCK_CONTIGUOUS_P(bl) ((bl)->ranges ().size () == 0 \
|| (bl)->ranges ().size () == 1)
So, before the commit we checked for the block ranges being nullptr,
but afterwards we just call block::ranges() in all cases.
The problem is that block::ranges() looks like this:
/* Return a view on this block's ranges. */
gdb::array_view<blockrange> ranges ()
{ return gdb::make_array_view (m_ranges->range, m_ranges->nranges); }
where m_ranges is:
struct blockranges *m_ranges;
And so, we see that the nullptr check has been lost, and we might end
up dereferencing a nullptr.
My proposed fix is to move the nullptr check into block::ranges, and
return an explicit empty array_view if m_ranges is nullptr.
After this, everything seems fine again.
2022-04-28 Stefan Liebler <stli@linux.ibm.com>
s390: Add DT_JMPREL pointing to .rela.[i]plt with static-pie
In static-pie case, there are IRELATIVE-relocs in
.rela.iplt (htab->irelplt), which will later be grouped
to .rela.plt. On s390, the IRELATIVE relocations are
always located in .rela.iplt - even for non-static case.
Ensure that DT_JMPREL, DT_PLTRELA, DT_PLTRELASZ is added
to the dynamic section even if htab->srelplt->size == 0.
See _bfd_elf_add_dynamic_tags in bfd/elflink.c.
bfd/
elf64-s390.c (elf_s390_size_dynamic_sections):
Enforce DT_JMPREL via htab->elf.dt_jmprel_required.
2022-04-28 Stefan Liebler <stli@linux.ibm.com>
s390: Avoid dynamic TLS relocs in PIE
No dynamic relocs are needed for TLS defined in an executable, the
TP relative offset is known at link time.
Fixes
FAIL: Build pr22263-1
bfd/
PR ld/22263
* elf64-s390.c (elf_s390_tls_transition): Use bfd_link_dll
instead of bfd_link_pic for TLS.
(elf_s390_check_relocs): Likewise.
(allocate_dynrelocs): Likewise.
(elf_s390_relocate_section): Likewise.
2022-04-28 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: impose an ordering on conflicting types
When two types conflict and they are not types which can have forwards
(say, two arrays of different sizes with the same name in two different
TUs) the CTF deduplicator uses a popularity contest to decide what to
do: the type cited by the most other types ends up put into the shared
dict, while the others are relegated to per-CU child dicts.
This works well as long as one type *is* most popular -- but what if
there is a tie? If several types have the same popularity count,
we end up picking the first we run across and promoting it, and
unfortunately since we are working over a dynhash in essentially
arbitrary order, this means we promote a random one. So multiple
runs of ld with the same inputs can produce different outputs!
All the outputs are valid, but this is still undesirable.
Adjust things to use the same strategy used to sort types on the output:
when there is a tie, always put the type that appears in a CU that
appeared earlier on the link line (and if there is somehow still a tie,
which should be impossible, pick the type with the lowest type ID).
Add a testcase -- and since this emerged when trying out extern arrays,
check that those work as well (this requires a newer GCC, but since all
GCCs that can emit CTF at all are unreleased this is probably OK as
well).
Fix up one testcase that has slight type ordering changes as a result
of this change.
libctf/ChangeLog:
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_detect_name_ambiguity): Use
cd_output_first_gid to break ties.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array-conflicted-ordering.d: New test, using...
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array-char-conflicting-1.c: ... this...
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array-char-conflicting-2.c: ... and this.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array-extern.d: New test, using...
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array-extern.c: ... this.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-typedefs.d: Adjust for ordering
changes.
2022-04-28 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: add a comment explaining how to use ctf_*open
Specifically, tell users what to pass to those functions that accept raw
section content, since it's fairly involved and easy to get wrong.
(.dynsym / .dynstr when CTF_F_DYNSTR is set, otherwise .symtab / .strtab).
include/ChangeLog:
* ctf-api.h (ctf_*open): Improve comment.
2022-04-28 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: test suite problems
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-27 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29065
* testsuite/lib/Makefile.skel: Search parent dir for libs too.
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove BLOCKVECTOR_MAP macro
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I4e56c76dfc363c1447686fb29c4212ea18b4dba0
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: constify addrmap_find
addrmap_find shouldn't need to modify the addrmap, so constify the
addrmap parameter. This helps for the following patch, where getting
the map of a const blockvector will return a const addrmap.
Change-Id: If670e425ed013724a3a77aab7961db50366dccb2
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK and BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS macros
Replace with calls to blockvector::blocks, and the appropriate method
call on the returned array_view.
Change-Id: I04d1f39603e4d4c21c96822421431d9a029d8ddd
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_ENTRY_PC macro
Replace with equivalent method.
Change-Id: I0e033095e7358799930775e61028b48246971a7d
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_CONTIGUOUS_P macro
Replace with an equivalent method.
Change-Id: I60fd3be7b4c2601c2a74328f635fa48ed80eb7f5
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_RANGE macro
Replace with access through the block::ranges method.
Change-Id: I50f3ed433b997c9f354e49bc6583f540ae4b6121
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_NRANGES macro
Replace with range for loops.
Change-Id: Icbe04f9b6f9e6ddae2e15b2409c61f7a336bc3e3
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_RANGES macro
Replace with an equivalent method on struct block.
Change-Id: I6dcf13e9464ba8a08ade85c89e7329c300fd6c2a
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_RANGE_{START,END} macros
Replace with equivalent methods on blockrange.
Change-Id: I20fd8f624e0129782c36768291891e7582d77c74
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_NAMESPACE macro
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: If86b8cbdfb0f52e22c929614cd53e73358bab76a
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_MULTIDICT macro
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: If9a239c511a664f2a59fecb6d1cd579881b23dc2
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_SUPERBLOCK macro
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I334a319909a50b5cc5570a45c38c70e10dc00630
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_FUNCTION macro
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I31ec00f5bf85335c8b23d306ca0fe0b84d489101
2022-04-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove BLOCK_{START,END} macros
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I10a6c8a2a86462d9d4a6a6409a3f07a6bea66310
2022-04-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-27 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Disable 2 tests with large memory requirement
gas/
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Disable rept.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Disable pr17618.
2022-04-27 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make gdb.base/parse_number.exp test all architectures
There are some subtle differences between architectures, like the size
of a "long" type, and this isn't currently accounted for in
gdb.base/parse_number.exp.
For example, on aarch64 a long type is 8 bytes, whereas a long type is
4 bytes for x86_64. This causes the following FAIL's:
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=asm: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=auto: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=c: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=c++: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=fortran: p/x 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=fortran: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=go: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=local: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=minimal: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=objective-c: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=opencl: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: lang=pascal: ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
There are some fortran-specific divergences as well, where 32-bit
architectures show "unsigned int" for both 32-bit and 64-bit integers
and 64-bit architectures show "unsigned int" and "unsigned long" for
32-bit and 64-bit integers.
There might be a bug that 32-bit fortran truncates 64-bit values to
32-bit, given "p/x 0xffffffffffffffff" returns "0xffffffff".
Here's what we get for aarch64:
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffff
type = unsigned int
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
type = unsigned long
(gdb) p sizeof (0xffffffff)
$1 = 4
(gdb) p sizeof (0xffffffffffffffff)
quit
$2 = 8
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffff
type = unsigned int
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
type = unsigned long
And for arm:
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffff
type = unsigned int
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
quit
type = unsigned long long
(gdb) p sizeof (0xffffffff)
quit
$1 = 4
(gdb) p sizeof (0xffffffffffffffff)
quit
$2 = 8
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffff
type = unsigned int
(gdb) ptype 0xffffffffffffffff
type = unsigned long
This patch...
* Makes the testcase iterate over all architectures, thus covering all
the different combinations of types/sizes every time.
* Adjusts the expected values and types based on the sizes of long
long, long and int.
A particularly curious architecture is s12z, which has 32-bit long
long, and thus no way to represent 64-bit integers in C-like
languages.
Co-Authored-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ifc0ccd33e7fd3c7585112ff6bebe7d266136768b
2022-04-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix gdbserver build for x86-64 Windows
I broke the gdbserver build on x86-64 Windows a little while back.
Previously, I could not build this configuration, but today I found
out that if I configure with:
--host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 --target=x86_64-w64-mingw32
using the Fedora 34 tools, it will in fact build. I'm not certain,
but maybe the gnulib update helped with this.
This patch fixes the build. I'm checking it in.
2022-04-27 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Create pseudo sections for NT_ARM_TLS notes on FreeBSD.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elf.c (elfcore_grok_freebsd_note): Handle NT_ARM_TLS notes.
2022-04-27 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
gdb/arm: Extend arm_m_addr_is_magic to support FNC_RETURN, add unwind-secure-frames command
This patch makes use of the support for several stack pointers
introduced by the previous patch to switch between them as needed
during unwinding.
It introduces a new 'unwind-secure-frames' arm command to enable/disable
mode switching during unwinding. It is enabled by default.
It has been tested using an STM32L5 board (with cortex-m33) and the
sample applications shipped with the STM32Cube development
environment: GTZC_TZSC_MPCBB_TrustZone in
STM32CubeL5/Projects/NUCLEO-L552ZE-Q/Examples/GTZC.
The test consisted in setting breakpoints in various places and check
that the backtrace is correct: SecureFault_Callback (Non-secure mode),
__gnu_cmse_nonsecure_call (before and after the vpush instruction),
SecureFault_Handler (Secure mode).
This implies that we tested only some parts of this patch (only MSP*
were used), but remaining parts seem reasonable.
2022-04-27 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
gdb/arm: Add support for multiple stack pointers on Cortex-M
Armv8-M architecture with Security extension features four stack pointers
to handle Secure and Non-secure modes.
This patch adds support to switch between them as needed during
unwinding, and replaces all updates of cache->prev_sp with calls to
arm_cache_set_prev_sp.
2022-04-27 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
gdb/arm: Introduce arm_cache_init
This patch is a preparation for the rest of the series and adds two
arm_cache_init helper functions. It updates every place that updates
cache->saved_regs to call the helper instead.
gdb/arm: Define MSP and PSP registers for M-Profile
This patch removes the hardcoded access to PSP in
arm_m_exception_cache() and relies on the definition with the XML
descriptions.
2022-04-27 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com>
gdb/arm: Fix prologue analysis to support vpush
While working on adding support for Non-secure/Secure modes unwinding,
I noticed that the prologue analysis lacked support for vpush, which
is used for instance in the CMSE stub routine.
This patch updates thumb_analyze_prologue accordingly, adding support
for vpush of D-registers.
2022-04-27 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix FAIL in gdb.base/clear_non_user_bp.exp
Tom and Simon feedback that there is a test failing in this commit:
commit a5c69b1e49bae4d0dcb20f324cebb310c63495c6
Date: Sun Apr 17 15:09:46 2022 +0800
gdb: fix using clear command to delete non-user breakpoints(PR cli/7161)
Then, I reproduced the same fail with Ubuntu 20.04 as Simon said, and I
fixed the nit in this patch. The root of the problem is not correctly
matching the presentation of internal breakpoints.
In addition, as Pedro pointed out, the original testcase is not portable
in some methods, so this patch fixes this issue and some other
improvements.
Tested on x86_64 ubuntu 20.04.4 and openSUSE Tumbleweed(VERSION_ID="20220425").
2022-04-27 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: VFPCLASSSH is Evex.LLIG
This also was mistakenly flagged as Evex.128.
2022-04-27 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix potential buffer overruns when creating DLLs.
PR 29006
* pe-dll.c (make_head): Use asprintf to allocate and populate a
buffer containing the temporary name.
(make_tail, make_one, make_singleton_name_thunk): Likewise.
(make_import_fixup_mark, make_import_fixup_entry): Likewise.
(make_runtime_pseudo_reloc): Likewise.
(pe_create_runtime_relocator_reference): Likewise.
2022-04-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert pr29072 lto test changes
Revert commit 65daf5bed6 testsuite changes in ld-plugin/. -z isn't
supported for non-ELF targets, and isn't needed since we now prune the
exec stack warning (commit 333cd559ba).
PR 29072
2022-04-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: use with_cwd where possible
I learned about with_cwd today. I spotted a few spots that could use
it, to make the code more robust.
Change-Id: Ia23664cb827f25e79d31948e0c006a8dc61c33e1
2022-04-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-26 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
GDB PowerPC record test cases for ISA 2.06 and ISA 3.1
This patch adds PowerPC specific tests to verify recording of various
instructions. The first test case checks the ISA 2.06 lxvd2x instruction.
The second test case tests several of the ISA 3.01 instructions. Specifically,
it checks the word and prefixed instructions and some of the Matrix
Multiply Assist (MMA) instructions.
The patch has been run on both Power 10 and Power 9 to verify the ISA
2.06 test case runs on both platforms without errors. The ISA 3.1 test
runs without errors on Power 10 and is skipped as expected on Power 9.
2022-04-26 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Add recording support for the ISA 3.1 PowerPC instructions.
This patch adds support for the PowerPC ISA 3.1 instructions to the PowerPC
gdb instruction recording routines. Case statement entries are added to a
number of the existing routines for recording the 32-bit word instructions.
A few new functions were added to handle the new word instructions. The 64-bit
prefix instructions are all handled by a set of new routines. The function
ppc_process_prefix_instruction() is the primary function to handle the
prefixed instructions. It calls additional functions to handle specific
sets of prefixed instructions. These new functions are:
ppc_process_record_prefix_vsx_d_form(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_store_vsx_ds_form(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_op34(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_op33(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_op32(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_store(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_op59_XX3(),
ppc_process_record_prefix_op42().
2022-04-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle encoding failures in Windows thread names
Internally at AdaCore, we noticed that the new Windows thread name
code could fail. First, it might return a zero-length string, but in
gdb conventions it should return nullptr instead. Second, an encoding
failure could wind up showing replacement characters to the user; this
is confusing and not useful; it's better to recognize such errors and
simply discard the name. This patch makes both of these changes.
2022-04-26 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
i386: Pass -z noexecstack to linker tests
PR ld/29072
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Pass -z noexecstack to gotpc1
and property-6.
2022-04-26 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
bsd-kvm: Fix build after recent changes to path handling functions.
Convert bsd_kvm_corefile and the local filename in bsd_kvm_open to
std::string rather than simple char * pointers freed by xfree.
2022-04-26 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make some random Python files Python 3-compatible
I noticed that these files failed to format with Black, because they use
print without parenthesis (which isn't Python 3 compatible).
I don't know if these files are still relevant, but the change is
trivial, so here it is.
Change-Id: I116445c2b463486016f824d32effffc915b60766
2022-04-26 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PowerPC: Update expected floating point output for gdb.arch/altivec-regs.exp and gdb.arch/vsx-regs.exp
The format for printing the floating point values was changed by commit:
commit 56262a931b7ca8ee3ec9104bc7e9e0b40cf3d64e
Author: Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Date: Thu Feb 17 13:43:59 2022 -0700
Change how "print/x" displays floating-point value
Currently, "print/x" will display a floating-point value by first
casting it to an integer type. This yields weird results like:
(gdb) print/x 1.5
$1 = 0x1
...
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16242
The above change results in 417 regression test failures since the expected
Power vector register output no longer match.
This patch updates the expected Altivec floating point register prints to
the hexadecimal format for both big endian and little endian systems. The
patch also fixes a formatting isue with the decimal_vector expected value
assign statements.
The expected VSX vector_register1, vector_register1_vr, vector_register2,
vector_register2_vr variables are updated to include the new float128 entry.
Additionally, the comment in the vsx expect file about the initialization
of the vs registers is updated.
The patch has been tested on Power 10, Power 8 LE and Power 8 BE.
2022-04-26 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
gdbsupport/pathstuff.h: #include <array> explicitly for std::array<>
This fixes build breakage using clang with libc++ on FreeBSD where
std::array<> is not yet declared when used by the path_join variadic
function template.
2022-04-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-25 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Do not put linkage names into .gdb_index
This changes the .gdb_index writer to skip linkage names. This was
always done historically (though somewhat implicitly).
2022-04-25 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Emit a note warning the user that creating an executable stack because of a missing .note.GNU-stack section is deprecated.
PR 29072
bfd * elflink.c (bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Display a note to the
user that the current ehaviour of creating an executable stack
because of a missing .note.GNU-stack section is deprecated and
will be changed in a future release.
binutils* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (prune_warnings_extra): Filter
out notes about the executable stacjk behaviour beign deprecated.
ld * testsuite/ld-elf/pr29072.b.warn: Update to include the note
about the linker's behaviour being depreccated.
2022-04-25 rupothar <rupesh.potharla@amd.com>
gdb/fortran: Support for assumed rank zero
If a variable is passed to function in FORTRAN as an argument the
variable is treated as an array with rank zero. GDB currently does
not support the case for assumed rank 0. This patch provides support
for assumed rank 0 and updates the testcase as well.
Without patch:
Breakpoint 1, arank::sub1 (a=<error reading variable:
failed to resolve dynamic array rank>) at assumedrank.f90:11
11 PRINT *, RANK(a)
(gdb) p a
failed to resolve dynamic array rank
(gdb) p rank(a)
failed to resolve dynamic array rank
With patch:
Breakpoint 1, arank::sub1 (a=0) at assumedrank.f90:11
11 PRINT *, RANK(a)
(gdb) p a
$1 = 0
(gdb) p rank(a)
$2 = 0
2022-04-25 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/infrun: assert !step_over_info_valid_p in restart_threads
While working in gdb/infrun.c:restart_threads, I was wondering what are
the preconditions to call the function. It seems to me that
!step_over_info_valid_p should be a precondition (i.e. if we are doing
an inline step over breakpoint, we do not want to resume non stepping
threads as one of them might miss the breakpoint which is temporally
disabled).
To convince myself that this is true, I have added an assertion to
enforce this, and got one regression in the testsuite:
FAIL: gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp: vfork: displaced=off: single step over vfork (GDB internal error)
This call to restart_threads originates from handle_vfork_done which
does not check if a step over is active when restarting other threads:
if (target_is_non_stop_p ())
{
scoped_restore_current_thread restore_thread;
insert_breakpoints ();
restart_threads (event_thread, event_thread->inf);
start_step_over ();
}
In this patch, Ipropose to:
- Call start_step_over before restart_threads. If a step over is already
in progress (as it is the case in the failing testcase),
start_step_over return immediately, and there is no point in restarting
all threads just to stop them right away for a step over breakpoint.
- Only call restart_threads if no step over is in progress at this
point.
In this patch, I also propose to keep the assertion in restart_threads
to help enforce this precondition, and state it explicitly.
I have also checked all other places which call restart_threads, and
they all seem to check that there is no step over currently active
before doing the call.
As for infrun-related things, I am never completely sure I did not miss
something. So as usual, all feedback and thoughts are very welcome.
Tested on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Change-Id: If5f5f98ec4cf9aaeaabb5e3aa88ae6ffd70d4f37
2022-04-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: move setbuf calls out of gdb_readline_no_editing_callback
After this commit:
commit d08cbc5d3203118da5583296e49273cf82378042
Date: Wed Dec 22 12:57:44 2021 +0000
gdb: unbuffer all input streams when not using readline
Issues were reported with some MS-Windows hosts, see the thread
starting here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/187004.html
Filed in bugzilla as: PR mi/29002
The problem seems to be that calling setbuf on terminal file handles
is not always acceptable, see this mail for more details:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-April/187310.html
This commit does two things, first moving the setbuf calls out of
gdb_readline_no_editing_callback so that we don't end up calling
setbuf so often.
Then, for MS-Windows hosts, we don't call setbuf for terminals, this
appears to resolve the issues that have been reported.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29002
2022-04-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: handle_no_resumed: only update thread list of event target
When running:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
I get:
target remote localhost:2347^M
Remote debugging using localhost:2347^M
Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2...^M
Reading symbols from /usr/lib/debug//lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.31.so...^M
0x00007ffff7fd0100 in _start () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
Cannot execute this command while the target is running.^M
Use the "interrupt" command to stop the target^M
and then try again.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp: re_run_inf=1: iter=1: runto: run to all_started
The test does:
- Connect to a remote target with inferior 2, continue and stop on the
all_started function
- Connect to a separate remote target / GDBserver instance with inferior 1,
continue and (expect to) stop on the all_started function
The failure seen above happens when trying to continue inferior 1.
What happens is:
- GDB tells inferior 1's remote target to continue
- We go into fetch_inferior_event, try to get an event at random from
the targets
- do_target_wait happens to pick inferior 2's target
- That target return TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED, which makes sense:
inferior 2 is stopped, that target has no resumed thread
- handle_no_resumed tries to update the thread list of all targets:
for (auto *target : all_non_exited_process_targets ())
{
switch_to_target_no_thread (target);
update_thread_list ();
}
- When trying to update the thread list of inferior 1's target, it hits
the "Cannot execute this command while the target is running" error.
This target is working in "remote all-stop" mode, and it is currently
waiting for a stop reply, so it can't send packets to update the
thread list at this time.
To handle the problem described in the comment in handle_no_resumed, I
don't think it is necessary to update the thread list of all targets,
but only the event target. That comment describes a kind of race
condition where some target reports a breakpoint hit for a thread and
then its last remaining resumed thread exits, so sends a "no resumed"
event. If we ended up resuming the thread that hit a breakpoint, we
want to ignore the "no resumed" and carry on.
But I don't really see why we need to update the thread list on the
other targets. I can't really articulate this, it's more a gut feeling,
maybe I just fail to imagine the situation where this is needed. But
here is the patch anyway, so we can discuss it. The patch changes
handle_no_resumed to only update the thread list of the event target.
This fixes the test run shown above.
The way I originally tried to fix this was to make
remote_target::update_thread_list return early if the target is
currently awaiting a stop reply, since there's no way it can update the
thread list at that time. But that felt more like papering over the
problem. I then thought that we probably shouldn't be asking the target
to update the thread list unnecessarily.
Change-Id: Ide3df22b4f556478e155ad1c67ad4b4fe7c26a58
2022-04-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver/linux: free process_info_private and arch_process_info when failing to attach
Running
$ ../gdbserver/gdbserver --once --attach :1234 539436
with ASan while /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope is set to 1 (prevents
attaching) shows that we fail to free some platform-specific objects
tied to the process_info (process_info_private and arch_process_info):
Direct leak of 32 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7f6b558b3fb9 in __interceptor_calloc /usr/src/debug/gcc/libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:154
#1 0x562eaf15d04a in xcalloc /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdb/alloc.c:100
#2 0x562eaf251548 in xcnew<process_info_private> /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/poison.h:122
#3 0x562eaf22810c in linux_process_target::add_linux_process_no_mem_file(int, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:426
#4 0x562eaf22d33f in linux_process_target::attach(unsigned long) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:1132
#5 0x562eaf1a7222 in attach_inferior /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:308
#6 0x562eaf1c1016 in captured_main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3949
#7 0x562eaf1c1d60 in main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
#8 0x7f6b552f630f in __libc_start_call_main (/usr/lib/libc.so.6+0x2d30f)
Indirect leak of 56 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7f6b558b3fb9 in __interceptor_calloc /usr/src/debug/gcc/libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:154
#1 0x562eaf15d04a in xcalloc /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdb/alloc.c:100
#2 0x562eaf2a0d79 in xcnew<arch_process_info> /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/poison.h:122
#3 0x562eaf295e2c in x86_target::low_new_process() /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-x86-low.cc:723
#4 0x562eaf22819b in linux_process_target::add_linux_process_no_mem_file(int, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:428
#5 0x562eaf22d33f in linux_process_target::attach(unsigned long) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:1132
#6 0x562eaf1a7222 in attach_inferior /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:308
#7 0x562eaf1c1016 in captured_main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:3949
#8 0x562eaf1c1d60 in main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.cc:4084
#9 0x7f6b552f630f in __libc_start_call_main (/usr/lib/libc.so.6+0x2d30f)
Those objects are deleted by linux_process_target::mourn, but that is
not called if we fail to attach, we only call remove_process. I
initially fixed this by making linux_process_target::attach call
linux_process_target::mourn on failure (before calling error). But this
isn't done anywhere else (including in GDB) so it would just be
confusing to do things differently here.
Instead, add a linux_process_target::remove_linux_process helper method
(which calls remove_process), and call that instead of remove_process in
the Linux target. Move the free-ing of the extra data from the mourn
method to that new method.
Change-Id: I277059a69d5f08087a7f3ef0b8f1792a1fcf7a85
2022-04-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: handle bracketed-paste-mode and EOF correctly
This commit replaces an earlier commit that worked around the issues
reported in bug PR gdb/28833.
The previous commit just implemented a work around in order to avoid
the worst results of the bug, but was not a complete solution. The
full solution was considered too risky to merge close to branching GDB
12. This improved fix has been applied after GDB 12 branched. See
this thread for more details:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186391.html
This commit replaces this earlier commit:
commit 74a159a420d4b466cc81061c16d444568e36740c
Date: Fri Mar 11 14:44:03 2022 +0000
gdb: work around prompt corruption caused by bracketed-paste-mode
Please read that commit for a full description of the bug, and why is
occurs.
In this commit I extend GDB to use readline's rl_deprep_term_function
hook to call a new function gdb_rl_deprep_term_function. From this
new function we can now print the 'quit' message, this replaces the
old printing of 'quit' in command_line_handler. Of course, we only
print 'quit' in gdb_rl_deprep_term_function when we are handling EOF,
but thanks to the previous commit (to readline) we now know when this
is.
There are two aspects of this commit that are worth further
discussion, the first is in the new gdb_rl_deprep_term_function
function. In here I have used a scoped_restore_tmpl to disable the
readline global variable rl_eof_found.
The reason for this is that, in rl_deprep_terminal, readline will
print an extra '\n' character before printing the escape sequence to
leave bracketed paste mode. You might then think that in the
gdb_rl_deprep_term_function function, we could simply print "quit" and
rely on rl_deprep_terminal to print the trailing '\n'. However,
rl_deprep_terminal only prints the '\n' when bracketed paste mode is
on. If the user has turned this feature off, no '\n' is printed.
This means that in gdb_rl_deprep_term_function we need to print
"quit" when bracketed paste mode is on, and "quit\n" when bracketed
paste mode is off.
We could absolutely do that, no problem, but given we know how
rl_deprep_terminal is implemented, it's easier (I think) to just
temporarily clear rl_eof_found, this prevents the '\n' being printed
from rl_deprep_terminal, and so in gdb_rl_deprep_term_function, we can
now always print "quit\n" and this works for all cases.
The second issue that should be discussed is backwards compatibility
with older versions of readline. GDB can be built against the system
readline, which might be older than the version contained within GDB's
tree. If this is the case then the system readline might not contain
the fixes needed to support correctly printing the 'quit' string.
To handle this situation I have retained the existing code in
command_line_handler for printing 'quit', however, this code is only
used now if the version of readline we are using doesn't not include
the required fixes. And so, if a user is using an older version of
readline, and they have bracketed paste mode on, then they will see
the 'quit' sting printed on the line below the prompt, like this:
(gdb)
quit
I think this is the best we can do when someone builds GDB against an
older version of readline.
Using a newer version of readline, or the patched version of readline
that is in-tree, will now give a result like this in all cases:
(gdb) quit
Which is what we want.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28833
2022-04-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
readline: back-port changes needed to properly detect EOF
This commit is a partial back-port of this upstream readline commit:
commit 002d31aa5f5929eb32d0e0e2e8b8d35d99e59961
Author: Chet Ramey <chet.ramey@case.edu>
Date: Thu Mar 3 11:11:47 2022 -0500
add rl_eof_found to public API; fix pointer aliasing problems \
with history-search-backward; fix a display problem with \
runs of invisible characters at the end of a physical \
screen line
I have only pulled in the parts of this commit that relate to the new
rl_eof_found global, and the RL_STATE_EOF state flag. These changes
are needed in order to fix PR cli/28833, and are discussed in this
thread to the bug-readline mailing list:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-readline/2022-02/msg00021.html
The above commit is not yet in any official readline release, but my
hope is that now it has been merged into the readline tree it should
be safe enough to back port this fix to GDB's tree.
At some point in the future we will inevitably want to roll forward
the version of readline that we maintain in the binutils-gdb
repository. When that day comes the changes in this commit can be
replaced with the latest upstream readline code, as I have not changed
the meaning of this code at all from what is in upstream readline.
This commit alone does not fix the PR cli/28833 issue, for that see
the next commit, which changes GDB itself.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28833
2022-04-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: improved EOF handling when using readline 7
In this commit:
commit a6b413d24ccc5d76179bab866834e11fd6fec294
Date: Fri Mar 11 14:44:03 2022 +0000
gdb: work around prompt corruption caused by bracketed-paste-mode
a change was made to GDB to work around bug PR gdb/28833. The
consequence of this work around is that, when bracketed paste mode is
enabled in readline, and GDB is quit by sending EOF, then the output
will look like this:
(gdb)
quit
The ideal output, which is what we get when bracketed paste mode is
off, is this:
(gdb) quit
The reason we need to make this change is explained in the original
commit referenced above. What isn't mentioned in the above commit, is
that the change that motivated this work around was only added in
readline 8, older versions of readline don't require the change.
In later commits in this series I will add a fix to GDB's in-tree copy
of readline (this fix is back-ported from upstream readline), and then
I will change GDB so that, when using the (patched) in-tree readline,
we can have the ideal output in all cases.
However, GDB can be built against the system readline. When this is
done, and the system readline is version 8, then we will still have to
use the work around (two line) style output.
But, if GDB is built against the system readline, and the system
readline is an older version 7 readline, then there's no reason why we
can't have the ideal output, after all, readline 7 doesn't include the
change that we need to work around.
This commit changes GDB so that, when using readline 7 we get the
ideal output in all cases. This change is trivial (a simple check
against the readline version number) so I think this should be fine to
include.
For testing this commit, you need to configure GDB including the
'--with-system-readline' flag, and build GDB on a system that uses
readline 7, for example 'Ubuntu 18.04'. Then run the test
'gdb.base/eof-exit.exp', you should expect everything to PASS.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28833
2022-04-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: prune inferiors at end of fetch_inferior_event, fix intermittent failure of gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp
This test sometimes fail like this:
info threads^M
Id Target Id Frame ^M
11.12 process 2270719 Couldn't get registers: No such process.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: detach-on-fork=off: no threads left
[Inferior 11 (process 2270719) exited normally]^M
info inferiors^M
Num Description Connection Executable ^M
* 1 <null> /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads/fork-plus-threads ^M
11 <null> /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads/fork-plus-threads ^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: detach-on-fork=off: only inferior 1 left (the program exited)
I can get it to fail quite reliably by pinning it to a core:
$ taskset -c 5 make check TESTS="gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp"
The previous attempt at fixing this was:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-October/182846.html
What we see is part due to a possible unfortunate ordering of events
given by the kernel, and what could be considered a bug in GDB.
The test program makes a number of forks, waits them all, then exits.
Most of the time, GDB will get and process the exit event for inferior 1
after the exit events of all the children. But this is not guaranteed.
After the last child exits and is waited by the parent, the parent can
exit quickly, such that GDB collects from the kernel the exit events for
the parent and that child at the same time. It then chooses one event
at random, which can be the event for the parent. This will result in
the parent appearing to exit before its child. There's not much we can
do about it, so I think we have to adjust the test to cope.
After expect has seen the "exited normally" notification for inferior 1,
it immediately does an "info thread" that it expects to come back empty.
But at this point, GDB might not have processed inferior 11's (the last
child) exit event, so it will look like there is still a thread. Of
course that thread is dead, we just don't know it yet. But that makes
the "no thread" test fail. If the test waited just a bit more for the
"exited normally" notification for inferior 11, then the list of threads
would be empty.
So, first change, make the test collect all the "exited normally"
notifications for all inferiors before proceeding, that should ensure we
see an empty thread list. That would fix the first FAIL above.
However, we would still have the second FAIL, as we expect inferior 11
to not be there, it should have been deleted automatically. Inferior 11
is normally deleted when prune_inferiors is called. That is called by
normal_stop, which is only called by fetch_inferior_event only if the
event thread completed an execution command FSM (thread_fsm). But the
FSM for the continue command completed when inferior 1 exited. At that
point inferior 11 was not prunable, as it still had a thread. When
inferior 11 exits, prune_inferiors is not called.
I think that can be considered a GDB bug. From the user point of view,
there's no reason why in one case inferior 11 would be deleted and not
in the other case.
This patch makes the somewhat naive change to call prune_inferiors in
fetch_inferior_event, so that it is called in this case. It is placed
at this particular point in the function so that it is called after the
user inferior / thread selection is restored. If it was called before
that, inferior 11 wouldn't be pruned, because it would still be the
current inferior.
Change-Id: I48a15d118f30b1c72c528a9f805ed4974170484a
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26272
2022-04-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Un-break the coff-pe-read.c build
This fixes a build breakage in my recent coff-pe-read.c change.
I'm sorry about this. I don't understand how it happened, because I
definitely built and tested the series on Windows, and I didn't change
it before pushing. Something must have gone wrong on the Windows
build, but I don't know what. I'll investigate and and re-test to be
sure.
2022-04-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
More const use and alloca avoidance in coff-pe-read.c
This changes another function in coff-pe-read.c to use 'const' more,
and to avoid the use of alloca by instead using std::string.
Use std::string in coff-pe-read.c
coff-pe-read.c uses xsnprintf and alloca, but using std::string is
better, and just as easy. In general I think alloca is something to
be avoided, and unbounded uses especially so.
Remove a const-removing cast from coff-pe-read.c
coff-pe-read.c casts away const at one spot, but this is easily
replaced by calling bfd_get_filename directly in a couple of debugging
prints.
Simplify BFD section iteration in coff-pe-read.c
coff-pe-read.c iterates over BFD sections using bfd_map_over_sections,
but it's much simpler to use a for-each loop. This allows for the
removal of helper functions and types.
2022-04-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix method naming bug in new DWARF indexer
Pedro pointed out that gdb-add-index is much slower with the new DWARF
indexer. He also noticed that, in some cases, the generated
.gdb_index would have the wrong fully-qualified name for a method.
I tracked this down to a bug in the indexer. If a type could have
methods but was marked as a declaration, the indexer was ignoring it.
However, this meant that the internal map to find the qualified name
was not updated for this container.
2022-04-22 Christoph Muellner <cmuellner@gcc.gnu.org>
RISC-V: Add missing DECLARE_INSNs for Zicbo{m,p,z}
The recently added support for the Zicbo{m,p,z} extensions did not
include DECLARE_INSN() declarations for the instructions.
These declarations are needed by GDB's instruction detection code.
This patch adds them.
2022-04-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-21 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix for gdb.base/solib-search.exp test.
The variable right_lib_flags is not being set correctly to define RIGHT.
The value RIGHT is needed to force the address of the library functions
lib1_func3 and lib2_func4 to occur at different address in the wrong and
right libraries.
With RIGHT defined correctly, functions lib1_func3 and lib2_func4 occur
at different addresses the test runs correctly on Powerpc.
The test needs the lib2 addresses to be different in the right and
wrong cases. That is the point of introducing function lib2_spacer
with the ifdef RIGHT compiler directive.
On Intel, the ARRAY_SIZE of 1 versus 8192 is sufficient to get the
dynamic linker to move the addresses of the library. You can also get
the same effect on PowerPC but you must use a value much larger than
8192.
The key thing is that the test was not properly setting RIGHT to
defined to get the lib2_spacer function on Intel and Powerpc.
Without the patch, we have the Intel backtrace for the bad libraries:
backtrace
#0 break_here () at /home/ ... /gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-search.c:30
#1 0x00007ffff7fae156 in ?? ()
#2 0x00007fffffffc150 in ?? ()
#3 0x00007ffff7fbb156 in ?? ()
#4 0x00007fffffffc160 in ?? ()
#5 0x00007ffff7fae146 in ?? ()
#6 0x00007fffffffc170 in ?? ()
#7 0x00007ffff7fbb146 in ?? ()
#8 0x00007fffffffc180 in ?? ()
#9 0x0000555555555156 in main () at /home/ ... /binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-search.c:23
Backtrace stopped: previous frame inner to this frame (corrupt stack?)
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/solib-search.exp: backtrace (with wrong libs) (data collection)
The backtrace on Intel with the good libraries is:
backtrace
#0 break_here () at /.../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-search.c:30
#1 0x00007ffff7fae156 in lib2_func4 () at /.../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-search-lib2.c:49
#2 0x00007ffff7fbb156 in lib1_func3 () at /.../gdb.base/solib-search-lib1.c:49
#3 0x00007ffff7fae146 in lib2_func2 () at /.../testsuite/gdb.base/solib-search-lib2.c:30
#4 0x00007ffff7fbb146 in lib1_func1 () at /.../gdb.base/solib-search-lib1.c:30
#5 0x0000555555555156 in main () at /...solib-search.c:23
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/solib-search.exp: backtrace (with right libs) (data collection)
PASS: gdb.base/solib-search.exp: backtrace (with right libs)
In one case the backtrace is correct and the other it
is wrong on Intel. This is due to the fact that the ARRAY_SIZE caused
the dynamic linker to move the library function addresses around. I
believe it has to do with the default size of the data and code
sections used by the dynamic linker.
So without the patch the backtrace on PowerPC looks like:
backtrace
#0 break_here () at /.../solib-search.c:30
#1 0x00007ffff7f007f4 in lib2_func4 () at /.../solib-search-lib2.c:49
#2 0x00007ffff7f307f4 in lib1_func3 () at /.../solib-search-lib1.c:49
#3 0x00007ffff7f007ac in lib2_func2 () at /.../solib-search-lib2.c:30
#4 0x00007ffff7f307ac in lib1_func1 () at /.../solib-search-lib1.c:30
#5 0x000000001000074c in main () at /.../solib-search.c:23
for both the good and bad libraries.
The patch fixes defining RIGHT in solib-search-lib1.c and solib-search-
lib2.c. Note, without the patch the lib1_spacer and lib2_spacer
functions do not show up in the object dump of the Intel or Powerpc
libraries as it should. The patch fixes that by making sure RIGHT gets
defined.
Now with the patch the backtrace for the bad library on PowerPC looks
like:
backtrace
#0 break_here () at /.../solib-search.c:30
#1 0x00007ffff7f0083c in __glink_PLTresolve () from /.../solib-search-lib2.so
Backtrace stopped: frame did not save the PC
And the backtrace for the good libraries on PowerPC looks like:
backtrace
#0 break_here () at /.../solib-search.c:30
#1 0x00007ffff7f0083c in lib2_func4 () at /.../solib-search-lib2.c:49
#2 0x00007ffff7f3083c in lib1_func3 () at /.../solib-search-lib1.c:49
#3 0x00007ffff7f007cc in lib2_func2 () at /.../solib-search-lib2.c:30
#4 0x00007ffff7f307cc in lib1_func1 () at /.../solib-search-lib1.c:30
#5 0x000000001000074c in main () at /.../solib-search.c:23
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/solib-search.exp: backtrace (with right libs) (data collection)
PASS: gdb.base/solib-search.exp: backtrace (with right libs)
The issue then is on Power where the ARRAY_SIZE of 1 versus 8192 is not
sufficient to cause the dymanic linker to allocate the libraries at
different addresses. I don't claim to understand the specifics of how
the dynamic linker works and what the default size is for the data and
code sections are. My guess is by default PowerPC allocates a larger
data size by default, which is large enough to hold array[8192]. The
default size of the data section allocated by the dynamic linker on
Intel is not large enough to hold array[8192] thus causing the code
section on Intel to have to move when the large array is defined.
Note on PowerPC, if you make ARRAY_SIZE big enough, then you will cause
the library addresses to occur at different addresses as the larger
data section forces the code section to a different address. That was
actually my original fix for the program until I spoke with Doug Evans
who originally wrote the test. Doug noticed that RIGHT was not getting
defined as he originally intended in the test.
With the patch to fix the definition of RIGHT, PowerPC has a bad and a
good backtrace because the address of lib1_func3 and lib2_func4 both
move because lib1_spacer and lib2_spacer are now defined
before lib1_func3 and lib2_func4.
Without the patch, the lib1_spacer and lib2_spacer function doesn't show
up in the binary for the correct or incorrect library on Intel or PowerPC.
With the patch, RIGHT gets defined as originally intended for the test on
both architectures and lib1_spacer and lib2_spacer function show up in the
binaries on both architectures changing the other function addresses as
intended thus causing the test work as intended on PowerPC.
2022-04-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/dwarf: remove line_header::header_length field
This can be a local in dwarf_decode_line_header.
Change-Id: I2ecf4616d1a3197bd1e81ded9f999a2da9a685af
2022-04-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/dwarf: remove line_header::total_length field
This doesn' have to be a field, it can simply be a local variable in
dwarf_decode_line_header. Name the local variable "unit_length", since
that's what the field in called in DWARF 4 and 5. It's always easier to
follow the code with the standard on the side when we use the same
terminology.
Change-Id: I3ad1022afd9410b193ea11b9b5437686c1e4e633
2022-04-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix "set temporary breakpoint" DUPLICATEs
Commit c67f4e538 ("gdb/testsuite: make gdb.ada/mi_prot.exp stop at
expected location") introduced some DUPLICATEs in MI tests using
mi_continue_to_line, for example:
DUPLICATE: gdb.ada/mi_ref_changeable.exp: mi_continue_to_line: set temporary breakpoint
These test names were previously differentiated by the location passed
to mi_continue_to_line. Since the location can contain a path, that
commit removed the location from the test name, in favor of a hardcoded
string "set temporary breakpoint", hence removing the differentiator.
mi_continue_to_line receives a "test" parameter, containing a test
name. Add a "with_test_prefix" with that name, so that all tests
recorded during mi_continue_to_line have this in their name.
mi_continue_to_line passes that "test" string to mi_get_stop_line, that
is a bit superfluous. mi_get_stop_line only uses that string in case of
failures (it doesn't record a pass if everything goes fine). Since it's
not crucial, just remove it, and adjust all callers.
Adjust three gdb.mi/mi-var-*.exp tests to use prefixes to differentiate
the multiple calls to mi_run_inline_test (which calls
mi_continue_to_line).
Change-Id: I511c6caa70499f8657b1cde37d71068d74d56a74
2022-04-21 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Always use dwarf2_initialize_objfile
Internally we noticed that some tests would fail like so on Windows:
warning: Section .debug_aranges in [...] has duplicate debug_info_offset 0x0, ignoring .debug_aranges.
Debugging showed that, in fact, a second CU was being created at this
offset. We tracked this down to the fact that, while the ELF reader
is careful to re-use the per-BFD data, other readers are not, and
could re-read the DWARF data multiple times.
However, since the change to allow an objfile to have multiple "quick
symbol" implementations, there's no reason for this approach -- it's
safe and easy for all symbol readers to reuse the per-BFD data when
reading DWARF.
This patch implements this idea, simplifying dwarf2_build_psymtabs and
making it private, and then switching to dwarf2_initialize_objfile as
the sole way to start the DWARF reader.
Note that, while I think the call to dwarf2_build_frame_info in
machoread.c is also obsolete, I haven't attempted to remove it here.
2022-04-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix 'remote show FOO-packet' aliases
The following behaviour was observed in GDB:
(gdb) show remote X-packet
Support for the `p' packet is auto-detected, currently unknown.
Note the message mentions the 'p' packet. This is a regression since
this commit:
commit 8579fd136a614985bd27f20539c7bb7c5a51287d
Date: Mon Nov 8 14:58:46 2021 +0000
gdb/gdbsupport: make xstrprintf and xstrvprintf return a unique_ptr
Before this commit the behaviour was:
(gdb) show remote X-packet
Support for the `X' packet is auto-detected, currently unknown.
The problem was caused by a failed attempt to ensure that some
allocated strings were deleted when GDB exits. The code in the above
commit attempted to make use of 'static' to solve this problem,
however, the solution was just wrong.
In this new commit I instead allocate a static vector into which all
the allocated strings are stored, this ensures the strings are
released when GDB exits (which makes output from tools like valgrind
cleaner), but each string within the vector can be unique, which fixes
the regression.
2022-04-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: add path_join function
In this review [1], Eli pointed out that we should be careful when
concatenating file names to avoid duplicated slashes. On Windows, a
double slash at the beginning of a file path has a special meaning. So
naively concatenating "/" and "foo/bar" would give "//foo/bar", which
would not give the desired results. We already have a few spots doing:
if (first_path ends with a slash)
path = first_path + second_path
else
path = first_path + slash + second_path
In general, I think it's nice to avoid superfluous slashes in file
paths, since they might end up visible to the user and look a bit
unprofessional.
Introduce the path_join function that can be used to join multiple path
components together (along with unit tests).
I initially wanted to make it possible to join two absolute paths, to
support the use case of prepending a sysroot path to a target file path,
or the prepending the debug-file-directory to a target file path. But
the code in solib_find_1 shows that it is more complex than this anyway
(for example, when the right hand side is a Windows path with a drive
letter). So I don't think we need to support that case in path_join.
That also keeps the implementation simpler.
Change a few spots to use path_join to show how it can be used. I
believe that all the spots I changed are guarded by some checks that
ensure the right hand side operand is not an absolute path.
Regression-tested on Ubuntu 18.04. Built-tested on Windows, and I also
ran the new unit-test there.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-April/187559.html
Change-Id: I0df889f7e3f644e045f42ff429277b732eb6c752
2022-04-21 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline: use unsupported instead of untested
In a previous commit (b750766ac96: gdb/testsuite: Introduce and use
gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline), if gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline cannot have GDB
attach to the process because of ptrace restrictions (operation not
permitted), the proc issues UNTESTED. This should really be
UNSUPPORTED, as it is done in gdb_attach.
This patch fixes this oversight.
Change-Id: Ib87e33b9230f3fa7a85e06220ef4c63814b71f7d
2022-04-21 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb/testsuite: add binary testcases to py-format-string.exp
We currently only test decimal and hexadecimal for the
gdb.Value.format_string() interface, this patch adds testcases for
binary format.
Tested on x86_64 openSUSE Tumbleweed(VERSION_ID="20220413").
2022-04-21 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: Fix "notice empty URL" test
The gdb_test_multiple pattern for the "notice empty URL" test in
gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp misses expecting the prompt.
Fix it by using -re -wrap.
Also, by using "confirm off", the message GDB prints if Debuginfod
downloading is available doesn't contain "Enable debuginfod" any
longer. E.g.:
~~~
(gdb) file testsuite/outputs/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols/fetch_src_and_symbols
Reading symbols from testsuite/outputs/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols/fetch_src_and_symbols...
This GDB supports auto-downloading debuginfo from the following URLs:
<http://localhost:123>
Enable debuginfod for this session? (y or [n])
~~~
~~~
(gdb) with confirm off -- file testsuite/outputs/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols/fetch_src_and_symbols
Reading symbols from testsuite/outputs/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols/fetch_src_and_symbols...
This GDB supports auto-downloading debuginfo from the following URLs:
<http://127.0.0.1:8000>
<127.0.0.1:8000>
Debuginfod has been disabled.
To make this setting permanent, add 'set debuginfod enabled off' to .gdbinit.
(No debugging symbols found in testsuite/outputs/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols/fetch_src_and_symbols)
(gdb)
~~~
I handled that correctly in the other tests that use test_urls, but
had forgotten to update the "notice empty URL" one.
Change-Id: I00040c83466e1494b3875574eb009c571a1504bf
2022-04-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
prune .note.GNU-stack warning from testsuite
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (prune_warnings_extra): Remove
.note.GNU-stack warning.
(run_dump_test): Call prune_warnings for ld and objcopy output.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Disable prune_warnings_extra temporarily
around test for absent .note.GNU-stack
* testsuite/ld-cris/globsymw2.s,
* testsuite/ld-cris/warn3.d: Modify "is not implemented" message
to avoid dejagnu prune_warnings.
ld testsuite xcoff XPASS
* testsuite/ld-scripts/defined5.d: Don't xfail xcoff targets.
Delete unused COFF gas macro
* config/obj-coff.h (sy_obj): Don't define.
(OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE): Revise comments.
2022-04-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-20 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb/debuginfod: Prevent out_of_range exception
Trailing whitespace in the string of debuginfod URLs causes an
out_of_range exception during the printing of URLs for the first
use notice.
To fix this, stop printing URLs when the substring to be printed
consists only of whitespace.
Also add first use notice testcases.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2022-04-20 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/testsuite: Introduce and use gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline
Following a7e6a19e87f3d719ea23c65b580a6d9bca4ccab3 "gdb: testsuite: add
new gdb_attach to check "attach" command", this commit proposes to
introduce the gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline helper and use it in
gdb.base/attach.exp.
This helper starts GDB and adds the "--pid=$PID" argument.
Also note that both the original and new implementation use
gdb_spawn_with_cmdline_opts, which in the end uses default_gdb_spawn.
This makes sure that we use $INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS, which by default already
contain "-iex \"set height 0\" -iex \"set width 0\"". To avoid
repetition of those arguments, gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline does not repeat
those arguments.
To maintain a behavior similat to what gdb.base/attach.exp used to do,
gdb_spawn_attach_cmdline keeps the -quiet flag.
Tested on x86_64-gnu-linux
Change-Id: I1fdcdb71c86d9c5d34bb28fc86fac68bcec37358
2022-04-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Replace symbol_symtab with symbol::symtab
This turns symbol_symtab into a method on symbol. It also replaces
symbol_set_symtab with a method.
Replace symbol_arch with symbol::arch
This turns symbol_arch into a method on symbol.
Replace symbol_objfile with symbol::objfile
This turns symbol_objfile into a method on symbol.
Remove symbol::aclass_index
Symbols have an aclass_index method, but this isn't needed, because
the aclass index isn't useful outside of the symbol implementation.
Use array_view for symbol_impls
It seemed to me that using array_view for symbol_impls would give a
bit more error checking, at least when gdb is built in libstdc++ debug
mode.
Add accessors for symbol's artificial field
For a series I'm experimenting with, it was handy to hide a symbol's
"artificial" field behind accessors. This patch is the result.
Unify the DWARF index holders
The dwarf2_per_bfd object has a separate field for each possible kind
of index. Until an earlier patch in this series, two of these were
even derived from a common base class, but still had separate slots.
This patch unifies all the index fields using the common base class
that was introduced earlier in this series. This makes it more
obvious that only a single index can be active at a time, and also
removes some code from dwarf2_initialize_objfile.
Add an ad hoc version check to dwarf_scanner_base
Some generic code in the DWARF reader has a special case for older
versions of .gdb_index. This patch adds an ad hoc version check
method so that these spots can work without specific knowledge of
which index is in use.
Simplify version check in dw2_symtab_iter_next
This simplifies the index versio check in dw2_symtab_iter_next, by
passing a reference to the index object to this function. This avoids
an indirection via the per_bfd object.
Introduce and use dwarf_scanner_base
This introduces dwarf_scanner_base, a base class for all the index
readers in the DWARF code. Then, it changes both mapped_index_base
and cooked_index_vector to derive from this new base class.
Introduce readnow_functions
This introduces readnow_functions, a new subclass of
dwarf2_base_index_functions, and changes the DWARF reader to use it.
This lets us drop the "index is NULL" hack from the gdb index code.
Remove some "OBJF_READNOW" code from dwarf2_debug_names_index
The dwarf2_debug_names_index code treats a NULL debug_names_table as
if it were from OBJF_READNOW. However, this trick is only done for
gdb_index, never for debug_names -- see dwarf2_initialize_objfile.
Let mapped index classes create the quick_symbol_functions object
This changes the mapped index classes to create the
quick_symbol_functions objects. This is a step toward having a more
abstract interface to mapped indices.
Give mapped_index_base a virtual destructor
This changes mapped_index_base to have a virtual destructor, so it can
be destroyed via its base class.
Move mapped_index_base to new header file
This moves mapped_index_base and the helper struct name_component to a
new header file in gdb/dwarf2/.
2022-04-20 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: reject all invalid SAE variants
So far an SAE-only specifier was accepted for static-rounding insns,
while SAE-only insns didn't accept static rounding specifiers. If
anything it would make sense the other way around, allowing SAE-only
insns to have the (ignored) rounding mode specified individually rather
than globally via -mevexrcig=. But for now make things match the SDM.
2022-04-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: xcoff: implement linker relaxation
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_stub_csect_name): Increase buffer size.
(xcoff_stub_get_csect_in_range, xcoff_build_one_stub): Whitespace.
(bfd_xcoff_size_stubs): Cast PRIx64 arg to required type.
Don't use freed stub_name.
Revert "as: Reject unknown -gXXX option" testsuite
This reverts the test committed as part of 6ea673e2d6.
2022-04-20 Cl?ment Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
xcoff: implement linker relaxation
bfd/ChangeLog:
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_reloc_type_noop): Add info argument.
(xcoff_reloc_type_fail): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_pos): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_neg): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_rel): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_toc): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_ba): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_crel): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_tls): Likewise.
(xcoff_reloc_type_br): Add stub handler.
(xcoff_ppc_relocate_section): Add info to
xcoff_calculate_relocation.
(xcoff_stub_indirect_call_code): New constant.
(xcoff_stub_shared_call_code): Likewise.
(bfd_xcoff_backend_data): Add stub code fields.
(bfd_pmac_xcoff_backend_data): Likewise.
* coff64-rs6000.c (xcoff64_reloc_type_br): Add stub handler.
(xcoff64_ppc_relocate_section): Add info to
xcoff64_calculate_relocation.
(xcoff64_stub_indirect_call_code): New constant.
(xcoff64_stub_shared_call_code): Likewise.
(bfd_xcoff_backend_data): Add stub code fields.
(bfd_xcoff_aix5_backend_data): Likewise.
* libxcoff.h (struct xcoff_backend_data_rec): Add stub fields.
(bfd_xcoff_stub_indirect_call_code): New define.
(bfd_xcoff_stub_indirect_call_size): New define.
(bfd_xcoff_stub_shared_call_code): New define.
(bfd_xcoff_stub_shared_call_size): New define.
(xcoff_reloc_function): Add info argument.
(enum xcoff_stub_type): New enum.
(struct xcoff_stub_hash_entry): New structure.
* xcofflink.c (struct xcoff_link_hash_table): Add stub hash
table and params fields.
(xcoff_stub_hash_entry): New define.
(xcoff_stub_hash_lookup): New define.
(stub_hash_newfunc): New function.
(_bfd_xcoff_bfd_link_hash_table_free): Free the new stub hash
table.
(_bfd_xcoff_bfd_link_hash_table_create): Create the new stub
hash table.
(xcoff_link_add_symbols): Save rawsize for XTY_SD.
(bfd_xcoff_link_init): New function.
(xcoff_stub_csect_name): New function.
(xcoff_stub_get_csect_in_range): New function.
(xcoff_stub_name): New function.
(bfd_xcoff_get_stub_entry): New function.
(bfd_xcoff_type_of_stub): New function.
(xcoff_add_stub): New function.
(xcoff_build_one_stub): New function.
(bfd_xcoff_size_stubs): New function.
(bfd_xcoff_build_stubs): New function.
(xcoff_stub_create_relocations): New function.
(xcoff_link_input_bfd): Adapt relocations to stub.
(xcoff_write_global_symbol): Adapt to new TOC entries generated
for stubs.
(_bfd_xcoff_bfd_final_link): Handle stub file.
* xcofflink.h (struct bfd_xcoff_link_params): New structure.
ld/ChangeLog:
* emultempl/aix.em (params): New variable.
(stub_file): New variable.
(xcoff_add_stub_section): New function.
(xcoff_layout_sections_again): New function
(hook_in_stub): New function.
(_after_allocation): Add stub creation.
(_create_output_section_statements): Allocate stub file and
pass params to backend.
2022-04-20 Cl?ment Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
Stubs (added in a later patch) will generate new .loader symbols, once the allocations have been done. Thus, the .loader section cannot be layout before that.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* coff-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff_put_ldsymbol_name): Write len in
ldinfo->strings instead of directly in the output_bfd.
* coff64-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff64_put_ldsymbol_name): Likewise.
* xcofflink.c (struct xcoff_link_hash_table): Remove ldrel_count
field. Add ldinfo field.
(xcoff_mark_symbol): Adjust to new ldinfo field.
(xcoff_mark): Likewise.
(bfd_xcoff_link_count_reloc): Likewise.
(xcoff_build_loader_section): Split into two functions: one that
build the loader section (this function) and one that only size
it...
(xcoff_size_loader_section): ... (this function).
(bfd_xcoff_size_dynamic_sections): Adapt to new ldinfo field.
Move the part where the dynamic sections are build to ...
(bfd_xcoff_build_dynamic_sections): ... this function.
* xcofflink.h: Add bfd_xcoff_build_dynamic_sections prototype.
include/ChangeLog:
* coff/xcoff.h (struct xcoff_loader_info): Add ldrel_count and
libpath fields.
ld/ChangeLog:
* emultempl/aix.em (_after_allocation): New function.
2022-04-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use symbol_symtab accessor in compile-object-load.c
I noticed that compile-object-load.c directly references owner.symtab
of a symbol. However, I think it's better for all users to call
symbol_symtab. This patch makes this change.
2022-04-20 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add linker warning for when it creates an executable stack.
PR 29072
2022-04-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Micro-optimize cooked_index_entry::full_name
I noticed that cooked_index_entry::full_name can return the canonical
string when there is no parent entry.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-04-20 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Implement loongarch_scan_prologue()
If can't determine prologue from the symbol table, need to examine
instructions. Implement loongarch_scan_prologue() to analyze the
function prologue from START_PC to LIMIT_PC, return the address of
the first instruction past the prologue.
2022-04-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
as: Reject unknown -gXXX option
* as.c (parse_args): Reject unknown -gXXX option.
* testsuite/gas/all/empty.s: New file.
* testsuite/gas/all/pr29067.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/all/pr29067.err: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/all/gas.exp: Run pr29067.
2022-04-19 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/selftest-arch: Make register_test_foreach_arch generate arch tests lazily
The register_test_foreach_arch is used to instantiate a given selftest
for all architectures supported by GDB. It is used in many _initialize_*
functions (under initialize_all_files, called by gdb_init).
Because the call is done during GDB's initialization, and because there
is no guaranty about the order in which all the _initialize_* functions
are executed, when register_test_foreach_arch is called, GDB is not
fully initialized. Specifically, when a particular initialize function
is executed, only the architectures registered at that point are listed
by gdbarch_printable_names.
As a consequence, the list of selftest effectively executed depends on
the order the _initialize_* functions are called. This can be observed
with the following:
$ ./gdb/gdb \
-data-directory ./gdb/data-directory \
-quiet -batch -ex "maint selftest" 2>&1 \
| grep -E "Ran [0-9]+ unit tests"
Ran 145 unit tests, 0 failed
$ GDB_REVERSE_INIT_FUNCTIONS=1 ./gdb/gdb \
-data-directory ./gdb/data-directory \
-quiet -batch -ex "maint selftest" 2>&1 \
| grep -E "Ran [0-9]+ unit tests"
Ran 82 unit tests, 0 failed
To fix this, make register_test_foreach_arch register a lazy selftest
generator. This way when the test generator is eventually executed, all
architectures are registered and we do not have a dependency on the
order the initialize functions are executed in.
Tested on x86_64-linux
Change-Id: I88eefebf7d372ad672f42d3a103e89354bc8a925
2022-04-19 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdbsupport/selftest: Allow lazy registration
This patch adds a way to delay the registration of tests until the
latest possible moment. This is intended for situations where GDB needs
to be fully initialized in order to decide if a particular selftest can
be executed or not.
This mechanism will be used in the next patch.
Change-Id: I7f6b061f4c0a6832226c7080ab4e3a2523e1b0b0
2022-04-19 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdbsupport/selftest: Replace for_each_selftest with an iterator_range
Remove the callback-based selftests::for_each_selftest function and use
an iterator_range instead.
Also use this iterator range in run_tests so all iterations over the
selftests are done in a consistent way. This will become useful in a
later commit.
Change-Id: I0b3a5349a7987fbcb0071f11c394e353df986583
2022-04-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: don't mistake ordinary immediates for SAE / rounding control
The way SAE templates are constructed was always puzzling me (including
the need for separate templates in the first place), and expressing the
extzra attribute via Imm8 actually has a bad effect: Ordinary immediates
would also be accepted, leading to an extra byte being added after the
instruction (i.e. generating bad code). Before re-working this (in
particular to accept proper Intel syntax there), fix the immediate issue
by adding the so far missing check.
x86: VCMPSH is Evex.LLIG
These were mistakenly flagged as Evex.128. Getting the LLIG status right
for insns allowing for SAE is a prereq for planned further work.
x86: drop stray CheckRegSize from VFPCLASSPH
Like VFPCLASSP{S,D} it has only a single operand allowing multiple
sizes, hence there are no pairs of operands to check for consistent
size.
x86/Intel: test non-legacy VCVT{,U}SI2SH insn forms
For an unclear reason corresponding AVX512F tests were apparently not
cloned or used as reference here, and instead the bogus legacy forms of
the insns (with the embedded rounding specifier not last) were used.
2022-04-19 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: correct and simplify NOP disassembly
It's not just REX.W which is ignored with opcode 0x90. The same goes for
REX.R and REX.X as well as empty REX. None of these are forms of
"xchg %eax,%eax" (which would mean zero-extending %eax to %rax), so they
also shouldn't be disassembled this way.
While there simplify things: A single hook function suffices, thus
making it unnecessary to keep two expressions in sync. And checking
ins->address_mode for mode_64bit also is unnecessary, as "rex" can be
non-zero only in that case anyway.
2022-04-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite/dwarf: don't automatically add directory and file entry for DWARF 5
To support DWARF 5 in the DWARF assembler line tables, we currently copy
the first user-provided directory and the first user-provided files and
make them elements at indices 0 in the directory and file name tables.
That was a sufficient behavior at the time (see commit 44fda089397a
("[gdb/testsuite] Support .debug_line v5 in dwarf assembler")), but in
the following patches, I would need to have finer grained control on
what is generated exactly. For example, I'd like to generate a DWARF 5 line
table with just a single file and a single directory.
Get rid of this behavior, and implement what is suggested in
44fda089397a: make include_dir return the directory index that can be
used to refer to that directory entry (based on the DWARF version), and
use it afterwards.
Adjust dw2-lines.exp and dw2-prologue-end.exp accordingly. Their produced
DWARF5 binaries will change a bit, in that they will now have a single
directory and file, where they had two before. But it doesn't change
the expected GDB behavior.
Change-Id: I5459b16ac9b7f28c34c9693c35c9afd2ebb3aa3b
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: use gdb_tilde_expand instead of gdb_tilde_expand_up in source_script_with_search
Since this is the latest use of gdb_tilde_expand_up, remove it.
Change-Id: I964c812ce55fe087876abf91e7a3577ad79c0425
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: make gdb_realpath_keepfile return an std::string
I'm trying to switch these functions to use std::string instead of char
arrays, as much as possible. Some callers benefit from it (can avoid
doing a copy of the result), while others suffer (have to make one more
copy).
Change-Id: I793aab17baaef8345488f4c40b9094e2695425bc
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: make gdb_abspath return an std::string
I'm trying to switch these functions to use std::string instead of char
arrays, as much as possible. Some callers benefit from it (can avoid
doing a copy of the result), while others suffer (have to make one more
copy).
Change-Id: Iced49b8ee2f189744c5072a3b217aab5af17a993
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: call gdb_tilde_expand instead of gdb_tilde_expand_up in source_script_with_search
This removes a use of gdb_tilde_expand_up, which is removed later in
this series.
Change-Id: I5887d526cea987103e4ca24514a982b0a28e992a
2022-04-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Update gnulib
This updates gnulib to a relatively recent commit. Most of this was
done by the gnulib import script; the only change I made was to
update-gnulib.sh.
Tested on x86-64 Fedora 34. I also did a mingw cross build.
2022-04-18 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix C++ cast of derived class to base class
PR c++/28907 points out that casting from a derived class to a base
class fails in some situations. The problem turned out to be a
missing use of value_embedded_offset. One peculiarity here is that,
if you managed to construct a pointer-to-derived with an embedded
offset of 0, the cast would work -- for example, one of the two new
tests here passes without the patch.
This embedded offset stuff is an endless source of bugs. I wonder if
it's possible to get rid of it somehow.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28907
2022-04-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: make gdb.ada/mi_prot.exp stop at expected location
This test attempts to run until the line marked "STOP", which is at
prot.adb:34. It first runs until the "main" symbol, then tries to place
a breakpoint by line at line 34, without specifying the source file. When looking at the logs:
-break-insert -t 34^M
^done,bkpt={number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="del",enabled="y",addr="0x0000555555558a6c",func="adafinal",file="/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/mi_pro t/b~prot.adb",fullname="/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/mi_prot/b~prot.adb",line="44",thread-groups=["i1"],times="0",original-location="/home/simark/b uild/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/mi_prot/b~prot.adb:34"}^M
... continues ...
*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="del",bkptno="2",frame={addr="0x0000555555558a6c",func="adafinal",args=[],file="/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/ mi_prot/b~prot.adb",fullname="/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/mi_prot/b~prot.adb",line="44",arch="i386:x86-64"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",co re="8"^M
... we see that the breakpoint is placed in some generated file, not in
the test source file as we expect. The problem is that "b main" in Ada
does not place a breakpoint on the "Ada main", but on some symbol in a
generated source file. So when stopped at the "main" symbol, we are not
stopped in the file that contains the STOP marker at line 34.
The test passes anyway today, so it doesn't seem to matter that we are
stopped at an unexpected location. But it starts failing with this
patch [1], because b~prot.adb:34 happens to be between two functions, so
the breakpoint doesn't resolve.
Fix this by placing the breakpoint at "$srcfile:$line", which works
regardless of what is the current source file.
However, this ends up introducing a path in the test name. Modify
mi_tbreak and mi_continue_to_line to avoid that.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-April/187686.html
Change-Id: I742e2a9993046dcb5e30c64fe2ad920a363baf75
2022-04-18 Vignesh Balasubramanian <Vignesh.Balasubrmanian@amd.com>
gdb/testsuite: add text_segment option to gdb_compile
LLVM's lld linker doesn't have the "-Ttext-segment" option, but
"--image-base" can be used instead.
To centralize the logic of checking which option is supported, add the
text_segment option to gdb_compile. Change tests that are currently
using -Ttext-segment to use that new option instead.
This patch fixes only compilation error, for example:
Before:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.base/jit-elf.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="CC_FOR_TARGET=clang LDFLAGS_FOR_TARGET=-fuse-ld=ld"
Running /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/jit-elf.exp ...
gdb compile failed, clang-13: warning: -Xlinker -Ttext-segment=0x7000000: 'linker' input unused [-Wunused-command-line-argument]
After:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.base/jit-elf.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="CC_FOR_TARGET=clang LDFLAGS_FOR_TARGET=-fuse-ld=ld"
Running /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/jit-elf.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: one_jit_test-1: continue to breakpoint: break here 1
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: one_jit_test-1: continue to breakpoint: break here 2
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: one_jit_test-2: continue to breakpoint: break here 1
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: one_jit_test-2: info function ^jit_function
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: one_jit_test-2: continue to breakpoint: break here 2
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: attach: one_jit_test-2: continue to breakpoint: break here 1
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: attach: one_jit_test-2: break here 1: attach
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: PIE: one_jit_test-1: continue to breakpoint: break here 1
FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: PIE: one_jit_test-1: continue to breakpoint: break here 2
=== gdb Summary ===
# of expected passes 26
# of unexpected failures 9
Change-Id: I3678c5c9bbfc2f80671698e28a038e6b3d14e635
2022-04-18 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb: fix using clear command to delete non-user breakpoints(PR cli/7161)
The clear command shouldn't delete momentary and internal breakpoints,
nor internal breakpoints created via Python's gdb.Breakpoint.
This patch fixes this issue and adds a testcase.
Regression tested on x86_64 openSUSE Tumbleweed(VERSION_ID="20220413").
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7161
2022-04-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-16 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add comments to dwarf2/abbrev-cache.h
This patch started when I noticed that the unordered_set include
wasn't needed in abbrev-cache.h. (That was probably leftover from
some earlier implementation of the class.) Then, I noticed that the
class itself was under-commented. This patch fixes both issues.
2022-04-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Return void from gdb_putc
I don't think it's very useful to return the character from gdb_putc,
so this patch changes it to return void.
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Handle "set height 1"
PR cli/17151 points out that "set height 1" has pathological behavior
in gdb. What I see is that gdb will endlessly print the pagination
prompt. This patch takes a simple and expedient approach to a fix:
pretend that the height is really 2.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17151
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Allow word wrapping even when paging is disabled
PR cli/20741 points out that when pagination is disabled, this also
disabled word wrapping. However, the manual documents that these
settings are separate -- if you intend to disable the wrapping, you
must use "set width unlimited".
This patch fixes the bug by letting the pagination-disabled case fall
through to the code that also handles word-wrapping.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20741
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Implement value_print for Rust
This adds an implementation of the value_print method to Rust. As
described in PR rust/22254, this removes a bit of weird-looking output
from some "print"s -- because c_value_print is bypassed. I don't have
a test for the bug that inspired this patch, because I only know how
to reproduce it when using a relatively old Rust compiler. However,
the new "cast-printing" code in value_print is required, because
omitting this causes some existing tests to fail.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22254
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Reimplement Rust slice printing
The current nightly Rust compiler (aka 1.61) added better DWARF
representation for unsized types. Fixing this is PR rust/21466; but
the code is actually the same as what is required to make slice
printing more useful, which is PR rust/23871. This patch implements
this. I tested this against various Rust compilers: 1.48, current
stable, current beta, and current nightly.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21466
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23871
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove some dead code from the Rust value printer
This removes a bit of dead code from the Rust value printer. This
code wasn't always dead -- it fixed a real bug, and a test case was
added for it. However, once val_print was removed, it became
unnecessary.
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Match rustc beta versions
The rust_compiler_version proc extracts the Rust compiler version from
the "rustc --version" output. For a beta compiler, the output looks
like:
rustc 1.60.0-beta.6 (7bccde197 2022-03-22)
This patch slightly relaxes the regexp -- removing a space -- so that
this can be understood by this proc.
2022-04-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/float-bits.exp with -m32
With test-case gdb.ada/float-bits.exp and native we get:
...
(gdb) print 16llf#7FFFF7FF4054A56FA5B99019A5C8#^M
$9 = 5.0e+25^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/float-bits.exp: print 16llf#7FFFF7FF4054A56FA5B99019A5C8#
...
but with target board unix/-m32 we have instead:
...
(gdb) print 16llf#7FFFF7FF4054A56FA5B99019A5C8#^M
Cannot export value 2596145952482202326224873165792712 as 96-bits \
unsigned integer (must be between 0 and 79228162514264337593543950335)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/float-bits.exp: print 16llf#7FFFF7FF4054A56FA5B99019A5C8#
...
Fix this by testing whether 16llf is supported by doing ptype long_long_float
which gets us either:
...
type = <16-byte float>^M
...
or:
...
type = <12-byte float>^M
...
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and unix/-m32.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29041
2022-04-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove WITH_SIM define
Since score-tdep.c was removed, the WITH_SIM define is not used in
gdb. This patch removes it.
Note that re-running autoheader shows a separate change that was
missed. I've kept it in this patch to avoid extra work.
2022-04-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.go/methods.exp with check-readmore
When running test-case gdb.go/methods.exp with make check we have:
...
(gdb) break main.T.Foo^M
Function "main.T.Foo" not defined.^M
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n^M
(gdb) XFAIL: gdb.go/methods.exp: gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at main.T.Foo
...
but with make check-readmore the XFAIL fails to trigger:
...
(gdb) break main.T.Foo^M
Function "main.T.Foo" not defined.^M
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.go/methods.exp: gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at main.T.Foo
...
This happens because this gdb_test_multiple "maintenance print symbols"
regexp:
...
-re "\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
...
matches the entire command output.
Fix this by adding the missing ^ at the regexp start.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29064
2022-04-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-14 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: Eliminate prepare_to_access_memory
Given:
- The prepare_to_access_memory machinery was added for non-stop mode.
- Only Linux supports non-stop.
- Linux no longer needs the prepare_to_access_memory machinery. In
fact, after the previous patch,
linux_process_target::prepare_to_access_memory became a nop.
Thus, prepare_to_access_memory can go away, simplifying core GDBserver
code.
Change-Id: I93ac8bfe66bd61c3d1c4a0e7d419335163120ecf
2022-04-14 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver/linux: Access memory even if threads are running
Similarly to how the native Linux target was changed
and subsequently reworked in these commits:
05c06f318fd9 Linux: Access memory even if threads are running
8a89ddbda2ec Avoid /proc/pid/mem races (PR 28065)
... teach GDBserver to access memory even when the current thread is
running, by always accessing memory via /proc/PID/mem.
The existing comment:
/* Neither ptrace nor /proc/PID/mem allow accessing memory through a
running LWP. */
... is incorrect for /proc/PID/mem does allow that.
Actually, from GDB's perspective, GDBserver could already access
memory while threads were running, but at the expense of pausing all
threads for the duration of the memory access, via
prepare_to_access_memory. This new implementation does not require
pausing any thread, thus
linux_process_target::prepare_to_access_memory /
linux_process_target::done_accessing_memory become nops. A subsequent
patch will remove the whole prepare_to_access_memory infrastructure
completely.
The GDBserver linux-low.cc implementation is simpler than GDB's
linux-nat.c's, because GDBserver always adds the unfollowed vfork/fork
children to the process list immediately when the fork/vfork event is
seen out of ptrace. I.e., there's no need to keep the file descriptor
stored on a side map, we can store it directly in the process
structure.
Change-Id: I0abfd782ceaa4ddce8d3e5f3e2dfc5928862ef61
2022-04-14 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: special case target_write_memory len==0
The next patch in this series adds a common helper routine for both
memory reads and writes, like this:
static int
proc_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *readbuf,
const gdb_byte *writebuf, int len)
{
gdb_assert ((readbuf == nullptr) != (writebuf == nullptr));
...
}
int
linux_process_target::read_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr,
unsigned char *myaddr, int len)
{
return proc_xfer_memory (memaddr, myaddr, nullptr, len);
}
linux_process_target::write_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr,
const unsigned char *myaddr, int len)
{
return proc_xfer_memory (memaddr, nullptr, myaddr, len);
}
Surprisingly, the assertion fails. That happens because it can happen
that target_write_memory is called with LEN==0, due to this in
gdb/remote.c:
/* Determine whether the remote target supports binary downloading.
This is accomplished by sending a no-op memory write of zero length
to the target at the specified address. (...) */
void
remote_target::check_binary_download (CORE_ADDR addr)
{
...
p = rs->buf.data ();
*p++ = 'X';
p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
*p++ = ',';
p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) 0);
*p++ = ':';
*p = '\0';
In this scenario, in gdbserver's target_write_memory, the "myaddr"
argument of the_target->write_memory is passed the data() of a local
gdb::byte_vector (which is a specialized std::vector). It's valid for
std::vector::data() to return NULL when the vector is empty.
This commit adds an early return to target_write_memory to avoid
target backends having to care about this. For good measure, do the
same on the read side, in read_inferior_memory.
Change-Id: Iac8f04fcf99014c624ef4036bd318ca1771ad491
2022-04-14 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver/qXfer::threads, prepare_to_access_memory=>target_pause_all
handle_qxfer_threads_proper needs to pause all threads even if the
target can read memory when threads are running, so use
target_pause_all instead, which is what the Linux implementation of
prepare_to_access_memory uses. (Only Linux implements this hook.)
A following patch will make the Linux backend be able to access memory
when threads are running, and thus will also make
prepare_to_access_memory do nothing, which would cause testsuite
regressions without this change.
Change-Id: I127fec7246b7c45b60dfa7341e781606bf54b5da
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Ignore 0,0 entries in .debug_aranges
When running the internal AdaCore test suite against the new DWARF
indexer, I found one regression on RISC-V. The test in question uses
--gc-sections, and winds up with an entry in the middle of a
.debug_aranges that has both address and length of 0. In this
scenario, gdb assumes the entries are terminated and then proceeds to
reject the section because it reads a subsequent entry as if it were a
header.
It seems to me that, because each header describes the size of each
.debug_aranges CU, it's better to simply ignore 0,0 entries and simply
read to the end. That is what this patch does.
I've patched an existing test to provide a regression test for this.
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use GetThreadDescription on Windows
Windows 10 introduced SetThreadDescription and GetThreadDescription, a
simpler way to set a thread's name. This changes gdb and gdbserver to
use this convention when it is available.
This is part of PR win32/29050.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29050
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Set the worker thread name on Windows
This patch is a bit different from the rest of the series, in that it
is a change to gdb's behavior on the host. It changes gdb's thread
pool to try to set the thread name on Windows, if SetThreadDescription
is available.
This is part of PR win32/29050.
This patch isn't likely to be useful to many people in the short term,
because the Windows port of the libstdc++ thread code is not upstream.
(AdaCore uses it, and sent it upstream, but it did not land, I don't
know why.) However, if that patch does ever go in, or presumably if
you build using some other C++ runtime library, then this will be
useful.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29050
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement thread_name for gdbserver
This changes gdbserver to implement thread_name method.
Share handle_ms_vc_exception with gdbserver
Currently, gdb's native Windows target implements the exception-based
approach for setting thread names, but gdbserver does not. This patch
moves handle_ms_vc_exception to the shared nat/windows-nat.c code, as
preparation for adding this support to gdbserver.
Move target_read_string to target/target.c
This moves the two overloads of target_read_string to a new file,
target/target.c, and updates both gdb and gdbserver to build this.
Remove the byte order parameter to target_read_string
target_read_string takes a byte order parameter, but only uses this to
check whether a given character is zero. This is readily done without
requiring the parameter, so remove it.
Rename read_string
This renames read_string to be an overload of target_read_string.
This makes it more consistent for the eventual merger with gdbserver.
Don't call QUIT in read_string
read_string does not need to call QUIT, because target_read_memory
already does. This change is needed to make string-reading usable by
gdbserver.
Fix possible Cygwin build problem
I noticed that nat/windows-nat.c checks __USEWIDE, but nothing sets it
there -- I forgot to copy over the definition when making this file.
This patch tries to fix the problem. I don't have a Cygwin setup, so
I don't know whether this is sufficient, but it's probably necessary.
2022-04-14 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/testsuite: Fix race in gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp
Pedro Alves warned me that there is a race in
gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp making the test sometimes fail on his
setup. This can be reliably reproduced using :
make check-read1 TESTS="gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp"
The relevant part of the gdb.log file is:
return 35
Function 'foo' does not follow the target calling convention.
If you continue, setting the return value will probably lead to unpredictable behaviors.
Make foo return now? (y or n) PASS: gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp: return 35
n
Not confirmed
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp: finish
The issue is that when doing the test for "return 35", the DejaGnu test
sends "n" (to tell GDB not to perform the return action) but never
consumes the "Not confirmed" acknowledgment sent by GDB. Later, when
trying to do the next test, DejaGnu tries to match the leftover output
from the "return" test. As this output is not expected, the test fails.
Fix by using gdb_test to send the "n" answer and match the confirmation
and consume all output to the prompt.
Also do minor adjustments to the main regex:
- Remove the leading ".*" which is not required.
- Ensure that the "?" from the question is properly escaped.
Tested on x86_64-gnu-linux, using
- make check TESTS="gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp"
- make check-read1 TESTS="gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp"
- make check-readmore TESTS="gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp"
Change-Id: I42858b13db2cbd623c5c1739de65ad423e0c0938
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Silence -Wmaybe-uninitialized warning from target_waitstatus
Currently, one use of target_waitstatus yields a warning:
target/waitstatus.h: In function 'void stop_all_threads()':
target/waitstatus.h:175:13: warning: 'ws.target_waitstatus::m_value' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
175 | m_value = other.m_value;
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This patch silences the warning. I tried the "volatile member"
approach that was used for gdb::optional, but that didn't work, so
this patch simply initializes the member.
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix regression on Windows with WOW64
Internally at AdaCore, we recently started testing a 64-bit gdb
debugging 32-bit processes. This failed with gdb head, but not with
gdb 11.
The tests fail like this:
Starting program: [...].exe
warning: Could not load shared library symbols for WOW64_IMAGE_SECTION.
Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
warning: Could not load shared library symbols for WOW64_IMAGE_SECTION.
Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
warning: Could not load shared library symbols for NOT_AN_IMAGE.
Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
warning: Could not load shared library symbols for NOT_AN_IMAGE.
Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
After some debugging and bisecting, to my surprise the bug was
introduced by commit 183be222 ("gdb, gdbserver: make target_waitstatus
safe").
The problem occurs in handle_exception. Previously the code did:
- ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
[...]
case EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT:
[...]
- ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
[...]
/* FALLTHROUGH */
case STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT:
DEBUG_EXCEPTION_SIMPLE ("EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT");
- ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP;
[...]
- last_sig = ourstatus->value.sig;
However, in the new code, the fallthrough case does:
+ ourstatus->set_stopped (GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP);
... which changes the 'kind' in 'ourstatus' after falling through.
This patch rearranges the 'last_sig' setting to more closely match
what was done before (this is probably not strictly needed but also
seemed harmless), and removes the fall-through in the
'ignore_first_breakpoint' case when __x86_64__ is defined.
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Reorganize Python events documentation
This slightly reorganizes the Python events documentation. It hoists
the "ThreadEvent" text out of the list of events, where it seemed to
be misplaced. It tidies the formatting a little bit (adding some
vertical space for easier reading in info), fixes a typo, adds some
missing commas, and fixes an incorrect reference to NewInferiorEvent.
2022-04-14 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove move constructor and move assignment operator from cooked_index
Building with clang++-14, I see:
CXX dwarf2/cooked-index.o
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.c:21:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.h:172:12: error: explicitly defaulted move constructor is implicitly deleted [-Werror,-Wdefaulted-function-deleted]
explicit cooked_index (cooked_index &&other) = default;
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.h:225:16: note: move constructor of 'cooked_index' is implicitly deleted because field 'm_storage' has a deleted move constructor
auto_obstack m_storage;
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/gdb_obstack.h:128:28: note: 'auto_obstack' has been explicitly marked deleted here
DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (auto_obstack);
^
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.c:21:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.h:174:17: error: explicitly defaulted move assignment operator is implicitly deleted [-Werror,-Wdefaulted-function-deleted]
cooked_index &operator= (cooked_index &&other) = default;
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.h:225:16: note: move assignment operator of 'cooked_index' is implicitly deleted because field 'm_storage' has a deleted move assignment operator
auto_obstack m_storage;
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/gdb_obstack.h:128:3: note: 'operator=' has been explicitly marked deleted here
DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (auto_obstack);
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../include/ansidecl.h:425:8: note: expanded from macro 'DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN'
void operator= (const TYPE &) = delete
^
We explicitly make cooked_index have a default move constructor and
move assignment operator. But it doesn't actually happen because
cooked_index has a field of type auto_obstack, which isn't movable.
We don't actually need cooked_index to be movable at the moment, so
remove those lines.
Change-Id: Ifc1fe3d7d67e3ae1a14363d6c1869936fe80b0a2
2022-04-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Let std::thread check pass even without pthreads
Currently, the configure check for std::thread relies on pthreads
existing. However, this means that if std::thread is implemented for
a non-pthreads host, then the check will yield the wrong answer. This
happened in AdaCore internal builds. Here, we have this GCC patch:
https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc-patches/2019-06/msg01840.html
... which adds mingw support to GCC's gthreads implementation, and
also to std::thread.
This configure change fixes this problem and enables threading for
gdb.
2022-04-14 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: fix build errors in gdbsupport/thread-pool.h used with old gcc
When I build gdb with gcc 8.3, there exist the following build errors,
rename the typedef to task_t to fix them.
CXX thread-pool.o
In file included from /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/thread-pool.cc:21:
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h: In member function std::future<void> gdb::thread_pool::post_task(std::function<void()>&&):
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h:69:44: error: declaration of task shadows a previous local [-Werror=shadow=local]
std::packaged_task<void ()> task (std::move (func));
^~~~
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h:102:39: note: shadowed declaration is here
typedef std::packaged_task<void ()> task;
^~~~
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h: In member function std::future<_Res> gdb::thread_pool::post_task(std::function<T()>&&):
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h:80:41: error: declaration of task shadows a previous local [-Werror=shadow=local]
std::packaged_task<T ()> task (std::move (func));
^~~~
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdbsupport/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h:102:39: note: shadowed declaration is here
typedef std::packaged_task<void ()> task;
^~~~
2022-04-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Detect 'No MPX support'
On openSUSE Leap 15.3, mpx support has been disabled for m32, so I run into:
...
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: outputs/gdb.arch/i386-mpx/i386-mpx ^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M
No MPX support^M
...
and eventually into all sort of fails in this and other mpx test-cases.
Fix this by detecting the "No MPX support" message in have_mpx.
Tested on x86_64-linux with target boards unix and unix/-m32.
2022-04-14 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
M68K: avoid quadratic slowdlow in label alignment check
Before the change tc-m68k maintained a list of seen labels.
Alignment check traversed label list to resolve symbol to label.
This caused quadratic slowdown as each symbol was checked against
each label. Worst affected files are the ones built with debugging
enabled as DWARF generates many labels.
The change embeds auxiliary label information right into symbol using
TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE.
Before the change test from PR 29058 did not finish in 10 minutes. After
the change it finishes in 2 seconds.
gas/ChangeLog:
PR 29058
* config/tc-m68k.h (TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE): define as m68k_tc_sy.
* config/tc-m68k.c (m68k_frob_label): Use TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE to
store label information.
2022-04-14 caiyinyu <caiyinyu@loongson.cn>
ld:LoongArch: Fix glibc fail: tst-audit25a/b.
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c: Add new func elf_loongarch64_hash_symbol.
2022-04-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF to complaint_interceptor::issue_complaint
Fix this error when building with clang++-14:
CXX complaints.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/complaints.c:130:65: error: format string is not a string literal [-Werror,-Wformat-nonliteral]
g_complaint_interceptor->m_complaints.insert (string_vprintf (fmt, args));
^~~
Change-Id: I0ef11f970510eb8638d1651fa0d5eeecd6a9d31a
2022-04-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix clang build failure in msymbol_is_mips
Building with clang++-14, I see:
CXX mips-tdep.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.c:453:12: error: use of bitwise '|' with boolean operands [-Werror,-Wbitwise-instead-of-logical]
return !(MSYMBOL_TARGET_FLAG_MIPS16 (msym)
~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.h:54:2: note: expanded from macro 'MSYMBOL_TARGET_FLAG_MIPS16'
(sym)->target_flag_1 ()
^
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.c:453:12: note: cast one or both operands to int to silence this warning
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.h:54:2: note: expanded from macro 'MSYMBOL_TARGET_FLAG_MIPS16'
(sym)->target_flag_1 ()
^
That's since commit e165fcef1e7 ("gdb: remove MSYMBOL_TARGET_FLAG_{1,2}
macros"). Fix this by using the boolean || rather than the bitwise |,
since the new methods return bool values. No change in behavior
expected.
Change-Id: Ia82664135aa25db64c29c92f5c1141859d345bf7
2022-04-13 Alexander von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
binutils: enable PE on 32bit haiku build
* config.bfd (x86-haiku): Add i386_pei_vec as a selectable format.
2022-04-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make intrusive_list_node's next/prev private
Tromey noticed that intrusive_list_node leaves its data members
public, which seems sub-optimal.
This commit makes intrusive_list_node's data fields private.
intrusive_list_iterator, intrusive_list_reverse_iterator, and
intrusive_list do need to access the fields, so they are made friends.
Change-Id: Ia8b306b40344cc218d423c8dfb8355207a612ac5
2022-04-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Tidy gdb.base/parse_number.exp
Now that Ada is able to parse & print 0xffffffffffffffff (2^64-1) in
hex, move it to the else branch like most other languages.
Change-Id: Ib305f6bb2b6b230a1190ea783b245b865821094c
2022-04-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: member access within null pointer of union
Add some nonsense to cover "undefined behaviour".
* ldlang.c (section_for_dot): Avoid UB.
2022-04-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in Ada number lexing
On irc, Pedro pointed out that Ada couldn't properly handle
0xffffffffffffffff. This used to work, but is a regression due to
some patches I wrote in the Ada lexer. This patch fixes the bug.
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix "passing NULL to memcpy" UBsan error in dwarf2/cooked-index.c
Reading a simple file compiled with :
$ gcc -DONE=1 -gdwarf-4 -g3 test.c
$ gcc --version
gcc (Ubuntu 9.4.0-1ubuntu1~20.04) 9.4.0
I get:
Reading symbols from /tmp/cwd/a.out...
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/cooked-index.c:332:11: runtime error: null pointer passed as argument 2, which is declared to never be null
It looks like even if the size is 0 (the size of the `entries` vector is
0), we shouldn't be passing a NULL pointer to memcpy. And
`entries.data ()` returns NULL.
Fix that by using std::vector::insert to insert the items of entries
into m_entries. I haven't checked, but it should essentially compile
down to a memcpy, since the vector elements are trivially copyiable.
Change-Id: I75f1c901e9b522e42e89eb5936e2c70d68eb21e5
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: change subfile::line_vector to an std::vector
Change this field to an std::vector to facilitate memory management.
Since the linetable_entry array is copied into the symtab resulting from
the subfile, it is possible to change it without changing how symtab
stores the linetable entries (which would be a much larger change).
There is a small change in buildsym_compunit::record_line to avoid
accessing a now invalid linetable_entry. Before this patch, we keep a
pointer to the last linetable entry, pop it from the vector, and then
read last->line. It works with the manually-maintained array, but since
we now use std::vector::pop_back, I am afraid that it could be flagged
as an invalid access by the various static / dynamic analysis tools to
access the linetable_entry object after popping it from the vector.
Instead, record just the line number in an optional and use it.
There are substantial changes in xcoffread.c that simplify the code, but
I can't test them. I was hesitant to do this change because of that,
but I decided to send it anyway. I don't think that an almost dead
platform should hold back improving the code in the common parts of GDB.
The changes in xcoffread.c are:
- Make arrange_linetable "arrange" the linetable passed as a parameter,
instead of returning possibly a new one, possibly the same one.
- In the "Process main file's line numbers.", I'm not too sure what
happens. We get the lintable from "main_subfile", "arrange" it, but
then assign the result to the current subfile, obtained with
get_current_subfile. I assume that the current subfile is also the
main one, so now I just call arrange_linetable on the main subfile's
line table.
- Remove that weird "Useless if!!!" FIXME comment. It's been there
forever, but the "if" is still there, so I guess the "if" can stay
there.
Change-Id: I11799006fd85189e8cf5bd3a168f8f38c2c27a80
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: use std::vector for temporary linetable_entry array in arrange_linetable
Reduce manual memory management and make the code a bit easier to read.
This helps me a bit in the following patch.
I don't have a way to test this, it's best-effort.
Change-Id: I64af9cd756311deabc6cd95e701dfb21234a40a5
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: change subfile::name and buildsym_compunit::m_comp_dir to strings
Change subfile::name to be a string, for easier memory management.
Change buildsym_compunit::m_comp_dir as well, since we move one in to
the other at some point in patch_subfile_names, so it's easier to do
both at the same time. There are various NULL checks for both fields
currently, replace them with empty checks, I think it ends up
equivalent.
I can't test the change in xcoffread.c, it's best-effort.
Change-Id: I62b5fb08b2089e096768a090627ac7617e90a016
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: allocate subfile with new
Allocate struct subfile with new, initialize its fields instead of
memset-ing it to 0. Use a unique_ptr for the window after a subfile has
been allocated but before it is linked in the buildsym_compunit's list
of subfile (and therefore owned by the buildsym_compunit.
I can't test the change in xcoffread.c, it's best-effort. I couldn't
find where subfiles are freed in that file, I assume they were
intentionally (or not) leaked.
Change-Id: Ib3b6877de31b7e65bc466682f08dbf5840225f24
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: use decltype instead of typeof in dwarf2/read.c
When building with -std=c++11, I get:
CXX dwarf2/read.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/read.c: In function ‘void dwarf2_build_psymtabs_hard(dwarf2_per_objfile*)’:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/read.c:7130:23: error: expected type-specifier before ‘typeof’
7130 | using iter_type = typeof (per_bfd->all_comp_units.begin ());
| ^~~~~~
This is because typeof is a GNU extension. Use C++'s decltype keyword
instead.
Change-Id: Ieca2e8d25e50f71dc6c615a405a972a54de3ef14
2022-04-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: use result_of_t instead of result_of in parallel-for.h
When building with -std=c++11, I get:
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/parallel-for-selftests.c:22: /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:134:10: error: ‘result_of_t’ is not a member of ‘std’; did you mean ‘result_of’?
134 | std::result_of_t<RangeFunction (RandomIt, RandomIt)>
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
| result_of
This is because result_of_t has been introduced in C++14. Use the
equivalent result_of<...>::type instead.
result_of and result_of_t have been removed in C++20 though, so I think
we'll need some patches eventually to make the code use invoke_result
instead, depending on the C++ version.
Change-Id: I4817f361c0ebcdd4b32976898fc368bb302b61b9
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove dwarf2_per_cu_data::v
Now that the psymtab reader has been removed, the
dwarf2_per_cu_data::v union is no longer needed. Instead, we can
simply move the members from dwarf2_per_cu_quick_data into
dwarf2_per_cu_data and remove the "quick" object entirely.
Delete DWARF psymtab code
This removes the DWARF psymtab reader.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Enable the new DWARF indexer
This patch finally enables the new indexer. It is left until this
point in the series to avoid any regressions; in particular, it has to
come after the changes to the DWARF index writer to avoid this
problem.
However, if you experiment with the series, this patch can be moved
anywhere from the patch to wire in the new reader to this point.
Moving this patch around is how I got separate numbers for the
parallelization and background finalization patches.
In the ongoing performance example, this reduces the time from the
baseline of 1.598869 to 0.903534.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Adapt .debug_names writer to new DWARF scanner
This updates the .debug_names writer to work with the new DWARF
scanner.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Adapt .gdb_index writer to new DWARF scanner
This updates the .gdb_index writer to work with the new DWARF scanner.
The .debug_names writer is deferred to another patch, to make review
simpler.
This introduces a small hack to psyms_seen_size, but is
inconsequential because this function will be deleted in a subsequent
patch.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Genericize addrmap handling in the DWARF index writer
This updates the DWARF index writing code to make the addrmap-writing
a bit more generic. Now, it can handle multiple maps, and it can work
using the maps generated by the new indexer.
Note that the new addrmap_index_data::using_index field will be
deleted in a future patch, when the rest of the DWARF psymtab code is
removed.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Change parameters to write_address_map
To support the removal of partial symtabs from the DWARF index writer,
this makes a small change to have write_address_map accept the address
map as a parameter, rather than assuming it always comes from the
per-BFD object.
Change the key type in psym_index_map
In order to change the DWARF index writer to avoid partial symtabs,
this patch changes the key type in psym_index_map (and renames that
type as well). Using the dwarf2_per_cu_data as the key makes it
simpler to reuse this code with the new indexer.
Rename write_psymtabs_to_index
We'll be removing all the psymtab code from the DWARF reader. As a
preparatory step, this renames write_psymtabs_to_index to avoid the
"psymtab" name.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
"Finalize" the DWARF index in the background
After scanning the CUs, the DWARF indexer merges all the data into a
single vector, canonicalizing C++ names as it proceeds. While not
necessarily single-threaded, this process is currently done in just
one thread, to keep memory costs lower.
However, this work is all done without reference to any data outside
of the indexes. This patch improves the apparent performance of GDB
by moving it to the background. All uses of the index are then made
to wait for this process to complete.
In our ongoing example, this reduces the scanning time on gdb itself
to 0.173937 (wall). Recall that before this patch, the time was
0.668923; and psymbol reader does this in 1.598869. That is, at the
end of this series, we see about a 10x speedup.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Parallelize DWARF indexing
This parallelizes the new DWARF indexer. The indexer's storage was
designed so that each storage object and each indexer is fully
independent. This setup makes it simple to scan different CUs
independently.
This patch creates a new cooked index storage object per thread, and
then scans a subset of all the CUs in each such thread, using gdb's
existing thread pool.
In the ongoing "gdb gdb" example, this patch reduces the wall time
down to 0.668923, from 0.903534. (Note that the 0.903534 is the time
for the new index -- that is, when the "enable the new index" patch is
rebased to before this one. However, in the final series, that patch
appears toward the end. Hopefully this isn't too confusing.)
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Pre-read DWARF section data
Because BFD is not thread-safe, we need to be sure that any section
data that is needed is read before trying to do any DWARF indexing in
the background.
This patch takes a simple approach to this -- it pre-reads the
"info"-related sections. This is done for the main file, but also any
auxiliary files as well, such as the DWO file.
This patch could be perhaps enhanced by removing some now-redundant
calls to dwarf2_section_info::read.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce thread-safe handling for complaints
This introduces a new class that can be used to make the "complaint"
code thread-safe. Instantiating the class installs a new handler that
collects complaints, and then prints them all when the object is
destroyed.
This approach requires some locks. I couldn't think of a better way
to handle this, though, because the I/O system is not thread-safe.
It seemed to me that only GDB developers are likely to enable
complaints, and because the complaint macro handle this case already
(before any locks are required), I reasoned that any performance
degradation that would result here would be fine.
As an aside about complaints -- are they useful at all? I just ignore
them, myself, since mostly they seem to indicate compiler problems
that can't be solved in the GDB world anyway. I'd personally prefer
them to be in a separate tool, like a hypothetical 'dwarflint'.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Wire in the new DWARF indexer
This wires the new DWARF indexer into the existing reader code. That
is, this patch makes the modification necessary to enable the new
indexer. It is not actually enabled by this patch -- that will be
done later.
I did a bit of performance testing for this patch and a few others. I
copied my built gdb to /tmp, so that each test would be done on the
same executable. Then, each time, I did:
$ ./gdb -nx
(gdb) maint time 1
(gdb) file /tmp/gdb
This patch is the baseline and on one machine came in at 1.598869 wall
time.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Implement quick_symbol_functions for cooked DWARF index
This implements quick_symbol_functions for the cooked DWARF index.
This is the code that interfaces between the new index and the rest of
gdb. Cooked indexes still aren't created by anything.
For the most part this is straightforward. It shares some concepts
with the existing DWARF indices. However, because names are stored
pre-split in the cooked index, name lookup here is necessarily
different; see expand_symtabs_matching for the gory details.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
The new DWARF indexer
This patch adds the code to index DWARF. This is just the scanner; it
reads the DWARF and constructs the index, but nothing calls it yet.
The indexer is split into two parts: a storage object and an indexer
object. This is done to support the parallelization of this code -- a
future patch will create a single storage object per thread.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce the new DWARF index class
This patch introduces the new DWARF index class. It is called
"cooked" to contrast against a "raw" index, which is mapped from disk
without extra effort.
Nothing constructs a cooked index yet. The essential idea here is
that index entries are created via the "add" method; then when all the
entries have been read, they are "finalize"d -- name canonicalization
is performed and the entries are added to a sorted vector.
Entries use the DWARF name (DW_AT_name) or linkage name, not the full
name as is done for partial symbols.
These two facets -- the short name and the deferred canonicalization
-- help improve the performance of this approach. This will become
clear in later patches, when parallelization is added.
Some special code is needed for Ada, because GNAT only emits mangled
("encoded", in the Ada lingo) names, and so we reconstruct the
hierarchical structure after the fact. This is also done in the
finalization phase.
One other aspect worth noting is that the way the "main" function is
found is different in the new code. Currently gdb will notice
DW_AT_main_subprogram, but won't recognize "main" during reading --
this is done later, via explicit symbol lookup. This is done
differently in the new code so that finalization can be done in the
background without then requiring a synchronization to look up the
symbol.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Update skip_one_die for new abbrev properties
This updates skip_one_die to speed it up in the cases where either
sibling_offset or size_if_constant are set.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Statically examine abbrev properties
The new DIE scanner works more or less along the lines indicated by
the text for the .debug_names section, disregarding the bugs in the
specification.
While working on this, I noticed that whether a DIE is interesting is
a static property of the DIE's abbrev. It also turns out that many
abbrevs imply a static size for the DIE data, and additionally that
for many abbrevs, the sibling offset is stored at a constant offset
from the start of the DIE.
This patch changes the abbrev reader to analyze each abbrev and stash
the results on the abbrev. These combine to speed up the new indexer.
If the "interesting" flag is false, GDB knows to skip the DIE
immediately. If the sibling offset is statically known, skipping can
be done without reading any attributes; and in some other cases, the
DIE can be skipped using simple arithmetic.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce DWARF abbrev cache
The replacement for the DWARF psymbol reader works in a somewhat
different way. The current reader reads and stores all the DIEs that
might be interesting. Then, if it is missing a DIE, it re-scans the
CU and reads them all. This approach is used for both intra- and
inter-CU references.
I instrumented the partial DIE hash to see how frequently it was used:
[ 0] -> 1538165
[ 1] -> 4912
[ 2] -> 96102
[ 3] -> 175
[ 4] -> 244
That is, most DIEs are never used, and some are looked up twice -- but
this is just an artifact of the implementation of
partial_die_info::fixup, which may do two lookups.
Based on this, the new implementation doesn't try to store any DIEs,
but instead just re-scans them on demand. In order to do this,
though, it is convenient to have a cache of DWARF abbrevs. This way,
if a second CU is needed to resolve an inter-CU reference, the abbrevs
for that CU need only be computed a single time.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add "fullname" handling to file_and_directory
This changes the file_and_directory object to be able to compute and
cache the "fullname" in the same way that is done by other code, like
the psymtab reader.
Specialize std::hash for gdb_exception
This adds a std::hash specialization for gdb_exception. This lets us
store these objects in a hash table, which is used later in this
series to de-duplicate the exception output from multiple threads.
Return vector of results from parallel_for_each
This changes gdb::parallel_for_each to return a vector of the results.
However, if the passed-in function returns void, the return type
remains 'void'. This functionality is used later, to parallelize the
new indexer.
Add batching parameter to parallel_for_each
parallel_for_each currently requires each thread to process at least
10 elements. However, when indexing, it's fine for a thread to handle
just a single CU. This patch parameterizes this, and updates the one
user.
Refactor build_type_psymtabs_reader
The new DWARF scanner needs to save the entire cutu_reader object, not
just parts of it. In order to make this possible, this patch
refactors build_type_psymtabs_reader. This change is done separately
because it is easy to review in isolation and it helps make the later
patches smaller.
Add new overload of dwarf5_djb_hash
This adds a new overload of dwarf5_djb_hash. This is used in
subsequent patches.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add name splitting
The new DWARF index code works by keeping names pre-split. That is,
rather than storing a symbol name like "a::b::c", the names "a", "b",
and "c" will be stored separately.
This patch introduces some helper code to split a full name into its
components.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Let skip_one_die not skip children
This patch adds an option to skip_one_die that causes it not to skip
child DIEs. This is needed in the new scanner.
Allow ada_decode not to decode operators
The new DWARF scanner records names as they appear in DWARF. However,
because Ada is unusual, it also decodes the Ada names to synthesize
package components for them. In order for this to work out properly,
gdb also needs a mode where ada_decode can be instructed not to decode
Ada operator names. That is what this patch implements.
Refactor dwarf2_get_pc_bounds
This changes dwarf2_get_pc_bounds so that it does not directly access
a psymtab or psymtabs_addrmap. Instead, both the addrmap and the
desired payload are passed as parameters. This makes it suitable to
be used by the new indexer.
Add dwarf2_per_cu_data::addresses_seen
This adds a new member to dwarf2_per_cu_data that indicates whether
addresses have been seen for this CU. This is then set by the
.debug_aranges reader. The idea here is to detect when a CU does not
have address information, so that the new indexer will know to do
extra scanning in that case.
Fix latent bug in read_addrmap_from_aranges
Tom de Vries found a failure that we tracked down to a latent bug in
read_addrmap_from_aranges (previously create_addrmap_from_aranges).
The bug is that this code can erroneously reject .debug_aranges when
dwz is in use, due to CUs at duplicate offsets. Because aranges can't
refer to a CU coming from the dwz file, the fix is to simply skip such
CUs in the loop.
Split create_addrmap_from_aranges
This patch splits create_addrmap_from_aranges into a wrapper function
and a worker function. The worker function is then used in a later
patch.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Allow thread-pool.h to work without threads
thread-pool.h requires CXX_STD_THREAD in order to even be included.
However, there's no deep reason for this, and during review we found
that one patch in the new DWARF indexer series unconditionally
requires the thread pool.
Because the thread pool already allows a task to be run in the calling
thread (for example if it is configured to have no threads in the
pool), it seemed straightforward to make this code ok to use when host
threads aren't available at all.
This patch implements this idea. I built it on a thread-less host
(mingw, before my recent configure patch) and verified that the result
builds.
After the thread-pool change, parallel-for.h no longer needs any
CXX_STD_THREAD checks at all, so this patch removes these as well.
2022-04-12 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Rebase the zlib sources to the 1.2.12 release
2022-04-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/stap-probe.exp with read1
When running test-case gdb.base/stap-probe.exp with make target check-read1, I
run into this and similar:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/stap-probe.exp: without semaphore, not optimized: \
info probes stap (timeout)
...
Fix this by using gdb_test_lines instead of gdb_test.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add C++ "save gdb-index" test
I found a bug in the new DWARF reader series, related to the handling
of enumerator names. This bug caused a crash, so this patch adds a
regression test for this particular case. I'm checking this in.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove "Ada Settings" node from the manual
A while back, I sent a patch to unify the Ada varsize-limit setting
with the more generic max-value-size:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182004.html
However, it turns out I somehow neglected to send part of the patch.
Internally, I also removed the "Ada Settings" node from the manual, as
it only documents the obsolete setting.
This patch removes this text.
2022-04-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Require GNAT debug info for some Ada tests
A few Ada tests require some debug info in the GNAT runtime. When run
without this info, these tests can't pass. This patch changes these
tests to detect this situation and stop with "untested".
2022-04-12 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop strip from removing debuglink sections.
PR 28992
* objcopy.c (is_strip_section_1): Do not delete debuglink sections
when stripping debug information.
2022-04-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: new_logical_line{,_flags}() can return "void"
With the sole user of the return value gone, convert the return type to
void. This in turn allows simplifying another construct, by moving it
slightly later in the function.
gas: drop .appfile and .appline
These were used originally to represent "# <line> <file>" constructs
inserted by (typically) compilers when pre-processing. Quite some time
ago they were replaced by .linefile though. Since the original
directives were never documented, we ought to be able to remove support
for them. As a result in a number of case function parameter aren't used
anymore and can hence be dropped.
2022-04-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: further adjust file/line handling for .macro
Commit 7992631e8c0b ("gas/Dwarf: improve debug info generation from .irp
and alike blocks"), while dealing okay with actual assembly source files
not using .file/.line and alike outside but not inside of .macro, has
undue effects when the logical file/line pair was already overridden:
Line numbers would continuously increment while processing the expanded
macro, while the goal of the PR gas/16908 workaround is to keep the
expansion associated with the line invoking the macro. However, as soon
as enough state was overridden _inside_ the macro to cause as_where() to
no longer fall back top as_where_physical(), honor this by resuming the
bumping of the logical line number.
Note that from_sb_is_expansion's initializer was 1 for an unknown
reason. While renaming the variable and changing its type, also change
the initializer to "expanding_none", which would have been "0" in the
original code. Originally the initializer value itself wasn't ever used
anyway (requiring sb_index != -1), as it necessarily had changed in
input_scrub_include_sb() alongside setting sb_index to other than -1.
Strictly speaking input_scrub_insert_line() perhaps shouldn't use
expanding_none, yet none of the other enumerators fit there either. And
then strictly speaking that function probably shouldn't exist in the
first place. It's used only by tic54x.
2022-04-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: further adjust file/line handling for .irp and alike
Commit 7992631e8c0b ("gas/Dwarf: improve debug info generation from .irp
and alike blocks"), while dealing okay with actual assembly source files
not using .file/.line and alike outside but not inside of .irp et al,
has undue effects when the logical file/line pair was already
overridden: Line numbers would continuously increment upon every
iteration, thus potentially getting far off. Furthermore it left it to
the user to actually insert .file/.line inside such constructs. Note
though that before aforementioned change things weren't pretty either:
Diagnostics (and debug info) would be associated with the directive
terminating the iteration construct, rather than with the actual lines.
Handle this automatically by simply latching the present line and then
re-instating coordinates first thing on every iteration; note that the
file can't change from what was previously pushed on the scrubber's
state stack, and hence can be taken from there by using a new flavor of
.linefile (which is far better memory-footprint-wise than recording the
full path in the inserted directive). (This then leaves undisturbed any
file/line control occurring in the body of the construct, as these will
only be seen and processed afterwards.)
2022-04-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: make {disp16} work similarly to {disp32}
In a few places {disp32} was handled specially when really {disp16}
wants handling just the same.
2022-04-12 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng doesn't build with gcc 5.5
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-07 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29026
* configure.ac: Check version of bison.
* src/Makefile.am (QLParser.yy): Run bison
* src/QLParser.yy: Adapted for bison 3.04 or later.
* src/DbeSession.cc: make some params const.
* src/DbeSession.h: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/QLParser.tab.cc: Deleted.
* src/QLParser.tab.hh: Deleted.
* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* gp-display-html/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* libcollector/configure: Regenerate.
2022-04-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-11 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
i386-fbsd-nat: Remove two unused variables.
Earlier versions of the change in
1285ce8629b37f800bf21731ee7c7a8b1b8d0233 used this variable, but not
the final version that landed.
2022-04-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove MSYMBOL_TARGET_FLAG_{1,2} macros
Replace with equivalent getter/setter macros.
Change-Id: I1042564dd47347337374762bd64ec31b5c573ee2
2022-04-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove minimal symbol size macros
Remove MSYMBOL_HAS_SIZE, MSYMBOL_SIZE and SET_MSYMBOL_SIZE, replace them
with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I6ee1cf82df37e58dff52ea6568ceb4649c7d7538
2022-04-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove MSYMBOL_TYPE macro
Add a getter and a setter for a minimal symbol's type. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I89900df5ffa5687133fe1a16b2e0d4684e67a77d
2022-04-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove symbol value macros
Remove all macros related to getting and setting some symbol value:
#define SYMBOL_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.ivalue
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol) \
#define SET_SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol, new_value) \
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES(symbol) (symbol)->value.bytes
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_COMMON_BLOCK(symbol) (symbol)->value.common_block
#define SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.block
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN(symbol) (symbol)->value.chain
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.ivalue
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_RAW_ADDRESS(symbol) ((symbol)->value.address + 0)
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(objfile, symbol) \
#define BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol) \
#define SET_MSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol, new_value) \
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES(symbol) (symbol)->value.bytes
#define MSYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.block
Replace them with equivalent methods on the appropriate objects.
Change-Id: Iafdab3b8eefc6dc2fd895aa955bf64fafc59ed50
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/doc: add section about Fortran intrinsic functions and types
The earlier version of this document had no sections about the
available Fortran intrinsic functions or the Fortran builtin types.
I added two sections 'Fortran intrinsics' and 'Fortran types' to
document the available Fortran language features. The subsection
'Fortran Defaults' has been integrated into the Fortran subsection.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran/testsuite: add complex from integers test
When working on the files I noted that there was no actual test for a
COMPLEX built from two INTEGERS. I added that now for completion.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: rewrite intrinsic handling and add some missing overloads
The operators FLOOR, CEILING, CMPLX, LBOUND, UBOUND, and SIZE accept
(some only with Fortran 2003) the optional parameter KIND. This
parameter determines the kind of the associated return value. So far,
implementation of this kind parameter has been missing in GDB.
Additionally, the one argument overload for the CMPLX intrinsic function
was not yet available.
This patch adds overloads for all above mentioned functions to the
Fortran intrinsics handling in GDB.
It re-writes the intrinsic function handling section to use the helper
methods wrap_unop_intrinsic/wrap_binop_intrinsic/wrap_triop_intrinsic.
These methods define the action taken when a Fortran intrinsic function
is called with a certain amount of arguments (1/2/3). The helper methods
fortran_wrap2_kind and fortran_wrap3_kind have been added as equivalents
to the existing wrap and wrap2 methods.
After adding more overloads to the intrinsics handling, some of the
operation names were no longer accurate. E.g. UNOP_FORTRAN_CEILING
has been renamed to FORTRAN_CEILING as it is no longer a purely unary
intrinsic function. This patch also introduces intrinsic functions with
one, two, or three arguments to the Fortran parser and the
UNOP_OR_BINOP_OR_TERNOP_INTRINSIC token has been added.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: rename f77_keywords to f_keywords
Rename f77_keywords to f_keywords since some of the introduced keywords
in the array are f90 only.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: Change GDB print for fortran default types
Currently, when asking GDB to print the type of a Fortran default type
such as INTEGER or REAL, GDB will return the default name of that type,
e.g. "integer"/"real":
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer
(gdb) ptype real
type = real
For LOGICAL and COMPLEX it would return the actual underlying types
(gdb) ptype logical
type = logical*4
(gdb) ptype complex
type = complex*4
Similarly, GDB would print the default integer type for the underlying
default type:
(gdb) ptype integer*4
type = integer
(gdb) ptype real*4
type = real
(gdb) ptype logical
type = logical*4
(gdb) ptype complex*4
type = complex*4
This is inconsistent and a bit confusing. Both options somehow indicate
what the internal underlying type for the default type is - but I think
the logical/complex version is a bit clearer.
Consider again:
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer
This indicates to a user that the type of "integer" is Fortran's default
integer type. Without examining "ptype integer*4" I would expect, that
any variable declared integer in the actual code would also fit into a
GDB integer. But, since we cannot adapt out internal types to the
compiler flags used at compile time of a debugged binary, this might be
wrong. Consider debugging Fortran code compiled with GNU and e.g. the
"-fdefault-integer-8" flag. In this case the gfortran default integer
would be integer*8 while GDB internally still would use a builtin_integer,
so an integer of the size of an integer*4 type. On the other hand having
GDB print
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer*4
makes this clearer. I would still be tempted to fit a variable declared
integer in the code into a GDB integer - but at least ptype would
directly tell me what is going on. Note, that when debugging a binary
compiled with "-fdefault-integer-8" a user will always see the actual
underlying type of any variable declared "integer" in the Fortran code.
So having the code
program test
integer :: a = 5
print *, a ! breakpt
end program test
will, when breaking at breakpt print
(gdb) ptype var
type = integer(kind=4)
or
(gdb) ptype var
type = integer(kind=8)
depending on the compiler flag.
This patch changes the outputs for the REAL and INTEGER default types to
actually print the internally used type over the default type name.
The new behavior for the above examples is:
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer*4
(gdb) ptype integer*4
type = integer*4
Existing testcases have been adapted to reflect the new behavior.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: clean-up Fortran intrinsic types
The currently implemented intrinsic type handling for Fortran missed some
tokens and their parsing. While still not all Fortran type kinds are
implemented this patch at least makes the currently handled types
consistent. As an example for what this patch does, consider the
intrinsic type INTEGER. GDB implemented the handling of the
keywords "integer" and "integer_2" but missed "integer_4" and "integer_8"
even though their corresponding internal types were already available as
the Fortran builtin types builtin_integer and builtin_integer_s8.
Similar problems applied to LOGICAL, REAL, and COMPLEX. This patch adds
all missing tokens and their parsing. Whenever a section containing the
type handling was touched, it also was reordered to be in a more easy to
grasp order. All INTEGER/REAL/LOGICAL/COMPLEX types were grouped
together and ordered ascending in their size making a missing one more
easy to spot.
Before this change GDB would print the following when tyring to use the
INTEGER keywords:
(gdb) set language fortran
(gdb) ptype integer*1
unsupported kind 1 for type integer
(gdb) ptype integer_1
No symbol table is loaded. Use the "file" command.
(gdb) ptype integer*2
type = integer*2
(gdb) ptype integer_2
type = integer*2
(gdb) ptype integer*4
type = integer
(gdb) ptype integer_4
No symbol table is loaded. Use the "file" command.
(gdb) ptype integer*8
type = integer*8
(gdb) ptype integer_8
No symbol table is loaded. Use the "file" command.
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer
With this patch all keywords are available and the GDB prints:
(gdb) set language fortran
(gdb) ptype integer*1
type = integer*1
(gdb) ptype integer_1
type = integer*1
(gdb) ptype integer*2
type = integer*2
(gdb) ptype integer_2
type = integer*2
(gdb) ptype integer*4
type = integer*4
(gdb) ptype integer_4
type = integer*4
(gdb) ptype integer*8
type = integer*8
(gdb) ptype integer_8
type = integer*8
(gdb) ptype integer
type = integer
The described changes have been applied to INTEGER, REAL, COMPLEX,
and LOGICAL. Existing testcases have been adapted to reflect the
new behavior. Tests for formerly missing types have been added.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: change default logical type to builtin_logical
According to the Fortran standard, logical is of the size of a
'single numeric storage unit' (just like real and integer). For
gfortran, flang and ifx/ifort this storage unit (or the default
logical type) is of size kind 4, actually occupying 4 bytes of
storage, and so the default type for logical expressions in
Fortran should probably also be Logical*4 and not Logical*2. I
adapted GDB's behavior to be in line with
gfortran/ifort/ifx/flang.
gdb/fortran: reformat build_fortran_types in f-lang.c
Add a few newlines after the type definitions and remove some
unnecessary linebreaks.
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: fix complex type in Fortran builtin types
Before this patch things like
(gdb) ptype complex*8
complex*16
(gdb) ptype complex*4
complex*8
were possible in GDB, which seems confusing for a user. The reason
is a mixup in the implementation of the Fortran COMPLEX type. In
Fortran the "*X" after a type would normally (I don't think this
is language required) specify the type's size in memory. For the
COMPLEX type the kind parameters usually (at least for GNU, Intel, Flang)
specify not the size of the whole type but the size of the individual
two REALs used to form the COMPLEX. Thus, a COMPLEX*4 will usually
consist of two REAL*4s. Internally this type was represented by a
builtin_complex_s8 - but here I think the s8 actually meant the raw
size of the type. This is confusing and I renamed the types (e.g.
builting_complex_s8 became builtin_complex_s4 according to its most
common useage) and their printed names to their language equivalent.
Additionally, I added the default COMPLEX type "COMPLEX" being the same
as a COMPLEX*4 (as is normally the case) and removed the latter. I added
a few tests for this new behavior as well.
The new behavior is
(gdb) ptype complex*8
complex*8
(gdb) ptype complex*4
complex*4
2022-04-11 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/f-lang: remove hidden ^L characters
gdb/f-lang: add Integer*1 to Fortran builtin types
Add builtin_integer_s1 of size TARGET_CHAR_BIT to Fortran builtin types.
2022-04-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/annota1.exp with pie
Since commit 359efc2d894 ("[gdb/testsuite] Make gdb.base/annota1.exp more
robust") we see this fail with target board unix/-fPIE/-pie:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: run until main breakpoint (timeout)
...
The problem is that the commit makes the number and order of matched
annotations fixed, while between target boards unix and unix/-fPIE/-pie there
is a difference:
...
\032\032post-prompt
Starting program: outputs/gdb.base/annota1/annota1
+\032\032breakpoints-invalid
+
\032\032starting
\032\032frames-invalid
...
Fix this by optionally matching the additional annotation.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-04-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp for m32 pie
As reported in PR29043, when running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp with
target board unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie, we run into:
...
Breakpoint 2, 0x56555540 in bar ()^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp: cv=2: cdw=32: lv=2: ldw=32: \
continue to breakpoint: foo \(1\)
next^M
Single stepping until exit from function bar,^M
which has no line number information.^M
0x56555587 in main ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp: cv=2: cdw=32: lv=2: ldw=32: \
next to foo (2)
...
The problem is that the bar breakpoint ends up at an unexpected location
because:
- the synthetic debug info is incomplete and doesn't provide line info
for the prologue part of the function, so consequently gdb uses the i386
port prologue skipper to get past the prologue
- the i386 port prologue skipper doesn't get past a get_pc_thunk call.
Work around this in the test-case by breaking on bar_label instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux with target boards unix, unix/-m32, unix/-fPIE/-pie and
unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie.
2022-04-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove MSYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN
I noticed that MSYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN is unused, so this patch removes it.
2022-04-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Rearrange struct bfd_section a little
For better packing on 64-bit hosts.
* section.c (struct bfd_section): Move next and prev field earlier.
Move alignment_power later.
(BFD_FAKE_SECTION): Adjust to suit.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2022-04-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't run pr27228 test for hppa
As the comment says, hppa doesn't support use of BFD_RELOC_* in
.reloc directives. Using xfail can result in a spurious XPASS result
as BFD_RELOC values change.
* testsuite/gas/elf/pr27228.d: Change xfail to notarget for hppa.
2022-04-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Correct nds32 readelf reloc numbers
* readelf.c (is_32bit_abs_reloc, is_16bit_abs_reloc): Comment fixes.
(is_none_reloc): Correct nds32 reloc numbers.
2022-04-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-08 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
gas: Port "copy st_size only if unset" to aarch64 and riscv
And disable the new test gas/elf/size.s for alpha which uses its own
.set, for hppa*-*-hpux* which does not allow .size before declaration.
2022-04-08 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: fprintf_styled_func not inizialized for disassembler
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-07 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* libcollector/unwind.c: inizialize fprintf_styled_func.
* src/Disasm.cc: Likewise.
2022-04-08 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: zlib handling
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-04-06 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* configure.ac: Add AM_ZLIB.
* src/Makefile.am: Add $(ZLIBINC) and $(ZLIB).
* gprofng/src/DbeSession.h: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* gp-display-html/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-04-08 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: Avoid undefined shifts, fix Go shifts
I noticed that a build of GDB with GCC + --enable-ubsan, testing
against GDBserver showed this GDB crash:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: trace: 0x00abababcdcdcdcd << 46 == 0x7373400000000000: advance to trace begin
tstart
../../src/gdb/valarith.c:1365:15: runtime error: left shift of 48320975398096333 by 46 places cannot be represented in type 'long int'
ERROR: GDB process no longer exists
GDB process exited with wait status 269549 exp9 0 1
UNRESOLVED: gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: trace: 0x00abababcdcdcdcd << 46 == 0x7373400000000000: start trace experiment
The problem is that, "0x00abababcdcdcdcd << 46" is an undefined signed
left shift, because the result is not representable in the type of the
lhs, which is signed. This actually became defined in C++20, and if
you compile with "g++ -std=c++20 -Wall", you'll see that GCC no longer
warns about it, while it warns if you specify prior language versions.
While at it, there are a couple other situations that are undefined
(and are still undefined in C++20) and result in GDB dying: shifting
by a negative ammount, or by >= than the bit size of the promoted lhs.
For the latter, GDB shifts using (U)LONGEST internally, so you have to
shift by >= 64 bits to see it:
$ gdb --batch -q -ex "p 1 << -1"
../../src/gdb/valarith.c:1365:15: runtime error: shift exponent -1 is negative
$ # gdb exited
$ gdb --batch -q -ex "p 1 << 64"
../../src/gdb/valarith.c:1365:15: runtime error: shift exponent 64 is too large for 64-bit type 'long int'
$ # gdb exited
Also, right shifting a negative value is implementation-defined
(before C++20, after which it is defined). For this, I chose to
change nothing in GDB other than adding tests, as I don't really know
whether we need to do anything. AFAIK, most implementations do an
arithmetic right shift, and it may be we don't support any host or
target that behaves differently. Plus, this becomes defined in C++20
exactly as arithmetic right shift.
Compilers don't error out on such shifts, at best they warn, so I
think GDB should just continue doing the shifts anyhow too.
Thus:
- Adjust scalar_binop to avoid the undefined paths, either by adding
explicit result paths, or by casting the lhs of the left shift to
unsigned, as appropriate.
For the shifts by a too-large count, I made the result be what you'd
get if you split the large count in a series of smaller shifts.
Thus:
Left shift, positive or negative lhs:
V << 64
=> V << 16 << 16 << 16 << 16
=> 0
Right shift, positive lhs:
Vpos >> 64
=> Vpos >> 16 >> 16 >> 16 >> 16
=> 0
Right shift, negative lhs:
Vneg >> 64
=> Vneg >> 16 >> 16 >> 16 >> 16
=> -1
This is actually Go's semantics (the compiler really emits
instructions to make it so that you get 0 or -1 if you have a
too-large shift). So for that language GDB does the shift and
nothing else. For other C-like languages where such a shift is
undefined, GDB warns in addition to performing the shift.
For shift by a negative count, for Go, this is a hard error. For
other languages, since their compilers only warn, I made GDB warn
too. The semantics I chose (we're free to pick them since this is
undefined behavior) is as-if you had shifted by the count cast to
unsigned, thus as if you had shifted by a too-large count, thus the
same as the previous scenario illustrated above.
Examples:
(gdb) set language go
(gdb) p 1 << 100
$1 = 0
(gdb) p -1 << 100
$2 = 0
(gdb) p 1 >> 100
$3 = 0
(gdb) p -1 >> 100
$4 = -1
(gdb) p -2 >> 100
$5 = -1
(gdb) p 1 << -1
left shift count is negative
(gdb) set language c
(gdb) p -2 >> 100
warning: right shift count >= width of type
$6 = -1
(gdb) p -2 << 100
warning: left shift count >= width of type
$7 = 0
(gdb) p 1 << -1
warning: left shift count is negative
$8 = 0
(gdb) p -1 >> -1
warning: right shift count is negative
$9 = -1
- The warnings' texts are the same as what GCC prints.
- Add comprehensive tests in a new gdb.base/bitshift.exp testcase, so
that we exercise all these scenarios.
Change-Id: I8bcd5fa02de3114b7ababc03e65702d86ec8d45d
2022-04-08 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix undefined behavior in the Fortran, Go and Pascal number parsers
This commit ports these two fixes to the C parser:
commit ebf13736b42af47c9907b5157c8e80c78dbe00e1
CommitDate: Thu Sep 4 21:46:28 2014 +0100
parse_number("0") reads uninitialized memory
commit 20562150d8a894bc91657c843ee88c508188e32e
CommitDate: Wed Oct 3 15:19:06 2018 -0600
Avoid undefined behavior in parse_number
... to the Fortran, Go, and Fortran number parsers, fixing the same
problems there.
Also add a new testcase that exercises printing 0xffffffffffffffff
(max 64-bit) in all languages, which crashes a GDB built with UBsan
without the fix.
I moved get_set_option_choices out of all-architectures.exp.tcl to
common code to be able to extract all the supported languages. I did
a tweak to it to generalize it a bit -- you now have to pass down the
"set" part of the command as well. This is so that the proc can be
used with "maintenance set" commands as well in future.
Change-Id: I8e8f2fdc1e8407f63d923c26fd55d98148b9e16a
2022-04-08 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Debug info for function in Windows PE binary on wrong instruction
PR 29038
* coffgen.c (coff_find_nearest_line_with_names): Fix typo
retrieving saved bias.
2022-04-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Pass PKG_CONFIG_PATH down from top-level Makefile
[Sending to binutils, gdb-patches and gcc-patches, since it touches the
top-level Makefile/configure]
I have my debuginfod library installed in a non-standard location
(/opt/debuginfod), which requires me to set
PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/debuginfod/lib/pkg-config. If I just set it during
configure:
$ PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/debuginfod/lib/pkg-config ./configure --with-debuginfod
$ make
or
$ ./configure --with-debuginfod PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/debuginfod/lib/pkg-config
$ make
Then PKG_CONFIG_PATH is only present (and ignored) during the top-level
configure. When running make (which runs gdb's and binutils'
configure), PKG_CONFIG_PATH is not set, which results in their configure
script not finding the library:
checking for libdebuginfod >= 0.179... no
configure: error: "--with-debuginfod was given, but libdebuginfod is missing or unusable."
Change the top-level configure/Makefile system to capture the value
passed when configuring the top-level and pass it down to
subdirectories (similar to CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, etc).
I don't know much about the top-level build system, so I really don't
know if I did this correctly. The changes are:
- Use AC_SUBST(PKG_CONFIG_PATH) in configure.ac, so that
@PKG_CONFIG_PATH@ gets replaced with the actual PKG_CONFIG_PATH value
in config files (i.e. Makefile)
- Add a PKG_CONFIG_PATH Makefile variable in Makefile.tpl, initialized
to @PKG_CONFIG_PATH@
- Add PKG_CONFIG_PATH to HOST_EXPORTS in Makefile.tpl, which are the
variables set when running the sub-configures
I initially added PKG_CONFIG_PATH to flags_to_pass, in Makefile.def, but
I don't think it's needed. AFAIU, this defines the flags to pass down
when calling "make" in subdirectories. We only need PKG_CONFIG_PATH to
be passed down during configure. After that, it's captured in
gdb/config.status, so even if a "make" causes a re-configure later
(because gdb/configure has changed, for example), the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
value will be remembered.
ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Add AC_SUBST(PKG_CONFIG_PATH).
* configure: Re-generate.
* Makefile.tpl (HOST_EXPORTS): Pass PKG_CONFIG_PATH.
(PKG_CONFIG_PATH): New.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
Change-Id: I91138dfca41c43b05e53e445f62e4b27882536bf
2022-04-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: use nopie in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-inline-param.exp
I see this failure:
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-inline-param/dw2-inline-param ^M
Warning:^M
Cannot insert breakpoint 1.^M
Cannot access memory at address 0x113b^M
^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-inline-param.exp: runto: run to *0x113b
The test loads the binary in GDB, grabs the address of a symbol, strips
the binary, reloads it in GDB, runs the program, and then tries to place
a breakpoint at that address. The problem is that the binary is built
as position independent, so the address GDB grabs in the first place
isn't where the code ends up after running.
Fix this by linking the binary as non-position-independent. The
alternative would be to compute the relocated address where to place the
breakpoint, but that's not very straightforward, unfortunately.
I was confused for a while, I was trying to load the binary in GDB
manually to get the symbol address, but GDB was telling me the symbol
could not be found. Meanwhile, it clearly worked in gdb.log. The thing
is that GDB strips the binary in-place, so we don't have access to the
intermediary binary with symbols. Change the test to output the
stripped binary to a separate file instead.
Change-Id: I66c56293df71b1ff49cf748d6784bd0e935211ba
2022-04-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gdb maintainer commit rights
Formalise what ought to be obvious. The top level of the binutils-gdb
repository isn't owned by binutils.
* MAINTAINERS: Spelling fix. GDB global maintainer rights.
2022-04-08 Bernhard Heckel <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>
Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: print fortran extended types with ptype
Add the print of the base-class of an extended type to the output of
ptype. This requires the Fortran compiler to emit DW_AT_inheritance
for the extended type.
2022-04-08 Bernhard Heckel <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>
Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/fortran: add support for accessing fields of extended types
Fortran 2003 supports type extension. This patch allows access
to inherited members by using their fully qualified name as described
in the Fortran standard.
In doing so the patch also fixes a bug in GDB when trying to access the
members of a base class in a derived class via the derived class' base
class member.
This patch fixes PR22497 and PR26373 on GDB side.
Using the example Fortran program from PR22497
program mvce
implicit none
type :: my_type
integer :: my_int
end type my_type
type, extends(my_type) :: extended_type
end type extended_type
type(my_type) :: foo
type(extended_type) :: bar
foo%my_int = 0
bar%my_int = 1
print*, foo, bar
end program mvce
and running this with GDB and setting a BP at 17:
Before:
(gdb) p bar%my_type
A syntax error in expression, near `my_type'.
(gdb) p bar%my_int
There is no member named my_int.
(gdb) p bar%my_type%my_int
A syntax error in expression, near `my_type%my_int'.
(gdb) p bar
$1 = ( my_type = ( my_int = 1 ) )
After:
(gdb) p bar%my_type
$1 = ( my_int = 1 )
(gdb) p bar%my_int
$2 = 1 # this line requires DW_TAG_inheritance to work
(gdb) p bar%my_type%my_int
$3 = 1
(gdb) p bar
$4 = ( my_type = ( my_int = 1 ) )
In the above example "p bar%my_int" requires the compiler to emit
information about the inheritance relationship between extended_type
and my_type which gfortran and flang currently do not de. The
respective issue gcc/49475 has been put as kfail.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26373
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22497
2022-04-08 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb: add Nils-Christian Kempke to gdb/MAINTAINERS
2022-04-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: change file_file_name to return an std::string
Straightforward change, return an std::string instead of a
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>. No behavior change expected.
Change-Id: Ia5e94c94221c35f978bb1b7bdffbff7209e0520e
2022-04-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/fortran: fix fetching assumed rank array content
Commit:
commit df7a7bdd9766adebc6b117c31bc617d81c1efd43
Date: Thu Mar 17 18:56:23 2022 +0000
gdb: add support for Fortran's ASSUMED RANK arrays
Added support for Fortran assumed rank arrays. Unfortunately, this
commit contained a bug that means though GDB can correctly calculate
the rank of an assumed rank array, GDB can't fetch the contents of an
assumed rank array.
The history of this patch can be seen on the mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-January/185306.html
The patches that were finally committed can be found here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186906.html
The original patches did support fetching the array contents, it was
only the later series that introduced the regression.
The problem is that when calculating the array rank the result is a
count of the number of ranks, i.e. this is a 1 based result, 1, 2, 3,
etc.
In contrast, when computing the details of any particular rank the
value passed to the DWARF expression evaluator should be a 0 based
rank offset, i.e. a 0 based number, 0, 1, 2, etc.
In the patches that were originally merged, this was not the case, and
we were passing the 1 based rank number to the expression evaluator,
e.g. passing 1 when we should pass 0, 2 when we should pass 1, etc.
As a result the DWARF expression evaluator was reading the
wrong (undefined) memory, and returning garbage results.
In this commit I have extended the test case to cover checking the
array contents, I've then ensured we make use of the correct rank
value, and extended some comments, and added or adjusted some asserts
as appropriate.
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: add "macros" option to gdb_compile
Make gdb_compile handle a new "macros" option, which makes it pass the
appropriate flag to make the compiler include macro information in the
debug info. This will help simplify tests using macros, reduce
redundant code, and make it easier to add support for a new compiler.
Right now it only handles clang specially (using -fdebug-macro) and
falls back to -g3 otherwise (which works for gcc). Other compilers can
be added as needed.
There are some tests that are currently skipped if the compiler is nor
gcc nor clang. After this patch, the tests will attempt to run (the -g3
fall back will be used). That gives a chance to people using other
compilers to notice something is wrong and maybe add support for their
compiler. If it is needed to support a compiler that doesn't have a way
to include macro information, then we can always introduce a
"skip_macro_tests" that can be used to skip over them.
Change-Id: I50cd6ab1bfbb478c1005486408e214b551364c9b
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove subfile::buildsym_compunit field
It is only set, never used.
Change-Id: Ia46ed2f9da243b0ccfc4588c1b57be2a0f3939de
2022-04-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Make gdb.base/annota1.exp more robust
On openSUSE Tumbleweed I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: run until main breakpoint (timeout)
...
The problem is that the libthread_db message occurs at a location where it's
not expected:
...
Starting program: outputs/gdb.base/annota1/annota1 ^M
^M
^Z^Zstarting^M
^M
^Z^Zframes-invalid^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M
^M
^Z^Zbreakpoints-invalid^M
^M
...
Fix this by making the matching more robust:
- rewrite the regexp such that each annotation is on a single line,
starting with \r\n\032\032 and ending with \r\n
- add a regexp variable optional_re, that matches all possible optional
output, and use it as a separator in the first part of the regexp
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite/dwarf: simplify line number program syntax
By calling `uplevel $body` in the program proc (a pattern we use at many
places), we can get rid of curly braces around each line number program
directive. That seems like a nice small improvement to me.
Change-Id: Ib327edcbffbd4c23a08614adee56c12ea25ebc0b
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite/dwarf: remove two unused variables
These variables seem to be unused, remove them.
Change-Id: I7d613d9d35735930ee78b2c348943c73a702afbb
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove symtab::pspace
Same idea as previous patch, but for symtab::pspace.
Change-Id: I1023abe622bea75ef648c6a97a01b53775d4104d
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove symtab::objfile
Same idea as previous patch, but for symtab::objfile. I find
it clearer without this wrapper, as it shows that the objfile is
common to all symtabs of a given compunit. Otherwise, you could think
that each symtab (of a given compunit) can have a specific objfile.
Change-Id: Ifc0dbc7ec31a06eefa2787c921196949d5a6fcc6
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove symtab::blockvector
symtab::blockvector is a wrapper around compunit_symtab::blockvector.
It is a bit misleadnig, as it gives the impression that a symtab has a
blockvector. Remove it, change all users to fetch the blockvector
through the compunit instead.
Change-Id: Ibd062cd7926112a60d52899dff9224591cbdeebf
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove symtab::dirname
I think the symtab::dirname method is bogus, or at least very
misleading. It makes you think that it returns the directory that was
used to find that symtab's file during compilation (i.e. the directory
the file refers to in the DWARF line header file table), or the
directory part of the symtab's filename maybe. In fact, it returns the
compilation unit's directory, which is the CWD of the compiler, at
compilation time. At least for DWARF, if the symtab's filename is
relative, it will be relative to that directory. But if the symtab's
filename is absolute, then the directory returned by symtab::dirname has
nothing to do with the symtab's filename.
Remove symtab::dirname to avoid this confusion, change all users to
fetch the same information through the compunit. At least, it will be
clear that this is a compunit property, not a symtab property.
Change-Id: I2894c3bf3789d7359a676db3c58be2c10763f5f0
2022-04-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: make gdb_breakpoint and runto take a linespec
Change gdb_breakpoint to accept a linespec, not just a function. In
fact, no behavior changes are necessary, this only changes the parameter
name and documentation. Change runto as well, since the two are so
close (runto forwards all its arguments to gdb_breakpoint).
I wrote this for a downstrean GDB port, but thought it could be
useful upstream, eventually, even though not callers take advantage of
it yet.
Change-Id: I08175fd444d5a60df90fd9985e1b5dfd87c027cc
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: update comments throughout reggroups.{c,h} files
This commit updates the comments in the gdb/reggroups.{c,h} files.
Fill in some missing comments, correct a few comments that were not
clear, and where we had comments duplicated between .c and .h files,
update the .c to reference the .h.
No user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: move struct reggroup into reggroups.h header
Move 'struct reggroup' into the reggroups.h header. Remove the
reggroup_name and reggroup_type accessor functions, and just use the
name/type member functions within 'struct reggroup', update all uses
of these removed functions.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: convert reggroup to a C++ class with constructor, etc
Convert the 'struct reggroup' into a real class, with a constructor
and getter methods.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make the pre-defined register groups const
Convert the 7 global, pre-defined, register groups const, and fix the
fall out (a minor tweak required in riscv-tdep.c).
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: more 'const' in gdb/reggroups.{c,h}
Convert the reggroup_new and reggroup_gdbarch_new functions to return
a 'const regggroup *', and fix up all the fallout.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: remove reggroup_next and reggroup_prev
Add a new function gdbarch_reggroups that returns a reference to a
vector containing all the reggroups for an architecture.
Make use of this function throughout GDB instead of the existing
reggroup_next and reggroup_prev functions.
Finally, delete the reggroup_next and reggroup_prev functions.
Most of these changes are pretty straight forward, using range based
for loops instead of the old style look using reggroup_next. There
are two places where the changes are less straight forward.
In gdb/python/py-registers.c, the register group iterator needed to
change slightly. As the iterator is tightly coupled to the gdbarch, I
just fetch the register group vector from the gdbarch when needed, and
use an index counter to find the next item from the vector when
needed.
In gdb/tui/tui-regs.c the tui_reg_next and tui_reg_prev functions are
just wrappers around reggroup_next and reggroup_prev respectively.
I've just inlined the logic of the old functions into the tui
functions. As the tui function had its own special twist (wrap around
behaviour) I think this is OK.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: convert reggroups to use a std::vector
Replace manual linked list with a std::vector. This commit doesn't
change the reggroup_next and reggroup_prev API, but that will change
in a later commit.
This commit is focused on the minimal changes needed to manage the
reggroups using a std::vector, without changing the API exposed by the
reggroup.c file.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: always add the default register groups
There's a set of 7 default register groups. If we don't add any
gdbarch specific register groups during gdbarch initialisation, then
when we iterate over the register groups using reggroup_next and
reggroup_prev we will make use of these 7 default groups. See the use
of default_groups in gdb/reggroups.c for details on this.
However, if the gdbarch adds its own groups during gdbarch
initialisation, then these groups will be used in preference to the
default groups.
A problem arises though if the particular architecture makes use of
the target description mechanism. If the default target
description(s) (i.e. those internal to GDB that are used when the user
doesn't provide their own) don't mention any additional register
groups then the default register groups will be used.
But if the target description does mention additional groups then the
default groups are not used, and instead, the groups from the target
description are used.
The problem with this is that what usually happens is that the target
description will mention additional groups, e.g. groups for special
registers. Most architectures that use target descriptions work
around this by adding all (or most) of the default register groups in
all cases. See i386_add_reggroups, aarch64_add_reggroups,
riscv_add_reggroups, xtensa_add_reggroups, and others.
In this patch, my suggestion is that we should just add the default
register groups for every architecture, always. This change is in
gdb/reggroups.c.
All the remaining changes are me updating the various architectures to
not add the default groups themselves.
So, where will this change be visible to the user? I think the
following commands will possibly change:
* info registers / info all-registers:
The user can provide a register group to these commands. For example,
on csky, we previously never added the 'vector' group. Now, as a
default group, this will be available, but (presumably) will not
contain any registers. I don't think this is necessarily a bad
thing, there's something to be said for having some consistent
defaults available. There are other architectures that didn't add
all 7 of the defaults, which will now have gained additional groups.
* maint print reggroups
This prints the set of all available groups. As a maintenance
command I'm less concerned with the output changing here.
Obviously, for the architectures that didn't previously add all the
defaults, this list just got bigger.
* maint print register-groups
This prints all the registers, and the groups they are in. If the
defaults were not previously being added then a register (obviously)
can't appear in one of the default groups. Now the groups are
available then registers might be in more groups than previously.
However, this is again a maintenance command, so I'm less concerned
about this changing.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: fix 'tui reg next/prev' command when data window is hidden
Start GDB like:
$ gdb -q executable
(gdb) start
(gdb) layout src
... tui windows are now displayed ...
(gdb) tui reg next
At this point the data (register) window should be displayed, but will
contain the message 'Register Values Unavailable', and at the console
you'll see the message "unknown register group 'next'".
The same happens with 'tui reg prev' (but the error message is
slightly different).
At this point you can continue to use 'tui reg next' and/or 'tui reg
prev' and you'll keep getting the error message.
The problem is that when the data (register) window is first
displayed, it's current register group is nullptr. As a consequence
tui_reg_next and tui_reg_prev (tui/tui-regs.c) will always just return
nullptr, which triggers an error in tui_reg_command.
In this commit I change tui_reg_next and tui_reg_prev so that they
instead return the first and last register group respectively if the
current register group is nullptr.
So, after this, using 'tui reg next' will (in the above case) show the
first register group, while 'tui reg prev' will display the last
register group.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: avoid theoretical bug with 'tui reg' command
While looking at the 'tui reg' command as part of another patch, I
spotted a theoretical bug.
The 'tui reg' command takes the name of a register group, but also
handles partial register group matches, though the partial match has to
be unique. The current command logic goes:
With the code as currently written, if a target description named a
register group either 'prev' or 'next' then GDB would see this as an
ambiguous register name, and refuse to switch groups.
Naming a register group 'prev' or 'next' seems pretty unlikely, but,
by adding a single else block we can prevent this problem.
Now, if there's a 'prev' or 'next' register group, the user will not
be able to select the group directly, the 'prev' and 'next' names will
always iterate through the available groups instead. But at least the
user could select their groups by iteration, rather than direct
selection.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: have reggroup_find return a const
Update reggroup_find to return a const reggroup *.
There are other function in gdb/reggroup.{c,h} files that could
benefit from returning const, these will be updated in later commits.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: use 'const reggroup *' in python/py-registers.c file
Convert uses of 'struct reggroup *' in python/py-registers.c to be
'const'.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: switch to using 'const reggroup *' in tui-regs.{c,h}
Make uses of 'reggroup *' const throughout tui-regs.{c,h}.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make gdbarch_register_reggroup_p take a const reggroup *
Change gdbarch_register_reggroup_p to take a 'const struct reggroup *'
argument. This requires a change to the gdb/gdbarch-components.py
script, regeneration of gdbarch.{c,h}, and then updates to all the
architectures that implement this method.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add some const in gdb/reggroups.c
This commit makes the 'struct reggroup *' argument const for the
following functions:
reggroup_next
reggroup_prev
reggroup_name
reggroup_type
There are other places that could benefit from const in the
reggroup.{c,h} files, but these will be changing in further commits.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: don't try to use readline before it's initialized
While working on a different patch, I triggered an assertion from the
initialize_current_architecture code, specifically from one of
the *_gdbarch_init functions in a *-tdep.c file. This exposes a
couple of issues with GDB.
This is easy enough to reproduce by adding 'gdb_assert (false)' into a
suitable function. For example, I added a line into i386_gdbarch_init
and can see the following issue.
I start GDB and immediately hit the assert, the output is as you'd
expect, except for the very last line:
$ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory/
../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
----- Backtrace -----
... snip ...
---------------------
../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) ../../src.dev-1/gdb/ser-event.c:212:16: runtime error: member access within null pointer of type 'struct serial'
Something goes wrong when we try to query the user. Note, I
configured GDB with --enable-ubsan, I suspect that without this the
above "error" would actually just be a crash.
The backtrace from ser-event.c:212 looks like this:
(gdb) bt 10
#0 serial_event_clear (event=0x675c020) at ../../src/gdb/ser-event.c:212
#1 0x0000000000769456 in invoke_async_signal_handlers () at ../../src/gdb/async-event.c:211
#2 0x000000000295049b in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:194
#3 0x0000000001f015f8 in gdb_readline_wrapper (
prompt=0x67135c0 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugg"...)
at ../../src/gdb/top.c:1141
#4 0x0000000002118b64 in defaulted_query(const char *, char, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (
ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", defchar=0 '\000', args=0x7fffffffa6e0)
at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:934
#5 0x0000000002118f72 in query (ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ")
at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1026
#6 0x00000000021170f6 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (problem=0x6107bc0 <internal_error_problem>, file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c",
line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:417
#7 0x00000000021175a0 in internal_verror (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455,
fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:485
#8 0x00000000029503b3 in internal_error (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455,
fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at ../../src/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
#9 0x000000000122d5b6 in i386_gdbarch_init (info=..., arches=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455
(More stack frames follow...)
It turns out that the problem is that the async event handler
mechanism has been invoked, but this has not yet been initialized.
If we look at gdb_init (in gdb/top.c) we can indeed see the call to
gdb_init_signals is after the call to initialize_current_architecture.
If I reorder the calls, moving gdb_init_signals earlier, then the
initial error is resolved, however, things are still broken. I now
see the same "Quit this debugging session? (y or n)" prompt, but when
I provide an answer and press return GDB immediately crashes.
So what's going on now? The next problem is that the call_readline
field within the current_ui structure is not initialized, and this
callback is invoked to process the reply I entered.
The problem is that call_readline is setup as a result of calling
set_top_level_interpreter, which is called from captured_main_1.
Unfortunately, set_top_level_interpreter is called after gdb_init is
called.
I wondered how to solve this problem for a while, however, I don't
know if there's an easy "just reorder some lines" solution here.
Looking through captured_main_1 there seems to be a bunch of
dependencies between printing various things, parsing config files,
and setting up the interpreter. I'm sure there is a solution hiding
in there somewhere.... I'm just not sure I want to spend any longer
looking for it.
So.
I propose a simpler solution, more of a hack/work-around. In utils.c
we already have a function filtered_printing_initialized, this is
checked in a few places within internal_vproblem. In some of these
cases the call gates whether or not GDB will query the user.
My proposal is to add a new readline_initialized function, which
checks if the current_ui has had readline initialized yet. If this is
not the case then we should not attempt to query the user.
After this change GDB prints the error message, the backtrace, and
then aborts (including dumping core). This actually seems pretty sane
as, if GDB has not yet made it through the initialization then it
doesn't make much sense to allow the user to say "no, I don't want to
quit the debug session" (I think).
2022-04-07 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Recognize the NT_ARM_SYSTEM_CALL register set
Update binutils to recognize the NT_ARM_SYSTEM_CALL set that is dumped by
Linux to core files.
2022-04-07 Mark Harmstone <mark@harmstone.com>
Add support for COFF secidx relocations
bfd * coff-i386.c (in_reloc_p): Add R_SECTION.
(howto_table): Add R_SECTION.
(coff_pe_i386_relocation_section): Add support for R_SECTION.
(coff_i386_reloc_type_lookup): Add support for
BFD_RELOC_16_SECCIDX.
* coff-x86_64.c (in_reloc_p): Add R_SECTION.
(howto_table): Add R_SECTION.
(coff_pe_amd64_relocation_section): Add support for R_SECTION.
(coff_amd64_reloc_type_lookup): Add support for
BFD_RELOC_16_SECCIDX.
* reloc.c: Add BFD_RELOC_16_SECIDX.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* libbfd.h: Regenerate.
gas * config/tc-i386.c (pe_directive_secidx): New function.
(md_pseudo_table): Add support for secidx.
(x86_cons_fix_new): Likewise.
(tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* expr.c (op_rank): Add O_secidx.
* expr.h (operatorT): Likewise.
* symbols.c (resolve_symbol_value): Add support for O_secidx.
* testsuite/gas/i386/secidx.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/secidx.d: New test driver file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run new test.
include * coff/i386.h: Define R_SECTION.
* coff/x86_64.h: Likewise.
ld * testsuite/ld-pe/secidx1.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/ld-pe/secidx2.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/ld-pe/secidx.d: New test driver file.
* testsuite/ld-pe/secidx_64.d: New test driver file.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe.exp: Add new tests.
2022-04-07 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/Dwarf: record functions
To help tools like addr2line looking up function names, in particular
when dealing with e.g. PE/COFF binaries (linked from ELF objects), where
there's no ELF symbol table to fall back to, emit minimalistic
information for functions marked as such and having their size
specified.
Notes regarding the restriction to (pure) ELF:
- I realize this is a layering violation; I don't see how to deal with
that in a better way.
- S_GET_SIZE(), when OBJ_MAYBE_ELF is defined, looks wrong: Unlike
S_SET_SIZE() it does not check whether the hook is NULL.
- symbol_get_obj(), when OBJ_MAYBE_ELF is defined, looks unusable, as
its return type can only ever be one object format's type (and this
may then not be ELF's).
The new testcases are limited to x86 because I wanted to include the
case where function size can't be determined yet at the time Dwarf2 info
is generated. As .nops gains support by further targets, they could also
be added here then (with, as necessary, expecations suitably relaxed to
cover for insn size differences).
2022-04-07 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
Arm64: arrange for line number emission for .inst
Just like insns encoded the more conventional way these should have line
number info associated with them.
Arm32: arrange for line number emission for .inst
Just like insns encoded the more conventional way these should have line
number info associated with them.
RISC-V: add testcase to check line number emission for .insn
Since no such test looks to exist, derive one from insn.s.
2022-04-07 Andreas Krebbel <krebbel@linux.ibm.com>
IBM zSystems: Add support for z16 as CPU name.
So far z16 was identified as arch14. After the machine has been
announced we can now add the real name.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-s390.c (s390_parse_cpu): Add z16 as alternate CPU
name.
* doc/as.texi: Add z16 and arch14 to CPU string list.
* doc/c-s390.texi: Add z16 to CPU string list.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* s390-mkopc.c (main): Enable z16 as CPU string in the opcode
table.
2022-04-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-06 Youling Tang <tangyouling@loongson.cn>
gdb: mips: Fix the handling of complex type of function return value
$ objdump -d outputs/gdb.base/varargs/varargs
00000001200012e8 <find_max_float_real>:
...
1200013b8: c7c10000 lwc1 $f1,0(s8)
1200013bc: c7c00004 lwc1 $f0,4(s8)
1200013c0: 46000886 mov.s $f2,$f1
1200013c4: 46000046 mov.s $f1,$f0
1200013c8: 46001006 mov.s $f0,$f2
1200013cc: 46000886 mov.s $f2,$f1
1200013d0: 03c0e825 move sp,s8
1200013d4: dfbe0038 ld s8,56(sp)
1200013d8: 67bd0080 daddiu sp,sp,128
1200013dc: 03e00008 jr ra
1200013e0: 00000000 nop
From the above disassembly, we can see that when the return value of the
function is a complex type and len <= 2 * MIPS64_REGSIZE, the return value
will be passed through $f0 and $f2, so fix the corresponding processing
in mips_n32n64_return_value().
$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS='GDB=../gdb gdb.base/varargs.exp --outdir=test'
Before applying the patch:
FAIL: gdb.base/varargs.exp: print find_max_float_real(4, fc1, fc2, fc3, fc4)
FAIL: gdb.base/varargs.exp: print find_max_double_real(4, dc1, dc2, dc3, dc4)
# of expected passes 9
# of unexpected failures 2
After applying the patch:
# of expected passes 11
This also fixes:
FAIL: gdb.base/callfuncs.exp: call inferior func with struct - returns float _Complex
Co-Authored-By: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk>
2022-04-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use new and delete in jit.c
This changes jit.c to use new and delete, rather than XCNEW. This
simplifies the code a little. This was useful for another patch I'm
working on, and I thought it would make sense to send it separately.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-04-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: don't copy entirely optimized out values in value_copy
Bug 28980 shows that trying to value_copy an entirely optimized out
value causes an internal error. The original bug report involves MI and
some Python pretty printer, and is quite difficult to reproduce, but
another easy way to reproduce (that is believed to be equivalent) was
proposed:
$ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory -ex "py print(gdb.Value(gdb.Value(5).type.optimized_out()))"
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:1731: internal-error: value_copy: Assertion `arg->contents != nullptr' failed.
This is caused by 5f8ab46bc691 ("gdb: constify parameter of
value_copy"). It added an assertion that the contents buffer is
allocated if the value is not lazy:
if (!value_lazy (val))
{
gdb_assert (arg->contents != nullptr);
This was based on the comment on value::contents, which suggest that
this is the case:
/* Actual contents of the value. Target byte-order. NULL or not
valid if lazy is nonzero. */
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<gdb_byte> contents;
However, it turns out that it can also be nullptr also if the value is
entirely optimized out, for example on exit of
allocate_optimized_out_value. That function creates a lazy value, marks
the entire value as optimized out, and then clears the lazy flag. But
contents remains nullptr.
This wasn't a problem for value_copy before, because it was calling
value_contents_all_raw on the input value, which caused contents to be
allocated before doing the copy. This means that the input value to
value_copy did not have its contents allocated on entry, but had it
allocated on exit. The result value had it allocated on exit. And that
we copied bytes for an entirely optimized out value (i.e. meaningless
bytes).
From here I see two choices:
1. respect the documented invariant that contents is nullptr only and
only if the value is lazy, which means making
allocate_optimized_out_value allocate contents
2. extend the cases where contents can be nullptr to also include
values that are entirely optimized out (note that you could still
have some entirely optimized out values that do have contents
allocated, it depends on how they were created) and adjust
value_copy accordingly
Choice #1 is safe, but less efficient: it's not very useful to allocate
a buffer for an entirely optimized out value. It's even a bit less
efficient than what we had initially, because values coming out of
allocate_optimized_out_value would now always get their contents
allocated.
Choice #2 would be more efficient than what we had before: giving an
optimized out value without allocated contents to value_copy would
result in an optimized out value without allocated contents (and the
input value would still be without allocated contents on exit). But
it's more risky, since it's difficult to ensure that all users of the
contents (through the various_contents* accessors) are all fine with
that new invariant.
In this patch, I opt for choice #2, since I think it is a better
direction than choice #1. #1 would be a pessimization, and if we go
this way, I doubt that it will ever be revisited, it will just stay that
way forever.
Add a selftest to test this. I initially started to write it as a
Python test (since the reproducer is in Python), but a selftest is more
straightforward.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28980
Change-Id: I6e2f5c0ea804fafa041fcc4345d47064b5900ed7
2022-04-06 Jeff Law <jeffreyalaw@gmail.com>
Fix for v850e divq instruction
This is the last of the correctness fixes I've been carrying around for the
v850.
Like the other recent fixes, this is another case where we haven't been as
careful as we should WRT host vs target types. For the divq instruction
both operands are 32 bit types. Yet in the simulator code we convert them
from unsigned int to signed long by assignment. So 0xfffffffb (aka -5)
turns into 4294967291 and naturally that changes the result of our division.
The fix is simple, insert a cast to int32_t to force interpretation as a
signed value.
Testcase for the simulator is included. It has a trivial dependency on the
bins patch.
2022-04-06 Jeff Law <jeffreyalaw@gmail.com>
Fix "bins" simulation for v850e3v5
I've been carrying this for a few years. One test in the GCC testsuite is
failing due to a bug in the handling of the v850e3v5 instruction "bins".
When the "bins" instruction specifies a 32bit bitfield size, the simulator
exhibits undefined behavior by trying to shift a 32 bit quantity by 32 bits.
In the case of a 32 bit shift, we know what the resultant mask should be. So
we can just set it.
That seemed better than using 1UL for the constant (on a 32bit host unsigned
long might still just be 32 bits) or needlessly forcing everything to
long long types.
Thankfully the case where this shows up is only bins <src>, 0, 32, <dest>
which would normally be encoded as a simple move.
* testsuite/v850/allinsns.exp: Add v850e3v5.
* testsuite/v850/bins.cgs: New test.
* v850/simops.c (v850_bins): Avoid undefined behavior on left shift.
2022-04-06 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: prepend tramp frame unwinder for signal
Implement the "init" method of struct tramp_frame to prepend tramp
frame unwinder for signal on LoongArch.
With this patch, the following failed testcases can be fixed:
FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: backtrace @ signal handler (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/annota3.exp: backtrace @ signal handler (pattern 2)
2022-04-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make interp_add static
Since this commit:
commit 8322445e0584be846f5873b9aab257dc9fbda05d
Date: Tue Jun 21 01:11:45 2016 +0100
Introduce interpreter factories
Interpreters should be registered with GDB, not by calling interp_add,
but with a call to interp_factory_register. I've checked the insight
source, and it too has moved over to using interp_factory_register.
In this commit I make interp_add static within interps.c.
There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2022-04-06 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add code to display the contents of .debug_loclists sections which contain offset entry tables.
PR 28981
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_value): Rename to fecth_indexed_addr and
return the address, rather than a string.
(fetch_indexed_value): New function - returns a value indexed by a
DW_FORM_loclistx or DW_FORM_rnglistx form.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Add support for DW_FORM_loclistx
and DW_FORM_rnglistx.
(process_debug_info): Load the loclists and rnglists sections.
(display_loclists_list): Add support for DW_LLE_base_addressx,
DW_LLE_startx_endx, DW_LLE_startx_length and
DW_LLE_default_location.
(display_offset_entry_loclists): New function. Displays a
.debug_loclists section that contains offset entry tables.
(display_debug_loc): Call the new function.
(display_debug_rnglists_list): Add support for
DW_RLE_base_addressx, DW_RLE_startx_endx and DW_RLE_startx_length.
(display_debug_ranges): Display the contents of the section's
header.
* dwarf.h (struct debug_info): Add loclists_base field.
* testsuite/binutils-all/dw5.W: Update expected output.
* testsuite/binutils-all/x86-64/pr26808.dump: Likewise.
2022-04-06 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Enable ARMv8.1-m PACBTI support
This set of changes enable support for the ARMv8.1-m PACBTI extensions [1].
The goal of the PACBTI extensions is similar in scope to that of a-profile
PAC/BTI (aarch64 only), but the underlying implementation is different.
One important difference is that the pointer authentication code is stored
in a separate register, thus we don't need to mask/unmask the return address
from a function in order to produce a correct backtrace.
The patch introduces the following modifications:
- Extend the prologue analyser for 32-bit ARM to handle some instructions
from ARMv8.1-m PACBTI: pac, aut, pacg, autg and bti. Also keep track of
return address signing/authentication instructions.
- Adds code to identify object file attributes that indicate the presence of
ARMv8.1-m PACBTI (Tag_PAC_extension, Tag_BTI_extension, Tag_PACRET_use and
Tag_BTI_use).
- Adds support for DWARF pseudo-register RA_AUTH_CODE, as described in the
aadwarf32 [2].
- Extends the dwarf unwinder to track the value of RA_AUTH_CODE.
- Decorates backtraces with the "[PAC]" identifier when a frame has signed
the return address.
- Makes GDB aware of a new XML feature "org.gnu.gdb.arm.m-profile-pacbti". This
feature is not included as an XML file on GDB's side because it is only
supported for bare metal targets.
- Additional documentation.
[1] https://community.arm.com/arm-community-blogs/b/architectures-and-processors-blog/posts/armv8-1-m-pointer-authentication-and-branch-target-identification-extension
[2] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aadwarf32/aadwarf32.rst
2022-04-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: move gdb_disassembly_flag into a new disasm-flags.h file
While working on the disassembler I was getting frustrated. Every
time I touched disasm.h it seemed like every file in GDB would need to
be rebuilt. Surely the disassembler can't be required by that many
parts of GDB, right?
Turns out that disasm.h is included in target.h, so pretty much every
file was being rebuilt!
The only thing from disasm.h that target.h needed is the
gdb_disassembly_flag enum, as this is part of the target_ops api.
In this commit I move gdb_disassembly_flag into its own file. This is
then included in target.h and disasm.h, after which, the number of
files that depend on disasm.h is much reduced.
I also audited all the other includes of disasm.h and found that the
includes in mep-tdep.c and python/py-registers.c are no longer needed,
so I've removed these.
Now, after changing disasm.h, GDB rebuilds much quicker.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce wrapped_file
Simon pointed out that timestamped_file probably needed to implement a
few more methods. This patch introduces a new file-wrapping file that
forwards most of its calls, making it simpler to implement new such
files. It also converts timestamped_file and pager_file to use it.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-04-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Don't call init_thread_list in windows-nat.c
I don't think there's any need to call init_thread_list in
windows-nat.c. This patch removes it. I tested this using the
internal AdaCore test suite on Windows, which FWIW does include some
multi-threaded inferiors.
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix intermittent failure in gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.exp
Tom de Vries reported some failures in this test:
continue
Continuing.
[New inferior 2 (process 14967)]
Thread 1.1 "vfork-follow-pa" hit Breakpoint 2, break_parent () at /home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.c:23
23 }
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.exp: resolution_method=schedule-multiple: continue to end of inferior 2
inferior 1
[Switching to inferior 1 [process 14961] (/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent/vfork-follow-parent)]
[Switching to thread 1.1 (process 14961)]
#0 break_parent () at /home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.c:23
23 }
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.exp: resolution_method=schedule-multiple: inferior 1
continue
Continuing.
[Inferior 2 (process 14967) exited normally]
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.exp: resolution_method=schedule-multiple: continue to break_parent (the program exited)
Here, we continue both the vfork parent and child, since
schedule-multiple is on. The child exits, which un-freezes the parent
and makes an exit event available to GDB. We expect GDB to consume this
exit event and present it to the user. Here, we see that GDB shows the
parent hitting a breakpoint before showing the child exit.
Because of the vfork, we know that chronologically, the child exiting
must have happend before the parent hitting a breakpoint. However,
scheduling being what it is, it is possible for the parent to un-freeze
and exit quickly, such that when GDB pulls events out of the kernel,
exit events for both processes are available. And then, GDB may chose
at random to return the one for the parent first. This is what I
imagine what causes the failure shown above.
We could change the test to expect both possible outcomes, but I wanted
to avoid complicating the .exp file that way. Instead, add a variable
that the parent loops on that we set only after we confirmed the exit of
the child. That should ensure that the order is always the same.
Note that I wasn't able to reproduce the failure, so I can't tell if
this fix really fixes the problem.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29021
Change-Id: Ibc8e527e0e00dac54b22021fe4d9d8ab0f3b28ad
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix intermittent failures in gdb.mi/mi-cmd-user-context.exp
I got failures like this once on a CI:
frame^M
&"frame\n"^M
~"#0 child_sub_function () at /home/jenkins/workspace/binutils-gdb_master_build/arch/amd64/target_board/unix/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:33\n"^M
~"33\t dummy = !dummy; /* thread loop line */\n"^M
^done^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-cmd-user-context.exp: frame 1 (unexpected output)
The problem is that the test expects the following regexp:
".*#0 0x.*"
And that typically works, when the output of the frame command looks
like:
#0 0x00005555555551bb in child_sub_function () at ...
Note the lack of hexadecimal address in the failing case. Whether or
not the hexadecimal address is printed (roughly) depends on whether the
current PC is at the beginning of a line. So depending on where thread
2 was when GDB stopped it (after thread 1 hit its breakpoint), we can
get either output. Adjust the regexps to not expect an hexadecimal
prefix (0x) but a function name instead (either child_sub_function or
child_function). That one is always printed, and is also a good check
that we are in the frame we expect.
Note that for test "frame 5", we are showing a pthread frame (on my
system), so the function name is internal to pthread, not something we
can rely on. In that case, it's almost certain that we are not at the
beginning of a line, or that we don't have debug info, so I think it's
fine to expect the hex prefix.
And for test "frame 6", it's ok to _not_ expect a hex prefix (what the
test currently does), since we are showing thread 1, which has hit a
breakpoint placed at the beginning of a line.
When testing this, Tom de Vries pointed out that the current test code
doesn't ensure that the child threads are in child_sub_function when
they are stopped. If the scheduler chooses so, it is possible for the
child threads to be still in the pthread_barrier_wait or child_function
functions when they get stopped. So that would be another racy failure
waiting to happen.
The only way I can think of to ensure the child threads are in the
child_sub_function function when they get stopped is to synchronize the
threads using some variables instead of pthread_barrier_wait. So,
replace the barrier with an array of flags (one per child thread). Each
child thread flips its flag in child_sub_function to allow the main
thread to make progress and eventually hit the breakpoint.
I copied user-selected-context-sync.c to a new mi-cmd-user-context.c and
made modifications to that, to avoid interfering with
user-selected-context-sync.exp.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29025
Change-Id: I919673bbf9927158beb0e8b7e9e980b8d65eca90
2022-04-05 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Fix qRcmd error code parsing
Someone at IRC spotted a bug in qRcmd handling. This looks like an oversight
or it is that way for historical reasons.
The code in gdb/remote.c:remote_target::rcmd uses isdigit instead of
isxdigit. One could argue that we are expecting decimal numbers, but further
below we use fromhex ().
Update the function to use isxdigit instead and also update the documentation.
I see there are lots of other cases of undocumented number format for error
messages, mostly described as NN instead of nn. For now I'll just update
this particular function.
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: resume ongoing step after handling fork or vfork
The test introduced by this patch would fail in this configuration, with
the native-gdbserver or native-extended-gdbserver boards:
FAIL: gdb.threads/next-fork-other-thread.exp: fork_func=fork: target-non-stop=auto: non-stop=off: displaced-stepping=auto: i=2: next to for loop
The problem is that the step operation is forgotten when handling the
fork/vfork. With "debug infrun" and "debug remote", it looks like this
(some lines omitted for brevity). We do the next:
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] proceed: addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT
[infrun] resume_1: step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [4154304.4154304.0] at 0x5555555553bf
[infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=4154304.0.0, step=1, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;r5555555553bf,5555555553c4:p3f63c0.3f63c0;c:p3f63c0.-1#cd
[infrun] proceed: exit
We then handle a fork event:
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[remote] wait: enter
[remote] Packet received: T05fork:p3f63ee.3f63ee;06:0100000000000000;07:b08e59f6ff7f0000;10:bf60e8f7ff7f0000;thread:p3f63c0.3f63c6;core:17;
[remote] wait: exit
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 4154304.4154310.0 [Thread 4154304.4154310],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = FORKED, child_ptid = 4154350.4154350.0
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = FORKED, child_ptid = 4154350.4154350.0
[remote] Sending packet: $D;3f63ee#4b
[infrun] resume_1: step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [4154304.4154310.0] at 0x7ffff7e860bf
[infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=4154304.0.0, step=0, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c:p3f63c0.-1#73
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit
In the first snippet, we resume the stepping thread with the range-stepping (r)
vCont command. But after handling the fork (detaching the fork child), we
resumed the whole process freely. The stepping thread, which was paused by
GDBserver while reporting the fork event, was therefore resumed freely, instead
of confined to the addresses of the stepped line. Note that since this
is a "next", it could be that we have entered a function, installed a
step-resume breakpoint, and it's ok to continue freely the stepping
thread, but that's not the case here. The two snippets shown above were
next to each other in the logs.
For the fork case, we can resume stepping right after handling the
event.
However, for the vfork case, where we are waiting for the
external child process to exec or exit, we only resume the thread that
called vfork, and keep the others stopped (see patch "gdb: fix handling of
vfork by multi-threaded program" prior in this series). So we can't
resume the stepping thread right now. Instead, do it after handling the
vfork-done event.
Change-Id: I92539c970397ce880110e039fe92b87480f816bd
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/remote: remove_new_fork_children don't access target_waitstatus::child_ptid if kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED
Following the previous patch, running
gdb.threads/forking-threads-plus-breakpoints.exp continuously eventually
gives me an internal error.
gdb/target/waitstatus.h:372: internal-error: child_ptid: Assertion `m_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED || m_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED' failed.^M
FAIL: gdb.threads/forking-threads-plus-breakpoint.exp: cond_bp_target=0: detach_on_fork=on: displaced=off: inferior 1 exited (GDB internal error)
The backtrace is:
0x55925b679c85 internal_error(char const*, int, char const*, ...)
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
0x559258deadd2 target_waitstatus::child_ptid() const
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target/waitstatus.h:372
0x55925a7cbac9 remote_target::remove_new_fork_children(threads_listing_context*)
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:7311
0x55925a79dfdb remote_target::update_thread_list()
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:3981
0x55925ad79b83 target_update_thread_list()
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:3793
0x55925addbb15 update_thread_list()
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:2031
0x559259d64838 stop_all_threads(char const*, inferior*)
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:5104
0x559259d88b45 keep_going_pass_signal
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:8215
0x559259d8951b keep_going
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:8251
0x559259d78835 process_event_stop_test
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:6858
0x559259d750e9 handle_signal_stop
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:6580
0x559259d6c07b handle_inferior_event
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:5832
0x559259d57db8 fetch_inferior_event()
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4222
Indeed, the code accesses target_waitstatus::child_ptid when the kind
is TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED, which is not right. A
TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED event does not have a child_ptid value
associated, it has an exit status, which we are not interested in. The
intent is to remove from the thread list the thread that has exited.
Its ptid is found in the stop reply event, get it from there.
Change-Id: Icb298cbb80b8779fdf0c660dde9a5314d5591535
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbserver: report correct status in thread stop race condition
The test introduced by the following patch would sometimes fail in this
configuration:
FAIL: gdb.threads/next-fork-other-thread.exp: fork_func=vfork: target-non-stop=on: non-stop=off: displaced-stepping=auto: i=14: next to for loop
The test has multiple threads constantly forking or vforking while the
main thread keep doing "next"s.
(After writing the commit message, I realized this also fixes a similar
failure in gdb.threads/forking-threads-plus-breakpoint.exp with the
native-gdbserver and native-extended-gdbserver boards.)
As stop_all_threads is called, because the main thread finished its
"next", it inevitably happens at some point that we ask the remote
target to stop a thread and wait() reports that this thread stopped with
a fork or vfork event, instead of the SIGSTOP we sent to try to stop it.
While running this test, I attached to GDBserver and stopped at
linux-low.cc:3626. We can see that the status pulled from the kernel
for 2742805 is indeed a vfork event:
(gdb) p/x w
$3 = 0x2057f
(gdb) p WIFSTOPPED(w)
$4 = true
(gdb) p WSTOPSIG(w)
$5 = 5
(gdb) p/x (w >> 8) & (PTRACE_EVENT_VFORK << 8)
$6 = 0x200
However, the statement at line 3626 overrides that:
ourstatus->set_stopped (gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (w)));
OURSTATUS becomes "stopped by a SIGTRAP". The information about the
fork or vfork is lost.
It's then all downhill from there, stop_all_threads eventually asks for
a thread list update. That thread list includes the child of that
forgotten fork or vfork, the remote target goes "oh cool, a new process,
let's attach to it!", when in fact that vfork child's destiny was to be
detached.
My reverse-engineered understanding of the code around there is that the
if/else between lines 3562 and 3583 (in the original code) makes sure
OURSTATUS is always initialized (not "ignore"). Either the details are
already in event_child->waitstatus (in the case of fork/vfork, for
example), in which case we just copy event_child->waitstatus to
ourstatus. Or, if the event is a plain "stopped by a signal" or a
syscall event, OURSTATUS is set to "stopped", but without a signal
number. Lines 3601 to 3629 (in the original code) serve to fill in that
last bit of information.
The problem is that when `w` holds the vfork status, the code wrongfully
takes this branch, because WSTOPSIG(w) returns SIGTRAP:
else if (current_thread->last_resume_kind == resume_stop
&& WSTOPSIG (w) != SIGSTOP)
The intent of this branch is, for example, when we sent SIGSTOP to try
to stop a thread, but wait() reports that it stopped with another signal
(that it must have received from somewhere else simultaneously), say
SIGWINCH. In that case, we want to report the SIGWINCH. But in our
fork/vfork case, we don't want to take this branch, as the thread didn't
really stop because it received a signal. For the non "stopped by a
signal" and non "syscall signal" cases, we would ideally skip over all
that snippet that fills in the signal or syscall number.
The fix I propose is to move this snipppet of the else branch of the
if/else above. In addition to moving the code, the last two "else if"
branches:
else if (current_thread->last_resume_kind == resume_stop
&& WSTOPSIG (w) != SIGSTOP)
{
/* A thread that has been requested to stop by GDB with vCont;t,
but, it stopped for other reasons. */
ourstatus->set_stopped (gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (w)));
}
else if (ourstatus->kind () == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED)
ourstatus->set_stopped (gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (w)));
are changed into a single else:
else
ourstatus->set_stopped (gdb_signal_from_host (WSTOPSIG (w)));
This is the default path we take if:
- W is not a syscall status
- W does not represent a SIGSTOP that have sent to stop the thread and
therefore want to suppress it
Change-Id: If2dc1f0537a549c293f7fa3c53efd00e3e194e79
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix handling of vfork by multi-threaded program (follow-fork-mode=parent, detach-on-fork=on)
There is a problem with how GDB handles a vfork happening in a
multi-threaded program. This problem was reported to me by somebody not
using vfork directly, but using system(3) in a multi-threaded program,
which may be implemented using vfork.
This patch only deals about the follow-fork-mode=parent,
detach-on-fork=on case, because it would be too much to chew at once to
fix the bugs in the other cases as well (I tried).
The problem
-----------
When a program vforks, the parent thread is suspended by the kernel
until the child process exits or execs. Specifically, in a
multi-threaded program, only the thread that called vfork is suspended,
other threads keep running freely. This is documented in the vfork(2)
man page ("Caveats" section).
Let's suppose GDB is handling a vfork and the user's desire is to detach
from the child. Before detaching the child, GDB must remove the software
breakpoints inserted in the shared parent/child address space, in case
there's a breakpoint in the path the child is going to take before
exec'ing or exit'ing (unlikely, but possible). Otherwise the child could
hit a breakpoint instruction while running outside the control of GDB,
which would make it crash. GDB must also avoid re-inserting breakpoints
in the parent as long as it didn't receive the "vfork done" event (that
is, when the child has exited or execed): since the address space is
shared with the child, that would re-insert breakpoints in the child
process also. So what GDB does is:
1. Receive "vfork" event for the parent
2. Remove breakpoints from the (shared) address space and set
program_space::breakpoints_not_allowed to avoid re-inserting them
3. Detach from the child thread
4. Resume the parent
5. Wait for and receive "vfork done" event for the parent
6. Clean program_space::breakpoints_not_allowed and re-insert
breakpoints
7. Resume the parent
Resuming the parent at step 4 is necessary in order for the kernel to
report the "vfork done" event. The kernel won't report a ptrace event
for a thread that is ptrace-stopped. But the theory behind this is that
between steps 4 and 5, the parent won't actually do any progress even
though it is ptrace-resumed, because the kernel keeps it suspended,
waiting for the child to exec or exit. So it doesn't matter for that
thread if breakpoints are not inserted.
The problem is when the program is multi-threaded. In step 4, GDB
resumes all threads of the parent. The thread that did the vfork stays
suspended by the kernel, so that's fine. But other threads are running
freely while breakpoints are removed, which is a problem because they
could miss a breakpoint that they should have hit.
The problem is present with all-stop and non-stop targets. The only
difference is that with an all-stop targets, the other threads are
stopped by the target when it reports the vfork event and are resumed by
the target when GDB resumes the parent. With a non-stop target, the
other threads are simply never stopped.
The fix
-------
There many combinations of settings to consider (all-stop/non-stop,
target-non-stop on/off, follow-fork-mode parent/child, detach-on-fork
on/off, schedule-multiple on/off), but for this patch I restrict the
scope to follow-fork-mode=parent, detach-on-fork=on. That's the
"default" case, where we detach the child and keep debugging the
parent. I tried to fix them all, but it's just too much to do at once.
The code paths and behaviors for when we don't detach the child are
completely different.
The guiding principle for this patch is that all threads of the vforking
inferior should be stopped as long as breakpoints are removed. This is
similar to handling in-line step-overs, in a way.
For non-stop targets (the default on Linux native), this is what
happens:
- In follow_fork, we call stop_all_threads to stop all threads of the
inferior
- In follow_fork_inferior, we record the vfork parent thread in
inferior::thread_waiting_for_vfork_done
- Back in handle_inferior_event, we call keep_going, which resumes only
the event thread (this is already the case, with a non-stop target).
This is the thread that will be waiting for vfork-done.
- When we get the vfork-done event, we go in the (new) handle_vfork_done
function to restart the previously stopped threads.
In the same scenario, but with an all-stop target:
- In follow_fork, no need to stop all threads of the inferior, the
target has stopped all threads of all its inferiors before returning
the event.
- In follow_fork_inferior, we record the vfork parent thread in
inferior::thread_waiting_for_vfork_done.
- Back in handle_inferior_event, we also call keep_going. However, we
only want to resume the event thread here, not all inferior threads.
In internal_resume_ptid (called by resume_1), we therefore now check
whether one of the inferiors we are about to resume has
thread_waiting_for_vfork_done set. If so, we only resume that
thread.
Note that when resuming multiple inferiors, one vforking and one not
non-vforking, we could resume the vforking thread from the vforking
inferior plus all threads from the non-vforking inferior. However,
this is not implemented, it would require more work.
- When we get the vfork-done event, the existing call to keep_going
naturally resumes all threads.
Testing-wise, add a test that tries to make the main thread hit a
breakpoint while a secondary thread calls vfork. Without the fix, the
main thread keeps going while breakpoints are removed, resulting in a
missed breakpoint and the program exiting.
Change-Id: I20eb78e17ca91f93c19c2b89a7e12c382ee814a1
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/infrun: add logging statement to do_target_resume
This helped me, it shows which ptid we actually call target_resume with.
Change-Id: I2dfd771e83df8c25f39371a13e3e91dc7882b73d
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/infrun: add inferior parameters to stop_all_threads and restart_threads
A following patch will want to stop all threads of a given inferior (as
opposed to all threads of all inferiors) while handling a vfork, and
restart them after. To help with this, add inferior parameters to
stop_all_threads and restart_threads. This is done as a separate patch
to make sure this doesn't cause regressions on its own, and to keep the
following patches more concise.
No visible changes are expected here, since all calls sites pass
nullptr, which should keep the existing behavior.
Change-Id: I4d9ba886ce842042075b4e346cfa64bbe2580dbf
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: replace inferior::waiting_for_vfork_done with inferior::thread_waiting_for_vfork_done
The inferior::waiting_for_vfork_done flag indicates that some thread in
that inferior is waiting for a vfork-done event. Subsequent patches
will need to know which thread precisely is waiting for that event.
Replace the boolean flag (waiting_for_vfork_done) with a thread_info
pointer (thread_waiting_for_vfork_done).
I think there is a latent buglet in that waiting_for_vfork_done is
currently not reset on inferior exec or exit. I could imagine that if a
thread in the parent process calls exec or exit while another thread of
the parent process is waiting for its vfork child to exec or exit, we
could end up with inferior::waiting_for_vfork_done without a thread
actually waiting for a vfork-done event anymore. And since that flag is
checked in resume_1, things could misbehave there.
Since the new field points to a thread_info object, and those are
destroyed on exec or exit, it could be worse now since we could try to
access freed memory, if thread_waiting_for_vfork_done were to point to a
stale thread_info. To avoid this, clear the field in
infrun_inferior_exit and infrun_inferior_execd.
Change-Id: I31b847278613a49ba03fc4915f74d9ceb228fdce
2022-04-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: make timestamped_file implement write_async_safe
Trying to use "set debug linux-nat 1", I get an internal error:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ui-file.h:70: internal-error: write_async_safe: write_async_safe
The problem is that timestamped_file doesn't implement write_async_safe,
which linux-nat's sigchld_handler uses. Implement it.
Change-Id: I830981010c6119f13ae673605ed015cced0f5ee8
2022-04-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix timeout in server-pipe.exp test
I noticed that the gdb.server/server-pipe.exp test would sometimes
timeout when my machine was more heavily loaded. Turns out the test
is reading all the shared libraries over GDB's remote protocol, which
can be slow.
We avoid this in other tests by setting the sysroot in GDBFLAGS,
something which is missing from the gdb.server/server-pipe.exp test.
Fix the timeouts by setting sysroot in GDBFLAGS, after this the shared
libraries are no longer copied over the remote protocol, and I no
longer see the test timeout.
2022-04-04 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Handle TLS variable lookups when using separate debug files.
Commit df22c1e5d53c38f38bce6072bb46de240f9e0e2b handled the case that
a separate debug file was passed as the objfile for a shared library
to svr4_fetch_objfile_link_map. However, a separate debug file can
also be passed for TLS variables in the main executable. In addition,
frv_fetch_objfile_link_map also expects to be passed the original
objfile rather than a separate debug file, so pull the code to resolve
a separate debug file to the main objfile up into
target_translate_tls_address.
2022-04-04 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Add maint set ignore-prologue-end-flag
The previous patch added support for the DWARF prologue-end flag in line
table. This flag can be used by DWARF producers to indicate where to
place breakpoints past a function prologue. However, this takes
precedence over prologue analyzers. So if we have to debug a program
with erroneous debug information, the overall debugging experience will
be degraded.
This commit proposes to add a maintenance command to instruct GDB to
ignore the prologue_end flag.
Tested on x86_64-gnu-linux.
Change-Id: Idda6d1b96ba887f4af555b43d9923261b9cc6f82
2022-04-04 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Add support for DW_LNS_set_prologue_end in line-table
Add support for DW_LNS_set_prologue_end when building line-tables. This
attribute can be set by the compiler to indicate that an instruction is
an adequate place to set a breakpoint just after the prologue of a
function.
The compiler might set multiple prologue_end, but considering how
current skip_prologue_using_sal works, this commit modifies it to accept
the first instruction with this marker (if any) to be the place where a
breakpoint should be placed to be at the end of the prologue.
The need for this support came from a problematic usecase generated by
hipcc (i.e. clang). The problem is as follows: There's a function
(lets call it foo) which covers PC from 0xa800to 0xa950. The body of
foo begins with a call to an inlined function, covering from 0xa800 to
0xa94c. The issue is that when placing a breakpoint at 'foo', GDB
inserts the breakpoint at 0xa818. The 0x18 offset is what GDB thinks is
foo's first address past the prologue.
Later, when hitting the breakpoint, GDB reports the stop within the
inlined function because the PC falls in its range while the user
expects to stop in FOO.
Looking at the line-table for this location, we have:
INDEX LINE ADDRESS IS-STMT
[...]
14 293 0x000000000000a66c Y
15 END 0x000000000000a6e0 Y
16 287 0x000000000000a800 Y
17 END 0x000000000000a818 Y
18 287 0x000000000000a824 Y
[...]
For comparison, let's look at llvm-dwarfdump's output for this CU:
Address Line Column File ISA Discriminator Flags
------------------ ------ ------ ------ --- ------------- -------------
[...]
0x000000000000a66c 293 12 2 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a6e0 96 43 82 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a6f8 102 18 82 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a70c 102 24 82 0 0
0x000000000000a710 102 18 82 0 0
0x000000000000a72c 101 16 82 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a73c 2915 50 83 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a74c 110 1 1 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a750 110 1 1 0 0 is_stmt end_sequence
0x000000000000a800 107 0 1 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a800 287 12 2 0 0 is_stmt prologue_end
0x000000000000a818 114 59 81 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a824 287 12 2 0 0 is_stmt
0x000000000000a828 100 58 82 0 0 is_stmt
[...]
The main difference we are interested in here is that llvm-dwarfdump's
output tells us that 0xa800 is an adequate place to place a breakpoint
past a function prologue. Since we know that foo covers from 0xa800 to
0xa94c, 0xa800 is the address at which the breakpoint should be placed
if the user wants to break in foo.
This commit proposes to add support for the prologue_end flag in the
line-program processing.
The processing of this prologue_end flag is made in skip_prologue_sal,
before it calls gdbarch_skip_prologue_noexcept. The intent is that if
the compiler gave information on where the prologue ends, we should use
this information and not try to rely on architecture dependent logic to
guess it.
The testsuite have been executed using this patch on GNU/Linux x86_64.
Testcases have been compiled with both gcc/g++ (verison 9.4.0) and
clang/clang++ (version 10.0.0) since at the time of writing GCC does not
set the prologue_end marker. Tests done with GCC 11.2.0 (not over the
entire testsuite) show that it does not emit this flag either.
No regression have been observed with GCC or Clang. Note that when
using Clang, this patch fixes a failure in
gdb.opt/inline-small-func.exp.
Change-Id: I720449a8a9b2e1fb45b54c6095d3b1e9da9152f8
2022-04-04 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/buildsym: Line record use a record flag
Currently when recording a line entry (with
buildsym_compunit::record_line), a boolean argument argument is used to
indicate that the is_stmt flag should be set for this particular record.
As a later commit will add support for new flags, instead of adding a
parameter to record_line for each possible flag, transform the current
is_stmt parameter into a enum flag. This flags parameter will allow
greater flexibility in future commits.
This enum flags type is not propagated into the linetable_entry type as
this would require a lot of changes across the codebase for no practical
gain (it currently uses a bitfield where each interesting flag only
occupy 1 bit in the structure).
Tested on x86_64-linux, no regression observed.
Change-Id: I5d061fa67bdb34918742505ff983d37453839d6a
2022-04-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make timestamped_file implement can_emit_style_escape
In our AMDGPU downstream port, we use styling in some logging output.
We noticed it stopped working after the gdb_printf changes. Making
timestamped_file implement can_emit_style_escape (returning the value of
the stream it wraps) fixes it. To show that it works, modify some
logging statements in auto-load.c to output style filenames. You can
see it in action by setting "set debug auto-load 1" and running a
program. We can incrementally add styling to other debug statements
throughout GDB, as needed.
Change-Id: I78a2fd1e078f80f2263251cf6bc53b3a9de9c17a
2022-04-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove assertion in psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching
psymtab_to_symtab is documented as possibly returning nullptr, if the
primary symtab of the partial symtab has no symbols. However,
psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching asserts that the result of
psymtab_to_symtab as non-nullptr.
I caught this assert by trying the CTF symbol reader on a library I
built with -gctf:
$ ./gdb --data-directory=data-directory /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
...
Reading symbols from /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0...
(gdb) maintenance expand-symtabs
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/psymtab.c:1142: internal-error: expand_symtabs_matching: Assertion `symtab != nullptr' failed.
The "symtab" in question is:
$ readelf --ctf=.ctf /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
...
CTF archive member: /home/simark/src/babeltrace/src/lib/graph/component-descriptor-set.c:
Header:
Magic number: 0xdff2
Version: 4 (CTF_VERSION_3)
Flags: 0xe (CTF_F_NEWFUNCINFO, CTF_F_IDXSORTED, CTF_F_DYNSTR)
Parent name: .ctf
Compilation unit name: /home/simark/src/babeltrace/src/lib/graph/component-descriptor-set.c
Type section: 0x0 -- 0x13 (0x14 bytes)
String section: 0x14 -- 0x5f (0x4c bytes)
Labels:
Data objects:
Function objects:
Variables:
Types:
0x80000001: (kind 5) bt_bool (*) (const bt_value *) (aligned at 0x8)
Strings:
0x0:
0x1: .ctf
0x6: /home/simark/src/babeltrace/src/lib/graph/component-descriptor-set.c
It contains a single type, and it is skipped by ctf_add_type_cb, because
an identical type was already seen earlier in this objfile. As a
result, no compunit_symtab is created.
Change psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching to expect that
psymtab_to_symtab can return nullptr.
Another possibility would be to make the CTF symbol reader always create
a compunit_symtab, even if there are no symbols in it (like the DWARF
parser does), but so far I don't see any advantage in doing so.
Change-Id: Ic43c38202c838a5eb87630ed1fd61d33528164f4
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
sim: fixes for libopcodes styled disassembler
In commit:
commit 60a3da00bd5407f07d64dff82a4dae98230dfaac
Date: Sat Jan 22 11:38:18 2022 +0000
objdump/opcodes: add syntax highlighting to disassembler output
I broke several sim/ targets by forgetting to update their uses of the
libopcodes disassembler to take account of the new styled printing.
These should all be fixed by this commit.
I've not tried to add actual styled output to the simulator traces,
instead, the styled print routines just ignore the style and print the
output unstyled.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove some globals from nat/windows-nat.c
nat/windows-nat.c has a number of globals that it uses to communicate
with its clients (gdb and gdbserver). However, if we ever want the
Windows ports to be multi-inferior, globals won't work.
This patch takes a step toward that by moving most nat/windows-nat.c
globals into a new struct windows_process_info. Many functions are
converted to be methods on this object.
A couple of globals remain, as they are needed to truly be global due
to the way that the Windows debugging APIs work.
The clients still have a global for the current process. That is,
this patch is a step toward the end goal, but doesn't implement the
goal itself.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove windows_thread_info destructor
windows_thread_info declares and defines a destructor, but this
doesn't need to be explicit.
Use unique_ptr in the Windows thread list
windows-nat.c uses some manual memory management when manipulating the
thread_list global. Changing this to use unique_ptr simplifies the
code, in particular windows_init_thread_list. (Note that, while I
think the the call to init_thread_list in there is wrong, I haven't
removed it in this patch.)
Use auto_obstack in windows-nat.c
One spot in windows-nat.c can use auto_obstack, removing some manual
memory management.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Simplify windows-nat.c solib handling
Currently windows-nat.c uses struct so_list to record its local idea
of which shared libraries have been loaded. However, many fields in
this are not needed, and furthermore I found this quite confusing at
first -- Windows actually uses solib-target and so the use of so_list
here is weird.
This patch simplifies this code by changing it to use a std::vector
and a new type that holds exactly what's needed for the Windows code.
2022-04-04 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Avoid undefined behavior in gdbscm_make_breakpoint
Running gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp against an --enable-ubsan build,
we see:
UNRESOLVED: gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: test_watchpoints: create a breakpoint with an invalid type number
...
guile (define wp2 (make-breakpoint "result" #:wp-class WP_WRITE #:type 999))
../../src/gdb/guile/scm-breakpoint.c:377:11: runtime error: load of value 999, which is not a valid value for type 'bptype'
ERROR: GDB process no longer exists
Fix this by parsing the user/guile input as plain int, and cast to
internal type only after we know we have a number that would be valid.
Change-Id: I03578d07db00be01b610a8f5ce72e5521aea6a4b
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add context-sensitive field name completion to Ada parser
This updates the Ada expression parser to implement context-sensitive
field name completion. This is PR ada/28727.
This is somewhat complicated due to some choices in the Ada lexer --
it chooses to represent a sequence of "."-separated identifiers as a
single token, so the parser must partially recreate the completer's
logic to find the completion word boundaries.
Despite the minor warts in this patch, though, it is a decent
improvement. It's possible that the DWARF reader rewrite will help
fix the package completion problem pointed out in this patch as well.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28727
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Consolidate single-char tokens in ada-lex.l
There are two rules in ada-lex.l that match single-character tokens.
This merges them.
Also, this removes '.' from the list of such tokens. '.' is not used
in any production in ada-exp.y, and removing it here helps the
subsequent completion patches.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove the Ada DOT_ALL token
The Ada parser has a DOT_ALL token to represent ".all", and another
token to represent other ".<identifier>" forms. However, for
completion it is a bit more convenient to unify these cases, so this
patch removes DOT_ALL.
Refactor ada-lex.l:processId
processId in ada-lex.l is a bit funny -- it uses an "if" and a
"switch", and a nested loop. This patch cleans it up a bit, changing
it to use a boolean flag and a simpler "if".
Implement completion for Ada attributes
This adds a completer for Ada attributes. Some work in the lexer is
required in order to match end-of-input correctly, as flex does not
have a general-purpose way of doing this. (The approach taken here is
recommended in the flex manual.)
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Refactor expression completion
This refactors the gdb expression completion code to make it easier to
add more types of completers.
In the old approach, just two kinds of completers were supported:
field names for some sub-expression, or tag names (like "enum
something"). The data for each kind was combined in single structure,
"expr_completion_state", and handled explicitly by
complete_expression.
In the new approach, the parser state just holds an object that is
responsible for implementing completion. This way, new completion
types can be added by subclassing this base object.
The structop completer is moved into structop_base_operation, and new
objects are defined for use by the completion code. This moves much
of the logic of expression completion out of completer.c as well.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Enable "set debug parser" for Ada
I noticed that "set debug parser 1" did not affect Ada parsing. This
patch fixes the problem.
Because this is rarely useful, and pretty much only for maintainers, I
didn't write a test case.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in Ada attributes lexing
The Ada lexer allows whitespace between the apostrophe and the
attribute text, but processAttribute does not handle this. This patch
fixes the problem and introduces a regression test.
Remove null sentinel from 'attributes'
In a subsequent patch, it's handy if the 'attributes' array in
ada-lex.l does not have a NULL sentinel at the end. In C++, this is
easy to avoid.
Handle ghost entities in symbol lookup
Normally, SPARK ghost entities are removed from the executable.
However, with -gnata, they will be preserved. In this situation, it's
handy to be able to inspect them. This patch allows this by removing
the "___ghost_" prefix in the appropriate places.
2022-04-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: rename start_symtab/end_symtab to start_compunit_symtab/end_compunit_symtab
It's a bit confusing because we have both "compunit_symtab" and "symtab"
types, and many methods and functions containing "start_symtab" or
"end_symtab", which actually deal with compunit_symtabs. I believe this
comes from the time before compunit_symtab was introduced, where
symtab did the job of both.
Rename everything I found containing start_symtab or end_symtab to use
start_compunit_symtab or end_compunit_symtab.
Change-Id: If3849b156f6433640173085ad479b6a0b085ade2
2022-04-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove some unused buildsym-legacy functions
Pretty much self-explanatory.
Change-Id: I5b658d017cd891ecdd1df61075eacb0f44316935
2022-04-04 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
gas: copy st_size only if unset
For
```
.size foo1, 1
foo1:
.set bar1, foo1
.size bar1, 2
.size bar2, 2
.set bar2, foo1
.set bar3, foo2
.size bar3, 2
.size bar4, 2
.set bar4, foo2
.size foo2, 1
foo2:
```
bar1's size is 2 while bar2, bar3, bar4's is 1. The behavior of bar1 makes sense
(generally directives on the new symbol should win) and is relied upon by glibc
stdio-common/errlist.c:
```
.hidden _sys_errlist_internal
.globl _sys_errlist_internal
.type _sys_errlist_internal, @object
.size _sys_errlist_internal, 1072
_sys_errlist_internal:
.globl __GLIBC_2_1_sys_errlist
.set __GLIBC_2_1_sys_errlist, _sys_errlist_internal
.type __GLIBC_2_1_sys_errlist, %object
.size __GLIBC_2_1_sys_errlist, 125 * (64 / 8)
// glibc expects that .size __GLIBC_2_1_sys_errlist, 125 * (64 / 8) wins.
```
The behavior of bar2/bar3/bar4 seems brittle. To avoid the reordering of the two
code blocks which will result in the bar3 situation, glibc compiles errlist.c
with gcc -fno-toplevel-reorder (previously -fno-unit-at-a-time).
To fix the inconsistency and improve robustness, make bar2/bar3/bar4 match bar1,
removing the directive order sensitivity.
There is a pity that `.size dest, 0` is indistinguishable from the case where
dest is unset, but the compromise seems fine.
PR gas/29012
* config/obj-elf.c (elf_copy_symbol_attributes): don't copy if src's size
has been set.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: New test.
* testsuite/gas/elf/size.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/elf/size.s: Likewise.
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: remove use of vfprintf_filtered
Commit:
commit 60a3da00bd5407f07d64dff82a4dae98230dfaac
Date: Sat Jan 22 11:38:18 2022 +0000
objdump/opcodes: add syntax highlighting to disassembler output
Introduced a new use of vfprintf_filtered, which has been deprecated.
This commit replaces this with gdb_vprintf instead.
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
opcodes/i386: partially implement disassembler style support
This commit adds partial support for disassembler styling in the i386
disassembler.
The i386 disassembler collects the instruction arguments into an array
of strings, and then loops over the array printing the arguments out
later on. The problem is that by the time we print the arguments out
it's not obvious what the type of each argument is.
Obviously this can be fixed, but I'd like to not do that as part of
this commit, rather, I'd prefer to keep this commit as small as
possible to get the basic infrastructure in place, then we can improve
on this, to add additional styling, in later commits.
For now then, I think this commit should correctly style mnemonics,
some immediates, and comments. Everything else will be printed as
plain text, which will include most instruction arguments, unless the
argument is printed as a symbol, by calling the print_address_func
callback.
Ignoring colours, there should be no other user visible changes in the
output of the disassembler in either objdump or gdb.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* disassembler.c (disassemble_init_for_target): Set
created_styled_output for i386 based targets.
* i386-dis.c: Changed throughout to use fprintf_styled_func
instead of fprintf_func.
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
opcodes/riscv: implement style support in the disassembler
Update the RISC-V disassembler to supply style information. This
allows objdump to apply syntax highlighting to the disassembler
output (when the appropriate command line flag is used).
Ignoring colours, there should be no other user visible changes in the
output of the disassembler in either objdump or gdb.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* disassembler.c (disassemble_init_for_target): Set
created_styled_output for riscv.
* riscv-dis.c: Changed throughout to use fprintf_styled_func
instead of fprintf_func.
2022-04-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
objdump/opcodes: add syntax highlighting to disassembler output
This commit adds the _option_ of having disassembler output syntax
highlighted in objdump. This option is _off_ by default. The new
command line options are:
--disassembler-color=off # The default.
--disassembler-color=color
--disassembler-color=extended-color
I have implemented two colour modes, using the same option names as we
use of --visualize-jumps, a basic 8-color mode ("color"), and an
extended 8bit color mode ("extended-color").
The syntax highlighting requires that each targets disassembler be
updated; each time the disassembler produces some output we now pass
through an additional parameter indicating what style should be
applied to the text.
As updating all target disassemblers is a large task, the old API is
maintained. And so, a user of the disassembler (i.e. objdump, gdb)
must provide two functions, the current non-styled print function, and
a new, styled print function.
I don't currently have a plan for converting every single target
disassembler, my hope is that interested folk will update the
disassemblers they are interested in. But it is possible some might
never get updated.
In this initial series I intend to convert the RISC-V disassembler
completely, and also do a partial conversion of the x86 disassembler.
Hopefully having the x86 disassembler at least partial converted will
allow more people to try this out easily and provide feedback.
In this commit I have focused on objdump. The changes to GDB at this
point are the bare minimum required to get things compiling, GDB makes
no use of the styling information to provide any colors, that will
come later, if this commit is accepted.
This first commit in the series doesn't convert any target
disassemblers at all (the next two commits will update some targets),
so after this commit, the only color you will see in the disassembler
output, is that produced from objdump itself, e.g. from
objdump_print_addr_with_sym, where we print an address and a symbol
name, these are now printed with styling information, and so will have
colors applied (if the option is on).
Finally, my ability to pick "good" colors is ... well, terrible. I'm
in no way committed to the colors I've picked here, so I encourage
people to suggest new colors, or wait for this commit to land, and
then patch the choice of colors.
I do have an idea about using possibly an environment variable to
allow the objdump colors to be customised, but I haven't done anything
like that in this commit, the color choices are just fixed in the code
for now.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Mention new feature.
* doc/binutils.texi (objdump): Describe --disassembler-color
option.
* objdump.c (disassembler_color): New global.
(disassembler_extended_color): Likewise.
(disassembler_in_comment): Likewise.
(usage): Mention --disassembler-color option.
(long_options): Add --disassembler-color option.
(objdump_print_value): Use fprintf_styled_func instead of
fprintf_func.
(objdump_print_symname): Likewise.
(objdump_print_addr_with_sym): Likewise.
(objdump_color_for_disassembler_style): New function.
(objdump_styled_sprintf): New function.
(fprintf_styled): New function.
(disassemble_jumps): Use disassemble_set_printf, and reset
disassembler_in_comment.
(null_styled_print): New function.
(disassemble_bytes): Use disassemble_set_printf, and reset
disassembler_in_comment.
(disassemble_data): Update init_disassemble_info call.
(main): Handle --disassembler-color option.
include/ChangeLog:
* dis-asm.h (enum disassembler_style): New enum.
(struct disassemble_info): Add fprintf_styled_func field, and
created_styled_output field.
(disassemble_set_printf): Declare.
(init_disassemble_info): Add additional parameter.
(INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO): Add additional parameter.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* dis-init.c (init_disassemble_info): Take extra parameter,
initialize the new fprintf_styled_func and created_styled_output
fields.
* disassembler.c (disassemble_set_printf): New function definition.
2022-04-04 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove more Python 2 code
I found another more place that still had a workaround for Python 2.
This patch removes it.
2022-04-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix KPASS in gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp
On openSUSE Leap 15.3 I run into:
...
KPASS: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=minimal: print pa_ptr.all \
(PRMS minimal encodings)
KPASS: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=minimal: print pa_ptr(3) \
(PRMS minimal encodings)
KPASS: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=minimal: print pa_ptr.all(3) \
(PRMS minimal encodings)
...
The test-case KFAILs some tests. However, the analysis in the corresponding
PR talks of a compiler problem, so it should use XFAILs instead.
The KFAILs are setup for pre-gcc-12, but apparantly the fix has been
backported to system compiler 7.5.0, hence the KPASS.
Fix this by:
- using an XFAIL instead of a KFAIL
- matching the specific gdb output that corresponds to the XFAILs
(reproduced on Fedora 34).
Tested on x86_64-linux, specifically openSUSE Leap 15.3 and Fedora 34.
2022-04-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-03 rupothar <rupesh.potharla@amd.com>
gdb: add support for Fortran's ASSUMED RANK arrays
This patch adds a new dynamic property DYN_PROP_RANK, this property is
read from the DW_AT_rank attribute and stored within the type just
like other dynamic properties.
As arrays with dynamic ranks make use of a single
DW_TAG_generic_subrange to represent all ranks of the array, support
for this tag has been added to dwarf2/read.c.
The final piece of this puzzle is to add support in gdbtypes.c so that
we can resolve an array type with dynamic rank. To do this the
existing resolve_dynamic_array_or_string function is split into two,
there's a new resolve_dynamic_array_or_string_1 core that is
responsible for resolving each rank of the array, while the now outer
resolve_dynamic_array_or_string is responsible for figuring out the
array rank (which might require resolving a dynamic property) and then
calling the inner core.
The resolve_dynamic_range function now takes a rank, which is passed
on to the dwarf expression evaluator. This rank will only be used in
the case where the array itself has dynamic rank, but we now pass the
rank in all cases, this should be harmless if the rank is not needed.
The only small nit is that resolve_dynamic_type_internal actually
handles resolving dynamic ranges itself, which now obviously requires
us to pass a rank value. But what rank value to use? In the end I
just passed '1' through here as a sane default, my thinking is that if
we are in resolve_dynamic_type_internal to resolve a range, then the
range isn't part of an array with dynamic rank, and so the range
should actually be using the rank value at all.
An alternative approach would be to make the rank value a
gdb::optional, however, this ends up adding a bunch of complexity to
the code (e.g. having to conditionally build the array to pass to
dwarf2_evaluate_property, and handling the 'rank - 1' in
resolve_dynamic_array_or_string_1) so I haven't done that, but could,
if people think that would be a better approach.
Finally, support for assumed rank arrays was only fixed very recently
in gcc, so you'll need the latest gcc in order to run the tests for
this.
Here's an example test program:
PROGRAM arank
REAL :: a1(10)
CALL sub1(a1)
CONTAINS
SUBROUTINE sub1(a)
REAL :: a(..)
PRINT *, RANK(a)
END SUBROUTINE sub1
END PROGRAM arank
Compiler Version:
gcc (GCC) 12.0.0 20211122 (experimental)
Compilation command:
gfortran assumedrank.f90 -gdwarf-5 -o assumedrank
Without Patch:
gdb -q assumedrank
Reading symbols from assumedrank...
(gdb) break sub1
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4006ff: file assumedrank.f90, line 10.
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/rupesh/STAGING-BUILD-2787/bin/assumedrank
Breakpoint 1, arank::sub1 (a=<unknown type in /home/rupesh/STAGING-BUILD-2787
/bin/assumedrank, CU 0x0, DIE 0xd5>) at assumedrank.f90:10
10 PRINT *, RANK(a)
(gdb) print RANK(a)
'a' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type
With patch:
gdb -q assumedrank
Reading symbols from assumedrank...
(gdb) break sub1
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4006ff: file assumedrank.f90, line 10.
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/rupesh/STAGING-BUILD-2787/bin/assumedrank
Breakpoint 1, arank::sub1 (a=...) at assumedrank.f90:10
10 PRINT *, RANK(a)
(gdb) print RANK(a)
$1 = 1
(gdb) ptype a
type = real(kind=4) (10)
(gdb)
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/dwarf: pass an array of values to the dwarf evaluator
When we need to evaluate a DWARF expression in order to resolve some
dynamic property of a type we call the dwarf2_evaluate_property
function, which is declared in gdb/dwarf/loc.h and defined in
gdb/dwarf/loc.c.
Currently, this function takes (amongst other things) an argument of
type property_addr_info called addr_stack and a boolean called
push_initial_value. When push_initial_value then the top value of
addr_stack is pushed onto the dwarf expression evaluation stack before
the expression is evaluated.
So far this has worked fine, as the only two cases we needed to handle
are the case the DWARF expression doesn't require the object
address (what the top of addr_stack represents), and the case where
the DWARF expression does require the address.
In the next commit this is going to change. As we add support for
Fortran assumed rank arrays, we need to start resolving the dynamic
properties of arrays. To do this, we need to push the array rank onto
the dwarf expression evaluation stack before the expression is
evaluated.
This commit is a refactoring commit aimed at making it easier to
support Fortran assumed rank arrays. Instead of passing a boolean,
and using this to decide if we should push the object address or not,
we instead pass an array (view) of values that should be pushed to the
dwarf expression evaluation stack.
In the couple of places where we previously passed push_initial_value
as true (mostly this was defaulting to false), we now have to pass the
address from the addr_stack as an item in the array view.
In the next commit, when we want to handle passing the array rank,
this will easily be supported too.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: small simplification in dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval
While examining the dwarf expression evaluator, I noticed that in
dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval, whenever push_initial_value is true, the
addr_stack will never be nullptr.
This allows for a small cleanup, replacing an if/then/else with an
assertion.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve some duplicate test names in gdb.base
This commit resolves all the duplicate test names that I see in the
script:
gdb.base/attach-pie-misread.exp
The duplicate names all come from a second call to
build_executable_own_libs, so in this commit I've places the second
call inside a with_test_prefix block.
While I was making this change I've also modified the value being
passed as the testname for the second build_executable_own_libs call.
Previously we used ${test}, however, I think this was likely a
mistake, the 'test' variable is setup for the previous test. I
suspect that ${testfile} is a better choice - especially now we have a
testname prefix.
As the testname is only used (after various calls) from within
build_executable_from_specs should the build fail, I don't think this
change really makes much difference though.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve a duplicate test name in a gdb.mi test
Solve two duplicate test names in the test script:
gdb.mi/mi-catch-cpp-exceptions.exp
by moving the call to restart_for_test inside the with_test_prefix
block. There should be no difference in what is tested after this
commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/Makefile.in: move ALLDEPFILES earlier in Makefile.in
If I do 'make tags' in the gdb build directory, the tags target does
complete, but I see these warnings:
../../src/gdb/arm.c: No such file or directory
../../src/gdb/arm-get-next-pcs.c: No such file or directory
../../src/gdb/arm-linux.c: No such file or directory
The reason for this is the ordering of build rules and make variables
in gdb/Makefile.in, specifically, the placement of the tags related
rules, and the ALLDEPFILES variable. The ordering is like this:
TAGFILES_NO_SRCDIR = .... $(ALLDEPFILES) ....
TAGS: $(TAGFILES_NO_SRCDIR) ....
# Recipe uses $(TAGFILES_NO_SRCDIR)
tags: TAGS
ALLDEPFILES = .....
When the TAGS rule is parsed TAGFILES_NO_SRCDIR is expanded, which
then expands ALLDEPFILES, which, at that point in the Makefile is
undefined, and so expands to the empty string. As a result TAGS does
not depend on any file listed in ALLDEPFILES.
However, when the TAGS recipe is invoked ALLDEPFILES is now defined.
As a result, all the files in ALLDEPFILES are passed to the etags
program.
The ALLDEPFILES references three files, arm.c, arm-get-next-pcs.c, and
arm-linux.c, which are actually in the gdb/arch/ directory, but, in
ALLDEPFILES these files don't include the arch/ prefix. As a result,
the etags program ends up looking for these files in the wrong
location.
As ALLDEPFILES is only used by the TAGS rule, this mistake was not
previously noticed (the TAGS rule itself was broken until a recent
commit).
In this commit I make two changes, first, I move ALLDEPFILES to be
defined before TAGFILES_NO_SRCDIR, this means that the TAGS rule will
depend on all the files in ALLDEPFILES. With this change the TAGS
rule now breaks complaining that there's no rule to build the 3 files
mentioned above.
Next, I have added all *.c files in gdb/arch/ to ALLDEPFILES,
including their arch/ prefix, and removed the incorrect (missing arch/
prefix) references.
With these two changes the TAGS (or tags if you prefer) target now
builds without any errors or warnings.
2022-04-03 Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>
gdb/Makefile.in: fix 'make tags' build target
The gdb_select.h file was moved to the gdbsupport directory long ago,
but a reference was accident left in gdb/Makefile.in (in the
HFILES_NO_SRCDIR variable), this commit removes that reference.
Before this commit, if I use 'make tags' here's what I see:
$ make tags
make: *** No rule to make target 'gdb_select.h', needed by 'TAGS'. Stop.
After this commit 'make tags' completes, but I still see these
warnings:
../../src/gdb/arm.c: No such file or directory
../../src/gdb/arm-get-next-pcs.c: No such file or directory
../../src/gdb/arm-linux.c: No such file or directory
These are caused by a separate issue, and will be addressed in the
next commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/Makefile.in: remove SOURCES variable
The SOURCES variable was added to gdb/Makefile.in as part of commit:
commit fb40c20903110ed8af9701ce7c2635abd3770d52
Date: Wed Feb 23 00:25:43 2000 +0000
Add mi/ and testsuite/gdb.mi/ subdirectories.
But as far as I can tell was not used at the time it was added, and is
not used today.
Lets remove it.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: fair split of delta after a resize
Currently, in master gdb, when a tui window is changed in size, the
screen delta is mostly just added to the next available window. We
do take care to respect the min/max size, but in most cases, these
limits are just "the terminal size", and so, we end up placing the
whole delta on the next window.
Consider these steps in an 80 column, 24 line terminal:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) layout src
(gdb) layout split
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 8 80 (has focus)
asm 8 80
status 1 80
cmd 8 80
(gdb) winheight cmd +2
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 6 80 (has focus)
asm 8 80
status 1 80
cmd 10 80
Notice that initially, the windows were balanced, 8 lines each for the
major windows. Then, when the cmd window was adjusted, the extra two
lines were given to the asm window.
I think it would be nicer if the delta was spread more evenly over the
available windows. In the example above, after the adjustment the
layout now looks like:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 7 80 (has focus)
asm 7 80
status 1 80
cmd 10 80
This is achieved within tui_layout_split::set_size, by just handing
out the delta in increments of 1 to each window (except for the window
the user adjusted), until there's no more delta left. Of course, we
continue to respect the min/max window sizes.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: relax restrictions on window max height and width
This commit removes some arbitrary adjustments made in
tui_cmd_window::max_height, tui_win_info::max_height, and
tui_win_info::max_width.
These member functions all subtract some constant from the theoretical
maximum height or width. I've looked back through the history a
little and can see no real reason why these adjustments should be
needed, with these adjustments removed all the existing tui tests
still pass.
However, retaining these restrictions causes some bugs, consider:
(gdb) tui new-layout hsrc {-horizontal src 1 cmd 1} 1
When this layout is selected with current master, gdb will leave a 4
line gap at the bottom of the terminal.
The problem is that the maximum height is restricted, for the cmd
window, to 4 less than the terminal height.
By removing this restriction gdb is able to size the windows to the
complete terminal height, and the layout is done correctly.
This 4 line restriction is also what prevents this layout from working
correctly:
(gdb) tui new-layout conly cmd 1
Previously, this layout would present a cmd window only, but there
would be a 4 line gap at the bottom of the terminal. This issue was
mentioned in an earlier commit in this series (when a different bug
was fixed), but with this commit, the above layout now correctly fills
the terminal. The associated test is updated.
After removing the adjustment in tui_cmd_window::max_height, the
implementation is now the same as the implementation in the parent
class tui_win_info, so I've completely removed the max_height call
from tui_cmd_window.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: some additional tests in gdb.tui/scroll.exp
This commit just adds an extra check of the src window size prior to
sending all the commands to gdb. We also set the cmd window height to
its existing height, this (obviously) shouldn't change the window
layout, which we check.
My main motivation was adding the initial window layout check, the
winheight and recheck are just extras. All of these test pass both
before and after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: support placing the cmd window into a horizontal layout
This commit allows the user to place the cmd window within horizontal
tui layouts. Consider this set of steps, carried out in an 80 columns
by 24 lines terminal, using current master gdb:
(gdb) tui new-layout hsrc { -horizontal src 1 cmd 1 } 1 status 1
(gdb) tui layout hsrc
What you end up with is a full width cmd window with the status bar
beneath. Where's the src window gone? We then try:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 23 3 (has focus)
cmd 23 80
status 1 80
(gdb)
Something weird has gone on, gdb has overlapped the cmd window with
the src window. If we trigger the src window to redraw is content,
for example, 'list main', then we see corruption in the cmd window as
the src window overwrites it.
So, what's going on?
The problem is some code in tui_layout_split::apply, in tui-layout.c.
Within 'Step 1', there is a loop that calculates the min/max window
sizes for all windows within a tui_layout_split. However, there's a
special case for the cmd window.
This special case is trying to have the cmd window retain its current
size when a layout is re-applied, or a new layout is applied. This
makes sense, consider moving from the 'src' layout to the 'asm'
layout, this looks something like this (status window removed):
.-------. .-------.
| src | | asm |
|-------| ====> |-------|
| cmd | | cmd |
'-------' '-------'
If the user has gone to the effort of adjusting the cmd window size,
then, the thinking goes, we shouldn't reset the cmd window size when
switching layouts like this.
The problem though, is that when we do a switch more like this:
.-----------. .-----------.
| src | | | |
|-----------| ====> | asm | cmd |
| cmd | | | |
'-----------' '-----------'
Now retaining the cmd window width makes no sense; the new layout has
a completely different placement for the cmd window, instead of sizing
by height, we're now sizing by width. The existing code doesn't
understand this though, and tried to retain the full width for the cmd
window.
To solve this problem, I propose we introduce the idea of a layout
"fingerprint". The fingerprint tries to capture, in an abstract way,
where the cmd window lives within the layout.
Only when two layouts have the same fingerprint will we attempt to
retain the cmd window size.
The fingerprint for a layout is represented as a string, the string is
a series of 'V' or 'H' characters, ending with a single 'C'
character. The series of 'V' and 'H' characters represent the
vertical or horizontal layouts that must be passed through to find the
cmd window.
Here are a few examples:
# This layout is equivalent to the builtin 'src' layout.
# Fingerprint: VC
tui new-layout example1 src 2 status 0 cmd 1
# This layout is equivalent to the builtin 'split' layout.
# Fingerprint: VC
tui new-layout example2 src 1 asm 1 status 0 cmd 1
# This is the same layout that was given at the top.
# Fingerprint: VHC
tui new-layout hsrc { -horizontal src 1 cmd 1 } 1 status 1
And so, when switching between example1 and example2, gdb knows that
the cmd window is, basically, in the same sort of position within the
layout, and will retain the cmd window size.
In contrast, when switching to the hsrc layout, gdb understands that
the position of the cmd window is different, and does not try to
retain the cmd window size.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: allow cmd window to change size in tui_layout_split::apply
When we switch layouts we call the tui_layout_split::apply member
function to reapply the layout, and recalculate all the window sizes.
One special case is the cmd window, which we try to keep at its
existing size.
However, in some cases it is not appropriate to keep the cmd window at
its existing size. I will describe two such cases here, in one, we
want the cmd window to reduce in size, and in the other, we want the
cmd window to grow in size.
Try these steps in a 80 columns, by 24 lines terminal:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) layout src
(gdb) winheight cmd 20
(gdb) layout split
You should see that the status window is missing from the new layout,
and that the cmd window has been placed over the border of the asm
window. The 'info win' output is:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 3 80 (has focus)
asm 3 80
status 1 80
cmd 20 80
Notice that gdb has assigned 27 lines of screen space, even with the
border overlap between the src and asm windows, this is still 2 lines
too many.
The problem here is that after switching layouts, gdb has forced the
cmd window to retain its 20 line height. Really, we want the cmd
window to reduce in height so that the src and asm windows can occupy
their minimum required space.
This commit allows this (details on how are below). After this
commit, in the above situation, we now see the status window displayed
correctly, and the 'info win' output is:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 3 80 (has focus)
asm 3 80
status 1 80
cmd 18 80
The cmd window has been reduced in size by 2 lines so that everything
can fit on the screen.
The second example is one which was discussed in a recent commit,
consider this case (still in the 80 column, 24 line terminal):
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) tui new-layout conly cmd 1
(gdb) layout conly
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
cmd 8 80 (has focus)
(gdb)
This layout only contains a cmd window, which we would expect to
occupy the entire terminal. But instead, the cmd window only occupies
the first 8 lines, and the rest of the terminal is unused!
The reason is, again, that the cmd window is keeping its previous
size (8 lines).
After this commit things are slightly different, the 'info win' output
is now:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
cmd 20 80 (has focus)
Which is a little better, but why only 20 lines? Turns out there's
yet another bug hitting this case. That bug will be addressed in a
later commit, so, for now, we're accepting the 20 lines.
What this commit does is modify the phase of tui_layout_split::apply
that handles any left over space. Usually, in "Step 2", each
sub-layout has a size calculated. As the size is an integer, then,
when all sizes are calculated we may have some space left over.
This extra space is then distributed between all the windows fairly
until all the space is used up.
When we consider windows minimum size, or fixed size windows, then it
is possible that we might try to use more space than is available,
this was our first example above. The same code that added extra
space to the windows, can also be used to reclaim space (in the over
allocation case) to allow all windows to fit.
The problem then is the cmd window, which we often force to a fixed
size. Inside the loop that handles the allocation of excess space, if
we find that we have tried every window, and still have space either
left to give, or we need to claim back more space, then, if the cmd
window was changed to a fixed size, we can change the cmd window back
to a non-fixed-size window, and proceed to either give, or take space
from the cmd window as needed.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: fairer distribution of excess space during apply
When applying layouts gdb computes the size of each window (or rather,
each sub-layout within a layout) using integer arithmetic. As this
rounds down the results, then, when all sub-layouts are sized, there
is the possibility that we have some space left over.
Currently, this space is just assigned to an arbitrary sub-layout.
This can result in some unbalanced results. Consider this set of
steps with current master:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) layout regs
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
regs 7 80
src 9 80 (has focus)
status 1 80
cmd 8 80
Notice the weird split between the src and regs windows, the original
layout specification has these windows given equal weight. The
problem is that, with rounding, both the regs and src windows are
initially sized to 7, the extra 2 lines are then arbitrarily added to
the src window.
In this commit, rather than add all the extra space to one single
window, I instead hand out the extra space 1 line at a time, looping
over all the sub-layouts. We take care to respect the min/max sizes,
and so, we now get this result:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) layout regs
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
regs 8 80
src 8 80 (has focus)
status 1 80
cmd 8 80
This looks more natural to me.
This is obviously a change in behaviour, and so, lots of the existing
tests need to be updated to take this into account. None of the
changes are huge, it's just a line or two (or column for width) moved
between windows.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: avoid fp exception when applying layouts
Consider:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) layout src
(gdb) tui new-layout conly cmd 1
(gdb) layout conly
After this, with current master, gdb crashes with a floating-point
exception.
The problem is that in tui_layout_split::apply, when we switch from
'src' to 'conly', we will try to retain the cmd window height. As
such, the cmd window will become a fixed size window, which decreases
the available_size, but doesn't count towards the total_weight.
As the cmd window is the only window, the total_weight stays at zero,
and, when we move into step 2, where we attempt to size the windows,
we perform a divide by zero, and crash.
After this commit we avoid the divide by zero, and just directly set
the window size based on the fixed size.
There is still a problem after this commit, when the conly layout is
selected the cmd window retains its original height, which will only
be part of the terminal. The rest of the terminal is left unused.
This issue will be addressed in a later commit, this commit is just
about the floating-point exception.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui/testsuite: refactor new-layout.exp test
This commit changes the gdb.tui/new-layout.exp test to make use of a
list of test descriptions, and a loop to check each description in
turn. There's no change to what is actually tested after this commit.
In future commits I plan to add additional tests to this file, and
this will be easier now that all I have to do is add a new test
description to the list.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: add left_boxed_p and right_boxed_p member functions
When I initially saw this code in tui_layout_split::apply, I assumed
that this must be a bug:
/* Two adjacent boxed windows will share a border, making a bit
more size available. */
if (i > 0
&& m_splits[i - 1].layout->bottom_boxed_p ()
&& m_splits[i].layout->top_boxed_p ())
...
After all, the apply might be laying out a horizontal layout, right?
So checking bottom_boxed_p and top_boxed_p is clearly wrong.
Well, it turns on, that due to the implementations of these things,
bottom_boxed_p is equivalent to an imagined right_boxed_p, and
top_boxed_p is equivalent to an imagined left_boxed_p.
In this commit I've renamed both top_boxed_p and bottom_boxed_p to
first_edge_has_border_p and last_edge_has_border_p respectively, and
extended the comments in tui_layout_base to mention that these methods
handle both horizontal and vertical layouts.
Now, hopefully, the code shouldn't look like it only applies for
vertical layouts.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: add a tui debugging flag
This commit adds 'set debug tui on|off' and 'show debug tui'. This
commit adds the control variable, and the printing macros in
tui/tui.h. I've then added some uses of these in tui.c and
tui-layout.c.
To help produce more useful debug output in tui-layout.c, I've added
some helper member functions in the class tui_layout_split, and also
moved the size_info struct out of tui_layout_split::apply into the
tui_layout_split class.
If tui debug is not turned on, then there should be no user visible
changes after this commit.
One thing to note is that, due to the way that the tui terminal is
often cleared, the only way I've found this useful is when I do:
(gdb) tui enable
(gdb) set logging file /path/to/file
(gdb) set logging debugredirect on
(gdb) set logging enable on
Additionally, gdb has some quirks when it comes to setting up logging
redirect and switching interpreters. Thus, the above only really
works if the logging is enabled after the tui is enabled, and disabled
again before the tui is disabled.
Enabling logging and switching interpreters can cause undefined
results, including crashes. This is an existing bug in gdb[1], and
has nothing directly to do with tui debug, but it is worth mentioning
here I think.
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28948
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: add new 'tui window width' command and 'winwidth' alias
This commit adds a new command 'tui window width', and an alias
'winwidth'. This command is equivalent to the old 'winheight'
command (which was recently renamed 'tui window height').
Even though I recently moved the old tui commands under the tui
namespace, and I would strongly encourage all new tui commands to be
added as 'tui ....' only (users can create their own top-level aliases
if they want), I'm breaking that suggestion here, and adding a
'winwidth' alias.
Given that we already have 'winheight' and have done for years, it
just didn't seem right to no have the matching 'winwidth'.
You might notice in the test that the window resizing doesn't quite
work right. I setup a horizontal layout, then grow and shrink the
windows. At the end of the test the windows should be back to their
original size...
... they are not. This isn't my fault, honest! GDB's window resizing
is a little ... temperamental, and is prone to getting things slightly
wrong during resizes, off by 1 type things. This is true for height
resizing, as well as the new width resizing.
Later patches in this series will rework the resizing algorithm, which
should improve things in this area. For now, I'm happy that the width
resizing is as good as the height resizing, given the existing quirks.
For the docs side I include a paragraph that explains how multiple
windows are required before the width can be adjusted. For
completeness, I've added the same paragraph to the winheight
description. With the predefined layouts this extra paragraph is not
really needed for winheight, as there are always multiple windows on
the screen. However, with custom layouts, this might not be true, so
adding the paragraph seems like a good idea.
As for the changes in gdb itself, I've mostly just taken the existing
height adjustment code, changed the name to make it generic 'size'
adjustment, and added a boolean flag to indicate if we are adjusting
the width or the height.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: rename tui_layout_split:set_weights_from_heights
In a following commit I'm going to add the ability to change the width
of a tui window (when in a horizontal layout). As a result, some of
the places where we currently hard-code references to height need to
be changed to handle either height, or width, based on whether we are
in a vertical, or horizontal layout.
This commit renames set_weights_from_heights to
set_weights_from_sizes, and makes the function use either the height,
or width as appropriate.
Currently, the only place that we call this function is from the
tui_layout_split::set_height function, in a part of the code we will
only reach for vertical layouts, so the new code is not actually being
used, but, this small change will help make later patches smaller, so
I'm proposing this as a stand alone change.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: rename tui_layout_base::adjust_size to ::set_height
Rename tui_layout_base::adjust_size to tui_layout_base::set_height,
the new name more accurately reflects what this member function does,
and makes it easier for a later commit to add a new
tui_layout_base::set_width member function.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-04-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: move some commands into the tui namespace
There are a lot of tui related commands that live in the top-level
command name space, e.g. layout, focus, refresh, winheight.
Having them at the top level means less typing for the user, which is
good, but, I think, makes command discovery harder.
In this commit, I propose moving all of the above mentioned commands
into the tui namespace, so 'layout' becomes 'tui layout', etc. But I
will then add aliases so that the old commands will still work,
e.g. I'll make 'layout' an alias for 'tui layout'.
The benefit I see in this work is that tui related commands can be
more easily discovered by typing 'tui ' and then tab-completing. Also
the "official" command is now a tui-sub-command, this is visible in,
for example, the help output, e.g.:
(gdb) help layout
tui layout, layout
Change the layout of windows.
Usage: tui layout prev | next | LAYOUT-NAME
List of tui layout subcommands:
tui layout asm -- Apply the "asm" layout.
tui layout next -- Apply the next TUI layout.
tui layout prev -- Apply the previous TUI layout.
tui layout regs -- Apply the TUI register layout.
tui layout split -- Apply the "split" layout.
tui layout src -- Apply the "src" layout.
Which I think is a good thing, it makes it clearer that this is a tui
command.
I've added a NEWS entry and updated the docs to mention the new and
old command names, with the new name being mentioned first.
2022-04-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix gdb_print -> gdb_printf typo
This caused a build failure with !CXX_STD_THREAD.
Change-Id: I30f0c89c43a76f85c0db34809192644fa64a9d18
2022-04-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Move microblaze relax info to target specific data
Target specific data shouldn't be put in struct bfd_section.
* section.c (struct bfd_section): Delete relax and relax_count.
(BFD_FAKE_SECTION): Adjust to suit.
(struct relax_table): Move to..
* elf32-microblaze.c (struct relax_table): ..here.
(struct _microblaze_elf_section_data): New.
(microblaze_elf_section_data): Define.
(microblaze_elf_new_section_hook): New function.
(bfd_elf32_new_section_hook): Define.
(calc_fixup): Return a size_t. Adjust to suit new location of
relax and relax_count.
(microblaze_elf_relax_section): Adjust to suit new location of
relax and relax_count. Make some variables size_t.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2022-04-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert commit 240d6706c6a2
PR 28592
PR 15994
PR 15935
* dwarf2.c (lookup_address_in_line_info_table): Return bool rather
than a range.
(comp_unit_find_nearest_line): Likewise. Return true if function
info found without line info.
(_bfd_dwarf2_find_nearest_line): Revert range handling code.
Regen bfd po/SRC-POTFILES.in
2022-04-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-02 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: rename floatformats_ia64_quad to floatformats_ieee_quad
It is better to rename floatformats_ia64_quad to floatformats_ieee_quad
to reflect the reality, and then we can clean up the related code.
As Tom Tromey said [1]:
These files are maintained in gcc and then imported into the
binutils-gdb repository, so any changes to them will have to
be proposed there first.
the related changes have been merged into gcc master now [2], it is time
to do it for gdb.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186569.html
[2] https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=commit;h=b2dff6b2d9d6
2022-04-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-04-01 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Remove unused variable.
2022-04-01 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb/debuginfod-support.c: Always display debuginfod errors
Errors encountered when downloading files from debuginfod servers
are not displayed if debuginfod verbosity is set to 0 (via
'set debuginfod verbose 0').
Tom recommended that these errors always be displayed, regardless
of the verbosity setting [1]. Fix this.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186350.html
2022-04-01 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Use I386_GSBASE_REGNUM in i386fbsd_get_thread_local_address.
32-bit x86 arches always the I386_*BASE_REGNUM values. Only code that
needs to support both 64-bit and 32-bit arches needs to use
tdep->fsbase_regnum to compute a segment base register number.
FreeBSD/x86: Read segment base registers from NT_X86_SEGBASES.
FreeBSD kernels recently grew a new register core dump note containing
the base addresses of the %fs and %gs segments (corresponding to the
%fsbase and %gsbase registers). Parse this note to permit inspecting
TLS variables in core dumps. Native processes already supported TLS
via older ptrace() operations.
2022-04-01 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Use pseudosections for NT_FREEBSD_X86_SEGBASES core dump notes.
This includes adding pseudosections when reading a core dump as well
as support for writing out a core dump note from a pseudosection.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elf-bfd.h (elfcore_write_x86_segbases): New.
* elf.c (elfcore_grok_freebsd_note): Add pseudosections for
NT_FREEBSD_X86_SEGBASES register notes.
(elfcore_write_x86_segbases): New.
(elfcore_write_register_note): Write NT_FREEBSD_X86_SEGBASES
register notes.
2022-04-01 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Recognize FreeBSD core dump note for x86 segment base registers.
This core dump note contains the value of the base address of the %fs
and %gs segments for both i386 and amd64 core dumps. It is primarily
useful in resolving the address of TLS variables in core dumps.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (get_freebsd_elfcore_note_type): Handle
NT_FREEBSD_X86_SEGBASES.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/common.h (NT_FREEBSD_X86_SEGBASES): Define.
2022-04-01 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
elfcore_grok_freebsd_note: Remove checks of note->namesz.
This function is only called if the note name is "FreeBSD", so
checking the name size is unnecessary.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elf.c (elfcore_grok_freebsd_note): Remove checks for namesz.
2022-04-01 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testing/tui: add new _csi_{L,S,T}
This patch was original part of this series:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186429.html
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186433.html
I've pulled this out as it might be useful ahead of the bigger series
being merged.
This commit adds:
_csi_L - insert line
_csi_S - pan down
_csi_T - pan up
2022-04-01 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Remove bfd_arch_l1om and bfd_arch_k1om
Remove bfd_arch_l1om and bfd_arch_k1om since L1OM/K1OM support has been
removed from gas, ld and opcodes.
bfd/
* Makefile.am (ALL_MACHINES): Remove cpu-l1om.lo and cpu-k1om.lo.
(ALL_MACHINES_CFILES): Remove cpu-l1om.c and cpu-k1om.c.
* archures.c (bfd_mach_l1om): Removed.
(bfd_mach_l1om_intel_syntax): Likewise.
(bfd_mach_k1om): Likewise.
(bfd_mach_k1om_intel_syntax): Likewise.
(bfd_k1om_arch): Likewise.
(bfd_l1om_arch): Likewise.
(bfd_archures_list): Remove bfd_k1om_arch and bfd_l1om_arch
references.
* config.bfd (targ_selvecs): Remove l1om_elf64_vec.
l1om_elf64_fbsd_vec, k1om_elf64_vec and k1om_elf64_fbsd_vec.
(targ_archs): Remove bfd_l1om_arch and bfd_k1om_arch.
* configure.ac (k1om_elf64_vec): Removed.
(k1om_elf64_fbsd_vec): Likewise.
(l1om_elf64_vec): Likewise.
(l1om_elf64_fbsd_vec): Likewise.
* cpu-k1om.c: Removed.
* cpu-l1om.c: Likewise.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf64_l1om_elf_object_p): Removed.
(elf64_k1om_elf_object_p): Likewise.
(l1om_elf64_vec): Removed.
(l1om_elf64_fbsd_vec): Likewise.
(k1om_elf64_vec): Likewise.
(k1om_elf64_fbsd_vec): Likewise.
(ELF_TARGET_OS): Undefine.
* targets.c (_bfd_target_vector): Remove k1om_elf64_vec,
k1om_elf64_fbsd_vec, l1om_elf64_vec and l1om_elf64_fbsd_vec.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* bfd-in2.h: Likewise.
* configure: Likewise.
opcodes/
* configure.ac: Remove bfd_arch_l1om/bfd_arch_k1om references.
* disassemble.c (disassembler): Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-04-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/ctf: pass partial symtab's filename to buildsym_compunit
I noticed that the CTF symbol reader passes the objfile's name to all
buildsym_compunit instances it creates. The result is that all
compunit_symtabs created have the same name, that of the objfile:
{ objfile /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 ((struct objfile *) 0x613000005d00)
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x621000286760)
debugformat ctf
producer (null)
name libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
dirname (null)
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x6210003911d0)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 ((struct symtab *) 0x6210003911f0)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x621000275c10)
debugformat ctf
producer (null)
name libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
dirname (null)
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x621000286710)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 ((struct symtab *) 0x621000286730)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
Notice the two "name libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0".
Change it to pass the partial_symtab's filename instead. The output
becomes:
{ objfile /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 ((struct objfile *) 0x613000005d00)
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x621000295610)
debugformat ctf
producer (null)
name libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
dirname (null)
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x6210003a15d0)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 ((struct symtab *) 0x6210003a15f0)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x621000288700)
debugformat ctf
producer (null)
name current-thread.c
dirname (null)
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x6210002955c0)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab /home/simark/src/babeltrace/src/lib/current-thread.c ((struct symtab *) 0x6210002955e0)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
Note that the first compunit_symtab still has libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0 as
its name. This is because the CTF symbol reader really creates a
partial symtab named like this. It appears to be because the debug info
contains information that has been factored out of all CUs and is at the
"top-level" of the objfile, outside any real CU. So it creates a
partial symtab and an artificial CU that's named after the objfile.
Change-Id: I576316bab2a3668adf87b4e6cebda900a8159b1b
2022-04-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: print compunit_symtab name in "maint info symtabs"
I think it would make sense to print a compunit_symtab's name in "maint
info symtabs". If you are looking for a given CU in the list, that's
probably the field you will be looking at. As the doc of
compunit_symtab::name says, it is not meant to be a reliable file name,
it is for debugging purposes (and "maint info symtabs" exists for
debugging purposes).
Sample output with the new field:
(gdb) maintenance info symtabs
{ objfile /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/a.out ((struct objfile *) 0x613000005d00)
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x621000131630)
debugformat DWARF 5
producer GNU C17 11.2.0 -mtune=generic -march=x86-64 -g3 -O0
name test.c
dirname /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x621000131d10)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab test.c ((struct symtab *) 0x6210001316b0)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x621000131d40)
}
{ symtab /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/test.h ((struct symtab *) 0x6210001316e0)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
{ symtab /usr/include/stdc-predef.h ((struct symtab *) 0x621000131710)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x6210001170a0)
debugformat DWARF 5
producer GNU C17 11.2.0 -mtune=generic -march=x86-64 -g3 -O0
name foo.c
dirname /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x621000131580)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab foo.c ((struct symtab *) 0x621000117120)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x6210001315b0)
}
{ symtab /usr/include/stdc-predef.h ((struct symtab *) 0x621000117150)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
}
}
Change-Id: I17b87adfac2f6551cb5bda30d59f6c6882789211
2022-04-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/ctf: don't create a buildsym_compunit when building partial symbols
I am trying to do some changes to buildsym_compunit, so I am auditing
the current uses. Something seems odd with this use of
buildsym_compunit (that this patch removes).
A buildsym_compunit is normally used when building a compunit_symtab.
That is, when expanding a partial symtab into a full compunit symtab.
In ctfread.c, a buildsym_compunit is created in ctf_start_archive, which
is only used when creating partial symtabs. At this moment, I don't
see how that's useful. ctf_start_archive creates a new
buildsym_compunit and starts a subfile. But that buildsym_compunit is
never used again. It's just overriden in ctf_start_symtab, which means
we leak the old buildsym_compunit, I suppose.
Remove ctf_start_archive completely. Add an assert in
ctf_start_symtab to verify that we are not overwriting an existing
buildsym_compunit (meaning we'd leak the existing one). This assert
triggers without the other part of the fix. When doing:
$ ./gdb --data-directory=data-directory /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
...
(gdb) maintenance expand-symtabs
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ctfread.c:1255: internal-error: ctf_start_symtab: Assertion `!ccp->builder' failed.
Change-Id: I666d146454a019f08e7305f3a1c4a974d27b4592
2022-04-01 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Style URLs in GDB output
I noticed that GDB will display URLs in a few spots. This changes
them to be styled. Originally I thought I'd introduce a new "url"
style, but there aren't many places to use this, so I just reused
filename styling instead. This patch also changes the debuginfod URL
list to be printed one URL per line. I think this is probably a bit
easier to read.
2022-04-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: initialize ctf_context::builder in create_partial_symtab
I built a random project with -gctf, in order to test the CTF support in
GDB. With my ASan/UBSan/etc-enabled build of GDB, I get:
$ ./gdb --data-directory=data-directory /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0
...
Reading symbols from /tmp/babeltrace-ctf/src/lib/.libs/libbabeltrace2.so.0.0.0...
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ctfread.c:1545:31: runtime error: member call on misaligned address 0xbebebebebebebebe for type 'struct buildsym_compunit', which requires 8 byte alignment
0xbebebebebebebebe: note: pointer points here
The 0xbebebebebebebebe value is a sign that the ctf_context::builder
field is uninitialized. The problem probably goes under the radar if
the field happens to be zero-initialized, because ctf_start_archive
contains this code:
if (ccx->builder == nullptr)
{
ccx->builder = new buildsym_compunit (of,
of->original_name, nullptr, language_c, 0);
If the field was zero-initialized (by chance), this will create a new
buildsym_compunit. But if the field was purposely filled with random
bytes by one of the sanitizers, we won't create a buildsym_compunit here
and we'll continue with ccx->builder equal to 0xbebebebebebebebe.
Fix this the easy way by initializing ccx->builder where the other
ctf_context fields are initialized (yeah, this code could be made nicer
C++, but I am going for the obvious fix here).
With this patch, this passes cleanly on my system:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.ctf/*.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="CC_FOR_TARGET=/opt/gcc/git/bin/gcc"
# of expected passes 40
... where /opt/gcc/git/bin/gcc is a gcc with CTF support, given my
system gcc does not have it.
Change-Id: Idea1b0cf3e3708b72ecb16b1b60222439160f9b9
2022-03-31 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove dbx mode
This patch removes gdb's dbx mode. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora
34.
2022-03-31 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gdb: Consolidate 32bit-pkeys.xml and 64bit-pkeys.xml
1. Since 32bit-pkeys.xml and 64bit-pkeys.xml are identical, consolidate
them into a single keys.xml.
2. Enable PKU for x32 to fix:
$ gdbserver :123456 x32-program
...
.../gdbserver/regcache.cc:255: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected
.
Unknown register pkru requested
on Tiger Lake.
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/linux-nat: remove check based on current_inferior in linux_handle_extended_wait
The check removed by this patch, using current_inferior, looks wrong.
When debugging multiple inferiors with the Linux native target and
linux_handle_extended_wait is called, there's no guarantee about which
is the current inferior. The vfork-done event we receive could be for
any inferior. If the vfork-done event is for a non-current inferior, we
end up wrongfully ignoring it. As a result, the core never processes a
TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE event, program_space::breakpoints_not_allowed
is never cleared, and breakpoints are never reinserted. However,
because the Linux native target decided to ignore the event, it resumed
the thread - while breakpoints out. And that's bad.
The proposed fix is to remove this check. Always report vfork-done
events and let infrun's logic decide if it should be ignored. We don't
save much cycles by filtering the event here.
Add a test that replicates the situation described above. See comments
in the test for more details.
Change-Id: Ibe33c1716c3602e847be6c2093120696f2286fbf
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver/linux: set lwp !stopped when failing to resume
I see some failures, at least in gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp and
gdb.threads/interrupted-hand-call.exp. Running `stress -C $(nproc)` at
the same time as the test makes those tests relatively frequent.
Let's take gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp as an example. The failure looks
like this, an unexpected "no resumed":
continue
Continuing.
No unwaited-for children left.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp: re_run_inf=2: iter=1: continue until exit
The situation is:
- Inferior 1 is stopped somewhere, it won't really play a role here.
- Inferior 2 has 2 threads, both stopped.
- We resume inferior 2, the leader thread is expected to exit, making
the process exit.
From GDB's perspective, a failing run looks like this:
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] do_target_wait: Found 2 inferiors, starting at #1
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[remote] wait: enter
[remote] Packet received: T0506:20dcffffff7f0000;07:20dcffffff7f0000;10:9551555555550000;thread:pae4cd.ae4cd;core:e;
[remote] wait: exit
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 713933.713933.0 [Thread 713933.713933],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = STOPPED, sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = STOPPED, sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
[infrun] clear_step_over_info: clearing step over info
[infrun] context_switch: Switching context from 0.0.0 to 713933.713933.0
[infrun] handle_signal_stop: stop_pc=0x555555555195
[infrun] start_step_over: enter
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 0
[infrun] operator(): step-over queue now empty
[infrun] start_step_over: exit
[infrun] process_event_stop_test: no stepping, continue
[remote] Sending packet: $Z0,555555555194,1#8e
[remote] Packet received: OK
[infrun] resume_1: step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [713933.713933.0] at 0x555555555195
[remote] Sending packet: $QPassSignals:e;10;14;17;1a;1b;1c;21;24;25;2c;4c;97;#0a
[remote] Packet received: OK
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c:pae4cd.-1#9f
[infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait
[infrun] reset: reason=handling event
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] do_target_wait: Found 2 inferiors, starting at #0
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[remote] wait: enter
[remote] Packet received: N
[remote] wait: exit
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: -1.0.0 [process -1],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = NO_RESUMED
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = NO_RESUMED
[remote] Sending packet: $Hgp0.0#ad
[remote] Packet received: OK
[remote] Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,1000#92
[remote] Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="pae4cb.ae4cb" core="3" name="multi-re-run-1" handle="40c7c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n<thread id="pae4cb.ae4cc" core="2" name="multi-re-run-1" handle="40b6c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n<thread id="pae4cd.ae4ce" core="1" name="multi-re-run-2" handle="40b6c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n</threads>\n
[infrun] stop_waiting: stop_waiting
[remote] Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,1000#92
[remote] Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="pae4cb.ae4cb" core="3" name="multi-re-run-1" handle="40c7c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n<thread id="pae4cb.ae4cc" core="2" name="multi-re-run-1" handle="40b6c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n<thread id="pae4cd.ae4ce" core="1" name="multi-re-run-2" handle="40b6c6f7ff7f0000"/>\n</threads>\n
[infrun] infrun_async: enable=0
[infrun] reset: reason=handling event
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit
We can see that we resume the inferior with vCont;c, but got NO_RESUMED.
When the test passes, we get an EXITED status to indicate the process
has exited.
From GDBserver's point of view, it looks like this. The logs contain
some logging I added and that are part of this patch.
[remote] getpkt: getpkt ("vCont;c:pae4cf.-1"); [no ack sent]
[threads] resume: enter
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 713931]? Ignoring, should remain stopped
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 713932]? Ignoring, should remain stopped
[threads] get_pc: pc is 0x555555555195
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 713935]? No, no breakpoint found at 0x555555555195
[threads] get_pc: pc is 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 713936]? No, no breakpoint found at 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] resume: Resuming, no pending status or step over needed
[threads] resume_one_thread: resuming LWP 713935
[threads] proceed_one_lwp: lwp 713935
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: continue from pc 0x555555555195
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: Resuming lwp 713935 (continue, signal 0, stop not expected)
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: NOW ptid=713935.713935.0 stopped=0 resumed=0
[threads] resume_one_thread: resuming LWP 713936
[threads] proceed_one_lwp: lwp 713936
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: continue from pc 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: Resuming lwp 713936 (continue, signal 0, stop not expected)
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: ptrace errno = 3 (No such process)
[threads] resume: exit
[threads] wait_1: enter
[threads] wait_1: [<all threads>]
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid(-1, ...) returned 0, ERRNO-OK
[threads] resume_stopped_resumed_lwps: resuming stopped-resumed LWP LWP 713935.713936 at 7ffff7d35a95: step=0
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: continue from pc 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: Resuming lwp 713936 (continue, signal 0, stop not expected)
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: ptrace errno = 3 (No such process)
[threads] operator(): check_zombie_leaders: leader_pid=713931, leader_lp!=NULL=1, num_lwps=2, zombie=0
[threads] operator(): check_zombie_leaders: leader_pid=713935, leader_lp!=NULL=1, num_lwps=2, zombie=1
[threads] operator(): Thread group leader 713935 zombie (it exited, or another thread execd).
[threads] delete_lwp: deleting 713935
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: exit (no unwaited-for LWP)
sigchld_handler
[threads] wait_1: ret = null_ptid, TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED
[threads] wait_1: exit
What happens is:
- We resume the leader (713935) successfully.
- The leader exits.
- We resume the secondary thread (713936), we get ESRCH. This is
expected this the leader has exited.
- resume_one_lwp_throw throws, it's caught by resume_one_lwp.
- resume_one_lwp checks with check_ptrace_stopped_lwp_gone that the
failure can be explained by the LWP becoming zombie, and swallows the
error.
- Note that this means that the secondary lwp still has stopped==1.
- wait_1 is called, probably because linux_process_target::resume marks
the async pipe at the end.
- The exit event isn't ready yet, probably because the machine is under
load, so waitpid returns nothing.
- check_zombie_leaders detects that the leader is zombie and deletes
- We try to find a resumed (non-stopped) LWP to get an event from,
there's none since the leader (that was resumed) is now deleted, and
the secondary thread is still marked stopped.
wait_for_event_filtered returns -1, causing wait_1 to return
NO_RESUMED.
What I notice here is that there is some kind of race between the
availability of the process' exit notification and the call to wait_1
that results from marking the async pipe at the end of resume.
I think what we want from this wait_1 invocation is to keep waiting, as
we will eventually get thread exit notifications for both of our
threads.
The fix I came up with is to mark the secondary thread as !stopped (or
resumed) when we fail to resume it. This makes wait_1 see that there is
at least one resume lwp, so it won't return NO_RESUMED. I think this
makes sense to consider it resumed, because we are going to receive an
exit event for it. Here's the GDBserver logs with the fix applied:
[threads] resume: enter
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 724595]? Ignoring, should remain stopped
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 724596]? Ignoring, should remain stopped
[threads] get_pc: pc is 0x555555555195
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 724597]? No, no breakpoint found at 0x555555555195
[threads] get_pc: pc is 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] thread_needs_step_over: Need step over [LWP 724598]? No, no breakpoint found at 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] resume: Resuming, no pending status or step over needed
[threads] resume_one_thread: resuming LWP 724597
[threads] proceed_one_lwp: lwp 724597
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: continue from pc 0x555555555195
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: Resuming lwp 724597 (continue, signal 0, stop not expected)
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: NOW ptid=724597.724597.0 stopped=0 resumed=0
[threads] resume_one_thread: resuming LWP 724598
[threads] proceed_one_lwp: lwp 724598
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: continue from pc 0x7ffff7d35a95
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: Resuming lwp 724598 (continue, signal 0, stop not expected)
[threads] resume_one_lwp_throw: ptrace errno = 3 (No such process)
[threads] resume: exit
[threads] wait_1: enter
[threads] wait_1: [<all threads>]
sigchld_handler
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid(-1, ...) returned 0, ERRNO-OK
[threads] operator(): check_zombie_leaders: leader_pid=724595, leader_lp!=NULL=1, num_lwps=2, zombie=0
[threads] operator(): check_zombie_leaders: leader_pid=724597, leader_lp!=NULL=1, num_lwps=2, zombie=1
[threads] operator(): Thread group leader 724597 zombie (it exited, or another thread execd).
[threads] delete_lwp: deleting 724597
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: sigsuspend'ing
sigchld_handler
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid(-1, ...) returned 724598, ERRNO-OK
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid 724598 received 0 (exited)
[threads] filter_event: 724598 exited
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid(-1, ...) returned 724597, ERRNO-OK
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid 724597 received 0 (exited)
[threads] wait_for_event_filtered: waitpid(-1, ...) returned 0, ERRNO-OK
sigchld_handler
[threads] wait_1: ret = LWP 724597.724598, exited with retcode 0
[threads] wait_1: exit
Change-Id: Idf0bdb4cb0313f1b49e4864071650cc83fb3c100
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite/tui: implement _csi_P proc
Since commit 3cd522938792 ("Change the pager to a ui_file"), I see these
errors when running gdb.tui/scroll.exp:
ERROR: invalid command name "_csi_P"
while executing
"::gdb_tcl_unknown _csi_P 2"
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel 1 ::gdb_tcl_unknown $args"
(procedure "::unknown" line 5)
invoked from within
"_csi_P 2"
("eval" body line 1)
invoked from within
"eval _csi_$cmd $params"
It looks like GDB is emitting a CSI that it did not emit before, the
"Delete character" one:
https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DCH.html
Implement it.
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Change-Id: I5bf86b6104d51b0623a26a69df83d1ca9a4851b7
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix use of fprintf_filtered in top.c
A race condition in how patches were pushed causes this build failure:
CXX top.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/top.c: In function void print_gdb_configuration(ui_file*):
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/top.c:1622:3: error: fprintf_filtered was not declared in this scope; did you mean printf_unfiltered?
1622 | fprintf_filtered (stream, _("\
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
fprintf_filtered has been removed, gdb_printf must be used now. Fix
this.
Change-Id: I6a172ba0d53dab2e7cc43ed0ed2696c82925245b
2022-03-31 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Relax check for RNG system registers
FEAT_RNG is an optional Armv8.5-A extension, but it can be backported
to earlier architectures as well. GAS previously made the RNG registers
conditional on having both armv8.5-a and +rng, but only +rng should be
required.
This seems to be the only feature that was handled like this.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (SR_RNG): Don't require V8_5.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rng-1.s, testsuite/gas/aarch64/rng-1.d: New
test.
2022-03-31 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
* gdb/top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Announce --enable-threading.
This includes the reporting of --enable/disable-threading as part of
the GDB configuration description.
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/infrun: add reason parameter to stop_all_threads
Add a "reason" parameter, only used to show in debug messages what is
the reason for stopping all threads. This helped me understand the
debug logs while adding some new uses of stop_all_threads, so I am
proposing to merge it.
Change-Id: I66c8c335ebf41836a7bc3d5fe1db92c195f65e55
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: update copyright years in gdb.base/vfork-follow-parent.*
I forgot to do this before pushing the previous commit.
Change-Id: Ia343f702e8357d0fd109e9ddd778973e91862805
2022-03-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: test vfork + follow-fork-mode=parent + detach-on-fork=off
The particular behavior we have when using that combination of settings
doesn't seem tested at all (at least, I don't find it if I grep for "Can
not resume the parent process"). Add a simple test for that.
Change-Id: Ib9454a615abba661b42f1b15056df73ed1bcd4c5
2022-03-31 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Accept the + character as part of filenames for MRI scripts.
2022-03-31 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
Fix procfs.c compilation
procfs.c doesn't compile on Solaris:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c: In member function virtual bool procfs_target::info_proc(const char*, info_proc_what):
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c:3302:3: error: gdb_argv was not declared in this scope
3302 | gdb_argv built_argv (args);
| ^~~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c:3303:20: error: built_argv was not declared in this scope; did you mean buildargv?
3303 | for (char *arg : built_argv)
| ^~~~~~~~~~
| buildargv
Fixed by including "gdbsupport/buildargv.h".
Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11, sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
2022-03-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: add tests for Term
While trying to review Andrew's patch here [1], I thought I spotted a
bug in the handling of a CSI, but I had no way to know for sure. So I
thought it would be useful to have unit tests for the handling of
control characters and control sequences of our toy terminal
implementation. It might help avoid chasing bugs in the GDB TUI when in
reality it's a problem with the testsuite's terminal implementation.
Add the gdb.tui/tuiterm.exp file to do that. All currently supported
control sequences and characters are tested, except _csi_m (the one that
handles colors and stuff). _csi_m should probably be tested too, but it
will require more work.
Fix a few issues that the tests spotted:
- backspace: according to [3] (table 4-1), a backspace when the cursor
is at the beginning of a line should have no effect. Our
implementation did wrap to the end of the previous line. Change our
implementation to match the doc (and the test).
- insert character: this control sequence is supposed to insert blank
characters, shifting all the rest of the line right. The current
implementation moves N characters right, but it overwrites the
characters on the right instead of shifting them. It also doesn't
insert blank characters at the cursor.
- Cursor down, forward, next line: off-by-one error when reaching the
end of the display.
- erase in display, line: off-by-one errors.
- vertical line position absolute: allowed setting the cursor outside
the display, when it should clamp it to the display size.
I found that this web page [2] gave some good clues on the expected
behavior of some control characters or sequences that some other pages
didn't.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186433.html
[2] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/console-virtual-terminal-sequences
[3] https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter4.html#S4.3.3
Change-Id: Iab4141fdcfb7459d1b7c45cc63bd1fcb50a78d5d
2022-03-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Only allow QUIT on the main thread
Pedro pointed out that gdb worker threads should not react to quits.
While I don't think that the new DWARF reader can call QUIT from a
worker thread (and I don't think the existing minsym threading code
can either), it seems safest to address this before checking in the
new code. This patch arranges for the QUIT macro to only work on the
main thread.
2022-03-30 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use gdb_printf and gdb_vprintf in more places
Luis pointed out that I missed a spot in the gdb_printf conversion --
namely aarch64-nat.c. While looking at this, I found another spot in
darwin-nat.c that I also missed. I can't build either of these, but I
think this patch should fix the problems.
Consolidate definition of current_directory
I noticed that both gdbserver and gdb define current_directory.
However, as it is referenced by gdbsupport, it seemed better to define
it there as well. This patch also moves the declaration to
pathstuff.h. Tested by rebuilding.
2022-03-30 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Decode "dynamic" interface types in Ada
In Ada, if a class implements an interface and has a dynamic
superclass, then the "offset to top" -- the offset that says how to
turn a pointer to the interface into a pointer to the whole object --
is stored in the object itself. This patch changes GDB to understand
this.
Because this only touches Ada code, and because Joel already reviewed
it internally, I am checking it in.
2022-03-30 Jeff Law <jeffreyalaw@gmail.com>
Fix for MUL instruction on the v850
* sim/v850/simops.c (Multiply64): Properly test if we need to
negate either of the operands.
* sim/testsuite/v850/mul.cgs: New test.
2022-03-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove two unused hooks
I noticed that a couple of deprecated hooks aren't ever called, so
they can't really be used by Insight. This patch removes them
entirely. I checked the Insight sources, and these aren't mentioned
there, either.
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove unnecessary calls to wrap_here and gdb_flush
Various spots in gdb currently know about the wrap buffer, and so are
careful to call wrap_here to be certain that all output has been
flushed.
Now that the pager is just an ordinary stream, this isn't needed, and
a simple call to gdb_flush is enough.
Similarly, there are places where gdb prints to gdb_stderr, but first
flushes gdb_stdout. stderr_file already flushes gdb_stdout, so these
aren't needed.
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Minor comment updates in utils.h
This patch updates some comments in utils.h to more closely reflect
the new reality.
Remove vfprintf_styled
Nothing calls vfprintf_styled any more, so remove it.
Remove ui_out_flag::unfiltered_output
There is no longer any need for ui_out_flag::unfiltered_output --
nothing ever sets this flag. This used to be needed to make the
_unfiltered output work, but now only printf_unfiltered can be used,
and it uses the puts_unfiltered method. This patch removes the flag
and the dead code.
Rename fprintf_symbol_filtered
fprintf_symbol_filtered is misnamed, because whether filtering happens
is now up to the stream. This renames it to fprintf_symbol, which
isn't a great name (the first "f" doesn't mean much and the second one
is truly meaningless here), but "print_symbol" was already taken.
Rename puts_filtered_tabular
puts_filtered_tabular is now misnamed, because whether filtering
happens is now up to the stream. So, rename it. (This function is
pretty weird, and should probably be rewritten to avoid using the
chars_printed global, and moved into objc-lang.c. However, I haven't
done so.)
Rename print_spaces_filtered
print_spaces_filtered is now misnamed, because whether filtering
happens is up to the stream. So, rename it.
Unify gdb printf functions
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the printf family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_printf". Most of this patch was written by script.
Unify gdb putc functions
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the putc family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_putc". Most of this patch was written by script.
Unify gdb puts functions
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the puts family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_puts". Most of this patch was written by script.
Unify vprintf functions
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the vprintf family of functions: vprintf_filtered,
vprintf_unfiltered, vfprintf_filtered and vfprintf_unfiltered. (For
the gdb_stdout variants, recall that only printf_unfiltered gets truly
unfiltered output at this point.) This removes one such function and
renames the remaining two to "gdb_vprintf". All callers are updated.
Much of this patch was written by script.
Remove fputs_styled_unfiltered
fputs_styled_unfiltered is only called from cli_ui_out, so remove it.
This area will be further simplified in future patches.
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Change the pager to a ui_file
This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation.
A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The
implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there
are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This
could be cleaned up at some future date.)
I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change
should be ok. There are a few cases:
* Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the
pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation.
* All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that
take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream
(e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to
gdb_stdout
I investigated all such calls by searching for:
grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr
This yields a number of candidates to check.
* The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and
save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands
and so are fine.
* Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok.
* Disassembly selftests.
* print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't
yet enabled at this point during startup.
* serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout
* The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file.
* DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout.
* Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if
they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if
not, then filtering never applied and still will not.
Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between
all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be
unified.
In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and
ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea,
erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this
part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to
cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this
direction.
Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking
against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now
it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully
delegated to the particular ui_file implementation.
ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call
to it.
I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt
This removes vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt, inlining it at the sole point
of call.
Add style-escape methods to ui_file
This adds emit_style_escape and reset_style methods to ui_file. These
aren't used yet, but they will be once the pager is converted to be a
ui_file subclass.
Add puts_unfiltered method to ui_file
When the pager is rewritten as a ui_file, gdb will still need a way to
bypass the filtering. After examining a few approaches, I chose this
patch, which adds a puts_unfiltered method to ui_file. For most
implementations of ui_file, this will just delegate to puts. This
patch also switches printf_unfiltered to use the new method.
Only have one API for unfiltered output
At the end of this series, the use of unfiltered output will be very
restricted -- only places that definitely need it will use it. To
this end, I thought it would be good to reduce the number of
_unfiltered APIs that are exposed. This patch changes gdb so that
only printf_unfiltered exists. (After this patch, the f* variants
still exist as well, but those will be removed later.)
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove some uses of printf_unfiltered
A number of spots call printf_unfiltered only because they are in code
that should not be interrupted by the pager. However, I believe these
cases are all handled by infrun's blanket ban on paging, and so can be
converted to the default (_filtered) API.
After this patch, I think all the remaining _unfiltered calls are ones
that really ought to be. A few -- namely in complete_command -- could
be replaced by a scoped assignment to pagination_enabled, but for the
remainder, the code seems simple enough like this.
2022-03-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use unfiltered output in annotate.c
It seems to me that annotations should not be filtered. While it
might be weird for an annotation-based UI to use the pager, it's not,
I think, out of the question. This patch makes this change.
2022-03-29 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
Aleksandar Paunovic <aleksandar.paunovic@intel.com>
gdb/remote: use current_inferior in read_ptid if multi-process not supported
When parsing the ptid out of a reply package, if the multi-process
extensions are not supported, use current_inferior's pid as the pid of
the reported thread, instead of inferior_ptid. This is needed because
the inferior_ptid may be null_ptid although a legit context exists,
due to a prior context switch via switch_to_inferior_no_thread.
Below is a scenario that illustrates what could go wrong. First,
setup a multi-target scenario. This is needed, because in a
multi-target setting, the inferior_ptid is cleared out before waiting
on targets. The second inferior below sits on top of a remote target.
Multi-process packets are disabled.
$ # First, spawn a process with PID 26253 to attach to later.
$ gdb-up a.out
Reading symbols from a.out...
(gdb) maint set target-non-stop on
(gdb) set remote multiprocess-feature-packet off
(gdb) start
...
(gdb) add-inferior -no-connection
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2
(gdb) inferior 2
[Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)]
(gdb) target extended-remote | gdbserver --multi -
Remote debugging using | gdbserver --multi -
Remote debugging using stdio
(gdb) attach 26253
Attaching to Remote target
Attached; pid = 26253
[New Thread 26253]
[New inferior 3]
Reading /tmp/a.out from remote target...
...
[New Thread 26253]
...
Reading /usr/local/lib/debug/....debug from remote target...
>>> GDB seems to hang here.
After attaching to a process and reading some library files, GDB
seems to hang. One interesting thing to note is that
[New Thread 26253]
appears twice. We also see
[New inferior 3]
Running the same scenario with "debug infrun on" reveals more details.
...
(gdb) attach 26253
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=attaching
Attaching to Remote target
Attached; pid = 26253
[New Thread 26253]
[infrun] infrun_async: enable=1
[infrun] attach_command: immediately after attach:
[infrun] attach_command: thread 26253.26253.0, executing = 1, resumed = 0, state = RUNNING
[infrun] clear_proceed_status_thread: 26253.26253.0
[infrun] reset: reason=attaching
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target native, no resumed threads
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target extended-remote
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] do_target_wait: Found 2 inferiors, starting at #1
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [Thread 0], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 26253.26253.0 [Thread 26253],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = STOPPED, sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = STOPPED, sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0
[infrun] start_step_over: enter
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 0
[infrun] operator(): step-over queue now empty
[infrun] start_step_over: exit
[infrun] context_switch: Switching context from 0.0.0 to 26253.26253.0
[infrun] handle_signal_stop: stop_pc=0x7f849d8cf151
[infrun] stop_waiting: stop_waiting
[infrun] stop_all_threads: starting
[infrun] stop_all_threads: pass=0, iterations=0
[New inferior 3]
Reading /tmp/a.out from remote target...
warning: File transfers from remote targets can be slow. Use "set sysroot" to access files locally instead.
Reading /tmp/a.out from remote target...
Reading symbols from target:/tmp/a.out...
[New Thread 26253]
[infrun] stop_all_threads: 4723.4723.0 not executing
[infrun] stop_all_threads: 26253.26253.0 not executing
[infrun] stop_all_threads: 42000.26253.0 executing, need stop
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [Thread 0], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: -1.0.0 [Thread 0],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = IGNORE
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [Thread 0], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: -1.0.0 [Thread 0],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = IGNORE
GDB tried to stop Thread 42000.26253.0, which does not exist, and we
are waiting for a stop event that will never happen. The PID in
'42000.26253.0', namely 42000, is the PID of magic_null_ptid.
It comes from gdb/remote.c:read_ptid:
/* Since the stub is not sending a process id, then default to
what's in inferior_ptid, unless it's null at this point. If so,
then since there's no way to know the pid of the reported
threads, use the magic number. */
if (inferior_ptid == null_ptid)
pid = magic_null_ptid.pid ();
else
pid = inferior_ptid.pid ();
if (obuf)
*obuf = pp;
return ptid_t (pid, tid);
Because multi-process was turned off, GDB did not parse an explicitly
specified PID. Furthermore, inferior_ptid == null_ptid, and
eventually GDB picked the PID from magic_null_ptid.
If target-non-stop is not turned on at the beginning, the same bug
reveals itself as a duplicated thread as shown below.
# Same setup as above, without 'maint set target-non-stop on'.
...
(gdb) attach 26253
Attaching to Remote target
Attached; pid = 26253
[New inferior 3]
...
[New Thread 26253]
...
(gdb) info threads
Id Target Id Frame
1.1 process 13517 "a.out" main () at test.c:3
* 2.1 Thread 26253 "a.out" 0x00007f12750c5151 in read () from target:/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
3.1 Thread 26253 "a.out" Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 560 bytes, got 2496 bytes): 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
(gdb)
Fix the problem by preferring current_inferior()'s pid instead of
magic_null_ptid.
Regression-tested on X86-64 Linux.
2022-03-29 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix test failure when building against readline v7
The test added in the commit:
commit a6b413d24ccc5d76179bab866834e11fd6fec294
Date: Fri Mar 11 14:44:03 2022 +0000
gdb: work around prompt corruption caused by bracketed-paste-mode
Was not written with readline 7 in mind, only readline 8+. Between
readline 7 and 8 the escape sequence used to disable bracketed paste
mode changed, an additional '\r' character was added to the end. In
fact, it was the addition of this '\r' character that triggered the
issue for which the above commit is part of the solution.
Anyway, the test tries to spot the case where the output from GDB is
not perfect, but does have the above work around applied. However,
the pattern in the test assumes that the problematic '\r' will be
present, and this is only true for readline 8+. With readline 7 the
test was failing.
In this commit I generalise the pattern a little so that the test will
still KFAIL with readline 7.
It's a little unfortunate that the test is KFAILing with readline 7,
as without the problematic '\r' there's actually no reason that GDB
couldn't "do the right thing" in this case, in which case, the test
would PASS, but that would require changes within GDB itself.
My preference then is that initially we patch the test to get it
KFAILing, then in a separate commit I can modify GDB so that it can
PASS with readline 7.
2022-03-29 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix copy & paste error in gdb.python/py-format-address.exp
The test gdb.python/py-format-address.exp, added in commit:
commit 25209e2c6979c3838e14e099f0333609810db280
Date: Sat Oct 23 09:59:25 2021 +0100
gdb/python: add gdb.format_address function
included 3 copy & paste errors where the wrong address was used in the
expected output patterns.
The test compiles two almost identical test binaries (one function
changes its name, that's the only difference), two inferiors are
created, each inferior using one of the test binaries.
We then take the address of the name changing function in both
inferiors ('foo' in inferior 1 and 'bar' in inferior 2) and the tests
are carried out using these addresses.
What we're checking for is that symbols 'foo' and 'bar' show up in the
correct inferior, and that (as this test is for a Python API feature),
the user can have one inferior selected, but ask about the other
inferior, and see the correct symbol in the result.
The hope is that the two binaries will be laid out identically by the
compiler, and that 'foo' and 'bar' will be at the same address. This
is fine, unless the executable is compiled as PIE (position
independent executable), in which case there is a problem.
The problem is that though inferior 1 is set running, the inferior 2
never is. If the executables are compiled as PIE, then the address in
the inferior 2 will not have been resolved, while the address in the
inferior 1 will have been, and so the two addresses we use in the
tests will be different.
This issue was reported here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186911.html
The first part of the fix is to use the correct address variable in
the expected output patterns, with this change the tests pass even
when the executables are compiled as PIE.
A second part of this fix is to pass the 'nopie' option when we
compile the tests, this should ensure that the address obtained in
inferior 2 is the same as the address from inferior 1, which makes the
test more useful.
2022-03-29 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/mi: fix use after free of frame_info causing spurious notifications
In commit:
commit a2757c4ed693cef4ecc4dcdcb2518353eb6b3c3f
Date: Wed Mar 16 15:08:22 2022 +0000
gdb/mi: consistently notify user when GDB/MI client uses -thread-select
Changes were made to GDB to address some inconsistencies in when
notifications are sent from a MI terminal to a CLI terminal (when
multiple terminals are in use, see new-ui command).
Unfortunately, in order to track when the currently selected frame has
changed, that commit grabs a frame_info pointer before and after an MI
command has executed, and compares the pointers to see if the frame
has changed.
This is not safe.
If the frame cache is deleted for any reason then the frame_info
pointer captured before the command started, is no longer valid, and
any comparisons based on that pointer are undefined.
This was leading to random test failures for some folk, see:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186867.html
This commit changes GDB so we no longer hold frame_info pointers, but
instead store the frame_id and frame_level, this is safe even when the
frame cache is flushed.
2022-03-29 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
bfd/Dwarf2: gas doesn't mangle names
Include the language identifier emitted by gas in the set of ones where
no mangled names are expected. Even if there could be "hand-mangled"
names, gas doesn't emit DW_AT_linkage_name in the first place.
bfd/Dwarf2: make find-nearest-line returned function name consistent
Prior to entering the enclosing "else if()" the earlier associated if()
checks function->is_linkage and, if set, uses function->name. The
comment in patch context precedes (and explains) the setting
function->is_linkage. Yet with the flag set, we should then also return
the function name, just like said earlier if() would do when we came
here a 2nd time for the same "addr". And indeed passing the same address
twice on addr2line's command line would resolve the function for the 2nd
instance, but not for the 1st (if this code path is taken). (This,
obviously, is particularly relevant when there's no ELF symbol table in
the first place, like would be the case - naturally - in PE/COFF
binaries, for example.)
gas/Dwarf: special-case .linefile only for macros
Restrict the PR gas/16908 workaround to just macros, matching the
original intention as well as the comment there. For constructs like
.irp or .rept the reasoning doesn't apply, as there's no separate
"invocation" point which may be of interest to record (for, as said
there, short macros).
2022-03-29 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
RISC-V: correct FCVT.Q.L[U]
While the spec isn't explicit about this, it pointing out the similarity
with the D extension ought to extend to the ignoring of a meaningless
rounding mode: "Note FCVT.D.W[U] always produces an exact result and is
unaffected by rounding mode." Hence the chosen encodings also ought to
match.
Note that to avoid breaking existing code the forms with a 3rd operand
are not removed, which means there continues to be a difference to
FCVT.D.W[U].
2022-03-29 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: add arch/.gdbinit stub scripts
Make it easy to load the common gdbinit script even when running in
the arch/ subdir instead of the top-level sim dir.
2022-03-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: heap buffer overflow in pa_chk_field_selector
The buffer overflow showed up running the gas "all macro" test.
PR 29005
* config/tc-hppa.c (pa_chk_field_selector): Don't read past end
of line.
2022-03-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add Rust parser check for end of expression
I noticed that "print 5," passed in Rust -- the parser wasn't checking
that the entire input was used. This patch fixes the problem. This
in turn pointed out another bug in the parser, namely that it didn't
lex the next token after handling a string token. This is also fixed
here.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Switch gdb_stdlog to use timestamped_file
Currently, timestamps for logging are done by looking for the use of
gdb_stdlog in vfprintf_unfiltered. This seems potentially buggy, in
that during logging or other redirects (like execute_fn_to_ui_file) we
might have gdb_stdout==gdb_stdlog and so, conceivably, wind up with
timestamps in a log when they were not desired.
It seems better, instead, for timestamps to be a property of the
ui_file itself.
This patch changes gdb to use the new timestamped_file for gdb_stdlog
where appropriate, and removes the special case from
vfprintf_unfiltered.
Note that this may somewhat change the output in some cases -- in
particular, when going through execute_fn_to_ui_file (or the _string
variant), timestamps won't be emitted. This could be fixed in those
functions, but it wasn't clear to me whether this is really desirable.
Note also that this changes the TUI to send gdb_stdlog to gdb_stderr.
I imagine that the previous use of gdb_stdout here was inadvertent.
(And in any case it probably doesn't matter.)
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add new timestamped_file class
This adds a "timestamped_file" subclass of ui_file. This class adds a
timestamp to its output when appropriate. That is, it follows the
rule already used in vfprintf_unfiltered of adding a timestamp at most
once per write.
The new class is not yet used.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use unique_ptr in CLI logging code
This changes the CLI logging code to avoid manual memory management
(to the extent possible) by using unique_ptr in a couple of spots.
This will come in handy in a later patch.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify the CLI set_logging logic
The CLI's set_logging logic seemed unnecessarily complicated to me.
This patch simplifies it, with an eye toward changing it to use RAII
objects in a subsequent patch.
I did not touch the corresponding MI code. That code seems incorrect
(nothing ever uses raw_stdlog, and nothing ever sets
saved_raw_stdlog). I didn't attempt to fix this, because I question
whether this is even useful for MI.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle multiple addresses in call_site_target
A large customer program has a function that is partitioned into hot
and cold parts. A variable in a callee of this function is described
using DW_OP_GNU_entry_value, but gdb gets confused when trying to find
the caller. I tracked this down to dwarf2_get_pc_bounds interpreting
the function's changes so that the returned low PC is the "wrong"
function.
Intead, when processing DW_TAG_call_site, the low PC of each range in
DW_AT_ranges should be preserved in the call_site_target. This fixes
the variable lookup in the test case I have.
I didn't write a standalone test for this as it seemed excessively
complicated.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change call_site_target to iterate over addresses
In order to handle the case where a call site target might refer to
multiple addresses, we change the code to use a callback style. Any
spot using call_site_target::address now passes in a callback function
that may be called multiple times.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change call_site_find_chain_1 to work recursively
call_site_find_chain_1 has a comment claiming that recursive calls
would be too expensive. However, I doubt this is so expensive; and
furthermore the explicit state management approach here is difficult
both to understand and to modify. This patch changes this code to use
explicit recursion, so that a subsequent patch can generalize this
code without undue trauma.
Additionally, I think this patch detects a latent bug in the recursion
code. (It's hard for me to be completely certain.) The bug is that
when a new target_call_site is entered, the code does:
if (target_call_site)
{
if (addr_hash.insert (target_call_site->pc ()).second)
{
/* Successfully entered TARGET_CALL_SITE. */
chain.push_back (target_call_site);
break;
}
}
Here, if entering the target_call_site fails, then any tail_call_next
elements in this call site are not visited. However, if this code
does happen to enter a call site, then the tail_call_next elements
will be visited during backtracking. This applies when doing the
backtracking as well -- it will only continue through a given chain as
long as each element in the chain can successfully be visited.
I'd appreciate some review of this. If this behavior is intentional,
it can be added to the new implementation.
2022-03-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Constify chain_candidate
While investigating this bug, I wasn't sure if chain_candidate might
update 'chain'. I changed it to accept a const reference, making it
clear that it cannot. This simplifies the code a tiny bit as well.
Make call_site_target members private
This makes the data members of call_site_target 'private'. This lets
us remove most of its public API. call_site_to_target_addr is changed
to be a method of this type. This is a preparatory refactoring for
the fix at the end of this series.
Change call_site_target to use custom type and enum
call_site_target reuses field_loc_kind and field_location. However,
it has never used the full range of the field_loc_kind enum. In a
subsequent patch, I plan to add a new 'kind' here, so it seemed best
to avoid this reuse and instead introduce new types here.
2022-03-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove an unused declaration from value.h
value.h has a declaration of value_print_array_elements that is
incorrect. In C, this would have been an error, but in C++ this is a
declaration of an overload that is neither defined nor used. This
patch removes the declaration.
2022-03-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libtool.m4: fix the NM="/nm/over/here -B/option/with/path" case
My previous nm patch handled all cases but one -- if the user set NM in
the environment to a path which contained an option, libtool's nm
detection tries to run nm against a copy of nm with the options in it:
e.g. if NM was set to "nm --blargle", and nm was found in /usr/bin, the
test would try to run "/usr/bin/nm --blargle /usr/bin/nm --blargle".
This is unlikely to be desirable: in this case we should run
"/usr/bin/nm --blargle /usr/bin/nm".
Furthermore, as part of this nm has to detect when the passed-in $NM
contains a path, and in that case avoid doing a path search itself.
This too was thrown off if an option contained something that looked
like a path, e.g. NM="nm -B../prev-gcc"; libtool then tries to run
"nm -B../prev-gcc nm" which rarely works well (and indeed it looks
to see whether that nm exists, finds it doesn't, and wrongly concludes
that nm -p or whatever does not work).
Fix all of these by clipping all options (defined as everything
including and after the first " -") before deciding whether nm
contains a path (but not using the clipped value for anything else),
and then removing all options from the path-modified nm before
looking to see whether that nm existed.
NM=my-nm now does a path search and runs e.g.
/usr/bin/my-nm -B /usr/bin/my-nm
NM=/usr/bin/my-nm now avoids a path search and runs e.g.
/usr/bin/my-nm -B /usr/bin/my-nm
NM="my-nm -p../wombat" now does a path search and runs e.g.
/usr/bin/my-nm -p../wombat -B /usr/bin/my-nm
NM="../prev-binutils/new-nm -B../prev-gcc" now avoids a path search:
../prev-binutils/my-nm -B../prev-gcc -B ../prev-binutils/my-nm
This seems to be all combinations, including those used by GCC bootstrap
(which, before this commit, fails to bootstrap when configured
--with-build-config=bootstrap-lto, because the lto plugin is now using
--export-symbols-regex, which requires libtool to find a working nm,
while also using -B../prev-gcc to point at the lto plugin associated
with the GCC just built.)
Regenerate all affected configure scripts.
* libtool.m4 (LT_PATH_NM): Handle user-specified NM with
options, including options containing paths.
2022-03-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: gas/Dwarf: improve debug info generation from .irp and alike blocks
am33_2.0-linux is a mn10300 target.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-irp.d: xfail am33.
2022-03-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-24 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
Remove download size from debuginfod progress messages if unavailable
Currently debuginfod progress update messages include the size of
each download:
Downloading 7.5 MB separate debug info for /lib/libxyz.so.0
This value originates from the Content-Length HTTP header of the
transfer. However this header is not guaranteed to be present for
each download. This can happen when debuginfod servers compress files
on-the-fly at the time of transfer. In this case gdb wrongly prints
"-0.00 MB" as the size.
This patch removes download sizes from progress messages when they are
not available. It also removes usage of the progress bar until
a more thorough reworking of progress updating is implemented. [1]
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-February/185798.html
2022-03-24 Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>
sim: fix a comment typo in sim-load.c
Fix a typo where the documentation refers to a function parameter by the
wrong name.
Change-Id: I99494efe62cd4aa76fb78a0bd5da438d35740ebe
2022-03-24 Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>
sim: fix “alligned” typos
Change-Id: Ifd574e38524dd4f1cf0fc003e0c5c7499abc84a0
2022-03-24 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: mention dropped L1OM/K1OM support in ld/ as well
This amends e961c696dcb2 ("x86: drop L1OM/K1OM support from ld"). Also
remove the marker that I mistakenly added in c085ab00c7b2 ("x86: drop
L1OM/K1OM support from gas").
2022-03-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove gdb.python/pretty-print-call-by-hand.exp
This test was added without a corresponding fix, with some setup_kfails.
However, it results in UNRESOLVED results when GDB is built with ASan.
ERROR: GDB process no longer exists
GDB process exited with wait status 1946871 exp7 0 1
UNRESOLVED: gdb.python/pretty-print-call-by-hand.exp: frame print: backtrace test (PRMS gdb/28856)
Remove the test from the tree, I'll attach it to the Bugzilla bug
instead [1].
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28856
Change-Id: Id95d8949fb8742874bd12aeac758aa4d7564d678
2022-03-24 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop L1OM/K1OM support from ld
This was only rudimentary support anyway; none of the sub-architecture
specific insns were ever supported.
x86: drop L1OM special case from disassembler
There wasn't any real support anyway: None of the sub-architecture
specific insns were ever supported.
2022-03-24 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
MAINTAINERS: add myself
I much appreciate Nick offering this role to me. Nevertheless there's
still a lot for me to learn here.
At this occasion also update my email address in the pre-existing, much
more narrow entry.
2022-03-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-23 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: address test failures in gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp
The gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp test was added in commit:
commit d08cbc5d3203118da5583296e49273cf82378042
Date: Wed Dec 22 12:57:44 2021 +0000
gdb: unbuffer all input streams when not using readline
And then tweaked in commit:
commit 144459531dd68a1287905079aaa131b777a8cc82
Date: Mon Feb 7 20:35:58 2022 +0000
gdb/testsuite: relax pattern in new gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp test
The second of these commits was intended to address periodic test
failures that I was seeing, and this change did fix some problems,
but, unfortunately, introduced other issues.
The problem is that the test relies on sending two commands to GDB in
a single write. As the characters that make these two commands arrive
they are echoed to GDB's console. However, there is a race between
how quickly the characters are echoed and how quickly GDB decides to
act on the incoming commands.
Usually, both commands are echoed in full before GDB acts on the first
command, but sometimes this is not the case, and GDB can execute the
first command before both commands are fully echoed to the console.
In this case, the output of the first command will be mixed in with
the echoing of the second command.
This mixing of the command echoing and the first command output is
what was causing failures in the original version of the test.
The second commit relaxed the expected output pattern a little, but
was still susceptible to failures, so this commit further relaxes the
pattern.
Now, we look for the first command output with no regard to what is
before, or after the command. Then we look for the first mi prompt to
indicate that the first command has completed.
I believe that this change should make the test more stable than it
was before.
2022-03-23 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: add LIBCTF_WRITE_FOREIGN_ENDIAN debugging option
libctf has always handled endianness differences by detecting
foreign-endian CTF dicts on the input and endian-flipping them: dicts
are always written in native endianness. This makes endian-awareness
very low overhead, but it means that the foreign-endian code paths
almost never get routinely tested, since "make check" usually reads in
dicts ld has just written out: only a few corrupted-CTF tests are
actually in fixed endianness, and even they only test the foreign-
endian code paths when you run make check on a big-endian machine.
(And the fix is surely not to add more .s-based tests like that, because
they are a nightmare to maintain compared to the C-code-based ones.)
To improve on this, add a new environment variable,
LIBCTF_WRITE_FOREIGN_ENDIAN, which causes libctf to unconditionally
endian-flip at ctf_write time, so the output is always in the wrong
endianness. This then tests the foreign-endian read paths properly
at open time.
Make this easier by restructuring the writeout code in ctf-serialize.c,
which duplicates the maybe-gzip-and-write-out code three times (once
for ctf_write_mem, with thresholding, and once each for
ctf_compress_write and ctf_write just so those can avoid thresholding
and/or compression). Instead, have the latter two call the former
with thresholds of 0 or (size_t) -1, respectively.
The endian-flipping code itself gains a bit of complexity, because
one single endian-flipper (flip_types) was assuming the input to be
in foreign-endian form and assuming it could pull things out of the
input once they had been flipped and make sense of them. At the
cost of a few lines of duplicated initializations, teach it to
read before flipping if we're flipping to foreign-endianness instead
of away from it.
libctf/
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_flip_header): No longer static.
(ctf_flip): Likewise.
* ctf-open.c (flip_header): Rename to...
(ctf_flip_header): ... this, now it is not private to one file.
(flip_ctf): Rename...
(ctf_flip): ... this too. Add FOREIGN_ENDIAN arg.
(flip_types): Likewise. Use it.
(ctf_bufopen_internal): Adjust calls.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_write_mem): Add flip_endian path via
a newly-allocated bounce buffer.
(ctf_compress_write): Move below ctf_write_mem and reimplement
in terms of it.
(ctf_write): Likewise.
(ctf_gzwrite): Note that this obscure writeout function does not
support endian-flipping.
2022-03-23 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf, ld: diagnose corrupted CTF header cth_strlen
The last section in a CTF dict is the string table, at an offset
represented by the cth_stroff header field. Its length is recorded in
the next field, cth_strlen, and the two added together are taken as the
size of the CTF dict. Upon opening a dict, we check that none of the
header offsets exceed this size, and we check when uncompressing a
compressed dict that the result of the uncompression is the same length:
but CTF dicts need not be compressed, and short ones are not.
Uncompressed dicts just use the ctf_size without checking it. This
field is thankfully almost unused: it is mostly used when reserializing
a dict, which can't be done to dicts read off disk since they're
read-only.
However, when opening an uncompressed foreign-endian dict we have to
copy it out of the mmaped region it is stored in so we can endian-
swap it, and we use ctf_size when doing that. When the cth_strlen is
corrupt, this can overrun.
Fix this by checking the ctf_size in all uncompressed cases, just as we
already do in the compressed case. Add a new test.
This came to light because various corrupted-CTF raw-asm tests had an
incorrect cth_strlen: fix all of them so they produce the expected
error again.
libctf/
PR libctf/28933
* ctf-open.c (ctf_bufopen_internal): Always check uncompressed
CTF dict sizes against the section size in case the cth_strlen is
corrupt.
ld/
PR libctf/28933
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-strlen-invalid.*: New test,
derived from diag-cttname-invalid.s.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cttname-invalid.s: Fix incorrect cth_strlen.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cttname-null.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cuname.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parlabel.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parname.s: Likewise.
2022-03-23 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
include, libctf, ld: extend variable section to contain functions too
The CTF variable section is an optional (usually-not-present) section in
the CTF dict which contains name -> type mappings corresponding to data
symbols that are present in the linker input but not in the output
symbol table: the idea is that programs that use their own symbol-
resolution mechanisms can use this section to look up the types of
symbols they have found using their own mechanism.
Because these removed symbols (mostly static variables, functions, etc)
all have names that are unlikely to appear in the ELF symtab and because
very few programs have their own symbol-resolution mechanisms, a special
linker flag (--ctf-variables) is needed to emit this section.
Historically, we emitted only removed data symbols into the variable
section. This seemed to make sense at the time, but in hindsight it
really doesn't: functions are symbols too, and a C program can look them
up just like any other type. So extend the variable section so that it
contains all static function symbols too (if it is emitted at all), with
types of kind CTF_K_FUNCTION.
This is a little fiddly. We relied on compiler assistance for data
symbols: the compiler simply emits all data symbols twice, once into the
symtypetab as an indexed symbol and once into the variable section.
Rather than wait for a suitably adjusted compiler that does the same for
function symbols, we can pluck unreported function symbols out of the
symtab and add them to the variable section ourselves. While we're at
it, we do the same with data symbols: this is redundant right now
because the compiler does it, but it costs very little time and lets the
compiler drop this kludge and save a little space in .o files.
include/
* ctf.h: Mention the new things we can see in the variable
section.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-ctf/data-func-conflicted-vars.d: New test.
libctf/
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_deduplicating_variables): Duplicate
symbols into the variable section too.
* ctf-serialize.c (symtypetab_delete_nonstatic_vars): Rename
to...
(symtypetab_delete_nonstatics): ... this. Check the funchash
when pruning redundant variables.
(ctf_symtypetab_sect_sizes): Adjust accordingly.
* NEWS: Describe this change.
2022-03-23 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
ld, testsuite: improve CTF-availability test
The test for -gctf support in the compiler is used to determine when to
run the ld-ctf tests and most of those in libctf. Unfortunately,
because it uses check_compiler_available and compile_one_cc, it will
fail whenever the compiler emits anything on stderr, even if it
actually does support CTF perfectly well.
So, instead, ask the compiler to emit assembler output and grep it for
references to ".ctf": this is highly unlikely to be present if the
compiler does not support CTF. (This will need adjusting when CTF grows
support for non-ELF platforms that don't dot-prepend their section
names, but right now the linker doesn't link CTF on any such platforms
in any case.)
With this in place we can do things like run all the libctf tests under
leak sanitizers etc even if those spray warnings on simple CTF
compilations, rather than being blocked from doing so just when we would
most like to.
ld/
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp (check_ctf_available): detect CTF
even if a CTF-capable compiler emits warnings.
2022-03-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/python: remove Python 2/3 compatibility macros
New in this version:
- Rebase on master, fix a few more issues that appeared.
python-internal.h contains a number of macros that helped make the code
work with both Python 2 and 3. Remove them and adjust the code to use
the Python 3 functions.
Change-Id: I99a3d80067fb2d65de4f69f6473ba6ffd16efb2d
2022-03-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/python: remove Python 2 support
New in this version:
- Add a PY_MAJOR_VERSION check in configure.ac / AC_TRY_LIBPYTHON. If
the user passes --with-python=python2, this will cause a configure
failure saying that GDB only supports Python 3.
Support for Python 2 is a maintenance burden for any patches touching
Python support. Among others, the differences between Python 2 and 3
string and integer types are subtle. It requires a lot of effort and
thinking to get something that behaves correctly on both. And that's if
the author and reviewer of the patch even remember to test with Python
2.
See this thread for an example:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-December/184260.html
So, remove Python 2 support. Update the documentation to state that GDB
can be built against Python 3 (as opposed to Python 2 or 3).
Update all the spots that use:
- sys.version_info
- IS_PY3K
- PY_MAJOR_VERSION
- gdb_py_is_py3k
... to only keep the Python 3 portions and drop the use of some
now-removed compatibility macros.
I did not update the configure script more than just removing the
explicit references to Python 2. We could maybe do more there, like
check the Python version and reject it if that version is not
supported. Otherwise (with this patch), things will only fail at
compile time, so it won't really be clear to the user that they are
trying to use an unsupported Python version. But I'm a bit lost in the
configure code that checks for Python, so I kept that for later.
Change-Id: I75b0f79c148afbe3c07ac664cfa9cade052c0c62
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: reject relocations involving registers
To prevent fatal or even internal errors, add a simple check to
i386_validate_fix(), rejecting relocations when their target symbol is
an equate of a register (or resolved to reg_section for any other
reason).
x86: improve resolution of register equates
Allow transitive (or recursive) equates to work in addition to direct
ones. The only requirements are that
- the equate being straight of a register, i.e. no expressions involved
(albeit I'm afraid something like "%eax + 0" will be viewed as %eax),
- at the point of use there's no forward ref left which cannot be
resolved, yet.
Revert "PR28977 tc-i386.c internal error in parse_register"
This reverts commit 5fac3f02edacfca458f7eeaaaa33a87e26e0e332,
which was superceeded / replaced by 4faaa10f3fab.
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: don't attempt to resolve equates and alike from i386_parse_name()
PR gas/28977
Perhaps right from its introduction in 4d1bb7955a8b it was wrong for
i386_parse_name() to call parse_register(). This being a hook from the
expression parser, it shouldn't be resolving e.g. equated symbols.
That's relevant only for all other callers of parse_register().
To compensate, in Intel syntax mode check_register() needs calling;
perhaps not doing so was an oversight right when the function was
introduced. This is necessary in particular to force EVEX encoding when
VRex registers are used (but of course also to reject bad uses of
registers, i.e. fully matching what parse_register() needs it for).
2022-03-23 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Update the list of recognized m-profile TAG_CPU_ARCH_*
Check 3 additional variants previously not recognized:
- TAG_CPU_ARCH_V7E_M
- TAG_CPU_ARCH_V8M_BASE
- TAG_CPU_ARCH_V8M_MAIN
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/Dwarf5: re-use file 0 line string table entry when faking file 0
No need to emit the same string a 2nd time for file 1 in this case.
gas/Dwarf5: adjust .debug_line file 0 checking
First of all when a table entry has a NULL filename, the two inner if()s
are better done the other way around: The 2nd doesn't depend on what the
first does. This then renders redundant half of the conditions of the
other if() and clarifies that subsequently only entry 0 is dealt with
(indicating that part of the comment was wrong). Finally for there to be
a usable name in slot 1, files_in_use needs to be larger than 1 and slot
1's (rather than slot 0's) name needs to be non-NULL.
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/Dwarf5: drop dead code
Commit 3417bfca676f ("GAS: DWARF-5: Ensure that the 0'th entry in the
directory table contains the current... ") added a "dwarf_level < 5"
check to out_dir_and_file_list(). This rendered dead that branch of the
construct, due to the enclosing if()'s "DWARF2_LINE_VERSION >= 5".
Delete that code as well as the corresponding part of the comment.
While there also drop a redundant "dirs != NULL": "dirs" will always be
non-NULL when dirs_in_use is not zero.
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/Dwarf: improve debug info generation from .irp and alike blocks
Tying the bumping of the logical line number to reading from the
original source file looks wrong: Upon finishing of the processing of an
sb the original values will be restored anyway. Yet without bumping the
line counter uses of .line inside e.g. an .irp construct won't have the
intended effect: Such uses may be necessary to ensure proper debug info
is emitted in particular when switching sections inside the .irp body,
as dwarf2_gen_line_info() would bail without doing anything when it
finds the line number unchanged from what it saw last.
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
ELF32: don't silently truncate relocation addends
At least x86-64's x32 sub-mode and RISC-V's 32-bit mode calculate
addends as 64-bit values, but store them in signed 32-bit fields when
generating the file without encountering any earlier error. When the
relocated field is a 64-bit one, the value resulting after processing
the relocation record when linking (or the latest when loading) may
thus be wrong due to the truncation.
With the code change in place, one x32 testcase actually triggers the
new diagnostic. That one case of too large a (negative) addend is being
adjusted alongside the addition of a new testcase to actually trigger
the new error. (Note that due to internal BFD behavior the relocation in
.data doesn't get processed anymore after the errors in .text.)
Note that in principle it is possible to express 64-bit relocations in
ELF32, but this would require .rel relocations, i.e. with the addend
stored in the 64-bit field being relocated. But I guess it would be a
lot of effort for little gain to actually support this.
2022-03-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: retain whitespace between strings
Macro arguments may be separated by commas or just whitespace. Macro
arguments may also be quoted (where one level of quotes is removed in
the course of determining the values for the respective formal
parameters). Furthermore this quote removal knows _two_ somewhat odd
escaping mechanisms: One, apparently in existence forever, is that a
pair of quotes counts as the escaping of a quote, with the pair being
transformed to a single quote in the course of quote removal. The other
(introduced by c06ae4f232e6) looks more usual on the surface in that it
deals with \" sequences, but it _retains_ the escaping \. Hence only the
former mechanism is suitable when the value to be used by the macro body
is to contain a quote. Yet this results in ambiguity of what "a""b" is
intended to mean; elsewhere (e.g. for .ascii) it represents two
successive string literals. However, in any event is the above different
from "a" "b": I don't think this can be viewed the same as "a""b" when
processing macro arguments.
Change the scrubber to retain such whitespace, by making the processing
of strings more similar to that of symbols. And indeed this appears to
make sense when taking into account that for quite a while gas has been
supporting quoted symbol names.
Taking a more general view, however, the change doesn't go quite far
enough. There are further cases where significant whitespace is removed
by the scrubber. The new testcase enumerates a few in its ".if 0"
section. I'm afraid the only way that I see to deal with this would be
to significantly simplify the scrubber, such that it wouldn't do much
more than collapse sequences of unquoted whitespace into a single blank.
To be honest problems in this area aren't really surprising when seeing
that there's hardly any checking of .macro use throughout the testsuite
(and in particular in the [relatively] generic tests under all/).
2022-03-23 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
Only .so files are used in libcollector. Remove the other files.
* libcollector/Makefile.am (install-data-local): Remove the *.la
and *.a libraries.
* libcollector/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-03-23 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: use gdb_attach to fix jit-elf.exp
If /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope is 1, when execute the following
command without superuser:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/jit-elf.exp"
we can see the following messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log:
(gdb) attach 1650108
Attaching to program: /home/yangtiezhu/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/jit-elf/jit-elf-main, process 1650108
ptrace: Operation not permitted.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/jit-elf.exp: attach: one_jit_test-2: break here 1: attach
use gdb_attach to fix the above issue, at the same time, the clean_reattach
proc should return a value to indicate whether it worked, and the callers
should return early as well on failure.
2022-03-23 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: use gdb_attach to fix attach-pie-noexec.exp
If /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope is 1, when execute the following
command without superuser:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp"
we can see the following messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log:
(gdb) attach 6500
Attaching to process 6500
ptrace: Operation not permitted.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp: attach
It is obviously wrong, the expected result should be UNSUPPORTED in such
a case.
With this patch, we can see "Operation not permitted" in the log info,
and then we can do the following processes to test:
(1) set ptrace_scope as 0
$ echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp"
(2) use sudo
$ sudo make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp"
2022-03-23 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: add new gdb_attach to check "attach" command
This commit adds new gdb_attach to centralize the failure checking of
"attach" command. Return 0 if attach failed, otherwise return 1.
2022-03-23 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: remove attach test from can_spawn_for_attach
As Pedro Alves said, caching procs should not issue pass/fail [1],
this commit removes attach test from can_spawn_for_attach, at the
same time, use "verbose -log" instead of "unsupported" to get a
trace about why a test run doesn't support spawning for attach.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186311.html
2022-03-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Add support for hardware breakpoints/watchpoints on FreeBSD/Aarch64.
This shares aarch64-nat.c and nat/aarch64-hw-point.c with the Linux
native target. Since FreeBSD writes all of the debug registers in one
ptrace op, use an unordered_set<> to track the "dirty" state for
threads rather than bitmasks of modified registers.
fbsd-nat: Add a low_prepare_to_resume virtual method.
This method can be overridden by architecture-specific targets to
perform additional work before a thread is resumed.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Add a low_delete_thread virtual method.
This method can be overridden by architecture-specific targets to
perform additional work when a thread is deleted.
Note that this method is only invoked on systems supporting LWP
events, but the pending use case (aarch64 debug registers) is not
supported on older kernels that do not support LWP events.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Add helper routine to fetch siginfo_t for a ptid.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
aarch64: Add an aarch64_nat_target mixin class.
This class includes platform-independent target methods for hardware
breakpoints and watchpoints using routines from
nat/aarch64-hw-point.c.
stopped_data_address is not platform-independent since the FAR
register holding the address for a breakpoint hit must be fetched in a
platform-specific manner. However, aarch64_stopped_data_address is
provided as a helper routine which performs platform-independent
validation given the value of the FAR register.
For tracking the per-process debug register mirror state, use an
unordered_map indexed by pid as recently adopted in x86-nat.c rather
than a manual linked-list.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
nat: Split out platform-independent aarch64 debug register support.
Move non-Linux-specific support for hardware break/watchpoints from
nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c to nat/aarch64-hw-point.c. Changes
beyond a simple split of the code are:
- aarch64_linux_region_ok_for_watchpoint and
aarch64_linux_any_set_debug_regs_state renamed to drop linux_ as
they are not platform specific.
- Platforms must implement the aarch64_notify_debug_reg_change
function which is invoked from the platform-independent code when a
debug register changes for a given debug register state. This does
not use the indirection of a 'low' structure as is done for x86.
- The handling for kernel_supports_any_contiguous_range is not
pristine. For non-Linux it is simply defined to true. Some uses of
this could perhaps be implemented as new 'low' routines for the
various places that check it instead?
- Pass down ptid into aarch64_handle_breakpoint and
aarch64_handle_watchpoint rather than using current_lwp_ptid which
is only defined on Linux. In addition, pass the ptid on to
aarch64_notify_debug_reg_change instead of the unused state
argument.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
x86-fbsd-nat: Copy debug register state on fork.
Use the FreeBSD native target low_new_fork hook to copy the
per-process debug state from the parent to the child on fork.
fbsd-nat: Add a low_new_fork virtual method.
This method can be overridden by architecture-specific targets to
perform additional work when a new child process is forked.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Add an x86_fbsd_nat_target mixin class for FreeBSD x86 native targets.
This class implements debug register support common between the i386
and amd64 native targets.
While here, remove #ifdef's for HAVE_PT_GETDBREGS in FreeBSD-specific
code. The ptrace request has been present on FreeBSD x86
architectures since 4.0 (released in March 2000). The last FreeBSD
release without this support is 3.5 released in June 2000.
2022-03-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
x86-nat: Add x86_lookup_debug_reg_state.
This function returns nullptr if debug register state does not yet
exist for a given process rather than creating new state.
x86-nat: Use an unordered_map to store per-pid debug reg state.
This replaces a manual linked list which used O(n) lookup and removal.
Remove USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO condition for FreeBSD/x86 debug regs support.
For BSD x86 targets, stopped_by_hw_breakpoint doesn't check siginfo_t
but inspects the DR6 register directly via PT_GETDBREGS.
2022-03-22 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove two unused variables
I found a couple of spots that declare a symtab_and_line but don't
actually use it. I think this probably isn't detected as unused
because it has a constructor.
2022-03-22 Steiner H Gunderson <steinar+sourceware@gunderson.no>
Fix return code in _bfd_dwarf2_find_nearest_line().
* dwarf2.c (_bfd_dwarf2_find_nearest_line): if a function name is
found, but no line number info, then return a result of 2.
2022-03-22 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: add gdb.format_address function
Add a new function, gdb.format_address, which is a wrapper around
GDB's print_address function.
This method takes an address, and returns a string with the format:
ADDRESS <SYMBOL+OFFSET>
Where, ADDRESS is the original address, formatted as hexadecimal,
SYMBOL is a symbol with an address lower than ADDRESS, and OFFSET is
the offset from SYMBOL to ADDRESS in decimal.
If there's no SYMBOL suitably close to ADDRESS then the
<SYMBOL+OFFSET> part is not included.
This is useful if a user wants to write a Python script that
pretty-prints addresses, the user no longer needs to do manual symbol
lookup, or worry about correctly formatting addresses.
Additionally, there are some settings that effect how GDB picks
SYMBOL, and whether the file name and line number should be included
with the SYMBOL name, the gdb.format_address function ensures that the
users Python script also benefits from these settings.
The gdb.format_address by default selects SYMBOL from the current
inferiors program space, and address is formatted using the
architecture for the current inferior. However, a user can also
explicitly pass a program space and architecture like this:
gdb.format_address(ADDRESS, PROGRAM_SPACE, ARCHITECTURE)
In order to format an address for a different inferior.
Notes on the implementation:
In py-arch.c I extended arch_object_to_gdbarch to add an assertion for
the type of the PyObject being worked on. Prior to this commit all
uses of arch_object_to_gdbarch were guaranteed to pass this function a
gdb.Architecture object, but, with this commit, this might not be the
case.
So, with this commit I've made it a requirement that the PyObject be a
gdb.Architecture, and this is checked with the assert. And in order
that callers from other files can check if they have a
gdb.Architecture object, I've added the new function
gdbpy_is_architecture.
In py-progspace.c I've added two new function, the first
progspace_object_to_program_space, converts a PyObject of type
gdb.Progspace to the associated program_space pointer, and
gdbpy_is_progspace checks if a PyObject is a gdb.Progspace or not.
2022-03-22 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Fix some stale header names from dwarf files
Some of these references were not updated when they were moved to a separate
directory.
2022-03-22 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
Install gprofng libraries under $(pkglibdir)
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-03-21 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/28972
* gprofng/libcollector/Makefile.am: Rename lib_LTLIBRARIES to
pkglib_LTLIBRARIES. Add install-data-local.
* gprofng/src/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* gprofng/src/envsets.cc (putenv_libcollector_ld_misc): New location of
the gprofng libraries.
* gprofng/configure.ac: Removed an unused GPROFNG_LIBDIR.
* gprofng/Makefile.am: Removed an unused GPROFNG_LIBDIR. Add
install-data-local.
* gprofng/configure: Regenerate.
* gprofng/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* gprofng/doc/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* gprofng/gp-display-htmllibcollector/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* gprofng/libcollector/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* gprofng/src/Makefile.in: Likewise.
2022-03-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-21 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
gdb: Add missing #include in solib.h
The gdb_bfd_ref_ptr type is used in solib.h declarations.
2022-03-21 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
PR gdb/27570: missing support for debuginfod in core_target::build_file_mappings
Add debuginfod support to core_target::build_file_mappings and
locate_exec_from_corefile_build_id to enable the downloading of
missing executables and shared libraries referenced in core files.
Also add debuginfod support to solib_map_sections so that previously
downloaded shared libraries can be retrieved from the local debuginfod
cache.
When core file shared libraries are found locally, verify that their
build-ids match the corresponding build-ids found in the core file.
If there is a mismatch, attempt to query debuginfod for the correct
build and print a warning if unsuccessful:
warning: Build-id of /lib64/libc.so.6 does not match core file.
Also disable debuginfod when gcore invokes gdb. Debuginfo is not
needed for core file generation so debuginfod queries will slow down
gcore unnecessarily.
2022-03-21 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb: Add soname to build-id mapping for core files
Since commit aa2d5a422 gdb has been able to read executable and shared
library build-ids within core files.
Expand this functionality so that each core file bfd maintains a map of
soname to build-id for each shared library referenced in the core file.
This feature may be used to verify that gdb has found the correct shared
libraries for core files and to facilitate downloading shared libaries via
debuginfod.
2022-03-21 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Watchpoint followed by catchpoint misreports watchpoint (PR gdb/28621)
If GDB reports a watchpoint hit, and then the next event is not
TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED, but instead some event for which there's a
catchpoint, such that GDB calls bpstat_stop_status, GDB mistakenly
thinks the watchpoint triggered. Vis, using foll-fork.c:
(gdb) awatch v
Hardware access (read/write) watchpoint 2: v
(gdb) catch fork
Catchpoint 3 (fork)
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Hardware access (read/write) watchpoint 2: v
Old value = 0
New value = 5
main () at gdb.base/foll-fork.c:16
16 pid = fork ();
(gdb)
Continuing.
Hardware access (read/write) watchpoint 2: v <<<<
<<<< these lines are spurious
Value = 5 <<<<
Catchpoint 3 (forked process 1712369), arch_fork (ctid=0x7ffff7fa4810) at arch-fork.h:49
49 arch-fork.h: No such file or directory.
(gdb)
The problem is that when we handle the fork event, nothing called
watchpoints_triggered before calling bpstat_stop_status. Thus, each
watchpoint's watchpoint_triggered field was still set to
watch_triggered_yes from the previous (real) watchpoint stop.
watchpoint_triggered is only current called in the handle_signal_stop
path, when handling TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED.
This fixes it by adding watchpoint_triggered calls in the other events
paths that call bpstat_stop_status. But instead of adding them
explicitly, it adds a new function bpstat_stop_status_nowatch that
wraps bpstat_stop_status and calls watchpoint_triggered, and then
replaces most calls to bpstat_stop_status with calls to
bpstat_stop_status_nowatch.
This required constifying watchpoints_triggered.
New test included, which fails without the fix.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28621
Change-Id: I282b38c2eee428d25319af3bc842f9feafed461c
2022-03-21 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: Fixup previous patch
The previous prepare_resume_reply change missed updating the 'buf'
reference that overwrites the 'T', so if 'buf' was advanced, we'd
still overwrite the wrong character. This fixes it.
Change-Id: Ia8ce433366b85af4e268c1c49e7b447da3130a4d
2022-03-21 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: Fix incorrect assertion
While playing with adding a new event kind, I noticed that
prepare_resume_reply TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED, etc. advance 'buf', so if
we force-disable the T packet, we'd fail the *buf == 'T' assertion.
Fix it by tweaking the assertion to always look at the beginning of
the buffer.
Change-Id: I8c38e32353db115edcde418b3b1e8ba12343c22b
2022-03-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: re-generate config.in
I'm getting this diff when running `autoreconf -vf`.
Change-Id: Id5f009d0f0481935c1ee9df5332cb4bf45fbd32d
2022-03-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/x86: handle stap probe arguments in xmm registers
On x86 machines with xmm register, and with recent versions of
systemtap (and gcc?), it can occur that stap probe arguments will be
placed into xmm registers.
I notice this happening on a current Fedora Rawhide install with the
following package versions installed:
$ rpm -q glibc systemtap gcc
glibc-2.35.9000-10.fc37.x86_64
systemtap-4.7~pre16468670g9f253544-1.fc37.x86_64
gcc-12.0.1-0.12.fc37.x86_64
If I check the probe data in libc, I see this:
$ readelf -n /lib64/libc.so.6
...
stapsdt 0x0000004d NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors)
Provider: libc
Name: pthread_start
Location: 0x0000000000090ac3, Base: 0x00000000001c65c4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000
Arguments: 8@%xmm1 8@1600(%rbx) 8@1608(%rbx)
stapsdt 0x00000050 NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors)
Provider: libc
Name: pthread_create
Location: 0x00000000000912f1, Base: 0x00000000001c65c4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000
Arguments: 8@%xmm1 8@%r13 8@8(%rsp) 8@16(%rsp)
...
Notice that for both of these probes, the first argument is a uint64_t
stored in the xmm1 register.
Unfortunately, if I try to use this probe within GDB, then I can't
view the first argument. Here's an example session:
$ gdb $(which gdb)
(gdb) start
...
(gdb) info probes stap libc pthread_create
...
(gdb) break *0x00007ffff729e2f1 # Use address of probe.
(gdb) continue
...
(gdb) p $_probe_arg0
Invalid cast.
What's going wrong? If I re-run my session, but this time use 'set
debug stap-expression 1', this is what I see:
(gdb) set debug stap-expression 1
(gdb) p $_probe_arg0
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: OP_REGISTER
String: xmm1
Type: uint64_t
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: OP_REGISTER
String: r13
Type: uint64_t
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: UNOP_IND
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: BINOP_ADD
Operation: OP_LONG
Type: long
Constant: 0x0000000000000008
Operation: OP_REGISTER
String: rsp
Type: uint64_t *
Type: uint64_t
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: UNOP_IND
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: BINOP_ADD
Operation: OP_LONG
Type: long
Constant: 0x0000000000000010
Operation: OP_REGISTER
String: rsp
Type: uint64_t *
Type: uint64_t
Invalid cast.
(gdb)
The important bit is this:
Operation: UNOP_CAST
Operation: OP_REGISTER
String: xmm1
Type: uint64_t
Which is where we cast the xmm1 register to uint64_t. And the final
piece of the puzzle is:
(gdb) ptype $xmm1
type = union vec128 {
v8bf16 v8_bfloat16;
v4f v4_float;
v2d v2_double;
v16i8 v16_int8;
v8i16 v8_int16;
v4i32 v4_int32;
v2i64 v2_int64;
uint128_t uint128;
}
So, we are attempting to cast a union type to a scalar type, which is
not supporting in C/C++, and as a consequence GDB's expression
evaluator throws an error when we attempt to do this.
The first approach I considered for solving this problem was to try
and make use of gdbarch_stap_adjust_register. We already have a
gdbarch method (gdbarch_stap_adjust_register) that allows us to tweak
the name of the register that we access. Currently only x86
architectures use this to transform things like ax to eax in some
cases.
I wondered, what if we change gdbarch_stap_adjust_register to do more
than just change the register names? What if this method instead
became gdbarch_stap_read_register. This new method would return a
operation_up, and would take the register name, and the type we are
trying to read from the register, and return the operation that
actually reads the register.
The default implementation of this method would just use
user_reg_map_name_to_regnum, and then create a register_operation,
like we already do in stap_parse_register_operand. But, for x86
architectures this method would fist possibly adjust the register
name, then do the default action to read the register. Finally, for
x86 this method would spot when we were accessing an xmm register,
and, based on the type being pulled from the register, would extract
the correct field from the union.
The benefit of this approach is that it would work with the expression
types that GDB currently supports. The draw back would be that this
approach would not be very generic. We'd need code to handle each
sub-field size with an xmm register. If other architectures started
using vector registers for probe arguments, those architectures would
have to create their own gdbarch_stap_read_register method. And
finally, the type of the xmm registers comes from the type defined in
the target description, there's a risk that GDB might end up
hard-coding the names of type sub-fields, then if a target uses a
different target description, with different field names for xmm
registers, the stap probes would stop working.
And so, based on all the above draw backs, I rejected this first
approach.
My second plan involves adding a new expression type to GDB called
unop_extract_operation. This new expression takes a value and a type,
during evaluation the value contents are fetched, and then a new value
is extracted from the value contents (based on type). This is similar
to the following C expression:
result_value = *((output_type *) &input_value);
Obviously we can't actually build this expression in this case, as the
input_value is in a register, but hopefully the above makes it clearer
what I'm trying to do.
The benefit of the new expression approach is that this code can be
shared across all architectures, and it doesn't care about sub-field
names within the union type.
The draw-backs that I see are potential future problems if arguments
are not stored within the least significant bytes of the register.
However if/when that becomes an issue we can adapt the
gdbarch_stap_read_register approach to allow architectures to control
how a value is extracted.
For testing, I've extended the existing gdb.base/stap-probe.exp test
to include a function that tries to force an argument into an xmm
register. Obviously, that will only work on a x86 target, so I've
guarded the new function with an appropriate GCC define. In the exp
script we use readelf to check if the probe exists, and is using the
xmm register.
If the probe doesn't exist then the associated tests are skipped.
If the probe exists, put isn't using the xmm register (which will
depend on systemtap/gcc versions), then again, the tests are skipped.
Otherwise, we can run the test. I think the cost of running readelf
is pretty low, so I don't feel too bad making all the non-xmm targets
running this step.
I found that on a Fedora 35 install, with these packages installed, I
was able to run this test and have the probe argument be placed in an
xmm register:
$ rpm -q systemtap gcc glibc
systemtap-4.6-4.fc35.x86_64
gcc-11.2.1-9.fc35.x86_64
glibc-2.34-7.fc35.x86_64
Finally, as this patch adds a new operation type, then I need to
consider how to generate an agent expression for the new operation
type.
I have kicked the can down the road a bit on this. In the function
stap_parse_register_operand, I only create a unop_extract_operation in
the case where the register type is non-scalar, this means that in
most cases I don't need to worry about generating an agent expression
at all.
In the xmm register case, when an unop_extract_operation will be
created, I have sketched out how the agent expression could be
handled, however, this code is currently not reached. When we try to
generate the agent expression to place the xmm register on the stack,
GDB hits this error:
(gdb) trace -probe-stap test:xmmreg
Tracepoint 1 at 0x401166
(gdb) actions
Enter actions for tracepoint 1, one per line.
End with a line saying just "end".
>collect $_probe_arg0
Value not scalar: cannot be an rvalue.
This is because GDB doesn't currently support placing non-scalar types
on the agent expression evaluation stack. Solving this is clearly
related to the original problem, but feels a bit like a second
problem. I'd like to get feedback on whether my approach to solving
the original problem is acceptable or not before I start looking at
how to handle xmm registers within agent expressions.
2022-03-21 Steiner H Gunderson <steinar+sourceware@gunderson.no>
Reduce O(n2) performance overhead when parsing DWARF unit information.
PR 28978
* dwarf2.c (scan_unit_for_symbols): When performing second pass,
check to see if the function or variable being processed is the
same as the previous one.
2022-03-21 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: don't suppress overflow diagnostics in x32 mode
Unlike in 64-bit mode, where values wrap at the 64-bit boundary anyway,
there's no wrapping at the 32-bit boundary here, and hence overflow
detection shouldn't be suppressed just because rela relocations are
going to be used.
The extra check against NO_RELOC is actually a result of an ilp32 test
otherwise failing. But thinking about it, reporting overflows for
not-really-relocations (typically because of earlier errors) makes
little sense in general. Perhaps this should even be extended to non-
64-bit modes.
2022-03-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/testsuite: reformat gdb.python/pretty-print-call-by-hand.py
Run black on the file.
Change-Id: Ifb576137fb7158a0227173f61c1202f0695b3685
2022-03-21 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
[gdb/testsuite] test a function call by hand from pretty printer
The test case added here is testing the bug gdb/28856, where calling a
function by hand from a pretty printer makes GDB crash. There are 6
mechanisms to trigger this crash in the current test, using the commands
backtrace, up, down, finish, step and continue. Since the failure happens
because of use-after-free (more details below) the tests will always
have a chance of passing through sheer luck, but anecdotally they seem
to fail all of the time.
The reason GDB is crashing is a use-after-free problem. The above
mentioned functions save a pointer to the current frame's information,
then calls the pretty printer, and uses the saved pointer for different
reasons, depending on the function. The issue happens because
call_function_by_hand needs to reset the obstack to get the current
frame, invalidating the saved pointer.
2022-03-21 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/testsuite: Installed-GDB testing & data-directory
In testsuite/README, we suggest that you can run the testsuite against
some other GDB binary by using:
make check RUNTESTFLAGS=GDB=/usr/bin/gdb
However, that example isn't fully correct, because with that command
line, the testsuite will still pass
-data-directory=[pwd]/../data-directory
to /usr/bin/gdb, like e.g.:
...
builtin_spawn /usr/bin/gdb -nw -nx -data-directory /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../data-directory -iex set height 0 -iex set width 0
...
while if you're testing an installed GDB (the system GDB being the
most usual scenario), then you should normally let it use its own
configured directory, not the just-built GDB's data directory.
This commit improves the status quo with the following two changes:
- if the user specifies GDB on the command line, then by default,
don't start GDB with the -data-directory command line option.
I.e., let the tested GDB use its own configured data directory.
- let the user override the data directory, via a new
GDB_DATA_DIRECTORY global. This replaces the existing
BUILD_DATA_DIRECTORY variable in testsuite/lib/gdb.exp, which
wasn't overridable, and was a bit misnamed for the new purpose.
So after this, the following commands I believe behave intuitively:
# Test the non-installed GDB in some build dir:
make check \
RUNTESTFLAGS="GDB=/path/to/other/build/gdb \
GDB_DATA_DIRECTORY=/path/to/other/build/gdb/data-directory"
# Test the GDB installed in some prefix:
make check \
RUNTESTFLAGS="GDB=/opt/gdb/bin/gdb"
# Test the built GDB with some alternative data directory, e.g., the
system GDB's data directory:
make check \
RUNTESTFLAGS="GDB_DATA_DIRECTORY=/usr/share/gdb"
Change-Id: Icdc21c85219155d9564a9900961997e6624b78fb
2022-03-21 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
z80 assembler: Fix new unexpected overflow warning in v2.37
PR 28791
* config/tc-z80.c (emit_data_val): Do not warn about overlarge
constants generated by bit manipulation operators.
* testsuite/gas/z80/pr28791.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/gas/z80/pr28791.d: New test driver file.
2022-03-21 Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Add support for readline 8.2
In readline 8.2 the type of rl_completer_word_break_characters changed to
include const.
2022-03-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-20 Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
RISC-V: Fix misplaced @end table
Move the csr-check and arch items inside the table for the .option directive.
2022-03-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28979, internal error in demand_empty_rest_of_line
The change in read_a_source_file prevents the particular testcase in
the PR from triggering the assertion in demand_empty_rest_of_line.
I've also removed the assertion. Nothing much goes wrong with gas if
something else triggers it, so it's not worthy of an abort.
I've also changed my previous patch to ignore_rest_of_line to allow
that function to increment input_line_pointer past buffer_limit, like
demand_empty_rest_of_line: The two functions ought to behave the
same in that respect. Finally, demand_empty_rest_of_line gets a
little hardening to prevent accesses past buffer_limit plus one.
PR 28979
* read.c (read_a_source_file): Calculate known size for sbuf
rather than calling strlen.
(demand_empty_rest_of_line): Remove "know" check. Expand comment.
Don't dereference input_line_pointer when past buffer_limit.
(ignore_rest_of_line): Allow input_line_pointer to increment to
buffer_limit plus one. Expand comment.
2022-03-20 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Update gdb/NEWS after GDB 12 branch creation.
This commit a new section for the next release branch, and renames
the section of the current branch, now that it has been cut.
2022-03-20 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Bump version to 13.0.50.DATE-git.
Now that the GDB 12 branch has been created,
this commit bumps the version number in gdb/version.in to
13.0.50.DATE-git
For the record, the GDB 12 branch was created
from commit 2be64de603f8b3ae359d2d3fbf5db0e79869f32b.
Also, as a result of the version bump, the following changes
have been made in gdb/testsuite:
* gdb.base/default.exp: Change $_gdb_major to 13.
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
ld:LoongArch: Add test cases to adapt to LoongArch32 and LoongArch64
ld/testsuite/ld-loongarch-elf
* ld-loongarch-elf.exp: Test LoongArch32 and LoongArch64 testcases respectively.
* jmp_op.d: Fix bug in test LoongArch32.
* disas-jirl-32.d: New test case for LoongArch32.
* disas-jirl-32.s: New test case for LoongArch32.
* disas-jirl.d: Skip test case LoongArch32.
* macro_op_32.d: New test case for LoongArch32.
* macro_op_32.s: New test case for LoongArch32.
* macro_op.d: Skip test case LoongArch32.
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
gas:LoongArch: Fix "make check" pr21884 fail in LoongArch32.
gas/config/
* tc-loongarch.c: Add function to select target mach.
* tc-loongarch.h: Define macro TARGET_MACH.
ld: loongarch: Skip unsupport test cases.
ld/testsuite/ld-elf/
* eh5.d Skip loongarch64 target.
* pr21884.d Skip loongarch* targets.
* pr26936.d Skip loongarch* targets.
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch: Fix LD check fails.
Some test cases about ifunc.
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c
* elfxx-loongarch.h
=== ld Summary ===
of expected passes 1430
of expected failures 11
of untested testcases 1
of unsupported tests 154
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch: Update ABI eflag in elf header.
Update LoongArch ABI eflag in elf header.
ilp32s 0x5
ilp32f 0x6
ilp32d 0x7
lp64s 0x1
lp64f 0x2
lp64d 0x3
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c Check object flags while ld.
gas/
* tc-loongarch.c Write eflag to elf header.
include/elf
* loongarch.h Define ABI number.
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
gas:LoongArch: Fix wrong line number in .debug_line
The dwarf2_emit_insn() can create debuginfo of line. But it is called
too late in append_fixp_and_insn. It causes extra offs when debuginfo
of line sets address.
gas/config/
* tc-loongarch.c
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
gas:LoongArch: Fix segment error in compilation due to too long symbol name.
Change "char buffer[8192];" into "char *buffer =
(char *) malloc(1000 + 6 * len_str);" in function
loongarch_expand_macro_with_format_map.
gas/
* config/tc-loongarch.c
include/
* opcode/loongarch.h
opcodes/
* loongarch-coder.c
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch: Use functions instead of magic numbers.
Replace the magic numbers in gas(tc-loongarch.c) and
bfd(elfnn-loongarch.c) with the functions defined in
the howto table(elfxx-loongarch.c).
gas/
* config/tc-loongarch.c: use functions.
bfd/
* elfnn-loongarch.c: use functions.
* elfxx-loongarch.c: define functions.
* elfxx-loongarch.h
2022-03-20 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
ubsan: loongarch : signed integer shift overflow.
opcodes/
* loongarch-coder.c :
int32_t ret = 0;
ret <<= sizeof (ret) * 8 - len;
ret >>= sizeof (ret) * 8 - len;
...
Avoid ubsan warning.
2022-03-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-19 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/python: remove gdb._mi_commands dict
The motivation for this patch is the fact that py-micmd.c doesn't build
with Python 2, due to PyDict_GetItemWithError being a Python 3-only
function:
CXX python/py-micmd.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/python/py-micmd.c: In function ‘int micmdpy_uninstall_command(micmdpy_object*)’:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/python/py-micmd.c:430:20: error: ‘PyDict_GetItemWithError’ was not declared in this scope; did you mean ‘PyDict_GetItemString’?
430 | PyObject *curr = PyDict_GetItemWithError (mi_cmd_dict.get (),
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| PyDict_GetItemString
A first solution to fix this would be to try to replace
PyDict_GetItemWithError equivalent Python 2 code. But I looked at why
we are doing this in the first place: it is to maintain the
`gdb._mi_commands` Python dictionary that we use as a `name ->
gdb.MICommand object` map. Since the `gdb._mi_commands` dictionary is
never actually used in Python, it seems like a lot of trouble to use a
Python object for this.
My first idea was to replace it with a C++ map
(std::unordered_map<std::string, gdbpy_ref<micmdpy_object>>). While
implementing this, I realized we don't really need this map at all. The
mi_command_py objects registered in the main MI command table can own
their backing micmdpy_object (that's a gdb.MICommand, but seen from the
C++ code). To know whether an mi_command is an mi_command_py, we can
use a dynamic cast. Since there's one less data structure to maintain,
there are less chances of messing things up.
- Change mi_command_py::m_pyobj to a gdbpy_ref, the mi_command_py is
now what keeps the MICommand alive.
- Set micmdpy_object::mi_command in the constructor of mi_command_py.
If mi_command_py manages setting/clearing that field in
swap_python_object, I think it makes sense that it also takes care of
setting it initially.
- Move a bunch of checks from micmdpy_install_command to
swap_python_object, and make them gdb_asserts.
- In micmdpy_install_command, start by doing an mi_cmd_lookup. This is
needed to know whether there's a Python MI command already registered
with that name. But we can already tell if there's a non-Python
command registered with that name. Return an error if that happens,
rather than waiting for insert_mi_cmd_entry to fail. Change the
error message to "name is already in use" rather than "may already be
in use", since it's more precise.
I asked Andrew about the original intent of using a Python dictionary
object to hold the command objects. The reason was to make sure the
objects get destroyed when the Python runtime gets finalized, not later.
Holding the objects in global C++ data structures and not doing anything
more means that the held Python objects will be decref'd after the
Python interpreter has been finalized. That's not desirable. I tried
it and it indeed segfaults.
Handle this by adding a gdbpy_finalize_micommands function called in
finalize_python. This is the mirror of gdbpy_initialize_micommands
called in do_start_initialization. In there, delete all Python MI
commands. I think it makes sense to do it this way: if it was somehow
possible to unload Python support from GDB in the middle of a session
we'd want to unregister any Python MI command. Otherwise, these MI
commands would be backed with a stale PyObject or simply nothing.
Delete tests that were related to `gdb._mi_commands`.
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Change-Id: I060d5ebc7a096c67487998a8a4ca1e8e56f12cd3
2022-03-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-18 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix crash with stepi, no debug info, and "set debug infrun 1"
A stepi in a function without debug info with "set debug infrun 1"
crashes GDB since commit c8353d682f69 (gdb/infrun: some extra infrun
debug print statements), due to a reference to
"tp->current_symtab->filename" when tp->current_symtab is null.
This commit adds the missing null check. The output in this case
becomes:
[infrun] set_step_info: symtab = <null>, line = 0, step_frame_id = {stack=0x7fffffffd980,code=0x0000000000456c30,!special}, step_stack_frame_id = {stack=0x7fffffffd980,code=0x0000000000456c30,!special}
Change-Id: I5171a9d222bc7e15b9dba2feaba7d55c7acd99f8
2022-03-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement gdbarch_stack_frame_destroyed_p for aarch64
The internal AdaCore testsuite has a test that checks that an
out-of-scope watchpoint is deleted. This fails on some aarch64
configurations, reporting an extra stop:
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
Thread 3 hit Watchpoint 2: result
Old value = 64
New value = 0
0x0000000040021648 in pck.get_val (seed=0, off_by_one=false) at [...]/pck.adb:13
13 end Get_Val;
I believe what is happening here is that the variable is stored at:
<efa> DW_AT_location : 2 byte block: 91 7c (DW_OP_fbreg: -4)
and the extra stop is reported just before a return, when the ldp
instruction is executed:
0x0000000040021644 <+204>: ldp x29, x30, [sp], #48
0x0000000040021648 <+208>: ret
This instruction modifies the frame base calculation, and so the test
picks up whatever memory is pointed to in the callee frame.
Implementing the gdbarch hook gdbarch_stack_frame_destroyed_p fixes
this problem.
As usual with this sort of patch, it has passed internal testing, but
I don't have a good way to try it with dejagnu. So, I don't know
whether some existing test covers this. I suspect there must be one,
but it's also worth noting that this test passes for aarch64 in some
configurations -- I don't know what causes one to fail and another to
succeed.
2022-03-18 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix Build issues due to patch "gprofng: a new GNU profiler"
Find and fix more places where clock_gettime() and CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW are used.
2022-03-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: run black to format some Python files
Seems like some leftovers from previous commits.
Change-Id: I7155ccdf7a4fef83bcb3d60320252c3628efdb83
2022-03-18 Viorel Preoteasa <viorel.preoteasa@gmail.com>
Fix ld-arm bug in encoding of blx calls jumping from thumb to arm instructions
PR 28924
* elf32-arm.c (THM_MAX_FWD_BRANCH_OFFSET): Fix definition.
(THM2_MAX_FWD_BRANCH_OFFSET): Likewise.
2022-03-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: also fold remaining multi-vector-size shift insns
By slightly relaxing the checking in operand_type_register_match() we
can fold the vector shift insns with an XMM source as well. While
strictly speaking an overlap in just one size (see the code comment) is
not enough (both operands could have multiple sizes with just a single
common one), this is good enough for all templates we have, or which
could sensibly / usefully appear (within the scope of the present
operand matching model).
Tightening this a little would be possible, but would require broadcast
related information to be passed into the function.
2022-03-18 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop stray CheckRegSize from VEXTRACT{F,I}32X4
They have only a single operand allowing multiple sizes, hence there are
no pairs of operands to check for consistent size.
x86: fold certain AVX2 templates into their AVX counterparts
Like for AVX512VL we can make the handling of operand sizes a little
more flexible to allow reducing the number of templates we have.
2022-03-18 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Cache management instructions
This commit adds 'Zicbom' / 'Zicboz' instructions.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Add handling for
new instruction classes.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (MATCH_CBO_CLEAN, MASK_CBO_CLEAN,
MATCH_CBO_FLUSH, MASK_CBO_FLUSH, MATCH_CBO_INVAL,
MASK_CBO_INVAL, MATCH_CBO_ZERO, MASK_CBO_ZERO): New macros.
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Add new instruction
classes INSN_CLASS_ZICBOM and INSN_CLASS_ZICBOZ.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Add cache-block management
instructions.
2022-03-18 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Prefetch hint instructions and operand set
This commit adds 'Zicbop' hint instructions.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Add handling for
new instruction class.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_ip): Add handling for new operand
type 'f' (32-byte aligned pseudo S-type immediate for prefetch
hints).
(validate_riscv_insn): Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (MATCH_PREFETCH_I, MASK_PREFETCH_I,
MATCH_PREFETCH_R, MASK_PREFETCH_R, MATCH_PREFETCH_W,
MASK_PREFETCH_W): New macros.
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Add new instruction
class INSN_CLASS_ZICBOP.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): Add handling for new operand
type.
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Add prefetch hint instructions.
2022-03-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28977 tc-i386.c internal error in parse_register
PR 28977
* config/tc-i386.c (parse_register): Handle X_op not O_register
as for a non-reg_section symbol. Simplify array bounds check.
2022-03-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Tidy gas current_frame before exit
Releases some obstack memory on an error path.
* cond.c (cond_finish_check): Call cond_exit_macro.
2022-03-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: logical_input_line signed integer overflow
To avoid a completely useless fuzzing ubsan "bug" report, I decided to
make logical_input_line unsigned.
* input-scrub.c (logical_input_line): Make unsigned.
(struct input_save): Here too.
(input_scrub_reinit, input_scrub_close, bump_line_counters),
(as_where): Adjust to suit.
2022-03-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-17 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Skip jsynprog with a broken javac
On CET enabled Linux/x86-64 machines, one can get
$ javac simple.java
Error: dl failure on line 894
Error: failed /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.8.0-openjdk-1.8.0.322.b06-6.fc35.x86_64/jre/lib/amd64/server/libjvm.so, because /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.8.0-openjdk-1.8.0.322.b06-6.fc35.x86_64/jre/lib/amd64/server/libjvm.so: rebuild shared object with SHSTK support enabled
Set GPROFNG_BROKEN_JAVAC to "yes" only with a broken javac and skip the
jsynprog test with a broken javac.
PR gprofng/28965
* Makefile.am (GPROFNG_BROKEN_JAVAC): New.
(check-DEJAGNU): Pass GPROFNG_BROKEN_JAVAC to runtest.
* configure.ac (GPROFNG_BROKEN_JAVAC): New AC_SUBST. Set to yes
with a broken javac.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Likewise.
* testsuite/gprofng.display/display.exp: Skip jsynprog with a
broken javac.
2022-03-17 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Remove fall throughs in core_target::xfer_partial.
The cases for TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES and TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES_AIX
can try to fetch different data objects (such as
TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO) if gdbarch methods for the requested data
aren't present. Return with TARGET_XFER_E_IO if the gdbarch method
isn't present instead.
2022-03-17 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: Remove support for S+core
GCC removed support for score back in 2014 already. Back then, we
basically agreed about removing it from GDB too, but it ended up being
forgotten. See:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2014-October/044643.html
Following through this time around.
Change-Id: I5b25a1ff7bce7b150d6f90f4c34047fae4b1f8b4
2022-03-17 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add another test for Ada Wide_Wide_String
In an earlier patch, I had written that I wanted to add this test:
ptype Wide_Wide_String'("literal")
... but that it failed with the distro GNAT. Further investigation
showed that it could be made to work by adding a function using
Wide_Wide_String to the program -- this caused the type to end up in
the debug info.
This patch adds the test. I'm checking this in.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: Null dereference in parse_module
* vms-alpha.c (parse_module): Sanity check that DST__K_RTNBEG
has set module->func_table for DST__K_RTNEND. Check return
of bfd_zalloc.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: Buffer overflow in evax_bfd_print_dst
With "name" a char*, the length at name[0] might be negative, escaping
buffer limit checks.
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_dst): Make name an unsigned char*.
(evax_bfd_print_emh): Likewise.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: Buffer overflow in som_set_reloc_info
* som.c (som_set_reloc_info): Add symcount parameter. Don't
access symbols past symcount. Don't access fixup past end_fixups.
(som_slurp_reloc_table): Adjust som_set_reloc_info calls.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: use of uninitialized value in buffer_and_nest
More occurences of the same as commit d12b8d620c6a.
* macro.c (buffer_and_nest): Sanity check length in buffer
before calling strncasecmp.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gprofng configure target tests
${target} in configure.ac should be the canonical target, so that for
example, someone configuring with --target=x86_64-linux will match
x86_64-*-linux*.
* configure.ac: Invoke AC_CANONICAL_TARGET.
* libcollector/configure.ac: Likewise.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* gp-display-html/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* libcollector/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* libcollector/configure: Regenerate.
* src/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: asan: buffer overflow in peXXigen.c
In the process of fixing a buffer overflow in commit fe69d4fcf0194a,
I managed to introduce a fairly obvious NULL pointer dereference..
* peXXigen.c (_bfd_XX_bfd_copy_private_bfd_data_common): Don't
segfault on not finding section. Wrap overlong lines.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: buffer overflows after calling ignore_rest_of_line
operand() is not a place that should be calling ignore_rest_of_line.
ignore_rest_of_line shouldn't increment input_line_pointer if already
at buffer limit.
* expr.c (operand): Don't call ignore_rest_of_line.
* read.c (s_mri_common): Likewise.
(ignore_rest_of_line): Don't increment input_line_pointer if
already at buffer_limit.
2022-03-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: bfd: add AMDGCN architecture
* po/SRC-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
2022-03-17 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: don't accept base architectures as extensions
The -march= intentions are quite clear: A base architecture may be
followed by any number of extensions. Accepting a base architecture in
place of an extension will at best result in confusion, as the first of
the two (or more) items specified simply would not take effect, due to
being overridden by the later one(s).
2022-03-17 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: never set i386_cpu_flags' "unused" field
Setting this field risks cpu_flags_all_zero() mistakenly returning
"false" when the object passed in was e.g. the result of ANDing together
two objects which had the bit set, or ANDNing together an object with
the field set and one with the field clear.
While there also avoid setting CpuNo64: Like Cpu64 this is driven
differently anyway and hence shouldn't be set anywhere by default.
Note that the moving of the two items in i386-gen.c's cpu_flags[] is
only for documentation purposes (and slight reducing of overhead), as
the fields are sorted anyway upon program start.
2022-03-17 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: unify CPU flag on/off processing
There's no need for the arbitrary special "unknown" token: Simply
recognize the leading ~ and process everything else the same, merely
recording whether to set individual fields to 1 or 0.
While there exclude CpuIAMCU from CPU_UNKNOWN_FLAGS - CPU_IAMCU_FLAGS
override cpu_arch_flags anyway when -march=iamcu is passed, and there's
no reason to have the stray flag set even if no insn actually is keyed
to it.
2022-03-17 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: add another IAMCU testcase
Now that {L,K}1OM support is gone, and with it the brokenness in
check_cpu_arch_compatible(), put in place a test making sure that only
extensions can be enabled via .arch for IAMCU, and that the base
architecture cannot be changed.
x86: drop L1OM/K1OM support from gas
This was only rudimentary support anyway; none of the sub-architecture
specific insns were ever supported.
x86: assorted IAMCU CPU checking fixes
The checks done by check_cpu_arch_compatible() were halfway sensible
only at the time where only L1OM support was there. The purpose,
however, has always been to prevent bad uses of .arch (turning off the
base CPU "feature" flag) while at the same time permitting extensions to
be enabled / disabled. In order to achieve this (and to prevent
regressions when L1OM and K1OM support are removed)
- set CpuIAMCU in CPU_IAMCU_FLAGS,
- adjust the IAMCU check in the function itself (the other two similarly
broken checks aren't adjusted as they're slated to be removed anyway),
- avoid calling the function for extentions (which would never have the
base "feature" flag set),
- add a new testcase actually exercising ".arch iamcu" (which would also
regress with the planned removal).
2022-03-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-16 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: work around prompt corruption caused by bracketed-paste-mode
In this commit:
commit b4f26d541aa7224b70d363932e816e6e1a857633
Date: Tue Mar 2 13:42:37 2021 -0700
Import GNU Readline 8.1
We imported readline 8.1 into GDB. As a consequence bug PR cli/28833
was reported. This bug spotted that, when the user terminated GDB by
sending EOF (usually bound to Ctrl+d), the last prompt would become
corrupted. Here's what happens, the user is sat at a prompt like
this:
(gdb)
And then the user sends EOF (Ctrl+d), we now see this:
quit)
... gdb terminates, and we return to the shell ...
Notice the 'quit' was printed over the prompt.
This problem is a result of readline 8.1 enabling bracketed paste mode
by default. This problem is present in readline 8.0 too, but in that
version of readline bracketed paste mode is off by default, so a user
will not see the bug unless they specifically enable the feature.
Bracketed paste mode is available in readline 7.0 too, but the bug
is not present in this version of readline, see below for why.
What causes this problem is how readline disables bracketed paste
mode. Bracketed paste mode is a terminal feature that is enabled and
disabled by readline emitting a specific escape sequence. The problem
for GDB is that the escape sequence to disable bracketed paste mode
includes a '\r' character at the end, see this thread for more
details:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bash/2018-01/msg00097.html
The change to add the '\r' character to the escape sequence used to
disable bracketed paste mode was introduced between readline 7.0 and
readline 8.0, this is why the bug would not occur when using older
versions of readline (note: I don't know if its even possible to build
GDB using readline 7.0. That really isn't important, I'm just
documenting the history of this issue).
So, the escape sequence to disable bracketed paste mode is emitted
from the readline function rl_deprep_terminal, this is called after
the user has entered a complete command and pressed return, or, if the
user sends EOF.
However, these two cases are slightly different. In the first case,
when the user has entered a command and pressed return, the cursor
will have moved to the next, empty, line, before readline emits the
escape sequence to leave bracketed paste mode. The final '\r'
character moves the cursor back to the beginning of this empty line,
which is harmless.
For the EOF case though, this is not what happens. Instead, the
escape sequence to leave bracketed paste mode is emitted on the same
line as the prompt. The final '\r' moves the cursor back to the start
of the prompt line. This leaves us ready to override the prompt.
It is worth noting, that this is not the intended behaviour of
readline, in rl_deprep_terminal, readline should emit a '\n' character
when EOF is seen. However, due to a bug in readline this does not
happen (the _rl_eof_found flag is never set). This is the first
readline bug that effects GDB.
GDB prints the 'quit' message from command_line_handler (in
event-top.c), this function is called (indirectly) from readline to
process the complete command line, but also in the EOF case (in which
case the command line is set to nullptr). As this is part of the
callback to process a complete command, this is called after readline
has disabled bracketed paste mode (by calling rl_deprep_terminal).
And so, when bracketed paste mode is in use, rl_deprep_terminal leaves
the cursor at the start of the prompt line (in the EOF case), and
command_line_handler then prints 'quit', which overwrites the prompt.
The solution to this problem is to print the 'quit' message earlier,
before rl_deprep_terminal is called. This is easy to do by using the
rl_deprep_term_function hook. It is this hook that usually calls
rl_deprep_terminal, however, if we replace this with a new function,
we can print the 'quit' string, and then call rl_deprep_terminal
ourselves. This allows the 'quit' to be printed before
rl_deprep_terminal is called.
The problem here is that there is no way in rl_deprep_terminal to know
if readline is processing EOF or not, and as a result, we don't know
when we should print 'quit'. This is the second readline bug that
effects GDB.
Both of these readline issues are discussed in this thread:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-readline/2022-02/msg00021.html
The result of that thread was that readline was patched to address
both of these issues.
Now it should be easy to backport the readline fix to GDB's in tree
copy of readline, and then change GDB to make use of these fixes to
correctly print the 'quit' string.
However, we are just about to branch GDB 12, and there is concern from
some that changing readline this close to a new release is a risky
idea, see this thread:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-March/186391.html
So, this commit doesn't change readline at all. Instead, this commit
is the smallest possible GDB change in order to avoid the prompt
corruption.
In this commit I change GDB to print the 'quit' string on the line
after the prompt, but only when bracketed paste mode is on. This
avoids the overwriting issue, the user sees this:
(gdb)
quit
... gdb terminates, and returns to the shell ...
This isn't ideal, but is better than the existing behaviour. After
GDB 12 has branched, we can backport the readline fix, and apply a
real fix to GDB.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28833
2022-03-16 Fangrui Song <i@maskray.me>
objcopy --weaken-symbol: apply to STB_GNU_UNIQUE symbols
PR binutils/28926
* objcopy.c (filter_symbols): Apply weaken to STB_GNU_UNIQUE symbols
* NEWS: Mention feature.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objcopy.exp (objcopy_test_symbol_manipulation): New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/weaken-gnu-unique.s: New.
2022-03-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Reimplement array concatenation for Ada and D
This started as a patch to implement string concatenation for Ada.
However, while working on this, I looked at how this code could
possibly be called. It turns out there are only two users of
concat_operation: Ada and D. So, in addition to implementing this for
Ada, this patch rewrites value_concat, removing the odd "concatenate
or repeat" semantics, which were completely unused. As Ada and D both
seem to represent strings using TYPE_CODE_ARRAY, this removes the
TYPE_CODE_STRING code from there as well.
Remove eval_op_concat
eval_op_concat has code to search for an operator overload of
BINOP_CONCAT. However, the operator overloading code is specific to
C++, which does not have this operator. And,
binop_types_user_defined_p rejects this case right at the start, and
value_x_binop does not handle this case. I think this code has been
dead for a very long time. This patch removes it and hoists the
remaining call into concatenation::evaluate, removing eval_op_concat
entirely.
2022-03-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Ada support for wide strings
This adds some basic support for Wide_String and Wide_Wide_String to
the Ada expression evaluator. In particular, a string literal may be
converted to a wide or wide-wide string depending on context.
The patch updates an existing test case. Note that another test,
namely something like:
ptype Wide_Wide_String'("literal")
... would be nice to add, but when tested against a distro GNAT, this
did not work (probably due to lack of debuginfo); so, I haven't
included it here.
2022-03-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove eval_op_string
eval_op_string is only used in a single place -- the implementation of
string_operation. This patch turns it into the
string_operation::evaluate method, removing a bit of extraneous code.
2022-03-16 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Powerpc fix for gdb.base/ending-run.exp
The last two tests in gdb.base/ending-run.exp case fail on Powerpc when the
system does not have the needed glibc debug-info files loaded. In this
case, gdb is not able to determine where execution stopped. This behavior
looks as follows for the test case:
The next to the last test does a next command when the program is stopped
at the closing bracket for main. The message printed is:
0x00007ffff7d01524 in ?? () from /lib/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
which fails to match any of the test_multiple options.
The test then does another next command. On Powerpc, the
message printed it:
Cannot find bounds of current function
The test fails as the output does not match any of the options for the
gdb_test_multiple.
I checked the behavior on Powerpc to see if this is typical.
I ran gdb on the following simple program as shown below.
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
printf("Hello, world!\n");
return 0;
}
gdb ./hello_world
<snip the gdb start info>
Type "apropos word" to search for commands related to "word"...
Reading symbols from ./hello_world...
(No debugging symbols found in ./hello_world)
(gdb) break main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x818
(gdb) r
Starting program: /home/carll/hello_world
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
Using host libthread_db library "/lib/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1".
Breakpoint 1, 0x0000000100000818 in main ()
(gdb) n
Single stepping until exit from function main,
which has no line number information.
Hello, world!
0x00007ffff7d01524 in ?? () from /lib/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
(gdb) n
Cannot find bounds of current function
So it would seem that the messages seen from the test case are
"normal" output for Powerpc when the debug-info is not available.
The following patch adds the output from Powerpc as an option
to the gdb_test_multiple statement, identifying the output as the expected
output on Powerpc without the needed debug-info files installed.
The patch has been tested on a Power 10 system and an Intel
64-bit system. No additional regression failures were seen on
either platform.
2022-03-16 Martin Storsj? <martin@martin.st>
dlltool: Use the output name as basis for deterministic temp prefixes
PR 28885
* dlltool.c (main): use imp_name rather than dll_name when
generating a temporary file name.
2022-03-16 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/mi: consistently notify user when GDB/MI client uses -thread-select
GDB notifies users about user selected thread changes somewhat
inconsistently as mentioned on gdb-patches mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-February/185989.html
Consider GDB debugging a multi-threaded inferior with both CLI and GDB/MI
interfaces connected to separate terminals.
Assuming inferior is stopped and thread 1 is selected, when a thread
2 is selected using '-thread-select 2' command on GDB/MI terminal:
-thread-select 2
^done,new-thread-id="2",frame={level="0",addr="0x00005555555551cd",func="child_sub_function",args=[],file="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",fullname="/home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",line="30",arch="i386:x86-64"}
(gdb)
and on CLI terminal we get the notification (as expected):
[Switching to thread 2 (Thread 0x7ffff7daa640 (LWP 389659))]
#0 child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30
30 volatile int dummy = 0;
However, now that thread 2 is selected, if thread 1 is selected
using 'thread-select --thread 1 1' command on GDB/MI terminal
terminal:
-thread-select --thread 1 1
^done,new-thread-id="1",frame={level="0",addr="0x0000555555555294",func="main",args=[],file="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",fullname="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",line="66",arch="i386:x86-64"}
(gdb)
but no notification is printed on CLI terminal, despite the fact
that user selected thread has changed.
The problem is that when `-thread-select --thread 1 1` is executed
then thread is switched to thread 1 before mi_cmd_thread_select () is
called, therefore the condition "inferior_ptid != previous_ptid"
there does not hold.
To address this problem, we have to move notification logic up to
mi_cmd_execute () where --thread option is processed and notify
user selected contents observers there if context changes.
However, this in itself breaks GDB/MI because it would cause context
notification to be sent on MI channel. This is because by the time
we notify, MI notification suppression is already restored (done in
mi_command::invoke(). Therefore we had to lift notification suppression
logic also up to mi_cmd_execute (). This change in made distinction
between mi_command::invoke() and mi_command::do_invoke() unnecessary
as all mi_command::invoke() did (after the change) was to call
do_invoke(). So this patches removes do_invoke() and moves the command
execution logic directly to invoke().
With this change, all gdb.mi tests pass, tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20631
2022-03-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Use symver attribute if available
Use symver attribute if available, instead of asm statement, to support
LTO build.
PR gprof/28962
* libcollector/dispatcher.c (timer_create@@GLIBC_2.3.3): Use
SYMVER_ATTRIBUTE.
(timer_create@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(timer_create@GLIBC_2.2.5): Likewise.
(pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(pthread_create@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
* libcollector/iotrace.c (open64@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(open64@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fopen@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fopen@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(fclose@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fclose@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(fdopen@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fdopen@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(pread@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(pread@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(pwrite@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(pwrite@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(pwrite64@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(pwrite64@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fgetpos@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(fgetpos@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(fgetpos64@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(fgetpos64@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(fsetpos@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(fsetpos@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(fsetpos64@@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(fsetpos64@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
* libcollector/linetrace.c (posix_spawn@@GLIBC_2.15): Likewise.
(posix_spawn@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(posix_spawn@GLIBC_2.2.5): Likewise.
(posix_spawnp@@GLIBC_2.15): Likewise.
(posix_spawnp@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(posix_spawnp@GLIBC_2.2.5): Likewise.
(popen@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(popen@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(_popen@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(_popen@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
* libcollector/mmaptrace.c (dlopen@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(dlopen@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
* libcollector/synctrace.c (pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2):
Likewise.
(pthread_cond_wait@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_wait@GLIBC_2.2.5): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_wait@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_timedwait@@GLIBC_2.3.2): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_timedwait@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_timedwait@GLIBC_2.2.5): Likewise.
(pthread_cond_timedwait@GLIBC_2.2): Likewise.
(sem_wait@@GLIBC_2.1): Likewise.
(sem_wait@GLIBC_2.0): Likewise.
* src/collector_module.h (SYMVER_ATTRIBUTE): New.
2022-03-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Don't hardcode -Wno-format-truncation/-Wno-switch
Use -Wno-format-truncation and -Wno-switch only if they are supported.
PR gprof/28969
* configure.ac (GPROFNG_NO_FORMAT_TRUNCATION_CFLAGS): New
AC_SUBST for -Wno-format-truncation.
(GPROFNG_NO_SWITCH_CFLAGS): New AC_SUBST for -Wno-switch.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Likewise.
* src/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Replace -Wno-format-truncation
and -Wno-switch with GPROFNG_NO_FORMAT_TRUNCATION_CFLAGS and
GPROFNG_NO_SWITCH_CFLAGS.
* src/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-03-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Don't hardcode -Wno-nonnull-compare
Use -Wno-nonnull-compare only if it is supported.
PR gprof/28969
* libcollector/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Replace
-Wno-nonnull-compare with GPROFNG_NO_NONNULL_COMPARE_CFLAGS.
* libcollector/configure.ac (GPROFNG_NO_NONNULL_COMPARE_CFLAGS):
New AC_SUBST for -Wno-nonnull-compare.
* libcollector/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* libcollector/aclocal.m4: Likewise.
* libcollector/configure: Likewise.
2022-03-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Define ATTRIBUTE_FALLTHROUGH
Define ATTRIBUTE_FALLTHROUGH to __attribute__ ((fallthrough)) only for
GCC 7 or above.
PR gprof/28969
* common/gp-defs.h (ATTRIBUTE_FALLTHROUGH): New.
* src/gp-collect-app.cc (collect::check_args): Replace
/* FALLTHROUGH */ with ATTRIBUTE_FALLTHROUGH.
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
binutils/readelf: handle AMDGPU relocation types
Make readelf recognize AMDGPU relocation types, as documented here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#amdgpu-relocation-records
The user-visible change looks like:
-000000000004 000400000001 unrecognized: 1 0000000000000000 SCRATCH_RSRC_DWORD0
-00000000000c 000500000001 unrecognized: 1 0000000000000000 SCRATCH_RSRC_DWORD1
-000000000014 000600000007 unrecognized: 7 0000000000000000 global_var0
-00000000001c 000700000008 unrecognized: 8 0000000000000000 global_var1
-000000000024 000800000009 unrecognized: 9 0000000000000000 global_var2
-00000000002c 00090000000a unrecognized: a 0000000000000000 global_var3
-000000000034 000a0000000b unrecognized: b 0000000000000000 global_var4
+000000000004 000400000001 R_AMDGPU_ABS32_LO 0000000000000000 SCRATCH_RSRC_DWORD0
+00000000000c 000500000001 R_AMDGPU_ABS32_LO 0000000000000000 SCRATCH_RSRC_DWORD1
+000000000014 000600000007 R_AMDGPU_GOTPCREL 0000000000000000 global_var0
+00000000001c 000700000008 R_AMDGPU_GOTPCREL 0000000000000000 global_var1
+000000000024 000800000009 R_AMDGPU_GOTPCREL 0000000000000000 global_var2
+00000000002c 00090000000a R_AMDGPU_REL32_LO 0000000000000000 global_var3
+000000000034 000a0000000b R_AMDGPU_REL32_HI 0000000000000000 global_var4
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (dump_relocations): Handle EM_AMDGPU.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/amdgpu.h: Add relocation values.
Change-Id: I2ed4589f4cd37ea11ad2e0cb38d4b682271e1334
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
binutils/readelf: build against msgpack, dump NT_AMDGPU_METADATA note contents
The AMDGPU HSA OS ABI (code object v3 and above) defines the
NT_AMDGPU_METADATA ELF note [1]. The content is a msgpack object
describing, among other things, the kernels present in the code object
and how to call them.
I think it would be useful for readelf to be able to display the content
of those notes. msgpack is a structured format, a bit like JSON, except
not text-based. It is therefore possible to dump the contents in
human-readable form without knowledge of the specific layout of the
note.
Add configury to binutils to optionally check for the msgpack C library
[2]. Add There is a new --with{,out}-msgpack configure flag, and the actual
library lookup is done using pkg-config.
If msgpack support is enabled, dumping a NT_AMDGPU_METADATA note looks
like:
$ readelf --notes amdgpu-code-object
Displaying notes found in: .note
Owner Data size Description
AMDGPU 0x0000040d NT_AMDGPU_METADATA (code object metadata)
{
"amdhsa.kernels": [
{
".args": [
{
".address_space": "global",
".name": "out.coerce",
".offset": 0,
".size": 8,
".value_kind": "global_buffer",
},
<snip>
If msgpack support is disabled, dump the contents as hex, as is done
with notes that are not handled in a special way. This allows one to
decode the contents manually (maybe using a command-line msgpack
decoder) if really needed.
[1] https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#code-object-metadata
[2] https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c/tree/c_master
binutils/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (readelf_CFLAGS): New.
(readelf_LDADD): Add MSGPACK_LIBS.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* configure.ac: Add --with-msgpack flag and check for msgpack
using pkg-config.
* readelf.c: Include msgpack.h if HAVE_MSGPACK.
(print_note_contents_hex): New.
(print_indents): New.
(dump_msgpack_obj): New.
(dump_msgpack): New.
(print_amdgpu_note): New.
(process_note): Handle NT_AMDGPU_METADATA note contents.
Use print_note_contents_hex.
Change-Id: Ia60a654e620bc32dfdb1bccd845594e2af328b84
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
binutils/readelf: handle NT_AMDGPU_METADATA note name
Handle the NT_AMDGPU_METADATA note, which is described here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#code-object-v3-note-records
As of this patch, just print out the name, not the contents, which is in
the msgpack format.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (get_amdgpu_elf_note_type): New.
(process_note): Handle "AMDGPU" notes.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/amdgcn.h (NT_AMDGPU_METADATA): New.
Change-Id: Id2dba2e2aeaa55ef7464fb35aee9c7d5f96ddb23
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
binutils/readelf: decode AMDGPU-specific e_flags
Decode and print the AMDGPU-specific fields of e_flags, as documented
here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#header
That is:
- The specific GPU model
- Whether the xnack and sramecc features are enabled
The result looks like:
- Flags: 0x52f
+ Flags: 0x52f, gfx906, xnack any, sramecc any
The flags for the "HSA" OS ABI are properly versioned and documented on
that page. But the NONE, PAL and MESA3D OS ABIs are not well documented
nor versioned. Taking a peek at the LLVM source code, we see that they
encode their flags the same way as HSA v3. For example, for PAL:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/c8b614cd74a92d85936aed5ac7c642af75ffdc29/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/MCTargetDesc/AMDGPUTargetStreamer.cpp#L601
So for those other OS ABIs, we read them the same as HSA v3.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c: Include elf/amdgcn.h.
(decode_AMDGPU_machine_flags): New.
(get_machine_flags): Handle flags for EM_AMDGPU machine type.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/amdgcn.h: Add EF_AMDGPU_MACH_AMDGCN_* and
EF_AMDGPU_FEATURE_* defines.
Change-Id: Ib5b94df7cae0719a22cf4e4fd0629330e9485c12
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
binutils/readelf: handle AMDGPU OS ABIs
When the machine is EM_AMDGPU, handle the various OS ABIs described
here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#header
For a binary with the HSA OS ABI, the change looks like:
- OS/ABI: <unknown: 40>
+ OS/ABI: AMD HSA
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (get_osabi_name): Handle EM_AMDGPU OS ABIs.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/common.h (ELFOSABI_AMDGPU_PAL, ELFOSABI_AMDGPU_MESA3D):
New.
Change-Id: I383590c390f7dc2fe0f902f50038735626d71863
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
opcodes: handle bfd_amdgcn_arch in configure script
There isn't an actual opcodes implementation for the AMDGCN arch (yet),
this is just the bare minimum to get
$ ./configure --target=amdgcn-hsa-amdhsa --disable-gas
$ make all-binutils
working later in this series.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Handle bfd_amdgcn_arch.
* configure: Re-generate.
Change-Id: Ib7d7c5533a803ed8b2a293e9275f667ed781ce79
2022-03-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
bfd: add AMDGCN architecture
Add support for the AMDGCN architecture to BFD.
This is the bare minimum to get
$ ./configure --target=amdgcn-hsa-amdhsa --disable-gas
$ make all-binutils
working later in this series.
The specific AMDGCN models added here are a bit arbitrary, based on
what we intend to initially support in GDB. This list will need to be
updated in the future anyway. The complete up-to-date list of existing
AMDGPU models can be found here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#processors
The ELF format for this architecture is documented here:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#elf-code-object
The flags for the "HSA" OS ABI are properly versioned and documented on
that page. But the NONE, PAL and MESA3D OS ABIs are not well documented
nor versioned. Taking a peek at the LLVM source code, we see that they
encode their flags the same way as HSA v3. For example, for PAL:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/c8b614cd74a92d85936aed5ac7c642af75ffdc29/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/MCTargetDesc/AMDGPUTargetStreamer.cpp#L601
So at least, we know that all AMDGPU objects (of which AMDGCN objects
are a subset of) at the time of writing encode the specific GPU model in
the EF_AMDGPU_MACH field of e_flags.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (ALL_MACHINES, ALL_MACHINES_CFILES):
Add cpu-amdgcn.c.
(BFD64_BACKENDS): Add elf64-amdgcn.lo.
(BFD64_BACKENDS_CFILES): Add elf64-amdgcn.c.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* cpu-amdgcn.c: New.
* elf64-amdgcn.c: New.
* archures.c (bfd_architecture): Add bfd_arch_amdgcn and related
mach defines.
(bfd_amdgcn_arch): New.
(bfd_archures_list): Add bfd_amdgcn_arch.
* bfd-in2.h: Re-generate.
* config.bfd: Handle amdgcn* target.
* configure.ac: Handle amdgcn_elf64_le_vec.
* configure: Re-generate.
* elf-bfd.h (elf_target_id): Add AMDGCN_ELF_DATA.
* targets.c (amdgcn_elf64_le_vec): New.
(_bfd_target_vector): Add amdgcn_elf64_le_vec.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/amdgpu.h: New.
* elf/common.h (ELFOSABI_AMDGPU_HSA): Add.
Change-Id: I969f7b14960797e88891c308749a6e341eece5b2
2022-03-16 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Serbian (for binutils/) and Russian (for gprof/) translations
2022-03-16 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make gdb.fortran/{array-slices,lbound-ubound} work against gdbserver
gdb.fortran/array-slices.exp and gdb.fortran/lbound-ubound.exp were
recently disabled unless testing with the native target, because they
rely on inferior I/O. However, when testing against gdbserver using
the native-gdbserver/native-extended-gdbserver boards, we do have
access to inferior I/O.
The right way to check whether the board can do I/O, is via checking
the gdb,noinferiorio board variable. Switch to using that.
And then, tweak the testcases to expect output to appear in
inferior_spawn_id, instead of gdb_spawn_id. When testing against the
native target, inferior_spawn_id is the same as gdb_spawn_id. When
testing against gdbserver, it maps to gdbserver_spawn_id.
This exposed a buglet in gdb.fortran/array-slices.f90's show_1d
subroutine -- it was missing printing newline at the end of the
"Expected GDB Output" text, leading to a test timeout. All other
subroutines end with advance=yes, except this one. Fix it by using
advance=yes here too.
Change-Id: I4640729f334431cfc24b0917e7d3977b677c6ca5
2022-03-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Delete PowerPC macro insn support
Let's hope this stays dead, but it's here as a patch separate from
those that removed use of powerpc_macros just in case it needs to be
resurrected.
include/
* opcode/ppc.h (struct powerpc_macro): Delete declaration.
(powerpc_macros, powerpc_num_macros): Likewise..
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (powerpc_macros, powerpc_num_macros): Delete.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_macro): Delete function.
(ppc_macro_hash): Delete.
(ppc_setup_opcodes, md_assemble): Delete macro support.
2022-03-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC SPE/SPE2 aliases in powerpc_macros
* ppc-opc.c (powerpc_macros): Move "evsadd", "evssub", "evsabs",
"evsnabs", "evsneg", "evsmul", "evsdiv", "evscmpgt", "evsgmplt",
"evsgmpeq", "evscfui", "evscfsi", "evscfuf", "evscfsf", "evsctui",
"evsctsi", "evsctuf", "evsctsf", "evsctuiz", "evsctsiz",
"evststgt", "evststlt", "evststeq"..
(powerpc_opcodes): ..to here.
(powerpc_macros): Move "evdotphsssi", "evdotphsssia", "evdotpwsssi",
and "evdotpwsssia"..
(spe2_opcodes): ..to here.
2022-03-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC VLE extended instructions in powerpc_macros
This moves VLE insn out of the macro table. "e_slwi" and "e_srwi"
already exist in vle_opcodes as distinct instructions rather than
encodings of e_rlwinm.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (vle_opcodes): Typo fix e_rlwinm operand.
Add "e_inslwi", "e_insrwi", "e_rotlwi", "e_rotrwi", "e_clrlwi",
"e_clrrwi", "e_extlwi", "e_extrwi", and "e_clrlslwi".
(powerpc_macros): Delete same. Delete "e_slwi" and "e_srwi" too.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/vle-simple-5.d: Update.
2022-03-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC32 extended instructions in powerpc_macros
As for PowerPC64, move instructions to the main opcode table.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (insert_crwn, extract_crwn, insert_elwn, extract_elwn),
(insert_erwn, extract_erwn, insert_erwb, extract_erwb),
(insert_cslwn, extract_cslwb, insert_ilwb, extract_ilwn),
(insert_irwb, extract_irwn, insert_rrwn, extract_rrwn),
(insert_slwn, extract_slwn, insert_srwn, extract_srwn): New functions.
(CRWn, ELWn, ERWn, ERWb, CSLWb, CSLWn, ILWn, ILWb, IRWn, IRWb),
(RRWn, SLWn, SRWn): Define and add powerpc_operands entries.
(MMB_MASK, MME_MASK, MSHMB_MASK): Define.
(powerpc_opcodes): Add "inslwi", "insrwi", "rotrwi", "clrrwi",
"slwi", "srwi", "extlwi", "extrwi", "sli", "sri" and corresponding
record (ie. dot suffix) forms.
(powerpc_macros): Delete same.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/simpshft.d: Update.
2022-03-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 extended instructions in powerpc_macros
The extended instructions implemented in powerpc_macros aren't used by
the disassembler. That means instructions like "sldi r3,r3,2" appear
in disassembly as "rldicr r3,r3,2,61", which is annoying since many
other extended instructions are shown.
Note that some of the instructions moved out of the macro table to the
opcode table won't appear in disassembly, because they are aliases
rather than a subset of the underlying raw instruction. If enabled,
rotrdi, extrdi, extldi, clrlsldi, and insrdi would replace all
occurrences of rotldi, rldicl, rldicr, rldic and rldimi. (Or many
occurrences in the case of clrlsldi if n <= b was added to the extract
functions.)
The patch also fixes a small bug in opcode sanity checking.
include/
* opcode/ppc.h (PPC_OPSHIFT_SH6): Define.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (insert_erdn, extract_erdn, insert_eldn, extract_eldn),
(insert_crdn, extract_crdn, insert_rrdn, extract_rrdn),
(insert_sldn, extract_sldn, insert_srdn, extract_srdn),
(insert_erdb, extract_erdb, insert_csldn, extract_csldb),
(insert_irdb, extract_irdn): New functions.
(ELDn, ERDn, ERDn, RRDn, SRDn, ERDb, CSLDn, CSLDb, IRDn, IRDb):
Define and add associated powerpc_operands entries.
(powerpc_opcodes): Add "rotrdi", "srdi", "extrdi", "clrrdi",
"sldi", "extldi", "clrlsldi", "insrdi" and corresponding record
(ie. dot suffix) forms.
(powerpc_macros): Delete same from here.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (insn_validate): Don't modify value passed
to operand->insert for PPC_OPERAND_PLUS1 when calculating mask.
Handle PPC_OPSHIFT_SH6.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/prefix-reloc.d: Update.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/simpshft.d: Update.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/elfv2so.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc3.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsdesc2.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget2.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsopt5.d: Update.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsopt6.d: Update.
2022-03-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Do not capture updated 'pc' in add_local_symbols
Simon pointed out that commit 13835d88 ("Use function view when
iterating over block symbols") caused a regression. The bug is that
the new closure captures 'pc' by reference, but later code updates
this variable -- but the earlier code did not update the callback
structure with the new value.
This patch restores the old behavior by using a new varible name in an
inner scope.
2022-03-15 Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>
gprofng: avoid using `fallthrough' attributes
gprofng didn't build with gcc 6.3 due to the usage of __attribute__
((fallthrough)). This patch uses /* FALLTHROUGH */ instead.
2022-03-15 Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>
* gprofng/src/gp-collect-app.cc (collect::check_args): Use
fallthrough comment instead of attribute.
2022-03-15 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in dwarf-mode.el
I noticed that, occasionally, dwarf-mode would think that the objdump
subprocess was still running after it had clearly exited. I managed
to reliably reproduce this today and learned that a process sentinel
is not guaranteed to be run with the current buffer set to the process
buffer. This patch fixes the problem.
I've bumped the version number of dwarf-mode.el to make it easier to
install for users who already have an earlier one installed.
I'm checking this in.
2022-03-15 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* dwarf-mode.el: Now 1.7.
(dwarf--sentinel): Switch to the process buffer.
2022-03-15 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: rename a proc and fix a typo
Rename a proc in gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.exp, I think the
old name was most likely a typo. The old name
match_re_or_ensure_not_output seems (to me) to imply we're in some way
checking that the regexp was not output. But that's not what we are
doing, we're checking either for the regexp, or for no output, hence
the new name match_re_or_ensure_no_output.
Additionally, I found a definite typo in one of the comments that I've
also fixed.
I also updated some test names. These tests (probably due to copy &
paste errors) has 'on MI' on their name, when they were actually
checking CLI output. For these test I changed the name to use 'on
CLI'.
There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-03-15 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
gprofng: Add a configure test for clock_gettime and a use of the test in getthrtime.c
2022-03-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprofng: Don't generate gprofng.info in source
Add info-in-builddir to AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS.
PR gprof/28967
* doc/Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Add info-in-builddir.
* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-03-15 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: fix failed testcases in gdb.base/align-c.exp
When execute the following command on LoongArch:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/align-c.exp"
there exist some failed testcases:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/align-c.exp: print _Alignof(struct align_pair_long_double_x_float)
FAIL: gdb.base/align-c.exp: print _Alignof(struct align_pair_long_double_x_double)
FAIL: gdb.base/align-c.exp: print _Alignof(struct align_pair_long_double_x_long_double)
...
According to LoongArch ELF ABI specification [1], set the target data types
of floating-point to fix the above failed testcases.
[1] https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html
2022-03-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-14 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python/mi: create MI commands using python
This commit allows a user to create custom MI commands using Python
similarly to what is possible for Python CLI commands.
A new subclass of mi_command is defined for Python MI commands,
mi_command_py. A new file, gdb/python/py-micmd.c contains the logic
for Python MI commands.
This commit is based on work linked too from this mailing list thread:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2021-November/049774.html
Which has also been previously posted to the mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2019-May/158010.html
And was recently reposted here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-January/185190.html
The version in this patch takes some core code from the previously
posted patches, but also has some significant differences, especially
after the feedback given here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-February/185767.html
A new MI command can be implemented in Python like this:
class echo_args(gdb.MICommand):
def invoke(self, args):
return { 'args': args }
echo_args("-echo-args")
The 'args' parameter (to the invoke method) is a list
containing (almost) all command line arguments passed to the MI
command (--thread and --frame are handled before the Python code is
called, and removed from the args list). This list can be empty if
the MI command was passed no arguments.
When used within gdb the above command produced output like this:
(gdb)
-echo-args a b c
^done,args=["a","b","c"]
(gdb)
The 'invoke' method of the new command must return a dictionary. The
keys of this dictionary are then used as the field names in the mi
command output (e.g. 'args' in the above).
The values of the result returned by invoke can be dictionaries,
lists, iterators, or an object that can be converted to a string.
These are processed recursively to create the mi output. And so, this
is valid:
class new_command(gdb.MICommand):
def invoke(self,args):
return { 'result_one': { 'abc': 123, 'def': 'Hello' },
'result_two': [ { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 },
{ 'c': 3, 'd': 4 } ] }
Which produces output like:
(gdb)
-new-command
^done,result_one={abc="123",def="Hello"},result_two=[{a="1",b="2"},{c="3",d="4"}]
(gdb)
I have required that the fields names used in mi result output must
match the regexp: "^[a-zA-Z][-_a-zA-Z0-9]*$" (without the quotes).
This restriction was never written down anywhere before, but seems
sensible to me, and we can always loosen this rule later if it proves
to be a problem. Much harder to try and add a restriction later, once
people are already using the API.
What follows are some details about how this implementation differs
from the original patch that was posted to the mailing list.
In this patch, I have changed how the lifetime of the Python
gdb.MICommand objects is managed. In the original patch, these object
were kept alive by an owned reference within the mi_command_py object.
As such, the Python object would not be deleted until the
mi_command_py object itself was deleted.
This caused a problem, the mi_command_py were held in the global mi
command table (in mi/mi-cmds.c), which, as a global, was not cleared
until program shutdown. By this point the Python interpreter has
already been shutdown. Attempting to delete the mi_command_py object
at this point was causing GDB to try and invoke Python code after
finalising the Python interpreter, and we would crash.
To work around this problem, the original patch added code in
python/python.c that would search the mi command table, and delete the
mi_command_py objects before the Python environment was finalised.
In contrast, in this patch, I have added a new global dictionary to
the gdb module, gdb._mi_commands. We already have several such global
data stores related to pretty printers, and frame unwinders.
The MICommand objects are placed into the new gdb.mi_commands
dictionary, and it is this reference that keeps the objects alive.
When GDB's Python interpreter is shut down gdb._mi_commands is deleted,
and any MICommand objects within it are deleted at this point.
This change avoids having to make the mi_cmd_table global, and walk
over it from within GDB's python related code.
This patch handles command redefinition entirely within GDB's python
code, though this does impose one small restriction which is not
present in the original code (detailed below), I don't think this is a
big issue. However, the original patch relied on being able to
finish executing the mi_command::do_invoke member function after the
mi_command object had been deleted. Though continuing to execute a
member function after an object is deleted is well defined, it is
also (IMHO) risky, its too easy for someone to later add a use of the
object without realising that the object might sometimes, have been
deleted. The new patch avoids this issue.
The one restriction that is added to avoid this, is that an MICommand
object can't be reinitialised with a different command name, so:
(gdb) python cmd = MyMICommand("-abc")
(gdb) python cmd.__init__("-def")
can't reinitialize object with a different command name
This feels like a pretty weird edge case, and I'm happy to live with
this restriction.
I have also changed how the memory is managed for the command name.
In the most recently posted patch series, the command name is moved
into a subclass of mi_command, the python mi_command_py, which
inherits from mi_command is then free to use a smart pointer to manage
the memory for the name.
In this patch, I leave the mi_command class unchanged, and instead
hold the memory for the name within the Python object, as the lifetime
of the Python object always exceeds the c++ object stored in the
mi_cmd_table. This adds a little more complexity in py-micmd.c, but
leaves the mi_command class nice and simple.
Next, this patch adds some extra functionality, there's a
MICommand.name read-only attribute containing the name of the command,
and a read-write MICommand.installed attribute that can be used to
install (make the command available for use) and uninstall (remove the
command from the mi_cmd_table so it can't be used) the command. This
attribute will be automatically updated if a second command replaces
an earlier command.
This patch adds additional error handling, and makes more use the
gdbpy_handle_exception function.
Co-Authored-By: Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
2022-03-14 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/gdbarch: compare some fields against 0 verify_gdbarch
After the previous commit, which removes the predicate function
gdbarch_register_type_p, I noticed that the gdbarch->register_type
field was not checked at in the verify_gdbarch function.
More than not being checked, the field wasn't mentioned at all.
I find this strange, I would expect that every field would at least be
mentioned - we already generate comments for some fields saying that
this field is _not_ being checked, so the fact that this field isn't
being checked looks (to me), like this field is somehow slipping
through the cracks.
The comment at the top of gdbarch-components.py tries to explain how
the validation is done. I didn't understand this comment completely,
but, I think this final sentence:
"Otherwise, the check is done against 0 (really NULL for function
pointers, but same idea)."
Means that, if non of the other cases apply, then the field should be
checked against 0, with 0 indicating that the field is invalid (was
not set by the tdep code). However, this is clearly not being done.
Looking in gdbarch.py at the code to generate verify_gdbarch we do
find that there is a case that is not handled, the case where the
'invalid' field is set true True, but non of the other cases apply.
In this commit I propose two changes:
1. Handle the case where the 'invalid' field of a property is set to
True, this should perform a check for the field of gdbarch still
being set to 0, and
2. If the if/else series that generates verify_gdbarch doesn't handle
a property then we should raise an exception. This means that if a
property is added which isn't handled, we should no longer silently
ignore it.
After doing this, I re-generated the gdbarch files and saw that the
following gdbarch fields now had new validation checks:
register_type
believe_pcc_promotion
register_to_value
value_to_register
frame_red_zone_size
displaced_step_restore_all_in_ptid
solib_symbols_extension
Looking at how these are currently set in the various -tdep.c files, I
believe the only one of these that is required to be set for all
architectures is the register_type field.
And so, for all of the other fields, I've changed the property
definition on gdbarch-components.py, setting the 'invalid' field to
False.
Now, after re-generation, the register_type field is checked against
0, thus an architecture that doesn't set_gdbarch_register_type will
now fail during validation. For all the other fields we skip the
validation, in which case, it is find for an architecture to not set
this field.
My expectation is that there should be no user visible changes after
this commit. Certainly for all fields except register_type, all I've
really done is cause some extra comments to be generated, so I think
that's clearly fine.
For the register_type field, my claim is that any architecture that
didn't provide this would fail when creating its register cache, and I
couldn't spot an architecture that doesn't provide this hook. As
such, I think this change should be fine too.
2022-03-14 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/gdbarch: remove the predicate function for gdbarch_register_type
I don't believe that the gdbarch_register_type_p predicate is called
anywhere in GDB, and the gdbarch_register_type function is called
without checking the gdbarch_register_type_p predicate function
everywhere it is used, for example in
init_regcache_descr (regcache.c).
My claim is that the gdbarch_register_type function is required for
every architecture, and GDB will not work if this function is not
supplied.
And so, in this commit, I remove the 'predicate=True' from
gdbarch-components.py for the 'register_type' field, and regenerate
the gdbarch files.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-03-14 Patrick Monnerat <patrick@monnerat.net>
Replace deprecated_target_wait_hook by observers
Commit b60cea7 (Make target_wait options use enum flags) broke
deprecated_target_wait_hook usage: there's a commit comment telling
this hook has not been converted.
Rather than trying to mend it, this patch replaces the hook by two
target_wait observers:
target_pre_wait (ptid_t ptid)
target_post_wait (ptid_t event_ptid)
Upon target_wait entry, target_pre_wait is notified with the ptid
passed to target_wait. Upon exit, target_post_wait is notified with
the event ptid returned by target_wait. Should an exception occur,
event_ptid is null_ptid.
This change benefits to Insight (out-of-tree): there's no real use of the
late hook in gdb itself.
2022-03-14 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Correctly print subrange types in generic_value_print
I noticed that generic_value_print assumes that a subrange type is
always a subrange of an integer type. However, this isn't necessarily
the case. In Ada, for example, one has subranges of character and
enumeration types.
This code isn't often exercised, I think, because languages with real
subrange types tend to implement their own printers. However, it
still seemed worth fixing.
2022-03-14 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
[aarch64/arm] Properly extract the return value returned in memory
When running gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.exp, the following shows up for
both aarch64-linux and armhf-linux:
Breakpoint 3, f1 (i1=23, i2=100) at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.cc:35
35 A a;
(gdb) finish
Run till exit from #0 f1 (i1=23, i2=100) at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.cc:35
main () at /src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.cc:163
163 B b = f2 (i1, i2);
Value returned is $6 = {a = -11952}
(gdb)
The return value should be {a = 123} instead. This happens because the
backends don't extract the return value from the correct location. GDB should
fetch a pointer to the memory location from X8 for aarch64 and r0 for armhf.
With the patch, gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.exp has full passes on
aarch64-linux and armhf-linux on Ubuntu 20.04/18.04.
The problem only shows up with the "finish" command. The "call" command
works correctly and displays the correct return value.
This is also related to PR gdb/28681
(https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28681) and fixes FAIL's in
gdb.ada/mi_var_array.exp.
A new testcase is provided, and it exercises GDB's ability to "finish" a
function that returns a large struct (> 16 bytes) and display the
contents of this struct correctly. This has always been incorrect for
these backends, but no testcase exercised this particular scenario.
2022-03-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28959, obdump doesn't disassemble mftb instruction
Without a -M cpu option given, powerpc objdump defaults currently to
-Mpower10 but -Many is also given. Commit 1ff6a3b8e562 regressed
-Many disassembly of instructions that are encoded differently
depending on cpu, such as mftb which has pre- and post-power4
encodings.
PR 28959
* ppc-dis.c (lookup_powerpc): Revert 2021-05-28 change. Instead
only look at deprecated PPC_OPCODE_RAW bit when -Many.
2022-03-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Relax regexp in gdb.rust/unsized.exp
With nightly rustc, gdb.rust/unsized.exp fails:
(gdb) ptype *us
Structure has no component named operator*.
rustc changed to emit a bit more debug info for unsized types.
Because the original test is just to make sure that ptype of an
unsized array looks right, this patch relaxes the regexp and changes
the expression. I think this keeps the original test meaning, but
also works with nightly. I also tested stable and 1.48.
2022-03-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-11 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid crash with cross-linux core file
An internal test case creates a core file using gcore, then restarts
gdb with that core. When run with a cross-linux gdb (in this case,
x86-64 host with ppc64-linux target), the test fails:
| (gdb) core core
| [New LWP 18437]
| warning: `/lib64/libc.so.6': Shared library architecture unknown is not compatible with target architecture powerpc:common64.
| warning: Could not load shared library symbols for /lib64/ld64.so.1.
| Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
| ../../src/gdb/gdbarch.c:3388: internal-error: int gdbarch_elf_make_msymbol_special_p(gdbarch*): Assertion `gdbarch != NULL' failed.
| A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
| further debugging may prove unreliable.
| Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y
What's happening here is that the core file lists some shared
libraries. These aren't available via the solib search path, and so
gdb finds the local (x86-64) libraries. This is not ideal, but on the
other hand, it is what was asked for -- while the test does set
solib-search-path, it does not set the sysroot.
But, because gdb isn't configured to handle these libraries, it
crashes.
It seems to me that it's better to avoid the crash by having
solib_bfd_open fail in the case where a library is incompatible. That
is what this patch does. Now it looks like:
| [New LWP 15488]
| Error while mapping shared library sections:
| `/lib64/libc.so.6': Shared library architecture unknown is not compatible with target architecture powerpc:common64.
... and does not crash gdb.
I don't have a good setup for testing this using dejagnu, so I don't
know whether an existing gdb test covers this scenario.
2022-03-11 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: remove duplicates from gdb.base/stap-probe.exp
Remove the duplicate test names from gdb.base/stap-probe.exp, this is
done by actually passing a unique test name in a couple of
places (rather than using the command as the test name), and in
another couple of places, a test has a duplicate name due to a cut &
paste error, which I've fixed.
There's no change in what is actually being tested after this commit.
2022-03-11 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
gprofng: a new GNU profiler
top-level
* Makefile.def: Add gprofng module.
* configure.ac: Add --enable-gprofng option.
* src-release.sh: Add gprofng.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* gprofng: New directory.
binutils
* MAINTAINERS: Add gprofng maintainer.
* README-how-to-make-a-release: Add gprofng.
include.
* collectorAPI.h: New file.
* libcollector.h: New file.
* libfcollector.h: New file.
2022-03-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-10 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb/auto-load: Remove repeating "auto-load" from debug message
Remove "auto-load:" from a format string passed to auto_load_debug_printf.
It is unnecessary since this function will prefix the string with "[auto-load]"
when printing it.
2022-03-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change how "print/x" displays floating-point value
Currently, "print/x" will display a floating-point value by first
casting it to an integer type. This yields weird results like:
(gdb) print/x 1.5
$1 = 0x1
This has confused users multiple times -- see PR gdb/16242, where
there are several dups. I've also seen some confusion from this
internally at AdaCore.
The manual says:
'x'
Regard the bits of the value as an integer, and print the integer
in hexadecimal.
... which seems more useful. So, perhaps what happened is that this
was incorrectly implemented (or maybe correctly implemented and then
regressed, as there don't seem to be any tests).
This patch fixes the bug.
There was a previous discussion where we agreed to preserve the old
behavior:
https://sourceware.org/legacy-ml/gdb-patches/2017-06/msg00314.html
However, I think it makes more sense to follow the manual.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16242
2022-03-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Simplify the ui-out progress API
I noticed that 'progress' is a method on ui-out, but it seems to me
that it would be better if the only API were via the progress_meter
class. This patch makes this change, changing progress to be a method
on the meter itself.
2022-03-10 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/gdbarch: fix typo in gdbarch-components.py
Fixes a minor typo, in a comment, in the gdbarch-components.py script.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-03-10 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
Process exit status is leader exit status testcase
This adds a multi-threaded testcase that has all threads in the
process exit with a different exit code, and ensures that GDB reports
the thread group leader's exit status as the whole-process exit
status. Before this set of patches, this would randomly report the
exit code of some other thread, and thus fail.
Tested on Linux-x86_64, native and gdbserver.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Change-Id: I30cba2ff4576fb01b5169cc72667f3268d919557
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Re-add zombie leader on exit, gdbserver/linux
Same as the previous patch, but for GDBserver.
In summary, the current zombie leader detection code in linux-low.cc
has a race -- if a multi-threaded inferior exits just before
check_zombie_leaders finds that the leader is now zombie via checking
/proc/PID/status, check_zombie_leaders deletes the leader, assuming we
won't get an event for that exit (which we won't in some scenarios,
but not in this one), which is a false-positive scenario, where the
whole process is simply exiting. Later when we see the last LWP in
our list exit, we report that LWP's exit status as exit code, even
though for the (real) parent process, the exit code that counts is the
child's leader thread's exit code.
Like for GDB, the solution here is to:
- only report whole-process exit events for the leader.
- re-add the leader back to the LWP list when we finally see it
exit.
Change-Id: Id2d7bbb51a415534e1294fff1d555b7ecaa87f1d
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Re-add zombie leader on exit, gdb/linux
The current zombie leader detection code in linux-nat.c has a race --
if a multi-threaded inferior exits just before check_zombie_leaders
finds that the leader is now zombie via checking /proc/PID/status,
check_zombie_leaders deletes the leader, assuming we won't get an
event for that exit (which we won't in some scenarios, but not in this
one). That might seem mostly harmless, but it has some downsides:
- later when we continue pulling events out of the kernel, we will
collect the exit event of the non-leader threads, and once we see
the last lwp in our list exit, we return _that_ lwp's exit code as
whole-process exit code to infrun, instead of the leader's exit
code.
- this can cause a hang in stop_all_threads in infrun.c. Say there
are 2 threads in the process. stop_all_threads stops each of those
threads, and then waits for two stop or exit events, one for each
thread. If the whole process exits, and check_zombie_leaders hits
the false-positive case, linux-nat.c will only return one event to
GDB (the whole-process exit returned when we see the last thread,
the non-leader thread, exit), making stop_all_threads hang forever
waiting for a second event that will never come.
However, in this false-positive scenario, where the whole process is
exiting, as opposed to just the leader (with pthread_exit(), for
example), we _will_ get an exit event shortly for the leader, after we
collect the exit event of all the other non-leader threads. Or put
another way, we _always_ get an event for the leader after we see it
become zombie.
I tried a number of approaches to fix this:
#1 - My first thought to address the race was to make GDB always
report the whole-process exit status for the leader thread, not for
whatever is the last lwp in the list. We _always_ get a final exit
(or exec) event for the leader, and when the race triggers, we're not
collecting it.
#2 - My second thought was to try to plug the race in the first place.
I thought of making GDB call waitpid/WNOHANG for all non-leader
threads immediately when the zombie leader is detected, assuming there
would be an exit event pending for each of them waiting to be
collected. Turns out that that doesn't work -- you can see the leader
become zombie _before_ the kernel kills all other threads. Waitpid in
that small time window returns 0, indicating no-event. Thankfully we
hit that race window all the time, which avoided trading one race for
another. Looking at the non-leader thread's status in /proc doesn't
help either, the threads are still in running state for a bit, for the
same reason.
#3 - My next attempt, which seemed promising, was to synchronously
stop and wait for the stop for each of the non-leader threads. For
the scenario in question, this will collect all the exit statuses of
the non-leader threads. Then, if we are left with only the zombie
leader in the lwp list, it means we either have a normal while-process
exit or an exec, in which case we should not delete the leader. If
_only_ the leader exited, like in gdb.threads/leader-exit.exp, then
after pausing threads, we will still have at least one live non-leader
thread in the list, and so we delete the leader lwp. I got this
working and polished, and it was only after staring at the kernel code
to convince myself that this would really work (and it would, for the
scenario I considered), that I realized I had failed to account for
one scenario -- if any non-leader thread is _already_ stopped when
some thread triggers a group exit, like e.g., if you have some threads
stopped and then resume just one thread with scheduler-locking or
non-stop, and that thread exits the process. I also played with
PTRACE_EVENT_EXIT, see if it would help in any way to plug the race,
and I couldn't find a way that it would result in any practical
difference compared to looking at /proc/PID/status, with respect to
having a race.
So I concluded that there's no way to plug the race, we just have to
deal with it. Which means, going back to approach #1. That is the
approach taken by this patch.
Change-Id: I6309fd4727da8c67951f9cea557724b77e8ee979
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: Reindent check_zombie_leaders
This fixes the indentation of
linux_process_target::check_zombie_leaders, which will help with
keeping its comments in sync with the gdb/linux-nat.c counterpart.
Change-Id: I37332343bd80423d934249e3de2d04feefad1891
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdbserver: Reorganize linux_process_target::filter_event
Reorganize linux-low.cc:linux_process_target::filter_event such that
all the handling for events for LWPs not in the LWP list is together.
This helps make a following patch clearer. The comments and debug
messages have also been tweaked to have them synchronized with the GDB
counterpart.
Change-Id: If9019635f63a846607cfda44b454b4254a404019
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: Reorganize linux_nat_filter_event
Reorganize linux-nat.c:linux_nat_filter_event such that all the
handling for events for LWPs not in the LWP list is together. This
helps make a following patch clearer. The comments and debug messages
have also been tweaked - the end goal is to have them synchronized
with the gdbserver counterpart.
Change-Id: I8586d8dcd76d8bd3795145e3056fc660e3b2cd22
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdb.threads/current-lwp-dead.exp race
If we make GDB report the process EXIT event for the leader thread, as
will be done in a latter patch of this series, then
gdb.threads/current-lwp-dead.exp starts failing:
(gdb) break fn_return
Breakpoint 2 at 0x5555555551b5: file /home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/current-lwp-dead.c, line 45.
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
[New LWP 2138466]
[Inferior 1 (process 2138459) exited normally]
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/current-lwp-dead.exp: continue to breakpoint: fn_return (the program exited)
The inferior exit reported is actually correct. The main thread has
indeed exited, and that's the thread that has the right exit code to
report to the user, as that's the exit code that is reported to the
program's parent. In this case, GDB managed to collect the exit code
for the leader thread before reaping the other thread, because in
reality, the testcase isn't creating standard threads, it is using raw
clone, and the new clones are put in their own thread group.
Fix it by making the main "thread" not exit until the scenario we're
exercising plays out. Also, run the program to completion for
completeness.
The original program really wanted the leader thread to exit before
the fn_return function was reached -- it was important that the
current thread as pointed by inferior_ptid was gone when infrun got
the breakpoint event. I've tweaked the testcase to ensure that that
condition is still held, though it is no longer the main thread that
exits. This required a bit of synchronization between the threads,
which required using CLONE_VM unconditionally. The #ifdef guards were
added as a fix for
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11214, though I don't
think they were necessary because the program is not using TLS. If it
turns out they were necessary, we can link the testcase with "-z now"
instead, which was mentioned as an alternative workaround in that
Bugzilla.
Change-Id: I7be2f0da4c2fe8f80a60bdde5e6c623d8bd5a0aa
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.exp race
If we make GDB report the process EXIT event for the leader thread,
instead of whatever is the last thread in the LWP list, as will be
done in a latter patch of this series, then
gdb.threads/current-lwp-dead.exp starts failing:
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.exp: catch SIGUSR1 (the program exited)
This is a testcase race -- the main thread does not wait for the
spawned clone "thread" to finish before exiting, so the main program
may exit before the second thread is scheduled and reports its
SIGUSR1. With the change to make GDB report the EXIT for the leader,
the race is 100% reproducible by adding a sleep(), like so:
--- c/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.c
+++ w/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.c
@@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ local_gettid (void)
static int
fn (void *unused)
{
+ sleep (1);
tkill (local_gettid (), SIGUSR1);
return 0;
}
Resulting in:
Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd418) at gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.c:65
65 stack = malloc (STACK_SIZE);
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
[New LWP 3715562]
[Inferior 1 (process 3715555) exited normally]
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/clone-new-thread-event.exp: catch SIGUSR1 (the program exited)
That inferior exit reported is actually correct. The main thread has
indeed exited, and that's the thread that has the right exit code to
report to the user, as that's the exit code that is reported to the
program's parent. In this case, GDB managed to collect the exit code
for the leader thread before reaping the other thread, because in
reality, the testcase isn't creating standard threads, it is using raw
clone, and the new clones are put in their own thread group.
Fix it by making the main thread wait for the child to exit. Also,
run the program to completion for completeness.
Change-Id: I315cd3dc2b9e860395dcab9658341ea868d7a6bf
2022-03-10 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdbserver/linux target_waitstatus logging assert
Turning on debug output in gdbserver leads to an assertion failure if
gdbserver reports a non-signal event:
[threads] wait_1: LWP 3273770: extended event with waitstatus status->kind = EXECD, execd_pathname = gdb.threads/non-ldr-exc-1/non-ldr-exc-1
[threads] wait_1: Hit a non-gdbserver trap event.
../../src/gdbserver/../gdb/target/waitstatus.h:365: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.
sig: Assertion `m_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED || m_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED' failed.
Fix it in the obvious way, using target_waitstatus::to_string(),
resulting in, for example:
[threads] wait_1: ret = LWP 1542412.1542412, status->kind = STOPPED, sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
Change-Id: Ia4832f9b4fa39f4af67fcaf21fd4d909a285a645
2022-03-10 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add option to objdump/readelf to disable access to debuginfod servers.
* dwarf.c (use_debuginfod): New variable. Set to 1.
(load_separate_debug_info): Only call
debuginfod_fetch_separate_debug_info is use_debuginfod is true.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_names): Add do-not-use-debuginfod and
use-debuginfod options.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Add D and E options.
* dwarf.h (use_debuginfod): New extern.
* objdump.c (usage): Mention the new options.
* readelf.c (usage): Likewise.
* doc/binutils.texi: Document the new options.
* doc/debug-options.texi: Describe the new options.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfod.exp: Add tests of the new
options.
2022-03-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ld: Add a before_plugin_all_symbols_read hook
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28849.d: Adjust for powerpc64 function
descriptors.
2022-03-10 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Add a before_plugin_all_symbols_read hook
Add a before_plugin_all_symbols_read hook to load symbol references from
DT_NEEDED entries, included from --copy-dt-needed-entries, before reading
plugin symbols to properly resolve plugin symbol references.
bfd/
PR ld/28849
* elf-bfd.h (elf_link_hash_table): Add handling_dt_needed.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_merge_symbol): Don't set non_ir_ref_dynamic
before plugin 'all symbols read' hook is called.
ld/
PR ld/28849
* ldelf.c (ldelf_handle_dt_needed): New function.
(ldelf_before_plugin_all_symbols_read): Likewise.
(ldelf_after_open): Call ldelf_handle_dt_needed.
* ldelf.h (ldelf_before_plugin_all_symbols_read): New.
* ldemul.c (ldemul_before_plugin_all_symbols_read): Likewise.
* ldemul.h (ldemul_before_plugin_all_symbols_read): Likewise.
(ld_emulation_xfer_struct): Add before_plugin_all_symbols_read.
* ldlang.c (lang_process): Call
ldemul_before_plugin_all_symbols_read before calling
plugin_call_all_symbols_read.
* emultempl/elf.em
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_plugin_all_symbols_read): New.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_PLUGIN_ALL_SYMBOLS_READ): New.
* emultempl/emulation.em (ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation):
Initialize the before_plugin_all_symbols_read field.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run PR ld/28849 tests.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28849.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28849a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28849b.c: Likewise.
2022-03-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-09 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
toplevel: Makefile.def: Make configure-sim depend on all-readline
Without this, a "make all-sim" without the equivalent of
libreadline-dev installed on the build system, won't
properly pick up the in-tree readline build, and you'll see:
mkdir -p -- ./sim
Configuring in ./sim
configure: creating cache ./config.cache
checking build system type... x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
checking host system type... x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
checking target system type... cris-axis-elf
checking for x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-gcc... gcc
checking whether the C compiler works... yes
...
checking for library containing tgetent... -ltermcap
checking for readline in -lreadline... no
configure: error: the required "readline" library is missing
make[1]: *** [Makefile:11188: configure-sim] Error 1
make[1]: Leaving directory '/home/hp/sim/b'
The sim dependency on readline is apparently (nominally)
valid as there's a readline call in sim/erc32/sis.c.
2022-02-21 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
* Makefile.def (dependencies): Make configure-sim depend on
all-readline.
2022-03-09 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
GDB/testsuite: Fix a "displayed" typo in gdb.base/default.exp
Fix a typo, s/dislayed/displayed/ in default.exp at the top level.
GDB/testsuite: Remove a stray backslash from gdb.base/settings.exp
Remove a stray trailing backslash from `test-integer' in settings.exp.
It is harmless as only white space follows in the next line before the
closing brace, so it merely swallows the newline character, but it may
look confusing to the reader.
2022-03-09 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com> (tiny change)
* gdb/doc/gdb.texinfo (Requirements): Fix a typo.
2022-03-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Constant fold view increment expressions
The idea here is to replace expressions like v + 1 + 1 + 1 with v + 3.
* dwarf2dbg.c (set_or_check_view): Remove useless assertion.
Resolve multiple view increments.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf2-18.d: Don't xfail mep.
2022-03-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Reduce duplicated symbol_clone_if_forward_ref work
* symbol.c (struct symbol_flags): Add forward_resolved.
(symbol_entry_find): Update needle initialisation.
(symbol_clone_if_forward_ref): Do no work when forward_resolved
is already set. Set forward_resolved.
2022-03-09 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb: Try searching for auto-load script using .gnu_debuglink
If an auto-load script cannot be found and objfile is a separate
debuginfo whose filename does not match the name found in the parent
file's .gnu_debuglink section, then repeat the search using the
parent's filename where the last component is replaced with the
.gnu_debuglink name.
For example if the parent's filename is "/usr/lib/libxyz.so" and the
name in its .gnu_debuglink section is "libxyz.so.debug", then
if no auto-load script is otherwise found the search will be
repeated with the filename "/usr/lib/libxyz.so.debug".
This helps gdb locate auto-load scripts when debuginfo files do not have
the expected filename, such as when they are aquired from debuginfod.
2022-03-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-08 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
PR gdb/27876 - debuginfod-downloaded source files don't pass proper fullname across mi / (gdb)info source
Source files downloaded from debuginfod currently use their original DWARF
filename as their "fullname". This causes a mismatch between the fullname
and the actual location of the source file in the debuginfod client cache.
MI consumers such as VSCode will fail to open debuginfod-downloaded
source files due to this. Also 'info source' will fail to include the
true paths of these files.
To fix this, use the debuginfod cache path as the fullname for debuginfod-
downloaded source files.
2022-03-08 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/mi: preserve user selected thread and frame when invoking MI commands
Fix for PR gdb/20684. When invoking MI commands with --thread and/or
--frame, the user selected thread and frame was not preserved:
(gdb)
info thread
&"info thread\n"
~" Id Target Id Frame \n"
~"* 1 Thread 0x7ffff7c30740 (LWP 19302) \"user-selected-c\" main () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:60\n"
~" 2 Thread 0x7ffff7c2f700 (LWP 19306) \"user-selected-c\" child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30\n"
~" 3 Thread 0x7ffff742e700 (LWP 19307) \"user-selected-c\" child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30\n"
^done
(gdb)
info frame
&"info frame\n"
~"Stack level 0, frame at 0x7fffffffdf90:\n"
~" rip = 0x555555555207 in main (/home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:60); saved rip = 0x7ffff7c5709b\n"
~" source language c.\n"
~" Arglist at 0x7fffffffdf80, args: \n"
~" Locals at 0x7fffffffdf80, Previous frame's sp is 0x7fffffffdf90\n"
~" Saved registers:\n "
~" rbp at 0x7fffffffdf80, rip at 0x7fffffffdf88\n"
^done
(gdb)
-stack-info-depth --thread 3
^done,depth="4"
(gdb)
info thread
&"info thread\n"
~" Id Target Id Frame \n"
~" 1 Thread 0x7ffff7c30740 (LWP 19302) \"user-selected-c\" main () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:60\n"
~" 2 Thread 0x7ffff7c2f700 (LWP 19306) \"user-selected-c\" child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30\n"
~"* 3 Thread 0x7ffff742e700 (LWP 19307) \"user-selected-c\" child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30\n"
^done
(gdb)
info frame
&"info frame\n"
~"Stack level 0, frame at 0x7ffff742dee0:\n"
~" rip = 0x555555555169 in child_sub_function (/home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30); saved rip = 0x555555555188\n"
~" called by frame at 0x7ffff742df00\n"
~" source language c.\n"
~" Arglist at 0x7ffff742ded0, args: \n"
~" Locals at 0x7ffff742ded0, Previous frame's sp is 0x7ffff742dee0\n"
~" Saved registers:\n "
~" rbp at 0x7ffff742ded0, rip at 0x7ffff742ded8\n"
^done
(gdb)
This caused problems for frontends that provide access to CLI because UI
may silently change the context for CLI commands (as demonstrated above).
This commit fixes the problem by restoring thread and frame in
mi_cmd_execute (). With this change, there are only two GDB/MI commands
that can change user selected context: -thread-select and -stack-select-frame.
This allows us to remove all and rather complicated logic of notifying
about user selected context change from mi_execute_command (), leaving it
to these two commands themselves to notify.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20684
2022-03-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: announce upcoming removal of Python 2 support from gdb
As has been discussed here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-January/184910.html
Python 2 support will be removed from GDB after GDB 12 has branched.
This commit places an entry in the NEWS file to inform users of this
decision.
2022-03-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: add new test for comparing char types in Python
There's an interesting property of the 'char' type in C and C++, the
three types 'char', 'unsigned char', and 'signed char', are all
considered distinct.
In contrast, and 'int' is signed by default, and so 'int' and 'signed
int' are considered the same type.
This commit adds a test to ensure that this edge case is visible to a
user from Python.
It is worth noting that for any particular compiler implementation (or
the flags a compiler was invoked with), a 'char' will be either signed
or unsigned; it has to be one or the other, and a user can access this
information by using the Type.is_signed property. However, for
something like function overload resolution, the 'char' type is
considered distinct from the signed and unsigned variants.
There's no change to GDB with this commit, this is just adding a new
test to guard some existing functionality.
2022-03-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: add Type.is_signed property
Add a new read-only property, Type.is_signed, which is True for signed
types, and False otherwise.
This property should only be read on types for which Type.is_scalar is
true, attempting to read this property for non-scalar types will raise
a ValueError.
I chose 'is_signed' rather than 'is_unsigned' in order to match the
existing Architecture.integer_type method, which takes a 'signed'
parameter. As far as I could find, that was the only existing
signed/unsigned selector in the Python API, so it seemed reasonable to
stay consistent.
2022-03-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: add Type.is_scalar property
Add a new read-only property which is True for scalar types,
otherwise, it's False.
2022-03-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/mi: add --no-connection to MI -add-inferior command
Following on from the previous commit, where the -add-inferior command
now uses the same connection as the current inferior, this commit adds
a --no-connection option to -add-inferior.
This new option matches the existing option of the same name for the
CLI version of add-inferior; the new inferior is created with no
connection.
I've added a new 'connection' field to the MI output of -add-inferior,
which includes the connection number and short name. I haven't
included the longer description field, this is the MI after all. My
expectation would be that if the frontend wanted to display all the
connection details then this would be looked up from 'info
connection' (or the MI equivalent if/when such a command is added).
The existing -add-inferior tests are updated, as are the docs.
2022-03-07 Umair Sair <umair_sair@hotmail.com>
gdb/mi: fix regression in mi -add-inferior command
Prior to the multi-target support commit:
commit 5b6d1e4fa4fc6827c7b3f0e99ff120dfa14d65d2
Date: Fri Jan 10 20:06:08 2020 +0000
Multi-target support
When a new inferior was added using the MI -add-inferior command, the
new inferior would be using the same target as all the other
inferiors. This makes sense, GDB only supported a single target stack
at a time.
After the above commit, each inferior has its own target stack.
To maintain backward compatibility, for the CLI add-inferior command,
when a new inferior is added the above commit has the new inferior
inherit a copy of the target stack from the current inferior.
Unfortunately, this same backward compatibility is missing for the MI.
This commit fixes this oversight.
Now, when the -add-inferior MI command is used, the new inferior will
inherit a copy of the target stack from the current inferior.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Deprecate dbx mode
GDB has a dbx emulation mode that adds a few aliases and helper
commands. This mode is barely documented and is very superficial
besides. I suspect it is rarely used, and I would like to propose
deprecating it for GDB 12, and then removing it in GDB 13.
2022-03-07 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Remove unnecessary inferior lookup in infrun:handle_one
infrun.c:handle_one calls find_inferior_ptid unnecessarily, since we
already have a thread pointer handy, and the thread has a pointer to
the inferior. This commit removes the unnecessary lookup.
Change-Id: I2ae18601dd75346c6c91068e9a4f9a6484fb3339
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in ada_print_floating
ada_print_floating rewrites a floating-point string representation to
conform to Ada syntax. However, if you managed to get a floating
point error, you might see:
(gdb) print whatever
$2 = <invalid float valu.0e>
What's happening here is that ada_print_floating doesn't recognize
this error case, and proceeds to modify the error text.
This patch fixes this problem.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement real literal extension for Ada
Sometimes it is convenient to be able to specify the exact bits of a
floating-point literal. For example, you may want to set a
floating-point register to a denormalized value, or to a particular
NaN.
In C, you can do this by combining the "{}" cast with an array
literal, like:
(gdb) p {double}{0x576488BDD2AE9FFE}
$1 = 9.8765449999999996e+112
This patch adds a somewhat similar idea to Ada. It extends the lexer
to allow "l" and "f" suffixes in a based literal. The "f" indicates a
floating-point literal, and the "l"s control the size of the
floating-point type.
Note that this differs from Ada's based real literals. I believe
those can also be used to control the bits of a floating-point value,
but they are a bit more cumbersome to use (simplest is binary but
that's also very lengthy). Also, these aren't implemented in GDB.
I chose not to allow this extension to work with based integer
literals with exponents. That didn't seem very useful.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Ada integer literals with exponents
While working on another patch, I noticed that Ada integer literals
with exponents did not work. For example, with one form you get an
error:
(gdb) print 8e2
Invalid digit `e' in based literal
And with another form you get an incorrect value:
(gdb) print 16#8#e2
$2 = 8
This patch fixes the bugs and adds tests.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp results
PR ada/28115 points out that gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp works with GNAT 12,
but fails with minimal encodings in earlier versions.
This patch updates the test to try to report the results correctly. I
tried this with the Fedora 34 system gcc (GCC 11) and with a GCC 12
built from git trunk sometime relatively recently.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28115
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle non-ASCII identifiers in Ada
Ada allows non-ASCII identifiers, and GNAT supports several such
encodings. This patch adds the corresponding support to gdb.
GNAT encodes non-ASCII characters using special symbol names.
For character sets like Latin-1, where all characters are a single
byte, it uses a "U" followed by the hex for the character. So, for
example, thorn would be encoded as "Ufe" (0xFE being lower case
thorn).
For wider characters, despite what the manual says (it claims
Shift-JIS and EUC can be used), in practice recent versions only
support Unicode. Here, characters in the base plane are represented
using "Wxxxx" and characters outside the base plane using
"WWxxxxxxxx".
GNAT has some further quirks here. Ada is case-insensitive, and GNAT
emits symbols that have been case-folded. For characters in ASCII,
and for all characters in non-Unicode character sets, lower case is
used. For Unicode, however, characters that fit in a single byte are
converted to lower case, but all others are converted to upper case.
Furthermore, there is a bug in GNAT where two symbols that differ only
in the case of "Y WITH DIAERESIS" (and potentially others, I did not
check exhaustively) can be used in one program. I chose to omit
handling this case from gdb, on the theory that it is hard to figure
out the logic, and anyway if the bug is ever fixed, we'll regret
having a heuristic.
This patch introduces a new "ada source-charset" setting. It defaults
to Latin-1, as that is GNAT's default. This setting controls how "U"
characters are decoded -- W/WW are always handled as UTF-32.
The ada_tag_name_from_tsd change is needed because this function will
read memory from the inferior and interpret it -- and this caused an
encoding failure on PPC when running a test that tries to read
uninitialized memory.
This patch implements its own UTF-32-based case folder. This avoids
host platform quirks, and is relatively simple. A short Python
program to generate the case-folding table is included. It simply
relies on whatever version of Unicode is used by the host Python,
which seems basically acceptable.
Test cases for UTF-8, Latin-1, and Latin-3 are included. This
exercises most of the new code paths, aside from Y WITH DIAERESIS as
noted above.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Define HOST_UTF32 in charset.h
rust-parse.c has a #define for the host-specific UTF-32 charset name.
A later patch needs the same thing, so this patch moves the definition
to charset.h for easier reuse.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Let phex and phex_nz handle sizeof_l==1
Currently, neither phex nor phex_nz handle sizeof_l==1 -- they let
this case fall through to the default case. However, a subsequent
patch in this series needs this case to work correctly.
I looked at all calls to these functions that pass a 1 for the
sizeof_l parameter. The only such case seems to be correct with this
change.
2022-03-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Don't pre-size result string in ada_decode
Currently, ada_decode pre-sizes the output string, filling it with 'X'
characters. However, it's a bit simpler and more flexible to let
std::string do the work here, and simply append characters to the
string as we go. This turns out to be useful for a subsequent patch.
Simplify a regular expression in ada-lex.l
ada-lex.l uses "%option case-insensitive", so there is no need for
regular expressions to match upper case.
2022-03-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-06 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk>
MIPS/opcodes: Fix alias annotation for branch instructions
Correct issues with INSN2_ALIAS annotation for branch instructions:
- regular MIPS BEQZ/L and BNEZ/L assembly instructions are idioms for
BEQ/L and BNE/L respectively with the `rs' operand equal to $0,
- microMIPS 32-bit BEQZ and BNEZ assembly instructions are idioms for
BEQ and BNE respectively with the `rt' operand equal to $0,
- regular MIPS BAL assembly instruction is an idiom for architecture
levels of up to the MIPSr5 ISA and a machine instruction on its own
from the MIPSr6 ISA up.
Add missing annotation to BEQZ/L and BNEZ/L accordingly then and add a
new entry for BAL for the MIPSr6 ISA, correcting a disassembly bug:
$ mips-linux-gnu-objdump -m mips:isa64r6 -M no-aliases -d bal.o
bal.o: file format elf32-tradlittlemips
Disassembly of section .text:
00000000 <foo>:
0: 04110000 0x4110000
...
$
Add test cases accordingly.
Parts for regular MIPS BEQZ/L and BNEZ/L instructions from Sagar Patel.
2022-03-06 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk>
binutils/
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips1-branch-alias.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips1-branch-noalias.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips2-branch-alias.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips2-branch-noalias.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips32r6-branch-alias.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips32r6-branch-noalias.d: New
test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/micromips-branch-alias.d: New
test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/micromips-branch-noalias.d: New
test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips-branch-alias.s: New test
source.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/micromips-branch-alias.s: New test
source.
* testsuite/binutils-all/mips/mips.exp: Run the new tests.
2022-03-06 Sagar Patel <sagarmp@cs.unc.edu>
Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk>
opcodes/
* mips-opc.c (mips_builtin_opcodes): Fix INSN2_ALIAS annotation
for "bal", "beqz", "beqzl", "bnez" and "bnezl" instructions.
* micromips-opc.c (micromips_opcodes): Likewise for "beqz" and
"bnez" instructions.
2022-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use function view when iterating over block symbols
This changes iterate_over_block_local_vars and
iterate_over_block_arg_vars to take a gdb::function_view rather than a
function pointer and a user-data. In one spot, this allows us to
remove a helper structure and helper function. In another spot, this
looked more complicated, so I changed the helper function to be an
"operator()" -- also a simplification, just not as big.
2022-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify hppa-tdep.c use of objfile_key
I happened to notice a couple of unnecessary casts in hppa-tdep.c, and
then I saw that the use of objfile_key could be simplified -- removing
some code and using the default deleter rather than noop_deleter.
Tested by rebuilding. Let me know what you think.
2022-03-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: constify parameter of value_copy
In a following patch, I have a const value I want to copy using a
value_copy. However, value_copy takes a non-const source value, at the
moment. Change the paramter to be const,
If the source value is not lazy, we currently call
value_contents_all_raw, which calls allocate_value_contents, to get a
view on the contents. They both take a non-const value, that's a
problem. My first attempt at solving it was to add a const version of
value_contents_all_raw, make allocate_value_contents take a const value,
and either:
- make value::contents mutable
- make allocate_value_contents cast away the const
The idea being that allocating the value contents buffer does modify the
value at the bit level, but logically that doesn't change its state.
That was getting a bit complicated, so what I ended up doing is make
value_copy not call value_contents_all_raw. We know at this point that
the value is not lazy, so value::contents must have been allocate
already.
Change-Id: I3741ab362bce14315f712ec24064ccc17e3578d4
2022-03-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove internalvar_funcs::destroy
No kind of internal var uses it remove it. This makes the transition to
using a variant easier, since we don't need to think about where this
should be called (in a destructor or not), if it can throw, etc.
Change-Id: Iebbc867d1ce6716480450d9790410d6684cbe4dd
2022-03-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Mark vDSO as not a file
The vDSO objfile is not a real file, so mark it as such. I noticed
this because, when playing with debuginfod, I saw:
Downloading 0.01 MB separate debug info for /tmp/system-supplied DSO at 0x7ffff7fc9000
That "/tmp" is wrong -- it's just gdb's cwd. This patch corrects the
problem, resulting in:
Downloading 0.01 MB separate debug info for system-supplied DSO at 0x7ffff7fc9000
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-03-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
binutils/readelf: fix indentation in process_dynamic_section
Clangd shows a warning about misleading indentation in this file, fix
it.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (process_dynamic_section): Fix indentation.
Change-Id: I43a7f4f4c75dd080af614222b980526f5debf297
2022-03-04 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
gdb: Use a typedef's scoped type name to identify local typedefs
GDB prints the wrong type for typedefs in case there is another typedef
available for the same raw type (gdb/16040). The reason is that the
current hashmap based substitution mechanism always compares the target
type of a typedef and not its scoped name.
The original output of GDB for a program like
~~~~
namespace ns
{
typedef double scoped_double;
}
typedef double global_double;
class TypedefHolder
{
public:
double a;
ns::scoped_double b;
global_double c;
private:
typedef double class_double;
class_double d;
double method1(ns::scoped_double) { return 24.0; }
double method2(global_double) { return 24.0; }
};
int main()
{
TypedefHolder th;
return 0;
}
~~~~
is
~~~~
(gdb) b 27
Breakpoint 1 at 0x1131: file TypedefHolder.cc, line 27.
(gdb) r
Starting program: /tmp/typedefholder
Breakpoint 1, main () at TypedefHolder.cc:27
27 return 0;
(gdb) ptype th
type = class TypedefHolder {
public:
class_double a;
class_double b;
class_double c;
private:
class_double d;
class_double method1(class_double);
class_double method2(class_double);
typedef double class_double;
}
~~~~
Basically all attributes of a class which have the raw type "double" are
substituted by "class_double".
With the patch the output is the following
~~~~
type = class TypedefHolder {
public:
double a;
ns::scoped_double b;
global_double c;
private:
class_double d;
double method1(ns::scoped_double);
double method2(global_double);
typedef double class_double;
}
~~~~
2022-03-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
RISC-V: make .insn actually work for 64-bit insns
Presently in this case, due to an undefined behavior shift, at least
with x86 cross builds I'm observing:
Error: value conflicts with instruction length `8,0x0000003f'
Eliminate the UB and extend the respective testcase.
2022-03-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop redundant x86-64-code16-2 test
The code16-2 test is already meaningless enough as a gas test, identical
to this one, and is run uniformly for all ELF targets anyway.
2022-03-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-03 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
Fix typo in last change.
2022-03-03 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
Avoid conflict with gnulib open/close macros.
On some systems, the gnulib configuration will decide to define open
and/or close as macros to replace the POSIX C functions. This
interferes with using those names in C++ class or namespace scopes.
gdbsupport/
* event-pipe.cc (event_pipe::open): Renamed to ...
(event_pipe::open_pipe): ... this.
(event_pipe::close): Renamed to ...
(event_pipe::close_pipe): ... this.
* event-pipe.h (class event_pipe): Updated.
gdb/
* inf-ptrace.h (async_file_open, async_file_close): Updated.
gdbserver/
* gdbserver/linux-low.cc (linux_process_target::async): Likewise.
2022-03-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Adjust ld ctf test for 32-bit targets
powerpc-linux, and I suspect other 32-bit targets, report "aligned at
0x4" for this test.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable.d: Accept any alignment.
2022-03-03 Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Update my e-mail address in the MAINTAINERS file
Update the information accordingly.
2022-03-03 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: fix failed testcases in gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp
When execute the following command:
make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp"
we can see there exist some failed testcases:
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 0: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 1: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 2: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 3: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 4: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 5: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 6: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 7: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 8: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 9: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
here are the detailed messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log:
attach 873776
A program is being debugged already. Kill it? (y or n) n
Not killed.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: can_spawn_for_attach: 0: can spawn for attach (got interactive prompt)
so handle the case "A program is being debugged already. Kill it" in
can_spawn_for_attach to fix the failed testcases.
2022-03-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
comment typo fix
2022-03-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 DT_RELR relative reloc addresses
Section addresses can change between ppc64_elf_size_stubs and
ppc64_elf_build_stubs due to .eh_frame editing. The idea of stashing
r_offset final addresses calculated in ppc64_elf_size_stubs for use by
ppc64_elf_build_stubs was never a good idea. Instead, we need to keep
section/offset pairs.
* elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_link_hash_table): Delete relr_addr.
Add relr section/offset array.
(append_relr_off): Rewrite. Update all callers.
(sort_relr): New function.
(ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Adjust to suit new relative reloc stash.
(ppc64_elf_build_stubs): Likewise.
2022-03-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-02 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
configure: Stop checking for PT_GETXMMREGS.
This request is present on all modern *BSD/i386 systems (those
released since mid-2006), and the *BSD/i386 targets now assume it is
present unconditionally.
i386-bsd-nat: Assume PT_GETXMMREGS is present.
NetBSD has included PT_GETXMMREGS since 1.6 released in September
2002. OpenBSD has included PT_GETXMMREGS since 3.8 released in
November 2005.
i386-fbsd-nat: Assume PT_GETXMMREGS is present.
PT_GETXMMREGS was first added in FreeBSD 6.0 released in November 2005.
The last FreeBSD release without support was 5.5 released in May 2006.
2022-03-02 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-tdep: Implement the vsyscall_range gdbarch hook.
FreeBSD recently added a real vDSO in its shared page for the amd64
architecture. The vDSO is mapped at the address given by the
AT_KPRELOAD ELF auxiliary vector entry. To find the end of the
mapping range, parse the list of virtual map entries used by 'info
proc mappings' either from the NT_PROCSTAT_VMMAP core dump note, or
via the kinfo_getvmmap function for native targets (fetched from the
native target as the TARGET_OBJECT_FREEBSD_VMMAP object).
This silences warnings on recent FreeBSD/amd64 kernels due to not
finding symbols for the vdso:
warning: Could not load shared library symbols for [vdso].
Do you need "set solib-search-path" or "set sysroot"?
2022-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Rewrite make-target-delegates in Python
I think gdb is probably better off having fewer languages involved
when generating code. 'sh' is unavoidable for build-time generation,
but for other things, let's use Python.
This rewrites make-target-delegates in Python. I've stuck pretty
closely to the original code in this rewrite, so it may look slightly
weird from a Python perspective.
The only output difference is that a copyright header is now
generated, using the code introduced in the previous patch.
make-target-delegates.py is simpler to invoke, as it knows the correct
input file to scan and it creates the output file itself.
2022-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Move copyright code from gdbarch.py to new file
This moves the copyright code from gdbarch.py to a new Python source
file, gdbcopyright.py. The function in this file will find the
copyright dates by scanning the calling script. This will be reused
in a future patch.
This involved minor changes to the output of gdbarch.py. Also, I've
updated copyright.py to remove the reference to gdbarch.sh. We don't
need to mention gdbarch.py there, either.
2022-03-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-03-01 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Some "distclean" fixes in gdb
PR build/12440 points out that "make distclean" is broken in gdb.
Most of the breakage comes from other projects in the tree, but we can
fix some of the issues, which is what this patch does.
Note that the yacc output files, like c-exp.c, are left alone. In a
source distribution, these are included in the tarball, and if the
user builds in-tree, we would not want to remove them.
While that seems a bit obscure, it seems to me that "distclean" is
only really useful for in-tree builds anyway -- out-of-tree I simply
delete the entire build directory and start over.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12440
2022-03-01 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix typo in the "alias" example
PR cli/17332, filed around 8 years ago, points out a typo in the docs
-- in one example, the command and its output are obviously out of
sync. This patch fixes it. I'm checking this in as obvious.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17332
2022-03-01 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix a typo in the previous delta to bfdio.c.
PR 25713
* bfdio.c (_bfd_real_fopen): Fix typo.
2022-03-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert "Check thin archive element file size against archive header"
This reverts commit 48e3e6aec8a4f37d00ea6c0da3ab45e76490e3db.
PR 28929
* archive.c (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Don't check thin archive
element file size.
2022-03-01 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix linker tests to compile with gcc-12.
PR 21964
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-1a.c: Fix array comparisons.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-1b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-1c.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-2a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-2b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr21964-3a.c: Likewise.
Prevent an assertion from being triggered when linking an ARM object file with incorrectly set build attributes.
PR 28848
PR 28859
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_merge_eabi_attributes): If the first
input bfd has a Tag_ABI_HardFP_use set to 3 but does not also have
TAG_FP_arch set then reset the TAG_ABI_HardFP_use.
2022-03-01 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: fix wrong expected result in attach-pie-noexec.exp
If /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope is 1, when execute the test case
gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp without superuser, the gdb.log shows the
following info:
(gdb) attach 6500
Attaching to process 6500
ptrace: Operation not permitted.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp: attach
It is obviously wrong, the expected result should be UNSUPPORTED in such
a case.
It is better to make can_spawn_for_attach to return false for this case.
It would have to setup a small test program, compile it to exec, spawn it
and try to attach to it.
With this patch, we can see "Operation not permitted" in the log info,
and then we can do the following processes to test:
(1) set ptrace_scope as 0
$ echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp"
(2) use sudo
$ sudo make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp"
Additionally, handle the other cases when test with RUNTESTFLAGS=
"--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver".
2022-03-01 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: print explicit test result in can_spawn_for_attach
In the current code, there is no test result when execute the following
commands:
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=remote-gdbserver-on-localhost"
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/attach-pie-noexec.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
It is better to print explicit test result in can_spawn_for_attach.
2022-03-01 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: add Tiezhu Yang as LoongArch maintainer
The patch series "gdb: Add basic support for LoongArch" has been
merged into master, list Tiezhu Yang as LoongArch maintainer.
2022-03-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-28 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Fix "spawn id XYZ not open" errors in gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp
Running mi-exec-run.exp on native-extended-gdbserver/-m{32,64}
causes several Tcl errors to appear. For example,
(gdb)
ERROR: : spawn id exp20 not open
while executing
"expect {
-i exp11 -timeout 10
-i "$inferior_spawn_id"
-re ".*Cannot exec.*Permission denied" {
set saw_perm_error 1
verbose -log "saw..."
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel $body" NONE : spawn id exp20 not open
UNRESOLVED: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=separate: mi=separate: force-fail=1: run failure detected (eof)
This is happening because of the way this test is implemented:
while {1} {
gdb_expect {
-i "$inferior_spawn_id"
-re ".*Cannot exec.*Permission denied" {
set saw_perm_error 1
verbose -log "saw mi error"
}
-i "$gdb_spawn_id"
-re "\\^error,msg=\"During startup program exited with code 127" {
set saw_mi_error 1
verbose -log "saw mi error"
}
# and so on
}
}
The first time this loop is executed, `inferior_spawn_id' is valid. When the
first branch of the expect statement is reached, gdbserver has exited, closing
the spawn_id. Since we haven't seen the gdb-side error yet, the loop is executed
again. The first branch now refers to a non-existent spawn_id, leading to the error.
This can be fixed by using exp_continue to loop in expect instead of looping around
expect, which is the approach I have used[1]. Note I've had to update the expected
message for the "During startup..." error message when running with gdbserver.
One other small change I've made is to add a log entry which spills the values of
the two variables, saw_mi_error and saw_perm_error (and updated the log output
for the later). This should make the log output clearer about why the test failed.
With this patch installed, all the ERRORs disappear, leaving previously masked
FAILs (which I have not attempted to fix).
[1] Anyone know why this test doesn't simply use gdb_test_multiple? I can only
assume that it was intentionally written this way, and I've modified the code with
that assumption. I have tested a version using gdb_test_multiple, and that appears
to work fine, too, if that is preferred. [It still employs exp_continue to fix the
spawn_id errors.]
2022-02-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add more filename styling
I found a few spots where filename styling ought to be applied, but is
not.
2022-02-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix maybe-uninitialized warning in py-infthread.c
I got this warning from py-infthread.c using the Fedora 34 system GCC:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/python/py-infthread.c:102:30: warning: extra_info may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
I think this happens because GDB_PY_HANDLE_EXCEPTION expands to an
'if' whose condition is always true -- but GCC can't know this. This
patch avoids the warning by adding a harmless initialization.
2022-02-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle multi-byte bracket sequences in Ada lexer
As noted in an earlier patch, the Ada lexer does not handle multi-byte
bracket sequences. This patch adds support for these for character
literals. gdb does not generally seem to handle the Ada wide string
types, so for the time being these continue to be excluded -- but an
explicit error is added to make this more clear.
2022-02-28 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle 'QWW' encoding case in Ada enums
In Ada, an enum can contain character literals. GNAT encodes these
values in a special way. For example, the Unicode character U+0178
would be represented as 'QW0178' in the DWARF:
<3><112f>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_enumerator)
<1130> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x19ff): QW0178
<1134> DW_AT_const_value : 2
gdb handles this reasonably well, but failed to handle the 'QWW'
encoding, which is used for characters outside the base plane.
Also, while working on this, I noticed that gdb will print the decimal
value for an enum character constant:
(gdb) print Char_X
$2 = 1 'x'
This is a nice feature, IMO, because in this situation the 'x' enum
constant does not have its usual decimal value -- it has the value
that's assigned based on the enumeration type.
However, gdb did not do this when it decided to print the constant
using the bracket notation:
(gdb) print Char_Thorn
$3 = ["de"]
This patch changes gdb to print the decimal value here as well, and to
put the bracket notation in single quotes -- otherwise gdb will be
printing something that it can't then read. Now it looks like:
(gdb) print Char_Thorn
$3 = 4 '["de"]'
Note that gdb can't read longer bracket notations, like the other ones
printed in this test case:
(gdb) print Char_King
$4 = 3 '["01fa00"]'
While I think this is a bug, I plan to fix it separately.
Finally, in the new test case, the copyright dates are chosen this way
because this all started as a copy of an existing test.
2022-02-28 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: Add gdb.InferiorThread.details attribute
This adds a new read-only attribute gdb.InferiorThread.details, this
attribute contains a string, the results of target_extra_thread_info
for the thread, or None, if target_extra_thread_info returns nullptr.
As the string returned by target_extra_thread_info is unstructured,
this attribute is only really useful for echoing straight through to
the user, but, if a user wants to write a command that displays the
same, or a similar 'Thread Id' to the one seen in 'info threads', then
they need access to this string.
Given that the string produced by target_extra_thread_info varies by
target, there's only minimal testing of this attribute, I check that
the attribute can be accessed, and that the return value is either
None, or a string.
2022-02-28 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Error when gdb_is_target_1 is called without running gdb instance
This is a snafu that I encountered while implementing the previous
patch, which attempted to use gdb_is_target_native. This proc and
gdb_is_target_remote both rely on gdb_is_target_1, which actually
cannot be called without gdb already running.
This patch adds appropriate warning comments to these procs and
causes gdb_is_target_1 to issue a Tcl error if it is called without a
gdb instance already running. This should prevent unwitting callers
from using this at the wrong time.
2022-02-28 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Fix gdb.fortran "failed to extract expected results" errors
When running the gdb.fortran tests array-slices.exp and lbound-ubound.exp,
the test suite throws several ERRORs on native-gdbserver/-m{32,64},
and native-extended-gdbsever/-m{32,64}:
[on native-extended-gdbserver/-m64]
Running /home/keiths/work/gdb/branches/testsuite-errors/linux/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.fortran/array-slices.exp ...
ERROR: failed to extract expected results
ERROR: failed to extract expected results
Running /home/keiths/work/gdb/branches/testsuite-errors/linux/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.fortran/lbound-ubound.exp ...
ERROR: failed to extract expected results for lbound
This occurs because the tests require inferior I/O which we do not have
access to while using these targets.
This patch skips these tests when running on non-native targets.
2022-02-28 Torbj?rn Svensson <torbjorn.svensson@st.com>
Further correct the handling of long pathnames on Windows hosts.
PR 25713
* bfdio.c (_bfd_real_fopen): Fix handling of parhs longer than 260
characters on Windows hosts.
2022-02-28 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Clarify the wording of the error message when an obsolete configuration is encountered.
PR 28886
* config.bfd: Update error message for obsolete configurations.
2022-02-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-26 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Handle recursive internal problem in gdb_internal_error_resync
I came across this problem when testing gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp
on a machine with a pre-release version of glib-2.34 installed:
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) Recursive internal problem.
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: expect eof #0 (GDB internal error)
Resyncing due to internal error.
ERROR: : spawn id exp11 not open
while executing
"expect {
-i exp11 -timeout 10
-re "Quit this debugging session\\? \\(y or n\\) $" {
send_gdb "n\n" answer
incr count
}
-re "Create..."
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel $body" NONE : spawn id exp11 not open
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (timeout)
gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: expect eof #0: stepped 9 times
UNRESOLVED: gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: 50 SIGTERM passes
I don't have a problem with the latter ERROR nor the UNRESOLVED
messages. However the first ERROR regarding the exp11 spawn id
not being open is not especially useful.
This commit handles the "Recursive internal problem" case, avoiding
the problematic ERROR shown above.
With this commit in place, the log messages look like this instead:
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) Recursive internal problem.
FAIL: gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: expect eof #15 (GDB internal error)
Resyncing due to internal error.
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (recursive internal problem)
gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: expect eof #15: stepped 12 times
UNRESOLVED: gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: 50 SIGTERM passes
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_internal_error_resync): Handle "Recursive
internal problem".
2022-02-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-25 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb-add-index: disable debuginfod
gdb-add-index may trigger debuginfod's first-use notice. The notice
is misleading in this case. It instructs the user to modify .gdbinit
in order to permanently enable/disable debuginfod but gdb-add-index
invokes gdb with -nx which ignores .gdbinit.
Additionally debuginfod is not needed for gdb-add-index since the
symbol file is given as an argument and should already be present
locally.
Fix this by disabling debuginfod when gdb-add-index invokes gdb.
2022-02-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add operator+= and operator+ overload for std::string
This commit adds operator+= and operator+ overloads for adding
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> to a std::string. I could only find 3
places in GDB where this was useful right now, and these all make use
of operator+=.
I've also added a self test for gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>, which
makes use of both operator+= and operator+, so they are both getting
used/tested.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit, except when
running 'maint selftest', where the new self test is visible.
2022-02-25 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Print MI prompt on interrupted command
Joel noticed that if the remote dies unexpectedly during a command --
you can simulate this by using "continue" and then killing gdbserver
-- then the CLI will print a new prompt, but MI will not. Later, we
found out that this was also filed in bugzilla as PR mi/23820.
The output looks something like this:
| (gdb)
| cont
| &"cont\n"
| ~"Continuing.\n"
| ^running
| *running,thread-id="all"
| (gdb)
| [... some output from GDB during program startup...]
| =thread-exited,id="1",group-id="i1"
| =thread-group-exited,id="i1"
| &"Remote connection closed\n"
Now, what about that "(gdb)" in the middle?
That prompt comes from this questionable code in
mi-interp.c:mi_on_resume_1:
/* This is what gdb used to do historically -- printing prompt
even if it cannot actually accept any input. This will be
surely removed for MI3, and may be removed even earlier. */
if (current_ui->prompt_state == PROMPT_BLOCKED)
fputs_unfiltered ("(gdb) \n", mi->raw_stdout);
... which seems like something to remove. But maybe the intent here
is that this prompt is sufficient, and MI clients must be ready to
handle output coming after a prompt. On the other hand, if this code
*is* removed, then nothing would print a prompt in this scenario.
Anyway, the CLI and the TUI handle emitting the prompt here by hooking
into gdb::observers::command_error, but MI doesn't install an observer
here.
This patch adds the missing observer and arranges to show the MI
prompt. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
It seems like this area could be improved a bit, by having
start_event_loop call the prompt-displaying code directly, rather than
indirecting through an observer. However, I haven't done this.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23820
2022-02-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix list.exp test cases
PR testsuite/7142 -- old enough to have been converted from Gnats --
points out that test_list_filename_and_function in gdb.base/list.exp
has "fails" that are unmatched with passes. This patch cleans this up
a little.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7142
2022-02-25 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Remove a loop in the ISA parser
Since commit e601909a3287bf541c6a7d82214bb387d2c76d82 ("RISC-V: Support
to parse the multi-letter prefix in the architecture string.") changed
so that all prefixed extensions are parsed in single
riscv_parse_prefixed_ext call, a "while" loop on riscv_parse_subset
is no longer required.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_subset): Remove unnecessary loop.
2022-02-25 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Fix mask for some fcvt instructions
This commit fixes incorrect uses of mask values in 'fcvt' instruction
family.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Fix incorrect uses of mask values
in 'fcvt' instruction family.
2022-02-25 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Support template lookups in strncmp_iw_with_mode
This patch adds support for wild template parameter list matches, similar
to how ABI tags or function overloads are now handled.
With this patch, users will be able to "gloss over" the details of matching
template parameter lists. This is accomplished by adding (yet more) logic
to strncmp_iw_with_mode to skip parameter lists if none is explicitly given
by the user.
Here's a simple example using gdb.linespec/cpls-ops.exp:
Before
------
(gdb) ptype test_op_call
type = struct test_op_call {
public:
void operator()(void);
void operator()(int);
void operator()(long);
void operator()<int>(int *);
}
(gdb) b test_op_call::operator()
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (3 locations)
(gdb) i b
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int)
at cpls-ops.cc:43
1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()()
at cpls-ops.cc:47
1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long)
at cpls-ops.cc:51
The breakpoint at test_op_call::operator()<int> was never set.
After
-----
(gdb) b test_op_call::operator()
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (4 locations)
(gdb) i b
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int)
at cpls-ops.cc:43
1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()()
at cpls-ops.cc:47
1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long)
at cpls-ops.cc:51
1.4 y 0x4008d0 in test_op_call::operator()<int>(int*)
at cpls-ops.cc:57
Similar to how scope lookups work, passing "-qualified" to the break command
will cause a literal lookup of the symbol. In the example immediately above,
this will cause GDB to only find the three non-template functions.
2022-02-25 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Unit tests for strncmp_iw_with_mode
This patch attempts to make a start at adding unit tests for
strncmp_iw_with_mode. While there is quite a bit of testing
of this function in other tests, these are currently end-to-end
tests.
This patch attempts to cover the basics of string matching, white
space, C++ ABI tags, and several other topics. However, one area
that is ostensibly missing is testing the `match_for_lcd' feature.
This is otherwise tested as part of our end-to-end DejaGNU-based
testing.
2022-02-25 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Move find_toplevel_char to cp-support.[ch]
find_toplevel_char is being used more and more outside of linespec.c, so
this patch moves it into cp-support.[ch].
2022-02-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Fix crash in Fortran code
PR fortran/28801 points out a gdb crash that can be provoked by
certain Fortran code. The bug is that f77_get_upperbound assumes the
property is either a constant or undefined, but in this case it is
PROP_LOCEXPR.
This patch fixes the crash by making this function (and the
lower-bound one as well) do the correct check before calling
'const_val'.
Thanks to Andrew for writing the test case.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28801
2022-02-24 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Revert "do_target_wait_1: Clear TARGET_WNOHANG if the target isn't async."
Commit 14b3360508b1 ("do_target_wait_1: Clear
TARGET_WNOHANG if the target isn't async.") broke some multi-target
tests, such as gdb.multi/multi-target-info-inferiors.exp. The symptom
is that execution just hangs at some point. What happens is:
1. One remote inferior is started, and now sits stopped at a breakpoint.
It is not "async" at this point (but it "can async").
2. We run a native inferior, the event loop gets woken up by the native
target's fd.
3. In do_target_wait, we randomly choose an inferior to call target_wait
on first, it happens to be the remote inferior.
4. Because the target is currently not "async", we clear
TARGET_WNOHANG, resulting in synchronous wait. We therefore block
here:
#0 0x00007fe9540dbb4d in select () from /usr/lib/libc.so.6
#1 0x000055fc7e821da7 in gdb_select (n=15, readfds=0x7ffdb77c1fb0, writefds=0x0, exceptfds=0x7ffdb77c2050, timeout=0x7ffdb77c1f90) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/posix-hdep.c:31
#2 0x000055fc7ddef905 in interruptible_select (n=15, readfds=0x7ffdb77c1fb0, writefds=0x0, exceptfds=0x7ffdb77c2050, timeout=0x7ffdb77c1f90) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/event-top.c:1134
#3 0x000055fc7eda58e4 in ser_base_wait_for (scb=0x6250002e4100, timeout=1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:240
#4 0x000055fc7eda66ba in do_ser_base_readchar (scb=0x6250002e4100, timeout=-1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:365
#5 0x000055fc7eda6ff6 in generic_readchar (scb=0x6250002e4100, timeout=-1, do_readchar=0x55fc7eda663c <do_ser_base_readchar(serial*, int)>) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:444
#6 0x000055fc7eda718a in ser_base_readchar (scb=0x6250002e4100, timeout=-1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-base.c:471
#7 0x000055fc7edb1ecd in serial_readchar (scb=0x6250002e4100, timeout=-1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/serial.c:393
#8 0x000055fc7ec48b8f in remote_target::readchar (this=0x617000038780, timeout=-1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:9446
#9 0x000055fc7ec4da82 in remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (this=0x617000038780, buf=0x6170000387a8, forever=1, expecting_notif=1, is_notif=0x7ffdb77c24f0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:9928
#10 0x000055fc7ec4f045 in remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane (this=0x617000038780, buf=0x6170000387a8, forever=1, is_notif=0x7ffdb77c24f0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:10037
#11 0x000055fc7ec354d4 in remote_target::wait_ns (this=0x617000038780, ptid=..., status=0x7ffdb77c33c8, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:8147
#12 0x000055fc7ec38aa1 in remote_target::wait (this=0x617000038780, ptid=..., status=0x7ffdb77c33c8, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote.c:8337
#13 0x000055fc7f1409ce in target_wait (ptid=..., status=0x7ffdb77c33c8, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2612
#14 0x000055fc7e19da98 in do_target_wait_1 (inf=0x617000038080, ptid=..., status=0x7ffdb77c33c8, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3636
#15 0x000055fc7e19e26b in operator() (__closure=0x7ffdb77c2f90, inf=0x617000038080) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3697
#16 0x000055fc7e19f0c4 in do_target_wait (ecs=0x7ffdb77c33a0, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3716
#17 0x000055fc7e1a31f7 in fetch_inferior_event () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4061
Before the aforementioned commit, we would not have cleared
TARGET_WNOHANG, the remote target's wait would have returned nothing,
and we would have consumed the native target's event.
After applying this revert, the testsuite state looks as good as before
for me on Ubuntu 20.04 amd64.
Change-Id: Ic17a1642935cabcc16c25cb6899d52e12c2f5c3f
2022-02-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: use a range based for loop when iterating over an array
Make use of a range based for loop to iterate over a static global
array, removing the need to have a null entry at the end of the
array.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-02-24 Dominique Quatravaux <dominique.quatravaux@epfl.ch>
Louis-He <1726110778@qq.com>
Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
gdb/darwin: skip over WIFSTOPPED wait4 status
On modern Darwin's, there appears to be a new circumstance in which a
MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME message can be received, and which was not
previously accounted for: to signal the WIFSTOPPED condition in the
debuggee. In that case the debuggee is not dead yet (and in fact,
counting it as dead would cause a zombie leak - A process in such a
state reparents to PID 1, but cannot be killed).
- Read and ignore such messages (counting on the next exception message
to let us know of the inferior's new state again)
- Refactor logging so as to clearly distinguish between the
MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME cases (WIFEXITED, WIFSTOPPED, signal, or
something else), and warn in the last case
Change-Id: Ie86904a894e9bd154e6b674b1bfbfbaee7fde3e1
2022-02-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/linux-tdep: move "Perms" column right
Commit 29ef4c0699e1 ("gdb/linux-tdep.c: Add Perms to the 'info proc
mappings' output") has broken test gdb.base/info-proc.exp on Linux,
because it changes the output of "info proc mappings" in a way that the
test does not expect (my bad for not testing before pushing).
I looked at how FreeBSD handles this, since I remembered it did show
permission flags. It looks like this:
Start Addr End Addr Size Offset Flags File
0x200000 0x243000 0x43000 0x0 r-- CN-- /usr/local/bin/tmux
(I think that `Flags` and the flags not being aligned is not
intentional)
The test passes on FreeBSD, because the test looks for four hex numbers
in a row and ignores the rest:
".*Mapped address spaces:.*${hex}${ws}${hex}${ws}${hex}${ws}${hex}.*"
I suggest fixing it on Linux by moving the flags column to the same
place as in the FreeBSD output. It makes things a bit more consistent
between OSes, and we don't have to touch the test.
At the same time, make use of the actual length of the permission's
string to specify the number of characters to print.
Before this patch, the output looks like:
Start Addr End Addr Perms Size Offset objfile
0x55dd4b544000 0x55dd4b546000 r--p 0x2000 0x0 /usr/bin/sleep
and after, it looks like:
Start Addr End Addr Size Offset Perms objfile
0x5622ae662000 0x5622ae664000 0x2000 0x0 r--p /usr/bin/sleep
Change-Id: If0fc167b010b25f97a3c54e2f491df4973ccde8f
2022-02-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/linux-tdep: make read_mapping return a structure
Change read_mapping to return a structure instead of taking many output
parameters. Change the string + length output parameters (permissions
and device) to be gdb::string_view, since that's what string_view is
for (a non-NULL terminated view on a string). No changes in behavior
expected.
Change-Id: I86e627d84d3dda8c9b835592b0f4de8d90d12112
2022-02-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-23 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in C++ overload resolution
PR c++/28901 points out a bug in C++ overload resolution. When
comparing two overloads, one might be better than the other for
certain parameters -- but, if that one also has some invalid
conversion, then it should never be considered the better choice.
Instead, a valid-but-not-apparently-quite-as-good overload should be
preferred.
This patch fixes this problem by changing how overload comparisons are
done. I don't believe it should affect any currently valid overload
resolution; nor should it affect resolutions where all the choices are
equally invalid.
2022-02-23 Dominik 'Disconnect3d' Czarnota <dominik.b.czarnota@gmail.com>
gdb/linux-tdep.c: Add Perms to the 'info proc mappings' output
Fixes #28914 and so it adds a 'Perms' (permissions) column to the
'info proc mappings' command output. This will allow users to know
the memory pages permissions right away from GDB instead of having
to fetch them from the /proc/$pid/maps file (which is also what GDB
does internally, but it just did not print that column).
Below I am also showing how an example output looks like before and
after this commit in case someone wonders.
On i386 targets - before this commit:
```
(gdb) info proc mappings
process 3461464
Mapped address spaces:
Start Addr End Addr Size Offset objfile
0x56555000 0x56556000 0x1000 0x0 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56556000 0x56557000 0x1000 0x1000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56557000 0x56558000 0x1000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56558000 0x5655a000 0x2000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0xf7fc4000 0xf7fc8000 0x4000 0x0 [vvar]
0xf7fc8000 0xf7fca000 0x2000 0x0 [vdso]
0xf7fca000 0xf7fcb000 0x1000 0x0 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7fcb000 0xf7fee000 0x23000 0x1000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7fee000 0xf7ffb000 0xd000 0x24000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7ffb000 0xf7ffe000 0x3000 0x30000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xfffdc000 0xffffe000 0x22000 0x0 [stack]
(gdb)
```
On i386 targets - after this commit:
```
(gdb) info proc mappings
process 3461464
Mapped address spaces:
Start Addr End Addr Perms Size Offset objfile
0x56555000 0x56556000 r--p 0x1000 0x0 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56556000 0x56557000 r-xp 0x1000 0x1000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56557000 0x56558000 r--p 0x1000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x56558000 0x5655a000 rw-p 0x2000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0xf7fc4000 0xf7fc8000 r--p 0x4000 0x0 [vvar]
0xf7fc8000 0xf7fca000 r-xp 0x2000 0x0 [vdso]
0xf7fca000 0xf7fcb000 r--p 0x1000 0x0 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7fcb000 0xf7fee000 r-xp 0x23000 0x1000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7fee000 0xf7ffb000 r--p 0xd000 0x24000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xf7ffb000 0xf7ffe000 rw-p 0x3000 0x30000 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0xfffdc000 0xffffe000 rw-p 0x22000 0x0 [stack]
(gdb)
```
On amd64 targets - after this commit:
```
(gdb) info proc mappings
process 3461869
Mapped address spaces:
Start Addr End Addr Perms Size Offset objfile
0x555555554000 0x555555555000 r--p 0x1000 0x0 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x555555555000 0x555555556000 r-xp 0x1000 0x1000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x555555556000 0x555555557000 r--p 0x1000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x555555557000 0x555555559000 rw-p 0x2000 0x2000 /home/dc/src/binutils-gdb/build/a.out
0x7ffff7fc3000 0x7ffff7fc7000 r--p 0x4000 0x0 [vvar]
0x7ffff7fc7000 0x7ffff7fc9000 r-xp 0x2000 0x0 [vdso]
0x7ffff7fc9000 0x7ffff7fca000 r--p 0x1000 0x0 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0x7ffff7fca000 0x7ffff7ff1000 r-xp 0x27000 0x1000 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0x7ffff7ff1000 0x7ffff7ffb000 r--p 0xa000 0x28000 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0x7ffff7ffb000 0x7ffff7fff000 rw-p 0x4000 0x31000 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.33.so
0x7ffffffdd000 0x7ffffffff000 rw-p 0x22000 0x0 [stack]
0xffffffffff600000 0xffffffffff601000 --xp 0x1000 0x0 [vsyscall]
(gdb)
```
Change-Id: I4991f6cc758cd532eae3ae98c29d22e7bd9d9c36
2022-02-23 Patrick O'Neill <patrick@rivosinc.com>
RISC-V: PR28733, add missing extension info to 'unrecognized opcode' error
Currently we report errors as "unrecognized opcode `fence.i'" when the
opcode isn't part of the selected extensions.
This patch expands that error message to include the missing extension
information. For example, now the error message would be "unrecognized
opcode `fence.i', extension `zifencei' required".
If the opcode is not a part of any extension, the error message reverts
to "unrecognized opcode `<op statement>'".
bfd/
pr 28733
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): New function,
used to return the extension string for each INSN_CLASS_*.
* elfxx-riscv.h: Added extern riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext.
gas/
pr 28733
* config/tc-riscv.c (struct riscv_ip_error): New structure,
contains information about errors that occur within the riscv_ip.
(riscv_ip): Use struct riscv_ip_error to report more detailed errors.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-fld-fsd-fail.l: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-imply-i2p1-01.: Likewise.
2022-02-23 Patrick O'Neill <patrick@rivosinc.com>
RISC-V: PR28733, add missing extension info to 'invalid CSR' error
Currently we report errors as "invalid CSR 'fscr' for the current ISA"
when the instruction isn't valid.
This patch expands that error message to include the missing extension
information. For example, now the error message would be "invalid CSR
'fscr' for the current ISA, CSR 'fscr' needs 'f' extension".
gas/
pr 28733
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_csr_address): Report more details
when the CSR is invalid.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Updated detailed errors.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
2022-02-23 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
binutils 2.38 vs. ppc32 linux kernel
Commit b25f942e18d6 made .machine more strict. Weaken it again.
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_machine): Treat an early .machine specially,
keeping sticky options to work around gcc bugs.
2022-02-23 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Updated CSRs to privileged spec v1.12 and debug spec v1.0.
* Removed N extension CSRs,
ustatus, uie, utvec, uscratch, uepc, ucause, utval and uip.
* Removed two supervisor CSRs,
sedeleg and sideleg.
* Changed debug CSR address of scontext from 0x7aa to 0x5a8. We cannot support
different versions of debug specs for now, so only supporting the latest one is
the only way to move forward.
* Added debug CSRs,
mscontext (0x7aa), mcontrol6 (0x7a1, tdata1) and tmexttrigger ((0x7a1, tdata1).
* Regarded hcontext as a debug CSR.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Updated CSRs to privileged spec v1.12 and
debug spec v1.0.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Updated CSRs to privileged spec v1.12
and debug spec v1.0.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Likewise.
2022-02-23 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Add Privileged Architecture 1.12 CSRs
This commit adds,
* Most of CSRs as listed in the Privileged Architecture,
version 1.12 (except scontext and mscontext).
* Testcases for most CSRs added on the Privileged
Architecture, version 1.12 (except moved "scontext" and
new "mscontext").
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv-opc.h (CSR_SENVCFG, CSR_MCONFIGPTR, CSR_MENVCFG,
CSR_MSTATUSH, CSR_MENVCFGH, CSR_MTINST, CSR_MTVAL2, CSR_MSECCFG,
CSR_MSECCFGH, CSR_PMPCFG4, CSR_PMPCFG5, CSR_PMPCFG6,
CSR_PMPCFG7, CSR_PMPCFG8, CSR_PMPCFG9, CSR_PMPCFG10,
CSR_PMPCFG11, CSR_PMPCFG12, CSR_PMPCFG13, CSR_PMPCFG14,
CSR_PMPCFG15, CSR_PMPADDR16, CSR_PMPADDR17, CSR_PMPADDR18,
CSR_PMPADDR19, CSR_PMPADDR20, CSR_PMPADDR21, CSR_PMPADDR22,
CSR_PMPADDR23, CSR_PMPADDR24, CSR_PMPADDR25, CSR_PMPADDR26,
CSR_PMPADDR27, CSR_PMPADDR28, CSR_PMPADDR29, CSR_PMPADDR30,
CSR_PMPADDR31, CSR_PMPADDR32, CSR_PMPADDR33, CSR_PMPADDR34,
CSR_PMPADDR35, CSR_PMPADDR36, CSR_PMPADDR37, CSR_PMPADDR38,
CSR_PMPADDR39, CSR_PMPADDR40, CSR_PMPADDR41, CSR_PMPADDR42,
CSR_PMPADDR43, CSR_PMPADDR44, CSR_PMPADDR45, CSR_PMPADDR46,
CSR_PMPADDR47, CSR_PMPADDR48, CSR_PMPADDR49, CSR_PMPADDR50,
CSR_PMPADDR51, CSR_PMPADDR52, CSR_PMPADDR53, CSR_PMPADDR54,
CSR_PMPADDR55, CSR_PMPADDR56, CSR_PMPADDR57, CSR_PMPADDR58,
CSR_PMPADDR59, CSR_PMPADDR60, CSR_PMPADDR61, CSR_PMPADDR62,
CSR_PMPADDR63): New CSR macros.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Add new CSRs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
2022-02-23 Tsukasa OI <research_trasio@irq.a4lg.com>
RISC-V: Reorganize testcases for CFI directives
This commit reorganizes and adds some CSRs to csr-dw-regnums.[sd] to
make it test the same CSRs as csr.s.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Reorganize and add
defined CSRs tested in csr.s.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Likewise.
2022-02-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
NEWS: Note that the FreeBSD async target supports async mode.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
inf-ptrace: Add an event_pipe to be used for async mode in subclasses.
Subclasses of inf_ptrace_target have to opt-in to using the event_pipe
by implementing the can_async_p and async methods. For subclasses
which do this, inf_ptrace_target provides is_async_p, async_wait_fd
and closes the pipe in the close target method.
inf_ptrace_target also provides wrapper routines around the event pipe
(async_file_open, async_file_close, async_file_flush, and
async_file_mark) for use in target methods such as async.
inf_ptrace_target also exports a static async_file_mark_if_open
function which can be used in SIGCHLD signal handlers.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Enable async mode in the target in attach_cmd.
If the attach target supports async mode, enable it after the
attach target's ::attach method returns.
fbsd-nat: Return nullptr rather than failing ::thread_name.
ptrace on FreeBSD cannot be used against running processes and instead
fails with EBUSY. This meant that 'info threads' would fail if any of
the threads were running (for example when using schedule-multiple=on
in gdb.base/fork-running-state.exp). Instead of throwing errors, just
return nullptr as no thread name is better than causing info threads to
fail completely.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Various cleanups to the ::resume entry debug message.
Move the message from 'show debug fbsd-lwp' to 'show debug fbsd-nat'
since it is helpful for debugging async target support and not just
LWP support.
Use target_pid_to_str to format the ptid and log the step and signo
arguments.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Include ptrace operation in error messages.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Implement async target support.
This is a fairly simple version of async target support.
Synchronous mode still uses blocking waitpid() calls in
inf_ptrace::wait() unlike the Linux native target which always uses
WNOHANG and uses sigsuspend() for synchronous operation.
Asynchronous mode registers an event pipe with the core as a file
handle and writes to the pipe when SIGCHLD is raised. TARGET_WNOHANG
is handled by inf_ptrace::wait().
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
inf-ptrace: Support async targets in inf_ptrace_target::wait.
- Handle TARGET_WNOHANG by passing WNOHANG to waitpid and returning
TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE if there are no events to report.
- Handle a race in async mode where SIGCHLD might signal the event
pipe for an event that has already been reported. If the event was
the exit of the last child process, waitpid() will fail with ECHILD
rather than returning a pid of 0. For this case, return
TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
inf-ptrace: Return an IGNORE event if waitpid() fails.
Previously this returned a TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED event for
inferior_ptid. However, inferior_ptid is invalid during ::wait()
methods after the multi-target changes, so this was triggering an
assertion further up the stack.
do_target_wait_1: Clear TARGET_WNOHANG if the target isn't async.
Previously, TARGET_WNOHANG was cleared if a target supported async
mode even if async mode wasn't currently enabled. This change only
permits TARGET_WNOHANG if async mode is enabled.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Don't enable async mode at the end of target ::resume methods.
Now that target_resume always enables async mode after target::resume
returns, these calls are redundant.
The other place that target resume methods are invoked outside of
target_resume are as the beneath target in record_full_wait_1. In
this case, async mode should already be enabled when supported by the
target before the resume method is invoked due to the following:
In general, targets which support async mode run as async until
::wait returns TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED to indicate that there are
no unwaited for children (either they have exited or are stopped).
When that occurs, the loop in wait_one disables async mode. Later
if a stopped child is resumed, async mode is re-enabled in
do_target_resume before waiting for the next event.
In the case of record_full_wait_1, this function is invoked from the
::wait target method when fetching an event. If the underlying
target supports async mode, then an earlier call to do_target_resume
to resume the child reporting an event in the loop in
record_full_wait_1 would have already enabled async mode before
::wait was invoked. In addition, nothing in the code executed in
the loop in record_full_wait_1 disables async mode. Async mode is
only disabled higher in the call stack in wait_one after ::wait
returns.
It is also true that async mode can be disabled by an
INF_EXEC_COMPLETE event passed to inferior_event_handle, but all of
the places that invoke that are in the gdb core which is "above" a
target ::wait method.
Note that there is an earlier call to enable async mode in
linux_nat_target::resume. That call also marks the async event pipe
to report an existing event after enabling async mode, so it needs to
stay.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Enable async mode on supported targets in target_resume.
Enabling async mode above the target layer removes duplicate code in
::resume methods of async-capable targets. Commit 5b6d1e4fa4f
("Multi-target support") enabled async mode in do_target_resume after
target_resume returns which is a step in this direction. However,
other callers of target_resume such as target_continue do not enable
async mode. Rather than enabling async mode in each of the callers
after target_resume returns, enable async mode at the end of
target_resume.
gdbserver linux-low: Convert linux_event_pipe to the event_pipe class.
Use event_pipe from gdbsupport in place of the existing file
descriptor array.
gdb linux-nat: Convert linux_nat_event_pipe to the event_pipe class.
Use event_pipe from gdbsupport in place of the existing file
descriptor array.
2022-02-22 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
gdbsupport: Add an event-pipe class.
This pulls out the implementation of an event pipe used to implement
target async support in both linux-low.cc (gdbserver) and linux-nat.c
(gdb).
This will be used to replace the existing event pipe in linux-low.cc
and linux-nat.c in future commits.
Co-Authored-By: Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
2022-02-22 Ruslan Kabatsayev <b7.10110111@gmail.com>
gdb: fix detection of compilation and linking flags for source-highlight
Currently there are two problems with the detection of
source-highlight via pkg-config in GDB's configure script:
1. The LDFLAGS variable is used to pass the 'pkg-config --libs' output
to AC_LINK_IFELSE, which results in the "-L/some/path
-lsource-highlight" preceding the conftest.cpp, which can result in a
failure to find symbols referenced in conftest.cpp, if the linker is
using --as-needed by default.
2. The CFLAGS variable is used to pass the 'pkg-config --cflags'
output to AC_LINK_IFELSE. However, as the current language is C++,
AC_LINK_IFELSE will actuall use CXXFLAGS, not CFLAGS, so any flags
returned from pkg-config will not be seen.
This patch fixes both of these mistakes, allowing GDB to correctly
configure and build using source-highlight installed into a custom
prefix, e.g. ~/opt/gdb-git (because the system version of
source-highlight is too old).
2022-02-22 Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
gdb/testsuite/README: point to default value of INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS
The INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS runtest variable was updated in 55c3ad88013
([gdb/testsuite] Prevent pagination in GDB_INTERNALFLAGS, 2020-10-26) to
disable pagination, and in aae1c79a03a (PR python/12227..., 2010-12-07)
to point to the data directory, but its default value mentioned in the
testsuite's README was not kept up to date.
To avoid it getting out of sync even more, point the reader to the
definition of the variable in lib/gdb.exp, and move the explanation of
the different flags there. Also adjust the example in the README
so it follows the flags added in 55c3ad88013.
Change-Id: I3533608a7d6ae5198af09c7dc7743bde24c19ed7
2022-02-22 Kito Cheng <kito.cheng@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Maintain a string to hold the canonical order
Using dummy entry in riscv_supported_std_ext cause confusing and wrongly
support `b` and `k` extensions.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_ext): Drop unsupported
extensions.
(riscv_ext_canonical_order): New.
(riscv_init_ext_order): Use riscv_ext_canonical_order rather
than riscv_supported_std_ext to compute canonical order.
V2 Changes:
- Use `*ext` rather than `*ext != NULL` for checking is reach end of
string.
2022-02-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ld: Support customized output section type
"DO NOT EDIT!" says the comment at the top of bfd-in2.h. Move the new
type field where it belongs.
PR ld/28841
* section.c (struct bfd_section): Add type. Formatting.
(BFD_FAKE_SECTION): Formatting.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2022-02-21 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: gdbinit: hoist setup to common code
This was left in subdirs because of the dynamic cgen usage. However,
we can move this breakpoint call to runtime and let gdb detect whether
the symbol exists.
2022-02-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: relax pattern in new gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp test
I saw some failures in the test gdb.mi/mi-multi-commands.exp that I
added recently. This test was added in commit:
commit d08cbc5d3203118da5583296e49273cf82378042
Date: Wed Dec 22 12:57:44 2021 +0000
gdb: unbuffer all input streams when not using readline
The failures I see only occurred when my machine was very heavily
loaded.
In this test I send multiple commands from dejagnu to gdb with a
single send_gdb call. In a well behaving world what I want to happen
is that the gdb console sees both commands arrive and echos the text
of those commands. Then gdb starts processing the first command,
prints the result, and then processes the second command, and prints
the result.
However, what I saw in my loaded environment was that only after
sending the two commands, only the first command was echoed to gdb's
terminal. Then gdb started processing the first command, and started
to write the output. Now, mixed in with the first command output, the
second command was echoed to gdb's terminal. Finally, gdb would
finish printing the first command output, and would read and handle
the second command.
This mixing of command echoing with the first command output was
causing the test matching patterns to fail.
In this commit I change the command I use in the test from a CLI
command to an MI command, this reduces the number of lines of output
that come from the test, CLI commands sent through the MI interpreter
are echoed back like this:
(gdb)
set $a = "FIRST COMMAND"
&"set $a = \"FIRST COMMAND\"\n"
^done
(gdb)
While this is not the case for true MI command:
(gdb)
-data-evaluate-expression $a
^done,value="\"FIRST COMMAND\""
(gdb)
Less output makes for simpler patterns to match against.
Next, when sending two command to gdb I was previously trying to spot
the output of the first command followed by the prompt with nothing
between. This is not really needed, for the first command I can look
for just the ^done,value="\"FIRST COMMAND\"" string, then I can start
looking for the output of the second command.
So long as the second pattern matches up to the gdb prompt, then I can
be sure than nothing is left over in the expect buffer to muck up
later matches.
As to see the second command output gdb must have read in the second
command, the second command output never suffers from the corruption
that the first command output does.
Since making this change, I've not seen a failure in this test.
2022-02-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: avoid nullptr access in dbxread.c from read_dbx_symtab
This fixes a GDB crash reported in bug pr/28900, related to reading in
some stabs debug information.
In this commit my goal is to stop GDB crashing. I am not trying to
ensure that GDB makes the best possible use of the available stabs
debug information. At this point I consider stabs a legacy debug
format, with only limited support in GDB.
So, the problem appears to be that, when reading in the stabs data, we
need to find a N_SO entry, this is the entry that defines the start of
a compilation unit (or at least the location of a corresponding source
file).
It is while handling an N_SO that GDB creates a psymtab to hold the
incoming debug information (symbols, etc).
The problem we hit in the bug is that we encounter some symbol
information (an N_PC entry) outside of an N_SO entry - that is we find
some symbol information that is not associated with any source file.
We already have some protection for this case, look (in
read_dbx_symtab) at the handling of N_PC entries of type 'F' and 'f',
if we have no psymtab (the pst variable is nullptr) then we issue a
complaint. However, for whatever reason, in both 'f' and 'F'
handling, there is one place where we assume that the pst
variable (the psymtab) is not nullptr. This is a mistake.
In this commit, I guard these two locations (in 'f' and 'F' handling)
so we no longer assume pst is not nullptr.
While I was at it, I audited all the other uses of pst in
read_dbx_symtab, and in every potentially dangerous case I added a
nullptr check, and issue a suitable complaint if pst is found to be
nullptr.
It might well be true that we could/should do something smarter if we
see a debug symbol outside of an N_SO entry, and if anyone wanted to
do that work, they're welcome too. But this commit is just about
preventing the nullptr access, and the subsequent GDB crash.
I don't have any tests for this change, I have no idea how to generate
weird stabs data for testing. The original binary from the bug report
now loads just fine without GDB crashing.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28900
2022-02-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make use of std::string in dbxread.c and xcoffread.c
While taking a look through dbxread.c I spotted a couple of places
where making use of std::string would remove the need for manual
memory allocation and memcpy.
During review Simon pointed out that the same code exists in
xcoffread.c, so I've applied the same fix there too.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-02-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-20 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Only paginate for filtered output in fputs_maybe_filtered
Ahave had situation where a unfiltered output (done using
fputs_unfiltered) ended up triggering pagination. The backtrace for this was:
...
#24 0x000055839377ee4e in check_async_event_handlers () at ../../gdb/async-event.c:335
#25 0x0000558394b67b57 in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:216
#26 0x0000558394587454 in gdb_readline_wrapper (prompt=0x7ffd907712d0 "--Type <RET> for more, q to quit, c to continue without paging--") at ../../gdb/top.c:1148
#27 0x0000558394707270 in prompt_for_continue () at ../../gdb/utils.c:1438
#28 0x00005583947088b3 in fputs_maybe_filtered (linebuffer=0x60c0000f4000 " [...quite big message...]", stream=0x60300028e9d0, filter=0) at ../../gdb/utils.c:1752
#29 0x0000558394708e57 in fputs_unfiltered (linebuffer=0x60c0000f4000 " [...quite big message...]", stream=0x60300028e9d0) at ../../gdb/utils.c:1811
...
This comes from what appears to be a oversight in fputs_maybe_filtered. This
function has a FILTER parameter which if true makes the function pause after
every screenful (i.e. triggers pagination).
The filter parameter is correctly used to guard the first place where
prompt_for_continue. There is a second place in the function which can call
prompt_for_continue, but is currently unguarded. I believe that this is an
oversight, this patch fixes that.
Tested on Linux-x86_64, no regression observed.
Change-Id: Iad8ffd50a87cf20077500878e2564b5a7dc81ece
2022-02-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-19 Dominique Quatravaux <dominique.quatravaux@epfl.ch>
gdb/darwin: remove not-so-harmless spurious call to `wait4`
As seen in https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24069 this
code will typically wait4() a second time on the same process that was
already wait4()'d a few lines above. While this used to be
harmless/idempotent (when we assumed that the process already exited),
this now causes a deadlock in the WIFSTOPPED case.
The early (~2019) history of bug #24069 cautiously suggests to use
WNOHANG instead of outright deleting the call. However, tests on the
current version of Darwin (Big Sur) demonstrate that gdb runs just fine
without a redundant call to wait4(), as would be expected.
Notwithstanding the debatable value of conserving bug compatibility with
an OS release that is more than a decade old, there is scant evidence of
what that double-wait4() was supposed to achieve in the first place - A
cursory investigation with `git blame` pinpoints commits bb00b29d7802
and a80b95ba67e2 from the 2008-2009 era, but fails to answer the
"why" question conclusively.
Co-Authored-By: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Id4e4415d66d6ff6b3552b60d761693f17015e4a0
2022-02-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add constructor to bound_minimal_symbol
This adds a constructor to bound_minimal_symbol, to avoid a build
failure with clang that Simon pointed out.
I also took the opportunity to remove some redundant initializations,
and to change one use of push_back to emplace_back, as suggested by
Simon.
2022-02-18 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
Fix typo in ld.texi
ld/
* ld.texi (Output Section Type): Fix typo in @code syntax.
2022-02-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove newlines from some linux_nat_debug_printf calls
Change-Id: I80328fab7096221356864b5a4fb30858b48d2c10
2022-02-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-17 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Serbian translations for the bfd, gold, ld and opcodes directories
2022-02-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-16 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
ld: Support customized output section type
bfd/
PR ld/28841
* bfd-in2.h (struct bfd_section): Add type.
(discarded_section): Add field.
* elf.c (elf_fake_sections): Handle bfd_section::type.
* section.c (BFD_FAKE_SECTION): Add field.
* mri.c (mri_draw_tree): Update function call.
ld/
PR ld/28841
* ld.texi: Document new output section type.
* ldlex.l: Add new token TYPE.
* ldgram.y: Handle TYPE=exp.
* ldlang.h: Add type_section to list of section types.
* ldlang.c (lang_add_section): Handle type_section.
(map_input_to_output_sections): Handle type_section.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/output-section-types.t: Add tests.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/output-section-types.d: Update.
2022-02-16 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: add a missing white space character
Just adds a missing space. There should be no user visible changes
after this commit.
gdb: convert callback_handler_installed from int to bool
Simple int to bool conversion on callback_handler_installed in
event-top.c. There should be no user visible changes after this
commit.
2022-02-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gas local label and dollar label handling
Much of the gas source and older BFD source use "long" for function
parameters and variables, when other types would be more appropriate.
This patch fixes one of those cases. Dollar labels and numeric local
labels do not need large numbers. Small positive itegers are usually
all that is required. Due to allowing longs, it was possible for
fb_label_name and dollar_label_name to overflow their buffers.
* symbols.c: Delete unnecessary forward declarations.
(dollar_labels, dollar_label_instances): Use unsigned int.
(dollar_label_defined, dollar_label_instance): Likewise.
(define_dollar_label): Likewise.
(fb_low_counter, fb_labels, fb_label_instances): Likewise.
(fb_label_instance_inc, fb_label_instance): Likewise.
(fb_label_count, fb_label_max): Make them size_t.
(dollar_label_name, fb_label_name): Rewrite using sprintf.
* symbols.h (dollar_label_defined): Update prototype.
(define_dollar_label, dollar_label_name): Likewise.
(fb_label_instance_inc, fb_label_name): Likewise.
* config/bfin-lex.l (yylex): Remove unnecessary casts.
* expr.c (integer_constant): Likewise.
* read.c (read_a_source_file): Limit numeric label range to int.
2022-02-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: s_app_line integer overflow
There are quite a few ubsan warnings in gas. This one disappears with
a code tidy.
* read.c (s_app_line): Rename 'l' to 'linenum'. Avoid ubsan
warning.
2022-02-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
pe_ILF_make_a_symbol_reloc segfault
pei-aarch64-little apparently lacks support for BFD_RELOC_RVA.
* peicode.h (pe_ILF_make_a_symbol_reloc): Don't segfault on
NULL howto.
2022-02-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
What to do when sh_addralign isn't a power of two
BFD generally doesn't handle anything but a power of two section
alignment, and ELF sh_addralign is required to be an integral power of
two (or zero) by the ELF spec. Of course this is ignored by fuzzers,
and because bfd_log2 rounds up, we can end up with alignment_power
being 32 on a 32-bit object or 64 on a 64-bit object. That then
triggers ubsan warnings in places like bfd_update_compression_header
where we want to convert from alignment_power back to an alignment.
I suppose we could reject object files that have non-compliant
sh_addralign, but I think it's also reasonable to use the greatest
power of two divisor of sh_addralign, ie. the rightmost 1 bit.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_make_section_from_shdr): Use greatest power
of two divisor of sh_addralign.
(_bfd_elf_assign_file_position_for_section): Likewise.
(assign_file_positions_for_non_load_sections): Likewise.
2022-02-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: buffer overflow in vms-alpha.c
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_dst): Sanity check another place
printing strings.
asan : use of uninitialized value in buffer_and_nest
* macro.c (buffer_and_nest): Don't read past end of string buffer.
asan: buffer overflow in peXXigen.c
* peXXigen.c (_bfd_XX_bfd_copy_private_bfd_data_common): Properly
sanity check DataDirectory[PE_DEBUG_DATA].Size.
2022-02-16 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/common: Improve sim_dump_memory head comment
As requested by Mike.
* sim-memopt.c: Improve head comment.
2022-02-16 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris/c/stat3.c: Fix formatting nit
* c/stat3.c (main): Fix formatting nit.
2022-02-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: cleanup the istarget * logic
Now that the multitarget testing has settled, clean up the cases where
istarget * is used. This ends up being mostly style unindenting.
2022-02-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
i386: Update I386_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P for DT_TEXTREL
Update I386_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P to allow R_386_TLS_IE for relocation
in read-only section.
bfd/
PR ld/28894
* elfxx-x86.h (I386_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): Allow
R_386_TLS_IE.
ld/
PR ld/28894
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Run pr28894.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28894.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28894.s: Likewise.
2022-02-15 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite: Default global_cc_os and global_cc_works properly
There was an omission on 3e6dc39ed7a8 "sim/testsuite: Set
global_cc_os also when no compiler is found"; global_cc_os
wasn't set for other than the primary target, which means
that the "unguarded" use of global_cc_os in
testsuite/cris/c/c.exp caused the dreaded "ERROR: can't read
"global_cc_os": no such variable" when e.g. configuring for
pru-elf and doing "make check-sim". Better initializing
both variables at the top to default values, rather than
adding another single 'set global_cc_os ""', to reduce the
risk of not setting them properly if or when that
if-statement-chain is made longer.
sim/testsuite:
* lib/sim-defs.exp (sim_init_toolchain): Default
global_cc_os and global_cc_works properly, before if-chain.
2022-02-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Add has_sib to struct instr_info
Add has_sib to struct instr_info and use SIB info only if ins->has_sib
is true.
PR binutils/28892
* i386-dis.c (instr_info): Add has_sib.
(get_sib): Set has_sib.
(OP_E_memory): Replace havesib with ins->has_sib.
(OP_VEX): Use ins->sib.index only if ins->has_sib is true.
2022-02-15 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Respect the DW_CC_nocall attribute
It is possible for a compiler to optimize a function in a such ways that
the function does not follow the calling convention of the target. In
such situation, the compiler can use the DW_AT_calling_convention
attribute with the value DW_CC_nocall to tell the debugger that it is
unsafe to call the function. The DWARF5 standard states, in 3.3.1.1:
> If the value of the calling convention attribute is the constant
> DW_CC_nocall, the subroutine does not obey standard calling
> conventions, and it may not be safe for the debugger to call this
> subroutine.
Non standard calling convention can affect GDB's assumptions in multiple
ways, including how arguments are passed to the function, how values are
returned, and so on. For this reason, it is unsafe for GDB to try to do
the following operations on a function with marked with DW_CC_nocall:
- call / print an expression requiring the function to be evaluated,
- inspect the value a function returns using the 'finish' command,
- force the value returned by a function using the 'return' command.
This patch ensures that if a command which relies on GDB's knowledge of
the target's calling convention is used on a function marked nocall, GDB
prints an appropriate message to the user and does not proceed with the
operation which is unreliable.
Note that it is still possible for someone to use a vendor specific
value for the DW_AT_calling_convention attribute for example to indicate
the use of an alternative calling convention. This commit does not
prevent this, and target dependent code can be adjusted if one wanted to
support multiple calling conventions.
Tested on x86_64-Linux, with no regression observed.
Change-Id: I72970dae68234cb83edbc0cf71aa3d6002a4a540
2022-02-15 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add a symbol* argument to get_return_value
Add an argument to the get_return_value function to indicate the symbol
of the function the debuggee is returning from. This will be used by
the following patch.
Since the function return type can be deduced from the symbol remove the
value_type argument which becomes redundant.
No user visible change after this patch.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Change-Id: Idf1279f1f7199f5022738a6679e0fa63fbd22edc
2022-02-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86-64: Use MAXPAGESIZE for the relro segment alignment
Adjust x86-64 linker tests after reverting
commit 31b4d3a16f200bf04db8439a63b72bba7af4e1be
Author: Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Feb 3 08:57:47 2022 +1030
PR28824, relro security issues, x86 keep COMMONPAGESIZE relro
to use MAXPAGESIZE for the end of the relro segment alignment, like other
ELF targets.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/plt-main-bnd.dd: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/plt-main-ibt-x32.dd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/plt-main-ibt.dd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr18176.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-02-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Revert "PR28824, relro security issues, x86 keep COMMONPAGESIZE relro"
This reverts commit 31b4d3a16f200bf04db8439a63b72bba7af4e1be.
2022-02-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris: If failing compilation, mark C tests as errors
...when we know we have a working compiler. This will reduce
the risk of faulty edits by exposing them rather than hiding
them as "unresolved". It also harmonizes behavior with that of
run_sim_test.
* c/c.exp: Mark C tests failing compilation test errors.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris: Remove faulty use of basename in C tests
Calls to basename were added here as part of commit
e1e1ae6e9b5e "sim: testsuite: fix objdir handling", but that
commit missed adding "#include <libgen.h>" or the equivalent
GNU extension, see basename(3). Fixing that shows a logical
error in the change to openpf1.c; the non-/-prefixed
code-path was changed instead of the "/"-prefixed code-path,
which is the one executed after that commit.
For "newlib" these tests failed linking after that commit.
Recent newlib has the (asm-renamed) GNU-extension-variant of
basename, but we're better off not using it at all.
Unfortunately, compilation failures for C tests run by the
machinery in c.exp are currently just marked "unresolved",
in contrast to C and assembler tests run by calling
run_sim_test.
The interaction of calling with the full program-path vs.
use of --sysroot exposes a consistency problem: when
--sysroot is used, argv[0] isn't the path by which the
program can find itself. It's undecided whether argv[0] for
the program running in the simulator should be edited
(related to the naked argument to the simulator before
passing on to the simulated program) to remove a leading
--sysroot. Either way, such a change would be out of scope
for this commit.
* c/stat3.c (mybasename): New macro. Use it instead of basename.
* c/openpf1.c: Correct basename-related change and update related
comment.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim: Add sim_dump_memory for debugging
Intended to be called from the debugger tool.
sim/common:
* sim-memopt.c (sim_dump_memory): New function.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim: Fix use of out-of-tree assembler and linker when testing
With commit 7a259895bb2d "sim: testsuite: expand arch specific
toolchain settings", trying to use out-of-tree ld and as at test-time
broke for the "primary target", like when testing a release-tarball.
Subsequent to that commit, all assembler tests without in-tree-built
tools FAIL, getting errors when trying to call
$(abs_builddir)/../gas/as-new. But, that isn't the actual culprint;
it's actually it's its immediate predecessor, commit 8996c21067373
"sim: testsuite: setup per-port toolchain settings for multitarget
build", which hardcodes in-tree-paths to those tools instead of
considering e.g. $(<X>_FOR_TARGET), the preferred overridable variable
for single-target builds, as set up by the toplevel Makefile.
This commit calls GCC_TARGET_TOOL (a deceptive name; gcc-specific
features aren't used) from toplev/config/acx.m4, somewhat like calls
in toplev/configure.ac but without the NCN_STRICT_CHECK_TARGET_TOOLS
step, for each X to find a value for $(<X>_FOR_TARGET). N.B.: in-tree
tools still override any ${target}-${tool} found in $PATH, i.e. only
previously broken builds are affected.
The variables $(<X>_FOR_TARGET) are usually overridden by the toplevel
Makefile to the same value or better, but has to be set here too, as
automake "wants" Makefiles to be self-contained (you get an error
pointing out that the variable may be empty). If it hadn't been for
that, SIM_AC_CHECK_TOOLCHAIN_FOR_PRIMARY_TARGET would not be needed.
This detail should only (positively) affect users invoking "make
check" in sim/ instead of "make check-sim" (or "make check") at the
toplevel. Now the output from "configure" matches the target tools
actually used by sim at test-time, for the "primary target".
Using $(CC) for "example-" targets CC_FOR_TARGET is not changed, as
that appears to be a deliberate special-case.
Note that all tools still have to be installed and present in
$PATH at configure-time to be properly used at test-time.
sim:
* m4/sim_ac_toolchain.m4 (SIM_AC_CHECK_TOOLCHAIN_FOR_PRIMARY_TARGET):
New defun.
(SIM_TOOLCHAIN_VARS): Call it using AC_REQUIRE, and use variables
AS_FOR_TARGET, LD_FOR_TARGET and CC_FOR_TARGET instead of hard-coded
values.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim cris: Unbreak --disable-sim-hardware builds
With --disable-sim-hardware (--enable-sim-hardware=no),
whose default was changed to --enable-sim-hardware(=yes) in
commit 34cf51120683, building for cris-elf fails as
sim_hw_parse then doesn't exist.
A cris-elf simulator configured for --enable-sim-hardware
(or the default after to the mentioned commit) runs about
2.5x slower than one configured --disable-sim-hardware.
A further 2-5% performance regression was not investigated.
When sim_hw_parse doesn't exist, --cris-900000xx can't be
supported. The best action here is to remove it completely,
so its absence can be identified through --help, but
avoiding littering the code with "#if WITH_HW".
sim/cris:
* sim-if.c (cris_options) [WITH_HW]: Conditionalize
support of option --cris-900000xx.
(sim_open) [WITH_HW]: Conditionalize sim_hw_parse
call.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris: As applicable, require simoption --cris-900000xx
Apply the new run_sim_test option "require" as in "#require
simoption --cris-900000xx" for all tests using that option.
This allows a clean test-suite-run for a build with
--disable-sim-hardware, where that option is not supported,
by skipping those tests as "untested".
sim/testsuite/cris:
* asm/io1.ms, asm/io2.ms, asm/io3.ms, asm/io6.ms,
asm/io7.ms: Call "#require: simoption --cris-900000xx".
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite: Support "requires: simoption <--name-of-option>"
Simulator features can be present or not, typically
depending on different-valued configure options, like
--enable-sim-hardware[=off|=on]. To avoid failures in
test-suite-runs when testing such configurations, a new
predicate is needed, as neither "target", "progos" nor
"mach" fits cleanly.
The immediate need was to check for presence of a simulator
option, but rather than a specialized "requires-simoption:"
predicate I thought I'd handle the general (parametrized)
need, so here's a generic predicate machinery and a (first)
predicate to use together with it; checking whether a
particular option is supported, by looking at "run --help"
output. This was inspired by the check_effective_target_
machinery in the gcc test-suite.
Multiple "requires: <requirement> <parameter>" form a list of
predicates (with parameters), to be used as a conjunction.
sim/testsuite:
* lib/sim-defs.exp (sim_check_requires_simoption): New function.
(run_sim_test): Support "requires: <requirement> <parameter>".
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris/hw/rv-n-cris/irq1.ms: Disable due to randomness
For reasons that remain largely to be investigated (besides
the apparent lack of synchronization between two processes),
this test fails randomly, with two different sets of common
outputs. Curiously, that doesn't happen for the other
similar tests. There's a comment that mentions this, though
that doesn't make it a sustainable part of a test-suite.
(Known-blinking tests should be disabled until fixed.)
sim/testsuite/cris:
* hw/rv-n-cris/irq1.ms: Disable by use of a never-matched
"progos" value.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris/c: Use -sim3 but only for newlib targets
Commit a39487c6685f "sim: cris: use -sim with C tests for cris-elf
targets" caused " -sim" to be appended to CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET for
cris*-*-elf, where testing had until then relied on
"RUNTESTFLAGS=--target_board=cris-sim" being passed when running "make
check-sim", adding the right options. While "-sim" happens to work,
the baseboard-file cris-sim.exp uses "-sim3" so for consistency use
that instead.
Then commit b42f20d2ac72 "sim: testsuite: drop most specific istarget
checks" caused " -sim" to be appended for *all* targets, which just
doesn't work. For example, for crisv32-linux-gnu, that's not a
recognized option and will cause a dejagnu error and further testing
in c.exp will be aborted.
While cris-sim.exp appends "-static" for *-linux-gnu, further changes
in the test-suite have caused "linux"-specific tests to break, so that
part will be tended to separately.
But, save and restore CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET around the modification and
use where needed, to not have the CRIS-specific modification affect a
continuing test-run (possibly for other targets).
sim/testsuite/cris:
* c/c.exp (CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET): Replace appended option " -sim"
with " -sim3", but do it conditionally for newlib targets. Save
and restore CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET in saved_CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET such
that it doesn't affect the value of CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET outside
c.exp.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite: Set global_cc_os also when no compiler is found
If we don't set this variable, it doesn't exist, and using "#progos:"
in an assembler-file will cause an error rather than just skipping the
test, viz:
Running /src/sim/testsuite/cris/hw/rv-n-cris/rvc.exp ...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing /src/sim/testsuite/cris/hw/rv-n-cris/rvc.exp.
ERROR: can't read "global_cc_os": no such variable
while executing
"if { $opts(progos) != "" && $opts(progos) != $global_cc_os } {
untested $subdir/$name
return
}"
(procedure "run_sim_test" line 102)
Neither the commit introducing progos, nor the top comment
in run_sim_test, mentions progos as intended only for C
tests, or that its use must be gated on $global_cc_works !=
0, so (not) setting it in the no-working-compiler path seems
just overlooked.
Allowing it to be used for assembler tests makes it usable
for e.g. an always-false predicate and in expressions in
.exp files without gating on $global_cc_works != 0.
With this patch, global_cc_os is set to "", just as for "unknown OS".
sim/testsuite:
* lib/sim-defs.exp (sim_init_toolchain): Set global_cc_os also when
no working target C compiler is found.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim/testsuite/cris: Assembler testcase for PRIx32 usage bug
Several C test-cases exposed the bug, but let's have one for
people who test using just the assembler and linker.
* asm/endmem1.ms: New test.
2022-02-14 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
sim cris: Correct PRIu32 to PRIx32
In 5ee0bc23a68f "sim: clean up bfd_vma printing" there was
an additional introduction of PRIx32 and PRIu32 but just in
sim/cris/sim-if.c. One type of bug was fixed in commit
d16ce6e4d581 "sim: cris: fix memory setup typos" but one
remained; the PRIu32 usage is wrong, as hex output is
desired; note the 0x prefix.
Without this fix, you'll see output like:
memory map 0:0x4000..0x5fff (8192 bytes) overlaps 0:0x0..0x16383 (91012 bytes)
program stopped with signal 6 (Aborted).
for some C programs, like some of the ones in the sim/cris/c
testsuite from where the example is taken (freopen2.c).
The bug behavior was with memory allocation. With an
attempt to allocate memory using the brk syscall such that
the room up to the next 8192-byte "page boundary" wasn't
sufficient, the simulator memory allocation machinery horked
on a consistency error when trying to allocate a memory
block to raise the "end of the data segment": there was
already memory allocated at that address.
Unfortunately, none of the programs in sim/cris/asm exposed
this bug at the time, but an assembler test-case is
committed after this fix.
sim/cris:
* sim-if.c (sim_open): Correct PRIu32 to PRIx32.
2022-02-14 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
microblaze: fix fsqrt collicion to build on glibc-2.35
* microblaze-opcm.h: Renamed 'fsqrt' to 'microblaze_fsqrt'.
* microblaze-opc.h: Follow 'fsqrt' rename.
2022-02-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove LA_PRINT_STRING
This removes the LA_PRINT_STRING macro, in favor of using ordinary
method calls.
Remove LA_PRINT_CHAR
This removes the LA_PRINT_CHAR macro, in favor of using ordinary
method calls.
Remove LA_PRINT_TYPE
This removes the LA_PRINT_TYPE macro, in favor of using ordinary
method calls.
2022-02-14 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: move styling support to gdb.styling
This commit moves the two Python functions that are used for styling
into a new module, gdb.styling, there's then a small update in
python.c so GDB can find the functions in their new location.
The motivation for this change is purely to try and reduce the clutter
in the top-level gdb module, and encapsulate related functions into
modules. I did ponder documenting these functions as part of the
Python API, however, doing so would effectively "fix" the API, and I'm
still wondering if there's improvements that could be made, also, the
colorize function is only called in some cases now that GDB prefers
libsource-highlight, so it's not entirely sure how this would work as
part of a user facing API.
Still, despite these functions never having been part of a documented
API, it is possible that a user out there has overridden these to, in
some way, customize how GDB performs styling. Moving the function as
I propose in this patch could break things for that user, however,
fixing this breakage is trivial, and, as these functions were never
documented, I don't think we should be obliged to not break user code
that relies on them.
2022-02-14 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: use python to colorize disassembler output
This commit adds styling support to the disassembler output, as such
two new commands are added to GDB:
set style disassembler enabled on|off
show style disassembler enabled
In this commit I make use of the Python Pygments package to provide
the styling. I did investigate making use of libsource-highlight,
however, I found the highlighting results to be inferior to those of
Pygments; only some mnemonics were highlighted, and highlighting of
register names such as r9d and r8d (on x86-64) was incorrect.
To enable disassembler highlighting via Pygments, I've added a new
extension language hook, which is then implemented for Python. This
hook is very similar to the existing hook for source code
colorization.
One possibly odd choice I made with the new hook is to pass a
gdb.Architecture through, even though this is currently unused. The
reason this argument is not used is that, currently, styling is
performed identically for all architectures.
However, even though the Python function used to perform styling of
disassembly output is not part of any documented API, I don't want
to close the door on a user overriding this function to provide
architecture specific styling. To do this, the user would inevitably
require access to the gdb.Architecture, and so I decided to add this
field now.
The styling is applied within gdb_disassembler::print_insn, to achieve
this, gdb_disassembler now writes its output into a temporary buffer,
styling is then applied to the contents of this buffer. Finally the
gdb_disassembler buffer is copied out to its final destination stream.
There's a new test to check that the disassembler output includes some
escape sequences, though I don't check for specific colours; the
precise colors will depend on which instructions are in the
disassembler output, and, I guess, how pygments is configured.
The only negative change with this commit is how we currently style
addresses in GDB.
Currently, when the disassembler wants to print an address, we call
back into GDB, and GDB prints the address value using the `address`
styling, and the symbol name using `function` styling. After this
commit, if pygments is used, then all disassembler styling is done
through pygments, and this include the address and symbol name parts
of the disassembler output.
I don't know how much of an issue this will be for people. There's
already some precedent for this in GDB when we look at source styling.
For example, function names in styled source listings are not styled
using the `function` style, but instead, either GNU Source Highlight,
or pygments gets to decide how the function name should be styled.
If the Python pygments library is not present then GDB will continue
to behave as it always has, the disassembler output is mostly
unstyled, but the address and symbols are styled using the `address`
and `function` styles, as they are today.
However, if the user does `set style disassembler enabled off`, then
all disassembler styling is switched off. This obviously covers the
use of pygments, but also includes the minimal styling done by GDB
when pygments is not available.
2022-02-14 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Keep indirect symbol from IR if referenced from shared object
Don't change indirect symbol defined in IR to undefined if it is
referenced from shared object.
bfd/
PR ld/28879
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_merge_symbol): Don't change indirect
symbol defined in IR to undefined if it is referenced from
shared object.
ld/
PR ld/28879
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run PR ld/28879 tests.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28879a.cc: New file.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28879b.cc: Likewise.
2022-02-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28882, build failure with gcc-4.2 due to use of 0b literals
PR 28882
* elf/loongarch.h: Replace binary literals with hex.
2022-02-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't pass around expld.dataseg pointer
The better to see any code that accesses expld.dataseg.
* ldexp.c (fold_segment_end): Remove seg parameter. Adjust calls.
(fold_segment_align, fold_segment_relro_end): Likewise.
* ldlang.c (lang_size_segment): Likewise.
(lang_size_relro_segment_1, lang_find_relro_sections_1): Likewise.
2022-02-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Remove bfd ELF_RELROPAGESIZE
Now that ld properly aligns the end of the relro segment, the hack to
make relro work on powerpc can disappear.
bfd/
* bfd.c (bfd_emul_get_commonpagesize): Remove relro param.
Don't return bed->relropagesize.
* elf-bfd.h (struct elf_backend_data): Remove relropagesize.
* elfxx-target.h (ELF_RELROPAGESIZE): Remove.
* elf32-ppc.c (ELF_RELROPAGESIZE): Don't define.
* elf64-ppc.c: Likewise.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
ld/
* ldemul.c (after_parse_default): Adjust
bfd_emul_get_commonpagesize call.
2022-02-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28824, relro security issues, x86 keep COMMONPAGESIZE relro
x86 treats MAXPAGESIZE as a memory optimisation parameter, actual
hardware paging is always COMMPAGESIZE of 4k. Use COMMONPAGESIZE for
the end of the relro segment alignment.
The previous patch regresses pr18176, increasing the testcase file
size from 322208 to 2099872 bytes. Fixing this on x86 will require
introducing a gap after the end of the relro segment (of up to
relropagesize-1 bytes).
PR 28824
PR 18176
* ld.h (ld_config_type): Add relro_use_commonpagesize field.
* ldexp.c (fold_segment_align): Set relropagesize depending on
relro_use_commonpagesize.
* emultempl/elf-x86.em (elf_x86_create_output_section_statements):
Set relro_use_commonpagesize.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr18176.d: xfail.
2022-02-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28824, relro security issues
Background
==========
There are constraints on layout of binaries to meet demand paging and
memory protection requirements. Demand paged binaries must have file
offset mod pagesize equal to vma mod pagesize. Memory protection
(executable, read, write status) can only change at page boundaries.
The linker's MAXPAGESIZE variable gives the page size for these layout
constraints.
In a typical basic executable with two memory segments, text (RE) and
data (RW), the data segment must start on a different page to the
last text segment page. For example, with 64k pages and a small
executable of 48k text and 1k data, the text segment might start at
address 0x10000 and data at 0x20000 for a total of two 64k memory
pages. Demand paging would require the image on disk to be 64k+1k
in size. We can do better than that. If the data segment instead
starts at 0x2c000 (the end of the text segment plus one 64k page) then
there are still only two memory pages, but the disk image is now
smaller, 48k+1k in size. This is why the linker normally starts the
data segment at the end of the text segment plus one page. That
simple heuristic isn't ideal in all cases. Changing our simple
example to one with 64k-1 text size, following that heuristic would
result in data starting at 0x2ffff. Now we have two 64k memory data
pages for a data segment of 1k! If the data segment instead started
at 0x30000 we'd get a single data segment page at the cost of 1 byte
extra in the disk image, which is likely a good trade-off. So the
linker does adjust the simple heuristic. Just how much disk image
size increase is allowed is controlled by the linker's COMMONPAGESIZE
variable.
A PT_GNU_RELRO segment overlays the initial part of the data segment,
saying that those pages should be made read-only after relocation by
the dynamic loader. Page granularity for memory protection means that
the end of the relro segment must be at a page boundary.
The problem
===========
Unfortunately most targets currently only align the end of the relro
segment to COMMONPAGESIZE. That results in only partial relro
protection if an executable is running with MAXPAGESIZE pages, since
any part of the relro segment past the last MAXPAGESIZE boundary can't
be made read-only without also affecting sections past the end of the
relro segment. I believe this problem arose because x86 always runs
with 4k (COMMPAGESIZE) memory pages, and therefore using a larger
MAXPAGESIZE on x86 is for reasons other than the demand paging and
memory page protection boundary requirements.
The solution
============
Always end the relro segment on a MAXPAGESIZE boundary, except for
x86. Note that the relro segment, comprising of sections at the start
of the data segment, is sized according to how those sections are laid
out. That means the start of the relro segment is fixed relative to
its end. Which also means the start of the data segment must be at a
fixed address mod MAXPAGESIZE. So for relro the linker can't play
games with the start of the data segment to save disk space. At
least, not without introducing gaps between the relro sections. In
fact, because the linker was starting layout using its simple
heuristic of starting the data segment at the end of the text segment
plus one page, it was sometimes introducing page gaps for no reason.
See pr28743.
PR 28824
PR 28734
* ldexp.c (fold_segment_align): When relro, don't adjust up by
offset within page. Set relropagesize.
(fold_segment_relro_end): Align to relropagesize.
* ldexp.h (seg_align_type): Rename pagesize to commonpagesize.
Add relropagesize. Comment.
* ldlang.c (lang_size_segment): Adjust to suit field renaming.
(lang_size_relro_segment_1): Align relro_end using relropagesize.
2022-02-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-11 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Disallow invalid relocation against protected symbol
I am checking this into master and will backport it to 2.38 branch.
H.J
----
On x86, GCC 12 supports -mno-direct-extern-access to enable canonical
reference to protected function and disable copy relocation. With
-mno-direct-extern-access, the canonical protected function symbols must
be accessed via canonical reference and the protected data symbols in
shared libraries are non-copyable. Under glibc 2.35, non-canonical
reference to the canonical protected function will get the run-time error:
./y: internal_f: ./libfoo.so: non-canonical reference to canonical protected function
and copy relocations against the non-copyable protected symbols will get
the run-time error:
./x: internal_i: ./libfoo.so: copy relocation against non-copyable protected symbol
Update x86 linker to disallow non-canonical reference to the canonical
protected function:
ld: plt.o: non-canonical reference to canonical protected function `internal_f' in libfoo.so
ld: failed to set dynamic section sizes: bad value
and copy relocation against the non-copyable protected symbol:
ld: main.o: copy relocation against non-copyable protected symbol `internal_i' in libfoo.so
at link-time.
bfd/
PR ld/28875
* elf-properties.c (_bfd_elf_parse_gnu_properties): Don't skip
shared libraries for GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_scan_relocs): Disallow non-canonical
reference to canonical protected function.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): Likewise.
* elfxx-x86.c (elf_x86_allocate_dynrelocs): Don't allow copy
relocation against non-copyable protected symbol.
ld/
PR ld/28875
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Check non-canonical reference to
canonical protected function and check copy relocation against
non-copyable protected symbol.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr21997-1.err: New file.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28875.err: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28875a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28875b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21997-1a.err: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21997-1b.err: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28875-data.err: New file.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28875-func.err: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Check non-canonical reference
to canonical protected function and check copy relocation against
non-copyable protected symbol.
2022-02-11 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add initializers to bound_minimal_symbol
This adds initializers to bound_minimal_symbol, allowing for the
removal of some calls to memset.
2022-02-11 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
gdb/fortran: support ptype and print commands for namelist variables
Gfortran supports namelists (a Fortran feature); it emits
DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item dies. But gdb does not
process these dies and does not support 'print' or 'ptype' commands on
namelist variables.
An attempt to print namelist variables results in gdb bailing out with
the error message as shown below.
(gdb) print nml
No symbol "nml" in current context.
This commit is to make the print and ptype commands work for namelist
variables and its items. Sample output of these commands is shared
below, with fixed gdb.
(gdb) ptype nml
type = Type nml
integer(kind=4) :: a
integer(kind=4) :: b
End Type nml
(gdb) print nml
$1 = ( a = 10, b = 20 )
2022-02-11 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
gdb: fix until behavior with trailing !is_stmt lines
When using the command "until", it is expected that GDB will exit a
loop if the current instruction is the last one related to that loop.
However, if there were trailing non-statement instructions, "until"
would just behave as "next". This was noticeable in clang-compiled
code, but might happen with gcc-compiled as well. PR gdb/17315 relates
to this problem, as running gdb.base/watchpoint.exp with clang
would fail for this reason.
To better understand this issue, consider the following source code,
with line numbers marked on the left:
10: for (i = 0; i < 10; ++i)
11: loop_body ();
12: other_stuff ();
If we transform this to pseudo-assembler, and generate a line table,
we could end up with something like this:
Address | Pseudo-Assembler | Line | Is-Statement?
0x100 | i = 0 | 10 | Yes
0x104 | loop_body () | 11 | Yes
0x108 | i = i + 1 | 10 | Yes
0x10c | if (i < 10): | 10 | No
0x110 | goto 0x104 | 10 | No
0x114 | other_stuff () | 12 | Yes
Notice the two non-statement instructions at the end of the loop.
The problem is that when we reach address 0x108 and use 'until',
hoping to leave the loop, GDB sets up a stepping range that runs from
the start of the function (0x100 in our example) to the end of the
current line table entry, that is 0x10c in our example. GDB then
starts stepping forward.
When 0x10c is reached GDB spots that we have left the stepping range,
that the new location is not a statement, and that the new location is
associated with the same source line number as the previous stepping
range. GDB then sets up a new stepping range that runs from 0x10c to
0x114, and continues stepping forward.
Within that stepping range the inferior hits the goto (at 0x110) and
loops back to address 0x104.
At 0x104 GDB spots that we have left the previous stepping range, that
the new address is marked as a statement, and that the new address is
for a different source line. As a result, GDB stops and returns
control to the user. This is not what the user was expecting, they
expected GDB to exit the loop.
The fix proposed in this patch, is that, when the user issues the
'until' command, and GDB sets up the initial stepping range, GDB will
check subsequent SALs (symtab_and_lines) to see if they are
non-statements associated with the same line number. If they are then
the end of the initial stepping range is extended to the end of the
non-statement SALs.
In our example above, the user is at 0x108 and uses 'until', GDB now
sets up a stepping range from the start of the function 0x100 to
0x114, the first address associated with a different line.
Now as GDB steps around the loop it never leaves the initial stepping
range. It is only when GDB exits the loop that we leave the stepping
range, and the stepping finishes at address 0x114.
This patch also adds a test case that can be run with gcc to test that
this functionality is not broken in the future.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17315
2022-02-11 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
gas/doc: Fix "a true results" typo
2022-02-11 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb: extend the information printed by 'maint info jit'
This commit updates the output of 'maint info jit' to print not just
the jit_code_entry address, but also the symfile address, and the
symfile size.
The new information could be obtained by looking into target memory at
the contents of the jit_code_entry, but, by storing this information
within gdb at the time the jit object is loaded, it is now possible to
check if the jit_code_entry has been modified in target memory behind
gdb's back.
Additionally, the symfile address is the same address that is now used
in the objfile names after commit 4a620b7e.
One test that relies on the output of 'maint info jit' was updated to
allow for the new output format.
2022-02-11 Michael Forney <mforney@mforney.org>
bfd: Remove return with expression in void function
* bfd.c (bfd_set_gp_value): Remove return with expression
in void function.
2022-02-11 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: LoongArch: Add Makefile, configure and NEWS
This commit adds Makefile, configure and NEWS for LoongArch.
gdb: LoongArch: Add initial native Linux support
This commit adds initial native Linux support for LoongArch.
gdb: LoongArch: Add initial Linux target support
This commit adds initial Linux target support for LoongArch.
gdb: LoongArch: Add initial baremetal support
This commit adds initial baremetal support for LoongArch.
gdb: LoongArch: Add initial target description support
This commit adds initial target description support for LoongArch.
2022-02-11 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
libctf: delete unused libctf_TEXINFOS
It's not clear what this was meant for, but it's not used by anything,
and the info pages still generate fine without it.
2022-02-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/linux: remove ptrace support check for exec, fork, vfork, vforkdone, clone, sysgood
I think it's safe to remove checking support for these ptrace features,
they have all been added in what is now ancient times (around the
beginning of Linux 2.6). This allows removing a bit of complexity in
linux-nat.c and nat/linux-ptrace.c.
It also allows saving one extra fork every time we start debugging on
Linux: linux_check_ptrace_features forks a child process to test if some
ptrace features are supported. That child process forks a grand-child,
to test whether ptrace reports an event for the fork by the child. This
is no longer needed, if we assume the kernel supports reporting forks.
PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORKDONE was introduced in Linux in this change, in 2003:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tglx/history.git/commit/?id=45c1a159b85b3b30afd26a77b4be312226bba416
PTRACE_O_TRACESYSGOOD was supported at least as of this change, in 2002:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tglx/history.git/commit/?id=acc7088569c8eef04eeed0eff51d23bb5bcff964
PTRACE_O_TRACEFORK, PTRACE_O_TRACEVFORK, PTRACE_O_TRACEEXEC and
PTRACE_O_TRACECLONE were introduced in this change, in 2002:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tglx/history.git/commit/?id=a0691b116f6a4473f0fa264210ab9b95771a2b46
Change-Id: Iffb906549a89cc6b619427f976ec044706ab1e8d
2022-02-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-10 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/infrun: some extra infrun debug print statements
While reviewing a different patch I wanted to know more about what was
going on during GDB's stepping. I added some extra infrun debug print
calls, and I thought these might be useful to others.
2022-02-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-09 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update the obsolete list and how-to-make-a-release documentation now that the 2.38 release is out.
2022-02-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28763, SIGSEGV during processing of program headers via readelf
PR 28763
* readelf.c (process_file_header): Discard any cached program
headers if there is an extension field for e_phnum in first
section header.
2022-02-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Work around gcc-4 warnings in elf64-ppc.c
elf64-ppc.c: In function 'ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections':
elf64-ppc.c:10309:45: error: value computed is not used [-Werror=unused-value]
++lgot_ents, ++lgot_masks, isym != NULL && isym++)
It is of course a silly warning, fixed in later versions of gcc. I
wrote "isym != NULL && isym++" rather than the simpler "isym++" to
stop sanitisers complaining about incrementing a NULL pointer. isym
is of course unused in any code path where it might start off as
NULL. Sometimes you can't win. So don't try to be clever in reading
local symbols only when needed. 99 times out of 100 they will be
cached anyway.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Avoid annoying
warnings by always reading local syms.
(ppc64_elf_layout_multitoc): Likewise.
2022-02-09 Peilin Ye <peilin.ye@bytedance.com>
Test --only-keep-debug on ELF relocatables
Add a test for commit 7c4643efe7be, which fixed --only-keep-debug for ELF
relocatables.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objcopy.exp
(keep_debug_symbols_for_elf_relocatable): New test.
2022-02-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-08 Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
RISC-V: Stop reporting warnings for mismatched extension versions
The extension version checking logic is really just too complicated to
encode into the linker, trying to do so causes more harm than good.
This removes the checks and the associated tests, leaving the logic to
keep the largest version of each extension linked into the target.
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_version_mismatch): Rename to
riscv_update_subset_version, and stop reporting warnings on
version mismatches.
(riscv_merge_std_ext): Adjust calls to riscv_version_mismatch.
(riscv_merge_multi_letter_ext): Likewise.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-01.d: Remove
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-01a.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-01b.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02.d: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02a.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02b.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02c.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02d.s: Likewise
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-user-ext-01.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-user-ext-rv32i21_m2p0.s:
Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-user-ext-rv32i21_m2p1.s:
Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Remove obselete
attr-merge-arch-failed-{01,02}, replace with
attr-merge-user-ext-01.
2022-02-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28862, heap-buffer-overflow in parse_stab_string
I have no info on the format of a "SUNPRO C++ Namespace" stab, so am
relying on the previous code being correct in parsing these stabs.
Just don't allow NULs anywhere in the stab.
PR 28862
* stabs.c (parse_stab_string): Don't overrun buffer when parsing
'Y' stab.
2022-02-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: elf: Check symbol version without any symbols
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr24718-1.d: Don't xfail for hppa64.
2022-02-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: remove tailing newlines from index_cache_debug calls
I noticed that most of the calls to index_cache_debug include a
trailing newline. As the new debug mechanism already adds a newline,
that means all of these debug calls result in a blank line being
printed, which I think is a mistake.
Remove all the trailing newlines.
I also reformatted one of the index_cache_debug where a string will
now fit onto a single line.
Unless 'set debug index-cache on' is used, there should be no visible
change in output after this commit.
2022-02-08 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
i386: Allow GOT32 relocations against ABS symbols
GOT32 relocations are allowed since absolute value + addend is stored in
the GOT slot.
Tested on glibc 2.35 build with GCC 11.2 and -Os.
bfd/
PR ld/28870
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_elf_x86_valid_reloc_p): Also allow GOT32
relocations.
ld/
PR ld/28870
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Run pr28870.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28870.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr28870.s: Likewise.
2022-02-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: allow Value.format_string to return styled output
Add a new argument to the gdb.Value.format_string method, 'styling'.
This argument is False by default.
When this argument is True, then the returned string can contain output
styling escape sequences.
When this argument is False, then the returned string will not contain
any styling escape sequences.
If the returned string is going to be printed to the user, then it is
often nice to retain the GDB styling.
For the testing, we need to adjust the TERM environment variable, as
we do for all the styling tests. I'm now running all of the C tests
in gdb.python/py-format-string.exp in an environment where styling
could be generated, but only my new test should actually produce
styled output, hopefully this will catch the case where a bug might
cause format_string to always produce styled output.
2022-02-07 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: make thread_info::m_thread_fsm a std::unique_ptr
While working on function calls, I realized that the thread_fsm member
of struct thread_info is a raw pointer to a resource it owns. This
commit changes the type of the thread_fsm member to a std::unique_ptr in
order to signify this ownership relationship and slightly ease resource
management (no need to manually call delete).
To ensure consistent use, the field is made a private member
(m_thread_fsm). The setter method (set_thread_fsm) can then check
that it is incorrect to associate a FSM to a thread_info object if
another one is already in place. This is ensured by an assertion.
The function run_inferior_call takes an argument as a pointer to a
call_thread_fsm and installs it in it in a thread_info instance. Also
change this function's signature to accept a unique_ptr in order to
signify that the ownership of the call_thread_fsm is transferred during
the call.
No user visible change expected after this commit.
Tested on x86_64-linux with no regression observed.
Change-Id: Ia1224f72a4afa247801ce6650ce82f90224a9ae8
2022-02-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: unbuffer all input streams when not using readline
This commit should fix PR gdb/28711. What's actually going on is
pretty involved, and there's still a bit of the story that I don't
understand completely, however, from my observed results, I think that
the change I propose making here (or something very similar) is going
to be needed.
The original bug report involves using eclipse to drive gdb using mi
commands. A separate tty is spun off in which to send gdb the mi
commands, this tty is created using the new-ui command.
The behaviour observed is that, given a particular set of mi commands
being sent to gdb, we sometimes see an ESPIPE error from a lseek
call, which ultimately results in gdb terminating.
The problems all originate from gdb_readline_no_editing_callback in
gdb/event-top.c, where we can (sometimes) perform calls to fgetc, and
allow glibc to perform buffering on the FILE object being used.
I say sometime, because, gdb_readline_no_editing_callback already
includes a call to disable the glibc buffering, but this is only done
if the input stream is not a tty. In our case the input stream is a
tty, so the buffering is left in place.
The first step to understanding why this problem occurs is to
understand that eclipse sends multiple commands to gdb very quickly
without waiting for and answer to each command, eclipse plans to
collect all of the command results after sending all the commands to
gdb. In fact, eclipse sends the commands to gdb that they appear to
arrive in the gdb process as a single block of data. When reproducing
this issue within the testsuite I find it necessary to send multiple
commands using a single write call.
The next bit of the story gets a little involved, and this is where my
understanding is not complete. I can describe the behaviour that I
observe, and (for me at least) I'm happy that what I'm seeing, if a
little strange, is consistent. In order to fully understand what's
going on I think I would likely need to dive into kernel code, which
currently seems unnecessary given that I'm happy with the solution I'm
proposing.
The following description all relates to input from a tty in which I'm
not using readline. I see the same problems either when using a
new-ui tty, or with gdb's standard, non-readline, mi tty.
Here's what I observe happening when I send multiple commands to gdb
using a single write, if I send gdb this:
command_1\ncommand_2\ncommand_3
then gdb's event loop will wake up (from its select) as it sees there
is input available. We call into gdb_readline_no_editing_callback,
where we call fgetc, glibc will do a single big read, and get back
just:
command_1\n
that is, despite there being multiple lines of input available, I
consistently get just a single line. From glibc a single character is
returned from the fgetc call, and within gdb we accumulate characters,
one at a time, into our own buffer. Eventually gdb sees the '\n'
character, and dispatches the whole 'command_1' into gdb's command
handler, which processes the command and prints the result. We then
return to gdb_readline_no_editing_callback, which in turn returns to
gdb's event loop where we re-enter the select.
Inside the select we immediately see that there is more input waiting
on the input stream, drop out of the select, and call back into
gdb_readline_no_editing_callback. In this function we again call
fgetc where glibc performs another big read. This time glibc gets:
command_2\n
that is, we once again get just a single line, despite there being a
third line available. Just like the first command we copy the whole
string, character by character into gdb's buffer, then handle the
command. After handling the command we go to the event loop, enter,
and then exit the select, and call back to the function
gdb_readline_no_editing_callback.
In gdb_readline_no_editing_callback we again call fgetc, this time
glibc gets the string:
command_3\n
like before, we copy this to gdb's buffer and handle the command, then
we return to the event loop. At this point the select blocks while we
wait for more input to arrive.
The important bit of this is that someone, somewhere is, it appears,
taking care to split the incoming write into lines.
My next experiment is to try something like:
this_is_a_very_long_command\nshort_command\n
However, I actually make 'this_is_a_very_long_command' very long, as
in many hundreds of characters long. One way to do this is:
echo xxxxxx.....xxxxx
and just adding more and more 'x' characters as needed. What I'm
aiming for is to have the first command be longer than glibc's
internal read buffer, which, on my machine, is 1024 characters.
However, for this discussion, lets imagine that glibc's buffer is just
8 characters (we can create just this situation by adding a suitable
setbuf call into gdb_readline_no_editing_callback).
Now, if I send gdb this data:
abcdefghij\nkl\n
The first read from glibc will get 'abcdefgh', that is a full 8
character buffer. Once gdb has copied these to its buffer we call
fgetc again, and now glibc will get 'ij\n', that is, just like before,
multiple lines are split at the '\n' character. The full command,
which is now in gdb's buffer can be handled 'abcdefghij', after which
we go (via the event loop) back to gdb_readline_no_editing_callback.
Now we call fgetc, and glibc will get 'kl\n', which is then handled in
the normal way.
So far, so good. However, there is, apparently, one edge case where
the above rules don't apply.
If the '\n' character is the first character read from the kernel,
then the incoming lines are not split up. So, given glibc's 8
character buffer, if I send gdb this:
abcdefgh\nkl\n
that is the first command is 8 characters plus a newline, then, on the
first read (from within glibc) we get 'abcdefgh' in a single buffer.
As there's no newline gdb calls fgetc again, and glibc does another
large read, now we get:
\nkl\n
which doesn't follow the above pattern - the lines are not split into
separate buffers!
So, gdb reads the first character from glibc using fgetc, this is the
newline. Now gdb has a complete command, and so the command is
handled. We then return to the event loop and enter the select.
The problem is that, as far as the kernel is concerned, there is no
more input pending, it's all been read into glibc's buffer, and so the
select doesn't return. The second command is basically stuck in
glibc's buffer.
If I send another command to gdb, or even just send an empty
command (a lone newline) then the select returns, we call into
gdb_readline_no_editing_callback, and now gdb sees the second
command.
OK, so the above is interesting, but it doesn't explain the ESPIPE
error.
Well, that's a slightly different, but related issue. The ESPIPE
case will _only_ show up when using new-ui to create the separate tty
for mi commands, and is a consequence of this commit:
commit afe09f0b6311a4dd1a7e2dc6491550bb228734f8
Date: Thu Jul 18 17:20:04 2019 +0100
Fix for using named pipes on Windows
Prior to this commit, the new-ui command would open the tty three
times, once each for stdin, stderr, and stdout. After this commit we
open the tty just once and reuse the FILE object for all three roles.
Consider the problem case, where glibc has (unexpectedly) read the
second command into its internal buffer. When we handle the first
command we usually end up having to write something to the mi output
stream.
After the above commit the same FILE object represents both the input
and output streams, so, when gdb tries to write to the FILE object,
glibc spots that there is input pending within the input buffer, and
so assumes that we have read ahead of where we should be in the input
file. To correct for this glibc tries to do an lseek call to
reposition the file offset of the output stream prior to writing to
it. However, as the output stream is a tty, and seeking is not
supported on a tty, this lseek call fails, this results in the ESPIPE,
which ultimately causes gdb to terminate.
So, now we understand why the ESPIPE triggers (which was what caused
the gdb crash in the original bug report), and we also understand that
sometime gdb will not handle the second command in a timely
fashion (if the first command is just the wrong length). So, what to
do about all this?
We could revert the commit mentioned above (and implement its
functionality another way). This would certainly resolve the ESPIPE
issue, the buffered input would now only be on the input stream, the
output stream would have no buffered input, and so glibc would never
try to lseek, and so we'd never get the ESPIPE error.
However, this only solves one of the two problems. We would still
suffer from the problem where, if the first command is just the wrong
length, the second command will not (immediately) get handled.
The only solution I can see to this problem is to unbuffer the input
stream. If glibc is not buffering the input, but instead, we read
incoming data character by character from the kernel, then everything
will be fine. As soon as we see the newline at the end of the first
command we will handle the first command. As glibc will have no
buffered input it will not be tempted to lseek, so no ESPIPE error.
When we go have to the event loop there will be more data pending in
the kernel, so the select will immediately return, and the second
command will be processed.
I'm tempted to suggest that we should move the unbuffering of the
input stream out of gdb_readline_no_editing_callback and do it
somewhere earlier, more like when we create the input streams.
However, I've not done that in this commit for a couple of reasons:
1. By keeping the unbuffering in gdb_readline_no_editing_callback
I'm making the smallest possible change that fixes the bug. Moving
the unbuffering somewhere better can be done as a refactor later, if
that 's felt to be important,
2. I don't think making repeated calls to unbuffer the input will
have that much performance impact. We only make the unbuffer call
once per call to gdb_readline_no_editing_callback, and, if the input
stream is already unbuffered we'll return pretty quickly, so I don't
see this as being massively costly,
3. Tom is currently doing lots of gdb stream management changes and
I want to minimise the chances we'll conflict.
So, this commit just changes gdb_readline_no_editing_callback to
always unbuffer the input stream.
The test for this issue sends two commands in a loop, with the first
command growing bigger each time around the loop. I actually make the
first command bigger by just adding whitespace to the front, as gdb
still has to read the complete command (including whitespace) via
glibc, so this is enough to trigger the bug.
The original bug was reported when using a virtual machine, and in
this situation we see this in the strace output:
read(9, "70-var-info-path-expression var1.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa", 1024) = 64
read(9, "\n71-var-info-path-expression var1.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\n", 1024) = 67
I'm not completely sure what's going on here, but it appears that the
kernel on the virtual machine is delivering the input to glibc slower
than I see on my real hardware; glibc asks for 1024 bytes, but only
gets 64 bytes the first time. In the second read we see the problem
case, the first character is the newline, but then the entire second
command is included.
If I run this exact example on my real hardware then the first command
would not be truncated at 64 bytes, instead, I'd expect to see the
newline included in the first read, with the second command split into
a second read.
So, for testing, I check cases where the first command is just a few
characters (starting at 8 character), all the way up to 2048
characters. Hopefully, this should mean we hit the problem case for
most machine setups.
The only last question relates to commit afe09f0b6311a4d that I
mentioned earlier. That commit was intended to provide support for
Microsoft named pipes:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/ipc/named-pipes
I know next to nothing about this topic beyond a brief scan of the
above link, but I think these windows named pipe are closer in
behaviour to unix sockets than to unix named fifos.
I am a little nervous that, after the above commit, we now use the
same FILE for in, err, and out streams. In contrast, in a vanilla C
program, I would expect different FILE objects for each stream.
Still, I'm reluctant to revert the above commit (and provide the same
functionality a different way) without a specific bug to point at,
and, now that the streams are unbuffered, I expect a lot of the read
and write calls are going straight to the kernel with minimal glibc
involvement, so maybe it doesn't really matter. Anyway, I haven't
touched the above patch, but it is something to keep in mind when
working in this area.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28711
2022-02-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/disasm: combine the no printing disassembler setup code
We have three places in gdb where we initialise a disassembler that
will not print anything (used for figuring out the length of
instructions, or collecting other information from the disassembler).
Each of these places has its own stub function to act as a print like
callback, the stub function is identical in each case, and just does
nothing.
In this commit I create a new function to initialise a disassembler
that doesn't print anything, and have all three locations use this new
function. There's now only one non-printing stub function.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-02-07 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdb: add the 'set/show suppress-cli-notifications' command
GDB already has a flag to suppress printing notification events, such
as thread and inferior context switches, on the CLI. This is used
internally when executing commands. Make the flag available to the
user via a new command. This is expected to be useful in scripts.
For instance, suppose that when Inferior 1 gets to a certain state,
you want to add and set up a new inferior using the commands below,
but you also want to have a reduced/clean output.
define do-setup
printf "Setting up Inferior 2...\n"
add-inferior -exec a.out
inferior 2
break file.c:3
run
inferior 1
printf "Done\n"
end
Currently, GDB prints
(gdb) do-setup
Setting up Inferior 2...
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2 on connection 1 (native)
[Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (/tmp/a.out)]
Breakpoint 2 at 0x1155: file file.c, line 3.
Thread 2.1 "a.out" hit Breakpoint 2, main () at file.c:3
3 return 0;
[Switching to inferior 1 [process 7670] (/tmp/test)]
[Switching to thread 1.1 (process 7670)]
#0 main () at test.c:2
2 int a = 1;
Done
GDB's Python API make it possible to capture and return GDB's output,
but this does not work for all the streams. In particular, CLI
notification events are not captured:
(gdb) python gdb.execute("do-setup", False, True)
[Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (/tmp/a.out)]
Thread 2.1 "a.out" hit Breakpoint 2, main () at file.c:3
3 return 0;
[Switching to inferior 1 [process 8263] (/tmp/test)]
[Switching to thread 1.1 (process 8263)]
#0 main () at test.c:2
2 int a = 1;
You can use the new "set suppress-cli-notifications" command to
suppress the output:
(gdb) set suppress-cli-notifications on
(gdb) do-setup
Setting up Inferior 2...
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2 on connection 1 (native)
Breakpoint 2 at 0x1155: file file.c, line 3.
Done
2022-02-07 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdb/cli: add a 'normal_stop' option to 'cli_suppress_notification'
Extend the 'cli_suppress_notification' struct with a new field,
'normal_stop', that can be used for checking if printing normal stop
events on the CLI should be suppressed.
This patch only introduces the flag. The subsequent patch adds a user
command to turn the flag off/on.
2022-02-07 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdb/cli: convert cli_suppress_notification from int to bool
Convert the suppress_notification flag for the CLI from int to bool.
2022-02-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert "elf: Remove the 1-page gap before the RELRO segment"
This reverts commit 2f83249c13d86065b4c7cdb198ea871017b4bba1.
PR ld/28743
* ldlang.c (lang_size_relro_segment_1): Revert 2022-01-10 changes.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr20830.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-s390/gotreloc_64-relro-1.dd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr18176.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-02-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert "ld: Rewrite lang_size_relro_segment_1"
This reverts commit c804c6f98d342c3d46f73d7a7ec6229d5ab1c9f3.
PR ld/28743
PR ld/28819
* ldlang.c (lang_size_relro_segment_1): Revert 2022-01-14 change.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28743-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28743-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Likewise.
2022-02-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
A more elegant pr28827-1 testcase
Use .irpc macros in pr28827-1.s
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-1.s: Make the testcase more
elegant. Comment.
2022-02-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Merge do_val_print and common_val_print
The only caller of do_val_print just does a small bit of work before
the call. This patch merges the two functions, and removes an
unnecessary local variable, making gdb a bit simpler.
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_LINE macro
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's line. Remove the corresponding macro
and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I229f2b8fcf938c07975f641361313a8761fad9a5
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_TYPE macro
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's type. Remove the corresponding
macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ie1a137744c5bfe1df4d4f9ae5541c5299577c8de
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remote SYMBOL_IS_CPLUS_TEMPLATE_FUNCTION macro
Add a getter for a whether a symbol is a C++ template function. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I89abc2802a952b77b0e0eb73a25c2306cb8e8bcc
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_INLINED macro
Add a getter and a setter for whether a symbol is inlined. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I934468da3b5a32dd6b161a6f252a6b1b94737279
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT macro
Add a getter and a setter for whether a symbol is an argument. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I71b4f0465f3dfd2ed8b9e140bd3f7d5eb8d9ee81
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_OBJFILE_OWNED macro
Add a getter and a setter for whether a symbol is objfile owned. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ib7ef3718d65553ae924ca04c3fd478b0f4f3147c
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_DOMAIN macro
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's domain. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I54465b50ac89739c663859a726aef8cdc6e4b8f3
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_CLASS macro, add getter
Change-Id: I83211d5a47efc0564386e5b5ea4a29c00b1fd46a
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_IMPL macro, add method
Add a getter for a symbol's "impl". Remove the corresponding macro and
adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ibe26ed442f0f99a0f5cddafca30bd96ec7fb9fa8
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_ACLASS_INDEX macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's aclass index. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ie8c8d732624cfadb714aba5ddafa3d29409b3d39
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME
It seems like this macro is not needed at all anymore, it just wraps the
function of the same name with the same arguments.
Change-Id: I3c342ac8d89c27af5aee1a819dc32cc6396fd41b
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_DIRNAME macro
Remove the macro, replace with an equivalent method.
Change-Id: I46ec36b91bb734331138eb9cd086b2db01635aed
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_PSPACE macro
Remove the macro, replace with an equivalent method.
Change-Id: Icccc20e7e8ae03ac4dac1c7514c25a12a9a0ac69
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_OBJFILE macro
Remove the macro, replace with an equivalent method.
Change-Id: I8f9ecd290ad28502e53c1ceca5006ba78bf042eb
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_BLOCKVECTOR macro
Remove the macro, replace with an equivalent method.
Change-Id: Id6fe2a79c04bcd6c69ccaefb7a69bc06a476288c
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_LANGUAGE macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's language. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I9f4d840b11c19f80f39bac1bce020fdd1739e11f
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_LINETABLE macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's linetable. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I159183fc0ccd8e18ab937b3c2f09ef2244ec6e9c
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove SYMTAB_COMPUNIT macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's compunit_symtab. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
For brevity, I chose the name "compunit" instead of "compunit_symtab"
the the field, getter and setter names. Since we are already in symtab
context, the _symtab suffix seems redundant.
Change-Id: I4b9b731c96e3594f7733e75af1e3d01bc0e4fe92
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_MACRO_TABLE macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's macro table. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I00615ea72d5ac43d9a865e941cb2de0a979c173a
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_EPILOGUE_UNWIND_VALID macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's epilogue unwind valid flag.
Remove the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: If3b68629d987767da9be7041a95d96dc34367a9a
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_LOCATIONS_VALID macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's locations valid flag.
Remove the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I3e3cfba926ce62993d5b61814331bb3244afad01
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_BLOCK_LINE_SECTION macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's block line section. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I3eb1a323388ad55eae8bfa45f5bc4a08dc3df455
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_BLOCKVECTOR macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's blockvector. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I99484c6619dcbbea7c5d89c72aa660316ca62f64
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_DIRNAME macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's dirname. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: If2f39b295fd26822586485e04a8b8b5aa5cc9b2e
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_PRODUCER macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's producer. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ia1d6d8a0e247a08a21af23819d71e49b37d8931b
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_DEBUGFORMAT macro, add getter/setter
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's debugformat. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I1667b02d5322346f8e23abd9f8a584afbcd75975
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_FILETABS macro
I think that most remaining uses of COMPUNIT_FILETABS intend to get the
primary filetab of the compunit_symtab specifically (and not to iterate
over all filetabs, for example, those cases would use compunit_filetabs,
which has been converted to compunit_symtab::filetabs), so replace mosts
uses with compunit_symtab::primary_filetab.
In jit.c, function finalize_symtab, we can save the symtab object
returned by allocate_symtab and use it, it makes things simpler.
Change-Id: I4e51d6d4b40759de8768b61292e5e13c8eae2e38
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: move compunit_filetabs to compunit_symtab::filetabs
Make compunit_filetabs, used to iterate a compunit_symtab's filetabs, a
method of compunit_symtab. The name filetabs conflicts with the current
name of the field. Rename the field to m_filetabs, since at this point
nothing outside of compunit_symtab uses it, so we should treat it as
private (even though it's not actually private). Rename the
last_filetab field to m_last_filetab as well (it's only used on
compunit_symtab::add_filetab).
Adjust the COMPUNIT_FILETABS macro to keep its current behavior of
returning the first filetab.
Change-Id: I537b553a44451c52d24b18ee1bfa47e23747cfc3
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: add compunit_symtab::set_primary_filetab method
Add a method to set the primary filetab of the CU. This is currently
done in buildsym_compunit::end_symtab_with_blockvector.
Change-Id: I16c51a6b90a4cb4c0c5f183b0f2e12bc64b6fd74
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: add compunit_symtab::add_filetab method
Add a method to append a filetab/symtab to a compunit_symtab. There is
a single place where this is done currently, in allocate_symtab.
Change-Id: Ie86c6e34d175728173d1cffdce44acd6cff6c31d
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: rename compunit_primary_filetab to compunit_symtab::primary_filetab
Make compunit_primary_filetab a method of compunit_symtab.
Change-Id: Iee3c4f7e36d579bf763c5bba146e5e10d6766768
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: remove COMPUNIT_OBJFILE macro
Remove the macro, update all users to use the getter directly.
Change-Id: I3f0fd6f4455d1c4ebd5da73b561eb18a979ef1f6
2022-02-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: add getter/setter for compunit_symtab::objfile
Rename the field to m_objfile, and add a getter and a setter. Update
all users.
Change-Id: If7e2f763ee3e70570140d9af9261b1b056253317
2022-02-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Allow non-ASCII characters in Rust identifiers
Rust 1.53 (quite a while ago now) ungated the support for non-ASCII
identifiers. This didn't work in gdb. This is PR rust/20166.
This patch fixes the problem by allowing non-ASCII characters to be
considered as identifier components. It seemed simplest to just pass
them through -- doing any extra checking didn't seem worthwhile.
The new test also verifies that such characters are allowed in strings
and character literals as well. The latter also required a bit of
work in the lexer.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20166
2022-02-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix Rust parser bug with function fields
In Rust, 'obj.f()' is a method call -- but '(obj.f)()' is a call of a
function-valued field 'f' in 'obj'. The Rust parser in gdb currently
gets this wrong. This is PR rust/24082.
The expression and Rust parser rewrites made this simple to fix --
simply wrapping a parenthesized expression in a new operation handles
it. This patch has a slight hack because I didn't want to introduce a
new exp_opcode enumeration constant just for this. IMO this doesn't
matter, since we should work toward removing dependencies on these
opcodes anyway; but let me know what you think of this.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24082
2022-02-06 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Add emultempl/emulation.em
Add emultempl/emulation.em to define ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation so
that new emulation hooks can be added easily.
* emultempl/aix.em (LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): New.
(LDEMUL_SET_OUTPUT_ARCH): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_CHOOSE_TARGET): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_CREATE_OUTPUT_SECTION_STATEMENTS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_OPEN_DYNAMIC_ARCHIVE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PARSE_ARGS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_UNRECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PRINT_SYMBOL): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/beos.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse):
Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): This.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): New.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PLACE_ORPHAN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_SET_SYMBOLS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/elf.em (LDEMUL_AFTER_PARSE): New.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_PLACE_ORPHANS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_SET_OUTPUT_ARCH): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_OPEN_DYNAMIC_ARCHIVE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PLACE_ORPHAN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_LIST_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_UNRECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/emulation.em: New file.
* emultempl/generic.em (ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/msp430.em (LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): New.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PLACE_ORPHAN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_FINISH): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_LIST_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/pe.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): Renamed
to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_parse): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_parse): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_unrecognized_file): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_unrecognized_file): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_recognized_file): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_recognized_file): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_place_orphan): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_place_orphan): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_open_dynamic_archive): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_open_dynamic_archive): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_find_potential_libraries): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_find_potential_libraries): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): This.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_PARSE): New.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_FINISH=): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_OPEN_DYNAMIC_ARCHIVE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PLACE_ORPHAN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_SET_SYMBOLS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_UNRECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_LIST_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_RECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_FIND_POTENTIAL_LIBRARIES): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/pep.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): Renamed
to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_set_symbols): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_parse): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_parse): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_before_allocation): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_unrecognized_file): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_unrecognized_file): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_recognized_file): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_recognized_file): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_place_orphan): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_place_orphan): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_open_dynamic_archive): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_open_dynamic_archive): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_find_potential_libraries): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_find_potential_libraries): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): This.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_PARSE): New.
(LDEMUL_AFTER_OPEN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_BEFORE_ALLOCATION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_FINISH=): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_OPEN_DYNAMIC_ARCHIVE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_PLACE_ORPHAN): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_SET_SYMBOLS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_UNRECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_LIST_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_RECOGNIZED_FILE): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_FIND_POTENTIAL_LIBRARIES): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/ticoff.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options):
Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_list_options): This.
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_before_parse): Renamed to ...
(gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): Renamed to ...
(gld${EMULATION_NAME}_get_script): This.
(LDEMUL_ADD_OPTIONS): New.
(LDEMUL_HANDLE_OPTION): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_LIST_OPTIONS): Likewise.
(ld_${EMULATION_NAME}_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
* emultempl/vanilla.em (LDEMUL_BEFORE_PARSE): New.
(LDEMUL_SET_OUTPUT_ARCH): Likewise.
(LDEMUL_GET_SCRIPT): Likewise.
(EMULATION_NAME): Likewise.
(OUTPUT_FORMAT): Likewise.
(ld_vanilla_emulation): Removed.
Source ${srcdir}/emultempl/emulation.em.
2022-02-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: update docs for 'info win' and 'winheight' commands
This started by noticing that the docs for 'winheight' are out of
date, the docs currently give a specific list of possible window
names. However, now that windows can be implemented in Python, it is
not possible to list all possible names.
I now link the user to a mechanism by which they can discover the
valid names for themselves at run time (by using 'info win'). That,
and the fact that gdb provides tab-completion of the name at the
command line, feels good enough.
Finally, I noticed that the docs for 'win info' don't explicitly say
that the name of the window is given in the output. This could
probably have been inferred, but given I'm now linking to this as a
mechanism to find the window name, I'd prefer to mention that the name
can be found in the output.
2022-02-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/tui: add window width information to 'info win' output
Now that we support horizontal window placement in the tui, it makes
sense to have 'info win' include the width, as well as the height, of
the currently visible windows.
That's what this commit does. Example output is now:
(gdb) info win
Name Lines Columns Focus
src 12 40 (has focus)
asm 12 41
status 1 80
cmd 11 80
I've added a NEWS entry, but the documentation was already suitably
vague, it just says that 'info win' displays the size of the visible
windows, so I don't think anything needs to be added there.
I've also added some tests, as far as I could find, the 'info win'
command was previously untested.
2022-02-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Skip undefined symbol when finishing DT_RELR
Don't abort for undefined symbol when finishing DT_RELR. Instead, skip
undefined symbol. Undefined symbol will be reported by relocate_section.
* elfxx-x86.c (elf_x86_size_or_finish_relative_reloc): Skip
undefined symbol in finishing phase.
2022-02-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Tweak assembler invocation for pr28827-1 test
PR 28827
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-1.d: Pass -a64 to gas.
2022-02-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28827 testcase
This testcase triggers a stub sizing error with the patches applied
for PR28743 (commit 2f83249c13d8 and c804c6f98d34).
PR 28827
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-1.s,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-1.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp: Run it.
2022-02-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Enable "size" as a dumpprog in ld
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (run_dump_test): Reference
global SIZE and SIZEFLAGS.
ld/
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Define SIZE and SIZEFLAGS.
2022-02-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Detect .eh_frame_hdr earlier for SIZEOF_HEADERS
Current code detects the need for PT_GNU_EH_FRAME using a field set by
_bfd_elf_discard_section_eh_frame_hdr, which is called fairly late in
the linking process. Use the elf hash table eh_info instead, which is
set up earlier by size_dynamic_sections.
* elf-bfd.h (struct output_elf_obj_tdata): Delete eh_frame_hdr.
(elf_eh_frame_hdr): Don't define.
(_bfd_elf_discard_section_eh_frame_hdr): Update prototype.
* elf-eh-frame.c (_bfd_elf_discard_section_eh_frame_hdr): Delete
abfd parameter. Don't set elf_eh_frame_hdr.
* elf.c (elf_eh_frame_hdr): New function.
(get_program_header_size): Adjust elf_eh_frame_hdr call.
(_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments): Likewise.
2022-02-05 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim: mips: Add simulator support for mips32r6/mips64r6
2022-02-01 Ali Lown <ali.lown@imgtec.com>
Andrew Bennett <andrew.bennett@imgtec.com>
Dragan Mladjenovic <dragan.mladjenovic@rt-rk.com>
Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* sim-bits.h (EXTEND9, EXTEND18 ,EXTEND19, EXTEND21,
EXTEND26): New macros.
sim/mips/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (IGEN_INCLUDE): Add mips3264r6.igen.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Support mipsisa32r6 and mipsisa64r6.
(sim_engine_run): Pick simulator model from processor specified
in e_flags.
* cp1.c (value_fpr): Handle fmt_dc32.
(fp_unary, fp_binary): Zero initialize locals.
(update_fcsr, fp_classify, fp_rint, fp_r6_cmp, inner_fmac,
fp_fmac, fp_min, fp_max, fp_mina, fp_maxa, fp_fmadd, fp_fmsub):
New functions.
(sim_fpu_class_mips_mapping): New.
* cp1.h (fcsr_ABS2008_mask, fcsr_ABS2008_shift): New define.
* interp.c (MIPSR6_P): New.
(load_word): Allow unaligned memory access for MIPSR6.
* micromips.igen (sc, scd): Adapt to new do_sc* helper signature.
* mips.igen: Add *r6 models.
(signal_if_cti, forbiddenslot32): New helpers.
(delayslot32): Use signal_if_cti.
(do_sc, do_scd); Add store_ll_bit parameter.
(sc, scd): Adapt to previous change.
(nal, beq, bal): New definitions for *r6.
(sll): Split nop and ssnop cases into ...
(nop, ssnop): New definitions.
(loadstore_ea): Use the 32-bit compatibility adressing.
(cache): Split logic into ...
(do_cache): New helper.
(check_fpu): Select IEEE 754-2008 mode for R6.
(not_word_value, unpredictable, check_mt_hilo, check_mf_hilo,
check_multi_hilo, check_div_hilo, check_u64, do_dmfc1b, add,
li, addu, and, andi, bgez, bgtz, blez, bltz, bne, break, dadd,
daddiu, daddu, dror, dror32, drorv, dsll, dsll32, dsllv, dsra,
dsra32, dsrav, dsrl, dsrl32, dsub, dsubu, j, jal, jalr,
jalr.hb, lb, lbu, ld, lh, lhu, lui, lw, lwu, nor, or, ori, ror,
rorv, sb, sd, sh, sll, sllv, slt, slti, sltiu, sltu, sra, srav,
srl, srlv, sub, subu, sw, sync, syscall, teq, tge, tgeu, tlt,
tltu, tne, xor, xori, check_fmt_p, do_load_double,
do_store_double, abs.FMT, add.FMT, ceil.l.FMT, ceil.w.FMT,
cfc1, ctc1, cvt.d.FMT, cvt.l.FMT, cvt.w.FMT, div.FMT, dfmc1,
dmtc1, floor.l.FMT, floor.w.FMT, ldc1, lwc1, mfc1, mov.FMT,
mtc1, mul.FMT, recip.FMT, round.l.FMT, round.w.FMT, rsqrt.FMT,
sdc1, sqrt.FMT, sub.FMT, swc1, trunc.l.FMT, trunc.w.FMT, bc0f,
bc0fl, bc0t, bc0tl, dmfc0, dmtc0, eret, mfc0, mtc0, cop, tlbp,
tlbr, tlbwi, tlbwr): Enable on *r6 models.
* mips3264r2.igen (dext, dextm, dextu, di, dins, dinsm, dinsu,
dsbh, dshd, ei, ext, mfhc1, mthc1, ins, seb, seh, synci, rdhwr,
wsbh): Likewise.
* mips3264r6.igen: New file.
* sim-main.h (FP_formats): Add fmt_dc32.
(FORBIDDEN_SLOT): New macros.
(simFORBIDDENSLOT, FP_R6CMP_*, FP_R6CLASS_*): New defines.
(fp_r6_cmp, fp_classify, fp_rint, fp_min, fp_max, fp_mina,
fp_maxa, fp_fmadd, fp_fmsub): New declarations.
(R6Compare, Classify, RoundToIntegralExact, Min, Max, MinA,
MaxA, FusedMultiplyAdd, FusedMultiplySub): New macros. Wrapping
previous declarations.
sim/testsuite/mips/ChangeLog:
* basic.exp: Add r6-*.s tests.
(run_r6_removed_test): New function.
(run_endian_tests): New function.
* hilo-hazard-3.s: Skip for mips*r6.
* r2-fpu.s: New test.
* r6-64.s: New test.
* r6-branch.s: New test.
* r6-forbidden.s: New test.
* r6-fpu.s: New test.
* r6-llsc-dp.s: New test.
* r6-llsc-wp.s: New test.
* r6-removed.csv: New test.
* r6-removed.s: New test.
* r6.s: New test.
* utils-r6.inc: New inc.
2022-02-05 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim: Add partial support for IEEE 754-2008
2022-02-01 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* sim-fpu.c (sim_fpu_minmax_nan): New.
(sim_fpu_max): Add variant behaviour for IEEE 754-2008.
(sim_fpu_min): Likewise.
(sim_fpu_is_un, sim_fpu_is_or): New.
(sim_fpu_un, sim_fpu_or): New.
(sim_fpu_is_ieee754_2008, sim_fpu_is_ieee754_1985): New.
(sim_fpu_set_mode): New.
(sim_fpu_classify): New.
* sim-fpu.h (sim_fpu_minmax_nan): New declaration.
(sim_fpu_un, sim_fpu_or): New declarations.
(sim_fpu_is_un, sim_fpu_is_or): New declarations.
(sim_fpu_mode): New enum.
[sim_fpu_state](current_mode): New field.
(sim_fpu_current_mode): New define.
(sim_fpu_is_ieee754_2008): New declaration.
(sim_fpu_is_ieee754_1985): New declaration.
(sim_fpu_set_mode): New declaration.
(sim_fpu_classify): New declaration.
2022-02-05 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim: Factor out NaN handling in floating point operations
2022-02-01 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* sim-fpu.c (sim_fpu_op_nan): New.
(sim_fpu_add): Factor out NaN operand handling with
a call to sim_fpu_op_nan.
(sim_fpu_sub, sim_fpu_mul, sim_fpu_div): Likewise.
(sim_fpu_rem, sim_fpu_max, sim_fpu_min): Likewise.
* sim-fpu.h (sim_fpu_op_nan): New declaration.
2022-02-05 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim: Allow toggling of quiet NaN-bit semantics
IEEE754-1985 specifies the top bit of the mantissa as an indicator
of signalling vs. quiet NaN, but does not define the precise semantics.
Most architectures treat this bit as indicating quiet NaN, but legacy
(pre-R6) MIPS goes the other way and treats it as signalling NaN.
This used to be controlled by a macro that was only defined for MIPS.
This patch replaces the macro with a variable to track the current
semantics of the NaN bit and allows differentiation between older
(pre-R6) and and newer MIPS cores.
2022-02-01 Faraz Shahbazker <fshahbazker@wavecomp.com>
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* sim-fpu.c (_sim_fpu): New.
(pack_fpu, unpack_fpu): Allow reversal of quiet NaN semantics.
* sim-fpu.h (sim_fpu_state): New struct.
(_sim_fpu): New extern.
(sim_fpu_quiet_nan_inverted): New define.
sim/mips/ChangeLog:
* cp1.h (fcsr_NAN2008_mask, fcsr_NAN2008_shift): New.
* mips.igen (check_fpu): Select default quiet NaN mode
for legacy MIPS.
* sim-main.h (SIM_QUIET_NAN_NEGATED): Remove.
2022-02-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Remove emultempl/armcoff.em
Remove emultempl/armcoff.em which has been unused after
commit 2ac93be706418f3b2aebeb22159a328023faed52
Author: Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Apr 16 20:33:36 2018 +0930
Remove arm-aout and arm-coff support
This also removes arm-netbsd (not arm-netbsdelf!), arm-openbsd, and
arm-riscix. Those targets weren't on the obsolete list but they are
all aout, and it doesn't make all that much sense to remove arm-aout
without removing them too.
* emultempl/armcoff.em: Removed.
2022-02-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: include jit_code_entry::symfile_addr value in names of objfiles created by jit reader API
This commit includes the JIT object's symfile address in the names of
objfiles created by JIT reader API (e.g., << JIT compiled code at
0x7ffd8a0c77a0 >>). This allows one to at least differentiate one from
another.
The address is the one that the debugged program has put in
jit_code_entry::symfile_addr, and that the JIT reader's read function
receives. As we can see in gdb.base/jit-reader-host.c and
gdb.base/jit-reader.c, that may not be the actual value of where the
JIT-ed code is. But it is a value chosen by the author of the JIT
engine and the JIT reader, so including this value in the objfile name
may help them correlate the JIT objfiles created by with their logs /
data structures.
To access this field, we need to pass down a reference to the
jit_code_entry. So make jit_dbg_reader_data a structure (instead of an
alias for a CORE_ADDR) that includes the address of the code entry in
the inferior's address space (the previous meaning of
jit_dbg_reader_data) plus a reference to the jit_code_entry as read into
GDB's address space. And while at it, pass down the gdbarch, so that we
don't have to call target_gdbarch.
Co-Authored-By: Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
Change-Id: Ib26c4d1bd8de503d651aff89ad2e500cb312afa5
2022-02-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Improve Ada unchecked union type printing
Currently, "ptype" of an Ada unchecked union may show a
compiler-generated wrapper structure in its output. It's more
Ada-like to elide this structure, which is what this patch implements.
It turned out to be simplest to reuse a part of print_variant_clauses
for this.
As this is Ada-specific, and Joel already reviewed it internally, I am
going to check it in.
2022-02-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove host_hex_value
I noticed that host_hex_value is redundant, because gdbsupport already
has fromhex. This patch removes the former in favor of the latter.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-02-04 Andi Kleen <andi@firstfloor.org>
Support symbol+offset lookup in addr2line
The Linux kernel usually ouputs symbol+offset instead of plain code
addresses these days, to avoid leaking ASLR secrets and to handle
dynamically loaded modules.
Converting those with addr2line is somewhat involved: it requires
looking up the symbol first using nm and then manually compute the
offset, and then pass it to addr2line.
This patch implements the necessary steps directly in addr2line,
by looking up the symbol (with demangling if needed) and computing
the offset.
It's possible that a symbol is ambigious with a hex number. In this
case it uses the symbol lookup if the string contains a +. When it isn't
ambigious the + is optional.
2022-02-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-03 Cary Coutant <ccoutant@gmail.com>
Rename EM_56800V4 to EM_56800EF.
include/elf:
* common.h: Rename EM_56800V4 to EM_56800EF.
2022-02-03 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Update X86_64_GOT_TYPE_P to cover more GOT relocations
Add R_X86_64_GOT32, R_X86_64_GOT64, R_X86_64_GOTPCREL64 and
R_X86_64_GOTPLT64 to X86_64_GOT_TYPE_P to cover more GOT relocations.
PR ld/28858
* elfxx-x86.h (X86_64_GOT_TYPE_P): Add R_X86_64_GOT32,
R_X86_64_GOT64, R_X86_64_GOTPCREL64 and R_X86_64_GOTPLT64.
2022-02-03 Cary Coutant <ccoutant@gmail.com>
Add new e_machine values.
include/elf:
* common.h: Add EM_U16_U8CORE, EM_TACHYUM, EM_56800V4.
2022-02-03 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
testsuite: fix failure in gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp
Starting with commit
commit 1da5d0e664e362857153af8682321a89ebafb7f6
Date: Tue Jan 4 08:02:24 2022 -0700
Change how Python architecture and language are handled
we see a failure in gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp:
...
Executing on target: kill -9 16622 (timeout = 300)
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP kill -9 16622
continue
Continuing.
Couldn't get registers: No such process.
(gdb) [Thread 0x7ffff77c2700 (LWP 16626) exited]
Program terminated with signal SIGKILL, Killed.
The program no longer exists.
FAIL: gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp: prompt after first continue (timeout)
This is not a regression but a failure due to a change in GDB's
output. Prior to the aforementioned commit, GDB has been printing the
"Couldn't get registers: No such process." message twice. The second
one came from
(top-gdb) bt
#0 amd64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers (this=0x555557f31440 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, regcache=0x555558805ce0, regnum=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/amd64-linux-nat.c:225
#1 0x000055555640ac5f in target_ops::fetch_registers (this=0x555557d636d0 <the_thread_db_target>, arg0=0x555558805ce0, arg1=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/target-delegates.c:502
#2 0x000055555641a647 in target_fetch_registers (regcache=0x555558805ce0, regno=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/target.c:3945
#3 0x0000555556278e68 in regcache::raw_update (this=0x555558805ce0, regnum=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/regcache.c:587
#4 0x0000555556278f14 in readable_regcache::raw_read (this=0x555558805ce0, regnum=16, buf=0x555558881950 "") at /gdb-up/gdb/regcache.c:601
#5 0x00005555562792aa in readable_regcache::cooked_read (this=0x555558805ce0, regnum=16, buf=0x555558881950 "") at /gdb-up/gdb/regcache.c:690
#6 0x000055555627965e in readable_regcache::cooked_read_value (this=0x555558805ce0, regnum=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/regcache.c:748
#7 0x0000555556352a37 in sentinel_frame_prev_register (this_frame=0x555558181090, this_prologue_cache=0x5555581810a8, regnum=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/sentinel-frame.c:53
#8 0x0000555555fa4773 in frame_unwind_register_value (next_frame=0x555558181090, regnum=16) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1235
#9 0x0000555555fa420d in frame_register_unwind (next_frame=0x555558181090, regnum=16, optimizedp=0x7fffffffd570, unavailablep=0x7fffffffd574, lvalp=0x7fffffffd57c, addrp=0x7fffffffd580,
realnump=0x7fffffffd578, bufferp=0x7fffffffd5b0 "") at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1143
#10 0x0000555555fa455f in frame_unwind_register (next_frame=0x555558181090, regnum=16, buf=0x7fffffffd5b0 "") at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1199
#11 0x00005555560178e2 in i386_unwind_pc (gdbarch=0x5555587c4a70, next_frame=0x555558181090) at /gdb-up/gdb/i386-tdep.c:1972
#12 0x0000555555cd2b9d in gdbarch_unwind_pc (gdbarch=0x5555587c4a70, next_frame=0x555558181090) at /gdb-up/gdb/gdbarch.c:3007
#13 0x0000555555fa3a5b in frame_unwind_pc (this_frame=0x555558181090) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:948
#14 0x0000555555fa7621 in get_frame_pc (frame=0x555558181160) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:2572
#15 0x0000555555fa7706 in get_frame_address_in_block (this_frame=0x555558181160) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:2602
#16 0x0000555555fa77d0 in get_frame_address_in_block_if_available (this_frame=0x555558181160, pc=0x7fffffffd708) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:2665
#17 0x0000555555fa5f8d in select_frame (fi=0x555558181160) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1890
#18 0x0000555555fa5bab in lookup_selected_frame (a_frame_id=..., frame_level=-1) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1720
#19 0x0000555555fa5e47 in get_selected_frame (message=0x0) at /gdb-up/gdb/frame.c:1810
#20 0x0000555555cc9c6e in get_current_arch () at /gdb-up/gdb/arch-utils.c:848
#21 0x000055555625b239 in gdbpy_before_prompt_hook (extlang=0x555557451f20 <extension_language_python>, current_gdb_prompt=0x555557f4d890 <top_prompt+16> "(gdb) ")
at /gdb-up/gdb/python/python.c:1063
#22 0x0000555555f7cfbb in ext_lang_before_prompt (current_gdb_prompt=0x555557f4d890 <top_prompt+16> "(gdb) ") at /gdb-up/gdb/extension.c:922
#23 0x0000555555f7d442 in std::_Function_handler<void (char const*), void (*)(char const*)>::_M_invoke(std::_Any_data const&, char const*&&) (__functor=...,
__args#0=@0x7fffffffd900: 0x555557f4d890 <top_prompt+16> "(gdb) ") at /usr/include/c++/7/bits/std_function.h:316
#24 0x0000555555f752dd in std::function<void (char const*)>::operator()(char const*) const (this=0x55555817d838, __args#0=0x555557f4d890 <top_prompt+16> "(gdb) ")
at /usr/include/c++/7/bits/std_function.h:706
#25 0x0000555555f75100 in gdb::observers::observable<char const*>::notify (this=0x555557f49060 <gdb::observers::before_prompt>, args#0=0x555557f4d890 <top_prompt+16> "(gdb) ")
at /gdb-up/gdb/../gdbsupport/observable.h:150
#26 0x0000555555f736dc in top_level_prompt () at /gdb-up/gdb/event-top.c:444
#27 0x0000555555f735ba in display_gdb_prompt (new_prompt=0x0) at /gdb-up/gdb/event-top.c:411
#28 0x00005555564611a7 in tui_on_command_error () at /gdb-up/gdb/tui/tui-interp.c:205
#29 0x0000555555c2173f in std::_Function_handler<void (), void (*)()>::_M_invoke(std::_Any_data const&) (__functor=...) at /usr/include/c++/7/bits/std_function.h:316
#30 0x0000555555e10c20 in std::function<void ()>::operator()() const (this=0x5555580f9028) at /usr/include/c++/7/bits/std_function.h:706
#31 0x0000555555e10973 in gdb::observers::observable<>::notify() const (this=0x555557f48d20 <gdb::observers::command_error>) at /gdb-up/gdb/../gdbsupport/observable.h:150
#32 0x00005555560e9b3f in start_event_loop () at /gdb-up/gdb/main.c:438
#33 0x00005555560e9bcc in captured_command_loop () at /gdb-up/gdb/main.c:481
#34 0x00005555560eb616 in captured_main (data=0x7fffffffddd0) at /gdb-up/gdb/main.c:1348
#35 0x00005555560eb67c in gdb_main (args=0x7fffffffddd0) at /gdb-up/gdb/main.c:1363
#36 0x0000555555c1b6b3 in main (argc=12, argv=0x7fffffffded8) at /gdb-up/gdb/gdb.c:32
Commit 1da5d0e664 eliminated the call to 'get_current_arch'
in 'gdbpy_before_prompt_hook'. Hence, the second instance of
"Couldn't get registers: No such process." does not appear anymore.
Fix the failure by updating the regular expression in the test.
2022-02-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 treatment of absolute symbols
Supporting -static-pie on PowerPC64 requires the linker to properly
treat SHN_ABS symbols for cases like glibc's _nl_current_LC_CTYPE_used
absolute symbol. I've been slow to fix the linker on powerpc because
there is some chance that this will break some shared libraries or
PIEs.
bfd/
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Consolidate local sym
handling code. Don't count dyn relocs against non-dynamic
absolute symbols.
(dec_dynrel_count): Adjust to suit.
(ppc64_elf_edit_toc): Don't remove entries for absolute symbols
when pic.
(allocate_got): Don't allocate space for got relocs against
non-dynamic absolute syms.
(ppc64_elf_layout_multitoc): Likewise.
(got_and_plt_relr): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Likewise for local got.
(got_and_plt_relr_for_local_syms): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Don't allocate space for relr either.
(ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Don't write relocs against non-dynamic
absolute symbols. Don't optimise got and toc code sequences
loading absolute symbol entries.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-reloc.s,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-static.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-static.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-pie.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-pie.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-shared.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-shared.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-pie-relr.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-pie-relr.r,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-shared-relr.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/abs-shared-relr.r: New tests.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp: Run them.
2022-02-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-02 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Stop the BFD library complaining about compressed dwarf debug string sections being too big.
PR 28834
* dwarf2.c (read_section): Change the heuristic that checks for
overlarge dwarf debug info sections.
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix formatting for help set/show extended-prompt
The formatting of the help text for 'help set extended-prompt' and
'help show extended-prompt' is a little off.
Here's the offending snippet:
Substitutions are applied to VALUE to compute the real prompt.
The currently defined substitutions are:
\[ Begins a sequence of non-printing characters.
\\ A backslash.
\] Ends a sequence of non-printing characters.
\e The ESC character.
Notice that the line for '\[' is indented more that the others.
Turns out this is due to how we build this help text, something which
is done in Python. We extended a classes __doc__ string with some
dynamically generated text.
The classes doc string looks like this:
"""Set the extended prompt.
Usage: set extended-prompt VALUE
Substitutions are applied to VALUE to compute the real prompt.
The currently defined substitutions are:
"""
Notice the closing """ are in a line of their own, and include some
white space just before. It's this extra white space that's causing
the problem.
Fix the formatting issue by moving the """ to the end of the previous
line. I then add the extra newline in at the point where the doc
string is merged with the dynamically generated text.
Now everything lines up correctly.
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: test to check one aspect of the linespec parsing code
While working on the fix for PR cli/28665 (see previous couple of
commits), I was playing with making a change in the linespec parsing
code. Specifically, I was thinking about whether the spec_string for
LINESPEC_LOCATION locations should ever be nullptr.
I made a change to prevent the spec_string from ever being nullptr,
tested gdb, and saw no regressions.
However, as part of this work I was reviewing how the breakpoint code
handles this case (spec_string being nullptr), and spotted that in
parse_breakpoint_sals the nullptr case is specifically handled, so
changing this should have caused a regression. But I didn't see one.
So, this commit adds a comment in location.c mentioning that the
nullptr case is (a) not an oversight, and (b) is required. Then I add
a new test to gdb.base/break.exp that ensures a change in this area
will cause a regression.
This test passes on current gdb, but with my modified (and broken)
gdb, the test would fail.
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: handle calls to edit command passing only a linespec condition
While working on the previous commit to fix PR cli/28665, I noticed
that the 'edit' command would suffer from the same problem. That is,
something like:
(gdb) edit task 123
would cause GDB to break. For a full explanation of what's going on
here, see the commit message for the previous commit.
As with the previous commit, this issue can be prevented by detecting,
and throwing, a junk at the end of the line error earlier, before
calling decode_line_1.
So, that's what this commit does. I've also added some tests for this
issue.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28665
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: handle calls to list command passing only a linespec condition
In PR cli/28665, it was reported that GDB would crash when given a
command like:
(gdb) list task 123
The problem here is that in cli/cli-cmd.c:list_command, the string
'task 123' is passed to string_to_event_location in find a location
specification. However, this location parsing understands about
breakpoint conditions, and so, will stop parsing when it sees
something that looks like a condition, in this case, the 'task 123'
looks like a breakpoint condition.
As a result, the location we get back from string_to_event_location
has no actual location specification attached to it. The actual call
path is:
list_command
string_to_event_location
string_to_event_location_basic
new_linespec_location
In new_linespec_location we call linespec_lex_to_end, which looks at
'task 123' and decides that there's nothing there that describes a
location. As such, in new_linespec_location, the spec_string field of
the location is left as nullptr.
Back in list_command we then call decode_line_1, which calls
event_location_to_sals, which calls parse_linespec, which takes the
spec_string we found earlier, and tries to converts this into a list
of sals.
However, parse_linespec is not intended to be passed a nullptr, for
example, calling is_ada_operator will try to access through the
nullptr, causing undefined behaviour. But there are other cases
within parse_linespec which don't expect to see a nullptr.
When looking at how to fix this issue, I first considered having
linespec_lex_to_end detect the problem. That function understands
when the first thing in the linespec is a condition keyword, and so,
could throw an error saying something like: "no linespec before
condition keyword", however, this is not going to work, at least, not
without additional changes to GDB, it is valid to place a breakpoint
like:
(gdb) break task 123
This will place a breakpoint at the current location with the
condition 'task 123', and changing linespec_lex_to_end breaks this
behaviour.
So, next, I considered what would happen if I added a condition to an
otherwise valid list command, this is what I see:
(gdb) list file.c:1 task 123
Junk at end of line specification.
(gdb)
So, then I wondered, could we just pull the "Junk" detection forward,
so that we throw the error earlier, before we call decode_line_1?
It turns out that yes we can. Well, sort of.
It is simpler, I think, to add a separate check into the list_command
function, after calling string_to_event_location, but before calling
decode_line_1. We know when we call string_to_event_location that the
string in question is not empty, so, after calling
string_to_event_location, if non of the string has been consumed, then
the content of the string must be junk - it clearly doesn't look like
a location specification.
I've reused the same "Junk at end of line specification." error for
consistency, and added a few tests to cover this issue.
While the first version of this patch was on the mailing list, a
second bug PR gdb/28797 was raised. This was for a very similar
issue, but this time the problem command was:
(gdb) list ,,
Here the list command understands about the first comma, list can have
two arguments separated by a comma, and the first argument can be
missing. So we end up trying to parse the second command "," as a
linespec.
However, in linespec_lex_to_end, we will stop parsing a linespec at a
comma, so, in the above case we end up with an empty linespec (between
the two commas), and, like above, this results in the spec_string
being nullptr.
As with the previous case, I've resolved this issue by adding an extra
check for junk at the end of the line - after parsing (or failing to
parse) the nothing between the two commas, we still have the "," left
at the end of the list command line - when we see this we can throw
the same "junk at the end of the line" error, and all is good.
I've added tests for this case too.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28665
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28797
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: move linespec test into gdb.linespec/ directory
The gdb.base/linespecs.exp test should really live in the gdb.linespec
directory, so lets move it there.
As we already have gdb.linespec/linespec.exp, I've renamed the test to
gdb.linespec/errors.exp, as this better reflects what the test is
actually checking.
Finally, the test script doesn't have its own source file, it was
reusing a random other source file, gdb.base/memattr.c. Now the tests
script is in gdb.linespec/, I've updated the test to use a different
source file from that directory.
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add empty string check in parse_linespec
If parse_linespec (linespec.c) is passed ARG as an empty string then
we end up calling `strchr (linespec_quote_characters, '\0')`, which
will return a pointer to the '\0' at the end of
linespec_quote_characters. This then results in GDB calling
skip_quote_char with `ARG + 1`, which is undefined behaviour (as ARG
only contained a single character, the '\0').
Fix this by checking for the first character of ARG being '\0' before
the call to strchr.
I have additionally added an assertion that ARG can't itself be
nullptr, as calling is_ada_operator with nullptr can end up calling
'startswith' on the nullptr, which is undefined behaviour.
Finally, I moved the declaration of TOKEN into the body of
parse_linespec, to where TOKEN is defined.
This patch came about while I was working on fixes for PR cli/28665
and PR gdb/28797. The actual fixes for these two issues will be in a
later commit in this series, but, with this patch in place, both of
the above bugs would hit the new assertion rather than accessing
invalid memory and crashing. The '\0' check is not currently ever
hit, but just makes the code a little safer.
Because this patch only changes the nature of the failure for the
above two bugs, there's no tests here. A later commit will fix the
above two issues, at which point I'll add some tests.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28665
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28797
2022-02-02 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: update the comment on string_to_event_location
The comment on string_to_event_location is (I believe) out of date.
This commit fixes the two issues I see:
1. This function can't return NULL any more. The implementation
calls string_to_explicit_location which can return NULL, but if this
is the case we then call string_to_event_location_basic, which I
don't believe can ever return NULL.
2. I've removed the mention that the returned string is malloc'd,
though this is true, now that we return a managed pointer, I believe
the source of the memory allocation is irrelevant, and so, shouldn't
be discussed in the header comment.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-02-02 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated French translation for the ld/ and gold/ sub-directories
2022-02-02 Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com>
or1k: Avoid R_OR1K_GOT16 signed overflow by using special howto
Previously when fixing PR 21464 we masked out upper bits of the
relocation value in order to avoid overflow complaints when acceptable.
It turns out this does not work when the relocation value ends up being
signed.
To fix this this patch introduces a special howto with
complain_on_overflow set to complain_overflow_dont. This is used in
place of the normal R_OR1K_GOT16 howto when we detect R_OR1K_GOT_AHI16
relocations.
bfd/ChangeLog:
PR 28735
* elf32-or1k.c (or1k_elf_got16_no_overflow_howto): Define.
(or1k_elf_relocate_section): Use new howto instead of trying to
mask out relocation bits.
2022-02-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-02-01 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix flex rule in gdb
Currently, if flex fails, it will leave the resulting .c file in the
tree. This will cause a cascade of errors, and requires the manual
deletion of the .c file in order to recreate the problem.
It's better for the rule to fail such that the .c file is not updated.
This way, 'make' will fail the same way every time -- which is much
handier for debugging syntax errors.
This fix just updates the Makefile rule to follow the way that the
"yacc" rule already works.
2022-02-01 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
gdb, btrace: improve error messages
When trying to use 'record btrace' on a system that does not support it,
the error message isn't as clear as it could be. See
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2022-January/049870.html.
Improve the error message in a few cases.
Reported-by: Simon Sobisch <simonsobisch@gnu.org>
2022-02-01 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/python: fix gdb.Objfile.__repr__ () for dynamically compiled code
While experimenting with JIT reader API I realized that calling repr ()
on objfile created by JIT reader crashes GDB.
The problem was that objfpy_repr () called objfile_filename () which
returned NULL, causing PyString_FromFormat () to crash.
This commit fixes this problem by using objfile_name () instead of
objfile_filename (). This also makes consistent with the value of gdb.Objfile.filename variable.
2022-02-01 Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@gnu.org>
hurd: Fix RPC prototypes
The last updates of MIG introduced qualifying strings and arrays with
const as appropriate. We thus have to update the protypes in gdb too.
Change-Id: I3f72aac1dfa6e58d1394d5776b822d7c8f2409df
2022-02-01 Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@gnu.org>
hurd: Fix RPC link names
The RPC stub code expects to be calling a C function, not a C++
function.
Change-Id: Idd7549fc118f2addc7fb4975667a011cacacc03f
2022-02-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-31 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Check symbol version without any symbols
VER_FLG_WEAK doesn't indicate that all symbol references of the symbol
version have STB_WEAK. VER_FLG_WEAK indicates a weak symbol version
definition with no symbols associated with it. It is used to verify
the existence of a particular implementation without any symbol references
to the weak symbol version.
PR ld/24718
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr24718-1.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr24718-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr24718-1.t: Likewise.
2022-01-31 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Load debug section only when dumping debug sections
Don't load debug sections if we aren't dumping any debug sections.
PR binutils/28843
* objdump.c (dump_any_debugging): New.
(load_debug_section): Return false if dump_any_debugging isn't
set.
(main): Set dump_any_debugging when dumping any debug sections.
* readelf (dump_any_debugging): New.
(parse_args): Set dump_any_debugging when dumping any debug
sections.
(load_debug_section): Return false if dump_any_debugging isn't
set.
2022-01-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix some clang-tidy readability-misleading-indentation warnings
I have warnings like these showing in my editor all the time, so I
thought I'd run clang-tidy with this diagnostic on all the files (that I
can compile) and fix them.
There is still one warning, in utils.c, but that's because some code
is mixed up with preprocessor macros (#ifdef TUI), so I think there no
good solution there.
Change-Id: I345175fc7dd865318f0fbe61ac026c88c3b6a96b
2022-01-31 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb, testsuite, fortran: adapt info symbol expected output for intel compilers
Info symbol is expected to print the symbol table name of a symbol, since
symbol lookup happens via the minimal symbol table. This name
corresponds to the linkage name in the full symbol table.
For gfortran (and maybe others) these names currently have the form
XXXX.NUMBER where XXXX is the symbol name and NUMBER a compiler
generated appendix for mangling.
An example taken from the modified nested-funcs-2.exp would be
~~~~
$ objdump -t ./outputs/gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2/nested-funcs-2 | grep \
increment
00000000000014ab l F .text 0000000000000095 increment.3883
000000000000141c l F .text 000000000000008f increment_program_global.3881
~~~~
This mangled name gets recognized by the Ada demangler/decoder and decoded as
Ada to XXXX (setting the symbol language to Ada). This leads to output
of XXXX over XXXX.NUMBER for info symbol on gfortran symbols.
For ifort and ifx the generated linkage names have the form
SCOPEA_SCOPEB_XXXX_ which are not recognized by the Ada decoder (or any
other demangler for that matter) and thus printed as is.
The respective objdump in the above case looks like
~~~~
$ objdump -t ./outputs/gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2/nested-funcs-2 | grep \
increment
0000000000403a44 l F .text 0000000000000074 contains_keyword_IP_increment_
0000000000403ab8 l F .text 0000000000000070
contains_keyword_IP_increment_program_global_
~~~~
In the unmodified testcase this results in 'fails' when ran with the intel
compilers:
~~~~
>> make check RUNTESTFLAGS="gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2.exp \
GDBFLAGS='$GDBFLAGS' CC_FOR_TARGET='icpc' F90_FOR_TARGET='ifort'"
...
=== gdb Summary ===
\# of expected passes 80
\# of unexpected failures 14
~~~~
Note that there is no Fortran mangling standard. We keep the gfortran
behavior as is and modify the test to reflect ifx and ifort mangled
names which fixes above fails.
2022-01-31 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Import patch from mainline GCC to fix an infinite recusion in the Rust demangler.
PR 98886
PR 99935
* rust-demangle.c (struct rust_demangler): Add a recursion
counter.
(demangle_path): Increment/decrement the recursion counter upon
entry and exit. Fail if the counter exceeds a fixed limit.
(demangle_type): Likewise.
(rust_demangle_callback): Initialise the recursion counter,
disabling if requested by the option flags.
2022-01-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28827, assertion building LLVM 9 on powerpc64le-linux-gnu
In trying to find a testcase for PR28827, I managed to hit a linker
error in bfd_set_section_contents with a .branch_lt input section
being too large for the output .branch_lt.
bfd/
PR 28827
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Set section size to
maxsize past STUB_SHRINK_ITER before laying out. Remove now
unnecessary conditional setting of maxsize at start of loop.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-2.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-2.lnk,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-2.s: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp: Run it.
2022-01-31 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove unused variables in fbsd-tdep.c files
i386-fbsd-tdep.c and amd64-fbsd-tdep.c failed to build on my x86-64
Fedora 34 machine, using the system gcc, after a recent patch. These
two files now have unused variables, which provokes a warning in this
configuration.
I'm checking in this patch to remove the unused variables.
2022-01-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28827, assertion building LLVM 9 on powerpc64le-linux-gnu
The previous patch wasn't quite correct. The size and padding depends
on offset used in the current iteration, and if we're fudging the
offset past STUB_SHRINK_ITER then we'd better use that offset. We
can't have plt_stub_pad using stub_sec->size as the offset.
PR 28827
* elf64-ppc.c (plt_stub_pad): Add stub_off param.
(ppc_size_one_stub): Set up stub_offset to value used in this
iteration before sizing the stub. Adjust plt_stub_pad calls.
2022-01-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
objcopy --only-keep-debug
From: Peilin Ye <peilin.ye@bytedance.com>
objcopy's --only-keep-debug option has been broken for ELF files since
commit 8c803a2dd7d3.
1. binutils/objcopy.c:setup_section() marks non-debug sections as
SHT_NOBITS, then calls bfd_copy_private_section_data();
2. If ISEC and OSEC share the same section flags,
bfd/elf.c:_bfd_elf_init_private_section_data() restores OSEC's
section type back to ISEC's section type, effectively undoing
"make_nobits".
* objcopy.c (setup_section): Act on make_nobits after calling
bfd_copy_private_section_data.
2022-01-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
gdb: fix ppc-sysv-tdep.c build on 32-bit platforms
The previous code triggered the following error on an i386 host:
/git/gdb/gdb/ppc-sysv-tdep.c:1764:34: error: non-constant-expression cannot be narrowed from type 'ULONGEST' (aka 'unsigned long long') to 'size_t' (aka 'unsigned int') in initializer list [-Wc++11-narrowing]
unscaled.read ({writebuf, TYPE_LENGTH (valtype)},
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/git/gdb/gdb/gdbtypes.h:2043:31: note: expanded from macro 'TYPE_LENGTH'
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/git/gdb/gdb/ppc-sysv-tdep.c:1764:34: note: insert an explicit cast to silence this issue
unscaled.read ({writebuf, TYPE_LENGTH (valtype)},
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
static_cast<size_t>( )
/git/gdb/gdb/gdbtypes.h:2043:31: note: expanded from macro 'TYPE_LENGTH'
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 error generated.
Fix this by using gdb::make_array_view.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD x86 nat: Use register maps for GP register sets.
Rather than using the x86-specific register offset tables, use
register maps to describe the layout of the general purpose registers
fetched via PT_GETREGS. The sole user-visible difference is that
FreeBSD/amd64 will now report additional segment registers ($ds, $es,
$fs, and $gs) for both 32-bit and 64-bit processes.
As part of these changes, the FreeBSD x86 native targets no longer use
amd64-bsd-nat.c or i386-bsd-nat.c. Remove FreeBSD-specific register
handling (for $fs_base, $gs_base, and XSAVE state) from these files.
Similarly, remove the global x86bsd_xsave_len from x86-bsd-nat.c. The
FreeBSD x86 native targets use a static xsave_len instead.
While here, rework the probing of PT_GETXMMREGS on FreeBSD/i386.
Probe the ptrace op once in the target read_description method and
cache the result for the future similar to the way the status of XSAVE
support is probed in the read_description method. In addition, return
the proper xcr0 mask (X87-only) for old kernels or systems without
either XSAVE or XMM support.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Return a bool from fetch_register_set and store_register_set.
Change these helper functions to return true if they did any work.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD x86: Use tramp-frame for signal frames.
Use a register map to describe the registers in mcontext_t as part of
the signal frame as is done on several other FreeBSD arches. This
permits fetching the fsbase and gsbase register values from the signal
frame for both amd64 and i386 and permits fetching additional segment
registers stored as 16-bit values on amd64.
While signal frames on FreeBSD do contain floating point/XSAVE state,
these unwinders do not attempt to supply those registers. The
existing x86 signal frame uwinders do not support these registers, and
the only existing functions which handle FSAVE/FXSAVE/XSAVE state all
work with regcaches. In the future these unwinders could create a
tempory regcache, collect floating point registers, and then supply
values out of the regcache into the trad-frame.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Use register maps for gp regsets on FreeBSD/x86 core dumps.
In particular, this permits reporting the value of the $ds, $es, $fs,
and $gs segment registers from amd64 core dumps since they are stored
as 16-bit values rather than the 32-bit size assumed by i386_gregset.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
regcache: Zero-extend small registers described by a register map.
When registers are supplied via regcache_supply_register from a
register block described by a register map, registers may be stored in
slots smaller than GDB's native register size (e.g. x86 segment
registers are 16 bits, but the GDB registers for those are 32-bits).
regcache_collect_regset is careful to zero-extend slots larger than a
register size, but regcache_supply_regset just used
regcache::raw_supply_part and did not initialize the upper bytes of a
register value.
trad_frame_set_reg_regmap assumes these semantics (zero-extending
short registers). Upcoming patches also require these semantics for
handling x86 segment register values stored in 16-bit slots on
FreeBSD. Note that architecturally x86 segment registers are 16 bits,
but the x86 gdb architectures treat these registers as 32 bits.
2022-01-28 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD x86: Remove fallback for detecting signal trampolines by address.
A few FreeBSD releases did not include the page holding the signal
code in core dumps. As a workaround, a sysctl was used to fetch the
default location of the signal code instead. The youngest affected
FreeBSD release is 10.1 released in November 2014 and EOLed in
December 2016. The fallback only works for native processes and would
require a separate unwinder once the FreeBSD arches are converted to
use tramp_frame for signal frames.
Remove support for pre-5.0 FreeBSD/i386 signal trampolines.
The last relevant release (FreeBSD 4.11) was released in January of
2005.
Remove vestigal FreeBSD/i386 3.x support.
This was orphaned when a.out support was removed as the FreeBSD/i386
ELF support always used the register layouts from 4.0+.
2022-01-28 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
Add Bruno Larsen to gdb/MAINTAINERS
2022-01-28 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb/build: Fix Wpessimizing-move in clang build
When building with clang, I run into an error:
...
tui/tui-disasm.c:138:25: error: moving a temporary object prevents copy
elision [-Werror,-Wpessimizing-move]
tal.addr_string = std::move (gdb_dis_out.release ());
^
tui/tui-disasm.c:138:25: note: remove std::move call here
tal.addr_string = std::move (gdb_dis_out.release ());
^~~~~~~~~~~ ~
...
The error above is caused by the recent commit 5d10a2041eb8 ("gdb: add
string_file::release method").
Fix this by removing std::move.
Build on x86_64-linux with clang 13.0.0.
2022-01-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
Add top-level .editorconfig file
Add a .editorconfig [1] file. This helps configure editors
automatically with the right whitespace settings. It will help me,
since I need to juggle with different whitespace settings for different
projects. But I think it can also help newcomers get things right from
the start.
Some editors have native support for reading these files, while others
require a plug-in [2]. And if you don't want to use it, then this file
doesn't change anything to your life.
I added rules for the kinds of files I edit most often, but more can be
added later. I assumed that the rules were the same for GDB and the
other projects, but if that's not the case, we can always put
.editorconfig files in project subdirectories to override settings.
[1] https://editorconfig.org/
[2] https://editorconfig.org/#download
Change-Id: Ifda136d13877fafcf0d137fec8501f6a34e1367b
2022-01-28 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated French translation for the gas sub-directory.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Set __ehdr_start rel_from_abs earlier
This is just a tidy, making the __ehdr_start symbol flag tweaks all in
one place.
* ldelf.c (ldelf_before_allocation): Don't set rel_from_abs
for __ehdr_start.
* ldlang.c (lang_symbol_tweaks): Set it here instead.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 handling of @tocbase
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Warn if the symbol
on R_PPC64_TOC isn't local.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Update PowerPC64 symtocbase test
Using a symbol other than .TOC. with @tocbase is an extension to the
ABI. It is never valid to use a symbol without a definition in the
binary, and symbols on these expressions cannot be overridden. Make
this explicit by using ".hidden" in the testcase.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/symtocbase-1.s: Align data. Make function
entry symbol hidden.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/symtocbase-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/symtocbase.d: Adjust expected output.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28827, assertion building LLVM 9 on powerpc64le-linux-gnu
The assertion is this one in ppc_build_one_stub
BFD_ASSERT (stub_entry->stub_offset >= stub_entry->group->stub_sec->size);
It is checking that a stub doesn't overwrite the tail of a previous
stub, so not something trivial.
Normally, stub sizing iterates until no stubs are added, detected by
no change in stub section size. Iteration also continues if no stubs
are added but one or more stubs increases in size, which also can be
detected by a change in stub section size. But there is a
pathological case where stub section sizing decreases one iteration
then increases the next. To handle that situation, stub sizing also
stops at more than STUB_SHRINK_ITER (20) iterations when calculated
stub section size is smaller. The previous larger size is kept for
the actual layout (so that building the stubs, which behaves like
another iteration of stub sizing, will see the stub section sizes
shrink). The problem with that stopping condition is that it assumes
that stub sizing is only affected by addresses external to the stub
sections, which isn't always true.
This patch fixes that by also keeping larger individual stub_offset
addresses past STUB_SHRINK_ITER. It also catches a further
pathological case where one stub shrinks and another expands in such a
way that no stub section size change is seen.
PR 28827
* elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_link_hash_table): Add stub_changed.
(STUB_SHRINK_ITER): Move earlier in file.
(ppc_size_one_stub): Detect any change in stub_offset. Keep
larger one if past STUB_SHRINK_ITER.
(ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Iterate on stub_changed too.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28826 x86_64 ld segfaults building xen
Fallout from commit e86fc4a5bc37
PR 28826
* coffgen.c (coff_write_alien_symbol): Init dummy to zeros.
2022-01-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28753, buffer overflow in read_section_stabs_debugging_info
PR 28753
* rddbg.c (read_section_stabs_debugging_info): Don't read past
end of section when concatentating stab strings.
2022-01-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: work around negative DW_AT_data_member_location GCC 11 bug
g++ 11.1.0 has a bug where it will emit a negative
DW_AT_data_member_location in some cases:
$ cat test.cpp
#include <memory>
int
main()
{
std::unique_ptr<int> ptr;
}
$ g++ -g test.cpp
$ llvm-dwarfdump -F a.out
...
0x00000964: DW_TAG_member
DW_AT_name [DW_FORM_strp] ("_M_head_impl")
DW_AT_decl_file [DW_FORM_data1] ("/usr/include/c++/11.1.0/tuple")
DW_AT_decl_line [DW_FORM_data1] (125)
DW_AT_decl_column [DW_FORM_data1] (0x27)
DW_AT_type [DW_FORM_ref4] (0x0000067a "default_delete<int>")
DW_AT_data_member_location [DW_FORM_sdata] (-1)
...
This leads to a GDB crash (when built with ASan, otherwise probably
garbage results), since it tries to read just before (to the left, in
ASan speak) of the value's buffer:
==888645==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow on address 0x6020000c52af at pc 0x7f711b239f4b bp 0x7fff356bd470 sp 0x7fff356bcc18
READ of size 1 at 0x6020000c52af thread T0
#0 0x7f711b239f4a in __interceptor_memcpy /build/gcc/src/gcc/libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_common_interceptors.inc:827
#1 0x555c4977efa1 in value_contents_copy_raw /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:1347
#2 0x555c497909cd in value_primitive_field(value*, long, int, type*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:3126
#3 0x555c478f2eaa in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:333
#4 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#5 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#6 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#7 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#8 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#9 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#10 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#11 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#12 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#13 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
#14 0x555c49759b17 in common_val_print(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, language_defn const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1151
#15 0x555c478f2fcb in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:335
#16 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#17 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#18 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#19 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#20 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#21 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
#22 0x555c49759b17 in common_val_print(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, language_defn const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1151
#23 0x555c478f2fcb in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:335
#24 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#25 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#26 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#27 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
#28 0x555c49759b17 in common_val_print(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, language_defn const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1151
#29 0x555c4760f04c in c_value_print(value*, ui_file*, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:587
#30 0x555c483ff954 in language_defn::value_print(value*, ui_file*, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:614
#31 0x555c49759f61 in value_print(value*, ui_file*, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1189
#32 0x555c48950f70 in print_formatted /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/printcmd.c:337
#33 0x555c48958eda in print_value(value*, value_print_options const&) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/printcmd.c:1258
#34 0x555c48959891 in print_command_1 /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/printcmd.c:1367
#35 0x555c4895a3df in print_command /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/printcmd.c:1458
#36 0x555c4767f974 in do_simple_func /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97
#37 0x555c47692e25 in cmd_func(cmd_list_element*, char const*, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:2475
#38 0x555c4936107e in execute_command(char const*, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/top.c:670
#39 0x555c485f1bff in catch_command_errors /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:523
#40 0x555c485f249c in execute_cmdargs /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:618
#41 0x555c485f6677 in captured_main_1 /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1317
#42 0x555c485f6c83 in captured_main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1338
#43 0x555c485f6d65 in gdb_main(captured_main_args*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1363
#44 0x555c46e41ba8 in main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:32
#45 0x7f71198bcb24 in __libc_start_main (/usr/lib/libc.so.6+0x27b24)
#46 0x555c46e4197d in _start (/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/gdb+0x77f197d)
0x6020000c52af is located 1 bytes to the left of 8-byte region [0x6020000c52b0,0x6020000c52b8)
allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f711b2b7459 in __interceptor_calloc /build/gcc/src/gcc/libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:154
#1 0x555c470acdc9 in xcalloc /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/alloc.c:100
#2 0x555c49b775cd in xzalloc(unsigned long) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/common-utils.cc:29
#3 0x555c4977bdeb in allocate_value_contents /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:1029
#4 0x555c4977be25 in allocate_value(type*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:1040
#5 0x555c4979030d in value_primitive_field(value*, long, int, type*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:3092
#6 0x555c478f6280 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:501
#7 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#8 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#9 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#10 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#11 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#12 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#13 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#14 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#15 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
#16 0x555c49759b17 in common_val_print(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, language_defn const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1151
#17 0x555c478f2fcb in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:335
#18 0x555c478f63b2 in cp_print_value /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:513
#19 0x555c478f02ca in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:161
#20 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#21 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#22 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#23 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
#24 0x555c49759b17 in common_val_print(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, language_defn const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1151
#25 0x555c478f2fcb in cp_print_value_fields(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*, type**, int) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/cp-valprint.c:335
#26 0x555c4760d45f in c_value_print_struct /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:383
#27 0x555c4760df4c in c_value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-valprint.c:438
#28 0x555c483ff9a7 in language_defn::value_print_inner(value*, ui_file*, int, value_print_options const*) const /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/language.c:632
#29 0x555c49758b68 in do_val_print /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/valprint.c:1048
Since there are some binaries with this in the wild, I think it would be
useful for GDB to work around this. I did the obvious simple thing, if
the DW_AT_data_member_location's value is -1, replace it with 0. I
added a producer check to only apply this fixup for GCC 11. The idea is
that if some other compiler ever uses a DW_AT_data_member_location value
of -1 by mistake, we don't know (before analyzing the bug at least) if
they did mean 0 or some other value. So I wouldn't want to apply the
fixup in that case.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28063
Change-Id: Ieef3459b0b9bbce8bdad838ba83b4b64e7269d42
2022-01-27 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Fix GDB internal error by using text (instead of data) section offset
Fedora Rawhide is now using gcc-12.0. As part of updating to the
gcc-12.0 package set, Rawhide is also now using a version of libgcc_s
which lacks a .data section. This causes gdb to fail in the following
fashion while debugging a program (such as gdb) which uses libgcc_s:
(top-gdb) run
Starting program: rawhide-master/bld/gdb/gdb
...
objfiles.h:467: internal-error: sect_index_data not initialized
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
...
I snipped the backtrace from the above output. Instead, here's a
portion of a backtrace obtained using GDB's backtrace command.
(Obviously, in order to obtain it, I used a GDB which has been patched
with this commit.)
#0 internal_error (
file=0xc6a508 "gdb/objfiles.h", line=467,
fmt=0xc6a4e8 "sect_index_data not initialized")
at gdbsupport/errors.cc:51
#1 0x00000000005f9651 in objfile::data_section_offset (this=0x4fa48f0)
at gdb/objfiles.h:467
#2 0x000000000097c5f8 in relocate_address (address=0x17244, objfile=0x4fa48f0)
at gdb/stap-probe.c:1333
#3 0x000000000097c630 in stap_probe::get_relocated_address (this=0xa1a17a0,
objfile=0x4fa48f0)
at gdb/stap-probe.c:1341
#4 0x00000000004d7025 in create_exception_master_breakpoint_probe (
objfile=0x4fa48f0)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:3505
#5 0x00000000004d7426 in create_exception_master_breakpoint ()
at gdb/breakpoint.c:3575
#6 0x00000000004efcc1 in breakpoint_re_set ()
at gdb/breakpoint.c:13407
#7 0x0000000000956998 in solib_add (pattern=0x0, from_tty=0, readsyms=1)
at gdb/solib.c:1001
#8 0x00000000009576a8 in handle_solib_event ()
at gdb/solib.c:1269
...
The function 'relocate_address' in gdb/stap-probe.c attempts to do
its "relocation" by using objfile->data_section_offset(). That
method, data_section_offset() is defined as follows in objfiles.h:
CORE_ADDR data_section_offset () const
{
return section_offsets[SECT_OFF_DATA (this)];
}
The internal error occurs when the SECT_OFF_DATA macro finds that the
'sect_index_data' field is -1:
#define SECT_OFF_DATA(objfile) \
((objfile->sect_index_data == -1) \
? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \
_("sect_index_data not initialized")), -1) \
: objfile->sect_index_data)
relocate_address() is obtaining the section offset in order to compute
a relocated address. For some ABIs, such as the System V ABI, the
section offsets will all be the same. So for those ABIs, it doesn't
matter which offset is used. However, other ABIs, such as the FDPIC
ABI, will have different offsets for the various sections. Thus, for
those ABIs, it is vital that this and other relocation code use the
correct offset.
In stap_probe::get_relocated_address, the address to which to add the
offset (thus forming the relocated address) is obtained via
this->get_address (); get_address is a getter for m_address in
probe.h. It's documented/defined as follows (also in probe.h):
/* The address where the probe is inserted, relative to
SECT_OFF_TEXT. */
CORE_ADDR m_address;
(Thanks to Tom Tromey for this observation.)
So, based on this, the current use of data_section_offset /
SECT_OFF_DATA is wrong. This relocation code should have been using
text_section_offset / SECT_OFF_TEXT all along. That being the
case, I've adjusted the stap-probe.c relocation code accordingly.
Searching the sources turned up one other use of data_section_offset,
in gdb/dtrace-probe.c, so I've updated that code as well. The same
reasoning presented above applies to this case too.
Summary:
* gdb/dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_probe::get_relocated_address):
Use method text_section_offset instead of data_section_offset.
* gdb/stap-probe.c (relocate_address): Likewise.
2022-01-27 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
gdb, remote, btrace: move switch_to_thread call right before xfer call
In remote_target::remote_btrace_maybe_reopen, we switch to the currently
iterated thread in order to set inferior_ptid for a subsequent xfer.
Move the switch_to_thread call directly before the target_read_stralloc
call to clarify why we need to switch threads.
2022-01-27 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
gdb, gdbserver: update thread identifier in enable_btrace target method
The enable_btrace target method takes a ptid_t to identify the thread on
which tracing shall be enabled.
Change this to thread_info * to avoid translating back and forth between
the two. This will be used in a subsequent patch.
2022-01-27 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
gdb, btrace: switch threads in remote_btrace_maybe_reopen()
In remote_btrace_maybe_reopen() we iterate over threads and use
set_general_thread() to set the thread from which to transfer the btrace
configuration.
This sets the remote general thread but does not affect inferior_ptid. On
the xfer request later on, remote_target::xfer_partial() again sets the
remote general thread to inferior_ptid, overwriting what
remote_btrace_maybe_reopen() had done.
In one case, this led to inferior_ptid being null_ptid when we tried to
enable tracing on a newly created thread inside a newly created process
during attach.
This, in turn, led to find_inferior_pid() asserting when we iterated over
threads in record_btrace_is_replaying(), which was called from
record_btrace_target::xfer_partial() when reading the btrace configuration
of the new thread to check whether it was already being recorded.
The bug was exposed by
0618ae41497 gdb: optimize all_matching_threads_iterator
and found by
FAIL: gdb.btrace/enable-new-thread.exp: ... (GDB internal error)
Use switch_to_thread() in remote_btrace_maybe_reopen().
2022-01-27 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
gdb, btrace: rename record_btrace_enable_warn()
We use record_btrace_enable_warn() as the new-thread observer callback.
It is not used in other contexts.
Rename it to record_btrace_on_new_thread() to make its role more clear.
2022-01-27 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Swedish translation for the binutils subdirectory
2022-01-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-26 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: handle non utf-8 characters when source highlighting
This commit adds support for source files that contain non utf-8
characters when performing source styling using the Python pygments
package. This does not change the behaviour of GDB when the GNU
Source Highlight library is used.
For the following problem description, assume that either GDB is built
without GNU Source Highlight support, of that this has been disabled
using 'maintenance set gnu-source-highlight enabled off'.
The initial problem reported was that a source file containing non
utf-8 characters would cause GDB to print a Python exception, and then
display the source without styling, e.g.:
Python Exception <class 'UnicodeDecodeError'>: 'utf-8' codec can't decode byte 0xc0 in position 142: invalid start byte
/* Source code here, without styling... */
Further, as the user steps through different source files, each time
the problematic source file was evicted from the source cache, and
then later reloaded, the exception would be printed again.
Finally, this problem is only present when using Python 3, this issue
is not present for Python 2.
What makes this especially frustrating is that GDB can clearly print
the source file contents, they're right there... If we disable
styling completely, or make use of the GNU Source Highlight library,
then everything is fine. So why is there an error when we try to
apply styling using Python?
The problem is the use of PyString_FromString (which is an alias for
PyUnicode_FromString in Python 3), this function converts a C string
into a either a Unicode object (Py3) or a str object (Py2). For
Python 2 there is no unicode encoding performed during this function
call, but for Python 3 the input is assumed to be a uft-8 encoding
string for the purpose of the conversion. And here of course, is the
problem, if the source file contains non utf-8 characters, then it
should not be treated as utf-8, but that's what we do, and that's why
we get an error.
My first thought when looking at this was to spot when the
PyString_FromString call failed with a UnicodeDecodeError and silently
ignore the error. This would mean that GDB would print the source
without styling, but would also avoid the annoying exception message.
However, I also make use of `pygmentize`, a command line wrapper
around the Python pygments module, which I use to apply syntax
highlighting in the output of `less`. And this command line wrapper
is quite happy to syntax highlight my source file that contains non
utf-8 characters, so it feels like the problem should be solvable.
It turns out that inside the pygments module there is already support
for guessing the encoding of the incoming file content, if the
incoming content is not already a Unicode string. This is what
happens for Python 2 where the incoming content is of `str` type.
We could try and make GDB smarter when it comes to converting C
strings into Python Unicode objects; this would probably require us to
just try a couple of different encoding schemes rather than just
giving up after utf-8.
However, I figure, why bother? The pygments module already does this
for us, and the colorize API is not part of the documented external
API of GDB. So, why not just change the colorize API, instead of the
content being a Unicode string (for Python 3), lets just make the
content be a bytes object. The pygments module can then take
responsibility for guessing the encoding.
So, currently, the colorize API receives a unicode object, and returns
a unicode object. I propose that the colorize API receive a bytes
object, and return a bytes object.
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove global wrap_here function
This removes the global wrap_here function, so that future calls
cannot be introduced. Instead, all callers must use the method on the
appropriate ui_file.
This temporarily moves the implementation of this method to utils.c.
This will change once the remaining patches to untangle the pager have
been written.
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Always call the wrap_here method
This changes all existing calls to wrap_here to call the method on the
appropriate ui_file instead. The choice of ui_file is determined by
context.
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add ui_file::wrap_here
Right now, wrap_here is a global function. In the long run, we'd like
output streams to be relatively self-contained objects, and having a
global function like this is counter to that goal. Also, existing
code freely mixes writes to some parameterized stream with calls to
wrap_here -- but wrap_here only really affects gdb_stdout, so this is
also incoherent.
This step is a patch toward making wrap_here more sane. It adds a
wrap_here method to ui_file and changes ui_out implementations to use
it.
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Convert wrap_here to use integer parameter
I think it only really makes sense to call wrap_here with an argument
consisting solely of spaces. Given this, it seemed better to me that
the argument be an int, rather than a string. This patch is the
result. Much of it was written by a script.
2022-01-26 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: improve the auto help text for gdb.Parameter
This commit attempts to improve the help text that is generated for
gdb.Parameter objects when the user fails to provide their own
documentation.
Documentation for a gdb.Parameter is currently pulled from two
sources: the class documentation string, and the set_doc/show_doc
class attributes. Thus, a fully documented parameter might look like
this:
class Param_All (gdb.Parameter):
"""This is the class documentation string."""
show_doc = "Show the state of this parameter"
set_doc = "Set the state of this parameter"
def get_set_string (self):
val = "on"
if (self.value == False):
val = "off"
return "Test Parameter has been set to " + val
def __init__ (self, name):
super (Param_All, self).__init__ (name, gdb.COMMAND_DATA, gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN)
self._value = True
Param_All ('param-all')
Then in GDB we see this:
(gdb) help set param-all
Set the state of this parameter
This is the class documentation string.
Which is fine. But, if the user skips both of the documentation parts
like this:
class Param_None (gdb.Parameter):
def get_set_string (self):
val = "on"
if (self.value == False):
val = "off"
return "Test Parameter has been set to " + val
def __init__ (self, name):
super (Param_None, self).__init__ (name, gdb.COMMAND_DATA, gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN)
self._value = True
Param_None ('param-none')
Now in GDB we see this:
(gdb) help set param-none
This command is not documented.
This command is not documented.
That's not great, the duplicated text looks a bit weird. If we drop
different parts we get different results. Here's what we get if the
user drops the set_doc and show_doc attributes:
(gdb) help set param-doc
This command is not documented.
This is the class documentation string.
That kind of sucks, we say it's undocumented, then proceed to print
the documentation. Finally, if we drop the class documentation but
keep the set_doc and show_doc:
(gdb) help set param-set-show
Set the state of this parameter
This command is not documented.
That seems OK.
So, I think there's room for improvement.
With this patch, for the four cases above we now see this:
# All values provided by the user, no change in this case:
(gdb) help set param-all
Set the state of this parameter
This is the class documentation string.
# Nothing provided by the user, the first string is now different:
(gdb) help set param-none
Set the current value of 'param-none'.
This command is not documented.
# Only the class documentation is provided, the first string is
# changed as in the previous case:
(gdb) help set param-doc
Set the current value of 'param-doc'.
This is the class documentation string.
# Only the set_doc and show_doc are provided, this case is unchanged
# from before the patch:
(gdb) help set param-set-show
Set the state of this parameter
This command is not documented.
The one place where this change might be considered a negative is when
dealing with prefix commands. If we create a prefix command but don't
supply the set_doc / show_doc strings, then this is what we saw before
my patch:
(gdb) python Param_None ('print param-none')
(gdb) help set print
set print, set pr, set p
Generic command for setting how things print.
List of set print subcommands:
... snip ...
set print param-none -- This command is not documented.
... snip ...
And after my patch:
(gdb) python Param_None ('print param-none')
(gdb) help set print
set print, set pr, set p
Generic command for setting how things print.
List of set print subcommands:
... snip ...
set print param-none -- Set the current value of 'print param-none'.
... snip ...
This seems slightly less helpful than before, but I don't think its
terrible.
Additionally, I've changed what we print when the get_show_string
method is not provided in Python.
Back when gdb.Parameter was first added to GDB, we didn't provide a
show function when registering the internal command object within
GDB. As a result, GDB would make use of its "magic" mangling of the
show_doc string to create a sentence that would display the current
value (see deprecated_show_value_hack in cli/cli-setshow.c).
However, when we added support for the get_show_string method to
gdb.Parameter, there was an attempt to maintain backward compatibility
by displaying the show_doc string with the current value appended, see
get_show_value in py-param.c. Unfortunately, this isn't anywhere
close to what deprecated_show_value_hack does, and the results are
pretty poor, for example, this is GDB before my patch:
(gdb) show param-none
This command is not documented. off
I think we can all agree that this is pretty bad.
After my patch, we how show this:
(gdb) show param-none
The current value of 'param-none' is "off".
Which at least is a real sentence, even if it's not very informative.
This patch does change the way that the Python API behaves slightly,
but only in the cases when the user has missed providing GDB with some
information. In most cases I think the new behaviour is a lot better,
there's the one case (noted above) which is a bit iffy, but I think is
still OK.
I've updated the existing gdb.python/py-parameter.exp test to cover
the modified behaviour.
Finally, I've updated the documentation to (I hope) make it clearer
how the various bits of help text come together.
2022-01-26 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: add gdb.history_count function
Add a new function gdb.history_count to the Python api, this function
returns an integer, the number of items in GDB's value history.
This is useful if you want to pull items from the history by their
absolute number, for example, if you wanted to show a complete history
list. Previously we could figure out how many items are in the
history list by trying to fetch the items, and then catching the
exception when the item is not available, but having this function
seems nicer.
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove unused declaration
This removes an unused declaration from top.h. This type is not
defined anywhere.
2022-01-26 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: convert maintenance target-async and target-non-stop settings to callbacks
This simplifies things a bit, as we don't need two variables and think
about reverting target_async_permitted_1 and target_non_stop_enabled_1
values if we can't change the setting.
Change-Id: I36acab045dacf02ae1988486cfdb27c1dff309f6
2022-01-26 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Reference array of structs instead of first member during memcpy
aarch64-tdep.c defines the following macro:
#define MEM_ALLOC(MEMS, LENGTH, RECORD_BUF) \
do \
{ \
unsigned int mem_len = LENGTH; \
if (mem_len) \
{ \
MEMS = XNEWVEC (struct aarch64_mem_r, mem_len); \
memcpy(&MEMS->len, &RECORD_BUF[0], \
sizeof(struct aarch64_mem_r) * LENGTH); \
} \
} \
while (0)
This is simlpy allocating a new array and copying it. However, for
the destination address, it is actually copying into the first member
of the first element of the array (`&MEMS->len"). This elicits a
warning with GCC 12:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c: In function int aarch64_process_record(gdbarch*, regcache*, CORE_ADDR):
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c:3711:23: error: writing 16 bytes into a region of size 8 [-Werror=stringop-overflow=]
3711 | memcpy(&MEMS->len, &RECORD_BUF[0], \
| ^
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c:4394:3: note: in expansion of macro MEM_ALLOC
4394 | MEM_ALLOC (aarch64_insn_r->aarch64_mems, aarch64_insn_r->mem_rec_count,
| ^~~~~~~~~
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c:3721:12: note: destination object aarch64_mem_r::len of size 8
3721 | uint64_t len; /* Record length. */
| ^~~
The simple fix is to reference the array, `MEMS' as the destination of the copy.
Tested by rebuilding.
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
# with '#' will be kept; you may remove them yourself if you want to.
# An empty message aborts the commit.
#
# Date: Tue Jan 25 08:28:32 2022 -0800
#
# On branch master
# Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit.
# (use "git push" to publish your local commits)
#
# Changes to be committed:
# modified: aarch64-tdep.c
#
2022-01-26 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add string_file::release method
A common pattern for string_file is to want to move out the internal
string buffer, because it is the result of the computation that we want
to return. It is the reason why string_file::string returns a non-const
reference, as explained in the comment. I think it would make sense to
have a dedicated method for that instead and make string_file::string
return a const reference.
This allows removing the explicit std::move in the typical case. Note
that compile_program::compute was missing a move, meaning that the
resulting string was copied. With the new version, it's not possible to
forget to move.
Change-Id: Ieaefa35b73daa7930b2f3a26988b6e3b4121bb79
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add a way to temporarily set a gdb parameter from Python
It's sometimes useful to temporarily set some gdb parameter from
Python. Now that the 'endian' crash is fixed, and now that the
current language is no longer captured by the Python layer, it seems
reasonable to add a helper function for this situation.
This adds a new gdb.with_parameter function. This creates a context
manager which temporarily sets some parameter to a specified value.
The old value is restored when the context is exited. This is most
useful with the Python "with" statement:
with gdb.with_parameter('language', 'ada'):
... do Ada stuff
This also adds a simple function to set a parameter,
gdb.set_parameter, as suggested by Andrew.
This is PR python/10790.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10790
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix another crash with gdb parameters in Python
While looking into the language-capturing issue, I found another way
to crash gdb using parameters from Python:
(gdb) python print(gdb.parameter('endian'))
(This is related to PR python/12188, though this patch isn't going to
fix what that bug is really about.)
The problem here is that the global variable that underlies the
"endian" parameter is initialized to NULL. However, that's not a
valid value for an "enum" set/show parameter.
My understanding is that, in gdb, an "enum" parameter's underlying
variable must have a value that is "==" (not just strcmp-equal) to one
of the values coming from the enum array. This invariant is relied on
in various places.
I started this patch by fixing the problem with "endian". Then I
added some assertions to add_setshow_enum_cmd to try to catch other
problems of the same type.
This patch fixes all the problems that I found. I also looked at all
the calls to add_setshow_enum_cmd to ensure that they were all
included in the gdb I tested. I think they are: there are no calls in
nat-* files, or in remote-sim.c; and I was trying a build with all
targets, Python, and Guile enabled.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12188
2022-01-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change how Python architecture and language are handled
Currently, gdb's Python layer captures the current architecture and
language when "entering" Python code. This has some undesirable
effects, and so this series changes how this is handled.
First, there is code like this:
gdbpy_enter enter_py (python_gdbarch, python_language);
This is incorrect, because both of these are NULL when not otherwise
assigned. This can cause crashes in some cases -- I've added one to
the test suite. (Note that this crasher is just an example, other
ones along the same lines are possible.)
Second, when the language is captured in this way, it means that
Python code cannot affect the current language for its own purposes.
It's reasonable to want to write code like this:
gdb.execute('set language mumble')
... stuff using the current language
gdb.execute('set language previous-value')
However, this won't actually work, because the language is captured on
entry. I've added a test to show this as well.
This patch changes gdb to try to avoid capturing the current values.
The Python concept of the current gdbarch is only set in those few
cases where a non-default value is computed or needed; and the
language is not captured at all -- instead, in the cases where it's
required, the current language is temporarily changed.
2022-01-26 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Make bfd.stamp depend on source bfd.texi
Make bfd.stamp depend on source bfd.texi to avoid regenerating
doc/bfd.info for each make run.
PR binutils/28807
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* doc/local.mk (%D%/bfd.stamp): Depend on $(srcdir)/%D%/bfd.texi.
2022-01-26 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Rewrite lang_size_relro_segment_1
1. Compute the desired PT_GNU_RELRO segment base and find the maximum
section alignment of sections starting from the PT_GNU_RELRO segment.
2. Find the first preceding load section.
3. Don't add the 1-page gap between the first preceding load section and
the relro segment if the maximum page size >= the maximum section
alignment. Align the PT_GNU_RELRO segment first. Subtract the maximum
page size if therer is still a 1-page gap.
PR ld/28743
PR ld/28819
* ldlang.c (lang_size_relro_segment_1): Rewrite.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28743-1.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr28743-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Run pr28743-1.
2022-01-26 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/testsuite: Ensure constant test name in gdb.base/break-interp.exp
When running the testsuite, I have lines similar to the following in the
gdb.sum file:
~~~
PASS: gdb.base/break-interp.exp: ldprelink=NO: ldsepdebug=NO: first backtrace: p /x 0x7f283d2f0fd1
...
PASS: gdb.base/break-interp.exp: ldprelink=NO: ldsepdebug=NO: binprelink=NO: binsepdebug=NO: binpie=NO: INNER: first backtrace: p /x 0x7f00de0317a5
...
~~~
The address part of the command might change between execution of the
test, which adds noise to a diff between two .sum files.
This patch changes to test name to "p /x $pc" in order to have constant
test name.
Tested on x86_64-Linux.
Change-Id: I973c1237a084dd6d424276443cbf0920533c9a21
2022-01-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Always print the "host libthread-db" message to stdout
linux-thread-db.c has a bit of unusual code that unconditionally
prints a message, but decides whether to print to gdb_stdout or
gdb_stdlog based on a debug flag. It seems better to me to simply
always print this; and this is the only spot in gdb where we
conditionally pass gdb_stdout to one of the f*_unfiltered functions.
2022-01-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Reduce explicit use of gdb_stdout
In an earlier version of the pager rewrite series, it was important to
audit unfiltered output calls to see which were truly necessary.
This is no longer necessary, but it still seems like a decent cleanup
to change calls to avoid explicitly passing gdb_stdout. That is,
rather than using something like fprintf_unfiltered with gdb_stdout,
the code ought to use plain printf_unfiltered instead.
This patch makes this change. I went ahead and converted all the
_filtered calls I could find, as well, for the same clarity.
2022-01-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Sent timing stats to gdb_stdlog
This changes the time / space / symtab per-command statistics code to
send its output to gdb_stdlog rather than gdb_stdout. This seems
slightly more correct to me.
Send some error output to gdb_stderr
This changes some code to send some error messages to gdb_stderr
rather than gdb_stdout.
2022-01-25 Klaus Ziegler <klausz@haus-gisela.de>
Fix a probem building the binutils on SPARC/amd64
PR 28816
* elf/common.h (AT_SUN_HWCAP): Make definition conditional.
2022-01-25 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Regenerate Makefile.in
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-01-25 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gold: drop old cygnus install hack
The gold subdir doesn't actually have a manual, so this hack doesn't
do anything. Plus the automake cygnus option was removed years ago
by Simon in d0ac1c44885daf68f631befa37e ("Bump to autoconf 2.69 and
automake 1.15.1"). So delete it here.
gas: drop old cygnus install hack
This was needed when gas was using the automake cygnus option, but
this was removed years ago by Simon in d0ac1c44885daf68f631befa37e
("Bump to autoconf 2.69 and automake 1.15.1"). So delete it here.
The info pages are already & still installed by default w/out it.
2022-01-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-24 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Update doc/local.mk
PR binutils/28807
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* doc/local.mk (AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS): Add -I "$(srcdir)/%D%" -I %D%.
(TEXI2DVI): New.
(%D%/bfd.texi): Removed.
(doc/bfd/index.html): Remove -I$(srcdir). Replace bfd.texi with
%D%/bfd.texi.
2022-01-24 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
bfd/doc: Fix racy build failure from missing mkdir
bfd/
* doc/local.mk (%D%/bfdver.texi): Add mkdir command.
2022-01-24 Martin Sebor <msebor@redhat.com>
Fix a proble building the libiberty library with gcc-12.
PR 28779
* regex.c: Suppress -Wuse-after-free.
2022-01-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: improve description for Window.click on Python TUI windows
The description of the Window.click method doesn't mention where the
coordinates are anchored (it's the top left corner).
This minor tweak just mentions this point.
2022-01-24 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update Bulgarian, French, Romaniam and Ukranian translation for some of the sub-directories
2022-01-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify some Rust expression-evaluation code
A few Rust operations do a bit of work in their 'evaluate' functions
and then call another function -- but are also the only caller. This
patch simplifies this code by removing the extra layer.
Tested on x86-64 Fedora 34. I'm checking this in.
2022-01-23 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Partially revert commit 0e3839bde6f
Partially revert
commit 0e3839bde6f93e1e3eefce815be3636e3d81054d
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jan 23 07:29:27 2022 -0800
bfd: Properly install library and header files
PR binutils/28807
* Makefile.am: Revert bfdlib_LTLIBRARIES and bfdinclude_HEADERS
changes.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-01-23 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Properly install library and header files
Rename bfdlib_LTLIBRARIES and bfdinclude_HEADERS to lib_LTLIBRARIES and
include_HEADERS to fix the missing installed library and header files in
bfd caused by
commit bd32be01c997f686ab0b53f0640eaa0aeb61fbd3
Author: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Date: Fri Dec 3 00:23:20 2021 -0500
bfd: merge doc subdir up a level
PR binutils/28807
* Makefile.am (bfdlib_LTLIBRARIES): Renamed to ...
(lib_LTLIBRARIES): This.
(bfdinclude_HEADERS): Renamed to ...
(include_HEADERS): This.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* doc/local.mk (install): Removed.
2022-01-23 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Regenerate Makefile.in files with automake 1.15.1
Regenerate Makefile.in files with the unmodified automake 1.15.1 to
remove
runstatedir = @runstatedir@
bfd/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
binutils/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
gas/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
gold/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/Makefile.in: Likewise.
gprof/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
ld/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
opcodes/
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2022-01-23 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Regenerate configure files with autoconf 2.69
Regenerate configure files with the unmodified autoconf 2.69 to remove
--runstatedir=DIR modifiable per-process data [LOCALSTATEDIR/run]
bfd/
* configure: Regenerate.
binutils/
* configure: Regenerate.
gas/
* configure: Regenerate.
gold/
* configure: Regenerate.
gprof/
* configure: Regenerate.
ld/
* configure: Regenerate.
opcodes/
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-01-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-22 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: merge doc subdir up a level
This avoids a recursive make into the doc subdir and speeds up the
build slightly. It also allows for more parallelism.
bfd: rename core.texi to corefile.texi
This is a generated file name from a correspondingly named C file.
Rename it to avoid unique build rules since there's no difference
to the generated manual.
bfd: replace doc header generation with pattern rules
This unifies boilerplate rules for most files with pattern rules.
2022-01-22 Martin Storsj? <martin@martin.st>
Allow inferring tmp_prefix from the dll name from a def file.
2022-01-22 Alexander von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Adjust default page sizes for haiku arm.
* configure.tgt (arm-haiku): Fix typo.
* emulparams/armelf_haiku.su (MAXPAGESIZE): Use the default value.
(COMMONPAGESIZE): Likewise.
2022-01-22 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update release makeing script with new release numbers
Change version number to 2.38.50 and regenerate files
Add markers for 2.38 branch
2022-01-22 Lifang Xia <lifang_xia@linux.alibaba.com>
RISC-V: create new frag after alignment.
PR 28793:
The alignment may be removed in linker. We need to create new frag after
alignment to prevent the assembler from computing static offsets.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_frag_align_code): Create new frag.
2022-01-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: include gdbsupport/buildargv.h in ser-mingw.c
Fixes:
CXX ser-mingw.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-mingw.c: In function int pipe_windows_open(serial*, const char*):
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ser-mingw.c:870:3: error: gdb_argv was not declared in this scope
870 | gdb_argv argv (name);
| ^~~~~~~~
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28802
Change-Id: I7f3e8ec5f9ca8582d587545fdf6b69901259f199
2022-01-21 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Serbian translation for the ld sub-directory
2022-01-21 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: fill in two missing @r
I noticed two places in the docs where we appear to be missing @r.
makeinfo seems to do the correct things despite these being
missing (at least, I couldn't see any difference in the pdf or info
output), but it doesn't hurt to have the @r in place.
2022-01-21 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
drop old unused stamp-h.in file
This was needed by ancient versions of automake, but that hasn't been
the case since at least automake-1.5, so punt this from the tree.
2022-01-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport/gdb_regex.cc: replace defs.h include with common-defs.h
This was forgotten when gdb_regex was moved from gdb to gdbsupport.
Change-Id: I73b446f71861cabbf7afdb7408ef9d59fa64b804
2022-01-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-20 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid bad breakpoints with --gc-sections
We found a case where --gc-sections can cause gdb to set an invalid
breakpoint. In the included test case, gdb will set a breakpoint with
two locations, one of which is 0x0.
The code in lnp_state_machine::check_line_address is intended to
filter out this sort of problem, but in this case, the entire CU is
empty, causing unrelocated_lowpc==0x0 -- which circumvents the check.
It seems to me that if a CU is empty like this, then it is ok to
simply ignore the line table, as there won't be any locations anyway.
2022-01-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-19 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
Add `set print array-indexes' tests for C/C++ arrays
Add `set print array-indexes' tests for C/C++ arrays, complementing one
for Fortran arrays.
2022-01-19 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
Respect `set print array-indexes' with Fortran arrays
Add `set print array-indexes' handling for Fortran arrays. Currently
the setting is ignored and indices are never shown.
Keep track of the most recent index handled so that any outstanding
repeated elements printed when the limit set by `set print elements' is
hit have the correct index shown.
Output now looks like:
(gdb) set print array-indexes on
(gdb) print array_1d
$1 = ((-2) = 1, (-1) = 1, (0) = 1, (1) = 1, (2) = 1)
(gdb) set print repeats 4
(gdb) set print elements 12
(gdb) print array_2d
$2 = ((-2) = ((-2) = 2, <repeats 5 times>) (-1) = ((-2) = 2, <repeats 5 times>) (0) = ((-2) = 2, (-1) = 2, ...) ...)
(gdb)
for a 5-element vector and a 5 by 5 array filled with the value of 2.
2022-01-19 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
Add `set print repeats' tests for C/C++ arrays
Add `set print repeats' tests for C/C++ arrays, complementing one for
Fortran arrays and covering the different interpretation of the `set
print elements' setting in particular where the per-dimension count of
the elements handled is matched against the trigger rather than the
total element count as with Fortran arrays.
2022-01-19 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
Respect `set print repeats' with Fortran arrays
Implement `set print repeats' handling for Fortran arrays. Currently
the setting is ignored and always treated as if no limit was set.
Unlike the generic array walker implemented decades ago the Fortran one
is a proper C++ class. Rather than trying to mimic the old walker then,
which turned out a bit of a challenge where interacting with the `set
print elements' setting, write it entirely from scratch, by adding an
extra specialization handler method for processing dimensions other than
the innermost one and letting the specialization class call the `walk_1'
method from the handler as it sees fit. This way repeats can be tracked
and the next inner dimension recursed into as a need arises only, or
unconditionally in the base class.
Keep track of the dimension number being handled in the class rather as
a parameter to the walker so that it does not have to be passed across
by the specialization class.
Use per-dimension element count tracking, needed to terminate processing
early when the limit set by `set print elements' is hit. This requires
extra care too where the limit triggers exactly where another element
that is a subarray begins. In that case rather than recursing we need
to terminate processing or lone `(...)' would be printed. Additionally
if the skipped element is the last one in the current dimension we need
to print `...' by hand, because `continue_walking' won't print it at the
upper level, because it can see the last element has already been taken
care of.
Preserve the existing semantics of `set print elements' where the total
count of the elements handled is matched against the trigger level which
is unlike with the C/C++ array printer where the per-dimension element
count is used instead.
Output now looks like:
(gdb) set print repeats 4
(gdb) print array_2d
$1 = ((2, <repeats 5 times>) <repeats 5 times>)
(gdb) set print elements 12
(gdb) print array_2d
$2 = ((2, <repeats 5 times>) (2, <repeats 5 times>) (2, 2, ...) ...)
(gdb)
for a 5 by 5 array filled with the value of 2.
Amend existing test cases accordingly that rely on the current incorrect
behavior and explicitly request that there be no limit for printing
repeated elements there.
Add suitable test cases as well covering sliced arrays in particular.
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
2022-01-19 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Add include for gdb_argv.
2022-01-19 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 DT_RELR ELFv1
More fun with R_PPC64_NONE found in .opd. Fixed by the
allocate_dynrelocs and ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections changes, and
since we are doing ifunc, opd and SYMBOL_REFERENCES_LOCAL tests later,
don't duplicate that work in check_relocs.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Remove opd and ifunc
conditions for rel_count.
(dec_dynrel_count): Likewise.
(allocate_dynrelocs): Test for opd and ifunc when allocating
relative relocs.
(ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Likewise.
2022-01-19 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 DT_RELR local PLT
Similarly to the local GOT case.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Don't allocate
space for PLT relocs against local syms when enable_dt_relr.
2022-01-19 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 DT_RELR local GOT
Fixes another case where we end up with superfluous R_PPC64_NONE.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Don't allocate
space for GOT relocs against non-TLS local syms when enable_dt_relr.
(ppc64_elf_layout_multitoc): Likewise.
2022-01-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PowerPC64 DT_RELR
HJ: "There are 238 R_PPC64_NONEs in libc.so.6 alone."
Indeed, let's make them go away. I had the SYMBOL_REFERENCES_LOCAL
test in the wrong place. check_relocs is too early to know whether a
symbol is dynamic in a shared library. Lots of glibc symbols are made
local by version script, but that doesn't happen until
size_dynamic_sections.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Don't count relative relocs
here depending on SYMBOL_REFERENCES_LOCAL.
(dec_dynrel_count): Likewise.
(allocate_dynrelocs): Do so here instead.
2022-01-18 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix the remote-sim.c build
My earlier patch to move gdb_argv broke the remote-sim.c build. This
patch fixes the bug. I'm checking it in.
2022-01-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: introduce remote_debug_printf
Add remote_debug_printf, and use it for all debug messages controlled by
remote_debug.
Change remote_debug to be a bool, which is trivial in this case.
Change-Id: I90de13cb892faec3830047b571661822b126d6e8
2022-01-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: introduce threads_debug_printf, THREADS_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT
Add the threads_debug_printf and THREADS_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT, which
use the logging infrastructure from gdbsupport/common-debug.h. Replace
all debug_print uses that are predicated by debug_threads with
threads_dethreads_debug_printf. Replace uses of the debug_enter and
debug_exit macros with THREADS_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT, which serves
essentially the same purpose, but allows showing what comes between the
enter and the exit in an indented form.
Note that "threads" debug is currently used for a bit of everything in
GDBserver, not only threads related stuff. It should ideally be cleaned
up and separated logically as is done in GDB, but that's out of the
scope of this patch.
Change-Id: I2d4546464462cb4c16f7f1168c5cec5a89f2289a
2022-01-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: turn debug_threads into a boolean
debug_threads is always used as a boolean. Except in ax.cc and
tracepoint.cc. These files have their own macros that use
debug_threads, and have a concept of verbosity level. But they both
have a single level, so it's just a boolean in the end.
Remove this concept of level. If we ever want to re-introduce it, I
think it will be better implemented in a more common location.
Change debug_threads to bool and adjust some users that were treating it
as an int.
Change-Id: I137f596eaf763a08c977dd74417969cedfee9ecf
2022-01-18 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify Ada catchpoints
All the Ada catchpoints use the same breakpoint_ops contents, because
the catchpoint itself records its kind. This patch simplifies the
code by removing the redundant ops structures.
Move "catch exec" to a new file
The "catch exec" code is reasonably self-contained, and so this patch
moves it out of breakpoint.c (the second largest source file in gdb)
and into a new file, break-catch-exec.c.
Move "catch fork" to a new file
The "catch fork" code is reasonably self-contained, and so this patch
moves it out of breakpoint.c (the second largest source file in gdb)
and into a new file, break-catch-fork.c.
Unify "catch fork" and "catch vfork"
I noticed that "catch fork" and "catch vfork" are nearly identical.
This patch simplifies the code by unifying these two cases.
Move gdb_regex to gdbsupport
This moves the gdb_regex convenience class to gdbsupport.
Introduce gdb-hashtab module in gdbsupport
gdb has some extensions and helpers for working with the libiberty
hash table. This patch consolidates these and moves them to
gdbsupport.
Move gdb obstack code to gdbsupport
This moves the gdb-specific obstack code -- both extensions like
obconcat and obstack_strdup, and things like auto_obstack -- to
gdbsupport.
Move gdb_argv to gdbsupport
This moves the gdb_argv class to a new header in gdbsupport.
Simplify event_location_probe
event_location_probe currently stores two strings, but really only
needs one. This patch simplifies it and removes some unnecessary
copies as well.
Use std::string in event_location
This changes event_location to use std::string, removing some manual
memory management, and an unnecessary string copy.
Split event_location into subclasses
event_location uses the old C-style discriminated union approach.
However, it's better to use subclassing, as this makes the code
clearer and removes some chances for error. This also enables future
cleanups to avoid manual memory management and copies.
Remove EL_* macros from location.c
This patch removes the old-style EL_* macros from location.c. This
cleans up the code by itself, IMO, but also enables further cleanups
in subsequent patches.
Boolify explicit_to_string_internal
This changes explicit_to_string_internal to use 'bool' rather than
'int'.
Remove a use of xfree in location.c
This small cleanup removes a use of xfree from location.c, by
switching to unique_xmalloc_ptr. One function is only used in
location.c, so it is made static. And, another function is changed to
avoid a copy.
2022-01-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use ptid_t::to_string instead of target_pid_to_str in debug statements
Same idea as 0fab79556484 ("gdb: use ptid_t::to_string in infrun debug
messages"), but throughout GDB.
Change-Id: I62ba36eaef29935316d7187b9b13d7b88491acc1
2022-01-18 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: preserve `|` in connection details string
Consider this GDB session:
$ gdb -q
(gdb) target remote | gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x
Remote debugging using | gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x
... snip ...
(gdb) info connections
Num What Description
* 1 remote gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x Remote target using gdb-specific protocol
(gdb) python conn = gdb.selected_inferior().connection
(gdb) python print(conn.details)
gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x
(gdb)
I think there are two things wrong here, first in the "What" column of
the 'info connections' output, I think the text should be:
remote | gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x
to correctly show the user how the connection was established. And in
a similar fashion, I think that the `details` string of the
gdb.TargetConnection object should be:
| gdbserver - ~/tmp/hello.x
This commit makes this change. Currently the '|' is detected and
removed in gdb/serial.c. The string passed to the pipe_ops
structure (from gdb/ser-pipe.c), doesn't then, contain the `|`, this
is instead implied by the fact that it is a pipes based implementation
of the serial_ops interface.
After this commit we still detect the `|` in gdb/serial.c, but we now
store the full string (including the `|`) in the serial::name member
variable.
For pipe based serial connections, this name is only used for
displaying the two fields I mention above, and in pipe_open (from
gdb/ser-pipe.c), and in pipe_open, we now know to skip over the `|`.
The benefit I see from this change is that GDB's output now more
accurately reflects the commands used to start a target, thus making
it easier for a user to understand what is going on.
2022-01-18 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: print explicit test result for gdb.base/dfp-test.exp
In the current code, if decimal floating point is not supported for
this target, there is no binary file dfp-test, and also there is no
test result after execute the following commands:
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/dfp-test.exp"
$ grep error gdb/testsuite/gdb.log
/home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dfp-test.c:39:1: error: decimal floating point not supported for this target
[...]
$ cat gdb/testsuite/gdb.sum
[...]
Running target unix
Running /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dfp-test.exp ...
=== gdb Summary ===
[...]
With this patch:
$ make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/dfp-test.exp"
$ cat gdb/testsuite/gdb.sum
[...]
Running target unix
Running /home/loongson/gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dfp-test.exp ...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: decimal floating point not supported for this target.
=== gdb Summary ===
# of unsupported tests 1
[...]
2022-01-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
bfd/elf64-ppc.c: fix clang -Wbitwise-instead-of-logical warning in ppc64_elf_check_init_fini
I see this error with clang-14:
CC elf64-ppc.lo
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/bfd/elf64-ppc.c:13131:11: error: use of bitwise '&' with boolean operands [-Werror,-Wbitwise-instead-of-logical]
return (check_pasted_section (info, ".init")
~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fix by replacing & with &&. But given that the check_pasted_section
function has side-effects and we want to make sure both calls are made,
assign to temporary variables before evaluating the `&&`.
Change-Id: I849e1b2401bea5f4d8ef3ab9af99ba9e3ef42490
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28029, debuginfod tests
binutils/NEWS says of the change in --process-links semantics:
If other debug section display options are also enabled (eg
--debug-dump=info) then the contents of matching sections in both the main
file and the separate debuginfo file *will* be displayed. This is because in
most cases the debug section will only be present in one of the files.
Implying that debug info is dumped without --process-links. Indeed
that appears to be the case for readelf. This does the same for
objdump.
PR 28029
* objdump.c (dump_bfd): Do not exit early when !is_mainfile
&& !processlinks, instead just exclude non-debug output.
(dump_dwarf): Add is_mainfile parameter and pass to
dump_dwarf_section.
(dump_dwarf_section): Only display debug sections when
!is_mainfile and !process_links.
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Check thin archive element file size against archive header
Makes it a little less likely for someone to break their thin archives.
* archive.c (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Check thin archive
element file size.
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
lang_size_relro_segment tidy
This function has seen too many minimal change style edits.
No functional changes in this patch.
* ldlang.c (lang_size_relro_segment): Tidy.
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 DT_RELR
PowerPC64 takes a more traditional approach to DT_RELR than x86. Count
relative relocs in check_relocs, allocate space for them and output in
the usual places but not doing so when enable_dt_relr. DT_RELR is
sized in the existing ppc stub relaxation machinery, run via the
linker's ldemul_after_allocation hook. DT_RELR is output in the same
function that writes ppc stubs, run via ldemul_finish.
This support should be considered experimental.
bfd/
* elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_local_dyn_relocs): Renamed from
ppc_dyn_relocs. Add rel_count field. Update uses.
(struct ppc_dyn_relocs): New. Replace all uses of elf_dyn_relocs.
(struct ppc_link_hash_table): Add relr_alloc, relr_count and
relr_addr.
(ppc64_elf_copy_indirect_symbol): Merge rel_count.
(ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Init rel_count for global and local syms.
(dec_dynrel_count): Change r_info param to reloc pointer. Update
all callers. Handle decrementing rel_count.
(allocate_got): Don't allocate space for relative relocs when
enable_dt_relr.
(allocate_dynrelocs): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Likewise. Handle srelrdyn.
(ppc_build_one_stub): Don't emit relative relocs on .branch_lt.
(compare_relr_address, append_relr_off): New functions.
(got_and_plt_relr_for_local_syms, got_and_plt_relr): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Size .relr.syn.
(ppc64_elf_build_stubs): Emit .relr.dyn.
(build_global_entry_stubs_and_plt): Don't output relative relocs
when enable_dt_relr.
(write_plt_relocs_for_local_syms): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Likewise.
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (supports_dt_relr): Add
powerpc64.
ld/
* emulparams/elf64ppc.sh: Source dt-relr.sh.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2b.d: Adjust for powerpc.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2e.d: Likewise.
2022-01-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
tweak __ehdr_start visibility and flags for check_relocs
bfd/
* elf-bfd.h (UNDEFWEAK_NO_DYNAMIC_RELOC): Test linker_def.
ld/
* ldelf.c (ldelf_before_allocation): Don't force __ehdr_start
local and hidden here..
* ldlang.c (lang_symbol_tweaks): ..do so here instead and set
def_regular and linker_def for check_relocs. New function
extracted from lang_process.
2022-01-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-17 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update the config.guess and config.sub files from the master repository and regenerate files.
2022-01-17 Sergey Belyashov <sergey.belyashov@gmail.com>
Fix Z80 assembly failure.
PR 28762
* app.c (do_scrub_chars): Correct handling when the symbol is not 'af'.
2022-01-17 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/infrun: rename variable and move to more specific scope
Move the "started" variable to the scope it's needed, and rename it to
"step_over_started".
Change-Id: I56f3384dbd328f55198063bb855edda10f1492a3
2022-01-17 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: adjust struct instr_info field types
Now that this lives on the stack, let's have it be a little less
wasteful in terms of space. Switch boolean fields to "bool" (also when
this doesn't change their size) and also limit the widths of "rex",
"rex_used", "op_ad", and "op_index". Do a little bit of re-ordering as
well to limit the number of padding holes.
x86: drop index16 field
There's a single use on a generally infrequently taken code path. Put
the necessary conditional there instead.
x86: drop most Intel syntax register name arrays
By making use of, in particular, oappend_maybe_intel() there's no need
for this redundant set of static data.
x86: fold variables in memory operand index handling
There's no real need for the pseudo-boolean "haveindex" or for separate
32-bit / 64-bit index pointers. Fold them into a single "indexes" and
set that uniformly to AT&T names, compensating by emitting the register
name via oappend_maybe_intel().
x86: constify disassembler static data
Now that the code is intended to be largely thread-safe, we'd better not
have any writable static objects.
2022-01-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-16 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
gdb/copyright.py: Do not update gdbsupport/Makefile.in
This file is generated, so we should not modify it (any modification
we make is going to be undone at the next re-generation anyway).
2022-01-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-14 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.dlang/demangle.exp: update expected output for _D8demangle4testFnZv
Since commit ce2d3708bc8b ("Synchronize binutils libiberty sources with
gcc version."), I see this failure:
demangle _D8demangle4testFnZv^M
demangle.test(typeof(null))^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dlang/demangle.exp: _D8demangle4testFnZv
The commit imported the commit 0e32a5aa8bc9 ("libiberty: Add support for
D `typeof(*null)' types") from the gcc repository. That commit includes
an update to libiberty/testsuite/d-demangle-expected, which updates a
test for the exact same mangled name:
_D8demangle4testFnZv
-demangle.test(none)
+demangle.test(typeof(null))
I don't know anything about D, but give that the change was made by Iain
Buclaw, the D language maintainer, I trust him on that.
Fix our test by updating the expected output in the same way.
Note: it's not really useful to have all these D demangling tests in the
GDB testsuite, since there are demangling tests in libiberty. We should
consider removing them, but we first need to make sure that everything
that is covered in gdb/testsuite/gdb.dlang/demangle.exp is also covered
in libiberty/testsuite/d-demangle-expected.
Change-Id: If2b290ea8367b8e1e0b90b20d4a6e0bee517952d
2022-01-14 Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: enable __INTEL_LLVM_COMPILER preprocessor in get_compiler_info
Intel Next Gen compiler defines preprocessor __INTEL_LLVM_COMPILER and provides
version info in __clang_version__ e.g. value: 12.0.0 (icx 2020.10.0.1113).
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-12-07 Abdul Basit Ijaz <abdul.b.ijaz@intel.com>
* lib/compiler.c: Add Intel next gen compiler pre-processor check.
* lib/compiler.cc: Ditto.
* lib/fortran.exp (fortran_main): Check Intel next gen compiler in
test_compiler_info.
2022-01-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28751 mbind2a / mbind2b regressions on powerpc*-linux
include/
* bfdlink.h (struct bfd_link_info): Add commonpagesize_is_set.
ld/
PR 28751
* emultempl/elf.em (handle_option): Set commonpagesize_is_set.
* ldelf.c (ldelf_after_parse): Don't error when only one of
-z max-page-size or -z common-page-size is given, correct the
other value to make it sane.
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp (mbind2a, mbind2b): Do not pass
-z max-page-size.
2022-01-14 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop ymmxmm_mode
This enumerator is not used by any table entry.
x86: share yet more VEX table entries with EVEX decoding
On top of prior similar work more opportunities have appeared in the
meantime. Note that this also happens to address the prior lack of
decoding of EVEX.L'L for VMOV{L,H}P{S,D} and VMOV{LH,HL}PS.
x86: consistently use scalar_mode for AVX512-FP16 scalar insns
For some reason the original AVFX512F insns were not taken as a basis
here, causing unnecessary divergence. While not an active issue, it is
still relevant to note that OP_XMM() has special treatment of e.g.
scalar_mode (marking broadcast as invalid). Such would better be
consistent for all sufficiently similar insns.
x86: record further wrong uses of EVEX.b
For one EVEX.W set does not imply EVEX.b is uniformly valid. Reject it
for modes which occur for insns allowing for EVEX.W to be set (noticed
with VMOV{H,L}PD and VMOVDDUP, and only in AT&T mode, but not checked
whether further insns would also have been impacted; I expect e.g.
VCMPSD would have had the same issue). And then the present concept of
broadcast makes no sense at all when the memory operand of an insn is
the destination.
2022-01-14 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: reduce AVX512 FP set of insns decoded through vex_w_table[]
Like for AVX512-FP16, there's not that many FP insns where going through
this table is easier / cheaper than using suitable macros. Utilize %XS
and %XD more to eliminate a fair number of table entries.
While doing this I noticed a few anomalies. Where lines get touched /
moved anyway, these are being addressed right here:
- vmovshdup used EXx for its 2nd operand, thus displaying seemingly
valid broadcast when EVEX.b is set with a memory operand; use
EXEvexXNoBcst instead just like vmovsldup already does
- vmovlhps used EXx for its 3rd operand, when all sibling entries use
EXq; switch to EXq there for consistency (the two differ only for
memory operands)
2022-01-14 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: reduce AVX512-FP16 set of insns decoded through vex_w_table[]
Like already indicated during review of the original submission, there's
really only very few insns where going through this table is easier /
cheaper than using suitable macros. Utilize %XH more and introduce
similar %XS and %XD (which subsequently can be used for further table
size reduction).
While there also switch to using oappend() in 'XH' macro processing.
2022-01-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-13 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Disable DT_RELR in some -z relro tests
Disable DT_RELR in the following -z relro tests which don't expect
DT_RELR in linker outputs.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr20830.d: Pass $NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS to ld.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-01-13 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Reapply libiberty: Pass --plugin to AR and RANLIB
Reapply the patch to detect GCC LTO plugin used for libiberty build to
support LTO build in libiberty.
* Makefile.in (AR): Add @AR_PLUGIN_OPTION@
(RANLIB): Add @RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION@.
(configure_deps): Depend on ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
* aclocal.m4: Include ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
* configure.ac: AC_SUBST AR_PLUGIN_OPTION and
RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION.
* configure: Regenerate.
2022-01-13 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Remove the 1-page gap before the RELRO segment
The existing RELRO scheme may leave a 1-page gap before the RELRO segment
and align the end of the RELRO segment to the page size:
[18] .eh_frame PROGBITS 408fa0 008fa0 005e80 00 A 0 0 8
[19] .init_array INIT_ARRAY 410de0 00fde0 000008 08 WA 0 0 8
[20] .fini_array FINI_ARRAY 410de8 00fde8 000008 08 WA 0 0 8
[21] .dynamic DYNAMIC 410df0 00fdf0 000200 10 WA 7 0 8
[22] .got PROGBITS 410ff0 00fff0 000010 08 WA 0 0 8
[23] .got.plt PROGBITS 411000 010000 000048 08 WA 0 0 8
Instead, we can remove the 1-page gap if the maximum page size >= the
maximum section alignment:
[18] .eh_frame PROGBITS 408fa0 008fa0 005e80 00 A 0 0 8
[19] .init_array INIT_ARRAY 40fde0 00fde0 000008 08 WA 0 0 8
[20] .fini_array FINI_ARRAY 40fde8 00fde8 000008 08 WA 0 0 8
[21] .dynamic DYNAMIC 40fdf0 00fdf0 000200 10 WA 7 0 8
[22] .got PROGBITS 40fff0 00fff0 000010 08 WA 0 0 8
[23] .got.plt PROGBITS 410000 010000 000048 08 WA 0 0 8
Because the end of the RELRO segment is always aligned to the page size
and may not be moved, the RELRO segment size may be increased:
[ 3] .dynstr STRTAB 000148 000148 000001 00 A 0 0 1
[ 4] .eh_frame PROGBITS 000150 000150 000000 00 A 0 0 8
[ 5] .init_array INIT_ARRAY 200150 000150 000010 08 WA 0 0 1
[ 6] .fini_array FINI_ARRAY 200160 000160 000010 08 WA 0 0 1
[ 7] .jcr PROGBITS 200170 000170 000008 00 WA 0 0 1
[ 8] .data.rel.ro PROGBITS 200180 000180 000020 00 WA 0 0 16
[ 9] .dynamic DYNAMIC 2001a0 0001a0 0001c0 10 WA 3 0 8
[10] .got PROGBITS 200360 000360 0002a8 00 WA 0 0 8
[11] .bss NOBITS 201000 000608 000840 00 WA 0 0 1
vs the old section layout:
[ 3] .dynstr STRTAB 000148 000148 000001 00 A 0 0 1
[ 4] .eh_frame PROGBITS 000150 000150 000000 00 A 0 0 8
[ 5] .init_array INIT_ARRAY 200b48 000b48 000010 08 WA 0 0 1
[ 6] .fini_array FINI_ARRAY 200b58 000b58 000010 08 WA 0 0 1
[ 7] .jcr PROGBITS 200b68 000b68 000008 00 WA 0 0 1
[ 8] .data.rel.ro PROGBITS 200b70 000b70 000020 00 WA 0 0 16
[ 9] .dynamic DYNAMIC 200b90 000b90 0001c0 10 WA 3 0 8
[10] .got PROGBITS 200d50 000d50 0002a8 00 WA 0 0 8
[11] .bss NOBITS 201000 000ff8 000840 00 WA 0 0 1
But there is no 1-page gap.
PR ld/28743
* ldlang.c (lang_size_relro_segment_1): Remove the 1-page gap
before the RELRO segment if the maximum page size >= the maximum
section alignment.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr20830.d: Adjusted.
* testsuite/ld-s390/gotreloc_64-relro-1.dd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr18176.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-01-13 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Synchronize binutils libiberty sources with gcc version.
+2021-12-30 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
+
+ * cp-demangle.c (d_clone_suffix): Support digits in clone tag
+ names.
+ * testsuite/demangle-expected: Check demangling of clone symbols
+ with digits in name.
+
+2021-12-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
+
+ Revert:
+ 2021-12-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
+
+ * Makefile.in (AR): Add @AR_PLUGIN_OPTION@
+ (RANLIB): Add @RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION@.
+ (configure_deps): Depend on ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
+ * configure.ac: AC_SUBST AR_PLUGIN_OPTION and
+ RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION.
+ * aclocal.m4: Regenerated.
+ * configure: Likewise.
+
+2021-12-15 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
+
+ * Makefile.in (AR): Add @AR_PLUGIN_OPTION@
+ (RANLIB): Add @RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION@.
+ (configure_deps): Depend on ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
+ * configure.ac: AC_SUBST AR_PLUGIN_OPTION and
+ RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION.
+ * aclocal.m4: Regenerated.
+ * configure: Likewise.
+
+2021-11-29 Eric Gallager <egallager@gcc.gnu.org>
+
+ PR other/103021
+ * Makefile.in: Use ETAGS variable in TAGS target.
+ * configure: Regenerate.
+ * configure.ac: Allow ETAGS variable to be overridden.
+
+2021-11-29 Andrew Pinski <apinski@marvell.com>
+
+ * make-temp-file.c (try_dir): Check to see if the dir
+ is actually a directory.
+
+2021-10-22 Eric Gallager <egallager@gcc.gnu.org>
+
+ PR other/102663
+ * Makefile.in: Allow dvi-formatted documentation
+ to be installed.
+
+2021-10-17 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ PR d/102618
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_parse_qualified): Handle anonymous
+ symbols correctly.
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: New tests to cover anonymous
+ symbols.
+
+2021-10-14 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Add test case for function literals.
+
+2021-10-14 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Add test cases for simple special
+ mangles.
+
+2021-10-12 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_parse_qualified): Remove redudant parenthesis
+ around lhs and rhs of assignments.
+
+2021-10-01 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Add missing format for new test
+
+2021-09-23 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_Type): Validate MANGLED is nonnull.
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: New test.
+
+2021-09-23 Lu?s Ferreira <contact@lsferreira.net>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_symbol_backref): Ensure strlen of
+ string is less than length computed by dlang_number.
+
+2021-09-01 Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
* configure: Regenerate.
+ * configure.ac: Do not search for sbrk on Darwin.
+ * xmalloc.c: Do not declare sbrk unless it has been found
+ by configure.
+
+2021-08-29 Iain Buclaw <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_identifier): Skip over fake parent manglings.
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Add tests.
+
+2021-08-29 Iain Buclaw <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_parse_arrayliteral): Add 'info' parameter.
+ (dlang_parse_assocarray): Likewise.
+ (dlang_parse_structlit): Likewise.
+ (dlang_value): Likewise. Handle function literal symbols.
+ (dlang_template_args): Pass 'info' to dlang_value.
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Add new test.
+
+2021-08-29 Iain Buclaw <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>
+
+ * d-demangle.c (dlang_attributes): Handle typeof(*null).
+ (dlang_type): Likewise. Demangle 'n' as typeof(null).
+ * testsuite/d-demangle-expected: Update tests.
+
+2021-08-23 Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
+
+ * simple-object-mach-o.c (simple_object_mach_o_write_segment):
+ Cast the first argument to set_32 as needed.
-2021-07-03 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
+2021-08-18 Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
+ * simple-object-mach-o.c (simple_object_mach_o_write_segment):
+ Arrange to swap the LTO index tables where needed.
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
2022-01-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: don't use -Wmissing-prototypes with g++
This commit aims to not make use of -Wmissing-prototypes when
compiling with g++.
Use of -Wmissing-prototypes was added with this commit:
commit a0761e34f054767de6d6389929d27e9015fb299b
Date: Wed Mar 11 15:15:12 2020 -0400
gdb: enable -Wmissing-prototypes warning
Because clang can provide helpful warnings with this flag.
Unfortunately, g++ doesn't accept this flag, and will give this
warning:
cc1plus: warning: command line option -Wmissing-prototypes is valid for C/ObjC but not for C++
In theory the fact that this flag is not supported should be detected
by the configure check in gdbsupport/warning.m4, but for users of
ccache, this check doesn't work due to a long standing ccache issue:
https://github.com/ccache/ccache/issues/738
The ccache problem is that -W... options are reordered on the command
line, and so -Wmissing-prototypes is seen before -Werror. Usually
this doesn't matter, but the above warning (about the flag not being
valid) is issued before the -Werror flag is processed, and so is not
fatal.
There have been two previous attempts to fix this that I'm aware of.
The first is:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182148.html
In this attempt, instead of just relying on a compile to check if a
flag is valid, the proposal was to both compile and link. As linking
doesn't go through ccache, we don't suffer from the argument
reordering problem, and the link phase will correctly fail when using
-Wmissing-prototypes with g++. The configure script will then disable
the use of this flag.
This approach was rejected, and the suggestion was to only add the
-Wmissing-prototypes flag if we are compiling with gcc.
The second attempt, attempts this approach, and can be found here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-November/183076.html
This attempt only adds the -Wmissing-prototypes flag is the value of
GCC is not 'yes'. This feels like it is doing the right thing,
unfortunately, the GCC flag is really a 'is gcc like' flag, not a
strict, is gcc check. As such, GCC is set to 'yes' for clang, which
would mean the flag was not included for clang or gcc. The entire
point of the original commit was to add this flag for clang, so
clearly the second attempt is not sufficient either.
In this new attempt I have added gdbsupport/compiler-type.m4, this
file defines AM_GDB_COMPILER_TYPE. This macro sets the variable
GDB_COMPILER_TYPE to either 'gcc', 'clang', or 'unknown'. In future
the list of values might be extended to cover other compilers, if this
is ever useful.
I've then modified gdbsupport/warning.m4 to only add the problematic
-Wmissing-prototypes flag if GDB_COMPILER_TYPE is not 'gcc'.
I've tested this with both gcc and clang and see the expected results,
gcc no longer attempts to use the -Wmissing-prototypes flag, while
clang continues to use it.
When compiling using ccache, I am no longer seeing the warning.
2022-01-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add some extra debug information to attach_command
While working on another patch I wanted to add some extra debug
information to the attach_command function. This required me to add a
new function to convert the thread_info::state variable to a string.
The new debug might be useful to others, and the state to string
function might be useful in other locations, so I thought I'd merge
it.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: gas: add visibility support using GNU syntax on XCOFF
tc-ppc.c: In function 'ppc_comm':
tc-ppc.c:4560:40: error: 'visibility' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
With that fixed we hit lots of segfaults in the ld testsuite.
PR 22085
bfd/
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_link_input_bfd): Don't segfault on NULL
sym_hash.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_comm): Init visibility.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
dt-relr.exp --no-as-needed
Otherwise the very simple test may not be linked with libc.so at all,
and thus correctly have no version reference added. Causing failure
of the dt-relr-glibc-1b.so test.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr.exp: Link with --no-as-needed.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Correct .relr.dyn nocombreloc script
* scripttempl/elf.sc (.relr.dyn): Don't depend on $COMBRELOC.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
testsuite supports_dt_relr
Tidy, and fix "FAIL: Build dt-relr-glibc-1b.so" on all non-x86
linux targets.
binutils/
* binutils-common.exp (supports_dt_relr): New proc.
ld/
* testsuite/config/default.exp (DT_RELR_LDFLAGS, NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS),
(DT_RELR_CC_LDFLAGS, NO_DT_RELR_CC_LDFLAGS): Use supports_dt_relr.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr.exp: Don't run unless supports_dt_relr.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2e.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2f.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2g.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2h.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3b.d: Likewise.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't use C++ comments in assembly
It might seem to work, but only if '/' is a start of comment char.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1.s: Use # for comment.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3.s: Likewise.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Move DT_RELR tag setting to elflink.c
This makes the code setting DT_RELR tags generally available. Many
targets will be able to use the defaults. Those that can't should set
up sh_entsize for .relr.dyn output section before reaching the dynamic
tag code in bfd_elf_final_link.
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_final_link): Set up DT_RELR tags and sh_entsize.
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_finish_dynamic_sections): Don't do any
of that here.
2022-01-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Set SEC_ELF_REVERSE_COPY earlier
Let's not rely on .init/.fini having relocs for the size sanity check.
This is mainly to squash reports of "my fuzzed object made ld hang".
2022-01-13 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: make string[] type as char in gdb.base/charset.c
This reverts the commit ff656e2e1cb1 ("gdb: testsuite: fix failed
testcases in gdb.base/charset.exp").
The original test code has no problem. On an architecture where
char is signed, then both 'A' and ebcdic_us_string[7] will yield
-63, which makes the equality true. On an architecture where char
is unsigned, then both 'A' and ebcdic_us_string[7] will yield 193,
which also makes the equality true.
The test cases only failed on LoongArch. The default type of char
is signed char on LoongArch, like x86-64. But when use gdb print
command on LoongArch, the default type of char is unsigned char,
this is wrong, I will look into it later, sorry for that.
On LoongArch:
$ cat test_char.c
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
char c1 = 193;
unsigned char c2 = 193;
printf("%d\n", c1);
printf("%d\n", c1 == c2);
return 0;
}
$ gcc test_char.c -o test_char
$ ./test_char
-63
0
(gdb) set target-charset EBCDIC-US
(gdb) print 'A'
$1 = 193 'A'
(gdb) print /c 'A'
$2 = 193 'A'
(gdb) print /u 'A'
$3 = 193
(gdb) print /d 'A'
$4 = -63
(gdb) print /x 'A'
$5 = 0xc1
2022-01-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-12 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb Power 9 add test for HW watchpoint support.
The Power 9 processor revision 2.2 has HW watchpoint support disabled due
to a HW bug. The support is fixed in Power 9 processor revision 2.3. This
patch add a test to lib/gdb.exp for Power to determine if the processor
supports HW watchpoints or not. If the Power processor doesn't support HW
watchpoints the proceedure skip_hw_watchpoint_tests will return 1 to
disable the various HW watchpoint tests.
The patch has been tested on Power 9, processor revesions 2.2 and 2.3. The
patch has also been tested on Power 10. No regression test failures were
found.
2022-01-12 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: add gdb.host_charset function
We already have gdb.target_charset and gdb.target_wide_charset. This
commit adds gdb.host_charset along the same lines.
2022-01-12 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.python/py-events.exp for finding process id
When executed with --target_board=native-extended-gdbserver, the
gdb.python/py-events.exp test errors out with
ERROR: tcl error sourcing /path/to/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-events.exp.
ERROR: can't read "process_id": no such variable
while executing
"lappend expected "ptid: \\($process_id, $process_id, 0\\)" "address: $addr""
(file "/path/to/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-events.exp" line 103)
invoked from within
"source /path/to/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-events.exp"
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel #0 source /path/to/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-events.exp"
invoked from within
"catch "uplevel #0 source $test_file_name""
There are multiple problems around this:
1. The process_id variable is not initialized to a default value.
2. The test attempts to find the PID of the current thread, but the
regexp that it uses is not tailored for the output printed by the
remote target.
3. The test uses "info threads" to find the current thread PID.
Using the "thread" command instead is simpler.
Fix these problems.
2022-01-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Don't mention "serial" in target remote description
PR remote/9177 points out that "info files" mentions "serial" a couple
of times:
Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol:
Debugging a target over a serial line.
However, often the remote target isn't really a serial connection.
It seems to me that this text could be a bit clearer; and furthermore
since "info files" prints the target's long description,
remote_target::files_info doesn't really add much and can simply be
removed.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9177
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Add glibc dependency for DT_RELR
When DT_RELR is enabled, to avoid random run-time crash with older glibc
binaries without DT_RELR support, add a GLIBC_ABI_DT_RELR symbol version,
which is provided by glibc with DT_RELR support, dependency on the shared
C library if it provides a GLIBC_2.XX symbol version.
bfd/
* elflink.c (elf_link_add_dt_relr_dependency): New function.
(bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Call
elf_link_add_dt_relr_dependency if DT_RELR is enabled.
ld/
* ld.texi: Mention GLIBC_ABI_DT_RELR in -z pack-relative-relocs
entry.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-glibc-1.c: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-glibc-1a.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-glibc-1b.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr.exp: Likewise.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Add simple DT_RELR tests
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1.s: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2e.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2f.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2g.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-2h.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dt-relr-3b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/dt-relr-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/dt-relr-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/dt-relr-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/dt-relr-1a-x32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/dt-relr-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/dt-relr-1b-x32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/dt-relr-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/dt-relr-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Run dt-relr-1a and dt-relr-1b.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Run dt-relr-1a, dt-relr-1a-x32
dt-relr-1b and dt-relr-1b-x32.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Add DT_RELR support
DT_RELR is implemented with linker relaxation:
1. During linker relaxation, we scan input relocations with the same
logic in relocate_section to determine if a relative relocation should
be generated and save the relative relocation candidate information for
sizing the DT_RELR section later after all symbols addresses can be
determined. For these relative relocations which can't be placed in
the DT_RELR section, they will be placed in the rela.dyn/rel.dyn
section.
2. When DT_RELR is enabled, _bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments calls a
backend function to size the DT_RELR section which will compute the
DT_RELR section size and tell ldelf_map_segments to layout sections
again when the DT_RELR section size has been increased.
3. After regular symbol processing is finished, bfd_elf_final_link calls
a backend function to finish the DT_RELR section.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_relocate_section): Don't generate
relative relocation when DT_RELR is enabled.
(elf_i386_finish_dynamic_symbol): Likewise.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_relocate_section): Don't generate
relative relocation when DT_RELR is enabled.
(elf_x86_64_finish_dynamic_symbol): Likewise.
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_link_hash_table_create): Initialize
relative_r_type, relative_r_name, elf_append_reloc,
elf_write_addend and elf_write_addend_in_got.
(elf_x86_relative_reloc_record_add): New function.
(_bfd_x86_elf_link_relax_section): Likewise.
(elf64_dt_relr_bitmap_add): Likewise.
(elf32_dt_relr_bitmap_add): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf32_write_addend): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf64_write_addend): Likewise.
(elf_x86_size_or_finish_relative_reloc): Likewise.
(elf_x86_compute_dl_relr_bitmap): Likewise.
(elf_x86_write_dl_relr_bitmap): Likewise.
(elf_x86_relative_reloc_compare ): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf_x86_size_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf_x86_finish_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(_bfd_x86_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Skip the .relr.dyn section.
(_bfd_x86_elf_finish_dynamic_sections): Convert 3 spare dynamic
tags to DT_RELR, DT_RELRSZ and for compact relative relocation.
* elfxx-x86.h (X86_64_GOT_TYPE_P): New.
(I386_GOT_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_GOT_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_64_RELATIVE_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(I386_RELATIVE_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_RELATIVE_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_LOCAL_GOT_RELATIVE_RELOC_P): Likewise.
(I386_PCREL_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_64_PCREL_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_64_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): Rewrite.
(I386_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(GENERATE_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P): Also check rel_from_abs.
(elf_x86_link_hash_entry): Add got_relative_reloc_done.
(elf_x86_relative_reloc_record): New.
(elf_x86_relative_reloc_data): Likewise.
(elf_dt_relr_bitmap): Likewise.
(elf_x86_link_hash_table): Add dt_relr_bitmap, relative_reloc,
unaligned_relative_reloc, relative_r_type, relative_r_name,
elf_append_reloc, elf_write_addend, elf_write_addend_in_got and
relative_reloc_done.
(elf_x86_relative_reloc_done): New.
(relative_reloc_packed): Likewise.
(_bfd_x86_elf_link_relax_section): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf_x86_size_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf_x86_finish_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf32_write_addend): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf64_write_addend): Likewise.
(bfd_elf32_bfd_relax_section): Likewise.
(bfd_elf64_bfd_relax_section): Likewise.
(elf_backend_size_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(elf_backend_finish_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(elf_x86_allocate_local_got_info): Also allocate
relative_reloc_done.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Support DT_RELR in linker tests
Allow eabling and disabling DT_RELR in linker tests. Disable DT_RELR in
linker tests which don't expect DT_RELR in linker outputs.
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (run_dump_test): Make
DT_RELR_LDFLAGS and NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS global.
ld/
* testsuite/config/default.exp (DT_RELR_LDFLAGS): New.
(DT_RELR_CC_LDFLAGS): Likewise.
(NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS): Likewise.
(NO_DT_RELR_CC_LDFLAGS): Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Pass $NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS to
linker for some tests.
* testsuite/ld-i386/export-class.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/ibt-plt-2a.d: Pass $NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS to
linker.
* testsuite/ld-i386/ibt-plt-3a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/ibt-plt-3c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr26869.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/report-reloc-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-i386-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-local-i386-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-local-x86-64-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc-2-x86-64-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/pr17154-x86-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-branch-1-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-ifunc-1-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-ifunc-2-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-ifunc-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-plt-1-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/bnd-plt-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/ibt-plt-2a-x32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/ibt-plt-2a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/ibt-plt-3a-x32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/ibt-plt-3a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/ilp32-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/load1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/load1d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr13082-2b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr18176.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19162.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19636-2d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19636-2l.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20253-1d.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20253-1f.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20253-1j.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20253-1l.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/report-reloc-1-x32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/report-reloc-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/export-class.exp (x86_64_export_class_test):
Pass $NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS to linker.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Pass $NO_DT_RELR_LDFLAGS to
linker for some tests.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Add size_relative_relocs and finish_relative_relocs
On some targets, the DT_RELR section size can be computed only after all
symbols addresses can be determined. Set the preliminary DT_RELR section
size before mapping sections to segments and set the final DT_RELR section
size after regular symbol processing is done.
* elf-bfd.h (elf_backend_data): Add size_relative_relocs and
finish_relative_relocs.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments): Call
size_relative_relocs if DT_RELR is enabled.
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_final_link): Call finish_relative_relocs
after regular symbol processing is finished if DT_RELR is enabled.
* elfxx-target.h (elf_backend_size_relative_relocs): New.
(elf_backend_finish_relative_relocs): Likewise.
(elfNN_bed): Add elf_backend_size_relative_relocs and
elf_backend_finish_relative_relocs.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Initial DT_RELR support
Add a -z pack-relative-relocs option to enable DT_RELR and create a
relr.dyn section for DT_RELR. DT_RELR is implemented with the linker
relaxation infrastructure, but it doesn't require the --relax option
enabled. -z pack-relative-relocs implies -z combreloc. -z nocombreloc
implies -z nopack-relative-relocs.
-z pack-relative-relocs is chosen over the similar option in lld,
--pack-dyn-relocs=relr, to implement a glibc binary lockout mechanism
with a special glibc version symbol, to avoid random crashes of DT_RELR
binaries with the existing glibc binaries.
bfd/
* elf-bfd.h (elf_link_hash_table): Add srelrdyn.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_link_create_dynamic_sections): Create a
.relr.dyn section for DT_RELR.
include/
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_info): Add enable_dt_relr.
ld/
* News: Mention -z pack-relative-relocs and
-z nopack-relative-relocs.
* ld.texi: Document -z pack-relative-relocs and
-z nopack-relative-relocs.
* ldelf.c (ldelf_after_parse): Disable DT_RELR if not building
PIE nor shared library. Add 3 spare dynamic tags for DT_RELR,
DT_RELRSZ and DT_RELRENT.
* ldlang.c (lang_relax_sections): Also enable relaxation if
DT_RELR is enabled.
* emulparams/elf32_x86_64.sh: Source dt-relr.sh.
* emulparams/elf_i386.sh: Likewise.
* emulparams/elf_x86_64.sh: Likewise.
* emulparams/dt-relr.sh: New file.
* scripttempl/elf.sc: Support .relr.dyn.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Pass need_layout to _bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments
On some targets, the DT_RELR section size can be computed only after all
symbols addresses can be determined. Update ldelf_map_segments to pass
need_layout to _bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments which will size DT_RELR
section and set need_layout to true if the DT_RELR section size is changed.
bfd/
* elf-bfd.h (_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments): Add a bool
pointer argument.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments): Add a bool pointer
argument to indicate if section layout needs update.
(assign_file_positions_for_load_sections): Pass NULL to
_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_strip_zero_sized_dynamic_sections): Pass
NULL to _bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments.
ld/
* ldelfgen.c (ldelf_map_segments): Pass &need_layout to
_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments.
2022-01-12 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Add .relr.dyn to special_sections_r
* elf.c (special_sections_r): Add .relr.dyn.
2022-01-12 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add 'maint set/show gnu-source-highlight enabled' command
In a later commit I want to address an issue with the Python pygments
based code styling solution. As this approach is only used when the
GNU Source Highlight library is not available, testing bugs in this
area can be annoying, as it requires GDB to be rebuilt with use of GNU
Source Highlight disabled.
This commit adds a pair of new maintenance commands:
maintenance set gnu-source-highlight enabled on|off
maintenance show gnu-source-highlight enabled
these commands can be used to disable use of the GNU Source Highlight
library, allowing me, in a later commit, to easily test bugs that
would otherwise be masked by GNU Source Highlight being used.
I made this a maintenance command, rather than a general purpose
command, as it didn't seem like this was something a general user
would need to adjust. We can always convert the maintenance command
to a general command later if needed.
There's no test for this here, but this feature will be used in a
later commit.
2022-01-12 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: erase items from the source_cache::m_offset_cache
The source_cache class has two member variables m_source_map, which
stores the file contents, and m_offset_cache, which stores offsets
into the file contents.
As source files are read the contents of the file, as well as the
offset data, are stored in the cache using these two member variables.
Whenever GDB needs either the files contents, or the offset data,
source_cache::ensure is called. This function looks for the file in
m_source_map, and if it's found then this implies the file is also in
m_offset_cache, and we're done.
If the file is not in m_source_map then GDB calls
source_cache::get_plain_source_lines to open the file and read its
contents. ::get_plain_source_lines also calculates the offset data,
which is then inserted into m_offset_cache.
Back in ::ensure, the file contents are added into m_source_map. And
finally, if m_source_map contains more than MAX_ENTRIES, an entry is
removed from m_source_map.
The problem is entries are not removed from m_offset_cache at the same
time.
This means that if a program contains enough source files, GDB will
hold at most MAX_ENTRIES cached source file contents, but can contain
offsets data for every source file.
Now, the offsets data is going to be smaller than the cached file
contents, so maybe there's no harm here. But, when we reload the file
contents we always recalculate the offsets data. And, when we
::get_line_charpos asking for offset data we still call ::ensure which
will ends up loading and caching the file contents.
So, given the current code does the work of reloading the offset data
anyway, we may as well save memory by capping m_offset_cache to
MAX_ENTRIES just like we do m_source_map.
That's what this commit does.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit, except for
ever so slightly lower memory usage in some cases.
2022-01-12 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: new 'maint flush source-cache' command
This commit adds a new 'maint flush source-cache' command, this
flushes the cache of source file contents.
After flushing GDB is forced to reread source files the next time any
source lines are to be displayed.
I've added a test for this new feature. The test is a little weird,
in that it modifies a source file after compilation, and makes use of
the cache flush so that the changes show up when listing the source
file. I'm not sure when such a situation would ever crop up in real
life, but maybe we can imagine such cases.
In reality, this command is useful for testing the syntax highlighting
within GDB, we can adjust the syntax highlighting settings, flush the
cache, and then get the file contents re-highlighted using the new
settings.
2022-01-12 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: rename lin-lwp to linux-nat in set/show debug
Rename 'set debug lin-lwp' to 'set debug linux-nat' and 'show debug
lin-lwp' to 'show debug linux-nat'.
I've updated the documentation and help text to match, as well as
making it clear that the debug that is coming out relates to all
aspects of Linux native inferior support, not just the LWP aspect of
it.
The boundary between general "native" target debug, and the lwp
specific part of that debug was always a little blurry, but the actual
debug variable inside GDB is debug_linux_nat, and the print routine
linux_nat_debug_printf, is used throughout the linux-nat.c file, not
just for lwp related debug, so the new name seems to make more sense.
2022-01-12 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
ld: add hidden and internal visibility support for XCOFF
This patch adds a primary support for hidden and internal visibility in
GNU linker for XCOFF format.
The protected visibility isn't yet supported.
PR 22085
bfd/ChangeLog:
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_dynamic_definition_p): Add hidden
and internal visibility support.
(xcoff_link_add_symbols): Likewise.
(xcoff_auto_export_p): Likewise.
(bfd_xcoff_export_symbol): Likewise.
(xcoff_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-vsb/main.c: Adapt for XCOFF.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/sh1.c: Likewse.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/vsb.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/visibility-1-xcoff-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/visibility-1-xcoff-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/visibility-2-xcoff-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/visibility-2-xcoff-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-vsb/xcoffvsb.dat: New test.
2022-01-12 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
ld/testsuite: prepare ld-elfvsb to support XCOFF
A following patch will add visibility support in ld for XCOFF. Thus,
ld-elfvsb is renamed ld-vsb and a suffix is added to files targeting only
ELF format.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb: rename as ld-vsb.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/hidden0.d: move to ld-vsb and rename with
suffix -elf.d.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/hidden1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/hidden2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/internal0.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/internal1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/protected0.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/protected1.d: Likewise.
2022-01-12 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: add visibility support using GNU syntax on XCOFF
In order to ease port of GNU assembly code and especially ld testsuite,
this patch allows XCOFF to accept the usual GNU syntax for visibility.
PR 22085
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_GNU_visibility): New function.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/aix.exp: Add new tests.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-2-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-2-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-2.s: New test.
2022-01-12 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: add visibility support for XCOFF
XCOFF assembly defines the visibility using an additional argument
on several pseudo-ops: .globl, .weak, .extern and .comm.
This implies that .globl and .weak syntax is different than the
usual GNU syntax. But we want to provide compatibility with AIX
assembler, especially because GCC is generating the visibility
using this XCOFF syntax.
PR 22085
bfd/ChangeLog:
* coffcode.h (coff_write_object_contents): Change XCOFF header
vstamp field to 2.
* coffgen.c (coff_print_symbol): Increase the size for n_type.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_xcoff_get_visibility): New function.
(ppc_globl): New function.
(ppc_weak): New function.
(ppc_comm): Add visibility field support.
(ppc_extern): Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/all/cofftag.d: Adjust to new n_type size
providing by objdump.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/test1xcoff32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/aix.exp: Add new tests.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-1-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-1-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-visibility-1.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* coff/internal.h (SYM_V_INTERNAL, SYM_V_HIDDEN,
SYM_V_PROTECTED, SYM_V_EXPORTED, SYM_V_MASK): New defines.
* coff/xcoff.h (struct xcoff_link_hash_entry): Add visibility
field.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-pe/pr19803.d: Adjust to new n_type size
providing by objdump.
2022-01-12 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
objdump, readelf: Emit "CU:" format only when wide output is requested
As pre-approved by Alan in
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-September/118019.html
and I believe people have run into getting testsuite failures for
test-environments with "long" directory names, at least once more
since that time. Enough. I grepped the gas, binutils and ld
testsuites for "CU:" to catch target-specific occurrences, but I
noticed none. I chose to remove "CU:" on the objdump tests instead of
changing options to get the wide format, so as to keep the name of the
test consistent with actual options; but added it to the readelf
options for the gas test as I believe the "CU:" format is preferable.
Tested for cris-elf and native x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
binutils:
* dwarf.c (display_debug_lines_decoded): Don't check the
string length of the directory, instead emit the "CU: dir/name"
format only if wide output is requested.
* testsuite/binutils-all/dw5.W, testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.WL:
Adjust accordingly.
gas:
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-loc0.d: Add -W to readelf options.
2022-01-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Set SEC_ELF_REVERSE_COPY earlier
For the sake of DT_RELR.
bfd/
* elflink.c (elf_link_input_bfd): Don't set SEC_ELF_REVERSE_COPY
here. Move sanity checks to reverse copying code.
ld/
* ldlang.c (lang_add_section): Set SEC_ELF_REVERSE_COPY for
.ctors/.dtors in .init_array/.fini_array.
2022-01-12 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: fix wrong comment in gdb.base/charset.c
In gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/charset.c, use "IBM1047" instead of "EBCDIC"
to fix the wrong comment.
2022-01-12 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: fix failed testcases in gdb.base/charset.exp
In gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/charset.c, the last argument is greater than 127
when call fill_run() in EBCDIC-US and IBM1047, but the type of string[] is
char, this will change the value due to sign extension.
For example, ebcdic_us_string[7] will be -63 instead of the original 193 in
EBCDIC-US.
Make the type of string[] as unsigned char to fix the following six failed
testcases:
$ grep FAIL gdb/testsuite/gdb.sum
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of parsed character literal in EBCDIC-US
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of parsed string literal in EBCDIC-US
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of escape that doesn't exist in EBCDIC-US
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of parsed character literal in IBM1047
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of parsed string literal in IBM1047
FAIL: gdb.base/charset.exp: check value of escape that doesn't exist in IBM1047
2022-01-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-11 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
ar: Add --thin for creating thin archives
In many ar implementations (FreeBSD, elfutils, etc), -T has the X/Open
System Interface specified semantics. Therefore -T for thin archives is
not recommended for portability. -T is deprecated without diagnostics.
PR binutils/28759
* ar.c (long_options): Add --thin.
(usage) Add --thin. Deprecate -T without diagnostics.
* doc/binutils.texi: Add doc.
* NEWS: Mention --thin.
* binutils/testsuite/binutils-all/ar.exp: Add tests.
2022-01-11 Martin Storsj <martin@martin.st>
Fix multiple problems with DLL generation.
ld * pe-dll.c (make_head): Prefix the symbol name with the dll name.
(make_tail, make_one, make_singleton_name_thunk): Likewise.
(make_import_fixup_entry, make_runtime_pseudo_reloc): Likewise.
(pe_create_runtime_relocator_reference): Likewise.
(pe_dll_generate_implib): Set dll_symname_len.
(pe_process_import_defs): Likewise.
binutils
* dlltool.c (main): If a prefix has not been provided, attempt to
use a deterministic one based upon the dll name.
2022-01-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/doc: mention quoted symbol names
2022-01-11 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdbsupport: regenerate Makefile.in
I had cause to regenerate gdbsupport/Makefile.in, and noticed some
unexpected changes in the copyright header dates.
I suspect that this was caused by the end of year date range update
process.
The Makefile.in contains two date ranges. The first range appears to
be the date range for the version of automake being used, that is the
range runs up to 2017 only, when automake 1.15.1 was released.
The second date range in Makefile.in represents the date range for the
generated file, and so, now runs up to 2022.
Anyway, this is the result of running autoreconf (using automake
1.15.1) in the gdbsupport directory.
2022-01-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-10 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
XCOFF: add support for TLS relocations on hidden symbols
This patch adds support for TLS relocation targeting C_HIDEXT symbols.
In gas, TLS relocations, except R_TLSM and R_TLMSL, must keep the value
of their target symbol.
In ld, it simply ensures that internal TLS symbols are added to the
linker hash table for xcoff_reloc_type_tls.
It also improves the tests made by both.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_howto_table): Fix name of R_TLSML.
(xcoff_reloc_type_tls): Replace the error when h is NULL by
an assert.
(xcoff_complain_overflow_unsigned_func): Adjust comments.
* coff64-rs6000.c (xcoff64_howto_table): Fix name of R_TLSML.
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_link_add_symbols_to_hash_table): New
function.
(xcoff_link_add_symbols): Add C_HIDEXT TLS symbols to the linker
hash table.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-ppc.c (md_apply_fix): Enable support for TLS
relocation over internal symbols.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/aix.exp: Replace xcoff-tlms by xcoff-tls.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tlsm-32.d: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tlsm-64.d: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tlsm.s: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tls-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tls-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-tls.s: New test.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix52.exp: Improve aix-tls-reloc test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-32.d: Removed.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-64.d: Removed.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-32.dd: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-32.dt: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-64.dd: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/aix-tls-reloc-64.dt: New test.
2022-01-10 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: add Tiezhu Yang to MAINTAINERS
2022-01-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Reduce use of unfiltered output in Darwin code
The Darwin code uses unfiltered output liberally. This patch changes
this code to send some output to gdb_stdlog (in some cases via the use
of debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc), or to gdb_stderr, or to simply
switch to filtered output.
Note that I didn't switch inferior_debug to use
debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc, because that would affect the
output by removing the information about the inferior. I wasn't sure
if this was important or not, so I left it in.
v2 of this patch uses warning rather than prints to gdb_stderr, and
removes some trailing whitespace.
I can't compile this patch, so it's "best effort".
2022-01-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/hurd: handle inferiors exiting
While testing on GNU/Hurd (i386) I noticed that GDB crashes when an
inferior exits, with this error:
inferior.c:293: internal-error: inferior* find_inferior_pid(process_stratum_target*, int): Assertion `pid != 0' failed.
The problem appears to be in gnu_nat_target::wait.
We always set inferior_ptid to null_ptid before calling target_wait,
this has been the case since the multi-target changes were made to GDB
in commit:
commit 5b6d1e4fa4fc6827c7b3f0e99ff120dfa14d65d2
Date: Fri Jan 10 20:06:08 2020 +0000
Multi-target support
With follow up changes in commit:
commit 24ed6739b699f329c2c45aedee5f8c7d2f54e493
Date: Thu Jan 30 14:35:40 2020 +0000
gdb/remote: Restore support for 'S' stop reply packet
Unfortunately, the GNU/Hurd target is still relying on the value of
inferior_ptid in the case where an inferior exits - we return the
value of inferior_ptid as the pid of the process that exited. This
was fine in the single target world, where inferior_ptid identified
the one running inferior, but this is no longer good enough.
Instead, we should return a ptid containing the pid of the process
that exited, as obtained from the wait event, and this is what this
commit does.
I've not run the full testsuite on GNU/Hurd as there appear to be lots
of other issues with this target that makes running the full testsuite
very painful, but I think this looks like a small easy improvement.
2022-01-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add explicit check for nullptr to target_announce_attach
Lancelot pointed out that target_announce_attach was missing an
explicit check against nullptr. This patch adds it.
2022-01-08 Hannes Domani <ssbssa@yahoo.de>
Add _sigsys info to siginfo struct
This patch adds information about _sigsys structure from newer
kernels, so that $_siginfo decoding can show information about
_sigsys, making it easier for developers to debug seccomp failures.
Requested in PR gdb/24283.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24283
2022-01-08 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
gdb: testsuite: show print array-indexes after set in arrayidx.exp
Add "show print array-indexes" testcases after set print array-indexes
to off or on.
Without this patch:
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: set print array-indexes to off
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: print array with array-indexes off
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: set print array-indexes to on
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: print array with array-indexes on
With this patch:
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: set print array-indexes to off
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: show print array-indexes is off
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: print array with array-indexes off
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: set print array-indexes to on
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: show print array-indexes is on
PASS: gdb.base/arrayidx.exp: print array with array-indexes on
2022-01-08 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Extract _bfd_elf_link_iterate_on_relocs
DT_RELR encodes consecutive R_*_RELATIVE relocations in GOT (the global
offset table) and data sections in a compact format:
https://groups.google.com/g/generic-abi/c/bX460iggiKg
On some targets, R_*_RELATIVE relocations are counted and the GOT offsets
are allocated when setting the dynamic section sizes after seeing all
relocations. R_*_RELATIVE relocations are generated while relocating
sections after section layout has been finalized.
To prepare for DT_RELR implementation on these targets, extract
_bfd_elf_link_iterate_on_relocs from _bfd_elf_link_check_relocs so
that a backend can scan relocations in elf_backend_always_size_sections
For x86 targets, the old check_relocs is renamed to scan_relocs and a
new check_relocs is added to chek input sections and create dynamic
relocation sections so that they will be mapped to output sections.
scan_relocs is now called from elf_backend_always_size_sections.
Since relocations are scanned after __start, __stop, .startof. and
.sizeof. symbols have been finalized on x86, __[start|stop]_SECNAME for
--gc-sections -z start-stop-gc are now zero when all SECNAME sections
been garbage collected. This is no need for elf_x86_start_stop_gc_p.
bfd/
* elf-bfd.h (_bfd_elf_link_iterate_on_relocs): New.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_convert_load_reloc): Don't call
elf_x86_start_stop_gc_p.
(elf_i386_check_relocs): Renamed to ...
(elf_i386_scan_relocs): This. Don't call
_bfd_elf_make_dynamic_reloc_section.
(elf_i386_always_size_sections): New.
(elf_backend_check_relocs): Removed.
(elf_backend_always_size_sections): New.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_convert_load_reloc): Don't call
elf_x86_start_stop_gc_p.
(elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Renamed to ...
(elf_x86_64_scan_relocs): This. Don't call
_bfd_elf_make_dynamic_reloc_section.
(elf_x86_64_always_size_sections): New.
(elf_backend_check_relocs): Removed.
(elf_backend_always_size_sections): New.
* elflink.c (elf_link_check_or_scan_relocs):
New. Extracted from _bfd_elf_link_check_relocs.
(_bfd_elf_link_check_relocs): Call elf_link_check_or_scan_relocs.
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_check_relocs): New.
* elfxx-x86.h (X86_64_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): New.
(I386_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOC_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(_bfd_x86_elf_check_relocs): Likewise.
(elf_backend_check_relocs): Likewise.
(elf_backend_always_size_sections): Removed.
(elf_x86_start_stop_gc_p): Likewise.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-1a.d: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-1a.d: Likewise.
2022-01-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.mi/mi-catch-load.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-catch-load.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-catch-load.exp: breakpoint at main
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-catch-load.exp: mi runto main
Fix by grouping the various phases in with_test_prefix blocks. Since
the tests now have a prefix, remove the manually written prefixes in
testnames.
Also change some messages with the pattern "(timeout) $testname" into
"$estname (timeout)" since tools will handle this as $testname[1] (which
is what we want in this particular scenario).
Tested on x86_64-linux.
[1] https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/GDBTestcaseCookbook#Do_not_use_.22tail_parentheses.22_on_test_messages
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.threads/staticthreads.ex
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp: couldn't compile staticthreads.c: unrecognized error
Fix by using foreach_with_prefix instead of foreach when preparing the
test case.
Testeed on x86_64-linux both in a setup where the test fails to prepare
and in a setup where the test fails to setup.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.mi/mi-language.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-language.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-language.exp: set lang ada
This is due to an erroneous explicit test name. This explicit test name
also happens to be useless (at least it would have been if it was
correct) since it only repeats the command, so just remove the explicit
test name and let the command be used as default test name. Also remove
explicit test name at another location in the file since it also just
repeat the command.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.mi/mi-nonstop-exit.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nonstop-exit.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-nonstop-exit.exp: breakpoint at main
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-nonstop-exit.exp: mi runto main
This test runs the same sequence of operations twice. Refactor the code
by running both of those sequences within a foreach_with_prefix block to
ensure that the commands have unique test names.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.mi/mi-nonstop.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nonstop.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-nonstop.exp: check varobj, w1, 1
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-nonstop.exp: stacktrace of stopped thread
Fix by adjusting the problematic test names.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.mi/mi-nsthrexec.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-nsthrexec.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-nsthrexec.exp: breakpoint at main
Fix by adjusting the duplicated test name.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/watchpoints.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running ../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/watchpoints.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/watchpoints.exp: watchpoint hit, first time
Fix by adjusting the test names where appropriate.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/nested-subp2.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/nested-subp2.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/nested-subp2.exp: continue to the STOP marker
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/nested-subp2.exp: print c
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/nested-subp2.exp: print count
Fix by using with_test_prefix to differentiate the test that are
performed at different points during the execution of the debuggee.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp: dummy stack frame number
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp: set confirm off
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp: return
This is due to the fact that a pattern was probably copy/pasted to
re-use the logic while not adjusting the test names to avoid the
duplication.
Fix by removing the redundant tests ('set confirm off' only needs to be
used once) and adjusting the test names where appropriate.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/pointers.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have :
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/pointers.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/pointers.exp: pointer assignment
Fix by placing the sections with duplication in with_test_prefix blocks.
This removes the duplication and gives a better organization the file.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/unload.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/unload.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/unload.exp: continuing to unloaded libfile
Fix by adjusting the test name.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/define-prefix.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/define-prefix.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/define-prefix.exp: define user command: ghi-prefix-cmd
Fix by adjusting test names.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/funcargs.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/funcargs.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/funcargs.exp: run to call2a
Fix by using proc_with_prefix instead on plain proc to create logical
function blocks.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/shlib-call.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/shlib-call.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: print g
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: set print sevenbit-strings
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: set print address off
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: set width 0
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: continue until exit
Fix by adjusting the test names when required, and by removing
un-necessary commands.
While at it, do some cleanup:
- Replace an explicit GDB restart sequence with a call to clean_restart.
- Remove trailing whitespaces.
- Use $gdb_test_name in gdb_test_multiple.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/set-cfd.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/set-cwd.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/set-cwd.exp: test_cwd_reset: continue to breakpoint: break-here
Fix by moving the tests after the 'runto_main' within the same
with_test_prefix scope.
While at it, I fix some indentation issues.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/exprs.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/exprs.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/exprs.exp: \$[0-9]* = red (setup)
Fix by using with_test_prefix where appropriate.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/readline.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/readline.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/readline.exp: Simple operate-and-get-next - final prompt
Fix by adjusting the prefix given to the second 'simple' call to
operate_and_get_next.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/pretty-array.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/pretty-array.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/pretty-array.exp: print nums
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/pretty-array.exp: print nums
Fix by giving a name to the test cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp: redirect while already logging: set logging redirect off
Fix by moving the first 'set logging redirect off' to the end of the
previous [with_test_prefix] test block. The statement's purpose is to
clean the on flag set in this previous block, so moving it there makes
sense and does not change the sequence of commands in the test file.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: completion-support.exp: improve leading whitespace support
There is a expect support library in the source tree designed to help
developers test the auto-completion capabilities of GDB.
One of the functions is test_gdb_complete_unique_re. It is used
(usually indirectly via test_gdb_complete_unique) to test that a given
input line is completed as a given output line. The test checks for two
ways to do the completion: using tab-completion, or using the
'complete' command. To do this, calls to two dedicated functions are
performed. If we omit few details, we can consider that a call to
test_gdb_complete_unique $input $expected
is equivalent to the two following calls:
test_gdb_complete_tab_unique $input $expected
test_gdb_complete_cmd_unique $input $expected
When using the tab-completion, everything works as expected, but some
care must be taken when using the 'complete' command if the given input
has leading whitespaces. In such situation, the output of the
'complete' command will drop the leading whitespaces.
The current approach is that in such situation, the input and expected
outputs are right trimmed (i.e. all leading whitespaces are removed)
when performing the command completion check.
This means that the following call:
test_gdb_complete_unique " $input" " $expected"
is almost equivalent to (again, omitting few details and arguments):
test_gdb_complete_tab_unique " $input" " $expected"
test_gdb_complete_cmd_unique "$input" "$expected"
This approach comes with a problem that we encounter when running the
tests in complete-empty.exp. When doing so, we have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/complete-empty.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/complete-empty.exp: empty-input-line: cmd complete ""
This is because the test file does something like:
test_gdb_complete_unique "" "!" " " 1
test_gdb_complete_unique " " " !" " " 1¬
which, if we do the substitution introduced above is equivalent to:
test_gdb_complete_tab_unique "" "!"
test_gdb_complete_cmd_unique "" "!"
test_gdb_complete_tab_unique " " " !"
test_gdb_complete_cmd_unique "" "!"
We see that the lines 2 and 4 are now the same, and for this reason the
testing framework complains about DUPLICATE test names.
To fix that, this commit proposes that instead of left trimming both
input and expected outputs, only the expected output is trimmed.
Care must be taken in the case the completion gives more possibilities
than allowed by the max-completions setting. In this case, the input
will be repeated in the output in its left trimmed version. This commit
also ensures that this is taken care of.
With this commit, the gdb.base/complete-empty.exp still passes all its
tests but does not report the DUPLICATE anymore.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/subst.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/subst.ex ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/subst.exp: unset substitute-path from, no rule entered yet
Fix by adjusting the problematic test name.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/dfp-exprs.exp
When I run the testsuite, I have:
Running ../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dfp-exprs.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/dfp-exprs.exp: p 1.2dl < 1.3df
Replace hand-written tests checking various comparison operators between
various decimal floating point types with a loop to programmatically
generate all the combinations. This removes the need to eyeball for all
suffixes, which lead to the original duplication.
Also add a lot more combinations, testing all comparison operators
comprehensively. The result is 262 unique tests vs 104 before this
patch.
Tested on x86_86-linux.
Change-Id: Id215a3d610aa8e032bf06ee160b5e3aed4a92d1e
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/ptype.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/ptype.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/ptype.exp: ptype the_highest
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/ptype.exp: list intfoo
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/ptype.exp: list charfoo
Fix by adjusting the offending test names.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/dfp-test.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dfp-test.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: 1.23E is an invalid number
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: 1.23E45A is an invalid number
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: 1.23E is an invalid number
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: 1.23E45A is an invalid number
Fix by using proc_with_prefix where appropriate.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/del.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/del.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/del.exp: info break after removing break on main
Refactor slightly this test to run the various configurations under
foreach_with_prefix so each variant is automatically prefixed, ensuring
that the forgotten custom test name cannot happen.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/solib-display.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-display.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: NO: break 25
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: NO: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: IN: break 25
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: IN: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: SEP: break 25
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/solib-display.exp: SEP: continue
The 'break 25' appears because the test inserts two breakpoints at the
same location. Fix this by only inserting the breakpoint once.
Fix the 'continue' DUPLICATE by giving a phony name to the second
continue: 'continue two'.
While at it, this commit also removes a trailing space.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/decl-before-def.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/decl-before-def.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/decl-before-def.exp: p a
Fix by giving explicit names to the two tests that use the same command.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/pending.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/pending.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/pending.exp: disable other breakpoints
Fix by adjusting the test names.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/checkpoint.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/checkpoint.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/checkpoint.exp: verify lines 5 two
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/checkpoint.exp: restart 0 one
This patch fixes the various erroneous incorrect test names.
While at it, this patch also remove some trailing white spaces across
the file.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/pie-fork.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/pie-fork.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/pie-fork.exp: test_no_detach_on_fork: continue
Fix by giving explicit names to the 'continue' commands that cause the
duplicate message.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/realname-expand.exp
When running the testsuite, I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/realname-expand.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/realname-expand.exp: set basenames-may-differ on
This is due to the fact that the test restarts GDB twice and each time
sets the basenames-may-differ setting. This patch proposes to fix this
by not restarting GDB so the setting is maintained. It just clears the
breakpoints between the two tests and updates the breakpoints number as
required.
This patch also perform some minor refactorings to improve visibility.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/interp.exp
When running the testsuite I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/interp.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/interp.exp: interpreter-exec mi "-var-update *"
This is due to the fact that multiple successive instances of
gdb_test_multiple use 'pass $cmd', but one of them forgets to reset $cmd
to a new test name.
Fix by using 'pass $gdb_test_name', given that the gdb_test_name is set
by gdb_test_multiple.
While fixing this, this patch refactors all occurrences of the following
pattern:
set cmd foo
gdb_test_multiple $cmd $cmd {
-re ... {
pass $cmd
}
}
into
gdb_test_multiple foo "" {
-re ... {
pass $gdb_test_name
}
}
This makes this test file coherent in its use of $gdb_test_name.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/miscexprs.exp
When running the testsuite I see:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/miscexprs.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/miscexprs.exp: print value of !ibig.i[100]
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/miscexprs.exp: print value of !ibig.i[100]
This is due to an explicit test name repeated across multiple tests.
The actual test explicit names do not add much over the command from
wich default test names are derived.
Fix by removing the explicit test names across the file where they do
not add value. While at doing some cleaning, also use $gdb_test_name in
the various uses of gdb_test_multiple.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates from gdb.base/stack-checking.exp
When running the testsuite I have:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/stack-checking.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/stack-checking.exp: bt
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/stack-checking.exp: bt
Fix by using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: update docs to reflect privileged spec v1.9 has been dropped
After commit d8af286fffa ("RISC-V: Drop the privileged spec v1.9
support.") has removed support for privileged spec v1.9, this removes
it from the documentation.
References: d8af286fffa ("RISC-V: Drop the privileged spec v1.9 support.")
gas/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Remove reference to priv spec 1.9.
* po/fr.po: Same.
* po/ru.po: Same.
* po/uk.po: Same.
2022-01-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: update docs for -mpriv-spec/--with-priv-spec for 1.12
While support for the privileged spec was added in a63375ac337
("RISC-V: Hypervisor ext: support Privileged Spec 1.12"), the
documentation has not been updated. Add 1.12 to the relevant
documentation.
References: a63375ac337 ("RISC-V: Hypervisor ext: support Privileged Spec 1.12")
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c: Add 1.12 to the usage message.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Add 1.12 to the help/usage message.
* po/fr.po: Same.
* po/ru.po: Same.
* po/uk.po: Same.
2022-01-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Do not use CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
ax.cc checks CC_HAS_LONG_LONG, but nothing defines this. However,
PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG is checked in configure. This patch removes the
former and keeps the latter. This is PR remote/14976 (filed by me in
2012, lol).
I'm checking this in.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14976
2022-01-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: shorten some source lines, and prevent some line breaks
Building on the previous commit, this makes use of a trailing @ to
split long @deffn lines in the guile.texi source file. This splitting
doesn't change how the document is laid out by texinfo.
I have also wrapped keyword and argument name pairs in @w{...} to
prevent line breaks appearing between the two. I've currently only
done this for the longer @deffn lines, where a line break is
possible. This makes the @deffn lines much nicer to read in the
generated pdf.
2022-01-07 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: Remove (...) around guile procedure names in @deffn lines
Most guile procedures in the guile.texi file are defined like:
@deffn {Scheme Procedure} name arg1 arg2 arg3
But there are two places where we do this:
@deffn {Scheme Procedure} (name arg1 arg2 arg3)
Notice the added (...). Though this does represent how a procedure
call is written in scheme, it's not the normal style throughout the
manual. I also checked the 'info guile' info page to see how they
wrote there declarations, and they use the first style too.
The second style also has the drawback that index entries are added as
'(name', and so they are grouped in the '(' section of the index,
which is not very user friendly.
In this commit I've changed the definitions of make-command and
make-parameter to use the first style.
The procedure declaration lines can get pretty long with all of the
arguments, and this was true for both of the procedures I am changing
in this commit. I have made use of a trailing '@' to split the deffn
lines, and keep them under 80 characters in the texi source. This
makes no difference to how the final document looks.
Finally, our current style for keyword arguments, appears to be:
[#:keyword-name argument-name]
I don't really understand the reason for this, 'info guile' just seems
to use:
[#:keyword-name]
which seems just as good to me. But I don't propose to change
that just now. What I do notice though, is that sometimes, texinfo
will place a line break between the keyword-name and the
argument-name, for example, the pdf of make-command is:
make-command name [#:invoke invoke] [#:command-class
command-class] [#:completer-class completer] [#:prefix? prefix] [#:doc
doc-string]
Notice the line break after '#:command-class' and after '#:doc',
neither of which are ideal. And so, for the two commands I am
changing in this commit, I have made use of @w{...} to prevent line
breaks between the keyword-name and the argument-name. Now the pdf
looks like this:
make-command name [#:invoke invoke]
[#:command-class command-class] [#:completer-class completer]
[#:prefix? prefix] [#:doc doc-string]
Which seems much better. I'll probably update the other deffn lines
at some point.
2022-01-07 Pavel Mayorov <pmayorov@cloudlinux.com>
Revert previous delta to debug.c. Replace with patch to reject indirect types that point to indirect types.
PR 28718
* dwarf.c: Revert previous delta.
(debug_get_real_type): Reject indirect types that point to
indirect types.
(debug_get_type_name, debug_get_type_size, debug_write_type):
Likewise.
2022-01-07 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Updated the default ISA spec to 20191213.
Update the default ISA spec from 2.2 to 20191213 will change the default
version of i from 2.0 to 2.1. Since zicsr and zifencei are separated
from i 2.1, users need to add them in the architecture string if they need
fence.i and csr instructions. Besides, we also allow old ISA spec can
recognize zicsr and zifencei, but we won't output them since they are
already included in the i extension when i's version is less than 2.1.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_add_subset): Allow old ISA spec can
recognize zicsr and zifencei.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (DEFAULT_RISCV_ISA_SPEC): Updated to 20191213.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Added zicsr to -march since
the default version of i is 2.1.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-03.d: Updated i's version to 2.1.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-03.s: Likewise.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax.d: Added zicsr to -march since
the default version of i is 2.1.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-01.d: Updated i's version to 2.1.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-01a.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-01b.: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-02a.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-02b.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-03.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-03a.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-03b.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-failed-02.d: Added zifencei
into Tag_RISCV_arch since it is added implied when i's version is
larger than 2.1.
2022-01-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Move elf_backend_always_size_sections earlier
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Move plt/got init
earlier and call elf_backend_always_size_sections at the start
of this function.
2022-01-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-06 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ldelfgen.c: Add missing newlines when calling einfo
* ldelfgen.c (ldelf_map_segments): Add the missing newline to
einfo.
2022-01-06 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix a stack exhaustion bug parsing malicious STABS format debug information.
PR 28718
* debug.c (debug_write_type): Allow for malicious recursion via
indirect debug types.
2022-01-06 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add support for new SME instructions
This patch adds support for three new SME instructions: ADDSPL,
ADDSVL and RDSVL. They behave like ADDPL, ADDVL and RDVL, but read
the streaming vector length instead of the current vector length.
opcodes/
* aarch64-tbl.h (aarch64_opcode_table): Add ADDSPL, ADDSVL and RDSVL.
* aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme.s, testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme.d: Add tests
for ADDSPL, ADDSVL and RDSVL.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use target_announce_detach in more targets
target_announce_detach was added in commit 0f48b757 ("Factor out
"Detaching from program" message printing"). There, Pedro wrote:
(For now, I left the couple targets that print this a bit differently
alone. Maybe this could be further pulled out into infcmd.c. If we
did that, and those targets want to continue printing differently,
this new function could be converted to a target method.)
It seems to me that the differences aren't very big, and in some cases
other targets handled the output a bit more nicely. In particular,
some targets will print a different message when exec_file==NULL,
rather than printing the same output with an empty string as
exec_file.
This patch incorporates the nicer output into target_announce_detach,
then changes the remaining ports to use this function.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce target_announce_attach
This introduces target_announce_attach, by analog with
target_announce_detach. Then it converts existing targets to use
this, rather than emitting their own output by hand.
2022-01-06 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make use add_setshow_prefix_cmd in gnu-nat.c
In gnu-nat.c we currently implement some set/show prefix commands
"manually", that is, we call add_prefix_cmd, and assign a set and show
function to each prefix command.
These set/show functions print an error indicating that the user
didn't type a complete command.
If we instead switch to using add_setshow_prefix_cmd then we can
delete the set/show functions, GDB provides some default functions,
which give a nice help style summary that lists all of the available
sub-commands, along with a one line summary of what each does.
Though this clearly changes the existing behaviour, I think this
change is acceptable as the new behaviour is more inline with other
set/show prefix commands, and the new behaviour is more informative.
This change will conflict with Tom's change here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-January/184724.html
Where Tom changes the set/show functions that I delete. My suggestion
is that the set/show functions still be deleted even after Tom's
patch (or instead of Tom's patch).
For testing I've build GDB on GNU/Hurd, and manually tested these
functions. I did a grep over the testsuite, and don't believe the
existing error messages are being checked for in any tests.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use warning in windows-nat error messages
A warning in windows-nat.c can be converted to use the warning
function. As a side effect, this arranges for the output to be sent
to gdb_stderr.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Clean up some dead code in windows-tdep.c
windows-tdep.c checks the result of xmalloc, which isn't necessary. I
initially removed this dead check, but then went a bit further and
modified the code so that some "goto"s and explicit memory management
could be removed. Then, I added a couple of missing bounds checks.
I believe this also fixes a possible bug with a missing 0-termination
of a string. I am not certain, but that is why I think the existing
code allocates a buffer that is 1 byte too long -- but then it fails
to set this byte to 0.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid crash in language_info
language_info calls:
show_language_command (NULL, 1, NULL, NULL);
... "knowing" that show_language_command does not use its ui_file
parameter. However, this was changed in commit 7514a661
("Consistently Use ui_file parameter to show callbacks").
This patch changes language_info to pass a ui_file.
It took a while to write the test -- this function is only called when
'verbose' is on and when switching the "expected" language in auto
mode.
2022-01-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix some failures in langs.exp
langs.exp currently has some fails for me because the stack trace
includes full paths to the source files.
FAIL: gdb.base/langs.exp: up to foo in langs.exp
FAIL: gdb.base/langs.exp: up to cppsub_ in langs.exp
FAIL: gdb.base/langs.exp: up to fsub in langs.exp
This fixes the failures by making the filename regexps a bit more lax.
2022-01-06 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop NoAVX insn attribute
To avoid issues like that addressed by 6e3e5c9e4181 ("x86: extend SSE
check to PCLMULQDQ, AES, and GFNI insns"), base the check on opcode
attributes and operand types.
x86: drop NoAVX from POPCNT
With the introduction of CpuPOPCNT the NoAVX attribute has become
meaningless for POPCNT.
x86: drop some "comm" template parameters
As already indicated in a remark when introducing these templates, the
"commutative" attribute is ignored for legacy encoding templates. Hence
it is possible to shorten a number of templates by specifying C directly
rather than through a template parameter. I think this helps readability
a bit.
x86: templatize FMA insn templates
The operand ordering portion of the mnemonics repeats, causing a flurry
of almost identical templates. Abstract this out.
x86-64: restrict PC32 -> PLT32 conversion
Neither non-64-bit code nor uses with a non-zero offset from a symbol
should be converted to PLT32, as an eventual PLT entry would not express
what was requested.
2022-01-06 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Fix copyright year in gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/inferior-clone.exp
I just realized that I forgot to update the year before pushing the
patch that created this file. Since it landed after the global
copyright year update have been done, this files copyright year is
updated.
This patch fixes that.
Change-Id: I280f7d86e02d38425f7afdcf19a1c3500d51c23f
2022-01-06 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Drop the sim-specific unsignedXX types and move to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: common: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Drop the sim-specific unsignedXX types and move to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: igen: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the custom local 64-bit types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: mips: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: cris: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: iq2000: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: synacor: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: msp430: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: riscv: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: bfin: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
sim: testsuite: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old code setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
sim: erc32: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
sim: mn10300: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
sim: v850: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
2022-01-06 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: m68hc11: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
Also migrate off the sim-specific unsignedXX types.
2022-01-06 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: d10v: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
Also migrate off the sim-specific unsignedXX types.
2022-01-06 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cr16: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
This old port setup its own uintXX types, but since we require C11
now, we can assume the standard uintXX_t types exist and use them.
Also migrate off the sim-specific unsignedXX types.
2022-01-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Add elf_x86_allocate_local_got_info
Add elf_x86_allocate_local_got_info to allocate x86 GOT info for local
symbols.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_check_relocs): Call
elf_x86_allocate_local_got_info.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Likewise.
* elfxx-x86.h (elf_x86_allocate_local_got_info): New.
2022-01-05 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
opcodes: Make i386-dis.c thread-safe
Improve thread safety in print_insn_i386_att, print_insn_i386_intel and
print_insn_i386 by removing the use of static variables.
Tested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
2022-01-04 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* i386-dis.c: Make print_insn_i386_att, print_insn_i386_intel
and print_insn_i386 thread-safe
2022-01-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
doc: Replace =frame-interp with =frames-interp
The actual objdump and readelf option name is =frames-interp, not
=frames-interp.
PR binutils/28747
* doc/debug.options.texi: Replace =frame-interp with
=frames-interp.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change riscv_return_value to use RETURN_VALUE_ABI_PRESERVES_ADDRESS
Internally, AdaCore has a test that is equivalent to (really a direct
translation of) gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp. On 32-bit RISC-V, the
"return" part of this test fails.
Joel tracked this down to riscv_return_value returning
RETURN_VALUE_ABI_RETURNS_ADDRESS. Using
RETURN_VALUE_ABI_PRESERVES_ADDRESS is more correct here, and fixes the
bug.
I tested this for both 32- and 64-bit RISC-V using the AdaCore
internal test suite, and Andrew Burgess tested it using
gnu_vector.exp.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Filtered output cleanup in expression dumping
Most of the expression-dumping code uses filtered output, but a few
functions did not. This patch cleans up these instance.
Note that this won't cause any behavior change, because the only calls
to dump_prefix_expression pass in gdb_stdlog. However, in the long
run it's easier to audit the code if the number of uses of _unfiltered
is reduced.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in terminal_info implementations
This changes one terminal_info implementation, and
default_terminal_info, to use filtered output. Other implementations
of this method already use filtered output.
I can't compile go32-nat.c, so this is a 'best effort' patch.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in gnu-nat.c commands
gnu-nat.c has a number of ordinary commands that should use filtered
output. In a few cases, I changed the output to use gdb_stderr as
well. I can't compile this file, so this patch is split out as a
"best effort".
Use filtered output in *-tdep commands
Various targets introduce their own commands, which then use
unfiltered output. It's better to use filtered output by default, so
this patch fixes the instances I found.
Use filtered output in btrace-related commands
This changes btrace.c and record-btrace.c to use filtered output in
the commands implemented there.
Use filtered output in some dumping commands
There are several commands that may optionally send their output to a
file -- they take an optional filename argument and open a file. This
patch changes these commands to use filtered output. The rationale
here is that, when printing to gdb_stdout, filtering is appropriate --
it is, and should be, the default for all commands. And, when writing
to a file, paging will not happen anyway (it only happens when the
stream==gdb_stdout), so using the _filtered form will not change
anything.
Use filtered output in kill command
This changes the kill command to use filtered output. I split this
one into its own patch because, out of an abundance of caution, I
changed the function to call bfd_cache_close_all a bit earlier, in
case pagination caused an exception.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in ordinary commands
Many otherwise ordinary commands choose to use unfiltered output
rather than filtered. I don't think there's any reason for this, so
this changes many such commands to use filtered output instead.
Note that complete_command is not touched due to a comment there
explaining why unfiltered output is believed to be used.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in language_info
Change language_info to use filtered output. This is ok because the
sole caller uses filtered output elsewhere, and because this function
calls show_language_command, which also uses filtered output.
Use filtered output in files_info implementations
This changes the implementations of the target files_info method to
use filtered output. This makes sense because the sole caller of this
method is an ordinary command (info_program_command). This patch
changes this command to use filtered output as well.
Use filtered output in target-descriptions.c
target-descriptions.c uses unfiltered output. However, if you happen
to invoke this command interactively, it's probably better for it to
use filtering. For non-interactive use, this doesn't matter.
Use filtered output for gdbarch dump
This changes gdbarch dumping to use filtered output. This seems a bit
better to me, both on the principle that this is an ordinary command,
and because the output can be voluminous, so it may be nice to stop in
the middle.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Implement putstr and putstrn in ui_file
In my tour of the ui_file subsystem, I found that fputstr and fputstrn
can be simplified. The _filtered forms are never used (and IMO
unlikely to ever be used) and so can be removed. And, the interface
can be simplified by removing a callback function and moving the
implementation directly to ui_file.
A new self-test is included. Previously, I think nothing was testing
this code.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change how versioned symbols are recorded
A change to BFD caused a gdb regression when using the Ada "catch
exception" feature. The bug is visible when a shared library throws
an exception that is caught in the main executable.
This was discussed here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-July/117538.html
This patch implements Alan's proposed fix, namely to use VERSYM_HIDDEN
rather than the name when deciding to install a version-less symbol.
The internal test case is identical to the catch_ex_std.exp that is
in-tree, so I haven't added a new test. I could not make that one
fail on x86-64 Linux, though. It's possible that maybe I'd have to
update the system linker first, but I didn't want to try that.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 32.
2022-01-05 Hannes Domani <ssbssa@yahoo.de>
Fix inferior_thread attribute in new_thread event
Commit 72ee03ff58 fixed a use-after-move bug in add_thread_object, but
it changed the inferior_thread attribute to contain the inferior instead
of the actual thread.
This now uses the thread_obj in its new location instead.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28429
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify execute_control_commands_to_string
execute_control_commands_to_string can be rewritten in terms of
execute_fn_to_string, which consolidates some knowledge about which
streams to redirect.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Do not print anything when self-backtrace unavailable
Right now, gdb's self-backtrace feature will still print something
when a backtrace is unavailable:
sig_write (_("----- Backtrace -----\n"));
[...]
sig_write (_("Backtrace unavailable\n"));
sig_write ("---------------------\n");
However, if GDB_PRINT_INTERNAL_BACKTRACE is undefined, it seems better
to me to print nothing at all.
This patch implements this change. It also makes a couple of other
small changes in this same module: it adds a header guard to
bt-utils.h, and it protects the definitions of
gdb_internal_backtrace_1 with a check of GDB_PRINT_INTERNAL_BACKTRACE.
2022-01-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix pager regression
The patch to fix paging with redirection caused a regression in the
internal AdaCore test suite. The problem occurs when running an MI
command from the CLI using interpreter-exec, when paging is enabled.
This scenario isn't covered by the current test suite, so this patch
includes a new test.
The problem is that, in this situation, MI does:
fputs_unfiltered (strcmp (context->command, "target-select") == 0
? "^connected" : "^done", mi->raw_stdout);
Here raw_stdout is a stdio_file wrapping stdout, so the pager thinks
that it is ok to buffer the output. However, in this setup, it isn't
ok, and flushing the wrap buffer doesn't really work properly. Also,
MI next does:
mi_out_put (uiout, mi->raw_stdout);
... but this uses ui_file::write, which also doesn't flush the wrap
buffer.
I think all this will be fixed by the pager rewrite series I'm working
on. However, in the meantime, adding the old gdb_stdout check back to
the pager fixes this problem.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-01-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Set p_align to the minimum page size if possible
Currently, on 32-bit and 64-bit ARM, it seems that ld generates p_align
values of 0x10000 even if no section alignment is greater than 0x1000.
The issue is more general and probably affects other targets with multiple
page sizes.
While file layout absolutely must take 64K page size into account, that
does not have to be reflected in the p_align value. If running on a 64K
kernel, the file will be loaded at a 64K page boundary by necessity. On
a 4K kernel, 64K alignment is not needed.
The glibc loader has been fixed to honor p_align:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28676
similar to kernel:
commit ce81bb256a224259ab686742a6284930cbe4f1fa
Author: Chris Kennelly <ckennelly@google.com>
Date: Thu Oct 15 20:12:32 2020 -0700
fs/binfmt_elf: use PT_LOAD p_align values for suitable start address
This means that on 4K kernels, we will start to do extra work for 64K
p_align, but this pointless for pretty much all binaries (whose section
alignment rarely exceeds 16).
The minimum page size is used, instead of the maximum section alignment
due to this glibc bug:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28688
It has been fixed in glibc 2.35. But linker output must work on existing
glibc binaries.
1. Set p_align to the minimum page size while laying out segments aligning
to the maximum page size or section alignment. The run-time loader can
align segments to the minimum page size or above, depending on system page
size.
2. If -z max-page-size=NNN is used, p_align will be set to the maximum
page size or the largest section alignment.
3. If a section requires alignment higher than the minimum page size,
don't set p_align to the minimum page size.
4. If a section requires alignment higher than the maximum page size,
set p_align to the section alignment.
5. For objcopy, when the minimum page size != the maximum page size,
p_align may be set to the minimum page size while segments are aligned
to the maximum page size. In this case, the input p_align will be
ignored and the maximum page size will be used to align the ouput
segments.
6. Update linker to disallow the common page size > the maximum page size.
7. Update linker to avoid the common page size > the maximum page size.
8. Adjust pru_irq_map-1.d to expect p_align == sh_addralign:
Section Headers:
[Nr] Name Type Addr Off Size ES Flg Lk Inf Al
[ 0] NULL 00000000 000000 000000 00 0 0 0
[ 1] .text PROGBITS 20000000 00007c 000004 00 AX 0 0 4
...
Program Headers:
Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr FileSiz MemSiz Flg Align
LOAD 0x000074 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00008 0x00008 RW 0x1
LOAD 0x00007c 0x20000000 0x20000000 0x00004 0x00004 R E 0x4
vs.
Section Headers:
[Nr] Name Type Addr Off Size ES Flg Lk Inf Al
[ 0] NULL 00000000 000000 000000 00 0 0 0
[ 1] .text PROGBITS 20000000 00007c 000004 00 AX 0 0 4
...
Program Headers:
Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr FileSiz MemSiz Flg Align
LOAD 0x000074 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00008 0x00008 RW 0x1
LOAD 0x00007c 0x20000000 0x20000000 0x00004 0x00004 R E 0x1
To enable this linker optimization, the backend should define ELF_P_ALIGN
to ELF_MINPAGESIZE.
bfd/
PR ld/28689
PR ld/28695
* elf-bfd.h (elf_backend_data): Add p_align.
* elf.c (assign_file_positions_for_load_sections): Set p_align
to the default p_align value while laying out segments aligning
to maximum page size or section alignment.
(elf_is_p_align_valid): New function.
(copy_elf_program_header): Call elf_is_p_align_valid to determine
if p_align is valid.
* elfxx-target.h (ELF_P_ALIGN): New. Default to 0.
(elfNN_bed): Add ELF_P_ALIGN.
* elfxx-x86.h (ELF_P_ALIGN): New. Set to ELF_MINPAGESIZE.
include/
PR ld/28689
PR ld/28695
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_info): Add maxpagesize_is_set.
ld/
PR ld/28689
PR ld/28695
* emultempl/elf.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_handle_option): Set
link_info.maxpagesize_is_set for -z max-page-size=NNN.
* ldelf.c (ldelf_after_parse): Disallow link_info.commonpagesize
> link_info.maxpagesize.
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Pass -z max-page-size=0x4000 to
linker to build mbind2a and mbind2b.
* testsuite/ld-elf/header.d: Add -z common-page-size=0x100.
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp: Add PR ld/28689 tests.
* testsuite/ld-elf/p_align-1.c: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/page-size-1.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26936.d: Add -z common-page-size=0x1000.
* testsuite/ld-elf/seg.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at5.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pru/pru_irq_map-1.d: Append 1 to name. Adjust
expected PT_LOAD segment alignment.
* testsuite/ld-pru/pru_irq_map-2.d: Append 2 to name.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/pr23571.d: Add -z max-page-size=0x1000.
2022-01-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Adjust quoted-sym-names test
Some targets restrict symbol addresses in .text to instruction
boundaries.
* testsuite/gas/all/quoted-sym-names.s: Define syms in .data.
* testsuite/gas/all/quoted-sym-names.d: Adjust to suit.
2022-01-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
infinite recursion detected in gold testcase
gold/testsuite/icf_test.cc:32:5: error: infinite recursion detected [-Werror=infinite-recursion]
32 | int kept_func()
| ^~~~~~~~~
* testsuite/icf_test.cc: Avoid infinite recursion error.
2022-01-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld/x86: Update -z report-relative-reloc
Use 0x%v, instead of bfd_sprintf_vma, to report relative relocations.
Change linker relative relocations report from
tmpdir/dump: R_X86_64_IRELATIVE (offset: 0x0000000000002000, info: 0x0000000000000025, addend: 0x0000000000001007) against 'ifunc' for section '.data.rel.ro.local' in tmpdir/report-reloc-1.o
to
tmpdir/dump: R_X86_64_IRELATIVE (offset: 0x2000, info: 0x25, addend: 0x1007) against 'ifunc' for section '.data.rel.ro.local' in tmpdir/report-reloc-1.o
bfd/
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_link_report_relative_reloc): Use
0x%v instead of bfd_sprintf_vma.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-i386/report-reloc-1.l: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/report-reloc-1.l: Likewise.
2022-01-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Improve thin archive member error message
Improve thin archive member error message with:
ld: libbar.a(bar.o): error opening thin archive member: No such file or directory
instead of
ld: libbar.a: error adding symbols: No such file or directory
PR ld/28722
* archive.c (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Add a pointer argument
for struct bfd_link_info. Call linker callback when failing to
open thin archive member.
(_bfd_generic_get_elt_at_index): Pass NULL to
_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos.
(bfd_generic_openr_next_archived_file): Likewise.
* coff-alpha.c (alpha_ecoff_get_elt_at_filepos): Add a pointer
argument for struct bfd_link_info and pass it to
_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos.
(alpha_ecoff_openr_next_archived_file): Pass NULL to
_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos.
(alpha_ecoff_get_elt_at_index): Likewise.
* coff-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff_openr_next_archived_file): Likewise.
* ecoff.c (ecoff_link_add_archive_symbols): Pass info to
backend->get_elt_at_filepos.
* elflink.c (elf_link_is_defined_archive_symbol): info to
_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos.
* libbfd-in.h (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Add a pointer argument
for struct bfd_link_info.
* libbfd.h: Regenerate.
* libecoff.h (ecoff_backend_data): Add a pointer argument for
struct bfd_link_info to get_elt_at_filepos.
* linker.c (_bfd_generic_link_add_archive_symbols): Pass info to
_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos.
2022-01-04 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb/testsuite: fix inferior-clone.exp for native-extended-gdbserver
003aae076207dbf32f98ba846158fc32669ef85f (gdb: Copy inferior properties
in clone-inferior) introduced a testcase that fails when testing with
the native-extended-gdbserver board:
Running ../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/inferior-clone.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/inferior-clone.exp: inferior 2: clone-inferior
FAIL: gdb.base/inferior-clone.exp: inferior 3: clone-inferior
The error is as follows:
clone-inferior
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2 on connection 1 (extended-remote localhost:2346)
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/inferior-clone.exp: inferior 2: clone-inferior
This fails because the testcase only expect the 'Added inferior 2' part
of the message. The 'on connection 1 [...]' part is unexpected.
Fix by adjusting the testcase to a account for the possible trailing
part of the message.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native-extende-gdbserver and unix boards.
Change-Id: Ie3d6f04c9ffe9cab1fbda8ddf4935ee09b858c7a
2022-01-04 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED to load_build_id_debug_file()'s main_filename parameter.
2022-01-04 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: don't pass nullptr to sigwait
I tried building GDB on GNU/Hurd, and ran into this warning:
gdbsupport/scoped_ignore_signal.h:78:16: error: null argument where non-null required (argument 2) [-Werror=nonnull]
This is because in this commit:
commit 99624310dd82542c389c89c2e55d8cae36bb74e1
Date: Sun Jun 27 15:13:14 2021 -0400
gdb: fall back on sigpending + sigwait if sigtimedwait is not available
A call to sigwait was introduced that passes nullptr as the second
argument, this call is only reached if sigtimedwait is not supported.
The original patch was written for macOS, I assume on that target
passing nullptr as the second argument is fine.
On my GNU/Linux box, the man-page for sigwait doesn't mention that
nullptr is allowed for the second argument, so my assumption would be
that nullptr is not OK, and, if I change the '#ifdef
HAVE_SIGTIMEDWAIT' introduced by the above patch to '#if 0', and
rebuild on GNU/Linux, I see the same warning that I see on GNU/Hurd.
I propose that we stop passing nullptr as the second argument to
sigwait, and instead pass a valid int pointer. The value returned in
the int can then be used in an assert.
For testing, I (locally) made the change to the #ifdef I mentioned
above, compiled GDB, and ran the usual tests, this meant I was using
sigwait instead on sigtimedwait on GNU/Linux, I saw no regressions.
2022-01-04 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Remove a spurious debugging message.
PR 28716
* dwarf.c (load_build_id_debug_file): Remove spurious printf.
2022-01-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build breaker in gdb/cli/cli-logging.c
Fix build breaker in gdb/cli/cli-logging.c:
...
gdb/cli/cli-logging.c: In function \
void show_logging_enabled(ui_file*, int, cmd_list_element*, const char*):
gdb/gdbsupport/gdb_locale.h:28:28: error: cannot convert char* to ui_file*
28 | # define _(String) gettext (String)
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~
| |
| char*
gdb/cli/cli-logging.c:202:25: note: in expansion of macro _
202 | fprintf_unfiltered (_("on: Logging is enabled.\n"));
| ^
...
Build and tested on x86_64-linux.
Fixes: 45aec4e5ed8 ("[gdb/cli] Improve show logging output")
2022-01-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/Intel: correct VFPCLASSP{S,D} handling when displacement is present
fits_in_disp8() can be called before ambiguous operands get resolved
or rejected (in process_suffix()), which requires that i.memshift be
non-negative to avoid an internal error. This case wasn't covered by
6c0946d0d28d ("x86: correct VFPCLASSP{S,D} operand size handling").
2022-01-04 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: rework handling of backslashes in quoted symbol names
Strange effects can result from the present handling, e.g.:
.if 1
"backslash\\":
.endif
yields first (correctly) "missing closing `"'" but then also "invalid
character '\' in mnemonic" and further "end of file inside conditional".
Symbols names ending in \ are in principle not expressable with that
scheme.
Instead of recording whether a backslash was seen, inspect the
subsequent character right away. Only accept \\ (meaning a single
backslash in the resulting symbol name) and \" (meaning an embedded
double quote in the resulting symbol name) for now, warning about any
other combination.
While perhaps not necessary immediately, also permit concatenated
strings to form a symbol name. This may become useful if going forward
we would want to support \<octal> or \x<hex> sequences, where closing
and re-opening quotes can be useful to delimit such sequences.
The ELF "Multibyte symbol names" test gets switched away from using
.set, as that would now also mean excluding nios2 and pru. By using
.equiv instead, even the existing #notarget can be dropped. (For h8300
the .section directive additionally needs attributes specified, to avoid
a target specific warning.)
2022-01-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/cli] Improve show logging output
Before commit 3b6acaee895 "Update more calls to add_prefix_cmd" we had the
following output for "show logging":
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set trace-commands on" \
-ex "set logging off" \
-ex "show logging" \
-ex "set logging on" \
-ex "show logging"
+set logging off
+show logging
Future logs will be written to gdb.txt.
Logs will be appended to the log file.
Output will be logged and displayed.
Debug output will be logged and displayed.
+set logging on
+show logging
Currently logging to "gdb.txt".
Logs will be appended to the log file.
Output will be logged and displayed.
Debug output will be logged and displayed.
...
After that commit we have instead:
...
+set logging off
+show logging
debugredirect: The logging output mode is off.
file: The current logfile is "gdb.txt".
overwrite: Whether logging overwrites or appends to the log file is off.
redirect: The logging output mode is off.
+set logging on
+show logging
debugredirect: The logging output mode is off.
file: The current logfile is "gdb.txt".
overwrite: Whether logging overwrites or appends to the log file is off.
redirect: The logging output mode is off.
...
which gives less clear output for some subcommands.
OTOH, it's explicit about whether boolean values are on or off.
The new text seems to have been chosen to match the set/show help texts:
...
(gdb) help show logging
Show logging options.
List of show logging subcommands:
show logging debugredirect -- Show the logging debug output mode.
show logging file -- Show the current logfile.
show logging overwrite -- \
Show whether logging overwrites or appends to the log file.
show logging redirect -- Show the logging output mode.
...
Make the show logging messages more clear, while still keep the boolean
values explicit, such that we have:
...
$ ./gdb.sh -q -batch -ex "show logging"
logging debugredirect: off: \
Debug output will go to both the screen and the log file.
logging enabled: off: Logging is disabled.
logging file: The current logfile is "gdb.txt".
logging overwrite: off: Logging appends to the log file.
logging redirect: off: Output will go to both the screen and the log file.
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-01-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix use of 'printf' in gdbtypes.c
An earlier patch of mine, commit 64b7cc50 ("Remove
gdb_print_host_address") inadvertently changed a function in
gdbtypes.c to use printf rather than printf_filtered. This patch
fixes the problem.
Fix regression in page-logging.exp
Simon and Tom pointed out that page-logging.exp failed on their
machines. Tom tracked this down to the "width" setting. Since
there's no need in the test to change the width, it seems simplest to
remove the setting. I confirmed that the test still fails if the fix
is backed out, ensuring that the test is still testing what it
purports to.
Small indentation fix in eval.c
I noticed that the AdaCore tree had a small divergence in eval.c -- it
had a fix for an indentation problem in binop_promote. I'm checking
in this small fix as obvious.
2022-01-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle for loop initial decl with gcc 4.8.5
When running test-case gdb.threads/schedlock-thread-exit.exp on a system with
system compiler gcc 4.8.5, I run into:
...
src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/schedlock-thread-exit.c:33:3: error: \
'for' loop initial declarations are only allowed in C99 mode
...
Fix this by:
- using -std=c99, or
- using -std=gnu99, in case that's required, or
- in the case of the jit test-cases, rewriting the for loops.
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with gcc 4.8.5 and gcc 7.5.0.
2022-01-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-02 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Update copying.awk for _initialize declaration patch
Commit 6c265988 ("gdb: add back declarations for _initialize
functions") modified copying.c, but not copying.awk. This patch
updates copying.awk to backport the appropriate fix. This way, if
copying.awk is run again, it will create the correct output.
I'm checking this in as obvious.
2022-01-02 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in print_i387_ext
print_i387_ext mostly uses filtered output, but one call in the middle
of the function uses the _unfiltered form. This patch fixes this
call. I'm checking this in as obvious.
2022-01-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Update year range in copyright notice of binutils files
The result of running etc/update-copyright.py --this-year, fixing all
the files whose mode is changed by the script, plus a build with
--enable-maintainer-mode --enable-cgen-maint=yes, then checking
out */po/*.pot which we don't update frequently.
The copy of cgen was with commit d1dd5fcc38ead reverted as that commit
breaks building of bfp opcodes files.
2022-01-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2022-01-01 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gdb: copyright: fix a few comment typos
sim: ppc: drop natural types
These are almost entirely unused. For the very few places using them,
replace with explicit signed types. This matches what was done in the
common sim code.
sim: mips: clean up bad style/whitespace
This doesn't fix all the problems, but grabs a bunch of the more
obvious ones.
sim: tweak copyright lines for gnulib update-copyright
The regex it uses does not like so many leading spaces which causes
it to think the files lack copyright. Trim them down so the script
can find & update them accordingly.
gdb: update sim mips testsuite copyright exemption
The sim testsuite was reorganized last year, so update the path.
2022-01-01 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
unify 64-bit bfd checks
Move the 64-bit bfd logic out of bfd/configure.ac and into bfd64.m4
under config so it can be shared between all the other subdirs.
This replaces want64 with enable_64_bit_bfd which was already being
declared, but not used directly.
2022-01-01 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Update Copyright year in gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/powerpc-power10.exp
This commit updates the copyright year range in the script
gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/powerpc-power10.exp. The update was
performed by running gdb/copyright.py again, to make sure
that the copyright year range will be automatically updated
in years forward.
2022-01-01 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Fix copyright header in gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/powerpc-power10.exp
The copyright year and holder line is slight malformed, missing
a space after a comma, and this is sufficient for gdb's
copyright.py script to miss this file during its automated
copyright year update.
This commit fixes this.
2022-01-01 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
gdb/copyright.py: Add update-netbsd.sh to MULTIPLE_COPYRIGHT_HEADERS
Add gdb/syscalls/update-netbsd.sh to the reminder printed
at the end of the execution listing all the files where
a manual update of the copyright header is needed. This
scripts contains some inline code which includes a copyright
header.
Manual copyright year update of various GDB files
This commit updates the copyright year in some files where
we have a copyright year outside of the copyright year,
and thus are not included in gdb's copyright.py script.
2022-01-01 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Automatic Copyright Year update after running gdb/copyright.py
This commit brings all the changes made by running gdb/copyright.py
as per GDB's Start of New Year Procedure.
For the avoidance of doubt, all changes in this commits were
performed by the script.
2022-01-01 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Update Copyright Year in gdb, gdbserver and gdbreplay version output
This commit changes the copyright year printed by gdb, gdbserver
and gdbreplay when printing the tool's version.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: next_char_of_string signed integer overflow
Squash another totally useless fuzz report that I should have ignored.
* read.c (next_char_of_string): Avoid integer overflow.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: bfd_mach_o_build_commands shift exponent 64 is too large
* mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_read_section_32): Limit alignment further.
(bfd_mach_o_read_section_64): Likewise.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: signed integer multiply overflow
9223371018427387904 * 2 cannot be represented in type 'long', yes, but
we don't care.
* expr.c (expr): Avoid signed overflow.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: Null-dereference in _bfd_xcoff_copy_private_bfd_data
sec->output_section will be NULL when objcopy removes sections.
* coff-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff_copy_private_bfd_data): Protect against
objcopy removing sections.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: integer overflow in section filepos subtraction
* elf.c (assign_file_positions_for_non_load_sections): Avoid
signed integer overflow.
2022-01-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Remove unnecessary ELF_MINPAGESIZE defines
The idea of this patch is to make it easy to see which targets (just
sparc) have ELF_MINPAGESIZE != ELF_COMMONPAGESIZE.
* elf32-arm.c (ELF_MINPAGESIZE): Don't define.
* elf32-metag.c: Likewise.
* elfnn-aarch64.c: Likewise.
* elf64-x86-64.c: Likewise. Also don't redefine a bunch of other
macros for l1om elf64-target.h use that are unchanged from default.
2022-01-01 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld-x86-64: Pass options to linker with "-Wl,"
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Pass options to linker with
"-Wl,".
2022-01-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-31 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Do not call reinitialize_more_filter from avr_io_reg_read_command
avr_io_reg_read_command is an ordinary gdb command, and so should not
be calling reinitialize_more_filter. This patch removes it. I'm
checking this in as obvious. Tested by rebuilding.
2021-12-31 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Define check_relocs_failed in elfxx-x86.h
* elf32-i386.c (check_relocs_failed): Moved to ...
* elfxx-x86.h (check_relocs_failed): Here. New.
* elf64-x86-64.c (check_relocs_failed): Removed.
Define X86_PCREL_TYPE_P/X86_SIZE_TYPE_P in elfxx-x86.h
* elf32-i386.c: Don't include "elf/i386.h".
(X86_PCREL_TYPE_P): Removed.
(X86_SIZE_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(elf_i386_check_relocs): Pass false to NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P.
(elf_i386_relocate_section): Pass false to
GENERATE_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P and COPY_INPUT_RELOC_P.
* elf64-x86-64.c: Don't include "elf/x86-64.h".
(X86_PCREL_TYPE_P): Removed.
(X86_SIZE_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Pass true to NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P
and X86_PCREL_TYPE_P.
(elf_x86_64_relocate_section): Pass true to X86_PCREL_TYPE_P,
X86_SIZE_TYPE_P, GENERATE_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P and
COPY_INPUT_RELOC_P.
* elfxx-x86.c: Don't include "elf/i386.h" nor "elf/x86-64.h".
* elfxx-x86.h (X86_64_PCREL_TYPE_P): New.
(I386_PCREL_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_PCREL_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_64_SIZE_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(I386_SIZE_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(X86_SIZE_TYPE_P): Likewise.
(NEED_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P): Add IS_X86_64 and pass it to
X86_PCREL_TYPE_P.
(COPY_INPUT_RELOC_P): Likewise.
(GENERATE_DYNAMIC_RELOCATION_P): Add IS_X86_64, pass it to
X86_PCREL_TYPE_P and X86_SIZE_TYPE_P.
2021-12-31 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
ld: fix coff PE SEH
COFF_WITH_pex64 and COFF_WITH_peAArch64 can't be true at the same time.
That means that two conditionals that control the sorting of the .pdata section
became a falsum.
The testsuite doesn't catch this because the linker does the sorting and to link
you require library support from the unwinder so we can't test from binutils in
isolation.
bfd/ChangeLog:
2021-12-31 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
PR ld/28682
* peXXigen.c: Fix conditional.
2021-12-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use filtered output in show callbacks
"show" command callbacks, like most ordinary gdb commands, should use
filtered output. I found a few that did not, so this patch changes
them to use the filtered form.
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Consistently Use ui_file parameter to show callbacks
I happened to notice that one "show" callback was printing to
gdb_stdout rather than to the passed-in ui_file parameter. I went
through all such callbacks and fixed them to consistently use the
ui_file.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use gdb_stdlog for MI debugging
When MI debugging is enabled, the logging output should be sent to
gdb_stdlog. This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc in index-cache
This changes index-cache.c to use debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc.
As a side effect, logs are now written to gdb_stdlog. This is part of
PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Send minsym logging to gdb_stdlog
This changes minsyms.c to send logging output to gdb_stdlog. This is
part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use gdb_stdlog for separate debug file logging
This changes the separate debug file logging code (spread across two
files) to use gdb_stdlog for its output. This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc in machoread
This changes machoread.c to use debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc. As
a side effect, the logs are now written to gdb_stdlog. This is part
of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use debug_prefixed_printf_cond_nofunc in microblaze.c
This changes microblaze.c to use the standard logging macro. As a
side effect, logs will now go to gdb_stdlog. This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Send debugging data to gdb_stdlog in mips-linux-nat.c
This changes mips-linux-nat.c to send some logging output to
gdb_stdlog, rather than stdout. This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Send arch-utils error messages to gdb_stderr
This changes arch-utils.c to send some error messages to gdb_stderr.
This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use correct stream for process record output
The process record code often emits unfiltered output. In some cases,
this output ought to go to gdb_stderr (but see below). In other
cases, the output is guarded by a logging variable and so ought to go
to gdb_stdlog. This patch makes these changes.
Note that in many cases, the output to stderr is followed by a
"return -1", which is how process record indicates an error. It seems
to me that calling error here would be preferable, because, in many
cases, that's all the caller does when it sees a -1. However, I
haven't made this change.
This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Send jit.c errors to gdb_stderr
jit.c writes some error messages to gdb_stdout, but using gdb_stderr
is better. This is part of PR gdb/7233.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7233
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix logging redirection bug with pager
I noticed yesterday that if gdb output is redirected to a file, the
pager will still be active. This is irritating, because the output
isn't actually visible -- just the pager prompt. Looking in bugzilla,
I found that this had been filed 17 years ago, as PR cli/8798.
This patch fixes the bug. It changes the pagination code to query the
particular ui-file to see if paging is allowable. The ui-file
implementations are changed so that only the stdout implementation and
a tee (where one sub-file is stdout) can page.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=8798
2021-12-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove unusual use of core_addr_eq and core_addr_hash
gdbtypes.h uses core_addr_eq and core_addr_hash in a weird way: taking
the address of a member and then passing this (as a void*) to these
functions.
It seems better to simply inline the ordinary code here. CORE_ADDR is
a scalar so it can be directly compared, and the identity hash
function seems safe to assume as well.
After this, core_addr_eq and core_addr_hash are unused, so this patch
removes them.
2021-12-29 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
gdb: Copy inferior properties in clone-inferior
This commit ensures that the following settings are cloned from one
inferior to the new one when processing the clone-inferior command:
- inferior-tty
- environment variables
- cwd
- args
Some of those parameters can be passed as command line arguments to GDB
(-args and -tty), so one could expect the clone-inferior to respect
those flags. The following debugging session illustrates that:
gdb -nx -quiet -batch \
-ex "show args" \
-ex "show inferior-tty" \
-ex "clone-inferior" \
-ex "inferior 2" \
-ex "show args" \
-ex "show inferior-tty" \
-tty=/some/tty \
-args echo foo bar
Argument list to give program being debugged when it is started is "foo bar".
Terminal for future runs of program being debugged is "/some/tty".
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2.
[Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (/bin/echo)]
Argument list to give program being debugged when it is started is "".
Terminal for future runs of program being debugged is "".
The other properties this commit copies on clone (i.e. CWD and the
environment variables) are included since they are related (in the sense
that they influence the runtime behavior of the program) even if they
cannot be directly set using command line switches.
There is a chance that this patch changes existing user workflow. I
think that this change is mostly harmless. If users want to start a new
inferior based on an existing one, they probably already propagate those
settings to the new inferior in some way.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Change-Id: I3b1f28b662f246228b37bb24c2ea1481567b363d
2021-12-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf32-i386: Fix a typo in GOT comments
Entry offsets in the global offset table are multiples of 4, not 8.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_relocate_section): Fix a typo in GOT
comments.
2021-12-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Don't check non-thin archive member file size
There is no need to check member file size for thin archive member.
* bfdio.c (bfd_bread): Don't check non-thin archive member file
size.
2021-12-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gas reloc sorting
In some cases, eg. riscv_pre_output_hook, gas generates out-of-order
relocations. Various places in the linker assume relocs are sorted
by increasing r_offset, which is normally the case. Provide
GAS_SORT_RELOCS to handle unsorted relocs.
bfd/
PR 28709
* elf32-nds32.c (nds32_insertion_sort): Make static.
* elf32-nds32.h (nds32_insertion_sort): Delete declaration.
gas/
PR 28709
* write.c (write_relocs): Implement reloc sorting by r_offset
when GAS_SORT_RELOCS.
* config/tc-nds32.c (compar_relent, nds32_set_section_relocs): Delete.
* config/tc-nds32.h (nds32_set_section_relocs): Don't declare.
(SET_SECTION_RELOCS): Don't define.
(GAS_SORT_RELOCS): Define.
* config/tc-riscv.h (GAS_SORT_RELOCS): Define.
2021-12-28 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
ld: Fix testcase errors due to -shared not support.
Reviewed-by: Jim Wilson <jim.wilson.gcc@gmail.com>
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-ctf/ctf.exp: Add shared lib check.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Add lto shared check.
2021-12-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-27 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Update comments for check_relocs in elf_backend_data
Since
commit 5c3261b0e834647cf9eb555320e20871b7854f98
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Oct 16 03:49:54 2017 -0700
ELF: Call check_relocs after opening all inputs
check_relocs is called after opening all inputs.
* elf-bfd.h (elf_backend_data::check_relocs): Update comments.
2021-12-27 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Remove emultempl/linux.em
Remove emultempl/linux.em whose last usage was removed by
commit c65c21e1ffd1e02d9970a4bca0b7e384788a50f0
Author: Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Apr 16 22:14:01 2018 +0930
various i386-aout and i386-coff target removal
Also tidies some other aout leftovers in binutils-common.exp.
2021-12-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove gdb_print_host_address
gdb_print_host_address is just a simple wrapper around
fprintf_filtered. However, it is readily replaced in all callers by a
combination of %s and call to host_address_to_string. This also
simplifies the code, so I think it's worthwhile to remove this
function.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 64.
2021-12-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Move gdb_bfd_errmsg to gdb_bfd.c
gdb_bfd.c contains most of gdb's BFD-related utility functions.
However, gdb_bfd_errmsg is in utils.c. It seemed better to me to move
this out of util.[ch] and into the BFD-related file instead.
Tested by rebuilding.
2021-12-24 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Rewrite the csr testcases.
Maskray (Fangrui Song) had suggested me before that we should combine
multiple testcases into one file as possible as we can. So that we can
more easily understand what these test cases are testing, and easier to
maintain. Therefore, this patch rewrites all csr testcases, to make them
more clean.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-fail-nonexistent.d: Renamed from
priv-reg-fail-nonexistent testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-fail-nonexistent.: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-fail-nonexistent.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-pseudo-noalias.d: Renamed from
priv-reg-pseudo testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-pseudo.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-pseudo.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-read-only.d: Renamed from
priv-reg-fail-read-only-02 testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-read-only.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-insns-read-only.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.d: Moved hypervisor csrs to csr.s.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr.s: Renamed from priv-reg.s, and then
added the hypervisor csrs.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: The csr testcase when
the privileged spec is 1.9.1. Also tested all invalid csr warnings
when -mcsr-check is enabled.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Likewise, but the
privileged spec is 1.10..
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise, but the
privileged spec is 1.11.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise, but the
privileged spec is 1.12.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg*: Removed or Renamed.
2021-12-24 Vineet Gupta <vineetg@rivosinc.com>
RISC-V: Hypervisor ext: support Privileged Spec 1.12
This is the Hypervisor Extension 1.0
- Hypervisor Memory-Management Instructions
HFENCE.VVMA, HFENCE.GVMA,
- Hypervisor Virtual Machine Load and Store Instructions
HLV.B, HLV.BU, HSV.B,
HLV.H, HLV.HU, HLVX.HU, HSB.H,
HLV.W, HLV.WU, HLVX.WU, HSV.W,
HLV.D, HSV.D
- Hypervisor CSRs (some new, some address changed)
hstatus, hedeleg, hideleg, hie, hcounteren, hgeie, htval, hip, hvip,
htinst, hgeip, henvcfg, henvcfgh, hgatp, hcontext, htimedelta, htimedeltah,
vsstatus, vsie, vstvec, vsscratch, vsepc, vscause, vstval, vsip, vsatp,
Note that following were added already as part of svinval extension
support:
HINVAL.GVMA, HINVAL.VVMA
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
Reviewed-by: Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
bfd/
* cpu-riscv.c (riscv_priv_specs): Added entry for 1.12.
* cpu-riscv.h (enum riscv_spec_class): Added PRIV_SPEC_CLASS_1P12.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (abort_version): Updated comment.
(validate_riscv_insn): Annotate switch-break.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.d: New testcase for hypervisor.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Added encodings for hypervisor csrs and
instrcutions.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Added hypervisor instrcutions.
2021-12-24 Vineet Gupta <vineetg@rivosinc.com>
RISC-V: Hypervisor ext: drop Privileged Spec 1.9.1 implementation/tests
This makes way for a clean 1.12 based Hypervisor Ext support.
There are no known implementors of 1.9.1 H-ext. (Per Jim, kendryte k210
is based on priv spec 1.9.1, but it seems unlikely that they implemented
H-ext).
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
Reviewed-by: Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Drop the hypervisor csrs
defined in the privileged spec 1.9.1.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-read-only-01.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Drop the hypervisor csrs defined in the
privileged spec 1.9.1.
2021-12-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-23 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: resolve some duplicate testnames in gdb.mi
Set of fixes to resolve some duplicate test names in the gdb.mi/
directory. There should be no real test changes after this set of
fixes, they are all either:
- Adding with_test_prefix type constructs to make test names unique,
or
- Changing the test name to be more descriptive, or better reflect
the test being run.
2021-12-23 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/remote: handle attach when stop packet lacks thread-id
Bug PR gdb/28405 reports a regression when using attach with an
extended-remote target. In this case the target is not including a
thread-id in the stop packet it sends back after the attach.
The regression was introduced with this commit:
commit 8f66807b98f7634c43149ea62e454ea8f877691d
Date: Wed Jan 13 20:26:58 2021 -0500
gdb: better handling of 'S' packets
The problem is that when GDB processes the stop packet, it sees that
there is no thread-id and so has to "guess" which thread the stop
should apply to.
In this case the target only has one thread, so really, there's no
guessing needed, but GDB still runs through the same process, this
shouldn't cause us any problems.
However, after the above commit, GDB now expects itself to be more
internally consistent, specifically, only a thread that GDB thinks is
resumed, can be a candidate for having stopped.
It turns out that, when GDB attaches to a process through an
extended-remote target, the threads of the process being attached too,
are not, initially, marked as resumed.
And so, when GDB tries to figure out which thread the stop might apply
too, it finds no threads in the processes marked resumed, and so an
assert triggers.
In extended_remote_target::attach we create a new thread with a call
to add_thread_silent, rather than remote_target::remote_add_thread,
the reason is that calling the latter will result in a call to
'add_thread' rather than 'add_thread_silent'. However,
remote_target::remote_add_thread includes additional
actions (i.e. calling remote_thread_info::set_resumed and set_running)
which are missing from extended_remote_target::attach. These missing
calls are what would serve to mark the new thread as resumed.
In this commit I propose that we add an extra parameter to
remote_target::remote_add_thread. This new parameter will force the
new thread to be added with a call to add_thread_silent. We can now
call remote_add_thread from the ::attach method, the extra
actions (listed above) will now be performed, and the thread will be
left in the correct state.
Additionally, in PR gdb/28405, a segfault is reported. This segfault
triggers when 'set debug remote 1' is used before trying to reproduce
the original assertion failure. The cause of this is in
remote_target::select_thread_for_ambiguous_stop_reply, where we do
this:
remote_debug_printf ("first resumed thread is %s",
pid_to_str (first_resumed_thread->ptid).c_str ());
remote_debug_printf ("is this guess ambiguous? = %d", ambiguous);
gdb_assert (first_resumed_thread != nullptr);
Notice that when debug printing is on we dereference
first_resumed_thread before we assert that the pointer is not
nullptr. This is the cause of the segfault, and is resolved by moving
the assert before the debug printing code.
I've extended an existing test, ext-attach.exp, so that the original
test is run multiple times; we run in the original mode, as normal,
but also, we now run with different packets disabled in gdbserver. In
particular, disabling Tthread would trigger the assertion as it was
reported in the original bug. I also run the test in all-stop and
non-stop modes now for extra coverage, we also run the tests with
target-async enabled, and disabled.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28405
2021-12-23 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: on x86-64 non-trivial C++ objects are returned in memory
Fixes PR gdb/28681. It was observed that after using the `finish`
command an incorrect value was displayed in some cases. Specifically,
this behaviour was observed on an x86-64 target.
Consider this test program:
struct A
{
int i;
A ()
{ this->i = 0; }
A (const A& a)
{ this->i = a.i; }
};
A
func (int i)
{
A a;
a.i = i;
return a;
}
int
main ()
{
A a = func (3);
return a.i;
}
And this GDB session:
$ gdb -q ex.x
Reading symbols from ex.x...
(gdb) b func
Breakpoint 1 at 0x401115: file ex.cc, line 14.
(gdb) r
Starting program: /home/andrew/tmp/ex.x
Breakpoint 1, func (i=3) at ex.cc:14
14 A a;
(gdb) finish
Run till exit from #0 func (i=3) at ex.cc:14
main () at ex.cc:23
23 return a.i;
Value returned is $1 = {
i = -19044
}
(gdb) p a
$2 = {
i = 3
}
(gdb)
Notice how after the `finish` the contents of $1 are junk, but, when I
immediately ask for the value of `a`, I get back the correct value.
The problem here is that after the finish command GDB calls the
function amd64_return_value to figure out where the return value can
be found (on x86-64 targets anyway).
This function makes the wrong choice for the struct A in our case, as
sizeof(A) <= 8, then amd64_return_value decides that A will be
returned in a register. GDB then reads the return value register an
interprets the contents as an instance of A.
Unfortunately, A is not trivially copyable (due to its copy
constructor), and the sys-v specification for argument and return
value passing, says that any non-trivial C++ object should have space
allocated for it by the caller, and the address of this space is
passed to the callee as a hidden first argument. The callee should
then return the address of this space as the return value.
And so, the register that GDB is treating as containing an instance of
A, actually contains the address of an instance of A (in this case on
the stack), this is why GDB shows the incorrect result.
The call stack within GDB for where we actually go wrong is this:
amd64_return_value
amd64_classify
amd64_classify_aggregate
And it is in amd64_classify_aggregate that we should be classifying
the type as AMD64_MEMORY, instead of as AMD64_INTEGER as we currently
do (via a call to amd64_classify_aggregate_field).
At the top of amd64_classify_aggregate we already have this logic:
if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 16 || amd64_has_unaligned_fields (type))
{
theclass[0] = theclass[1] = AMD64_MEMORY;
return;
}
Which handles some easy cases where we know a struct will be placed
into memory, that is (a) the struct is more than 16-bytes in size,
or (b) the struct has any unaligned fields.
All we need then, is to add a check here to see if the struct is
trivially copyable. If it is not then we know the struct will be
passed in memory.
I originally structured the code like this:
if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 16
|| amd64_has_unaligned_fields (type)
|| !language_pass_by_reference (type).trivially_copyable)
{
theclass[0] = theclass[1] = AMD64_MEMORY;
return;
}
This solved the example from the bug, and my small example above. So
then I started adding some more extensive tests to the GDB testsuite,
and I ran into a problem. I hit this error:
gdbtypes.h:676: internal-error: loc_bitpos: Assertion `m_loc_kind == FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS' failed.
This problem is triggered from:
amd64_classify_aggregate
amd64_has_unaligned_fields
field::loc_bitpos
Inside the unaligned field check we try to get the bit position of
each field. Unfortunately, in some cases the field location is not
FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS, but is FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK.
An example that shows this bug is:
struct B
{
short j;
};
struct A : virtual public B
{
short i;
A ()
{ this->i = 0; }
A (const A& a)
{ this->i = a.i; }
};
A
func (int i)
{
A a;
a.i = i;
return a;
}
int
main ()
{
A a = func (3);
return a.i;
}
It is the virtual base class, B, that causes the problem. The base
class is represented, within GDB, as a field within A. However, the
location type for this field is a DWARF_BLOCK.
I spent a little time trying to figure out how to convert the
DWARF_BLOCK to a BITPOS, however, I realised that, in this case at
least, conversion is not needed.
The C++ standard says that a class is not trivially copyable if it has
any virtual base classes. And so, in this case, even if I could
figure out the BITPOS for the virtual base class fields, I know for
sure that I would immediately fail the trivially_copyable check. So,
lets just reorder the checks in amd64_classify_aggregate to:
if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 16
|| !language_pass_by_reference (type).trivially_copyable
|| amd64_has_unaligned_fields (type))
{
theclass[0] = theclass[1] = AMD64_MEMORY;
return;
}
Now, if we have a class with virtual bases we will fail quicker, and
avoid the unaligned fields check completely.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28681
2021-12-23 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make use of SCOPE_EXIT to manage thread executing state
While working on another patch relating to how GDB manages threads
executing and resumed state, I spotted the following code in
record-btrace.c:
executing = tp->executing ();
set_executing (proc_target, inferior_ptid, false);
id = null_frame_id;
try
{
id = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ());
}
catch (const gdb_exception &except)
{
/* Restore the previous execution state. */
set_executing (proc_target, inferior_ptid, executing);
throw;
}
/* Restore the previous execution state. */
set_executing (proc_target, inferior_ptid, executing);
return id;
I notice that we only catch the exception so we can call
set_executing, and this is the same call to set_executing that we need
to perform in the non-exception return path.
This would be much cleaner if we could use SCOPE_EXIT to avoid the
try/catch, so lets do that.
While cleaning this up, I also applied a similar patch to
record-full.c, though there's no try/catch in that case, but using
SCOPE_EXIT makes the code safe if, in the future, we do start throwing
exceptions.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/doc: add some index entries relating to mi-async setting
I noticed that the mi-async setting was not referenced from the index
in any way, this commit tries to rectify that a bit.
The @cindex lines I think are not controversial, these same index
entries are used elsewhere in the manual for async related topics (see
@node Background Execution).
The only bit that might be controversial is that I've added a @kindex
entry for 'set mi-async' when the command is documented as '-gdb-set
mi-async' (with a similar difference for the show/-gdb-show).
My reasoning here is that nothing else is indexed under -gdb-set or
-gdb-show, and as -gdb-set/-gdb-show are just the MI equivalent for
set/show anything that is documented under set/show can be adjusted
using -gdb-set/-gdbshow, and so, I've tried to keep the index
consistent for mi-async.
2021-12-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: convert 'set debug lin-lwp' to a boolean command
Convert the 'set debug lin-lwp' command to a boolean. Adds a new
LINUX_NAT_SCOPED_DEBUG_ENTER_EXIT macro, and makes use of it in one
place (linux_nat_target::stop).
The manual entry for 'set debug lin-lwp' is already vague about
exactly what arguments this command takes, and the description talks
about turning debug on and off, so I don't think there's any updates
required there.
I have updated the doc strings shown when the users enters 'help show
debug lin-lwp' or 'help show debug lin-lwp'. The old title lines used
to talk about the 'GNU/Linux lwp module', but this debug flag is now
used for any native linux target debug, so we now talk about
'GNU/Linux native target'. The body string for this setting has been
changed from 'Enables printf debugging output.' to 'When on, print
debug messages relating to the GNU/Linux native target.', the old
value looks like a cut&paste error to me.
2021-12-22 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add threads debugging switch
Add new commands:
set debug threads on|off
show debug threads
Prints additional debug information relating to thread creation and
deletion.
GDB already announces when threads are created of course.... most of
the time, but sometimes threads are added silently, in which case this
debug message is the only mechanism to see the thread being added.
Also, though GDB does announce when a thread exits, it doesn't
announce when the thread object is deleted, I've added a debug message
for that.
Additionally, having message printed through the debug system will
cause the messages to be nested to an appropriate depth when other
debug sub-systems are turned on (especially things like `infrun` and
`lin-lwp`).
2021-12-22 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Update Scalar Crypto testcases.
Add opcodes in testcases to make sure every instruction generate
right opcode after disassemble.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext-64.d: Add opcode detect.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkc-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkc-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkx-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkx-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksed-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksed-64.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksh-32.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksh-64.d: Ditto.
2021-12-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbarch-components.py: change empty "params" tuples to empty lists
During review, it was suggested to change the "params" parameter from a
tuple to a list, for esthetic reasons. The empty ones are still tuples
though, they should probably be changed to be empty lists, for
consistency. It does not change anything in the script result.
Change-Id: If13c6c527aa167a5ee5b45740e5f1bda1e9517e4
2021-12-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-21 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
[AArch64] Fix typo in error messages
Fix mispelling of PROT_ME to PROT_MTE in the error messages.
2021-12-21 Joel Sherrill <joel@rtems.org>
Obsolete m32c-rtems and m32r-rtems
2020-12-20 Joel Sherrill <joel@rtems.org>
bfd/
* config.bfd (m32c-*-rtems*): Remove target.
ld/
* configure.tgt (m32c-*-rtems*): Remove target.
* configure.tgt (m32r-*-rtems*): Remove target.
2021-12-21 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: -mfence-as-lock-add=yes doesn't work for 16-bit mode
Rather than trying to fix this (which would require making an assumption
on the upper half of %esp being zero), simply issue an error. While at
it, since the generated code is in conflict with -momit-lock-prefix=yes,
issue an error in that case as well.
gas/ELF: avoid below-base ref in obj_elf_parse_section_letters()
We would better be prepared for 'm' being the first character of the
incoming string.
2021-12-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Typo fixes in binutils doc
* doc/binutils.texi: Fix typos.
2021-12-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove print_spaces
This removes the print_spaces helper function, in favor of using the
"*%s" idiom that's already used in many places in gdb. One spot (in
symmisc.c) is changed to use print_spaces_filtered, because the rest
of that function is using filtered output. (This highlights one way
that the printf idiom is better -- this error is harder to make when
using that.)
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-12-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove puts_debug
I noticed that puts_debug isn't used in the tree. git log tells me
that the last use was removed in 2015:
commit 40e0b27177e747600d3ec186458fe0e482a1cf77
Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Aug 24 15:40:26 2015 +0100
Delete the remaining ROM monitor targets
... and this commit mentions that the code being removed here probably
hadn't worked for 6 years prior to that.
Based on this, I'm removing puts_debug. I don't think it's useful.
Tested by rebuilding.
2021-12-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Make n_spaces return a const char *
n_spaces keeps the spaces in a static buffer. If a caller overwrites
these, it may give an incorrect result to a subsequent caller. So,
make the return type const to help avoid this outcome.
2021-12-20 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
Add Enze Li to gdb/MAINTAINERS
2021-12-20 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
gdb/ada-exp.y: Reformat comment to follow GDB's coding standards
This commit reformats a comment in gdb/ada-exp.y to avoid
the leading '*' at the beginning of each line of the comment.
gdb/ada-lang.h: Reformat comment to follow coding standards
This commit reformats a comment in gdb/ada-lang.h to avoid
the leading '*' at the beginning of each line of the comment.
2021-12-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-19 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Obsolete m32c-rtems
readelf: avoid a possible divide by zero
* readelf.c (process_section_headers): Check SHT_RELR entsize.
2021-12-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-18 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb: add "exit" command as an alias for "quit"
This command adds the "exit" command as an alias for the "quit"
command, as requested in PR gdb/28406.
The documentation is also updated to mention this new command.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28406
2021-12-18 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add assert in remote_target::wait relating to async being off
While working on another patch I ended up in a situation where I had
async mode disabled (with 'maint set target-async off'), but the async
event token got marked anyway.
In this situation GDB was continually calling into
remote_target::wait, however, the async token would never become
unmarked as the unmarking is guarded by target_is_async_p.
We could just unconditionally unmark the token, but that would feel
like just ignoring a bug, so, instead, lets assert that if
!target_is_async_p, then the async token should not be marked.
This assertion would have caught my earlier mistake.
There should be no user visible changes with this commit.
2021-12-18 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/remote: some fixes for 'maint set target-async off'
While working on another patch relating to remote targets, I wanted to
test with 'maint set target-async off' in place. Unfortunately I ran
into some problems. This commit is an attempt to fix one of the
issues I hit.
In my particular case I was actually running with:
maint set target-async off
maint set target-non-stop off
that is, we're telling GDB to force the targets to operate in
non-async mode, and in all-stop mode. Here's my GDB session showing
the problem:
(gdb) maintenance set target-async off
(gdb) maintenance set target-non-stop off
(gdb) target extended-remote :54321
Remote debugging using :54321
(gdb) attach 2365960
Attaching to process 2365960
No unwaited-for children left.
(gdb)
Notice the 'No unwaited-for children left.' error, this is the
problem. There's no reason why GDB should not be able to attach to
the process.
The problem is this:
1. The user runs 'attach PID' and this sends GDB into attach_command
in infcmd.c. From here we call the ::attach method on the attach
target, which will be the extended_remote_target.
2. In extended_remote_target::attach, we attach to the remote target
and get the first reply (which is a stop packet). We put off
processing the stop packet until the end of ::attach. We setup the
inferior and thread to represent the process we attached to, and
download the target description. Finally, we process the initial
stop packet.
If '!target_is_non_stop_p ()' and '!target_can_async_p ()', which is
the case for us given the maintenance commands we used, we cache the
stop packet within the remote_state::buf for later processing.
3. Back in attach_command, if 'target_is_non_stop_p ()' then we
request that the target stops. This will either process any cached
stop replies, or request that the target stops, and process the stop
replies. However, this code is not what we use due to non-stop mode
being disabled. So, we skip to the next step which is to call
validate_exec_file.
4. Calling validate_exec_file can cause packets to be sent to the
remote target, and replies received, the first path I hit is the
call to target_pid_to_exec_file, which calls
remote_target::pid_to_exec_file, which can then try to read the
executable from the remote. Sending an receiving packets will make
use of the remote_state::buf object.
5. The attempt to attach continues, but the damage is already done...
So, the problem is that, in step #2 we cache a stop reply in the
remote_state::buf, and then in step #4 we reuse the remote_state::buf
object, discarding any cached stop reply. As a result, the initial
stop, which is sent when GDB first attaches to the target, is lost.
This problem can clearly be seen, I feel, by looking at the
remote_state::cached_wait_status flag. This flag tells GDB if there
is a wait status cached in remote_state::buf. However, in
remote_target::putpkt_binary and remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1
this flag is just set back to 0, doing this immediately discards any
cached data.
I don't know if this scheme ever made sense, looking at commit
2d717e4f8a54, where the cached_wait_status flag was added, it appears
that there was nothing between where the stop was cached, and where
the stop was consumed, so, I suspect, there never was a situation
where we ended up in putpkt_binary or getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 and
needed to clear to the flag, maybe the clearing was added "just in
case". Whatever the history, I claim that this clearing this flag is
no longer a good idea.
So, my first step toward fixing this issue was to replace the two
instances of 'rs->cached_wait_status = 0;' in ::putpkt_binary and
::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 with 'gdb_assert (rs->cached_wait_status ==
0);', this, at least would show me when GDB was doing something
dangerous, and indeed, this assert is now hit in my test case above.
I did play with using some kind of scoped restore to backup, and
restore the remote_state::buf object in all the places within remote.c
that I was hitting where the ::buf was being corrupted. The first
problem with this is that, where the ::cached_wait_status flag is
reset is _not_ where ::buf is corrupted. For the ::putpkt_binary
case, by the time we get to the method the buffer has already been
corrupted in many cases, so we end up needing to add the scoped
save/restore within the callers, which means we need the save/restore
in _lots_ of places.
Plus, using this save/restore model feels like the wrong solution. I
don't think that it's obvious that the buffer might be holding cached
data, and I think it would be too easy for new corruptions of the
buffer to be introduced, which could easily go unnoticed for a long
time.
So, I really wanted a solution that didn't require us to cache data in
the ::buf object.
Luckily, I think we already have such a solution in place, the
remote_state::stop_reply_queue, it seems like this does exactly the
same task, just in a slightly different way. With the
::stop_reply_queue, the stop packets are processed upon receipt and
the stop_reply object is added to the queue. With the ::buf cache
solution, the unprocessed stop reply is cached in the ::buf, and
processed later.
So, finally, in this commit, I propose to remove the
remote_state::cached_wait_status flag and to stop using the ::buf to
cache stop replies. Instead, stop replies will now always be stored
in the ::stop_reply_queue.
There are two places where we use the ::buf to hold a cached stop
reply, the first is in the ::attach method, and the second is in
remote_target::start_remote, however, the second of these cases is far
less problematic, as after caching the stop reply in ::buf we call the
global start_remote function, which does very little work before
calling normal_stop, which processes the cached stop reply. However,
my plan is to switch both users over to using ::stop_reply_queue so
that the old (unsafe) ::cached_wait_status mechanism can be completely
removed.
The next problem is that the ::stop_reply_queue is currently only used
for async-mode, and so, in remote_target::push_stop_reply, where we
push stop_reply objects into the ::stop_reply_queue, we currently also
mark the async event token. I've modified this so we only mark the
async event token if 'target_is_async_p ()' - note, _is_, not _can_
here. The ::push_stop_reply method is called in places where async
mode has been temporarily disabled, but, when async mode is switched
back on (see remote_target::async) we will mark the event token if
there are events in the queue.
Another change of interest is in remote_target::remote_interrupt_as.
Previously this code checked ::cached_wait_status, but didn't check
for events in the ::stop_reply_queue. Now that ::cached_wait_status
has been removed we now check the queue length instead, which should
have the same result.
Finally, in remote_target::wait_as, I've tried to merge the processing
of the ::stop_reply_queue with how we used to handle the
::cached_wait_status flag.
Currently, when processing the ::stop_reply_queue we call
process_stop_reply and immediately return. However, when handling
::cached_wait_status we run through the whole of ::wait_as, and return
at the end of the function.
If we consider a standard stop packet, the two differences I see are:
1. Resetting of the remote_state::waiting_for_stop_reply, flag; this
is not currently done when processing a stop from the
::stop_reply_queue.
2. The final return value has the possibility of being adjusted at
the end of ::wait_as, as well as there being calls to
record_currthread, non of which are done if we process a stop from
the ::stop_reply_queue.
After discussion on the mailing list:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-December/184535.html
it was suggested that, when an event is pushed into the
::stop_reply_queue, the ::waiting_for_stop_reply flag is never going
to be set. As a result, we don't need to worry about the first
difference. I have however, added a gdb_assert to validate the
assumption that the flag is never going to be set. If in future the
situation ever changes, then we should find out pretty quickly.
As for the second difference, I have resolved this by having all stop
packets taken from the ::stop_reply_queue, pass through the return
value adjustment code at the end of ::wait_as.
An example of a test that reveals the benefits of this commit is:
make check-gdb \
RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver \
GDBFLAGS='-ex maint\ set\ target-async\ off \
-ex maint\ set\ target-non-stop\ off' \
gdb.base/attach.exp"
For testing I've been running test on x86-64/GNU Linux, and run with
target boards unix, native-gdbserver, and native-extended-gdbserver.
For each board I've run with the default GDBFLAGS, as well as with:
GDBFLAGS='-ex maint\ set\ target-async\ off \
-ex maint\ set\ target-non-stop\ off' \
Though running with the above GDBFLAGS is clearly a lot more unstable
both before and after my patch, I'm not seeing any consistent new
failures with my patch, except, with the native-extended-gdbserver
board, where I am seeing new failures, but only because more tests are
now running. For that configuration alone I see the number of
unresolved go down by 49, the number of passes goes up by 446, and the
number of failures also increases by 144. All of the failures are new
tests as far as I can tell.
2021-12-18 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
x86: Terminate mnemonicendp in swap_operand()
Tested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2021-12-17 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* i386-dis.c (swap_operand): Terminate mnemonicendp.
gas/ChangeLog:
2021-12-17 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
* testsuite/gas/i386/opts-intel.d: Updated expected disassembly.
* testsuite/gas/i386/opts.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/sse2avx-opts-intel.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/sse2avx-opts.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-opts-intel.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-opts.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-sse2avx-opts-intel.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-sse2avx-opts.d: Likewise.
2021-12-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Document gdbarch-components.py
This adds a comment to document how to update gdbarch.
Remove gdbarch.sh
This patch runs gdbarch.py and removes gdbarch.sh.
2021-12-17 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Add new gdbarch generator
The new gdbarch generator is a Python program. It reads the
"components.py" that was created in the previous patch, and generates
gdbarch.c and gdbarch-gen.h.
This is a relatively straightforward translation of the existing .sh
code. It doesn't try very hard to be idiomatic Python or to be
especially smart.
It is, however, incredibly faster:
$ time ./gdbarch.sh
real 0m8.197s
user 0m5.779s
sys 0m3.384s
$ time ./gdbarch.py
real 0m0.065s
user 0m0.053s
sys 0m0.011s
Co-Authored-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2021-12-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Generate new gdbarch-components.py from gdbarch.sh
The new gdbarch.sh approach will be to edit a Python file, rather than
adding a line to a certain part of gdbarch.sh. We use the existing sh
code, though, to generate the first draft of this .py file.
Documentation on the format will come in a subsequent patch.
Note that some info (like "staticdefault") in the current code is
actually unused, and so is ignored by this new generator.
2021-12-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Do not sort the fields in gdbarch_dump
This changes gdbarch.sh so that it no longer sorts the fields in
gdbarch_dump. This sorting isn't done anywhere else by gdbarch.sh,
and this simplifies the new generator a little bit.
Do not generate gdbarch.h
Now that gdbarch.h has been split, we no longer need the generator
code in gdbarch.sh, so remove it.
2021-12-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Split gdbarch.h into two files
This patch splits gdbarch.h into two files -- gdbarch.h now is
editable and hand-maintained, and the new gdbarch-gen.h file is the
only thing generated by gdbarch.sh. This lets us avoid maintaining
boilerplate in the gdbarch.sh file.
Note that gdbarch.sh still generates gdbarch.h after this patch. This
makes it easier to re-run when rebasing. This code is removed in a
subsequent patch.
2021-12-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Move ordinary gdbarch code to arch-utils
While I think it makes sense to generate gdbarch.c, at the same time I
think it is better for ordinary code to be editable in a C file -- not
as a hunk of C code embedded in the generator.
This patch moves this sort of code out of gdbarch.sh and gdbarch.c and
into arch-utils.c, then has arch-utils.c include gdbarch.c.
2021-12-17 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
Avoid redundant operations in `fortran_array_walker'
Move inner dimension's element type determination outside the respective
loops in `fortran_array_walker'. The operation is exactly the same with
each iteration, so there is no point in redoing it for each element and
while a smart compiler might be able to move it outside the loop it is
regardless a bad coding style. No functional change.
Initialize `m_ndimensions' in the member initializer list
Following our coding convention initialize the `m_ndimensions' member in
the member initializer list rather than in the body of the constructor
of the `fortran_array_walker' class. No functional change.
2021-12-17 Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/tui: install SIGWINCH only when connected to a TTY
PR26056 reports that when GDB is connected to non-TTY stdin/stdout, it
crashes when it receives a SIGWINCH signal.
This can be reproduced as follows:
$ gdb/gdb -nx -batch -ex 'run' --args sleep 60 </dev/null 2>&1 | cat
# from another terminal:
$ kill -WINCH %(pidof gdb)
When doing so, the process crashes in a call to rl_resize_terminal:
void
rl_resize_terminal (void)
{
_rl_get_screen_size (fileno (rl_instream), 1);
...
}
The problem is that at this point rl_instream has the value NULL.
The rl_instream variable is supposed to be initialized during a call to
readline_initialize_everything, which in a normal startup sequence is
called under this call chain:
tui_interp::init
tui_ensure_readline_initialized
rl_initialize
readline_initialize_everything
In tui_interp::init, we have the following sequence:
tui_initialize_io ();
tui_initialize_win (); // <- Installs SIGWINCH
if (gdb_stdout->isatty ())
tui_ensure_readline_initialized (); // <- Initializes rl_instream
This function unconditionally installs the SIGWINCH signal handler (this
is done by tui_initialize_win), and then if gdb_stdout is a TTY it
initializes readline. Therefore, if stdout is not a TTY, SIGWINCH is
installed but readline is not initialized. In such situation
rl_instream stays NULL, and when GDB receives a SIGWINCH it calls its
handler and in fine tries to access rl_instream leading to the crash.
This patch proposes to fix this issue by installing the SIGWINCH signal
handler only if GDB is connected to a TTY. Given that this
initialization it the only task of tui_initialize_win, this patch moves
tui_initialize_win just after the call to
tui_ensure_readline_initialized.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26056
Change-Id: I6458acef7b0d9beda2a10715d0345f02361076d9
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: NULL dereference in bfd_elf_set_group_contents
* elf-bfd.h (struct output_elf_obj_tdata): Make num_section_syms
unsigned.
* elf.c (bfd_elf_set_group_contents): Bounds check sec->index
and check that entry in elf_section_syms for sec is non-NULL.
(_bfd_elf_symbol_from_bfd_symbol): Adjust.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: use after free in _bfd_elf_mips_get_relocated_section_contents
Leaving entries on mips_hi16_list from a previous pass over relocs
leads to confusing bugs.
* elfxx-mips.c (_bfd_elf_mips_get_relocated_section_contents):
Free mips_hi16_list entries on error exit.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: abort in wasm_scan_name_function_section
Macros like READ_LEB128 in wasm-module.c that alter control flow are
evil. Maintainers will break your code if you have hidden ways to
reach labels.
* wasm-module.c (wasm_scan_name_function_section): Don't
attempt to bfd_release NULL.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: heap-buffer-overflow in bpf_elf_generic_reloc
The bpf reloc howtos are a bit weird, using bitpos to specify an
offset from r_offset that is outside the size of the reloc as given by
howto.size. That means bfd_get_reloc_size gives the wrong answer for
range checking, and thus bfd_reloc_offset_in_range can't be used.
* elf64-bpf.c (bpf_elf_generic_reloc): Handle bitpos offset reloc
range checking.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: bfd.c:2519:8: shift exponent 34 is too large
* bfd.c (bfd_update_compression_header): Avoid integer overflow.
asan: buffer overflow in mmo_get_symbols
* mmo.c (mmo_get_symbols): Error on symbol name exceeding max length.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: buffer overflow in elfnn-aarch64.c get_plt_type
We can't assume .dynamic is a multiple of ElfNN_External_Dyn, at least
not when presented with fuzzed object files.
* elfnn-aarch64.c (get_plt_type): Don't access past end of
improperly sized .dynamic.
2021-12-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
try_build_id_prefix gcc-10 -Wformat-security errors
dwarf.c:11300:3: error: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Werror=format-security]
11300 | f += sprintf (f, prefix);
PR 28697
* dwarf.c (try_build_id_prefix): Avoid -Wformat-security error.
2021-12-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-16 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix AVR assembler so that it creates relocs that will work with linker relaxation.
PR 28686
gas * config/tc-avr.h (tc_fix_adjustable): Define.
* config/tc-avr.c (avr_fix_adjustable): New function.
* testsuite/gas/all/gas.exp: Skip tests that need adjustable fixups.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/avr/diffreloc_withrelax.d: Adjust expected output.
* testsuite/gas/avr/pc-relative-reloc.d: Adjust expected output.
ld * testsuite/ld-avr/avr-prop-7.d: Adjust expected output.
* testsuite/ld-avr/avr-prop-8.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-avr/pr13402.d: Likewise.
2021-12-16 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
When loading separate debug info files, also attempt to locate a file based upon the build-id.
PR 28697
* dwarf.c (load_build_id_debug_file): New function.
(try_build_id_prefix): New function.
(check_for_and_load_links): Call load_build_id_debug_file.
(debug_displays): Add entry for .note.gnu.build-id.
* dwarf.h (enum dwarf_section_display_enum): Add
note_gnu_build_id.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfod.exp (test_fetch_debuglink):
Fix regexp for loads via debuglink section.
2021-12-16 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
arm: Add support for Armv9.1-A to Armv9.3-A
This patch adds AArch32 support for -march=armv9.[123]-a.
The behaviour of the new options can be expressed using a
combination of existing feature flags and tables.
The cpu_arch_ver entries for ARM_ARCH_V9_2A and ARM_ARCH_V9_3A
are technically redundant but it seemed less surprising to include
them anyway.
include/
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_ARCH_V9_1A, ARM_ARCH_V9_2A): New macros.
(ARM_ARCH_V9_3A): Likewise.
gas/
* doc/c-arm.texi: Add armv9.1-a, armv9.2-a and armv9.3-a.
* config/tc-arm.c (armv91a_ext_table, armv92a_ext_table): New macros.
(armv93a_ext_table): Likewise.
(arm_archs): Add armv9.1-a, armv9.2-a and armv9.3-a.
(cpu_arch_ver): Add ARM_ARCH_V9_1A, ARM_ARCH_V9_2A and ARM_ARCH_V9_3A.
* NEWS: Mention the above.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv9_1-a.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv9_2-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv9_3-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-armv9.1-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-armv9.2-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-armv9.3-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/i8mm-armv9.1-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/i8mm-armv9.2-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/i8mm-armv9.3-a.d: Likewise.
2021-12-16 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
arm: Add support for Armv8.7-A and Armv8.8-A
This patch adds AArch32 support for -march=armv8.[78]-a.
The behaviour of the new options can be expressed using a
combination of existing feature flags and tables.
The cpu_arch_ver entries are technically redundant but
it seemed less surprising to include them anyway.
include/
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_ARCH_V8_7A, ARM_ARCH_V8_8A): New macros.
gas/
* doc/c-arm.texi: Add armv8.7-a and armv8.8-a.
* config/tc-arm.c (armv87a_ext_table, armv88a_ext_table): New macros.
(arm_archs): Add armv8.7-a and armv8.8-a.
(cpu_arch_ver): Add ARM_ARCH_V8_7A and ARM_ARCH_V8_8A.
* NEWS: Mention the above.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv8_7-a.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv8_8-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-armv8.7-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-armv8.8-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/i8mm-armv8.7-a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/i8mm-armv8.8-a.d: Likewise.
2021-12-16 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add support for Armv9.1-A to Armv9.3-A
This patch adds AArch64 support for -march=armv9.[123]-a.
The behaviour of the new options can be expressed using a
combination of existing feature flags, so we don't need to
eat into the vanishing number of spare AARCH64_FEATURE_* bits.
Hoewver, it was more convenient to separate out the |s of
feature flags so that Armv9.1-A could reuse the set for
Armv8.6-A, and so on.
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_ARCH_V8_FEATURES): New macro,
split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_1_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_1): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_2_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_2): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_3_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_3): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_4_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_4): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_5_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_5): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_6_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_6): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_7_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_7): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_8_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_8): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9_FEATURES): New macro, split out from...
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9): ...here.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9_1_FEATURES, AARCH64_ARCH_V9_1): New macros.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9_2_FEATURES, AARCH64_ARCH_V9_2): New macros.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9_3_FEATURES, AARCH64_ARCH_V9_3): New macros.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Add armv9.1-a, armv9-2-a and armv9.3-a.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_archs): Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the above.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_invalid.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_invalid.s,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_invalid.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_1.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_1_invalid.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_1_invalid.s,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_1_invalid.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_2.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_2_invalid.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_2_invalid.s,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_2_invalid.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_3.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv9_3.s: Likewise.
2021-12-16 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Support svinval extension with frozen version 1.0.
According to the privileged spec, there are five new instructions for
svinval extension. Two of them (HINVAL.VVMA and HINVAL.GVMA) need to
enable the hypervisor extension. But there is no implementation of
hypervisor extension in mainline for now, so let's consider the related
issues later.
31..25 24..20 19..15 14..12 11...7 6..2 1..0
sinval.vma 0001011 rs2 rs1 000 00000 11100 11
sfence.w.inval 0001100 00000 00000 000 00000 11100 11
sfence.inval.ir 0001100 00001 00000 000 00000 11100 11
hinval.vvma 0010011 rs2 rs1 000 00000 11100 11
hinval.gvma 0110011 rs2 rs1 000 00000 11100 11
This patch is cherry-picked from the riscv integration branch since the
svinval extension is frozen for now. Besides, we fix the funct7 encodings
of hinval.vvma and hinval.gvma, from 0x0011011 and 0x0111011 to 0x0010011
and 0x0110011.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_s_ext): Added svinval.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Handle INSN_CLASS_SVINVAL.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/svinval.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/svinval.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Added encodings for svinval.
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Added INSN_CLASS_SVINVAL.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Added svinval instructions.
2021-12-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: mips/or1k: drop redundant arg to bitsize macro
These are just using the default behavior for the 3rd arg, so drop
it to make it more clear. This also makes them match all other
ports that only use the first 2 arguments.
2021-12-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: unify texi generation rules
The logic between these rules are extremely similar, so unify them
into a single variable by leveraging make $@ and $< variables.
Also add automake silent rule support while we're here.
2021-12-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: fix mingw builds with replacement gnulib open
The header shuffling in here broke the workaround for gnulib defining
"open". Move it back before the sim-specific includes to fix. This
is because the callback struct in the headers has an "open" member and
this file tries to call that.
2021-12-16 Sandra Loosemore <sandra@codesourcery.com>
Adjust compare_link_order for unstable qsort
In a cross toolchain for nios2-elf target and x86_64-w64-mingw32 host
using binutils 2.37, we observed a failure that didn't show up on
x86_64-linux-gnu host: testcase pr25490-5.s was failing with
C:\path\to\nios2-elf-ld.exe: looping in map_segments
FAIL: __patchable_function_entries section 5
* ldelfgen.c (compare_link_order): Don't use section id in
sorting. Keep original ordering instead. Update comments.
2021-12-16 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Fix an undefined behaviour in the BFD library's DWARF parser
Using an unsigned int cast (to 32 bits) on a pointer difference (of
possibly 64 bits) is wrong. Even though it will work on all real
object files, the fuzzers will eventually find this hole.
PR 28687
* dwarf1.c (parse_die): Cast pointer difference to size_t.
Catch another possible pointer overflow.
2021-12-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: re-format with black 21.12b0
Run black 21.12b0 on gdb/, there is a single whitespace change. I will
update the wiki [1] in parallel to bump the version of black to 21.12b0.
[1] https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/Internals%20GDB-Python-Coding-Standards
Change-Id: Ib3b859e3506c74a4f15d16f1e44ef402de3b98e2
2021-12-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: re-format with black 21.9b0
Run black 21.9b0 on gdb/ (this is the version currently mentioned on the
wiki [1], the subsequent commit will bump that version).
[1] https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/Internals%20GDB-Python-Coding-Standards
Change-Id: I5ceaab42c42428e053e2572df172aa42a88f0f86
2021-12-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28691, validate dwarf attribute form
PR28691 is a fuzzing PR that triggers a non-problem of "output changes
per run" with PIEs and/or different compilers. I've closed similar
PRs before as wontfix, but I guess there will be no end of this type
of PR. The trigger is an attribute that usually takes one of the
offset/constant reference DW_FORMs being given an indexed string
DW_FORM. The bfd reader doesn't support indexed strings and returns
an error string instead. The address of the string varies with PIE
runs and/or compiler, and we allow that address to appear in output.
Fix this by validating integer attribute forms, as we do for string
form attributes.
PR 28691
* dwarf2.c (is_str_attr): Rename to..
(is_str_form): ..this. Change param type. Update calls.
(is_int_form): New function.
(read_attribute_value): Handle DW_FORM_addrx2.
(find_abstract_instance): Validate form when using attr.u.val.
(scan_unit_for_symbols, parse_comp_unit): Likewise.
2021-12-15 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
New --enable-threading configure option to control use of threads in GDB/GDBserver
Add the --enable-threading configure option so multithreading can be disabled
at configure time. This is useful for statically-linked builds of
GDB/GDBserver, since the thread library doesn't play well with that setup.
If you try to run a statically-linked GDB built with threading, it will crash
when setting up the number of worker threads.
This new option is also convenient when debugging GDB in a system with lots of
threads, where the thread discovery code in GDB will emit too many messages,
like so:
[New Thread 0xfffff74d3a50 (LWP 2625599)]
If you have X threads, that message will be repeated X times.
The default for --enable-threading is "yes".
2021-12-15 Nikita Popov <npv1310@gmail.com>
Fix an undefined behaviour in the BFD library's DWARF parser.
PR 28687
* dwarf1.c (parse_die): Fix undefined behaviour in range tests.
2021-12-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28694, Out-of-bounds write in stab_xcoff_builtin_type
PR 28694
* stabs.c (stab_xcoff_builtin_type): Make typenum unsigned.
Negate typenum earlier, simplifying bounds checking. Correct
off-by-one indexing. Adjust switch cases.
2021-12-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
loongarch32 build failure on 32-bit host
gas/config/tc-loongarch.c: In function assember_macro_helper:
gas/config/tc-loongarch.c:915:28: error: right shift count >= width of type [-Werror=shift-count-overflow]
915 | hi32 = insn->args[1] >> 32;
| ^~
One possible fix is to make offsetT a 64-bit type for loongarch32.
This also makes bfd/targmatch.h (generated from bfd/config.bfd)
consistent since the loongarch32 match is inside #ifdef BFD64.
* config.bfd (loongarch32-*): Set want64.
2021-12-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
loongarch64 build failure on 32-bit host
gas/config/tc-loongarch.c: In function loongarch_args_parser_can_match_arg_helper:
gas/config/tc-loongarch.c:661:13: error: cast from pointer to integer of different size [-Werror=pointer
-to-int-cast]
661 | imm = (offsetT) str_hash_find (r_htab, arg);
| ^
Cast it to the correct size int, relying on normal integer promotions
if offsetT is larger than a pointer.
* config/tc-loongarch.c (loongarch_args_parser_can_match_arg_helper):
Cast return from str_hash_find to intptr_t, not offsetT.
2021-12-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
XCOFF C_STSYM test failure on 32-bit host
This test was failing here and on another similar symbol:
[ 4](sec 1)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 143) (nx 0) 0x05d1745d11745d21 .bs
where correct output is
[ 4](sec 1)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 143) (nx 0) 0x000000000000000a .bs
The problem is caused by a 32-bit host pointer being sign-extended
when stored into a 64-bit bfd_vma, and then that value not being
trimmed back to 32 bits when used. The following belt-and-braces
patch fixes both the store and subsequent reads.
* coffcode.h (coff_slurp_symbol_table): Do not sign extend
when storing a host pointer to syment.n_value.
* coffgen.c (coff_get_symbol_info): Cast syment.n_value to a
bfd_hostptr_t before using in arithmetic.
(coff_print_symbol): Likewise.
2021-12-14 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbserver/tracepoint.cc: use snprintf in gdb_agent_socket_init
If we modify tracepoint.cc to try to use a too long unix socket name,
for example by modifying SOCK_DIR to be:
#define SOCK_DIR "/tmp/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut/salut"
... trying to start an application with libinproctrace.so loaded
crashes:
$ LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.6:./libinproctrace.so /bin/ls
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/common-utils.cc:69: A problem internal to GDBserver in-process agent has been detected.
xsnprintf: Assertion `ret < size' failed.
Looking at the rest of the socket initialization code, the intent seems
to be that if something goes wrong, we warn but let the program
execute. So crashing on this failed assertions seems against the intent.
Commit 6cebaf6e1ae4 ("use xsnprintf instead of snprintf.") changed this
code to use xsnprintf instead of snprintf, introducing this assertion.
Before that, snprintf would return a value bigger that UNIX_PATH_MAX and
the "if" after would catch it and emit a warning, which is exactly what
we want. That change was done because LynxOS didn't have snprintf.
Since LynxOS isn't supported anymore, we can simply revert to use
snprintf there.
With this patch, we get a warning (printed by the caller of
gdb_agent_socket_init), but the program keeps executing:
$ LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.6:./libinproctrace.so /bin/ls
ipa: could not create sync socket
...
Change-Id: I78bca52d5dc3145335abeae45a42052701e3f5dd
2021-12-14 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbserver/tracepoint.cc: work around -Wstringop-truncation error
When building gdb with on AArch64 with g++ 11.1.0 (and some preceding
versions too), -O2 and -fsanitize=address, I get this error.
CXX tracepoint-ipa.o
cc1plus: warning: command-line option -Wmissing-prototypes is valid for C/ObjC but not for C++
In file included from /usr/include/string.h:519,
from ../gnulib/import/string.h:41,
from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/common-defs.h:95,
from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/server.h:22,
from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.cc:19:
In function char* strncpy(char*, const char*, size_t),
inlined from int init_named_socket(const char*) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.cc:6902:11,
inlined from int gdb_agent_socket_init() at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.cc:6953:26,
inlined from void* gdb_agent_helper_thread(void*) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.cc:7204:41:
/usr/include/bits/string_fortified.h:95:34: error: char* __builtin_strncpy(char*, const char*, long unsigned int) output may be truncated copying 107 bytes from a string of length 107 [-Werror=stringop-truncation]
95 | return __builtin___strncpy_chk (__dest, __src, __len,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
96 | __glibc_objsize (__dest));
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note that _FORTIFY_SOURCE changes the message a bit, but I get a similar
error if I use -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=0.
I am pretty sure it's spurious and might be related to this GCC bug:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=88780
From what I can see, we are copying from a static 108 bytes long buffer
(the global array agent_socket_name) to a 108 bytes long array,
sockaddr_un::sun_path. I don't see anything wrong.
Still, it would make things easier if we didn't see this error. Change
the code to check that the source string length is smaller than the
destination buffer (including space for the NULL byte) and use strcpy.
For anybody who would like to try to reproduce, the full command line
is:
g++ -I. -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdb/regformats -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/.. -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../include -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdb -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gnulib/import -I../gnulib/import -I/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/.. -I.. -pthread -Wall -Wpointer-arith -Wno-unused -Wunused-value -Wunused-variable -Wunused-function -Wno-switch -Wno-char-subscripts -Wempty-body -Wunused-but-set-parameter -Wunused-but-set-variable -Wno-sign-compare -Wno-error=maybe-uninitialized -Wno-mismatched-tags -Wsuggest-override -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 -Wduplicated-cond -Wshadow=local -Wdeprecated-copy -Wdeprecated-copy-dtor -Wredundant-move -Wmissing-declarations -Wmissing-prototypes -Wstrict-null-sentinel -Wformat -Wformat-nonliteral -Werror -DGDBSERVER -DCONFIG_UST_GDB_INTEGRATION -Drpl_strerror_r=strerror_r -Drpl_free=free -fPIC -DIN_PROCESS_AGENT -fvisibility=hidden -g3 -O2 -fsanitize=address -c -o tracepoint-ipa.o -MT tracepoint-ipa.o -MMD -MP -MF ./.deps/tracepoint-ipa.Tpo /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.cc
Change-Id: I18e86c0487feead7e7677e69398405e7057cf464
2021-12-14 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
bfd: fix -Wunused errors with clang 13+
Clang 13 and 14 produce some -Wunused-but-set-{variable,parameter} for
situations where gcc doesn't. In particular, when a variable is set and
then used in a way to update its own value. For example, if `i` is only
used in this way:
int i = 2;
i++;
i = i + 1;
gcc won't warn, but clang will.
Fix all such errors found in an --enable-targets=all build. It would be
important for somebody who knows what they're doing to just make sure
that these variables can indeed be deleted, and that there a no cases
where it's a bug, and the variable should actually be used.
The first instance of this error fix by this patch is:
CC elf32-score.lo
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/bfd/elf32-score.c:450:11: error: variable 'relocation' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
bfd_vma relocation;
^
Change-Id: I2f233ce20352645cf388aff3dfa08a651d21a6b6
2021-12-14 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/mi: rename build_table to add_builtin_mi_commands
Just give the function build_table a more descriptive name. There
should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/mi: rename mi_cmd to mi_command
Just give this class a new name, more inline with the name of the
sub-classes. I've also updated mi_cmd_up to mi_command_up in
mi-cmds.c inline with this new naming scheme.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/mi: use separate classes for different types of MI command
This commit changes the infrastructure in mi-cmds.{c,h} to add new
sub-classes for the different types of MI command. Instances of these
sub-classes are then created and added into mi_cmd_table.
The existing mi_cmd class becomes the abstract base class, this has an
invoke method and takes care of the suppress notifications handling,
before calling a do_invoke virtual method which is implemented by all
of the sub-classes.
There's currently two different sub-classes, one of pure MI commands,
and a second for MI commands that delegate to CLI commands.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/mi: int to bool conversion in mi_execute_cli_command
Change an argument of mi_execute_cli_command from int to bool. Update
the callers to take this into account. Within mi_execute_cli_command,
update a comparison of a pointer to 0 with a comparison to nullptr,
and add an assert, if we are not using the argument string then the
string should be nullptr. Also removed a cryptic 'gdb_????' comment,
which isn't really helpful.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/mi: use std::map for MI commands in mi-cmds.c
This changes the hashmap used in mi-cmds.c from a custom structure to
std::map. Not only is replacing a custom container with a standard
one an improvement, but using std::map will make it easier to
dynamically add commands; which is something that is planned for a
later series, where we will allow MI commands to be implemented in
Python.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/mi: rename mi_lookup to mi_cmd_lookup
Lets give this function a more descriptive name. I've also improved
the comments in the header and source files.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-12-14 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Added ld testcases for the medlow and medany code models.
There are two linker scripts, code-model-01.ld and code-model-02.ld,
which are corresponding to the two different memory layouts,
* code-model-01.ld: the text section is in the 32-bit address range, but
the data section is far away from the text section, which means the data
section is over the 32-bit address range.
* code-model-02.ld: the text section is over the 32-bit address range, but
the data section is placed nearly zero address.
We use the two linker scripts, to test the current medlow and medany behaviors
of GNU ld, including the weak symbol references and the relaxations behaviors.
Besides, these testcases also show the limits of the current medlow and medany
code models, that is - we may get the truncated to fit errors when linking
with the above two linker scripts.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-01.ld: New testcases to test the
behaviors of the current medlow and medany code models.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-02.ld: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medany-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medany-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medany-weakref-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medany-weakref-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medlow-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medlow-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medlow-weakref-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-medlow-weakref-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medany-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medany-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medany-weakref-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medany-weakref-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medlow-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medlow-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medlow-weakref-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medlow-weakref-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Updated.
2021-12-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-13 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Adjust linker tests for --disable-separate-code
Adjust linker tests for linker configured with --disable-separate-code:
1. Update expected outputs.
2. Pass -z max-page-size=0x1000 -z separate-code" to linker.
* testsuite/ld-i386/report-reloc-1.l: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/report-reloc-1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pe-x86-64.exp: Pass
"-z max-page-size=0x1000 -z separate-code" to linker.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19609-4e.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19609-6a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19609-6b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19609-7b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19609-7d.d: Likewise.
2021-12-13 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb: Powerpc mark xfail in gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp
Powerpc is not reporting the
Catchpoint 1 (returned from syscall execve), ....
as expected. The issue appears to be with the kernel not returning the
expected result. This patch marks the test failure as an xfail.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28623
2021-12-13 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: improve reuse of value contents when fetching array elements
While working on a Python script, which was interacting with a remote
target, I noticed some weird slowness in GDB. In my program I had a
structure something like this:
struct foo_t
{
int array[5];
};
struct foo_t global_foo;
Then in the Python script I was fetching a complete copy of global
foo, like:
val = gdb.parse_and_eval('global_foo')
val.fetch_lazy()
Then I would work with items in foo_t.array, like:
print(val['array'][1])
I called the fetch_lazy method specifically because I knew I was going
to end up accessing almost all of the contents of val, and so I wanted
GDB to do a single remote protocol call to fetch all the contents in
one go, rather than trying to do lazy fetches for a couple of bytes at
a time.
What I observed was that, after the fetch_lazy call, GDB does,
correctly, fetch the entire contents of global_foo, including all of
the contents of array, however, when I access val.array[1], GDB still
goes and fetches the value of this element from the remote target.
What's going on is that in valarith.c, in value_subscript, for C like
languages, we always end up treating the array value as a pointer, and
then doing value_ptradd, and value_ind, the second of these calls
always returns a lazy value.
My guess is that this approach allows us to handle indexing off the
end of an array, when working with zero element arrays, or when
indexing a raw pointer as an array. And, I agree, that in these
cases, where, even when the original value is non-lazy, we still will
not have the content of the array loaded, we should be using the
value_ind approach.
However, for cases where we do have the array contents loaded, and we
do know the bounds of the array, I think we should be using
value_subscripted_rvalue, which is what we use for non C like
languages.
One problem I did run into, exposed by gdb.base/charset.exp, was that
value_subscripted_rvalue stripped typedefs from the element type of
the array, which means the value returned will not have the same type
as an element of the array, but would be the raw, non-typedefed,
type. In charset.exp we got back an 'int' instead of a
'wchar_t' (which is a typedef of 'int'), and this impacts how we print
the value. Removing typedefs from the resulting value just seems
wrong, so I got rid of that, and I don't see any test regressions.
With this change in place, my original Python script is now doing no
additional memory accesses, and its performance increases about 10x!
2021-12-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: update gdb-gdb.py.in for latest changes to struct field
This commit updates uses of 'loc' and 'loc_kind' to 'm_loc' and
'm_loc_kind' respectively, in gdb-gdb.py.in, which is required after
this commit:
commit cd3f655cc7a55437a05aa8e7b1fcc9051b5fe404
Date: Thu Sep 30 22:38:29 2021 -0400
gdb: add accessors for field (and call site) location
I have also incorporated this change:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182171.html
Which means we print 'm_name' instead of 'name' when displaying the
'm_name' member variable.
Finally, I have also added support for the new TYPE_SPECIFIC_INT
fields, which were added with this commit:
commit 20a5fcbd5b28cca88511ac5a9ad5e54251e8fa6d
Date: Wed Sep 23 09:39:24 2020 -0600
Handle bit offset and bit size in base types
I updated the gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp test to cover all of these
changes.
2021-12-13 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdbserver/linux-low: replace direct assignment to current_thread
Use scoped_restore_current_thread and switch_to_thread in
linux_process_target::wait_for_sigstop.
2021-12-13 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdbserver: replace direct assignments to current_thread
Replace the direct assignments to current_thread with
switch_to_thread. Use scoped_restore_current_thread when appropriate.
There is one instance remaining in linux-low.cc's wait_for_sigstop.
This will be handled in a separate patch.
Regression-tested on X86-64 Linux using the native-gdbserver and
native-extended-gdbserver board files.
2021-12-13 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdbserver: introduce scoped_restore_current_thread and switch_to_thread
Introduce a class for restoring the current thread and a function to
switch to the given thread. This is a preparation for a refactoring
that aims to remove direct assignments to 'current_thread'.
2021-12-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make post_startup_inferior a virtual method on inf_ptrace_target
While working on a later patch that required me to understand how GDB
starts up inferiors, I was confused by the
target_ops::post_startup_inferior method.
The post_startup_inferior target function is only called from
inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior.
Part of the target class hierarchy looks like this:
inf_child_target
|
'-- inf_ptrace_target
|
|-- linux_nat_target
|
|-- fbsd_nat_target
|
|-- nbsd_nat_target
|
|-- obsd_nat_target
|
'-- rs6000_nat_target
Every sub-class of inf_ptrace_target, except rs6000_nat_target,
implements ::post_startup_inferior. The rs6000_nat_target picks up
the implementation of ::post_startup_inferior not from
inf_ptrace_target, but from inf_child_target.
No descendent of inf_child_target, outside the inf_ptrace_target
sub-tree, implements ::post_startup_inferior, which isn't really
surprising, as they would never see the method called (remember, the
method is only called from inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior).
What I find confusing is the role inf_child_target plays in
implementing, what is really a helper function for just one of its
descendents.
In this commit I propose that we formally make ::post_startup_inferior
a helper function of inf_ptrace_target. To do this I will remove the
::post_startup_inferior from the target_ops API, and instead make this
a protected, pure virtual function on inf_ptrace_target.
I'll remove the empty implementation of ::post_startup_inferior from
the inf_child_target class, and add a new empty implementation to the
rs6000_nat_target class.
All the other descendents of inf_ptrace_target already provide an
implementation of this method and so don't need to change beyond
making the method protected within their class declarations.
To me, this makes much more sense now. The helper function, which is
only called from within the inf_ptrace_target class, is now a part of
the inf_ptrace_target class.
The only way in which this change is visible to a user is if the user
turns on 'set debug target 1'. With this debug flag on, prior to this
patch the user would see something like:
-> native->post_startup_inferior (...)
<- native->post_startup_inferior (2588939)
After this patch these lines are no longer present, as the
post_startup_inferior is no longer a top level target method. For me,
this is an acceptable change.
2021-12-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: have mips_nbsd_nat_target inherit from nbsd_nat_target
While working on another patch I had reason to look at
mips-netbsd-nat.c, and noticed that the class mips_nbsd_nat_target
inherits directly from inf_ptrace_target.
This is a little strange as alpha_bsd_nat_target,
arm_netbsd_nat_target, hppa_nbsd_nat_target, m68k_bsd_nat_target,
ppc_nbsd_nat_target, sh_nbsd_nat_target, and vax_bsd_nat_target all
inherit from nbsd_nat_target.
Originally, in this commit:
commit f6ac5f3d63e03a81c4ff3749aba234961cc9090e
Date: Thu May 3 00:37:22 2018 +0100
Convert struct target_ops to C++
When the target tree was converted to C++, all of the above classes
inherited from inf_ptrace_target except for hppa_nbsd_nat_target,
which was the only class that originally inherited from
nbsd_nat_target.
Later on all the remaining targets (except mips) were converted to
inherit from nbsd_nat_target, these are the commits:
commit 4fed520be264b60893aa674071947890f8172915
Date: Sat Mar 14 16:05:24 2020 +0100
Inherit alpha_netbsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
commit 6018d381a00515933016c539d2fdc18ad0d304b8
Date: Sat Mar 14 14:50:51 2020 +0100
Inherit arm_netbsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
commit 01a801176ea15ddfc988cade2e3d84c3b0abfec3
Date: Sat Mar 14 16:54:42 2020 +0100
Inherit m68k_bsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
commit 9faa006d11a5e08264a007463435f84b77864c9c
Date: Thu Mar 19 14:52:57 2020 +0100
Inherit ppc_nbsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
commit 9809762324491b851332ce600ae9bde8dd34f601
Date: Tue Mar 17 15:07:39 2020 +0100
Inherit sh_nbsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
commit d5be5fa4207da00d039a1d5a040ba316e7092cbd
Date: Sat Mar 14 13:21:58 2020 +0100
Inherit vax_bsd_nat_target from nbsd_nat_target
I could only find mailing list threads for ppc and sh in the archive ,
and unfortunately, none of the commits has any real detail that might
explain why mips was missed out, the only extra context I could find
was this message:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-March/166853.html
Which says that "proper" OS support is going to be added to
nbsd_nat_target, hence the need to inherit from that class.
My guess is that leaving mips_nbsd_nat_target unchanged was an
oversight, so, in this commit, I propose changing mips_nbsd_nat_target
to inherit from nbsd_nat_target just like all the other nbsd targets.
My motivation for this patch relates to the post_startup_inferior
target method. In a future commit I want to change how this method is
handled. Currently the mips_nbsd_nat_target will pick up the empty
implementation of inf_child_target::post_startup_inferior rather than
the version in netbsd-nat.c. This feels like a bug to me, as surely,
enabling of proc events is something that would need to be done for
all netbsd targets, regardless of architecture.
In my future patch I have a choice then, either (a) add a new, empty
implementation of post_startup_inferior to mips_nbsd_nat_target,
or (b) this commit, have mips_nbsd_nat_target inherit from
nbsd_nat_target. Option (b) seems like the right way to go, hence,
this commit.
I've done absolutely no testing for this change, not even building it,
as that would require at least an environment in which I can x-build
mips-netbsd applications, which I have no idea how to set up.
2021-12-13 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: only include mips and riscv targets if building with 64-bit bfd
While testing another patch I was trying to build different
configurations of GDB, and, during one test build I ran into a
problem, I configured with `--enable-targets=all
--host=i686-w64-mingw32` and saw this error while linking GDB:
.../i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ld: mips-tdep.o: in function `mips_gdbarch_init':
.../src/gdb/mips-tdep.c:8730: undefined reference to `disassembler_options_mips'
.../i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ld: riscv-tdep.o: in function `riscv_gdbarch_init':
.../src/gdb/riscv-tdep.c:3851: undefined reference to `disassembler_options_riscv'
So the `disassembler_options_mips` and `disassembler_options_riscv`
symbols are missing.
This turns out to be because mips-dis.c and riscv-dis.c, in which
these symbols are defined, are in the TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES list
in opcodes/Makefile.am, these files are only built when we are
building with a 64-bit bfd.
If we look further, into bfd/Makefile.am, we can see that all the
files matching elf*-riscv.lo are in the BFD64_BACKENDS list, as are
the elf*-mips.lo files, and (I know because I tried), the two
disassemblers do, not surprisingly, depend on features supplied from
libbfd.
So, though we can build most of GDB just fine for riscv and mips with
a 32-bit bfd, if I understand correctly, the final GDB
executable (assuming we could get it to link) would not understand
these architectures at the bfd level, nor would there be any
disassembler available. This sounds like a pretty useless GDB to me.
So, in this commit, I move the riscv and mips targets into GDB's list
of targets that require a 64-bit bfd. After this I can build GDB just
fine with the configure options given above.
This was discussed on the mailing list in a couple of threads:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-December/184365.html
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-November/118498.html
and it is agreed, that it is unfortunate that the 32-bit riscv and
32-bit mips targets require a 64-bit bfd. If in the future this
situation ever changes then it would be expected that some (or all) of
this patch would be reverted. Until then though, this patch allows
GDB to build when configured with --enable-targets=all, and when using
a 32-bit libbfd.
2021-12-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
C++-ify path substitution code
I found some uses of xfree in the path substitution code in source.c.
C++-ifying struct substitute_path_rule both simplifies the code and
removes manual memory management.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-12-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] PowerPC64 @notoc in non-power10 code
Gold version of commit 7aba54da42.
elfcpp/
* powerpc.h (R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC): Define.
gold/
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::maybe_skip_tls_get_addr_call,
is_branch_reloc, max_branch_delta): Handle R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC.
(Target_powerpc::Branch_info::make_stub): Likewise.
(struct Plt_stub_ent): Add p9notoc_, p9off_, tsize_.
(struct Branch_stub_ent): Add p9notoc_, p9off_.
(Stub_table::add_plt_call_entry): Handle R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC.
(Stub_table::add_long_branch_entry): Likewise.
(Stub_table::add_eh_frame): Likewise.
(Stub_table::plt_call_size): Return aligned size. Adjust callers.
Handle p9notoc_ sizing.
(Stub_table::do_write): Write out p9notoc_ stubs.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::get_reference_flags, local, global):
Handle R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC.
(Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Likewise.
2021-12-11 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Don't return the main file as the separate debug info
On Fedora 35,
$ readelf -d /usr/bin/npc
caused readelf to run out of stack since load_separate_debug_info
returned the input main file as the separate debug info:
(gdb) bt
#0 load_separate_debug_info (
main_filename=main_filename@entry=0x510f50 "/export/home/hjl/.cache/debuginfod_client/dcc33c51c49e7dafc178fdb5cf8bd8946f965295/debuginfo",
xlink=xlink@entry=0x4e5180 <debug_displays+4480>,
parse_func=parse_func@entry=0x431550 <parse_gnu_debuglink>,
check_func=check_func@entry=0x432ae0 <check_gnu_debuglink>,
func_data=func_data@entry=0x7fffffffdb60, file=file@entry=0x51d430)
at /export/gnu/import/git/sources/binutils-gdb/binutils/dwarf.c:11057
#1 0x000000000043328d in check_for_and_load_links (file=0x51d430,
filename=0x510f50 "/export/home/hjl/.cache/debuginfod_client/dcc33c51c49e7dafc178fdb5cf8bd8946f965295/debuginfo")
at /export/gnu/import/git/sources/binutils-gdb/binutils/dwarf.c:11381
#2 0x00000000004332ae in check_for_and_load_links (file=0x51b070,
filename=0x518dd0 "/export/home/hjl/.cache/debuginfod_client/dcc33c51c49e7dafc178fdb5cf8bd8946f965295/debuginfo")
Return NULL if the separate debug info is the same as the input main
file to avoid infinite recursion.
PR binutils/28679
* dwarf.c (load_separate_debug_info): Don't return the input
main file.
2021-12-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't edit bogus sh_link on reading relocatable objects (Oracle fix)
This reverts a 1995 fix to handle bogus object files. Presumably such
object files have long gone.
* elf.c (bfd_section_from_shdr): Remove old hack for Oracle
libraries.
2021-12-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-10 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
gdb/testsuite: respect GDBSERVER variable in remote-stdio-gdbserver "board"
The comment on top of gdb/testsuite/boards/remote-stdio-gdbserver.exp says
that user can specify path to gdbserver on remote system by setting
GDBSERVER variable. However, this variable was ignored and /usr/bin/gdbserver
was used unconditionally.
This commit updates the code to respect GDBSERVER if set and fall back to
/usr/bin/gdbserver if not.
2021-12-10 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
Revert "gdbsupport: remove unnecessary `#ifndef IN_PROCESS_AGENT`"
This reverts commit fe72c32765e1190c8a17d309fc3a7e1882d6a430.
It turns out it was wrong, libinproctrace.so does build its own
gdbsupport/tdesc.cc. This broke the build:
make[1]: Entering directory '/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdbserver'
CXXLD libinproctrace.so
/usr/bin/ld: gdbsupport/tdesc-ipa.o: in function `print_xml_feature::visit_pre(target_desc const*)':
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:407: undefined reference to `tdesc_architecture_name(target_desc const*)'
/usr/bin/ld: /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:408: undefined reference to `tdesc_architecture_name(target_desc const*)'
/usr/bin/ld: /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:411: undefined reference to `tdesc_osabi_name(target_desc const*)'
/usr/bin/ld: /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:416: undefined reference to `tdesc_compatible_info_list(target_desc const*)'
/usr/bin/ld: /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:418: undefined reference to `tdesc_compatible_info_arch_name(std::unique_ptr<tdesc_compatible_info, std::default_delete<tdesc_compatible_info> > const&)'
2021-12-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28674, objdump crash
Not returning an error indication here leaves the attribute
uninitialised, which then leads to intemperate behaviour.
PR 28674
* dwarf2.c (read_attribute_value): Return NULL on trying to read
past end of attributes.
2021-12-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Set sh_link for reloc sections created as normal sections
binutils-all/strip-13 and binutils-all/strip-14 tests create
SHT_REL/SHT_RELA sections by hand. These don't have sh_link set to
the .symtab section as they should, leading to readelf warnings if you
happen to be looking at the object files.
* elf.c (assign_section_numbers): Formatting. Set sh_link for
reloc sections created as normal sections in relocatable
objects.
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: remove unnecessary `#ifndef IN_PROCESS_AGENT`
I suppose this code was copied from GDBserver and this ifndef was left
there. As far as I know, IN_PROCESS_AGENT will never be defined when
building this file, so we can remove this.
Change-Id: I84fc408e330b3a29106df830a09342861cadbaf6
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/microblaze-tdep.c: fix -Wunused-but-set-variable
Fix this, seen when building with clang 14:
CXX microblaze-tdep.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/microblaze-tdep.c:207:7: error: variable 'flags' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
int flags = 0;
^
Change-Id: I59f726ed33e924912748bc475b6fd9a9394fc0d0
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/csky-tdep.c: fix -Wunused-but-set-variable error
Fix these, seen when building with clang 14:
CXX csky-tdep.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/csky-tdep.c:332:7: error: variable 'need_dummy_stack' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
int need_dummy_stack = 0;
^
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/csky-tdep.c:805:12: error: variable 'offset' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
int offset = 0;
^
Change-Id: I6703bcb50e83c50083f716f4084ef6aa30d659c4
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: fix default behavior of runto
The documented behavior of proc runto is to not emit a PASS when
succeeding to to run to the specified location, but emit a FAIL when
failing to do so. I suppose the intent is that it won't pollute the
results normally passing tests (although I don't see why we would care),
but make visible any problems.
However, it seems like the implementation makes it default to never
print anything. "no-message" is prependend to "args", so if "message"
is not passed, we will always take the path that sets print_fail to 0,
which will silence any failure.
This unfortunately means that tests relying on runto_main won't emit a
FAIL if failing to run to main. And since commit 4dfef5be6812
("gdb/testsuite: make runto_main not pass no-message to runto"), tests
don't emit a FAIL themselves when failing to run to main. This means
that tests failing to run to main just fail silently, and that's bad.
This can be reproduced by hacking gdb.base/template.exp like so:
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/template.c b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/template.c
index bcf39c377d92..052be5b79d73 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/template.c
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/template.c
@@ -15,6 +15,14 @@
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+#include <stdlib.h>
+
+__attribute__((constructor))
+static void c (void)
+{
+ exit (1);
+}
+
int
main (void)
{
Running the modified gdb.base/template.exp shows that it exits without
printing any result.
Remove the line that prepends no-message to args, that should make
runto's behavior match its documentation.
This patch will appear to add many failures, but in reality they already
existed, they were just silenced.
Change-Id: I2a730d5bc72b6ef0698cd6aad962d9902aa7c3d6
2021-12-09 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb fix elfv1 Powerpc gdb.dwarf2/frame-inlined-in-outer-frame.exp
On ELFv1, the _start symbol must point to the *function descriptor* (in
the .opd section), not to the function code (in the .text section) like
with ELFv2 and other architectures.
2021-12-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/maint.exp with -readnow
With test-case gdb.base/maint.exp and target board -readnow, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint info line-table w/o a file name
...
The problem is that this and other regexps anchored using '^':
...
-re "^$gdb_prompt $" {
...
don't trigger because other regexps don't consume the entire preceding line.
This is partly due to the addition of the IS-STMT column.
Fix this by making the regexps consume entire lines.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and target board readnow, as well as
check-read1 and check-readmore.
2021-12-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/include-main.exp with -readnow
With test-case gdb.base/include-main.exp and target board readnow, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/include-main.exp: maint info symtab
...
The corresponding check in gdb.base/include-main.exp:
...
gdb_test_no_output "maint info symtab"
...
checks that no CU was expanded, while -readnow ensures that all CUs are
expanded.
Fix this by skipping the check with -readnow.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with native and target board readnow.
2021-12-09 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Clarify the behavior of .option arch directive.
* To be consistent with -march option, removed the "=" operator when
user want to reset the whole architecture string. So the formats are,
.option arch, +<extension><version>, ...
.option arch, -<extension>
.option arch, <ISA string>
* Don't allow to add or remove the base extensions in the .option arch
directive. Instead, users should reset the whole architecture string
while they want to change the base extension.
* The operator "+" won't update the version of extension, if the
extension is already in the subset list.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_add_subset): Don't update the version
if the extension is already in the subset list.
(riscv_update_subset): To be consistent with -march option,
removed the "=" operator when user want to reset the whole
architecture string. Besides, Don't allow to add or remove
the base extensions in the .option arch directive.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01.s: Updated since we cannot
add or remove the base extensions in the .option arch directive.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-02.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-fail.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-fail.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01a.d: Set -misa-spec=2.2.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-02.d: Updated since the .option
arch, + won't change the version of extension, if the extension is
already in the subset list.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-03.s: Removed the "=" operator
when resetting the whole architecture string.
2021-12-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: use ## for automake comments
The ## marker tells automake to not include the comment in its
generated output, so use that in most places where the comment
only makes sense in the inputs.
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb, gdbserver: detach fork child when detaching from fork parent
While working with pending fork events, I wondered what would happen if
the user detached an inferior while a thread of that inferior had a
pending fork event. What happens with the fork child, which is
ptrace-attached by the GDB process (or by GDBserver), but not known to
the core? Sure enough, neither the core of GDB or the target detach the
child process, so GDB (or GDBserver) just stays ptrace-attached to the
process. The result is that the fork child process is stuck, while you
would expect it to be detached and run.
Make GDBserver detach of fork children it knows about. That is done in
the generic handle_detach function. Since a process_info already exists
for the child, we can simply call detach_inferior on it.
GDB-side, make the linux-nat and remote targets detach of fork children
known because of pending fork events. These pending fork events can be
stored in:
- thread_info::pending_waitstatus, if the core has consumed the event
but then saved it for later (for example, because it got the event
while stopping all threads, to present an all-stop stop on top of a
non-stop target)
- thread_info::pending_follow: if we ran to a "catch fork" and we
detach at that moment
Additionally, pending fork events can be in target-specific fields:
- For linux-nat, they can be in lwp_info::status and
lwp_info::waitstatus.
- For the remote target, they could be stored as pending stop replies,
saved in `remote_state::notif_state::pending_event`, if not
acknowledged yet, or in `remote_state::stop_reply_queue`, if
acknowledged. I followed the model of remove_new_fork_children for
this: call remote_notif_get_pending_events to process /
acknowledge any unacknowledged notification, then look through
stop_reply_queue.
Update the gdb.threads/pending-fork-event.exp test (and rename it to
gdb.threads/pending-fork-event-detach.exp) to try to detach the process
while it is stopped with a pending fork event. In order to verify that
the fork child process is correctly detached and resumes execution
outside of GDB's control, make that process create a file in the test
output directory, and make the test wait $timeout seconds for that file
to appear (it happens instantly if everything goes well).
This test catches a bug in linux-nat.c, also reported as PR 28512
("waitstatus.h:300: internal-error: gdb_signal target_waitstatus::sig()
const: Assertion `m_kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED || m_kind ==
TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED' failed.). When detaching a thread with a
pending event, get_detach_signal unconditionally fetches the signal
stored in the waitstatus (`tp->pending_waitstatus ().sig ()`). However,
that is only valid if the pending event is of type
TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED, and this is now enforced using assertions (iit
would also be valid for TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED, but that would mean
the thread does not exist anymore, so we wouldn't be detaching it). Add
a condition in get_detach_signal to access the signal number only if the
wait status is of kind TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED, and use GDB_SIGNAL_0
instead (since the thread was not stopped with a signal to begin with).
Add another test, gdb.threads/pending-fork-event-ns.exp, specifically to
verify that we consider events in pending stop replies in the remote
target. This test has many threads constantly forking, and we detach
from the program while the program is executing. That gives us some
chance that we detach while a fork stop reply is stored in the remote
target. To verify that we correctly detach all fork children, we ask
the parent to exit by sending it a SIGUSR1 signal and have it write a
file to the filesystem before exiting. Because the parent's main thread
joins the forking threads, and the forking threads wait for their fork
children to exit, if some fork child is not detach by GDB, the parent
will not write the file, and the test will time out. If I remove the
new remote_detach_pid calls in remote.c, the test fails eventually if I
run it in a loop.
There is a known limitation: we don't remove breakpoints from the
children before detaching it. So the children, could hit a trap
instruction after being detached and crash. I know this is wrong, and
it should be fixed, but I would like to handle that later. The current
patch doesn't fix everything, but it's a step in the right direction.
Change-Id: I6d811a56f520e3cb92d5ea563ad38976f92e93dd
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28512
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: move clearing of tp->pending_follow to follow_fork_inferior
A following patch will change targets so that when they detach an
inferior, they also detach any pending fork children this inferior may
have. While doing this, I hit a case where we couldn't differentiate
two cases, where in one we should detach the fork detach but not in the
other.
Suppose we continue past a fork with "follow-fork-mode == child" &&
"detach-on-fork on". follow_fork_inferior calls target_detach to detach
the parent. In that case the target should not detach the fork
child, as we'll continue debugging the child. As of now, the
tp->pending_follow field of the thread who called fork still contains
the details about the fork.
Then, suppose we run to a fork catchpoint and the user types "detach".
In that case, the target should detach the fork child in addition to the
parent. In that case as well, the tp->pending_follow field contains
the details about the fork.
To allow targets to differentiate the two cases, clear
tp->pending_follow a bit earlier, when following a fork. Targets will
then see that tp->pending_follow contains TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS, and
won't detach the fork child.
As of this patch, no behavior changes are expected.
Change-Id: I537741859ed712cb531baaefc78bb934e2a28153
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/remote.c: refactor pending fork status functions
In preparation for a following patch, refactor a few things that I did
find a bit awkward, and to make them a bit more reusable.
- Pass an inferior to kill_new_fork_children instead of a pid. That
allows iterating on only this inferior's threads and avoid further
filtering on the thread's pid.
- Change thread_pending_fork_status to return a non-nullptr value only
if the thread does have a pending fork status.
- Remove is_pending_fork_parent_thread, as one can just use
thread_pending_fork_status and check for nullptr.
- Replace is_pending_fork_parent with is_fork_status, which just
returns if the given target_waitkind if a fork or a vfork. Push
filtering on the pid to the callers, when it is necessary.
Change-Id: I0764ccc684d40f054e39df6fa5458cc4c5d1cd7b
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/remote.c: move some things up
Move the stop_reply and a few functions up. Some code above them in the
file will need to use them in a following patch. No behavior changes
expected here.
Change-Id: I3ca57d0e3ec253f56e1ba401289d9d167de14ad2
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb/linux-nat: factor ptrace-detach code to new detach_one_pid function
The following patch will add some code paths that need to ptrace-detach
a given PID. Factor out the code that does this and put it in its own
function, so that it can be re-used.
Change-Id: Ie65ca0d89893b41aea0a23d9fc6ffbed042a9705
2021-12-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbserver: hide fork child threads from GDB
This patch aims at fixing a bug where an inferior is unexpectedly
created when a fork happens at the same time as another event, and that
other event is reported to GDB first (and the fork event stays pending
in GDBserver). This happens for example when we step a thread and
another thread forks at the same time. The bug looks like (if I
reproduce the included test by hand):
(gdb) show detach-on-fork
Whether gdb will detach the child of a fork is on.
(gdb) show follow-fork-mode
Debugger response to a program call of fork or vfork is "parent".
(gdb) si
[New inferior 2]
Reading /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-while-fork-in-other-thread/step-while-fork-in-other-thread from remote target...
Reading /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-while-fork-in-other-thread/step-while-fork-in-other-thread from remote target...
Reading symbols from target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-while-fork-in-other-thread/step-while-fork-in-other-thread...
[New Thread 965190.965190]
[Switching to Thread 965190.965190]
Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 560 bytes, got 816 bytes): ... <long series of bytes>
The sequence of events leading to the problem is:
- We are using the all-stop user-visible mode as well as the
synchronous / all-stop variant of the remote protocol
- We have two threads, thread A that we single-step and thread B that
calls fork at the same time
- GDBserver's linux_process_target::wait pulls the "single step
complete SIGTRAP" and the "fork" events from the kernel. It
arbitrarily choses one event to report, it happens to be the
single-step SIGTRAP. The fork stays pending in the thread_info.
- GDBserver send that SIGTRAP as a stop reply to GDB
- While in stop_all_threads, GDB calls update_thread_list, which ends
up querying the remote thread list using qXfer:threads:read.
- In the reply, GDBserver includes the fork child created as a result
of thread B's fork.
- GDB-side, the remote target sees the new PID, calls
remote_notice_new_inferior, which ends up unexpectedly creating a new
inferior, and things go downhill from there.
The problem here is that as long as GDB did not process the fork event,
it should pretend the fork child does not exist. Ultimately, this event
will be reported, we'll go through follow_fork, and that process will be
detached.
The remote target (GDB-side), has some code to remove from the reported
thread list the threads that are the result of forks not processed by
GDB yet. But that only works for fork events that have made their way
to the remote target (GDB-side), but haven't been consumed by the core
yet, so are still lingering as pending stop replies in the remote target
(see remove_new_fork_children in remote.c). But in our case, the fork
event hasn't made its way to the GDB-side remote target. We need to
implement the same kind of logic GDBserver-side: if there exists a
thread / inferior that is the result of a fork event GDBserver hasn't
reported yet, it should exclude that thread / inferior from the reported
thread list.
This was actually discussed a while ago, but not implemented AFAIK:
https://pi.simark.ca/gdb-patches/1ad9f5a8-d00e-9a26-b0c9-3f4066af5142@redhat.com/#t
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2016-June/133906.html
Implementation details-wise, the fix for this is all in GDBserver. The
Linux layer of GDBserver already tracks unreported fork parent / child
relationships using the lwp_info::fork_relative, in order to avoid
wildcard actions resuming fork childs unknown to GDB. This information
needs to be made available to the handle_qxfer_threads_worker function,
so it can filter the reported threads. Add a new thread_pending_parent
target function that allows the Linux target to return the parent of an
eventual fork child.
Testing-wise, the test replicates pretty-much the sequence of events
shown above. The setup of the test makes it such that the main thread
is about to fork. We stepi the other thread, so that the step completes
very quickly, in a single event. Meanwhile, the main thread is resumed,
so very likely has time to call fork. This means that the bug may not
reproduce every time (if the main thread does not have time to call
fork), but it will reproduce more often than not. The test fails
without the fix applied on the native-gdbserver and
native-extended-gdbserver boards.
At some point I suspected that which thread called fork and which thread
did the step influenced the order in which the events were reported, and
therefore the reproducibility of the bug. So I made the test try both
combinations: main thread forks while other thread steps, and vice
versa. I'm not sure this is still necessary, but I left it there
anyway. It doesn't hurt to test a few more combinations.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28288
Change-Id: I2158d5732fc7d7ca06b0eb01f88cf27bf527b990
2021-12-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use for-each more in gdb
There are some loops in gdb that use ARRAY_SIZE (or a wordier
equivalent) to loop over a static array. This patch changes some of
these to use foreach instead.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-12-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix error in file_and_directory patch
In my earlier C++-ization patch for file_and_directory, I introduced
an error:
- if (strcmp (fnd.name, "<unknown>") != 0)
+ if (fnd.is_unknown ())
This change inverted the sense of the test, which causes failures with
.debug_names.
This patch fixes the bug. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34. I
also tested it using the AdaCore internal test suite, with
.debug_names -- this was failing before, and now it works.
2021-12-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: Use tp_init instead of tp_new to setup gdb.Value
The documentation suggests that we implement gdb.Value.__init__,
however, this is not currently true, we really implement
gdb.Value.__new__. This will cause confusion if a user tries to
sub-class gdb.Value. They might write:
class MyVal (gdb.Value):
def __init__ (self, val):
gdb.Value.__init__(self, val)
obj = MyVal(123)
print ("Got: %s" % obj)
But, when they source this code they'll see:
(gdb) source ~/tmp/value-test.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/andrew/tmp/value-test.py", line 7, in <module>
obj = MyVal(123)
File "/home/andrew/tmp/value-test.py", line 5, in __init__
gdb.Value.__init__(self, val)
TypeError: object.__init__() takes exactly one argument (the instance to initialize)
(gdb)
The reason for this is that, as we don't implement __init__ for
gdb.Value, Python ends up calling object.__init__ instead, which
doesn't expect any arguments.
The Python docs suggest that the reason why we might take this
approach is because we want gdb.Value to be immutable:
https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/typeobj.html#c.PyTypeObject.tp_new
But I don't see any reason why we should require gdb.Value to be
immutable when other types defined in GDB are not. This current
immutability can be seen in this code:
obj = gdb.Value(1234)
print("Got: %s" % obj)
obj.__init__ (5678)
print("Got: %s" % obj)
Which currently runs without error, but prints:
Got: 1234
Got: 1234
In this commit I propose that we switch to using __init__ to
initialize gdb.Value objects.
This does introduce some additional complexity, during the __init__
call a gdb.Value might already be associated with a gdb value object,
in which case we need to cleanly break that association before
installing the new gdb value object. However, the cost of doing this
is not great, and the benefit - being able to easily sub-class
gdb.Value seems worth it.
After this commit the first example above works without error, while
the second example now prints:
Got: 1234
Got: 5678
In order to make it easier to override the gdb.Value.__init__ method,
I have tweaked the definition of gdb.Value.__init__. The second,
optional argument to __init__ is a gdb.Type, if this argument is not
present then GDB figures out a suitable type.
However, if we want to override the __init__ method in a sub-class,
and still support the default argument, it is easier to write:
class MyVal (gdb.Value):
def __init__ (self, val, type=None):
gdb.Value.__init__(self, val, type)
Currently, passing None for the Type will result in an error:
TypeError: type argument must be a gdb.Type.
After this commit I now allow the type argument to be None, in which
case GDB figures out a suitable type just as if the type had not been
passed at all.
Unless a user is trying to reinitialize a value, or create sub-classes
of gdb.Value, there should be no user visible changes after this
commit.
2021-12-08 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: use try/catch around a gdb_disassembler::print_insn call
While investigating some disassembler problems I ran into this case;
GDB compiled on a 32-bit arm target, with --enable-targets=all. Then
in GDB:
(gdb) set architecture i386
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
This is interesting because it shows a case where the libopcodes
disassembler is returning -1 without first calling the
memory_error_func callback. Indeed, the return from libopcodes
happens from this code snippet in i386-dis.c in the print_insn
function:
if (address_mode == mode_64bit && sizeof (bfd_vma) < 8)
{
(*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream,
_("64-bit address is disabled"));
return -1;
}
Notice how, prior to the return the disassembler tries to print a
helpful message out, but GDB doesn't print this message.
The reason this message goes missing is the call stack, it looks like
this:
gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn
gdb_disassembler::print_insn
gdbarch_print_insn
...
i386-dis.c:print_insn
When i386-dis.c:print_insn returns -1 this is handled in
gdb_disassembler::print_insn, where an exception is thrown. However,
the actual printing of the disassembler output is done in
gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn, and is only done if
an exception is not thrown.
In this commit I change this. The pretty_print_insn now uses
try/catch around the call to gdb_disassembler::print_insn, if we catch
an error then we first print any pending output in the instruction
buffer, before rethrowing the exception. As a result, even if an
exception is thrown we still print any pending disassembler output to
the screen; in the above case the helpful message will now be shown.
Before my patch we might expect to see this output:
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x0000000000000000: unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
(gdb)
But now we see this:
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x0000000000000000: 64-bit address is disabled
unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
If the disassembler returns -1 without printing a helpful message then
we would still expect a change in output, something like:
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x0000000000000000:
unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
Which I think is still acceptable, though at this point I think a
strong case can be made that this is a disassembler bug (not printing
anything, but still returning -1).
Notice however, that the error message is always printed on a new line
now. This is also true for the memory error case, where before we
might see this:
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x00000000: Cannot access memory at address 0x0
We now get this:
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x00000000:
Cannot access memory at address 0x0
For me, I'm happy to accept this change, having the error on a line by
itself, rather than just appended to the end of the previous line,
seems like an improvement, but I'm aware others might feel
differently, so I'd appreciate any feedback.
2021-12-08 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
ppc: recognize all program traps
Permanent program breakpoints (ones inserted into the code) other than
the one GDB uses for POWER (0x7fe00008) did not result in stop but
caused GDB to loop infinitely.
This was because GDB did not recognize trap instructions other than
"trap". For example, "tw 12, 4, 4" was not be recognized, causing GDB
to loop forever.
This commit fixes this by providing POWER specific hook
(gdbarch_program_breakpoint_here_p) recognizing all tw, twi, td and tdi
instructions.
Tested on Linux on PowerPC e500 and on QEMU PPC64le.
2021-12-08 Jan Vrany <jan.vrany@labware.com>
ppc: use "trap" ("tw, 31, 0, 0") as breakpoint instruction
Power ISA 3.0 B spec [1], sections 3.3.11 "Fixed-Point Trap Instructions"
and section C.6 "Trap Mnemonics" specify "tw, 31, 0, 0" (encoded as
0x7fe00008) as canonical unconditional trap instruction.
This commit changes the breakpoint instruction used by GDB from
"tw 12, r2, r2" to unconditional "trap".
[1]: https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=power-isa-version-3-0
2021-12-08 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
bfd_section_from_shdr: Support SHT_RELR sections
If a.so contains an SHT_RELR section, objcopy a.so will fail with:
a.so: unknown type [0x13] section `.relr.dyn'
This change allows objcopy to work.
bfd/
* elf.c (bfd_section_from_shdr): Support SHT_RELR.
2021-12-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28673, input file 'gcov' is the same as output file
PR 28673
* ldlang.c (open_output): Use local_sym_name when checking
output against input files rather than filename.
2021-12-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix bug in source.c change
My earlier change to source.c ("Remove an xfree from add_path")
introduced a regression. This patch fixes the problem.
2021-12-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make struct linespect contain vectors, not pointers to vectors
struct linespec contains pointers to vectors, instead of containing
vectors directly. This is probably historical, when linespec_parser
(which contains a struct linespec field) was not C++-ified yet. But it
seems easy to change the pointers to vectors to just vectors today.
This simplifies the code, we don't need to manually allocate and delete
the vectors and there's no pointer that can be NULL.
As far as I understand, there was not meaningful distinction between a
NULL pointer to vector and an empty vector. So all NULL checks are
changed for !empty checks.
Change-Id: Ie759707da14d9d984169b93233343a86e2de9ee6
2021-12-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-07 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove an xfree from add_path
This removes a temporary \0 assignment and an xfree from add_path,
replacing it with a simpler use of std::string.
2021-12-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/linespec.c: simplify condition
We can remove the empty check: if the vector has size 1, it is obviously
not empty. This code ended up like this because the empty check used to
be a NULL check.
Change-Id: I1571bd0228818ca93f6a6b444e9b010dc2da4c08
2021-12-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: rename "maint agent" functions
Functions agent_eval_command and agent_command are used to implement
maintenance commands, rename them accordingly (with the maint_ prefix),
as well as the agent_command_1 helper function.
Change-Id: Iacf96d4a0a26298e8dd4648a0f38da649ea5ef61
2021-12-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make set_raw_breakpoint static
set_raw_breakpoint is only used in breakpoint.c, make it static.
Change-Id: I7fbeda067685309a30b88aceaf957eff7a28e310
2021-12-07 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Support AT_FXRNG and AT_KPRELOAD on FreeBSD.
FreeBSD's kernel has recently added two new ELF auxiliary vector
entries. AT_FXRNG points to a root seed version for the kernel's
PRNG. Userland can use this to reseed a userland PRNG after the
kernel's PRNG has reseeded. AT_KPRELOAD is the base address of a
kernel-provided vDSO.
This change displays the proper name and description of these entries
in 'info auxv'.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/common.h (AT_FREEBSD_FXRNG, AT_FREEBSD_KPRELOAD): Define.
2021-12-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid extra work in global_symbol_searcher::expand_symtabs
I noticed that global_symbol_searcher::expand_symtabs always passes a
file matcher to expand_symtabs_matching. However, if 'filenames' is
empty, then this always returns true. It's slightly more efficient to
pass a null file matcher in this case, because that lets the "quick"
symbol implementations skip any filename checks.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-12-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix options arg handling in compile_jit_elf_main_as_so
In commit 80ad340c902 ("[gdb/testsuite] use -Ttext-segment for jit-elf tests")
the following change was made:
...
proc compile_jit_elf_main_as_so {main_solib_srcfile main_solib_binfile options} {
- set options [concat $options debug]
+ global jit_load_address jit_load_increment
+
+ set options [list \
+ additional_flags="-DMAIN=jit_dl_main" \
+ additional_flags=-DLOAD_ADDRESS=$jit_load_address \
+ additional_flags=-DLOAD_INCREMENT=$jit_load_increment \
+ debug]
...
Before the change, the options argument was used, but after the change not
anymore.
Fix this by reverting back to using "set options [concat $options ...]".
Fixing this gets us twice the -DMAIN=jit_dl_main bit, once from a caller, and
once from compile_jit_elf_main_as_so. Fix this by removing the bit from
compile_jit_elf_main_as_so, which makes the code similar to compile_jit_main.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-12-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.tui/basic.exp
On openSUSE Leap 15.2 aarch64 I ran into:
...
FAIL: gdb.tui/basic.exp: check main is where we expect on the screen
...
while this is passing on x86_64.
On x86_64-linux we have at the initial screen dump for "list -q main":
...
0 +-/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.tui/tui-layout.c--+
1 | 15 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public |
2 | 16 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/|
3 | 17 |
4 | 18 int |
5 | 19 main () |
6 | 20 { |
7 | 21 return 0; |
8 | 22 } |
9 | 23 |
...
but on aarch64:
...
0 +-/home/tdevries/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.tui/tui-layout.c--------------+
1 | 16 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/|
2 | 17 |
3 | 18 int |
4 | 19 main () |
5 | 20 { |
6 | 21 return 0; |
7 | 22 } |
8 | 23 |
9 | 24 |
...
The cause of the diffferent placement is that we have as line number for main
on x86_64:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.tui/basic/basic -ex "info line main"
Line 20 of "tui-layout.c" starts at address 0x4004a7 <main> \
and ends at 0x4004ab <main+4>.
...
and on aarch64 instead:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.tui/basic/basic -ex "info line main"
Line 21 of "tui-layout.c" starts at address 0x4005f4 <main> \
and ends at 0x4005f8 <main+4>.
...
Fix this by using a new source file main-one-line.c, that implements the
entire main function on a single line, in order to force the compiler to use
that line number.
Also try to do less hard-coding in the test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
2021-12-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Fix inferior plt calls in PIE for i386
Consider test-case test.c:
...
int main (void) {
void *p = malloc (10);
return 0;
}
...
When compiled to a non-PIE exec:
...
$ gcc -m32 test.c
...
the call sequence looks like:
...
8048447: 83 ec 0c sub $0xc,%esp
804844a: 6a 0a push $0xa
804844c: e8 bf fe ff ff call 8048310 <malloc@plt>
...
which calls to:
...
08048310 <malloc@plt>:
8048310: ff 25 0c a0 04 08 jmp *0x804a00c
8048316: 68 00 00 00 00 push $0x0
804831b: e9 e0 ff ff ff jmp 8048300 <.plt>
...
where the first insn at 0x8048310 initially jumps to the following address
0x8048316, read from the .got.plt @ 0x804a00c:
...
804a000 0c9f0408 00000000 00000000 16830408 ................
804a010 26830408 &...
...
Likewise, when compiled as a PIE:
...
$ gcc -m32 -fPIE -pie test.c
...
we have this call sequence (with %ebx setup to point to the .got.plt):
...
0000055d <main>:
579: 83 ec 0c sub $0xc,%esp
57c: 6a 0a push $0xa
57e: 89 c3 mov %eax,%ebx
580: e8 6b fe ff ff call 3f0 <malloc@plt>
...
which calls to:
...
000003f0 <malloc@plt>:
3f0: ff a3 0c 00 00 00 jmp *0xc(%ebx)
3f6: 68 00 00 00 00 push $0x0
3fb: e9 e0 ff ff ff jmp 3e0 <.plt>
...
where the insn at 0x3f0 initially jumps to following address 0x3f6, read from
the .got.plt at offset 0xc:
...
2000 f41e0000 00000000 00000000 f6030000 ................
2010 06040000 ....
...
When instead doing an inferior call to malloc (with nosharedlib to force
malloc to resolve to malloc@plt rather than the functions in ld.so or libc.so)
with the non-PIE exec, we have the expected:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex start -ex nosharedlib -ex "p /x (void *)malloc (10)"
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x8048444
Temporary breakpoint 1, 0x08048444 in main ()
$1 = 0x804b160
...
But with the PIE exec, we run into:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex start -ex nosharedlib -ex "p /x (void *)malloc (10)"
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x56c
Temporary breakpoint 1, 0x5655556c in main ()
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x565553f0 in malloc@plt ()
...
The segfault happens because:
- the inferior call mechanism doesn't setup %ebx
- %ebx instead is 0
- the jump to "*0xc(%ebx)" reads from memory at 0xc
Fix this by setting up %ebx properly in i386_thiscall_push_dummy_call.
Fixes this failure with target board unix/-m32/-pie/-fPIE reported in
PR28467:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/nodebug.exp: p/c (int) array_index("abcdef",2)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux, with target board unix/-m32 and unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28467
2021-12-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Support -readnow during reread
When running test-case gdb.base/cached-source-file.exp with target board
readnow, we run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/cached-source-file.exp: rerun program (the program exited)
...
The problem is that when rereading, the readnow is ignored.
Fix this by copying the readnow handling code from symbol_file_add_with_addrs
to reread_symbols.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26800
2021-12-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/ada] Fix assert in ada_is_unconstrained_packed_array_type
On openSUSE Leap 42.3, with system compiler gcc 4.8.5 I run into:
...
(gdb) print u_one_two_three^M
src/gdb/gdbtypes.h:1050: internal-error: field: \
Assertion `idx >= 0 && idx < num_fields ()' failed.^M
...
We run into trouble while doing this in
ada_is_unconstrained_packed_array_type:
...
1953 return TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, 0) > 0;
...
which tries to get field 0 from a type without fields:
...
(gdb) p type->num_fields ()
$6 = 0
...
which is the case because the type is a typedef:
...
(gdb) p type->code ()
$7 = TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
...
Fix this by using the type referenced by the typedef instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28323
2021-12-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Add support for AArch64 EFI (efi-*-aarch64)
Commit b69c9d41e8 was broken in multiple ways regarding the realloc
of the target string, most notably in that "-little" wasn't actually
appended to the input_target or output_target. This caused asan
errors and "FAIL: Check if efi app format is recognized". I also
noticed that the input_target string wasn't being copied but rather
the output_target when dealing with the input target. Fix that too.
PR 26206
* objcopy.c (convert_efi_target): Rewrite. Allocate modified
target strings here..
(copy_main): ..rather than here. Do handle input_target,
not output_target for input.
2021-12-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Error on ld output file name matching input file name
It's not foolproof, for example we don't catch output to a linker
script, to a library specified with -l, or to an element of a thin
archive.
* ldlang.c (open_output): Exit with error on output file matching
an input file.
* testsuite/ld-misc/just-symbols.exp: Adjust ld -r test to suit.
2021-12-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-06 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb: Add PowerPC support to gdb.dwarf2/frame-inlined-in-outer-frame
This patch adds an #elif defined for PowerPC to setup the exit_0 macro.
This patch addes the needed macro definitionald logic to handle both elfV1
and elfV2.
The patch has been successfully tested on both PowerPC BE, Powerpc LE and
X86_64 with no regressions.
2021-12-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use precise align in gdb.arch/i386-{avx,sse}.exp
Test-cases gdb.arch/i386-{avx,sse}.exp use assembly instructions that require
the memory operands to be aligned to a certain boundary, and the test-cases
use C11's _Alignas to make that happen.
The draw-back of using _Alignas is that while it does enforce a minimum
alignment, the actual alignment may be bigger, which makes the following
scenario possible:
- copy say, gdb.arch/i386-avx.c as basis for a new test-case
- run the test-case and observe a PASS
- commit the new test-case in the supposition that the test-case is correct
and well-tested
- run later into a failure on a different test setup (which may be a setup
where reproduction and investigation is more difficult and time-consuming),
and find out that the specified alignment was incorrect and should have been
updated to say, 64 bytes. The initial PASS occurred only because the actual
alignment happened to be greater than required.
The idea of having precise alignment as a means of having more predictable
execution which allows flushing out bugs earlier, has been filed as PR
gcc/103095.
Add a new file lib/precise-aligned-alloc.c with functions
precise_aligned_alloc and precise_aligned_dup, to support precise alignment.
Use precise_aligned_dup in aforementioned test-cases to:
- verify that the specified alignment is indeed sufficient, rather
than too little but accidentally over-aligned.
- prevent the same type of problems in any new test-cases based on these
Tested on x86_64-linux, with both gcc and clang.
2021-12-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix data alignment in gdb.arch/i386-{avx,sse}.exp
When running test-case gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp with clang I ran into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp: set first breakpoint in main
continue^M
Continuing.^M
^M
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.^M
0x000000000040052b in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd3c8) at i386-avx.c:54^M
54 asm ("vmovaps 0(%0), %%ymm0\n\t"^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp: continue to breakpoint: \
continue to first breakpoint in main
...
The problem is that the vmovaps insn requires an 256-bit (or 32-byte) aligned
address, and it's only 16-byte aligned:
...
(gdb) p /x $rax
$1 = 0x601030
...
Fix this by using a sufficiently aligned address, using _Alignas.
Compile using -std=gnu11 to support _Alignas.
Likewise in gdb.arch/i386-sse.exp.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with both gcc and clang.
2021-12-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] PowerPC64 inline plt sequences
The fixes gold failures to handle inline PLT sequences properly.
PowerPC gold was always turning these back into direct calls due to
gsym->use_plt_offset() returning false. This is fixed for dynamic
linking by correcting get_reference_flags, and for static linking by
overriding use_plt_offset() in relocate(). The rest of the patch
revolves around needing to create PLT entries for inline PLT calls
when statically linking (for gcc -mlongcall). The lplt section
handled that for local symbols, now it does globals too.
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::plt_off): Return proper section
for static link.
(Target_powerpc::symval_for_branch): Make public.
(Target_powerpc::make_lplt_section): Add Symbol_table* param.
Adjust all calls.
(Target_powerpc::make_local_plt_entry): Likewise.
(Target_powerpc::make_local_plt_entry): New variant for global syms.
(Powerpc_relobj::do_relocate_sections): Don't write lplt contents.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::do_write): Write lplt contents here.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::Output_data_plt_powerpc): Save
symbol table pointer. Adjust all uses.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::add_entry): Add stash parameter. Don't
do dynamic reloc handling when no reloc section. Save symbol
for local plt entries.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::add_local_entry): Save symbol.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::Local_plt_ent): New class.
(Output_data_plt_powerpc::sym_ents_): New vector.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::get_reference_flags): Return
FUNCTION_CALL|RELATIVE_REF for inline plt relocs.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::global): Make entries in lplt for inline
plt call relocation symbols.
(Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Rename has_plt_offset to
use_plt_offset. Set use_plt_offset for inline plt relocs.
2021-12-06 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
ld: improve shared tests for AIX
It's now possible to refer symbols in the main program from the
shared library. However, it still impossible to have the same
overriden features between shared objects and mains than ELF,
without using the runtime linking feature which isn't yet fully
available.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Improve XCOFF support
* testsuite/ld-shared/main.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-shared/sh1.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-shared/xcoff.dat: Likewise.
2021-12-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Preserve artificial CU name in process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader
This fixes a use-after-free that Simon pointed out.
process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader was allocating an artificial name for
a CU, and then discarding it. However, this name was preserved in the
cached file_and_directory. This patch arranges for the allocated name
to be preserved there.
2021-12-05 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: include ansidecl.h when needed
Avoid implicit include deps with this to help untangle sim headers
so we can get rid of arch-specific sim-main.h.
sim: include stdint.h when needed
Avoid implicit include deps with this to help untangle sim headers
so we can get rid of arch-specific sim-main.h.
sim: include stdarg.h when used
Avoid implicit include deps with this to help untangle sim headers
so we can get rid of arch-specific sim-main.h.
2021-12-05 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: reorder header includes
We're including system headers after local headers in a bunch of
places, but this leads to conflicts when our local headers happen
to define symbols that show up in the system headers.
Use the more standard order of:
* config.h (via defs.h)
* system headers
* local library headers (e.g. bfd & libiberty)
* sim specific headers
2021-12-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: fix memory leak in create_file_handler when re-using file handler
ASan made me notice a memory leak, where the memory tied to the file
handle name string wasn't freed. When register a file handler with an
fd that is already registered, we re-use the file_handler object, so we
ended up creating a new std::string object and overwriting the
file_handler::name pointer, without free-ing the old std::string.
Fix this by allocating file_handler with new, deleting it with
delete, and making file_handler::name not a pointer.
Change-Id: Ie304cc78ab5ae5dfad9a1366e9890c09de651f43
2021-12-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: moxie: hoist dtb rules up to common builds
These rules don't depend on the target compiler settings, so hoist
the build logic up to the common builds for better parallelization.
sim: m68hc11: delete unused profile flags
These were moved to the common configure script a while ago and have
the same default as these, so just delete it.
sim: msp430: delete redundant comments & settings
These were copied from the example docs, so aren't adding any value.
sim: erc32: drop old configure target
There is no configure script in here anymore to regenerate.
sim: m32c/rl78: drop redundant -Wall settings
We already turn these on in the configure script.
2021-12-04 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Cache the result of find_file_and_directory
This changes the DWARF reader to cache the result of
find_file_and_directory. This is not especially important now, but it
will help the new DWARF indexer.
Move file_and_directory to new file and C++-ize
This moves file_and_directory to a new file, and then C++-izes it --
replacing direct assignments with methods, and arranging for it to own
any string that must be computed. Finally, the CU's objfile will only
be used on demand; this is an important property for the new DWARF
indexer's parallel mode.
Remove Irix case from find_file_and_directory
find_file_and_directory has a special case for the Irix 6.2 compiler.
Since this is long obsolete, this patch removes it.
2021-12-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: frv: split up testsuite a bit
Running frv's allinsn in serial is quite slow due to the sheer number
of tests it contains. By splitting it up and running in parallel, the
execution time on my system goes from ~100sec to ~60sec.
2021-12-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: don't show deprecated aliases
I don't think it's very useful to show deprecated aliases to the
user. It encourages the user to use them, when the goal is the
opposite.
For example, before:
(gdb) help set index-cache enabled
set index-cache enabled, set index-cache off, set index-cache on
alias set index-cache off = set index-cache enabled off
alias set index-cache on = set index-cache enabled on
Enable the index cache.
When on, enable the use of the index cache.
(gdb) help set index-cache on
Warning: 'set index-cache on', an alias for the command 'set index-cache enabled', is deprecated.
Use 'set index-cache enabled on'.
set index-cache enabled, set index-cache off, set index-cache on
alias set index-cache off = set index-cache enabled off
alias set index-cache on = set index-cache enabled on
Enable the index cache.
When on, enable the use of the index cache.
After:
(gdb) help set index-cache enabled
Enable the index cache.
When on, enable the use of the index cache.
(gdb) help set index-cache on
Warning: 'set index-cache on', an alias for the command 'set index-cache enabled', is deprecated.
Use 'set index-cache enabled on'.
Enable the index cache.
When on, enable the use of the index cache.
Change-Id: I989b618a5ad96ba975367e9d16db95523cd57a4c
2021-12-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: fix two "maint info line-table"-related tests
Commit 92228a334ba2 ("gdb: small "maintenance info line-table"
readability improvements") change the output format of "maint info
line-table" slightly, adding some empty lines between each
line-table. This causes two tests to start failing, update them to
account for those empty lines.
Change-Id: I9d33a58fce3e860ba0554b25f5582e8066a5c519
2021-12-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: revert one array_view copy change in ada-lang.c
Commit 4bce7cdaf481 ("gdbsupport: add array_view copy function") caused
an internal error when running gdb.ada/packed_array_assign.exp:
print pra(1) := pr^M
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/array-view.h:217: internal-error: copy: Assertion `dest.size () == src.size ()' failed.^M
I am not sure what's the root cause of this, whether it is a GDB bug
exposed by using the array_view copy function or not. Back out the
change that triggers the internal error for now, while we investigate
it.
Change-Id: I055ab14143e4cfd3ca7ce8f4855c6c3c05db52a7
2021-12-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: unify header generation rules
The logic between these rules are extremely similar, so unify them
into a single variable.
2021-12-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: move header updates up a directory
The rules for rebuilding the bfd headers live in the doc/ subdir
(most likely) because they rely on the chew & related tools. But
we can collapse them into the main Makefile while keeping the tools
in the doc subdir easily enough. This makes the code simpler and
allows for rebuilding them in parallel.
Also add automake silent rule support while we're here.
2021-12-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: convert bfdver.h to silent automake rules
2021-12-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: small "maintenance info line-table" readability improvements
- separate each entry with a newline, to visually separate them
- style filenames with the filename style
- print the name of the compunit_symtab
A header now looks like this, with the compunit_symtab name added (and
the coloring, but you can't really see it here):
objfile: /home/simark/build/babeltrace/src/cli/.libs/babeltrace2 ((struct objfile *) 0x613000005980)
compunit_symtab: babeltrace2-cfg-cli-args.c ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x62100da1ed10)
symtab: /usr/include/glib-2.0/glib/gdatetime.h ((struct symtab *) 0x62100d9ee530)
linetable: ((struct linetable *) 0x0):
Change-Id: Idc23e10aaa66e2e692adb0a6a74144f72c4fa1c7
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: change some alias functions parameters to const-reference
Now that we use intrusive list to link aliases, it becomes easier to
pass cmd_list_element arguments by const-reference rather than by
pointer to some functions, change a few.
Change-Id: Id0df648ed26e9447da0671fc2c858981cda31df8
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use intrusive_list for cmd_list_element aliases list
Change the manually-implemented linked list to use intrusive_list. This
is not strictly necessary, but it makes the code much simpler.
Change-Id: Idd08090ebf2db8bdcf68e85ef72a9635f1584ccc
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: trivial changes to use array_view
Change a few relatively obvious spots using value contents to propagate
the use array_view a bit more.
Change-Id: I5338a60986f06d5969fec803d04f8423c9288a15
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make extract_integer take an array_view
I think it would make sense for extract_integer, extract_signed_integer
and extract_unsigned_integer to take an array_view. This way, when we
extract an integer, we can validate that we don't overflow the buffer
passed by the caller (e.g. ask to extract a 4-byte integer but pass a
2-byte buffer).
- Change extract_integer to take an array_view
- Add overloads of extract_signed_integer and extract_unsigned_integer
that take array_views. Keep the existing versions so we don't
need to change all callers, but make them call the array_view
versions.
This shortens some places like:
result = extract_unsigned_integer (value_contents (result_val).data (),
TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (result_val)),
byte_order);
into
result = extract_unsigned_integer (value_contents (result_val), byte_order);
value_contents returns an array view that is of length
`TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (result_val))` already, so the length is
implicitly communicated through the array view.
Change-Id: Ic1c1f98c88d5c17a8486393af316f982604d6c95
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: add array_view copy function
An assertion was recently added to array_view::operator[] to ensure we
don't do out of bounds accesses. However, when the array_view is copied
to or from using memcpy, it bypasses that safety.
To address this, add a `copy` free function that copies data from an
array view to another, ensuring that the destination and source array
views have the same size. When copying to or from parts of an
array_view, we are expected to use gdb::array_view::slice, which does
its own bounds check. With all that, any copy operation that goes out
of bounds should be caught by an assertion at runtime.
copy is implemented using std::copy and std::copy_backward, which, at
least on libstdc++, appears to pick memmove when copying trivial data.
So in the end there shouldn't be much difference vs using a bare memcpy,
as we do right now. When copying non-trivial data, std::copy and
std::copy_backward assigns each element in a loop.
To properly support overlapping ranges, we must use std::copy or
std::copy_backward, depending on whether the destination is before the
source or vice-versa. std::copy and std::copy_backward don't support
copying exactly overlapping ranges (where the source range is equal to
the destination range). But in this case, no copy is needed anyway, so
we do nothing.
The order of parameters of the new copy function is based on std::copy
and std::copy_backward, where the source comes before the destination.
Change a few randomly selected spots to use the new function, to show
how it can be used.
Add a test for the new function, testing both with arrays of a trivial
type (int) and of a non-trivial type (foo). Test non-overlapping
ranges as well as three kinds of overlapping ranges: source before dest,
dest before source, and dest == source.
Change-Id: Ibeaca04e0028410fd44ce82f72e60058d6230a03
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: change store_waitstatus to return a target_waitstatus by value
store_waitstatus is basically a translation function between a status
integer and an equivalent target_waitstatus object. It would make sense
for it to take the integer as a parameter and return the
target_waitstatus by value. Do that, and rename to
host_status_to_waitstatus. Users can then do:
ws = host_status_to_waitstatus (status)
which does the right thing, given the move constructor of
target_waitstatus.
Change-Id: I7a07d59d3dc19d3ed66929642f82f44f3e85d61b
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: return *this in target_waitstatus setters
While playing with some code creating target_waitstatus objects, I was
mildly annoyed by the fact that we can't just return a new
target_waitstatus object. We have to do:
target_waitstatus ws;
ws.set_exited (123);
return ws;
Make the setters return the "this" object as a reference, such that it's
possible to do:
return target_waitstatus ().set_exited (123);
I initially thought of adding static creation functions, which you would
use like:
return target_waitstatus::make_exited (123);
However, making the setters return a reference to the object achieves
pretty much the same thing, with less new code.
Change-Id: I45159b7f9fcd9db5b20603480e323020b14ed147
2021-12-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make saved_filename an std::string
Make this variable an std::string, avoiding manual memory management.
Change-Id: Ie7a8d7381449ab9c4dfc4cb8b99e63b9ffa8f947
2021-12-03 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Fix uninitialised memory
AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B and AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B
are not paired with an error string, but we had an assert that the
error was nonnull. Previously this assert was testing uninitialised
memory and so could pass or fail arbitrarily.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (verify_mops_pme_sequence): Initialize the error
field to null for AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B and
AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B.
* aarch64-dis.c (print_verifier_notes): Move assert.
2021-12-03 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: make value_subscripted_rvalue static
The function value_subscripted_rvalue is only used in valarith.c, so
lets make it a static function.
There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2021-12-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: give a test a real name
A test in gdb.python/py-send-packet.exp added in this commit:
commit 24b2de7b776f8f23788d855b1eec290c6e208821
Date: Tue Aug 31 14:04:36 2021 +0100
gdb/python: add gdb.RemoteTargetConnection.send_packet
included a large amount of binary data in the command sent to GDB. As
this test didn't have a real test name the binary data was included in
the gdb.sum file. The contents of the binary data could change
between different runs of GDB, and this makes comparing results
harder.
This commit gives the test a real test name.
2021-12-03 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/remote: fix use after free bug
This commit:
commit 288712bbaca36bff6578bc839ebcdc3707662f81
Date: Mon Nov 22 15:16:27 2021 +0000
gdb/remote: use scoped_restore to control starting_up flag
introduced a use after free bug. The scoped restore added in the
above commit resets a flag within a remote_target's remote_state
object.
However, in some situations, the remote_target can be unpushed before
the error is thrown. If the only reference to the target is the one
in the target stack, then unpushing the target will cause the
remote_target to be deleted, which, in turn, will delete the
remote_state object. The scoped restore will then try to reset the
flag within a deleted object.
This problem was caught in the gdb.server/server-connect.exp test,
which, when run with the address sanitizer enabled, highlights the
write after free bug described above.
This commit resolves this issue by adding a new class specifically for
the purpose of managing the starting_up flag. As well as setting, and
then clearing the starting_up flag, this new class increments, and
then decrements the reference count on the remote_target object. This
prevents the remote_target from being deleted until after the flag has
been reset.
The gdb.server/server-connect.exp now runs cleanly with the address
sanitizer enabled.
2021-12-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
libctf: workaround automake bug with conditional info pages
It looks like automake makes assumptions about its ability to build info
pages based on the GNU standard behavior of shipping info pages with the
distributions. So even though the info pages were conditionalized, and
automake disabled some of the targets, it was still creeping in by way
of unconditional INFO_DEPS settings.
We can workaround this by adding a stub target for the info page when
building info pages are disabled. This tricks automake into disabling
its own extended generation target. I'll follow up with the automake
folks to see what they think.
2021-12-03 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Add myself and Zhensong Liu as the LoongArch port maintainer.
2021-12-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert "Re: Don't compile some opcodes files when bfd is 32-bit only"
This reverts commit 7a53275579e7cec9389ccb924f5ecf69e8d89d41.
The bpf sim doesn't work with a 32-bit bfd after all.
2021-12-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove unexpected xstrdup in _initialize_maint_test_settings
That xstrdup is not correct, since we are assigning an std::string. The
result of xstrdup is used to initialize the string, and then lost
forever. Remove it.
Change-Id: Ief7771055e4bfd643ef3b285ec9fb7b1bfd14335
2021-12-02 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix illegal memory access whilst parsing corrupt DWARF debug information.
PR 28645
* dwarf.c (process_cu_tu_index): Add test for overruning section
whilst processing slots.
2021-12-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Fix avx512 -m32 support in gdbserver
PR27257 reports a problem that can be reproduced as follows:
- use x86_64 machine with avx512 support
- compile a hello world with -m32 to a.out
- start a gdbserver session with a.out
- use gdb to connect to the gdbserver session
This makes us run into:
...
Listening on port 2346
Remote debugging from host ::1, port 34940
src/gdbserver/regcache.cc:257: \
A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.
Unknown register zmm16h requested
...
The problem is that i387_xsave_to_cache in gdbserver/i387-fp.cc can't find a
register zmm16h in the register cache.
To understand how this happens, first some background.
SSE has 16 128-bit wide xmm registers.
AVX extends the SSE registers set as follows:
- it extends the 16 existing 128-bit wide xmm registers to 256-bit wide ymm
registers.
AVX512 extends the AVX register set as follows:
- it extends the 16 existing 256-bit wide ymm registers to 512-bit wide zmm
registers.
- it adds 16 additional 512-bit wide zmm registers (with corresponding ymm and
xmm subregisters added as well)
However, in 32-bit mode, there are only 8 xmm/ymm/zmm registers.
The problem we're running into is that gdbserver/i387-fp.cc uses these
constants to describe the size of the register file:
...
static const int num_avx512_zmmh_low_registers = 16;
static const int num_avx512_zmmh_high_registers = 16;
static const int num_avx512_ymmh_registers = 16;
static const int num_avx512_xmm_registers = 16;
...
which are all incorrect for the 32-bit case.
Fix this by replacing the constants with variables that have the appropriate
values in 64-bit and 32-bit mode.
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and unix/-m32.
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: update tests looking for "DWARF 2" debug format
Commit ab557072b8ec ("gdb: use actual DWARF version in compunit's
debugformat field") changes the debug format string in "info source" to
show the actual DWARF version, rather than always show "DWARF 2".
However, it failed to consider that some tests checked for the "DWARF 2"
string to see if the test program is compiled with DWARF debug
information. Since everything is compiled with DWARF 4 or 5 nowadays,
that changed the behavior of those tests. Notably, it prevent the
tests using skip_inline_var_tests to run.
Grep through the testsuite for "DWARF 2" and change all occurrences I
could find to use "DWARF [0-9]" instead (that string is passed to TCL's
string match).
Change-Id: Ic7fb0217fb9623880c6f155da6becba0f567a885
2021-12-02 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
(PPC64) fix handling of fixed-point values when using "return" command
In the gdb.ada/fixed_points_function.exp testcase, we have the following
Ada code...
type FP1_Type is delta 0.1 range -1.0 .. +1.0; -- Ordinary
function Call_FP1 (F : FP1_Type) return FP1_Type is
begin
FP1_Arg := F;
return FP1_Arg;
end Call_FP1;
... used as follow:
F1 : FP1_Type := 1.0;
F1 := Call_FP1 (F1);
The testcase, among other things, verifies that "return" works
properly as follow:
| (gdb) return 1.0
| Make pck.call_fp1 return now? (y or n) y
| [...]
| 9 F1 := Call_FP1 (F1);
| (gdb) next
| (gdb) print f1
| $1 = 0.0625
The output of the last command shows that we returned the wrong
value. The value printed gives a clue about the problem, since
it is 1/16th of the value we expected, where 1/16 is FP1_Type's
scaling factor.
The problem, here, comes from the fact that the function
handling return values for base types (ppc64_sysv_abi_return_value_base)
writes the return value using unpack_long which, upon seeing that
the value being unpacked is a fixed point type, applies the scaling
factor, to get the integer-representation of our fixed-point value
(similar to what it does with floats, for instance).
So, the fix consists in teaching ppc64_sysv_abi_return_value_base
about fixed-point types, and to avoid the unwanted application
of the scaling factor.
Note that the "finish" function, on the other hand, does not
suffer from this issue, simply becaue the value returned by
the function is read from register without the use of a type,
thus avoiding an unwanted application of a scaling factor.
No test added, as this change is already tested by
gdb.ada/fixed_points_function.exp.
Co-Authored-By: Tristan Gingold <gingold@adacore.com>
2021-12-02 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
(RISCV) fix handling of fixed-point type return values
This commit adds support for TYPE_CODE_FIXED_POINT types for
"finish" and "return" commands.
Consider the following Ada code...
type FP1_Type is delta 0.1 range -1.0 .. +1.0; -- Ordinary
function Call_FP1 (F : FP1_Type) return FP1_Type is
begin
FP1_Arg := F;
return FP1_Arg;
end Call_FP1;
... used as follow:
F1 : FP1_Type := 1.0;
F1 := Call_FP1 (F1);
"finish" currently behaves as follow:
| (gdb) finish
| [...]
| Value returned is $1 = 0
We expect the returned value to be "1".
Similarly, "return" makes the function return the wrong value:
| (gdb) return 1.0
| Make pck.call_fp1 return now? (y or n) y
| [...]
| 9 F1 := Call_FP1 (F1);
| (gdb) next
| (gdb) print f1
| $1 = 0.0625
(we expect it to print "1" instead).
This problem comes from the handling of integral return values
when the return value is actually fixed point type. Our type
here is actually a range of a fixed point type, but the same
principles should also apply to pure fixed-point types. For
the record, here is what the debugging info looks like:
<1><238>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_subrange_type)
<239> DW_AT_lower_bound : -16
<23a> DW_AT_upper_bound : 16
<23b> DW_AT_name : pck__fp1_type
<23f> DW_AT_type : <0x248>
<1><248>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_base_type)
<249> DW_AT_byte_size : 1
<24a> DW_AT_encoding : 13 (signed_fixed)
<24b> DW_AT_binary_scale: -4
<24c> DW_AT_name : pck__Tfp1_typeB
<250> DW_AT_artificial : 1
... where the scaling factor is 1/16.
Looking at the "finish" command, what happens is that riscv_arg_location
determines that our return value should be returned by parameter using
an integral convention (via builtin type long). And then,
riscv_return_value uses a cast to that builtin type long to
store the value of into a buffer with the right register size.
This doesn't work in our case, because the underlying value
returned by the function is unscaled, which means it is 16,
and thus the cast is like doing:
arg_val = (FP1_Type) 16
... In other words, it is trying to create an FP1_Type enty whose
value is 16. Applying the scaling factor, that's 256, and because
the size of FP1_Type is 1 byte, we overflow and thus it ends up
being zero.
The same happen with the "return" function, but the other way around.
The fix consists in handling fixed-point types separately from
integral types.
2021-12-02 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
(ARM/fixed-point) wrong value shown by "finish" command:
Consider the following Ada code:
type FP1_Type is delta 0.1 range -1.0 .. +1.0; -- Ordinary
FP1_Arg : FP1_Type := 0.0;
function Call_FP1 (F : FP1_Type) return FP1_Type is
begin
FP1_Arg := F;
return FP1_Arg;
end Call_FP1;
After having stopped inside function Call_FP1 as follow:
Breakpoint 1, pck.call_fp1 (f=1) at /[...]/pck.adb:5
5 FP1_Arg := F;
Returning from that function call using "finish" should show
that the function return "1.0" (the same value as was passed
as an argument). However, this is not the case:
(gdb) finish
Run till exit from #0 pck.call_fp1 (f=1)
[...]
9 F1 := Call_FP1 (F1);
Value returned is $1 = 0
This patch enhances the extraction of the return value to know about
fixed point types.
2021-12-02 Xavier Roirand <roirand@adacore.com>
(Ada/AArch64) fix fixed point argument passing in inferior funcall
Consider the following code:
type FP1_Type is delta 0.1 range -1.0 .. +1.0; -- Ordinary
function Call_FP1 (F : FP1_Type) return FP1_Type is
begin
return F;
end Call_FP1;
When the default in GCC is to generate proper DWARF info for fixed point
types, then in gdb, printing the result of a call to call_fp1 with a
decimal parameter leads to:
(gdb) p call_fp1(0.5)
$1 = 0
The displayed value is wrong, and we actually expected:
(gdb) p call_fp1(0.5)
$1 = 0.5
What happened is that our fixed point type parameter got promoted to a
32bit integer because we detected that the length of that object was less
than 4 bytes. The compiler does not perform this promotion and therefore
GDB should not either.
This patch fixes the behavior described above.
2021-12-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Implement 'task apply'
This adds a 'task apply' command, which is the Ada tasking analogue of
'thread apply'. Unlike 'thread apply', it doesn't offer the
'ascending' flag; but otherwise it's essentially the same.
Add "task" keyword to the "watch" command
Breakpoints in gdb can be made specific to an Ada task using the
"task" qualifier. This patch applies this same idea to watchpoints.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Update gas/NEWS for recent changes
gas/
* NEWS: Mention support for Armv8.8-A and for new system registers.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add BC instruction
This patch adds support for the Armv8.8-A BC instruction.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0596/2021-09/Base-Instructions/BC-cond--Branch-Consistent-conditionally-?lang=en]
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_HBC): New macro.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_8): Make armv8.8-a imply AARCH64_FEATURE_HBC.
opcodes/
* aarch64-tbl.h (aarch64_feature_hbc): New variable.
(HBC, HBC_INSN): New macros.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Add BC.C.
* aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document +hbc.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_features): Add "hbc".
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/hbc.s, testsuite/gas/aarch64/hbc.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/hbc-invalid.s,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/hbc-invalid.l,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/hbc-invalid.d: New test.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Enforce P/M/E order for MOPS instructions
The MOPS instructions should be used as a triple, such as:
cpyfp [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
cpyfm [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
cpyfe [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
The registers should also be the same for each writeback operand.
This patch adds a warning for code that doesn't follow this rule,
along similar lines to the warning that we already emit for
invalid uses of MOVPRFX.
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (C_SCAN_MOPS_P, C_SCAN_MOPS_M, C_SCAN_MOPS_E)
(C_SCAN_MOPS_PME): New macros.
(AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B): New aarch64_operand_error_kind.
(AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B): Likewise.
(aarch64_operand_error): Make each data value a union between
an int and a string.
opcodes/
* aarch64-tbl.h (MOPS_CPY_OP1_OP2_INSN): Add scan flags.
(MOPS_SET_OP1_OP2_INSN): Likewise.
* aarch64-opc.c (set_out_of_range_error): Update after change to
aarch64_operand_error.
(set_unaligned_error, set_reg_list_error): Likewise.
(init_insn_sequence): Use a 3-instruction sequence for
MOPS P instructions.
(verify_mops_pme_sequence): New function.
(verify_constraints): Call it.
* aarch64-dis.c (print_verifier_notes): Handle
AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B and AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B.
gas/
* config/tc-aarch64.c (operand_mismatch_kind_names): Add entries
for AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B and AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B.
(operand_error_higher_severity_p): Check that
AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B and AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B
come between AARCH64_OPDE_RECOVERABLE and AARCH64_OPDE_SYNTAX_ERROR;
their relative order is not significant.
(record_operand_error_with_data): Update after change to
aarch64_operand_error.
(output_operand_error_record): Likewise. Handle
AARCH64_OPDE_A_SHOULD_FOLLOW_B and AARCH64_OPDE_EXPECTED_A_AFTER_B.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid_2.s,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid_2.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid_2.l: New test.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add support for +mops
This patch adds support for FEAT_MOPS, an Armv8.8-A extension
that provides memcpy and memset acceleration instructions.
I took the perhaps controversial decision to generate the individual
instruction forms using macros rather than list them out individually.
This becomes useful with a follow-on patch to check that code follows
the correct P/M/E sequence.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0596/2021-09/Base-Instructions?lang=en]
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_MOPS): New macro.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_8): Make armv8.8-a imply AARCH64_FEATURE_MOPS.
(AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rd): New aarch64_opnd.
(AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rs): Likewise.
(AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_WB_Rn): Likewise.
opcodes/
* aarch64-asm.h (ins_x0_to_x30): New inserter.
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_x0_to_x30): New function.
* aarch64-dis.h (ext_x0_to_x30): New extractor.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_x0_to_x30): New function.
* aarch64-tbl.h (aarch64_feature_mops): New feature set.
(aarch64_feature_mops_memtag): Likewise.
(MOPS, MOPS_MEMTAG, MOPS_INSN, MOPS_MEMTAG_INSN)
(MOPS_CPY_OP1_OP2_PME_INSN, MOPS_CPY_OP1_OP2_INSN, MOPS_CPY_OP1_INSN)
(MOPS_CPY_INSN, MOPS_SET_OP1_OP2_PME_INSN, MOPS_SET_OP1_OP2_INSN)
(MOPS_SET_INSN): New macros.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Add MOPS instructions.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Add entries for AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rd,
AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rs and AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_WB_Rn.
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_print_operand): Handle
AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rd, AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rs and
AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_WB_Rn.
(verify_three_different_regs): New function.
* aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
* aarch64-dis-2.c: Likewise.
* aarch64-opc-2.c: Likewise.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document +mops.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_x0_to_x30): New function.
(parse_operands): Handle AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rd,
AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_ADDR_Rs and AARCH64_OPND_MOPS_WB_Rn.
(aarch64_features): Add "mops".
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops.s, testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/mops_invalid.l: Likewise.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add Armv8.8-A system registers
Armv8.8-A defines two new system registers: allint and icc_nmiar1_el1.
Both of them were previously unmapped. allint supports a 0/1 immediate.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0595/2021-09/AArch64-Registers/ALLINT--All-Interrupt-Mask-Bit?lang=en]
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0595/2021-09/AArch64-Registers/ICC-NMIAR1-EL1--Interrupt-Controller-Non-maskable-Interrupt-Acknowledge-Register-1?lang=en]
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (SR_V8_8): New macro.
(aarch64_sys_regs): Add allint and icc_nmiar1_el1.
(aarch64_pstatefields): Add allint.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_8-a-sysregs.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_8-a-sysregs.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_8-a-sysregs-invalid.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_8-a-sysregs-invalid.l,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_8-a-sysregs-invalid.d: New test.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add id_aa64isar2_el1
Armv8.8-A defines a read-only system register called id_aa64isar2_el1.
The register was previously RES0 and should therefore be accepted
at all architecture levels.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0595/2021-09/AArch64-Registers/ID-AA64ISAR2-EL1--AArch64-Instruction-Set-Attribute-Register-2?lang=en]
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_sys_regs): Add id_aa64isar2_el1.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-diagnostic.s: Test writes to
id_aa64isar2_el1.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-diagnostic.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-diagnostic.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg.s: Test reads from
id_aa64isar2_el1.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg.d: Update accordingly.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add support for Armv8.8-A
This patch adds skeleton support for -march=armv8.8-a, testing only
that it correctly inherits from armv8.7-a.
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_V8_8): New macro.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_8): Likewise.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document armv8.8-a.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_archs): Add armv8-8-a
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/v8-8-a.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/v8-8-a.d: New test.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Provide line info for unclosed sequences
We warn about MOVPRFX instructions that have no following
instruction. This patch adds a line number to the message,
which is useful if the assembly code has multiple text sections.
The new code is unconditional since OBJ_ELF is always defined
for aarch64.
gas/
* config/tc-aarch64.h (aarch64_segment_info_type): Add last_file
and last_line.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (now_instr_sequence): Delete.
(force_automatic_sequence_close): Provide a line number when
reporting unclosed sequences.
(md_assemble): Record the location of the instruction in
tc_segment_info.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-movprfx_4.l: Add line number to error
message.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-movprfx_7.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-movprfx_8.l: Likewise.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Tweak insn sequence code
libopcodes has some code to check constraints across sequences
of consecutive instructions. It was added to support MOVPRFX
sequences but is going to be useful for the Armv8.8-A MOPS
feature as well.
Currently the structure has one field to record the instruction
that started a sequence and another to record the remaining
instructions in the sequence. It's more convenient for the
MOPS code if we put the instructions into a single array instead.
No functional change intended.
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (aarch64_instr_sequence): Replace num_insns
and current_insns with num_added_insns and num_allocated_insns.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (add_insn_to_sequence): New function.
(init_insn_sequence): Update for new aarch64_instr_sequence layout.
Add the first instruction to the inst array.
(verify_constraints): Update for new aarch64_instr_sequence layout.
Don't add the last instruction to the array.
2021-12-02 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add maximum immediate value to aarch64_sys_reg
The immediate form of MSR has a 4-bit immediate field (in CRm).
However, many forms of MSR require a smaller immediate. These cases
are identified by value in operand_general_constraint_met_p,
but they're now the common case rather than the exception.
This patch therefore adds the maximum value to the sys_reg
description and gets the range from there. It also enforces
the minimum of 0, which avoids a situation in which:
msr dit, #2
would give the expected:
Error: immediate value out of range 0 to 1
whereas:
msr dit, #-1
would give:
Error: immediate value out of range 0 to 15
(from the later UIMM4 checking).
Also:
- we were reporting the first error above against the wrong operand
- TCO takes a single-bit immediate, but we previously allowed
all 16 values.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0596/2021-09/Base-Instructions/MSR--immediate---Move-immediate-value-to-Special-Register-?lang=en]
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.h (F_REG_MAX_VALUE, F_GET_REG_MAX_VALUE): New macros.
* aarch64-opc.c (operand_general_constraint_met_p): Read the
maximum MSR immediate value from aarch64_pstatefields.
(aarch64_pstatefields): Add the maximum immediate value
for each register.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-4.s: Use an immediate value of 1
rather than 8 for the TCO test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-4.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/armv8_2-a-illegal.l: Fix operand number
in MSR immediate error messages.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/diagnostic.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pan-illegal.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/ssbs-illegal1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-4b.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-4b.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-4b.l: New test.
2021-12-02 Marcus Nilsson <brainbomb@gmail.com>
Allow the --visualize-jumps feature to work with the AVR disassembler.
* avr-dis.c (avr_operand); Pass in disassemble_info and fill
in insn_type on branching instructions.
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb, include: replace pragmas with DIAGNOSTIC macros, fix build with g++ 4.8
When introducing this code, I forgot that we had some macros for this.
Replace some "manual" pragma diagnostic with some DIAGNOSTIC_* macros,
provided by include/diagnostics.h.
In diagnostics.h:
- Add DIAGNOSTIC_ERROR, to enable a diagnostic at error level.
- Add DIAGNOSTIC_ERROR_SWITCH, to enable -Wswitch at error level, for
both gcc and clang.
Additionally, using DIAGNOSTIC_PUSH, DIAGNOSTIC_ERROR_SWITCH and
DIAGNOSTIC_POP seems to misbehave with g++ 4.8, where we see these
errors:
CXX ada-tasks.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ada-tasks.c: In function void read_known_tasks():
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ada-tasks.c:998:10: error: enumeration value ADA_TASKS_UNKNOWN not handled in switch [-Werror=switch]
switch (data->known_tasks_kind)
^
Because of the POP, the diagnostic should go back to being disabled,
since it was disabled in the beginning, but that's not what we see
here. Versions of GCC >= 5 compile correctly.
Work around this by making DIAGNOSTIC_ERROR_SWITCH a no-op for GCC < 5.
Note that this code (already as it exists in master today) enables
-Wswitch at the error level even if --disable-werror is passed. It
shouldn't be a problem, as it's not like a new enumerator will appear
out of nowhere and cause a build error if building with future
compilers. Still, for correctness, we would ideally want to ask the
compiler to enable -Wswitch at its default level (as if the user had
passed -Wswitch on the command-line). There doesn't seem to be a way to
do this.
Change-Id: Id33ebec3de39bd449409ea0bab59831289ffe82d
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gas: re-generate configure
When configuring gas, I get:
config.status: error: cannot find input file: `doc/Makefile.in'
This is because configure is out-of-date, re-generate it.
Change-Id: Iaa5980c282900d9fd23b90f0df25bf8ba3676498
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
libctf: re-generate configure
When configuring libctf, I get:
config.status: error: cannot find input file: `doc/Makefile.in'
This is because configure is out-of-date, re-generate it.
Change-Id: Ie69acd33012211a4620661582c7d24ad6d2cd169
2021-12-02 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Skip __[start|stop]_SECNAME for --gc-sections -z start-stop-gc
Don't convert memory load to immediate load on __start_SECNAME and
__stop_SECNAME for --gc-sections -z start-stop-gc if all SECNAME
sections been garbage collected.
bfd/
PR ld/27491
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_convert_load_reloc): Skip __start_SECNAME
and __stop_SECNAME for --gc-sections -z start-stop-gc if the input
section been garbage collected.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_convert_load_reloc): Likewise.
* elfxx-x86.h (elf_x86_start_stop_gc_p): New function.
ld/
PR ld/27491
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Run PR ld/27491 tests.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-1.s: New file.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-3.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-4a.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr27491-4b.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-1a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-3.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-4a.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr27491-4b.s: Likewise.
2021-12-02 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
bfd: delete unused proto settings
These have been around for decades but don't appear to be used, and
trying to build them (e.g. `make archive.p archive.ip`) doesn't work,
so just delete it all.
gas: merge doc subdir up a level
This avoids a recursive make into the doc subdir and speeds up the
build slightly. It also allows for more parallelism.
libctf: merge doc subdir up a level
This avoids a recursive make into the doc subdir and speeds up the
build slightly. It also allows for more parallelism.
2021-12-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use actual DWARF version in compunit's debugformat field
The "info source" command, with a DWARF-compile program, always show
that the debug info is "DWARF 2":
(gdb) info source
Current source file is test.c
Compilation directory is /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb
Located in /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/test.c
Contains 2 lines.
Source language is c.
Producer is GNU C17 9.3.0 -mtune=generic -march=x86-64 -g3 -gdwarf-5 -O0 -fasynchronous-unwind-tables -fstack-protector-strong -fstack-clash-protection -fcf-protection.
Compiled with DWARF 2 debugging format.
Includes preprocessor macro info.
Change it to display the actual DWARF version:
(gdb) info source
Current source file is test.c
Compilation directory is /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb
Located in /home/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/test.c
Contains 2 lines.
Source language is c.
Producer is GNU C17 9.3.0 -mtune=generic -march=x86-64 -g3 -gdwarf-5 -O0 -fasynchronous-unwind-tables -fstack-protector-strong -fstack-clash-protection -fcf-protection.
Compiled with DWARF 5 debugging format.
Includes preprocessor macro info.
The comp_unit_head::version field is guaranteed to be between 2 and 5,
thanks to the check in read_comp_unit_head. So we can still use static
strings to pass to record_debugformat, and keep it efficient.
In the future, when somebody will update GDB to support DWARF 6, they'll
hit this assert and have to update this code.
Change-Id: I3270b7ebf5e9a17b4215405bd2e365662a4d6172
2021-12-02 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Discard input .note.gnu.build-id sections
1. Discard input .note.gnu.build-id sections.
2. Clear the build ID field before writing.
3. Use bfd_make_section_anyway_with_flags to create the output
.note.gnu.build-id section.
PR ld/28639
* ldelf.c (ldelf_after_open): Discard input .note.gnu.build-id
sections, excluding the first one.
(write_build_id): Clear the build ID field before writing.
(ldelf_setup_build_id): Use bfd_make_section_anyway_with_flags
to create the output .note.gnu.build-id section.
* testsuite/ld-elf/build-id.exp: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28639a.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28639b.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28639c.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28639d.rd: Likewise.
2021-12-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-12-01 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
binutils: add missing prefix for binutils/index.html rule
2021-12-01 Luca Boccassi <luca.boccassi@gmail.com>
readelf: recognize FDO Packaging Metadata ELF note. (Correcting snafu during patch application)
2021-12-01 Luca Boccassi <luca.boccassi@gmail.com>
readelf: recognize FDO Packaging Metadata ELF note
As defined on: https://systemd.io/COREDUMP_PACKAGE_METADATA/
this note will be used starting from Fedora 36. Allow
readelf --notes to pretty print it:
Displaying notes found in: .note.package
Owner Data size Description
FDO 0x00000039 FDO_PACKAGING_METADATA
Packaging Metadata: {"type":"deb","name":"fsverity-utils","version":"1.3-1"}
2021-12-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix typo in gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp
With gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp I run into:
...
Running src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp ...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp.
ERROR: wrong # args: extra words after "else" clause in "if" command
while executing
"if [istarget "powerpc64*-*-*"] {
set march "-m64"
} else if [istarget "s390*-*-*"] {
set march "-m31"
} else {
set march "-m32"
}"
...
Fix the else if -> elseif typo.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-12-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.arch/i386-pkru.exp on linux
When running test-case gdb.arch/i386-pkru.exp on a machine with "Memory
Protection Keys for Userspace" support, we run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/i386-pkru.exp: probe PKRU support
print $pkru^M
$2 = 1431655764^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-pkru.exp: pkru register
...
The test-case expects the $pkru register to have the default value 0, matching
the "init state" of 0 defined by the XSAVE hardware.
Since linux kernel version v4.9 containing commit acd547b29880 ("x86/pkeys:
Default to a restrictive init PKRU"), the register is set to 0x55555554 by
default (which matches the printed decimal value above).
Fix the FAIL by accepting this value for linux.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-12-01 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix the fields in the x_n union inside the the x_file structure so that pointers can be stored.
PR 28630
* coff/internal.h (x_n): Use bfd_hostptr_t for the fields in this
structure.
2021-12-01 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/remote: use scoped_restore to control starting_up flag
This commit makes use of a scoped_restore object to control the
remote_state::starting_up flag within the remote_target::start_remote
method.
Ideally I would have liked to create the scoped_restore inside
start_remote and just leave the restore in place until the end of the
scope, however, I'm worried that doing this would change the behaviour
of GDB. Specifically, in start_remote, the following code is executed
once the starting_up flag has been restored to its previous value:
if (breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now ())
insert_breakpoints ();
I think (but am not 100% sure) that calling install_breakpoints could
end up back inside remote_target::can_download_tracepoint, which does
check the value of remote_state::starting_up. And so, I'm concerned
that leaving the scoped_restore in place until the end of start_remote
will cause a possible change in behaviour.
To avoid this, and to leave things as close to the current behaviour
as possible, I've split remote_target::start_remote into two, there's
the main function body which moves into remote_target::start_remote_1,
this function uses the scoped_restore to change the ::starting_up
flag, then there's the old remote_target::start_remote, which now just
calls ::start_remote_1, and then does the insert_breakpoints call.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit, unless
there's a situation where the ::starting_up flag could previously have
been left set, if this was the case, then this situation should no
longer be possible.
2021-12-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb.base/corefile-buildid.exp: fix DUPLICATEs when failing to generate a core file
When my system isn't properly configured to generate core files in the
local directory, I see these DUPLICATEs:
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/corefile-buildid.exp: could not generate core file
Fix that by having a single with_test_prefix around that message and
what follows.
Change-Id: I4ac245fcce1c666db56e3bad3582aa17f183dcba
2021-12-01 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gold: enable silent build rules
2021-12-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-30 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb: Powerpc fix gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp test
The expect file has a procedure append_arch_options which sets march based
the istarget. The current if / else statement does not check for
powerpc64. The else statement is hit which sets march to -m32. This
results in compilation errors on 64-bit PowerPC.
This patch adds an if statement to check for powerpc64 and if true sets mach
to -m64.
The patch was tested on a Power 10 system. No compile errors were generated.
The test completes with 1 expected pass and no failures.
2021-11-30 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
binutils: regenerate Makefile.in after doc/ changes
2021-11-30 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
Fix missing build dependency for binutils man pages
binutils/
* doc/local.mk: Give each man page target its missing dependency on
doc/$(am__dirstamp).
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Add missing system registers [PR27145]
This patch adds support for various system registers, up to Armv8.7-A.
This includes all the registers that were mentioned in the PR and that
hadn't become supported since.
opcodes/
PR aarch64/27145
* aarch64-opc.c (SR_V8_4): Remove duplicate definition.
(SR_V8_6, SR_V8_7, SR_GIC, SR_AMU): New macros.
(aarch64_sys_regs): Add missing entries (up to Armv8.7-A).
gas/
PR aarch64/27145
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-8.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-8.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8.l,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8b.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8b.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-8b.l: New tests.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg.s: Change system register numbers
to ones that are still unallocated.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg.d: Update accordingly.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Make LOR registers conditional on +lor
We have a +lor feature flag for the Limited Ordering Regions
extension, but the associated registers didn't use it.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (SR_LOR): New macro.
(aarch64_sys_regs): Use it for lorc_el1, lorea_el1, lorn_el1 and
lorsa_el1.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sysreg-7.s: Enable +lor.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-7.s: Test for LOR registers
without +lor.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-7.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-7.l: Likewise.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Remove ZIDR_EL1
ZIDR_EL1 was part of an early version of SVE, but didn't make
it to the final release.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_sys_regs): Remove zidr_el1 entry.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-sysreg.s: Remove zidr_el1.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-sysreg.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-sysreg-invalid.l: Likewise.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Allow writes to MFAR_EL3
MFAR_EL3 is a read/write register, but was incorrectly marked as
read-only
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0601/2021-09/AArch64-Registers/MFAR-EL3--PA-Fault-Address-Register?lang=en]
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_sys_regs): Mark mfar_el3 as read-write.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rme.s: Test writing to mfar_el3.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rme.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rme-invalid.s: Delete.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rme-invalid.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/rme-invalid.d: Likewise.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Mark PMSIDR_EL1 as read-only
We were incorrectly allowing writes to PMSIDR_EL1, which is
a read-only register.
[https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0595/2021-09/AArch64-Registers/PMSIDR-EL1--Sampling-Profiling-ID-Register?lang=en]
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_sys_regs): Make pmsidr_el1 as F_REG_READ.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/msr.s: Remove write to pmsidr_el1.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/msr.d: Update accordingly.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-2.s,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-2.d,
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-sysreg-2.l: New test.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Remove duplicate system register entries
There is a lot of overlap between the ETM and ETE system registers,
so some registers were listed twice.
Already tested by etm.[sd] and ete.[sd].
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_sys_regs): Combine ETE and ETM blocks
and remove redundant entries.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/etm.s: Remove duplicated test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/etm.d: Update accordingly.
2021-11-30 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
aarch64: Check for register aliases before mnemonics
Previously we would not accept:
A .req B
if A happened to be the name of an instruction. Adding new
instructions could therefore invalidate existing register aliases.
I noticed this with a test that used "zero" as a register alias
for "xzr", where "zero" is now also the name of an SME instruction.
I don't have any evidence that "real" code is doing this, but it
seems at least plausible.
This patch switches things so that we check for register aliases
first. It might slow down parsing slightly, but the difference
is unlikely to be noticeable.
Things like:
b .req + 0
still work, since create_register_alias checks for " .req ",
and with the input scrubber, we'll only keep whitespace after
.req if it's followed by another name. If there's some valid
expression that I haven't thought about that is scrubbed to
" .req ", users could avoid the ambiguity by wrapping .req
in parentheses.
The new test for invalid aliases already passed. I just wanted
something to exercise the !dot condition.
I can't find a way of exercising the (existing) p == base condition,
but I'm not brave enough to say that it can never happen. If it does
happen, get_mnemonic_name would return an empty string.
gas/
* config/tc-aarch64.c (opcode_lookup): Move mnemonic extraction
code to...
(md_assemble): ...here. Check for register aliases first.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/register_aliases.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/register_aliases.s: Test for a register
alias called "zero".
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/register_aliases_invalid.d,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/register_aliases_invalid.l,
testsuite/gas/aarch64/register_aliases_invalid.s: New test.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: don't use the 'p' format for parsing args
When running the gdb.python/py-arch.exp tests on a GDB built
against Python 2 I ran into some errors. The problem is that this
test script exercises the gdb.Architecture.integer_type method, and
this method uses 'p' as an argument format specifier in a call to
gdb_PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords.
Unfortunately this specified was only added in Python 3.3, so will
cause an error for earlier versions of Python.
This commit switches to use the 'O' specifier to collect a PyObject,
and then uses PyObject_IsTrue to convert the object to a boolean.
An earlier version of this patch incorrectly switched from using 'p'
to use 'i', however, it was pointed out during review that this would
cause some changes in behaviour, for example both of these will work
with 'p', but not with 'i':
gdb.selected_inferior().architecture().integer_type(32, None)
gdb.selected_inferior().architecture().integer_type(32, "foo")
The new approach of using 'O' works fine with these cases. I've added
some new tests to cover both of the above.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@sdflex.arch.suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/style.exp with stub-termcap
When running test-case gdb.base/style.exp with a gdb build using
stub-termcap.c, we run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20
^M<et width 30^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: set width 30
...
The problem is that we're trying to issue the command "set width 30" while
width is set to 20, which causes horizontal scrolling.
Fix this by resetting the width to 0 before issuing the "set width 30"
command.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24582
2021-11-30 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Use dwarf_vma type for offsets, ranges and section sizes in DWARF decoder.
* dwarf.c (find_debug_info_for_offset): Use dwarf_vma type for
offsets, sizes and ranges.
(display_loc_list): Likewise. Also use print_dwarf_vma to print
the offset.
(display_loclists_list): Likewise.
(display_loc_list_dwo): Likewise.
(display_debug_str): Likewise.
(display_debug_aranges): Likewise.
(display_debug_ranges_list): Likewise.
(display_debug_rnglists_list): Likewise.
(display_debug_ranges): Likewise.
ld: pru: Add pru_irq_map output section
* scripttempl/pru.sc (.pru_irq_map): Define output section.
* testsuite/ld-pru/pru_irq_map-1.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-pru/pru_irq_map-2.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-pru/pru_irq_map.s: New test.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: check the python module is available before using it
The gdb.python/py-inferior-leak.exp test makes use of the tracemalloc
module. When running the Python tests with a GDB built against Python
2 I ran into a test failure due to the tracemalloc module not being
available.
This commit adds a new helper function to lib/gdb-python.exp that
checks if a named module is available. Using this we can then skip
the py-inferior-leak.exp test when the tracemalloc module is not
available.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix disassembler regressions for 32-bit arm
After this commit:
commit 76b43c9b5c2b275cbf4f927bfc25984410cb5dd5
Date: Tue Oct 5 15:10:12 2021 +0100
gdb: improve error reporting from the disassembler
We started seeing FAILs in the gdb.base/all-architectures*.exp tests,
when running on a 32-bit ARM target, though I suspect running on any
target that compiles such that bfd_vma is 32-bits would also trigger
the failures.
The problem is that the test is expected GDB's disassembler to print
an error like this:
Cannot access memory at address 0x0
However, after the above commit we see an error like:
unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
The reason for this is this code in opcodes/i386-dis.c (in the
print_insn function):
if (address_mode == mode_64bit && sizeof (bfd_vma) < 8)
{
(*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream,
_("64-bit address is disabled"));
return -1;
}
This code effectively disallows us from ever disassembling 64-bit x86
code if we compiled GDB with a 32-bit bfd_vma. Notice we return
-1 (indicating a failure to disassemble), but never call the
memory_error_func callback.
Prior to the above commit GDB, when it received the -1 return value
would assume that a memory error had occurred and just print whatever
value happened to be in the memory error address variable, the default
value of 0 just happened to be fine because the test had asked GDB to
do this 'disassemble 0x0,+4'.
If we instead change the test to do 'disassemble 0x100,+4' then GDB
would (previously) have still reported:
Cannot access memory at address 0x0
which makes far less sense.
In this commit I propose to fix this issue by changing the test to
accept either the "Cannot access memory ..." string, or the newer
"unknown disassembler error ..." string. With this change done the
test now passes.
However, there is one weakness with this strategy; if GDB broke such
that we _always_ reported "unknown disassembler error ..." we would
never notice. This clearly would be bad. To avoid this issue I have
adjusted the all-architectures*.exp tests so that, when we disassemble
for the default architecture (the one selected by "auto") we _only_
expect to get the "Cannot access memory ..." error string.
[ Note: In an ideal world we should be able to disassemble any
architecture at all times. There's no reason why the 64-bit x86
disassembler requires a 64-bit bfd_vma, other than the code happens
to be written that way. We could rewrite the disassemble to not
have this requirement, but, I don't plan to do that any time soon. ]
Further, I have changed the all-architectures*.exp test so that we now
disassemble at address 0x100, this should avoid us being able to pass
by printing a default address of 0x0. I did originally change the
address we disassembled at to 0x4, however, some architectures,
e.g. ia64, have a default instruction alignment that is greater than
4, so would still round down to 0x0. I could have just picked 0x8 as
an address, but I figured that 0x100 was likely to satisfy most
architectures alignment requirements.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: add gdb.RemoteTargetConnection.send_packet
This commits adds a new sub-class of gdb.TargetConnection,
gdb.RemoteTargetConnection. This sub-class is created for all
'remote' and 'extended-remote' targets.
This new sub-class has one additional method over its base class,
'send_packet'. This new method is equivalent to the 'maint
packet' CLI command, it allows a custom packet to be sent to a remote
target.
The outgoing packet can either be a bytes object, or a Unicode string,
so long as the Unicode string contains only ASCII characters.
The result of calling RemoteTargetConnection.send_packet is a bytes
object containing the reply that came from the remote.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: make packet_command function available outside remote.c
In a later commit I will add a Python API to access the 'maint packet'
functionality, that is, sending a user specified packet to the target.
To make implementing this easier, this commit refactors how this
command is currently implemented so that the packet_command function
is now global.
The new global send_remote_packet function takes an object that is an
implementation of an abstract interface. Two functions within this
interface are then called, one just before a packet is sent to the
remote target, and one when the reply has been received from the
remote target. Using an interface object in this way allows (1) for
the error checking to be done before the first callback is made, this
means we only print out what packet it being sent once we know we are
going to actually send it, and (2) we don't need to make a copy of the
reply if all we want to do is print it.
One user visible changes after this commit are the error
messages, which I've changed to be less 'maint packet' command
focused, this will make them (I hope) better for when
send_remote_packet can be called from Python code.
So: "command can only be used with remote target"
Becomes: "packets can only be sent to a remote target"
And: "remote-packet command requires packet text as argument"
Becomes: "a remote packet must not be empty"
Additionally, in this commit, I've added support for packet replies
that contain binary data. Before this commit, the code that printed
the reply treated the reply as a C string, it assumed that the string
only contained printable characters, and had a null character only at
the end.
One way to show the problem with this is if we try to read the auxv
data from a remote target, the auxv data is binary, so, before this
commit:
(gdb) target remote :54321
...
(gdb) maint packet qXfer:auxv:read::0,1000
sending: "qXfer:auxv:read::0,1000"
received: "l!"
(gdb)
And after this commit:
(gdb) target remote :54321
...
(gdb) maint packet qXfer:auxv:read::0,1000
sending: "qXfer:auxv:read::0,1000"
received: "l!\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\xf0\xfc\xf7\xff\x7f\x00\x00\x10\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\xff\xf>
(gdb)
The binary contents of the reply are now printed as escaped hex.
2021-11-30 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/python: introduce gdb.TargetConnection object type
This commit adds a new object type gdb.TargetConnection. This new
type represents a connection within GDB (a connection as displayed by
'info connections').
There's three ways to find a gdb.TargetConnection, there's a new
'gdb.connections()' function, which returns a list of all currently
active connections.
Or you can read the new 'connection' property on the gdb.Inferior
object type, this contains the connection for that inferior (or None
if the inferior has no connection, for example, it is exited).
Finally, there's a new gdb.events.connection_removed event registry,
this emits a new gdb.ConnectionEvent whenever a connection is removed
from GDB (this can happen when all inferiors using a connection exit,
though this is not always the case, depending on the connection type).
The gdb.ConnectionEvent has a 'connection' property, which is the
gdb.TargetConnection being removed from GDB.
The gdb.TargetConnection has an 'is_valid()' method. A connection
object becomes invalid when the underlying connection is removed from
GDB (as discussed above, this might be when all inferiors using a
connection exit, or it might be when the user explicitly replaces a
connection in GDB by issuing another 'target' command).
The gdb.TargetConnection has the following read-only properties:
'num': The number for this connection,
'type': e.g. 'native', 'remote', 'sim', etc
'description': The longer description as seen in the 'info
connections' command output.
'details': A string or None. Extra details for the connection, for
example, a remote connection's details might be
'hostname:port'.
2021-11-30 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: The vtype immediate with more than the defined 8 bits are preserved.
According the rvv spec,
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-v-spec/blob/master/vtype-format.adoc
The bits of vtype immediate from 8 to (xlen - 1) should be reserved.
Therefore, we should also dump the vtype immediate as numbers, when
they are set over 8-bits. I think this is a bug that we used to support
vediv extension and use the bit 8 and 9 of vtype, but forgot to update
the behavior when removing the vediv.
Consider the testcases,
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x700 # the reserved bit 10, 9 and 8 are used.
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x400 # the reserved bit 10 is used.
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x300 # the reserved bit 9 and 8 are used.
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x100 # the reserved bit 8 is used.
vsetivli a0, 0xb, 0x300 # the reserved bit 9 and 8 are used.
vsetivli a0, 0xb, 0x100 # the reserved bit 8 is used.
The original objdump shows the following result,
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 7005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,1792
4: 4005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,1024
8: 3005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,e8,m1,tu,mu
c: 1005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,e8,m1,tu,mu
10: f005f557 vsetivli a0,11,e8,m1,tu,mu
14: d005f557 vsetivli a0,11,e8,m1,tu,mu
But in fact the correct result should be,
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 7005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,1792
4: 4005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,1024
8: 3005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,768
c: 1005f557 vsetvli a0,a1,256
10: f005f557 vsetivli a0,11,768
14: d005f557 vsetivli a0,11,256
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.d: Added testcases to
test the reserved bit 8 to (xlen-1) of vtype.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv.h: Removed OP_MASK_VTYPE_RES and OP_SH_VTYPE_RES,
since they are different for operand Vc and Vb.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): Updated imm_vtype_res to
extract the reserved immediate of vtype correctly.
2021-11-30 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Dump vset[i]vli immediate as numbers once vsew or vlmul is reserved.
Consider the following case,
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x4 # unrecognized vlmul
vsetvli a0, a1, 0x20 # unrecognized vsew
vsetivli a0, 0xb, 0x4 # unrecognized vlmul
vsetivli a0, 0xb, 0x20 # unrecognized vsew
For the current dis-assembler, we get the result,
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 0045f557 vsetvli a0,a1,e8,(null),tu,mu
4: 0205f557 vsetvli a0,a1,e128,m1,tu,mu
8: c045f557 vsetivli a0,11,e8,(null),tu,mu
c: c205f557 vsetivli a0,11,e128,m1,tu,mu
The vsew e128 and vlmul (null) are preserved according to the spec,
so dump these fields looks wrong. Consider that we are used to dump
the unrecognized csr as csr numbers directly, we should also dump
the whole vset[i]vli immediates as numbers, once the vsew or vlmul
is reserved. Therefore, following is what I expected,
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 0045f557 vsetvli a0,a1,4
4: 0205f557 vsetvli a0,a1,32
8: c045f557 vsetivli a0,11,4
c: c205f557 vsetivli a0,11,32
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.d: Rewrite the vset[i]vli
testcases since we should dump the immediate as numbers once
the vsew or vlmul is reserved.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): The reserved vsew and vlmul
are NULL string in the riscv_vsew and riscv_vlmul, so dump the
whole imm as numbers once one of them is NULL.
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_vsew): Set the reserved vsew to NULL.
(riscv_vlmul): Set the reserved vlmul to NULL.
2021-11-30 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
zlib: enable silent build rules
ld: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
libctf: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
gprof: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
binutils: merge doc subdir up a level
This avoids a recursive make into the doc subdir and speeds up the
build slightly. It also allows for more parallelism.
binutils: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
bfd: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
opcodes: enable silent build rules
Also add $(AM_V_xxx) to various manual rules in here.
2021-11-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Allow DW_ATE_UTF for Rust characters
The Rust compiler plans to change the encoding of a Rust 'char' type
to use DW_ATE_UTF. You can see the discussion here:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89887
However, this fails in gdb. I looked into this, and it turns out that
the handling of DW_ATE_UTF is currently fairly specific to C++. In
particular, the code here assumes the C++ type names, and it creates
an integer type.
This comes from commit 53e710acd ("GDB thinks char16_t and char32_t
are signed in C++"). The message says:
Both places need fixing. But since I couldn't tell why dwarf2read.c
needs to create a new type, I've made it use the per-arch built-in
types instead, so that the types are only created once per arch
instead of once per objfile. That seems to work fine.
... which is fine, but it seems to me that it's also correct to make a
new character type; and this approach is better because it preserves
the type name as well. This does use more memory, but first we
shouldn't be too concerned about the memory use of types coming from
debuginfo; and second, if we are, we should implement type interning
anyway.
Changing this code to use a character type revealed a couple of
oddities in the C/C++ handling of TYPE_CODE_CHAR. This patch fixes
these as well.
I filed PR rust/28637 for this issue, so that this patch can be
backported to the gdb 11 branch.
2021-11-29 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[PR gdb/27026] CTRL-C is ignored when debug info is downloaded
During debuginfod downloads, ctrl-c should result in the download
being cancelled and skipped. However in some cases, ctrl-c fails to
get delivered to gdb during downloading. This can result in downloads
being unskippable.
Fix this by ensuring that target_terminal::ours is in effect for the
duration of each download.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27026#c3
2021-11-29 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
strings: Replace references to -u option with references to -U.
PR 28632
2021-11-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix segfault in search_one_symtab
PR28539 describes a segfault in lambda function search_one_symtab due to
psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching calling expansion_notify with a
nullptr symtab:
...
struct compunit_symtab *symtab =
psymtab_to_symtab (objfile, ps);
if (expansion_notify != NULL)
if (!expansion_notify (symtab))
return false;
...
This happens as follows. The partial symtab ps is a dwarf2_include_psymtab
for some header file:
...
(gdb) p ps.filename
$5 = 0x64fcf80 "/usr/include/c++/11/bits/stl_construct.h"
...
The includer of ps is a shared symtab for a partial unit, with as user:
...
(gdb) p ps.includer().user.filename
$11 = 0x64fc9f0 \
"/usr/src/debug/llvm13-13.0.0-1.2.x86_64/tools/clang/lib/AST/Decl.cpp"
...
The call to psymtab_to_symtab expands the Decl.cpp symtab (and consequently
the shared symtab), but returns nullptr because:
...
struct dwarf2_include_psymtab : public partial_symtab
{
...
compunit_symtab *get_compunit_symtab (struct objfile *objfile) const override
{
return nullptr;
}
...
Fix this by returning the Decl.cpp symtab instead, which fixes the segfault
in the PR.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28539
2021-11-29 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update description of string's -n option.
PR 28632
* strings.c (usage): Update desciption of -n option.
* doc/binutils.texi: Likewise.
2021-11-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix typo in proc lines
Proc lines contains a typo:
...
string_form { set $_line_string_form $value }
...
Remove the incorrect '$' in '$_line_string_form'.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use unique files in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp
While debugging a problem in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp, I realized that the
test-case generates all executables and associated temporary files using the
same filenames.
Fix this by adding a new proc prefix_id in lib/gdb.exp, and using it in the
test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp with -m32
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp with target board -unix/-m32,
we run into another instance of PR28383, where the dwarf assembler generates
64-bit relocations which are not supported by the 32-bit assembler:
...
dw2-lines-dw.S: Assembler messages:^M
outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines/dw2-lines-dw.S:76: Error: \
cannot represent relocation type BFD_RELOC_64^M
...
Fix this by using _op_offset in _line_finalize_header.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-29 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: drop most specific istarget checks
We'll rely on the toolchain probing to determine whether each arch's
tests can be run rather the current configure target. This allows
testing all of the ports in a multitarget configuration.
For now, we don't reformat the files entirely to make it easier to
review, and in case we need to make adjustments. Once this feels
like it's stable, we can flatten the code a bit by removing the if
statement entirely.
2021-11-29 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: support parallel execution
Break up the dejagnu logic so that we can parallelize the testsuite.
This takes a page from gcc & gdb where each .exp is run in isolation
instead of in serial.
For most targets, this doesn't make much of a difference as they only
have a single .exp. A few (like cris & frv) have multiple .exp though
and will see a bit of a speed up.
The real gain is when testing a multitarget build. This way we can
run all the targets in parallel and cut the execution time a bit.
On my system, it goes from ~155sec to ~100sec.
We can gain further speedups by splitting up some of the larger .exp
files into smaller groups. We'll do that in a followup though.
2021-11-29 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: expand arch specific toolchain settings
Leverage the new per-port toolchain settings to initialize the env
for eeach set of tests. This allows us to run all the tests in a
multitarget build if the user sets up the vars. If they don't, we
can still skip all the tests.
2021-11-29 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: setup per-port toolchain settings for multitarget build
Gas does not support multitarget builds -- it still only supports
a single input & output format. ld is a bit better, but requires
manual flags to select the right output. This makes it impossible
to run the complete testsuite in a multitarget build.
To address this limitation, create a suite of FOR_TARGET variables
so these can be set to precompiled as & ld programs. It requires
a bit of setup ahead of time, but it's a one-time cost, and makes
running the full testsuite at once much easier.
2021-11-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28629 NIOS2 fallout
The test exactly matched wrong output.
PR 28629
* testsuite/gas/nios2/relax.d: Update expected output.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: add checks to core headers to prevent incorrect common building
Some of the core sim headers rely on the SIM_AC_OPTION_BITSIZE macro
which can change the size of core types. Since these haven't been
unified across ports, add checks to make sure they aren't accidentally
included when building for all ports. This caught the sim-load file
using poisoned headers that it didn't actually need.
sim: unify syscall.o building
Now that we've unified all the syscall tables, this file does not rely
on any port-specific settings, so move it up to building as part of the
common step so we only do it once in a multibuild.
sim: drop unused gentmap & nltvals.def logic
Now that all ports have switched to target-newlib-* files, there's
no need for these files & generating things at build time. So punt
the logic and make target-newlib-syscall a hard requirement.
sim: mcore: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and mcore has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
sim: riscv: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and riscv has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cr16: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and cr16 has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
This allows cleaning up the syscall ifdef logic. We know these will
always exist now.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: d10v: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and d10v has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
This allows cleaning up the syscall ifdef logic. We know these will
always exist now.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and sh has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: v850: switch to new target-newlib-syscall
Use the new target-newlib-syscall module. This is needed to merge all
the architectures into a single build, and v850 has a custom syscall
table for its newlib/libgloss port.
This allows cleaning up the syscall ifdef logic. We know these will
always exist now.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: iq2000/lm32/m32c/moxie/rx: switch to new target-newlib-syscall.h
Use the new target-newlib-syscall.h to provide the target syscall
defines. These code paths are written specifically for the newlib
ABI rather than being generalized, so switching them to the defines
rather than trying to go through the dynamic callback conversion
seems like the best trade-off for now. Might have to reconsider
this in the future.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: nltvals: pull target syscalls out into a dedicated source file
Like we just did for pulling out the errno map, pull out the syscall
maps into a dedicated common file. Most newlib ports are using the
same syscall map, but not all, which means we have to do a bit more
work to migrate.
This commit adds the maps and switches the ports using the common
default syscall table over to it. Ports using unique syscall tables
are still using the old targ-map.c logic.
Switching common ports over is easy by checking NL_TARGET, but the
ppc code needs a bit more cleanup here hence its larger diff.
2021-11-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: frv: resolve syscalls dynamically
Avoid use of TARGET_<syscall> defines and rely on the callback layers
to resolve these dynamically so we can support multiple syscall layers
instead of assuming the newlib/libgloss numbers all the time.
sim: mn10300: resolve syscalls dynamically
Avoid use of TARGET_<syscall> defines and rely on the callback layers
to resolve these dynamically so we can support multiple syscall layers
instead of assuming the newlib/libgloss numbers all the time.
sim: nltvals: drop i960
This port was dropped from gdb/bfd/sim years ago, so stop including
its syscall constants too.
sim: moxie: fix datadir handling
Expand the value at `make` time rather than configure generation time
so that we handle $(datarootdir) setting properly.
2021-11-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix typos in configure
The variable names used to restore CFLAGS and LDFLAGS here don't quite
match the names used above, resulting in losing the original CFLAGS and
LDFLAGS. Fix that.
Change-Id: I9cc2c3b48b1dc30c31a7143563c893fd6f426a0a
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: hw: mark hw_descriptors const
sim: testsuite: add dedicated flag for init toolchain tests
As we setup more reliable CC_FOR_TARGET variables for each target, the
bfin way of overriding it to stuff custom CFLAGS doesn't scale well.
Add a dedicated CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET_init setting that each set of tests
can setup if they want to add custom options.
sim: testsuite: clean up arch specific toolchain settings
In a multitarget build, we process all targets in order, so make sure
the toolchain settings from one don't leak into the next.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cris: always search for local rvdummy tool
If the board info sets the sim to a basename that is found via $PATH
(which is the default dejagnu behavior), the logic here to use its
dirname to find rvdummy fails because it looks for `./rvdummy`. So
switch it to always use the local build of rvdummy which is the one
we want to be testing against in the first place.
If we get a request for testing against a different setup, we can
figure out & document the needs at that point, and then setup some
config knobs to control it.
2021-11-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.base/list-missing-source.exp
In commit f8080fb7a44 "[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.base/include-main.exp" a
file gdb.base/main.c was added, which caused the following regression:
...
(gdb) list^M
<gdb.base/main.c>
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/list-missing-source.exp: list
...
The problem is that the test-case does not expect to find a file main.c, but
now it finds gdb.base/main.c.
Fix this by using the more specific file name list-missing-source.c.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: fix bits-gen EXEEXT handling
Add missing $(EXEEXT) to dependencies on bits-gen. These are actually
build-only tools, but automake doesn't allow for build & host tools, so
the rules are re-using EXEEXT.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: initial support for OS-specific tests
We usually test against the newlib/libgloss environment, but for a
few ports that also support Linux apps, we want to test that logic
too. A lot of the C code is written such that it works with either
newlib/libgloss or glibc/linux toolchains, but we have some tests
that end up being Linux-specific. Cris has been using the target
tuple as a rough proxy for this (where cris*-*-elf is assumed to be
newlib/libgloss, and everything else is glibc/linux), but that is a
bit too rough, and it doesn't work in a multitarget build.
So lets create a few stub files that we can do compile tests with
to detect the different setups, and then let tests declare which
one they require (if they require any at all).
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: unify basic C compiler checks
Both bfin & cris ports test the C compiler to see if it works, but in
their own way. Unify the checks in the common code so we can leverage
them in more ports in the future, and collapse the bfin & cris code.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: rework sim_init usage
The sim_init function was called by runtest for each test when --tool
was set to sim. When we changed to --tool '' to collapse the testsuite
dir, the init function was no longer called on every test. However, it
was still being called explicitly by config/default.exp. It's not clear
why that explicit call ever existed since, in the past, it meant it was
redundant.
Lets drop the single sim_init call in config/default.exp and move it out
to all our tests. This replicates the runtest behavior so we can setup
variables on a per-test basis which allows us to recollapse the sim_path
logic back. We'll also leverage this in the future for toolchain setup.
Also add a few comments clarifying the overall runtime behavior.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cris: fix testsuite hang when sim is missing
If the cris sim hasn't been built yet, trying to run its testsuite
will hang indefinitely. The common sim APIs already have this, so
copy it over to the cris forks of the test+run functions.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: fix objdir handling
The tests assume that the cwd is the objdir directory and write its
intermediates to there all the time. When using runtest's --objdir
setting though, this puts the files in the wrong place. This isn't
a big problem currently as we never change --objdir, but in order to
support parallel test execution, we're going to start setting that
option, so clean up the code ahead of time.
We also have to tweak some of the cris tests which were making
assumptions about the argv[0] value.
2021-11-27 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: rename global_sim_options to SIMFLAGS_FOR_TARGET
Now that all the other toolchain settings have been renamed to match
the dejagnu settings of XXX_FOR_TARGET, rename global_sim_options to
SIMFLAGS_FOR_TARGET too.
sim: testsuite: replace global_ld_options with LDFLAGS_FOR_TARGET
Only a few tests actually use global_ld_options, but we can replace the
sim-specific settings with the dejagnu common LDFLAGS_FOR_TARGET and get
the same result.
2021-11-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-26 John David Anglin <danglin@gcc.gnu.org>
Fix ifunc test fails on hppa*-*-*
2021-11-26 John David Anglin <danglin@gcc.gnu.org>
PR ld/27442
ld/ChangeLog:
* ld/testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc.exp (contains_irelative_reloc): Adjust
regexp.
Skip static ifunc-using executable test on hppa*-*-*.
2021-11-26 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gas: Update commit 4780e5e4933
Update
commit 4780e5e4933a2497a5aecc4ceabbbb8e82aaf822
Author: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Date: Fri Nov 26 09:59:45 2021 +0100
[gas] Fix file 0 dir with -gdwarf-5
1. Replace i with j in
for (j = 0; i < NUM_MD5_BYTES; ++j)
2. Pass -W to readelf to force CU: in output due to:
if (do_wide || strlen (directory) < 76)
printf (_("CU: %s/%s:\n"), directory, file_table[0].name);
else
printf ("%s:\n", file_table[0].name);
PR gas/28629
* dwarf2dbg.c (out_dir_and_file_list): Fix a typo in commit
4780e5e4933.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-nop-for-line-table.d: Pass -W to
readelf.
2021-11-26 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: replace global_as_options with ASFLAGS_FOR_TARGET
Only a few tests actually use global_as_options, but we can replace the
sim-specific settings with the dejagnu common ASFLAGS_FOR_TARGET and get
the same result.
2021-11-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.base/include-main.exp
The test-case gdb.ada/dgopt.exp uses the -gnatD switch, in combination with
-gnatG.
This causes the source file $src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/dgopt/x.adb to be
expanded into $build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/dgopt/x.adb.dg, and the
debug information should refer to the x.adb.dg file.
That is the case for the .debug_line part:
...
The Directory Table is empty.
The File Name Table (offset 0x1c):
Entry Dir Time Size Name
1 0 0 0 x.adb.dg
...
but not for the .debug_info part:
...
<11> DW_AT_name : $src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/dgopt/x.adb
<15> DW_AT_comp_dir : $build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.ada/dgopt
...
Filed as PR gcc/103436.
In C we can generate similar debug information, using a source file that does
not contain any code, but includes another one that does:
...
$ cat gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/include-main.c
#include "main.c"
...
such that in the .debug_line part we have:
...
The Directory Table (offset 0x1c):
1 /home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base
The File Name Table (offset 0x57):
Entry Dir Time Size Name
1 1 0 0 main.c
...
and in the .debug_info part:
...
<11> DW_AT_name : $src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/include-main.c
<15> DW_AT_comp_dir : $build/gdb/testsuite
...
Add a C test-case that mimics gdb.ada/dgopt.exp, that is:
- generate debug info as described above,
- issue a list of a line in include-main.c, while the corresponding
CU is not expanded yet.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-26 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: drop unused global_cc_options
Nothing in the testsuite is using this setting, so let's drop it.
Any code that wants to set compiler flags can use CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET
instead to get the same effect.
sim: testsuite: punt unused toolchain variables
These haven't been used in over 20 years. The sim testsuite used to
run these tools itself directly, but back in ~1999 it switched to the
dejagnu helpers (e.g. target_assemble & target_link), and the dejagnu
logic only utilizes XXX_FOR_TARGET variables. Punt them here to avoid
confusion with dead code.
2021-11-26 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Simon Cook <simon.cook@embecosm.com>
gdb: add risc-v disassembler options support
This commit adds support for RISC-V disassembler options to GDB. This
commit is based on this patch which was never committed:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-January/114944.html
All of the binutils refactoring has been moved to a separate, earlier,
commit, so this commit is pretty straight forward, just registering
the required gdbarch hooks.
2021-11-26 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Simon Cook <simon.cook@embecosm.com>
opcodes/riscv: add disassembler options support to libopcodes
In preparation for the next commit, which will add GDB support for
RISC-V disassembler options, this commit restructures how the
disassembler options are managed within libopcodes.
The implementation provided here is based on this mailing list patch
which was never committed:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-January/114944.html
which in turn took inspiration from the MIPS implementation of the
same feature.
The biggest changes from the original mailing list post are:
1. The GDB changes have been split into a separate patch, and
2. The `riscv_option_args_privspec` variable, which held the valid
priv-spec values is now gone, instead we use the `riscv_priv_specs`
array from bfd/cpu-riscv.c instead.
include/ChangeLog:
* dis-asm.h (disassembler_options_riscv): Declare.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (enum riscv_option_arg_t): New enum typedef.
(riscv_options): New static global.
(disassembler_options_riscv): New function.
(print_riscv_disassembler_options): Rewrite to use
disassembler_options_riscv.
2021-11-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gas] Fix file 0 dir with -gdwarf-5
In out_dir_and_file_list, if file 0 is copied from file 1, only the filename
is copied, and the dir and md5 fields are left to their default values.
Fix this by adding the copy of the dir and md5 fields.
gas/ChangeLog:
2021-11-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR 28629
* dwarf2dbg.c (out_dir_and_file_list): When copying file 1 to file 0,
also copy dir and md5 fields.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-4.d: Adjust expected output.
2021-11-26 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: mips: avoid _ namespace
Some C libraries export _P symbols in their headers (like older
newlib and its ctype.h), so use P_ instead to avoid conflicts.
ld: fix POSIX shell test usage
POSIX test uses = for compares, not == which is a bashism.
gas: enable silent build rules
ld: fix --disable-multiple-abs-defs alignment in help
2021-11-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-25 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
gdb: ensure extension_language_python is always defined
In this commit:
commit c6a6aad52d9e839d6a84ac31cabe2b7e1a2a31a0
Date: Mon Oct 25 17:25:45 2021 +0100
gdb/python: make some global variables static
building without Python was broken. The extension_language_python
global was moved from being always defined, to only being defined when
the HAVE_PYTHON macro was defined. As a consequence, building without
Python support would result in errors like:
/usr/bin/ld: extension.o:(.rodata+0x120): undefined reference to `extension_language_python'
This commit fixes the problem by moving the definition of
extension_language_python outside of the HAVE_PYTHON macro protection.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Revert "gdb: add assert in remote_target::wait relating to async being off"
This commit introduced a test failure in gdb.server/attach-flag.exp.
I didn't spot this failure originally as the problem is fixed by this,
as yet unpushed patch:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-November/183768.html
I unfortunately didn't test each patch in the original series
independently. I'll repost this patch after the above patch has been
merged.
This reverts commit 32b1f5e8d6b8ddd3be6e471c26dd85a1dac31dda.
2021-11-25 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix building the AArch64 assembler and disassembler when assertions are disabled.
PR 28614
* aarch64-asm.c: Replace assert(0) with real code.
* aarch64-dis.c: Likewise.
* aarch64-opc.c: Likewise.
2021-11-25 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
PR gdb/28480: Improve ambiguous member detection
Basic ambiguity detection assumes that when 2 fields with the same name
have the same byte offset, it must be an unambiguous request. This is not
always correct. Consider the following code:
class empty { };
class A {
public:
[[no_unique_address]] empty e;
};
class B {
public:
int e;
};
class C: public A, public B { };
if we tried to use c.e in code, the compiler would warn of an ambiguity,
however, since A::e does not demand an unique address, it gets the same
address (and thus byte offset) of the members, making A::e and B::e have the
same address. however, "print c.e" would fail to report the ambiguity,
and would instead print it as an empty class (first path found).
The new code solves this by checking for other found_fields that have
different m_struct_path.back() (final class that the member was found
in), despite having the same byte offset.
The testcase gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp was also changed to test for this
behavior.
2021-11-25 Jan W. Jagersma <jwjagersma@gmail.com>
coff-go32: consistent 16-byte section alignment
Section alignment for coff-go32 is inconsistent - The '.text' and
'.data' sections are 16-byte aligned, but named sections '.text.*' and
'.data.*' are only 4-byte aligned. '.gnu.linkonce.r.*' is aligned to
16 bytes, yet '.rodata' and '.rodata.*' are aligned to 4 bytes. For
'.bss' all input sections are only aligned to 4 bytes.
This primarily can cause trouble when using SSE instructions, which
require their memory operands to be aligned to 16-byte boundaries.
This patch solves the issue simply by setting the section alignment
to 16 bytes, for all code and data sections referenced in the default
linker script.
* coff-go32.c (COFF_SECTION_ALIGNMENT_ENTRIES): Use partial
name match for .text, .data. Add entries for .const, .rodata,
.bss, .gnu.linkonce.b.
2021-11-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: AArch64: Add support for AArch64 EFI (efi-*-aarch64)
Commit b69c9d41e8 edited bfd/Makefile.in rather than using automake,
which meant a typo in Makefile.am was not discovered and other
differences in Makefile.in are seen with a proper regeneration. One
difference was lack of an empty line between the pe-aarch64igen.c rule
and the following $(BFD32_LIBS) etc. dependency rule, in the
regenerated file. Not that it matters for proper "make" behaviour,
but it's nicer with a line between those rules. Moving the rule
earlier seems to cure the missing empty line.
* Makefile.am (BFD64_BACKENDS): Correct typo.
(BFD_H_DEPS, LOCAL_H_DEPS): Move earlier. Move rule using these
deps earlier too.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* po/BLD-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
* po/SRC-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
2021-11-25 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated French translation for the opcodes directory.
* po/fr.po; Updated French translation.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: rename source_styling_changed observer
In a later commit I plan to add disassembler styling. In the same way
that we have a source_styling_changed observer I would need to add a
disassembler_styling_changed observer.
However, currently, these observers would only be notified from
cli-style.c:set_style_enabled, and observed in tui-winsource.c,
tui_source_window::style_changed, as a result, having two observers
seems unnecessary right now, so, in this commit, I plan to rename
source_styling_changed to just styling_changed, then, in the later
commit, when disassembler styling is added, I can use the same
observer for both source styling, and disassembler styling.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: make some global variables static
Make a couple of global variables static in python/python.c. To do
this I had to move the definition of extension_language_python to
later in the file.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add assert in remote_target::wait relating to async being off
While working on another patch I ended up in a situation where I had
async mode disabled (with 'maint set target-async off'), but the async
event token got marked anyway.
In this situation GDB was continually calling into
remote_target::wait, however, the async token would never become
unmarked as the unmarking is guarded by target_is_async_p.
We could just unconditionally unmark the token, but that would feel
like just ignoring a bug, so, instead, lets assert that if
!target_is_async_p, then the async token should not be marked.
This assertion would have caught my earlier mistake.
There should be no user visible changes with this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: simplify remote_target::is_async_p
This commit simplifies remote_target::is_async_p by removing the
target_async_permitted check.
In previous commits I have added additional assertions around the
target_async_permitted flag into target.c, as a result we should now
be confident that if target_can_async_p returns false, a target will
never have async mode enabled. Given this, it should not be necessary
to check target_async_permitted in remote_target::is_async_p, if this
flag is false ::is_async_p should return false anyway. There is an
assert to this effect in target_is_async_p.
There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: add asserts in target.c for target_async_permitted
The target_async_permitted flag allows a user to override whether a
target can act in async mode or not. In previous commits I have moved
the checking of this flag out of the various ::can_async_p methods and
into the common target.c code.
In this commit I will add some additional assertions into
target_is_async_p and target_async. The rules these assertions are
checking are:
1. A target that returns false for target_can_async_p should never
become "async enabled", and so ::is_async_p should always return
false. This is being checked in target_is_async_p.
2. GDB should never try to enable async mode for a target that
returns false for target_can_async_p, this is checked in
target_async.
There are a few places where we call the ::is_async_p method directly,
in these cases we will obviously not pass through the assert in
target_is_async_p, however, there are also plenty of places where we
do call target_is_async_p so if GDB starts to misbehave we should
catch it quickly enough.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: hoist target_async_permitted checks into target.c
This commit moves the target_async_permitted check out of each targets
::can_async_p method and into the target_can_async_p wrapper function.
I've left some asserts in the two ::can_async_p methods that I
changed, which will hopefully catch any direct calls to these methods
that might be added in the future.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-25 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: introduce a new overload of target_can_async_p
There are a few places where we call the target_ops::can_async_p
member function directly, instead of using the target_can_async_p
wrapper.
In some of these places this is because we need to ask before the
target has been pushed, and in another location (in target.c) it seems
unnecessary to go through the wrapper when we are already in target.c
code.
However, in the next commit I'd like to hoist some common checks out
of target specific code into target.c. To achieve this, in this
commit, I introduce a new overload of target_can_async_p which takes a
target_ops pointer, and calls the ::can_async_p method directly. I
then make use of the new overload where appropriate.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-25 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
ld/testsuite/ld-elfvsb: correctly test "weak hidden symbol DSO last"
The test must be done with the shared object and not with the object
file which is already being tested above.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/elfvsb.exp: use .so file in "weak hidden
symbol DSO last"
2021-11-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/cli] Add "set logging enabled", deprecate "set logging on/off"
Before commit 3b6acaee895 "Update more calls to add_prefix_cmd" we had the
following output for "show logging file":
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set trace-commands on" \
-ex "set logging off" \
-ex "show logging file" \
-ex "set logging on" \
-ex "show logging file"
+set logging off
+show logging file
Future logs will be written to gdb.txt.
+set logging on
+show logging file
Currently logging to "gdb.txt".
...
After that commit we have instead:
...
+set logging off
+show logging file
The current logfile is "gdb.txt".
+set logging on
+show logging file
The current logfile is "gdb.txt".
...
Before the commit, whether logging is enabled or not can be deduced from the
output of the command. After the commit, the message is unified and it's no
longer clear whether logging is enabled or not.
Fix this by:
- adding a new command "show logging enabled"
- adding a corresponding new command "set logging enabled on/off"
- making the commands "set logging on/off" deprecated aliases of the
"set logging enabled on/off" command.
Update the docs and testsuite to use "set logging enabled". Mention the new
and deprecated commands in NEWS.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/cli] Fix typo in logging overwrite help text
Currently we have:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "help set logging overwrite"
Set whether logging overwrites or appends to the log file.
If set, logging overrides the log file.
...
Fix overrides -> overwrites typo.
2021-11-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix help doc for "set index-cache enabled"
When implementing this command, I put "help doc" as a placeholder for
the help string, and forgot to update it. Change it for a real help
string.
Change-Id: Id23c2142c5073dc570bd8a706e9ec6fa8c40eb09
2021-11-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Revert (part of) "gdb fix for catch-syscall.exp"
This reverts (par of) commit ab198279120fe7937c0970a8bb881922726678f9.
This commit changed what the test expects when catching the execve
syscall based on the behavior seen on a Linux PowerPC machine. That is,
we get an "entry" event, but no "return" event. This is not what we get
on Linux with other architectures, though, and it seems like a
PowerPC-specific bug.
Revert the part of the patch related to this, but not the other hunk.
Change-Id: I4248776e4299f10999487be96d4acd1b33639996
2021-11-24 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix an illegal memory access parsing a corrupt sysroff file.
PR 28564
* sysdump.c (getCHARS): Check for an out of bounds read.
2021-11-24 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: fix crash when reading ECOFF debug information
In commit:
commit 633cf2548bcd3dafe297e21a1dd3574240280d48
Date: Wed May 9 15:42:28 2018 -0600
Remove cleanups from mdebugread.c
the following change was made in the function parse_partial_symbols in
mdebugread.c:
- fdr_to_pst = XCNEWVEC (struct pst_map, hdr->ifdMax + 1);
- old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, fdr_to_pst);
+ gdb::def_vector<struct pst_map> fdr_to_pst_holder (hdr->ifdMax + 1);
+ fdr_to_pst = fdr_to_pst_holder.data ();
The problem with this change is that XCNEWVEC calls xcalloc, which in
turn calls calloc, and calloc zero initializes the allocated memory.
In contrast, the new line gdb::def_vector<struct pst_map> specifically
does not initialize the underlying memory.
This is a problem because, later on in this same function, we
increment the n_globals field within 'struct pst_map' objects stored
in the vector. The incrementing is now being done from an
uninitialized starting point.
In this commit we switch from using gdb::def_vector to using
std::vector, this alone should be enough to ensure that the fields are
initialized to zero.
However, for extra clarity, I have also added initial values in the
'struct pst_map' to make it crystal clear how the struct will start
up.
This issue was reported on the mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-November/183693.html
Co-Authored-By: Lightning <lightningth@gmail.com>
2021-11-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-23 Alexandra Hájková <ahajkova@redhat.com>
configure.ac: Check for the readline.h explicitly
When readline development package is missing make fails with
"configure: error: system readline is not new enough" which
might be confusing. This patch checks for the readline.h explicitly
and makes make to warn about the missing package.
2021-11-23 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
AArch64: Add support for AArch64 EFI (efi-*-aarch64).
This adds support for efi-*-aarch64 by virtue of adding a new PEI target
pei-aarch64-little. This is not a full target and only exists to support EFI
at this time.
This means that this target does not support relocation processing and is mostly
a container format. This format has been added to elf based aarch64 targets
such that efi images can be made natively on Linux.
However this target is not valid for use with gas but only with objcopy.
With these changes the resulting file is recognized as an efi image by
third party tools:
> pecli info hello.efi
Metadata
================================================================================
MD5: 598c32a778b0f0deebe977fef8578c4e
SHA1: 4580121edd5cb4dc40f51b28f171fd15250df84c
SHA256: 3154bd7cf42433d1c957f6bf55a17ad8c57ed41b29df2d485703349fd6ff1d5c
Imphash:
Size: 47561 bytes
Type: PE32+ executable (EFI application) (stripped to external PDB), for MS Windows
Compile Time: 1970-01-01 00:00:00 (UTC - 0x0 )
Entry point: 0x2000 (section .text)
Sections
================================================================================
Name RWX VirtSize VirtAddr RawAddr RawSize Entropy md5
.text R-X 0x5bb0 0x2000 0x400 0x5c00 6.39 551fbc264256a3f387de8a891500ae0d
.reloc R-- 0xc 0x8000 0x6000 0x200 0.02 0c45f6d812d079821c1d54c09ab89e1d
.data RW- 0x1d88 0x9000 0x6200 0x1e00 4.18 5d1137c09f01289dc62bf754f7290db3
.dynamic RW- 0xf0 0xb000 0x8000 0x200 0.34 5c94ed3206f05a277e6f04fbf131f131
.rela R-- 0xe58 0xc000 0x8200 0x1000 1.87 8b5c6bc30f3acb7ca7bf2e6789d68519
.dynsym R-- 0x138 0xd000 0x9200 0x200 0.96 bdcf5101da51aadc663ca8859f88138c
Imports
================================================================================
Any magic number is based on the Microsoft PE specification [1].
[1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/pe-format
bfd/ChangeLog:
2021-10-21 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
PR binutils/26206
* .gitignore (pe-aarch64igen.c): New.
* Makefile.am (pei-aarch64.lo, pe-aarch64igen.lo, pei-aarch64.c,
pe-aarch64igen.c): Add support.
* Makefile.in: Likewise.
* bfd.c (bfd_get_sign_extend_vma): Add pei-aarch64-little.
* coff-aarch64.c: New file.
* coffcode.h (coff_set_arch_mach_hook, coff_set_flags,
coff_write_object_contents) Add aarch64 (aarch64_pei_vec) support.
* config.bfd: Likewise.
* configure: Likewise.
* configure.ac: Likewise.
* libpei.h (GET_OPTHDR_IMAGE_BASE, PUT_OPTHDR_IMAGE_BASE,
GET_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_STACK_RESERVE, PUT_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_STACK_RESERVE,
GET_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_STACK_COMMIT, PUT_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_STACK_COMMIT,
GET_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_HEAP_RESERVE, PUT_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_HEAP_RESERVE,
GET_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_HEAP_COMMIT, PUT_OPTHDR_SIZE_OF_HEAP_COMMIT,
GET_PDATA_ENTRY, _bfd_peAArch64_bfd_copy_private_bfd_data_common,
_bfd_peAArch64_bfd_copy_private_section_data,
_bfd_peAArch64_get_symbol_info, _bfd_peAArch64_only_swap_filehdr_out,
_bfd_peAArch64_print_private_bfd_data_common,
_bfd_peAArch64i_final_link_postscript,
_bfd_peAArch64i_only_swap_filehdr_out, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_aouthdr_in,
_bfd_peAArch64i_swap_aouthdr_out, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_aux_in,
_bfd_peAArch64i_swap_aux_out, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_lineno_in,
_bfd_peAArch64i_swap_lineno_out, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_scnhdr_out,
_bfd_peAArch64i_swap_sym_in, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_sym_out,
_bfd_peAArch64i_swap_debugdir_in, _bfd_peAArch64i_swap_debugdir_out,
_bfd_peAArch64i_write_codeview_record,
_bfd_peAArch64i_slurp_codeview_record,
_bfd_peAArch64_print_ce_compressed_pdata): New.
* peXXigen.c (_bfd_XXi_swap_aouthdr_in, _bfd_XXi_swap_aouthdr_out,
pe_print_pdata, _bfd_XX_print_private_bfd_data_common,
_bfd_XX_bfd_copy_private_section_data, _bfd_XXi_final_link_postscript):
Support COFF_WITH_peAArch64,
* pei-aarch64.c: New file.
* peicode.h (coff_swap_scnhdr_in, pe_ILF_build_a_bfd, pe_ILF_object_p):
Support COFF_WITH_peAArch64.
(jtab): Add dummy entry that traps.
* targets.c (aarch64_pei_vec): New.
binutils/ChangeLog:
2021-10-21 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
PR binutils/26206
* NEWS: Add new support.
* objcopy.c (convert_efi_target): Add efi-*-aarch64 support.
* testsuite/binutils-all/aarch64/pei-aarch64-little.d: New test.
* testsuite/binutils-all/aarch64/pei-aarch64-little.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
2021-10-21 Tamar Christina <tamar.christina@arm.com>
PR binutils/26206
* coff/aarch64.h: New file.
* coff/pe.h (IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_ARM64): New.
2021-11-23 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
binutils debuginfod test
A missing "return" resulted in this non-ELF fail:
x86_64-w64-mingw32 +FAIL: debuginfod (create separate debug info file)
Also, the debuginfod I have installed does not appear to handle
non-native ELF objects, so only run the test when native.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfod.exp: Don't run test unless
native ELF.
2021-11-23 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Update bug reporting address
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/ everywhere
bfd/
* configure.ac (ACX_BUGURL): Set to https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/
* po/Make-in (msgid-bugs-address): Likewise.
* README: Report bugs to the above.
* configure: Regenerate.
binutils/
* po/Make-in (msgid-bugs-address): Update.
gas/
* README: Update bug address. Delete mention of gcc.
* po/Make-in: Update bug address.
gold/
* po/Make-in: Update bug address.
gprof/
* po/Make-in: Update bug address.
ld/
* po/Make-in: Update bug address.
opcodes/
* po/Make-in: Update bug address.
2021-11-23 Jan (janneke) Nieuwenhuizen <janneke@gnu.org>
gdb: more compile fixes for gnu-nat.c
This fixes compile errors like
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/gnu-nat.c: In function void add_task_commands():
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/gnu-nat.c:3204:17: error: no matching function for call to add_cmd(const char [8], command_class, cmd_list_element*&, char*, cmd_list_element**)
3204 | &setlist);
| ^
In file included from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/completer.h:21,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/symtab.h:36,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/infrun.h:21,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/target.h:42,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/inf-child.h:23,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/gnu-nat.h:38,
from ../../gdb-11.1/gdb/gnu-nat.c:24:
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/command.h:160:33: note: candidate: cmd_list_element* add_cmd(const char*, command_class, void (*)(const char*, int), const char*, cmd_list_element**)
160 | extern struct cmd_list_element *add_cmd (const char *, enum command_class,
| ^~~~~~~
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/command.h:161:30: note: no known conversion for argument 3 from cmd_list_element* to void (*)(const char*, int)
161 | cmd_const_cfunc_ftype *fun,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/command.h:167:33: note: candidate: cmd_list_element* add_cmd(const char*, command_class, const char*, cmd_list_element**)
167 | extern struct cmd_list_element *add_cmd (const char *, enum command_class,
| ^~~~~~~
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/command.h:167:33: note: candidate expects 4 arguments, 5 provided
../../gdb-11.1/gdb/gnu-nat.c:3210:18: error: no matching function for call to add_cmd(const char [8], command_class, cmd_list_element*&, char*, cmd_list_element**)
3210 | &showlist);
| ^
Change-Id: Ie9029363d3fb40e34e8f5b1ab503745bc44bfe3f
2021-11-23 Andrea Monaco <andrea.monaco@autistici.org>
gnu-nat.c: fix calls to add_info_alias
Some time ago add_info_alias was changed (commit
e0f25bd9717c7973197095523db7c1cdc956cea2). These calls were not updated
and caused errors on compilation.
Change-Id: I354ae4e8b8926d785abc94ec7142471ffd76d2de
2021-11-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: pass more const target_waitstatus by reference
While working on target_waitstatus changes, I noticed a few places where
const target_waitstatus objects could be passed by reference instead of
by pointers. And in some cases, places where a target_waitstatus could
be passed as const, but was not. Convert them as much as possible.
Change-Id: Ied552d464be5d5b87489913b95f9720a5ad50c5a
2021-11-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: introduce target_waitkind_str, use it in target_waitstatus::to_string
I would like to print target_waitkind values in debug messages, so I
think that a target_waitkind-to-string function would be useful. While
at it, use it in target_waitstatus::to_string. This changes the output
of target_waitstatus::to_string a bit, but I think it is for the better.
The debug messages will show a string matching exactly the
target_waitkind enumerator (minus the TARGET_WAITKIND prefix).
As a convenience, make string_appendf return the same reference to
string it got as a parameter. This allows doing this:
return string_appendf (str, "foo");
... keeping the code concise.
Change-Id: I383dffc9c78614e7d0668b1516073905e798eef7
2021-11-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: rename target_waitstatus_to_string to target_waitstatus::to_string
Make target_waitstatus_to_string a "to_string" method of
target_waitstatus, a bit like we have ptid_t::to_string already. This
will save a bit of typing.
Change-Id: Id261b7a09fa9fa3c738abac131c191a6f9c13905
2021-11-22 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Removed the redundant NULL pointer check in the riscv_update_subset.
If we always use the .option arch to call the riscv_update_subset, then
it is almost impossible that the input string will be NULL. Therefore,
just remove the redundant NULL pointer check in the riscv_update_subset.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_update_subset): Removed the redundant NULL
pointer check.
2021-11-22 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Replace .option rvc/norvc with .option arch, +c/-c.
Since the .option rvc/norvc directives are obsolete, replace them with
the new proposed diretives: .option arch, +c/-c. And also reset the
riscv_opts.rvc flag for the .option arch directives.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (s_riscv_option): Reset the riscv_opts.rvc
for the .option arch directives.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/align-1.s: Replace the obsolete .option
rvc/norvc with .option arch, +c/-c.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-add-addi.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-nonzero-imm.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-nonzero-reg.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-zero-imm-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-zero-imm.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/c-zero-reg.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/ext.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/no-relax-align-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/shamt-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/shamt-64.s: Likewise.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix x86_64 x32 build
A build error on x86_64 with x32 abi was reported here (
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2021-November/049787.html ):
...
gdb/nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c:280:42: error: \
'struct compat_x32_siginfo_t::<unnamed union>::<unnamed>' has no member \
named 'si_addr_bnd'
280 | #define cpt_si_lower _sifields._sigfault.si_addr_bnd._lower
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
gdb/nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c:337:38: note: in expansion of macro 'cpt_si_lower'
337 | to->cpt_si_lower = from_ptrace.cpt_si_lower;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
...
The problem is that code added in commit d3d7d1ba3bb "[gdb/tdep] Handle
si_addr_bnd in compat_siginfo_from_siginfo" doesn't compile on an x86_64 x32
setup, because compat_x32_siginfo_t doesn't have the si_addr_bnd fields.
Fix this conservatively by disabling the code for x32.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: PR28610, Fix ASAN heap-buffer-overflow error in riscv_update_subset.
The architecture parser in riscv_update_subset shouldn't check (or access)
the pointer space which doesn't exist.
bfd/
pr 28610
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_update_subset): The architecture parser
shouldn't access the pointer space which doesn't exist.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Support .debug_line with DW_FORM_line_strp
I noticed a new gcc option -gdwarf64 and tried it out (using gcc 11.2.1).
With a test-case hello.c:
...
int
main (void)
{
printf ("hello\n");
return 0;
}
...
compiled like this:
...
$ gcc -g -gdwarf64 ~/hello.c
...
I ran into:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out
DW_FORM_line_strp pointing outside of .debug_line_str section \
[in module a.out]
...
Debugging gdb revealed that the string offset is:
...
(gdb) up
objfile=0x182ab70, str_offset=1378684502312,
form_name=0xeae9b5 "DW_FORM_line_strp")
at src/gdb/dwarf2/section.c:208
208 error (_("%s pointing outside of %s section [in module %s]"),
(gdb) p /x str_offset
$1 = 0x14100000128
(gdb)
...
which is read when parsing a .debug_line entry at 0x1e0.
Looking with readelf at the 0x1e0 entry, we have:
...
The Directory Table (offset 0x202, lines 2, columns 1):
Entry Name
0 (indirect line string, offset: 0x128): /data/gdb_versions/devel
1 (indirect line string, offset: 0x141): /home/vries
...
which in a hexdump looks like:
...
0x00000200 1f022801 00004101 00000201 1f020f02
...
What happens is the following:
- readelf interprets the DW_FORM_line_strp reference to .debug_line_str as
a 4 byte value, and sees entries 0x00000128 and 0x00000141.
- gdb instead interprets it as an 8 byte value, and sees as first entry
0x0000014100000128, which is too big so it bails out.
AFAIU, gdb is wrong. It assumes DW_FORM_line_strp is 8 bytes on the basis
that the corresponding CU is 64-bit DWARF. However, the .debug_line
contribution has it's own initial_length field, and encodes there that it's
32-bit DWARF.
Fix this by using the correct offset size for DW_FORM_line_strp references
in .debug_line.
Note: the described test-case does trigger this complaint (both with and
without this patch):
...
$ gdb -q -batch -iex "set complaints 10" a.out
During symbol reading: intermixed 32-bit and 64-bit DWARF sections
...
The reason that the CU has 64-bit dwarf is because -gdwarf64 was passed to
gcc. The reason that the .debug_line entry has 32-bit dwarf is because that's
what gas generates. Perhaps this is complaint-worthy, but I don't think it
is wrong.
Tested on x86_64-linux, using native and target board dwarf64.exp.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add target board dwarf64.exp
Add a new target board dwarf64.exp, that runs test with -gdwarf64.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Support .debug_line v5 in dwarf assembler
The v5 section version for .debug_line has:
- two new fields address_size and segment_selector_size
- a different way to encode the directory and filename tables.
Add support for this in the dwarf assembler.
For now, make the v5 directory and filename tables work with the v4 type of
specification in the test-cases by adding duplicate entries at position 0.
This will need to be properly fixed with an intrusive fix that changes how
directory and filename entries are specified in the test-cases, f.i:
...
set diridx [include_dir "${srcdir}/${subdir}"]
set fileidx [file_name "$srcfile" $diridx]
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Factor out _line_finalize_header
Rather than generate dwarf immediately in procs include_dir and file_name,
postpone generation and store the data in variables. Then handle the
generation in a new proc _line_finalize_header.
Tested on x86-64-linux.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Support .debug_line v4 in dwarf assembler
The .debug_line header got a new field in v4:
maximum_operations_per_instruction.
Generate this field in the dwarf assembler, for now hardcoding the value to 1,
meaning non-VLIW.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp
Add a new test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lines.exp that tests various .debug_line
sections.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Speed up MACRO_AT_* calls
Currently, for each MACRO_AT_range or MACRO_AT_func in dwarf assembly the
following is done:
- $srcdir/$subdir/$srcfile is compiled to an executable using
flags "debug"
- a new gdb instance is started
- the new executable is loaded.
This is inefficient, because the executable is identical within the same
Dwarf::assemble call.
Share the gdb instance in the same Dwarf::assemble invocation, which speeds
up a make check with RUNTESTFLAGS like this to catch all dwarf assembly
test-cases:
...
rtf=$(echo $(cd src/gdb/testsuite; find gdb.* -type f -name "*.exp" \
| xargs grep -l Dwarf::assemble))
...
from:
...
real 1m39.916s
user 1m25.668s
sys 0m21.377s
...
to:
...
real 1m29.512s
user 1m17.316s
sys 0m19.100s
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-21 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Remove duplicates in gdb.base/catch-signal.exp
When running the testsuite I have the following:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/catch-signal.exp ...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: SIGHUP: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: SIGHUP: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: 1: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: 1: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: SIGHUP SIGUSR2: continue
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/catch-signal.exp: SIGHUP SIGUSR2: continue
This patch removes DUPLICATE in gdb.base/catch-signal.exp by explicitly
giving names to the offending 'gdb_test "continue"' statements to make
them distinct.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-21 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: v850: fix cpu_option testsuite handling
The v850 testsuite code has been testing the $opt variable, but this
was never actually set anywhere globally or v850-specific. Instead,
this was a random variable leaking out of the sh testsuite code. As
far as I can tell, it has always been this way. That means the code
only ever tested the v850 cpu target (which is the default).
This failure can be easily seen in practice by running the v850 code
in isolation and seeing it crash:
$ runtest v850/allinsns.exp
...
Running target unix
Using /usr/share/dejagnu/baseboards/unix.exp as board description file for target.
Using /usr/share/dejagnu/config/unix.exp as generic interface file for target.
Using ../../../sim/testsuite/config/default.exp as tool-and-target-specific interface file.
WARNING: Assuming target board is the local machine (which is probably wrong).
You may need to set your DEJAGNU environment variable.
Running ../../../sim/testsuite/v850/allinsns.exp ...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing ../../../sim/testsuite/v850/allinsns.exp.
ERROR: tcl error code TCL LOOKUP VARNAME opt
ERROR: can't read "opt": no such variable
while executing
"switch -regexp -- $opt {
Backing up a bit, the reason for this logic in the first place is
because the common sim testsuite code makes an assumption about the
assembler options with cpu_option -- the option and its value are
always separated by an =. This is not the case with v850. So tweak
the core sim logic a bit to support omitting the = so that we can
switch v850 to the standard all_machs setting and avoid opt entirely.
2021-11-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-20 Jeff Law <jeffreyalaw@gmail.com>
Fix intermittent failures on the H8, particularly H8/SX tests.
The upstream GCC tester has showed spurious execution failures on the
H8 target for the H8/SX multilibs. I suspected memory corruption or an
uninitialized variable early as the same binary would sometimes work and
sometimes it got the wrong result. Worse yet, the point where the test
determined it was getting the wrong result would change.
Because it only happened on the H8/SX variant I was able to zero in on
the "mova" support and the "short form" of those instructions in particular.
As the code stands it checks if code->op3.type == 0 to try and identify cases
where op3 wasn't filled in and thus we've got the short form of the mova
instruction.
But for the short-form of those instructions we never set any of the "op3"
data structure. We get whatever was lying around -- it's usually zero and
thus things usually work, but if the stale data was nonzero, then we'd
fail to recognize the instruction as a short-form and fail to set up the
various fields appropriately.
I initially initialized the op3.type field to zero, but didn't like that
because it was inconsistent with how other operands were initialized.
Bringing consistency meant using -1 as the initializer value and adjusting
the check for short form mova appropriately.
I've had this in the upstream GCC tester for perhaps a year at this point
and haven't seen any of the intermittent failures again.
2021-11-20 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: fix array-view compilation with c++11 && _GLIBCXX_DEBUG
When building with -std=c++11 and -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG=1, we get some errors
like:
CXX unittests/array-view-selftests.o
In file included from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.h:25,
from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/defs.h:630,
from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/array-view-selftests.c:20:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/array-view.h: In instantiation of constexpr gdb::array_view<T> gdb::array_view<T>::slice(gdb::array_view<T>::size_type, gdb::array_view<T>::size_type) const [with T = unsigned char; gdb::array_view<T>::size_type = long unsigned int:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/array-view-selftests.c:532:29: required from here
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/array-view.h:192:3: error: body of constexpr function constexpr gdb::array_view<T> gdb::array_view<T>::slice(gdb::array_view<T>::size_type, gdb::array_view<T>::size_type) const [with T = unsigned char; gdb::array_view<T>::size_type = long unsigned int not a return-statement
192 | }
| ^
This is because constexpr functions in c++11 can only consist of a
single return statement, so we can't have the gdb_assert in there. Make
the gdb_assert presence conditional to the __cplusplus version, to
enable it only for c++14 and later.
Change-Id: I2ac33f7b4bd1765ddc3ac8d07445b16ac1f340f0
2021-11-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Check if libsource-highlight is usable
When building gdb with g++ 4.8.5, I ran into:
...
ld: source-cache.o: in function `source_cache::ensure(symtab*)':
source-cache.c:207: undefined reference to \
srchilite::SourceHighlight::SourceHighlight(std::string const&)
...
[ I configured gdb without explicit settings related to source-highlight, so
we're excercising the enable_source_highlight=auto scenario. ]
The problem is that:
- the source-highlight library is build with system compiler
g++ 7.5.0 which uses the new libstdc++ library abi (see
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/manual/using_dual_abi.html )
- gdb is build using g++ 4.8.5 which uses the old abi.
[ There's a compatibility macro _GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI, but that doesn't work
for this case. Instead, it enables the opposite case where the
source-highlight library is build with g++ 4.8.5 and gdb is build with
g++ 7.5.0. ]
Fix this by checking whether the source-highlight library is usable during
configuration.
In the enable_source_highlight=auto scenario, this allows the build to skip
the unusable library and finish successfully.
In the enable_source_highlight=yes scenario, this allows the build to error
out earlier.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-20 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
bfd: remove wrong comment in xcofflink.c
This comment was long time ago associated to the function
"xcoff_build_ldsyms" which have since been replaced by
"xcoff_build_ldsym".
* xcofflink.c: Remove wrong comment.
2021-11-20 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: bfin: fix short --env usage in testsuite
Now that we have more than one option that matches "--env", the test
config here doesn't work. Use the explicit --environment.
2021-11-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elfedit: Align --[in|out]put-abiversion usage
Align
--input-abiversion [0-255] Set input ABIVERSION
--output-abiversion [0-255] Set output ABIVERSION
instead of
--input-abiversion [0-255]
Set input ABIVERSION
--output-abiversion [0-255]
Set output ABIVERSION
* elfedit.c (usage): Align --[in|out]put-abiversion usage.
2021-11-19 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle runto fail in gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp
On OBS I ran into:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: run to mi-var-cp.cc:81 (set breakpoint)
UNRESOLVED: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: unable to start target
...
followed by 81 FAILs and two more UNRESOLVEDs.
I didn't manage to reproduce this, but I did notice that the initial
problem causing the UNRESOLVED caused all subsequent UNRESOLVEDs and FAILs.
I emulated the problem by commenting out the send_gdb "run\n" in
mi_run_cmd_full.
Fix this by:
- handling mi_run_cmd failure in mi_get_inline_test
- handling mi_run_inline_test failure in gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp, and
other test-cases using mi_get_inline_test
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-19 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix 64-bit dwarf test-cases with -m32
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/loc-sec-offset.exp with target board -m32,
I run into:
...
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP gcc -fno-stack-protector -m32 \
-fdiagnostics-color=never -c -o loc-sec-offset-dw641.o \
loc-sec-offset-dw64.S^M
as: loc-sec-offset-dw641.o: unsupported relocation type: 0x1^M
loc-sec-offset-dw64.S: Assembler messages:^M
loc-sec-offset-dw64.S:29: Error: cannot represent relocation type \
BFD_RELOC_64^M
...
Looking at line 29, we have:
...
.8byte .Labbrev1_begin /* Abbrevs */
...
It would be nice if the assembler could handle this somehow. But I guess
it's not unreasonable that an assembler for a 32-bit architecture will object
to handling 64-bit labels.
Instead, work around this in the dwarf assembler by emitting:
...
.4byte .Labbrev1_begin /* Abbrevs (lsw) */
.4byte 0 /* Abbrevs (msw) */
...
Tested on x86_64-linux with target board unix/-m32.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28383
2021-11-19 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/thread-specific-bp.exp
On OBS I ran into a failure in test-case gdb.threads/thread-specific-bp.exp:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/thread-specific-bp.exp: non-stop: continue to end
info breakpoint^M
Num Type Disp Enb Address What^M
1 breakpoint keep y 0x0000555555555167 in main at $src:36^M
breakpoint already hit 1 time^M
2 breakpoint keep y 0x0000555555555151 in start at $src:23^M
breakpoint already hit 1 time^M
3 breakpoint keep y 0x0000555555555167 in main at $src:36 thread 2^M
stop only in thread 2^M
4 breakpoint keep y 0x000055555555515c in end at $src:29^M
breakpoint already hit 1 time^M
(gdb) [Thread 0x7ffff7db1640 (LWP 19984) exited]^M
Thread-specific breakpoint 3 deleted - thread 2 no longer in the thread list.^M
FAIL: gdb.threads/thread-specific-bp.exp: non-stop: \
thread-specific breakpoint was deleted (timeout)
...
Fix this by waiting for the "[Thread 0x7ffff7db1640 (LWP 19984) exited]"
message before issuing the "info breakpoint command".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-19 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
gdb/testsuite: Extend tests for print of cv qualifiers
This commit supplements whatis and ptype command tests for print of
const-volatile qualifiers.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-11-16 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
* gdb.cp/ptype-cv-cp.cc: New const and volatile typedef
variables.
* gdb.cp/ptype-cv-cp.exp: Add new tests.
2021-11-19 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
gdb: Print cv qualifiers if class attributes are substituted
Make ptype print const/volatile qualifiers when template or typedef
attributes are substituted.
For a programm like
~~~
template<typename DataT>
class Cfoo
{
typedef float myfloat;
public:
DataT me0;
const DataT me1=1;
const myfloat me2=2.0;
};
int main()
{
Cfoo<int> cfoo;
return 0;
}
~~~
gdb outputs the following type for cfoo's attributes:
~~~
(gdb) b 14
Breakpoint 1 at 0x1170: file tmp.cc, line 14.
(gdb) run
Starting program: /tmp
Breakpoint 1, main () at tmp.cc:14
14 return 0;
(gdb) ptype cfoo
type = class Cfoo<int> [with DataT = int] {
public:
DataT me0;
DataT me1;
myfloat me2;
private:
typedef float myfloat;
}
~~~
The cv qualifiers (const in this case) are ignored for me1 and me2.
After:
~~~
(gdb) ptype cfoo
type = class Cfoo<int> [with DataT = int] {
public:
DataT me0;
const DataT me1;
const myfloat me2;
private:
typedef float myfloat;
}
~~~
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-11-16 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
* gdb/c-typeprint.c: Print cv qualifiers in case of parameter
substitution.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-11-16 Christina Schimpe <christina.schimpe@intel.com>
* gdb.cp/templates.cc: New template class Cfoo with const,
template, typdef and integer attributes.
* gdb.cp/templates.exp: Add new test using ptype and ptype/r
commmands for template class CFoo.
2021-11-19 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Support new .option arch directive.
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-asm-manual/pull/67
Format:
.option arch, +<extension><version>, ...
.option arch, -<extension>
.option arch, =<ISA string>
The new direcitve is used to enable/disable extensions for the specific
code region. For example,
.attribute arch, "rv64ic" # arch = rv64i2p0_c2p0
.option push
.option arch, +d2p0, -c # arch = rv64i2p0_f2p0_d2p0, f is added implied
.option arch, =rv32gc # arch = rv32i2p0_m2p0_a2p0_f2p0_d2p0_c2p0
.option pop # arch = rv64i2p0_c2p0
Note that,
1. ".option rvc/norvc" have the same behavior as ".option arch +c/-c".
2. ".option arch -i" is illegal, since we cannot remove base i extension.
3. If arch=rv64i2p0, then ".option arch, +i3p0" will update the i's version
from 2.0 to 3.0.
4. If arch=rv64i3p0, then ".option arch, +i" will update the i's version
from 2.0 to the default one according to the chosen isa spec.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_add_subset): If the subset is already added,
and the new versions are not RISCV_UNKNOWN_VERSION, then update the
versions to the subset list.
(riscv_copy_subset): New function. Copy the subset from list.
(riscv_copy_subset_list): New function. Return the new copyed list.
(riscv_update_subset): Updated to make .option arch directives workable.
* elfxx-riscv.h: Updated.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_subsets): Defined as a pointer.
(riscv_rps_as): Init the subset_list to NULL, we will set it later
once riscv_opts_stack is created or updated.
(struct riscv_option_stack, riscv_opts_stack): Moved forward.
(riscv_set_arch): Updated.
(s_riscv_option): Support new .option arch directive, to add, remove
or update subsets for the specific code region.
(riscv_write_out_attrs): Updated.
* doc/c-riscv.texi: Added document for new .option arch directive.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01a.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-01.s: Likewise..
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-02.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-fail.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-fail.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/option-arch-fail.s: Likewise.
2021-11-19 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Add multibyte character warning option to the assembler.
On hppa*-hp-hpux* run_dump_test edits the test file, adjusting .comm
directives to suit those target's unusual syntax. Thus gas is passed
a temporary file name.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte1.l: Ignore file name.
2021-11-19 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: install various doc files
2021-11-19 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Support STO_RISCV_VARIANT_CC and DT_RISCV_VARIANT_CC.
This is the original discussion,
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/pull/190
And here is the glibc part,
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/libc-alpha/2021-August/129931.html
For binutils part, we need to support a new direcitve: .variant_cc.
The function symbol marked by .variant_cc means it need to be resolved
directly without resolver for dynamic linker. We also add a new dynamic
entry, STO_RISCV_VARIANT_CC, to indicate there are symbols with the
special attribute in the dynamic symbol table of the object.
I heard that llvm already have supported this in their mainline, so
I think it's time to commit this.
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_elf_link_hash_table): Added variant_cc
flag. It is used to check if relocations for variant CC symbols
may be present.
(allocate_dynrelocs): If the symbol has STO_RISCV_VARIANT_CC
flag, then raise the variant_cc flag of riscv_elf_link_hash_table.
(riscv_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Added dynamic entry for
variant_cc.
(riscv_elf_merge_symbol_attribute): New function, used to merge
non-visibility st_other attributes, including STO_RISCV_VARIANT_CC.
binutils/
* readelf.c (get_riscv_dynamic_type): New function.
(get_dynamic_type): Called get_riscv_dynamic_type for riscv targets.
(get_riscv_symbol_other): New function.
(get_symbol_other): Called get_riscv_symbol_other for riscv targets.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (s_variant_cc): Marked symbol that it follows a
variant CC convention.
(riscv_elf_copy_symbol_attributes): Same as elf_copy_symbol_attributes,
but without copying st_other. If a function symbol has special st_other
value set via directives, then attaching an IFUNC resolver to that symbol
should not override the st_other setting.
(riscv_pseudo_table): Support variant_cc diretive.
* config/tc-riscv.h (OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES): Defined.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/variant_cc-set.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/variant_cc-set.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/variant_cc.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/variant_cc.s: Likewise.
include/
* elf/riscv.h (DT_RISCV_VARIANT_CC): Defined to (DT_LOPROC + 1).
(STO_RISCV_VARIANT_CC): Defined to 0x80.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/variant_cc-1.s: New testcase.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/variant_cc-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/variant_cc-now.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/variant_cc-r.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/variant_cc-shared.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Updated.
2021-11-19 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: use program_transform_name for libsim
Instead of always using target_alias as a prefix on the name, use
program_transform_name instead so that the library is scoped in the
same way as the run program.
sim: avoid installing headers when there is no sim
If we aren't building any sims, don't install the sim headers as they
won't be useful to anyone.
2021-11-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-18 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
dprintf-execution-x-script.exp: Adjust test for native-extended-gdbserver
Without this commit, doing...
make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver" \
TESTS="gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.exp"
...will show one failure.
Here's a snippet from gdb.log showing the circumstances - I've trimmed
the paths for readability:
builtin_spawn gdb -nw -nx -data-directory data-directory -iex set height 0 -iex set width 0 -iex set auto-connect-native-target off -iex set sysroot -ex set height unlimited -x testsuite/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.gdb --args testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script/dprintf-execution-x-script
...
Reading symbols from testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script/dprintf-execution-x-script...
Dprintf 1 at 0x40116e: file testsuite/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.c, line 38.
Breakpoint 2 at 0x40113a: file testsuite/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.c, line 26.
testsuite/gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.gdb:21: Error in sourced command file:
Don't know how to run. Try "help target".
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.exp: load and run script with -x
...
GNU gdb (GDB) 12.0.50.20211118-git
Copyright (C) 2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
...
(gdb) set height 0
(gdb) set width 0
(gdb) builtin_spawn gdbserver/gdbserver --once --multi localhost:2346
Listening on port 2346
target extended-remote localhost:2346
Remote debugging using localhost:2346
...
[Tests after this point will pass.]
Note that the command which spawns gdb prevents the gdb script from
using the native target via "-iex set auto-connect-native-target off".
Moreover, the script in question contains a "run" command, so GDB
doesn't know how to run (since it's prevented from using the native
target and no alternate "target" command has been issued. But, once
GDB finishes starting up, the test will spawn a gdbserver and then
connect to it. The other (two) tests after this point both pass.
I've fixed this by using gdb_test_multiple instead of gdb_test.
When a "Don't know how to run message" is received, the test is
unsupported.
I've also added a comment explaining the reason for needing to check
for "Don't know how to run" despite bailing out at the top of the test
via:
if ![target_can_use_run_cmd] {
return 0
}
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix array-view-selftests.c build with g++ 4.8
When building with g++ 4.8, I get:
CXX unittests/array-view-selftests.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/array-view-selftests.c:123:42: error: expected 'class' before 'Container'
template<template<typename ...> typename Container>
^
I am no C++ template expert, but it looks like if I change "typename" for
"class", as the compiler kind of suggests, the code compiles.
Change-Id: I9c3edd29fb2b190069f0ce0dbf3bc3604d175f48
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix ia64-tdep.c build with g++ 4.8
When building with g++ 4.8, I get:
CXX ia64-tdep.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/ia64-tdep.c:3862:1: error: could not convert '{ia64_allocate_new_rse_frame, ia64_store_argument_in_slot, ia64_set_function_addr}' from '<brace
-enclosed initializer list>' to 'const ia64_infcall_ops'
};
^
This happens since commit 345bd07cce3 ("gdb: fix gdbarch_tdep ODR
violation"), which added default values for ia64_infcall_ops fields. It
looks like g++ 4.8 doesn't like initializing the ia64_infcall_ops object
using the brace-enclosed initializer list when the ia64_infcall_ops
fields are assigned default values.
Later compilers don't have a problem with that, so I suppose that the
code is correct, but still, change it to make gcc 4.8 happy. Don't
initialize the fields of ia64_infcall_ops directly, instead
default-initialize ia64_gdbarch_tdep::infcall_ops.
Change-Id: I35e3a61abd7b7bbcafe6cb207078c738c5266d76
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: move AIX_TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE to rs6000-aix-tdep.c, remove rs6000-tdep.h
The contents of rs6000-tdep.h (AIX_TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE) is AIX-specific,
so I thought that this file should be named rs6000-aix-tdep.h. But
there's already a rs6000-aix-tdep.h, so then I though
AIX_TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE should simply be moved there, and rs6000-tdep.h
deleted. But then I realized that AIX_TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE is only used in
rs6000-aix-tdep.c, so move it to the beginning of that file.
Change-Id: Ia212c6fae202f31aedb46575821cd642beeda7a3
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: rename rs6000-nat.c to rs6000-aix-nat.c
This file seems to be AIX-specific, according to its contents and
configure.nat. Rename it to rs6000-aix-nat.c, to make that clear (and
to follow the convention).
Change-Id: Ib418dddc6b79b2e28f64431121742b5e87f5f4f5
2021-11-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/doc] Fix negative repeat count examining memory example
The documentation for the examining memory command x contains an example:
...
You can also specify a negative repeat count to examine memory backward from
the given address. For example, 'x/-3uh 0x54320' prints three halfwords (h)
at 0x54314, 0x54328, and 0x5431c.
...
The 0x54328 looks like a typo, which was intended to be 0x54318.
But the series uses a 4-byte distance, while the halfword size used in the
command means a 2-byte distance, so the series should be:
...
0x5431a, 0x5431c, and 0x5431e.
...
Fix this by updating the addresses in the example accordingly.
Reported here ( https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2021-November/049784.html
).
2021-11-18 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add multibyte character warning option to the assembler.
* as.c (parse_args): Add support for --multibyte-handling.
* as.h (multibyte_handling): Declare.
* app.c (scan_for_multibyte_characters): New function.
(do_scrub_chars): Call the new function if multibyte warning is
enabled.
* input-scrub,c (input_scrub_next_buffer): Call the multibyte
scanning function if multibyte warnings are enabled.
* symbols.c (struct symbol_flags): Add multibyte_warned bit.
(symbol_init): Call the multibyte scanning function if multibyte
symbol warnings are enabled.
(S_SET_SEGMENT): Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* doc/as.texi: Document the new feature.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte1.d: New test driver file.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte1.l: New test expected output.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte2.d: New test driver file.
* testsuite/gas/all/multibyte2.l: New test expected output.
* testsuite/gas/all/gas.exp: Run the new tests.
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: include gdbarch.h in all files extending gdbarch_tdep
Commit 345bd07cce33 ("gdb: fix gdbarch_tdep ODR violation") made a bunch
of files define a *_gdbarch_tdep class that inherits from a gdbarch_tdep
base. But some of these files don't include gdbarch.h, where
gdbarch_tdep is defined. This may cause build errors if gdbarch.h isn't
already included by chance by some other header file. Avoid this by
making them include gdbarch.h.
Change-Id: If433d302007e274daa4f656cfc94f769cf1aa68a
2021-11-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: make gdb_assert_not_reached accept a format string
Change gdb_assert_not_reached to accept a format string plus
corresponding arguments. This allows giving more precise messages.
Because the format string passed by the caller is prepended with a "%s:"
to add the function name, the callers can no longer pass a translated
string (`_(...)`). Make the gdb_assert_not_reached include the _(),
just like the gdb_assert_fail macro just above.
Change-Id: Id0cfda5a57979df6cdaacaba0d55dd91ae9efee7
2021-11-18 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb fix for catch-syscall.exp
Remove check_continue "execve" from Proc test_catch_syscall_execve.
The check_continue proceedure checs that the command, execve, starts and
checks for the return from the command. The execve command starts a new
program and thus the return from the command causing the test to fail.
The call to proc check_continue "execve" is removed and replaced with
just the call to check_call_to_syscall "execve" to verify the command
executed. The next test in proc test_catch_syscall_execve verifies that
the new program started and hit the break point in main.
Update the check for the PowerPC architecture. Power Little Endian systems
include "le" in the name. The istarget "power64-*-linux*" check fails to
match LE sytems. The expected string is updated to capture both Big Endian
and Little Endian systems. Power 10 LE istarget prints as:
powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu.
This patch fixes three failures and the error:
ERROR: can't read "arch1": no such variable
Patch tested on Power 10 ppc64le GNU/Linux platform.
2021-11-18 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb: PowerPC fix gdb.base/break-interp.exp
This patch fixes eight test failures on PowerPC for the test
gdb.base/break-interp.exp. The patch adds a funtion and registers it to
setup the displaced stepping for ppc-linux platform. The patch moves the
struct ppc_inferior_data to the ppc-tdep.h include file to make it visible
to the ppc-linux-tdep.c and rs6000-tdep.c files. Additionally the function
get_ppc_per_inferior is made external in ppc-tdep.h to make it visible in
both files.
Tested on Power 10 ppc64le-linux with no regressions.
2021-11-18 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
gdb fix PowerPC test gdb.arch/ppc-longdouble.exp
The test complains of duplicate tests.
DUPLICATE: gdb.arch/ppc-longdouble.exp: continue to breakpoint: return
The do_test calls gdb_continue_to_breakpoint "return". The duplicates
are the result of calling do_test three times with different arguments.
This patch fixes the duplicate tests by adding $name to the
gdb_continue_to_breakpoint argument.
Patch tested on Power 10 ppc64le GNU/Linux, no duplicate tests reported,
no new regression errors.
2021-11-18 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf/x86: Issue an error on discarded output .plt section
Issue an error, instead of crash, on discarded output .plt section.
bfd/
PR ld/28597
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_finish_dynamic_sections): Issue an error
on discarded output .plt section.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_finish_dynamic_sections): Likewise.
ld/
PR ld/28597
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28597.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28597.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28597.t: Likewise.
2021-11-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add missing wait in gdb.base/signals-state-child.exp
On OBS I ran into:
...
(gdb) shell diff -s outputs/gdb.base/signals-state-child/standalone.txt \
outputs/gdb.base/signals-state-child/gdb.txt^M
diff: outputs/gdb.base/signals-state-child/standalone.txt: \
No such file or directory^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/signals-state-child.exp: signals states are identical
...
I managed to reproduce this by adding "sleep (5)" at the start of main in
signals-state-child.c.
Fix this by waiting on the result of the spawned command.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Don't compile some opcodes files when bfd is 32-bit only
Put bpf back in the 32-bit targets, even though bpf requires a 64-bit
bfd. bpf sim support apparently works without being 64-bit.
* Makefile.am (TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES): Move bpf files..
(TARGET32_LIBOPCODES_CFILES): ..to here.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-11-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Pass DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS when compiling dwarf.c
Pick up the elfutils/debuginfod.h install location -I flags from
a variable set by debuginfod.m4 (via pkg.m4 and pkg-config).
* Makefile.am (DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS): Define.
(dwarf.@OBJECT@): New rule.
2021-11-18 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Add testcases for z[fdq]inx
Use gpr when the zfinx enable, the testcases contain float
instructions that reuse by z[fdq]inx.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zdinx.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zdinx.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zqinx.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zqinx.s: New test.
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
2021-11-18 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Add instructions and operand set for z[fdq]inx
Reuse float instructions in INSN_CLASS_F/D/Q, use riscv_subset_supports to
verify if z*inx enabled and use gpr instead of fpr when z*inx is enable.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Added support for
z*inx extension.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_ip): Added register choice for z*inx.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Reused INSN_CLASS_* for z*inx.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Added disassemble check for
z*inx.
* riscv-opc.c: Reused INSN_CLASS_* for z*inx.
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
2021-11-18 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Add mininal support for z[fdq]inx
Minimal support for zfinx, zdinx, zqinx. Like f/d/q, the zqinx
imply zdinx and zdinx imply zfinx, where zfinx are not compatible
with f/d/q.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Added implicit rules
for z*inx extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added entries for z*inx.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Added conflict check for z*inx.
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
2021-11-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] SVE2 instructions added to support SME
This patch is adding new SVE2 instructions added to support SME extension.
The following SVE2 instructions are added by the SME architecture:
* PSEL,
* REVD, SCLAMP and UCLAMP.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sme_pred_reg_with_index):
New parser.
(parse_operands): New parser.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-9-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-9-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-9-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-9.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-9.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New operand
AARCH64_OPND_SME_PnT_Wm_imm.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_sme_pred_reg_with_index):
New inserter.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_sme_pred_reg_with_index):
New extractor.
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_print_operand): Printout of
OPND_SME_PnT_Wm_imm.
* aarch64-opc.h (enum aarch64_field_kind): New bitfields
FLD_SME_Rm, FLD_SME_i1, FLD_SME_tszh, FLD_SME_tszl.
* aarch64-tbl.h (OP_SVE_NN_BHSD): New qualifier.
(OP_SVE_QMQ): New qualifier.
(struct aarch64_opcode): New instructions PSEL, REVD,
SCLAMP and UCLAMP.
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add new SME system registers
This patch is adding miscellaneous SME related system registers.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-sysreg.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-sysreg.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-sysreg-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-sysreg-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-sysreg-illegal.s: New test.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-opc.c: New system registers id_aa64smfr0_el1,
smcr_el1, smcr_el12, smcr_el2, smcr_el3, smpri_el1,
smprimap_el2, smidr_el1, tpidr2_el0 and mpamsm_el1.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add SME mode selection and state access instructions
This patch is adding new SME mode selection and state access instructions:
* Add SMSTART and SMSTOP instructions.
* Add SVCR system register.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sme_sm_za): New parser.
(parse_operands): New parser.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-8-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-8-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-8-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-8.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-8.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New operand
AARCH64_OPND_SME_SM_ZA.
(enum aarch64_insn_class): New instruction classes
sme_start and sme_stop.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_pstatefield): New inserter.
(aarch64_ins_sme_sm_za): New inserter.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_imm): New extractor.
(aarch64_ext_pstatefield): New extractor.
(aarch64_ext_sme_sm_za): New extractor.
* aarch64-opc.c (operand_general_constraint_met_p):
New pstatefield value for SME instructions.
(aarch64_print_operand): Printout for OPND_SME_SM_ZA.
(SR_SME): New register SVCR.
* aarch64-opc.h (F_REG_IN_CRM): New register endcoding.
* aarch64-opc.h (F_IMM_IN_CRM): New immediate endcoding.
(PSTATE_ENCODE_CRM): Encode CRm field.
(PSTATE_DECODE_CRM): Decode CRm field.
(PSTATE_ENCODE_CRM_IMM): Encode CRm immediate field.
(PSTATE_DECODE_CRM_IMM): Decode CRm immediate field.
(PSTATE_ENCODE_CRM_AND_IMM): Encode CRm and immediate
field.
* aarch64-tbl.h (struct aarch64_opcode): New SMSTART
and SMSTOP instructions.
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add LD1x, ST1x, LDR and STR instructions
This patch is adding new loads and stores defined by SME instructions.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sme_address): New parser.
(parse_sme_za_hv_tiles_operand_with_braces): New parser.
(parse_sme_za_array): New parser.
(output_operand_error_record): Print error details if
present.
(parse_operands): Support new operands.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-5-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-5-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-5-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-5.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-5.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-6-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-6-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-6-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-6.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-6.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-7-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-7-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-7-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-7.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-7.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New operands.
(enum aarch64_insn_class): Added sme_ldr and sme_str.
(AARCH64_OPDE_UNTIED_IMMS): New operand error kind.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_sme_za_hv_tiles): New inserter.
(aarch64_ins_sme_za_list): New inserter.
(aarch64_ins_sme_za_array): New inserter.
(aarch64_ins_sme_addr_ri_u4xvl): New inserter.
* aarch64-asm.h (AARCH64_DECL_OPD_INSERTER): Added
ins_sme_za_list, ins_sme_za_array and ins_sme_addr_ri_u4xvl.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_sme_za_hv_tiles): New extractor.
(aarch64_ext_sme_za_list): New extractor.
(aarch64_ext_sme_za_array): New extractor.
(aarch64_ext_sme_addr_ri_u4xvl): New extractor.
* aarch64-dis.h (AARCH64_DECL_OPD_EXTRACTOR): Added
ext_sme_za_list, ext_sme_za_array and ext_sme_addr_ri_u4xvl.
* aarch64-opc.c (operand_general_constraint_met_p):
(aarch64_match_operands_constraint): Handle sme_ldr, sme_str
and sme_misc.
(aarch64_print_operand): New operands supported.
* aarch64-tbl.h (OP_SVE_QUU): New qualifier.
(OP_SVE_QZU): New qualifier.
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add ZERO instruction
This patch is adding ZERO (a list of 64-bit element ZA tiles)
instruction.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sme_list_of_64bit_tiles):
New parser.
(parse_operands): Handle OPND_SME_list_of_64bit_tiles.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-4-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-4-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-4-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-4.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-4.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New operand
AARCH64_OPND_SME_list_of_64bit_tiles.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-opc.c (print_sme_za_list): New printing function.
(aarch64_print_operand): Handle OPND_SME_list_of_64bit_tiles.
* aarch64-opc.h (enum aarch64_field_kind): New bitfield
FLD_SME_zero_mask.
* aarch64-tbl.h (struct aarch64_opcode): New ZERO instruction.
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add MOV and MOVA instructions
This patch is adding new MOV (alias) and MOVA SME instruction.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (enum sme_hv_slice): new enum.
(struct reloc_entry): Added ZAH and ZAV registers.
(parse_sme_immediate): Immediate parser.
(parse_sme_za_hv_tiles_operand): ZA tile parser.
(parse_sme_za_hv_tiles_operand_index): Index parser.
(parse_operands): Added ZA tile parser calls.
(REGNUMS): New macro. Regs with suffix.
(REGSET16S): New macro. 16 regs with suffix.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2a.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-2a.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3a.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-3a.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New enums
AARCH64_OPND_SME_ZA_HV_idx_src and
AARCH64_OPND_SME_ZA_HV_idx_dest.
(struct aarch64_opnd_info): New ZA tile vector struct.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_sme_za_hv_tiles):
New inserter.
* aarch64-asm.h (AARCH64_DECL_OPD_INSERTER):
New inserter ins_sme_za_hv_tiles.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_sme_za_hv_tiles):
New extractor.
* aarch64-dis.h (AARCH64_DECL_OPD_EXTRACTOR):
New extractor ext_sme_za_hv_tiles.
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_print_operand):
Handle SME_ZA_HV_idx_src and SME_ZA_HV_idx_dest.
* aarch64-opc.h (enum aarch64_field_kind): New enums
FLD_SME_size_10, FLD_SME_Q, FLD_SME_V and FLD_SME_Rv.
(struct aarch64_operand): Increase fields size to 5.
* aarch64-tbl.h (OP_SME_BHSDQ_PM_BHSDQ): New qualifiers
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add SME instructions
Patch is adding new SME matrix instructions. Please note additional
instructions will be added in following patches.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sme_zada_operand):
New parser.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_reg_with_qual):
New reg parser.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (R_ZA): New egister type.
(parse_operands): New parser.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-illegal.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-illegal.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-illegal.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-f64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-f64.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-i64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sme-i64.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (enum aarch64_opnd): New operands
AARCH64_OPND_SME_ZAda_2b, AARCH64_OPND_SME_ZAda_3b and
AARCH64_OPND_SME_Pm.
(enum aarch64_insn_class): New instruction class sme_misc.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-opc.c (aarch64_print_operand):
Print OPND_SME_ZAda_2b and OPND_SME_ZAda_3b operands.
(verify_constraints): Handle OPND_SME_Pm.
* aarch64-opc.h (enum aarch64_field_kind):
New bit fields FLD_SME_ZAda_2b, FLD_SME_ZAda_3b and FLD_SME_Pm.
* aarch64-tbl.h (OP_SME_ZADA_PN_PM_ZN_S): New qualifier set.
(OP_SME_ZADA_PN_PM_ZN_D): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_PN_PM_ZN_ZM): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_S_PM_PM_S_S): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_D_PM_PM_D_D): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_S_PM_PM_H_H): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_S_PM_PM_B_B): New qualifier.
(OP_SME_ZADA_D_PM_PM_H_H): New qualifier.
(SME_INSN): New instruction macro.
(SME_F64_INSN): New instruction macro.
(SME_I64_INSN): New instruction macro.
(SME_INSNC): New instruction macro.
(struct aarch64_opcode): New SME instructions.
aarch64-asm-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-dis-2.c: Regenerate.
aarch64-opc-2.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: [SME] Add +sme option to -march
This series of patches (tagged [SME]) add support for the Scalable
Matrix Extension. Patch introduces new command line options: +sme, +sme-f64 and
+sme-i64 to -march command line options.
gas/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Updated docs.
* config/tc-aarch64.c: New SME command line options.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_SME): New flag.
(AARCH64_FEATURE_SME_F64): New flag.
(AARCH64_FEATURE_SME_I64): New flag.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-tbl.h (SME): New feature object.
2021-11-17 Jeremy Drake <cygwin@jdrake.com>
Set the default DLL chracteristics to 0 for Cygwin based targets.
* emultempl/pep.em (DEFAULT_DLL_CHARACTERISTICS): Set to 0 for
Cygwin targets.
* emultempl/pep.em (DEFAULT_DLL_CHARACTERISTICS): Likewise.
2021-11-17 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix the linker script parser so that it will recognise the PT_GNU_RELRO segment type, and the linker itself so that it will gracefully handle being unable to assign any sections to such a segment.
PR 28452
bfd * elf.c (assign_file_positions_for_non_load_sections): Replace
assertion with a warning message.
ld * ldgram.y: Add support for PT_GNU_RELRO and PT_GNU_PROPERTY.
* ldgram.c: Regenerate.
2021-11-17 Andreas Arnez <arnez@linux.ibm.com>
[gdb/build, s390x] Fix build after gdbarch_tdep changes
Commit 345bd07cce33 ("gdb: fix gdbarch_tdep ODR violation") changes a
declaration in s390-tdep.h from
struct gdbarch_tdep { ... };
to
struct s390_gdbarch_tdep : gdbarch_tdep { ... };
and now requires that gdbarch_tdep has been declared before. Which is
usually the case, except when compiling s390-linux-nat.c, where
s390-tdep.h is included before gdbarch.h. Thus the s390x build errors out
with the compiler complaining about a missing class name after the colon.
Fix this in s390-linux-nat.c, by including gdbarch.h before s390-tdep.h.
2021-11-17 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Expose the BTI BTYPE more explicitly in the registers
Augment the register description XML to expose the BTI BTYPE field contained
in the CPSR register. It will be displayed like so:
cpsr 0x60001000 [ EL=0 BTYPE=0 SSBS C Z ]
2021-11-17 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elfedit: Add --output-abiversion option to update ABIVERSION
* NEWS: Mention --output-abiversion.
* elfedit.c (input_elf_abiversion): New.
(output_elf_abiversion): Likewise.
(update_elf_header): Update EI_ABIVERSION.
(command_line_switch): Add OPTION_INPUT_ABIVERSION and
OPTION_OUTPUT_ABIVERSION.
(options): Add --input-abiversion and --output-abiversion.
(usage): Likewise.
(main): Handle --input-abiversion and --output-abiversion.
* doc/binutils.texi: Document --input-abiversion and
--output-abiversion.
* testsuite/binutils-all/elfedit.exp: Run elfedit-6.
* testsuite/binutils-all/elfedit-6.d: New file.
2021-11-17 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Support rvv extension with released version 1.0.
2021-11-17 Jim Wilson <jimw@sifive.com>
Kito Cheng <kito.cheng@sifive.com>
Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
This patch is porting from the following riscv github,
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-binutils-gdb/tree/rvv-1.0.x
And here is the vector spec,
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-v-spec
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Added imply rules
of v, zve and zvl extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_ext): Updated verison of v to 1.0.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added zve and zvl extensions.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): The zvl extensions need to
enable either v or zve extension.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Check the subset list to know
if the INSN_CLASS_V and INSN_CLASS_ZVEF instructions are supported.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (enum riscv_csr_class): Added CSR_CLASS_V.
(enum reg_class): Added RCLASS_VECR and RCLASS_VECM.
(validate_riscv_insn): Check whether the rvv operands are valid.
(md_begin): Initialize register hash for rvv registers.
(macro_build): Added rvv operands when expanding rvv pseudoes.
(vector_macro): Expand rvv macros into one or more instructions.
(macro): Likewise.
(my_getVsetvliExpression): Similar to my_getVsetvliExpression,
but used for parsing vsetvli operands.
(riscv_ip): Parse and encode rvv operands. Besides, The rvv loads
and stores with EEW 64 cannot be used when zve32x is enabled.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.d: Updated -march
to rv32ifv_zkr.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg.s: Added rvv csr testcases.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p10.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-imply-v.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-fail-zve32xf.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-fail-zve32xf.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-fail-zvl.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-fail-zvl.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-vmsgtvx.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-vmsgtvx.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-zero-imm.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns-zero-imm.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/vector-insns.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Defined mask/match encodings and csrs for rvv.
* opcode/riscv.h: Defined rvv immediate encodings and fields.
(enum riscv_insn_class): Added INSN_CLASS_V and INSN_CLASS_ZVEF.
(INSN_V_EEW64): Defined.
(M_VMSGE, M_VMSGEU): Added for the rvv pseudoes.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): Dump the rvv operands.
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_vecr_names_numeric): Defined rvv registers.
(riscv_vecm_names_numeric): Likewise.
(riscv_vsew): Likewise.
(riscv_vlmul): Likewise.
(riscv_vta): Likewise.
(riscv_vma): Likewise.
(match_vs1_eq_vs2): Added for rvv Vu operand.
(match_vd_eq_vs1_eq_vs2): Added for rvv Vv operand.
(riscv_opcodes): Added rvv v1.0 instructions.
2021-11-17 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
gdb/nat/linux-osdata.c: fix build on gcc-12 (string overfow)
On gcc-12 build fails as:
../../gdbserver/../gdb/nat/linux-osdata.c: In function 'void linux_xfer_osdata_processes(buffer*)':
../../gdbserver/../gdb/nat/linux-osdata.c:330:39: error:
'__builtin___sprintf_chk' may write a terminating nul past the end of the destination [-Werror=format-overflow=]
330 | sprintf (core_str, "%d", i);
| ^
It's an off-by-one case in an infeasible scenario for negative
huge core count. The change switches to std::string for memory
handling.
Tested by running 'info os processes' and checking CPU cores column.
2021-11-17 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb: Add aliases for read_core_file_mappings callbacks
Add aliases read_core_file_mappings_loop_ftype and
read_core_file_mappings_pre_loop_ftype. Intended for use with
read_core_file_mappings.
Also add build_id parameter to read_core_file_mappings_loop_ftype.
2021-11-17 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: add support for $pwd replacements
Extend the common test framework to support $pwd replacements in
settings. This allows replacing the custom cris @exedir@ with it.
sim: cris: replace @srcdir@ test extension with $srcdir/$subdir
The common framework supports $srcdir & $subdir replacements already,
so replace the custom @srcdir@ logic with those. Since the replace
happens in slurp_options that cris already uses, we don't have any
logic to port over there. We have to duplicate that into the cris
slurp_rv helper though.
2021-11-17 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cris: drop custom "dynamic" test field
This tag is used to force tests to be built dynamically (i.e. without
-static linking). This is because cris-sim.exp in dejagnu turns on
static linking in ldflags.
The default configs and runtest flags shouldn't load these boards.
If these settings are still needed, we should figure out a different
way of suppressing the stock settings wholesale. We want these to
all pass out of the box with little to no configuration so that they
can run in a multitarget build.
With dropping "dynamic", it'll be easier to merge the custom cris
test logic with the common sim test logic.
2021-11-17 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: add more silent build rules
site.exp is still verbose, but that comes from automake, so have
to get it fixed upstream.
2021-11-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-16 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
sim: cr16: fix build on gcc-12 (NULL comparison)
On gcc-12 build fails as:
sim/cr16/interp.c: In function 'lookup_hash':
sim/cr16/interp.c:89:25: error:
the comparison will always evaluate as 'true'
for the address of 'mnimonic' will never be NULL [-Werror=address]
89 | if ((h->ops->mnimonic != NULL) &&
| ^~
'mnimonic' is a sharr array within ops. It can never be NULL.
While at it renamed 'mnimonic' to 'mnemonic'.
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix length of array view returned by some value_contents functions
In commit 50888e42dcd3 ("gdb: change functions returning value contents
to use gdb::array_view"), I believe I made a mistake with the length of
the array views returned by some functions. All functions return a view
of `TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (type))` length. This is not correct when
the value's enclosing type is larger than the value's type. In that
case, the value's contents buffer is of the size of the enclosing type,
and the value's actual contents is a slice of that (as returned by
value_contents). So, functions value_contents_all_raw,
value_contents_for_printing and value_contents_for_printing_const are
not correct. Since they are meant to return the value's contents buffer
as a whole, they should have the size of the enclosing type.
There is nothing that uses the returned array view size at the moment,
so this didn't cause a problem. But it became apparent when trying to
adjust some callers.
Change-Id: Ib4e8837e1069111d2b2784d3253d5f3002419e68
2021-11-16 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
readelf: Support SHT_RELR/DT_RELR for -r
The -r output for SHT_RELR looks like:
Relocation section '.relr.dyn' at offset 0x530 contains 4 entries:
7 offsets
00000000000028c0
00000000000028c8
0000000000003ad0
0000000000003ad8
0000000000003ae0
0000000000003ae8
0000000000003af0
For --use-dynamic, the header looks like
'RELR' relocation section at offset 0x530 contains 32 bytes:
include/
* elf/common.h (DT_ENCODING): Bump to 38.
* elf/external.h (Elf32_External_Relr): New.
(Elf64_External_Relr): New.
binutils/
* readelf.c (enum relocation_type): New.
(slurp_relr_relocs): New.
(dump_relocations): Change is_rela to rel_type.
Dump RELR.
(dynamic_relocations): Add DT_RELR.
(process_relocs): Check SHT_RELR and DT_RELR.
(process_dynamic_section): Store into dynamic_info for
DT_RELR/DT_RELRENT/DT_RELRSZ.
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: remove FUNCTION_NAME
__func__ is standard C++11:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/function
Also, in C++11, __func__ expands to the demangled function name, so the
mention in the comment above FUNCTION_NAME doesn't apply anymore.
Finally, in places where FUNCTION_NAME is used, I think it's enough to
print the function name, no need to print the whole signature.
Therefore, I propose to just remove FUNCTION_NAME and update users to
use the standard __func__.
Change-Id: I778f28155422b044402442dc18d42d0cded1017d
2021-11-16 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/gdbsupport: make xstrprintf and xstrvprintf return a unique_ptr
The motivation is to reduce the number of places where unmanaged
pointers are returned from allocation type routines. All of the
callers are updated.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-11-16 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdbsupport: move xfree into its own file
In the next commit I'd like to reference gdb_unique_ptr within the
common-utils.h file. However, this requires that I include
gdb_unique_ptr.h, which requires that xfree be defined.
Interestingly, gdb_unique_ptr.h doesn't actually include anything that
defines xfree, but I was finding that when I added a gdb_unique_ptr.h
include to common-utils.h I was getting a dependency cycle; before my
change xfree was defined when gdb_unique_ptr.h was processed, while
after my change it was not, and this made g++ unhappy.
To break this cycle, I propose to move xfree into its own header file,
gdb-xfree.h, which I'll then include into gdb_unique_ptr.h and
common-utils.cc.
2021-11-16 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb: throw OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR rather than GENERIC_ERROR
While reviewing this patch:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-November/183227.html
I spotted that the patch could be improved if we threw
OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR rather than GENERIC_ERROR in a few places.
This commit updates error_value_optimized_out and
require_not_optimized_out to throw OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR.
I ran the testsuite and saw no regressions. This doesn't really
surprise me, we don't usually write code like:
catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
{
(if ex.error == GENERIC_ERROR)
...
else
...
}
There are a three places where we write something like:
catch (const gdb_exception_error &ex)
{
(if ex.error == OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR)
...
}
In frame.c:unwind_pc, stack.c:info_frame_command_core, and
value.c:value_optimized_out, but if we are hitting these cases then
it's not significantly changing GDB's behaviour.
2021-11-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove config.cache in gdbserver's "distclean"
PR gdb/28586 points out that "make distclean" fails to delete
config.cache from gdbserver/. This patch fixes the bug, and removes a
duplicate "Makefile" deletion that was also pointed out in the PR.
2021-11-16 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Remove inferior output in gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp
Test-case gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp has inferior output that is not needed, but
which makes the regexp matching more difficult (see commit 1f28b70def1
"[gdb/testsuite] Fix regexp in gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp").
Remove the inferior output, and revert commit 1f28b70def1 to make the matching
more restrictive.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Don't allow KMOV in TLS code sequences
Don't allow KMOV in TLS code sequences which require integer MOV
instructions.
PR target/28595
* config/tc-i386.c (match_template): Don't allow KMOV in TLS
code sequences.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run inval-tls and x86-64-inval-tls
tests.
* testsuite/gas/i386/inval-tls.l: New file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/inval-tls.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-inval-tls.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-inval-tls.s: Likewise.
2021-11-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: run: support concise env var settings
Support the same syntax as other common utilities where env vars can
be specified before the program to be run without an explicit option.
This behavior can be suppressed by using the -- marker.
2021-11-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: nrun: add --env-{set,unset,clear} command line options
Provide explicit control over the program's environment with the
basic set/unset/clear options. These are a bit clunky to use,
but they're functional.
The env set operation is split out into a separate function as it'll
be used in the next commit.
With these in place, we can adjust the custom cris testsuite to use
the now standard options and not its one-off hack.
2021-11-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: syscall: hoist argc/argn/argnlen to common code
Now that the callback framework supports argv & envp, we can move
the Blackfin implementation of these syscalls to the common code.
sim: syscall: fix argvlen & argv implementation
Now that we have access to the argv & envp strings, finish implementing
these syscalls. Delete unused variables, fix tbuf by incrementing the
pointer instead of setting to the length, and make sure we don't write
more data than the bufsize says is available.
sim: callback: expose argv & environ
Pass the existing strings data to the callbacks so that common
libgloss syscalls can be implemented (which we'll do shortly).
2021-11-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: keep track of program environment strings
We've been passing the environment strings to sim_create_inferior,
but most ports don't do anything with them. A few will use ad-hoc
logic to stuff the stack for user-mode programs, but that's it.
Let's formalize this across the board by storing the strings in the
normal sim state. This will allow (in future commits) supporting
more functionality in the run interface, and to unify some of the
libgloss syscalls.
2021-11-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: iq2000: fix some missing prototypes warnings
Turns out some of these were hiding real bugs like not passing the
pc variable down.
2021-11-16 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Scalar crypto instruction and entropy source CSR testcases.
Add testcases for Scalar Crypto extension, with total testcase contain all
instructions in k-ext/k-ext-64 and sub-extension testcase for zbk* zk*. Also
add testcase for new CSR name 'seed' which is the Entropy Source in zkr.
In fact these whole testcases can be combined into one file, after we have
supported the .option arch +-= directives.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext-64.d: New testcase for crypto instructions.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/k-ext.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkb-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkc-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkc-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkc.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkx-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkx-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zbkx.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknd-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zkne-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-32.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zknh-64.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksed-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksed-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksed.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksh-32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksh-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zksh.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-zkr.d: New testcase for zkr
csr check.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-zkr.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.d: Updated march to
rv32if_zkr.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p10.d: Added Crypto seed csr.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p11.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg.s: Likewise.
2021-11-16 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Scalar crypto instructions and operand set.
Add instructions in k-ext, some instruction in zbkb, zbkc is reuse from
zbb,zbc, we just change the class attribute to make them both support.
The 'aes64ks1i' and 'aes64ks2' instructions are present in both the Zknd
and Zkne extensions on rv64. Add new operand letter 'y' to present 'bs'
symbol and 'Y' to present 'rnum' symbolc for zkn instructions. Also add
a new Entropy Source CSR define 'seed' located at address 0x015.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Added support for
crypto extension.
gas/
*config/tc-riscv.c (enum riscv_csr_class): Added CSR_CLASS_ZKR.
(riscv_csr_address): Checked for CSR_CLASS_ZKR.
(validate_riscv_insn): Added y and Y for bs and rnum operands.
(riscv_ip): Handle y and Y operands.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Added encodings of crypto instructions.
Also defined new csr seed, which address is 0x15.
* opcode/riscv.h: Defined OP_* and INSN_CLASS_* for crypto.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): Recognized new y and Y operands.
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Added crypto instructions.
2021-11-16 jiawei <jiawei@iscas.ac.cn>
RISC-V: Minimal support of scalar crypto extension.
Minimal support of scalar crypto extension, add "k" in the
riscv_supported_std_ext, to make the order check right with
"zk" behind "zb".
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Added implicit
rules for zk* extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_ext): Added entry for k.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added entries for zk*.
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: rework "set debuginfod" commands
As discussed here [1], do some re-work in the "set debuginfod commands".
First, use "set debuginfod enabled on/off/ask" instead of "set
debuginfod on/off/ask". This is more MI-friendly, and it gives an
output that makes more sense in "info set", for example.
Then, make the show commands not call "error" when debuginfod support is
not compiled in. This makes the commands "show" and "show debuginfod"
stop early, breaking gdb.base/default.exp:
Running /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/default.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/default.exp: info set
FAIL: gdb.base/default.exp: show
- Make the "debuginfod enabled" setting default to "off" when debuginfod
support is not compiled in, and "ask" otherwise.
- Make the setter of "debuginfod enabled" error out when debuginfod
support is not compiled in, so that "debuginfod enabled" will always
remain "off" in that case.
- Make the setter of "debuginfod verbose" work in any case. I don't
see the harm in letting the user change that setting, since the user will
hit an error if they try to enable the use of debuginfod.
- I would do the same for the "debuginfod urls" setter, but because
this one needs to see the DEBUGINFOD_URLS_ENV_VAR macro, provided by
libdebuginfod, I made that one error out as well if debuginfod
support is not compiled it (otherwise, I would have left it like
"debuginfod verbose". Alternatively, we could hard-code
"DEBUGINFOD_URLS" in the code (in fact, it was prior to this patch,
but I think it was an oversight, as other spots use
DEBUGINFOD_URLS_ENV_VAR), or use a dummy string to store the setting,
but I don't really see the value in that.
Rename debuginfod_enable to debuginfod_enabled, just so it matches the
setting name.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-October/182937.html
Change-Id: I45fdb2993f668226a5639228951362b7800f09d5
Co-Authored-By: Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: adjust gdbarch_tdep calls in nat files
Commit 345bd07cce33 ("gdb: fix gdbarch_tdep ODR violation") forgot to
update the gdbarch_tdep calls in the native files other than x86-64
Linux. This patch updates them all (to the best of my knowledge).
These are the files I was able to build-test:
aarch64-linux-nat.c
amd64-bsd-nat.c
arm-linux-nat.c
ppc-linux-nat.c
windows-nat.c
xtensa-linux-nat.c
And these are the ones I could not build-test:
aix-thread.c
arm-netbsd-nat.c
ppc-fbsd-nat.c
ppc-netbsd-nat.c
ia64-tdep.c (the part that needs libunwind)
ppc-obsd-nat.c
rs6000-nat.c
If there are still some build problems related to gdbarch_tdep in them,
they should be pretty obvious to fix.
Change-Id: Iaa3d791a850e4432973757598e634e3da6061428
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove unused variables in xtensa-linux-nat.c
While build-testing this file, the compiler complained about these two
unused variables, remove them.
Change-Id: I3c54f779f12c16ef6184af58aca75eaad042ce4e
2021-11-16 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add arc-newlib-tdep.c to ALL_TARGET_OBS
This file is currently not compiled in an --enable-targets=all build,
but it should be. Add it to ALL_TARGET_OBS.
Update the gdbarch_tdep call that commit 345bd07cce33 ("gdb: fix
gdbarch_tdep ODR violation") forgot to update.
Change-Id: I86248a01493eea5e70186e9c46a298ad3994b034
2021-11-16 Jim Wilson <wilson@tuliptree.org>
Update my email address.
I've left SiFive and have a new gmail account because it is convenient
to use with git send-email. I'm planning to use this for my RISC-V
work. My tuliptree address still works, it just isn't as convenient.
binutils:
* MAINTAINERS (RISC-V): Update my address.
2021-11-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Don't use gdb_stdlog for inferior-events
The test-case gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp contains:
...
if [gdb_debug_enabled] {
untested "debug is enabled"
return 0
}
...
To understand what it does, I disabled this bit and ran with GDB_DEBUG=infrun,
like so:
...
$ cd $build/gdb/testsuite
$ make check GDB_DEBUG=infrun RUNTESTFLAGS=gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp
...
and ran into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exec: \
vfork parent follow, through step: set follow-fork parent
next^M
33 if (pid == 0) {^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exec: \
vfork parent follow, through step: step
...
The problem is that the test-case expects:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exec: \
vfork parent follow, through step: set follow-fork parent
next^M
[Detaching after vfork from child process 28169]^M
33 if (pid == 0) {^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exec: \
vfork parent follow, through step: step
...
but the "Detaching" line has been redirected to
$outputs/gdb.base/foll-vfork/gdb.debug.
I looked at the documentation of "set logging debugredirect [on|off]":
...
By default, GDB debug output will go to both the terminal and the logfile.
Set debugredirect if you want debug output to go only to the log file.
...
and my interpretation of it was that "debug output" did not match the
"messages" description of inferior-events:
...
The set print inferior-events command allows you to enable or disable printing
of messages when GDB notices that new inferiors have started or that inferiors
have exited or have been detached.
...
Fix the discrepancy by not using gdb_stdlog for inferior-events.
Update the gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp test-case to not require
gdb_debug_enabled == 0.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Tested test-case gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp with and without GDB_DEBUG=infrun.
2021-11-15 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
ld: Fix testsuite failures under --enable-textrel-check=error
ld/
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/dt_textrel.d: Pass explicit -z notext in
case ld was configured with --enable-textrel-check=error.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/pr22764.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/pr20402.d: Likewise.
2021-11-15 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Extend the prologue analyzer to handle the bti instruction
Handle the BTI instruction in the prologue analyzer. The patch handles all
the variations of the BTI instruction.
2021-11-15 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix gdbarch_tdep ODR violation
I would like to be able to use non-trivial types in gdbarch_tdep types.
This is not possible at the moment (in theory), because of the one
definition rule.
To allow it, rename all gdbarch_tdep types to <arch>_gdbarch_tdep, and
make them inherit from a gdbarch_tdep base class. The inheritance is
necessary to be able to pass pointers to all these <arch>_gdbarch_tdep
objects to gdbarch_alloc, which takes a pointer to gdbarch_tdep.
These objects are never deleted through a base class pointer, so I
didn't include a virtual destructor. In the future, if gdbarch objects
deletable, I could imagine that the gdbarch_tdep objects could become
owned by the gdbarch objects, and then it would become useful to have a
virtual destructor (so that the gdbarch object can delete the owned
gdbarch_tdep object). But that's not necessary right now.
It turns out that RISC-V already has a gdbarch_tdep that is
non-default-constructible, so that provides a good motivation for this
change.
Most changes are fairly straightforward, mostly needing to add some
casts all over the place. There is however the xtensa architecture,
doing its own little weird thing to define its gdbarch_tdep. I did my
best to adapt it, but I can't test those changes.
Change-Id: Ic001903f91ddd106bd6ca09a79dabe8df2d69f3b
2021-11-15 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
COFF: avoid modifications over C_FILE filename aux entries.
Commit e86fc4a5bc37 ("PR 28447: implement multiple parameters for .file
on XCOFF") introduces C_FILE entries which can store additional
information.
However, some modifications are needed by them but not by the original
C_FILE entries, usually representing the filename.
This patch ensures that filename entries are kept as is, in order to
protect targets not supporting the additional entries.
* coffgen.c (coff_write_symbol): Protect filename entries
(coff_write_symbols): Likewise.
(coff_print_symbol): Likewise.
2021-11-15 Eric Botcazou <ebotcazou@gcc.gnu.org>
Deal with full path in .file 0 directive
Gas uses the directory part, if present, of the .file 0 directive to set
entry 0 of the directory table in DWARF 5, which represents the "current
directory".
Now Gas also uses the file part of the same directive to set entry 0 of the
file table, which represents the "current compilation file". But the latter
need not be located in the former so GCC will use a full path in the file
part when it is passed a full path:
gcc -c /full/path/test.c -save-temps
yields:
.file 0 "/current/directory" "/full/path/test.c"
in the assembly file and:
The Directory Table (offset 0x22, lines 2, columns 1):
Entry Name
0 (indirect line string, offset: 0x25): /current/directory
1 (indirect line string, offset: 0x38): /full/path
The File Name Table (offset 0x30, lines 2, columns 2):
Entry Dir Name
0 0 (indirect line string, offset: 0x43): /full/path/test.c
in the object file. Note the full path and the questionable Dir value in
the 0 entry of the file table.
2021-11-15 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cris: make error message test a little more flexible
The point of this test is to just make sure the usage text is shown,
not the exact details of the usage text. So shorten the output test
to match the beginning. This fixes breakage when the output changed
slightly to include [--].
sim: run: fix crash in argc==0 error situation
The new argv processing code assumed that we were always passed a
command line. If we weren't, make sure we don't crash before we
get a chance to output an error message about incorrect usage.
sim: cris: touch up rvdummy handling
Add quiet build support and make sure it's removed with `make clean`.
sim: cris: replace custom "dest" test field with new --argv0
The #dest field used in the cris testsuite is a bit of hack to set the
argv[0] for the tests to read out later on. Now that the sim has an
option to set argv[0] explicitly, we don't need this custom field, so
let's drop it to harmonize the testsuites a little.
sim: run: add --argv0 option to control argv[0]
We default argv[0] to the program we run which is a standard *NIX
convention, but sometimes we want to be able to control the argv[0]
setting independently (especially for programs that inspect argv[0]
to change their behavior or output). Add an option to control it.
2021-11-15 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: split program path out of argv vector
We use the program argv to both find the program to run (argv[0]) and
to hold the arguments to the program. Most of the time this is fine,
but if we want to let programs specify argv[0] independently (which is
possible in standard *NIX programs), this double duty doesn't work.
So let's split the path to the program to run out into a separate
field by itself. This simplifies the various sim_open funcs too.
By itself, this code is more of a logical cleanup than something that
is super useful. But it will open up customization of argv[0] in a
follow up commit. Split the changes to make it easier to review.
2021-11-15 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: bfin: fix mach/xfail usage in tests
Set the mach to the right value all the time, and update xfail to
say the test fails on all targets. WIth multitarget testing, the
idea of target here doesn't make much sense.
2021-11-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
-Waddress fixes for gold testsuite
Current mainline gcc.
common_test_1.c: In function 'main':
common_test_1.c:56:14: error: comparison between two arrays [-Werror=array-compare]
56 | assert (c5 > c4);
| ^
common_test_1.c:56:14: note: use '&c5[0] > &c4[0]' to compare the addresses
* testsuite/common_test_1.c: Avoid -Waddress warnings.
* testsuite/common_test_1_v1.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/common_test_1_v2.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/script_test_2.cc: Likewise.
2021-11-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64 @notoc in non-power10 code
R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC is a variant of R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC for use on
@notoc cals from non-power10 code in the rare case that using such a
construct is useful. R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC will be emitted by gas
rather than R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC when @notoc is used in a branch
instruction if power10 instructions are not enabled at that point.
The new relocation tells the linker to not use power10 instructions on
any stub emitted for that branch, unless overridden by
--power10-stubs=yes.
The current linker heuristic of only generating power10 instructions
for stubs if power10-only relocations are detected, continues to be
used.
include/
* elf/ppc64.h (R_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC): Define.
bfd/
* reloc.c (BFD_RELOC_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC): Define.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_howto_raw): Add entry for new reloc.
(ppc64_elf_reloc_type_lookup): Handle it.
(enum ppc_stub_type): Delete.
(enum ppc_stub_main_type, ppc_stub_sub_type): New.
(struct ppc_stub_type): New.
(struct ppc_stub_hash_entry): Use the above new type.
(struct ppc_link_hash_table): Update stub_count.
(is_branch_reloc, ppc64_elf_check_relocs),
(toc_adjusting_stub_needed): Handle new reloc.
(stub_hash_newfunc, select_alt_stub, ppc_merge_stub),
(ppc_type_of_stub, plt_stub_size, build_plt_stub),
(build_tls_get_addr_head, build_tls_get_addr_tail),
(ppc_build_one_stub, ppc_size_one_stub, ppc64_elf_size_stubs),
(ppc64_elf_build_stubs, ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Handle new
reloc. Modify stub handling to suit new scheme.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* libbfd.h: Regenerate.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_elf_suffix): When power10 is not enabled
return BFD_RELOC_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC for @notoc.
(fixup_size, ppc_force_relocation, ppc_fix_adjustable): Handle
BFD_RELOC_PPC64_REL24_P9NOTOC.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/callstub-2.s: Add .machine power10.
2021-11-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Regenerate a couple of files
A couple of files changed on my latest --enable-maintainer-mode
build. ld/Makefile.in had a missing dependency but better sorting of
the loongson entries.
intl/
* configure: Regenerate.
ld/
* Makefile.am: Sort loongson entries.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-11-15 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix build with current GCC: EL_EXPLICIT(location) always non-NULL
Compiling GDB with current GCC (1b4a63593b) runs into this:
src/gdb/location.c: In function 'int event_location_empty_p(const event_location*)':
src/gdb/location.c:963:38: error: the address of 'event_location::<unnamed union>::explicit_loc' will never be NULL [-Werror=address]
963 | return (EL_EXPLICIT (location) == NULL
| ^
src/gdb/location.c:57:30: note: 'event_location::<unnamed union>::explicit_loc' declared here
57 | struct explicit_location explicit_loc;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
GCC is right, EL_EXPLICIT is defined as returning the address of an
union field:
/* An explicit location. */
struct explicit_location explicit_loc;
#define EL_EXPLICIT(P) (&((P)->u.explicit_loc))
and thus must always be non-NULL.
Change-Id: Ie74fee7834495a93affcefce03c06e4d83ad8191
2021-11-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-14 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
[PR gdb/16238] Add completer for the show user command
The 'show user' command (which shows the definition of non-python/scheme
user defined commands) is currently missing a completer. This is
mentioned in PR 16238. Having one can improve the user experience.
In this commit I propose an implementation for such completer as well as
the associated tests.
Tested on x86_64 GNU/Linux.
All feedbacks are welcome.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16238
2021-11-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
sync libbacktrace from gcc
2021-11-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-13 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Sync Makefile.tpl with GCC
* Makefile.tpl: Sync with GCC.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-11-13 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: fix switch-bool warnings
This code triggers -Werror=switch-bool warnings with <=gcc-5 versions.
Rework it to use if statements instead as it also simplifies a bit.
sim: sh: rework carry checks to not rely on integer overflows
In <=gcc-7 versions, -fstrict-overflow is enabled by default, and that
triggers warnings in this code that relies on integer overflows to test
for carries. Change the logic to test against the limit directly.
2021-11-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-12 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix gdb.base/sigstep.exp test for ppc
The test stops at <signal_handler called> which is the call to the handler
rather than in the handler as intended. This patch replaces the
gdb_test "$enter_cmd to handler" with a gdb_test_multiple test. The multiple
test looks for the stop at <signal_handler called>. If found, the command
is issued again. The test passes if gdb stops in the handler as expected.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: stepi to handler, nothing in handler, step
from handler: continue to signal
stepi
<signal handler called>
1: x/i $pc
=> 0x7ffff7f80440 <__kernel_start_sigtramp_rt64>: bctrl
(gdb) stepi
handler (sig=551) at sigstep.c:32
32 {
1: x/i $pc
=> 0x10000097c <handler>: addis r2,r12,2
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: stepi to handler, nothing in handler,
step from handler: stepi to handler
Patch has been tested on x86_64-linux and ppc64le-linux with no test failures.
2021-11-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix regexp in gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp
On OBS I ran into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exit: \
vfork relations in info inferiors: continue to child exit
info inferiors^M
Num Description Connection Executable ^M
1 <null> foll-vfork-exit ^M
* 2 <null> foll-vfork-exit ^M
(gdb) I'm the proud parent of child #5044!^M
FAIL: gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: exit: vfork relations in info inferiors: \
vfork relation no longer appears in info inferiors (timeout)
...
Fix this by removing the '$' anchor in the corresponding '$gdb_prompt $'
regexps.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't compile some opcodes files when bfd is 32-bit only
* Makefile.am (TARGET_LIBOPCODES_CFILES): Split into..
(TARGET64_LIBOPCODES_CFILES): ..this and..
(TARGET32_LIBOPCODES_CFILES): ..this.
(ALL_MACHINES): Likewise split to
(ALL64_MACHINES, ALL32_MACHINES): ..this.
* disassemble.c: Define some ARCH_* when ARCH_all only if BFD64.
* configure.ac (BFD_MACHINES): Defined depending on BFD_ARCH_SIZE.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
Import Makefile.def from gcc
* Makefile.def: Import from gcc.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-11-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix demangle style usage info
Extract allowed styles from libiberty, so we don't have to worry about
our help messages getting out of date. The function probably belongs
in libiberty/cplus-dem.c but it can be here for a while to iron out
bugs.
PR 28581
* demanguse.c: New file.
* demanguse.h: New file.
* nm.c (usage): Break up output. Use display_demangler_styles.
* objdump.c (usage): Use display_demangler_styles.
* readelf.c (usage): Likewise.
* Makefile.am: Add demanguse.c and demanguse.h.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* po/POTFILESin: Regenerate.
2021-11-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-11 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix "set scheduler-locking" thread exit hang
GDB hangs when doing this:
- launch inferior with multiple threads
- multiple threads hit some breakpoint(s)
- one breakpoint hit is presented as a stop, the rest are saved as
pending wait statuses
- "set scheduler-locking on"
- resume the currently selected thread (because of scheduler-locking,
it's the only one resumed), let it execute until exit
- GDB hangs, not showing the prompt, impossible to interrupt with ^C
When the resumed thread exits, we expect the target to return a
TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED event, and that's what we see:
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event
[infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found.
[Thread 0x7ffff7d9c700 (LWP 309357) exited]
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: -1.0.0 [process -1],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = no-resumed
[infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = no-resumed
[infrun] handle_no_resumed: TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED (ignoring: found resumed)
[infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait
[infrun] reset: reason=handling event
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target native, no resumed threads
[infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit
The problem is in handle_no_resumed: we check if some other thread is
actually resumed, to see if we should ignore that event (see comments in
that function for more info). If this condition is true:
(thread->executing () || thread->has_pending_waitstatus ())
... then we ignore the event. The problem is that there are some non-resumed
threads with a pending event, which makes us ignore the event. But these
threads are not resumed, so we end up waiting while nothing executes, hence
waiting for ever.
My first fix was to change the condition to:
(thread->executing ()
|| (thread->resumed () && thread->has_pending_waitstatus ()))
... but then it occured to me that we could simply check for:
(thread->resumed ())
Since "executing" implies "resumed", checking simply for "resumed"
covers threads that are resumed and executing, as well as threads that
are resumed with a pending status, which is what we want.
Change-Id: Ie796290f8ae7f34c026ca3a8fcef7397414f4780
2021-11-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix Wimplicit-exception-spec-mismatch in clang build
When building with clang 13 (and -std=gnu++17 to work around an issue in
string_view-selftests.c), we run into a few Wimplicit-exception-spec-mismatch
warnings:
...
src/gdbsupport/new-op.cc:102:1: error: function previously declared with an \
explicit exception specification redeclared with an implicit exception \
specification [-Werror,-Wimplicit-exception-spec-mismatch]
operator delete (void *p)
^
/usr/include/c++/11/new:130:6: note: previous declaration is here
void operator delete(void*) _GLIBCXX_USE_NOEXCEPT
^
...
These are due to recent commit 5fff6115fea "Fix
LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6 gdb".
Fix this by adding the missing noexcept.
Build on x86_64-linux, using gcc 7.5.0 and clang 13.0.0.
2021-11-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build with -std=c++11
When building with -std=c++11, we run into two Werror=missing-declarations:
...
new-op.cc: In function 'void operator delete(void*, std::size_t)':
new-op.cc:114:1: error: no previous declaration for \
'void operator delete(void*, std::size_t)' [-Werror=missing-declarations]
operator delete (void *p, std::size_t) noexcept
^~~~~~~~
new-op.cc: In function 'void operator delete [](void*, std::size_t)':
new-op.cc:132:1: error: no previous declaration for \
'void operator delete [](void*, std::size_t)' [-Werror=missing-declarations]
operator delete[] (void *p, std::size_t) noexcept
^~~~~~~~
...
These are due to recent commit 5fff6115fea "Fix
LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6 gdb".
The declarations are provided by <new> (which is included) for c++14 onwards,
but they are missing for c++11.
Fix this by adding the missing declarations.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc 7.5.0, both without (implying -std=gnu++14) and
with -std=c++11.
2021-11-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.arch/ppc64-break-on-_exit.exp
Add a regression test-case for commit a50bdb99afe "[gdb/tdep, rs6000] Don't
skip system call in skip_prologue":
- set a breakpoint on a local copy of glibc's _exit, and
- verify that it triggers.
The test-case uses an assembly file by default, but also has the possibility
to use a C source file instead.
Tested on ppc64le-linux. Verified that the test-case fails without
aforementioned commit, and passes with the commit. Both with assembly
and C source.
2021-11-11 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Dump objects according to the elf architecture attribute.
For now we should always generate the elf architecture attribute both for
elf and linux toolchains, so that we could dump the objects correctly
according to the generated architecture string. This patch resolves the
problem that we probably dump an object with c.nop instructions, but
in fact the c extension isn't allowed. Consider the following case,
nelson@LAPTOP-QFSGI1F2:~/test$ cat temp.s
.option norvc
.option norelax
.text
add a0, a0, a0
.byte 0x1
.balign 16
nelson@LAPTOP-QFSGI1F2:~/test$ ~/binutils-dev/build-elf32-upstream/build-install/bin/riscv32-unknown-elf-as temp.s -o temp.o
nelson@LAPTOP-QFSGI1F2:~/test$ ~/binutils-dev/build-elf32-upstream/build-install/bin/riscv32-unknown-elf-objdump -d temp.o
temp.o: file format elf32-littleriscv
Disassembly of section .text:
00000000 <.text>:
0: 00a50533 add a0,a0,a0
4: 01 .byte 0x01
5: 00 .byte 0x00
6: 0001 nop
8: 00000013 nop
c: 00000013 nop
nelson@LAPTOP-QFSGI1F2:~/test$ ~/binutils-dev/build-elf32-upstream/build-install/bin/riscv32-unknown-elf-readelf -A temp.o
Attribute Section: riscv
File Attributes
Tag_RISCV_arch: "rv32i2p0_m2p0_a2p0_f2p0_d2p0"
The c.nop at address 0x6 is generated for alignment, but since the rvc isn't
allowed for this object, dump it as a c.nop instruction looks wrong. After
applying this patch, I get the following result,
nelson@LAPTOP-QFSGI1F2:~/test$ ~/binutils-dev/build-elf32-upstream/build-install/bin/riscv32-unknown-elf-objdump -d temp.o
temp.o: file format elf32-littleriscv
Disassembly of section .text:
00000000 <.text>:
0: 00a50533 add a0,a0,a0
4: 01 .byte 0x01
5: 00 .byte 0x00
6: 0001 .2byte 0x1
8: 00000013 nop
c: 00000013 nop
For the current objdump, we dump data to .byte/.short/.word/.dword, and
dump the unknown or unsupported instructions to .2byte/.4byte/.8byte, which
respectively are 2, 4 and 8 bytes instructions. Therefore, we shouldn't
dump the 0x0001 as a c.nop instruction in the above case, we should dump
it to .2byte 0x1 as a unknown instruction, since the rvc is disabled.
However, consider that some people may use the new objdump to dump the old
objects, which don't have any elf attributes. We usually set the default
architecture string to rv64g by bfd/elfxx-riscv.c:riscv_set_default_arch.
But this will cause rvc instructions to be unrecognized. Therefore, we
set the default architecture string to rv64gc for disassembler, to keep
the previous behavior.
This patch pass the riscv-gnu-toolchain gcc/binutils regressions for
rv32emc-elf, rv32gc-linux, rv32i-elf, rv64gc-elf and rv64gc-linux
toolchains. Also, tested by --enable-targets=all and can build
riscv-gdb successfully.
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_merge_arch_attr_info): Tidy the
codes for riscv_parse_subset_t setting.
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_get_default_ext_version): Updated.
(riscv_subset_supports): Moved from gas/config/tc-riscv.c.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Likewise.
* elfxx-riscv.h: Added extern for riscv_subset_supports and
riscv_multi_subset_supports.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_subset_supports): Moved to
bfd/elfxx-riscv.c.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Likewise.
(riscv_rps_as): Defined for architectrue parser.
(riscv_set_arch): Updated.
(riscv_set_abi_by_arch): Likewise.
(riscv_csr_address): Likewise.
(reg_lookup_internal): Likewise.
(riscv_ip): Likewise.
(s_riscv_option): Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04b.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-03b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-04b.d: Likewise.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c: Include elfxx-riscv.h since we need the
architecture parser. Also removed the cpu-riscv.h, it
is already included in elfxx-riscv.h.
(default_isa_spec): Defined since the parser need this
to set the default architecture string.
(xlen): Moved out from riscv_disassemble_insn as a global
variable, it is more convenient to initialize riscv_rps_dis.
(riscv_subsets): Defined to recoed the supported
extensions.
(riscv_rps_dis): Defined for architectrue parser.
(riscv_disassemble_insn): Call riscv_multi_subset_supports
to make sure if the instructions are valid or not.
(print_insn_riscv): Initialize the riscv_subsets by parsing
the elf architectrue attribute. Otherwise, set the default
architectrue string to rv64gc.
2021-11-11 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: testsuite: drop sim_compile cover function
Most code isn't using this, and the only call site (in one cris file)
can use target_compile directly. So switch it over to simplify.
sim: cris: stop testing a.out explicitly [ld/13900]
Since gcc dropped support for a.out starting with 4.4.0 in 2009, it's
been impossible to verify this code actually still works. Since it
crashes in ld, and it uses a config option that no other tests uses
and we want to remove, drop the test to avoid all the trouble.
sim: io: tweak compiler workaround with error output
Outputting an extra space broke a cris test. Change the workaround
to use %s with an empty string to avoid the compiler warning but not
output an extra space.
sim: testsuite: delete unused arm remote host logic
There's no need to sync testutils.inc with remote hosts. The one
we have in the source tree is all we need and only thing we test.
Delete it to simplify.
sim: synacor: simplify test generation
Objcopy was used to create a binary file of just the executable code
since the environment requires code to based at address 0. We can
accomplish the same thing with the -Ttext=0 flag, so switch to that
to get rid of custom logic.
2021-11-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle PIE in .debug_loclists
Simon pointed out that my recent patches to .debug_loclists caused
some regressions. After a brief discussion we realized it was because
his system compiler defaults to PIE.
This patch changes this code to unconditionally apply the text offset
here. It also changes loclist_describe_location to work more like
dwarf2_find_location_expression.
I tested this by running the gdb.dwarf2 tests both with and without
-pie.
2021-11-10 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
arm: enable Cortex-A710 CPU
This patch is adding support for Cortex-A710 CPU in Arm.
bfd/
* cpu-arm.c (processors): Add cortex-a710.
gas/
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_cpus): Add cortex-a710 to -mcpu.
* doc/c-arm.texi: Update docs.
* testsuite/gas/arm/cpu-cortex-a710.d: New test.
2021-11-10 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gdb: adjust x_file fields on COFF readers
Commit e86fc4a5bc37 ("PR 28447: implement multiple parameters for .file
on XCOFF") changes the structure associated to the internal
representation of files in COFF formats. However, gdb directory update
has been forgotten, leading to compilation errors of this kind:
CXX coffread.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/coffread.c: In function 'const char* coff_getfilename(internal_auxent*)':
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/coffread.c:1343:29: error: 'union internal_auxent::<unnamed struct>::<unnamed>' has no member named 'x_zeroes'
1343 | if (aux_entry->x_file.x_n.x_zeroes == 0)
| ^~~~~~~~
Fix it by adjusting the COFF code in GDB.
Change-Id: I703fa134bc722d47515efbd72b88fa5650af6c3c
2021-11-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.opt/break-on-_exit.exp
Add a test-case to excercise the problem scenario reported in PR28527 and
fixed in commit a50bdb99afe "[gdb/tdep, rs6000] Don't skip system call in
skip_prologue":
- set a breakpoint on _exit, and
- verify that it triggers.
Note that this is not a regression test for that commit. Since the actual
code in _exit may vary across os instances, we cannot guarantee that the
problem will always trigger with this test-case.
Rather, this test-case is a version of the original test-case
(gdb.threads/process-dies-while-detaching.exp) that is minimal while still
reproducing the problem reported in PR28527, in that same setting.
The benefit of this test-case is that it exercise real-life code and may
expose similar problems in other settings. Also, it provides a much easier
test-case to investigate in case a similar problem occurs.
Tested on x86_64-linux and ppc64le-linux.
2021-11-10 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: frv: flip trapdump default back to off
When I refactored this by scoping it to sim-frv-xxx in commit
e7954ef5e5ed90fb7d28c013518f4c2e6bcd20a1 ("sim: frv: scope the
unique configure flag"), I changed the default from off to on.
While the feature is nice for developers, it breaks a bunch of
tests which aren't expecting this extra output. So flip it back
to off by default.
2021-11-10 Pekka Seppänen <pexu@sourceware.mail.kapsi.fi>
PR28575, readelf.c and strings.c use undefined type uint
Since --unicode support (commit b3aa80b45c4) both binutils/readelf.c
and binutils/strings.c use 'uint' in a few locations. It likely
should be 'unsigned int' since there isn't anything defining 'uint'
within binutils (besides zlib) and AFAIK it isn't a standard type.
* readelf.c (print_symbol): Replace uint with unsigned int.
* strings.c (string_min, display_utf8_char): Likewise.
(print_unicode_stream_body, print_unicode_stream): Likewise.
(print_strings): Likewise.
(get_unicode_byte): Wrap long line.
2021-11-10 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
ld: set correct flags for AIX shared tests
Previous flags were aimed to be run with XLC.
Nowadays, only GCC is being tested with GNU toolchain. Moreover,
recent XLC versions might also accept "-shared".
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Adjust shared flags.
2021-11-10 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
PR 28447: implement multiple parameters for .file on XCOFF
On XCOFF, ".file" pseudo-op allows 3 extras parameters to provide
additional information to AIX linker, or its debugger. These are
stored in auxiliary entries of the C_FILE symbol.
bfd/
PR 28447
* coffcode.h (combined_entry_type): Add extrap field.
(coff_bigobj_swap_aux_in): Adjust names of x_file fields.
(coff_bigobj_swap_aux_out): Likewise.
* coffgen.c (coff_write_auxent_fname): New function.
(coff_fix_symbol_name): Write x_file using
coff_write_auxent_fname.
(coff_write_symbol): Likewise.
(coff_write_symbols): Add C_FILE auxiliary entries to
string table if needed.
(coff_get_normalized_symtab): Adjust names of x_file fields.
Normalize C_FILE auxiliary entries.
(coff_print_symbol): Print C_FILE auxiliary entries.
* coff-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff_swap_aux_in): Adjust names of
x_file fields.
(_bfd_xcoff_swap_aux_out): Likewise.
* coff64-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff64_swap_aux_in): Likewise.
(_bfd_xcoff64_swap_aux_out): Likewise.
* cofflink.c (_bfd_coff_final_link): Likewise.
(_bfd_coff_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
* coffswap.h (coff_swap_aux_in): Likewise.
* peXXigen.c (_bfd_XXi_swap_aux_in): Likewise.
(_bfd_XXi_swap_aux_out): Likewise.
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
* libcoff.h: Regenerate.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_file): New function.
* config/tc-ppc.h (OBJ_COFF_MAX_AUXENTRIES): Change to 4.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/aix.exp: Add tests.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-file-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-file-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-file.s: New test.
include/
* coff/internal.h (union internal_auxent): Change x_file to be a
struct instead of a union. Add x_ftype field.
* coff/rs6000.h (union external_auxent): Add x_resv field.
* coff/xcoff.h (XFT_FN): New define.
(XFT_CT): Likewise.
(XFT_CV): Likewise.
(XFT_CD): Likewise.
2021-11-10 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Test case for Bug 28308
The purpose of this test is described in the comments in
dprintf-execution-x-script.exp.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28308
The name of this new test was based on that of an existing test,
bp-cmds-execution-x-script.exp. I started off by copying that test,
adding to it, and then rewriting almost all of it. It's different
enough that I decided that listing the copyright year as 2021
was sufficient.
2021-11-10 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Fix PR 28308 - dprintf breakpoints not working when run from script
This commit fixes Bug 28308, titled "Strange interactions with
dprintf and break/commands":
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28308
Since creating that bug report, I've found a somewhat simpler way of
reproducing the problem. I've encapsulated it into the GDB test case
which I've created along with this bug fix. The name of the new test
is gdb.base/dprintf-execution-x-script.exp, I'll demonstrate the
problem using this test case, though for brevity, I've placed all
relevant files in the same directory and have renamed the files to all
start with 'dp-bug' instead of 'dprintf-execution-x-script'.
The script file, named dp-bug.gdb, consists of the following commands:
dprintf increment, "dprintf in increment(), vi=%d\n", vi
break inc_vi
commands
continue
end
run
Note that the final command in this script is 'run'. When 'run' is
instead issued interactively, the bug does not occur. So, let's look
at the interactive case first in order to see the correct/expected
output:
$ gdb -q -x dp-bug.gdb dp-bug
... eliding buggy output which I'll discuss later ...
(gdb) run
Starting program: /mesquite2/sourceware-git/f34-master/bld/gdb/tmp/dp-bug
vi=0
dprintf in increment(), vi=0
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 in dprintf-execution-x-script.c
vi=1
dprintf in increment(), vi=1
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 in dprintf-execution-x-script.c
vi=2
dprintf in increment(), vi=2
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 in dprintf-execution-x-script.c
vi=3
[Inferior 1 (process 1539210) exited normally]
In this run, in which 'run' was issued from the gdb prompt (instead
of at the end of the script), there are three dprintf messages along
with three 'Breakpoint 2' messages. This is the correct output.
Now let's look at the output that I snipped above; this is the output
when 'run' is issued from the script loaded via GDB's -x switch:
$ gdb -q -x dp-bug.gdb dp-bug
Reading symbols from dp-bug...
Dprintf 1 at 0x40116e: file dprintf-execution-x-script.c, line 38.
Breakpoint 2 at 0x40113a: file dprintf-execution-x-script.c, line 26.
vi=0
dprintf in increment(), vi=0
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 dprintf-execution-x-script.c: No such file or directory.
vi=1
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 in dprintf-execution-x-script.c
vi=2
Breakpoint 2, inc_vi () at dprintf-execution-x-script.c:26
26 in dprintf-execution-x-script.c
vi=3
[Inferior 1 (process 1539175) exited normally]
In the output shown above, only the first dprintf message is printed.
The 2nd and 3rd dprintf messages are missing! However, all three
'Breakpoint 2...' messages are still printed.
Why does this happen?
bpstat_do_actions_1() in gdb/breakpoint.c contains the following
comment and code near the start of the function:
/* Avoid endless recursion if a `source' command is contained
in bs->commands. */
if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
return 0;
scoped_restore save_executing
= make_scoped_restore (&executing_breakpoint_commands, 1);
Also, as described by this comment prior to the 'async' field
in 'struct ui' in top.h, the main UI starts off in sync mode
when processing command line arguments:
/* True if the UI is in async mode, false if in sync mode. If in
sync mode, a synchronous execution command (e.g, "next") does not
return until the command is finished. If in async mode, then
running a synchronous command returns right after resuming the
target. Waiting for the command's completion is later done on
the top event loop. For the main UI, this starts out disabled,
until all the explicit command line arguments (e.g., `gdb -ex
"start" -ex "next"') are processed. */
This combination of things, the state of the static global
'executing_breakpoint_commands' plus the state of the async
field in the main UI causes this behavior.
This is a backtrace after hitting the dprintf breakpoint for
the second time when doing 'run' from the script file, i.e.
non-interactively:
Thread 1 "gdb" hit Breakpoint 3, bpstat_do_actions_1 (bsp=0x7fffffffc2b8)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/breakpoint.c:4431
4431 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
#0 bpstat_do_actions_1 (bsp=0x7fffffffc2b8)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:4431
#1 0x00000000004d8bc6 in dprintf_after_condition_true (bs=0x1538090)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:13048
#2 0x00000000004c5caa in bpstat_stop_status (aspace=0x116dbc0, bp_addr=0x40116e, thread=0x137f450, ws=0x7fffffffc718,
stop_chain=0x1538090) at gdb/breakpoint.c:5498
#3 0x0000000000768d98 in handle_signal_stop (ecs=0x7fffffffc6f0)
at gdb/infrun.c:6172
#4 0x00000000007678d3 in handle_inferior_event (ecs=0x7fffffffc6f0)
at gdb/infrun.c:5662
#5 0x0000000000763cd5 in fetch_inferior_event ()
at gdb/infrun.c:4060
#6 0x0000000000746d7d in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT)
at gdb/inf-loop.c:41
#7 0x00000000007a702f in handle_target_event (error=0, client_data=0x0)
at gdb/linux-nat.c:4207
#8 0x0000000000b8cd6e in gdb_wait_for_event (block=block@entry=0)
at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:701
#9 0x0000000000b8d032 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=0)
at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:597
#10 gdb_do_one_event () at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:212
#11 0x00000000009d19b6 in wait_sync_command_done ()
at gdb/top.c:528
#12 0x00000000009d1a3f in maybe_wait_sync_command_done (was_sync=0)
at gdb/top.c:545
#13 0x00000000009d2033 in execute_command (p=0x7fffffffcb18 "", from_tty=0)
at gdb/top.c:676
#14 0x0000000000560d5b in execute_control_command_1 (cmd=0x13b9bb0, from_tty=0)
at gdb/cli/cli-script.c:547
#15 0x000000000056134a in execute_control_command (cmd=0x13b9bb0, from_tty=0)
at gdb/cli/cli-script.c:717
#16 0x00000000004c3bbe in bpstat_do_actions_1 (bsp=0x137f530)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:4469
#17 0x00000000004c3d40 in bpstat_do_actions ()
at gdb/breakpoint.c:4533
#18 0x00000000006a473a in command_handler (command=0x1399ad0 "run")
at gdb/event-top.c:624
#19 0x00000000009d182e in read_command_file (stream=0x113e540)
at gdb/top.c:443
#20 0x0000000000563697 in script_from_file (stream=0x113e540, file=0x13bb0b0 "dp-bug.gdb")
at gdb/cli/cli-script.c:1642
#21 0x00000000006abd63 in source_gdb_script (extlang=0xc44e80 <extension_language_gdb>, stream=0x113e540,
file=0x13bb0b0 "dp-bug.gdb") at gdb/extension.c:188
#22 0x0000000000544400 in source_script_from_stream (stream=0x113e540, file=0x7fffffffd91a "dp-bug.gdb",
file_to_open=0x13bb0b0 "dp-bug.gdb")
at gdb/cli/cli-cmds.c:692
#23 0x0000000000544557 in source_script_with_search (file=0x7fffffffd91a "dp-bug.gdb", from_tty=1, search_path=0)
at gdb/cli/cli-cmds.c:750
#24 0x00000000005445cf in source_script (file=0x7fffffffd91a "dp-bug.gdb", from_tty=1)
at gdb/cli/cli-cmds.c:759
#25 0x00000000007cf6d9 in catch_command_errors (command=0x5445aa <source_script(char const*, int)>,
arg=0x7fffffffd91a "dp-bug.gdb", from_tty=1, do_bp_actions=false)
at gdb/main.c:523
#26 0x00000000007cf85d in execute_cmdargs (cmdarg_vec=0x7fffffffd1b0, file_type=CMDARG_FILE, cmd_type=CMDARG_COMMAND,
ret=0x7fffffffd18c) at gdb/main.c:615
#27 0x00000000007d0c8e in captured_main_1 (context=0x7fffffffd3f0)
at gdb/main.c:1322
#28 0x00000000007d0eba in captured_main (data=0x7fffffffd3f0)
at gdb/main.c:1343
#29 0x00000000007d0f25 in gdb_main (args=0x7fffffffd3f0)
at gdb/main.c:1368
#30 0x00000000004186dd in main (argc=5, argv=0x7fffffffd508)
at gdb/gdb.c:32
There are two frames for bpstat_do_actions_1(), one at frame #16 and
the other at frame #0. The one at frame #16 is processing the actions
for Breakpoint 2, which is a 'continue'. The one at frame #0 is attempting
to process the dprintf breakpoint action. However, at this point,
the value of 'executing_breakpoint_commands' is 1, forcing an early
return, i.e. prior to executing the command(s) associated with the dprintf
breakpoint.
For the sake of comparison, this is what the stack looks like when hitting
the dprintf breakpoint for the second time when issuing the 'run'
command from the GDB prompt.
Thread 1 "gdb" hit Breakpoint 3, bpstat_do_actions_1 (bsp=0x7fffffffccd8)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/breakpoint.c:4431
4431 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
#0 bpstat_do_actions_1 (bsp=0x7fffffffccd8)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:4431
#1 0x00000000004d8bc6 in dprintf_after_condition_true (bs=0x16b0290)
at gdb/breakpoint.c:13048
#2 0x00000000004c5caa in bpstat_stop_status (aspace=0x116dbc0, bp_addr=0x40116e, thread=0x13f0e60, ws=0x7fffffffd138,
stop_chain=0x16b0290) at gdb/breakpoint.c:5498
#3 0x0000000000768d98 in handle_signal_stop (ecs=0x7fffffffd110)
at gdb/infrun.c:6172
#4 0x00000000007678d3 in handle_inferior_event (ecs=0x7fffffffd110)
at gdb/infrun.c:5662
#5 0x0000000000763cd5 in fetch_inferior_event ()
at gdb/infrun.c:4060
#6 0x0000000000746d7d in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT)
at gdb/inf-loop.c:41
#7 0x00000000007a702f in handle_target_event (error=0, client_data=0x0)
at gdb/linux-nat.c:4207
#8 0x0000000000b8cd6e in gdb_wait_for_event (block=block@entry=0)
at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:701
#9 0x0000000000b8d032 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=0)
at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:597
#10 gdb_do_one_event () at gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:212
#11 0x00000000007cf512 in start_event_loop ()
at gdb/main.c:421
#12 0x00000000007cf631 in captured_command_loop ()
at gdb/main.c:481
#13 0x00000000007d0ebf in captured_main (data=0x7fffffffd3f0)
at gdb/main.c:1353
#14 0x00000000007d0f25 in gdb_main (args=0x7fffffffd3f0)
at gdb/main.c:1368
#15 0x00000000004186dd in main (argc=5, argv=0x7fffffffd508)
at gdb/gdb.c:32
This relatively short backtrace is due to the current UI's async field
being set to 1.
Yet another thing to be aware of regarding this problem is the
difference in the way that commands associated to dprintf breakpoints
versus regular breakpoints are handled. While they both use a command
list associated with the breakpoint, regular breakpoints will place
the commands to be run on the bpstat chain constructed in
bp_stop_status(). These commands are run later on. For dprintf
breakpoints, commands are run via the 'after_condition_true' function
pointer directly from bpstat_stop_status(). (The 'commands' field in
the bpstat is cleared in dprintf_after_condition_true(). This
prevents the dprintf commands from being run again later on when other
commands on the bpstat chain are processed.)
Another thing that I noticed is that dprintf breakpoints are the only
type of breakpoint which use 'after_condition_true'. This suggests
that one possible way of fixing this problem, that of making dprintf
breakpoints work more like regular breakpoints, probably won't work.
(I must admit, however, that my understanding of this code isn't
complete enough to say why. I'll trust that whoever implemented it
had a good reason for doing it this way.)
The comment referenced earlier regarding 'executing_breakpoint_commands'
states that the reason for checking this variable is to avoid
potential endless recursion when a 'source' command appears in
bs->commands. We know that a dprintf command is constrained to either
1) execution of a GDB printf command, 2) an inferior function call of
a printf-like function, or 3) execution of an agent-printf command.
Therefore, infinite recursion due to a 'source' command cannot happen
when executing commands upon hitting a dprintf breakpoint.
I chose to fix this problem by having dprintf_after_condition_true()
directly call execute_control_commands(). This means that it no
longer attempts to go through bpstat_do_actions_1() avoiding the
infinite recursion check for potential 'source' commands on the
command chain. I think it simplifies this code a little bit too, a
definite bonus.
Summary:
* breakpoint.c (dprintf_after_condition_true): Don't call
bpstat_do_actions_1(). Call execute_control_commands()
instead.
2021-11-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Add --unicode option
* objdump: Whitespace fixes.
(long_options): Correct "ctf" entry.
2021-11-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Add --unicode option
At low optimisation levels gcc may warn.
* strings.c (print_unicode_stream_body): Avoid bogus "may be
used unitialised" warning.
2021-11-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28543, readelf entered an infinite loop
This little tweak terminates fuzzed binary readelf output a little
quicker.
PR 28543
* dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Consume a byte when
form is unrecognized.
2021-11-09 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28542, Undefined behaviours in readelf.c
PR 28542
* readelf.c (dump_relocations): Check that section headers have
been read before attempting to access section name.
(print_dynamic_symbol): Likewise.
(process_mips_specific): Delete dead code.
2021-11-09 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb::array_view slicing/container selftest - test std::array too
Change-Id: I2141b0b8a09f6521a59908599eb5ba1a19b18dc6
2021-11-09 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: fix when GDB is built with AddressSanitizer
This test fails for me, showing:
ERROR: tcl error sourcing /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp.
ERROR: This GDB was configured as follows:
configure --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu --target=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
--with-auto-load-dir=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
--with-auto-load-safe-path=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
... and much more ...
The problem is that TCL's exec throws an error as soon as the exec'ed
process outputs on stderr. When GDB is built with ASan, it prints some
warnings about pre-existing signal handlers:
warning: Found custom handler for signal 7 (Bus error) preinstalled.
warning: Found custom handler for signal 8 (Floating point exception) preinstalled.
warning: Found custom handler for signal 11 (Segmentation fault) preinstalled.
Pass --quiet to GDB to avoid these warnings.
Change-Id: I3751d89b9b1df646da19149d7cb86775e2d3e80f
2021-11-09 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Correctly handle DW_LLE_start_end
When the code to handle DW_LLE_start_end was added (as part of some
DWARF 5 work), it was written to add the base address. However, this
seems incorrect -- the DWARF standard describes this as an address,
not an offset from the base address.
This patch changes a couple of spots in dwarf2/loc.c to fix this
problem. It then changes decode_debug_loc_addresses to return
DEBUG_LOC_OFFSET_PAIR instead, which preserves the previous semantics.
This only showed up on the RISC-V target internally, due to the
combination of DWARF 5 and a newer version of GCC. I've updated a
couple of existing loclists test cases to demonstrate the bug.
2021-11-09 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix build on rhES5
The rhES5 build failed due to an upstream import a while back. The
bug here is that, while the 'personality' function exists,
ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE is only defined in <linux/personality.h>, not
<sys/personality.h>.
However, <linux/personality.h> does not declare the 'personality'
function, and <sys/personality.h> and <linux/personality.h> cannot
both be included.
This patch restores one of the removed configure checks and updates
the code to check it.
We had this as a local patch at AdaCore, because it seemed like there
was no interest upstream. However, now it turns out that this fixes
PR build/28555, so I'm sending it now.
2021-11-09 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
doc/ctf-spec.texi: Remove "@validatemenus off"
Remove @validatemenus from ctf-spec.texi, which has been removed from
texinfo by
commit a16dd1a9ece08568a1980b9a65a3a9090717997f
Author: Gavin Smith <gavinsmith0123@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Oct 12 16:32:37 2020 +0100
* doc/texinfo.texi
(Writing a Menu, Customization Variables for @-Commands)
(Command List),
* doc/refcard/txirefcard.tex
Remove @validatemenus.
* tp/Texinfo/XS/Makefile.am (command_ids.h): Use gawk instead
of awk. Avoid discouraged "$p" usage, using "$(p)" instead.
* tp/Texinfo/XS/configure.ac: Check for gawk.
commit 128acab3889b51809dc3bd3c6c74b61d13f7f5f4
Author: Gavin Smith <gavinsmith0123@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Jan 3 14:51:53 2019 +0000
Update refcard.
* doc/refcard/txirefcard.tex: @setfilename is no longer
mandatory. Do not mention @validatemenus or explicitly giving
@node pointers, as these are not very important features.
PR libctf/28567
* doc/ctf-spec.texi: Remove "@validatemenus off".
2021-11-09 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Add --unicode option to control how unicode characters are handled by display tools.
* nm.c: Add --unicode option to control how unicode characters are
handled.
* objdump.c: Likewise.
* readelf.c: Likewise.
* strings.c: Likewise.
* binutils.texi: Document the new feature.
* NEWS: Document the new feature.
* testsuite/binutils-all/unicode.exp: New file.
* testsuite/binutils-all/nm.hex.unicode
* testsuite/binutils-all/strings.escape.unicode
* testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.highlight.unicode
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.invalid.unicode
2021-11-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: simplify testsuite a bit
Switch from the centralized list in the exp file to each test declaring
its own requirements which they're already (mostly) doing. This will
increase coverage slightly by running more tests in more configurations
since the hardcoded exp list was a little out of date.
We have to mark the psh* tests as shdsp only (to match what the exp
file was doing), mark the fsca & fsrra tests as failing (since they
weren't even being run by the exp file), and to fix the expected
output & status of the fail test.
2021-11-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cris: clean up missing func prototype warnings
Move some unused funcs under existing #if 0 protection, mark a few
local funcs as static, and add missing prototypes for the rest which
are used from other files. This fixes all the fatal warnings in the
mloop files so we can turn -Werror on here fully.
2021-11-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-08 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Improve gdb::array_view ctor from contiguous containers
While reading the interface of gdb::array_view, I realized that the
constructor that builds an array_view on top of a contiguous container
(such as std::vector, std::array or even gdb::array_view) can be
missused.
Lets consider the following code sample:
struct Parent
{
Parent (int a): a { a } {}
int a;
};
std::ostream &operator<< (std::ostream& os, const Parent & p)
{ os << "Parent {a=" << p.a << "}"; return os; }
struct Child : public Parent
{
Child (int a, int b): Parent { a }, b { b } {}
int b;
};
std::ostream &operator<< (std::ostream& os, const Child & p)
{ os << "Child {a=" << p.a << ", b=" << p.b << "}"; return os; }
template <typename T>
void print (const gdb::array_view<const T> &p)
{
std::for_each (p.begin (), p.end (), [](const T &p) { std::cout << p << '\n'; });
}
Then with the current interface nothinng prevents this usage of
array_view to be done:
const std::array<Child, 3> elts = {
Child {1, 2},
Child {3, 4},
Child {5, 6}
};
print_all<Parent> (elts);
This compiles fine and produces the following output:
Parent {a=1}
Parent {a=2}
Parent {a=3}
which is obviously wrong. There is nowhere in memory a Parent-like
object for which the A member is 2 and this call to print_all<Parent>
shold not compile at all (calling print_all<Child> is however fine).
This comes down to the fact that a Child* is convertible into a Parent*,
and that an array view is constructed to a pointer to the first element
and a size. The valid type pointed to that can be used with this
constructor are restricted using SFINAE, which requires that a
pointer to a member into the underlying container can be converted into a
pointer the array_view's data type.
This patch proposes to change the constraints on the gdb::array_view
ctor which accepts a container now requires that the (decayed) type of
the elements in the container match the (decayed) type of the array_view
being constructed.
Applying this change required minimum adjustment in GDB codebase, which
are also included in this patch.
Tested by rebuilding.
2021-11-08 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Add a const version of gdb_argv:as_array_view
This commits adds const versions for the GET and AS_ARRAX_VIEW methods
of gdb_argv. Those methods will be required in the following patch of
the series.
2021-11-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix nulltr -> nullptr typo
Change-Id: I04403bd85ec3fa75ea14130d68daba675a2a8aeb
2021-11-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: tweak scoped_disable_commit_resumed uses when resuming all threads in non-stop
When doing "continue -a" in non-stop mode, each thread is individually
resumed while the commit resumed state is enabled. This forces the
target to commit each resumption immediately, instead of being able to
batch things.
The reason is that there is no scoped_disable_commit_resumed around the
loop over threads in continue_1, when "non_stop && all_threads" is true.
Since the proceed function is called once for each thread, the
scoped_disable_commit_resumed in proceed therefore forces commit-resumed
between each thread resumption. Add the necessary
scoped_disable_commit_resumed in continue_1 to avoid that.
I looked at the MI side of things, the function exec_continue, and found
that it was correct. There is a similar iteration over threads, and
there is a scoped_disable_commit_resumed at the function scope. This is
not wrong, but a bit more than we need. The branches that just call
continue_1 do not need it, as continue_1 takes care of disabling commit
resumed. So, move the scoped_disable_commit_resumed to the inner scope
where we iterate on threads and proceed them individually.
Here's an example debugging a multi-threaded program attached by
gdbserver (debug output trimmed for brevity):
$ ./gdb -nx -q --data-directory=data-directory -ex "set non-stop" -ex "tar rem :1234"
(gdb) set debug remote
(gdb) set debug infrun
(gdb) c -a
Continuing.
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c:p14388.14388#90
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote
[infrun] proceed: exit
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c:p14388.1438a#b9
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote
[infrun] proceed: exit
... and so on for each thread ...
Notice how we send one vCont;c for each thread. With the patch applied, we
send a single vCont;c at the end:
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=continue all threads in non-stop
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] proceed: exit
[infrun] clear_proceed_status_thread: Thread 85790.85792
[infrun] proceed: enter
[infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=proceeding
[infrun] reset: reason=proceeding
[infrun] proceed: exit
... proceeding threads individually ...
[infrun] reset: reason=continue all threads in non-stop
[infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote
[infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote
[remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c#a8
Change-Id: I331dd2473c5aa5114f89854196fed2a8fdd122bb
2021-11-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make dwarf2_find_containing_comp_unit take a dwarf2_per_bfd
While reading another patch, I saw that this function didn't need to
take a dwarf2_per_objfile, but could take a dwarf2_per_bfd instead.
It doesn't change the behavior, but doing this shows that this function
is objfile-independent (can work with only the shared per-bfd data).
Change-Id: I58f9c9cef6688902e95226480285da2d0005d77f
2021-11-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove bpstat typedef, rename bpstats to bpstat
I don't find that the bpstat typedef, which hides a pointer, is
particularly useful. In fact, it confused me many times, and I just see
it as something to remember that adds cognitive load. Also, with C++,
we might want to be able to pass bpstats objects by const-reference, not
necessarily by pointer.
So, remove the bpstat typedef and rename struct bpstats to bpstat (since
it represents one bpstat, it makes sense that it is singular).
Change-Id: I52e763b6e54ee666a9e045785f686d37b4f5f849
2021-11-08 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: add CTF format specification
It's been a long time since most of this was written: it's long past
time to put it in the binutils source tree. It's believed correct and
complete insofar as it goes: it documents format v3 (the current
version) but not the libctf API or any earlier versions. (The
earlier versions can be read by libctf but not generated by it, and you
are highly unlikely ever to see an example of any of them.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-11-08 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* doc/ctf-spec.texi: New file.
* configure.ac (MAKEINFO): Add.
(BUILD_INFO): Likewise.
(AC_CONFIG_FILES) [doc/Makefile]: Add.
* Makefile.am [BUILD_INFO] (SUBDIRS): Add doc/.
* doc/Makefile.am: New file.
* doc/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerated.
* Makefile.in: Likewise.
2021-11-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Correct ld script wildcard matching description
Goes with commit 68bbb9f788d0
* ld.texi (Input Section Wildcards): Delete paragraph incorrectly
saying '*' does not match '/'.
2021-11-07 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: fix conversion of PC to an integer
On LLP64 targets where sizeof(long) != sizeof(void*), this code fails:
sim/sh/interp.c:704:24: error: cast from pointer to integer of different size -Werror=pointer-to-int-cast]
704 | do { memstalls += ((((long) PC & 3) != 0) ? (n) : ((n) - 1)); } while (0)
| ^
Since this code simply needs to check alignment, cast it using uintptr_t
which is the right type for this.
2021-11-07 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: clean up time(NULL) call
Casting 0 to a pointer via (long *) doesn't work on LLP64 targets:
error: cast from pointer to integer of different size [-Werror=pointer-to-int-cast]
It's also unnecessary here. We can simply pass NULL like every other
bit of code does.
2021-11-07 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: sh: break utime logic out of _WIN32 check
Some _WIN32 targets provide utime (like mingw), so move the header
include out from _WIN32 and under the specific HAVE_UTIME_H check.
sim: sh: drop errno extern
This isn't needed on any reasonable target nowadays, and no other
source does this, and breaks with some mingw targets, so punt the
extern entirely.
sim: sh: fix isnan redefinition with mingw targets
The code assumes that all _WIN32 targets are the same and can
define isnan to _isnan. For mingw targets, they provide an isnan
define already, so no need for the fallback here.
sim: arm/bfin/rx: undefine page size from system headers
Some targets (like cygwin) will export page size defines that clash
with our local usage here. Undefine the system one to fix building
for these targets.
sim: ppc: switch to libiberty environ.h
Drop our compat code and assume environ exists to simplify.
We did this for all other targets already, but ppc was missed.
sim: sh: enable -Werror everywhere
With most of the warnings fixed in interp.c, we can enable -Werror
here too now. There are some -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings still
lurking that look legitimate, but we don't flag those are fatal,
and I don't have the expertise to dive into each opcode to figure
out the right way to clean them up.
sim: sh: fix uninitialized variable usage with pdmsb
This block of code relies on i to control which bits to test and how
many times to run through the loop, but it never actually initialized
it. There is another chunk of code that handles the pdmsb instruction
that sets i to 16, so use that here too assuming it's correct. The
programming manual suggests this is the right value too, but I am by
no means a SuperH DSP expert. The tests are still passing though ...
sim: sh: constify a few read-only lookup tables
sim: sh: fix various parentheses warnings
Add parentheses to a bunch of places where the compiler suggests we
do to avoid confusion to most readers.
sim: sh: fix unused-value warnings
These macro expansions are deliberate in not using the computed value
so that they trigger side-effects (possible invalid memory accesses)
but while otherwise being noops. Add a (void) cast so the compiler
knows these are intentional.
sim: sh: rework register layout with anonymous unions & structs
Now that we require C11, we can leverage anonymous unions & structs
to fix a long standing issue with the SH register layout. The use
of sregs.i for sh-dsp has generated a lot of compiler warnings about
the access being out of bounds -- it only has 7 elements declared,
but code goes beyond that to reach into the fregs that follow. But
now that we have anonymous unions, we can reduce the nested names
and have sregs cover all of these registers.
2021-11-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-06 Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
sim: mips: use sim_fpu_to{32,64}u to fix build warnings
Since the first argument type is unsigned32 or unsigned64, just use
sim_fpu_to{32,64}u instead of sim_fpu_to{32,64}i to fix the following
build warnings:
CC cp1.o
.../sim/mips/cp1.c: In function 'convert':
.../sim/mips/cp1.c:1425:32: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'sim_fpu_to32i' differ in signedness [-Wpointer-sign]
status |= sim_fpu_to32i (&result32, &wop, round);
^~~~~~~~~
In file included from .../sim/mips/sim-main.h:67,
from .../sim/mips/cp1.c:46:
.../sim/mips/../common/sim-fpu.h:270:22: note: expected 'signed32 *' {aka 'int *'} but argument is of type 'unsigned32 *' {aka 'unsigned int *'}
INLINE_SIM_FPU (int) sim_fpu_to32i (signed32 *i, const sim_fpu *f,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
.../sim/mips/cp1.c:1429:32: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'sim_fpu_to64i' differ in signedness [-Wpointer-sign]
status |= sim_fpu_to64i (&result64, &wop, round);
^~~~~~~~~
In file included from .../sim/mips/sim-main.h:67,
from .../sim/mips/cp1.c:46:
.../sim/mips/../common/sim-fpu.h:274:22: note: expected 'signed64 *' {aka 'long int *'} but argument is of type 'unsigned64 *' {aka 'long unsigned int *'}
INLINE_SIM_FPU (int) sim_fpu_to64i (signed64 *i, const sim_fpu *f,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
.../sim/mips/cp1.c: In function 'convert_ps':
.../sim/mips/cp1.c:1528:34: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'sim_fpu_to32i' differ in signedness [-Wpointer-sign]
status_u |= sim_fpu_to32i (&res_u, &wop_u, round);
^~~~~~
In file included from .../sim/mips/sim-main.h:67,
from .../sim/mips/cp1.c:46:
.../sim/mips/../common/sim-fpu.h:270:22: note: expected 'signed32 *' {aka 'int *'} but argument is of type 'unsigned32 *' {aka 'unsigned int *'}
INLINE_SIM_FPU (int) sim_fpu_to32i (signed32 *i, const sim_fpu *f,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
.../sim/mips/cp1.c:1529:34: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'sim_fpu_to32i' differ in signedness [-Wpointer-sign]
status_l |= sim_fpu_to32i (&res_l, &wop_l, round);
^~~~~~
In file included from .../sim/mips/sim-main.h:67,
from .../sim/mips/cp1.c:46:
.../sim/mips/../common/sim-fpu.h:270:22: note: expected 'signed32 *' {aka 'int *'} but argument is of type 'unsigned32 *' {aka 'unsigned int *'}
INLINE_SIM_FPU (int) sim_fpu_to32i (signed32 *i, const sim_fpu *f,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
2021-11-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Modernise yyerror
Newer versions of bison emit a prototype for yyerror
void yyerror (const char *);
This clashes with some of our old code that declares yyerror to return
an int. Fix that in most cases by modernizing yyerror. bfin-parse.y
uses the return value all over the place, so for there disable
generation of the prototype as specified by posix.
binutils/
* arparse.y (yyerror): Return void.
* dlltool.c (yyerror): Likewise.
* dlltool.h (yyerror): Likewise.
* sysinfo.y (yyerror): Likewise.
* windmc.h (yyerror): Likewise.
* mclex.c (mc_error): Extract from ..
(yyerror): ..here, both now returning void.
gas/
* config/bfin-parse.y (yyerror): Define.
(yyerror): Make static.
* itbl-parse.y (yyerror): Return void.
ld/
* deffilep.y (def_error): Return void.
2021-11-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: undefined shift in mach-o.c
This one was logically wrong too. If file_ptr was 64 bits, then -1U
is extended to 0x00000000ffffffff, probably not what was intended
here.
* mach-o.c (FILE_ALIGN): Correct expression.
2021-11-06 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
readelf: Support RELR in -S and -d and output
readelf -r dumping support is not added in this patch.
include/
* elf/common.h: Add SHT_RELR, DT_RELR{,SZ,ENT}
bfd/
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_print_private_bfd_data): Add DT_RELR{,SZ,ENT}.
binutils/
* readelf.c (get_dynamic_type): Add DT_RELR{,SZ,ENT}.
(get_section_type_name): Add SHT_RELR.
2021-11-06 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
readelf: Make DT_PREINIT_ARRAYSZ's output style match DT_INIT_ARRAYSZ
The output now looks like:
- 0x0000000000000021 (PREINIT_ARRAYSZ) 0x10
+ 0x0000000000000021 (PREINIT_ARRAYSZ) 16 (bytes)
0x0000000000000019 (INIT_ARRAY) 0xbefc90
0x000000000000001b (INIT_ARRAYSZ) 536 (bytes)
* readelf.c (process_dynamic_section): Handle DT_PREINIT_ARRAYSZ.
2021-11-06 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: clarify license text via COPYING file
The project has been using GPL v3 for a while now in the source files,
and the arm & ppc ports have carried a copy of the COPYING file. Lets
move those up to the top sim dir like other projects to make it clear.
Also drop the ppc/COPYING.LIB as it's not really referenced by any
source as everything is GPL v3.
2021-11-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Introduce make_unique_xstrndup
This adds a new make_unique_xstrndup function, which is the "n"
analogue of make_unique_xstrdup. It also updates a couple existing
places to use this function.
2021-11-05 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Avoid /proc/pid/mem races (PR 28065)
PR 28065 (gdb.threads/access-mem-running-thread-exit.exp intermittent
failure) shows that GDB can hit an unexpected scenario -- it can
happen that the kernel manages to open a /proc/PID/task/LWP/mem file,
but then reading from the file returns 0/EOF, even though the process
hasn't exited or execed.
"0" out of read/write is normally what you get when the address space
of the process the file was open for is gone, because the process
execed or exited. So when GDB gets the 0, it returns memory access
failure. In the bad case in question, the process hasn't execed or
exited, so GDB fails a memory access when the access should have
worked.
GDB has code in place to gracefully handle the case of opening the
/proc/PID/task/LWP/mem just while the LWP is exiting -- most often the
open fails with EACCES or ENOENT. When it happens, GDB just tries
opening the file for a different thread of the process. The testcase
is written such that it stresses GDB's logic of closing/reopening the
/proc/PID/task/LWP/mem file, by constantly spawning short lived
threads.
However, there's a window where the kernel manages to find the thread,
but the thread exits just after and clears its address space pointer.
In this case, the kernel creates a file successfully, but the file
ends up with no address space associated, so a subsequent read/write
returns 0/EOF too, just like if the whole process had execed or
exited. This is the case in question that GDB does not handle.
Oleg Nesterov gave this suggestion as workaround for that race:
gdb can open(/proc/pid/mem) and then read (say) /proc/pid/statm.
If statm reports something non-zero, then open() was "successfull".
I think that might work. However, I didn't try it, because I realized
we have another nasty race that that wouldn't fix.
The other race I realized is that because we close/reopen the
/proc/PID/task/LWP/mem file when GDB switches to a different inferior,
then it can happen that GDB reopens /proc/PID/task/LWP/mem just after
a thread execs, and before GDB has seen the corresponding exec event.
I.e., we can open a /proc/PID/task/LWP/mem file accessing the
post-exec address space thinking we're accessing the pre-exec address
space.
A few months back, Simon, Oleg and I discussed a similar race:
[Bug gdb/26754] Race condition when resuming threads and one does an exec
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26754
The solution back then was to make the kernel fail any ptrace
operation until the exec event is consumed, with this kernel commit:
commit dbb5afad100a828c97e012c6106566d99f041db6
Author: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com>
AuthorDate: Wed May 12 15:33:08 2021 +0200
Commit: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
CommitDate: Wed May 12 10:45:22 2021 -0700
ptrace: make ptrace() fail if the tracee changed its pid unexpectedly
This however, only applies to ptrace, not to the /proc/pid/mem file
opening case. Also, even if it did apply to the file open case, we
would want to support current kernels until such a fix is more wide
spread anyhow.
So all in all, this commit gives up on the idea of only ever keeping
one /proc/pid/mem file descriptor open. Instead, make GDB open a
/proc/pid/mem per inferior, and keep it open until the inferior exits,
is detached or execs. Make GDB open the file right after the inferior
is created or is attached to or forks, at which point we know the
inferior is stable and stopped and isn't thus going to exec, or have a
thread exit, and so the file open won't fail (unless the whole process
is SIGKILLed from outside GDB, at which point it doesn't matter
whether we open the file).
This way, we avoid both races described above, at the expense of using
more file descriptors (one per inferior).
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28065
Change-Id: Iff943b95126d0f98a7973a07e989e4f020c29419
2021-11-05 Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite: use gdb_get_line_number
Replaces a hard coded line number with a use of gdb_get_line_number.
I suspect that the line number has, over time, come adrift from where
it was supposed to be stopping. When the test was first added, line
770 pointed at the final 'return 0' in function main. Over time, as
things have been added, line 770 now points at some random location in
the middle of main.
So, I've marked the 'return 0' with a comment, and now the test will
always stop there.
I also removed an old comment from 1997 talking about how these tests
will only pass with the HP compiler, followed by an additional comment
from 2000 saying that the tests now pass with GCC.
I get the same results before and after this change.
2021-11-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28541, unstable cie offset in the output of readelf
Calculating "0 - pointer" can indeed result in seeming randomness as
the pointer address varies.
PR 28541
* dwarf.c (display_debug_frames): Don't print cie offset when
invalid, print "invalid" instead. Remove now redundant warning.
2021-11-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Missing va_end in aarch64-dis.c
* aarch64-dis.c (extract_fields): Invoke va_end.
2021-11-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28530, Hang in objdump on machine with 196GB RAM
Investigating the PR28530 testcase, which has a fuzzed compression
header with an enormous size, I noticed that decompress_contents is
broken when the size doesn't fit in strm.avail_out. It wouldn't be
too hard to support larger sizes (patches welcome!) but for now just
stop decompress_contents from returning rubbish.
PR 28530
* compress.c (decompress_contents): Fail when uncompressed_size
is too big.
(bfd_init_section_decompress_status): Likewise.
2021-11-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: alpha-vms: objdump buffer overflows
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_desc): Sanity check buffer access.
(evax_bfd_print_valspec, evax_bfd_print_typspec): Likewise.
(evax_bfd_print_dst): Likewise.
2021-11-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: introduce "set index-cache enabled", deprecate "set index-cache on/off"
The "set index-cache" command is used at the same time as a prefix
command (prefix for "set index-cache directory", for example), and a
boolean setting for turning the index-cache on and off. Even though I
did introduce that, I now don't think it's a good idea to do something
non-standard like this.
First, there's no dedicated CLI command to show whether the index-cache
is enabled, so it has to be custom output in the "show index-cache
handler". Also, it means there's no good way a MI frontend can find out
if the index-cache is enabled. "-gdb-show index-cache" doesn't show it
in the MI output record:
(gdb) interpreter-exec mi "-gdb-show index-cache"
~"\n"
~"The index cache is currently disabled.\n"
^done,showlist={option={name="directory",value="/home/simark/.cache/gdb"}}
Fix this by introducing "set/show index-cache enabled on/off", regular
boolean setting commands. Keep commands "set index-cache on" and "set
index-cache off" as deprecated aliases of "set index-cache enabled",
with respectively the default arguments "on" and "off".
Update tests using "set index-cache on/off" to use the new command.
Update the regexps in gdb.base/maint.exp to figure out whether the
index-cache is enabled or not. Update the doc to mention the new
commands.
Change-Id: I7d5aaaf7fd22bf47bd03e0023ef4fbb4023b37b3
2021-11-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: pass/return setting setter/getter scalar values by value
The getter and setter in struct setting always receive and return values
by const reference. This is not necessary for scalar values (like bool
and int), but more importantly it makes it a bit annoying to write a
getter, you have to use a scratch static variable or something similar
that you can refer to:
const bool &
my_getter ()
{
static bool value;
value = function_returning_bool ();
return value;
}
Change the getter and setter function signatures to receive and return
value by value instead of by reference, when the underlying data type is
scalar. This means that string-based settings will still use
references, but all others will be by value. The getter above would
then be re-written as:
bool
my_getter ()
{
return function_returning_bool ();
}
This is useful for a patch later in this series that defines a boolean
setting with a getter and a setter.
Change-Id: Ieca3a2419fcdb75a6f75948b2c920b548a0af0fd
2021-11-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove command_class enum class_deprecated
The class_deprecated enumerator isn't assigned anywhere, so remove it.
Commands that are deprecated have cmd_list_element::cmd_deprecated set
instead.
Change-Id: Ib35e540915c52aa65f13bfe9b8e4e22e6007903c
2021-11-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove unnecessary cmd_list_element::aliases nullptr checks
Remove two unnecessary nullptr checks. If aliases is nullptr, then the
for loops will simply be skipped.
Change-Id: I9132063bb17798391f8d019af305383fa8e0229f
2021-11-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: re-generate configure
I get some diffs when running autoconf in gdbserver, probably leftovers
from commit 5dfe4bfcb969 ("Fix format_pieces selftest on Windows").
Re-generate configure in that directory.
Change-Id: Icdc9906af95fbaf1047a579914b2983f8ec5db08
2021-11-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Revert "bfd: Always check sections with the corrupt size"
This reverts commit e0f7ea91436dd308a094c4c101fd4169e8245a91.
2021-11-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Always check sections with the corrupt size
Always check sections with the corrupt size for non-MMO files. Skip MMO
files for compress_status == COMPRESS_SECTION_NONE since MMO has special
handling for COMPRESS_SECTION_NONE.
PR binutils/28530
* compress.c (bfd_get_full_section_contents): Always check
sections with the corrupt size.
2021-11-04 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Clarify the behavior of .option rvc or norvc.
Add/Remove the rvc extension to/from the riscv_subsets once the
.option rvc/norvc is set. So that we don't need to always check
the riscv_opts.rvc in the riscv_subset_supports, just call the
riscv_lookup_subset to search the subset list is enough.
Besides, we will need to dump the instructions according to the
elf architecture attributes. That means the dis-assembler needs
to parse the architecture string from the elf attribute before
dumping any instructions, and also needs to recognized the
INSN_CLASS* classes from riscv_opcodes. Therefore, I suppose
some functions will need to be moved from gas/config/tc-riscv.c
to bfd/elfxx-riscv.c, including riscv_multi_subset_supports and
riscv_subset_supports. This is one of the reasons why we need
this patch.
This patch passes the gcc/binutils regressions of rv32emc-elf,
rv32i-elf, rv64gc-elf and rv64gc-linux toolchains.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_remove_subset): Remove the extension
from the subset list.
(riscv_update_subset): Add/Remove an extension to/from the
subset list. This is used for the .option rvc or norvc.
* elfxx-riscv.h: Added the extern bool riscv_update_subset.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_set_options): Removed the unused
rve flag.
(riscv_opts): Likewise.
(riscv_set_rve): Removed.
(riscv_subset_supports): Removed the riscv_opts.rvc check.
(riscv_set_arch): Don't need to call riscv_set_rve.
(reg_lookup_internal): Call riscv_subset_supports to check
whether the rve is supported.
(s_riscv_option): Add/Remove the rvc extension to/from the
subset list once the .option rvc/norvc is set.
2021-11-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: mips: fix missing prototype in multi-run generation
The multi-run logic for mips involves a bit of codegen and rewriting
of files to include per-architecture prefixes. That can result in
files with missing prototypes which cause compiler errors. In the
case of mips-sde-elf targets, we have:
$srcdir/m16run.c -> $builddir/m16mips64r2_run.c
sim_engine_run -> m16mips64r2_engine_run
$srcdir/micromipsrun.c -> micromipsmicromips_run.c
sim_engine_run -> micromips64micromips_engine_run
micromipsmicromips_run.c:80:1: error: no previous prototype for 'micromips64micromips_engine_run' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
80 | micromips64micromips_engine_run (SIM_DESC sd, int next_cpu_nr, int nr_cpus,
We generate headers for those prototypes in the configure script,
but only include them in the generated multi-run.c file. Update the
rewrite logic to turn the sim-engine.h include into the relevant
generated engine include so these files also have their prototypes.
$srcdir/m16run.c -> $builddir/m16mips64r2_run.c
sim-engine.h -> m16mips64r2_engine.h
$srcdir/micromipsrun.c -> micromipsmicromips_run.c
sim-engine.h -> micromips64micromips_engine.h
2021-11-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28540, segmentation fault on NULL byte_get
PR 28540
* objdump.c (dump_bfd): Don't attempt load_separate_debug_files
when byte_get is NULL.
2021-11-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: inline common sim-fpu.c logic
We will never bother building w/out a ../common/ sim directory,
so drop ancient logic supporting that method.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: switch to common builds for callback objects
We don't need to build this anymore ourselves since the common build
includes it and produces the same object code. We also need to pull
in the split constant modules after the refactoring and pulling them
out of nltvals.def & targ-map.o. This doesn't matter for the sim
directly, but does for gdb and other users of libsim.
We also delete some conditional source tree logic since we already
require this be the "new" combined tree with a ../common/ dir. This
has been the case for decades at this point.
2021-11-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix gnu-nat build
When building gnu-nat.c, we get:
CXX gnu-nat.o
gnu-nat.c: In member function 'virtual void gnu_nat_target::create_inferior(const char*, const string&, char**, int)':
gnu-nat.c:2117:13: error: 'struct inf' has no member named 'target_is_pushed'
2117 | if (!inf->target_is_pushed (this))
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
gnu-nat.c:2118:10: error: 'struct inf' has no member named 'push_target'
2118 | inf->push_target (this);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
This is because of a confusion between the generic `struct inferior`
variable and the gnu-nat-specific `struct inf` variable. Fix by
referring to `inferior`, not `inf`.
Adjust the comment on top of `struct inf` to clarify the purpose of that
type.
Co-Authored-By: Andrea Monaco <andrea.monaco@autistici.org>
Change-Id: I2fe2f7f6ef61a38d79860fd262b08835c963fc77
2021-11-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: set ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=0 while running tests
We see some additional failures when running the testsuite against a GDB
compiled with ASan, compared to a GDB compiled without ASan. Some of
them are caused by the memory leak report shown by the GDB process when
it exits, and the fact that it makes it exit with a non-zero exit code.
I generally try to remember to set ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=0 in my
environment when running the tests, but I don't always do it. I think
it would be nice if the testsuite did it. I don't see any use to have
leak detection when running the tests. That is, unless we ever have a
test that ensures GDB doesn't leak memory, which isn't going to happen
any time soon.
Here are some tests I found that were affected by this:
gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp
gdb.base/many-headers.exp
gdb.base/quit.exp
gdb.base/with-mf.exp
gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index.exp
gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index-symlink.exp
gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-runto-main.exp
Change-Id: I784c7df8a13979eb96587f735c1d33ba2cc6e0ca
2021-11-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use section name in warnings in display_debug_loc
While looking at an apparently malformed executable with
"readelf --debug-dump=loc", I got this warning:
readelf: ./main: Warning: There is a hole [0x89 - 0x95] in .debug_loc section.
However, the executable only has a .debug_loclists section.
This patch fixes the warning messages in display_debug_loc to use the
name of the section that is being processed.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-11-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* dwarf.c (display_debug_loc): Use section name in warnings.
2021-11-03 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
[AArch64] Make gdbserver register set selection dynamic
The current register set selection mechanism for AArch64 is static, based
on a pre-populated array of register sets.
This means that we might potentially probe register sets that are not
available. This is OK if the kernel errors out during ptrace, but probing the
tag_ctl register, for example, does not result in a ptrace error if the kernel
supports the tagged address ABI but not MTE (PR 28355).
Making the register set selection dynamic, based on feature checks, solves
this and simplifies the code a bit. It allows us to list all of the register
sets only once, and pick and choose based on HWCAP/HWCAP2 or other properties.
I plan to backport this fix to GDB 11 as well.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28355
2021-11-03 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6 gdb
Currently for a binary compiled normally (without -fsanitize=address) but with
LD_PRELOAD of ASAN one gets:
$ ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=0:alloc_dealloc_mismatch=1:abort_on_error=1:fast_unwind_on_malloc=0 LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6 gdb
=================================================================
==1909567==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: alloc-dealloc-mismatch (malloc vs operator delete []) on 0x602000001570
#0 0x7f1c98e5efa7 in operator delete[](void*) (/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6+0xb0fa7)
...
0x602000001570 is located 0 bytes inside of 2-byte region [0x602000001570,0x602000001572)
allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f1c98e5cd1f in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6+0xaed1f)
#1 0x557ee4a42e81 in operator new(unsigned long) (/usr/libexec/gdb+0x74ce81)
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: alloc-dealloc-mismatch (/usr/lib64/libasan.so.6+0xb0fa7) in operator delete[](void*)
==1909567==HINT: if you don't care about these errors you may set ASAN_OPTIONS=alloc_dealloc_mismatch=0
==1909567==ABORTING
Despite the code called properly operator new[] and operator delete[].
But GDB's new-op.cc provides its own operator new[] which gets translated into
malloc() (which gets recogized as operatore new(size_t)) but as it does not
translate also operators delete[] Address Sanitizer gets confused.
The question is how many variants of the delete operator need to be provided.
There could be 14 operators new but there are only 4, GDB uses 3 of them.
There could be 16 operators delete but there are only 6, GDB uses 2 of them.
It depends on libraries and compiler which of the operators will get used.
Currently being used:
U operator new[](unsigned long)
U operator new(unsigned long)
U operator new(unsigned long, std::nothrow_t const&)
U operator delete[](void*)
U operator delete(void*, unsigned long)
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: dlltool buffer overflow: embedded NUL in string
yyleng gives the pattern length, xstrdup just copies up to the NUL.
So it is quite possible writing at an index of yyleng-2 overflows
the xstrdup allocated string buffer. xmemdup quite handily avoids
this problem, even writing the terminating NUL over the trailing
quote. Use it in ldlex.l too where we'd already had a report of this
problem and fixed it by hand, and to implement xmemdup0 in gas.
binutils/
* deflex.l (single and double quote strings): Use xmemdup.
gas/
* as.h (xmemdup0): Use xmemdup.
ld/
PR 20906
* ldlex.l (double quote string): Use xmemdup.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: mloop: mark a few conditionally used funcs as unused
These are marked inline, so building w/gcc at higher optimization
levels will automatically discard them. But building with -O0 will
trigger unused function warnings, so fix that.
The common before/after cover functions in the common mloop generator
are not used by all architecture ports. Doesn't seem to be a hard
requirement, so marking them optional (i.e. unused) is fine.
The cris execute function is conditionally used depending on the
fast-build mode settings, so mark it unused too.
2021-11-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: assert (addr_ranges) <= (start)
That assert would be more obvious if it were reported as
"addr_ranges <= end_ranges". Fix that by using the obvious variable
in the final loop. Stop the assertion by using a signed comparison:
It's possible for the rounding up of the arange pointer to exceed the
end of the block when the block size is fuzzed.
* dwarf.c (display_debug_aranges): Use "end_ranges" in loop
displaying ranges rather that "start". Simplify rounding up
to 2*address_size boundary. Use signed comparison in loop.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: hoist cgen mloop rules up to common builds
These rules don't depend on the target compiler settings, so hoist
the build logic up to the common builds for better parallelization.
We have to extend the genmloop.sh logic a bit to allow outputting
to a subdir since it always assumed cwd was the right place.
We leave the cgen maintainer rules in the subdirs for now as they
aren't normally run, and they rely on cgen logic that has not yet
been generalized.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: hoist mn10300 & v850 igen rules up to common builds
These rules don't depend on the target compiler settings, so hoist
the build logic up to the common builds for better parallelization.
We leave the mips rules in place as they depend on complicated
arch-specific configure logic that needs to be untangled first.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: hoist gencode & opc2c build rules up to common builds
These rules don't depend on the target compiler settings, so hoist
the build logic up to the common builds for better parallelization.
2021-11-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
opcodes: d10v: simplify header includes
This file doesn't use anything from bfd (sysdep.h), so drop that
include. This avoids an implicit dependency on the generated
config.h which can be problematic for build-time tools.
Also swap stdio.h for stddef.h. This file isn't doing or using
any I/O structures, but it does need NULL.
2021-11-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28523, ld.bfd created undefined symbols on ppc64
This patch removes any fake (linker created) function descriptor
symbol if its code entry symbol isn't dynamic, to ensure bogus dynamic
symbols are not created. The change to func_desc_adjust requires that
it be run only once, which means ppc64_elf_tls_setup can't call it for
just a few selected symbols.
PR 28523
* elf64-ppc.c (func_desc_adjust): If a function entry sym is
not dynamic and has no plt entry, hide any associated fake
function descriptor symbol.
(ppc64_elf_edit): Move func_desc_adjust iteration over syms to..
(ppc64_elf_tls_setup): ..here.
2021-11-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep, rs6000] Don't skip system call in skip_prologue
I ran into a case where a breakpoint on _exit never triggered, because it was
set past the end of the _exit prologue, past the end of the exit_group system
call (which does not return).
More concretely, the breakpoint was set at the last insn show here:
...
Dump of assembler code for function _exit:
0x00007ffff7e42ea0 <+0>: 12 00 4c 3c addis r2,r12,18
0x00007ffff7e42ea4 <+4>: 60 43 42 38 addi r2,r2,17248
0x00007ffff7e42ea8 <+8>: 00 00 00 60 nop
0x00007ffff7e42eac <+12>: f8 ff e1 fb std r31,-8(r1)
0x00007ffff7e42eb0 <+16>: 78 1b 7f 7c mr r31,r3
0x00007ffff7e42eb4 <+20>: f0 ff c1 fb std r30,-16(r1)
0x00007ffff7e42eb8 <+24>: ea 00 00 38 li r0,234
0x00007ffff7e42ebc <+28>: a0 8b 22 e9 ld r9,-29792(r2)
0x00007ffff7e42ec0 <+32>: 78 fb e3 7f mr r3,r31
0x00007ffff7e42ec4 <+36>: 14 6a c9 7f add r30,r9,r13
0x00007ffff7e42ec8 <+40>: 02 00 00 44 sc
0x00007ffff7e42ecc <+44>: 26 00 00 7c mfcr r0
0x00007ffff7e42ed0 <+48>: 00 10 09 74 andis. r9,r0,4096
...
Fix this by treating system calls the same as branches in skip_prologue:
by default, don't skip, such that the breakpoint is set at 0x00007ffff7e42eb8
instead.
Tested on ppc64le-linux, on a power 8 machine.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28527
2021-11-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@zinfandel-3.arch.suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle SIGILL in two gdb.arch powerpc test-cases
On powerpc64le-linux, with test-case gdb.arch/powerpc-addpcis.exp I run into
SIGILL:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/powerpc-addpcis.exp: get hexadecimal valueof "$r3"
stepi^M
^M
Program terminated with signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.^M
The program no longer exists.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/powerpc-addpcis.exp: set r4
...
because it's a power9 insn, and I'm running on a power8 machine.
Fix this by handling the SIGILL. Likewise in gdb.arch/powerpc-lnia.exp.
Tested on powerpc64le-linux.
2021-11-02 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/sim: update my email address
gdb:
* MAINTAINERS (Global Maintainers): Update my address.
(Responsible Maintainers): Likewise.
(Write After Approval): Likewise.
sim:
* MAINTAINERS (Global Maintainers): Update my address.
2021-11-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix stepi test-cases with unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie
When running test-case gdb.base/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp with target board
unix/-m32/-fPIE/-pie, I run into:
...
(gdb) stepi^M
0x5655552e 22 { /* inc.1 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
0x56555530 22 { /* inc.1 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
0x565555f7 in __x86.get_pc_thunk.ax ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp: stepi into return thunk
...
In contrast, with unix/-m32 we have instead:
...
(gdb) stepi^M
0x08048407 22 { /* inc.1 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
23 return x + 1; /* inc.2 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
0x0804840c 23 return x + 1; /* inc.2 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
24 } /* inc.3 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
0x08048410 24 } /* inc.3 */^M
(gdb) stepi^M
0x0804848f in __x86_return_thunk ()^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp: stepi into return thunk
...
The test-case doesn't expect to run into __x86.get_pc_thunk.ax, which is a
PIC helper function for x86_64-linux.
Fix this by insn-stepping through it.
Likewise in a few other test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-11-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-11-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ARM: match armeb output for unwind-pacbti-m test
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.d: Match armeb output.
2021-11-01 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
[gdb/doc]: Updated manpages to be consistent with help
Updated manpages to be consistent with help information provided by the
binary. The main changes are:
* Making all long-form options have '--', instead of a single '-';
* added most of the missing options to the manpage;
* removed the information about using '+' instead of '-', since it
doesn't seem to be supported anymore.
This also fixes 2 upstream bugs:
* https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23965; by adding
--args to the manpage
* https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10619; by adding the
double dashes
2021-11-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
macho-o archive sanity checks
Anti-fuzzing checks.
* mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_fat_archive_p): Sanity check entry offset
and size against file size.
2021-11-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
objcopy buffer overflow
"tocopy" in this code was an int, which when the size to be copied was
larger than MAXINT could result in tocopy being negative. A negative
value of course is less than BUFSIZE, but when converted to
bfd_size_type is extremely large.
PR 995
* objcopy.c (copy_unknown_object): Correct calculation of "tocopy".
Use better variable types.
2021-11-01 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
arm: add armv9-a architecture to -march
Update also include:
+ New value of Tag_CPU_arch EABI attribute (22) is added.
+ Updated missing Tag_CPU_arch EABI attributes.
+ Updated how we combine archs 'v4t_plus_v6_m' as this mechanism
have to handle new Armv9 as well.
Regression tested on `arm-none-eabi` cross Binutils and no issues.
bfd/
* archures.c: Define bfd_mach_arm_9.
* bfd-in2.h (bfd_mach_arm_9): Define bfd_mach_arm_9.
* cpu-arm.c: Add 'armv9-a' option to -march.
* elf32-arm.c (using_thumb2_bl): Update assert check.
(arch_has_arm_nop): Add TAG_CPU_ARCH_V9.
(bfd_arm_get_mach_from_attributes): Add case for TAG_CPU_ARCH_V9.
Update assert.
(tag_cpu_arch_combine): Updated table.
(v9): New table..
binutils/
* readelf.c (arm_attr_tag_CPU_arch): Update with
elfcpp/
* arm.h: Update TAG_CPU_ARCH_ enums with correct values.
gas/
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-arm.c (get_aeabi_cpu_arch_from_fset): Return Armv9-a
for -amarch=all.
(aeabi_set_public_attributes): Update assert.
* doc/c-arm.texi: Update docs.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv9-a_arch.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-all.d: Update test with v9.
include/
* elf/arm.h Update TAG_CPU_ARCH_ defines with correct values.
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_EXT3_V9A): New macro.
(ARM_ARCH_NONE): Updated with arm_feature_set.core size.
(FPU_NONE): Updated.
(ARM_ANY): Updated.
(ARM_ARCH_UNKNOWN): New macro.
(ARM_FEATURE_LOW): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE_CORE): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE_CORE_LOW): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE_CORE_HIGH): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE_COPROC): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE): Updated.
(ARM_FEATURE_ALL): New macro.
opcodes/
* arm-dis.c (select_arm_features): Support bfd_mach_arm_9.
Also Update bfd_mach_arm_unknown to use new macro ARM_ARCH_UNKNOWN.
2021-11-01 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: iq2000: reduce -Wno-error scope
Clean up the warnings in sim-if, then reduce the -Werror disable to
the files that still aren't clean that now that we require GNU make
and can set variables on a per-object basis.
sim: lm32: reduce -Wno-error scope
Clean up some warnings in dv-lm32cpu, and all in sim-if, then reduce
the -Werror disable to the files that still aren't clean that now that
we require GNU make and can set variables on a per-object basis.
sim: frv: reduce -Wno-error scope
Only two files in here still generates warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that now that we require GNU make and can set variables on
a per-object basis.
sim: m32r: reduce -Wno-error scope
Only two files in here still generates warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that now that we require GNU make and can set variables on
a per-object basis.
sim: mips: reduce -Wno-error scope
Fix a few printf warnings in sim-main.c, and then we're left with only
one file in here still generating warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that alone now that we require GNU make and can set variables
on a per-object basis.
sim: erc32: reduce -Wno-error scope
Only one file in here still generates warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that alone now that we require GNU make and can set variables
on a per-object basis.
sim: cris: reduce -Wno-error scope
Only two files in here still generates warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that now that we require GNU make and can set variables on
a per-object basis.
sim: sh: reduce -Wno-error scope
Only one file in here still generates warnings, so reduce the -Werror
disable to that alone now that we require GNU make and can set variables
on a per-object basis.
sim: or1k: build with -Werror
The only warnings left in this port are a few maybe-uninitialized,
but we don't abort the build for them, so turn on -Werror everywhere.
sim: igen: minor build output alignment fix
The custom echo was off by one space relative to all the others.
sim: ppc: fix the printf fix for 32-bit systems
The time delta is a 64-bit value too.
sim: m68hc11: clean up pointer casts
The void *data field is used to past arbitrary data between event
handlers, and these are using it to pass an integer. Fix up the
casts to avoid using (long) to cast to/from pointers since there
is no guarantee that's the right size.
sim: d10v: clean up pointer casts
Use %p to print pointers instead of trying to cast them to longs.
sim: bfin: cast pointers using uintptr_t
We can't assume that sizeof(long) == sizeof(void*), so change all
these casts over to uintptr_t.
sim: ppc: clean up printf format handling
Don't blindly cast every possible type to (long). Change to the right
printf format specifier whether it be a 64-bit type or a pointer.
sim: ppc: switch core types to stdint.h types
There's no need to define these ourselves anymore, so switch to the
stdint.h types. This will be important when we start using PRI*
defines with printf formats.
sim: mn10300: clean up pointer casts
The void *data field is used to past arbitrary data between event
handlers, and these are using it to pass an enum. Fix up the casts
to avoid using (long) to cast to/from pointers since there is no
guarantee that's the right size.
sim: events: clean up trace casts
Don't blindly cast every possible type to (long). Change to the right
printf format specifier whether it be a 64-bit type or a pointer.
sim: ppc: handle \r in igen inputs [PR sim/28476]
Make sure we consume & ignore \r bytes in inputs in case the file
encodings are from a non-LF systems (e.g. Windows).
sim: ppc: constify strings in igen tooling
2021-11-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-31 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix latent bug in DWARF test case
On my branch that replaces the DWARF psymtab reader,
dw2-stack-boundary.exp started failing. However, when I look at the
output in gdb.log, it is correct:
file /home/tromey/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-stack-boundary/dw2-stack-boundary
Reading symbols from /home/tromey/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-stack-boundary/dw2-stack-boundary...
During symbol reading: location description stack overflow
During symbol reading: location description stack underflow
What happens to cause the failure is that the two branches in
gdb_test_multiple appear in this order:
-re "\r\nDuring symbol reading: location description stack underflow" {
[...]
-re "\r\nDuring symbol reading: location description stack overflow" {
The first one will match the above, without causing the second one to
ever match -- leading to a spurious failure.
Anchoring the regexps seems to fix the problem, and works for the
current gdb as well.
2021-10-31 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix unittest.exp failure due to 'set debuginfod' addition
The 'set debuginfod' change caused a regression in unittest.exp:
Running selftest help_doc_invariants.
help doc broken invariant: command 'info set debuginfod' help doc first line is not terminated with a '.' character
help doc broken invariant: command 'set debuginfod' help doc first line is not terminated with a '.' character
help doc broken invariant: command 'show debuginfod' help doc first line is not terminated with a '.' character
Self test failed: self-test failed at ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/command-def-selftests.c:100
This patch fixes the problem. I'm checking it in.
2021-10-31 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: use silent build rules here too
The ppc codebase is unique and doesn't leverage common/, so have to
add silent rules to it specifically.
sim: rl78: drop obsolete manual dependency rules
We have GNU make generate these for us automatically now, so there's
no need to manually specify any deps.
sim: drop unused targ-vals.h includes
This is used in a few places where it's not needed. Drop the include
to avoid the build-time generated header file as we move to drop it.
sim: unify callback.o building
Now that the use of TARGET_xxx defines have been removed, we can move
this to the common logic so we only build it once for multi-targets.
sim: nltvals: pull target open flags out into a dedicated source file
Like we just did for pulling out the errno & signal maps, pull out the
open flag map into a dedicated common file. All newlib ports are using
the same map which makes it easy.
sim: nltvals: localize TARGET_<open> defines
Code should not be using these directly, instead they should be
resolving these dynamically via the open_map. Rework the common
callback code that was using the defines to use symbolic names
instead, and localize some of the defines in the ARM code (since
it's a bit unclear how many different APIs it supports currently),
then remove the defines out of the header so no new code can rely on
them.
sim: nltvals: pull target signal out into a dedicated source file
Like we just did for pulling out the errno map, pull out the signal
map into a dedicated common file. All newlib ports are using the
same signal map which makes it easy.
2021-10-31 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: nltvals: pull target errno out into a dedicated source file
The current system maintains a list of target errno constants in the
nltvals.def file, then runs a build-time tool to turn that into a C
file. This list of errno values is the same for all arches, so we
don't need the arch-specific flexibility. Further, these are only
for newlib/libgloss environments, which makes it confusing to support
other userland runtimes (like Linux). Let's simplify to make this
easier to understand & build. We don't namespace the variables yet,
but sets up the framework for it.
Create a new target-newlib-errno.c template file. The template file
is hand written, but the inline map is still automatically generated.
This allows us to move it to the common set of objects so it's only
built once in a multi-target build.
Now we can remove the output from the gentmap build-time tool since
it's checked into the tree.
Then we stop including the errno lists in nltvals.def since nothing
uses it.
2021-10-31 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: erc32: use silent build rules with sis linkage
2021-10-31 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: erc32: fix a few more build warnings
Tweak the if indentation & brace style to avoid ambiguous warnings.
Add ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED to UART functions that aren't used when FAST_UART
is defined (which is the default).
2021-10-31 Orgad Shaneh <orgads@gmail.com>
sim: erc32: fix signedness compatibility and redefinition warnings
2021-10-31 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: add arch-specific conditional logic
This will make it easy to include arch-specific logic (build files)
as we migrate ports to the common top level build.
sim: v850: delete old gencode logic
The v850 port used to have a gencode helper, but it was deleted long
ago. Clean up the settings that no longer make sense w/out it.
sim: common: merge multiple clean commands
This provides a minor speedup when cleaning in a multi-target build.
sim: m32c: tighten up opc2c build output
Drop the single debugging line that repeats the command line option,
and use the silent build helpers to tighten up output.
sim: tighten up build regen rules
Update the makefile & configure related rules to use the silent
build helpers.
sim: tighten up gencode output
Update the gencode rules to use the silent build helpers.
sim: igen: tighten up build output
Add a new stamp helper for quiet builds, and don't dump the command
line options when it runs. That isn't standard tool behavior, and
doesn't really seem necessary in any way.
sim: tighten up stamp rules
Add a new ECHO_STAMP helper and convert existing stamp code over
to it. This is mostly common rules and cgen mloop rules.
sim: silence stamp touch rules
We pretty much never care about these stamp touches, so silence them.
Also switch to using $@ when it makes sense.
sim: standardize move-if-change rules
Use the srcroot path and make them all silent.
sim: mips/v850: remove redundant variable setup
The common/Make-common.in fragment already provides these variables.
2021-10-31 Orgad Shaneh <orgads@gmail.com>
sim: fix compilation on mingw64 [PR sim/28476]
...by reordering includes.
1. sim-utils.c
sim/mips/sim-main.h defines UserMode, while there is a struct in winnt.h
which has UserMode as a member. So if sim-main.h is included before winnt.h,
compilation fails.
2. ppc
registers.h defines CR, which is used as a member in winnt.h.
winsock2.h is included by sys/time.h, so sys/time.h has to be included
before registers.h.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/PR28476
2021-10-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Don't include coff/pe.h in coff-x86_64.c
This (and other) code from coffcode.h is broken for x86_64_coff_vec,
and has been ever since support was added in 2006 commit 99ad839030c1
Here, bfd_coff_aoutsz must match coff_swap_aouthdr_out otherwise we
end up writing garbage.
/* Note that peicode.h fills in a PEAOUTHDR, not an AOUTHDR.
include/coff/pe.h sets AOUTSZ == sizeof (PEAOUTHDR)). */
char * buff;
bfd_size_type amount = bfd_coff_aoutsz (abfd);
buff = (char *) bfd_malloc (amount);
if (buff == NULL)
return false;
coff_swap_aouthdr_out (abfd, & internal_a, buff);
amount = bfd_bwrite (buff, amount, abfd);
We have removed support for --target=x86_64-coff, likely because it
never worked properly, but still produce coff-x86_64.o with
--enable-targets=all. This means objcopy can recognize x86_64 COFF
files but will write garbage to the output file, a fact found by
fuzzers. I suspect x86_64 COFF is still broken after this fix, and
mention of coff-x86_64.* should be removed from bfd/Makefile.am.
* coff-x86_64.c: Don't include coff/pe.h.
(COFF_WITH_pex64): Don't define here.
* pe-x86_64.c: Include coff/pe.h and other headers.
(PEI_HEADERS): Define.
2021-10-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28420, ecoff fuzzing failures
sym_ptr_ptr NULL results in segfaults.
PR 28420
* ecoff.c (ecoff_slurp_reloc_table): Don't leave sym_ptr_ptr NULL.
2021-10-31 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: alpha-vms: undefined shift
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_image): Shift left 1u.
PR28518: signed integer overflow & free on unmalloced address
PR 28518
* vms-alpha.c (build_module_list): Don't lose malloc buffer address.
Use unsigned variables.
2021-10-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix gdb.gdb/unittest.exp with C++17 compiler
On a machine with gcc 11, I get:
FAIL: gdb.gdb/unittest.exp: test_completion: tab complete "maintenance selftest string_v" (second tab) (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.gdb/unittest.exp: test_completion: tab complete "maintenance selftest string_vie" (timeout)
That's because when compiling with C++ >= 17, we use the standard
version of string_view, and don't have a selftest for it. So the list
of selftests shown by the tab completion when completing "string_v"
differs.
Change the test to use the copy_* tests instead.
Change-Id: I85f6aa44ee5fc9652b9bd4451e0506b89773526b
2021-10-30 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb.texinfo: Expand documentation for debuginfod
Add section describing GDB's usage of debuginfod.
Refer to this new section in the description of the '--with-debuginfod'
configure option.
Mention debuginfod in the 'Separate Debug Files' section.
2021-10-30 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb: add set/show commands for managing debuginfod
Add 'set debuginfod' command. Accepts 'on', 'off' or 'ask' as an
argument. 'on' enables debuginfod for the current session. 'off'
disables debuginfod for the current session. 'ask' will prompt
the user to either enable or disable debuginfod when the next query
is about to be performed:
This GDB supports auto-downloading debuginfo from the following URLs:
<URL1> <URL2> ...
Enable debuginfod for this session? (y or [n]) y
Debuginfod has been enabled.
To make this setting permanent, add 'set debuginfod on' to .gdbinit.
For interactive sessions, 'ask' is the default. For non-interactive
sessions, 'off' is the default.
Add 'show debuginfod status' command. Displays whether debuginfod
is set to 'on', 'off' or 'ask'.
Add 'set/show debuginfod urls' commands. Accepts a string of
space-separated debuginfod server URLs to be queried. The default
value is copied from the DEBUGINFOD_URLS environment variable.
Finally add 'set/show debuginfod verbose' commands to control whether
debuginfod-related output is displayed. Verbose output is enabled
by default.
(gdb) run
Starting program: /bin/sleep 5
Download failed: No route to host. Continuing without debug info for /lib64/libc.so.6.
If GDB is not built with debuginfod then these commands will just display
Support for debuginfod is not compiled into GDB.
2021-10-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK
Remove TYPE_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK, replace with type::field +
field::loc_dwarf_block.
Change-Id: I10af9410bb5f46d342b8358a7956998c7e804b64
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR
Remove TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR replace with type::field +
field::loc_physaddr.
Change-Id: Ica9bc4a48f34750ec82ec86c298d3ecece81bcbd
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME
Remove TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME, replace with type::field +
field::loc_physname.
Change-Id: Ie35d446b67dd1d02f39998b406001bdb7e6d5abb
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL
Remove TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL, replace with type::field +
field::loc_enumval.
Change-Id: I2ada73e4635aad3363ce2eb22c1dc52698ee2072
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS
Remove TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS, replace its uses with type::field +
field::loc_bitpos.
Change-Id: Iccd8d5a77e5352843a837babaa6bd284162e0320
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND
Remove TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND, replace its uses with type::field +
field::loc_kind.
Change-Id: Ib124a26365df82ac1d23df7962d954192913bd90
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK macro
Remove FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK, replace its uses with field::loc_dwarf_block.
Change-Id: I66b7d6a960cb5e341e61e21bd3cc9a6ac26de6a8
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR macro
Remove FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR, replace its uses with
field::loc_physaddr.
Change-Id: Ifd8b2bdaad75f42bfb1404ef8c396ffe7e10ac55
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME macro
Remove FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME, replace its uses with field::loc_physname.
Change-Id: Iaa8952410403b4eb5bbd68411feea27e2405d657
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_ENUMVAL macro
Remove FIELD_ENUMVAL, replace its uses with field::loc_enumval.
Change-Id: Id4861cee91a8bb583a9836f1aa5da0a320fbf4d9
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_BITPOS macro
Remove FIELD_BITPOD, replace its uses with field::loc_bitpos.
Change-Id: Idb99297e0170661254276c206383a7e9bf1a935a
2021-10-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove FIELD_LOC_KIND macro
Remove FIELD_LOC_KIND, replace its uses with field::loc_kind or
call_site_target::loc_kind.
Change-Id: I0368d8c3ea269d491bb215aa70e32edbdf55f389
2021-10-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add gdb.Architecture.integer_type Python function
This adds a new Python function, gdb.Architecture.integer_type, which
can be used to look up an integer type of a given size and
signed-ness. This is useful to avoid dependency on debuginfo when a
particular integer type would be useful.
v2 moves this to be a method on gdb.Architecture and addresses other
review comments.
2021-10-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove ada_value_print_inner
I noticed that the only caller of ada_value_print_inner is
valprint.c:do_val_print (via ada_language::value_print_inner), meaning
that the try/catch logic in this function is redundant. This patch
removes the wrapper function.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-10-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Document resolve_dynamic_type oddity
Today I re-learned that resolve_dynamic_type can return a type for
which is_dynamic_type returns true. This can happen for an array
whose elements have dynamic type -- the array is reported as dynamic,
but resolving the elements would be incorrect, because each element
might have a different type after resolution.
You can see the special case in resolve_dynamic_array_or_string:
if (ary_dim != NULL && ary_dim->code () == TYPE_CODE_ARRAY)
...
else
...
I looked into having the TYPE_CODE_ARRAY case in
is_dynamic_type_internal follow this same logic, but that breaks down
on the gdb.fortran/dynamic-ptype-whatis.exp test case. In particular
this code in fortran_undetermined::evaluate:
value *callee = std::get<0> (m_storage)->evaluate (nullptr, exp, noside);
if (noside == EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS
&& is_dynamic_type (value_type (callee)))
callee = std::get<0> (m_storage)->evaluate (nullptr, exp, EVAL_NORMAL);
... relies on is_dynamic_type returning true for such an array.
I wasn't really sure of the best way to fix this, so in the meantime I
wrote this patch, which documents the oddity so that I might have a
chance of remembering this in the future.
2021-10-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid self-test failures on x86-linux
The disassembly tests in "maint selftest" will fail on x86-linux.
This happens because opcodes rejects an attempt to disassemble for an
arch with a 64-bit address size when bfd_vma is 32-bit.
This patch avoids this problem by avoiding the test in this case. I
chose to do it this way because this seems to be the only situation
where opcodes checks the size of bfd_vma.
For v2 of this patch, I've also updated memory_error_test to do the
same thing. This is needed due to the "improve error reporting from
the disassembler" patch.
2021-10-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build with --disable-unit-tests
A build with --disable-unit-tests currently run into:
...
ld: maint.o: in function \
`maintenance_selftest_completer(cmd_list_element*, completion_tracker&,
char const*, char const*)':
src/gdb/maint.c:1183: undefined reference to \
`selftests::for_each_selftest(
gdb::function_view<
void (std::__cxx11::basic_string<char,std::char_traits<char>,
std::allocator<char> > const&)>)'
...
Fix this by guarding the call to selftests::for_each_selftest in
maintenance_selftest_completer with GDB_SELF_TEST, such that the "-verbose"
completion still works.
Rebuild on x86_64-linux and ran gdb.gdb/unittest.exp.
2021-10-29 Enze Li <lienze2010@hotmail.com>
Document "memory-tag-violations".
* gdb/doc/gdb.texinfo: (Data): Document '-memory-tag-violations'.
(Command Options): Update the example.
2021-10-29 Tejas Belagod <tejas.belagod@arm.com>
Support for a new pacbti unwind opcode.
This patch adds readelf support for decoding the exception table
opcode for restoring the RA_AUTH_CODE pseudo register defined by the
EHABI
(https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/releases/download/2021Q1/ehabi32.pdf
Section 10.3).
* readelf.c (decode_arm_unwind_bytecode): Add support to decode
restoring RA_AUTH_CODE pseudo register.
2021-10-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: arm: add unwinder encoding support for PACBTI
Move the gas testsuite files to where they belong.
2021-10-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ELF core file size checks
Catch fuzzed segments where p_offset + p_filesz wraps, and limit error
output.
* elfcore.h (elf_core_file_p): Rewrite segment checks using
bfd_get_file_size. Set read_only on file size errors.
* elfcode.h (elf_swap_shdr_in): Don't repeat error message.
2021-10-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
obcopy vs. files with silly section alignment
We already ignore stupid segment alignment when rewriting headers,
ignore section alignment too.
* elf.c (rewrite_elf_program_header): Ignore section alignment
power greater than 62.
2021-10-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-28 Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com>
gdb: Add OpenRISC gdbserver and native config news
The previous patches added gdbserver and native debugging support
for OpenRISC targets. This patch documents that in the news.
gdb: or1k: add single step for linux native debugging
Needed for single stepping in Linux, this adds the or1k implementation
of or1k_software_single_step. Most of the implementation is borrowed
from the bare metal single step code from or1k_single_step_through_delay
which has been extracted and shared in helper function
or1k_delay_slot_p.
2021-10-28 Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com>
gdb: or1k: add native linux support
This patch adds support for running gdb natively on OpenRISC linux.
Debugging support is provided via the linux PTRACE interface which is
mostly handled by GDB genric code. This patch provides the logic of how
to read and write the ptrace registers between linux and GDB.
Single stepping is privided in a separate patch.
2021-10-28 Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com>
gdb: or1k: add generated linux descriptor file
gdb: or1k: fixup linux regcache comment
The old comment was not properly updated from the RISC-V example used.
Update it to match OpenRISC.
2021-10-28 Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com>
gdb: or1k: implement gdb server
This patch adds gdbserver support for OpenRISC. This has been used for
debugging the glibc port that in being worked on here:
https://github.com/openrisc/or1k-glibc/tree/or1k-port-2
Hence the comment about registers definitions being inline with glibc.
2021-10-28 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
[sim] Include defs.h in ppc/hw_memory.c
To fix this error (seen on cygwin):
/../../sim/ppc/../common ../../../sim/ppc/hw_memory.c
In file included from ../../gnulib/import/stdlib.h:100,
from ../../../sim/ppc/hw_memory.c:28:
../../gnulib/import/unistd.h:663:3: error: #error "Please include config.h first."
663 | #error "Please include config.h first."
| ^~~~~
../../gnulib/import/unistd.h:665:24: error: expected ';' before 'extern'
665 | _GL_INLINE_HEADER_BEGIN
| ^
| ;
../../gnulib/import/unistd.h:2806:22: error: expected ';' before 'extern'
2806 | _GL_INLINE_HEADER_END
| ^
| ;
2021-10-28 Markus Klein <markus.klein@sma.de>
ARM assembler: Allow up to 32 single precision registers in the VPUSH and VPOP instructions.
PR 28436
* config/tc-arm.c (do_vfp_nsyn_push_pop_check): New function.
(do_vfp_nsyn_pop): Use the new function.
(do_vfp_nsyn_push): Use the new function.
* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.s: Add new instructions.
* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.d: Updated expected disassembly.
2021-10-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: use ptid_t::to_string in infrun debug messages
In debug messages, I think it would be more helpful to print ptid using
the simple "pid.lwp.tid" notation in infrun debug messages. I am
currently debugging some fork issues, and find the pid_to_str output not
so useful, as it doesn't tell which process a thread belongs to.
It currently shows up like this:
[infrun] resume_1: step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x7ffff7d95740 (LWP 892942)] at 0x55555555521f
With the patch, it shows up like this:
[infrun] resume_1: step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=1, current thread [894072.894077.0] at 0x5555555551d9
Change-Id: I130796d7dfb0d8e763b8358d8a6002701d80c4ea
2021-10-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add selftest name completion
After the previous commit, it is easy to add completion for selftest
names. Again, this is not particularly high value, but I rarely touched
completion, so it served as a simple example to get some practice.
Change the for_each_selftest_ftype parameter to gdb::function_view, so
that we can pass a lambda that captures things.
Change-Id: I87cac299ddca9ca7eb0ffab78342e850a98d954c
2021-10-28 Tejas Belagod <Tejas.Belagod@arm.com>
arm: add unwinder encoding support for PACBTI
This patch adds support for encoding the Return Address Authentication pseudo
register - '.save {ra_auth_code}' as defined by the DWARF ABI - in the
exception tables where the opcode is defined by the EHABI
gas/Changelog:
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_reg_type): Add new type REG_TYPE_PSEUDO.
(reg_expected_msgs): Add message for pseudo reg type.
(reg_list_els): Add new reg list type REGLIST_PSEUDO.
(parse_reg_list): Handle new REGLIST_PSEUDO type.
(s_arm_unwind_save_pseudo): Encode pseudo reg list save in exception
tables.
(s_arm_unwind_save): Handle new REG_TYPE_PSEUDO.
(reg_names): Add ra_auth_code pseudo register.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m-readelf.d: New test.
2021-10-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add "maint set/show selftest verbose" commands and use process_options
I saw the new -verbose switch to "maint selftests" and thought it would
be nice for it to use the option framework. For example, that makes
having completion easy. It's not that high value, given this is a
maintenance command, but I had never used the framework myself, so it
was a good way to practice.
This patch also adds the "maint set/show selftest verbose" setting. It
would be possible to use option framework without adding the setting,
but using the framework makes adding the option almost trivial, so I
thought why not.
Change-Id: I6687faa0713ff3da60b398253211777100094144
2021-10-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Update some test-cases to GPLv3
I noticed some files in the test-suite have GPLv2 notices.
Update these to GPLv3.
2021-10-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add add_setshow_prefix_cmd
There's a common pattern to call add_basic_prefix_cmd and
add_show_prefix_cmd to add matching set and show commands. Add the
add_setshow_prefix_cmd function to factor that out and use it at a few
places.
Change-Id: I6e9e90a30e9efb7b255bf839cac27b85d7069cfd
2021-10-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Require python in gdb.server/server-kill-python.exp
I came across this when running test-case gdb.server/server-kill-python.exp
with a gdb configured without python:
...
builtin_spawn gdb -nw -nx -data-directory data-directory -iex set height 0 \
-iex set width 0 -quiet -iex set height 0 -iex set width 0 \
-ex source outputs/gdb.server/server-kill-python/file1.py^M
FAIL: gdb.server/server-kill-python.exp: ensure inferior is running
Executing on target: kill -9 28535 (timeout = 300)
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP kill -9 28535^M
file1.py:1: Error in sourced command file:^M
Undefined command: "import". Try "help".^M
...
Fix this by testing for python support in the test-case.
Tested on aarch64-linux (with python support disabled) and x86_64-linux (with
python support enabled).
2021-10-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix assembly comments in gdb.dwarf2/clang-debug-names.exp.tcl
On openSUSE Leap 15.2 aarch64 I ran into:
...
clang-debug-names-debug.S:72: \
Error: junk at end of line, first unrecognized character is `#'
...
due to:
...
71 .Ldebug_names_start:
72 .short 5 # Header: version
...
Fix this by using the /* ... */ comment style instead:
...
$ sed -i 's% #\([^"]*\)%/*\1 */%' clang-debug-names.exp.tcl
...
Tested on aarch64-linux and x86_64-linux.
2021-10-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Handle DW_AT_string_length with location list
Consider a fortran routine where a string variable s is modified:
...
subroutine f(s)
character*(*) s
print *, s
s(1:3) = 'oof'
print *, s
end subroutine f
...
When compiling with optimization level -O1 and printing the type of
variable s we get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.opt/fortran-string/fortran-string \
-ex "b f" \
-ex run \
-ex "ptype s"
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4006f7: file fortran-string.f90, line 21.
Breakpoint 1, f (s=..., _s=_s@entry=3) at fortran-string.f90:21
21 subroutine f(s)
type = character*1
...
while with -O0 we have instead:
...
type = character (3)
...
The problem is that the type of s is:
...
<1><2d6>: Abbrev Number: 21 (DW_TAG_string_type)
<2d7> DW_AT_string_length: 0xbf (location list)
<2db> DW_AT_byte_size : 4
...
where the DW_AT_string_length is a location list, a case that is not handled
by attr_to_dynamic_prop.
Fix this by handling attr->form_is_section_offset () in attr_to_dynamic_prop.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
The test-case is based on gdb.opt/fortran-string.exp from
https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/gdb/raw/f32/f/gdb-archer-vla-tests.patch .
I've updated the copyrights to stretch to 2021.
[ I've tried to create a dwarf assembly test-case for this, but didn't
manage. ]
Co-Authored-By: Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26910
2021-10-28 Kavitha Natarajan <kavitha.natarajan@amd.com>
[gdb/testsuite] Initialize anonymous union in gdb.cp/koenig.cc
GDB test fails while running the test case gdb.cp/koenig.exp using
clang compiler:
[...]
p foo (p_union)
No symbol "p_union" in current context.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.cp/koenig.exp: p foo (p_union)
[...]
In the testcase, "p_union" is an unused/uninitialized variable of
anonymous union type. Clang does not emit symbol for unused anonymous
union/struct variables at any optimization level. Since the compiler
itself is not emitting the symbol for "p_union", debug info is also
not emitted when built with debug option. If the anonymous union is
initialized (or used), then clang emits the symbol "p_union" which
enables emitting debug info for "p_union".
[...]
p foo (p_union)
Cannot resolve function foo to any overloaded instance
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/koenig.exp: p foo (p_union)
[...]
2021-10-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: mmo: NULL dereferenc in mmo_xore_32
mmo_get_loc can return NULL. It's commented even, and that the caller
then must handle a split field. mmo_xore_* don't handle split fields,
instead just segfault. Stop that happening, and refuse to recognise
fuzzed mmo files that trigger this problem.
* mmo.c (mmo_get_loc): Don't declare inline.
(mmo_xore_64, mmo_xore_32, mmo_xore_16): Remove forward decls.
Return pointer, don't dereference NULL.
(mmo_scan): Return error on mmo_get_loc returning NULL.
2021-10-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfd: remove use of INLINE
No need to use anything fancy, plain inline works just as well.
* bfd-in.h (INLINE): Don't define.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* aoutx.h: Replace use of INLINE with inline.
* elf-eh-frame.c: Likewise.
* elf32-score7.c: Likewise.
* elfxx-mips.c: Likewise.
* ihex.c: Likewise.
* mach-o.c: Likewise.
* mmo.c: Likewise.
2021-10-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ASSERT in empty output section with address
* ldlang.c (lang_do_assignments_1): Correct "dot" inside ignored
sections.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/empty-address-4.d,
* testsuite/ld-scripts/empty-address-4.s,
* testsuite/ld-scripts/empty-address-4.t: New test.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/empty-address.exp: Run it.
2021-10-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: alpha-vms: buffer overflows
Yet more anti-fuzzer sanity checking
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_egsd): Sanity check record and
name lengths before access.
(evax_bfd_print_etir_stc_ir, evax_bfd_print_etir): Likewise.
2021-10-27 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: arm: undefined shift
left shift of 2 by 31 places cannot be represented in type 'int'
* arm-dis.c (print_insn_thumb16): Avoid undefined behaviour.
2021-10-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix watchpoints with multiple threads on Windows
A recent internal change pointed out that watchpoints were not working
on Windows when the inferior was multi-threaded. This happened
because the debug registers were only updated for certain threads --
in particular, those that were being resumed and that were not marked
as suspended. In the case of single-stepping, the need to update the
debug registers in other threads could also be "forgotten".
This patch changes windows-nat.c to mark all threads needing a debug
register update. This brings the code closer to what gdbserver does
(though, unfortunately, it still seems more complicated than needed).
2021-10-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix port detection in gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp
On OBS I ran into this failure with test-case
gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp:
...
Failed to listen for connections: Address already in use^M
[Thu Oct 21 11:48:49 2021] (559/559): started http server on IPv6 port=8000^M
...
FAIL: gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: local_url: find port timeout
...
The test-case is trying to start debuginfod on a port to see if it's
available, and it handles either this message:
"started http server on IPv4 IPv6 port=$port"
meaning success, or:
"failed to bind to port"
meaning failure, in which case the debuginfod instance is killed, and we try
the next port.
The test-case only uses the v4 address 127.0.0.1, so fix this by:
- accepting "started http server on IPv4 port=$port"
- rejecting "started http server on IPv6 port=$port"
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: fix value.c build on 32-bits
When building on ARM (32-bits), we errors like this:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c: In function 'gdb::array_view<const unsigned char> value_contents_for_printing(value*)':
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/value.c:1252:35: error: narrowing conversion of 'length' from 'ULONGEST' {aka 'long long unsigned int'} to 'size_t' {aka 'unsigned int'} [-Werror=narrowing]
1252 | return {value->contents.get (), length};
| ^~~~~~
Fix that by using gdb::make_array_view, which does the appropriate
conversion.
Change-Id: I7d6f2e75d7440d248b8fb18f8272ee92954b404d
2021-10-27 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Tidy riscv assembler and disassembler.
Tidy the gas/config/tc-riscv.c and opcodes/riscv-dis.c, to prepare for
moving the released extensions (including released vendor extensions)
from integration branch back to mainline.
* Added parts of missing comments.
* Updated md_show_usage.
* For validate_riscv_insn, riscv_ip and print_insn_args, unify the
following pointer names,
- oparg: pointed to the parsed operand defined in the riscv_opcodes.
- asarg: pointed to the parsed operand from assembly.
- opargStart: recorded the parsed operand name from riscv_opcodes.
- asargStart: recorded the parsed operand name from assembly.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c: Added parts of missind comments and updated
the md_show_usage.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Tidy codes.
(validate_riscv_insn): Unify the pointer names, oparg, asarg,
opargStart and asargStart, to prepare for moving the released
extensions from integration branch back to mainline.
(riscv_ip): Likewise.
(macro_build): Added fmtStart, also used to prepare for moving
released extensions.
(md_show_usage): Added missing descriptions for new options.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_args): Unify the pointer names,
oparg and opargStart, to prepare for moving the released
extensions from integration branch back to mainline.
2021-10-27 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
opcodes: Fix RPATH not being set for dynamic libbfd dependency
If built as a shared library, libopcodes has a load-time dependency on
libbfd, which is recorded in the dynamic section, however without a
corresponding RPATH entry for the directory to find libbfd in. This
causes loading to fail whenever libbfd is only pulled by libopcodes
indirectly and libbfd has been installed in a directory that is not in
the dynamic loader's search path.
It does not happen with the programs included with binutils or GDB,
because they all also pull libbfd when using libopcodes, but it can
happen with external software, e.g.:
$ gdbserver --help
gdbserver: error while loading shared libraries: libbfd-[...].so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
$
(not our `gdbserver').
Indirect dynamic dependencies are handled by libtool automatically by
adding RPATH entries as required, however our setup for libopcodes
prevents this from happening by linking in libbfd with an explicit file
reference sneaked through to the linker directly behind libtool's back
via the `-Wl' linker command-line option rather than via `-l' combined
with a suitable library search path specified via `-L', as it would be
usually the case, or just referring to the relevant .la file in a fully
libtool-enabled configuration such as ours.
According to an observation in the discussion back in 2007[1][2][3] that
has led to the current arrangement it is to prevent libtool from picking
up the wrong version of libbfd. It does not appear to be needed though,
not at least with our current libtool incarnation, as directly referring
`libbfd.la' does exactly what it should, as previously suggested[4], and
with no link-time reference to the installation directory other than to
set RPATH. Uninstalled version of libopcodes has libbfd's build-time
location prepended to RPATH too, as also expected.
Use a direct reference to `libbfd.la' then, making the load error quoted
above go away. Alternatively `-L' and `-l' could be used to the same
effect, but it seems an unnecessary complication and just another way to
circumvent rather than making use of libtool.
References:
[1] "compile failure due to undefined symbol",
<https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2007-08/msg00476.html>
[2] same, <https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2007-09/msg00000.html>
[3] same, <https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2007-10/msg00019.html>
[4] same, <https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2007-10/msg00034.html>
opcodes/
* Makefile.am: Remove obsolete comment.
* configure.ac: Refer `libbfd.la' to link shared BFD library
except for Cygwin.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
2021-10-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-27 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gold: Place .note.gnu.property section before other note sections
Place the .note.gnu.property section before all other note sections to
avoid being placed between other note sections with different alignments.
PR gold/28494
* layout.cc (Layout::create_note): Set order to ORDER_PROPERTY_NOTE
for the .note.gnu.property section.
* layout.h (Output_section_order): Add ORDER_PROPERTY_NOTE.
2021-10-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/doc] Fix print inferior-events default
In the docs about print inferior-events we read:
...
By default, these messages will not be printed.
...
That used to be the case, but is no longer so since commit f67c0c91715 "Enable
'set print inferior-events' and improve detach/fork/kill/exit messages".
Fix this by updating the docs.
2021-10-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-25 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: change functions returning value contents to use gdb::array_view
The bug fixed by this [1] patch was caused by an out-of-bounds access to
a value's content. The code gets the value's content (just a pointer)
and then indexes it with a non-sensical index.
This made me think of changing functions that return value contents to
return array_views instead of a plain pointer. This has the advantage
that when GDB is built with _GLIBCXX_DEBUG, accesses to the array_view
are checked, making bugs more apparent / easier to find.
This patch changes the return types of these functions, and updates
callers to call .data() on the result, meaning it's not changing
anything in practice. Additional work will be needed (which can be done
little by little) to make callers propagate the use of array_view and
reap the benefits.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182306.html
Change-Id: I5151f888f169e1c36abe2cbc57620110673816f3
2021-10-25 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdbsupport: add assertions in array_view
Add assertions to ensure we don't access an array_view out of bounds.
Enable these assertions only when _GLIBCXX_DEBUG is set, as we did for
gdb::optional.
Change-Id: Iffaee38252405073735ed123c8e57fde6b2c6be3
2021-10-25 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: make target_pid_to_str return std::string
I wanted to write a warning that included two target_pid_to_str calls,
like this:
warning (_("Blabla %s, blabla %s"),
target_pid_to_str (ptid1),
target_pid_to_str (ptid2));
This doesn't work, because target_pid_to_str stores its result in a
static buffer, so my message would show twice the same ptid. Change
target_pid_to_str to return an std::string to avoid this. I don't think
we save much by using a static buffer, but it is more error-prone.
Change-Id: Ie3f649627686b84930529cc5c7c691ccf5d36dc2
2021-10-25 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Also handle stores for -muse-unaligned-vector-move
* config/tc-i386.c (encode_with_unaligned_vector_move): Also
handle stores.
* testsuite/gas/i386/unaligned-vector-move.s: Add stores.
* testsuite/gas/i386/unaligned-vector-move.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-unaligned-vector-move.d: Likewise.
2021-10-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix duplicate in gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp
With test-case gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp I run into this duplicate:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: run to mi-var-cp.cc:104 (set breakpoint)
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: create varobj for s
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: create varobj for s
DUPLICATE: gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.exp: create varobj for s
...
This is due to a duplicate test name here:
...
$ cat -n gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-var-cp.cc
...
100 int reference_to_struct ()
101 {
102 /*: BEGIN: reference_to_struct :*/
103 S s = {7, 8};
104 S& r = s;
105 /*:
106 mi_create_varobj S s "create varobj for s"
107 mi_create_varobj R r "create varobj for s"
...
Fix this by using "create varobj for r" instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf, ld: handle nonrepresentable types better
ctf_type_visit (used, among other things, by the type dumping code) was
aborting when it saw a nonrepresentable type anywhere: even a single
structure member with a nonrepresentable type caused an abort with
ECTF_NONREPRESENTABLE. This is not useful behaviour, given that the
abort comes from a type-resolution we are only doing in order to
determine whether the type is a structure or union. We know
nonrepresentable types can't be either, so handle that case and
pass the nonrepresentable type down.
(The added test verifies that the dumper now handles this case and
prints nonrepresentable structure members as it already does
nonrepresentable top-level types, rather than skipping the whole
structure -- or, without the previous commit, skipping the whole types
section.)
ld/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable-member.*: New test.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-types.c (ctf_type_rvisit): Handle nonrepresentable types.
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: dump: do not stop dumping types on error
If dumping of a single type fails, we obviously can't dump it; but just
as obviously this doesn't make the other types in the types section
invalid or undumpable. So we should not propagate errors seen when
type-dumping, but rather ignore them and carry on, so we dump as many
types as we can (leaving out the ones we can't grok).
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_type): Do not abort on error.
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
binutils, ld: make objdump --ctf's parameter optional
ld by default (and always, unless adjusted with a hand-rolled linker
script) emits deduplicated CTF into the .ctf section. But viewing
it needs you to explicitly tell objdump this: it doesn't default
its argument, even though what you always end up typing is
--ctf=.ctf.
This is annoying, so make the argument optional.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* objdump.c (usage): --ctf now has an optional argument.
(main): Adjust accordingly.
(dump_ctf): Default it.
* doc/ctf.options.texi: Adjust.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array.d: Change --ctf=.ctf to --ctf.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.parent.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.parent.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.parent.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-enums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-typedefs.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-conflicting.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-nonconflicting.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-into-cycle.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-noncyclic.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.A.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.B.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.C.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/data-func-conflicted.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cttname-null.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cuname.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parlabel.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/enum-forward.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/forward.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/function.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/super-sub-cycles.d: Likewise.
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
binutils: make objdump/readelf --ctf-parent actually useful
This option has been present since the very early days of the
development of libctf as part of binutils, and it shows. Back in the
earliest days, I thought we might handle ambiguous types by introducing
new ELF sections on the fly named things like .ctf.foo.c for ambiguous
types found only in foo.c, etc. This turned out to be a terrible idea,
so we moved to using a CTF archive in the .ctf section which contained
all the CTF dictionaries -- but the --ctf-parent option in objdump and
readelf was never adjusted, and lingered as a mechanism to specify CTF
parent dictionaries in sections other than .ctf, even though the linker
has no way to produce parent dictionaries in different sections from
their children, libctf's ctf_open can't handle such split-up
parent/child dicts, and they are never found in the wild, emitted by GNU
ld or by any known third-party linking tool.
Meanwhile, the actually-useful ctf_link feature (albeit not used by ld)
which lets you remap the names of CTF archive members (so you can end up
with a parent archive member named something other than ".ctf", still
contained with all its children in a single .ctf section) had no support
in objdump or readelf: there was no way to tell them that these members
were parents, so all the types in the associated child dicts always
appeared corrupted, referencing nonexistent types from a parent objdump
couldn't find.
So adjust --ctf-parent so that rather than taking a section name it
takes a member name instead (if not specified, the name is ".ctf", which
is what GNU ld emits). Because the option was always useless before
now, this is expected to have no backward-compatibility implications.
As part of this, we have to slightly adjust the code which skips the
archive member name if redundant: right now it skips it if it's ".ctf",
on the assumption that this name will almost always be at the start
of the objdump output and thus we'll end up with a shared dump
and then smaller, headed dumps for the per-TU child dicts; but if
the parent name has been changed, that won't be true any more.
So change the rules to "members named .ctf which appear first in the
first have their member name skipped". Since we now need to count
members, move from ctf_archive_iter (for which passing in extra
parameters requires defining a new struct and is clumsy) to
ctf_archive_next, allowing us to just *call* dump_ctf_archive_member and
maintain a member count in the obvious way. In the process we fix a
tiny difference between readelf and objdump: if a ctf_dump ever failed,
readelf skipped every later member, while objdump tried to keep going as
much as it could. For a dumping tool the former is clearly preferable.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* objdump.c (usage): --ctf-parent now takes a name, not a section.
(dump_ctf): Don't open a separate section; use the parent_name in
ctf_dict_open instead. Use ctf_archive_next, not ctf_archive_iter,
so we can pass down a member count.
(dump_ctf_archive_member): Add the member count; don't return
anything. Import parents into children no matter what the
parent's name, while still avoiding displaying the header for the
common parent name of ".ctf".
* readelf.c (usage): Adjust similarly.
(dump_section_as_ctf): Likewise.
(dump_ctf_archive_member): Likewise. Never stop iterating over
archive members, even if ctf_dump of one member fails.
* doc/ctf.options.texi: Adjust.
2021-10-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
objdump doesn't accept -L option
A followup to commit ca0e11aa4b.
* objdump.c (main): Add 'L' to short options and sort them.
2021-10-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfd_nonfatal_message, localise va_start
Nothing to see here, just a little tidier.
* bucomm.c (bfd_nonfatal_message): Localise va_list args.
2021-10-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ubsan: _bfd_xcoff64_swap_aux_in left shift of negative value
* coff64-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff64_swap_aux_in): Use bfd_vma for h.
asan: evax_bfd_print_image buffer overflow
* vms-alpha.c (evax_bfd_print_image): Sanity check printing of
"image activator fixup" section.
(evax_bfd_print_relocation_records): Sanity check buffer offsets.
(evax_bfd_print_address_fixups): Likewise.
(evax_bfd_print_reference_fixups): Likewise.
2021-10-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: c4x, c54x coff_canonicalize_reloc buffer overflow
Sometimes the investigation of a fuzzing bug report leads into areas
you'd rather not go. In this instance by the time I'd figured out the
real cause was a target variant that had never been properly supported
in binutils, the time needed to fix it was less than the time needed
to rip it out.
* coffcode.h (coff_set_alignment_hook): Call bfd_coff_swap_reloc_in
not coff_swap_reloc_in.
(coff_slurp_reloc_table): Likewise. Don't use RELOC type.
(ticoff0_swap_table): Use coff_swap_reloc_v0_out and
coff_swap_reloc_v0_in.
* coffswap.h (coff_swap_reloc_v0_in, coff_swap_reloc_v0_out): New.
* coff-tic54x.c (tic54x_lookup_howto): Don't abort.
* coffgen.c (coff_get_normalized_symtab): Use PTR_ADD.
* bfd-in.h (PTR_ADD, NPTR_ADD): Avoid warnings when passing an
expression.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2021-10-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
asan: arm-darwin: buffer overflow
PR 21813
* mach-o-arm.c (bfd_mach_o_arm_canonicalize_one_reloc): Sanity
check PAIR reloc in other branch of condition as was done for
PR21813. Formatting. Delete debug printf.
asan: aout: heap buffer overflow
* aoutx.h (aout_get_external_symbols): Sanity check before writing
zero index entry. Remove outdated comment.
* pdp11.c (aout_get_external_symbols): Likewise.
2021-10-24 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch ld support
2021-10-22 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Zhensong Liu <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
Weinan Liu <liuweinan@loongson.cn>
Xiaolin Tang <tangxiaolin@loongson.cn>
ld/
* Makefile.am: Add LoongArch.
* NEWS: Mention LoongArch support.
* configure.tgt: Add LoongArch.
* emulparams/elf32loongarch-defs.sh: New.
* emulparams/elf32loongarch.sh: Likewise.
* emulparams/elf64loongarch-defs.sh: Likewise.
* emulparams/elf64loongarch.sh: Likewise.
* emultempl/loongarchelf.em: Likewise.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* po/BLD-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
ld/testsuite/
* ld-loongarch-elf/disas-jirl.d: New.
* ld-loongarch-elf/disas-jirl.s: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/jmp_op.d: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/jmp_op.s: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/ld-loongarch-elf.exp: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/macro_op.d: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/macro_op.s: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/syscall-0.s: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/syscall-1.s: Likewise.
* ld-loongarch-elf/syscall.d: Likewise.
* ld-srec/srec.exp: Add LoongArch.
* ld-unique/pr21529.d: Likewise.
2021-10-24 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch gas support
2021-10-22 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Zhensong Liu <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
Weinan Liu <liuweinan@loongson.cn>
Xiaolin Tang <tangxiaolin@loongson.cn>
gas/
* Makefile.am: Add LoongArch.
* NEWS: Mention LoongArch support.
* config/loongarch-lex-wrapper.c: New.
* config/loongarch-lex.h: New.
* config/loongarch-lex.l: New.
* config/loongarch-parse.y: New.
* config/tc-loongarch.c: New.
* config/tc-loongarch.h: New.
* configure.ac: Add LoongArch.
* configure.tgt: Likewise.
* doc/as.texi: Likewise.
* doc/c-loongarch.texi: Likewise.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* po/POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/all/gas.exp: Add LoongArch.
* gas/elf/elf.exp: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/4opt_op.d: New.
* gas/loongarch/4opt_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/fix_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/fix_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/float_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/float_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/imm_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/imm_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/jmp_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/jmp_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/load_store_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/load_store_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/loongarch.exp: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/macro_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/macro_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/nop.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/nop.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/privilege_op.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/privilege_op.s: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/syscall.d: Likewise.
* gas/loongarch/syscall.s: Likewise.
* lib/gas-defs.exp: Add LoongArch.
2021-10-24 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch binutils support
2021-10-22 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Zhensong Liu <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
Weinan Liu <liuweinan@loongson.cn>
binutils/
* NEWS: Mention LoongArch support.
* readelf.c: Add LoongArch.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.exp: Add LoongArch.
2021-10-24 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch opcodes support
2021-10-22 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Zhensong Liu <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
Weinan Liu <liuweinan@loongson.cn>
include/
* opcode/loongarch.h: New.
* dis-asm.h: Declare print_loongarch_disassembler_options.
opcodes/
* Makefile.am: Add LoongArch.
* configure.ac: Likewise.
* disassemble.c: Likewise.
* disassemble.h: Declare print_insn_loongarch.
* loongarch-coder.c: New.
* loongarch-dis.c: New.
* loongarch-opc.c: New.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* po/POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
2021-10-24 liuzhensong <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
LoongArch bfd support
2021-10-22 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Zhensong Liu <liuzhensong@loongson.cn>
Weinan Liu <liuweinan@loongson.cn>
bfd/
* Makefile.am: Add LoongArch.
* archures.c: Likewise.
* config.bfd: Likewise.
* configure.ac: Likewise.
* cpu-loongarch.c: New.
* elf-bfd.h: Add LoongArch.
* elf.c: Add LoongArch elfcore_grok_xxx.
* elfnn-loongarch.c: New.
* elfxx-loongarch.c: New.
* elfxx-loongarch.h: New.
* reloc.c: Add LoongArch BFD RELOC ENUM.
* targets.c: Add LoongArch target.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* libbfd.h: Regenerate.
* po/BLD-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
* po/SRC-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
include/
* elf/common.h: Add NT_LARCH_{CPUCFG,CSR,LSX,LASX}.
* elf/loongarch.h: New.
2021-10-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-22 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Add -muse-unaligned-vector-move to assembler
Unaligned load/store instructions on aligned memory or register are as
fast as aligned load/store instructions on modern Intel processors. Add
a command-line option, -muse-unaligned-vector-move, to x86 assembler to
encode encode aligned vector load/store instructions as unaligned
vector load/store instructions.
* NEWS: Mention -muse-unaligned-vector-move.
* config/tc-i386.c (use_unaligned_vector_move): New.
(encode_with_unaligned_vector_move): Likewise.
(md_assemble): Call encode_with_unaligned_vector_move for
-muse-unaligned-vector-move.
(OPTION_MUSE_UNALIGNED_VECTOR_MOVE): New.
(md_longopts): Add -muse-unaligned-vector-move.
(md_parse_option): Handle -muse-unaligned-vector-move.
(md_show_usage): Add -muse-unaligned-vector-move.
* doc/c-i386.texi: Document -muse-unaligned-vector-move.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run unaligned-vector-move and
x86-64-unaligned-vector-move.
* testsuite/gas/i386/unaligned-vector-move.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/unaligned-vector-move.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-unaligned-vector-move.d: Likewise.
2021-10-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix 'uninstall' target
This adds some missing code to the 'uninstall' targets in gdb and
gdbserver. It also changes gdb's uninstall target so that it no
longer tries to remove any man page -- this is already done (and more
correctly) by doc/Makefile.in.
I tested this with 'make install' followed by 'make uninstall', then
examining the install tree for regular files. Only the 'dir' file
remains, but this appears to just be how 'install-info' is intended to
work.
2021-10-22 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove unused variables from gdbserver's Makefile
This removes a number of unused variables from gdbserver's Makefile.
I found these while working on the subsequent patches, and figured it
would be cleaner to have a separate patch for the deletions.
2021-10-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/linux-dp.exp
On openSUSE Tumbleweed with glibc-debuginfo installed I get:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/linux-dp.exp: continue to breakpoint: thread 5's print
where^M
#0 print_philosopher (n=3, left=33 '!', right=33 '!') at linux-dp.c:105^M
#1 0x0000000000401628 in philosopher (data=0x40537c) at linux-dp.c:148^M
#2 0x00007ffff7d56b37 in start_thread (arg=<optimized out>) \
at pthread_create.c:435^M
#3 0x00007ffff7ddb640 in clone3 () \
at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone3.S:81^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/linux-dp.exp: first thread-specific breakpoint hit
...
while without debuginfo installed I get instead:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/linux-dp.exp: continue to breakpoint: thread 5's print
where^M
#0 print_philosopher (n=3, left=33 '!', right=33 '!') at linux-dp.c:105^M
#1 0x0000000000401628 in philosopher (data=0x40537c) at linux-dp.c:148^M
#2 0x00007ffff7d56b37 in start_thread () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
#3 0x00007ffff7ddb640 in clone3 () from /lib64/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/linux-dp.exp: first thread-specific breakpoint hit
...
The problem is that the regexp used:
...
"\(from .*libpthread\|at pthread_create\|in pthread_create\)"
...
expects the 'from' part to match libpthread, but in glibc 2.34 libpthread has
been merged into libc.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAILs in gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp
Since commit e36788d1354 "[gdb/testsuite] Fix handling of nr_args < 3 in
mi_gdb_test" we run into:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp: test_auto_disable: mi runto main
Expecting: ^(-break-insert -f pendfunc1[^M
]+)?((&.*)*.*~"Breakpoint 2 at.*\\n".*=breakpoint-created,\
bkpt=\{number="2",type="breakpoint".*\}.*\n\^done[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-break-insert -f pendfunc1^M
^done,bkpt={number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",\
addr="0x00007ffff7bd559e",func="pendfunc1",\
file="gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/pendshr1.c",\
fullname="gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/pendshr1.c",line="21",thread-groups=["i1"],\
times="0",original-location="pendfunc1"}^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp: test_auto_disable: \
-break-insert -f pendfunc1 (unexpected output)
...
The regexp expects a breakpoint-created event, but that's actually suppressed
by the command:
...
DEF_MI_CMD_MI_1 ("break-insert", mi_cmd_break_insert,
&mi_suppress_notification.breakpoint),
...
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Likewise for the following:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp: test_auto_disable: \
-break-insert -f pendfunc1
Expecting: ^(-break-enable count 1 2[^M
]+)?(=breakpoint-modified,\
bkpt=\{number="2",type="breakpoint",disp="dis",enabled="y".*\}.*\n\^done[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-break-enable count 1 2^M
^done^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp: test_auto_disable: \
-break-enable count 1 2 (unexpected out\
put)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-22 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: move gdb.Membuf support into a new file
In a future commit I'm going to be creating gdb.Membuf objects from a
new file within gdb/python/py*.c. Currently all gdb.Membuf objects
are created directly within infpy_read_memory (as a result of calling
gdb.Inferior.read_memory()).
Initially I split out the Membuf creation code into a new function,
and left the new function in gdb/python/py-inferior.c, however, it
felt a little random that the Membuf creation code should live with
the inferior handling code.
So, then I moved all of the Membuf related code out into a new file,
gdb/python/py-membuf.c, the interface is gdbpy_buffer_to_membuf, which
wraps an array of bytes into a gdb.Membuf object.
Most of the code is moved directly from py-inferior.c with only minor
tweaks to layout and replacing NULL with nullptr, hence, I've left the
copyright date on py-membuf.c as 2009-2021 to match py-inferior.c.
Currently, the only user of this code is still py-inferior.c, but in
later commits this will change.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-10-22 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: new gdb.architecture_names function
Add a new function to the Python API, gdb.architecture_names(). This
function returns a list containing all of the supported architecture
names within the current build of GDB.
The values returned in this list are all of the possible values that
can be returned from gdb.Architecture.name().
2021-10-22 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: make disassembler fprintf callback a static member function
The disassemble_info structure has four callbacks, we have three of
them as static member functions within gdb_disassembler, the fourth is
just a global static function.
However, this fourth callback, is still only used from the
disassemble_info struct, so there's no real reason for its special
handling.
This commit makes fprintf_disasm a static method within
gdb_disassembler.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-10-22 Lewis Revill <lewis.revill@embecosm.com>
RISC-V: Added ld testcase for pcgp relaxation.
Consider the the pcgp-relax-02 testcase,
.text
.globl _start
_start:
.L1: auipc a0, %pcrel_hi(data_a)
.L2: auipc a1, %pcrel_hi(data_b)
addi a0, a0, %pcrel_lo(.L1)
addi a1, a1, %pcrel_lo(.L2)
.data
.word 0x0
.globl data_a
data_a:
.word 0x1
.section .rodata
.globl data_b
data_b:
.word 0x2
If the first auipc is deleted, but we are still building the pcgp
table (connect the high and low pcrel relocations), then there is
an aliasing issue that we need some way to disambiguate which of
the two symbols we are targeting. Therefore, Palmer thought of a
way to use R_RISCV_DELETE to split this into two phases, so we
could resolve the addresses before creating the ambiguities.
This patch just add the ld testcase for the above case, in case we
have changed something but break this.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Renamed pcgp-relax
to pcgp-relax-01, and added pcgp-relax-02.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-01.d: Renmaed from pcgp-relax.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-01.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-02.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-02.s: Likewise.
2021-10-22 Lewis Revill <lewis.revill@embecosm.com>
RISC-V: Don't separate pcgp relaxation to another relax pass.
Commit abd20cb637008da9d32018b4b03973e119388a0a and
ebdcad3fddf6ec21f6d4dcc702379a12718cf0c4 introduced additional
complexity into the paths run by the RISC-V relaxation pass in order to
resolve the issue of accurately keeping track of pcrel_hi and pcrel_lo
pairs. The first commit split up relaxation of these relocs into a pass
which occurred after other relaxations in order to prevent the situation
where bytes were deleted in between a pcrel_lo/pcrel_hi pair, inhibiting
our ability to find the corresponding pcrel_hi relocation from the
address attached to the pcrel_lo.
Since the relaxation was split into two passes the 'again' parameter
could not be used to perform the entire relaxation process again and so
the second commit added a way to restart ldelf_map_segments, thus
starting the whole process again.
Unfortunately this process could not account for the fact that we were
not finished with the relaxation process so in some cases - such as the
case where code would not fit in a memory region before the
R_RISCV_ALIGN relocation was relaxed - sanity checks in generic code
would fail.
This patch fixes all three of these concerns by reverting back to a
system of having only one target relax pass but updating entries in the
table of pcrel_hi/pcrel_lo relocs every time any bytes are deleted. Thus
we can keep track of the pairs accurately, and we can use the 'again'
parameter to restart the entire target relax pass, behaving in the way
that generic code expects. Unfortunately we must still have an
additional pass to delay deleting AUIPC bytes to avoid ambiguity between
pcrel_hi relocs stored in the table after deletion. This pass can only
be run once so we may potentially miss out on relaxation opportunities
but this is likely to be rare.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28410
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_elf_link_hash_table): Removed restart_relax.
(riscv_elf_link_hash_table_create): Updated.
(riscv_relax_delete_bytes): Moved after the riscv_update_pcgp_relocs.
Update the pcgp_relocs table whenever bytes are deleted.
(riscv_update_pcgp_relocs): Add function to update the section
offset of pcrel_hi and pcrel_lo, and also update the symbol value
of pcrel_hi.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_call): Need to update the pcgp_relocs table
when deleting codes.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_lui): Likewise.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_tls_le): Likewise.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_align): Once we've handled an R_RISCV_ALIGN,
we can't relax anything else, so set the sec->sec_flg0 to true.
Besides, we don't need to update the pcgp_relocs table at this
stage, so just pass NULL pointer as the pcgp_relocs table for
riscv_relax_delete_bytes.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_section): Use only one pass for all target
relaxations.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_delete): Likewise, we don't need to update
the pcgp_relocs table at this stage, and don't need to set
the `again' since restart_relax mechanism is abandoned.
(bfd_elfNN_riscv_restart_relax_sections): Removed.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_section): Updated.
* elfxx-riscv.h (bfd_elf32_riscv_restart_relax_sections): Removed.
(bfd_elf64_riscv_restart_relax_sections): Likewise.
ld/
* emultempl/riscvelf.em: Revert restart_relax changes and set
relax_pass to 3.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/align-small-region.d: New testcase.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/align-small-region.ld: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/align-small-region.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/restart-relax.d: Removed sine the
restart_relax mechanism is abandoned.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/restart-relax.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Updated.
2021-10-22 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix remote-sim.c build
Commit 183be222907a ("gdb, gdbserver: make target_waitstatus safe")
broke the remote-sim.c build. In fact, it does some wrong changes,
result of a bad sed invocation.
Fix it by adjusting the code to the new target_waitstatus API.
Change-Id: I3236ff7ef7681fc29215f68be210ff4263760e91
2021-10-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb, gdbserver: make target_waitstatus safe
I stumbled on a bug caused by the fact that a code path read
target_waitstatus::value::sig (expecting it to contain a gdb_signal
value) while target_waitstatus::kind was TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED. This
meant that the active union field was in fact
target_waitstatus::value::related_pid, and contained a ptid. The read
signal value was therefore garbage, and that caused GDB to crash soon
after. Or, since that GDB was built with ubsan, this nice error
message:
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:1271:12: runtime error: load of value 2686365, which is not a valid value for type 'gdb_signal'
Despite being a large-ish change, I think it would be nice to make
target_waitstatus safe against that kind of bug. As already done
elsewhere (e.g. dynamic_prop), validate that the type of value read from
the union matches what is supposed to be the active field.
- Make the kind and value of target_waitstatus private.
- Make the kind initialized to TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE on
target_waitstatus construction. This is what most users appear to do
explicitly.
- Add setters, one for each kind. Each setter takes as a parameter the
data associated to that kind, if any. This makes it impossible to
forget to attach the associated data.
- Add getters, one for each associated data type. Each getter
validates that the data type fetched by the user matches the wait
status kind.
- Change "integer" to "exit_status", "related_pid" to "child_ptid",
just because that's more precise terminology.
- Fix all users.
That last point is semi-mechanical. There are a lot of obvious changes,
but some less obvious ones. For example, it's not possible to set the
kind at some point and the associated data later, as some users did.
But in any case, the intent of the code should not change in this patch.
This was tested on x86-64 Linux (unix, native-gdbserver and
native-extended-gdbserver boards). It was built-tested on x86-64
FreeBSD, NetBSD, MinGW and macOS. The rest of the changes to native
files was done as a best effort. If I forgot any place to update in
these files, it should be easy to fix (unless the change happens to
reveal an actual bug).
Change-Id: I0ae967df1ff6e28de78abbe3ac9b4b2ff4ad03b7
2021-10-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: initialize the members of lwp_info in-class
Add a constructor to initialize the waitstatus members. Initialize the
others in the class directly.
Change-Id: I10f885eb33adfae86e3c97b1e135335b540d7442
2021-10-21 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbserver: make thread_info non-POD
Add a constructor and a destructor. The constructor takes care of the
initialization that happened in add_thread, while the destructor takes
care of the freeing that happened in free_one_thread. This is needed to
make target_waitstatus non-POD, as thread_info contains a member of that
type.
Change-Id: I1db321b4de9dd233ede0d5c101950f1d6f1d13b7
2021-10-21 Andrew Pinski <apinski@marvell.com>
Fix ARMv8.4 for hw watchpoint and breakpoint
Just like my previoius patch for ARMv8.1 and v8.2 (49ecef2a7da2ee9df4),
this adds ARMv8.4 debug arch as being compatible for hw watchpoint
and breakpoints.
Refactor code slightly in nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c (aarch64_linux_get_debug_reg_capacity)
Since the two locations which check the debug arch are the same code currently, it is
a good idea to factor it out to a new function and just use that function from
aarch64_linux_get_debug_reg_capacity. This is also the first step to support
ARMv8.4 debug arch.
2021-10-21 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fixes for gdb.mi/mi-break.exp
Update the expected pattern for two of the tests.
Matching pattern \" doesn't work. Use .* to match the \* pattern.
2021-10-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tui] Fix breakpoint display functionality
In commit 81e6b8eb208 "Make tui-winsource not use breakpoint_chain", a loop
body was transformed into a lambda function body:
...
- for (bp = breakpoint_chain;
- bp != NULL;
- bp = bp->next)
+ iterate_over_breakpoints ([&] (breakpoint *bp) -> bool
...
and consequently:
- a continue was replaced by a return, and
- a final return was added.
Then in commit 240edef62f0 "gdb: remove iterate_over_breakpoints function", we
transformed back to a loop body:
...
- iterate_over_breakpoints ([&] (breakpoint *bp) -> bool
+ for (breakpoint *bp : all_breakpoints ())
...
but without reverting the changes that introduced the two returns.
Consequently, breakpoints no longer show up in the tui source window.
Fix this by reverting the changes that introduced the two returns.
Build on x86_64-linux, tested with all .exp test-cases that contain
tuiterm_env.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28483
2021-10-21 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix test step-and-next-inline.cc
The test expect the runto_main to stop at the first line of the function.
Depending on the optimization level, gdb may stop in the prolog or after
the prolog at the first line. To ensure the test stops at the first line
of main, have it explicitly stop at a break point on the first line of the
function.
On PowerPC, the test passes when compiled with no optimization but fails
with all levels of optimization due to gdb stopping in the prolog.
2021-10-21 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix latent Ada bug when accessing field offsets
The "add accessors for field (and call site) location" patch caused a
gdb crash when running the internal AdaCore testsuite. This turned
out to be a latent bug in ada-lang.c.
The immediate cause of the bug is that find_struct_field
unconditionally uses TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS. This causes an assert for a
dynamic type.
This patch fixes the problem by doing two things. First, it changes
find_struct_field to use a dummy value for the field offset in the
situation where the offset is not actually needed by the caller. This
works because the offset isn't used in any other way -- only as a
result.
Second, this patch assures that calls to find_struct_field use a
resolved type when the offset is needed. For
value_tag_from_contents_and_address, this is done by resolving the
type explicitly. In ada_value_struct_elt, this is done by passing
nullptr for the out parameters when they are not needed (the second
call in this function already uses a resolved type).
Note that, while we believe the parent field probably can't occur at a
variable offset, the patch still updates this code path, just in case.
I've updated an existing test case to reproduce the crash.
I'm checking this in.
2021-10-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
-Waddress warning in ldelf.c
ldelf.c: In function 'ldelf_after_open':
ldelf.c:1049:43: warning: the comparison will always evaluate as 'true' for the address of 'elf_header' will never be NULL [-Waddress]
1049 | && elf_tdata (abfd)->elf_header != NULL
| ^~
In file included from ldelf.c:37:
../bfd/elf-bfd.h:1957:21: note: 'elf_header' declared here
1957 | Elf_Internal_Ehdr elf_header[1]; /* Actual data, but ref like ptr */
* ldelf.c (ldelf_after_open): Remove useless elf_header test.
2021-10-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Avoid -Waddress warnings in readelf
Mainline gcc:
readelf.c: In function 'find_section':
readelf.c:349:8: error: the comparison will always evaluate as 'true' for the pointer operand in 'filedata->section_headers + (sizetype)((long unsigned int)i * 80)' must not be NULL [-Werror=address]
349 | ((X) != NULL \
| ^~
readelf.c:761:9: note: in expansion of macro 'SECTION_NAME_VALID'
761 | if (SECTION_NAME_VALID (filedata->section_headers + i)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This will likely be fixed in gcc, but inline functions are nicer than
macros.
* readelf.c (SECTION_NAME, SECTION_NAME_VALID),
(SECTION_NAME_PRINT, VALID_SYMBOL_NAME, VALID_DYNAMIC_NAME),
(GET_DYNAMIC_NAME): Delete. Replace with..
(section_name, section_name_valid, section_name_print),
(valid_symbol_name, valid_dynamic_name, get_dynamic_name): ..these
new inline functions. Update use throughout file.
2021-10-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28417, std::string no longer allows accepting nullptr_t
PR 28417
* incremental.cc (Sized_relobj_incr::do_section_name): Avoid
std:string undefined behaviour.
* options.h (Search_directory::Search_directory): Likewise.
2021-10-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR27625, powerpc64 gold __tls_get_addr calls
My previous PR27625 patch had a problem or two. For one, the error
"__tls_get_addr call lacks marker reloc" on processing some calls
before hitting a call without markers typically isn't seen. Instead a
gold assertion fails. Either way it would be a hard error, which
triggers on a file contained in libphobos.a when running the gcc
testsuite. A warning isn't even appropriate since the call involved
is one built by hand without any of the arg setup relocations that
might result in linker optimisation.
So this patch reverts most of commit 0af4fcc25dd5, instead entirely
ignoring the problem of mis-optimising old-style __tls_get_addr calls
without marker relocs. We can't handle them gracefully without
another pass over relocations before decisions are made about GOT
entries in Scan::global or Scan::local. That seems too costly, just
to link object files from 2009. What's more, there doesn't seem to be
any way to allow the libphobos explicit __tls_get_addr call, but not
old TLS sequences without marker relocs. Examining instructions
before the __tls_get_addr call is out of the question: program flow
might reach the call via a branch. Putting an R_PPC64_TLSGD marker
with zero sym on the call might be a solution, but current linkers
will then merrily optimise away the call!
PR gold/27625
* powerpc.cc (Powerpc_relobj): Delete no_tls_marker_, tls_marker_,
and tls_opt_error_ variables and accessors. Remove all uses.
2021-10-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use std::string in print_one_catch_syscall
This changes print_one_catch_syscall to use std::string, removing a
bit of manual memory management.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in breakpoint
This changes struct breakpoint to use unique_xmalloc_ptr in a couple
of spots, removing a bit of manual memory management.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in bp_location
This changes struct bp_location to use a unique_xmalloc_ptr, removing
a bit of manual memory management.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in watchpoint
This changes struct watchpoint to use unique_xmalloc_ptr in a couple
of places, removing a bit of manual memory management.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in exec_catchpoint
This changes struct exec_catchpoint to use a unique_xmalloc_ptr,
removing a bit of manual memory management.
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in solib_catchpoint
This changes struct solib_catchpoint to use a unique_xmalloc_ptr,
removing a bit of manual memory management.
2021-10-20 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
Make c-exp.y work with Bison 3.8+
When using Bison 3.8, we get this error:
../../gdb/c-exp.y:3455:1: error: 'void c_print_token(FILE*, int, YYSTYPE)' defined but not used [-Werror=unused-function]
That's because bison 3.8 removed YYPRINT support:
https://savannah.gnu.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=10047
Accordingly, this patch only defines that function for Bison < 3.8.
Change-Id: I3cbf2f317630bb72810b00f2d9b2c4b99fa812ad
2021-10-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-19 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Reimplement gdb.gdb/python-interrupts.exp as unittest
The test-case gdb.gdb/python-interrupts.exp:
- runs to captured_command_loop
- sets a breakpoint at set_active_ext_lang
- calls a python command
- verifies the command triggers the breakpoint
- sends a signal and verifies the result
The test-case is fragile, because (f.i. with -flto) it cannot be guaranteed
that captured_command_loop and set_active_ext_lang are available for setting
breakpoints.
Reimplement the test-case as unittest, using:
- execute_command_to_string to capture the output
- try/catch to catch the "Error while executing Python code" exception
- a new hook selftests::hook_set_active_ext_lang to raise the signal
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Check index in type::field
This changes gdb to check the index that is passed to type::field.
This caught one bug in the Ada code when running the test suite
(actually I found the bug first, then realized that the check would
have helped), so this patch fixes that as well.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-10-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Rust lex selftest when using libiconv
The Rust lex selftest fails on our Windows build. I tracked this down
to a use of UTF-32 as a parameter to convert_between_encodings. Here,
iconv_open succeeds, but the actual conversion of a tab character
fails with EILSEQ. I suspect that "UTF-32" is being interpreted as
big-endian, as changing the call to use "UTF-32LE" makes it work.
This patch implements this fix.
2021-10-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix format_pieces selftest on Windows
The format_pieces selftest currently fails on Windows hosts.
The selftest doesn't handle the "%ll" -> "%I64" rewrite that the
formatter may perform, but also gdbsupport was missing a configure
check for PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG. This patch fixes both issues.
2021-10-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix bug in dynamic type resolution
A customer-reported problem led us to a bug in dynamic type
resolution. resolve_dynamic_struct will recursively call
resolve_dynamic_type_internal, passing it the sub-object for the
particular field being resolved. While it offsets the address here,
it does not also offset the "valaddr" -- the array of bytes describing
the memory.
This patch fixes the bug, by offsetting both. A test case is included
that can be used to reproduce the bug.
2021-10-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Always use std::function for self-tests
Now that there is a register_test variant that accepts std::function,
it seems to me that the 'selftest' struct and accompanying code is
obsolete -- simply always using std::function is simpler. This patch
implements this idea.
2021-10-19 Daniel Black <daniel@mariadb.org>
Fix PR gdb/17917 Lookup build-id in remote binaries
GDB doesn't support loading debug files using build-id from remote
target filesystems.
This is the case when gdbserver attached to a process and a gdb target
remote occurs over tcp.
With this change we make build-id lookups possible:
(gdb) show debug-file-directory
The directory where separate debug symbols are searched for is "/usr/local/lib/debug".
(gdb) set debug-file-directory /usr/lib/debug
(gdb) show sysroot
The current system root is "target:".
(gdb) target extended-remote :46615
Remote debugging using :46615
warning: Can not parse XML target description; XML support was disabled at compile time
Reading /usr/sbin/mariadbd from remote target...
warning: File transfers from remote targets can be slow. Use "set sysroot" to access files locally instead.
Reading /usr/sbin/mariadbd from remote target...
Reading symbols from target:/usr/sbin/mariadbd...
Reading /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6e/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6e/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading symbols from target:/usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6e/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug...
Reading /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpcre2-8.so.0 from remote target...
...
Before this change, the lookups would have been (GNU gdb (GDB) Fedora 10.2-3.fc34):
(gdb) target extended-remote :46615
Remote debugging using :46615
Reading /usr/sbin/mariadbd from remote target...
warning: File transfers from remote targets can be slow. Use "set sysroot" to access files locally instead.
Reading /usr/sbin/mariadbd from remote target...
Reading symbols from target:/usr/sbin/mariadbd...
Reading /usr/sbin/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading /usr/sbin/.debug/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading /usr/lib/debug//usr/sbin/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading /usr/lib/debug/usr/sbin//0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Reading target:/usr/lib/debug/usr/sbin//0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug from remote target...
Missing separate debuginfo for target:/usr/sbin/mariadbd
Try: dnf --enablerepo='*debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6e/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug
(No debugging symbols found in target:/usr/sbin/mariadbd)
Observe it didn't look for
/usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6e/0a874dca5a7ff831396ddc0785d939a192efe3.debug
on the remote target (where it is) and expected them to be installed
locally.
As a minor optimization, this also changes the build-id lookup such that
if sysroot is empty, no second lookup of the same location is performed.
Change-Id: I5181696d271c325a25a0805a8defb8ab7f9b3f55
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17917
2021-10-19 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix a potential illegal memory access when testing for a special LTO symbol name.
bfd * linker.c (_bfd_generic_link_add_one_symbol): Test for a NULL
name before checking to see if the symbol is __gnu_lto_slim.
* archive.c (_bfd_compute_and_write_armap): Likewise.
binutils
* nm.c (filter_symbols): Test for a NULL name before checking to
see if the symbol is __gnu_lto_slim.
* objcopy.c (filter_symbols): Likewise.
2021-10-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-18 Weimin Pan <weimin.pan@oracle.com>
CTF: incorrect underlying type setting for enumeration types
A bug was filed against the incorrect underlying type setting for
an enumeration type, which was caused by a copy and paste error.
This patch fixes the problem by setting it by calling objfile_int_type,
which was originally dwarf2_per_objfile::int_type, with ctf_type_size bits.
Also add error checking on ctf_func_type_info call.
2021-10-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28459, readelf issues bogus warning
I'd missed the fact that the .debug_rnglists dump doesn't exactly
display the contents of the section. Instead readelf rummages through
.debug_info looking for DW_AT_ranges entries, then displays the
entries in .debug_rnglists pointed at, sorted. A simpler dump of the
actual section contents might be more useful and robust, but it was
likely done that way to detect overlap and holes.
Anyway, the headers in .debug_rnglists besides the first are ignored,
and limiting to the unit length of the first header fails if there is
more than one unit.
PR 28459
* dwarf.c (display_debug_ranges): Don't constrain data to length
in header.
2021-10-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Adjust pr28158.rd for glibc 2.34
Adjust pr28158.rd for glibc 2.34:
$ readelf -W --dyn-syms tmpdir/pr28158
Symbol table '.dynsym' contains 4 entries:
Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
0: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT UND
1: 0000000000000000 0 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT UND __libc_start_main@GLIBC_2.34 (2)
2: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE WEAK DEFAULT UND __gmon_start__
3: 000000000040401c 4 OBJECT GLOBAL DEFAULT 23 foo@VERS_2.0 (3)
$
vs older glibc:
$ readelf -W --dyn-syms tmpdir/pr28158
Symbol table '.dynsym' contains 4 entries:
Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
0: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT UND
1: 0000000000000000 0 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT UND __libc_start_main@GLIBC_2.2.5 (3)
2: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE WEAK DEFAULT UND __gmon_start__
3: 000000000040401c 4 OBJECT GLOBAL DEFAULT 23 foo@VERS_2.0 (2)
$
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158.rd: Adjusted for glibc 2.34.
2021-10-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-14 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Powerpc: Add support for openat and fstatat syscalls
[gdb] update ppc-linux-tdep.c
Add argument to ppc_canonicalize_syscall for the wordsize.
Add syscall entries for the openat and fstatat system calls.
2021-10-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add .debug_loc support in dwarf assembler
Add .debug_loc support in the dwarf assembler, and use it in new test-case
gdb.dwarf2/loc-sec-offset.exp (which is based on
gdb.dwarf2/loclists-sec-offset.exp).
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Re: PowerPC64: Don't pretend to support multi-toc
We can't get at section->address() until everything is laid out, so
trying to generalise the offset calculation rather than using a value
of 0x8000 (the old object->toc_base_offset()) was bound to fail.
got->g_o_t() is a little better than a hard-coded 0x8000.
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::Scan::local, global): Don't use
toc_pointer() here.
2021-10-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Two GOT sections for PowerPC64
Split .got into two piece, one with the header and entries for small
model got entries, the other with entries for medium/large model got
entries. The idea is to better support mixed pcrel/non-pcrel code
where non-pcrel small-model .toc entries need to be within 32k of the
toc pointer.
* target.h (Target::tls_offset_for_local): Add got param.
(Target::tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
(Target::do_tls_offset_for_local, do_tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
* output.h (Output_data_got::Got_entry::write): Add got param.
* output.cc (Output_data_got::Got_entry::write): Likewise, pass to
tls_offset_for_local/global calls.
(Output_data_got::do_write): Adjust to suit.
* s390.cc (Target_s390::do_tls_offset_for_local): Likewise.
(Target_s390::do_tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
* powerpc.cc (enum Got_type): Extend with small types, move from
class Target_powerpc.
(Target_powerpc::biggot_): New.
(Traget_powerpc::do_tls_offset_for_local, do_tls_offset_for_global,
got_size, got_section, got_base_offset): Handle biggot_.
(Target_powerpc::do_define_standard_symbols): Adjust.
(Target_powerpc::make_plt_section, do_finalize_sections): Likewise.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::Output_data_got_powerpc): Only make
64-bit header for small got section.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::g_o_t): Only return a result for small
got section.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::write): Only write small got section
header.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::local, global): Select small/big Got_type
and section to suit reloc.
(Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Similarly.
(Sort_toc_sections): Rewrite.
2021-10-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] PowerPC64: Don't pretend to support multi-toc
Code in powerpc.cc is pretending to support a per-object toc pointer
value, but powerpc gold has no real support for multi-toc. This patch
removes the pretense, tidying quite a lot in preparation for a
followup patch. If multi-toc is ever to be supported, don't revert
this patch but start by adding object parameter to toc_pointer() and
an object to Branch_stub_key.
* powerpc.cc (Powerpc_relobj::toc_base_offset): Delete.
(Target_powerpc::toc_pointer): New function. Use throughout.
(Target_powerpc::got_base_offset): New function. Use throughout..
(Output_data_got_powerpc::got_base_offset): ..in place of
this. Delete.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::Output_data_got_powerpc): Init
header_index_ to -1u for 64-bit, and make header here.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::set_final_data_size, reserve_ent): Don't
make 64-bit header here.
(Output_data_got_powerpc::g_o_t): Return toc pointer offset in
section for 64-bit. Use throughout.
(Stub_table): Remove toc_base_off_ from Branch_stub_key, and
object param on add_long_branch_entry and find_long_branch_entry.
Adjust all uses.
2021-10-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: s12z/disassembler: call memory_error_func when appropriate
Adjust for commit ba7c18a48457.
* testsuite/gas/s12z/truncated.d: Update expected output.
2021-10-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/exp] Improve <error reading variable> message
When printing a variable x in a subroutine foo:
...
subroutine foo (x)
integer(4) :: x (*)
x(3) = 1
end subroutine foo
...
where x is an array with unknown bounds, we get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.fortran/array-no-bounds/array-no-bounds \
-ex "break foo" \
-ex run \
-ex "print x"
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4005cf: file array-no-bounds.f90, line 18.
Breakpoint 1, foo (x=...) at array-no-bounds.f90:18
18 x(3) = 1
$1 = <error reading variable>
...
Improve the error message by printing the details of the error, such that we
have instead:
...
$1 = <error reading variable: failed to get range bounds>
...
This is a change in gdb/valprint.c, and grepping through the sources reveals
that this is a common pattern.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
PPC fix for stfiwx instruction (and additional stores with primary opcode of 31)
[gdb] Fix address being recorded in rs6000-tdep.c, ppc_process_record_op31.
The GDB record function was recording the variable addr that was passed in
rather than the calculated effective address (ea) by the
ppc_process_record_op31 function.
2021-10-13 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: improve error reporting from the disassembler
If the libopcodes disassembler returns a negative value then this
indicates that the disassembly failed for some reason. In disas.c, in
the function gdb_disassembler::print_insn we can see how this is
handled; when we get a negative value back, we call the memory_error
function, which throws an exception.
The problem here is that the address used in the memory_error call is
gdb_disassembler::m_err_memaddr, which is set in
gdb_disassembler::dis_asm_memory_error, which is called from within
the libopcodes disassembler through the
disassembler_info::memory_error_func callback.
However, for this to work correctly, every time the libopcodes
disassembler returns a negative value, the libopcodes disassembler
must have first called the memory_error_func callback.
My first plan was to make m_err_memaddr a gdb::optional, and assert
that it always had a value prior to calling memory_error, however, a
quick look in opcodes/*-dis.c shows that there _are_ cases where a
negative value is returned without first calling the memory_error_func
callback, for example in arc-dis.c and cris-dis.c.
Now, I think that a good argument can be made that these disassemblers
must therefore be broken, except for the case where we can't read
memory, we should always be able to disassemble the memory contents to
_something_, even if it's just '.word 0x....'. However, I certainly
don't plan to go and fix all of the disassemblers.
What I do propose to do then, is make m_err_memaddr a gdb::optional,
but now, instead of always calling memory_error, I add a new path
which just calls error complaining about an unknown error. This new
path is only used if m_err_memaddr doesn't have a value (indicating
that the memory_error_func callback was not called).
To test this I just augmented one of the disassemblers to always
return -1, before this patch I see this:
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x000101aa <+0>: Cannot access memory at address 0x0
And after this commit I now see:
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x000101aa <+0>: unknown disassembler error (error = -1)
This doesn't really help much, but that's because there's no way to
report non memory errors out of the disasembler, because, it was not
expected that the disassembler would ever report non memory errors.
2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp with native-gdbserver
When running test-case gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp with target board
native-gdbserver, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: print string_func_ (&'abcdefg', 3)
call (integer) string_func_ (&'abcdefg', 3)^M
$2 = 0^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: call (integer) string_func_ (&'abcdefg', 3)
...
The problem is that gdb_test is used to match inferior output.
Fix this by using gdb_test_stdio.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Require use_gdb_stub == 0 where appropriate
When running with target board native-gdbserver, we run into a number of FAILs
due to use of the start command (and similar), which is not supported when
use_gdb_stub == 1.
Fix this by:
- requiring use_gdb_stub == 0 for the entire test-case, or
- guarding some tests in the test-case with use_gdb_stub == 0.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix test name in gdb.python/python.exp
When running test-case gdb.python/python.exp, we have:
...
PASS: gdb.python/python.exp: starti via gdb.execute, not from tty
PASS: gdb.python/python.exp: starti via interactive input
...
The two tests are instances of the same test, with different values for
starti command argument from_tty, so it's strange that the test names are so
different.
This is due to using a gdb_test nested in a gdb_test_multiple, with the inner
one using a different test name than the outer one. [ That could still make
sense if both produced passes, but that's not the case here. ]
Fix this by using $gdb_test_name, such that we have:
...
PASS: gdb.python/python.exp: starti via gdb.execute, not from tty
PASS: gdb.python/python.exp: starti via gdb.execute, from tty
...
Also make this more readable by using variables.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp with native-gdbserver
When running test-case gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp with target board
native-gdbserver, I run into (added missing double quotes for clarity):
...
builtin_spawn $build/gdb/testsuite/../../gdb/gdb -nw -nx \
-data-directory $build/gdb/testsuite/../data-directory \
-iex "set height 0" -iex "set width 0" \
-ex "set auto-connect-native-target off" \
-iex "set sysroot" -batch ""^M
: No such file or directory.^M
PASS: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: 1x: \
No such file or directory: [lindex $result 2] == 0
FAIL: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: 1x: \
No such file or directory: [lindex $result 3] == $expect_status
...
As in commit a02a90c114c "[gdb/testsuite] Set sysroot earlier in
local-board.exp", the problem is the use of -ex for
"set auto-connect-native-target off", which makes that the last command to
be executed, and consequently determines the return status.
Fix this by using -iex instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Remove quit in gdb.arch/i386-mpx.exp
When running test-case gdb.arch/i386-mpx.exp with target board
native-gdbserver, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/i386-mpx.exp: verify size for bnd0
Remote debugging from host ::1, port 42328^M
quit^M
A debugging session is active.^M
^M
Inferior 1 [process 19679] will be killed.^M
^M
Quit anyway? (y or n) monitor exit^M
Please answer y or n.^M
A debugging session is active.^M
^M
Inferior 1 [process 19679] will be killed.^M
^M
Quit anyway? (y or n) WARNING: Timed out waiting for EOF in server after monitor exit
...
The problem is that the test-case sends a quit at the end (without verifying
the result of this in any way):
...
send_gdb "quit\n"
...
Fix this by removing the quit.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
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2021-10-11 Srinath Parvathaneni <srinath.parvathaneni@arm.com>
[ARM] Add support for M-profile MVE extension
This patch adds support for the M-profile MVE extension, which includes the
following:
- New M-profile XML feature m-profile-mve
- MVE vector predication status and control register (VPR)
- p0 pseudo register (contained in the VPR)
- q0 ~ q7 pseudo vector registers
- New feature bits
- Documentation update
Pseudo register p0 is the least significant bits of vpr and can be accessed
as $p0 or displayed through $vpr. For more information about the register
layout, please refer to [1].
The q0 ~ q7 registers map back to the d0 ~ d15 registers, two d registers
per q register.
The register dump looks like this:
(gdb) info reg all
r0 0x0 0
r1 0x0 0
r2 0x0 0
r3 0x0 0
r4 0x0 0
r5 0x0 0
r6 0x0 0
r7 0x0 0
r8 0x0 0
r9 0x0 0
r10 0x0 0
r11 0x0 0
r12 0x0 0
sp 0x0 0x0 <__Vectors>
lr 0xffffffff -1
pc 0xd0c 0xd0c <Reset_Handler>
xpsr 0x1000000 16777216
d0 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d1 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d2 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d3 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d4 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d5 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d6 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d7 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d8 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d9 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d10 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d11 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d12 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d13 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d14 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
d15 0 (raw 0x0000000000000000)
fpscr 0x0 0
vpr 0x0 [ P0=0 MASK01=0 MASK23=0 ]
s0 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s1 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s2 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s3 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s4 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s5 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s6 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s7 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s8 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s9 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s10 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s11 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s12 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s13 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s14 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s15 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s16 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s17 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s18 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s19 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s20 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s21 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s22 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s23 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s24 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s25 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s26 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s27 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s28 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s29 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s30 0 (raw 0x00000000)
s31 0 (raw 0x00000000)
q0 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q1 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q2 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q3 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q4 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q5 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q6 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
q7 {u8 = {0x0 <repeats 16 times>}, u16 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, u64 = {0x0, 0x0}, f32 = {0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0}, f64 = {0x0, 0x0}}
p0 0x0 0
Built and regtested with a simulator.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0553/bn
Co-Authored-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
2021-10-11 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
[ARM] Refactor pseudo register numbering
The pseudo register handling for ARM uses some hardcoded constants to
determine types and names. In preparation to the upcoming MVE support
patch (that will add another pseudo register), this patch refactors and
reorganizes things in order to simplify handling of future pseudo registers.
We keep track of the first pseudo register number in a group and the number of
pseudo registers in that group.
Right now we only have the S and Q pseudo registers.
2021-10-11 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
[ARM] Small refactoring of arm gdbarch initialization
This is in preparation to MVE support, where we will define another
pseudo register. We need to define the pseudo register numbers *after*
accounting for all the registers in the XML description, so move
the call to tdesc_use_registers up.
If we don't do it, GDB's register count won't consider registers contained
in the XML but ignored by GDB, throwing the register numbering off.
2021-10-11 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
[ARM] Refactor some constants
In preparation for the MVE extension patch, this one refactors some of
the register-related constants we have for ARM.
Basically I'm separating counting constants from numbering constants.
For example, ARM_A1_REGNUM is a numbering constant, whereas ARM_NUM_ARG_REGS
is a counting constant.
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.mi/mi-var-child-f.exp
When running test-case gdb.mi/mi-var-child-f.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed
(with glibc 2.34) I run into:
...
(gdb) ^M
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-var-child-f.exp: mi runto prog_array
Expecting: ^(-var-create array \* array[^M
]+)?(\^done,name="array",numchild="[0-9]+",value=".*",type=.*,has_more="0"[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-var-create array * array^M
&"Attempt to use a type name as an expression.\n"^M
^error,msg="-var-create: unable to create variable object"^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-var-child-f.exp: create local variable array (unexpected output)
...
The problem is that the name array is used both:
- as the name for a local variable
- as the name of a type in glibc, in file malloc/dynarray-skeleton.c, as included
by nss/nss_files/files-hosts.c.
Fix this by ignoring the shared lib symbols.
Likewise in a couple of other fortran tests.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
z80/disassembler: call memory_error_func when appropriate
If a call to the read_memory_func fails then we should call the
memory_error_func to notify the user of the disassembler of the
address that was a problem.
Without this GDB will report all memory errors as being at address
0x0.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* z80-dis.c (fetch_data): Call memory_error_func if the
read_memory_func call fails.
2021-10-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
s12z/disassembler: call memory_error_func when appropriate
If a call to the read_memory_func fails then we should call the
memory_error_func to notify the user of the disassembler of the
address that was a problem.
Without this GDB will report all memory errors as being at address
0x0.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* s12z-disc.c (abstract_read_memory): Call memory_error_func if
the read_memory_func call fails.
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix double debug info in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp
A mistake slipped in in commit a5ea23036d8 "[gdb/testsuite] Use function_range
in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp".
Before the commit the main file was compiled with debug info, and the two
others not:
...
if {[prepare_for_testing_full "failed to prepare" \
[list $testfile {} $srcfile {} $srcfuncfile {} \
$srcmainfile debug]]} {
...
After the commit, all were compiled with debug info, and consequently, there
are two versions of debug info for $srcfuncfile. This shows up as a FAIL when
running the test-case with target boards readnow and cc-with-debug-names.
Fix this by using prepare_for_testing_full, as before.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Fixes: a5ea23036d8 ("[gdb/testsuite] Use function_range in
gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp")
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use require for ensure_gdb_index
Replace:
...
if { [ensure_gdb_index $binfile] == -1 } {
return -1
}
...
with:
...
require {ensure_gdb_index $binfile} != -1
...
and consequently, add a missing UNTESTED message.
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with native and target board readnow.
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle readnow in ensure_gdb_index
When running test-case gdb.base/with-mf.exp with target board readnow, I run
into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/with-mf.exp: check if index present
...
This is since commit 6010fb0c49e "[gdb/testsuite] Fix full buffer in
gdb.rust/dwindex.exp".
Before that commit, the proc ensure_gdb_index would treat the line:
...
.gdb_index: faked for "readnow"^M
...
as proof that an index is already present (which is incorrect).
Now, instead it generates aforementioned FAIL and continues to generate an
index.
Fix this by explicitly handling the readnow case in proc ensure_gdb_index,
such that we bail out instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index-symlink.exp
The test-case gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index-symlink.exp interpretes a failure to
add an index as a failure to add an index for a symlink:
...
if { [ensure_gdb_index $symlink] == -1 } {
fail "Unable to call gdb-add-index with a symlink to a symfile"
return -1
}
...
However, it's possible that the gdb-add-index also fails with a regular
file. Add a check for that situation.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add proc require in lib/gdb.exp
Add a new proc require in lib/gdb.exp, and use it to shorten:
...
if { [gdb_skip_xml_test] } {
# Valgrind gdbserver requires gdb with xml support.
untested "missing xml support"
return 0
}
...
into:
...
require gdb_skip_xml_test 0
...
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with and without a trigger patch that forces
gdb_skip_xml_test to return 1.
2021-10-11 Michael Forney <mforney@mforney.org>
bfd: Remove use of void pointer arithmetic
This is not valid in ISO C. Instead, use a pointer to bfd_byte.
* peicode.h (pe_bfd_object_p): Remove use of void pointer
arithmetic.
2021-10-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Make execute_command_to_string return string on throw
The pattern for using execute_command_to_string is:
...
std::string output;
output = execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out);
...
This results in a problem when using it in a try/catch:
...
try
{
output = execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out)
}
catch (const gdb_exception &e)
{
/* Use output. */
}
...
If an expection was thrown during execute_fn_to_string, then the output
remains unassigned, while it could be worthwhile to known what output was
generated by gdb before the expection was thrown.
Fix this by returning the string using a parameter instead:
...
execute_fn_to_string (output, fn, term_out)
...
Also add a variant without string parameter, to support places where the
function is used while ignoring the result:
...
execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add check-readmore
Consider the gdb output:
...
27 return SYSCALL_CANCEL (nanosleep, requested_time, remaining);^M
(gdb) ^M
Thread 2 "run-attach-whil" stopped.^M
...
When trying to match the gdb prompt using gdb_test which uses '$gdb_prompt $',
it may pass or fail.
This sort of thing needs to be fixed (see commit b0e2f96b56b), but there's
currently no way to reliably find this type of FAILs.
We have check-read1, but that one actually make the test pass reliably.
We need something like the opposite of check-read1: something that makes
expect read a bit slower, or more exhaustively.
Add a new test target check-readmore that implements this.
There are two methods of implementing this in read1.c:
- the first method waits a bit before doing a read
- the second method does a read and then decides whether to
return or to wait a bit and do another read, and so on.
The second method is potentially faster, has less risc of timeout and could
potentially detect more problems. The first method has a simpler
implementation.
The second method is enabled by default. The default waiting period is 10
miliseconds.
The first method can be enabled using:
...
$ export READMORE_METHOD=1
...
and the waiting period can be specified in miliseconds using:
...
$ export READMORE_SLEEP=9
...
Also a log file can be specified using:
...
$ export READMORE_LOG=$(pwd -P)/LOG
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Testing with check-readmore showed these regressions:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/bp-cmds-continue-ctrl-c.exp: run: stop with control-c (continue)
FAIL: gdb.base/bp-cmds-continue-ctrl-c.exp: attach: stop with control-c (continue)
...
I have not been able to find a problem in the test-case, and I think it's the
nature of both the test-case and readmore that makes it run longer. Make
these pass by increasing the alarm timeout from 60 to 120 seconds.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27957
2021-10-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix fortran module tests with stressed cpu
When running these test-cases:
- gdb.fortran/info-modules.exp
- gdb.fortran/module.exp
- gdb.mi/mi-fortran-modules.exp
in conjunction with:
...
$ stress -c $(($(cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -c "^processor") + 1))
...
I run into timeouts.
Fix this by using:
- "set auto-solib-add off" to avoid symbols of shared libs
(which doesn't work for libc, now that libpthread_name_p has been
updated to match libc)
- "nosharedlibrary" to avoid symbols of libc
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28133
2021-10-09 Guillermo E. Martinez <guillermo.e.martinez@oracle.com>
PR28415, invalid read in xtensa_read_table_entries
PR 28415
PR 28416
* elf32-xtensa.c (xtensa_read_table_entries): Handle error
return from retrieve_contents.
2021-10-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/info-types-c++.exp with stressed cpu
When running test-case gdb.base/info-types-c++.exp in conjunction with:
...
$ stress -c $(($(cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -c "^processor") + 1))
...
we get:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/info-types-c++.exp: info types (timeout)
...
Fix this by setting auto-solib-add to off.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/info_sources_2.exp with check-read1
When running test-case gdb.base/info_sources_2.exp with check-read1, I run
into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/info_sources_2.exp: args: : info sources (timeout)
...
Fix this by consuming a "$src1, $src2, ..., $srcn: line bit by bit rather than
as one whole line.
Also add the missing handling of "Objfile has no debug information".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.mi/gdb2549.exp with check-read1
When running test-case gdb.mi/gdb2549.exp with check-read1, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.mi/gdb2549.exp: register values x (timeout)
...
Fix this by applying the same fix as for "register values t" in commit
478e490a4df "[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.mi/gdb2549.exp with check-read1".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/bt-on-error-and-warning.exp with check-read1
When running test-case gdb.base/bt-on-error-and-warning.exp with check-read1,
I run into:
...
(gdb) maint internal-error foobar^M
src/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: foobar^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detectedFAIL: \
gdb.base/bt-on-error-and-warning.exp: problem=internal-error, mode=on: \
scan for backtrace (GDB internal error)
Resyncing due to internal error.
,^M
...
The corresponding gdb_test_multiple in the test-case contains:
...
-early -re "^A problem internal to GDB has been detected,\r\n" {
incr header_lines
exp_continue
}
...
but instead this one triggers in gdb_test_multiple:
...
-re ".*A problem internal to GDB has been detected" {
fail "$message (GDB internal error)"
gdb_internal_error_resync
set result -1
}
...
Fix this by likewise shortening the regexp to before the comma.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add nopie in two test-cases
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-restrict.exp on openSUSE Leap 15.2 with
gcc-PIE installed (switching compiler default to -fPIE/-pie), I get:
...
gdb compile failed, ld: outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-restrict/dw2-restrict0.o: \
warning: relocation in read-only section `.text'
ld: warning: creating DT_TEXTREL in a PIE
UNTESTED: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-restrict.exp: failed to prepare
...
This is due to using a hardcoded .S file that was generated with -fno-PIE.
Fix this by adding the missing nopie.
Likewise in gdb.arch/amd64-tailcall-noret.exp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp with glibc 2.34
When running test-case gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp on openSUSE
Tumbleweed (with glibc 2.34) I get:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M
Stopped due to shared library event:^M
Inferior loaded /lib64/libm.so.6^M
/lib64/libc.so.6^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp: user-initiated check: continue
...
The check expect the inferior to load libpthread, but since glibc 2.34
libpthread has been integrated into glibc, and consequently it's no longer
a dependency:
...
$ ldd outputs/gdb.threads/check-libthread-db/check-libthread-db
linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffe4cae4000)
libm.so.6 => /lib64/libm.so.6 (0x00007f167c77c000)
libc.so.6 => /lib64/libc.so.6 (0x00007f167c572000)
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00007f167c86e000)
...
Fix this by updating the regexp to expect libpthread or libc.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.guile/scm-type.exp with gcc 4.8
With gcc 7.5.0, I get:
...
(gdb) guile (print (type-range (field-type (type-field (value-type \
(value-dereference f)) "items"))))^M
= (0 0)^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.guile/scm-type.exp: lang_cpp: test_range: \
on flexible array member: $cmd
...
but with gcc 4.8.5, I get instead:
...
(gdb) guile (print (type-range (field-type (type-field (value-type \
(value-dereference f)) "items"))))^M
= (0 -1)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.guile/scm-type.exp: lang_cpp: test_range: \
on flexible array member: $cmd
...
There's a difference in debug info. With gcc 4.8.5, we have:
...
<2><224>: Abbrev Number: 15 (DW_TAG_member)
<225> DW_AT_name : items
<22b> DW_AT_type : <0x231>
<1><231>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_array_type)
<232> DW_AT_type : <0x105>
<2><23a>: Abbrev Number: 16 (DW_TAG_subrange_type)
<23b> DW_AT_type : <0x11a>
<23f> DW_AT_upper_bound : 0xffffffffffffffff
...
and with gcc 7.5.0, we have instead:
...
<2><89f>: Abbrev Number: 12 (DW_TAG_member)
<8a0> DW_AT_name : items
<8a6> DW_AT_type : <0x8ac>
<1><8ac>: Abbrev Number: 17 (DW_TAG_array_type)
<8ad> DW_AT_type : <0x29d>
<2><8b5>: Abbrev Number: 41 (DW_TAG_subrange_type)
<2><8b6>: Abbrev Number: 0
...
As mentioned in commit 858c8f2c1b9 "gdb/testsuite: adjust
gdb.python/flexible-array-member.exp expected pattern":
...
Ideally, GDB would present a consistent and documented value for an
array member declared with size 0, regardless of how the debug info
looks like.
...
As in gdb.python/flexible-array-member.exp, change the test to accept the two
values.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-07 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add accessors for field (and call site) location
Add accessors for the various location values in struct field. This
lets us assert that when we get a location value of a certain kind (say,
bitpos), the field's location indeed contains a value of that kind.
Remove the SET_FIELD_* macros, instead use the new setters directly.
Update the FIELD_* macros used to access field locations to go through
the getters. They will be removed in a subsequent patch.
There are places where the FIELD_* macros are used on call_site_target
structures, because it contains members of the same name (loc_kind and
loc). For now, I have replicated the getters/setters in
call_site_target. But we could perhaps eventually factor them in a
"location" structure that can be used at both places.
Note that the field structure, being zero-initialized, defaults to a
bitpos location with value 0. While writing this patch, I tried to make
it default to an "unset" location, to catch places where we would miss
setting a field's location. However, I found that some places relied on
the default being "bitpos 0", so I left it as-is. This change could
always be done as follow-up work, making these places explicitly set the
"bitpos 0" location.
I found two issues to fix:
- I got some failures in the gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs-c++.exp
test. They were caused by two functions in amd64-tdep.c using
TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS before checking if the location is of the bitpos
kind, which they do indirectly through `field_is_static`. Simply
move getting the bitpos below the field_is_static call.
- I got a failure in gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp. It turns out that in
make_gdb_type_enum, we set enum field values using SET_FIELD_BITPOS,
and later access them through FIELD_ENUMVAL. Fix that by using
set_loc_enumval to set the value.
Change-Id: I53d3734916c46457576ba11dd77df4049d2fc1e8
2021-10-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: Support aliases for Zbs instructions
Add aliases for the non-immediate mnemonics of b{set,clr,inv,ext} to
yencode the respective immediate insn b{set,clr,inv,ext}i when the
second source operand is an immediate.
2021-01-11 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext.d: Add tests.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext-64.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Add aliases for Zbs.
Suggested-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
2021-10-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: Add support for Zbs instructions
This change adds the Zbs instructions from the Zbs 1.0.0 specification.
See
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-bitmanip/releases/tag/1.0.0
for the frozen specification.
2021-01-09 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added zbs.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Handle INSN_CLASS_ZBS.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext.d: Test Zbs instructions.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext-64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/b-ext-64.s: Likewise.
include/
* opcode/riscv-opc.h: Added MASK/MATCH/DECLARE_INSN for Zbs.
* opcode/riscv.h (riscv_insn_class): Added INSN_CLASS_ZBS.
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Add zbs.
2021-10-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: Update extension version for Zb[abc] to 1.0.0
2021-10-06 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Update the version
number for zba, zbb and zbc to 1.0.0
Version-changes: 3
- Updated version numbers for zba, zbb and zbc to 1.0.0
2021-10-07 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
RISC-V: Split Zb[abc] into commented sections
The Zb[abc] opcodes are bundled just below the Privileged opcodes in
riscv_opcodes, possibly giving the appearance that they are part of
the Privileged spec for an uninitiated reader. This separates them
out and adds comments above each section to clearly identify them as
Zba, Zbb or Zbc opcodes.
2021-10-04 Philipp Tomsich <philipp.tomsich@vrull.eu>
opcodes/
* riscv-opc.c: Split of Zb[abc] instructions and add comments.
2021-10-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28423, use-after-free in objdump
XCOFF archives use a bi-directional linked list for file members. So
one member points to both the previous member and the next member.
Members may not be sequentially ordered in the file. This of course
is over-engineered nonsense and an attractive target for fuzzers.
(There is even a free list of members!) The testcase in PR28423 is an
XCOFF archive with one member pointing to itself, which results in
lots of bad behaviour. For example, "ar t" never terminates.
The use-after-free with "objdump -r" happens like this: The first
archive element is opened, its symbols are read and "canonicalized"
for objdump, then relocations are read and printed. Those relocations
use the canonicalized symbols, and also happen to be cached by the
coff bfd backend support. objdump frees the symbols. The next
archive element is then opened. This must be done before the first
element is closed, because finding the next element uses data held in
the currect element. Unfortunately the next element happens to be the
original, so we aren't opening, we're reopening a bfd which has cached
data. When the relocations are printed they use the cached copy
containing references to the freed canonical symbols.
This patch adds a little sanity checking to the XCOFF "open next
archive file" support, so that it rejects archive members pointing at
themselves. That is sufficient to cure this problem. Anything more
is overkill. If someone deliberately fuzzes an XCOFF archive with an
element loop then reports an "ar" bug when it runs forever, they will
find their bug report closed WONTFIX.
PR 28423
* coff-rs6000.c (_bfd_xcoff_read_ar_hdr): Save size occupied
by member name in areltdata.extra_size.
(_bfd_xcoff_openr_next_archived_file): Sanity check nextoff.
* coff64-rs6000.c (xcoff64_openr_next_archived_file): Call
_bfd_xcoff_openr_next_archived_file.
2021-10-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28422, build_id use-after-free
This fixes a bug in commit 5d9bbb73c1df. All fields preserved from a
bfd in struct bfd_preserve need to be cleared in bfd_reinit.
PR 28422
* format.c (bfd_reinit): Clear build_id.
2021-10-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Change ridiculous section size error
Rather than reporting "memory exhausted", report "file truncated".
You can hit this error on small fuzzed object files, or on files that
are actually truncated. In either case sizes can be such that an out
of memory error is a little confusing.
* compress.c (bfd_get_full_section_contents): Set
bfd_error_file_truncated rather than bfd_error_no_memory when
section size exceeds file size.
2021-10-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.base/annota1.exp
On openSUSE tumbleweed I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: run until main breakpoint (timeout)
...
due to a message related to libthread_db:
...
^Z^Zstarting^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M
^M
^Z^Zframes-invalid^M
...
which is not matched by the regexp.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Refactor regexp in gdb.base/annota1.exp
Refactor regexp in gdb.base/annota1.exp to reduce indentation and repetition.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-06 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/doc: improve 'show print elements' description
The documentation for 'show print elements' contains the line:
If the number is 0, then the printing is unlimited.
However, this line is now out of date as can be seen by this GDB
session:
(gdb) set print elements 0
(gdb) show print elements
Limit on string chars or array elements to print is unlimited.
The value 0 does indeed mean unlimited, and this is described in the
'set print elements' section, however, for 'show print elements' the
user will never see the value 0, so lets just remove that bit from the
docs.
2021-10-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.tui/corefile-run.exp
When running test-case gdb.tui/corefile-run.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed,
I run into:
...
PASS: gdb.tui/corefile-run.exp: load corefile
FAIL: gdb.tui/corefile-run.exp: run until the end
...
What's going on is easier to see when also doing dump_screen if
check_contents passes, and inspecting state at the preceding PASS:
...
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
exec No process In: L?? PC: ??
[New LWP 16629]
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".
Core was generated by `/data/gdb_versions/devel/build/gdb/testsuite/output
s/gdb.tui/corefile-run/corefi'.
Program terminated with signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
#0 main ()
--Type <RET> for more, q to quit, c to continue without paging--
...
The problem is that we're getting a pagination prompt, and the subsequent run
command is interpreted as an answer to that prompt.
Fix this by:
- detecting the gdb prompt in response to "load corefile", such that
we detect the failure earlier, and
- doing a "set pagination off" in Term::clean_restart.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28420, ecoff fuzzing failures
PR 28420
* coff-mips.c (mips_adjust_reloc_in): Replace abort with error
message and return.
* ecoff.c (ecoff_slurp_reloc_table): Remove assertion and aborts,
instead handle errors gracefully.
2021-10-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28402, fail to allocate line number array
This fixes a situation where the COFF code allocated memory for
internal representaion arrays before reading the external file data.
That meant the allocation didn't have any sanity check against file
size.
PR 28402
* coffcode.h (buy_and_read): Malloc rather than alloc memory.
(coff_slurp_line_table): Read native line number info before
allocating memory for internal line number array. Adjust error
paths to suit. Remove now unnecessary line number count check.
(coff_slurp_reloc_table): Adjust to suit buy_and_read change.
2021-10-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28403, null pointer dereference in disassemble_bytes
Indexing of symbol and howto arrays wasn't checked in aout targets.
PR 28403
* aout-ns32k.c (MY (reloc_howto)): Sanity check howto_table index.
Make r_index unsigned.
(MY_swap_std_reloc_in): Make r_index unsigned.
* aoutx.h (MOVE_ADDRESS): Sanity check symbol r_index.
(aout_link_input_section_std): Make r_index unsigned.
(aout_link_input_section_ext): Likewise.
* i386lynx.c (MOVE_ADDRESS): Sanity check symbol r_index.
(swap_ext_reloc_in, swap_std_reloc_in): Make r_index unsigned.
* pdp11.c (MOVE_ADDRESS): Sanity check symbol r_index.
2021-10-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28401, invalid section name lookup
The PR28401 testcase has a section named "", ie. an empty string.
This results in some silly behaviour in load_debug_section, and
dump_dwarf_section. Fix that. Note that this patch doesn't correct
the main complaint in PR28401, "failed to allocate", since malloc
failures on sections having huge bogus sizes are to be expected. We
can't safely catch all such cases by comparing with file size, for
example, where sections contain compressed data.
PR 28401
* objdump.c (load_debug_section): Don't attempt to retrieve
empty name sections.
(dump_dwarf_section): Likewise.
2021-10-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Make tui testing less verbose
Currently, tui testing is rather verbose. When using these RUNTESTFLAGS to
pick up all tui tests (17 in total):
...
rtf=$(echo $(cd src/gdb/testsuite/; find gdb.* -type f -name *.exp* \
| xargs grep -l tuiterm_env) )
...
we have:
...
$ wc -l gdb.log
120592 gdb.log
...
Most of the output is related to controlling the tui screen, but that does
not give a top-level sense of how the test-case progresses.
Put differently: a lot of bandwith is used to describe how we arrive at a
certain tui screen state. But we don't actually always show the state we
arrive at, unless there's a FAIL.
And if there's say, a PASS that should actually be FAILing, it's hard to
detect.
Fix this by:
- dropping the -log on the call to verbose in _log. We still can get the
same info back using runtest -v.
- dumping the screen or box that we're checking, also when the test passes.
Brings down verbosity to something more reasonable:
...
$ wc -l gdb.log
3221 gdb.log
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add Term::dump_box in lib/tuiterm.exp
Factor out new proc Term::get_region and use it to implement a
new proc Term::dump_box, similar to Term::dump_screen.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-05 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Remove deprecated assertion in setting::get
The commit 702991711a91bd47b209289562843a11e7009396 (gdb: Have setter
and getter callbacks for settings) makes it possible for a setting not
to be backed by a memory buffer but use callback functions instead to
retrieve or set the setting's value.
An assertion was not properly updated to take into account that the
m_var member (which points to a memory buffer, if used) might be nullptr
if the setting uses callback functions. If the setting is backed by a
memory buffer, the m_var has to be non nullptr, which is already checked
before the pointer is dereferenced.
This commit removes this assertion as it is not valid anymore.
2021-10-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove 'varsize-limit'
This makes the Ada-specific "varsize-limit" a synonym for
"max-value-size", and removes the Ada-specific checks of the limit.
I am not certain of the history here, but it seems to me that this
code is fully obsolete now. And, removing this makes it possible to
index large Ada arrays without triggering an error. A new test case
is included to demonstrate this.
2021-10-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Allow lazy 'zero' value
This changes value_zero to create a lazy value. In many cases,
value_zero is called in expression evaluation to wrap a type in a
non-eval context. It seems senseless to allocate a buffer in these
cases.
A new 'is_zero' flag is added so we can preserve the existing
assertions in value_fetch_lazy.
A subsequent patch will add a test where creating a zero value would
fail, due to the variable size check. However, the contents of this
value are never needed, and so creating a lazy value avoids the error
case.
2021-10-05 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Add lval_funcs::is_optimized_out
This adds an is_optimized_out function pointer to lval_funcs, and
changes value_optimized_out to call it. This new function lets gdb
determine if a value is optimized out without necessarily fetching the
value. This is needed for a subsequent patch, where an attempt to
access a lazy value would fail due to the value size limit -- however,
the access was only needed to determine the optimized-out state.
2021-10-05 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAIL in gdb.mi/mi-nsmoribund.exp
Since commit e36788d1354 "[gdb/testsuite] Fix handling of nr_args < 3 in
mi_gdb_test" we run into:
...
PASS: gdb.mi/mi-nsmoribund.exp: print done = 1
Expecting: ^(.*[^M
]+)?([^
]*^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"^M
\*running,thread-id="[0-9]+"[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
103-exec-continue --all^M
=library-loaded,id="/lib64/libgcc_s.so.1",target-name="/lib64/libgcc_s.so.1",\
host-name="/lib64/libgcc_s.so.1",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1",\
ranges=[{from="0x00007ffff22a5010",to="0x00007ffff22b6365"}]^M
103^running^M
*running,thread-id="5"^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-nsmoribund.exp: 103-exec-continue --all (unexpected output)
...
The regexp expect running messages for all threads, but we only get one for
thread 5.
The test-case uses non-stop mode, and when the exec-continue --all command is
issued, thread 5 is stopped and all other threads are running. Consequently,
only thread 5 is resumed, and reported as running.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-10-05 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: fix memory leak in python inferior code
When a user creates a gdb.Inferior object for the first time a new
Python object is created. This object is then cached within GDB's
inferior object using the registry mechanism (see
inferior_to_inferior_object in py-inferior.c, specifically the calls
to inferior_data and set_inferior_data).
The Python Reference to the gdb.Inferior object held within the real
inferior object ensures that the reference count on the Python
gdb.Inferior object never reaches zero while the GDB inferior object
continues to exist.
At the same time, the gdb.Inferior object maintains a C++ pointer back
to GDB's real inferior object. We therefore end up with a system that
looks like this:
Python Reference
|
|
.----------. | .--------------.
| |------------------->| |
| inferior | | gdb.Inferior |
| |<-------------------| |
'----------' | '--------------'
|
|
C++ Pointer
When GDB's inferior object is deleted (say the inferior exits) then
py_free_inferior is called (thanks to the registry system), this
function looks up the Python gdb.Inferior object and sets the C++
pointer to nullptr and finally reduces the reference count on the
Python gdb.Inferior object.
If at this point the user still holds a reference to the Python
gdb.Inferior object then nothing happens. However, the gdb.Inferior
object is now in the non-valid state (see infpy_is_valid in
py-inferior.c), but otherwise, everything is fine.
However, if there are no further references to the Python gdb.Inferior
object, or, once the user has given up all their references to the
gdb.Inferior object, then infpy_dealloc is called.
This function currently checks to see if the inferior pointer within
the gdb.Inferior object is nullptr or not. If the pointer is nullptr
then infpy_dealloc immediately returns.
Only when the inferior point in the gdb.Inferior is not nullptr do
we (a) set the gdb.Inferior reference inside GDB's inferior to
nullptr, and (b) call the underlying Python tp_free function.
There are a number things wrong here:
1. The Python gdb.Inferior reference within GDB's inferior object
holds a reference count, thus, setting this reference to nullptr
without first decrementing the reference count would leak a
reference, however...
2. As GDB's inferior holds a reference then infpy_dealloc will never
be called until GDB's inferior object is deleted. Deleting a GDB
inferior ohject calls py_free_inferior, and so gives up the
reference. At this point there is no longer a need to call
set_inferior_data to set the field back to NULL, that field must
have been cleared in order to get the reference count to zero, which
means...
3. If we know that py_free_inferior must be called before
infpy_dealloc, then we know that the inferior pointer in
gdb.Inferior will always be nullptr when infpy_dealloc is called,
this means that the call to the underlying tp_free function will
always be skipped. Skipping this call will cause Python to leak the
memory associated with the gdb.Inferior object, which is what we
currently always do.
Given all of the above, I assert that the C++ pointer within
gdb.Inferior will always be nullptr when infpy_dealloc is called.
That's what this patch does.
I wrote a test for this issue making use of Pythons tracemalloc
module, which allows us to spot this memory leak.
2021-10-05 Bhuvanendra Kumar N <Bhuvanendra.KumarN@amd.com>
[gdb/testsuite] Use function_range in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp
Following 2 test points are failing with clang compiler
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp: func_nofb print
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ref-missing-frame.exp: func_loopfb print
As in commit f677852bbda "[gdb/testsuite] Use function_range in
gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp", the problem is that the CU and functions
have an empty address range, due to using asm labels in global scope,
which is a known source of problems, as explained in the comment of proc
function_range in gdb/testsuite/lib/dwarf.exp. Hence fix this also by
using function_range.
Tested on x86_64-linux with gcc and clang.
2021-10-05 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: add a new gdb_exiting event
Add a new event, gdb.events.gdb_exiting, which is called once GDB
decides it is going to exit.
This event is not triggered in the case that GDB performs a hard
abort, for example, when handling an internal error and the user
decides to quit the debug session, or if GDB hits an unexpected,
fatal, signal.
This event is triggered if the user just types 'quit' at the command
prompt, or if GDB is run with '-batch' and has processed all of the
required commands.
The new event type is gdb.GdbExitingEvent, and it has a single
attribute exit_code, which is the value that GDB is about to exit
with.
The event is triggered before GDB starts dismantling any of its own
internal state, so, my expectation is that most Python calls should
work just fine at this point.
When considering this functionality I wondered about using the
'atexit' Python module. However, this is triggered when the Python
environment is shut down, which is done from a final cleanup. At
this point we don't know for sure what other GDB state has already
been cleaned up.
2021-10-05 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: update events test to handle missing exit_code
The test gdb.python/py-events.exp sets up a handler for the gdb.exited
event. Unfortunately the handler is slightly broken, it assumes that
the exit_code attribute will always be present. This is not always
the case.
In a later commit I am going to add more tests to py-events.exp test
script, and in so doing I expose the bug in our handling of gdb.exited
events.
Just to be clear, GDB itself is fine, it is the test that is not
written correctly according to the Python Events API.
So, in this commit I fix the Python code in the test, and extend the
test case to exercise more paths through the Python code.
Additionally, I noticed that the gdb.exited event is used as an
example in the documentation for how to write an event handler.
Unfortunately the same bug that we had in our test was also present in
the example code in the manual.
So I've fixed that too.
After this commit there is no functional change to GDB.
2021-10-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> when demangling
I noticed that some methods in language_defn could use
unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> rather than a plain 'char *'. This patch
implements this change, fixing up the fallout and changing
gdb_demangle to also return this type. In one spot, std::string is
used to simplify some related code, and in another, an auto_obstack is
used to avoid manual management.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-10-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Minor boolean fix in windows-nat.c
I noticed a spot in windows-nat.c that used '1' rather than the more
appropriate 'true'. This patch fixes it.
2021-10-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Add CXX_DIALECT to CXX
Say we use a gcc version that (while supporting c++11) does not support c++11
by default, and needs an -std setting to enable it.
If gdb would use the default AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX from autoconf-archive, then
we'd have:
...
CXX="g++ -std=gnu++11"
...
That mechanism however has the following problem (quoting from commit
0bcda685399):
...
the top level Makefile passes CXX down to subdirs, and that overrides whatever
gdb/Makefile may set CXX to. The result would be that a make invocation from
the build/gdb/ directory would use "g++ -std=gnu++11" as expected, while a
make invocation at the top level would not.
...
Commit 0bcda685399 fixes this by using a custom AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX which
does:
...
CXX=g++
CXX_DIALECT=-std=gnu++11
...
The problem reported in PR28318 is that using the custom instead of the
default AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX makes the configure test for std::thread
support fail.
We could simply add $CXX_DIALECT to the test for std::thread support, but
that would have to be repeated for each added c++ support test.
Instead, fix this by doing:
...
CXX="g++ -std=gnu++11"
CXX_DIALECT=-std=gnu++11
...
This is somewhat awkward, since it results in -std=gnu++11 occuring twice in
some situations:
...
$ touch src/gdb/dwarf2/read.c
$ ( cd build/gdb; make V=1 dwarf2/read.o )
g++-4.8 -std=gnu++11 -x c++ -std=gnu++11 ...
...
However, both settings are needed:
- the switch in CXX for the std::thread tests (and other tests)
- the switch in CXX_DIALECT so it can be appended in Makefiles, to
counteract the fact that the top-level Makefile overrides CXX
The code added in gdb/ax_cxx_compile_stdcxx.m4 is copied from the default
AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX from autoconf-archive.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28318
2021-10-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
[gdb/symtab] Use unrelocated addresses in call_site
Consider test-case gdb.trace/entry-values.exp with target board
unix/-fPIE/-pie.
Using this command we have an abbreviated version, and can see the correct
@entry values for foo:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.trace/entry-values/entry-values \
-ex start \
-ex "break foo" \
-ex "set print entry-values both" \
-ex continue
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x679
Temporary breakpoint 1, 0x0000555555554679 in main ()
Breakpoint 2 at 0x55555555463e
Breakpoint 2, 0x000055555555463e in foo (i=0, i@entry=2, j=2, j@entry=3)
...
Now, let's try the same again, but run directly to foo rather than stopping at
main:
...
$ gdb -q -batch outputs/gdb.trace/entry-values/entry-values \
-ex "break foo" \
-ex "set print entry-values both" \
-ex run
Breakpoint 1 at 0x63e
Breakpoint 1, 0x000055555555463e in foo (i=0, i@entry=<optimized out>, \
j=2, j@entry=<optimized out>)
...
So, what explains the difference? Noteworthy, this is a dwarf assembly
test-case, with debug info for foo and bar, but not for main.
In the first case:
- we run to main
- this does not trigger expanding debug info, because there's none for main
- we set a breakpoint at foo
- this triggers expanding debug info. Relocated addresses are used in
call_site info (because the exec is started)
- we continue to foo, and manage to find the call_site info
In the second case:
- we set a breakpoint at foo
- this triggers expanding debug info. Unrelocated addresses are used in
call_site info (because the exec is not started)
- we run to foo
- this triggers objfile_relocate1, but it doesn't update the call_site
info addresses
- we don't manage to find the call_site info
We could fix this by adding the missing call_site relocation in
objfile_relocate1.
This solution however is counter-trend in the sense that we're trying to
work towards the situation where when starting two instances of an executable,
we need only one instance of debug information, implying the use of
unrelocated addresses.
So, fix this instead by using unrelocated addresses in call_site info.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
This fixes all remaining unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie vs unix/-fPIE/-pie
regressions, like f.i. PR24892.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24892
Co-Authored-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
2021-10-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
[gdb/symtab] C++-ify call_site
- add constructor
- add member function call_site::pc ()
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
2021-10-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Add call_site_eq and call_site_hash
In commit b4c919f7525 "[gdb/symtab] Fix htab_find_slot call in
read_call_site_scope" , I removed the comment:
...
It must be the first field as we overload core_addr_hash and core_addr_eq for
it.
...
for field pc of struct call_site.
However, this was not tested, and when indeed moving field pc to the second
location, we run into a testsuite failure in gdb.trace/entry-values.exp.
This is caused by core_addr_eq (the eq_f function for the htab) being
called with a pointer to the pc field (as passed into htab_find_slot) and a
pointer to a hash table element. Now that pc is no longer the first field,
the pointer to hash table element no longer points to the pc field.
This could be fixed by simply reinstating the comment, but we're trying to
get rid of this kind of tricks that make refactoring more difficult.
Instead, fix this by:
- reverting commit b4c919f7525, apart from the comment removal, such that
we're passing a pointer to element to htab_find_slot
- updating the htab_find_slot call in compunit_symtab::find_call_site
in a similar manner
- adding a call_site_eq and call_site_hash, and using these in the hash table
instead of core_addr_eq and core_addr_hash.
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with and without a trigger patch that moves pc to
the second location in struct call_site.
2021-10-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix remote-sim.c compilation
The change "make string-like set show commands use std::string
variable" caused remote-sim.c to fail to build. The issue is that the
code does:
const std::string &sysroot = gdb_sysroot;
if (is_target_filename (sysroot))
sysroot += strlen (TARGET_SYSROOT_PREFIX);
... which isn't valid.
This patch changes this code to use a 'const char *' again, fixing the
build.
2021-10-04 Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
[gdb/testsuite] update analyze-racy-logs.py to python3
Since python 2 is no longer supported on most distributions, update the
script to run under python while while still being runnable under
python2.
2021-10-04 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdbsupport: remove attempt to define TARGET_WORD_SIZE
In the gdbsupport configure.ac file, there is an attempt to define
TARGET_WORD_SIZE. This is done by running grep on the file
../bfd/bfd-in3.h.
The problem with this is, the file bfd-in3.h is generated into the bfd
build directory when bfd is configured, and there is no dependency
between the gdbsupport module and the bfd module, so, for example, if
I do:
$ ../src/configure
$ make all-gdbsupport
Then bfd will neither be configured, or built. In this case
TARGET_WORD_SIZE ends up being defined, but with no value because the
grep on bfd-in3.h fails.
However, it turns out that this doesn't matter; we don't actually use
TARGET_WORD_SIZE anywhere.
My proposal in this commit is to just remove the definition of
TARGET_WORD_SIZE, the alternative would be to add a dependency between
configure-gdbsupport and configure-bfd into Makefile.def, but adding a
dependency for something we don't need seems pretty pointless.
2021-10-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: add --info-target for listing supported BFD targets
It can be difficult to guess the exact bfd name, so add an option to
list all the targets that the current build supports. This aligns with
other simulator options like --info-architecture.
2021-10-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-03 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Setting setter return a bool to tell if the value changed
GDB can notify observers when a parameter is changed.
To do that, do_set_command (in gdb/cli/cli-setshow.c) compares the new
value against the old one before updating it, and based on that notifies
observers. This looks like something like:
int valuechanged = 0;
switch (cmd->var.type ())
{
case var_integer:
{
LONGEST new_val = parse_and_eval_long (arg)
if (new_val != cmd->var.get<int> ())
{
cmd->var.get<int> (new_val);
value_changes = 1;
}
}
case var_uinteger:
case var_zuinteger:
{
unsigned int val
= parse_cli_var_uinteger (c->var->type (), &arg, true);
if (c->var->get<unsigned int> () != val)
{
c->var->set<unsigned int> (val);
option_changed = true;
}
}
case...
/* And so on for all possible var_types. */
}
This comparison is done for each possible var_type, which leads to
unnecessary logic duplication.
In this patch I propose to move all those checks in one place within the
setting setter method. This limits the code duplication and simplifies
the do_set_command implementation.
This patch also changes slightly the way a value change is detected.
Instead of comparing the user provided value against the current value
of the setting, we compare the value of the setting before and after the
set operation. This is meant to handle edge cases where trying to set
an unrecognized value would be equivalent to a noop (the actual value
remains unchanged). Doing this requires that the original value needs
to be copied before the update, which can be non trivial for
std::string.
There should be no user visible change introduced by this commit.
Tested on x86_64 GNU/Linux.
[1] https://review.lttng.org/c/binutils-gdb/+/5831/41
Change-Id: If064b9cede3eb56275aacd2b286f74eceb1aed11
2021-10-03 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: Have setter and getter callbacks for settings
The main motivation behind this improvement is to help the
implementation of a patch Simon Marchi is preparing to fix a bug when
MI or Python try to access parameters that are inferior dependent (see
PR/28085).
This commit extends the previous ones, which introduces the setting
object to represent a static variable whose value can be set or shown
with the appropriate commands. This patch proposes that a setting can
either contain a pointer to a static variable holding a setting, or
pointers to a pair of setter and getter callback functions.
The callbacks functions can be used to retrieve or change the value with
custom logic. This is useful when the source of truth for a given
setting is not contained in the variable pointed to by the setting
instance.
Given that the callback function call is hidden within the setting
abstraction introduced earlier, none of the sites accessing the setting
needs to be updated. The registered getter or setter is used whatever
the way to access it is (through MI, Python, Guile, the "with" command
and the $_gdb_setting / $_gdb_setting_str convenience functions).
All the add_setshow_*_cmd are given a new overload that will accept the
pair of function pointers (set / get functions) instead of the pointer
to a global variable.
Tested on GNU/Linux x86_64 with no regression observed.
Change-Id: Ieb81fef57550632ff66e6aa85f637372a226be8c
2021-10-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: make string-like set show commands use std::string variable
String-like settings (var_string, var_filename, var_optional_filename,
var_string_noescape) currently take a pointer to a `char *` storage
variable (typically global) that holds the setting's value. I'd like to
"mordernize" this by changing them to use an std::string for storage.
An obvious reason is that string operations on std::string are often
easier to write than with C strings. And they avoid having to do any
manual memory management.
Another interesting reason is that, with `char *`, nullptr and an empty
string often both have the same meaning of "no value". String settings
are initially nullptr (unless initialized otherwise). But when doing
"set foo" (where `foo` is a string setting), the setting now points to
an empty string. For example, solib_search_path is nullptr at startup,
but points to an empty string after doing "set solib-search-path". This
leads to some code that needs to check for both to check for "no value".
Or some code that converts back and forth between NULL and "" when
getting or setting the value. I find this very error-prone, because it
is very easy to forget one or the other. With std::string, we at least
know that the variable is not "NULL". There is only one way of
representing an empty string setting, that is with an empty string.
I was wondering whether the distinction between NULL and "" would be
important for some setting, but it doesn't seem so. If that ever
happens, it would be more C++-y and self-descriptive to use
optional<string> anyway.
Actually, there's one spot where this distinction mattered, it's in
init_history, for the test gdb.base/gdbinit-history.exp. init_history
sets the history filename to the default ".gdb_history" if it sees that
the setting was never set - if history_filename is nullptr. If
history_filename is an empty string, it means the setting was explicitly
cleared, so it leaves it as-is. With the change to std::string, this
distinction doesn't exist anymore. This can be fixed by moving the code
that chooses a good default value for history_filename to
_initialize_top. This is ran before -ex commands are processed, so an
-ex command can then clear that value if needed (what
gdb.base/gdbinit-history.exp tests).
Another small improvement, in my opinion is that we can now easily
give string parameters initial values, by simply initializing the global
variables, instead of xstrdup-ing it in the _initialize function.
In Python and Guile, when registering a string-like parameter, we
allocate (with new) an std::string that is owned by the param_smob (in
Guile) and the parmpy_object (in Python) objects.
This patch started by changing all relevant add_setshow_* commands to
take an `std::string *` instead of a `char **` and fixing everything
that failed to build. That includes of course all string setting
variable and their uses.
string_option_def now uses an std::string also, because there's a
connection between options and settings (see
add_setshow_cmds_for_options).
The add_path function in source.c is really complex and twisted, I'd
rather not try to change it to work on an std::string right now.
Instead, I added an overload that copies the std:string to a `char *`
and back. This means more copying, but this is not used in a hot path
at all, so I think it is acceptable.
Change-Id: I92c50a1bdd8307141cdbacb388248e4e4fc08c93
2021-10-03 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: Introduce setting construct within cmd_list_element
cmd_list_element can contain a pointer to data that can be set and / or
shown. This is achieved with the void* VAR member which points to the
data that can be accessed, while the VAR_TYPE member (of type enum
var_types) indicates how to interpret the data pointed to.
With this pattern, the user of the cmd_list_element needs to know what
is the storage type associated with a given VAR_TYPES in order to do
the proper casting. No automatic safeguard is available to prevent
miss-use of the pointer. Client code typically looks something like:
switch (c->var_type)
{
case var_zuinteger:
unsigned int v = *(unsigned int*) c->var;
...
break;
case var_boolean:
bool v = *(bool *) c->var;
...
break;
...
}
This patch proposes to add an abstraction around the var_types and void*
pointer pair. The abstraction is meant to prevent the user from having
to handle the cast and verify that the data is read or written as a type
that is coherent with the setting's var_type. This is achieved by
introducing the struct setting which exposes a set of templated get /
set member functions. The template parameter is the type of the
variable that holds the referred variable.
Using those accessors allows runtime checks to be inserted in order to
ensure that the data pointed to has the expected type. For example,
instantiating the member functions with bool will yield something
similar to:
const bool &get<bool> () const
{
gdb_assert (m_var_type == var_boolean);
gdb_assert (m_var != nullptr);
return *static_cast<bool *> (m_var);
}
void set<bool> (const bool &var)
{
gdb_assert (m_var_type == var_boolean);
gdb_assert (m_var != nullptr);
*static_cast<bool *> (m_var) = var;
}
Using the new abstraction, our initial example becomes:
switch (c->var_type)
{
case var_zuinteger:
unsigned int v = c->var->get<unsigned int> ();
...
break;
case var_boolean:
bool v = c->var->get<bool> ();
...
break;
...
}
While the call site is still similar, the introduction of runtime checks
help ensure correct usage of the data.
In order to avoid turning the bulk of add_setshow_cmd_full into a
templated function, and following a suggestion from Pedro Alves, a
setting can be constructed from a pre validated type erased reference to
a variable. This is what setting::erased_args is used for.
Introducing an opaque abstraction to describe a setting will also make
it possible to use callbacks to retrieve or set the value of the setting
on the fly instead of pointing to a static chunk of memory. This will
be done added in a later commit.
Given that a cmd_list_element may or may not reference a setting, the
VAR and VAR_TYPES members of the struct are replaced with a
gdb::optional<setting> named VAR.
Few internal function signatures have been modified to take into account
this new abstraction:
-The functions value_from_setting, str_value_from_setting and
get_setshow_command_value_string used to have a 'cmd_list_element *'
parameter but only used it for the VAR and VAR_TYPE member. They now
take a 'const setting &' parameter instead.
- Similarly, the 'void *' and a 'enum var_types' parameters of
pascm_param_value and gdbpy_parameter_value have been replaced with a
'const setting &' parameter.
No user visible change is expected after this patch.
Tested on GNU/Linux x86_64, with no regression noticed.
Change-Id: Ie1d08c3ceb8b30b3d7bf1efe036eb8acffcd2f34
2021-10-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: filter out SIGSTKSZ [PR sim/28302]
We map target signals to host signals so we can propagate signals
between the host & simulated worlds. That means we need to know
the symbolic names & values of all signals that might be sent.
The tools that generate that list use signal.h and include all
symbols that start with "SIG" so as to automatically include any
new symbols that the C library might add. Unfortunately, this
also picks up "SIGSTKSZ" which is not actually a signal itself,
but a signal related setting -- it's the size of the stack when
a signal is handled.
By itself this doesn't super matter as we will never see a signal
with that same value (since the range of valid signals tend to be
way less than 1024, and the size of the default signal stack will
never be that small). But with recent glibc changes that make this
into a dynamic value instead of a compile-time constant, some users
see build failures when building the sim.
As suggested by Adam Sampson, update our scripts to ignore this
symbol to simplify everything and avoid the build failure.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/PR28302
2021-10-03 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: fallback when ln is not available [PR sim/18864]
Not all systems have easy access to hard links or symlinks, so add
fallback logic to the run->psim build code to handle those.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/PR18864
2021-10-03 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Fix comment in riscv_scan_prologue
I found an inaccurate comment in riscv_scan_prologue. This commit fixes
it.
2021-10-03 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Support the c.mv insn in the riscv prologue scanner.
While working on other problems, I encountered situations where GDB
fails to properly unwind the stack because some functions use the C.MV
instruction in the prologue. The prologue scanner stops when it hits
this instruction assuming its job is done at this point. Unfortunately
the prologue is not necessarily finished yet, preventing GDB to properly
unwind.
This commit adds support for handling such instruction in
riscv_scan_prologue.
Note that C.MV is part of the compressed instruction set. The MV
counterpart from the base ISA is a pseudo instruction that expands to
'ADDI RD,RS1,0' which is already supported.
Tested on riscv64-linux-gnu.
All feedback are welcome.
2021-10-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
[gdb/symtab] Remove COMPUNIT_CALL_SITE_HTAB
Remove macro COMPUNIT_CALL_SITE_HTAB, and provide access to the htab using
member functions:
- compunit_symtab::find_call_site
- compunit_symtab::set_call_site_htab
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
2021-10-02 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/python: fix a few flake8 warnings
Fix these rather obvious warnings reported by flake8:
./lib/gdb/FrameIterator.py:16:1: F401 'gdb' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/FrameIterator.py:17:1: F401 'itertools' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/command/prompt.py:55:26: E712 comparison to False should be 'if cond is False:' or 'if not cond:'
./lib/gdb/command/explore.py:526:9: F841 local variable 'has_explorable_fields' is assigned to but never used
./lib/gdb/command/explore.py:697:56: E712 comparison to False should be 'if cond is False:' or 'if not cond:'
./lib/gdb/command/explore.py:736:62: E712 comparison to False should be 'if cond is False:' or 'if not cond:'
./lib/gdb/command/explore.py:767:61: E712 comparison to False should be 'if cond is False:' or 'if not cond:'
./lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py:21:1: F401 'copy' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py:22:1: F401 'gdb.FrameIterator.FrameIterator' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py:23:1: F401 'gdb.FrameDecorator.FrameDecorator' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py:25:1: F401 'itertools' imported but unused
./lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py:179:17: E712 comparison to True should be 'if cond is True:' or 'if cond:'
Change-Id: I4f49c0cb430359ee872222600c61d9c5283b09ab
2021-10-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-10-01 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Fix build failure for 32-bit targets
When building master GDB, I ran into the following:
binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c: In function 'int libbacktrace_print(void*, uintptr_t, const char*, int, const char*)':
binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:93:44: error: format '%lx' expects argument of type 'long unsigned int', but argument 4 has type 'uintptr_t {aka unsigned int}' [-Werror=format=]
snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "0x%lx ", pc);
Fix this by using %PRIxPTR as opposed to %lx.
2021-10-01 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix mistake in RX assembler documentation (special section names)
2021-10-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
[gdb/symtab] Fix htab_find_slot call in read_call_site_scope
In read_call_site_scope we have:
...
call_site_local.pc = pc;
slot = htab_find_slot (cu->call_site_htab, &call_site_local, INSERT);
...
The call passes a call_site pointer as element. OTOH, the hashtab is created
using hash_f == core_addr_hash and eq_f == core_addr_eq, so the element
will be accessed through a CORE_ADDR pointer.
This is not wrong (at least in C), given that pc is the first field in
call_site.
Nevertheless, as in call_site_for_pc, make the htab_find_slot call match the
used hash_f and eq_f by using &pc instead:
...
slot = htab_find_slot (cu->call_site_htab, &pc, INSERT);
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
2021-10-01 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH bfd: Fix linker warning for recently introduced arm attributes
2021-09-27 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf-bfd.h (NUM_KNOWN_OBJ_ATTRIBUTES): Update value to cover
'Tag_BTI_use' and 'Tag_PACRET_use'.
2021-10-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite/dwarf: use options for rnglists/loclists procs
Change how rnglists and loclists procs to align them with how procs for
aranges (and other things in the DWARF assembler) work. Instead of
using "args" (variable number of parameters in TCL) and command-line
style option arguments, use one leading "option" parameters, used as a
kind of key/value dictionary of options parsed using `parse_options`.
Change-Id: I63e60d17ae16a020ce4d6de44baf3d152ea42a1a
2021-10-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite/dwarf: don't define nested procs for rnglists/loclists
When I wrote support for rnglists and loclists in the testsuite's DWARF
assembler, I made it with nested procs, for example proc "table" inside
proc "rnglists". The intention was that this proc "table" could only be
used by the user while inside proc "rnglists"'s body. I had chosen very
simple names, thinking there was no chance of name clashes. I recently
learned that this is not how TCL works. This ends up defining a proc
"table" in the current namespace ("Dwarf" in this case).
Things still work if you generate rnglists and loclists in the same
file, as each redefines its own procedures when executing. But if a
user of the assembler happened to define a convenience "table" or
"start_end" procedure, for example, it would get overriden.
I'd like to change how this works to reduce the chances of a name clash.
- Move the procs out of each other, so they are not defined in a nested
fashion.
- Prefix them with "_rnglists_" or "_loclists_".
- While calling $body in the various procs, temporarily make the procs
available under their "short" name. For example, while in rngllists'
body, make _rnglists_table available as just "table". This allows
existing code to keep working and keeps it not too verbose.
- Modify with_override to allow the overriden proc to not exist. In
that case, the temporary proc is deleted on exit.
Note the non-conforming indentation when calling with_override in
_loclists_list. This is on purpose: as we implement more loclists (and
rnglists) entry types, the indentation would otherwise get larger and
larger without much value for readability. So I think it's reasonable
here to put them on the same level.
Change-Id: I7bb48d26fcb0dba1ae4dada05c0c837212424328
2021-10-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove TYPE_FIELD_NAME and FIELD_NAME macros
Remove the `TYPE_FIELD_NAME` and `FIELD_NAME` macros, changing all the
call sites to use field::name directly.
Change-Id: I6900ae4e1ffab1396e24fb3298e94bf123826ca6
2021-10-01 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add field::name / field::set_name
Add the `name` and `set_name` methods on `struct field`, in order to
remove `FIELD_NAME` and `TYPE_FIELD_NAME` macros. In this patch, the
macros are changed to use `field::name`, so all the call sites that are
used to set the field's name are changed to use `field::set_name`.
The next patch will remove the macros completely.
Note that because of the name clash between the existing field named
`name` and the new method, I renamed the field `m_name`. It is not
private per-se, because we can't make `struct field` a non-POD yet, but
it should be considered private anyway (not accessed outside `struct
field`).
Change-Id: If16ddbca4e0c39d0ff9da420bb5cdebe5b9b0896
2021-10-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-30 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@sergiodj.net>
[PR gdb/28369] Use get_shell on gdb/ser-pipe.c
PR gdb/28369 reports that gdb/ser-pipe.c has an 'execl' function call
with a hard-coded "/bin/sh" as its argument. We've had 'get_shell'
for a while now, which is conscious about the SHELL environment and a
better alternative to always calling "/bin/sh".
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28369
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add untested for missing xml support in gdb.base/valgrind*.exp
Add untested in case missing xml support is detected in test-cases
gdb.base/valgrind*.exp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
arm: enable Cortex-R52+ CPU
Patch is adding Cortex-R52+ as 'cortex-r52plus' command line
flag for -mcpu option.
bfd/
* cpu-arm.c: New Cortex-R52+ CPU.
gas/
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-arm.c: New Cortex-R52+ CPU.
* doc/c-arm.texi: Update docs.
* testsuite/gas/arm/cpu-cortex-r52plus.d: New test.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: Enable Cortex-X2 CPU
This patch is adding support for Cortex-X2 CPU.
gas:
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-aarch64.c: Add Cortex-X2.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: Enable Cortex-A710 CPU
This patch is adding support for Cortex-A710 CPU.
gas/
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-aarch64.c: Add Cortex-A710.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: Enable Cortex-A510 CPU
This patch is adding support for Cortex-A510 CPU.
gas/
* NEWS: Update docs.
* config/tc-aarch64.c: Add Cortex-A510.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: Update AArch64 features command line options docs 2/2
Patch is only sorting by 'Extension` column 'Architecture Extension'
table.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: Update AArch64 features command line options docs 1/2
Patch is improving entries in "Architecture extensions" table in GAS
documentation.
gas/
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Update docs.
2021-09-30 Przemyslaw Wirkus <przemyslaw.wirkus@arm.com>
aarch64: add armv9-a architecture to -march
Patch is adding new 'armv9-a` command line flag to -march for AArch64.
gas/
* config/tc-aarch64.c: Add 'armv9-a' command line flag.
* docs/c-aarch64.text: Update docs.
* NEWS: Update docs.
include/
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_V9): New define.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V9): New define.
2021-09-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: make runto_main not pass no-message to runto
As follow-up to this discussion:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-August/171385.html
... make runto_main not pass no-message to runto. This means that if we
fail to run to main, for some reason, we'll emit a FAIL. This is the
behavior we want the majority of (if not all) the time.
Without this, we rely on tests logging a failure if runto_main fails,
otherwise. They do so in a very inconsisteny mannet, sometimes using
"fail", "unsupported" or "untested". The messages also vary widly.
This patch removes all these messages as well.
Also, remove a few "fail" where we call runto (and not runto_main). by
default (without an explicit no-message argument), runto prints a
failure already. In two places, gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp and
gdb.python/py-pp-registration.exp, remove "message" passed to runto.
This removes a few PASSes that we don't care about (but FAILs will still
be printed if we fail to run to where we want to). This aligns their
behavior with the rest of the testsuite.
Change-Id: Ib763c98c5f4fb6898886b635210d7c34bd4b9023
2021-09-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: make gdb_mkostemp_cloexec return a scoped_fd
This encourages the callers to use automatic file descriptor management.
Change-Id: I137a81df6f3607b457e28c35aafde8ed6f3a3344
2021-09-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: make gdb_open_cloexec return scoped_fd
Make gdb_open_cloexec return a scoped_fd, to encourage using automatic
management of the file descriptor closing. Except in the most trivial
cases, I changed the callers to just release the fd, which retains their
existing behavior. That will allow the transition to using scoped_fd
more to go gradually, one caller at a time.
Change-Id: Ife022b403f96e71d5ebb4f1056ef6251b30fe554
2021-09-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: move gdb_file_up to its own file
The following patches wants to change gdb_fopen_cloexec and
gdb_mkostemp_cloexec to return a scoped_fd. Doing this causes a cyclic
include between scoped_fd.h and filestuff.h, that both want to include
each other. scoped_fd.h includes filestuff.h because of the
scoped_fd::to_file method's return value. filestuff.h would then
include scoped_fd.h for gdb_fopen_cloexec's and gdb_mkostemp_cloexec's
return values.
To fix that, move gdb_file_up to its own file, gdb_file.h.
Change-Id: Ic82a48914b2aacee8f14af535b7469245f88b93d
2021-09-30 Dimitar Dimitrov <dimitar@dinux.eu>
ld: pru: Fix resource_table output section alignment
My commit 261980de18b added alignment for the resource table symbol.
But it is wrong. The Linux remoteproc driver loads and interprets the
contents of the .resource_table ELF section, not of a table symbol.
Without this patch, if the linker happens to output padding for symbol
alignment, then the resource table contents as viewed by the kernel
loader would "shift" and look corrupted.
ld/ChangeLog:
* scripttempl/pru.sc (.resource_table): Align the output
section, not the first symbol.
2021-09-30 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Windows crash from stop_pc change
The "make thread_suspend_state::stop_pc optional" patch caused a
regression on Windows when using shared libraries. I tracked this
down to an unguarded use of stop_pc() in the TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED
case of handle_inferior_event. This patch fixes the bug by ensuring
that the stop PC is set at this point.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use untested in gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp
With running test-case gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp with target
board unix/-bad, I get:
...
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'^M
compiler exited with status 1
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
FAIL: gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: compile
...
Replace the FAIL with the usual:
...
UNTESTED: gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: failed to compile
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Remove redundant FAIL in gdb.base/info-os.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/info-os.exp with target board unix/-bad, I run
into:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.base/info-os.exp: failed to prepare
FAIL: gdb.base/info-os.exp: cannot compile test program
...
Remove the redundant FAIL.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/info-os.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/info-os.exp, I run into:
...
PASS: gdb.base/info-os.exp: get threads
PASS: gdb.base/info-os.exp: get threads
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/info-os.exp: get threads
...
Fix this not doing pass followed by exp_continue in gdb_test_multiple.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Check compilation result in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-opt-structptr.exp
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-opt-structptr.exp with target board
unix/-bad, I get:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-opt-structptr.exp: dw2-opt-structptr.exp
UNTESTED: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-opt-structptr.exp: failed to compile
ERROR: (dw2-opt-structptr) No such file or directory
UNRESOLVED: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-opt-structptr.exp: console: set print object on
...
Merge the two UNTESTEDs.
Fix the UNRESOLVED by checking result of compilation.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Check compilation result in gdb.base/structs.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/structs.exp with target board unix/-bad, I
get:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.base/structs.exp: failed to prepare
ERROR: tcl error sourcing src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/structs.exp.
ERROR: can't read "use_gdb_stub": no such variable
...
Fix this by checking the compilation result.
Fix the resulting DUPLICATEs using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Prepare nodebug exec in gdb.base/cvexpr.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/cvexpr.exp with target board unix/-bad, I get:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
ERROR: tcl error sourcing src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/cvexpr.exp.
ERROR: can't read "use_gdb_stub": no such variable
...
This is triggered in a part of the test that claims to require no debug
information, but uses the exec containing either dwarf or ctf.
Fix this by preparing another executable compiled with nodebug, and using
that one instead.
Also use with_test_prefix to mark the nodebug part, such that we have:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.base/cvexpr.exp: dwarf: failed to prepare
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.base/cvexpr.exp: nodebug: failed to prepare
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/cvexpr.exp
Fix:
...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/cvexpr.exp: ptype int * restrict
...
using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Check compilation result in gdb.base/call-sc.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/call-sc.exp with target board unix/-bad, I
get:
...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-bad'
UNTESTED: gdb.base/call-sc.exp: failed to prepare
ERROR: tcl error sourcing src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/call-sc.exp.
ERROR: can't read "use_gdb_stub": no such variable
...
Fix this by checking the compilation result.
Fix the resulting DUPLICATE:
...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/call-sc.exp: failed to prepare
...
using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix untested messages in gdb.mi/*.exp
The effect of:
...
untested "y.exp"
...
in a gdb.x/y.exp is:
...
UNTESTED: gdb.x/y.exp: y.exp
...
which is a bit pointless.
Replace these untested messages in gdb.mi/*.exp with the usual "failed to
compile".
Likewise for an:
...
untested $testname
...
where the variable is undefined.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
make objcopy fail if it is asked to redefine symbols in an object file containing LTO information.
* objcopy.c (filter_symbols): Fail if attempting to dredefine
symbols in an LTO object file.
2021-09-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix full buffer in gdb.rust/dwindex.exp
On ubuntu 18.04.5, I run into:
...
(gdb) mt print objfiles dwindex^M
^M
Object file build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.rust/dwindex/dwindex: \
Objfile at 0x55dab0b87a50, bfd at 0x55dab0b0cfa0, 1095 minsyms^M
^M
Psymtabs:^M
vendor/compiler_builtins/src/int/specialized_div_rem/mod.rs at 0x55dab0db0720^M
...
library/std/src/sys/unix/stdio.rs at 0x55dab0d96320^M
ERROR: internal buffer is full.
UNRESOLVED: gdb.rust/dwindex.exp: check if index present
...
Fix this by using -lbl in proc ensure_gdb_index.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 Libor Bukata <libor.bukata@oracle.com>
Add Solaris specific ELF note processing
Add elfcore_grok_solaris_note function that enables to
obtain process status, register values, and program info
from Solaris's core files.
bfd/
* elf.c (elfcore_grok_solaris_note): Solaris specific ELF
note parser. Better GDB's coredump analysis on Solaris...
(elfcore_grok_solaris_note_impl): New function.
(elfcore_grok_solaris_prstatus): New function.
(elfcore_grok_solaris_info): New function.
(elfcore_grok_solaris_lwpstatus): New function.
(elf_parse_notes): Added "CORE" groker element.
include/
* elf/common.h: Add note segment constants for core files on
Solaris systems.
2021-09-30 Frederic Cambus <fred@statdns.com>
Add support to readelf for reading OpenBSD ELF core notes.
* readelf.c (get_openbsd_elfcore_note_type): New function.
(process_note): Add support for OpenBSD core notes.
2021-09-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/break-interp.exp for ld.so without debug
When running test-case gdb.base/break-interp.exp on openSUSE Leap 42.3, I get:
...
(gdb) info addr dl_main^M
Symbol "dl_main" is at 0x1750 in a file compiled without debugging.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/break-interp.exp: info addr dl_main
...
while the regexp expects "Symbol \"dl_main\" is a function at address $hex\\."
Fix this by also accepting this variant.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add a testcase for PR binutils/27202
PR binutils/27202
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-loc0.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-loc0.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Run dwarf-5-loc0.
2021-09-29 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp race
The gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp testcase sometimes fails like so:
Running /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: stop with control-c (SIGINT)
It's easier to reproduce if you stress the machine at the same time, like e.g.:
$ stress -c 24
Looking at gdb.log, we see:
(gdb) attach 60422
Attaching to program: build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings, process 60422
[New Thread 60422.60422]
Reading symbols from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6...
Reading symbols from /usr/lib/debug//lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc-2.31.so...
Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2...
(No debugging symbols found in /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2)
0x00007f2fc2485334 in __GI___clock_nanosleep (clock_id=<optimized out>, clock_id@entry <mailto:clock_id@entry>=0, flags=flags@entry <mailto:flags@entry>=0, req=req@entry <mailto:req@entry>=0x7ffe23126940, rem=rem@entry <mailto:rem@entry>=0x0) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c:78
78 ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c: No such file or directory.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: inf2: attach
set schedule-multiple on
(gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: set schedule-multiple on
info inferiors
Num Description Connection Executable
1 process 60404 1 (extended-remote localhost:2349) build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings
* 2 process 60422 1 (extended-remote localhost:2349) build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings
(gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: info inferiors
pid=60422, count=46
pid=60422, count=47
pid=60422, count=48
pid=60422, count=49
pid=60422, count=50
pid=60422, count=51
pid=60422, count=52
pid=60422, count=53
pid=60422, count=54
pid=60422, count=55
pid=60422, count=56
pid=60422, count=57
pid=60422, count=58
pid=60422, count=59
pid=60422, count=60
pid=60422, count=61
pid=60422, count=62
pid=60422, count=63
pid=60422, count=64
pid=60422, count=65
pid=60422, count=66
pid=60422, count=67
pid=60422, count=68
pid=60422, count=69
pid=60404, count=54
pid=60404, count=55
pid=60404, count=56
pid=60404, count=57
pid=60404, count=58
PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: continue
Quit
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: stop with control-c (SIGINT)
If you look at the testcase's sources, you'll see that the intention
is to resumes the program with "continue", wait to see a few of those
"pid=..., count=..." lines, and then interrupt the program with
Ctrl-C. But somehow, that resulted in GDB printing "Quit", instead of
the Ctrl-C stopping the program with SIGINT.
Here's what is happening:
#1 - those "pid=..., count=..." lines we see above weren't actually
output by the inferior after it has been continued (see #1).
Note that "inf1_how" and "inf2_how" are "attach". What happened
is that those "pid=..., count=..." lines were output by the
inferiors _before_ they were attached to. We see them at that
point instead of earlier, because that's where the testcase
reads from the inferiors' spawn_ids.
#2 - The testcase mistakenly thinks those "pid=..., count=..." lines
happened after the continue was processed by GDB, meaning it has
waited enough, and so sends the Ctrl-C. GDB hasn't yet passed
the terminal to the inferior, so the Ctrl-C results in that
Quit.
The fix here is twofold:
#1 - flush inferior output right after attaching
#2 - consume the "Continuing" printed by "continue", indicating the
inferior has the terminal. This is the same as done throughout
the testsuite to handle this exact problem of sending Ctrl-C too
soon.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net <mailto:pedro@palves.net>>
* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp (create_inferior): Flush
inferior output.
(coretest): Use $gdb_test_name. After issuing "continue", wait
for "Continuing".
Change-Id: Iba7671dfe1eee6b98d29cfdb05a1b9aa2f9defb9
2021-09-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Disable vgdb tests if xml not supported
I build gdb without xml support using --without-expat, and ran into:
...
(gdb) target remote | vgdb --wait=2 --max-invoke-ms=2500 --pid=22032^M
Remote debugging using | vgdb --wait=2 --max-invoke-ms=2500 --pid=22032^M
relaying data between gdb and process 22032^M
warning: Can not parse XML target description; XML support was disabled at \
compile time^M
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/valgrind-infcall.exp: continue #1
p gdb_test_infcall ()^M
Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 560 bytes, got 800 bytes): ...^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/valgrind-infcall.exp: p gdb_test_infcall ()
...
After googling the error message with context valgrind gdbserver, I found
indications that the Remote 'g' packet reply error is due to missing xml
support.
And here ( https://www.valgrind.org/docs/manual/manual-core-adv.html ) I
found:
...
GDB version needed for ARM and PPC32/64.
You must use a GDB version which is able to read XML target description sent
by a gdbserver. This is the standard setup if GDB was configured and built
with the "expat" library. If your GDB was not configured with XML support, it
will report an error message when using the "target" command. Debugging will
not work because GDB will then not be able to fetch the registers from the
Valgrind gdbserver.
...
So I guess I'm running into the same problem for x86_64.
Fix this by skipping all gdb.base/valgrind-*.exp tests if xml support is not
available. Although only the gdb.base/valgrind-infcall*.exp produce fails,
the Remote 'g' packet reply error occurs in all tests, so it seems prudent to
disable them all.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp with python 2
With a gdb build using python 2.7, I run into:
...
(gdb) python \
gdb.events.breakpoint_modified.connect(lambda bp: print(bp.enabled))^M
File "<string>", line 1^M
gdb.events.breakpoint_modified.connect(lambda bp: print(bp.enabled))^M
^^M
SyntaxError: invalid syntax^M
Error while executing Python code.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp: test_bkpt_auto_disable: \
trap breakpoint_modified event
...
This is caused by the following:
- a lambda function body needs to be an expression
- in python 2, print is a statement, while in python 3 it's a function
- a function call is an expression, and a statement is not.
Fix this by defining a function print_bp_enabled:
...
def print_bp_enabled (bp):
print (bp.enabled)
end
...
and using that instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix breakpoint detection in gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp
With a gdb configured to be somewhat minimal, while still supporting python:
...
$ gdb --configuration
This GDB was configured as follows:
configure --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu --target=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
--with-auto-load-dir=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
--with-auto-load-safe-path=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
--without-expat
--with-gdb-datadir=$install/share/gdb (relocatable)
--with-jit-reader-dir=$install/lib64/gdb (relocatable)
--without-libunwind-ia64
--without-lzma
--without-babeltrace
--without-intel-pt
--with-mpfr
--without-xxhash
--with-python=/usr
--with-python-libdir=/usr/lib
--with-debuginfod
--without-guile
--disable-source-highlight
--with-separate-debug-dir=/usr/lib/debug
--with-system-gdbinit=$devel/system-gdbinit
...
and using gcc 4.8 to build gdb (causing std::thread not to be used due to
PR28318) I ran into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: start inner gdb
print 1^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, value_print () at src/gdb/valprint.c:1174^M
1174 scoped_value_mark free_values;^M
(xgdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: hit breakpoint in inner gdb (timeout)
...
The problem is that the regexp expects "hit Breakpoint $decimal". The "hit"
part is missing.
The "hit" is printed by maybe_print_thread_hit_breakpoint, when
show_thread_that_caused_stop returns true:
...
int
show_thread_that_caused_stop (void)
{
return highest_thread_num > 1;
}
...
Apparently, that's not the case.
Fix this by removing "hit" from the regexp, making the regexp more similar to
what is used in say, continue_to_breakpoint.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: fix build when libbacktrace and execinfo backtrace are not available
In this commit:
commit abbbd4a3e0ca51132e7fb31a43f896d29894dae0
Date: Wed Aug 11 13:24:33 2021 +0100
gdb: use libbacktrace to create a better backtrace for fatal signals
The build of GDB was broken iff, the execinfo backtrace API is not
available, and, libbacktrace is either disabled, or not usable. In
this case you'll see build errors like this:
CXX bt-utils.o
/home/username/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c: In function 'void gdb_internal_backtrace()':
/home/username/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:165:5: error: 'gdb_internal_backtrace_1' was not declared in this scope
gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This commit fixes the issue by guarding the call to
gdb_internal_backtrace_1 with '#ifdef GDB_PRINT_INTERNAL_BACKTRACE',
which is only defined when one of the backtrace libraries are
available.
2021-09-29 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/doc: use 'standard error stream' instead of 'stderr' in some places
With this commit:
commit 91f2597bd24d171c1337a4629f8237aa47c59082
Date: Thu Aug 12 18:24:59 2021 +0100
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning
I included some references to 'stderr', which, it was pointed out,
would be better written as 'standard error stream'. See:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182225.html
This commit replaces the two instances of 'stderr' that I introduced.
2021-09-29 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: fix manor -> manner typo in some comments
In a recent commit I used 'manor' in some comments rather than
'manner'. This commit fixes those two mistakes.
I also looked through the gdb/ tree and found one additional instance
of this mistake that this commit also fixes.
2021-09-29 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR27202, readelf -wL doesn't work on ".loc 0"
For DWARF revision 4 and earlier, display_debug_lines_decoded
populates the file_table array with entries read from .debug_line
after the directory table. file_table[0] contains the first entry.
DWARF rev 4 line number programs index this entry as file number one.
DWARF revision 5 changes .debug_line format quite extensively, and in
particular gives file number zero a meaning.
PR 27202
* dwarf.c (display_debug_lines_decoded): Correct indexing used
for DWARF5 files.
2021-09-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: enable target_async around stop_all_threads call in process_initial_stop_replies
The following scenario hangs:
- maint set target-non-stop on
- `gdbserver --attach`
- a multi-threaded program
For example:
Terminal 1:
$ gnome-calculator&
[1] 495731
$ ../gdbserver/gdbserver --once --attach :1234 495731
Attached; pid = 495731
Listening on port 1234
Terminal 2:
$ ./gdb -nx -q --data-directory=data-directory /usr/bin/gnome-calculator -ex "maint set target-non-stop on" -ex "tar rem :1234"
Reading symbols from /usr/bin/gnome-calculator...
(No debugging symbols found in /usr/bin/gnome-calculator)
Remote debugging using :1234
* hangs *
What happens is:
- The protocol between gdb and gdbserver is in non-stop mode, but the
user-visible behavior is all-stop
- On connect, gdbserver sends one stop reply for one thread that is
stops, the others stay running
- In process_initial_stop_replies, gdb calls stop_all_threads to stop
these other threads, because we are using the all-stop user-visible
mode
- stop_all_threads sends a stop request for all the running threads and
then waits for resulting events
- At this point, the remote target is in target_async(0) mode, which
makes stop_all_threads not consider it for events
- stop_all_threads loops indefinitely (it does not even block
indefinitely, it is in an infinite busy loop) because there are no
event sources. wait_one_event returns a TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED
wait status.
Fix that by making the remote target async around the stop_all_threads
call.
I haven't implemented it because I'm not sure how to do it, but I think
it would be a good idea to have, in stop_all_threads / wait_one /
handle_one, an assert to check that if we are expecting one or more
event, then there are some targets that are in a state where they can
supply some events. Otherwise, we'll necessarily be stuck in this
infinite loop, and it's probably due to a bug in GDB. I'm not too sure
where to put this or how to express it though. Perhaps in
stop_all_threads, here:
for (int i = 0; i < waits_needed; i++)
{
wait_one_event event = wait_one ();
*here*
if (handle_one (event))
break;
}
If at that point, the returned event is TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED,
there's a problem. We expect some event, because we've asked some
threads to stop, but all targets are answering that they won't have any
events for us. That's a contradiction, and a sign that something has
gone wrong. It could perhaps event be:
gdb_assert (event.ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED);
in handle_one, as the idea is the same in prepare_for_detach.
A bit more sophisticated would be: we know which targets we are
expecting waits from, since we know which threads we have asked to
stop. So if any of these targets returns TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED,
something is fishy.
Add a test that tests attaching with gdbserver's --attach flag to a
multi-threaded program, and then connecting to it. Without the fix, the
test reproduces the hang.
Change-Id: If6f6690a4887ca66693ef1af64791dda4c65f24f
2021-09-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix darwin-nat build (again)
I made a mistake in the previous patch. Adjust the format string to
match the arguments.
Change-Id: I4d45e0e0adb78eb3b5a06ba1a5287155940056ba
2021-09-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix darwin-nat build
There are two errors of this kind:
CXX darwin-nat.o
/Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/darwin-nat.c:1175:19: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long' but the argument has type 'ULONGEST' (aka 'unsigned long long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
ptid.pid (), ptid.tid ());
^~~~~~~~~~~
Fix them by using ptid_t's to_string method.
Change-Id: I52087d5f7ee0fc01ac8b3f87d4db0217cb0d7cc7
2021-09-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: accept "info breakpoints" output in any order
The test currently requires the "inf 1" breakpoint to be before the "inf
2" breakpoint. This is not always the case:
info breakpoints 2
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
2 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
2.1 y 0x0000555555554730 in callee at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:9 inf 2
2.2 y 0x0000555555554730 in callee at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:9 inf 1
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: info breakpoints
Since add_location_to_breakpoint uses only the address as a criterion to
sort locations, the order of locations at the same address is not
stable: it will depend on the insertion order. Here, the insertion
order comes from the order of SALs when creating the breakpoint, which
can vary from machine to machine. While it would be more user-friendly
to have a more stable order for printed breakpoint locations, it doesn't
really matter for this test, and it would be hard to define an order
that will be the same everywhere, all the time.
So, loosen the regexp to accept "inf 1" and "inf 2" in any order.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Change-Id: I5ada2e0c6ad0669e0d161bfb6b767229c0970d16
2021-09-28 Cooper Qu <cooper.qu@linux.alibaba.com>
RISC-V: Fix wrong version number when arch contains 'p'.
When specify a default version for p extension in
riscv_supported_std_ext[](elfxx-riscv.c) and assembling with
-march=rv32imacp, the c extension's version in attribute will become
0p0, the expectation is 2p0.
TODO: Remember to add testcase when we have supported standrad p in
the future.
bfd/
PR gas/28372
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parsing_subset_version): Break if p
represent the 'p' extension.
Change-Id: Ia4e0cf26f3d7d07acaee8cefd86707ecac663a59
2021-09-28 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Allow to add numbers in the prefixed extension names.
We need to allow adding numbers in the prefixed extension names, since
the zve<32,64><d,f,x> extensions are included in the forzen rvv v1.0 spec
recently. But there are two restrictions as follows,
* The extension name ends with <number>p is invalid, since this may
be confused with extension with <number>.0 version. We report errors
for this case.
Invalid format: [z|h|s|zvm|x][0-9a-z]+[0-9]+p
* The extension name ends with numbers is valid, but the numbers will
be parsed as major version, so try to avoid naming extensions like this.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_recognized_prefixed_ext): Renamed from
riscv_valid_prefixed_ext/
(riscv_parsing_subset_version): The extensions end with <number>p
is forbidden, we already report the detailed errors in the
riscv_parse_prefixed_ext, so clean the code and unused parameters.
(riscv_parse_std_ext): Updated.
(riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Rewrite the parser to allow numbers
in the prefixed extension names.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-x-01.d: New testcases.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-x-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-z-01.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-z-02.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version-x.d: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version-z.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version.l: Likewise.
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning
This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace
of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning.
This fixes PR gdb/26377.
There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in
most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And
so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing
of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings.
In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for
internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an
internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session.
Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new
settings:
maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off
maintenance show internal-error backtrace
maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off
maintenance show internal-warning backtrace
Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the
backtrace included:
(gdb) maintenance internal-error blah
../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
----- Backtrace -----
0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1
../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123
0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev
../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165
0xe33237 internal_vproblem
../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393
0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag
../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470
0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z
../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error
../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82
0x636f57 do_simple_func
../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97
.... snip, lots more backtrace lines ....
---------------------
../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y
This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see:
<https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>.
../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n
My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to
diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I
find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is
located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not
always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: use libbacktrace to create a better backtrace for fatal signals
GDB recently gained the ability to print a backtrace when a fatal
signal is encountered. This backtrace is produced using the backtrace
and backtrace_symbols_fd API available in glibc.
However, in order for this API to actually map addresses to symbol
names it is required that the application (GDB) be compiled with
-rdynamic, which GDB is not by default.
As a result, the backtrace produced often looks like this:
Fatal signal: Bus error
----- Backtrace -----
./gdb/gdb[0x80ec00]
./gdb/gdb[0x80ed56]
/lib64/libc.so.6(+0x3c6b0)[0x7fc2ce1936b0]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__poll+0x4f)[0x7fc2ce24da5f]
./gdb/gdb[0x15495ba]
./gdb/gdb[0x15489b8]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b794d]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b7a6d]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b943b]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b94a1]
./gdb/gdb[0x4175dd]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf3)[0x7fc2ce17e1a3]
./gdb/gdb[0x4174de]
---------------------
This is OK if you have access to the exact same build of GDB, you can
manually map the addresses back to symbols, however, it is next to
useless if all you have is a backtrace copied into a bug report.
GCC uses libbacktrace for printing a backtrace when it encounters an
error. In recent commits I added this library into the binutils-gdb
repository, and in this commit I allow this library to be used by
GDB. Now (when GDB is compiled with debug information) the backtrace
looks like this:
----- Backtrace -----
0x80ee08 gdb_internal_backtrace
../../src/gdb/event-top.c:989
0x80ef0b handle_fatal_signal
../../src/gdb/event-top.c:1036
0x7f24539dd6af ???
0x7f2453a97a5f ???
0x154976f gdb_wait_for_event
../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:613
0x1548b6d _Z16gdb_do_one_eventv
../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:237
0x9b7b02 start_event_loop
../../src/gdb/main.c:421
0x9b7c22 captured_command_loop
../../src/gdb/main.c:481
0x9b95f0 captured_main
../../src/gdb/main.c:1353
0x9b9656 _Z8gdb_mainP18captured_main_args
../../src/gdb/main.c:1368
0x4175ec main
../../src/gdb/gdb.c:32
---------------------
Which seems much more useful.
Use of libbacktrace is optional. If GDB is configured with
--disable-libbacktrace then the libbacktrace directory will not be
built, and GDB will not try to use this library. In this case GDB
would try to use the old backtrace and backtrace_symbols_fd API.
All of the functions related to writing the backtrace of GDB itself
have been moved into the new files gdb/by-utils.{c,h}.
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
src-release.sh: add libbacktrace to GDB_SUPPORT_DIRS
After the previous commit that imported libbacktrace from gcc, this
commit updates src-release.sh so that the libbacktrace directory is
included in the gdb release tar file.
ChangeLog:
* src-release.sh (GDB_SUPPPORT_DIRS): Add libbacktrace.
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
Copy in libbacktrace from gcc
This copies in libbacktrace from the gcc repository as it was in the
commit 62e420293a293608f383d9b9c7f2debd666e9fc9. GDB is going to
start using this library soon.
A dependency between GDB and libbacktrace has already been added to
the top level Makefile, so, after this commit, when building GDB,
libbacktrace will be built first. However, libbacktrace is not yet
linked into GDB, or used by GDB in any way.
It is possible to stop libbacktrace being built by configuring the
tree with --disable-libbacktrace.
This commit does NOT update src-release.sh, that will be done in the
next commit, this commit ONLY imports libbacktrace from gcc. This
means that if you try to make a release of GDB from exactly this
commit then the release tar file will not include libbacktrace.
However, as libbacktrace is an optional dependency this is fine.
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: Add a dependency between gdb and libbacktrace
GDB is going to start using libbacktrace, so add a build dependency.
ChangeLog:
* Makefile.def: Add all-gdb dependency on all-libbacktrace.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-09-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
top-level configure: setup target_configdirs based on repository
The top-level configure script is shared between the gcc repository
and the binutils-gdb repository.
The target_configdirs variable in the configure.ac script, defines
sub-directories that contain components that should be built for the
target using the target tools.
Some components, e.g. zlib, are built as both host and target
libraries.
This causes problems for binutils-gdb. If we run 'make all' in the
binutils-gdb repository we end up trying to build a target version of
the zlib library, which requires the target compiler be available.
Often the target compiler isn't immediately available, and so the
build fails.
The problem with zlib impacted a previous attempt to synchronise the
top-level configure scripts from gcc to binutils-gdb, see this thread:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2019-May/107094.html
And I'm in the process of importing libbacktrace in to binutils-gdb,
which is also a host and target library, and triggers the same issues.
I believe that for binutils-gdb, at least at the moment, there are no
target libraries that we need to build.
In the configure script we build three lists of things we want to
build, $configdirs, $build_configdirs, and $target_configdirs, we also
build two lists of things we don't want to build, $skipdirs and
$noconfigdirs. We then remove anything that is in the lists of things
not to build, from the list of things that should be built.
My proposal is to add everything in target_configdirs into skipdirs,
if the source tree doesn't contain a gcc/ sub-directory. The result
is that for binutils-gdb no target tools or libraries will be built,
while for the gcc repository, nothing should change.
If a user builds a unified source tree, then the target tools and
libraries should still be built as the gcc/ directory will be present.
I've tested a build of gcc on x86-64, and the same set of target
libraries still seem to get built. On binutils-gdb this change
resolves the issues with 'make all'.
ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (skipdirs): Add the contents of target_configdirs if
we are not building gcc.
2021-09-28 Gleb Fotengauer-Malinovskiy <glebfm@altlinux.org>
PR28391, strip/objcopy --preserve-dates *.a: cannot set time
After commit 985e0264516 copy_archive function began to pass invalid
values to the utimensat(2) function when it tries to preserve
timestamps in ar archives. This happens because the bfd_stat_arch_elt
implementation for ar archives fills only the st_mtim.tv_sec part of
the st_mtim timespec structure, but leaves the st_mtim.tv_nsec part
and the whole st_atim timespec untouched leaving them uninitialized
PR 28391
* ar.c (extract_file): Clear buf for preserve_dates.
* objcopy.c (copy_archive): Likewise.
2021-09-28 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: drop weak func attrs on module inits
When I first wrote this, I was thinking we'd scan all source files
that existed and generate a complete init list. That means for any
particular build, we'd probably have a few functions that didn't
exist, so weak attributes was necessary. What I ended up scanning
though was only the source files that went into a particular build.
There was another concern too: a source file might be included, but
the build settings would cause all of its contents to be skipped
(via CPP defines). So scanning via naive grep would pick up names
not actually available. A check of the source tree shows that we
never do this, and it's pretty easy to institute a policy that we
don't start (by at the very least including a stub init func).
The use of weak symbols ends up causing a problem in practice: for
a few modules (like profiling), nothing else pulls it in, so the
linker omits it entirely, which leads to the profiling module never
being available. So drop the weak markings since we know all these
funcs will be available.
2021-09-28 Cui,Lili <lili.cui@intel.com>
x86: Print {bad} on invalid broadcast in OP_E_memory
Don't print broadcast for scalar_mode, and print {bad} for invalid broadcast.
gas/
PR binutils/28381
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.s: Add a new testcase.
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast-intel.d: New.
opcodes/
PR binutils/28381
* i386-dis.c (static struct): Add no_broadcast.
(OP_E_memory): Mark invalid broadcast with no_broadcast=1 and Print "{bad}"for it.
(intel_operand_size): mark invalid broadcast with no_broadcast=1.
(OP_XMM): Mark scalar_mode with no_broadcast=1.
2021-09-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use intrusive_list for linux-nat lwp_list
Replace the manually maintained linked list of lwp_info objects with
intrusive_list. Replace the ALL_LWPS macro with all_lwps, which returns
a range. Add all_lwps_safe as well, for use in iterate_over_lwps, which
currently iterates in a safe manner.
Change-Id: I355313502510acc0103f5eaf2fbde80897d6376c
2021-09-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add destructor to lwp_info
Replace the lwp_free function with a destructor. Make lwp_info
non-copyable, since there is now a destructor (we wouldn't want an
lwp_info object getting copied and this->arch_private getting deleted
twice).
Change-Id: I09fcbe967e362566d3a06fed2abca2a9955570fa
2021-09-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make lwp_info non-POD
Initialize all fields in the class declaration directly. This opens the
door to using intrusive_list, done in the following patch.
Change-Id: I38bb27410cd9ebf511d310bb86fe2ea1872c3b05
2021-09-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb: don't share aspace/pspace on fork with "detach-on-fork on" and "follow-fork-mode child"
We found that when handling forks, two inferiors can unexpectedly share
their program space and address space. To reproduce:
1. Using a test program that forks...
2. "set follow-fork-mode child"
3. "set detach-on-fork on" (the default)
4. run to a breakpoint somewhere after the fork
Step 4 should have created a new inferior:
(gdb) info inferiors
Num Description Connection Executable
1 <null> /home/smarchi/build/wt/amd/gdb/fork
* 2 process 251425 1 (native) /home/smarchi/build/wt/amd/gdb/fork
By inspecting the state of GDB, we can see that the two inferiors now
share one program space and one address space:
Inferior 1:
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.num
$2 = 1
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.aspace
$3 = (struct address_space *) 0x5595e2520400
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.pspace
$4 = (struct program_space *) 0x5595e2520440
Inferior 2:
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.num
$5 = 2
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.aspace
$6 = (struct address_space *) 0x5595e2520400
(top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.pspace
$7 = (struct program_space *) 0x5595e2520440
You can then run inferior 1 again and the two inferiors will still
erroneously share their spaces, but already at this point this is wrong.
The cause of the bad {a,p}space sharing is in follow_fork_inferior.
When following the child and detaching from the parent, we just re-use
the parent's spaces, rather than cloning them. When we switch back to
inferior 1 and run again, we find ourselves with two unrelated inferiors
sharing spaces.
Fix that by creating new spaces for the parent after having moved them
to the child. My initial implementation created new spaces for the
child instead. Doing this breaks doing "next" over fork(). When "next"
start, we record the symtab of the starting location. When the program
stops, we compare that symtab with the symtab the program has stopped
at. If the symtab or the line number has changed, we conclude the
"next" is done. If we create a new program space for the child and copy
the parent's program space to it with clone_program_space, it creates
new symtabs for the child as well. When the child stop, but still on
the fork() line, GDB thinks the "next" is done because the symtab
pointers no longer match. In reality they are two symtab instances that
represent the same file. But moving the spaces to the child and
creating new spaces for the parent, we avoid this problem.
Note that the problem described above happens today with "detach-on-fork
off" and "follow-fork-mode child", because we create new spaces for the
child. This will have to be addressed later.
Test-wise, improve gdb.base/foll-fork.exp to set a breakpoint that is
expected to have a location in each inferiors. Without the fix, when
the two inferiors erroneously share a program space, GDB reports a
single location.
Change-Id: Ifea76e14f87b9f7321fc3a766217061190e71c6e
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: use foreach_with_prefix to handle prefixes
No behavior change in the test expected, other than in the test names.
Change-Id: I111137483858ab0f23138439f2930009779a2b3d
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: rename variables
Rename the variables / parameters used to match the corresponding GDB
setting name, I find that easier to follow.
Change-Id: Idcbddbbb369279fcf1e808b11a8c478f21b2a946
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: refactor to restart GDB between each portion of the test
This test is difficult to follow and modify because the state of GDB is
preserved some tests. Add a setup proc, which starts a new GDB and runs
to main, and use it in all test procs. Use proc_with_prefix to avoid
duplicates.
The check_fork_catchpoints proc also seems used to check for follow-fork
support by checking if catchpoints are supported. If they are not, it
uses "return -code return", which makes its caller return. I find this
unnecessary complex, versus just returning a boolean. Modify it to do
so.
Change-Id: I23e62b204286c5e9c5c86d2727f7d33fb126ed08
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: remove gating based on target triplet
It looks like this test has some code to check at runtime the support of
fork handling of the target (see check_fork_catchpoints). So, it seems
to me that the check based on target triplet at the beginning of the
test is not needed. This kind of gating is generally not desirable,
because we wouldn't think of updating it when adding fork support to a
target. For example, FreeBSD supports fork, but it wasn't listed here.
Change-Id: I6b55f2298edae6b37c3681fb8633d8ea1b5aabee
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: remove DUPLICATEs
Remove DUPLICATEs, and and at the same time replace two uses of
gdb_test_multiple with gdb_test. I don't think using gdb_test_multiple
is necessary here.
Change-Id: I8dcf097c3364e92d4f0e11f0c0f05dbb88e86742
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf, lookup: fix bounds of pptrtab lookup
An off-by-one bug in the check for pptrtab lookup meant that we could
access the pptrtab past its bounds (*well* past its bounds),
particularly if we called ctf_lookup_by_name in a child dict with "*foo"
where "foo" is a type that exists in the parent but not the child and no
previous lookups by name have been carried out. (Note that "*foo" is
not even a valid thing to call ctf_lookup_by_name with: foo * is.
Nonetheless, users sometimes do call ctf_lookup_by_name with invalid
content, and it should return ECTF_NOTYPE, not crash.)
ctf_pptrtab_len, as its name suggests (and as other tests of it in
ctf-lookup.c confirm), is one higher than the maximum valid permissible
index, so the comparison is wrong.
(Test added, which should fail pretty reliably in the presence of this
bug on any machine with 4KiB pages.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-lookup.c (ctf_lookup_by_name_internal): Fix pptrtab bounds.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab-writable-page-deep-lookup.*:
New test.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf, testsuite: fix various warnings in tests
These warnings are all off by default, but if they do fire you get
spurious ERRORs when running make check-libctf.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/enum-symbol.c: Remove unused label.
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/conflicting-type-syms.c: Remove unused
variables.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/reserialize-strtab-corruption.c:
Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld-r.c: Fix
format string.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.c:
Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.lk: Adjust.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/symtypetab-nonlinker-writeout.c: Fix
initializer.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: fix handling of CTF symtypetab sections emitted by older GCC
Older (pre-upstreaming) GCC emits a function symtypetab section of a
format never read by any extant libctf. We can detect such CTF dicts by
the lack of the CTF_F_NEWFUNCINFO flag in their header, and we do so
when reading in the symtypetab section -- but if the set of symbols with
types is sufficiently sparse, even an older GCC will emit a function
index section.
In NEWFUNCINFO-capable compilers, this section will always be the exact
same length as the corresponding function section (each is an array of
uint32_t, associated 1:1 with each other). But this is not true for the
older compiler, for which the sections are different lengths. We check
to see if the function symtypetab section and its index are the same
length, but we fail to skip this check when this is not a NEWFUNCINFO
dict, and emit a spurious corruption error for a CTF dict we could
have perfectly well opened and used.
Fix trivial: check the flag (and fix the terrible grammar of the error
message at the same time).
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-open.c (ctf_bufopen_internal): Don't complain about corrupt
function index symtypetab sections if this is an old-format
function symtypetab section (which should be ignored in any case).
Fix bad grammar.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
configure: regenerate in all projects that use libtool.m4
(including sim/, which has no changelog.)
bfd/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
gas/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
gprof/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
opcodes/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
zlib/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: try several possibilities for linker versioning flags
Checking for linker versioning by just grepping ld --help output for
mentions of --version-script is inadequate now that Solaris 11.4
implements a --version-script with different semantics. Try linking a
test program with a small wildcard-using version script with each
supported set of flags in turn, to make sure that linker versioning is
not only advertised but actually works.
The Solaris "GNU-compatible" linker versioning is not quite
GNU-compatible enough, but we can work around the differences by
generating a new version script that removes the comments from the
original (Solaris ld requires #-style comments), and making another
version script for libctf-nonbfd in particular which doesn't mention any
of the symbols that appear in libctf.la, to avoid Solaris ld introducing
corresponding new NOTYPE symbols to match the version script.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27967
* configure.ac (VERSION_FLAGS): Replace with...
(ac_cv_libctf_version_script): ... this multiple test.
(VERSION_FLAGS_NOBFD): Substitute this too.
* Makefile.am (libctf_nobfd_la_LDFLAGS): Use it. Split out...
(libctf_ldflags_nover): ... non-versioning flags here.
(libctf_la_LDFLAGS): Use it.
* libctf.ver: Give every symbol not in libctf-nobfd a comment on
the same line noting as much.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libtool.m4: fix nm BSD flag detection
Libtool needs to get BSD-format (or MS-format) output out of the system
nm, so that it can scan generated object files for symbol names for
-export-symbols-regex support. Some nms need specific flags to turn on
BSD-formatted output, so libtool checks for this in its AC_PATH_NM.
Unfortunately the code to do this has a pair of interlocking flaws:
- it runs the test by doing an nm of /dev/null. Some platforms
reasonably refuse to do an nm on a device file, but before now this
has only been worked around by assuming that the error message has a
specific textual form emitted by Tru64 nm, and that getting this
error means this is Tru64 nm and that nm -B would work to produce
BSD-format output, even though the test never actually got anything
but an error message out of nm -B. This is fixable by nm'ing *nm
itself* (since we necessarily have a path to it).
- the test is entirely skipped if NM is set in the environment, on the
grounds that the user has overridden the test: but the user cannot
reasonably be expected to know that libtool wants not only nm but
also flags forcing BSD-format output. Worse yet, one such "user" is
the top-level Cygnus configure script, which neither tests for
nor specifies any BSD-format flags. So platforms needing BSD-format
flags always fail to set them when run in a Cygnus tree, breaking
-export-symbols-regex on such platforms. Libtool also needs to
augment $LD on some platforms, but this is done unconditionally,
augmenting whatever the user specified: the nm check should do the
same.
One wrinkle: if the user has overridden $NM, a path might have been
provided: so we use the user-specified path if there was one, and
otherwise do the path search as usual. (If the nm specified doesn't
work, this might lead to a few extra pointless path searches -- but
the test is going to fail anyway, so that's not a problem.)
(Tested with NM unset, and set to nm, /usr/bin/nm, my-nm where my-nm is a
symlink to /usr/bin/nm on the PATH, and /not-on-the-path/my-nm where
*that* is a symlink to /usr/bin/nm.)
ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27967
* libtool.m4 (LT_PATH_NM): Try BSDization flags with a user-provided
NM, if there is one. Run nm on itself, not on /dev/null, to avoid
errors from nms that refuse to work on non-regular files. Remove
other workarounds for this problem. Strip out blank lines from the
nm output.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libtool.m4: augment symcode for Solaris 11
This reports common symbols like GNU nm, via a type code of 'C'.
ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27967
* libtool.m4 (lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe): Augment symcode for
Solaris 11.
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
libctf: link against libiberty before linking in libbfd or libctf-nobfd
This ensures that the CTF_LIBADD, which always contains at least this
when doing a shared link:
-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic -liberty
appears in the link line before any requirements pulled in by libbfd.la,
which include -liberty but because it is install-time do not include the
-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic portion (in an indirect dep like this, the path
comes from the libbfd.la file, and is an install path). libiberty also
appears after libbfd in the link line by virtue of libctf-nobfd.la,
because libctf-nobfd has to follow libbfd in the link line, and that
needs symbols from libiberty too.
Without this, an installed liberty might well be pulled in by libbfd,
and if --enable-install-libiberty is not specified this libiberty might
be completely incompatible with what is being installed and break either
or boht of libbfd and libctf. (The specific problem observed here is
that bsearch_r was not present, but other problems might easily be
observed in future too.)
Because ld links against libctf, this has a tendency to break the system
linker at install time too, if installing with --prefix=/usr. That's
quite unpleasant to recover from.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27360
* Makefile.am (libctf_la_LIBADD): Link against libiberty
before pulling in libbfd.la or pulling in libctf-nobfd.la.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-09-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build with g++-4.8
When building g++-4.8, we run into:
...
src/gdb/dwarf2/read.c:919:5: error: multiple fields in union \
'partial_die_info::<anonymous union>' initialized
...
This is due to:
...
union
{
struct
{
CORE_ADDR lowpc = 0;
CORE_ADDR highpc = 0;
};
ULONGEST ranges_offset;
};
...
The error looks incorrect, given that only one union member is initialized,
and does not reproduce with newer g++.
Nevertheless, work around this by moving the initialization to a constructor.
[ I considered just removing the initialization, with the idea that access
should be guarded by has_pc_info, but I ran into one failure in the testsuite,
for gdb.base/check-psymtab.exp due to add_partial_symbol using lowpc without
checking has_pc_info. ]
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-27 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: add setting to disable reading source code files
In some situations it is possible that a user might not want GDB to
try and access source code files, for example, the source code might
be stored on a slow to access network file system.
It is almost certainly possible that using some combination of 'set
directories' and/or 'set substitute-path' a user can trick GDB into
being unable to find the source files, but this feels like a rather
crude way to solve the problem.
In this commit a new option is add that stops GDB from opening and
reading the source files. A user can run with source code reading
disabled if this is required, then re-enable later if they decide
that they now want to view the source code.
2021-09-27 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: remove duplicate cmd_list_element declarations
For some reason we have two locations where cmd_list_elements are
declared, cli/cli-cmds.h and gdbcmd.h. Worse still there is
duplication between these two locations.
In this commit I have moved all of the cmd_list_element declarations
from gdbcmd.h into cli/cli-cmds.h and removed the duplicates.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-27 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: prevent an assertion when computing the frame_id for an inline frame
I ran into this assertion while GDB was trying to unwind the stack:
gdb/inline-frame.c:173: internal-error: void inline_frame_this_id(frame_info*, void**, frame_id*): Assertion `frame_id_p (*this_id)' failed.
That is, when building the frame_id for an inline frame, GDB asks for
the frame_id of the previous frame. Unfortunately, no valid frame_id
was returned for the previous frame, and so the assertion triggers.
What is happening is this, I had a stack that looked something like
this (the arrows '->' point from caller to callee):
normal_frame -> inline_frame
However, for whatever reason (e.g. broken debug information, or
corrupted stack contents in the inferior), when GDB tries to unwind
"normal_frame", it ends up getting back effectively the same frame,
thus the call stack looks like this to GDB:
.-> normal_frame -> inline_frame
| |
'-----'
Given such a situation we would expect GDB to terminate the stack with
an error like this:
Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)
However, the inline_frame causes a problem, and here's why:
When unwinding we start from the sentinel frame and call
get_prev_frame. We eventually end up in get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle,
in here we create a raw frame, and as this is frame #0 we immediately
return.
However, eventually we will try to unwind the stack further. When we
do this we inevitably needing to know the frame_id for frame #0, and
so, eventually, we end up in compute_frame_id.
In compute_frame_id we first find the right unwinder for this frame,
in our case (i.e. for inline_frame) the $pc is within the function
normal_frame, but also within a block associated with the inlined
function inline_frame, as such the inline frame unwinder claims this
frame.
Back in compute_frame_id we next compute the frame_id, for our
inline_frame this means a call to inline_frame_this_id.
The ID of an inline frame is based on the id of the previous frame, so
from inline_frame_this_id we call get_prev_frame_always, this
eventually calls get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle again, which creates
another raw frame and calls compute_frame_id (for frames other than
frame 0 we immediately compute the frame_id).
In compute_frame_id we again identify the correct unwinder for this
frame. Our $pc is unchanged, however, the fact that the next frame is
of type INLINE_FRAME prevents the inline frame unwinder from claiming
this frame again, and so, the standard DWARF frame unwinder claims
normal_frame.
We return to compute_frame_id and call the standard DWARF function to
build the frame_id for normal_frame.
With the frame_id of normal_frame figured out we return to
compute_frame_id, and then to get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle, where we add
the ID for normal_frame into the frame_id cache, and return the frame
back to inline_frame_this_id.
From inline_frame_this_id we build a frame_id for inline_frame and
return to compute_frame_id, and then to get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle,
which adds the frame_id for inline_frame into the frame_id cache.
So far, so good.
However, as we are trying to unwind the complete stack, we eventually
ask for the previous frame of normal_frame, remember, at this point
GDB doesn't know the stack is corrupted (with a cycle), GDB still
needs to figure that out.
So, we eventually end up in get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle where we create
a raw frame and call compute_frame_id, remember, this is for the frame
before normal_frame.
The first task for compute_frame_id is to find the unwinder for this
frame, so all of the frame sniffers are tried in order, this includes
the inline frame sniffer.
The inline frame sniffer asks for the $pc, this request is sent up the
stack to normal_frame, which, due to its cyclic behaviour, tells GDB
that the $pc in the previous frame was the same as the $pc in
normal_frame.
GDB spots that this $pc corresponds to both the function normal_frame
and also the inline function inline_frame. As the next frame is not
an INLINE_FRAME then GDB figures that we have not yet built a frame to
cover inline_frame, and so the inline sniffer claims this new frame.
Our stack is now looking like this:
inline_frame -> normal_frame -> inline_frame
But, we have not yet computed the frame id for the outer most (on the
left) inline_frame. After the frame sniffer has claimed the inline
frame GDB returns to compute_frame_id and calls inline_frame_this_id.
In here GDB calls get_prev_frame_always, which eventually ends up
in get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle again, where we create a raw frame and
call compute_frame_id.
Just like before, compute_frame_id tries to find an unwinder for this
new frame, it sees that the $pc is within both normal_frame and
inline_frame, but the next frame is, again, an INLINE_FRAME, so, just
like before the standard DWARF unwinder claims this frame. Back in
compute_frame_id we again call the standard DWARF function to build
the frame_id for this new copy of normal_frame.
At this point the stack looks like this:
normal_frame -> inline_frame -> normal_frame -> inline_frame
After compute_frame_id we return to get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle, where
we try to add the frame_id for the new normal_frame into the frame_id
cache, however, unlike before, we fail to add this frame_id as it is
a duplicate of the previous normal_frame frame_id. Having found a
duplicate get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle unlinks the new frame from the
stack, and returns nullptr, the stack now looks like this:
inline_frame -> normal_frame -> inline_frame
The nullptr result from get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle is fed back to
inline_frame_this_id, which forwards this to get_frame_id, which
immediately returns null_frame_id. As null_frame_id is not considered
a valid frame_id, this is what triggers the assertion.
In summary then:
- inline_frame_this_id currently assumes that as the inline frame
exists, we will always get a valid frame back from
get_prev_frame_always,
- get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle currently assumes that it is safe to
return nullptr when it sees a cycle.
Notice that in frame.c:compute_frame_id, this code:
fi->this_id.value = outer_frame_id;
fi->unwind->this_id (fi, &fi->prologue_cache, &fi->this_id.value);
gdb_assert (frame_id_p (fi->this_id.value));
The assertion makes it clear that the this_id function must always
return a valid frame_id (e.g. null_frame_id is not a valid return
value), and similarly in inline_frame.c:inline_frame_this_id this
code:
*this_id = get_frame_id (get_prev_frame_always (this_frame));
/* snip comment */
gdb_assert (frame_id_p (*this_id));
Makes it clear that every inline frame expects to be able to get a
previous frame, which will have a valid frame_id.
As I have discussed above, these assumptions don't currently hold in
all cases.
One possibility would be to move the call to get_prev_frame_always
forward from inline_frame_this_id to inline_frame_sniffer, however,
this falls foul of (in frame.c:frame_cleanup_after_sniffer) this
assertion:
/* No sniffer should extend the frame chain; sniff based on what is
already certain. */
gdb_assert (!frame->prev_p);
This assert prohibits any sniffer from trying to get the previous
frame, as getting the previous frame is likely to depend on the next
frame, I can understand why this assertion is a good thing, and I'm in
no rush to alter this rule.
The solution proposed here takes onboard feedback from both Pedro, and
Simon (see the links below). The get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle function
is renamed to get_prev_frame_maybe_check_cycle, and will now not do
cycle detection for inline frames, even when we spot a duplicate frame
it is still returned. This is fine, as, if the normal frame has a
duplicate frame-id then the inline frame will also have a duplicate
frame-id. And so, when we reject the inline frame, the duplicate
normal frame, which is previous to the inline frame, will also be
rejected.
In inline-frame.c the call to get_prev_frame_always is no longer
nested inside the call to get_frame_id. There are reasons why
get_prev_frame_always can return nullptr, for example, if there is a
memory error while trying to get the previous frame, if this should
happen then we now give a more informative error message.
Historical Links:
Patch v2: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-June/180208.html
Feedback: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/180651.html
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/180663.html
Patch v3: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/181029.html
Feedback: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/181035.html
Additional input: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182040.html
2021-09-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/dcache-flush.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/dcache-flush.exp on ubuntu 18.04.5, I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/dcache-flush.exp: p var2
info dcache^M
Dcache 4096 lines of 64 bytes each.^M
Contains data for Thread 0x7ffff7fc6b80 (LWP 3551)^M
Line 0: address 0x7fffffffd4c0 [47 hits]^M
Line 1: address 0x7fffffffd500 [31 hits]^M
Line 2: address 0x7fffffffd5c0 [7 hits]^M
Cache state: 3 active lines, 85 hits^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/dcache-flush.exp: check dcache before flushing
...
The regexp expects "Contains data for process $decimal".
This is another case of thread_db_target::pid_to_str being used.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Test sw watchpoint in gdb.threads/process-dies-while-detaching.exp
The test-case gdb.threads/process-dies-while-detaching.exp takes about 20s
when using hw watchpoints, but when forcing sw watchpoints (using the patch
mentioned in PR28375#c0), the test-case takes instead 3m14s.
Also, it show a FAIL:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
Cannot find user-level thread for LWP 10324: generic error^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/process-dies-while-detaching.exp: single-process:
continue: watchpoint: continue
...
for which PR28375 was filed.
Modify the test-case to:
- add the hw/sw axis to the watchpoint testing, to ensure that we
observe the sw watchpoint behaviour also on can-use-hw-watchpoints
architectures.
- skip the hw breakpoint testing if not supported
- set the sw watchpoint later to avoid making the test
too slow. This still triggers the same PR, but now takes just 24s.
This patch adds a KFAIL for PR28375.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-27 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix indentation in gdbtypes.c
Change-Id: I7bfbb9d349a1f474256800c45e28fe3b1de08771
2021-09-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-26 Peter Bergner <bergner@linux.ibm.com>
PowerPC: Enable mfppr mfppr32, mtppr and mtppr32 extended mnemonics on POWER5
SPR 896 and the mfppr mfppr32, mtppr and mtppr32 extended mnemonics were added
in ISA 2.03, so enable them on POWER5 and later.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes) <mfppr, mfppr32, mtppr, mtppr32>: Enable
on POWER5 and later.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power5.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power5.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/ppc.exp: Run it.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power7.s: Remove tests for mfppr, mfppr32, mtppr
and mtppr32.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power7.d: Likewise.
2021-09-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Minimize gdb restarts
Minimize gdb restarts, applying the following rules:
- don't use prepare_for_testing unless necessary
- don't use clean_restart unless necessary
Also, if possible, replace build_for_executable + clean_restart
with prepare_for_testing for brevity.
Touches 68 test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-25 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28346, segfault attempting to disassemble raw binary
Don't attempt to access elf_section_data for non-ELF sections.
PR 28346
* elf32-xtensa.c (xtensa_read_table_entries): Return zero entries
for non-ELF.
2021-09-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-24 Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>
gas/testsuite/ld-elf/dwarf2-21.d: Pass -W
Required for the expected "CU:" to be emitted for long
source-paths. See binutils/dwarf.c:
if (do_wide || strlen (directory) < 76)
printf (_("CU: %s/%s:\n"), directory, file_table[0].name);
else
printf ("%s:\n", file_table[0].name);
See also commit 5f410aa50ce2c, "testsuite/ld-elf/pr26936.d:
Pass -W."
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-elf/dwarf2-21.d: Pass -W.
2021-09-24 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: change thread_info::name to unique_xmalloc_ptr, add helper function
This started out as changing thread_info::name to a unique_xmalloc_ptr.
That showed that almost all users of that field had the same logic to
get a thread's name: use thread_info::name if non-nullptr, else ask the
target. Factor out this logic in a new thread_name free function. Make
the field private (rename to m_name) and add some accessors.
Change-Id: Iebdd95f4cd21fbefc505249bd1d05befc466a2fc
2021-09-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Move value_true to value.h
I noticed that value_true is declared in language.h and defined in
language.c. However, as part of the value API, I think it would be
better in one of those files. And, because it is very short, I
changed it to be an inline function in value.h. I've also removed a
comment from the implementation, on the basis that it seems obsolete
-- if the change it suggests was needed, it probably would have been
done by now; and if it is needed in the future, odds are it would be
done differently anyway.
Finally, this patch also changes value_true and value_logical_not to
return a bool, and updates some uses.
2021-09-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Make dcache multi-target-safe
By inspection, I noticed that this code in dcache.c is not
multi-target-aware:
/* If this is a different inferior from what we've recorded,
flush the cache. */
if (inferior_ptid != dcache->ptid)
This doesn't take into account that threads of different targets may
have the same ptid.
Fixed by also storing/comparing the process_stratum_target.
Tested on x86-64-linux-gnu, native and gdbserver.
Change-Id: I4d9d74052c696b72d28cb1c77b697b911725c8d3
2021-09-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix 'FAIL: gdb.perf/disassemble.exp: python Disassemble().run()'
We currently have one FAIL while running "make check-perf":
PerfTest::assemble, run ...
python Disassemble().run()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py", line 64, in run
self.warm_up()
File "<string>", line 25, in warm_up
gdb.error: No symbol "ada_evaluate_subexp" in current context.
Error while executing Python code.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.perf/disassemble.exp: python Disassemble().run()
...
The gdb.perf/disassemble.exp testcase debugs GDB with itself, runs to
main, and then disassembles a few GDB functions. The problem is that
most(!) functions it is trying to disassemble are now gone...
This commit fixes the issue by simply picking some other functions to
disassemble.
It would perhaps be better to come up with some test program to
disassemble, one that would stay the same throughout the years,
instead of disassembling GDB itself. I don't know why that wasn't
done to begin with. I'll have to leave that for another rainy day,
though.
gdb/testsuite/
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* gdb.perf/disassemble.py (Disassemble::warm_up): Disassemble
evaluate_subexp_do_call instead of ada_evaluate_subexp.
(Disassemble::warm_up): Disassemble "captured_main",
"run_inferior_call" and "update_global_location_list" instead of
"evaluate_subexp_standard" and "c_parse_internal".
Change-Id: I89d1cca89ce2e495dea5096e439685739cc0d3df
2021-09-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix all PATH problems in testsuite/gdb.perf/
Currently "make check-perf" triggers ~40 PATH messages in gdb.sum:
...
PATH: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath("/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build/gdb/../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib"))
PATH: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python exec (open ('/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.perf/backtrace/backtrace.py').read ())
...
This commit fixes them. E.g. before/after gdb.sum diff:
-PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python import os, sys
-PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath("/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build-master/gdb/../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib"))
-PATH: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath("/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build-master/gdb/../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib"))
-PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python exec (open ('/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build-master/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.perf/backtrace/backtrace.py').read ())
-PATH: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python exec (open ('/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build-master/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.perf/backtrace/backtrace.py').read ())
+PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: setup perftest: python import os, sys
+PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: setup perftest: python sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath("${srcdir}/gdb.perf/lib"))
+PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: setup perftest: python exec (open ('${srcdir}/gdb.perf/backtrace.py').read ())
gdb/testsuite/
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* lib/perftest.exp (PerfTest::_setup_perftest): Use
with_test_prefix. Add explicit test names to python invocations,
with "$srcdir" not expanded.
Change-Id: I50a31b04b7abdea754139509e4a34ae9263118a4
2021-09-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix all DUPLICATE problems in testsuite/gdb.perf/
Currently running "make check-perf" shows:
...
# of duplicate test names 6008
...
All those duplicate test names come from gdb.perf/skip-command.exp.
This commit fixes them, using with_test_prefix.
gdb/testsuite/
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* gdb.perf/skip-command.exp (run_skip_bench): Wrap each for
iteration in with_test_prefix.
Change-Id: I38501cf70bc6b60306ee7228996ee7bcd858dc1b
2021-09-24 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix handling of DW_AT_data_bit_offset
A newer version of GCC will now emit member locations using just
DW_AT_data_bit_offset, like:
<3><14fe>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_member)
<14ff> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x215e): nb_bytes
<1503> DW_AT_decl_file : 1
<1503> DW_AT_decl_line : 10
<1504> DW_AT_decl_column : 7
<1505> DW_AT_type : <0x150b>
<1509> DW_AT_bit_size : 31
<150a> DW_AT_data_bit_offset: 64
whereas earlier versions would emit something like:
<3><164f>: Abbrev Number: 7 (DW_TAG_member)
<1650> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x218d): nb_bytes
<1654> DW_AT_decl_file : 1
<1655> DW_AT_decl_line : 10
<1656> DW_AT_decl_column : 7
<1657> DW_AT_type : <0x165f>
<165b> DW_AT_byte_size : 4
<165c> DW_AT_bit_size : 31
<165d> DW_AT_bit_offset : 1
<165e> DW_AT_data_member_location: 8
That is, DW_AT_data_member_location is not emitted any more. This is
a change due to the switch to DWARF 5 by default.
This change pointed out an existing bug in gdb, namely that the
attr_to_dynamic_prop depends on the presence of
DW_AT_data_member_location. This patch moves the handling of
DW_AT_data_bit_offset into handle_data_member_location, and updates
attr_to_dynamic_prop to handle this new case.
A new test case is included. This test fails with GCC 11, but passes
with an earlier version of GCC.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Don't leave gdb instance running after function_range
A typical dwarf assembly test-case start like this:
...
standard_testfile .c -debug.S
set asm_file [standard_output_file $srcfile2]
Dwarf::assemble $asm_file {
...
}
if { [prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" ${testfile} \
[list $srcfile $asm_file] {nodebug}] } {
return -1
}
...
When accidentally using build_for_executable instead of
prepare_for_testing (or intentionally using it but forgetting to add
clean_restart $binfile or some such) the mistake may not be caught, because
another gdb instance is still running, and we may silently end up testing
compiler-generated DWARF.
This can be caused by something relatively obvious, like an earlier
prepare_for_testing or clean_restart, but also by something more obscure like
function_range, which may even be triggered by dwarf assembly like this:
...
{MACRO_AT_func {main}}
...
Fix this by calling gdb_exit at the end of function_range.
Also fix the fallout of that in test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-elf.exp, where a
get_sizeof call used the gdb instance left lingering by function_range.
[ A better and more complete fix would add a new proc get_exec_info, that would
be called at the start of the dwarf assembly body:
...
Dwarf::assemble $asm_file {
get_exec_info {main foo} {int void*}
...
that would:
- do a prepare_for_testing with $srcfile (roughtly equivalent to what
MACRO_AT_func does,
- call function_range for all functions main and foo, without starting a
new gdb instance
- set corresponding variables at the call-site: main_start, main_len,
main_end, foo_start, foo_len, foo_end.
- get size for types int and void*
- set corresponding variables at the call-site: int_size, void_ptr_size.
- do a gdb_exit. ]
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use pie instead of -fpie/-pie
I noticed two test-cases where -fpie is used. Using the canonical pie option
will usually get one -fPIE instead.
That choice is justified here in gdb_compile:
...
# For safety, use fPIE rather than fpie. On AArch64, m68k, PowerPC
# and SPARC, fpie can cause compile errors due to the GOT exceeding
# a maximum size. On other architectures the two flags are
# identical (see the GCC manual). Note Debian9 and Ubuntu16.10
# onwards default GCC to using fPIE. If you do require fpie, then
# it can be set using the pie_flag.
set flag "additional_flags=-fPIE"
...
There is no indication that using -fpie rather than -fPIE is on purpose, so
use pie instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Factor out dump_info in gdb.testsuite/dump-system-info.exp
Factor out new proc dump_info in test-case gdb.testsuite/dump-system-info.exp,
and in the process:
- fix a few typos
- remove unnecessary "test -r /proc/cpuinfo"
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2021-09-24 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb/testsuite: Make it possible to use TCL variables in DWARF assembler loclists
It is currently not possible to use variables in locations lists. For
example, with:
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus.exp b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus.exp
index 6b4f5c8cbb8..cdbf948619f 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus.exp
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus.exp
@@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ if {![dwarf2_support]} {
return 0
}
+set myconst 0x123456
+
# Test with 32-bit and 64-bit DWARF.
foreach_with_prefix is_64 {false true} {
if { $is_64 } {
@@ -49,6 +51,7 @@ foreach_with_prefix is_64 {false true} {
global func1_addr func1_len
global func2_addr func2_len
global is_64
+ global myconst
# The CU uses the DW_FORM_loclistx form to refer to the .debug_loclists
# section.
@@ -107,7 +110,7 @@ foreach_with_prefix is_64 {false true} {
list_ {
# When in func1.
start_length $func1_addr $func1_len {
- DW_OP_constu 0x123456
+ DW_OP_constu $myconst
DW_OP_stack_value
}
we get:
$ make check TESTS="*/loclists-multiple-cus.exp"
...
gdb compile failed, build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus/loclists-multiple-cus-dw32.S: Assembler messages:
build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/loclists-multiple-cus/loclists-multiple-cus-dw32.S:78: Error: leb128 operand is an undefined symbol: $myconst
...
That means $myconst was copied literally to the generated assembly
file.
This patch fixes it, by running subst on the location list body, in
the context of the caller. The fix is applied to both
Dwarf::loclists::table::list_::start_length and
Dwarf::loclists::table::list_::start_end.
Reported-by: Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Change-Id: I615a64431857242d9f477d5699e3732df1b31322
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATEs in gdb.dwarf2/implptr-64bit.exp
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/implptr-64bit.exp with target board
unix/-m32, I noticed:
...
DUPLICATE: gdb.dwarf2/implptr-64bit.exp: failed to prepare
...
Fix this by using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATEs gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp
Fix these DUPLICATEs by using with_test_prefix:
...
DUPLICATE: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp: ensure we saw a valid line pattern, 1
DUPLICATE: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp: ensure we saw a valid line pattern, 2
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix set $var val in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp
When doing a testrun with:
...
$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS=$(cd $src/gdb/testsuite/; echo gdb.dwarf2/*.exp)
...
I ran into:
...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp.
ERROR: expected integer but got "dw2-abs-hi-pc-world.c"
while executing
"incr i"
...
The variable i is set in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp, and leaks to
gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp. It's not removed by gdb_cleanup_globals because i
is set as global variable by runtest.exp, which does:
...
for { set i 0 } { $i < $argc } { incr i } {
...
at toplevel but forgets to unset the variable.
Fix this by removing '$' in front of the variable name when doing set:
...
-set $i 0
+set i 0
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/load-command.exp
Fix this duplicate:
...
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/load-command.exp: check initial value of the_variable
...
by using with_test_prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use pie/nopie instead of ldflags=-pie/-no-pie
I noticed two test-case that use ldflags=-pie and ldflags-no-pie, instead of
the canonical pie and nopie options, which would typically also add
additional_flags=-fPIE respectively additional_flags=-fno-pie.
There is no indication that this is on purpose, so replace these with pie and
nopie.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.testsuite/dump-system-info.exp
When interpreting the testsuite results, it's often relevant what kind of
machine the testsuite ran on. On a local machine one can just do
/proc/cpuinfo, but in case of running tests using a remote system
that distributes test runs to other remote systems that are not directly
accessible, that's not possible.
Fix this by dumping /proc/cpuinfo into the gdb.log, as well as lsb_release -a
and uname -a.
We could do this at the start of each test run, by putting it into unix.exp
or some such. However, this might be too verbose, so we choose to put it into
its own test-case, such that it get triggered in a full testrun, but not when
running one or a subset of tests.
We put the test-case into the gdb.testsuite directory, which is currently the
only place in the testsuite where we do not test gdb. [ Though perhaps this
could be put into a new gdb.info directory, since the test-case doesn't
actually test the testsuite. ]
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Change pointer_type to a method of struct type
I noticed that pointer_type is declared in language.h and defined in
language.c. However, it really has to do with types, so it should
have been in gdbtypes.h all along.
This patch changes it to be a method on struct type. And, I went
through uses of TYPE_IS_REFERENCE and updated many spots to use the
new method as well. (I didn't update ones that were in arch-specific
code, as I couldn't readily test that.)
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Support -fPIE/-fno-PIE/-pie/-no-pie in gdb_compile_rust
When running gdb.rust/*.exp test-cases with target board unix/-fPIE/-pie, I
run into:
...
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP rustc --color never gdb.rust/watch.rs \
-g -lm -fPIE -pie -o outputs/gdb.rust/watch/watch^M
error: Unrecognized option: 'f'^M
^M
compiler exited with status 1
...
The problem is that -fPIE and -fpie are gcc options, but for rust we use
rustc, which has different compilation options.
Fix this by translating the gcc options to rustc options in gdb_compile_rust,
similar to how that is done for ada in target_compile_ada_from_dir.
Likewise for unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with:
- native
- unix/-fPIE/-pie
- unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie
specifically, on openSUSE Leap 15.2 both with package gcc-PIE:
- installed (making gcc default to PIE)
- uninstalled (making gcc default to non-PIE).
and rustc 1.52.1.
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use pie instead of -fPIE -pie
Replace {additional_flags=-fPIE ldflags=-pie} with {pie}.
This makes sure that the test-cases properly error out when using target board
unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix probe test in gdb.base/break-interp.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/break-interp.exp on ubuntu 18.04.5, we have:
...
(gdb) bt^M
#0 0x00007eff7ad5ae12 in ?? () from break-interp-LDprelinkNOdebugNO^M
#1 0x00007eff7ad71f50 in ?? () from break-interp-LDprelinkNOdebugNO^M
#2 0x00007eff7ad59128 in ?? () from break-interp-LDprelinkNOdebugNO^M
#3 0x00007eff7ad58098 in ?? () from break-interp-LDprelinkNOdebugNO^M
#4 0x0000000000000002 in ?? ()^M
#5 0x00007fff505d7a32 in ?? ()^M
#6 0x00007fff505d7a94 in ?? ()^M
#7 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/break-interp.exp: ldprelink=NO: ldsepdebug=NO: \
first backtrace: dl bt
...
Using the backtrace, the test-case tries to establish that we're stopped in
dl_main.
However, the backtrace only shows an address, because:
- the dynamic linker contains no minimal symbols and no debug info, and
- gdb is build without --with-separate-debug-dir so it can't find the
corresponding .debug file, which does contain the mimimal symbols and
debug info.
As in "[gdb/testsuite] Improve probe detection in gdb.base/break-probes.exp",
fix this by doing info probes and grepping for the address.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Improve probe detection in gdb.base/break-probes.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/break-probes.exp on ubuntu 18.04.5, we have:
...
(gdb) run^M
Starting program: break-probes^M
Stopped due to shared library event (no libraries added or removed)^M
(gdb) bt^M
#0 0x00007ffff7dd6e12 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#1 0x00007ffff7dedf50 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#2 0x00007ffff7dd5128 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#3 0x00007ffff7dd4098 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#4 0x0000000000000001 in ?? ()^M
#5 0x00007fffffffdaac in ?? ()^M
#6 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()^M
(gdb) UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/break-probes.exp: probes not present on this system
...
Using the backtrace, the test-case tries to establish that we're stopped in
dl_main, which is used as proof that we're using probes.
However, the backtrace only shows an address, because:
- the dynamic linker contains no minimal symbols and no debug info, and
- gdb is build without --with-separate-debug-dir so it can't find the
corresponding .debug file, which does contain the mimimal symbols and
debug info.
Fix this by instead printing the pc and grepping for the value in the
info probes output:
...
(gdb) p /x $pc^M
$1 = 0x7ffff7dd6e12^M
(gdb) info probes^M
Type Provider Name Where Object ^M
...
stap rtld init_start 0x00007ffff7dd6e12 /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 ^M
...
(gdb)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle failing probe detection in gdb.base/break-probes.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/break-probes.exp on ubuntu 18.04.5, we have:
...
(gdb) bt^M
#0 0x00007ffff7dd6e12 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#1 0x00007ffff7dedf50 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#2 0x00007ffff7dd5128 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#3 0x00007ffff7dd4098 in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2^M
#4 0x0000000000000001 in ?? ()^M
#5 0x00007fffffffdaac in ?? ()^M
#6 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/break-probes.exp: ensure using probes
...
The test-case intends to emit an UNTESTED in this case, but fails to do so
because it tries to do it in a regexp clause in a gdb_test_multiple, which
doesn't trigger. Instead, a default clause triggers which produces the FAIL.
Also the use of UNTESTED is not appropriate, and we should use UNSUPPORTED
instead.
Fix this by silencing the FAIL, and emitting an UNSUPPORTED after the
gdb_test_multiple:
...
if { ! $using_probes } {
+ unsupported "probes not present on this system"
return -1
}
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use early-out style in gdb.base/break-probes.exp
Reduce indentation and improve readability in test-case
gdb.base/break-probes.exp by replacing:
...
if { <cond> } {
<lots-of-code>
}
...
with:
...
if { ! <cond> } {
return -1
}
<lots-of-code>
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-23 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Test that frame info/IDs are stable/consistent
This adds a testcase that tests that the unwinder produces consistent
frame info and frame IDs by making sure that "info frame" shows the
same result when stopped at a function (level == 0), compared to when
we find the same frame in the stack at a level > 0.
E.g., on x86-64, right after running to main, we see:
(gdb) info frame
Stack level 0, frame at 0x7fffffffd340:
rip = 0x555555555168 in main (gdb.base/backtrace.c:41); saved rip = 0x7ffff7dd90b3
source language c.
Arglist at 0x7fffffffd330, args:
Locals at 0x7fffffffd330, Previous frame's sp is 0x7fffffffd340
Saved registers:
rbp at 0x7fffffffd330, rip at 0x7fffffffd338
(gdb)
and then after continuing to a function called by main, and selecting
the "main" frame again, we see:
(gdb) info frame
Stack level 3, frame at 0x7fffffffd340:
rip = 0x555555555172 in main (gdb.base/backtrace.c:41); saved rip = 0x7ffff7dd90b3
caller of frame at 0x7fffffffd330
source language c.
Arglist at 0x7fffffffd330, args:
Locals at 0x7fffffffd330, Previous frame's sp is 0x7fffffffd340
Saved registers:
rbp at 0x7fffffffd330, rip at 0x7fffffffd338
(gdb)
The only differences should be in the stack level, the 'rip = '
address, and the presence of the "caller of frame at" info. All the
rest should be the same. If it isn't, it probably means that the
frame base, the frame ID, etc. aren't stable & consistent.
The testcase exercises both the DWARF and the heuristic unwinders,
using "maint set dwarf unwinder on/off".
Tested on {x86-64 -m64, x86-64 -m32, Aarch64, Power8} GNU/Linux.
Change-Id: I795001c82cc70d543d197415e3f80ce5dc7f3452
2021-09-23 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change get_ada_task_ptid parameter type
get_ada_task_ptid currently takes a 'long' as its 'thread' parameter
type. However, on some platforms this is actually a pointer, and
using 'long' can sometimes end up with the value being sign-extended.
This sign extension can cause problems later, if the tid is then later
used as an address again.
This patch changes the parameter type to ULONGEST and updates all the
uses. This approach preserves sign extension on the targets where it
is apparently intended, while avoiding it on others.
Co-Authored-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
2021-09-23 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Change ptid_t::tid to ULONGEST
The ptid_t 'tid' member is normally used as an address in gdb -- both
bsd-uthread and ravenscar-thread use it this way. However, because
the type is 'long', this can cause problems with sign extension.
This patch changes the type to ULONGEST to ensure that sign extension
does not occur.
2021-09-23 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove defaulted 'tid' parameter to ptid_t constructor
I wanted to find, and potentially modify, all the spots where the
'tid' parameter to the ptid_t constructor was used. So, I temporarily
removed this parameter and then rebuilt.
In order to make it simpler to search through the "real" (nonzero)
uses of this parameter, something I knew I'd have to do multiple
times, I removed any ", 0" from constructor calls.
Co-Authored-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
2021-09-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Style the "XXX" text in ptype/o
This patch changes gdb to use the 'highlight' style on the "XXX" text
in the output of ptype/o.
2021-09-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.python/py-events.exp
With test-case gdb.python/py-events.exp on ubuntu 18.04.5 we run into:
...
(gdb) info threads^M
Id Target Id Frame ^M
* 1 Thread 0x7ffff7fc3740 (LWP 31467) "py-events" do_nothing () at \
src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-events-shlib.c:19^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.python/py-events.exp: get current thread
...
The info thread commands uses "Thread" instead of "process" because
libpthread is already loaded:
...
new objfile name: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libdl.so.2^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1".^M
event type: new_objfile^M
new objfile name: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0^M
...
and consequently thread_db_target::pid_to_str is used.
Fix this by parsing the "Thread" expression.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Add maint selftest -verbose option
The print_one_insn selftest in gdb/disasm-selftests.c contains:
...
/* If you want to see the disassembled instruction printed to gdb_stdout,
set verbose to true. */
static const bool verbose = false;
...
Make this parameter available in the maint selftest command using a new option
-verbose, such that we can do:
...
(gdb) maint selftest -verbose print_one_insn
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-22 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
dwarf2 sub-section test
This is a testcase for the bug fixed by commit 5b4846283c3d. When
running the testcase on ia64 targets I found timeouts along with lots
of memory being consumed, due to ia64 gas not tracking text
sub-sections. Trying to add nops for ".nop 16" in ".text 1" resulting
in them being added to subsegment 0, with no increase to subsegment 1
size. This patch also fixes that problem.
Note that the testcase fails on ft32-elf, mn10200-elf, score-elf,
tic5x-elf, and xtensa-elf. The first two are relocation errors, the
last three appear to be the .nop directive failing to emit the right
number of nops. I didn't XFAIL any of them.
* config/tc-ia64.c (md): Add last_text_subseg.
(ia64_flush_insns, dot_endp): Use last_text_subseg.
(ia64_frob_label, md_assemble): Set last_text_subseg.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf2-21.d,
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf2-21.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Run it.
2021-09-22 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix x86 "FAIL: TLS -fno-pic -shared"
Fix a typo in commit 5d0869d9872a
* testsuite/ld-i386/tlsnopic.rd: Typo fix.
2021-09-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-21 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Change the linker's heuristic for computing the entry point for binaries so that shared libraries default to an entry point of 0.
* ldlang.c (lang_end): When computing the entry point, only
try the start address of the entry section when creating an
executable.
* ld.texi (Entry point): Update description of heuristic used to
choose the entry point.
testsuite/ld-alpha/tlspic.rd: Update expected entry point address.
testsuite/ld-arm/tls-gdesc-got.d: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-i386/tlsnopic.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-ia64/tlspic.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/gotop32.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/gotop64.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/tlssunnopic32.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/tlssunnopic64.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/tlssunpic32.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-sparc/tlssunpic64.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-tic6x/shlib-1.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-tic6x/shlib-1b.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-tic6x/shlib-1r.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-tic6x/shlib-1rb.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-tic6x/shlib-noindex.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-x86-64/tlsdesc.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-x86-64/tlspic.rd: Likewise.
testsuite/ld-x86-64/tlspic2.rd: Likewise.
2021-09-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle supports_memtag in gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp
In test-case gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp, we run all procs declared with
gdb_caching_proc. Some of these require a gdb instance, some not.
We could just do a clean_restart every time, but that would amount to 44 gdb
restarts. We try to minimize this by doing this only for the few procs that
need it, and hardcoding those in the test-case.
For those procs, we do a clean_restart, execute the proc, and then do a
gdb_exit, to make sure the gdb instance doesn't linger such that we detect
procs that need a gdb instance but are not listed in the test-case.
However, that doesn't work in the case of gnat_runtime_has_debug_info. This
proc doesn't require a gdb instance because it starts its own. But it doesn't
clean up the gdb instance, and since it's not listed, the test-case
doesn't clean up the gdb instance eiter. Consequently, the proc
supports_memtag (which should be listed, but isn't) uses the gdb instance
started by gnat_runtime_has_debug_info rather than throwing an error. Well,
unless gnat_runtime_has_debug_info fails before starting a gdb instance, in
which case we do run into the error.
Fix this by:
- doing gdb_exit unconditionally
- fixing the resulting error by adding supports_memtag in the test-case to
the "needing gdb instance" list
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-21 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
gdb, doc: Add ieee_half and bfloat16 to list of predefined target types.
For some reason these two weren't added to the list when they were orginally
added to GDB.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2021-09-21 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Predefined Target Types): Mention ieee_half and bfloat16.
2021-09-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/interface.exp with gcc-9
When running test-case gdb.ada/interface.exp with gcc-9, we run into:
...
(gdb) info locals^M
s = (x => 1, y => 2, w => 3, h => 4)^M
r = (x => 1, y => 2, w => 3, h => 4)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/interface.exp: info locals
...
The failure is caused by the regexp expecting variable r followed by
variable s.
Fix this by allowing variable s followed by variable r as well.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/mi_prot.exp
When running test-case gdb.ada/mi_prot.exp with gcc 8.5.0, we run into:
...
(gdb) ^M
Expecting: ^(-stack-list-arguments --no-frame-filters 1[^M
]+)?(\^done,stack=.*[^M
]+[(]gdb[)] ^M
[ ]*)
-stack-list-arguments --no-frame-filters 1^M
^done,stack-args=[frame={level="0",args=[{name="<_object>",value="(ceiling_priority =\
> 97, local => 0)"},{name="v",value="5"},{name="<_objectO>",value="true"}]},frame={le\
vel="1",args=[{name="v",value="5"},{name="<_objectO>",value="true"}]},frame={level="2\
",args=[]}]^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.ada/mi_prot.exp: -stack-list-arguments --no-frame-filters 1 (unexpected out\
put)
...
Fix this by updating the regexp to expect "^done,stack-args=" instead of
"^done,stack=".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Register test for each arch separately in register_test_foreach_arch
In gdb/disasm-selftests.c we have:
...
selftests::register_test_foreach_arch ("print_one_insn",
selftests::print_one_insn_test);
...
and we get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn" 2>&1 \
| grep ^Running
Running selftest print_one_insn.
$
...
Change the semantics register_test_foreach_arch such that a version of
print_one_insn is registered for each architecture, such that we have:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn" 2>&1 \
| grep ^Running
Running selftest print_one_insn::A6.
Running selftest print_one_insn::A7.
Running selftest print_one_insn::ARC600.
...
$
...
This makes it f.i. possible to do:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn::armv8.1-m.main"
Running selftest print_one_insn::armv8.1-m.main.
Self test failed: self-test failed at src/gdb/disasm-selftests.c:165
Ran 1 unit tests, 1 failed
...
Tested on x86_64-linux with an --enable-targets=all build.
2021-09-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Change register_test to use std::function arg
Change register_test to use std::function arg, such that we can do:
...
register_test (test_name, [=] () { SELF_CHECK (...); });
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp xfail for -m32
With test-case gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp and target board unix/-m32 I run
into:
...
(gdb) print bad^M
$2 = (0 => 0 <repeats 24 times>, 160)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp: scenario=minimal: print bad
...
The problem is that while the variable is an array of 196 bits (== 24.5 bytes),
the debug information describes it as 25 unsigned char. This is PR
gcc/101643, and the test-case contains an xfail for this, which catches only:
...
(gdb) print bad^M
$2 = (0 => 0 <repeats 25 times>)^M
...
Fix this by updating the xfail pattern.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-20 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport/gdb_proc_service.h: use decltype instead of typeof
Bug 28341 shows that GDB fails to compile when built with -std=c++11.
I don't know much about the use case, but according to the author of the
bug:
I encountered the scenario where CXX is set to "g++ -std=c++11" when
I try to compile binutils under GCC as part of the GCC 3-stage
compilation, which is common for building a cross-compiler.
The author of the bug suggests using __typeof__ instead of typeof. But
since we're using C++, we might as well use decltype, which is standard.
This is what this patch does.
The failure (and fix) can be observed by configuring GDB with CXX="g++
-std=c++11":
CXX linux-low.o
In file included from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/gdb_proc_service.h:22,
from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.h:27,
from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.cc:20:
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/gdb_proc_service.h:177:50: error: expected constructor, destructor, or type conversion before (token
177 | __attribute__((visibility ("default"))) typeof (SYM) SYM
| ^
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbserver/../gdbsupport/gdb_proc_service.h:179:1: note: in expansion of macro PS_EXPORT
179 | PS_EXPORT (ps_get_thread_area);
| ^~~~~~~~~
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28341
Change-Id: I84fbaae938209d8d935ca08dec9b7e6a0dd1bda0
2021-09-20 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
riscv: print .2byte or .4byte before an unknown instruction encoding
When the RISC-V disassembler encounters an unknown instruction, it
currently just prints the value of the bytes, like this:
Dump of assembler code for function custom_insn:
0x00010132 <+0>: addi sp,sp,-16
0x00010134 <+2>: sw s0,12(sp)
0x00010136 <+4>: addi s0,sp,16
0x00010138 <+6>: 0x52018b
0x0001013c <+10>: 0x9c45
My proposal, in this patch, is to change the behaviour to this:
Dump of assembler code for function custom_insn:
0x00010132 <+0>: addi sp,sp,-16
0x00010134 <+2>: sw s0,12(sp)
0x00010136 <+4>: addi s0,sp,16
0x00010138 <+6>: .4byte 0x52018b
0x0001013c <+10>: .2byte 0x9c45
Adding the .4byte and .2byte opcodes. The benefit that I see here is
that in the patched version of the tools, the disassembler output can
be fed back into the assembler and it should assemble to the same
binary format. Before the patch, the disassembler output is invalid
assembly.
I've started a RISC-V specific test file under binutils so that I can
add a test for this change.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/riscv.exp: New file.
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/unknown.d: New file.
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/unknown.s: New file.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Print a .%dbyte opcode
before an unknown instruction, '%d' is replaced with the
instruction length.
2021-09-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Fix allocate_filenum last dir/file checks
* dwarf2dbg.c (allocate_filenum) Correct use of last_used_dir_len.
2021-09-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28149, debug info with wrong file association
Fixes segfaults when building aarch64-linux kernel, due to only doing
part of the work necessary when allocating file numbers late. I'd
missed looping over subsegments, which resulted in some u.filename
entries left around and later interpreted as u.view.
PR 28149
* dwarf2dbg.c (purge_generated_debug): Iterate over subsegs too.
(dwarf2_finish): Call do_allocate_filenum for all subsegs too,
in a separate loop before subsegs are chained.
2021-09-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Move eelf_mipsel_haiki.c to ALL_64_EMULATION_SOURCES
--enable-targets=all on a 32-bit host results in a link failure with
undefined references due to elfxx-mips.c not being compiled. This
patch fixes that by putting eelf_mipsel_haiki.c in the correct
EMULATION_SOURCES Makefile variable. I've also added a bunch of
missing file dependencies and sorted a few things so that it's easier
to verify dependencies are present.
* Makfile.am: Add missing haiku dependencies, sort.
(ALL_EMULATION_SOURCES): Sort. Move eelf_mipsel_haiku.c to..
(ALL_64_EMULATION_SOURCES): ..here. Sort.
* Makfile.in: Regenerate.
2021-09-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Don't set version info on unversioned symbols
Don't set version info on unversioned symbols when seeing a hidden
versioned symbol after an unversioned definition and the default
versioned symbol.
bfd/
PR ld/28348
* elflink.c (elf_link_add_object_symbols): Don't set version info
on unversioned symbols.
ld/
PR ld/28348
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28348.rd: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28348.t: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28348a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28348b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28348c.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Run PR ld/28348 tests.
2021-09-19 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gdb: manual: update @inforef to @xref
The @inforef command is deprecated, and @xref does the samething.
Also had to update the text capitalization to match current manual.
Verified that info & HTML links work.
2021-09-19 Weimin Pan <weimin.pan@oracle.com>
CTF: multi-CU and archive support
Now gdb is capable of debugging executable, which consists of multiple
compilation units (CUs) with the CTF debug info. An executable could
potentially have one or more archives, which, in CTF context, contain
conflicting types.
all changes were made in ctfread.c in which elfctf_build_psymtabs was
modified to handle archives, via the ctf archive iterator and its callback
build_ctf_archive_member and scan_partial_symbols was modified to scan
archives, which are treated as subfiles, to build the psymtabs.
Also changes were made to handle CTF's data object section and function
info section which now share the same format of their contents - an array
of type IDs. New functions ctf_psymtab_add_stt_entries, which is called by
ctf_psymtab_add_stt_obj and ctf_psymtab_add_stt_func, and add_stt_entries,
which is called by add_stt_obj and add_stt_func when setting up psymtabs
and full symtab, respectively.
2021-09-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.server/server-kill.exp with -m32
When running test-case gdb.server/server-kill.exp with target board unix/-m32,
I run into:
...
0xf7fd6b20 in _start () from /lib/ld-linux.so.2^M
(gdb) Executing on target: kill -9 13082 (timeout = 300)
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP kill -9 13082^M
bt^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.server/server-kill.exp: kill_pid_of=server: test_unwind_syms: bt
...
The test-case expects the backtrace command to trigger remote communication,
which then should result in a "Remote connection closed" or similar.
However, no remote communication is triggered, because we hit the "Check that
this frame is unwindable" case in get_prev_frame_always_1.
We don't hit this problem in the kill_pid_of=inferior case, because there we
run to main before doing the backtrace.
Fix this by doing the same in the kill_pid_of=server case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/ada] Handle artificial local symbols
With current master and gcc 7.5.0/8.5.0, we have this timeout:
...
(gdb) print s^M
Multiple matches for s^M
[0] cancel^M
[1] s at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/interface/foo.adb:20^M
[2] s at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/interface/foo.adb:?^M
> FAIL: gdb.ada/interface.exp: print s (timeout)
...
[ The FAIL doesn't reproduce with gcc 9.3.1. This difference in
behaviour bisects to gcc commit d70ba0c10de.
The FAIL with earlier gcc bisects to gdb commit ba8694b650b. ]
The FAIL is caused by gcc generating this debug info describing a named
artificial variable:
...
<2><1204>: Abbrev Number: 31 (DW_TAG_variable)
<1205> DW_AT_name : s.14
<1209> DW_AT_type : <0x1213>
<120d> DW_AT_artificial : 1
<120d> DW_AT_location : 5 byte block: 91 e0 7d 23 18 \
(DW_OP_fbreg: -288; DW_OP_plus_uconst: 24)
...
An easy way to fix this would be to simply not put named artificial variables
into the symbol table. However, that causes regressions for Ada. It relies
on being able to get the value from such variables, using a named reference.
Fix this instead by marking the symbol as artificial, and:
- ignoring such symbols in ada_resolve_variable, which fixes the FAIL
- ignoring such ada symbols in do_print_variable_and_value, which prevents
them from showing up in "info locals"
Note that a fix for the latter was submitted here (
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2008-January/054994.html ), and
this patch borrows from it.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28180
2021-09-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28149 part 2, purge generated line info
Mixing compiler generated line info with gas generated line info is
generally just confusing. Also .loc directives with non-zero view
fields might reference a previous .loc. It becomes a little more
tricky to locate that previous .loc if there might be gas generated
line info present too. Mind you, we turn off gas generation of line
info on seeing compiler generated line info, so any reference back
won't hit gas generated line info. At least, if the view info is
sane. Unfortunately, gas needs to handle mangled source.
PR 28149
* dwarf2dbg.c (purge_generated_debug): New function.
(dwarf2_directive_filename): Call the above.
(out_debug_line): Don't segfault after purging.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf2-line-4.d: Update expected output.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf4-line-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-2.d: Likewise.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28149, debug info with wrong file association
gcc-11 and gcc-12 pass -gdwarf-5 to gas, in order to prime gas for
DWARF 5 level debug info. Unfortunately it seems there are cases
where the compiler does not emit a .file or .loc dwarf debug directive
before any machine instructions. (Note that the .file directive
typically emitted as the first line of assembly output doesn't count as
a dwarf debug directive. The dwarf .file has a file number before the
file name string.)
This patch delays allocation of file numbers for gas generated line
debug info until the end of assembly, thus avoiding any clashes with
compiler generated file numbers. Two fixes for test case source are
necessary; A .loc can't use a file number that hasn't already been
specified with .file.
A followup patch will remove all the gas generated line info on
seeing a .file directive.
PR 28149
* dwarf2dbg.c (num_of_auto_assigned): Delete.
(current): Update initialisation.
(set_or_check_view): Replace all accesses to view with u.view.
(dwarf2_consume_line_info): Likewise.
(dwarf2_directive_loc): Likewise. Assert that we aren't generating
line info.
(dwarf2_gen_line_info_1): Don't call set_or_check_view on
gas generated line entries.
(dwarf2_gen_line_info): Set and track filenames for gas generated
line entries. Simplify generation of labels.
(get_directory_table_entry): Use filename_cmp when comparing dirs.
(do_allocate_filenum): New function.
(dwarf2_where): Set u.filename and filenum to -1 for gas generated
line entries.
(dwarf2_directive_filename): Remove num_of_auto_assigned handling.
(process_entries): Update view field access. Call
do_allocate_filenum.
* dwarf2dbg.h (struct dwarf2_line_info): Add filename field in
union aliasing view.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf2-line-3.s: Add .file directive.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf2-line-4.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf2-line-4.d: Update expected output.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf4-line-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-2.d: Likewise.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] PowerPC64 support for sym+addend GOT entries
Pass addends to all the GOT handling functions, plus remove some
extraneous asserts.
PR 28192
* powerpc.cc (Output_data_got_powerpc): Add addend parameter to
all methods creating got entries.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::local): Pass reloc addend to got handling
functions, and when creating dynamic got relocations.
(Target_powerpc::Scan::global): Likewise.
(Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Likewise. Remove extraneous
assertions.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Got_entry::write addends
This takes care of writing out GOT entries with addends. The local
symbol case was already largely handled, except for passing the addend
to tls_offset_for_local which might need the addend in a
local_got_offset call. That's needed also in tls_offset_for_global.
I'm assuming here that GOT entries for function symbols won't ever
have addends, and in particular that a GOT entry referencing PLT call
stub code won't want an offset into the code.
PR 28192
* output.cc (Output_data_got::Got_entry::write): Include addend
in global symbol value. Pass addend to tls_offset_for_*.
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::do_tls_offset_for_local): Handle addend.
(Target_powerpc::do_tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
* s390.cc (Target_s390::do_tls_offset_for_local): Likewise.
(Target_s390::do_tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
* target.h (Target::tls_offset_for_local): Add addend param.
(Target::tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
(Target::do_tls_offset_for_local): Likewise.
(Target::do_tls_offset_for_global): Likewise.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Output_data_got create entry method addends
This patch makes all the Output_data_got methods that create new
entries accept an optional addend.
PR 28192
* output.h (Output_data_got::add_global): Add optional addend
parameter. Update comment. Delete overload without addend.
(Output_data_got::add_global_plt): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_global_tls): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_global_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_global_pair_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_plt): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_tls): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_tls_pair): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::reserve_local): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::reserve_global): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::Got_entry): Include addend in global sym
constructor. Delete local sym constructor without addend.
* output.cc (Output_data_got::add_global): Add addend param,
pass to got handling methods.
(Output_data_got::add_global_plt): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_global_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_global_pair_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_plt): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_tls_pair): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::reserve_local): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::reserve_global): Likewise.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Output_data_got tidy
Some Output_data_got methods already have support for addends, but
were implemented as separate methods. This removes unnecessary code
duplication.
Relobj::local_has_got_offset and others there get a similar treatment.
Comments are removed since it should be obvious without a comment, and
the existing comments are not precisely what the code does. For
example, a local_has_got_offset call without an addend does not return
whether the local symbol has *a* GOT offset of type GOT_TYPE, it
returns whether there is a GOT entry of type GOT_TYPE for the symbol
with addend of zero.
PR 28192
* output.h (Output_data_got::add_local): Make addend optional.
(Output_data_got::add_local_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_pair_with_rel): Likewise.
* output.cc (Output_data_got::add_local): Delete overload
without addend.
(Output_data_got::add_local_with_rel): Likewise.
(Output_data_got::add_local_pair_with_rel): Likewise.
* object.h (Relobj::local_has_got_offset): Make addend optional.
Delete overload without addend later. Update comment.
(Relobj::local_got_offset): Likewise.
(Relobj::set_local_got_offset): Likewise.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Remove addend from Local_got_entry_key
This patch removes the addend from Local_got_entry_key, which is
unnecessary now that Got_offset_list has an addend. Note that it
might be advantageous to keep the addend in Local_got_entry_key when
linking objects containing a large number of section_sym+addend@got
relocations. I opted to save some memory by removing the field but
left the class there in case we might need to restore {sym,addend}
lookup. That's also why this change is split out from the
Got_offset_list change.
PR 28192
* object.h (Local_got_entry_key): Delete addend_ field.
Adjust constructor and methods to suit.
* object.cc (Sized_relobj::do_for_all_local_got_entries):
Update key.
2021-09-17 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] Got_offset_list: addend field
This is the first in a series of patches aimed at supporting GOT
entries against symbol plus addend generally for PowerPC64 rather than
just section symbol plus addend as gold has currently.
This patch adds an addend field to Got_offset_list, so that both local
and global symbols can have GOT entries with addend.
PR 28192
* object.h (Got_offset_list): Add addend_ field, init in both
constructors. Adjust all accessors to suit.
(Sized_relobj::do_local_has_got_offset): Adjust to suit.
(Sized_relobj::do_local_got_offset): Likewise.
(Sized_relobj::do_set_local_got_offset): Likewise.
* symtab.h (Symbol::has_got_offset): Add optional addend param.
(Symbol::got_offset, Symbol::set_got_offset): Likewise.
* incremental.cc (Local_got_offset_visitor::visit): Add unused
uint64_t parameter with FIXME.
(Global_got_offset_visitor::visit): Add unused uint64_t parameter.
2021-09-17 Henry Castro <hcvcastro@gmail.com>
Fix segfault when running ia16-elf-gdb
"A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable."
Segmentation fault
2021-09-17 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Merged extension string tables and their version tables into one.
There are two main reasons for this patch,
* In the past we had two extension tables, one is used to record all
supported extensions in bfd/elfxx-riscv.c, another is used to get the
default extension versions in gas/config/tc-riscv.c. It is hard to
maintain lots of tables in different files, but in fact we can merge
them into just one table. Therefore, we now define many riscv_supported_std*
tables, which record names and versions for all supported extensions.
We not only use these tables to initialize the riscv_ext_order, but
also use them to get the default versions of extensions, and decide if
the extensions should be enbaled by default.
* We add a new filed `default_enable' for the riscv_supported_std* tables,
to decide if the extension should be enabled by default. For now if the
`default_enable' field of the extension is set to EXT_DEFAULT, then we
should enable the extension when the -march and elf architecture attributes
are not set. In the future, I suppose the `default_enable' can be set
to lots of EXT_<VENDOR>, each vendor can decide to open which extensions,
when the target triple of vendor is chosen.
The elf/linux regression tests of riscv-gnu-toolchain are passed.
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (cpu-riscv.h): Removed sine it is included in
bfd/elfxx-riscv.h.
(riscv_merge_std_ext): Updated since the field of rpe is changed.
* elfxx-riscv.c (cpu-riscv.h): Removed.
(riscv_implicit_subsets): Added implicit extensions for g.
(struct riscv_supported_ext): Used to be riscv_ext_version. Moved
from gas/config/tc-riscv.c, and added new field `default_enable' to
decide if the extension should be enabled by default.
(EXT_DEFAULT): Defined for `default_enable' field.
(riscv_supported_std_ext): It used to return the supported standard
architecture string, but now we move ext_version_table from
gas/config/tc-riscv.c to here, and rename it to riscv_supported_std_ext.
Currently we not only use the table to initialize riscv_ext_order, but
also get the default versions of extensions, and decide if the extensions
should be enbaled by default.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Likewise, but is used for z* extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_s_ext): Likewise, but is used for s* extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_h_ext): Likewise, but is used for h* extensions.
(riscv_supported_std_zxm_ext): Likewise, but is used for zxm* extensions.
(riscv_all_supported_ext): Includes all supported extension tables.
(riscv_known_prefixed_ext): Updated.
(riscv_valid_prefixed_ext): Updated.
(riscv_init_ext_order): Init the riscv_ext_order table according to
riscv_supported_std_ext.
(riscv_get_default_ext_version): Moved from gas/config/tc-riscv.c.
Get the versions of extensions from riscv_supported_std* tables.
(riscv_parse_add_subset): Updated.
(riscv_parse_std_ext): Updated.
(riscv_set_default_arch): Set the default subset list according to
the default_enable field of riscv_supported_*ext tables.
(riscv_parse_subset): If the input ARCH is NULL, then we call
riscv_set_default_arch to set the default subset list.
* elfxx-riscv.h (cpu-riscv.h): Included.
(riscv_parse_subset_t): Removed get_default_version field, and added
isa_spec field to replace it.
(extern riscv_supported_std_ext): Removed.
gas/
* (bfd/cpu-riscv.h): Removed.
(struct riscv_ext_version): Renamed and moved to bfd/elfxx-riscv.c.
(ext_version_table): Likewise.
(riscv_get_default_ext_version): Likewise.
(ext_version_hash): Removed.
(init_ext_version_hash): Removed.
(riscv_set_arch): Updated since the field of rps is changed. Besides,
report error when the architecture string is empty.
(riscv_after_parse_args): Updated.
2021-09-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-16 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix interrupted sleep in multi-threaded test-cases
When running test-case gdb.threads/continue-pending-status.exp with native, I
have:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
PASS: gdb.threads/continue-pending-status.exp: attempt 0: continue for ctrl-c
^C^M
Thread 1 "continue-pendin" received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.^M
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7fc4740 (LWP 1276)]^M
0x00007ffff758e4c0 in __GI___nanosleep () at nanosleep.c:27^M
27 return SYSCALL_CANCEL (nanosleep, requested_time, remaining);^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/continue-pending-status.exp: attempt 0: caught interrupt
...
but with target board unix/-m32, I run into:
...
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
PASS: gdb.threads/continue-pending-status.exp: attempt 0: continue for ctrl-c
[Thread 0xf74aeb40 (LWP 31957) exited]^M
[Thread 0xf7cafb40 (LWP 31956) exited]^M
[Inferior 1 (process 31952) exited normally]^M
(gdb) Quit^M
...
The problem is that the sleep (300) call at the end of main is interrupted,
which causes the inferior to exit before the ctrl-c can be send.
This problem is described at "Interrupted System Calls" in the docs, and the
suggested solution (using a sleep loop) indeed fixes the problem.
Fix this instead using the more prevalent:
...
alarm (300);
...
while (1) sleep (1);
...
which is roughly equivalent because the sleep is called at the end of main,
but slightly better because it guards against hangs from the start rather than
from the end of main.
Likewise in gdb.base/watch_thread_num.exp.
Likewise in gdb.btrace/enable-running.exp, but use the sleep loop there,
because the sleep is not called at the end of main.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-16 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gdb: manual: fix werrors typo
2021-09-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use function_range in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp
When I run test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp with gcc, we have:
...
(gdb) break hello^M
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4004c0: file dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello.c, line 24.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp: break hello
...
but with clang, I run into:
...
(gdb) break hello^M
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4004e4^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp: break hello
...
The problem is that the CU and function both have an empty address range:
...
<0><d2>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_compile_unit)
<108> DW_AT_name : dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello.c
<123> DW_AT_low_pc : 0x4004e0
<127> DW_AT_high_pc : 0x4004e0
<1><12f>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
<131> DW_AT_name : hello
<13a> DW_AT_low_pc : 0x4004e0
<13e> DW_AT_high_pc : 0x4004e0
...
The address ranges are set like this in dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello-dbg.S:
...
.4byte .hello_start /* DW_AT_low_pc */
.4byte .hello_end /* DW_AT_high_pc */
...
where the labels refer to dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello.c:
...
extern int v;
asm (".hello_start: .globl .hello_start\n");
void
hello (void)
{
asm (".hello0: .globl .hello0\n");
v++;
asm (".hello1: .globl .hello1\n");
}
asm (".hello_end: .globl .hello_end\n");
...
Using asm labels in global scope is a known source of problems, as explained
in the comment of proc function_range in gdb/testsuite/lib/dwarf.exp.
Fix this by using function_range instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux with gcc and clang-7 and clang-12.
2021-09-15 Claudiu Zissulescu <claziss@synopsys.com>
arc: Fix got-weak linker test
Use regular expressions to fix the got-weak linker test.
ld/
* testsuite/got-weak.d: Update test.
2021-09-15 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
bfd: fix incorrect type used in sizeof
Noticed in passing that we used 'sizeof (char **)' when calculating
the size of a list of 'char *' pointers. Of course, this isn't really
going to make a difference anywhere, but we may as well be correct.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* archures.c (bfd_arch_list): Use 'char *' instead of 'char **'
when calculating space for a string list.
2021-09-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/doc] Fix typo in maint selftest entry
Fix typo "will by" -> "will be".
2021-09-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[bfd] Ensure unique printable names for bfd archs
Remove duplicate entry in bfd_ft32_arch and bfd_rx_arch.
Fix printable name for bfd_mach_n1: "nh1" -> "n1".
PR 28336
* cpu-ft32.c (arch_info_struct): Remove "ft32" entry.
* cpu-rx.c (arch_info_struct): Remove "rx" entry.
* cpu-nds32.c (bfd_nds32_arch): Fix printable name for bfd_mach_n1
entry.
2021-09-15 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28328, dlltool ice
PR 28328
* archive.c (bfd_ar_hdr_from_filesystem): Don't use bfd_set_input_error
here, our caller will do that.
2021-09-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb_load_no_complaints with gnu-debuglink
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.exp with target
board gnu-debuglink I run into:
...
(gdb) file dw2-ranges-psym-warning^M
Reading symbols from dw2-ranges-psym-warning...^M
Reading symbols from .debug/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.debug...^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.exp: No complaints
...
Fix this by updating the regexp in gdb_load_no_complaints.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix function range handling in psymtabs
Consider the test-case from this patch.
We run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.exp: continue
bt^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x4004b6 in read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
read in psymtab, but not in symtab.)^M
^M
)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.exp: bt
...
This happens as follows.
The function foo:
...
<1><31>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
<33> DW_AT_name : foo
<37> DW_AT_ranges : 0x0
...
has these ranges:
...
00000000 00000000004004c1 00000000004004d2
00000000 00000000004004ae 00000000004004af
00000000 <End of list>
...
which have a hole at at [0x4004af,0x4004c1).
However, the address map of the partial symtabs incorrectly maps addresses
in the hole (such as 0x4004b6 in the backtrace) to the foo CU.
The address map of the full symbol table of the foo CU however does not
contain the addresses in the hole, which is what the warning / internal error
complains about.
Fix this by making sure that ranges of functions are read correctly.
The patch adds a bit to struct partial_die_info, in this hole (shown for
x86_64-linux):
...
/* 11: 7 | 4 */ unsigned int canonical_name : 1;
/* XXX 4-byte hole */
/* 16 | 8 */ const char *raw_name;
...
So there's no increase in size for 64-bit, but AFAIU there will be an increase
for 32-bit.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/28200
* dwarf2/read.c (struct partial_die_info): Add has_range_info and
range_offset field.
(add_partial_subprogram): Handle pdi->has_range_info.
(partial_die_info::read): Set pdi->has_range_info.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/28200
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning-main.c: New test.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.c: New test.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym-warning.exp: New file.
2021-09-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix CU list in .debug_names for dummy CUs
With current trunk and target board cc-with-debug-names we have:
...
(gdb) file dw2-ranges-psym^M
Reading symbols from dw2-ranges-psym...^M
warning: Section .debug_names in dw2-ranges-psym has abbreviation_table of \
size 1 vs. written as 28, ignoring .debug_names.^M
(gdb) set complaints 0^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym.exp: No complaints
...
The executable has 8 compilation units:
...
$ readelf -wi dw2-ranges-psym | grep @
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x0:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x2e:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xa5:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xc7:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xd2:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x145:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x150:
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x308:
...
of which the ones at 0xc7 and 0x145 are dummy CUs (that is, they do not
contain a single DIE), which were added by recent commit 5ef670d81fd
"[gdb/testsuite] Add dummy start and end CUs in dwarf assembly".
The .debug_names section contains this CU table:
...
[ 0] 0x0
[ 1] 0x2e
[ 2] 0xa5
[ 3] 0xd2
[ 4] 0x150
[ 5] 0x308
[ 6] 0x1
[ 7] 0x0
...
The last two entries are incorrect, and the entries for the dummy CUs are
missing.
The last two entries are incorrect because here in write_debug_names we write
the dimension of the CU list as 8:
...
/* comp_unit_count - The number of CUs in the CU list. */
header.append_uint (4, dwarf5_byte_order,
per_objfile->per_bfd->all_comp_units.size ()
- per_objfile->per_bfd->tu_stats.nr_tus);
...
while the actual dimension of the CU list is 6.
The discrepancy is caused by this code which skips the dummy CUs:
...
for (int i = 0; i < per_objfile->per_bfd->all_comp_units.size (); ++i)
{
...
/* CU of a shared file from 'dwz -m' may be unused by this main
file. It may be referenced from a local scope but in such
case it does not need to be present in .debug_names. */
if (psymtab == NULL)
continue;
...
because they have a null partial symtab.
We can fix this by writing the actual dimension of the CU list, but that still
leaves the dummy CUs out of the CU list. The purpose of having these is to
delimit the end of preceding CUs.
So, fix this by:
- removing the code that skips the dummy CUs (note that the same change
was done for .gdb_index in commit efba5c2319d '[gdb/symtab] Handle PU
without import in "save gdb-index"'.
- verifying that all units are represented in the CU/TU lists
- using the actual CU list size when writing the dimension of the CU list
(and likewise for the TU list).
Tested on x86_64-linux with native and target board cc-with-debug-names.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28261
2021-09-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Generate .debug_aranges in gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp with target
board cc-with-debug-names, all tests pass but we run into PR28261:
...
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: locexpr-data-member-location ^M
warning: Section .debug_names in locexpr-data-member-location-lib.so has \
abbreviation_table of size 1 vs. written as 37, ignoring .debug_names.^M
...
Using a patch that fixes PR28261, the warning is gone, but we run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp: step into foo
...
This is due a missing .debug_aranges contribution for the CU declared in
gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp.
Fix this by adding the missing .debug_aranges contribution.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-14 Claudiu Zissulescu <claziss@synopsys.com>
arc: Fix potential invalid pointer access when fixing got symbols.
When statically linking, it can arrive to an undefined weak symbol of
which its value cannot be determined. However, we are having pieces of
code which doesn't take this situation into account, leading to access
a structure which may not be initialized. Fix this situation and add a
test.
bfd/
xxxx-xx-xx Cupertino Miranda <cmiranda@synopsys.com>
Claudiu Zissulescu <claziss@synopsys.com>
* arc-got.h (arc_static_sym_data): New structure.
(get_static_sym_data): New function.
(relocate_fix_got_relocs_for_got_info): Move the computation fo
symbol value and section to above introduced function, and use
this new function.
ld/testsuite/
xxxx-xx-xx Claudiu Zissulescu <claziss@synopsys.com>
* ld-arc/got-weak.d: New file.
* ld-arc/got-weak.s: Likewise.
fix
2021-09-14 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: bfin: add support for SDL2
This probably should have been ported long ago, but better late than
never. We keep support for both versions for now since both projects
tend to have long lifetimes. Maybe consider dropping SDL1 in another
ten years.
2021-09-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove use of __CYGNUSCLIB__
I found a check of __CYGNUSCLIB__ in dbxread.c. I think this is dead
code. This patch removes it.
2021-09-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Check for valid test name
When running gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp I noticed that the test name
contains a newline:
...
PASS: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: : No such file or directory\.^M
: No such file or directory\.: [lindex $result 2] == 0
...
Check for this in ::CheckTestNames::check, such that we have a warning:
...
PASS: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: : No such file or directory\.^M
: No such file or directory\.: [lindex $result 2] == 0
WARNING: Newline in test name
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Fix exec check in gdb_print_insn_arm
With a gdb build with --enable-targets=all we run into a KFAIL:
...
KFAIL: gdb.gdb/unittest.exp: executable loaded: maintenance selftest, \
failed none (PRMS: gdb/27891)
...
due to:
...
Running selftest print_one_insn.^M
Self test failed: arch armv8.1-m.main: self-test failed at \
disasm-selftests.c:165^M
...
The test fails because we expect disassembling of one arm insn to consume 4
bytes and produce (using verbose = true in disasm-selftests.c):
...
arm mov r0, #0
...
but instead the disassembler uses thumb mode and only consumes 2
bytes and produces:
...
arm movs r0, r0
...
The failure does not show up in the "no executable loaded" variant because
this code in gdb_print_insn_arm isn't triggered:
...
if (current_program_space->exec_bfd () != NULL)
info->flags |= USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE;
...
and consequently we do this in print_insn:
...
if ((info->flags & USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE) == 0)
info->mach = bfd_mach_arm_unknown;
...
and don't set force_thumb to true in select_arm_features.
The code in gdb_print_insn_arm makes the assumption that the disassembly
architecture matches the exec architecture, which in this case is incorrect,
because the exec architecture is x86_64, and the disassembly architecture is
armv8.1-m.main. Fix that by explicitly checking it:
...
if (current_program_space->exec_bfd () != NULL
&& (current_program_space->exec_bfd ()->arch_info
== gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (gdbarch)))
...
This fixes the print_one_insn failure, so remove the KFAIL.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27891
2021-09-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/tdep] Reset force_thumb in parse_arm_disassembler_options
With a gdb build with --enable-targets=all, we have 2 arch-specific failures
in selftest print_one_insn:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn" 2>&1 \
| grep "Self test failed: arch "
Self test failed: arch armv8.1-m.main: self-test failed at \
disasm-selftests.c:165
Self test failed: arch arm_any: self-test failed at disasm-selftests.c:165
$
...
During the first failed test, force_thumb is set to true, and remains so until
and during the second test, which causes the second failure.
Fix this by resetting force_thumb to false in parse_arm_disassembler_options,
such that we get just one failure:
...
$ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "maint selftest print_one_insn" 2>&1 \
| grep "Self test failed: arch "
Self test failed: arch armv8.1-m.main: self-test failed at \
disasm-selftests.c:165
$
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-13 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix no-Python build
A build without Python will currently fail, because
selftests::test_python uses gdb_python_initialized, which is only
conditionally defined.
This patch fixes the build by making test_python also be conditionally
defined. I chose this approach because the selftest will fail if
Python is not enabled, so it didn't seem useful to leave it defined.
2021-09-13 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Update the assembler insn testcase.
Since the 0x57 is preserved for the vadd.vv instruction in the integration
branch, remove it to make sure the testcase can work.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.d: Remove 0x57 since it is preserved
for vadd.vv instruction.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.s: Likewise.
2021-09-13 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
MIPS: don't use get_symbol_name() for section parsing. With s_change_section() later calling obj_elf_section(), it seems better to pre-parse the section name by the same function that will be used there. This way no differences in what is accepted will result.
gas * config/tc-mips.c (s_change_section): Use obj_elf_section_name to
parse the section name.
ia64: don't use get_symbol_name() for section parsing. With cross_section() later calling obj_elf_section(), it seems better to pre-parse the section name by the same function that will be used there. This way no differences in what is accepted will result.
gas * config/tc-ia64.c (cross_section): Use obj_elf_section_name to
parse the section name.
2021-09-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.gdb/selftest.exp
With a gdb build with CFLAGS "-O2 -g -flto=auto", I run into:
...
#7 gdb_main (args=0x7fffffffd220) at src/gdb/main.c:1368^M
#8 main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/gdb.c:32^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/selftest.exp: backtrace through signal handler
...
which means that this regexp in proc test_with_self fails:
...
-re "#0.*(read|poll).*in main \\(.*\\) at .*gdb\\.c.*$gdb_prompt $" {
...
The problem is that gdb_main has been inlined into main, and consequently the
backtrace uses:
...
#x <fn> ...
...
instead of
...
#x <address> in <fn> ...
...
Fix this by updating the regexp to not require "in" before " main".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Deprecate a.out support for NetBSD targets
* config.bfd: Correct m68-*-*bsd* obsolete target match.
2021-09-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix test name in gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp
When running gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp I noticed that the test name
contains a newline:
...
PASS: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: : No such file or directory\.^M
: No such file or directory\.: [lindex $result 2] == 0
...
The mistake is that I passed an output regexp argument to a parameter
interpreted as testname prefix. Fix this by passing a testname prefix
instead.
Add support for checking output, to be able to handle the output regexp
argument.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Set sysroot earlier in local-board.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp for native, it passes.
But with target board cc-with-debug-names, we run into (added missing double
quotes for clarity):
...
builtin_spawn $build/gdb/testsuite/../../gdb/gdb -nw -nx \
-data-directory $build/gdb/testsuite/../data-directory \
-iex "set height 0" -iex "set width 0" -ex "set sysroot" -batch ""^M
: No such file or directory.^M
PASS: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: \
: No such file or directory\.: [lindex $result 2] == 0
FAIL: gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: \
: No such file or directory\.: [lindex $result 3] == $expect_status
...
The difference between the passing and failing case is that with native we
have (leaving out set height/width for brevity):
...
$ gdb -batch ""; echo $?
: No such file or directory.
1
...
and with target board cc-with-debug-names:
...
$ gdb -ex "set sysroot" -batch ""; echo $?
: No such file or directory.
0
...
The difference is expected. GDB returns the exit status of the last executed
command. In the former case that's 'file ""', which fails. In the latter case,
that's 'set sysroot', which succeeds.
Fix this by setting sysroot using -iex instead of -ex in local-board.exp, such
that we have the expected:
...
$ gdb -iex "set sysroot" -batch ""; echo $?
: No such file or directory.
1
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-11 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: run: change help short option to -h
It's unclear why -H was picked over the more standard -h, but since
-h is still not used, just change -H to -h to match pretty much every
other tool in the sourceware tree.
2021-09-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Reimplement gdb.gdb/python-selftest.exp as unittest
The test-case gdb.gdb/python-selftest.exp:
- patches the gdb_python_initialized variable in gdb to 0
- checks that the output of a python command is "Python not initialized"
Reimplement gdb.gdb/python-selftest.exp as unittest, using:
- execute_command_to_string to capture the output
- try/catch to catch the "Python not initialized" exception.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/global-var-nested-by-dso.exp
Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/global-var-nested-by-dso.exp by naming commands more
uniquely.
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/skip-solib.exp
Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.base/skip-solib.exp by using with_test_prefix.
Also fix indentation style and long lines, remove outdated question/answer
bits, and use multi_line.
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix handling of nr_args < 3 in mi_gdb_test
The documentation of mi_gdb_test states that the command, pattern and message
arguments are mandatory:
...
# mi_gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN MESSAGE [IPATTERN] -- send a command to gdb;
# test the result.
...
However, this is not checked, and when mi_gdb_test is called with less than 3
arguments, it passes or fails silently.
Fix this by using the following semantics:
- if there are 1 or 2 arguments, use the command as the message.
- if there is 1 argument, use ".*" as the pattern.
- if there are no or too much arguments, error out.
Fix a PATH issue in gdb.mi/mi-logging.exp, introduced by using the command as
message. Fix a few other trivial-looking FAILs.
There are 11 less trivial-looking FAILs left in gdb.mi in test-cases:
- mi-nsmoribund.exp
- mi-breakpoint-changed.exp
- mi-break.exp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add string_list_to_regexp
A regexp pattern with escapes like this is hard to read:
...
set re "~\"\[$\]$decimal = 1\\\\n\"\r\n\\^done"
...
We can make it more readable by spacing out parts (which allows us to also use
the curly braces where that's convenient):
...
set re [list "~" {"} {[$]} $decimal " = 1" "\\\\" "n" {"} "\r\n" "\\^" "done"]
set re [join $re ""]
...
or by using string_to_regexp:
...
set re [list \
[string_to_regexp {~"$}] \
$decimal \
[string_to_regexp " = 1\\n\"\r\n^done"]]
set re [join $re ""]
...
Note: we have to avoid applying string_to_list to decimal, which is already a
regexp.
Add a proc string_list_to_regexp to make it easy to do both:
...
set re [list \
[string_list_to_regexp ~ {"} $] \
$decimal \
[string_list_to_regexp " = 1" \\ n {"} \r\n ^ done]]
...
Also add a test-case gdb.testsuite/string_to_regexp.exp.
2021-09-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle unrecognized command line option in gdb_compile_test
When running the gdb testsuite with gnatmake-4.8, I get many fails of the
following form:
...
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-fgnat-encodings=all'^M
gnatmake: "gdb.ada/O2_float_param/foo.adb" compilation error^M
compiler exited with status 1
compilation failed: gcc ... gdb.ada/O2_float_param/foo.adb
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-fgnat-encodings=all'
gnatmake: "gdb.ada/O2_float_param/foo.adb" compilation error
FAIL: gdb.ada/O2_float_param.exp: scenario=all: compilation foo.adb
...
Fix this by marking the test unsupported instead, such that we have:
...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.ada/O2_float_param.exp: scenario=all: compilation foo.adb \
(unsupported option '-fgnat-encodings=all')
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC, sanity check r_offset in relocate_section
* elf32-ppc.c (offset_in_range): New function.
(ppc_elf_vle_split16): Sanity check r_offset before accessing
section contents. Return status.
(ppc_elf_relocate_section): Sanity check r_offset before
accessing section contents. Don't segfault on NULL howto.
Re: gas: Use the directory name in .file 0
PR gas/28266
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-file0-2.s: Use %object rather than
@object, .4byte instead of .long, and .asciz instead of .string.
2021-09-10 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
etc: switch to automake
There's no content in here currently, so switching to automake is
pretty easy with a stub file.
etc: rename configure.in to configure.ac
The .in name has been deprecated for a long time in favor of .ac.
2021-09-10 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gas: Use the directory name in .file 0
DWARF5 allows .file 0 to take an optional directory name. Set the entry
0 of the directory table to the directory name in .file 0.
PR gas/28266
* dwarf2dbg.c (get_directory_table_entry): Add an argument for
the directory name in .file 0 and use it, instead of PWD.
(allocate_filenum): Pass NULL to get_directory_table_entry.
(allocate_filename_to_slot): Pass the incoming dirname to
get_directory_table_entry.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-file0-2.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-file0-2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Run dwarf-5-file0-2.
2021-09-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-09 Yoshinori Sato <ysato@users.sourceforge.jp>
gdb: Enable target rx-*-*linux.
I added rx-*-linux in binutils few yaers ago.
But missing this changes,
2021-09-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/coredump-filter-build-id.exp with older eu-unstrip
On openSUSE Leap 42.3 with eu-unstrip 0.158, we run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/coredump-filter-build-id.exp: save corefile
First line of eu-unstrip: \
0x400000+0x202000 f4ae8502bd6a14770182382316bc595e9dc6f08b@0x400284 - - [exe]
FAIL: gdb.base/coredump-filter-build-id.exp: gcore dumped mapping with build-id
...
The test expects an actual file name instead of '[exe]', but that only got
introduced with eu-unstrip 0.161. Before it printed '[exe]' or '[pie]'.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix various issues in gdb.mi/mi-sym-info.exp
I noticed this failure in gdb.mi/mi-sym-info.exp with gcc-4.8:
...
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-sym-info.exp: -symbol-info-functions --max-results 1 \
(unexpected output)
...
due to function f2 instead of f3 being listed.
AFAICT, this is caused by a difference in debug info:
...
$ readelf -wi outputs/gdb.mi/mi-sym-info/mi-sym-info1.o \
| egrep "DW_AT_name.*: f[1-3]"
<72> DW_AT_name : f1
<a1> DW_AT_name : f2
<d0> DW_AT_name : f3
...
vs:
...
$ readelf -wi outputs/gdb.mi/mi-sym-info/mi-sym-info1.o \
| egrep "DW_AT_name.*: f[1-3]"
<f4> DW_AT_name : f3
<123> DW_AT_name : f2
<152> DW_AT_name : f1
...
and the command documentation does not mention an imposed order, so fix this
by allowing f2 as well.
Doing this fix, it made sense to do a refactoring of adding f2_re and f3_re
variables, in order to write (?:$f2_re|$f3_re), and I applied the same pattern
overall.
Furthermore, I found a silent FAIL due to calling mi_gdb_proc with 2 args, fix
by updating the regexp.
Then I ran with clang and found another FAIL, fix by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux with gcc-4.8.5, gcc-7.5.0, gcc-11.2.1, clang-7.0.1 and
clang-12.0.1.
2021-09-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Reimplement gdb.gdb/complaints.exp as unittest
When building gdb with "-Wall -O2 -g -flto=auto", I run into:
...
(gdb) call clear_complaints()^M
No symbol "clear_complaints" in current context.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/complaints.exp: clear complaints
...
The problem is that lto has optimized away the clear_complaints function
and consequently the selftest doesn't work.
Fix this by reimplementing the selftest as a unit test.
Factor out two new functions:
- void
execute_fn_to_ui_file (struct ui_file *file, std::function<void(void)> fn);
- std::string
execute_fn_to_string (std::function<void(void)> fn, bool term_out);
and use the latter to capture the complaints output.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-09 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: remove all uses of Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER
Python 2 has a bit flag Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER which can be passed as
part of the tp_flags field when defining a new object type. This flag
is not defined in Python 3 and so we define it to 0 in
python-internal.h (when IS_PY3K is defined).
The meaning of this flag is that the object has the fields tp_iter and
tp_iternext. Note the use of "has" here, the flag says nothing about
the values in those fields, just that the type object has the fields.
In early versions of Python 2 these fields were no part of the
PyTypeObject struct, they were added in version 2.2 (see
https://docs.python.org/release/2.3/api/type-structs.html). And so,
there could be a some code compiled out there which has a PyTypeObject
structure within it that doesn't even have the tp_iter and tp_iternext
fields, attempting to access these fields would be undefined
behaviour.
And so Python added the Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER flag. If the flag is
present then Python is free to access the tp_iter and tp_iternext
fields.
If we consider GDB then we always assume that the tp_iter and
tp_iternext fields are part of PyTypeObject. If someone was crazy
enough to try and compile GDB against Python 2.1 then we'd get lots of
build errors saying that we were passing too many fields when
initializing PyTypeObject structures. And so, I claim, we can be sure
that GDB will always be compiled with a version of Python that has the
tp_iter and tp_iternext fields in PyTypeObject.
Next we can look at the Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT flag. In Python 2, each
time additional fields are added to PyTypeObject a new Py_TPFLAGS_*
flag would be defined to indicate whether those flags are present or
not. And, those new flags would be added to Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT. And
so, in the latest version of Python 2 the Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT flag
includes Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER (see
https://docs.python.org/2.7/c-api/typeobj.html).
In GDB we pass Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT as part of the tp_flags for all
objects we define.
And so, in this commit, I propose to remove all uses of
Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER from GDB, it's simply not needed.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: accept -EB/-EL short options
Many GNU tools accept -EB/-EL as short options for selecting big &
little endian modes. While the sim has an -E option, it requires
spelling out "big" and "little". Adding support for -EB & -EL is
thus quite trivial, so lets round it out to be less annoying.
sim: ppc: drop support for std-config.h overrides
Only the ppc arch supports this kind of source file override logic.
All the others expose knobs via configure flags, and for some of
these, the ppc code does as well. For others, it doesn't make sense
to ever change them. Since it's unlikely anyone is using this, drop
it all to simplify the code (and to get us a little closer to the
common sim code).
sim: ppc: enable use of gnulib
All other sim arches are using this now, so finish up the logic in
the ppc arch to enable gnulib usage here too.
sim: drop old O_NDELAY & FNBLOCK support
We use these older names inconsistently in the sim codebase, and time
has moved on long ago, so drop support for these non-standard names.
POSIX provides O_NONBLOCK for us, so use it everywhere.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: dv-sockser: enable for mingw targets too
We have enough functionality from gnulib now to build sockser on
all platforms.
Non-blocking I/O is supported when F_GETFL/F_SETFL are unavailable,
but we can address that in a follow up commit. This mirrors what
is done in other places in the sim already.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: cgen: workaround Windows VOID define
The cgen framework provides a "VOID" type for code to use, but this
defines ends up conflicting with the standard Windows VOID define.
Since they actually define to the same thing ("void"), undef it here
to fix the Windows build.
We might want to reconsider the need for "VOID" in cgen, but that
will take larger discussion & coordination with the cgen project.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: dv-sockser: move sim-main.h include after system includes
The sim-main.h header is a bit of a dumping ground. Every arch can
(and many do) define all sorts of weird & common names that end up
conflicting with system headers. So including it before the system
headers sets us up for pain. v850 is a good example of this -- when
building for mingw, we see weird failures:
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc ... -c -o dv-sockser.o ../../../../sim/v850/../common/dv-sockser.c
In file included from ../../../../sim/v850/sim-main.h:11,
from ../../../../sim/v850/../common/dv-sockser.c:24:
../../../../sim/v850/../common/sim-base.h:97:32: error: expected ')' before '->' token
97 | # define STATE_CPU(sd, n) ((sd)->cpu[0])
| ^~
While gcc is unhelpful at first, running it through the preprocessor
by hand shows more details:
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc ... -E -dD -o dv-sockser.i ../../../../sim/v850/../common/dv-sockser.c
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc -c dv-sockser.i
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/minwindef.h:163,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windef.h:9,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windows.h:69,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winsock2.h:23,
from ../../gnulib/import/sys/socket.h:684,
from ../../gnulib/import/netinet/in.h:43,
from ../../../../sim/v850/../common/dv-sockser.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winnt.h:4803:25: error: expected ')' before '->' token
4803 | DWORD State;
| ^
| )
This is because v850 sets up this common name:
All of this needs cleaning up someday, but since the dv-sockser code
definitely should be fixed in this way, lets do that now and unblock
the v850 code.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: mips: delete unused PSIZE define
It's unclear what this define is for as it appears to be unused, and
has never been used in the history of the mips sim. Delete it to tidy
up, and to fix build errors for Windows targets that have a standard
"PSIZE" struct in their system headers. This doesn't show up yet as
most sim files don't include many system headers, but enabling sockser
code for mingw uncovers the conflict.
Unfortunately the error produced by gcc is inscrutable, but running
it through the preprocessor manually manages to provide a pointer to
the underlying issue.
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc ... -c -o dv-sockser.o ../../../../sim/mips/../common/dv-sockser.c
<command-line>: error: expected identifier or '(' before numeric constant
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windows.h:71,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winsock2.h:23,
from ../../gnulib/import/sys/socket.h:684,
from ../../gnulib/import/netinet/in.h:43,
from ../../../../sim/mips/../common/dv-sockser.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/wingdi.h:2934:59: error: unknown type name 'LPSIZE'; did you mean 'LPSIZEL'?
2934 | WINGDIAPI WINBOOL WINAPI GetAspectRatioFilterEx(HDC hdc,LPSIZE lpsize);
| ^~~~~~
| LPSIZEL
...
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc ... -E -dD -o dv-sockser.i ../../../../sim/mips/../common/dv-sockser.c
$ i686-w64-mingw32-gcc -c dv-sockser.i
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windows.h:69,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winsock2.h:23,
from ../../gnulib/import/sys/socket.h:684,
from ../../gnulib/import/netinet/in.h:43,
from ../../../../sim/mips/../common/dv-sockser.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windef.h:104:9: error: expected identifier or '(' before numeric constant
104 | } SIZE,*PSIZE,*LPSIZE;
| ^~
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: switch to common warning flags
Now that the ppc code has been cleaned up enough to use the same set
of warning flags as the common code, delete the ppc-specific configure
logic so we can leverage what the common code already defined for us.
2021-09-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
sim: ppc: enable -Wpointer-sign warnings
When compiling with --enable-werror and CFLAGS="-O0 -g -Wall", we run into:
...
src/sim/ppc/hw_memory.c: In function 'hw_memory_init_address':
src/sim/ppc/hw_memory.c:204:7: error: pointer targets in passing argument 4 \
of 'device_find_integer_array_property' differ in signedness \
[-Werror=pointer-sign]
&new_chunk->size);
^
...
Fix these by adding an explicit pointer cast. It's a bit ugly to use APIs
based on signed integers to read out unsigned values, but in practice, this
is par for the course in the ppc code.
We already use signed APIs and assign the result to unsigned values a lot:
see how device_find_integer_property returns a signed integer (cell), but
then assign it to unsigned types. The array APIs are not used that often
which is why we don't see many warnings, and we disable warnings when we
assign signed integers to unsigned integers in general.
The dtc/libfdt project (which is the standard in other projects) processes
the fdt blob as a series of bytes without any type information. Typing is
left to the caller. They have core APIs that read/write bytes, and a few
helper functions to cast/convert those bytes to the right value (e.g. u32).
In this ppc sim code, the core APIs use signed integers, and the callers
convert to unsigned, usually implicitly.
We could add some core APIs to the ppc sim that deal with raw bytes and then
add some helpers to convert to the right type, but that seems like a lot of
lifting for what boils down to a cast, and is effectively equivalent to all
the implicit assignments we use elsewhere. Long term, a lot of the ppc code
should either get converted to existing sim common code, or we should stand
up proper APIs in the common code first, or use standard libraries to do all
the processing (e.g. libfdt). Either way, this device.c code would all get
deleted, and callers (like these hw_*.c files) would get converted. Which
is also why we go with a cast rather new (but largely unused) APIs.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: enable -Wmissing-declarations & -Wmissing-prototypes
This aligns with common code which already uses this flag. We have
to add another local prototype to fix the failure, and add another
local decl for the SIM_DESC type. Unwinding these will require a
lot more work & conversions in the process, so going with the decl
for now unblocks the warning unification.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: microblaze: replace custom basic types with common ones
The basic "byte" type conflicts with Windows headers, and we already
have common types that provide the right sizes. So replace these with
the common ones to avoid issues.
CC dv-sockser.o
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/wtypes.h:8,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winscard.h:10,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/windows.h:97,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/winsock2.h:23,
from ../../gnulib/import/sys/socket.h:684,
from ../../gnulib/import/netinet/in.h:43,
from .../build/sim/../../../sim/microblaze/../common/dv-sockser.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/usr/include/rpcndr.h:63:25: error: conflicting types for 'byte'; have 'unsigned char'
63 | typedef unsigned char byte;
| ^~~~
In file included from .../buildsim/../../../sim/microblaze/sim-main.h:21,
from .../buildsim/../../../sim/microblaze/../common/dv-sockser.c:24:
.../buildsim/../../../sim/microblaze/microblaze.h:94:25: note: previous declaration of 'byte' with type 'byte' {aka 'char'}
94 | typedef char byte;
| ^~~~
make: *** [Makefile:513: dv-sockser.o] Error 1
2021-09-09 Jim Wilson <jimw@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Pretty print values formed with lui and addiw.
The disassembler has support to pretty print values created by an lui/addi
pair, but there is no support for addiw. There is also no support for
c.addi and c.addiw. This patch extends the pretty printing support to
handle these 3 instructions in addition to addi. Existing testcases serve
as tests for the new feature.
opcodes/
* riscv-dis.c (maybe_print_address): New arg wide. Sign extend when
wide is true.
(print_insn_args): Fix calls to maybe_print_address. Add checks for
c.addi, c.addiw, and addiw, and call maybe_print_address for them.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.d: Update for disassembler change.
* testsuite/gas/li32.d, testsuite/gas/li64.d: Likwise.
* testsuite/gas/lla64.d: Likewise.
2021-09-09 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: ppc: align format string settings with common code
This copies logic used in the common sim warning configure code to fix
build errors for mingw targets. Turning format warnings on triggers
a failure in the debug.c file, so apply a minor fix at the same time.
sim: ppc: drop unnecessary config includes
This file is compiled for the --host & --build system which leads to
including the configure generated config.h in both environments.
This obviously doesn't work when the two targets don't look alike at
all and can cause build failures here (e.g. a mingw host & a linux
build). Since we don't actually need any config settings in this
very simple file, drop the includes entirely.
2021-09-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-08 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gnulib: import various network functions
Some sim ports use these to provide networking functionality via the
dv-sockser module or via direct emulation for a few ports.
Gdb seems to build just fine still too.
2021-09-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix unit test build on Windows
Like Tom de Vries' earlier patch to fix the no-CXX_STD_THREAD case in
maint.c, this patch fixes a similar problem in
parallel-for-selftests.c. This fixes a build failure on Windows.
2021-09-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64, sanity check r_offset in relocate_section
This hardens the powerpc64 linker code transformations.
* elf64-ppc.c (is_8byte_reloc, offset_in_range): New functions.
(ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Sanity check r_offset before
accessing section contents for various code transformations.
2021-09-08 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC64: Avoid useless work on R_PPC64_TPREL34
_bfd_elf_ppc_at_tprel_transform doesn't handle prefix instructions,
and I'm not inclined to implement code editing for them.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Don't attempt tprel
transform for R_PPC64_TPREL34.
2021-09-08 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: make thread_suspend_state::stop_pc optional
Currently the stop_pc field of thread_suspect_state is a CORE_ADDR and
when we want to indicate that there is no stop_pc available we set
this field back to a special value.
There are actually two special values used, in post_create_inferior
the stop_pc is set to 0. This is a little unfortunate, there are
plenty of embedded targets where 0 is a valid pc value. The more
common special value for stop_pc though, is set in
thread_info::set_executing, where the value (~(CORE_ADDR) 0) is used.
This commit changes things so that the stop_pc is instead a
gdb::optional. We can now explicitly reset the field to an
uninitialised state, we also have asserts that we don't read the
stop_pc when its in an uninitialised state (both in
gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h, when compiling with _GLIBCXX_DEBUG
defined, and in thread_info::stop_pc).
One situation where a thread will not have a stop_pc value is when the
thread is stopped as a consequence of GDB being in all stop mode, and
some other thread stopped at an interesting event. When GDB brings
all the other threads to a stop those other threads will not have a
stop_pc set (thus avoiding an unnecessary read of the pc register).
Previously, when GDB passed through handle_one (in infrun.c) the
threads executing flag was set to false and the stop_pc field was left
unchanged, i.e. it would (previous) have been left as ~0.
Now, handle_one leaves the stop_pc with no value.
This caused a problem when we later try to set these threads running
again, in proceed() we compare the current pc with the cached stop_pc.
If the thread was stopped via handle_one then the stop_pc would have
been left as ~0, and the compare (in proceed) would (likely) fail.
Now however, this compare tries to read the stop_pc when it has no
value and this would trigger an assert.
To resolve this I've added thread_info::stop_pc_p() which returns true
if the thread has a cached stop_pc. We should only ever call
thread_info::stop_pc() if we know that there is a cached stop_pc,
however, this doesn't mean that every call to thread_info::stop_pc()
needs to be guarded with a call to thread_info::stop_pc_p(), in most
cases we know that the thread we are looking at stopped due to some
interesting event in that thread, and so, we know that the stop_pc is
valid.
After running the testsuite I've seen no other situations where
stop_pc is read uninitialised.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Fix build with undefined CXX_STD_THREAD
When building gdb on openSUSE Leap 42.3, we trigger the case that
CXX_STD_THREAD is undefined, and run into:
...
gdb/maint.c: In function 'void maintenance_show_worker_threads \
(ui_file*, int, cmd_list_element*, const char*)':
gdb/maint.c:877:14: error: 'gdb::thread_pool' has not been declared
gdb::thread_pool::g_thread_pool->thread_count ());
^
Makefile:1647: recipe for target 'maint.o' failed
make[1]: *** [maint.o] Error 1
...
Fix this by handling the undefined CXX_STD_THREAD case in
maintenance_show_worker_threads, such that we get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint show worker-thread"
The number of worker threads GDB can use is 0.
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28312
2021-09-08 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: update configure target list
Fix sorting of the list, and update the globs to match the list used
in gdb's configure script.
gdb: cris: enable sim integration
The sim side is already ready to go for cris, so wire it up.
gdb: aarch64: enable sim integration
The sim side is already ready to go for aarch64, so wire it up.
gdb: sim: consolidate configure settings
Moving all the sim settings to one section makes it easier to track,
and makes it easier to keep it aligned with the sim target tests.
The gdb logic was duplicating this when handling different OS targets
instead of having a single cpu check. Now it's more obvious that the
sim is tied to a cpu and not related to the OS.
2021-09-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-07 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove unused declaration from gdbserver/win32-low.h
I noticed that gdbserver/win32-low.h has an unused declaration. This
code was changed a while ago, but this declaration slipped through.
This patch removes it. Tested by rebuilding.
2021-09-07 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: make use of std::string in utils.c
Replace some of the manual string management (malloc/free) with
std::string when creating commands in utils.c.
Things are a little bit messy as, creating the prefix commands (using
add_basic_prefix_cmd and add_show_prefix_cmd), doesn't copy the doc
string, while creating the actual set/show commands (using
add_setshow_enum_cmd) does copy the doc string.
As a result, I have retained the use of xstrprintf when creating the
prefix command doc strings, but switched to using std::string when
creating the actual set/show commands.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-07 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Revert: [AArch64] MTE corefile support
bfd * elf.c (elfcore_make_memtag_note_section): New function.
(elfcore_grok_note): Handle NT_MEMTAG note types.
binutils* readelf.c (get_note_type): Handle NT_MEMTAG note types.
include * elf/common.h (NT_MEMTAG): New constant.
(NT_MEMTAG_TYPE_AARCH_MTE): New constant.
2021-09-07 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: use bool instead of int in struct internal_problem
Change struct internal_problem (gdb/utils.c) to use bool instead of
int, update the 3 static instances of this structure that we create to
use true/false instead of 1/0.
I've also updated the comments on struct internal_problem as the
existing comment doesn't seem to be referring to the structure, it
talks about returning something, which doesn't make sense in this
context.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-07 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: make thread_info::executing private
Rename thread_info::executing to thread_info::m_executing, and make it
private. Add a new get/set member functions, and convert GDB to make
use of these.
The only real change of interest in this patch is in thread.c where I
have deleted the helper function set_executing_thread, and now just
use the new set function thread_info::set_executing. However, the old
helper function set_executing_thread included some code to reset the
thread's stop_pc, so I moved this code into the new function
thread_info::set_executing. However, I don't believe there is
anywhere that this results in a change of behaviour, previously the
executing flag was always set true through a call to
set_executing_thread anyway.
2021-09-07 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix an illegal memory access triggered by an atempt to disassemble a corrupt xtensa binary.
PR 28305
* elf32-xtensa.c (elf_xtensa_do_reloc): Add check for put of range
reloc.
2021-09-07 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/python: new function to add values into GDB's history
The guile API has (history-append! <value>) to add values into GDB's
history list. There is currently no equivalent in the Python API.
This commit adds gdb.add_history(<value>) to the Python API, this
function takes <value> a gdb.Value (or anything that can be passed to
the constructor of gdb.Value), and adds the value it represents to
GDB's history list. The index of the newly added value is returned.
2021-09-07 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix illegal memory access triggered by an attempt to disassemble a corrupt RISC-V binary.
PR 28303
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_elf_add_sub_reloc): Add check for out of
range relocs.
2021-09-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle internal-error in gdb_unload
When reverting commit 5a20fadc841 and using gdb_unload instead of runto "bar"
to trigger the internal-error in test-case
gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp, we run into:
...
ERROR: couldn't unload file in $gdb (timeout).
...
and the test-case takes about 1 minute.
Fix this by handling internal-error in gdb_unload, such that we have:
...
ERROR: Couldn't unload file in $gdb (GDB internal error).
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (eof)
...
within 2 seconds.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28307, segfault in ppc64_elf_toc64_reloc
Adds missing bfd_reloc_offset_in_range checks to various relocation
special_functions.
PR 28307
* elf32-ppc.c (ppc_elf_addr16_ha_reloc): Range check reloc offset.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_ha_reloc, ppc64_elf_brtaken_reloc): Likewise.
(ppc64_elf_toc64_reloc, ppc64_elf_prefix_reloc): Likewise.
2021-09-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle internal-error in gdb_run_cmd
When reverting commit 5a20fadc841 the test-case
gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp fails like this:
...
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp: running to bar in runto \
(GDB internal error)
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (eof)
...
and takes 1 minute to run.
The long running time is caused by running into a timeout in gdb_run_cmd, at
this point:
...
(gdb) run ^M
The program being debugged has been started already.^M
Start it from the beginning? (y or n) y^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/gdbtypes.c:5583: internal-error: \
Unexpected type field location kind: 4^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,^M
further debugging may prove unreliable.^M
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
...
Fix this by detecting the internal-error in gdb_run_cmd. We don't handle it
in gdb_run_cmd, but stash the gdb output back into the buffer using
-notransfer, and let the caller proc runto deal with it.
After the fix, the test-case just takes 2 seconds.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-06 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: rename gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/riscv64-unwind-prologue-with-ld-lw.c
A previous commit added the
gdb.arch/riscv64-unwind-prologue-with-ld-lw.exp testcase, but one of its
associated file was named after a previous version of the test.
This commit fixes this and makes sure that all the files linked to this
testcase share the same prefix in the name.
Tested on riscv64 GNU/Linux.
2021-09-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Handle eof in gdb_internal_error_resync
Before commit 5a20fadc841 the test-case
gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp fails like this:
...
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp: running to bar in runto \
(GDB internal error)
ERROR: : spawn id exp9 not open
while executing
"expect {
-i exp9 -timeout 10
-re "Quit this debugging session\\? \\(y or n\\) $" {
send_gdb "n\n" answer
incr count
}
-re "Create ..."
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel $body" NONE : spawn id exp9 not open
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (timeout)
...
Fix the:
...
ERROR: : spawn id exp9 not open
...
by handling eof in gdb_internal_error_resync, such that we have instead:
...
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/locexpr-data-member-location.exp: running to bar in runto \
(GDB internal error)
ERROR: Could not resync from internal error (eof)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Remove some complaints.h includes
There are a few includes of complaints.h that aren't necessary. This
patch removes them. Tested by rebuilding.
2021-09-06 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix an illegal memory access triggered by disassembling corrupt s390x binaries.
PR 28304
* elfxx-score7.c (score_elf_gprel15_reloc): If there is no output bfd
treat the reloc as undefined.
Fix potential use on an uninitialised vairable in the MCore assembler.
Fix potential uninitialised variable in microblaze assembler code.
2021-09-06 Yinjun Zhang <yinjun.zhang@corigine.com>
Add a sanity check to the init_nfp6000_mecsr_sec() function in the NFP disassembler.
2021-09-06 Alexandra Hájková <ahajkova@redhat.com>
gdbtypes.c: Add the case for FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK
The case for FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK was missing for
switch TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND. Thas caused an internal-error
under some circumstances.
Fixes bug 28030.
2021-09-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Check avx support in gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.exp
On a machine on Open Build Service I'm running into a SIGILL for test-case
gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.exp:
...
Program received signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.^M
test_rip_vex2 () at gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.S:40^M
40 vmovsd ro_var(%rip),%xmm0^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.exp: vex2: \
continue to test_rip_vex2_end
...
The SIGILL happens when trying to execute the first avx instruction in the
executable.
I can't directly access the machine, but looking at the log for test-case
gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp, it seems that there's no avx support:
...
Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd6b8) at gdb.arch/i386-avx.c:68^M
68 if (have_avx ())^M
(gdb) print have_avx ()^M
$1 = 0^M
...
Fix this by:
- adding a gdb_caching_proc have_avx, similar to have_mpx, using the have_avx
function from gdb.arch/i386-avx.c
- using proc have_avx in both gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.exp
and gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp.
Tested on my x86_64-linux laptop with avx support, where both test-cases pass.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-09-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/26950
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-avx.c (main): Remove call to have_avx.
(have_avx): Move ...
* gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp (have_avx): ... here. New proc.
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step-avx.exp: Use have_avx.
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-avx.exp: Same.
2021-09-04 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gnulib: import sys_wait
A few sims use this to emulate process syscalls.
Gdb builds seem to still be fine.
2021-09-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Use CORE_ADDR as return type from x86_dr_low_get_addr
On a Windows build locally, watchpoints started failing. I tracked
this down to x86_dr_low_get_addr returning an 'unsigned long'... in
this particular build, this is a 32-bit type, but the inferior is a
64-bit program.
This patch fixes the problem by changing the return type. No other
change is required, because this matches the function pointer in
struct x86_dr_low_type.
2021-09-03 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
Test case reproducing PR28030 bug
The original reproducer for PR28030 required use of a specific
compiler version - gcc-c++-11.1.1-3.fc34 is mentioned in the PR,
though it seems probable that other gcc versions might also be able to
reproduce the bug as well. This commit introduces a test case which,
using the DWARF assembler, provides a reproducer which is independent
of the compiler version. (Well, it'll work with whatever compilers
the DWARF assembler works with.)
To the best of my knowledge, it's also the first test case which uses
the DWARF assembler to provide debug info for a shared object. That
being the case, I provided more than the usual commentary which should
allow this case to be used as a template when a combo shared
library / DWARF assembler test case is required in the future.
I provide some details regarding the bug in a comment near the
beginning of locexpr-dml.exp.
This problem was difficult to reproduce; I found myself constantly
referring to the backtrace while trying to figure out what (else) I
might be missing while trying to create a reproducer. Below is a
partial backtrace which I include for posterity.
#0 internal_error (
file=0xc50110 "/ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/gdbtypes.c", line=5575,
fmt=0xc520c0 "Unexpected type field location kind: %d")
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdbsupport/errors.cc:51
#1 0x00000000006ef0c5 in copy_type_recursive (objfile=0x1635930,
type=0x274c260, copied_types=0x30bb290)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/gdbtypes.c:5575
#2 0x00000000006ef382 in copy_type_recursive (objfile=0x1635930,
type=0x274ca10, copied_types=0x30bb290)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/gdbtypes.c:5602
#3 0x0000000000a7409a in preserve_one_value (value=0x24269f0,
objfile=0x1635930, copied_types=0x30bb290)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/value.c:2529
#4 0x000000000072012a in gdbscm_preserve_values (
extlang=0xc55720 <extension_language_guile>, objfile=0x1635930,
copied_types=0x30bb290)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/guile/scm-value.c:94
#5 0x00000000006a3f82 in preserve_ext_lang_values (objfile=0x1635930,
copied_types=0x30bb290)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/extension.c:568
#6 0x0000000000a7428d in preserve_values (objfile=0x1635930)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/value.c:2579
#7 0x000000000082d514 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x1635930,
__in_chrg=<optimized out>)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/objfiles.c:549
#8 0x0000000000831cc8 in std::_Sp_counted_ptr<objfile*, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_dispose (this=0x1654580)
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:348
#9 0x00000000004e6617 in std::_Sp_counted_base<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_release (this=0x1654580) at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:168
#10 0x00000000004e1d2f in std::__shared_count<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_count (this=0x190bb88, __in_chrg=<optimized out>)
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:705
#11 0x000000000082feee in std::__shared_ptr<objfile, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_ptr (this=0x190bb80, __in_chrg=<optimized out>)
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:1154
#12 0x000000000082ff0a in std::shared_ptr<objfile>::~shared_ptr (
this=0x190bb80, __in_chrg=<optimized out>)
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/shared_ptr.h:122
#13 0x000000000085ed7e in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (this=0x114bc00,
__p=0x190bb80) at /usr/include/c++/11/ext/new_allocator.h:168
#14 0x000000000085e88d in std::allocator_traits<std::allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (__a=...,
__p=0x190bb80) at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/alloc_traits.h:531
#15 0x000000000085e50c in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::_M_erase (this=0x114bc00, __position=
std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x1635930})
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/stl_list.h:1925
#16 0x000000000085df0e in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::erase (this=0x114bc00, __position=
std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x1635930})
at /usr/include/c++/11/bits/list.tcc:158
#17 0x000000000085c748 in program_space::remove_objfile (this=0x114bbc0,
objfile=0x1635930)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/progspace.c:210
#18 0x000000000082d3ae in objfile::unlink (this=0x1635930)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/objfiles.c:487
#19 0x000000000082e68c in objfile_purge_solibs ()
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/objfiles.c:875
#20 0x000000000092dd37 in no_shared_libraries (ignored=0x0, from_tty=1)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/solib.c:1236
#21 0x00000000009a37fe in target_pre_inferior (from_tty=1)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/target.c:2496
#22 0x00000000007454d6 in run_command_1 (args=0x0, from_tty=1,
run_how=RUN_NORMAL)
at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f34-pr28030/bld/../../worktree-pr28030/gdb/infcmd.c:437
I'll note a few points regarding this backtrace:
Frame #1 is where the internal error occurs. It's caused by an
unhandled case for FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK. The fix for this bug
adds support for this case.
Frame #22 - it's a partial backtrace - shows that GDB is attempting to
(re)run the program. You can see the exact command sequence that was
used for reproducing this problem in the PR (at
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28030), but in a
nutshell, after starting the program and advancing to the appropriate
source line, GDB was asked to step into libstdc++; a "finish" command
was issued, returning a value. The fact that a value was returned is
very important. GDB was then used to step back into libstdc++. A
breakpoint was set on a source line in the library after which a "run"
command was issued.
Frame #19 shows a call to objfile_purge_solibs. It's aptly named.
Frame #7 is a call to the destructor for one of the objfile solibs; it
turned out to be the one for libstdc++.
Frames #6 thru #3 show various value preservation frames. If you look
at preserve_values() in gdb/value.c, the value history is preserved
first, followed by internal variables, followed by values for the
extension languages (python and guile).
2021-09-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add untested case in gdb.gdb/complaints.exp
When building gdb with "-Wall -O2 -g -flto=auto", I run into:
...
(gdb) call clear_complaints()^M
No symbol "clear_complaints" in current context.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/complaints.exp: clear complaints
...
The problem is that lto has optimized away clear_complaints, and consequently
the selftests cannot run.
Fix this by:
- using info function to detect presence of clear_complaints
- handling the absence of clear_complaints by calling untested
...
(gdb) UNTESTED: gdb.gdb/complaints.exp: \
Cannot find clear_complaints, skipping test
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-09-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.gdb/complaints.exp: Use untested if clear_complaints cannot
be found.
2021-09-03 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
gdb: Enable finish command and inferior calls for _Float16 on amd64 and i386.
Values of type _Float16 and _Float16 _Complex can now be used on CPUs with
AVX512-FP16 support. Return values of those types are located in XMM0.
Compiler support for gcc and clang is in progress, see e.g.:
https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2021-July/574117.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_classify): Classify _Float16 and
_Float16 _Complex as AMD64_SSE.
* i386-tdep.c (i386_extract_return_value): Read _Float16 and
_Float16 _Complex from xmm0.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdb.arch/x86-avx512fp16-abi.c: New file.
* gdb.arch/x86-avx512fp16-abi.exp: New file.
2021-09-03 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
Add half support for AVX512 register view.
This adds support for the half datatype, FP16, to the AVX512 register printing.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* i386-tdep.c (i386_zmm_type) <v32_half>: New field.
(i386_ymm_type) <v16_half>: New field.
(i386_gdbarch_init): Add set_gdbarch_half_format.
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.xml: Add half type.
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.c: Regenerated.
* features/i386/64bit-sse.xml: Add half type.
* features/i386/64bit-sse.c: Regenerated.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdb.arch/x86-avx512fp16.c: New file.
* gdb.arch/x86-avx512fp16.exp: New file.
* lib/gdb.exp (skip_avx512fp16_tests): New function.
2021-09-03 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
gdb, i386: Enable AVX512-bfloat16 for i386 targets.
Values of type bfloat16 can also be used on 32-bit targets, which was missed
in the original enablement. This also adjusts the testcase to pass with
"unix/-m32", where only the lower 8 AVX registers are available.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* features/i386/32bit-sse.xml: Add bfloat16 type.
* features/i386/32bit-sse.c: Regenerated.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdb.arch/x86-avx512bf16.exp: Only use x/z/ymm 0-7.
2021-09-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add untested case in selftest_setup
When building gdb with "-Wall -O2 -g -flto=auto", I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: breakpoint in captured_main \
(got interactive prompt)
FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: run until breakpoint at captured_main
WARNING: Couldn't test self
...
and similar in gdb.gdb/selftest.exp.
The first FAIL in more detail:
...
(gdb) break captured_main^M
Function "captured_main" not defined.^M
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: breakpoint in captured_main \
(got interactive prompt)
...
The problem is that lto has optimized away the captured_main function
and consequently the selftests dependent on that cannot run.
Fix this by:
- using gdb_breakpoint to detect failure to set the breakpoint
- handling the failure to set a breakpoint by calling untested
- not emitting the warning if we've already got untested
such that we have:
...
(gdb) UNTESTED: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: Cannot set breakpoint at \
captured_main, skipping testcase.
...
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-09-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/selftest-support.exp: Emit untested when not being able to set
breakpoint.
2021-09-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ld testsuite tidy
Fixes a few issues:
1) If you use "-fsanitize=address,undefined" in CFLAGS, the Makefile
attempt to trim off -fsanitize options left us with ",undefined".
2) ld_compile adds CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET itself, no need to pass it.
3) CFLAGS might be needed linking bootstrap test.
* Makefile.am (CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET, CXXFLAGS_FOR_TARGET): Trim off
all -fsanitize=*.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/ld-bootstrap/bootstrap.exp: Use CFLAGS when linking.
* testsuite/ld-cdtest/cdtest.exp: Use CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET when
linking.
* testsuite/ld-auto-import/auto-import.exp: Don't pass
CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET to ld_compile.
* testsuite/ld-cygwin/exe-export.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/elfvsb.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfweak/elfweak.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-gc/gc.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-compile.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run2.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/plugin.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfcomm/elfcomm.exp: Likewise, and don't allow
nios2 testing to trash CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/crossref.exp: Don't pass options in
CC_FOR_TARGET, do so in CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET instead.
* testsuite/ld-srec/srec.exp: Likewise, and for CXX.
2021-09-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
CC_FOR_TARGET et al
The top level Makefile, the ld Makefile and others, define
CC_FOR_TARGET to be a compiler for the binutils target machine. This
is the compiler that should be used for almost all tests with C
source. There are _FOR_TARGET versions of CFLAGS, CXX, and CXXFLAGS
too. This was all supposed to work with the testsuite .exp files
using CC for the target compiler, and CC_FOR_HOST for the host
compiler, with the makefiles passing CC=$CC_FOR_TARGET and
CC_FOR_HOST=$CC to the runtest invocation.
One exception to the rule of using CC_FOR_TARGET is the native-only ld
bootstrap test, which uses the newly built ld to link a copy of
itself. Since the files being linked were created with the host
compiler, the boostrap test should use CC and CFLAGS, in case some
host compiler option provides needed libraries automatically.
However, bootstrap.exp used CC where it should have used CC_FOR_HOST.
I set about fixing that problem, then decided that playing games in
the makefiles with CC was a bad idea. Not only is it confusing, but
other dejagnu code knows about CC_FOR_TARGET. See dejagnu/target.exp.
So this patch gets rid of the makefile variable renaming and changes
all the .exp files to use the correct _FOR_TARGET variables.
CC_FOR_HOST and CFLAGS_FOR_HOST disappear. A followup patch will
correct bootstrap.exp to use CFLAGS, and a number of other things I
noticed.
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (run_dump_test): Use
CC_FOR_TARGET and CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET rather than CC and CFLAGS.
ld/
* Makefile.am (check-DEJAGNU): Don't set CC to CC_FOR_TARGET
and similar. Pass variables with unchanged names. Don't set
CC_FOR_HOST or CFLAGS_FOR_HOST.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Update default CC and similar.
(compiler_supports, plug_opt): Use CC_FOR_TARGET.
* testsuite/ld-cdtest/cdtest.exp: Replace all uses of CC with
CC_FOR_TARGET, and similarly for CFLAGS, CXX and CXXFLAGS.
* testsuite/ld-auto-import/auto-import.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-cygwin/exe-export.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dwarf.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfcomm/elfcomm.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/elfvsb.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfweak/elfweak.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-gc/gc.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-mn10300/mn10300.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-compile.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run2.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pie/pie.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/plugin.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/crossref.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-selective/selective.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-sh/sh.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-srec/srec.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-undefined/undefined.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-unique/unique.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/tls.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp: Likewise.
libctf/
* Makefile.am (check-DEJAGNU): Don't set CC to CC_FOR_TARGET.
Pass CC and CC_FOR_TARGET. Don't set CC_FOR_HOST.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Update default CC and similar.
* testsuite/lib/ctf-lib.exp (run_native_host_cmd): Use CC rather
than CC_FOR_HOST.
(run_lookup_test): Use CC_FOR_TARGET and CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET.
2021-09-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
pj: asan: out of bounds, ubsan: left shift of negative
* pj-dis.c: Include libiberty.h.
(print_insn_pj): Don't index op->arg past array bound. Don't
left shift negative int.
ubsan: alpha: member access within null pointer
* elf64-alpha.c (elf64_alpha_relax_with_lituse): Avoid UB.
ubsan: libctf: applying zero offset to null pointer
* ctf-open.c (init_symtab): Avoid ubsan error.
2021-09-03 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
haiku tidy
--enable-maintainer-mode showed a number of files needing to be
regenerated, and in the case of ld/Makefile.in that the file was
regenerated by hand. Nothing to see here really.
ld/
* Makefile.am (ALL_64_EMULATION_SOURCES): Sort haiku entry.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* po/BLD-POTFILES.in: Regenerate.
libctf/
* configure: Regenerate.
zlib/
* configure: Regenerate.
2021-09-03 Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
gold: --export-dynamic-symbol: don't imply -u
to match GNU ld.
gold/
* archive.cc (Library_base::should_include_member): Don't handle
--export-dynamic-symbol.
* symtab.cc (Symbol_table::do_add_undefined_symbols_from_command_line):
Likewise.
2021-09-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-02 Alexander von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Add support for the haiku operating system. These are the os support patches we have been grooming and maintaining for quite a few years over on git.haiku-os.org. All of these architectures are working and most have been stable for quite some time.
2021-09-02 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix the V850 assembler's generation of relocations for the st.b instruction.
PR 28292
gas * config/tc-v850.c (handle_lo16): Also accept
BFD_RELOC_V850_LO16_SPLIT_OFFSET.
* testsuite/gas/v850/split-lo16.s: Add extra line.
* testsuite/gas/v850/split-lo16.d: Update expected disassembly.
opcodes * v850-opc.c (D16): Use BFD_RELOC_V850_LO16_SPLIT_OFFSET in place
of BFD_RELOC_16.
2021-09-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX handling
.symtab_shndx section contents is an array, one entry for each symbol
in .symtab, present when the number of symbols exceeds a little less
than 64k. Since the mapping is 1-1 with symbols there is no need to
keep both dest_index and destshndx_index in elf_sym_strtab. Instead,
just make sure that the shndx pointers to the swap functions are kept
NULL when .symtab_shndx does not exist. Also, strtabcount in the
linker's elf hash table is incremented in lock-step with the output
symcount, so that can disappear too.
2021-09-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PTR_ADD and NPTR_ADD for bfd.h
This defines a couple of macros used to avoid ubsan complaints about
calculations involving NULL pointers. PTR_ADD should be used in the
case where it is known that the offset is always zero with a NULL
pointer, and you'd like to know if a non-zero offset is ever used.
NPTR_ADD should be rarely used, but is defined for cases where a
non-zero offset is expected and should be ignored if the pointer is
NULL.
bfd/
* bfd-in.h (PTR_ADD, NPTR_ADD): Define.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* elf-eh-frame.c (adjust_eh_frame_local_symbols): Avoid NULL
pointer calculations.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_strip_zero_sized_dynamic_sections): Likewise.
(bfd_elf_add_dt_needed_tag, elf_finalize_dynstr): Likewise.
(elf_link_add_object_symbols, elf_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
(bfd_elf_final_link, bfd_elf_gc_record_vtinherit): Likewise.
binutils/
* objdump.c (disassemble_section): Use PTR_ADD for rel_ppend.
2021-09-02 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
obstack.h __PTR_ALIGN vs. ubsan
Current ubsan complains on every use of __PTR_ALIGN (when ptrdiff_t is
as large as a pointer), due to making calculations relative to a NULL
pointer. This patch avoids the problem by extracting out and
simplifying __BPTR_ALIGN for the usual case. I've continued to use
ptrdiff_t here, where it might be better to throw away __BPTR_ALIGN
entirely and just assume uintptr_t exists.
* obstack.h (__PTR_ALIGN): Expand and simplify __BPTR_ALIGN
rather than calculating relative to a NULL pointer.
2021-09-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-09-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix dwo path in fission-*.S
[ Using $build for /home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/build to make things a bit
more readable. ]
When using make check// to run test-case gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.exp:
...
( cd $build/gdb; make check//unix RUNTESTFLAGS="fission-base.exp" )
...
we run into:
...
(gdb) file \
$build/gdb/testsuite.unix/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base^M
Reading symbols from \
$build/gdb/testsuite.unix/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base...^M
warning: Could not find DWO CU \
$build/gdb/testsuite.1/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base.dwo \
(0x807060504030201) referenced by CU at offset 0xc7 [in module \
$build/gdb/testsuite.unix/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base]^M
...
The problem is that the executable refers to the dwo file using path name
$build/gdb/testsuite.1/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base.dwo,
while the actual dwo file is at
$build/gdb/testsuite.unix/outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-base/fission-base.dwo.
This is caused by this trick in fission-base.S:
...
#define XSTR(s) STR(s)
#define STR(s) #s
...
.asciz XSTR(DWO) # DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name
...
and:
...
$ echo | gcc -E -dD - | grep "define unix"
...
I used this trick to avoid doing additional_flags=-DDWO=\"$dwo\", since I was
concerned that there could be quoting issues.
However, I've found other uses of this pattern, f.i. in
gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/corefile-buildid.exp:
...
additional_flags=-DSHLIB_NAME=\"$dlopen_lib\"]
...
So, fix this by:
- using additional_flags=-DDWO=\"$dwo\" and
- using plain DWO instead of XSTR(DWO)
Likewise in other gdb.dwarf2/fission*.exp test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux, using make check//unix.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-09-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/28298
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.S: Use DWO instead of XSTR(DWO).
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists-pie.S: Same.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.S: Same.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-reread.S: Same.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.exp: Use additional_flags=-DDWO=\"$dwo\".
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists-pie.exp: Same.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.exp: Same.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-reread.exp: Same.
2021-09-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp symbol search
On openSUSE Tumbleweed I ran into:
...
(gdb) ptype outstring_func.part^M
No symbol "outstring_func" in current context.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: ptype outstring_func.part
...
while on openSUSE Leap 15.2 I have instead:
...
(gdb) ptype string_func_^M
type = <unknown return type> ()^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: ptype string_func_
...
The difference is caused by the result for "info function string_func", which
is this for the latter:
...
(gdb) info function string_func^M
All functions matching regular expression "string_func":^M
^M
Non-debugging symbols:^M
0x000000000040089c string_func_^M
...
but this for the former:
...
(gdb) info function string_func^M
All functions matching regular expression "string_func":^M
^M
Non-debugging symbols:^M
0x00000000004012bb string_func_^M
0x00007ffff7bac5b0 outstring_func.part^M
0x00007ffff7bb1a00 outstring_func.part^M
...
The extra symbols are part of glibc:
...
$ nm /lib64/libc.so.6 | grep string_func
00000000000695b0 t outstring_func.part.0
000000000006ea00 t outstring_func.part.0
...
If glibc debug info is installed, we get instead:
...
(gdb) info function string_func^M
All functions matching regular expression "string_func":^M
^M
File /usr/src/debug/glibc-2.33-9.1.x86_64/stdio-common/vfprintf-internal.c:^M
236: static int outstring_func(int, size_t, const unsigned int *, FILE *);^M
^M
File vfprintf-internal.c:^M
236: static int outstring_func(int, size_t, const unsigned char *, FILE *);^M
^M
Non-debugging symbols:^M
0x00000000004012bb string_func_^M
...
and the FAIL doesn't trigger.
Fix this by calling "info function string_func" before starting the exec, such
that only symbols of the exec are taken into account.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-09-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: Avoid shared lib symbols for
find_mangled_name calls.
2021-09-01 Yinjun Zhang <yinjun.zhang@corigine.com>
nfp: add validity check of island and me
AddressSanitizer detects heap-buffer-overflow when running
"objdump -D" for nfp .nffw files.
PR 27854
* nfp-dis.c (_NFP_ISLAND_MAX, _NFP_ME_MAX): Define.
(nfp_priv_data): ..and use here.
(_print_instrs): Sanity check island and menum.
2021-09-01 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28250, Null pointer dereference in debug_class_type_samep
Typo fix, obviously should be m1->variants != NULL, not
m1->variants == NULL.
PR 28250
* debug.c (debug_class_type_samep): Correct m1->variants test.
2021-09-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-31 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove breakpoint_find_if
Remove breakpoint_find_if, replace its sole usage with using
all_breakpoints directly instead. At the same time, change return
types to use bool.
Change-Id: I9ec392236b4804b362d16ab563330b9c07311106
2021-08-31 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Update the how-to-make-a-release document so that a check for empty manual pages is included. cf PR 28144
2021-08-31 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Extend .insn directive to support hardcode encoding.
The .insn directive can let users use their own instructions, or
some new instruction, which haven't supported in the old binutils.
For example, if users want to use sifive cache instruction, they
cannot just write "cflush.d1.l1" in the assembly code, they should
use ".insn i SYSTEM, 0, x0, x10, -0x40". But the .insn directive
may not easy to use for some cases, and not so friendly to users.
Therefore, I believe most of the users will use ".word 0xfc050073",
to encode the instructions directly, rather than use .insn. But
once we have supported the mapping symbols, the .word directives
are marked as data, so disassembler won't dump them as instructions
as usual. I have discussed this with Kito many times, we all think
extend the .insn direcitve to support the hardcode encoding, is the
easiest way to resolve the problem. Therefore, there are two more
.insn formats are proposed as follows,
(original) .insn <type>, <operand1>, <operand2>, ...
.insn <insn-length>, <value>
.insn <value>
The <type> is string, and the <insn-length> and <value> are constants.
gas/
* config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_ip_hardcode): Similar to riscv_ip,
but assembles an instruction according to the hardcode values
of .insn directive.
* doc/c-riscv.texi: Document two new .insn formats.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn-fail.d: New testcases.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn-fail.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn-fail.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.s: Likewise.
2021-08-31 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Use gdbfmt for vprintf_filtered.
gdbfmt was already used for printf_filtered, so using it for
vprintf_filtered is more consistent.
As a result, all callers of vfprintf_maybe_filtered now use gdbfmt, so
the function can be simplified to assume the gdbfmt case and remove
the associated bool argument. Similary, vprintf_filtered is now a
simple wrapper around vfprintf_filtered.
2021-08-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-30 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
fbsd-nat: Don't use '%jd' and '%ju' with printf_filtered.
The handler for 'info proc status' for native processes on FreeBSD
uses the 'j' size modifier along with uintmax_t / intmax_t casts to
output integer values for types such as off_t that are not aliases of
a basic C type such as 'int' or 'long'. printf_filtered does not
support the 'j' modifer, so this resulted in runtime errors in
practice:
(gdb) info proc stat
process 8674
Name: ls
State: T (stopped)
Parent process: 8673
Process group: 8674
Session id: 2779
Unrecognized format specifier 'j' in printf
Instead, use plongest and pulongest to generate the output strings of
these integer values.
2021-08-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix build error in unittests/parallel-for-selftests.c
We get this error when building GDB on some platforms. I get it using
g++-10 on Ubuntu 20.04 (installed using the distro package). It was
also reported by John Baldwin, using a clang that uses libc++.
CXX unittests/parallel-for-selftests.o
cc1plus: warning: command line option '-Wmissing-prototypes' is valid for C/ObjC but not for C++
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/parallel-for-selftests.c: In function 'void selftests::parallel_for::test(int)':
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/parallel-for-selftests.c:53:30: error: use of deleted function 'std::atomic<int>::atomic(const std::atomic<int>&)'
53 | std::atomic<int> counter = 0;
| ^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/9/future:42,
from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/thread-pool.h:29,
from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:26,
from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/parallel-for-selftests.c:22:
/usr/include/c++/9/atomic:755:7: note: declared here
755 | atomic(const atomic&) = delete;
| ^~~~~~
/usr/include/c++/9/atomic:759:17: note: after user-defined conversion: 'constexpr std::atomic<int>::atomic(std::atomic<int>::__integral_type)'
759 | constexpr atomic(__integral_type __i) noexcept : __base_type(__i) { }
| ^~~~~~
I haven't dug to know why it does not happen everywhere, but this patch
fixes it by using the constructor to initialize the variable, rather
than the assignment operator.
Change-Id: I6b27958171bf6187f6a875657395fd10441db7e6
2021-08-30 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: PR28291, Fix the gdb fails that PR27916 caused.
* According to PR28291, we get the following unexpected gdb behavior,
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x0000000000000000:
0x0000000000000001:
0x0000000000000002:
0x0000000000000003:
End of assembler dump.
* This patch should fix it to the right behavior,
(gdb) disassemble 0x0,+4
Dump of assembler code from 0x0 to 0x4:
0x0000000000000000: Cannot access memory at address 0x0
opcodes/
pr 28291
* riscv-dis.c (print_insn_riscv): Return STATUS if it is not zero.
2021-08-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add some parallel_for_each tests
Tom de Vries noticed that a patch in the DWARF scanner rewrite series
caused a regression in parallel_for_each -- it started crashing in the
case where the number of threads is 0 (there was an unchecked use of
"n-1" that was used to size an array).
He also pointed out that there were no tests of parallel_for_each.
This adds a few tests of parallel_for_each, primarily testing that
different settings for the number of threads will work. This test
catches the bug that he found in that series.
2021-08-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Add a show function for "maint show worker-threads"
I wanted to see how many threads gdb thought it was using, but
"maint show worker-threads" only reported "unlimited". This patch
adds a show function so that it will now report the number of threads
gdb has started.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-08-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/cli] Don't assert on empty string for core-file
With current gdb we run into:
...
$ gdb -batch '' ''
: No such file or directory.
pathstuff.cc:132: internal-error: \
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> gdb_abspath(const char*): \
Assertion `path != NULL && path[0] != '\0'' failed.
...
Fix this by skipping the call to gdb_abspath in core_target_open in the
empty-string case, such that we have instead:
...
$ gdb -batch '' ''
: No such file or directory.
: No such file or directory.
$
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR cli/28290
* gdb/corelow.c (core_target_open): Skip call to gdb_abspath in the
empty-string case.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR cli/28290
* gdb.base/batch-exit-status.exp: Add gdb '' and gdb '' '' tests.
2021-08-30 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: PR27916, Support mapping symbols.
Similar to ARM/AARCH64, we add mapping symbols in the symbol table,
to mark the start addresses of data and instructions. The $d means
data, and the $x means instruction. Then the disassembler uses these
symbols to decide whether we should dump data or instruction.
Consider the mapping-04 test case,
$ cat tmp.s
.text
.option norelax
.option norvc
.fill 2, 4, 0x1001
.byte 1
.word 0
.balign 8
add a0, a0, a0
.fill 5, 2, 0x2002
add a1, a1, a1
.data
.word 0x1 # No need to add mapping symbols.
.word 0x2
$ riscv64-unknown-elf-as tmp.s -o tmp.o
$ riscv64-unknown-elf-objdump -d tmp.o
Disassembly of section .text:
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 00001001 .word 0x00001001 # Marked $d, .fill directive.
4: 00001001 .word 0x00001001
8: 00000001 .word 0x00000001 # .byte + part of .word.
c: 00 .byte 0x00 # remaining .word.
d: 00 .byte 0x00 # Marked $d, odd byte of alignment.
e: 0001 nop # Marked $x, nops for alignment.
10: 00a50533 add a0,a0,a0
14: 20022002 .word 0x20022002 # Marked $d, .fill directive.
18: 20022002 .word 0x20022002
1c: 2002 .short 0x2002
1e: 00b585b3 add a1,a1,a1 # Marked $x.
22: 0001 nop # Section tail alignment.
24: 00000013 nop
* Use $d and $x to mark the distribution of data and instructions.
Alignments of code are recognized as instructions, since we usually
fill nops for them.
* If the alignment have odd bytes, then we cannot just fill the nops
into the spaces. We always fill an odd byte 0x00 at the start of
the spaces. Therefore, add a $d mapping symbol for the odd byte,
to tell disassembler that it isn't an instruction. The behavior
is same as Arm and Aarch64.
The elf/linux toolchain regressions all passed. Besides, I also
disable the mapping symbols internally, but use the new objudmp, the
regressions passed, too. Therefore, the new objudmp should dump
the objects corretly, even if they don't have any mapping symbols.
bfd/
pr 27916
* cpu-riscv.c (riscv_elf_is_mapping_symbols): Define mapping symbols.
* cpu-riscv.h: extern riscv_elf_is_mapping_symbols.
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_maybe_function_sym): Do not choose mapping
symbols as a function name.
(riscv_elf_is_target_special_symbol): Add mapping symbols.
binutils/
pr 27916
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s: Updated.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64-unused: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64-unused: Likewise.
gas/
pr 27916
* config/tc-riscv.c (make_mapping_symbol): Create a new mapping symbol.
(riscv_mapping_state): Decide whether to create mapping symbol for
frag_now. Only add the mapping symbols to text sections.
(riscv_add_odd_padding_symbol): Add the mapping symbols for the
riscv_handle_align, which have odd bytes spaces.
(riscv_check_mapping_symbols): Remove any excess mapping symbols.
(md_assemble): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_frag_align_code): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_init_frag): Add mapping symbols for frag, it usually called
by frag_var. Marked as MAP_DATA for rs_align and rs_fill, and
marked as MAP_INSN for rs_align_code.
(s_riscv_insn): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_adjust_symtab): Call riscv_check_mapping_symbols.
* config/tc-riscv.h (md_cons_align): Defined to riscv_mapping_state
with MAP_DATA.
(TC_SEGMENT_INFO_TYPE): Record mapping state for each segment.
(TC_FRAG_TYPE): Record the first and last mapping symbols for the
fragments. The first mapping symbol must be placed at the start
of the fragment.
(TC_FRAG_INIT): Defined to riscv_init_frag.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01.s: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-04a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-04b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/no-relax-align.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/no-relax-align-2.d: Likewise.
include/
pr 27916
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_seg_mstate): Added.
opcodes/
pr 27916
* riscv-dis.c (last_map_symbol, last_stop_offset, last_map_state):
Added to dump sections with mapping symbols.
(riscv_get_map_state): Get the mapping state from the symbol.
(riscv_search_mapping_symbol): Check the sorted symbol table, and
then find the suitable mapping symbol.
(riscv_data_length): Decide which data size we should print.
(riscv_disassemble_data): Dump the data contents.
(print_insn_riscv): Handle the mapping symbols.
(riscv_symbol_is_valid): Marked mapping symbols as invalid.
2021-08-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Improve argument syntax of proc arange
The current syntax of proc arange is:
...
proc arange { arange_start arange_length {comment ""} {seg_sel ""} } {
...
and a typical call looks like:
...
arange $start $len
...
This style is somewhat annoying because if you want to specify the last
parameter, you need to give the default values of all the other optional ones
before as well:
...
arange $start $len "" $seg_sel
...
Update the syntax to:
...
proc arange { options arange_start arange_length } {
parse_options {
{ comment "" }
{ seg_sel "" }
}
...
such that a typical call looks like:
...
arange {} $start $len
...
and a call using seg_sel looks like:
...
arange {
seg_sel $seg_sel
} $start $len
...
Also update proc aranges, which already has an options argument, to use the
new proc parse_options.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
2021-08-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Change indirect symbol from IR to undefined
bfd/
PR ld/28264
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_merge_symbol): Change indirect symbol from
IR to undefined.
ld/
PR ld/28264
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run PR ld/28264 test.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264-1.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28264.ver: Likewise.
2021-08-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28264, ld.bfd crash on linking efivar with LTO
PR 28264
PR 26978
* linker.c (_bfd_generic_link_add_one_symbol <MIND>): Check
that string is non-NULL.
2021-08-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Don't write .gdb_index symbol table with empty entries
When comparing the sizes of the index files generated for shlib
outputs/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-zero-range/shr1.sl, I noticed a large difference
between .debug_names:
...
$ gdb -q -batch $shlib -ex "save gdb-index -dwarf-5 ."
$ du -b -h shr1.sl.debug_names shr1.sl.debug_str
61 shr1.sl.debug_names
0 shr1.sl.debug_str
...
and .gdb_index:
...
$ gdb -q -batch $shlib -ex "save gdb-index ."
$ du -b -h shr1.sl.gdb-index
8.2K shr1.sl.gdb-index
...
The problem is that the .gdb_index contains a non-empty symbol table with only
empty entries.
Fix this by making the symbol table empty, such that we have instead:
...
$ du -b -h shr1.sl.gdb-index
184 shr1.sl.gdb-index
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Generate .debug_aranges in gdb.dlang/watch-loc.exp
Before commit 5ef670d81fd "[gdb/testsuite] Add dummy start and end CUs in
dwarf assembly" we had in exec outputs/gdb.dlang/watch-loc/watch-loc a D
compilation unit at offset 0xc7:
...
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xc7:
Length: 0x4c (32-bit)
Version: 4
Abbrev Offset: 0x64
Pointer Size: 8
<0><d2>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_compile_unit)
<d3> DW_AT_language : 19 (D)
...
with a corresponding .debug_aranges entry:
...
Offset into .debug_info: 0xc7
Pointer Size: 4
Segment Size: 0
Address Length
004004a7 0000000b
00000000 00000000
...
After that commit we have a dummy CU at offset 0xc7 and the D compilation unit
at offset 0xd2:
...
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xc7:
Length: 0x7 (32-bit)
Version: 4
Abbrev Offset: 0x64
Pointer Size: 8
Compilation Unit @ offset 0xd2:
Length: 0x4c (32-bit)
Version: 4
Abbrev Offset: 0x65
Pointer Size: 8
<0><dd>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_compile_unit)
<de> DW_AT_language : 19 (D)
...
while the .debug_aranges entry still points to 0xc7.
The problem is that the test-case uses a hack (quoting from
commit 75f06e9dc59):
...
[ Note: this is a non-trivial test-case. The file watch-loc-dw.S contains a
.debug_info section, but not an .debug_aranges section or any actual code.
The file watch-loc.c contains code and a .debug_aranges section, but no other
debug section. So, the intent for the .debug_aranges section in watch-loc.c
is to refer to a compilation unit in the .debug_info section in
watch-loc-dw.S. ]
...
and adding the dummy CU caused that hack to stop working.
Fix this by moving the generation of .debug_aranges from watch-loc.c to
watch-loc.exp, such that we have:
...
Offset into .debug_info: 0xd2
Pointer Size: 4
Segment Size: 0
Address Length
004004a7 0000000b
00000000 00000000
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Generate .debug_aranges entry for dummy CU
A best practise for DWARF [1] is to generate .debug_aranges entries for CUs
even if they have no address range.
Generate .debug_arange entries for the dummy CUs added by the DWARF assembler.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
[1] http://wiki.dwarfstd.org/index.php?title=Best_Practices
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add .debug_aranges in more test-cases
A couple of test-cases fail when run with target board cc-with-debug-names due
to missing .debug_aranges entries for the CUs added by the dwarf assembler.
Add a .debug_aranges entry for those CUs.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Support .debug_aranges in dwarf assembly
Add a proc aranges such that we can generate .debug_aranges sections in dwarf
assembly using:
...
cu { label cu_label } {
...
}
aranges {} cu_label {
arange $addr $len [<comment>] [$segment_selector]
}
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-08-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add label option to proc cu
We can use current dwarf assembly infrastructure to declare a label that marks
the start of the CU header:
...
declare_labels header_start_cu_a
_section ".debug_info"
header_start_cu_a : cu {} {
}
_section ".debug_info"
header_start_cu_b : cu {} {
}
...
on the condition that we switch to the .debug_info section before, which makes
this style of use fragile.
Another way to achieve the same is to use the label as generated by the cu
proc itself:
...
variable _cu_label
cu {} {
}
set header_start_cu_a $_cu_label
cu {} {
}
set header_start_cu_b $_cu_label
...
but again that seems fragile given that adding a new CU inbetween will
silently result in the wrong value for the label.
Add a label option to proc cu such that we can simply do:
...
cu { label header_start_cu_a } {
}
cu { label header_start_cu_b } {
}
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-08-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-26 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: remove some stray newlines in debug output
I spotted a couple of stray newlines that were left at the end of
debug message during conversion to the new debug output scheme. These
messages are part of the 'set debug lin-lwp 1' output.
2021-08-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix two regressions caused by CU / TU merging
PR symtab/28160 and PR symtab/27893 concern GDB crashes in the test
suite when using the "fission" target board. They are both caused by
the patches that merge the list of CUs with the list of TUs (and to a
lesser degree by the patches to share DWARF data across objfiles), and
the underlying issue is the same: it turns out that reading a DWO can
cause new type units to be created. This means that the list of
dwarf2_per_cu_data objects depends on precisely which CUs have been
expanded. However, because the type units can be created while
expanding a CU means that the vector of CUs can expand while it is
being iterated over -- a classic mistake. Also, because a TU can be
added later, it means the resize_symtabs approach is incorrect.
This patch fixes resize_symtabs by removing it, and having set_symtab
resize the vector on demand. It fixes the iteration problem by
introducing a safe (index-based) iterator and changing the relevant
spots to use it.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28160
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27893
2021-08-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Real programmers don't configure gcc using --with-ld
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp (run_host_cmd): Give a clue as to why
gcc -B doesn't pick up the ld under test.
2021-08-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
objdump -S test fail on mingw
FAIL: objdump -S
FAIL: objdump --source-comment
is seen on mingw for the simple reason that gcc adds a .exe suffix on
the output file if not already present. Fix that, and tidy some objcopy
tests.
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (exeext): New proc.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objcopy.exp (exe, test_prog): Use it here.
(objcopy_remove_relocations_from_executable): Catch objcopy errors.
Only run on ELF targets.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.exp (exe): Set variable.
(test_build_id_debuglink, test_objdump_S): Use exe file suffix.
2021-08-24 James Bowman (FTDI-UK) <james.bowman@ftdichip.com>
FT32: Remove recursion in ft32_opcode
The function ft32_opcode used recursion. This could cause a stack
overflow. Replaced with a pair of non-recursive functions.
PR 28169
* ft32-dis.c: Formatting.
(ft32_opcode1): Split out from..
(ft32_opcode): ..here.
2021-08-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix a latent bug in dw2-ranges-overlap.exp
dw2-ranges-overlap.exp creates a program where a psymtab has two
address ranges, and a function without debug info whose address is
between these two ranges. Then it sets a breakpoint on this function
and runs to it, expecting that the language should remain "auto; c"
when stopped.
However, this test case also has a "main" function described (briefly)
in the DWARF, and this function is given language C++. Also, a
breakpoint stop sets the current language to the language that was
used when setting the breakpoint.
My new DWARF scanner decides that this "main" is the main program and
sets the current language to C++ at startup, causing this test to
fail.
This patch fixes the test in a simple way, by introducing a new
function that takes the place of "main" in the DWARF. I think this
still exercises the original problem, but also avoids problems with my
branch.
It seemed safe to me to submit this separately.
2021-08-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb] Fix 'not in executable format' error message
With trying to load a non-executable file into gdb, we run into PR26880:
...
$ gdb -q -batch test.c
"0x7ffc87bfc8d0s": not in executable format: \
file format not recognized
...
The problem is caused by using %ps in combination with the error function
(note that confusingly, it does work in combination with the warning
function).
Fix this by using plain "%s" instead.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR gdb/26880
* gdb/exec.c (exec_file_attach): Use %s instead of %ps in call to
error function.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR gdb/26880
* gdb.base/non-executable.exp: New file.
2021-08-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Use compiler-generated instead of gas-generated stabs
The test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges.exp is the only one in the gdb testsuite
that uses gas-generated stabs.
While the use seems natural alongside the use of gas-generated dwarf in the
same test-case, there are a few known issues, filed on the gdb side as:
- PR symtab/12497 - "stabs: PIE relocation does not work"
- PR symtab/28221 - "[readnow, stabs] FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges.exp: \
info line func"
and on the gas side as:
- PR gas/28233 - "[gas, --gstabs] Generate stabs more similar to gcc"
The test-case contains a KFAIL for PR12497, but it's outdated and fails to
trigger.
The intention of the test-case is to test gas-generated dwarf, and using
gcc-generated stabs instead of gas-generated stabs works fine.
Supporting compiler-generated stabs is already a corner-case for gdb, and
there's no current commitment/incentive to support/workaround gas-generated
stabs, which can be considered a corner-case of a corner-case.
Work around these problem by using compiler-generated stabs in the test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges.exp: Use compiler-generated stabs.
2021-08-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add dummy start and end CUs in dwarf assembly
Say one compiles a hello.c:
...
$ gcc -g hello.c
...
On openSUSE Leap 15.2 and Tumbleweed, the CU for hello.c is typically not the
first in .debug_info, nor the last, due to presence of debug information in
objects for sources like:
- ../sysdeps/x86_64/start.S
- init.c
- ../sysdeps/x86_64/crti.S
- elf-init.c
- ../sysdeps/x86_64/crtn.S.
On other systems, say ubuntu 18.04.5, the CU for hello.c is typically the
first and the last in .debug_info.
This difference has caused me to find some errors in the dwarf assembly
using openSUSE, that didn't show up on other platforms.
Force the same situation on other platforms by adding a dummy start
and end CU.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/28235
* lib/dwarf.exp (Dwarf::dummy_cu): New proc.
(Dwarf::assemble): Add dummy start and end CU.
2021-08-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix dw2-ranges-psym.exp with -readnow
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym.exp with target board
-readnow, I run into:
...
(gdb) file dw2-ranges-psym^M
Reading symbols from dw2-ranges-psym...^M
Expanding full symbols from dw2-ranges-psym...^M
(gdb) set complaints 0^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-psym.exp: No complaints
...
The problem is that the regexp expects a gdb prompt immediately after the
"Reading symbols" line.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_load_no_complaints): Update regexp to allow
"Expanding full symbols" Line.
2021-08-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-22 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: m32r: add __linux__ hack for non-Linux hosts
The m32r Linux syscall emulation logic assumes the host environment
directly matches -- it's being run on 32-bit little endian Linux.
This breaks building for non-Linux systems, so put all the code in
__linux__ ifdef checks. This code needs a lot of love to make it
work everywhere, but let's at least unbreak it for non-Linux hosts.
2021-08-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-20 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: nltvals: switch output mode to a directory
In preparation for this script generating more files, change the output
argument to specify a directory. This drops the stdout behavior, but
since no one really runs this tool directly, it's not a big deal.
2021-08-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-19 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use bool in notify_command_param_changed_p and do_set_command
Trivial patch to use bool instead of int.
Change-Id: I9e5f8ee4305272a6671cbaaaf2f0484eff0d1ea5
2021-08-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Put back 3 aborts in OP_E_memory
Put back 3 aborts where invalid lengths should have been filtered out.
gas/
PR binutils/28247
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.s: Add a comment.
opcodes/
PR binutils/28247
* * i386-dis.c (OP_E_memory): Put back 3 aborts.
2021-08-19 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Avoid abort on invalid broadcast
Print "{bad}" on invalid broadcast instead of abort.
gas/
PR binutils/28247
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run bad-bcast.
opcodes/
PR binutils/28247
* i386-dis.c (OP_E_memory): Print "{bad}" on invalid broadcast
instead of abort.
2021-08-19 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
gdb/solib: Refactor scan_dyntag
scan_dyntag is unnecessarily duplicated in solib-svr4.c and solib-dsbt.c.
Move this function to solib.c and rename it to gdb_bfd_scan_elf_dyntag.
Also add it to solib.h so it is included in both solib-svr4 and solib-dsbt.
2021-08-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-18 Will Schmidt <will_schmidt@vnet.ibm.com>
[gdb] [rs6000] Add ppc64_linux_gcc_target_options method.
Add a method to set the gcc target options for the ppc64 targets.
This change sets an empty value, which allows the gcc
default values (-mcmodel=medium) be used, instead of -mcmodel=large
which is set by the default_gcc_target_options hook.
[gdb] [rs6000] Add ppc64*_gnu_triplet_regexp methods.
Add methods to set the target triplet so we can
find the proper gcc when our gcc is named of
the form powerpc64{le}-<foo>-gcc or ppc64{le}-<foo>-gcc.
2021-08-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: as: Replace the removed symbol with the versioned symbol
Some targets, typically embedded without shared libraries, replace the
relocation symbol with a section symbol (see tc_fix_adjustable).
Allow the test to pass for such targets. Fixes the following.
avr-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
d10v-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
dlx-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
ip2k-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
m68k-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
mcore-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
pj-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
s12z-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
visium-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
z80-elf +FAIL: symver symver16
PR gas/28157
* testsuite/gas/symver/symver16.d: Relax reloc match.
2021-08-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
[GOLD] PowerPC64 relocation overflow for -Os register save/restore funcs
Fixes a silly mistake in calculating the address of -Os out-of-line
register save/restore function copies. Copies of these linker defined
functions are added to stub sections when the original (in
target->savres_section) can't be reached.
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Correct address
calculation of out-of-line save/restore function copies.
2021-08-18 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Another ld script backtrack
* ldgram.y (length_spec): Throw away look-ahead NAME.
2021-08-18 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
gdb: fix spacing on CCLD silent rules
sim: nltvals: localize TARGET_<ERRNO> defines
Code should not be using these directly, instead they should be
resolving these dynamically via cb_host_to_target_errno maps.
Fix the Blackfin code and remove the defines out of the header
so no new code can rely on them.
2021-08-18 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: rename ChangeLog files to ChangeLog-2021
Now that ChangeLog entries are no longer used for sim patches,
this commit renames all relevant sim ChangeLog to ChangeLog-2021,
similar to what we would do in the context of the "Start of New
Year" procedure.
The purpose of this change is to avoid people merging ChangeLog
entries by mistake when applying existing commits that they are
currently working on.
Also throw in a .gitignore entry to keep people from adding new
ChangeLog files anywhere in the sim tree.
2021-08-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-17 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix thread_step_over_chain_length
If I debug a single-thread program and look at the infrun debug logs, I
see:
[infrun] start_step_over: stealing global queue of threads to step, length = 2
That makes no sense... turns out there's a buglet in
thread_step_over_chain_length, "num" should be initialized to 0. I
think this bug is a leftover from an earlier version of the code (not
merged upstream) that manually walked the list, where the first item was
implicitly counted (hence the 1).
Change-Id: I0af03aa93509aed36528be5076894dc156a0b5ce
2021-08-17 Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
opcodes: Fix the auxiliary register numbers for ARC HS
The numbers for the auxiliary registers "tlbindex" and
"tlbcommand" of ARCv2HS are incorrect. This patch makes
the following changes to correct that error.
,------------.-----------------.---------------.
| aux. reg. | old (incorrect) | new (correct) |
|------------+-----------------+---------------|
| tlbindex | 0x463 | 0x464 |
| tlbcommand | 0x464 | 0x465 |
`------------^-----------------^---------------'
opcodes/
2021-08-17 Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
* arc-regs.h (DEF): Fix the register numbers.
2021-08-17 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gdb: Don't assume r_ldsomap when r_version > 1 on Linux
The r_ldsomap field is specific to Solaris (part of librtld_db), and
should never be accessed for Linux. glibc is planning to add a field
to support multiple namespaces. But there will be no r_ldsomap when
r_version is bumped to 2. Add linux_[ilp32|lp64]_fetch_link_map_offsets
to set r_ldsomap_offset to -1 and use them for Linux targets.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28236
2021-08-17 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gdbserver: Check r_version < 1 for Linux debugger interface
Update gdbserver to check r_version < 1 instead of r_version != 1 so
that r_version can be bumped for a new field in the glibc debugger
interface to support multiple namespaces. Since so far, the gdbserver
only reads fields defined for r_version == 1, it is compatible with
r_version >= 1.
All future glibc debugger interface changes will be backward compatible.
If there is ever the need for backward incompatible change to the glibc
debugger interface, a new DT_XXX element will be provided to access the
new incompatible interface.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11839
2021-08-17 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [4/4] arm: Add Tag_PACRET_use build attribute
bfd/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_merge_eabi_attributes): Add
'Tag_PACRET_use' case.
binutils/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* readelf.c (arm_attr_tag_PAC_extension): Declare.
(arm_attr_public_tags): Add 'PAC_extension' lookup.
elfcpp/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm.h: Define 'Tag_PACRET_use' enum.
gas/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_convert_symbolic_attribute): Add
'Tag_PACRET_use' to the attribute_table.
include/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf/arm.h (elf_arm_reloc_type): Add 'Tag_PACRET_use'.
2021-08-17 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [3/4] arm: Add Tag_BTI_use build attribute
bfd/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_merge_eabi_attributes): Add
'Tag_BTI_use' case.
binutils/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* readelf.c (arm_attr_tag_PAC_extension): Declare.
(arm_attr_public_tags): Add 'PAC_extension' lookup.
elfcpp/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm.h: Define 'Tag_BTI_use' enum.
gas/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_convert_symbolic_attribute): Add
'Tag_BTI_use' to the attribute_table.
include/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf/arm.h (elf_arm_reloc_type): Add 'Tag_BTI_use'.
2021-08-17 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [2/4] arm: Add Tag_BTI_extension build attribute
bfd/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_merge_eabi_attributes): Add
'Tag_BTI_extension' case.
binutils/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* readelf.c (arm_attr_tag_PAC_extension): Declare.
(arm_attr_public_tags): Add 'PAC_extension' lookup.
elfcpp/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm.h: Define 'Tag_BTI_extension' enum.
gas/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_convert_symbolic_attribute): Add
'Tag_BTI_extension' to the attribute_table.
include/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf/arm.h (elf_arm_reloc_type): Add 'Tag_BTI_extension'.
2021-08-17 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [1/4] arm: Add Tag_PAC_extension build attribute
bfd/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_merge_eabi_attributes): Add
'Tag_PAC_extension' case.
binutils/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* readelf.c (arm_attr_tag_PAC_extension): Declare.
(arm_attr_public_tags): Add 'PAC_extension' lookup.
elfcpp/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm.h: Define 'Tag_PAC_extension' enum.
gas/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_convert_symbolic_attribute): Add
'Tag_PAC_extension' to the attribute_table.
include/
2021-07-06 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* elf/arm.h (elf_arm_reloc_type): Add 'Tag_PAC_extension'.
2021-08-17 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Always run fp tests
Always run fp tests since the size of .tfloat, .ds.x, .dc.x and .dcb.x
directive outputs is always 10 bytes. There is no need for fp-elf32 nor
fp-elf64.
PR gas/28230
* testsuite/gas/i386/fp-elf32.d: Removed.
* testsuite/gas/i386/fp-elf64.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/fp.s: Remove NO_TFLOAT_PADDING codes.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Don't run fp-elf32 nor fp-elf64.
Always run fp.
2021-08-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Don't pad .tfloat directive output
.tfloat output should always be 10 bytes without padding, independent
of psABIs. In glibc, x86 assembly codes expect 10-byte .tfloat output.
This also reduces .ds.x output and .tfloat output with hex input from
12 bytes to 10 bytes to match .tfloat output.
PR gas/28230
* NEWS: Mention changes of .ds.x output and .tfloat output with
hex input.
* config/tc-i386.c (x86_tfloat_pad): Removed.
* config/tc-i386.h (X_PRECISION_PAD): Changed to 0.
(x86_tfloat_pad): Removed.
* testsuite/gas/i386/fp.s: If NO_TFLOAT_PADDING isn't defined,
add explicit paddings after .tfloat, .ds.x, .dc.x and .dcb.x
directives.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp (ASFLAGS): Append
"--defsym NO_TFLOAT_PADDING=1" when running the fp test.
2021-08-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix register regression in DWARF evaluator
On an internal test case, using an arm-elf target, commit ba5bc3e5a92
("Make DWARF evaluator return a single struct value") causes a
regression. (It doesn't happen for any of the other cross targets
that I test when importing upstream gdb.)
I don't know if there's an upstream gdb test case showing the same
problem... I can only really run native tests with dejagnu AFAIK.
The failure manifests like this:
Breakpoint 1, file_1.export_1 (param_1=<error reading variable: Unable to access DWARF register number 64>, str=...) at [...]/file_1.adb:5
Whereas when it works it looks like:
Breakpoint 1, file_1.export_1 (param_1=99.0, str=...) at [...]/file_1.adb:5
The difference is that the new code uses the passed-in gdbarch,
whereas the old code used the frame's gdbarch, when handling
DWARF_VALUE_REGISTER.
This patch restores the use of the frame's arch.
2021-08-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix Ada regression due to DWARF expression series
Commit 0579205aec4 ("Simplify dwarf_expr_context class interface")
caused a regression in the internal AdaCore test suite. I didn't try
to reproduce this with the GDB test suite, but the test is identical
to gdb.dwarf2/dynarr-ptr.exp.
The problem is that this change:
case DW_OP_push_object_address:
/* Return the address of the object we are currently observing. */
- if (this->data_view.data () == nullptr
- && this->obj_address == 0)
+ if (this->m_addr_info == nullptr)
... slightly changes the logic here. In particular, it's possible for
the caller to pass in a non-NULL m_addr_info, but one that looks like:
(top) p *this.m_addr_info
$15 = {
type = 0x29b7a70,
valaddr = {
m_array = 0x0,
m_size = 0
},
addr = 0,
next = 0x0
}
In this case, an additional check is needed. With the current code,
what happens instead is that the computation computes an incorrect
address -- but one that does not fail in read_memory, due to the
precise memory map of the embedded target in question.
This patch restores the old logic.
2021-08-16 Patrick Monnerat <patrick@monnerat.net>
Notify observer of breakpoint auto-disabling
As breakpoint_modified observer is currently notified upon breakpoint stop
before handling auto-disabling when enable count is reached, the observer
is never notified of the disabling.
The problem affects:
- The MI interpreter enabled= value when reporting =breakpoint-modified
- A Python event handler for breakpoint_modified using the "enabled"
member of its parameter
- insight: breakpoint GUI window is not properly updated upon auto-disable
This patch moves the observer notification after the auto-disabling
code and implements corresponding tests for the MI and Python cases.
Fixes https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23336
Change-Id: I0c50df4789334071e5390cb46b3ca0d4a7f83c61
2021-08-16 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
as: Replace the removed symbol with the versioned symbol
When a symbol removed by .symver is used in relocation and there is one
and only one versioned symbol, don't remove the symbol. Instead, mark
it to be removed and replace the removed symbol used in relocation with
the versioned symbol before generating relocation.
PR gas/28157
* symbols.c (symbol_flags): Add removed.
(symbol_entry_find): Updated.
(symbol_mark_removed): New function.
(symbol_removed_p): Likewise.
* symbols.h (symbol_mark_removed): New prototype.
(symbol_removed_p): Likewise.
* write.c (write_relocs): Call obj_fixup_removed_symbol on
removed fixp->fx_addsy and fixp->fx_subsy if defined.
(set_symtab): Don't add a symbol if symbol_removed_p returns true.
* config/obj-elf.c (elf_frob_symbol): Don't remove the symbol
if it is used on relocation. Instead, mark it as to be removed
and issue an error if the symbol has more than one versioned name.
(elf_fixup_removed_symbol): New function.
* config/obj-elf.h (elf_fixup_removed_symbol): New prototype.
(obj_fixup_removed_symbol): New.
* testsuite/gas/symver/symver11.d: Updated expected error
message.
* testsuite/gas/symver/symver16.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/symver/symver16.s: Likewise.
2021-08-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ld script fill pattern expression
It turns out we do need to backtrack when parsing after all. The
fill_opt component in the section rule swiches to EXPRESSION and back
to SCRIPT, and to find the end of an expression it is necessary to
look ahead one token.
* ldgram.y (section): Throw away lookahead NAME token.
(overlay_section): Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/overlay.t: Add fill pattern on overlays.
Test fill pattern before stupidly named normal sections too,
and before /DISCARD/.
2021-08-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ld lexer tidy, possibly break the world
This tidies the states in which ld lexer rules are enabled.
This change will quite likely trip over issues similar to those
mentioned in the new ldlex.l comments, so please test it out.
* ldgram.y (wildcard_name): Remove now unnecessary components.
* ldlex.l: Restrict many rules' states. Remove -l expression
state rule. Comment on lookahead state madness and need for
/DISCARD/ in expression state.
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ld script lower-case absolute and sizeof_headers
I think these happened by accident, so let's see what breaks if they
are removed.
* ldlex.l: Remove lower case "absolute" and "sizeof_headers"
in non-mri mode.
* ld.texi: Remove sizeof_headers index.
* testsuite/ld-mmix/mmohdr1.ld: Use SIZEOF_HEADERS.
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
tidy mri script extern
MRI mode generally doesn't flip lexer states, so let's make MRI mode
"extern" not do so either.
* ldgram.y (extern_name_list): Don't change lex state here.
(ifile_p1): Change state here on EXTERN instead.
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28217, Syntax error when memory region contains a hyphen
I discovered some more errors when tightening up the lexer rules.
Just because we INCLUDE a file doesn't mean we've switched states.
PR 28217
* ldgram.y (statement): Don't switch lexer state on INCLUDE.
(mri_script_command, ifile_p1, memory_spec, section): Likewise.
2021-08-13 Lifang Xia <lifang_xia@c-sky.com>
PR28168: [CSKY] Fix stack overflow in disassembler
PR 28168:
Stack overflow with a large float. %f is not a goot choice for this.
%f should be replaced with %.7g.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/csky/pr28168.d: New testcase for PR 28168.
* testsuite/gas/csky/pr28168.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/csky/v2_float_part2.d: Following the new format.
* opcodes/csky-dis.c (csky_output_operand): %.7g replaces %f.
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28217, Syntax error when memory region contains a hyphen
The saga of commit 40726f16a8d7 continues. This attacks the problem
of switching between SCRIPT and EXPRESSION state lexing by removing
the need to do so for phdrs like ":text". Instead {WILDCHAR}*
matching, the reason why ":text" lexed as one token, is restricted to
within the braces of a section or overlay statement. The new WILD
lexer state is switched at the non-optional brace tokens, so
ldlex_backup is no longer needed. I've also removed the BOTH state,
which doesn't seem to be needed any more. Besides rules involving
error reporting, there was just one place where SCRIPT appeared
without BOTH, the {WILDCHAR}* rule, three where BOTH appears without
SCRIPT for tokens that only need EXPRESSION state, and two where BOTH
appears alongside INPUT_LIST. (Since I'm editing the wild and
filename rules, removing BOTH and adding WILD can also be seen as
renaming the old BOTH state to SCRIPT and renaming the old SCRIPT
state to WILD with a reduced scope.)
As a followup, I'll look at removing EXPRESSION state from some lexer
rules that no longer need it due to this cleanup.
PR 28217
* ldgram.y (exp <ORIGIN, LENGTH>): Use paren_script_name.
(section): Parse within braces of section in wild mode, and
after brace back in script mode. Remove ldlex_backup call.
Similarly for OVERLAY.
(overlay_section): Similarly.
(script_file): Replace ldlex_both with ldlex_script.
* ldlex.h (ldlex_wild): Declare.
(ldlex_both): Delete.
* ldlex.l (BOTH): Delete. Remove state from all rules.
(WILD): New state. Enable many tokens in this state.
Enable filename match in SCRIPT mode. Enable WILDCHAR match
in WILD state, disable in SCRIPT mode.
(ldlex_wild): New function.
* ldfile.c (ldfile_try_open_bfd): Replace ldlex_both call with
ldlex_script.
2021-08-13 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ns32k configury
Since ns32k-netbsd is as yet not removed, just marked obsolete,
the target should still be accepted with --enable-obsolete.
I also enabled ns32k-openbsd in ld since there doesn't seem to be a
good reason why that target is not supported there but is elsewhere.
bfd/
* config.bfd: Allow ns32k-netbsd.
ld/
* configure.tgt: Allow ns32k-openbsd.
2021-08-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-13 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: riscv_scan_prologue: handle LD and LW instructions
While working on the testsuite, I ended up noticing that GDB fails to
produce a full backtrace from a thread waiting in pthread_join. When
selecting the waiting thread and using the 'bt' command, the following
result can be observed:
(gdb) bt
#0 0x0000003ff7fccd20 in __futex_abstimed_wait_common64 () from /lib/riscv64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#1 0x0000003ff7fc43da in __pthread_clockjoin_ex () from /lib/riscv64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
Backtrace stopped: frame did not save the PC
On my platform, I do not have debug symbols for glibc, so I need to rely
on prologue analysis in order to unwind stack.
Here is what the function prologue looks like:
(gdb) disassemble __pthread_clockjoin_ex
Dump of assembler code for function __pthread_clockjoin_ex:
0x0000003ff7fc42de <+0>: addi sp,sp,-144
0x0000003ff7fc42e0 <+2>: sd s5,88(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42e2 <+4>: auipc s5,0xd
0x0000003ff7fc42e6 <+8>: ld s5,-2(s5) # 0x3ff7fd12e0
0x0000003ff7fc42ea <+12>: ld a5,0(s5)
0x0000003ff7fc42ee <+16>: sd ra,136(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42f0 <+18>: sd s0,128(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42f2 <+20>: sd s1,120(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42f4 <+22>: sd s2,112(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42f6 <+24>: sd s3,104(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42f8 <+26>: sd s4,96(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42fa <+28>: sd s6,80(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42fc <+30>: sd s7,72(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc42fe <+32>: sd s8,64(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc4300 <+34>: sd s9,56(sp)
0x0000003ff7fc4302 <+36>: sd a5,40(sp)
As far as prologue analysis is concerned, the most interesting part is
done at address 0x0000003ff7fc42ee (<+16>): 'sd ra,136(sp)'. This stores
the RA (return address) register on the stack, which is the information
we are looking for in order to identify the caller.
In the current implementation of the prologue scanner, GDB stops when
hitting 0x0000003ff7fc42e6 (<+8>) because it does not know what to do
with the 'ld' instruction. GDB thinks it reached the end of the
prologue but have not yet reached the important part, which explain
GDB's inability to unwind past this point.
The section of the prologue starting at <+4> until <+12> is used to load
the stack canary[1], which will then be placed on the stack at <+36> at
the end of the prologue.
In order to have the prologue properly handled, this commit proposes to
add support for the ld instruction in the RISC-V prologue scanner.
I guess riscv32 would use lw in such situation so this patch also adds
support for this instruction.
With this patch applied, gdb is now able to unwind past pthread_join:
(gdb) bt
#0 0x0000003ff7fccd20 in __futex_abstimed_wait_common64 () from /lib/riscv64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#1 0x0000003ff7fc43da in __pthread_clockjoin_ex () from /lib/riscv64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x0000002aaaaaa88e in bar() ()
#3 0x0000002aaaaaa8c4 in foo() ()
#4 0x0000002aaaaaa8da in main ()
I have had a look to see if I could reproduce this easily, but in my
simple testcases using '-fstack-protector-all', the canary is loaded
after the RA register is saved. I do not have a reliable way of
generating a prologue similar to the problematic one so I forged one
instead.
The testsuite have been run on riscv64 ubuntu 21.01 with no regression
observed.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffer_overflow_protection#Canaries
2021-08-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Update documentation to mention Pygments
Philippe Blain pointed out that the gdb documentation does not mention
that Pygments may be used for source highlighting. This patch updates
the docs to reflect how highlighting is actually done.
2021-08-12 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make gdbarch_printable_names return a vector
I noticed that gdbarch_selftest::operator() leaked the value returned by
gdbarch_printable_names. Make gdbarch_printable_names return an
std::vector and update callers. That makes it easier for everyone
involved, less manual memory management.
Change-Id: Ia8fc028bdb91f787410cca34f10bf3c5a6da1498
2021-08-12 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Improve forward progress test in python.exp
The test steps into func2 and than does an up to get back to the previous
frame. The test checks that the line number you are at after the up command
is greater than the line where the function was called from. The
assembly/codegen for the powerpc target includes a NOP after the
branch-link.
func2 (); /* Break at func2 call site. /
10000694: 59 00 00 48 bl 100006ec
10000698: 00 00 00 60 nop
return 0; / Break to end. */
1000069c: 00 00 20 39 li r9,0
The PC at the instruction following the branch-link is 0x10000698 which
GDB.find_pc_line() maps to the same line number as the bl instruction.
GDB did move past the branch-link location thus making forward progress.
The following proposed fix adds an additional PC check to see if forward
progress was made. The line test is changed from greater than to greater
than or equal.
2021-08-12 Jiangshuai Li <jiangshuai_li@c-sky.com>
gdb:csky rm tdesc_has_registers in csky_register_name
As CSKY arch has not parsed target-description.xml in csky_gdbarch_init,
when a remote server, like csky-qemu or gdbserver, send a target-description.xml
to gdb, tdesc_has_registers will return ture, but tdesc_register_name (gdbarch, 0)
will return NULL, so a cmd "info registers r0" will not work.
Function of parsing target-description.xml will be add later for CSKY arch,
now it is temporarily removed to allow me to do other supported tests.
2021-07-15 Jiangshuai Li <jiangshuai_li@c-sky.com>
* csky-tdep.c : not using tdesc funtions in csky_register_name
2021-08-12 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: gas: support NaN flavors
Fixes tic4x-coff FAIL: simple FP constants
* testsuite/gas/all/float.s: Make NaN tests conditional on hasnan.
* testsuite/gas/all/gas.exp: Define hasnan.
2021-08-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-11 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Update the pass and fail strings of PR ld/28138 test
PR ld/28138
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Update the pass and fail strings
of PR ld/28138 test to indicate which part of the test passed
and failed.
2021-08-11 Darius Galis <darius.galis@cyberthorstudios.com>
Fix a typo in the RX asse,bler. The Double-precision floating-point exception handling control register name is DECNT not DCENT.
* config/rx-parse.y (DECNT): Fixed typo.
* testsuite/gas/rx/dpopm.sm (DECNT): Fixed typo.
* testsuite/gas/rx/dpushm.sm (DECNT): Fixed typo.
* testsuite/gas/rx/macros.inc (DECNT): Fixed typo.
2021-08-11 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix an internal error in the CSKY assembler when asked to resolve an overlarge constant.
PR 28215
* config/tc-csky.c (md_apply_fix): Correctly handle a fixup that
involves an overlarge constant.
2021-08-11 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Add 3 new PAC-related ARM note types
The following patch synchronizes includes/objdump/readelf with the Linux
Kernel in terms of ARM regset notes.
We're currently missing 3 of them:
NT_ARM_PACA_KEYS
NT_ARM_PACG_KEYS
NT_ARM_PAC_ENABLED_KEYS
We don't need GDB to bother with this at the moment, so this doesn't update
bfd/elf.c. If needed, we can do it in the future.
binutils/
* readelf.c (get_note_type): Handle new ARM PAC notes.
include/elf/
* common.h (NT_ARM_PACA_KEYS, NT_ARM_PACG_KEYS)
(NT_ARM_PAC_ENABLED_KEYS): New constants.
2021-08-11 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Portuguese translation for the binutils sub-directory.
2021-08-11 John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
Deprecate a.out support for NetBSD targets.
As discussed previously, a.out support is now quite deprecated, and in
some cases removed, in both Binutils itself and NetBSD, so this legacy
default makes little sense. `netbsdelf*` and `netbsdaout*` still work
allowing the user to be explicit about there choice. Additionally, the
configure script warns about the change as Nick Clifton requested.
One possible concern was the status of NetBSD on NS32K, where only a.out
was supported. But per [1] NetBSD has removed support, and if it were to
come back, it would be with ELF. The binutils implementation is
therefore marked obsolete, per the instructions in the last message.
With that patch and this one applied, I have confirmed the following:
--target=i686-unknown-netbsd
--target=i686-unknown-netbsdelf
builds completely
--target=i686-unknown-netbsdaout
properly fails because target is deprecated.
--target=vax-unknown-netbsdaout builds completely except for gas, where
the target is deprecated.
[1]: https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-toolchain/2021/07/19/msg004025.html
---
bfd/config.bfd | 43 +++++++++++++--------
bfd/configure.ac | 5 +--
binutils/testsuite/binutils-all/nm.exp | 2 +-
binutils/testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp | 7 +---
config/picflag.m4 | 4 +-
gas/configure.tgt | 9 +++--
gas/testsuite/gas/arm/blx-bl-convert.d | 2 +-
gas/testsuite/gas/arm/blx-local-thumb.d | 2 +-
gas/testsuite/gas/sh/basic.exp | 2 +-
gdb/configure.host | 34 +++++++----------
gdb/configure.tgt | 2 +-
gdb/testsuite/gdb.asm/asm-source.exp | 6 +--
intl/configure | 2 +-
ld/configure.tgt | 44 +++++++++++-----------
ld/testsuite/ld-arm/arm-elf.exp | 4 +-
ld/testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp | 2 +-
ld/testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp | 4 +-
libiberty/configure | 4 +-
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: don't print backtrace when dumping core after an internal error
Currently, when GDB hits an internal error, and the user selects to
dump core, the recently added feature to write a backtrace to the
console will kick in, and print a backtrace as well as dumping the
core.
This was certainly not my intention when adding the backtrace on fatal
signal functionality, this feature was intended to produce a backtrace
when GDB crashes due to some fatal signal, internal errors should have
continued to behave as they did before, unchanged.
In this commit I set the signal disposition of SIGABRT back to SIG_DFL
just prior to the call to abort() that GDB uses to trigger the core
dump, this prevents GDB reaching the code that writes the backtrace to
the console.
I've also added a test that checks we don't see a backtrace on the
console after an internal error.
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: register SIGBUS, SIGFPE, and SIGABRT handlers
Register handlers for SIGBUS, SIGFPE, and SIGABRT. All of these
signals are setup as fatal signals that will cause GDB to terminate.
However, by passing these signals through the handle_fatal_signal
function, a user can arrange to see a backtrace when GDB
terminates (see maint set backtrace-on-fatal-signal).
In normal use of GDB there should be no user visible changes after
this commit. Only if GDB terminates with one of the above signals
will GDB change slightly, potentially printing a backtrace before
aborting.
I've added new tests for SIGFPE, SIGBUS, and SIGABRT.
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: print backtrace on fatal SIGSEGV
This commit adds a new maintenance feature, the ability to print
a (limited) backtrace if GDB dies due to a fatal signal.
The backtrace is produced using the backtrace and backtrace_symbols_fd
functions which are declared in the execinfo.h header, and both of
which are async signal safe. A configure check has been added to
check for these features, if they are not available then the new code
is not compiled into GDB and the backtrace will not be printed.
The motivation for this new feature is to aid in debugging GDB in
situations where GDB has crashed at a users site, but the user is
reluctant to share core files, possibly due to concerns about what
might be in the memory image within the core file. Such a user might
be happy to share a simple backtrace that was written to stderr.
The production of the backtrace is on by default, but can switched off
using the new commands:
maintenance set backtrace-on-fatal-signal on|off
maintenance show backtrace-on-fatal-signal
Right now, I have hooked this feature in to GDB's existing handling of
SIGSEGV only, but this will be extended to more signals in a later
commit.
One additional change I have made in this commit is that, when we
decide GDB should terminate due to the fatal signal, we now
raise the same fatal signal rather than raising SIGABRT.
Currently, this is only effecting our handling of SIGSEGV. So,
previously, if GDB hit a SEGV then we would terminate GDB with a
SIGABRT. After this commit we will terminate GDB with a SIGSEGV.
This feels like an improvement to me, we should still get a core dump,
but in many shells, the user will see a more specific message once GDB
exits, in bash for example "Segmentation fault" rather than "Aborted".
Finally then, here is an example of the output a user would see if GDB
should hit an internal SIGSEGV:
Fatal signal: Segmentation fault
----- Backtrace -----
./gdb/gdb[0x8078e6]
./gdb/gdb[0x807b20]
/lib64/libpthread.so.0(+0x14b20)[0x7f6648c92b20]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__poll+0x4f)[0x7f66484d3a5f]
./gdb/gdb[0x1540f4c]
./gdb/gdb[0x154034a]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b002d]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b014d]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b1aa6]
./gdb/gdb[0x9b1b0c]
./gdb/gdb[0x41756d]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf3)[0x7f66484041a3]
./gdb/gdb[0x41746e]
---------------------
A fatal error internal to GDB has been detected, further
debugging is not possible. GDB will now terminate.
This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see:
<https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>.
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
It is disappointing that backtrace_symbols_fd does not actually map
the addresses back to symbols, this appears, in part, to be due to GDB
not being built with -rdynamic as the manual page for
backtrace_symbols_fd suggests, however, even when I do add -rdynamic
to the build of GDB I only see symbols for some addresses.
We could potentially look at alternative libraries to provide the
backtrace (e.g. libunwind) however, the solution presented here, which
is available as part of glibc is probably a good baseline from which
we might improve things in future.
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: rename async_init_signals to gdb_init_signals
The async_init_signals has, for some time, dealt with async and sync
signals, so removing the async prefix makes sense I think.
Additionally, as pointed out by Pedro:
.....
The comments relating to SIGTRAP and SIGQUIT within this function are
out of date.
The comments for SIGTRAP talk about the signal disposition (SIG_IGN)
being passed to the inferior, meaning the signal disposition being
inherited by GDB's fork children. However, we now call
restore_original_signals_state prior to forking, so the comment on
SIGTRAP is redundant.
The comments for SIGQUIT are similarly out of date, further, the
comment on SIGQUIT talks about problems with BSD4.3 and vfork,
however, we have not supported BSD4.3 for several years now.
Given the above, it seems that changing the disposition of SIGTRAP is
no longer needed, so I've deleted the signal() call for SIGTRAP.
Finally, the header comment on the function now called
gdb_init_signals was getting quite out of date, so I've updated it
to (hopefully) better reflect reality.
There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: register signal handler after setting up event token
This commit fixes the smallest of small possible bug related to signal
handling. If we look in async_init_signals we see code like this:
signal (SIGQUIT, handle_sigquit);
sigquit_token =
create_async_signal_handler (async_do_nothing, NULL, "sigquit");
Then if we look in handle_sigquit we see code like this:
mark_async_signal_handler (sigquit_token);
signal (sig, handle_sigquit);
Finally, in mark_async_signal_handler we have:
async_handler_ptr->ready = 1;
Where async_handler_ptr will be sigquit_token.
What this means is that if a SIGQUIT arrive in async_init_signals
after handle_sigquit has been registered, but before sigquit_token has
been initialised, then GDB will most likely crash.
The chance of this happening is tiny, but fixing this is trivial, just
ensure we call create_async_signal_handler before calling signal, so
lets do that.
There are no tests for this. Trying to land a signal in the right
spot is pretty hit and miss. I did try changing the current HEAD GDB
like this:
signal (SIGQUIT, handle_sigquit);
raise (SIGQUIT);
sigquit_token =
create_async_signal_handler (async_do_nothing, NULL, "sigquit");
And confirmed that this did result in a crash, after my change I tried
this:
sigquit_token =
create_async_signal_handler (async_do_nothing, NULL, "sigquit");
signal (SIGQUIT, handle_sigquit);
raise (SIGQUIT);
And GDB now starts up just fine.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* event-top.c (async_init_signals): For each signal, call signal
only after calling create_async_signal_handler.
2021-08-11 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: terminate upon receipt of SIGFPE
GDB's SIGFPE handling is broken, this is PR gdb/16505 and
PR gdb/17891.
We currently try to use an async event token to process SIGFPE. So,
when a SIGFPE arrives the signal handler calls
mark_async_signal_handler then returns, effectively ignoring the
signal (for now).
The intention is that later the event loop will see that the async
token associated with SIGFPE has been marked and will call the async
handler, which just throws an error.
The problem is that SIGFPE is not safe to ignore. Ignoring a
SIGFPE (unless it is generated artificially, e.g. by raise()) is
undefined behaviour, after ignoring the signal on many targets we
return to the instruction that caused the SIGFPE to be raised, which
immediately causes another SIGFPE to be raised, we get stuck in an
infinite loop. The behaviour is certainly true on x86-64.
To view this behaviour I simply added some dummy code to GDB that
performed an integer divide by zero, compiled this on x86-64
GNU/Linux, ran GDB and saw GDB hang.
In this commit, I propose to remove all special handling of SIGFPE and
instead just let GDB make use of the default SIGFPE action, that is,
to terminate the process.
The only user visible change here should be:
- If a user sends a SIGFPE to GDB using something like kill,
previously GDB would just print an error and remain alive, now GDB
will terminate. This is inline with what happens if the user
sends GDB a SIGSEGV from kill though, so I don't see this as an
issue.
- If a bug in GDB causes a real SIGFPE, previously the users GDB
session would hang. Now the GDB session will terminate. Again,
this is inline with what happens if GDB receives a SIGSEGV due to
an internal bug.
In bug gdb/16505 there is mention that it would be nice if GDB did
more than just terminate when receiving a fatal signal. I haven't
done that in this commit, but later commits will move in that
direction.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16505
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17891
2021-08-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28198, Support # as linker script comment marker
PR 28198
* ldlex.l: Combine rules for handling newline, whitespace and
comments. Extend # comment handling to all states.
2021-08-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
ldgram.y tidies
I've been tripped up before thinking the "end" rule was the "END"
token. Let's use a better name. The formatting changes are for
consistency within rules, and making it a little easier to visually
separate tokens from mid-rule actions.
* ldgram.y (separator): Rename from "end". Update uses.
(statement): Formatting. Move ';' match to beginning.
(paren_script_name): Formatting. Simplify.
(must_be_exp, section): Formatting.
2021-08-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Mention whitespace in script expressions
Inside an output section statement, ld's parser can't tell whether a
line
.+=4;
is an assignment to dot or a file named ".+=4".
* ld.texi (expressions): Mention need for whitespace.
2021-08-11 Matt Jacobson <mhjacobson@me.com>
Add a -mno-dollar-line-separator command line option to the AVR assembler.
Some frontends, like the gcc Objective-C frontend, emit symbols with $
characters in them. The AVR target code in gas treats $ as a line separator,
so the code doesn?t assemble correctly.
Provide a machine-specific option to disable treating $ as a line separator.
* config/tc-avr.c (enum options): Add option flag.
(struct option): Add option -mno-dollar-line-separator.
(md_parse_option): Adjust treatment of $ when option is present.
* config/tc-avr.h: Use avr_line_separator_chars.
2021-08-11 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix typo in previous delta
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: fold IEEE encoding of -Inf with that of +Inf
The respective results differ only by the sign bits - there's no need to
have basically identical (partially even arch-specific) logic twice.
Simply set the sign bit at the end of encoding the various formats.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas: support NaN flavors
Like for infinity, there isn't just a single NaN. The sign bit may be
of interest and, going beyond infinity, whether the value is quiet or
signalling may be even more relevant to be able to encode.
Note that an anomaly with x86'es double extended precision NaN values
gets taken care of at the same time: For all other formats a positive
value with all mantissa bits set was used, while here a negative value
with all non-significant mantissa bits clear was chose for an unknown
reason.
For m68k, since I don't know their X_PRECISION floating point value
layout, a warning gets issued if any of the new flavors was attempted
to be encoded that way. However likely it may be that, given that the
code lives in a source file supposedly implementing IEEE-compliant
formats, the bit patterns of the individual words match x86'es, I didn't
want to guess so. And my very, very old paper doc doesn't even mention
floating point formats other than single and double.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
Arm64: leave .bfloat16 processing to common code
With x86 support having been implemented by extending atof-ieee.c, avoid
unnecessary code duplication in md_atof(). This will then also allow to
take advantage of adjustments made there without needing to mirror them
here.
Arm32: leave more .bfloat16 processing to common code
With x86 support having been implemented by extending atof-ieee.c, avoid
unnecessary code duplication in md_atof(). This will then also allow to
take advantage of adjustments made there without needing to mirror them
here.
gas: make 2nd argument of .dcb.* consistently optional
Unlike the forms consuming/producing integer data, the floating point
ones so far required the 2nd argument to be present, contrary to
documentation. To avoid code duplication, split float_length() out of
hex_float() (taking the opportunity to adjust error message wording).
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: introduce .bfloat16 directive
This is to be able to generate data acted upon by AVX512-BF16 and
AMX-BF16 insns. While not part of the IEEE standard, the format is
sufficiently standardized to warrant handling in config/atof-ieee.c.
Arm, where custom handling was implemented, may want to leverage this as
well. To be able to also use the hex forms supported for other floating
point formats, a small addition to the generic hex_float() is needed.
Extend existing x86 testcases.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: introduce .hfloat directive
This is to be able to generate data passed to {,V}CVTPH2PS and acted
upon by AVX512-FP16 insns. To be able to also use the hex forms
supported for other floating point formats, a small addition to the
generic hex_float() is needed.
Extend existing x86 testcases.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/ELF: fix .tfloat output with hex input
The ELF psABI-s are quite clear here: On 32-bit the data type is 12
bytes long (with 2 bytes of trailing padding), while on 64-bit it is 16
bytes long (with 6 bytes of padding). Make hex_float() capable of
handling such padding.
Note that this brings the emitted data size of .dc.x / .dcb.x in line
also for non-ELF targets; so far they were different depending on input
format (dec vs hex).
Extend the existing x86 testcases.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/ELF: fix .ds.x output
The ELF psABI-s are quite clear here: On 32-bit the underlying data type
is 12 bytes long (with 2 bytes of trailing padding), while on 64-bit it
is 16 bytes long (with 6 bytes of padding). Make s_space() capable of
handling 'x' (and 'p') type floating point being other than 12 bytes
wide (also adjusting documentation). This requires duplicating the
definition of X_PRECISION in the target speciifc header; the compiler
would complain if this was out of sync with config/atof-ieee.c.
Note that for now padding space doesn't get separated from actual
storage, which means that things will work correctly only for little-
endian cases, and which also means that by specifying large enough
numbers padding space can be set to non-zero. Since the logic is needed
for a single little-endian architecture only for now, I'm hoping that
this might be acceptable for the time being; otherwise the change will
become more intrusive.
Note also that this brings the emitted data size of .ds.x vs .tfloat in
line for non-ELF targets as well; the issue will be even more obvious
when further taking into account a subsequent patch fixing .dc.x/.dcb.x
(where output sizes currently differ depending on input format).
Extend existing x86 testcases.
2021-08-11 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/ELF: fix .tfloat output
The ELF psABI-s are quite clear here: On 32-bit the data type is 12
bytes long (with 2 bytes of trailing padding), while on 64-bit it is 16
bytes long (with 6 bytes of padding). Make ieee_md_atof() capable of
handling such padding, and specify the needed padding for x86 (leaving
non-ELF targets alone for now). Split the existing x86 testcase.
x86: have non-PE/COFF BEOS be recognized as ELF
BEOS, unless explicitly requesting *-*-beospe* targets, uses standard
ELF. None of the newly enabled tests in the testsuite fail for me.
2021-08-11 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28163, Segment fault in function rl78_special_reloc
Relocation offset checks were completely missing in the rl78 backend,
allowing a relocation to write over memory anywhere. This was true
for rl78_special_reloc, a function primarily used when applying debug
relocations, and in rl78_elf_relocate_section used by the linker.
This patch fixes those problems by correcting inaccuracies in the
relocation howtos, then uses those howtos to sanity check relocation
offsets before applying relocations. In addition, the patch
implements overflow checking using the howto information rather than
the ad-hoc scheme implemented in relocate_section. I implemented the
overflow checking in rl78_special_reloc too.
* elf32-rl78.c (RL78REL, RL78_OP_REL): Add mask parameter.
(rl78_elf_howto_table): Set destination masks. Correct size and
bitsize of DIR32_REV. Correct complain_on_overflow for many relocs
as per tests in relocate_section. Add RH_SFR. Correct bitsize
for RH_SADDR. Set size to 3 and bitsize to 0 for all OP relocs.
(check_overflow): New function.
(rl78_special_reloc): Check that reloc address is within section.
Apply relocations using reloc howto. Check for overflow.
(RANGE): Delete.
(rl78_elf_relocate_section): Sanity check r_offset. Perform
overflow checking using reloc howto.
2021-08-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Ignore .debug_types when reading .debug_aranges
I noticed that the fission-reread.exp test case can cause a complaint
when run with --target_board=cc-with-debug-names:
warning: Section .debug_aranges in [...]/fission-reread has duplicate debug_info_offset 0x0, ignoring .debug_aranges.
The bug here is that this executable has both .debug_info and
.debug_types, and both have a CU at offset 0x0. This triggers the
duplicate warning.
Because .debug_types doesn't provide any address ranges, these CUs can
be ignored. That is, this bug turns out to be another regression from
the info/types merger patch.
This patch fixes the problem by having this loop igore type units.
fission-reread.exp is updated to test for the bug.
2021-08-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Generalize addrmap dumping
While debugging another patch series, I wanted to dump an addrmap. I
came up with this patch, which generalizes the addrmap-dumping code
from psymtab.c and moves it to addrmap.c. psymtab.c is changed to use
the new code.
2021-08-10 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: iterate only on vfork parent threads in handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit
I spotted what I think is a buglet in proceed_after_vfork_done. After a
vfork child exits or execs, we resume all the threads of the parent. To
do so, we iterate on all threads using iterate_over_threads with the
proceed_after_vfork_done callback. Each thread is resumed if the
following condition is true:
if (thread->ptid.pid () == pid
&& thread->state == THREAD_RUNNING
&& !thread->executing
&& !thread->stop_requested
&& thread->stop_signal () == GDB_SIGNAL_0)
where `pid` is the pid of the vfork parent. This is not multi-target
aware: since it only filters on pid, if there is an inferior with the
same pid in another target, we could end up resuming a thread of that
other inferior. The chances of the stars aligning for this to happen
are tiny, but still.
Fix that by iterating only on the vfork parent's threads, instead of on
all threads. This is more efficient, as we iterate on just the required
threads (inferiors have their own thread list), and we can drop the pid
check. The resulting code is also more straightforward in my opinion,
so it's a win-win.
Change-Id: I14647da72e2bf65592e82fbe6efb77a413a4be3a
2021-08-10 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Serbian and Russian translations for various sub-directories
2021-08-10 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
guile: fix smob exports
Before Guile v2.1 [1], calls to `scm_make_smob_type' implicitly added
the created class to the exports list of (oop goops); v2.1+ does not
implicitly create bindings in any modules. This means that the GDB
manual subsection documenting exported types is not quite right when GDB
is linked against Guile <v2.1 (types are exported from (oop goops))
instead of (gdb)) and incorrect when linked against Guile v2.1+ (types
are not bound to any variables at all!).
There is a range of cases in which it's necessary or convenient to be
able to refer to a GDB smob type, for instance:
- Pattern matching based on the type of a value.
- Defining GOOPS methods handling values from GDB (GOOPS methods
typically use dynamic dispatch based on the types of the arguments).
- Type-checking assertions when applying some defensive programming on
an interface.
- Generally any other situation one might encounter in a dynamically
typed language that might need some introspection.
If you're more familiar with Python, it would be quite similar to being
unable to refer to the classes exported from the GDB module (which is to
say: not crippling for the most part, but makes certain tasks more
difficult than necessary).
This commit makes a small change to GDB's smob registration machinery
to make sure registered smobs get exported from the current
module. This will likely cause warnings to the user about conflicting
exports if they load both (gdb) and (oop goops) from a GDB linked
against Guile v2.0, but it shouldn't impact functionality (and seemed
preferable to trying to un-export bindings from (oop goops) if v2.0
was detected).
[1]: This changed with Guile commit
28d0871b553a3959a6c59e2e4caec1c1509f8595
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-06-07 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* guile/scm-gsmob.c (gdbscm_make_smob_type): Export registered
smob type from the current module.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-06-07 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* gdb.guile/scm-gsmob.exp (test exports): Add tests to make
sure the smob types currently listed in the GDB manual get
exported from the (gdb) module.
Change-Id: I7dcd791276b48dfc9edb64fc71170bbb42a6f6e7
2021-08-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-09 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
GAS: DWARF-5: Ensure that the 0'th entry in the directory table contains the current working directory.
* dwarf2dbg.c (get_directory_table_entry): Ensure that dir[0]
contains current working directory.
(out_dir_and_file_list): Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-dir0.s: New test source file.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-dir0.d: New test driver.
* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Run the new test.
* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-file0.d: Adjust expected output.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf5-line-2.d: Likewise.
2021-08-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Include objfiles.h in a few .c files
I found a few .c files that rely on objfiles.h, but that only include
it indirectly, via dwarf2/read.h -> psympriv.h. If that include is
removed (something my new DWARF indexer series does), then the build
will break.
It seemed harmless and correct to add these includes now, making the
eventual series a little smaller.
2021-08-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28186, SEGV elf.c:7991:30 in _bfd_elf_fixup_group_sections
PR 28186
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_fixup_group_sections): Don't segfault on
objcopy/strip with NULL output_section.
2021-08-07 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28176, rl78 complex reloc divide by zero
This is a bit more than just preventing the divide by zero. Most of
the patch is tidying up error reporting, so that for example, linking
an object file with a reloc stack underflow produces a linker error
rather than just displaying a message that might be ignored.
PR 28176
* elf32-rl78.c (RL78_STACK_PUSH, RL78_STACK_POP): Delete.
(rl78_stack_push, rl78_stack_pop): New inline functions.
(rl78_compute_complex_reloc): Add status and error message params.
Use new inline stack handling functions. Report stack overflow
or underflow, and divide by zero.
(rl78_special_reloc): Return status and error message from
rl78_compute_complex_reloc.
(rl78_elf_relocate_section): Similarly. Modernise reloc error
reporting. Delete unused bfd_reloc_other case. Don't assume
DIR24S_PCREL overflow is due to undefined function.
(rl78_offset_for_reloc): Adjust to suit rl78_compute_complex_reloc.
2021-08-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Recognize .gdb_index symbol table with empty entries as empty
When reading a .gdb_index that contains a non-empty symbol table with only
empty entries, gdb doesn't recognize it as empty.
Fix this by recognizing that the constant pool is empty, and then setting the
symbol table to empty.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/28159
* dwarf2/read.c (read_gdb_index_from_buffer): Handle symbol table
filled with empty entries.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/28159
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-zero-range.exp: Remove kfail.
2021-08-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Unconditionally define _initialize_addrmap
The way that init.c is generated does not allow for an initialization
function to be conditionally defined -- doing so will result in a link
error.
This patch fixes a build problem that arises from such a conditional
definition. It can be reproduce with --disable-unit-tests.
2021-08-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix zero address complaint for shlib
In PR28004 the following warning / Internal error is reported:
...
$ gdb -q -batch \
-iex "set sysroot $(pwd -P)/repro" \
./repro/gdb \
./repro/core \
-ex bt
...
Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
#0 0x00007ff8fe8e5d22 in raise () from repro/usr/lib/libc.so.6
[Current thread is 1 (LWP 1762498)]
#1 0x00007ff8fe8cf862 in abort () from repro/usr/lib/libc.so.6
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x7ff8feb2c21d in read in psymtab, \
but not in symtab.)
warning: (Internal error: pc 0x7ff8feb2c218 in read in psymtab, \
but not in symtab.)
...
#2 0x00007ff8feb2c21e in __gnu_debug::_Error_formatter::_M_error() const \
[clone .cold] (warning: (Internal error: pc 0x7ff8feb2c21d in read in \
psymtab, but not in symtab.)
) from repro/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6
...
The warning is about the following:
- in find_pc_sect_compunit_symtab we try to find the address
(0x7ff8feb2c218 / 0x7ff8feb2c21d) in the symtabs.
- that fails, so we try again in the partial symtabs.
- we find a matching partial symtab
- however, the partial symtab has a full symtab, so
we should have found a matching symtab in the first step.
The addresses are:
...
(gdb) info sym 0x7ff8feb2c218
__gnu_debug::_Error_formatter::_M_error() const [clone .cold] in \
section .text of repro/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6
(gdb) info sym 0x7ff8feb2c21d
__gnu_debug::_Error_formatter::_M_error() const [clone .cold] + 5 in \
section .text of repro/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6
...
which correspond to unrelocated addresses 0x9c218 and 0x9c21d:
...
$ nm -C repro/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6.0.29 | grep 000000000009c218
000000000009c218 t __gnu_debug::_Error_formatter::_M_error() const \
[clone .cold]
...
which belong to function __gnu_debug::_Error_formatter::_M_error() in
/build/gcc/src/gcc/libstdc++-v3/src/c++11/debug.cc.
The partial symtab that is found for the addresses is instead the one for
/build/gcc/src/gcc/libstdc++-v3/src/c++98/bitmap_allocator.cc, which is
incorrect.
This happens as follows.
The bitmap_allocator.cc CU has DW_AT_ranges at .debug_rnglist offset 0x4b50:
...
00004b50 0000000000000000 0000000000000056
00004b5a 00000000000a4790 00000000000a479c
00004b64 00000000000a47a0 00000000000a47ac
...
When reading the first range 0x0..0x56, it doesn't trigger the "start address
of zero" complaint here:
...
/* A not-uncommon case of bad debug info.
Don't pollute the addrmap with bad data. */
if (range_beginning + baseaddr == 0
&& !per_objfile->per_bfd->has_section_at_zero)
{
complaint (_(".debug_rnglists entry has start address of zero"
" [in module %s]"), objfile_name (objfile));
continue;
}
...
because baseaddr != 0, which seems incorrect given that when loading the
shared library individually in gdb (and consequently baseaddr == 0), we do see
the complaint.
Consequently, we run into this case in dwarf2_get_pc_bounds:
...
if (low == 0 && !per_objfile->per_bfd->has_section_at_zero)
return PC_BOUNDS_INVALID;
...
which then results in this code in process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader being
called with cu_bounds_kind == PC_BOUNDS_INVALID, which sets the set_addrmap
argument to 1:
...
scan_partial_symbols (first_die, &lowpc, &highpc,
cu_bounds_kind <= PC_BOUNDS_INVALID, cu);
...
and consequently, the CU addrmap gets build using address info from the
functions.
During that process, addrmap_set_empty is called with a range that includes
0x9c218 and 0x9c21d:
...
(gdb) p /x start
$7 = 0x9989c
(gdb) p /x end_inclusive
$8 = 0xb200d
...
but it's called for a function at DIE 0x54153 with DW_AT_ranges at 0x40ae:
...
000040ae 00000000000b1ee0 00000000000b200e
000040b9 000000000009989c 00000000000998c4
000040c3 <End of list>
...
and neither range includes 0x9c218 and 0x9c21d.
This is caused by this code in partial_die_info::read:
...
if (dwarf2_ranges_read (ranges_offset, &lowpc, &highpc, cu,
nullptr, tag))
has_pc_info = 1;
...
which pretends that the function is located at addresses 0x9989c..0xb200d,
which is indeed not the case.
This patch fixes the first problem encountered: fix the "start address of
zero" complaint warning by removing the baseaddr part from the condition.
Same for dwarf2_ranges_process.
The effect is that:
- the complaint is triggered, and
- the warning / Internal error is no longer triggered.
This does not fix the observed problem in partial_die_info::read, which is
filed as PR28200.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-29 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/28004
* gdb/dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_rnglists_process, dwarf2_ranges_process):
Fix zero address complaint.
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-zero-range-shlib.c: New test.
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-zero-range.c: New test.
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-zero-range.exp: New file.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: Add tests for Intel AVX512_FP16 instructions
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_pseudo_ops.d: Pass with
mingw section padding.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
chew ubsan warning
It matters not at all if pc is incremented from its initial NULL
value, but avoid this silly runtime ubsan error.
* doc/chew.c (perform): Avoid incrementing NULL pc.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
bfd_reloc_offset_in_range overflow
This patch is more about the style of bounds checking we ought to use,
rather than a real problem. An overflow of "octet + reloc_size" can
only happen with huge sections which would certainly cause out of
memory errors.
* reloc.c (bfd_reloc_offset_in_range): Avoid possible overflow.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28175, Segment fault in coff-tic30.c reloc_processing
The obj_convert table shouldn't be accessed without first checking the
index against the table size.
PR 28175
* coff-tic30.c (reloc_processing): Sanity check reloc symbol index.
* coff-z80.c (reloc_processing): Likewise.
* coff-z8k.c (reloc_processing): Likewise.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28173, nds32_elf_howto_table index out of bounds
Indexing the howto table was seriously broken by a missing entry, and
use of assertions about user input rather than testing the input.
PR 28173
* elf32-nds32.c (nds32_elf_howto_table): Add missing empty howto.
(bfd_elf32_bfd_reloc_type_table_lookup): Replace assertions with
range checks. Return NULL if unsupported reloc type. Remove
dead code. Take an unsigned int param.
(nds32_info_to_howto_rel): Test for NULL howto or howto name
return from lookup. Remove assertion.
(nds32_info_to_howto): Remove unnecessary ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
Test for NULL howto or howto name return from lookup.
2021-08-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28172, bfin_pcrel24_reloc heap-buffer-overflow
bfin pcrel24 relocs are weird, they apply to the reloc address minus
two. That means reloc addresses of 0 and 1 are invalid. Check that,
and fix other reloc range checking.
PR 28172
* elf32-bfin.c (bfin_pcrel24_reloc): Correct reloc range check.
(bfin_imm16_reloc, bfin_byte4_reloc, bfin_bfd_reloc): Likewise.
(bfin_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
2021-08-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-05 Will Schmidt <will_schmidt@vnet.ibm.com>
[PATCH] GDB Testsuite, update compile-cplus.exp
[PATCH] GDB Testsuite, update compile-cplus.exp
Update the gdb.compile/compile-cplus.exp test to
handle errors generated when passing bad arguments
into the gdb-compile command.
This matches changes made to gdb.compile/compile.exp
in the past as part of
"Migrate rest of compile commands to new options framework"
e6ed716cd5514c08b9d7c469d185b1aa177dbc22
2021-08-05 Will Schmidt <will_schmidt@vnet.ibm.com>
[gdb] Handle .TOC. sections during gdb-compile for rs6000 target.
[gdb] Handle .TOC. sections during gdb-compile for rs6000 target.
When we encounter a .TOC. symbol in the object we are loading,
we need to associate this with the .toc section in order to
properly resolve other symbols in the object. IF a .toc section
is not found, iterate the sections until we find one with the
SEC_ALLOC flag. If that also fails, fall back to using
the *ABS* section, pointed to by bfd_abs_section_ptr.
2021-08-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: gdb.base/attach.exp: expose bug when testing with native-extended-gdbserver
In gdb.base/attach.exp, proc do_attach_failure_tests, we attach to a
process. When then try to attach to the same process in another
inferior, expecting it to fail. We then come back to the first inferior
and try to kill it, to clean up the test. When using the
native-extended-gdbserver board, this "kill" test passes, even though it
didn't actually work:
add-inferior
[New inferior 2]
Added inferior 2 on connection 1 (extended-remote localhost:2347)
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: do_attach_failure_tests: add empty inferior 2
inferior 2
[Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)]
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: do_attach_failure_tests: switch to inferior 2
attach 817032
Attaching to process 817032
Attaching to process 817032 failed
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: do_attach_failure_tests: fail to attach again
inferior 1
[Switching to inferior 1 [process 817032] (/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/attach/attach)]
[Switching to thread 1.1 (Thread 817032.817032)]
#0 main () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/attach.c:19
19 while (! should_exit)
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: do_attach_failure_tests: switch to inferior 1
kill
Kill the program being debugged? (y or n) y
Remote connection closed <==== That's unexpected
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: do_attach_failure_tests: exit after attach failures
When the second attach fails, gdbserver seems to break the connection
(it hangs up on the existing remote target) and start listening again
for incoming connections. This is documented in PR 19558 [1].
Make the expected output regexp for the kill command tighter (it
currently accepts anything). Use "set confirm off" so we don't have to
deal with the confirmation. And to be really sure the extended-remote
target still works, try to run the inferior again after killing. The
now tests are kfail'ed when the target is gdbserver.
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19558
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/attach.exp (do_attach_failure_tests): Make kill
regexp tighter, run inferior after killing it. Kfail when
target is gdbserver.
Change-Id: I99c5cd3968ce2ec962ace35b016f842a243b7a0d
2021-08-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: gdb.base/attach.exp: fix support check in test_command_line_attach_run
When running this test with the native-extended-gdbserver, we get:
main () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/attach.c:19
19 while (! should_exit)
The program being debugged has been started already.
Start it from the beginning? (y or n) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: cmdline attach run: run to prompt
y
Don't know how to run. Try "help target".
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/attach.exp: cmdline attach run: run to main
This test tests using both "-p <pid>" and "-ex start" on the command line,
making sure that we first attach and then run.
Normally, after that "y", we should see the program running again.
However, a particuliarity of the native-extended-gdbserver is that it
uses "set auto-connect-native-target off" on the command line. The full
GDB command line is:
./gdb -nw -nx -data-directory /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/../data-directory \
-iex set height 0 -iex set width 0 -ex set auto-connect-native-target off \
-ex set sysroot -quiet -iex set height 0 -iex set width 0 --pid=536609 -ex start
The attach succeeds. I guess it is done before "set
auto-connect-native-target off", or it somehow bypasses it. When the
"start" is executed, the native target is unpushed, while killing the
existing process, but not re-pushed, due to "set
auto-connect-native-target off". So we get that "Don't know how to run"
message.
Really, I think it's a case of the test doing things incompatible with
the board, I think it should just be skipped. And as we can see with
the current code, there were some attempts at doing this, just using the
wrong checks:
- isnative: this is a dejagnu proc which checks if the target board has
the same triplet as the build machine. In the case of
native-extended-gdbserver, it does.
- is_remote target: this checks whether the target board is remote, as
in executing on a different machin. native-extended-gdbserver is not
remote.
Since the --pid option specifically attaches to a process using the
native target, change the test to use gdb_is_target_native instead.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/attach.exp (test_command_line_attach_run): Use
gdb_is_target_native to check if test is supported.
Change-Id: I762e127f39623889999dc9ed2185540a0951bfb0
2021-08-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: target_waitstatus_to_string: print extra info for FORKED, VFORKED, EXECD
Print the extra information contained in target_waitstatus for these
events. For TARGET_WAITKIND_{FORKED,VFORKED}, the extra information is
contained in related_pid, and is the ptid of the new process. For
TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD, it,s the exec'd path name in execd_pathname.
Print it using the same format used for TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED and
others.
Here are sample outputs for all three events:
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 726890.726890.0 [process 726890],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = vforked, related_pid = 726894.726894.0
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 727045.727045.0 [process 727045],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = forked, related_pid = 727049.727049.0
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) =
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: 727119.727119.0 [process 727119],
[infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = execd, execd_pathname = /usr/bin/ls
Change-Id: I4416a74e3bf792a625a68bf26c51689e170f2184
2021-08-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use ptid_t::to_string in print_target_wait_results
The ptid_t::to_string method was introduced recently, to format a ptid_t
for debug purposes. It formats the ptid exactly as is done in
print_target_wait_results, so make print_target_wait_results use it.
Change-Id: I0a81c8040d3e1858fb304cb28366b34d94eefe4d
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Add as_lval argument to expression evaluator
There are cases where the result of the expression evaluation is
expected to be in a form of a value and not location description.
One place that has this requirement is dwarf_entry_parameter_to_value
function, but more are expected in the future. Until now, this
requirement was fulfilled by extending the evaluated expression with
a DW_OP_stack_value operation at the end.
New implementation, introduces a new evaluation argument instead.
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::fetch_result): Add as_lval
argument.
(dwarf_expr_context::eval_exp): Add as_lval argument.
* dwarf2/expr.h (struct dwarf_expr_context): Add as_lval
argument to fetch_result and eval_exp methods.
* dwarf2/frame.c (execute_stack_op): Add as_lval argument.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_entry_parameter_to_value): Remove
DWARF expression extension.
(dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Add as_lval argument support.
(dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc): Add as_lval argument support.
(dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval): Add as_lval argument support.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Simplify dwarf_expr_context class interface
Idea of this patch is to get a clean and simple public interface for
the dwarf_expr_context class, looking like:
- constructor,
- destructor,
- push_address method and
- evaluate method.
Where constructor should only ever require a target architecture
information. This information is held in per object file
(dwarf2_per_objfile) structure, so it makes sense to keep that
structure as a constructor argument. It also makes sense to get the
address size from that structure, but unfortunately that interface
doesn't exist at the moment, so the dwarf_expr_context class user
needs to provide that information.
The push_address method is used to push a CORE_ADDR as a value on
top of the DWARF stack before the evaluation. This method can be
later changed to push any struct value object on the stack.
The evaluate method is the method that evaluates a DWARF expression
and provides the evaluation result, in a form of a single struct
value object that describes a location. To do this, the method requires
a context of the evaluation, as well as expected result type
information. If the type information is not provided, the DWARF generic
type will be used instead.
To avoid storing the gdbarch information in the evaluator object, that
information is now always acquired from the per_objfile object.
All data members are now private and only visible to the evaluator
class, so a m_ prefix was added to all of their names to reflect that.
To make this distinction clear, they are also accessed through objects
this pointer, wherever that was not the case before.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context): Add
address size argument.
(dwarf_expr_context::read_mem): Change to use property_addr_info
structure.
(dwarf_expr_context::evaluate): New function.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Change to use
property_addr_info structure.
* dwarf2/expr.h (struct dwarf_expr_context): New evaluate
declaration. Change eval and fetch_result method to private.
(dwarf_expr_context::gdbarch): Remove member.
(dwarf_expr_context::stack): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::addr_size): Make private and add
m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::recursion_depth): Make private and add
m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::max_recursion_depth): Make private and
add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::len): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::data): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::initialized): Make private and add
m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::pieces): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::per_objfile): Make private and add
m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::frame): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::per_cu): Make private and add m_ prefix.
(dwarf_expr_context::addr_info): Make private and add
m_ prefix.
* dwarf2/frame.c (execute_stack_op): Change to call evaluate
method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Change to call
evaluate method.
(dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval): Change to call evaluate method.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Make DWARF evaluator return a single struct value
The patch is addressing the issue of class users writing and reading
the internal data of the dwarf_expr_context class.
At this point, all conditions are met for the DWARF evaluator to return
an evaluation result in a form of a single struct value object.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (pieced_value_funcs): Chenge to static
function.
(allocate_piece_closure): Change to static function.
(dwarf_expr_context::fetch_result): New function.
* dwarf2/expr.h (struct piece_closure): Remove declaration.
(struct dwarf_expr_context): fetch_result new declaration.
fetch, fetch_address and fetch_in_stack_memory members move
to private.
(allocate_piece_closure): Remove.
* dwarf2/frame.c (execute_stack_op): Change to use
fetch_result.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Change to use
fetch_result.
(dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval): Change to use fetch_result.
* dwarf2/loc.h (invalid_synthetic_pointer): Expose function.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Make value_copy also copy the stack data member
Fixing a bug where the value_copy function did not copy the stack data
and initialized members of the struct value. This is needed for the
next patch where the DWARF expression evaluator is changed to return a
single struct value object.
* value.c (value_copy): Change to also copy the stack data
and initialized members.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move piece_closure and its support to expr.c
Following 5 patches series is trying to clean up the interface of the
DWARF expression evaluator class (dwarf_expr_context).
After merging all expression evaluators into one class, the next
logical step is to make a clean user interface for that class. To do
that, we first need to address the issue of class users writing and
reading the internal data of the class directly.
Fixing the case of writing is simple, it makes sense for an evaluator
instance to be per architecture basis. Currently, the best separation
seems to be per object file, so having that data (dwarf2_per_objfile)
as a constructor argument makes sense. It also makes sense to get the
address size from that object file, but unfortunately that interface
does not exist at the moment.
Luckily, address size information is already available to the users
through other means. As a result, the address size also needs to be a
class constructor argument, at least until a better interface for
acquiring that information from an object file is implemented.
The rest of the user written data comes down to a context of an
evaluated expression (compilation unit context, frame context and
passed in buffer context) and a source type information that a result
of evaluating expression is representing. So, it makes sense for all of
these to be arguments of an evaluation method.
To address the problem of reading the dwarf_expr_context class
internal data, we first need to understand why it is implemented that
way?
This is actualy a question of which existing class can be used to
represent both values and a location descriptions and why it is not
used currently?
The answer is in a struct value class/structure, but the problem is
that before the evaluators were merged, only one evaluator had an
infrastructure to resolve composite and implicit pointer location
descriptions.
After the merge, we are now able to use the struct value to represent
any result of the expression evaluation. It also makes sense to move
all infrastructure for those location descriptions to the expr.c file
considering that that is the only place using that infrastructure.
What we are left with in the end is a clean public interface of the
dwarf_expr_context class containing:
- constructor,
- destructor,
- push_address method and
- eval_exp method.
The idea with this particular patch is to move piece_closure structure
and the interface that handles it (lval_funcs) to expr.c file.
While implicit pointer location descriptions are still not useful in
the CFI context (of the AMD's DWARF standard extensions), the composite
location descriptions are certainly necessary to describe a results of
specific compiler optimizations.
Considering that a piece_closure structure is used to represent both,
there was no benefit in splitting them.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (struct piece_closure): Add from loc.c.
(allocate_piece_closure): Add from loc.c.
(bits_to_bytes): Add from loc.c.
(rw_pieced_value): Add from loc.c.
(read_pieced_value): Add from loc.c.
(write_pieced_value): Add from loc.c.
(check_pieced_synthetic_pointer): Add from loc.c.
(indirect_pieced_value): Add from loc.c.
(coerce_pieced_ref): Add from loc.c.
(copy_pieced_value_closure): Add from loc.c.
(free_pieced_value_closure): Add from loc.c.
(sect_variable_value): Add from loc.c.
* dwarf2/loc.c (sect_variable_value): Move to expr.c.
(struct piece_closure): Move to expr.c.
(allocate_piece_closure): Move to expr.c.
(bits_to_bytes): Move to expr.c.
(rw_pieced_value): Move to expr.c.
(read_pieced_value): Move to expr.c.
(write_pieced_value): Move to expr.c.
(check_pieced_synthetic_pointer): Move to expr.c.
(indirect_pieced_value): Move to expr.c.
(coerce_pieced_ref): Move to expr.c.
(copy_pieced_value_closure): Move to expr.c.
(free_pieced_value_closure): Move to expr.c.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Merge evaluate_for_locexpr_baton evaluator
The evaluate_for_locexpr_baton is the last derived class from the
dwarf_expr_context class. It's purpose is to support the passed in
buffer functionality.
Although, it is not really necessary to merge this class with it's
base class, doing that simplifies new expression evaluator design.
Considering that this functionality is going around the DWARF standard,
it is also reasonable to expect that with a new evaluator design and
extending the push object address functionality to accept any location
description, there will be no need to support passed in buffers.
Alternatively, it would also makes sense to abstract the interaction
between the evaluator and a given resource in the near future. The
passed in buffer would then be a specialization of that abstraction.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::read_mem): Merge with
evaluate_for_locexpr_baton implementation.
* dwarf2/loc.c (class evaluate_for_locexpr_baton): Remove
class.
(evaluate_for_locexpr_baton::read_mem): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
(dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval): Instantiate dwarf_expr_context
instead of evaluate_for_locexpr_baton class.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Remove empty frame and full evaluators
There are no virtual methods that require different specialization in
dwarf_expr_context class. This means that derived classes
dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc are not needed any
more.
As a result of this, the evaluate_for_locexpr_baton class base class
is now the dwarf_expr_context class.
There might be a need for a better class hierarchy when we know more
about the direction of the future DWARF versions and gdb extensions,
but that is out of the scope of this patch series.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/frame.c (class dwarf_expr_executor): Remove class.
(execute_stack_op): Instantiate dwarf_expr_context instead of
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc class.
* dwarf2/loc.c (class dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc): Remove class.
(dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Instantiate dwarf_expr_context
instead of dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc class.
(struct evaluate_for_locexpr_baton): Derive from
dwarf_expr_context.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Inline get_reg_value method of dwarf_expr_context
The get_reg_value method is a small function that is only called once,
so it can be inlined to simplify the dwarf_expr_context class.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::get_reg_value): Remove
method.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Inline get_reg_value
method.
* dwarf2/expr.h (dwarf_expr_context::get_reg_value): Remove
method.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move push_dwarf_reg_entry_value to expr.c
Following the idea of merging the evaluators, the
push_dwarf_reg_entry_value method can be moved from
dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc classes
to their base class dwarf_expr_context.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c
(dwarf_expr_context::push_dwarf_reg_entry_value): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
* dwarf2/frame.c
(dwarf_expr_executor::push_dwarf_reg_entry_value): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_expr_reg_to_entry_parameter): Expose
function.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::push_dwarf_reg_entry_value): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
* dwarf2/loc.h (dwarf_expr_reg_to_entry_parameter): Expose
function.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move read_mem to dwarf_expr_context
Following the idea of merging the evaluators, the read_mem method can
be moved from dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc classes
to their base class dwarf_expr_context.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::read_mem): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
* dwarf2/frame.c (dwarf_expr_executor::read_mem): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::read_mem): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Move get_object_address to dwarf_expr_context
Following the idea of merging the evaluators, the get_object_address
and can be moved from dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc
classes to their base class dwarf_expr_context.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::get_object_address): Move
from dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
(class dwarf_expr_context): Add object address member to
dwarf_expr_context.
* dwarf2/expr.h (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_pc): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/frame.c (dwarf_expr_executor::get_object_address):
Remove method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::get_object_address):
move to dwarf_expr_context.
(class dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc): Move object address member to
dwarf_expr_context.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move dwarf_call to dwarf_expr_context
Following the idea of merging the evaluators, the dwarf_call and
get_frame_pc method can be moved from dwarf_expr_executor and
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc classes to their base class dwarf_expr_context.
Once this is done, the get_frame_pc can be replace with lambda
function.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_call): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_pc): Replace with lambda.
* dwarf2/expr.h (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_pc): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/frame.c (dwarf_expr_executor::dwarf_call): Remove
method.
(dwarf_expr_executor::get_frame_pc): Remove method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::get_frame_pc): Remove
method.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::dwarf_call): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
(per_cu_dwarf_call): Inline function.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move compilation unit info to dwarf_expr_context
This patch moves the compilation unit context information and support
from dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc to
dwarf_expr_context evaluator. The idea is to report an error when a
given operation requires a compilation unit information to be resolved,
which is not available.
With this change, it also makes sense to always acquire ref_addr_size
information from the compilation unit context, considering that all
DWARF operations that refer to that information require a compilation
unit context to be present during their evaluation.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (ensure_have_per_cu): New function.
(dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context): Add compilation unit
context information.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_base_type): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_addr_index): Remove method.
(dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_variable_value): Remove method.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Call compilation unit
context info check. Inline get_addr_index and
dwarf_variable_value methods.
* dwarf2/expr.h (struct dwarf_expr_context): Add compilation
context info.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_addr_index): Remove method.
(dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_variable_value): Remove method.
(dwarf_expr_context::ref_addr_size): Remove member.
* dwarf2/frame.c (dwarf_expr_executor::get_addr_index): Remove
method.
(dwarf_expr_executor::dwarf_variable_value): Remove method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (sect_variable_value): Expose function.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::get_addr_index): Remove method.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::dwarf_variable_value): Remove method.
(class dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc): Move compilation unit context
information to dwarf_expr_context class.
* dwarf2/loc.h (sect_variable_value): Expose function.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Remove get_frame_cfa from dwarf_expr_context
Following the idea of merging the evaluators, the get_frame_cfa method
can be moved from dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc
classes to their base class dwarf_expr_context. Once this is done,
it becomes apparent that the method is only called once and it can be
inlined.
It is also necessary to check if the frame context information was
provided before the DW_OP_call_frame_cfa operation is executed.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_cfa): Remove
method.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Call frame context info
check for DW_OP_call_frame_cfa. Remove use of get_frame_cfa.
* dwarf2/expr.h (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_cfa): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/frame.c (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_cfa): Remove
method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_cfa): Remove
method.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <zoran.zaric@amd.com>
Move frame context info to dwarf_expr_context
Following 15 patches in this patch series is cleaning up the design of
the DWARF expression evaluator (dwarf_expr_context) to make future
extensions of that evaluator easier and cleaner to implement.
There are three subclasses of the dwarf_expr_context class
(dwarf_expr_executor, dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc and
evaluate_for_locexpr_baton). Here is a short description of each class:
- dwarf_expr_executor is evaluating a DWARF expression in a context
of a Call Frame Information. The overridden methods of this subclass
report an error if a specific DWARF operation, represented by that
method, is not allowed in a CFI context. The source code of this
subclass lacks the support for composite as well as implicit pointer
location description.
- dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc can evaluate any expression with no
restrictions. All of the methods that this subclass overrides are
actually doing what they are intended to do. This subclass contains
a full support for all location description types.
- evaluate_for_locexpr_baton subclass is a specialization of the
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc subclass and it's function is to add
support for passed in buffers. This seems to be a way to go around
the fact that DWARF standard lacks a bit offset support for memory
location descriptions as well as using any location description for
the push object address functionality.
It all comes down to this question: what is a function of a DWARF
expression evaluator?
Is it to evaluate the expression in a given context or to check the
correctness of that expression in that context?
Currently, the only reason why there is a dwarf_expr_executor subclass
is to report an invalid DWARF expression in a context of a CFI, but is
that what the evaluator is supposed to do considering that the evaluator
is not tied to a given DWARF version?
There are more and more vendor and GNU extensions that are not part of
the DWARF standard, so is it that impossible to expect that some of the
extensions could actually lift the previously imposed restrictions of
the CFI context? Not to mention that every new DWARF version is lifting
some restrictions anyway.
The thing that makes more sense for an evaluator to do, is to take the
context of an evaluation and checks the requirements of every operation
evaluated against that context. With this approach, the evaluator would
report an error only if parts of the context, necessary for the
evaluation, are missing.
If this approach is taken, then the unification of the
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc, dwarf_expr_executor and dwarf_expr_context
is the next logical step. This makes a design of the DWARF expression
evaluator cleaner and allows more flexibility when supporting future
vendor and GNU extensions.
Additional benefit here is that now all evaluators have access to all
location description types, which means that a vendor extended CFI
rules could support composite location description as well. This also
means that a new evaluator interface can be changed to return a single
struct value (that describes the result of the evaluation) instead of
a caller poking around the dwarf_expr_context internal data for answers
(like it is done currently).
This patch starts the merging process by moving the frame context
information and support from dwarf_expr_executor and
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc to dwarf_expr_context evaluator. The idea
is to report an error when a given operation requires a frame
information to be resolved, if that information is not present.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (ensure_have_frame): New function.
(read_addr_from_reg): Add from frame.c.
(dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context): Add frame info to
dwarf_expr_context.
(dwarf_expr_context::read_addr_from_reg): Remove.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_reg_value): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
(dwarf_expr_context::get_frame_base): Move from
dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Call frame context info
check. Remove use of read_addr_from_reg method.
* dwarf2/expr.h (struct dwarf_expr_context): Add frame info
member, read_addr_from_reg, get_reg_value and get_frame_base
declaration.
(read_addr_from_reg): Move to expr.c.
* dwarf2/frame.c (read_addr_from_reg): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
(dwarf_expr_executor::read_addr_from_reg): Remove.
(dwarf_expr_executor::get_frame_base): Remove.
(dwarf_expr_executor::get_reg_value): Remove.
(execute_stack_op): Use read_addr_from_reg function instead of
read_addr_from_reg method.
* dwarf2/loc.c (dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::get_frame_base): Move
to dwarf_expr_context.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::get_reg_value): Move to
dwarf_expr_context.
(dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc::read_addr_from_reg): Remove.
(dwarf2_locexpr_baton_eval):Use read_addr_from_reg function
instead of read_addr_from_reg method.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Cleanup of the dwarf_expr_context constructor
Move the initial values for dwarf_expr_context class data members
to the class declaration in expr.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context):
Remove initial data members values.
* dwarf2/expr.h (dwarf_expr_context): Add initial values
to the class data members.
2021-08-05 Zoran Zaric <Zoran.Zaric@amd.com>
Replace the symbol needs evaluator with a parser
This patch addresses a design problem with the symbol_needs_eval_context
class. It exposes the problem by introducing two new testsuite test
cases.
To explain the issue, I first need to explain the dwarf_expr_context
class that the symbol_needs_eval_context class derives from.
The intention behind the dwarf_expr_context class is to commonize the
DWARF expression evaluation mechanism for different evaluation
contexts. Currently in gdb, the evaluation context can contain some or
all of the following information: architecture, object file, frame and
compilation unit.
Depending on the information needed to evaluate a given expression,
there are currently three distinct DWARF expression evaluators:
 - Frame: designed to evaluate an expression in the context of a call
   frame information (dwarf_expr_executor class). This evaluator doesn't
   need a compilation unit information.
 - Location description: designed to evaluate an expression in the
   context of a source level information (dwarf_evaluate_loc_desc
   class). This evaluator expects all information needed for the
   evaluation of the given expression to be present.
 - Symbol needs: designed to answer a question about the parts of the
   context information required to evaluate a DWARF expression behind a
   given symbol (symbol_needs_eval_context class). This evaluator
   doesn't need a frame information.
The functional difference between the symbol needs evaluator and the
others is that this evaluator is not meant to interact with the actual
target. Instead, it is supposed to check which parts of the context
information are needed for the given DWARF expression to be evaluated by
the location description evaluator.
The idea is to take advantage of the existing dwarf_expr_context
evaluation mechanism and to fake all required interactions with the
actual target, by returning back dummy values. The evaluation result is
returned as one of three possible values, based on operations found in a
given expression:
- SYMBOL_NEEDS_NONE,
- SYMBOL_NEEDS_REGISTERS and
- SYMBOL_NEEDS_FRAME.
The problem here is that faking results of target interactions can yield
an incorrect evaluation result.
For example, if we have a conditional DWARF expression, where the
condition depends on a value read from an actual target, and the true
branch of the condition requires a frame information to be evaluated,
while the false branch doesn't, fake target reads could conclude that a
frame information is not needed, where in fact it is. This wrong
information would then cause the expression to be actually evaluated (by
the location description evaluator) with a missing frame information.
This would then crash the debugger.
The gdb.dwarf2/symbol_needs_eval_fail.exp test introduces this
scenario, with the following DWARF expression:
                   DW_OP_addr $some_variable
                   DW_OP_deref
                   # conditional jump to DW_OP_bregx
                   DW_OP_bra 4
                   DW_OP_lit0
                   # jump to DW_OP_stack_value
                   DW_OP_skip 3
                   DW_OP_bregx $dwarf_regnum 0
                   DW_OP_stack_value
This expression describes a case where some variable dictates the
location of another variable. Depending on a value of some_variable, the
variable whose location is described by this expression is either read
from a register or it is defined as a constant value 0. In both cases,
the value will be returned as an implicit location description on the
DWARF stack.
Currently, when the symbol needs evaluator fakes a memory read from the
address behind the some_variable variable, the constant value 0 is used
as the value of the variable A, and the check returns the
SYMBOL_NEEDS_NONE result.
This is clearly a wrong result and it causes the debugger to crash.
The scenario might sound strange to some people, but it comes from a
SIMD/SIMT architecture where $some_variable is an execution mask.  In
any case, it is a valid DWARF expression, and GDB shouldn't crash while
evaluating it. Also, a similar example could be made based on a
condition of the frame base value, where if that value is concluded to
be 0, the variable location could be defaulted to a TLS based memory
address.
The gdb.dwarf2/symbol_needs_eval_timeout.exp test introduces a second
scenario. This scenario is a bit more abstract due to the DWARF
assembler lacking the CFI support, but it exposes a different
manifestation of the same problem. Like in the previous scenario, the
DWARF expression used in the test is valid:
                       DW_OP_lit1
                       DW_OP_addr $some_variable
                       DW_OP_deref
                       # jump to DW_OP_fbreg
                       DW_OP_skip 4
                       DW_OP_drop
                       DW_OP_fbreg 0
                       DW_OP_dup
                       DW_OP_lit0
                       DW_OP_eq
                       # conditional jump to DW_OP_drop
                       DW_OP_bra -9
                       DW_OP_stack_value
Similarly to the previous scenario, the location of a variable A is an
implicit location description with a constant value that depends on a
value held by a global variable. The difference from the previous case
is that DWARF expression contains a loop instead of just one branch. The
end condition of that loop depends on the expectation that a frame base
value is never zero. Currently, the act of faking the target reads will
cause the symbol needs evaluator to get stuck in an infinite loop.
Somebody could argue that we could change the fake reads to return
something else, but that would only hide the real problem.
The general impression seems to be that the desired design is to have
one class that deals with parsing of the DWARF expression, while there
are virtual methods that deal with specifics of some operations.
Using an evaluator mechanism here doesn't seem to be correct, because
the act of evaluation relies on accessing the data from the actual
target with the possibility of skipping the evaluation of some parts of
the expression.
To better explain the proposed solution for the issue, I first need to
explain a couple more details behind the current design:
There are multiple places in gdb that handle DWARF expression parsing
for different purposes. Some are in charge of converting the expression
to some other internal representation (decode_location_expression,
disassemble_dwarf_expression and dwarf2_compile_expr_to_ax), some are
analysing the expression for specific information
(compute_stack_depth_worker) and some are in charge of evaluating the
expression in a given context (dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op
and decode_locdesc).
The problem is that all those functions have a similar (large) switch
statement that handles each DWARF expression operation. The result of
this is a code duplication and harder maintenance.
As a step into the right direction to solve this problem (at least for
the purpose of a DWARF expression evaluation) the expression parsing was
commonized inside of an evaluator base class (dwarf_expr_context). This
makes sense for all derived classes, except for the symbol needs
evaluator (symbol_needs_eval_context) class.
As described previously the problem with this evaluator is that if the
evaluator is not allowed to access the actual target, it is not really
evaluating.
Instead, the desired function of a symbol needs evaluator seems to fall
more into expression analysis category. This means that a more natural
fit for this evaluator is to be a symbol needs analysis, similar to the
existing compute_stack_depth_worker analysis.
Another problem is that using a heavyweight mechanism of an evaluator
to do an expression analysis seems to be an unneeded overhead. It also
requires a more complicated design of the parent class to support fake
target reads.
The reality is that the whole symbol_needs_eval_context class can be
replaced with a lightweight recursive analysis function, that will give
more correct result without compromising the design of the
dwarf_expr_context class. The analysis treats the expression byte
stream as a DWARF operation graph, where each graph node can be
visited only once and each operation can decide if the frame context
is needed for their evaluation.
The downside of this approach is adding of one more similar switch
statement, but at least this way the new symbol needs analysis will be
a lightweight mechnism and it will provide a correct result for any
given DWARF expression.
A more desired long term design would be to have one class that deals
with parsing of the DWARF expression, while there would be a virtual
methods that deal with specifics of some DWARF operations. Then that
class would be used as a base for all DWARF expression parsing mentioned
at the beginning.
This however, requires a far bigger changes that are out of the scope
of this patch series.
The new analysis requires the DWARF location description for the
argc argument of the main function to change in the assembly file
gdb.python/amd64-py-framefilter-invalidarg.S. Originally, expression
ended with a 0 value byte, which was never reached by the symbol needs
evaluator, because it was detecting a stack underflow when evaluating
the operation before. The new approach does not simulate a DWARF
stack anymore, so the 0 value byte needs to be removed because it
makes the DWARF expression invalid.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/loc.c (class symbol_needs_eval_context): Remove.
(dwarf2_get_symbol_read_needs): New function.
(dwarf2_loc_desc_get_symbol_read_needs): Remove.
(locexpr_get_symbol_read_needs): Use
dwarf2_get_symbol_read_needs.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.python/amd64-py-framefilter-invalidarg.S : Update argc
DWARF location expression.
* lib/dwarf.exp (_location): Handle DW_OP_fbreg.
* gdb.dwarf2/symbol_needs_eval.c: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/symbol_needs_eval_fail.exp: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/symbol_needs_eval_timeout.exp: New file.
2021-08-05 Cui,Lili <lili.cui@intel.com>
[PATCH 2/2] Add tests for Intel AVX512_FP16 instructions
Intel AVX512 FP16 instructions use maps 3, 5 and 6. Maps 5 and 6 use 3 bits
in the EVEX.mmm field (0b101, 0b110). Map 5 is for instructions that were FP32
in map 1 (0Fxx). Map 6 is for instructions that were FP32 in map 2 (0F38xx).
There are some exceptions to this rule. Some things in map 1 (0Fxx) with imm8
operands predated our current conventions; those instructions moved to map 3.
FP32 things in map 3 (0F3Axx) found new opcodes in map3 for FP16 because map3
is very sparsely populated. Most of the FP16 instructions share opcodes and
prefix (EVEX.pp) bits with the related FP32 operations.
Intel AVX512 FP16 instructions has new displacements scaling rules, please refer
to the public software developer manual for detail information.
gas/
2021-08-05 Igor Tsimbalist <igor.v.tsimbalist@intel.com>
H.J. Lu <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
Wei Xiao <wei3.xiao@intel.com>
Lili Cui <lili.cui@intel.com>
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run FP16 tests.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16-intel.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16-inval-bcast.l: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16-inval-bcast.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16_pseudo_ops.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16_pseudo_ops.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16_vl-intel.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16_vl.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/avx512_fp16_vl.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-intel.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-inval-bcast.l: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-inval-bcast.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_pseudo_ops.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_pseudo_ops.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_vl-intel.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_vl.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16_vl.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-inval-register.l: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-inval-register.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-bad.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-avx512_fp16-bad.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-default-suffix-avx.d: Add new testcase.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-default-suffix.d: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-default-suffix.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/xmmword.l: Ditto.
* testsuite/gas/i386/xmmword.s: Ditto.
2021-08-05 Cui,Lili <lili.cui@intel.com>
[PATCH 1/2] Enable Intel AVX512_FP16 instructions
Intel AVX512 FP16 instructions use maps 3, 5 and 6. Maps 5 and 6 use 3 bits
in the EVEX.mmm field (0b101, 0b110). Map 5 is for instructions that were FP32
in map 1 (0Fxx). Map 6 is for instructions that were FP32 in map 2 (0F38xx).
There are some exceptions to this rule. Some things in map 1 (0Fxx) with imm8
operands predated our current conventions; those instructions moved to map 3.
FP32 things in map 3 (0F3Axx) found new opcodes in map3 for FP16 because map3
is very sparsely populated. Most of the FP16 instructions share opcodes and
prefix (EVEX.pp) bits with the related FP32 operations.
Intel AVX512 FP16 instructions has new displacements scaling rules, please refer
to the public software developer manual for detail information.
gas/
2021-08-05 Igor Tsimbalist <igor.v.tsimbalist@intel.com>
H.J. Lu <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
Wei Xiao <wei3.xiao@intel.com>
Lili Cui <lili.cui@intel.com>
* config/tc-i386.c (struct Broadcast_Operation): Adjust comment.
(cpu_arch): Add .avx512_fp16.
(cpu_noarch): Add noavx512_fp16.
(pte): Add evexmap5 and evexmap6.
(build_evex_prefix): Handle EVEXMAP5 and EVEXMAP6.
(check_VecOperations): Handle {1to32}.
(check_VecOperands): Handle CheckRegNumb.
(check_word_reg): Handle Toqword.
(i386_error): Add invalid_dest_and_src_register_set.
(match_template): Handle invalid_dest_and_src_register_set.
* doc/c-i386.texi: Document avx512_fp16, noavx512_fp16.
opcodes/
2021-08-05 Igor Tsimbalist <igor.v.tsimbalist@intel.com>
H.J. Lu <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
Wei Xiao <wei3.xiao@intel.com>
Lili Cui <lili.cui@intel.com>
* i386-dis.c (EXwScalarS): New.
(EXxh): Ditto.
(EXxhc): Ditto.
(EXxmmqh): Ditto.
(EXxmmqdh): Ditto.
(EXEvexXwb): Ditto.
(DistinctDest_Fixup): Ditto.
(enum): Add xh_mode, evex_half_bcst_xmmqh_mode, evex_half_bcst_xmmqdh_mode
and w_swap_mode.
(enum): Add PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A08_W_0, PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A0A_W_0,
PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A26, PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A27, PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A56,
PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A57, PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A66, PREFIX_EVEX_0F3A67,
PREFIX_EVEX_0F3AC2, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_10, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_11,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_1D, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_2A, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_2C,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_2D, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_2E, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_2F,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_51, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_58, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_59,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5A_W_0, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5A_W_1,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5B_W_0, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5B_W_1,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5C, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5D, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5E,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_5F, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_78, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_79,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_7A, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_7B, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_7C,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP5_7D_W_0, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP6_13, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP6_56,
PREFIX_EVEX_MAP6_57, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP6_D6, PREFIX_EVEX_MAP6_D7
(enum): Add EVEX_MAP5 and EVEX_MAP6.
(enum): Add EVEX_W_MAP5_5A, EVEX_W_MAP5_5B,
EVEX_W_MAP5_78_P_0, EVEX_W_MAP5_78_P_2, EVEX_W_MAP5_79_P_0,
EVEX_W_MAP5_79_P_2, EVEX_W_MAP5_7A_P_2, EVEX_W_MAP5_7A_P_3,
EVEX_W_MAP5_7B_P_2, EVEX_W_MAP5_7C_P_0, EVEX_W_MAP5_7C_P_2,
EVEX_W_MAP5_7D, EVEX_W_MAP6_13_P_0, EVEX_W_MAP6_13_P_2,
(get_valid_dis386): Properly handle new instructions.
(intel_operand_size): Handle new modes.
(OP_E_memory): Ditto.
(OP_EX): Ditto.
* i386-dis-evex.h: Updated for AVX512_FP16.
* i386-dis-evex-mod.h: Updated for AVX512_FP16.
* i386-dis-evex-prefix.h: Updated for AVX512_FP16.
* i386-dis-evex-reg.h : Updated for AVX512_FP16.
* i386-dis-evex-w.h : Updated for AVX512_FP16.
* i386-gen.c (cpu_flag_init): Add CPU_AVX512_FP16_FLAGS,
and CPU_ANY_AVX512_FP16_FLAGS. Update CPU_ANY_AVX512F_FLAGS
and CPU_ANY_AVX512BW_FLAGS.
(cpu_flags): Add CpuAVX512_FP16.
(opcode_modifiers): Add DistinctDest.
* i386-opc.h (enum): (AVX512_FP16): New.
(i386_opcode_modifier): Add reqdistinctreg.
(i386_cpu_flags): Add cpuavx512_fp16.
(EVEXMAP5): Defined as a macro.
(EVEXMAP6): Ditto.
* i386-opc.tbl: Add Intel AVX512_FP16 instructions.
* i386-init.h: Regenerated.
* i386-tbl.h: Ditto.
2021-08-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28167, vms-alpha build_module_list
PR 28167
* vms-alpha.c (build_module_list): Malloc and free section contents.
Don't read past end of section.
2021-08-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28166, _bfd_elf_mips_get_relocated_section_contents
Some of the code paths unpacking mips relocs left arelent->sym_ptr_ptr
uninitialised.
PR 28166
* elf64-mips.c (mips_elf64_slurp_one_reloc_table): Don't leave
sym_ptr_ptr uninitialised.
2021-08-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28165, buffer overflow in elf32-rx.c:rx_info_to_howto_rela
PR 28165
* elf32-rx.c (rx_elf_howto_table): Add missing empty entries.
(rx_info_to_howto_rela): Assert rx_elf_howto_table is correct size.
Use actual size when sanity checking r_type.
2021-08-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: elf: Treat undefined version as hidden
Fix fallout in cris testsuite
PR binutils/28158
* ld-cris/libdso-1c.d: Update for version display change.
* ld-cris/libdso-15b.d: Likewise.
2021-08-05 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/testsuite: update test gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp
I was looking at PR gdb/19675 and the related test
gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp. This test includes a call to kfail
when we are testing a displaced step over a clone syscall.
While looking at the test I removed the call to kfail and ran the
test, and was surprised that the test passed.
I ran the test a few times and it does sometimes fail, but mostly it
passed fine.
PR gdb/19675 describes how, when we displaced step over a clone, the
new thread is created with a $pc in the displaced step buffer. GDB
then fails to "fix" this $pc (for the new thread), and the thread will
be set running with its current $pc value. This means that the new
thread will just start executing from whatever happens to be after the
displaced stepping buffer.
In the original PR gdb/19675 bug report Yao Qi was seeing the new
thread cause a segfault, the problem is, what actually happens is
totally undefined.
On my machine, I'm seeing the new thread reenter main, it then starts
trying to run the test again (in the new thread). This just happens
to be safe enough (in this simple test) that most of the time the
inferior doesn't crash.
In this commit I try to make the test slightly more likely to fail by
doing a couple of things.
First, I added a static variable to main, this is set true when the
first thread enters main, if a second thread ever enters main then I
force an abort.
Second, when the test is finishing I want to ensure that the new
threads have had a chance to do "something bad" if they are going to.
So I added a global counter, as each thread starts successfully it
decrements the counter. The main thread does not proceed to the final
marker function (where GDB has placed a breakpoint) until all threads
have started successfully. This means that if the newly created
thread doesn't successfully enter clone_fn then the counter will never
reach zero and the test will timeout.
With these two changes my hope is that the test should fail more
reliably, and so, I have also changed the test to call setup_kfail
before the specific steps that we expect to misbehave instead of just
calling kfail and skipping parts of the test completely. The benefit
of this is that if/when we fix GDB this test will start to KPASS and
we'll know to update this test to remove the setup_kfail call.
2021-08-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-05 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Use unwinder name in frame_info::to_string
While working on a stack unwinding issue using 'set debug frame on', I
noticed the frame_info::to_string method could be slightly improved.
Unwinders have been given a name in
a154d838a70e96d888620c072e2d6ea8bdf044ca. Before this patch, frame_info
debug output prints the host address of the used unwinder, which is not
easy to interpret. This patch proposes to use the unwinder name
instead since we now have it.
Before the patch:
{level=1,type=NORMAL_FRAME,unwind=0x2ac1763ec0,pc=0x3ff7fc3460,id={stack=0x3ff7ea79b0,code=0x0000003ff7fc33ac,!special},func=0x3ff7fc33ac}
With the patch:
{level=1,type=NORMAL_FRAME,unwinder="riscv prologue",pc=0x3ff7fc3460,id={stack=0x3ff7ea79b0,code=0x0000003ff7fc33ac,!special},func=0x3ff7fc33ac}
Tested on riscv64-linux-gnu.
2021-08-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.base/info-macros.exp with clang
The test gdb.base/info-macros.exp says that it doesn't pass the "debug"
option to prepare_for_testing because that would cause -g to appear
after -g3 on the command line, and that would cause some gcc versions to
not include macro info. I don't know what gcc versions this refers to.
I tested with gcc 4.8, and that works fine with -g after -g3.
The current state is problematic when testing with CC_FOR_TARGET=clang,
because then only -fdebug-macro is included. No -g switch if included,
meaning we get a binary without any debug info, and the test fails.
One way to fix it would be to add "debug" to the options when the
compiler is clang.
However, the solution I chose was to specify "debug" in any case, even
for gcc. Other macro tests such as gdb.base/macscp.exp do perfectly
fine with it. Also, this lets the test use the debug flag specified by
the board file. For example, we can test with GCC and DWARF 5, with:
$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5" TESTS="gdb.base/info-macros.exp"
With the hard-coded -g3, this wouldn't actually test with DWARF 5.
Change-Id: I33fa92ee545007d3ae9c52c4bb2d5be6b5b698f1
2021-08-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: avoid dereferencing empty str_offsets_base optional in dwarf_decode_macros
Since 4d7188abfdf2 ("gdbsupport: add debug assertions in
gdb::optional::get"), some macro-related tests fail on Ubuntu 20.04 with
the system gcc 9.3.0 compiler when building with _GLIBCXX_DEBUG. For
example, gdb.base/info-macros.exp results in:
(gdb) break -qualified main
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h:206: internal-error: T& gdb::optional<T>::get() [with T = long unsigned int]: Assertion `this->has_value ()' failed.
The binary contains DWARF 4 debug info and includes a pre-standard
(pre-DWARF 5) .debug_macro section. The CU doesn't have a
DW_AT_str_offsets_base attribute (which doesn't exist in DWARF 4). The
field dwarf2_cu::str_offsets_base is therefore empty. At
dwarf2/read.c:24138, we unconditionally read the value in the optional,
which triggers the assertion shown above.
The same thing happens when building the test program with DWARF 5 with
the same gcc compiler, as that version of gcc doesn't use indirect
string forms, even with DWARF 5. So it still doesn't add a
DW_AT_str_offsets_base attribute on the CU.
Fix that by propagating down a gdb::optional<ULONGEST> for the str
offsets base instead of ULONGEST. That value is only used in
dwarf_decode_macro_bytes, when encountering an "strx" macro operation
(DW_MACRO_define_strx or DW_MACRO_undef_strx). Add a check there that
we indeed have a value in the optional before reading it. This is
unlikely to happen, but could happen in theory with an erroneous file
that uses DW_MACRO_define_strx but does not provide a
DW_AT_str_offsets_base (in practice, some things would probably have
failed before and stopped processing of debug info). I tested the
complaint by inverting the condition and using a clang-compiled binary,
which uses the strx operators. This is the result:
During symbol reading: use of DW_MACRO_define_strx with unknown string offsets base [in module /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/info-macros/info-macros]
The test now passes cleanly with the setup mentioned above, and the
testsuite looks on par with how it was before 4d7188abfdf2.
Change-Id: I7ebd2724beb7b9b4178872374c2a177aea696e77
2021-08-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix typo in complaint in dwarf2/macro.c
I saw this complaint when my code had some bug, and spotted the typo.
Fix it, and while at it mention DW_MACRO as well (it would be confusing
to only see DW_MACINFO with a file that uses a DWARF 5 .debug_macro
section). I contemplated the idea of passing the knowledge of whether
we are dealing with a .debug_macro section or .debug_macinfo section, to
print only the right one. But in the end, I don't think that trouble is
necessary for a complaint nobody is going to see.
Change-Id: I276ce8da65c3eac5304f64a1e246358ed29cdbbc
2021-08-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix warnings in bsd-kvm.c
Building on OpenBSD, I get warnings like:
CXX bsd-kvm.o
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bsd-kvm.c:241:18: error: ISO C++11 does not allow conversion from string literal to 'char *' [-Werror,-Wwritable-strings]
nl[0].n_name = "_dumppcb";
^
Silence those by adding casts.
Change-Id: I2bef4eebcc306762a4e3e5b5c52f67ecf2820503
2021-08-04 Andreas Krebbel <krebbel@linux.ibm.com>
IBM Z: Remove lpswey parameter
opcodes/
* s390-opc.c (INSTR_SIY_RD): New instruction format.
(MASK_SIY_RD): New instruction mask.
* s390-opc.txt: Change instruction format of lpswey to SIY_RD.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-arch14.d: Remove last operand of
lpswey.
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-arch14.s: Likewise.
2021-08-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28162, segment fault in mips_elf_assign_gp
For the testcase in the PR, _bfd_mips_elf32_gprel16_reloc is passed a
NULL output_bfd. As expected for reloc special functions if called by
objdump or when final linking. The function attempts to find the
output by
output_bfd = symbol->section->output_section->owner;
That makes some sense, since when handling a gp-relative reloc we need
the relevant gp to which the symbol is relative. Possibly the gp
value can be one for a shared library? But that doesn't seem useful
or supported by the various abi docs and won't work as written.
Symbols defined in shared libraries have section->output_section
NULL, and what's more the code in mips_elf_assign_gp isn't set up to
look at shared library symbols.
Also, if the symbol is a SHN_ABS one the owner of *ABS* section is
NULL, which will result in the testcase segfault. The only gp to
which an absolute symbol can be relative is the linker output bfd when
linking, or the input bfd when not. This patch arranges to do that
for all gp-relative reloc symbols.
* elf32-mips.c (_bfd_mips_elf32_gprel16_reloc): Don't use the
section symbol to find the output bfd, use input_section.
(mips_elf_gprel32_reloc, mips16_gprel_reloc): Likewise.
* elf64-mips.c (mips_elf64_gprel16_reloc): Likewise.
(mips_elf64_literal_reloc, mips_elf64_gprel32_reloc): Likewise.
(mips16_gprel_reloc): Likewise.
2021-08-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Use lambda function instead of addrmap_foreach_check
Use a lambda function instead of addrmap_foreach_check,
which removes the need for static variables.
Also remove unnecessary static on local var temp_obstack in test_addrmap.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* addrmap.c (addrmap_foreach_check): Remove.
(array, val1, val2): Move ...
(test_addrmap): ... here. Remove static on temp_obstack. Use lambda
function instead of addrmap_foreach_check.
2021-08-04 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Treat undefined version as hidden
Since undefined version can't be used to resolve any references without
the original definition, treat it as hidden.
bfd/
PR binutils/28158
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_get_symbol_version_string): Treat undefined
version as hidden.
ld/
PR binutils/28158
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp: Run PR binutils/28158 tests.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158-1.c: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158-2.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158.nd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr28158.t: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers2.dsym: Updated.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers3.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers6.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers19.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers22.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers23.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers23d.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers27d4.dsym: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers28c.dsym: Likewise.
2021-08-04 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Implement addrmap_mutable_find
Currently addrmap_mutable_find is not implemented:
...
static void *
addrmap_mutable_find (struct addrmap *self, CORE_ADDR addr)
{
/* Not needed yet. */
internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
_("addrmap_find is not implemented yet "
"for mutable addrmaps"));
}
...
I implemented this because I needed it during debugging, to be able to do:
...
(gdb) p ((dwarf2_psymtab *)addrmap_find (map, addr))->filename
...
before and after a call to addrmap_set_empty.
Since this is not used otherwise, added addrmap unit test.
Build on x86_64-linux, tested by doing:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "maint selftest addrmap"
Running selftest addrmap.
Ran 1 unit tests, 0 failed
...
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-03 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb/addrmap.c (addrmap_mutable_find): Implement
[GDB_SELF_TESTS] (CHECK_ADDRMAP_FIND): New macro.
[GDB_SELF_TESTS] (core_addr, addrmap_foreach_check, test_addrmap)
(_initialize_addrmap): New function.
2021-08-04 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: correctly output XCOFF tbss symbols with XTY_CM type.
Global tbss symbols weren't correctly handled and were generating
a symbol with XTY_SD instead of XTY_CM as expected.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_frog_symbol): Generate a XTY_CM when
a symbol has a storage class of XMC_UL.
2021-08-04 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: always add dummy symbols when creating XCOFF sections.
Most of the algorithms for XCOFF in tc-ppc.c assume that
the csects field of a ppc_xcoff_section isn't NULL.
This was already made for most of the sections with the creation
of a dummy symbol.
This patch simply mades it default when creating a xcoff_section.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_init_xcoff_section): Always create
the dummy symbol.
(md_begin): Adjust ppc_init_xcoff_section call.
(ppc_comm): Likewise.
(ppc_change_csect): Likewise.
2021-08-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28156, rename.c doesn't compile with MinGW
Guard against lack of struct timespec definition.
PR 28156
* rename.c (get_stat_atime, get_stat_mtime): Don't compile
unless HAVE_UTIMENSAT is defined.
2021-08-04 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28155, Superfluous "the" in the man page
PR 28155
* ld.texi (Options <runtime library name>): Correct grammar.
revise PE IMAGE_SCN_LNK_NRELOC_OVFL test
* coffcode.h (coff_set_alignment_hook): Test that the resulting
reloc count is not less than 0xffff.
2021-08-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: follow-fork: push target and add thread in target_follow_fork
In the context of ROCm-gdb [1], the ROCm target sits on top of the
linux-nat target. when a process forks, it needs to carry over some
data from the forking inferior to the fork child inferior. Ideally, the
ROCm target would implement the follow_fork target_ops method, but there
are some small problems. This patch fixes these, which helps the ROCm
target, but also makes things more consistent and a bit nicer in
general, I believe.
The main problem is: when follow-fork-mode is "parent",
target_follow_fork is called with the parent as the current inferior.
When it's "child", target_follow_fork is called with the child as the
current inferior. This means that target_follow_fork is sometimes
called on the parent's target stack and sometimes on the child's target
stack.
The parent's target stack may contain targets above the process target,
such as the ROCm target. So if follow-fork-child is "parent", the ROCm
target would get notified of the fork and do whatever is needed. But
the child's target stack, at that moment, only contains the exec and
process target copied over from the parent. The child's target stack is
set up by follow_fork_inferior, before calling target_follow_fork. In
that case, the ROCm target wouldn't get notified of the fork.
For consistency, I think it would be good to always call
target_follow_fork on the parent inferior's target stack. I think it
makes sense as a way to indicate "this inferior has called fork, do
whatever is needed". The desired outcome of the fork (whether an
inferior is created for the child, do we need to detach from the child)
can be indicated by passed parameter.
I therefore propose these changes:
- make follow_fork_inferior always call target_follow_fork with the
parent as the current inferior. That lets all targets present on the
parent's target stack do some fork-related handling and push
themselves on the fork child's target stack if needed.
For this purpose, pass the child inferior down to target_follow_fork
and follow_fork implementations. This is nullptr if no inferior is
created for the child, because we want to detach from it.
- as a result, in follow_fork_inferior, detach from the parent inferior
(if needed) only after the target_follow_fork call. This is needed
because we want to call target_follow_fork before the parent's
target stack is torn down.
- hand over to the targets in the parent's target stack (including the
process target) the responsibility to push themselves, if needed, to
the child's target stack. Also hand over the responsibility to the
process target, at the same time, to create the child's initial
thread (just like we do for follow_exec).
- pass the child inferior to exec_on_vfork, so we don't need to swap
the current inferior between parent and child. Nothing in
exec_on_vfork depends on the current inferior, after this change.
Although this could perhaps be replaced with just having the exec
target implement follow_fork and push itself in the child's target
stack, like the process target does... We would just need to make
sure the process target calls beneath()->follow_fork(...). I'm not
sure about this one.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Add inferior*
parameter.
(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
* target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise.
(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
* fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
(fbsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call
inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork.
* linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and
call inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork.
* obsd-nat.h (obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call
inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork.
* remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
(remote_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call
process_stratum_target::follow_fork.
* process-stratum-target.h (class process_stratum_target)
<follow_fork>: New.
* process-stratum-target.c
(process_stratum_target::follow_fork): New.
* target-delegates.c: Re-generate.
[1] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCgdb
Change-Id: I460bd0af850f0485e8aed4b24c6d8262a4c69929
2021-08-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-03 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fixes for mi-fortran-modules.exp fixes
Output has additional information for a given filename.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
* gdb.mi/mi-fortran-modules.exp (system_modules_pattern,
system_module_symbols_pattern): Add check for additional symbols
on the line
2021-08-03 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport: add debug assertions in gdb::optional::get
The libstdc++ version of optional contains some runtime checks enabled
when _GLIBCXX_DEBUG is defined. I think it would be useful if our
version contained similar checks.
Add checks in the two `get` methods, also conditional on _GLIBCXX_DEBUG.
I think it's simpler to use that macro rather than introducing a new
GDB-specific one, as I think that if somebody is interested in enabling
these runtime checks, they'll also be interested in enabling the
libstdc++ runtime checks (and vice-versa).
I implemented these checks using gdb_assert. Note that gdb_assert
throws (after querying the user), and we are in noexcept methods. That
means that std::terminate / abort will immediately be called. I think
this is ok, since if those were "real" _GLIBCXX_DEBUG checks, abort
would be called straight away.
If I add a dummy failure, it looks like so:
$ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h:206: internal-error: T& gdb::optional<T>::get() [with T = int]: Assertion `this->has_value ()' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) n
[1] 658767 abort (core dumped) ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory
Change-Id: Iadfdcd131425bd2ca6a2de30d7b22e9b3cc67793
2021-08-03 Alok Kumar Sharma <AlokKumar.Sharma@amd.com>
[gdb/testsuite] templates.exp to accept clang++ output
Please consider below testcase with intended error.
``````````
constexpr const char cstring[] = "Eta";
template <const char*, typename T> class Column {};
using quick = Column<cstring,double>; // cstring without '&'
void lookup() {
quick c1;
c1.ls();
}
``````````
It produces below error.
``````````
no member named 'ls' in 'Column<&cstring, double>'.
``````````
Please note that error message contains '&' for cstring, which is absent
in actual program.
Clang++ does not generate & in such cases and this should also be
accepted as correct output.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.cp/templates.exp: Accept different but correct output
from the Clang++ compiled binary also.
2021-08-03 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle compiler-generated suffixes in Ada names
The compiler may add a suffix to a mangled name. A typical example
would be splitting a function and creating a ".cold" variant.
This patch changes Ada decoding (aka demangling) to handle these
suffixes. It also changes the encoding process to handle them as
well.
A symbol like "function.cold" will now be displayed to the user as
"function[cold]". The "." is not simply preserved because that is
already used in Ada.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove uses of fprintf_symbol_filtered
I believe that many calls to fprintf_symbol_filtered are incorrect.
In particular, there are some that pass a symbol's print name, like:
fprintf_symbol_filtered (gdb_stdout, sym->print_name (),
current_language->la_language, DMGL_ANSI);
fprintf_symbol_filtered uses the "demangle" global to decide whether
or not to demangle -- but print_name does this as well. This can lead
to double-demangling. Normally this could be innocuous, except I also
plan to change Ada demangling in a way that causes this to fail.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Handle type qualifier for enumeration name
Pierre-Marie noticed that the Ada expression "TYPE'(NAME)" resolved
incorrectly when "TYPE" was an enumeration type. Here, "NAME" should
be unambiguous.
This patch fixes this problem. Note that the patch is not perfect --
it does not give an error if TYPE is an enumeration type but NAME is
not an enumerator but does have some other meaning in scope. Fixing
this proved difficult, and so I've left it out.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Remove the type_qualifier global
The type_qualifier global is no longer needed in the Ada expression
parser, so this removes it.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Defer Ada character literal resolution
In Ada, an enumeration type can use a character literal as one of the
enumerators. The Ada expression parser handles the appropriate
conversion.
It turns out, though, that this conversion was handled incorrectly.
For an expression like TYPE'(EXP), the conversion would be done for
any such literal appearing in EXP -- but only the outermost such
expression should really be affected.
This patch defers the conversion until the resolution phase, fixing
the bug.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Refactor Ada resolution
In a subsequent patch, it will be convenient if an Ada expression
operation can supply its own replacement object. This patch refactors
Ada expression resolution to make this possible.
Remove add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs
I noticed that add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs is empty, and can be
removed. The one caller, ada_add_local_symbols, can also be
simplified, removing some code that, I think, was an incorrect attempt
to handle nested functions.
2021-08-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid crash in varobj deletion
PR varobj/28131 points out a crash in the varobj deletion code. It
took a while to reproduce this, but essentially what happens is that a
top-level varobj deletes its root object, then deletes the "dynamic"
object. However, deletion of the dynamic object may cause
~py_varobj_iter to run, which in turn uses gdbpy_enter_varobj:
gdbpy_enter_varobj::gdbpy_enter_varobj (const struct varobj *var)
: gdbpy_enter (var->root->exp->gdbarch, var->root->exp->language_defn)
{
}
However, because var->root has already been destroyed, this is
invalid.
I've added a new test case. This doesn't reliably crash, but the
problem can easily be seen under valgrind (and, I presume, with ASAN,
though I did not try this).
Tested on x86-64 Fedora 32. I also propose putting this on the GDB 11
branch, with a suitable ChangeLog entry of course.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28131
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp with cc-with-dwz-m
When running with target board cc-with-dwz-m, we run into:
...
(gdb) file dw2-using-debug-str-no-debug-str^M
Reading symbols from dw2-using-debug-str-no-debug-str...^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp: file dw2-using-debug-str
...
With native, the .debug_str section is present in the
dw2-using-debug-str executable, and removed from the
dw2-using-debug-str-no-debug-str executable. When loading the latter, a dwarf
error is triggered.
With cc-with-dwz-m, the .debug_str section is not present in the
dw2-using-debug-str executable, because it's already moved to
.tmp/dw2-using-debug-str.dwz. Consequently, the removal has no effect, and no
dwarf error is triggered, which causes the FAIL.
The same problem arises with target board cc-with-gnu-debuglink.
Fix this by detecting whether the .debug_str section is missing, and skipping
the remainder of the test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp: Handle missing .debug_str
section in dw2-using-debug-str.
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
When running with target board cc-with-gdb-index, we run into:
...
(gdb) file dw2-using-debug-str-no-debug-str^M
Reading symbols from dw2-using-debug-str-no-debug-str...^M
Dwarf Error: DW_FORM_strp used without required section^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp: file dw2-using-debug-str
...
The test expects the dwarf error, but has no matching pattern for the entire
output.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp: Update regexp to match
cc-with-gdb-index output.
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/per-bfd-sharing.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
When running with target board cc-with-gdb-index, we run into:
...
rm: cannot remove '/tmp/tmp.JmYTeiuFjj/*.gdb-index': \
No such file or directory^M
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/per-bfd-sharing.exp: \
couldn't remove files in temporary cache dir
...
Fix this, as in gdb.base/index-cache.exp, by only FAILing when
$expecting_index_cache_use.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/per-bfd-sharing.exp: Only expect index-cache files
when $expecting_index_cache_use.
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/gdb-index-nodebug.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
When running with target board cc-with-gdb-index, we run into:
...
(gdb) save gdb-index .^M
Error while writing index for `gdb-index-nodebug': \
Cannot use an index to create the index^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/gdb-index-nodebug.exp: try to save gdb index
...
Fix this by detecting an already present index, and marking the test
unsupported.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/gdb-index-nodebug.exp: Mark unsupported when index
already present.
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/fission-relative-dwo.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
When running with target board cc-with-gdb-index, we run into:
...
gdb compile failed, warning: Could not find DWO CU \
fission-relative-dwo.dwo(0x1234) referenced by CU at offset 0xc7 \
[in module outputs/gdb.dwarf2/fission-relative-dwo/.tmp/fission-relative-dwo]
UNTESTED: gdb.dwarf2/fission-relative-dwo.exp: fission-relative-dwo.exp
ERROR: failed to compile fission-relative-dwo
...
The problem is that:
- the .dwo file is found relative to the executable, and
- cc-with-tweaks.sh moves the executable to a temp dir, but not
the .dwo file.
Fix this by copying the .dwo file alongside the executable in the temp dir.
Verified changes using shellcheck.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-08-02 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* contrib/cc-with-tweaks.sh: Copy .dwo files alongside executable.
2021-08-02 Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
gdb: Make the builtin "boolean" type an unsigned type
When printing the fields of a register that is of a custom struct type,
the "unpack_bits_as_long ()" function is used:
do_val_print (...)
cp_print_value_fields (...)
value_field_bitfield (...)
unpack_value_bitfield (...)
unpack_bits_as_long (...)
This function may sign-extend the extracted field while returning it:
val >>= lsbcount;
if (...)
{
valmask = (((ULONGEST) 1) << bitsize) - 1;
val &= valmask;
if (!field_type->is_unsigned ())
if (val & (valmask ^ (valmask >> 1)))
val |= ~valmask;
}
return val;
lsbcount: Number of lower bits to get rid of.
bitsize: The bit length of the field to be extracted.
val: The register value.
field_type: The type of field that is being handled.
While the logic here is correct, there is a problem when it is
handling "field_type"s of "boolean". Those types are NOT marked
as "unsigned" and therefore they end up being sign extended.
Although this is not a problem for "false" (0), it definitely
causes trouble for "true".
This patch constructs the builtin boolean type as such that it is
marked as an "unsigned" entity.
The issue tackled here was first encountered for arc-elf32 target
running on an x86_64 machine. The unit-test introduced in this change
has passed for all the targets (--enable-targets=all) running on the
same x86_64 host.
Fixes: https://sourceware.org/PR28104
2021-08-02 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/maint.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
With target board cc-with-gdb-index we run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint print statistics
...
The output that is checked is:
...
Statistics for 'maint':^M
Number of "minimal" symbols read: 53^M
Number of "full" symbols read: 40^M
Number of "types" defined: 60^M
Number of symbol tables: 7^M
Number of symbol tables with line tables: 2^M
Number of symbol tables with blockvectors: 2^M
Number of read CUs: 2^M
Number of unread CUs: 5^M
Total memory used for objfile obstack: 20320^M
Total memory used for BFD obstack: 4064^M
Total memory used for string cache: 4064^M
...
and the regexp doesn't match because it expects the "Number of read/unread
CUs" lines in a different place.
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/maint.exp: Update "maint print statistics" to match
output with target board cc-with-gdb-index.
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/index-cache.exp with cc-with-gdb-index
With target board cc-with-gdb-index we run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/index-cache.exp: couldn't remove files in temporary cache dir
...
The problem is that there are no files to remove, because the index cache
isn't used, as indicated by $expecting_index_cache_use.
Fix this by only FAILing when $expecting_index_cache_use.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-08-01 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/index-cache.exp:
2021-08-01 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-31 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use iterator_range in more places
This changes a couple of spots to replace custom iterator range
classes with a specialization of iterator_range.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-07-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Replace exception_print_same with operator!=
I noticed that exception_print_same is only used in a single spot, and
it seemed to be better as an operator!= method attached to
gdb_exception.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2021-07-30 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/build] Disable attribute nonnull
With trunk gcc (12.0) we're running into a -Werror=nonnull-compare build
breaker in gdb, which caused a broader review of the usage of the nonnull
attribute.
The current conclusion is that it's best to disable this. This is explained
at length in the gdbsupport/common-defs.h comment.
Tested by building with trunk gcc.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-29 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdbsupport/common-defs.h (ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL): Disable.
2021-07-30 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: ensure XCOFF DWARF subsection are initialized to 0
debug_abbrev doesn't use end_exp to compute its size. However, it must
be NULL. Otherwise, ppc_xcoff_end might try to access uninitialized
memory.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_dwsect): Use XCNEW instead of XNEW when creating
a new subsection.
2021-07-30 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
bfd: ensure that symbols targeted by DWARF relocations are kept in XCOFF
This patch improves XCOFF garbage collector pass, in order to keep
symbols being referenced only by special sections like DWARF sections.
bfd/
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_mark): Replace SEC_MARK by gc_mark.
Look through relocations even if xcoff_section_data is NULL.
(xcoff_sweep): Check if any sections of a file is kept before
adding its special sections.
Call xcoff_mark for special sessions being kept instead of just
marking them.
(SEC_MARK): Remove
(xcoff_mark_symbol): Replace SEC_MARK by gc_mark.
(xcoff_keep_symbol_p): Likewise.
(bfd_xcoff_size_dynamic_sections): Likewise.
(xcoff_find_tc0): Likewise.
2021-07-30 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
bfd: avoid a crash when debug_section isn't created in XCOFF
bfd/
* xcofflink.c (bfd_xcoff_size_dynamic_sections):
Add check to know if debug_section is initialized.
2021-07-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
readelf: catch archive_file_size of -1
Fuzzers might put -1 in arhdr.ar_size. If the size is rounded up to
and even number of bytes we get zero.
* readelf.c (process_archive): Don't round up archive_file_size.
Do round up next_arhdr_offset calculation.
2021-07-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
reloc_upper_bound size calculations
Section reloc_count is an unsigned int. Adding one for a NULL
terminator to an array of arelent pointers can wrap the count to
zero. Avoid that by doing the addition as longs.
* coffgen.c (coff_get_reloc_upper_bound): Don't overflow unsigned
int expression.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_get_reloc_upper_bound): Likewise.
* elf64-sparc.c (elf64_sparc_get_reloc_upper_bound): Likewise.
* mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_get_reloc_upper_bound): Likewise.
* vms-alpha.c (alpha_vms_get_reloc_upper_bound): Likewise.
2021-07-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Sanity check _bfd_coff_read_string_table
* coffgen.c (_bfd_coff_read_string_table): Catch overflows
when calculating string table file location.
2021-07-30 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
IMAGE_SCN_LNK_NRELOC_OVFL
From microsoft docs: It is an error if IMAGE_SCN_LNK_NRELOC_OVFL is
set and there are fewer than 0xffff relocations in the section.
* coffcode.h (coff_set_alignment_hook): Sanity check overflow
reloc count.
2021-07-30 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fix nr_bits gdb_assert in append_flags_type_field
The assertion
gdb_assert (nr_bits >= 1 && nr_bits <= type_bitsize);
is not correct. Well, it's correct in that we do want the number of
bits to be in the range [1, type_bitsize]. But we don't check anywhere
that the end of the specified flag is within the containing type.
The following code should generate a failed assertion, as the flag goes
past the 32 bits of the underlying type, but it's currently not caught:
static void
test_print_flag (gdbarch *arch)
{
type *flags_type = arch_flags_type (arch, "test_type", 32);
type *field_type = builtin_type (arch)->builtin_uint32;
append_flags_type_field (flags_type, 31, 2, field_type, "invalid");
}
(You can test this by registering it as a selftest using
selftests::register_test_foreach_arc and running.)
Change the assertion to verify that the end bit is within the range of
the underlying type. This implicitly verifies that nr_bits is not
too big as well, so we don't need a separate assertion for that.
Change-Id: I9be79e5fd7a5917bf25b03b598727e6274c892e8
Co-Authored-By: Tony Tye <Tony.Tye@amd.com>
2021-07-30 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-29 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
obsd-nat: Report both thread and PID in ::pid_to_str.
This improves the output of info threads when debugging multiple
inferiors (e.g. after a fork with detach_on_fork disabled).
2021-07-29 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
obsd-nat: Various fixes for fork following.
- Don't use #ifdef's on ptrace ops. obsd-nat.h didn't include
<sys/ptrace.h>, so the virtual methods weren't always overridden
causing the fork following to not work. In addition, the thread and
fork code is intertwined in ::wait and and the lack of #ifdef's
there already assumed both were present. Finally, both of these
ptrace ops have been present in OpenBSD for at least 10 years.
- Move duplicated code to enable PTRACE_FORK event reporting to a
single function and invoke it on new child processes reported via
PTRACE_FORK.
- Don't return early from PTRACE_FORK handling, but instead reset
wptid to the correct ptid if the child reports its event before the
parent. This allows the ptid fixup code to add thread IDs if the
first event for a process is a PTRACE_FORK event. This also
properly returns ptid's with thread IDs when reporting PTRACE_FORK
events.
- Handle detach_fork by skipping the PT_DETACH.
2021-07-29 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
obsd-nat: Various fixes to obsd_nat_target::wait.
- Call inf_ptrace_target::wait instead of duplicating the code.
Replace a check for WIFSTOPPED on the returned status from waitpid
by checking for TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED in the parsed status as is
done in fbsd_nat_target::wait.
- Don't use inferior_ptid when deciding if a new process is a child vs
parent of the fork. Instead, use find_inferior_pid and assume that
if an inferior already exists, the pid in question is the parent;
otherwise, the pid is the child.
- Don't use inferior_ptid when deciding if the ptid of the process
needs to be updated with an LWP ID, or if this is a new thread.
Instead, use the approach from fbsd-nat which is to check if a ptid
without an LWP exists and if so update the ptid of that thread
instead of adding a new thread.
2021-07-29 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
x86-bsd-nat: Only define gdb_ptrace when using debug registers.
This fixes an unused function warning on OpenBSD which does not
support PT_GETDBREGS.
2021-07-29 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Don't compile x86 debug register support on OpenBSD.
Simon Marchi tried gdb on OpenBSD, and it immediately segfaults when
running a program. Simon tracked down the problem to x86_dr_low.get_status
being nullptr at this point:
(lldb) print x86_dr_low.get_status
(unsigned long (*)()) $0 = 0x0000000000000000
(lldb) bt
* thread #1, stop reason = step over
* frame #0: 0x0000033b64b764aa gdb`x86_dr_stopped_data_address(state=0x0000033d7162a310, addr_p=0x00007f7ffffc5688) at x86-dregs.c:645:12
frame #1: 0x0000033b64b766de gdb`x86_dr_stopped_by_watchpoint(state=0x0000033d7162a310) at x86-dregs.c:687:10
frame #2: 0x0000033b64ea5f72 gdb`x86_stopped_by_watchpoint() at x86-nat.c:206:10
frame #3: 0x0000033b64637fbb gdb`x86_nat_target<obsd_nat_target>::stopped_by_watchpoint(this=0x0000033b65252820) at x86-nat.h:100:12
frame #4: 0x0000033b64d3ff11 gdb`target_stopped_by_watchpoint() at target.c:468:46
frame #5: 0x0000033b6469b001 gdb`watchpoints_triggered(ws=0x00007f7ffffc61c8) at breakpoint.c:4790:32
frame #6: 0x0000033b64a8bb8b gdb`handle_signal_stop(ecs=0x00007f7ffffc61a0) at infrun.c:6072:29
frame #7: 0x0000033b64a7e3a7 gdb`handle_inferior_event(ecs=0x00007f7ffffc61a0) at infrun.c:5694:7
frame #8: 0x0000033b64a7c1a0 gdb`fetch_inferior_event() at infrun.c:4090:5
frame #9: 0x0000033b64a51921 gdb`inferior_event_handler(event_type=INF_REG_EVENT) at inf-loop.c:41:7
frame #10: 0x0000033b64a827c9 gdb`infrun_async_inferior_event_handler(data=0x0000000000000000) at infrun.c:9384:3
frame #11: 0x0000033b6465bd4f gdb`check_async_event_handlers() at async-event.c:335:4
frame #12: 0x0000033b65070917 gdb`gdb_do_one_event() at event-loop.cc:216:10
frame #13: 0x0000033b64af0db1 gdb`start_event_loop() at main.c:421:13
frame #14: 0x0000033b64aefe9a gdb`captured_command_loop() at main.c:481:3
frame #15: 0x0000033b64aed5c2 gdb`captured_main(data=0x00007f7ffffc6470) at main.c:1353:4
frame #16: 0x0000033b64aed4f2 gdb`gdb_main(args=0x00007f7ffffc6470) at main.c:1368:7
frame #17: 0x0000033b6459d787 gdb`main(argc=5, argv=0x00007f7ffffc6518) at gdb.c:32:10
frame #18: 0x0000033b6459d521 gdb`___start + 321
On BSDs, get_status is set in _initialize_x86_bsd_nat, but only if
HAVE_PT_GETDBREGS is defined. PT_GETDBREGS doesn't exist on OpenBSD, so
get_status (and the other fields of x86_dr_low) are left as nullptr.
OpenBSD doesn't support getting or setting the x86 debug registers, so
fix by omitting debug register support entirely on OpenBSD:
- Change x86bsd_nat_target to only inherit from x86_nat_target if
PT_GETDBREGS is supported.
- Don't include x86-nat.o and nat/x86-dregs.o for OpenBSD/amd64. They
were already omitted for OpenBSD/i386.
2021-07-29 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix for gdb.tui/tui-layout-asm.exp
The width of the window is too narrow to display the entire assembly line.
The width of the columns in the window changes as the test walks thru the
terminal window output. The column change results in the first and second
reads of the same line to differ thus causing the test to fail. Increasing
the width of the window keeps the column width consistent thru the test.
If the test fails, the added check prints an message to the log file if
the failure may be due to the window being too narrow.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
* gdb.tui/tui-layout-asm.exp: Replace window width of 80 with the
tui_asm_window_width variable for the width. Add if
count_whitespace check.
(count_whitespace): New proc
2021-07-29 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
guile/scm-math: indentation fixes
Changes the indenting of a few expressions in
vlscm_convert_typed_number to be better in line with the prevailing
code style.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-30 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* guile/scm-math.c (vlscm_convert_typed_number): Fix the
indentation of calls to gdbscm_make_out_of_range_error.
Change-Id: I7463998b77c17a00e88058e89b52fa029ee40e03
2021-07-29 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
guile: fix make-value with pointer type
Calling the `make-value' procedure with an integer value and a pointer
type for the #:type argument triggers a failed assertion in
`get_unsigned_type_max', as that function doesn't consider pointers to
be an unsigned type. This commit fixes the issue by adding a separate
code path for pointers.
As previously suggested, range checking is done using a new helper
function in gdbtypes.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-30 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* gdbtypes.h (get_pointer_type_max): Add declaration.
* gdbtypes.c (get_pointer_type_max): Add definition for new
helper function.
* guile/scm-math.c (vlscm_convert_typed_number): Add code path
for handling conversions to pointer types without failing an
assert.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-30 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* gdb.guile/scm-math.exp (test_value_numeric_ops): Add test
for creating pointers with make-value.
(test_make_pointer_value, test_pointer_numeric_range): Add
test procedures containing checks for integer-to-pointer
validation.
Change-Id: I9994dd1c848840a3d995f745e6d72867732049f0
2021-07-29 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
gdbtypes: return value from get_unsigned_type_max
Changes the signature of get_unsigned_type_max to return the computed
value rather than returning void and writing the value into a pointer
passed by the caller.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-30 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* gdbtypes.h (get_unsigned_type_max): Change signature to
return the result instead of accepting a pointer argument in
which to store the result.
* gdbtypes.c (get_unsigned_type_max): Likewise.
* guile/scm-math.c (vlscm_convert_typed_number): Update caller
of get_unsigned_type_max.
(vlscm_integer_fits_p): Likewise.
Change-Id: Ibb1bf0c0fa181fac7853147dfde082a7d1ae2323
2021-07-29 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
gas: improve C_BSTAT and C_STSYM symbols handling on XCOFF
A C_BSTAT debug symbol specifies the beginning of a static block.
Its n_value is the index of the csect containing static symbols.
A C_STSYM debug symbol represents the stabstring of a statically
allocated symbol. Its n_value is the offset in the csect pointed
by the containing C_BSTAT.
These two special n_value were not correctly handled both when
generating object files with gas or when reading them with objdump.
This patch tries to improve that and, above all, to allow gas-generated
object files with such symbols to be accepted by AIX ld.
bfd/
* coff-bfd.c (bfd_coff_get_syment): Adjust n_value of symbols
having fix_value = 1 in order to be an index and not a memory
offset.
* coffgen.c (coff_get_symbol_info): Likewize.
(coff_print_symbol): Likewize.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_frob_label): Don't change within if
already set.
(ppc_stabx): Remove workaround changing exp.X_add_symbol's
within.
* config/tc-ppc.h (struct ppc_tc_sy): Update comments.
* symbols.c (resolve_symbol_value): Remove symbol update
when final_val is 0 and it's an AIX debug symbol.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/aix.exp: Add new tests.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-stsym-32.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-stsym-64.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/xcoff-stsym.s: New test.
2021-07-29 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
Guile: temporary breakpoints
Adds API to the Guile bindings for creating temporary breakpoints and
querying whether an existing breakpoint object is temporary. This is
effectively a transliteration of the Python implementation.
It's worth noting that the added `is_temporary' flag is ignored in the
watchpoint registration path. This replicates the behaviour of the
Python implementation, but might be a bit surprising for users.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-06-09 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* guile/scm-breakpoint.c (gdbscm_breakpoint_object::spec): Add
is_temporary field.
(temporary_keyword): Add keyword object for make-breakpoint
argument parsing.
(gdbscm_make_breakpoint): Accept #:temporary keyword argument
and store the value in the allocated object's
spec.is_temporary.
(gdbscm_register_breakpoint_x): Pass the breakpoint's
spec.is_temporary value to create_breakpoint.
(gdbscm_breakpoint_temporary): Add breakpoint-temporary?
procedure implementation.
(breakpoint_functions::make-breakpoint): Update documentation
string and fix a typo.
(breakpoint_functions::breakpoint-temporary?): Add
breakpoint-temporary? procedure.
(gdbscm_initialize_breakpoints): Initialise temporary_keyword
variable.
NEWS (Guile API): Mention new temporary breakpoints API.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2021-06-09 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* guile.texi (Breakpoints In Guile): Update make-breakpoint
documentation to reflect new #:temporary argument.
Add documentation for new breakpoint-temporary? procedure.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-06-09 George Barrett <bob@bob131.so>
* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: Add additional tests for
temporary breakpoints.
Change-Id: I2de332ee7c256f5591d7141ab3ad50d31b871d17
2021-07-29 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-28 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: clean up some things in features/Makefile
Clean up some things I noticed:
- we generate a regformats/microblaze-with-stack-protect.dat file. I
don't think this is used. It could be used by a GDBserver built for
Microblaze, but GDBserver isn't ported to Microblaze. So I don't
think that's used at all. Remove the entry in features/Makefile and
the file itself.
- There are a bunch of *-expedite values in features/Makefile for
architectures for which we don't generate dat files. AFAIK, these
*-expedite values are only used when generating dat files. Remove
those that are not necessary.
- 32bit-segments.xml is not listed in the Makfile, but it's used. This
means that it wouldn't get re-generated if we were to change how C
files are generated from the XML. It looks like it was simply
forgotten, add it.
Change-Id: I112d00db317102270e1df924473c37122ccb6c3a
2021-07-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Simplify check for distinct TMM register operands
If any pair of operands in AMX instructions with 3 TMM register operands
are the same, the instruction will UD. Don't call register_number to
check for distinct TMM register operands since all TMM register operands
have the same size.
* config/tc-i386.c (check_VecOperands): Remove register_number
call when checking for distinct TMM register operands.
2021-07-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Run tmpdir/pr28138 only for native build
* PR ld/28138
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run tmpdir/pr28138 only for
native build.
2021-07-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Close the file descriptor if there is no archive fd
Close the file descriptor if there is no archive plugin file descriptor
to avoid running out of file descriptors on thin archives with many
archive members.
bfd/
PR ld/28138
* plugin.c (bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor): Close the file
descriptor there is no archive plugin file descriptor.
ld/
PR ld/28138
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run ld/28138 tests.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138.c: New file.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-1.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-2.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-3.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-4.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-5.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-6.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/pr28138-7.c: Likewise.
2021-07-28 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Report error reason when a library cannot be found
With "ulimit -n 20", report:
ld: cannot find -lgcc: Too many open files
instead of
ld: cannot find -lgcc
* ldfile.c (ldfile_open_file): Rport error reason when a library
cannot be found.
2021-07-28 Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
texi2pod.pl: add no-op --no-split option support [PR28144]
Change 2faf902da ("generate single html manual page by default")
added use of --no-split option to makeinfo. binutils reuses
makeinfo options for texi2pod.pl wrapper. Unsupported option
led to silent manpage truncation.
The change adds no-op option support.
etc/
* texi2pod.pl: Handle no-op --no-split option.
2021-07-28 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: fix missing space in some info variables output
Fixes PR gdb/28121. When a user declares an array like this:
int * const foo_1[3];
And in GDB the user does this:
(gdb) info variables foo
All variables matching regular expression "foo":
File test.c:
1: int * constfoo_1[3];
Notice the missing space between 'const' and 'foo_1'. This is fixed
in c_type_print_varspec_prefix (c-typeprint.c) by passing through the
flag that indicates if a trailing space is needed, rather than hard
coding the flag to false as we currently do.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28121
2021-07-28 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix unhandled dwarf expression opcode with gcc-11 -gdwarf-5
[ I've confused things by forgetting to add -gdwarf-4 in $subject of
commit 0057a7ee0d9 "[gdb/testsuite] Add KFAILs for gdb.ada FAILs with
gcc-11". So I'm adding here -gdwarf-5 in $subject, even though -gdwarf-5 is
the default for gcc-11. I keep getting confused because of working with a
system gcc-11 compiler that was patched to switch the default back to
-gdwarf-4. ]
When running test-case gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp with gcc-11 (and default
-gdwarf-5), I run into:
...
(gdb) print pa_ptr.all^M
Unhandled dwarf expression opcode 0xff^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=all: print pa_ptr.all
...
What happens is that pa_ptr:
...
<2><1523>: Abbrev Number: 3 (DW_TAG_variable)
<1524> DW_AT_name : pa_ptr
<1529> DW_AT_type : <0x14fa>
...
has type:
...
<2><14fa>: Abbrev Number: 2 (DW_TAG_typedef)
<14fb> DW_AT_name : foo__packed_array_ptr
<1500> DW_AT_type : <0x1504>
<2><1504>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_pointer_type)
<1505> DW_AT_byte_size : 8
<1505> DW_AT_type : <0x1509>
...
which is a pointer to a subrange:
...
<2><1509>: Abbrev Number: 12 (DW_TAG_subrange_type)
<150a> DW_AT_lower_bound : 0
<150b> DW_AT_upper_bound : 0x3fffffffffffffffff
<151b> DW_AT_name : foo__packed_array
<151f> DW_AT_type : <0x15cc>
<1523> DW_AT_artificial : 1
<1><15cc>: Abbrev Number: 5 (DW_TAG_base_type)
<15cd> DW_AT_byte_size : 16
<15ce> DW_AT_encoding : 7 (unsigned)
<15cf> DW_AT_name : long_long_long_unsigned
<15d3> DW_AT_artificial : 1
...
with upper bound of form DW_FORM_data16.
In gdb/dwarf/attribute.h we have:
...
/* Return non-zero if ATTR's value falls in the 'constant' class, or
zero otherwise. When this function returns true, you can apply
the constant_value method to it.
...
DW_FORM_data16 is not considered as constant_value cannot handle
that. */
bool form_is_constant () const;
...
so instead we have attribute::form_is_block (DW_FORM_data16) == true.
Then in attr_to_dynamic_prop for the upper bound, we get a PROC_LOCEXPR
instead of a PROP_CONST and end up trying to evaluate the constant
0x3fffffffffffffffff as if it were a locexpr, which causes the
"Unhandled dwarf expression opcode 0xff".
In contrast, with -gdwarf-4 we have:
...
<164c> DW_AT_upper_bound : 18 byte block: \
9e 10 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff 3f 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 \
(DW_OP_implicit_value 16 byte block: \
ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff 3f 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 )
...
Fix the dwarf error by translating the DW_FORM_data16 constant into a
PROC_LOCEXPR, effectively by prepending 0x9e 0x10, such that we have same
result as with -gdwarf-4:
...
(gdb) print pa_ptr.all^M
That operation is not available on integers of more than 8 bytes.^M
(gdb) KFAIL: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=all: print pa_ptr.all \
(PRMS: gdb/20991)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc-11 and target board
unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* dwarf2/read.c (attr_to_dynamic_prop): Handle DW_FORM_data16.
2021-07-28 will schmidt <will_schmidt@vnet.ibm.com>
Externalize the _bfd_set_gp_value function
This change adds an external-visible wrapper for the _bfd_set_gp_value
function. This is a prerequisite for some gdb patches that better
handle powerpc64le relocations against ".TOC.".
* bfd.c (bfd_set_gp_value): New externally visible wrapper
for _bfd_set_gp_value.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
2021-07-28 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PowerPC: ignore sticky options for .machine
PowerPC gas and objdump for a long time have allowed certain -m/-M
options that extend a base cpu with extra functional units to be
specified before the base cpu. For example, "-maltivec -mpower4" is
the same as "-mpower4 -maltivec". See
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2008-January/054935.html
It doesn't make as much sense that .machine keep any of these
"sticky" flags when handling a new base cpu. See gcc PR101393. I
think that instead .machine ought to override the command line.
That's what this patch does. It is still possible to extend cpu
functionality with .machine. For example the following can be
assembled when selecting a basic -mppc on the command line:
.machine power5
.machine altivec
frin 1,2
lvsr 3,4,5
Here, ".machine altivec" extends the ".machine power5" so that both
the power5 "frin" instruction and the altivec "lvsr" instruction are
enabled. Swapping the two ".machine" directives would result in
failure to assemble "lvsr".
This change will expose some assembly errors, such as the one in
glibc/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/tst-ucontext-ppc64-vscr.c, a file
compiled with -maltivec but containing
asm volatile (".machine push;\n"
".machine \"power5\";\n"
"vspltisb %0,0;\n"
"vspltisb %1,-1;\n"
"vpkuwus %0,%0,%1;\n"
"mfvscr %0;\n"
"stvx %0,0,%2;\n"
".machine pop;"
: "=v" (v0), "=v" (v1)
: "r" (vscr_ptr)
: "memory");
It's just wrong to choose power5 for a bunch of altivec instructions
and in fact all of those .machine directives are unnecessary.
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_machine): Don't use command line
sticky options.
2021-07-28 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add xfail for PR gcc/101643
With gcc 8.5.0 I run into:
...
(gdb) print bad^M
$2 = (0 => 0 <repeats 25 times>)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp: scenario=minimal: print bad
...
while with gcc 9.3.1 we have instead:
...
(gdb) print bad^M
$2 = (false <repeats 196 times>)^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp: scenario=minimal: print bad
...
This is caused by gcc PR, which I've filed at
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=101643 "[debug, ada] packed array
not described as packed".
Fix by marking this as XFAIL.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/26904
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/big_packed_array.exp: Add xfail.
2021-07-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add xfail for PR gcc/101633
With gcc 7.5.0, I run into:
...
(gdb) print objects^M
$1 = ((tag => object, values => ()), (tag => unused))^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/array_of_variant.exp: scenario=minimal: print entire array
...
while with gcc 8.5.0 we have:
...
(gdb) print objects^M
$1 = ((tag => object, values => (2, 2, 2, 2, 2)), (tag => unused))^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/array_of_variant.exp: scenario=minimal: print entire array
...
This is due to a gcc PR, which I've filed at
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=101633 "Bug 101633 - [debug]
DW_TAG_subrange_type missing DW_AT_upper_bound".
Fix by marking this and related FAILs as XFAIL.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-27 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/26903
* gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/array_of_variant.exp: Add xfails.
2021-07-27 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: remove VALUE_FRAME_ID and fix another frame debug issue
This commit was originally part of this patch series:
(v1): https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-May/179357.html
(v2): https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-June/180208.html
(v3): https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/181028.html
However, that series is being held up in review, so I wanted to break
out some of the non-related fixes in order to get these merged.
This commit addresses two semi-related issues, both of which are
problems exposed by using 'set debug frame on'.
The first issue is in frame.c in get_prev_frame_always_1, and was
introduced by this commit:
commit a05a883fbaba69d0f80806e46a9457727fcbe74c
Date: Tue Jun 29 12:03:50 2021 -0400
gdb: introduce frame_debug_printf
This commit replaced fprint_frame with frame_info::to_string.
However, the former could handle taking a nullptr while the later, a
member function, obviously requires a non-nullptr in order to make the
function call. In one place we are not-guaranteed to have a
non-nullptr, and so, there is the possibility of triggering undefined
behaviour.
The second issue addressed in this commit has existed for a while in
GDB, and would cause this assertion:
gdb/frame.c:622: internal-error: frame_id get_frame_id(frame_info*): Assertion `fi->this_id.p != frame_id_status::COMPUTING' failed.
We attempt to get the frame_id for a frame while we are computing the
frame_id for that same frame.
What happens is that when GDB stops we create a frame_info object for
the sentinel frame (frame #-1) and then we attempt to unwind this
frame to create a frame_info object for frame #0.
In the test case used here to expose the issue we have created a
Python frame unwinder. In the Python unwinder we attemt to read the
program counter register.
Reading this register will initially create a lazy register value.
The frame-id stored in the lazy register value will be for the
sentinel frame (lazy register values hold the frame-id for the frame
from which the register will be unwound).
However, the Python unwinder does actually want to examine the value
of the program counter, and so the lazy register value is resolved
into a non-lazy value. This sends GDB into value_fetch_lazy_register
in value.c.
Now, inside this function, if 'set debug frame on' is in effect, then
we want to print something like:
frame=%d, regnum=%d(%s), ....
Where 'frame=%d' will be the relative frame level of the frame for
which the register is being fetched, so, in this case we would expect
to see 'frame=0', i.e. we are reading a register as it would be in
frame #0. But, remember, the lazy register value actually holds the
frame-id for frame #-1 (the sentinel frame).
So, to get the frame_info for frame #0 we used to call:
frame = frame_find_by_id (VALUE_FRAME_ID (val));
Where VALUE_FRAME_ID is:
#define VALUE_FRAME_ID(val) (get_prev_frame_id_by_id (VALUE_NEXT_FRAME_ID (val)))
That is, we start with the frame-id for the next frame as obtained by
VALUE_NEXT_FRAME_ID, then call get_prev_frame_id_by_id to get the
frame-id of the previous frame.
The get_prev_frame_id_by_id function finds the frame_info for the
given frame-id (in this case frame #-1), calls get_prev_frame to get
the previous frame, and then calls get_frame_id.
The problem here is that calling get_frame_id requires that we know
the frame unwinder, so then have to try each frame unwinder in turn,
which would include the Python unwinder.... which is where we started,
and thus we have a loop!
To prevent this loop GDB has an assertion in place, which is what
actually triggers.
Solving the assertion failure is pretty easy, if we consider the code
in value_fetch_lazy_register and get_prev_frame_id_by_id then what we
do is:
1. Start with a frame_id taken from a value,
2. Lookup the corresponding frame,
3. Find the previous frame,
4. Get the frame_id for that frame, and
5. Lookup the corresponding frame
6. Print the frame's level
Notice that steps 3 and 5 give us the exact same result, step 4 is
just wasted effort. We could shorten this process such that we drop
steps 4 and 5, thus:
1. Start with a frame_id taken from a value,
2. Lookup the corresponding frame,
3. Find the previous frame,
6. Print the frame's level
This will give the exact same frame as a result, and this is what I
have done in this patch by removing the use of VALUE_FRAME_ID from
value_fetch_lazy_register.
Out of curiosity I looked to see how widely VALUE_FRAME_ID was used,
and saw it was only used in one other place in valops.c:value_assign,
where, once again, we take the result of VALUE_FRAME_ID and pass it to
frame_find_by_id, thus introducing a redundant frame_id lookup.
I don't think the value_assign case risks triggering the assertion
though, as we are unlikely to call value_assign while computing the
frame_id for a frame, however, we could make value_assign slightly
more efficient, with no real additional complexity, by removing the
use of VALUE_FRAME_ID.
So, in this commit, I completely remove VALUE_FRAME_ID, and replace it
with a use of VALUE_NEXT_FRAME_ID, followed by a direct call to
get_prev_frame_always, this should make no difference in either case,
and resolves the assertion issue from value.c.
As I said, this patch was originally part of another series, the
original test relied on the fixes in that original series. However, I
was able to create an alternative test for this issue by enabling
frame debug within an existing test script.
This commit probably fixes bug PR gdb/27938, though the bug doesn't
have a reproducer attached so it is not possible to know for sure.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27938
2021-07-27 Chenghua Xu <xuchenghua@loongson.cn>
Correct gs264e bfd_mach in mips_arch_choices.
opcodes/
* mips-dis.c (mips_arch_choices): Correct gs264e bfd_mach.
2021-07-27 Roland McGrath <mcgrathr@google.com>
Fix ld test case that assumes --enable-textrel-check
ld/
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp (Build textrel-1): Use --warn-textrel.
2021-07-27 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-27 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
bfd: Set error to bfd_error_malformed_archive only if unset
When reading an archive member, set error to bfd_error_malformed_archive
on open_nested_file failure only if the error is unset.
PR ld/28138
* archive.c (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Don't set error to
bfd_error_malformed_archive if it has been set.
2021-07-26 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix for mi-reverse.exp
This test fails on PPC64 because PPC64 prints the value of 3.5 with
more significant digits than on Intel. The patch updates the regular
expression to allow for more significant digits on the constant.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
* gdb.mi/mi-reverse.exp: mi_execute_to exec-step reverse add check
for additional digits.
2021-07-26 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix the Windows build
The gdb build was broken on Windows after the patch to change
get_inferior_cwd. This patch fixes the build.
2021-07-26 Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
gdb: Fix numerical field extraction for target description "flags"
The "val_print_type_code_flags ()" function is responsible for
extraction of fields for "flags" data type. These data types are
used when describing a custom register type in a target description
XML. The logic used for the extraction though is not sound:
unsigned field_len = TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, field);
ULONGEST field_val
= val >> (TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, field) - field_len + 1);
TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE: The bit length of the field to be extracted.
TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS: The starting position of the field; 0 is LSB.
val: The register value.
Imagine you have a field that starts at position 1 and its length
is 4 bits. According to the third line of the code snippet the
shifting right would become "val >> -2", or "val >> 0xfff...fe"
to be precise. That will result in a "field_val" of 0.
The correct extraction should be:
ULONGEST field_val = val >> TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, field);
The rest of the algorithm that masks out the higher bits is OK.
Co-Authored-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [10/10] arm: Alias 'ra_auth_code' to r12 for pacbti.
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (reg_names): Alias 'ra_auth_code' to r12.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [9/10] arm: add 'pacg' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (T16_32_TAB): Add '_pacg'.
(do_t_pacbti_pacg): New function.
(insns): Define 'pacg' insn.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Add 'pacg' test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'pacg'.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [8/10] arm: add 'autg' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (T16_32_TAB): Add '_autg'.
(insns): Define 'autg' insn.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Add autg test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'autg'.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [7/10] arm: add 'bxaut' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (T16_32_TAB): Add '_bxaut'.
(do_t_pacbti_nonop): New function.
(insns): Define 'bxaut' insn.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Add 'bxaut' test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'bxaut'.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [6/10] arm: Add -march=armv8.1-m.main+pacbti flag
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (pacbti_ext): Define.
(BAD_PACBTI): New macro.
(armv8_1m_main_ext_table): Add 'pacbti' extension.
include/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_EXT3_PACBTI, ARM_AEXT3_V8_1M_MAIN_PACBTI): New
macro.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [5/10] arm: Extend again arm_feature_set struct to provide more bits
include/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* opcode/arm.h (arm_feature_set): Extend 'core' field.
(ARM_CPU_HAS_FEATURE, ARM_FSET_CPU_SUBSET, ARM_CPU_IS_ANY)
(ARM_MERGE_FEATURE_SETS, ARM_CLEAR_FEATURE, ARM_FEATURE_EQUAL)
(ARM_FEATURE_ZERO, ARM_FEATURE_CORE_EQUAL): Account for
'core[2]'.
(ARM_FEATURE_CORE_HIGH_HIGH): New macro.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [4/10] arm: add 'pac' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (T16_32_TAB): Add '_pac'.
(insns): Add 'pac' insn.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.l: Add pac tests.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'pac'.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [3/10] arm: add 'aut' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (insns): Add 'aut.'
(T16_32_TAB): Add '_aut'.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.l: Add 'aut' tests.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'aut'.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [2/10] arm: add 'pacbti' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c
(enum operand_parse_code): Add OP_SP and OP_R12.
(parse_operands): Add switch cases for OP_SP and OP_R12.
(T16_32_TAB): Add '_pacbti'.
(do_t_pacbti): New function.
(insns): Add 'pacbti'.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti-bad.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: Add 'pacbti' to testcase.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add 'pacbti' instruction.
2021-07-26 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
PATCH [1/10] arm: add 'bti' instruction for Armv8.1-M pacbti extension
gas/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (insns): Add 'bti' insn.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/arm/armv8_1-m-pacbti.s: Likewise.
opcodes/
2021-06-11 Andrea Corallo <andrea.corallo@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (thumb32_opcodes): Add bti instruction.
2021-07-26 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb: move remaining ChangeLogs to legacy files
In commit:
commit f069ea46a03ae868581d1c852da28e979ea1245a
Date: Sat Jul 3 16:29:08 2021 -0700
Rename gdb/ChangeLog to gdb/ChangeLog-2021
The gdb/ChangeLog file was renamed, but all of the other ChangeLog
files relating to gdb were left in place.
As I understand things, the no ChangeLogs policy applies to all the
GDB related directories, so this commit renames all of the remaining
GDB related ChangeLog files.
As with the original commit, the intention behind this commit is to
hopefully stop people merging ChangeLog entries by mistake.
The renames carried out in this commit are:
gdb/doc/ChangeLog -> gdb/doc/ChangeLog-1991-2021
gdb/stubs/ChangeLog -> gdb/stubs/ChangeLog-2012-2020
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog -> gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog-2014-2021
gdbserver/ChangeLog -> gdbserver/ChangeLog-2002-2021
gdbsupport/ChangeLog -> gdbsupport/ChangeLog-2020-2021
2021-07-26 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
gdb/mi: handle no condition argument case for -break-condition
As reported in PR gdb/28076 [1], passing no condition argument to the
-break-condition command (e.g.: "-break-condition 2") should clear the
condition for breakpoint 2, just like CLI's "condition 2", but instead
an error message is returned:
^error,msg="-break-condition: Missing the <number> and/or <expr> argument"
The current implementation of the -break-condition command's argument
handling (79aabb7308c "gdb/mi: add a '--force' flag to the
'-break-condition' command") was done according to the documentation,
where the condition argument seemed mandatory. However, the
-break-condition command originally (i.e. before the 79aabb7308c
patch) used the CLI's "cond" command, and back then not passing a
condition argument was clearing out the condition. So, this is a
regression in terms of the behavior.
Fix the argument handling of the -break-condition command to allow not
having a condition argument, and also update the document to make the
behavior clear. Also add test cases to test the scenarios which were
previously not covered.
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28076
2021-07-26 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-25 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Revert: PowerPC: Don't generate unused section symbols
Blindly following x86 broke linux kernel builds.
bfd/
* elf32-ppc.c (TARGET_KEEP_UNUSED_SECTION_SYMBOLS): Define as true.
* elf64-ppc.c (TARGET_KEEP_UNUSED_SECTION_SYMBOLS): Likewise.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/ppc/power4.d: Adjust for section sym change.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/test1elf32.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/test1elf64.d: Likewise.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe.r: Adjust for section sym change.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32no.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexeno.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexenors.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexers.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexetoc.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexetocrs.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget.wf: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget2.wf: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsso.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsso32.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlstocso.r: Likewise.
2021-07-24 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: ld script expression parsing
Commit 40726f16a8d7 broke references to sections within ADDR(), and
overlays with weird section names.
* ldgram.y (paren_script_name): New rule.
(exp): Use it for ALIGNOF, SIZEOF, ADDR, and LOADADDR. Similarly
ensure script mode parsing for section name in SEGMENT_START.
(overlay_section): Delete unnecessary ldlex_script call. Backup
on a lookahead NAME parsed in expression mode.
* testsuite/ld-elf/overlay.s: Add more sections.
* testsuite/ld-elf/overlay.t: Test '-' in section names.
2021-07-24 Frederic Cambus <fred@statdns.com>
Update the NetBSD system call table to match NetBSD-current.
Generated from sys/sys/syscall.h revision 1.319.
We can safely remove the _lwp_gettid syscall, which was never exposed
in libc and never made it into a release.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-23 Frederic Cambus <fred@statdns.com>
* syscalls/netbsd.xml: Regenerate.
2021-07-24 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: test get/set value of unregistered Guile parameter
When creating a parameter in Guile, you have to create it using
make-parameter and then register it with GDB with register-parameter!.
In between, it's still possible (though not documented) to set the
parameter's value. I broke this use case by mistake while writing this
series, so thought it would be good to have a test for it.
I suppose that people could use this "feature" to give their parameter
an initial value, even though make-parameter has an initial-value
parameter for this. Nevertheless, changing this behavior could break
some scripts, which is why I think it's important for it to be tested.
Change-Id: I5b2103e3cec0cfdcccf7ffb00eb05fed8626e66d
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove cmd_list_element::function::sfunc
I don't understand what the sfunc function type in
cmd_list_element::function is for. Compared to cmd_simple_func_ftype,
it has an extra cmd_list_element parameter, giving the callback access
to the cmd_list_element for the command being invoked. This allows
registering the same callback with many commands, and alter the behavior
using the cmd_list_element's context.
From the comment in cmd_list_element, it sounds like at some point it
was the callback function type for set and show functions, hence the
"s". But nowadays, it's used for many more commands that need to access
the cmd_list_element object (see add_catch_command for example).
I don't really see the point of having sfunc at all, since do_sfunc is
just a trivial shim that changes the order of the arguments. All
commands using sfunc could just as well set cmd_list_element::func to
their callback directly.
Therefore, remove the sfunc field in cmd_list_element and everything
that goes with it. Rename cmd_const_sfunc_ftype to cmd_func_ftype and
use it for cmd_list_element::func, as well as for the add_setshow
commands.
Change-Id: I1eb96326c9b511c293c76996cea0ebc51c70fac0
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: rename cfunc to simple_func
After browsing the CLI code for quite a while and trying really hard, I
reached the conclusion that I can't give a meaningful explanation of
what "sfunc" and "cfunc" functions are, in cmd_list_element. I don't
see a logic at all. That makes it very difficult to do any kind of
change. Unless somebody can make sense out of all that, I'd like to try
to retro-fit some logic in the cmd_list_element callback function code
so that we can understand what is going on, do some cleanups and add new
features.
The first change is about "cfunc". I can't figure out what the "c" in
cfunc means. It's not const, because there's already "const" in
"cmd_const_cfunc_ftype", and the previous "cmd_cfunc_ftype" had nothing
const.. It's not "cmd" or "command", because there's already "cmd" in
"cmd_const_cfunc_ftype".
The "main" command callback, cmd_list_element::func, has three
parameters, whereas cfunc has two. It is missing the cmd_list_element
parameter. So the only reason I see for cfunc to exist is to be a shim
between the three and two parameter versions. Most commands don't need
to receive the cmd_list_element object, so adding it everywhere would be
long and would just add more unnecessary boilerplate. So since this is
the "simple" version of the callback, compared to the "full", I suggest
renaming cmd_const_cfunc_ftype into cmd_simple_func_ftype, as well as
everything (like the utility functions) that goes with it.
Change-Id: I4e46cacfd77a66bc1cbf683f6a362072504b7868
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make inferior::m_terminal an std::string
Same idea as the previous patch, but for m_terminal.
Change-Id: If9367d5db8c976a4336680adca4ea5bc31ab64d2
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make inferior::m_cwd an std::string
Same idea as the previous patch, but for m_cwd.
To keep things consistent across the board, change get_inferior_cwd as
well, which is shared with GDBserver. So update the related GDBserver
code too.
Change-Id: Ia2c047fda738d45f3d18bc999eb67ceb8400ce4e
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make inferior::m_args an std::string
With the current code, both a NULL pointer and an empty string can mean
"no arguments". We don't need this distinction. Changing to a string
has the advantage that there is now a single state for that (an empty
string), which makes the code a bit simpler in my opinion.
Change-Id: Icdc622820f7869478791dbaa84b4a1c7fec21ced
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add setter/getter for inferior cwd
Add cwd/set_cwd to the inferior class, remove set_inferior_args.
Keep get_inferior_args, because it is used from fork_inferior, in shared
code. The cwd could eventually be passed as a parameter eventually,
though, I think that would be cleaner.
Change-Id: Ifb72ea865d7e6f9a491308f0d5c1595579d8427e
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add setter/getter for inferior arguments
Add args/set_args to the inferior class, remove the set_inferior_args
and get_inferior_args functions, that would just be wrappers around
them.
Change-Id: If87d52f3402ce08be26c32897ae8915d9f6d1ea3
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: remove inferior::{argc,argv}
There are currently two states that the inferior args can be stored.
The main one is the `args` field, where they are stored as a single
string. The other one is the `argc`/`argv` fields.
This last one is only used for arguments passed in GDB's
command line. And the only outcome is that when get_inferior_args is
called, `argc`/`argv` are serialized into `args`. So really,
`argc`/`argv` is just a staging area before moving the arguments in
`args`.
Simplify this by only keeping the `args` field. Change
set_inferior_args_vector to immediately serialize the arguments into
`args`, work that would be done in get_inferior_args later anyway.
The only time where this work would be "wasted" is when the user passes
some arguments on the command line, but does not end up running the
program. But that just seems unlikely. And it's not that much work.
Change-Id: Ica0b9859397c095f6530350c8fb3c36905f2044a
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: un-share set_inferior_cwd declaration
The declaration of set_inferior_cwd is currently shared between gdb and
gdbserver, in gdbsupport/common-inferior.h. It doesn't need to be, as
set_inferior_cwd is not called from common code. Only get_inferior_cwd
needs to.
The motivation for this is that a future patch will change the prototype
of set_inferior_cwd in gdb, and I don't want to change it for gdbserver
unnecessarily. I see this as a good cleanup in any case, to reduce to
just the essential what is shared between GDB and GDBserver.
Change-Id: I3127d27d078f0503ebf5ccc6fddf14f212426a73
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb.base/setshow.exp: fix duplicate test name
Fix:
DUPLICATE: gdb.base/setshow.exp: test_setshow_args: show args
by giving some explicit test names.
Change-Id: I2a738d3d3675ab9b45929e71f5aee0ea6bf92072
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb.base/setshow.exp: split in procs
Split in multiple procs, one per topic, and start with a fresh GDB in
each. I find it easier to work on a test with multiple smaller
independent test procedures. For example, it's possible to comment all
but one when working on one. It's also easier to add things without
having to think about the impact on existing tests, and vice-versa.
Change-Id: I19691eed8f9bcb975b2eeff7577cac66251bcbe2
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb.base/setshow.exp: use save_vars to save/restore gdb_prompt
Using save_vars is a bit better than what we have now, as it ensures the
variable gets restored if the code within it throws an error.
Change-Id: I3bd6836e5b7efb61b078acadff1a1c8182c19a27
2021-07-23 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: split gdb.python/py-parameter.exp in procs
Split the file into multiple independent test procs, where each proc
starts with a fresh GDB. I find it easier to understand what a test is
doing when each part of the test is isolated and self-contained. It
makes it easier to comment out some parts of the test while working /
debugging a specific part. It also makes it easier to add new things
(which a subsequent patch will do) without fear of impacting another part
of the test.
Change-Id: I8b4d52ac82b1492d79b679e13914ed177d8a836d
2021-07-23 Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com>
Fix for gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp
Not all systems have hardware breakpoint support. Add a check
to see if the system supports hardware breakpoints.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
* gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp (test_hardware_breakpoints): Add
check for hardware breakpoint support.
2021-07-23 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
gdb/testsuite: don't error when trying to unset last_spawn_tty_name
In spawn_capture_tty_name (lib/gdb.exp) we either set or unset
last_spawn_tty_name depending on whether spawn_out(slave,name) exists
or not.
One situation that might cause spawn_out(slave,name) to not exists is
if the spawn function is called with the argument -leaveopen, which is
how it is called when processes are created as part of a pipeline, the
created process has no tty, instead its output is written to a file
descriptor.
If a pipeline is created consisting of multiple processes then there
will be multiple sequential calls to spawn, all using -leaveopen. The
first of these calls is fine, spawn_out(slave,name) is not set, and so
in spawn_capture_tty_name we unset last_spawn_tty_name. However, on
the second call to spawn, spawn_out(slave,name) is still not set and
so in spawn_capture_tty_name we again try to unset
last_spawn_tty_name, this now throws an error (as last_spawn_tty_name
is already unset).
Fix this issue by using -nocomplain with the call to unset in
spawn_capture_tty_name.
Before this commit I was seeing gdb.base/gnu-debugdata.exp report 1
pass, and 1 unsupported test. After this commit I now see 16 passes
from this test script.
I have also improved the code that used to do this:
if { [info exists spawn_out] } {
set ::last_spawn_tty_name $spawn_out(slave,name)
} else {
...
}
The problem here is that we check for the existence of spawn_out, and
then unconditionally read spawn_out(slave,name). A situation could
arise where some other element of spawn_out is set,
e.g. spawn_out(foo), in which case we would enter the if block and try
to read a non-existent variable. After this commit we now check
specifically for spawn_out(slave,name).
Finally, it is worth noting that before this issue was fixed runtest
itself, or rather the expect process behind runtest, would segfault
while exiting. I haven't looked at all into what the problem is here
that caused expect to crash, as fixing the bug in GDB's testing
scripts made the segfault go away.
2021-07-23 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: express unduly set rounding control bits in disassembly
While EVEX.L'L are indeed ignored when EVEX.b stands for just SAE,
EVEX.b itself is not ignored when an insn permits neither rounding
control nor SAE.
While changing this aspect of EVEX.b handling, also alter unduly set
embedded broadcast: Don't call BadOp(), screwing up subsequent
disassembly, but emit "{bad}" instead.
2021-07-23 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAILs due to PR gcc/101575
When running test-case gdb.ada/formatted_ref.exp with gcc-11 and target board
unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-4 we run into:
...
(gdb) print/x s^M
No definition of "s" in current context.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/formatted_ref.exp: print/x s
...
which is caused by "runto defs.adb:20" taking us to defs__struct1IP:
...
(gdb) break defs.adb:20^M
Breakpoint 1 at 0x402cfd: defs.adb:20. (2 locations)^M
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: formatted_ref ^M
^M
Breakpoint 1, defs__struct1IP () at defs.adb:20^M
20 return s.x; -- Set breakpoint marker here.^M
(gdb) print s1'access^M
...
instead of the expected defs.f1:
...
(gdb) break defs.adb:20^M
Breakpoint 1 at 0x402d0e: file defs.adb, line 20.^M
(gdb) run ^M
Starting program: formatted_ref ^M
^M
Breakpoint 1, defs.f1 (s=...) at defs.adb:20^M
20 return s.x; -- Set breakpoint marker here.^M
...
This is caused by incorrect line info due to gcc PR 101575 - "[gcc-11,
-gdwarf-4] Missing .file <n> directive causes invalid line info".
Fix this by when landing in defs__struct1IP:
- xfailing the runto, and
- issuing a continue to land in defs.f1.
Likewise in a few other test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with:
- system gcc.
- gcc-11 and target boards unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-4 and
unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-22 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.ada/formatted_ref.exp: Add xfail for PR gcc/101575.
* gdb.ada/iwide.exp: Same.
* gdb.ada/pkd_arr_elem.exp: Same.
2021-07-22 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop dq{b,d}_mode
Their sole use is for {,V}EXTRACTPS / {,V}P{EXT,INS}RB respectively; for
consistency also limit use of dqw_mode to Jdqw. 64-bit disassembly
reflecting REX.W / VEX.W is not in line with the assembler's opcode
table having NoRex64 / VexWIG in all respective templates, i.e. assembly
input isn't being honored there either. Obviously the 0FC5 encodings of
{,V}PEXTRW then also need adjustment for consistency reasons.
x86: drop vex_scalar_w_dq_mode
It has only a single use and can easily be represented by dq_mode
instead. Plus its handling in intel_operand_size() was duplicating
that of vex_vsib_{d,q}_w_dq_mode anyway.
x86: drop xmm_m{b,w,d,q}_mode
They're effectively redundant with {b,w,d,q}_mode.
x86: fold duplicate vector register printing code
The bulk of OP_XMM() can be easily reused also for OP_EX(). Break the
shared logic out of the function, and invoke the new helper from both
places.
x86: drop vex_mode and vex_scalar_mode
These are fully redundant with, respectively, x_mode and scalar_mode.
x86: correct EVEX.V' handling outside of 64-bit mode
Unlike the high bit of VEX.vvvv / EVEX.vvvv, EVEX.V' is not ignored
outside of 64-bit mode. Oddly enough there already are tests for these
cases, but their expectations were wrong. (This may have been based on
an old SDM version, where the restriction wasn't properly spelled out.)
x86: fold duplicate code in MOVSXD_Fixup()
There's no need to have two paths printing the "xd" mnemonic suffix.
x86: fold duplicate register printing code
What so far was OP_E_register() can be easily reused also for OP_G().
Add suitable parameters to the function and move the invocation of
swap_operand() to OP_E(). Adjust MOVSXD's first operand: There never was
a need to use movsxd_mode there, and its use gets in the way of the code
folding.
x86-64: properly bounds-check %bnd<N> in OP_G()
The restriction to %bnd0-%bnd3 requires to also check REX.R is clear,
just like OP_E_Register() also includes REX.B in its check.
x86-64: generalize OP_G()'s EVEX.R' handling
EVEX.R' is invalid to be clear not only for mask registers, but also for
GPRs - IOW everything handled in this function.
2021-07-22 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: correct VCVT{,U}SI2SD rounding mode handling
With EVEX.W clear the instruction doesn't ignore the rounding mode, but
(like for other insns without rounding semantics) EVEX.b set causes #UD.
Hence the handling of EVEX.W needs to be done when processing
evex_rounding_64_mode, not at the decode stages.
Derive a new 64-bit testcase from the 32-bit one to cover the different
EVEX.W treatment in both cases.
2021-07-22 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86: drop OP_Mask()
By moving its vex.r check there it becomes fully redundant with OP_G().
2021-07-22 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp with gcc-11
When running test-case gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp with gcc-11, I run
into:
...
KPASS: gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: no_header: next step 1 \
(PRMS symtab/25507)
FAIL: gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: no_header: next step 2
KPASS: gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: no_header: next step 3 \
(PRMS symtab/25507)
...
[ Note that I get the same result with gcc-11 and target board
unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-4, so this is not a dwarf 4 vs 5 issue. ]
With gcc-10, I have this trace:
...
64 get_alias_set (&xx);
get_alias_set (t=0x601038 <xx>) at step-and-next-inline.cc:51
51 if (t != NULL
40 if (t->x != i)
52 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 1
43 return x;
53 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 2
43 return x;
54 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 3)
43 return x;
main () at step-and-next-inline.cc:65
65 return 0;
...
and with gcc-11, I have instead:
...
64 get_alias_set (&xx);
get_alias_set (t=0x601038 <xx>) at step-and-next-inline.cc:51
51 if (t != NULL
52 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 1
43 return x;
53 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 2
43 return x;
54 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 3)
43 return x;
main () at step-and-next-inline.cc:65
65 return 0;
...
and with clang-10, I have instead:
...
64 get_alias_set (&xx);
get_alias_set (t=0x601034 <xx>) at step-and-next-inline.cc:51
51 if (t != NULL
52 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 1
53 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 2
54 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 3)
51 if (t != NULL
57 }
main () at step-and-next-inline.cc:65
65 return 0;
...
The test-case tries to verify that we don't step into inlined function
tree_check (lines 40-43) (so, with the clang trace we get that right).
The test-case then tries to kfail the problems when using gcc, but this is
done in such a way that the testing still gets out of sync after a failure.
That is: the "next step 2" check that is supposed to match
"TREE_TYPE (t).z != 2" is actually matching "TREE_TYPE (t).z != 1":
...
(gdb) next^M
52 && TREE_TYPE (t).z != 1^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: no_header: next step 2
...
Fix this by issuing extra nexts to arrive at the required lines.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc-8, gcc-9, gcc-10, gcc-11, clang-8, clang-10
and clang-12.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.cc (tree_check, get_alias_set, main):
Tag closing brace with comment.
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.h: Update to keep identical with
step-and-next-inline.cc.
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: Issue extra next when required.
2021-07-21 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Russian translation for the bfd library
2021-07-21 Luca Boccassi <luca.boccassi@microsoft.com>
Allows linker scripts to set the SEC_READONLY flag.
* ld.texi: Document new output section type.
* ldgram.y: Add new token.
* ldlang.c: Handle the new flag.
* ldlang.h: Add readonly_section to list of section types.
* ldlex.l: Add a new identifier.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/output-section-types.t: New example linker script.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/output-section-types.d: Test driver.
* testsyute/ld-scripts/script.exp: Run the new test.
2021-07-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix FAILs due to PR gcc/101452
When running test-case gdb.base/ptype-offsets.exp with gcc-11 (with -gdwarf-5
default) or gcc-10 with target board unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5 we run
into this regression:
...
(gdb) ptype/o static_member^M
/* offset | size */ type = struct static_member {^M
- static static_member Empty;^M
/* 0 | 4 */ int abc;^M
^M
/* total size (bytes): 4 */^M
}^M
-(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/ptype-offsets.exp: ptype/o static_member
+(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/ptype-offsets.exp: ptype/o static_member
...
This is caused by missing debug info, which I filed as gcc PR101452 - "[debug,
dwarf-5] undefined static member removed by
-feliminate-unused-debug-symbols".
It's not clear yet whether this is a bug or a feature, but work around this in
the test-cases by:
- defining the static member
- adding additional_flags=-fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-20 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/gdb.exp (gcc_major_version): New proc.
* gdb.base/ptype-offsets.cc: Define static member static_member::Empty.
* gdb.cp/templates.exp: Define static member using -DGCC_BUG.
* gdb.cp/m-static.exp: Add
additional_flags=-fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types.
* gdb.cp/pr-574.exp: Same.
* gdb.cp/pr9167.exp: Same.
2021-07-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add KFAILs for gdb.ada FAILs with gcc-11
With gcc-11 we run into:
...
(gdb) print pa_ptr.all^M
That operation is not available on integers of more than 8 bytes.^M
(gdb) KFAIL: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=all: print pa_ptr.all (PRMS: gdb/20991)
...
This is due to PR exp/20991 - "__int128 type support". Mark this and similar
FAILs as KFAIL.
Also mark this FAIL:
....
(gdb) print pa_ptr(3)^M
cannot subscript or call something of type `foo__packed_array_ptr'^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: scenario=minimal: print pa_ptr(3)
...
as a KFAIL for PR ada/28115 - "Support packed array encoded as
DW_TAG_subrange_type".
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc-10 and gcc-11.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-21 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.ada/arrayptr.exp: Add KFAILs for PR20991 and PR28115.
* gdb.ada/exprs.exp: Add KFAILs for PR20991.
* gdb.ada/packed_array_assign.exp: Same.
2021-07-21 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
as_bad_subtract
Many places report errors of the nature "can't resolve a - b".
This provides a utility function to report such errors consistently.
I removed the section reporting and quotes around symbol names while I
was at it. Compare
ifunc-2.s:4: Error: can't resolve `bar1' {.text.1 section} - `foo1' {.text.1 section}
with
ifunc-2.s:4: Error: can't resolve bar1 - foo1
In many cases the section names don't help the user very much in
figuring out what went wrong, and the quotes if present arguably ought
to be placed around the entire expression:
can't resolve `bar1 - foo1'
The patch also tidies some tc_get_reloc functions that leak memory on
error paths.
* write.h (as_bad_subtract): Declare.
* write.c (as_bad_subtract): New function.
(fixup_segment): Use as_bad_subtract.
* config/tc-arc.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-avr.c (md_apply_fix, tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-cris.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-d10v.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-d30v.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-ft32.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-h8300.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-m68hc11.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-mmix.c (mmix_frob_file): Likewise.
* config/tc-mn10200.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-nds32.c (nds32_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-pru.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-riscv.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-s12z.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-s390.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-tilegx.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-tilepro.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-v850.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-vax.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-xc16x.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-xgate.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-xstormy16.c (xstormy16_md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-xtensa.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
* config/tc-z80.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-spu.c (md_apply_fix): Likewise.
(tc_gen_reloc): Delete dead code. Free memory on error.
* config/tc-cr16.c (tc_gen_reloc): Use as_bad_subtract. Free
on error.
* config/tc-crx.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-ppc.c (tc_gen_reloc): Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/ifunc-2.l: Adjust to suit changed error message.
* testsuite/gas/mips/lui-2.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/tic6x/reloc-bad-1.l: Likewise.
2021-07-21 John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
Remove `netbsdpe` support
netbsdpe was deprecated in c2ce831330e10dab4703094491f80b6b9a5c2289.
Since then, a release has passed (2.37), and it was marked obselete in
5c9cbf07f3f972ecffe13d858010b3179df17b32. Unless I am mistaken, that
means we can now remove support altogether.
All branches in the "active" code are remove, and the target is
additionally marked as obsolete next to the other removed ones for
libbfd and gdb.
Per [1] from the NetBSD toolchain list, PE/COFF support was removed a
decade ago. Furthermore, the sole mention of this target in the binutils
commit history was in 2002. Together, I'm led to believe this target
hasn't seen much attention in quite a while.
[1]: https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-toolchain/2021/06/16/msg003996.html
bfd/
* config.bfd: Remove netbsdpe entry.
binutils/
* configure.ac: Remove netbsdpe entry.
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (is_pecoff_format): Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
gas/
* configure.tgt: Remove netbsdpe entry.
gdb/
* configure.tgt: Add netbsdpe to removed targets.
ld/
* configure.tgt: Remove netbsdpe entry.
* testsuite/ld-bootstrap/bootstrap.exp: Likewise.
2021-07-21 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-20 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28106, build of 2.37 fails on FreeBSD and Clang
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/NULL says NULL might be
defined as nullptr.
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/reinterpret_cast says
reinterpret_cast can't be used on nullptr.
PR gold/28106
PR gold/27815
* gc.h (gc_process_relocs): Use static_cast in Section_id constructor.
2021-07-20 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
Fix printing of non-address types when memory tagging is enabled
When the architecture supports memory tagging, we handle
pointer/reference types in a special way, so we can validate tags and
show mismatches.
Unfortunately, the currently implementation errors out when the user
prints non-address values: composite types, floats, references, member
functions and other things.
Vector registers:
(gdb) p $v0
Value can't be converted to integer.
Non-existent internal variables:
(gdb) p $foo
Value can't be converted to integer.
The same happens for complex types and printing struct/union types.
There are a few problems here.
The first one is that after print_command_1 evaluates the expression
to print, the tag validation code call value_as_address
unconditionally, without making sure we have have a suitable type
where it makes to sense to call it. That results in value_as_address
(if it isn't given a pointer-like type) trying to treat the value as
an integer and convert it to an address, which #1 - doesn't make sense
(i.e., no sense in validating tags after "print 1"), and throws for
non-integer-convertible types. We fix this by making sure we have a
pointer or reference type first, and only if so then proceed to check
if the address-like value has tags.
The second is that we're calling value_as_address even if we have an
optimized out or unavailable value, which throws, because the value's
contents aren't fully accessible/readable. This error currently
escapes out and aborts the print. This case is fixed by checking for
optimized out / unavailable explicitly.
Third, the tag checking process does not gracefully handle exceptions.
If any exception is thrown from the tag validation code, we abort the
print. E.g., the target may fail to access tags via a running thread.
Or the needed /proc files aren't available. Or some other untold
reason. This is a bit too rigid. This commit changes print_command_1
to catch errors, print them, and still continue with the normal
expression printing path instead of erroring out and printing nothing
useful.
With this patch, printing works correctly again:
(gdb) p $v0
$1 = {d = {f = {2.0546950501119882e-81, 2.0546950501119882e-81}, u = {3399988123389603631, 3399988123389603631}, s = {
3399988123389603631, 3399988123389603631}}, s = {f = {1.59329203e-10, 1.59329203e-10, 1.59329203e-10, 1.59329203e-10}, u = {
791621423, 791621423, 791621423, 791621423}, s = {791621423, 791621423, 791621423, 791621423}}, h = {bf = {1.592e-10,
1.592e-10, 1.592e-10, 1.592e-10, 1.592e-10, 1.592e-10, 1.592e-10, 1.592e-10}, f = {0.11224, 0.11224, 0.11224, 0.11224, 0.11224,
0.11224, 0.11224, 0.11224}, u = {12079, 12079, 12079, 12079, 12079, 12079, 12079, 12079}, s = {12079, 12079, 12079, 12079,
12079, 12079, 12079, 12079}}, b = {u = {47 <repeats 16 times>}, s = {47 <repeats 16 times>}}, q = {u = {
62718710765820030520700417840365121327}, s = {62718710765820030520700417840365121327}}}
(gdb) p $foo
$2 = void
(gdb) p 2 + 2i
$3 = 2 + 2i
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28110
2021-07-20 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Minor updates for architecture parser.
* Two add subset functions is redundant. Keep the riscv_add_implicit_subset,
and renamed it to riscv_add_subset. Besides, if the subset is added in order,
then we just add it at the tail of the subset list.
* Removed the "-march:" prefix from the error messages. Since not only the
-march= option will use the parser, but also the architecture elf attributes,
the default architecture setting and linker will use the same parser.
* Use a function, riscv_parse_check_conflicts, to check the conflicts
of extensions, including the rv64e and rv32q.
The rv32emc-elf/rv32i-elf/rv32gc-linux/rv64gc-elf/rv64gc-linux regressions
are tested and passed.
bfd/
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_lookup_subset): Check the subset tail list
first. If the subset is added in order, then we can just add it to
the tail without searching the whole list.
(riscv_add_subset): Replaced by riscv_add_implicit_subset.
(riscv_add_implicit_subset): Renamed to riscv_add_subset.
(riscv_parse_add_subset): Updated.
(riscv_parsing_subset_version): Removed the "-march:" prefix from
the error message.
(riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Likewise.
(riscv_parse_std_ext): Likewise. And move the rv<xlen>e check
to riscv_parse_check_conflicts.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): New function used to check conflicts.
(riscv_parse_subset): Updated.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-base-02.l: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-unknown-std.l: Likewise.
2021-07-20 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-19 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: set current thread in btrace_compute_ftrace_{bts,pt}
As documented in bug 28086, test gdb.btrace/enable-new-thread.exp
started failing with commit 0618ae414979 ("gdb: optimize
all_matching_threads_iterator"):
(gdb) record btrace^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.btrace/enable-new-thread.exp: record btrace
break 24^M
Breakpoint 2 at 0x555555555175: file /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.btrace/enable-new-thread.c, line 24.^M
(gdb) continue^M
Continuing.^M
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:303: internal-error: inferior* find_inferior_pid(process_stratum_target*, int): Assertion `pid != 0' failed.^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,^M
further debugging may prove unreliable.^M
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) FAIL: gdb.btrace/enable-new-thread.exp: continue to breakpoint: cont to bp.1 (GDB internal error)
Note that I only see the failure if GDB is compiled without libipt
support. This is because GDB then makes use BTS instead of PT, so
exercises different code paths.
I think that the commit above just exposed an existing problem. The
stack trace of the internal error is:
#8 0x0000561cb81e404e in internal_error (file=0x561cb83aa2f8 "/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c", line=303, fmt=0x561cb83aa099 "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
#9 0x0000561cb7b5c031 in find_inferior_pid (targ=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, pid=0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:303
#10 0x0000561cb7b5c102 in find_inferior_ptid (targ=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:317
#11 0x0000561cb7f1d1c3 in find_thread_ptid (targ=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:487
#12 0x0000561cb7f1b921 in all_matching_threads_iterator::all_matching_threads_iterator (this=0x7ffc4ee34678, filter_target=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, filter_ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread-iter.c:125
#13 0x0000561cb77bc462 in filtered_iterator<all_matching_threads_iterator, non_exited_thread_filter>::filtered_iterator<process_stratum_target* const&, ptid_t const&> (this=0x7ffc4ee34670) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/filtered-iterator.h:42
#14 0x0000561cb77b97cb in all_non_exited_threads_range::begin (this=0x7ffc4ee34650) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread-iter.h:243
#15 0x0000561cb7d8ba30 in record_btrace_target::record_is_replaying (this=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/record-btrace.c:1411
#16 0x0000561cb7d8bb83 in record_btrace_target::xfer_partial (this=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, annex=0x0, readbuf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", writebuf=0x0, offset=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/record-btrace.c:1437
#17 0x0000561cb7ef73a9 in raw_memory_xfer_partial (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, readbuf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1504
#18 0x0000561cb7ef77da in memory_xfer_partial_1 (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_CODE_MEMORY, readbuf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1635
#19 0x0000561cb7ef78b5 in memory_xfer_partial (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_CODE_MEMORY, readbuf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1664
#20 0x0000561cb7ef7ba4 in target_xfer_partial (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_CODE_MEMORY, annex=0x0, readbuf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", writebuf=0x0, offset=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1721
#21 0x0000561cb7ef8503 in target_read_partial (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_CODE_MEMORY, annex=0x0, buf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", offset=140737352774277, len=1, xfered_len=0x7ffc4ee34ad8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1974
#22 0x0000561cb7ef861f in target_read (ops=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_CODE_MEMORY, annex=0x0, buf=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", offset=140737352774277, len=1) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2014
#23 0x0000561cb7ef809f in target_read_code (memaddr=140737352774277, myaddr=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", len=1) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1869
#24 0x0000561cb7937f4d in gdb_disassembler::dis_asm_read_memory (memaddr=140737352774277, myaddr=0x7ffc4ee34c58 "\260g\343N\374\177", len=1, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm.c:139
#25 0x0000561cb80ab66d in fetch_data (info=0x7ffc4ee34e88, addr=0x7ffc4ee34c59 "g\343N\374\177") at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c:194
#26 0x0000561cb80ab7e2 in ckprefix () at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c:8628
#27 0x0000561cb80adbd8 in print_insn (pc=140737352774277, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c:9587
#28 0x0000561cb80abe4f in print_insn_i386 (pc=140737352774277, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c:8894
#29 0x0000561cb7744a19 in default_print_insn (memaddr=140737352774277, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/arch-utils.c:1029
#30 0x0000561cb7b33067 in i386_print_insn (pc=140737352774277, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/i386-tdep.c:4013
#31 0x0000561cb7acd8f4 in gdbarch_print_insn (gdbarch=0x561cbae2fb60, vma=140737352774277, info=0x7ffc4ee34e88) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbarch.c:3478
#32 0x0000561cb793a32d in gdb_disassembler::print_insn (this=0x7ffc4ee34e80, memaddr=140737352774277, branch_delay_insns=0x0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm.c:795
#33 0x0000561cb793a5b0 in gdb_print_insn (gdbarch=0x561cbae2fb60, memaddr=140737352774277, stream=0x561cb8ac99f8 <null_stream>, branch_delay_insns=0x0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm.c:850
#34 0x0000561cb793a631 in gdb_insn_length (gdbarch=0x561cbae2fb60, addr=140737352774277) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm.c:859
#35 0x0000561cb77f53f4 in btrace_compute_ftrace_bts (tp=0x561cbba11210, btrace=0x7ffc4ee35188, gaps=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/btrace.c:1107
#36 0x0000561cb77f55f5 in btrace_compute_ftrace_1 (tp=0x561cbba11210, btrace=0x7ffc4ee35180, cpu=0x0, gaps=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/btrace.c:1527
#37 0x0000561cb77f5705 in btrace_compute_ftrace (tp=0x561cbba11210, btrace=0x7ffc4ee35180, cpu=0x0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/btrace.c:1560
#38 0x0000561cb77f583b in btrace_add_pc (tp=0x561cbba11210) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/btrace.c:1589
#39 0x0000561cb77f5a86 in btrace_enable (tp=0x561cbba11210, conf=0x561cb8ac6878 <record_btrace_conf>) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/btrace.c:1629
#40 0x0000561cb7d88d26 in record_btrace_enable_warn (tp=0x561cbba11210) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/record-btrace.c:294
#41 0x0000561cb7c603dc in std::__invoke_impl<void, void (*&)(thread_info*), thread_info*> (__f=@0x561cbb6c4878: 0x561cb7d88cdc <record_btrace_enable_warn(thread_info*)>) at /usr/include/c++/10/bits/invoke.h:60
#42 0x0000561cb7c5e5a6 in std::__invoke_r<void, void (*&)(thread_info*), thread_info*> (__fn=@0x561cbb6c4878: 0x561cb7d88cdc <record_btrace_enable_warn(thread_info*)>) at /usr/include/c++/10/bits/invoke.h:153
#43 0x0000561cb7c5dc92 in std::_Function_handler<void (thread_info*), void (*)(thread_info*)>::_M_invoke(std::_Any_data const&, thread_info*&&) (__functor=..., __args#0=@0x7ffc4ee35310: 0x561cbba11210) at /usr/include/c++/10/bits/std_function.h:291
#44 0x0000561cb7f2600f in std::function<void (thread_info*)>::operator()(thread_info*) const (this=0x561cbb6c4878, __args#0=0x561cbba11210) at /usr/include/c++/10/bits/std_function.h:622
#45 0x0000561cb7f23dc8 in gdb::observers::observable<thread_info*>::notify (this=0x561cb8ac5aa0 <gdb::observers::new_thread>, args#0=0x561cbba11210) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/observable.h:150
#46 0x0000561cb7f1c436 in add_thread_silent (targ=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:263
#47 0x0000561cb7f1c479 in add_thread_with_info (targ=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=..., priv=0x561cbb3f7ab0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:272
#48 0x0000561cb7bfa1d0 in record_thread (info=0x561cbb0413a0, tp=0x0, ptid=..., th_p=0x7ffc4ee35610, ti_p=0x7ffc4ee35620) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-thread-db.c:1380
#49 0x0000561cb7bf7a2a in thread_from_lwp (stopped=0x561cba81db20, ptid=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-thread-db.c:429
#50 0x0000561cb7bf7ac5 in thread_db_notice_clone (parent=..., child=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-thread-db.c:447
#51 0x0000561cb7bdc9a2 in linux_handle_extended_wait (lp=0x561cbae25720, status=4991) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:1981
#52 0x0000561cb7bdf0f3 in linux_nat_filter_event (lwpid=435403, status=198015) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:2920
#53 0x0000561cb7bdfed6 in linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid=..., ourstatus=0x7ffc4ee36398, target_options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3202
#54 0x0000561cb7be0b68 in linux_nat_target::wait (this=0x561cb8aafb60 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=..., ourstatus=0x7ffc4ee36398, target_options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3440
#55 0x0000561cb7bfa2fc in thread_db_target::wait (this=0x561cb8a9acd0 <the_thread_db_target>, ptid=..., ourstatus=0x7ffc4ee36398, options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-thread-db.c:1412
#56 0x0000561cb7d8e356 in record_btrace_target::wait (this=0x561cb8aa6250 <record_btrace_ops>, ptid=..., status=0x7ffc4ee36398, options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/record-btrace.c:2547
#57 0x0000561cb7ef996d in target_wait (ptid=..., status=0x7ffc4ee36398, options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2608
#58 0x0000561cb7b6d297 in do_target_wait_1 (inf=0x561cba6d8780, ptid=..., status=0x7ffc4ee36398, options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3640
#59 0x0000561cb7b6d43e in operator() (__closure=0x7ffc4ee36190, inf=0x561cba6d8780) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3701
#60 0x0000561cb7b6d7b2 in do_target_wait (ecs=0x7ffc4ee36370, options=...) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3720
#61 0x0000561cb7b6e67d in fetch_inferior_event () at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4069
#62 0x0000561cb7b4659b in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inf-loop.c:41
#63 0x0000561cb7be25f7 in handle_target_event (error=0, client_data=0x0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:4227
#64 0x0000561cb81e4ee2 in handle_file_event (file_ptr=0x561cbae24e10, ready_mask=1) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:575
#65 0x0000561cb81e5490 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:701
#66 0x0000561cb81e41be in gdb_do_one_event () at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:212
#67 0x0000561cb7c18096 in start_event_loop () at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:421
#68 0x0000561cb7c181e0 in captured_command_loop () at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:481
#69 0x0000561cb7c19d7e in captured_main (data=0x7ffc4ee366a0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1353
#70 0x0000561cb7c19df0 in gdb_main (args=0x7ffc4ee366a0) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1368
#71 0x0000561cb7693186 in main (argc=11, argv=0x7ffc4ee367b8) at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:32
At frame 45, the new_thread observable is fired. At this moment, the
new thread isn't the current thread, inferior_ptid is null_ptid. I
think this is ok: the new_thread observable doesn't give any guarantee
on the global context when observers are invoked. Frame 35,
btrace_compute_ftrace_bts, calls gdb_insn_length. gdb_insn_length
doesn't have a thread_info or other parameter what could indicate where
to read memory from, it implicitly uses the global context
(inferior_ptid).
So we reach the all_non_exited_threads_range in
record_btrace_target::record_is_replaying with a null inferior_ptid.
The previous implemention of all_non_exited_threads_range didn't care,
but the new one does. The problem of calling gdb_insn_length and
ultimately trying to read memory with a null inferior_ptid already
existed, but the commit mentioned above made it visible.
Something between frames 40 (record_btrace_enable_warn) and 35
(btrace_compute_ftrace_bts) needs to be switching the global context to
make TP the current thread. Since btrace_compute_ftrace_bts takes the
thread_info to work with as a parameter, that typically means that it
doesn't require its caller to also set the global current context
(current thread) when calling. If it needs to call other functions
that do require the global current thread to be set, then it needs to
temporarily change the current thread while calling these other
functions. Therefore, switch and restore the current thread in
btrace_compute_ftrace_bts.
By inspection, it looks like btrace_compute_ftrace_pt may also call
functions sensitive to the global context: it installs the
btrace_pt_readmem_callback callback in the PT instruction decoder. When
this function gets called, inferior_ptid must be set appropriately. Add
a switch and restore in there too.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28086
Change-Id: I407fbfe41aab990068bd102491aa3709b0a034b3
2021-07-19 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-18 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Move pending-obsolesence targets onto the obsolete list.
* config.bfd: Move pending obsoletion targets to obsolete list.
Update how-to-make-a-release checklist with latest changes from 2.37 release
2021-07-18 Michael Krasnyk <mkrasnyk@argo.ai>
PR28098 Skip R_*_NONE relocation entries with zero r_sym without counting
PR gold/28098
* reloc.cc (Track_relocs::advance): Skip R_*_NONE relocation entries
with r_sym of zero without counting in advance method.
2021-07-18 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: convert nat/x86-dregs.c macros to functions
I'm debugging why GDB crashes on OpenBSD/amd64, turns out it's because
x86_dr_low.get_status is nullptr. It would have been useful to be able
to break on x86_dr_low_get_status, so I thought it would be a good
reason to convert these function-like macros into functions.
Change-Id: Ic200b50ef8455b4697bc518da0fa2bb704cf4721
2021-07-18 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix file-name handling regression with DWARF index
When run with the gdb-index or debug-names target boards, dup-psym.exp
fails. This came up for me because my new DWARF scanner reuses this
part of the existing index code, and so it registers as a regression.
This is PR symtab/25834.
Looking into this, I found that the DWARF index code here is fairly
different from the psymtab code. I don't think there's a deep reason
for this, and in fact, it seemed to me that the index code could
simply mimic what the psymtab code already does.
That is what this patch implements. The DW_AT_name and DW_AT_comp_dir
are now stored in the quick file names table. This may require
allocating a quick file names table even when DW_AT_stmt_list does not
exist. Then, the functions that work with this data are changed to
use find_source_or_rewrite, just as the psymbol code does. Finally,
line_header::file_full_name is removed, as it is no longer needed.
Currently, the index maintains a hash table of "quick file names".
The hash table uses a deletion function to free the "real name"
components when necessary. There's also a second such function to
implement the forget_cached_source_info method.
This bug fix patch will create a quick file name object even when
there is no DW_AT_stmt_list, meaning that the object won't be entered
in the hash table. So, this patch changes the memory management
approach so that the entries are cleared when the per-BFD object is
destroyed. (A dwarf2_per_cu_data destructor is not introduced,
because we have been avoiding adding a vtable to that class.)
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25834
2021-07-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Check for debug-types in map_symbol_filenames
map_symbol_filenames can skip type units -- in fact I think it has to,
due to the assertion at the top of dw2_get_file_names. This may be a
regression due to the TU/CU unification patch, I did not check.
Simplify DWARF file name caching
The DWARF index file name caching code only records when a line table
has been read and the reading failed. However, the code would be
simpler if it recorded any attempt, which is what this patch
implements.
Introduce find_source_or_rewrite
The final bug fix in this series would duplicate the logic in
psymtab_to_fullname, so this patch extracts the body of this function
into a new function.
Simplify file_and_directory storage management
file_and_directory carries a std::string in case the compilation
directory is computed, but a subsequent patch wants to preserve this
string without also having to maintain the storage for it. So, this
patch arranges for the compilation directory string to be stored in
the per-BFD string bcache instead.
Pass file_and_directory through DWARF line-decoding code
This patch removes the redundant "comp_unit" parameter from
compute_include_file_name, and arranges to pass a file_and_directory
object from the readers down to this function. It also changes the
partial symtab reader to use find_file_and_directory, rather than
reimplement this functionality by hand.
Rename and refactor psymtab_include_file_name
In order to fix an index-related regression, I want to use
psymtab_include_file_name in the DWARF index file-handling code. This
patch renames this function and changes it to no longer require a
partial symtab to be passed in. A subsequent patch will further
refactor this code to remove the redundant parameter (which was always
there but is now more obvious).
2021-07-17 Sergey Belyashov <Sergey.Belyashov@gmail.com>
Add basic Z80 CPU support
Supported ISAs:
- Z80 (all undocumented instructions)
- Z180
- eZ80 (Z80 mode only)
Datasheets:
Z80: https://www.zilog.com/manage_directlink.php?filepath=docs/z80/um0080&extn=.pdf
Z180: https://www.zilog.com/manage_directlink.php?filepath=docs/z180/ps0140&extn=.pdf
eZ80: http://www.zilog.com/force_download.php?filepath=YUhSMGNEb3ZMM2QzZHk1NmFXeHZaeTVqYjIwdlpHOWpjeTlWVFRBd056Y3VjR1Jt
To debug Z80 programs using GDB you must configure and embed
z80-stub.c to your program (SDCC compiler is required). Or
you may use some simulator with GDB support.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add z80-tdep.c.
* NEWS: Mention z80 support.
* configure.tgt: Handle z80*.
* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Add z80.xml.
* features/z80-cpu.xml: New.
* features/z80.c: Generate.
* features/z80.xml: New.
* z80-tdep.c: New file.
* z80-tdep.h: New file.
gdb/stubs/ChangeLog:
* z80-stub.c: New file.
Change-Id: Id0b7a6e210c3f93c6853c5e3031b7bcee47d0db9
2021-07-17 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make all_inferiors_safe actually work
The test gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp fails since 08bdefb58b78
("gdb: make inferior_list use intrusive_list"):
FAIL: gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: detach-on-fork=off: only inferior 1 left
Looking at the log, we see that we are left with a bunch of inferiors in
the detach-on-fork=off case:
info inferiors^M
Num Description Connection Executable ^M
* 1 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
2 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
3 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
4 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
5 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
6 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
7 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
8 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
9 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
10 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
11 <null> <snip>/fork-plus-threads ^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: detach-on-fork=off: only inferior 1 left
when we expect to have just one. The problem is prune_inferiors not
pruning inferiors. And this is caused by all_inferiors_safe not
actually iterating on inferiors. The current implementation:
inline all_inferiors_safe_range
all_inferiors_safe ()
{
return {};
}
default-constructs an all_inferiors_safe_range, which default-constructs
an all_inferiors_safe_iterator as its m_begin field, which
default-constructs a all_inferiors_iterator. A default-constructed
all_inferiors_iterator is an end iterator, which means we have
constructed an (end,end) all_inferiors_safe_range.
We actually need to pass down the list on which we want to iterator
(that is the inferior_list global), so that all_inferiors_iterator's
first constructor is chosen. We also pass nullptr as the proc_target
filter. In this case, we don't do any filtering, but if in the future
all_inferiors_safe needed to allow filtering on process target (like
all_inferiors does), we could pass down a process target pointer.
basic_safe_iterator's constructor needs to be changed to allow
constructing the wrapped iterator with multiple arguments, not just one.
With this, gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp is passing once again for
me.
Change-Id: I650552ede596e3590c4b7606ce403690a0278a01
2021-07-17 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-16 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb: Support stepping out from signal handler on riscv*-linux
Currently, gdb cannot step outside of a signal handler on RISC-V
platforms. This causes multiple failures in gdb.base/sigstep.exp:
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: continue to handler, nothing in handler, step from handler: leave handler (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: continue to handler, si+advance in handler, step from handler: leave handler (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: continue to handler, nothing in handler, next from handler: leave handler (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: continue to handler, si+advance in handler, next from handler: leave handler (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: stepi from handleri: leave signal trampoline
FAIL: gdb.base/sigstep.exp: nexti from handleri: leave signal trampoline
=== gdb Summary ===
# of expected passes 587
# of unexpected failures 6
This patch adds support for stepping outside of a signal handler on
riscv*-*-linux*.
Implementation is heavily inspired from mips_linux_syscall_next_pc and
surroundings as advised by Pedro Alves.
After this patch, all tests in gdb.base/sigstep.exp pass.
Build and tested on riscv64-linux-gnu.
2021-07-16 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
gdb/testsuite: Declare that riscv*-*-linux* cannot hardware_single_step
Many tests fail in gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/sigstep.exp on
riscv64-linux-gnu. Those tests check that when stepping, if the
debuggee received a signal it should step inside the signal handler.
This feature requires hardware support for single stepping (or at least
kernel support), but none are available on riscv*-linux-gnu hosts, at
the moment at least.
This patch adds RISC-V to the list of configurations that does not
have hardware single step capability, disabling tests relying on such
feature.
Tested on riscv64-linux-gnu.
2021-07-16 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Document quick_symbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching invariant
While working on my series to replace the DWARF psymbol reader, I
noticed that the expand_symtabs_matching has an undocumented
invariant. I think that, if this invariant is not followed, then GDB
will crash. So, this patch documents this in the relevant spots and
introduces some asserts to make it clear.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 32.
2021-07-16 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Fix array stride bug
Investigation of using the Python API with an Ada program showed that
an array of dynamic types was not being handled properly. I tracked
this down to an oddity of how array strides are handled.
In gdb, an array stride can be attached to the range type, via the
range_bounds object. However, the stride can also be put into the
array's first field. From create_range_type_with_stride:
else if (bit_stride > 0)
TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (result_type, 0) = bit_stride;
It's hard to be sure why this is done, but I would guess a combination
of historical reasons plus a desire (mentioned in a comment somewhere)
to avoid modifying the range type.
This patch fixes the problem by changing type::bit_stride to
understand this convention. It also fixes one spot that reproduces
this logic.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 32.
2021-07-16 Giulio Benetti <giulio.benetti@benettiengineering.com>
or1k: fix pc-relative relocation against dynamic on PC relative 26 bit relocation.
bfd * elf32-or1k.c (or1k_elf_relocate_section): Use a separate entry
in switch case R_OR1K_INSN_REL_26 where we need to check for
!SYMBOL_CALLS_LOCAL() instead of !SYMBOL_REFERENCES_LOCAL().
2021-07-16 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Swedish translation for the binutils sub-directory
2021-07-16 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-15 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
Avoid expression parsing crash with unknown language
PR gdb/28093 points out that gdb crashes when language is set to
"unknown" and expression parsing is attempted. At first I thought
this was a regression due to the expression rewrite, but it turns out
that older versions crash as well.
This patch avoids the crash by changing the default expression parser
to throw an exception. I think this is preferable -- the current
behavior of silently doing nothing does not really make sense.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28093
2021-07-15 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: pass child_ptid and fork kind to target_ops::follow_fork
This is a small cleanup I think would be nice, that I spotted while
doing the following patch.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Add ptid and
target_waitkind parameters.
(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
* target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise.
(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
* fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise.
* linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise.
* obsd-nat.h (class obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise.
* remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_target_waitkind): New.
* target-delegates.c: Re-generate.
Change-Id: I5421a542f2e19100a22b74cc333d2b235d0de3c8
2021-07-15 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: call post_create_inferior at end of follow_fork_inferior
GDB doesn't handle well the case of an inferior using the JIT interface
to register JIT-ed objfiles and forking. If an inferior registers a
code object using the JIT interface and then forks, the child process
conceptually has the same code object loaded, so GDB should look it up
and learn about it (it currently doesn't).
To achieve this, I think it would make sense to have the
inferior_created observable called when an inferior is created due to a
fork in follow_fork_inferior. The inferior_created observable is
currently called both after starting a new inferior and after attaching
to an inferior, allowing various sub-components to learn about that new
executing inferior. We can see handling a fork child just like
attaching to it, so any work done when attaching should also be done in
the case of a fork child.
Instead of just calling the inferior_created observable, this patch
makes follow_fork_inferior call the whole post_create_inferior function.
This way, the attach and follow-fork code code paths are more alike.
Given that post_create_inferior calls solib_create_inferior_hook,
follow_fork_inferior doesn't need to do it itself, so those calls to
solib_create_inferior_hook are removed.
One question you may have: why not just call post_create_inferior at the
places where solib_create_inferior_hook is currently called, instead of
after target_follow_fork?
- there's something fishy for the second solib_create_inferior_hook
call site: at this point we have switched the current program space
to the child's, but not the current inferior nor the current thread.
So solib_create_inferior_hook (and everything under, including
check_for_thread_db, for example) is called with inferior 1 as the
current inferior and inferior 2's program space as the current
program space. I think that's wrong, because at this point we are
setting up inferior 2, and all that code relies on the current
inferior. We could just add a switch_to_thread call before it to
make inferior 2 the current one, but there are other problems (see
below).
- solib_create_inferior_hook is currently not called on the
`follow_child && detach_fork` path. I think we need to call it,
because we still get a new inferior in that case (even though we
detach the parent). If we only call post_create_inferior where
solib_create_inferior_hook used to be called, then the JIT
subcomponent doesn't get informed about the new inferior, and that
introduces a failure in the new gdb.base/jit-elf-fork.exp test.
- if we try to put the post_create_inferior just after the
switch_to_thread that was originally at line 662, or just before the
call to target_follow_fork, we introduce a subtle failure in
gdb.threads/fork-thread-pending.exp. What happens then is that
libthread_db gets loaded (somewhere under post_create_inferior)
before the linux-nat target learns about the LWPs (which happens in
linux_nat_target::follow_fork). As a result, the ALL_LWPS loop in
try_thread_db_load_1 doesn't see the child LWP, and the thread-db
target doesn't have the chance to fill in thread_info::priv. A bit
later, when the test does "info threads", and
thread_db_target::pid_to_str is called, the thread-db target doesn't
recognize the thread as one of its own, and delegates the request to
the target below. Because the pid_to_str output is not the expected
one, the test fails.
This tells me that we need to call the process target's follow_fork
first, to make the process target create the necessary LWP and thread
structures. Then, we can call post_create_inferior to let the other
components of GDB do their thing.
But then you may ask: check_for_thread_db is already called today,
somewhere under solib_create_inferior_hook, and that is before
target_follow_fork, why don't we see this ordering problem!? Well,
because of the first bullet point: when check_for_thread_db /
thread_db_load are called, the current inferior is (erroneously)
inferior 1, the parent. Because libthread_db is already loaded for
the parent, thread_db_load early returns. check_for_thread_db later
gets called by linux_nat_target::follow_fork. At this point, the
current inferior is the correct one and the child's LWP exists, so
all is well.
Since we now call post_create_inferior after target_follow_fork, which
calls the inferior_created observable, which calls check_for_thread_db,
I don't think linux_nat_target needs to explicitly call
check_for_thread_db itself, so that is removed.
In terms of testing, this patch adds a new gdb.base/jit-elf-fork.exp
test. It makes an inferior register a JIT code object and then fork.
It then verifies that whatever the detach-on-fork and follow-fork-child
parameters are, GDB knows about the JIT code object in all the inferiors
that survive the fork. It verifies that the inferiors can unload that
code object.
There isn't currently a way to get visibility into GDB's idea of the JIT
code objects for each inferior. For the purpose of this test, add the
"maintenance info jit" command. There isn't much we can print about the
JIT code objects except their load address. So the output looks a bit
bare, but it's good enough for the test.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Mention "maint info jit" command.
* infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior): Don't call
solib_create_inferior_hook, call post_create_inferior if a new
inferior was created.
* jit.c (maint_info_jit_cmd): New.
(_initialize_jit): Register new command.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Don't call
check_for_thread_db.
* linux-nat.h (check_for_thread_db): Remove declaration.
* linux-thread-db.c (check_thread_signals): Make static.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Mention "maint info jit".
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/jit-elf-fork-main.c: New test.
* gdb.base/jit-elf-fork-solib.c: New test.
* gdb.base/jit-elf-fork.exp: New test.
Change-Id: I9a192e55b8a451c00e88100669283fc9ca60de5c
2021-07-15 Libor Bukata <libor.bukata@oracle.com>
[gdb/procfs.c] Fix build failure in find_stop_signal
It fixes a regression caused by commit
1edb66d856c82c389edfd7610143236a68c76846 where thread_info::suspend was
made private.
The public thread_info API has to be used to get stop signal and avoid
build failures.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-14 Libor Bukata <libor.bukata@oracle.com>
* gdb/procfs.c (find_stop_signal): Use thread_info API.
Change-Id: I53bc57a05cd0eca5f28ef0726d6faeeb306e7904
2021-07-15 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-14 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86: Add int1 as one byte opcode 0xf1
Also change the x86 disassembler to disassemble 0xf1 as int1, instead of
icebp.
gas/
PR gas/28088
* testsuite/gas/i386/opcode.s: Add int1.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-opcode.s: Add int1, int3 and int.
* testsuite/gas/i386/opcode-intel.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/i386/opcode-suffix.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/opcode.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-opcode.d: Likewise.
opcodes/
PR gas/28088
* i386-dis.c (dis386): Replace icebp with int1.
* i386-opc.tbl: Add int1.
* i386-tbl.h: Regenerate.
2021-07-14 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
gas: default TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB to 0
gas/write.c provides a fallback TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB define that can be
a problem for some targets, the problem being that a non-zero
definition of TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB says that some uses of fx_subsy are
OK, in effect that the target will handle fx_subsy in md_apply_fix
and/or tc_gen_reloc. A lot of targets don't have the necessary
md_apply_fix and tc_gen_reloc support. So a safer default is to
disallow fx_subsy by default.
I've had a good look over target usage of fx_subsy, and think I've
caught all the cases where targets need TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB. Possible
failures would be limited to alpha, microblaze, ppc and s390 (the
targets that define UNDEFINED_DIFFERENCE_OK), or targets that generate
fixups with BFD_RELOC_GPREL32/16 and use a syntax explicitly showing
a difference expression.
* write.c (TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB): Default to 0.
* config/tc-hppa.h (TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB): Define.
* config/tc-microblaze.h (TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB): Define.
* config/tc-alpha.h (TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB): Define for ECOFF.
* config/tc-ppc.h (TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB): Don't define for ELF.
Do define for XCOFF.
2021-07-14 Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
objdump: add DWARF support for AIX
DWARF sections have special names on AIX which need be handled
by objdump in order to correctly print them.
This patch also adds the correlation in bfd for future uses.
bfd/
* libxcoff.h (struct xcoff_dwsect_name): Add DWARF name.
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_dwsect_names): Update.
* coffcode.h (sec_to_styp_flags): Likewise.
(coff_new_section_hook): Likewise.
binutils/
* dwarf.h (struct dwarf_section): Add XCOFF name.
* dwarf.c (struct dwarf_section_display): Update.
* objdump.c (load_debug_section): Add XCOFF name handler.
(dump_dwarf_section): Likewise.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_change_debug_section): Update to
match new name's field.
2021-07-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/gold-gdb-index.exp
When running test-case gdb.base/gold-gdb-index.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed,
I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/gold-gdb-index.exp: maint info symtabs
...
This is due to a dummy .gdb_index:
...
Contents of the .gdb_index section:
Version 7
CU table:
TU table:
Address table:
Symbol table:
...
The dummy .gdb_index is ignored when loading the symbols, and instead partial
symbols are used. Consequently, we get the same result as if we'd removed
-Wl,--gdb-index from the compilation.
Presumably, gold fails to generate a proper .gdb_index because it lacks
DWARF5 support.
Anyway, without a proper .gdb_index we can't test the gdb behaviour we're
trying to excercise. Fix this by detecting whether we actually used a
.gdb_index for symbol loading.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/gdb.exp (have_index): New proc.
* gdb.base/gold-gdb-index.exp: Use have_index.
2021-07-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Add missing skip_tui_tests
When building gdb with --disable-tui, we run into:
...
(gdb) frame apply all -- -^M
Undefined command: "-". Try "help".^M
(gdb) ERROR: Undefined command "frame apply all -- -".
UNRESOLVED: gdb.base/options.exp: test-frame-apply: frame apply all -- -
...
Fix this by detecting whether tui is supported, and skipping the tui-related
tests otherwise. Same in some gdb.tui test-cases.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/options.exp: Skip tui-related tests when tui is not
supported.
* gdb.python/tui-window-disabled.exp: Same.
* gdb.python/tui-window.exp: Same.
2021-07-14 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-13 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Use /bin/sh as shebang in gdb/make-init-c
While testing the NixOS[1] packaging for gdb-11.0.90.tar.xz, I got the
following error:
[...]
CXX aarch32-tdep.o
CXX gdb.o
GEN init.c
/nix/store/26a78ync552m8j4sbjavhvkmnqir8c9y-bash-4.4-p23/bin/bash: ./make-init-c: /usr/bin/env: bad interpreter: No such file or directory
make[2]: *** [Makefile:1866: stamp-init] Error 126
make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs....
make[2]: Leaving directory '/build/gdb-11.0.90/gdb'
make[1]: *** [Makefile:9814: all-gdb] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory '/build/gdb-11.0.90'
make: *** [Makefile:903: all] Error 2
builder for '/nix/store/xs8my3rrc3l4kdlbpx0azh6q0v0jxphr-gdb-gdb-11.0.90.drv' failed with exit code 2
error: build of '/nix/store/xs8my3rrc3l4kdlbpx0azh6q0v0jxphr-gdb-gdb-11.0.90.drv' failed
In the nix build environment, /usr/bin/env is not present, only /bin/sh
is. This patch makes sure that gdb/make-init-c uses '/bin/sh' as
interpreter as this is the only one available on this platform.
I do not think this change will cause regressions on any other
configuration.
[1] https://nixos.org/
gdb/Changelog
* make-init-c: Use /bin/sh as shebang.
2021-07-13 John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
arm-fbsd-nat: Use fetch_register_set and store_register_set.
aarch64-fbsd-nat: Use fetch_register_set and store_register_set.
riscv-fbsd-nat: Use fetch_register_set and store_register_set.
fbsd-nat: Add helper functions to fetch and store register sets.
In particular, this supports register sets described by a regcache_map
which are fetched and stored with dedicated ptrace operations. These
functions are intended to be used in architecture-specific
fetch_registers and store_registers target methods.
Add regcache_map_supplies helper routine.
This helper can be used in the fetch_registers and store_registers
target methods to determine if a register set includes a specific
register.
2021-07-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Avoid letting exceptions escape gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_close (PR gdb/28080)
Before PR gdb/28080 was fixed by the previous patch, GDB was crashing
like this:
(gdb) detach
Detaching from program: target:/any/program, process 3671843
Detaching from process 3671843
Ending remote debugging.
[Inferior 1 (process 3671843) detached]
In main
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error'
Aborted (core dumped)
Here's the exception above being thrown:
(top-gdb) bt
#0 throw_error (error=TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR, fmt=0x555556035588 "Remote connection closed") at src/gdbsupport/common-exceptions.cc:222
#1 0x0000555555bbaa46 in remote_target::readchar (this=0x555556a11040, timeout=10000) at src/gdb/remote.c:9440
#2 0x0000555555bbb9e5 in remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0, expecting_notif=0, is_notif=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:9928
#3 0x0000555555bbbda9 in remote_target::getpkt_sane (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0) at src/gdb/remote.c:10030
#4 0x0000555555bc0e75 in remote_target::remote_hostio_send_command (this=0x555556a11040, command_bytes=13, which_packet=14, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0, attachment=0x0, attachment_len=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12137
#5 0x0000555555bc1b6c in remote_target::remote_hostio_close (this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12455
#6 0x0000555555bc1bb4 in remote_target::fileio_close (During symbol reading: .debug_line address at offset 0x64f417 is 0 [in module build/gdb/gdb]
this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12462
#7 0x0000555555c9274c in target_fileio_close (fd=3, target_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/target.c:3365
#8 0x000055555595a19d in gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0, stream=0x555556b11530) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:439
#9 0x0000555555e09e3f in opncls_bclose (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:599
#10 0x0000555555e0a2c7 in bfd_close_all_done (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:847
#11 0x0000555555e0a27a in bfd_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:814
#12 0x000055555595a9d3 in gdb_bfd_close_or_warn (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:626
#13 0x000055555595ad29 in gdb_bfd_unref (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:715
#14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573
#15 0x0000555555ae955a in std::_Sp_counted_ptr<objfile*, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_dispose (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:377
#16 0x000055555572b7c8 in std::_Sp_counted_base<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_release (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:155
#17 0x00005555557263c3 in std::__shared_count<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_count (this=0x555556bf0588, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:730
#18 0x0000555555ae745e in std::__shared_ptr<objfile, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:1169
#19 0x0000555555ae747e in std::shared_ptr<objfile>::~shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr.h:103
#20 0x0000555555b1c1dc in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (this=0x5555564cdd60, __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/ext/new_allocator.h:153
#21 0x0000555555b1bb1d in std::allocator_traits<std::allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (__a=..., __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/alloc_traits.h:497
#22 0x0000555555b1b73e in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::_M_erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/stl_list.h:1921
#23 0x0000555555b1afeb in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/list.tcc:158
#24 0x0000555555b19576 in program_space::remove_objfile (this=0x5555564cdd20, objfile=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/progspace.c:210
#25 0x0000555555ae4502 in objfile::unlink (this=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:487
#26 0x0000555555ae5a12 in objfile_purge_solibs () at src/gdb/objfiles.c:875
#27 0x0000555555c09686 in no_shared_libraries (ignored=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/solib.c:1236
#28 0x00005555559e3f5f in detach_command (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/infcmd.c:2769
Note frame #14:
#14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573
That's a dtor, thus noexcept. That's the reason for the
std::terminate.
The previous patch fixed things such that the exception above isn't
thrown anymore. However, it's possible that e.g., the remote
connection drops just while a user types "nosharedlibrary", or some
other reason that leads to objfile::~objfile, and then we end up the
same std::terminate problem.
Also notice that frames #9-#11 are BFD frames:
#9 0x0000555555e09e3f in opncls_bclose (abfd=0x555556bc27e0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:599
#10 0x0000555555e0a2c7 in bfd_close_all_done (abfd=0x555556bc27e0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:847
#11 0x0000555555e0a27a in bfd_close (abfd=0x555556bc27e0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:814
BFD is written in C and thus throwing exceptions over such frames may
either not clean up properly, or, may abort if bfd is not compiled
with -fasynchronous-unwind-tables (x86-64 defaults that on, but not
all GCC ports do).
Thus frame #8 seems like a good place to swallow exceptions. More so
since in this spot we already ignore target_fileio_close return
errors. That's what this commit does. Without the previous fix, we'd
see:
(gdb) detach
Detaching from program: target:/any/program, process 2197701
Ending remote debugging.
[Inferior 1 (process 2197701) detached]
warning: cannot close "target:/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2": Remote connection closed
Note it prints a warning, which would still be a regression compared
to GDB 10, if it weren't for the previous fix.
gdb/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
PR gdb/28080
* gdb_bfd.c (gdb_bfd_close_warning): New.
(gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_close): Wrap target_fileio_close in
try/catch and print warning on exception.
(gdb_bfd_close_or_warn): Use gdb_bfd_close_warning.
Change-Id: Ic7a26ddba0a4444e3377b0e7c1c89934a84545d7
2021-07-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Fix detach with target remote (PR gdb/28080)
Commit 408f66864a1a823591b26420410c982174c239a2 ("detach in all-stop
with threads running") regressed "detach" with "target remote":
(gdb) detach
Detaching from program: target:/any/program, process 3671843
Detaching from process 3671843
Ending remote debugging.
[Inferior 1 (process 3671843) detached]
In main
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error'
Aborted (core dumped)
Here's the exception above being thrown:
(top-gdb) bt
#0 throw_error (error=TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR, fmt=0x555556035588 "Remote connection closed") at src/gdbsupport/common-exceptions.cc:222
#1 0x0000555555bbaa46 in remote_target::readchar (this=0x555556a11040, timeout=10000) at src/gdb/remote.c:9440
#2 0x0000555555bbb9e5 in remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0, expecting_notif=0, is_notif=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:9928
#3 0x0000555555bbbda9 in remote_target::getpkt_sane (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0) at src/gdb/remote.c:10030
#4 0x0000555555bc0e75 in remote_target::remote_hostio_send_command (this=0x555556a11040, command_bytes=13, which_packet=14, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0, attachment=0x0, attachment_len=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12137
#5 0x0000555555bc1b6c in remote_target::remote_hostio_close (this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12455
#6 0x0000555555bc1bb4 in remote_target::fileio_close (During symbol reading: .debug_line address at offset 0x64f417 is 0 [in module build/gdb/gdb]
this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12462
#7 0x0000555555c9274c in target_fileio_close (fd=3, target_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/target.c:3365
#8 0x000055555595a19d in gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0, stream=0x555556b11530) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:439
#9 0x0000555555e09e3f in opncls_bclose (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:599
#10 0x0000555555e0a2c7 in bfd_close_all_done (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:847
#11 0x0000555555e0a27a in bfd_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:814
#12 0x000055555595a9d3 in gdb_bfd_close_or_warn (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:626
#13 0x000055555595ad29 in gdb_bfd_unref (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:715
#14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573
#15 0x0000555555ae955a in std::_Sp_counted_ptr<objfile*, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_dispose (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:377
#16 0x000055555572b7c8 in std::_Sp_counted_base<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_release (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:155
#17 0x00005555557263c3 in std::__shared_count<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_count (this=0x555556bf0588, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:730
#18 0x0000555555ae745e in std::__shared_ptr<objfile, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:1169
#19 0x0000555555ae747e in std::shared_ptr<objfile>::~shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr.h:103
#20 0x0000555555b1c1dc in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (this=0x5555564cdd60, __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/ext/new_allocator.h:153
#21 0x0000555555b1bb1d in std::allocator_traits<std::allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (__a=..., __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/alloc_traits.h:497
#22 0x0000555555b1b73e in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::_M_erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/stl_list.h:1921
#23 0x0000555555b1afeb in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/list.tcc:158
#24 0x0000555555b19576 in program_space::remove_objfile (this=0x5555564cdd20, objfile=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/progspace.c:210
#25 0x0000555555ae4502 in objfile::unlink (this=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:487
#26 0x0000555555ae5a12 in objfile_purge_solibs () at src/gdb/objfiles.c:875
#27 0x0000555555c09686 in no_shared_libraries (ignored=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/solib.c:1236
#28 0x00005555559e3f5f in detach_command (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/infcmd.c:2769
So frame #28 already detached the remote process, and then we're
purging the shared libraries. GDB had opened remote shared libraries
via the target: sysroot, so it tries closing them. GDBserver is
tearing down already, so remote communication breaks down and we close
the remote target and throw TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR.
Note frame #14:
#14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573
That's a dtor, thus noexcept. That's the reason for the
std::terminate.
Stepping back a bit, why do we still have open remote files if we've
managed to detach already, and, we're debugging with "target remote"?
The reason is that commit 408f66864a1a823591b26420410c982174c239a2
makes detach_command hold a reference to the target, so the remote
target won't be finally closed until frame #28 returns. It's closing
the target that invalidates target file I/O handles.
This commit fixes the issue by not relying on target_close to
invalidate the target file I/O handles, instead invalidate them
immediately in remote_unpush_target. So when GDB purges the solibs,
and we end up in target_fileio_close (frame #7 above), there's nothing
to do, and we don't try to talk with the remote target anymore.
The regression isn't seen when testing with
--target_board=native-gdbserver, because that does "set sysroot" to
disable the "target:" sysroot, for test run speed reasons. So this
commit adds a testcase that explicitly tests detach with "set sysroot
target:".
gdb/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
PR gdb/28080
* remote.c (remote_unpush_target): Invalidate file I/O target
handles.
* target.c (fileio_handles_invalidate_target): Make extern.
* target.h (fileio_handles_invalidate_target): Declare.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
PR gdb/28080
* gdb.base/detach-sysroot-target.exp: New.
* gdb.base/detach-sysroot-target.c: New.
Reported-By: Jonah Graham <jonah@kichwacoders.com>
Change-Id: I851234910172f42a1b30e731161376c344d2727d
2021-07-13 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix check-libthread-db.exp FAILs with glibc 2.33
When running test-case gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp on openSUSE
Tumbleweed with glibc 2.33, I get:
...
(gdb) maint check libthread-db^M
Running libthread_db integrity checks:^M
Got thread 0x7ffff7c79b80 => 9354 => 0x7ffff7c79b80; errno = 0 ... OK^M
libthread_db integrity checks passed.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp: user-initiated check: \
libpthread.so not initialized (pattern 2)
...
The test-case expects instead:
...
Got thread 0x0 => 9354 => 0x0 ... OK^M
...
which is what I get on openSUSE Leap 15.2 with glibc 2.26, and what is
described in the test-case like this:
...
# libthread_db should fake a single thread with th_unique == NULL.
...
Using a breakpoint on check_thread_db_callback we can compare the two
scenarios, and find that in the latter case we hit this code in glibc function
iterate_thread_list in nptl_db/td_ta_thr_iter.c:
...
if (next == 0 && fake_empty)
{
/* __pthread_initialize_minimal has not run. There is just the main
thread to return. We cannot rely on its thread register. They
sometimes contain garbage that would confuse us, left by the
kernel at exec. So if it looks like initialization is incomplete,
we only fake a special descriptor for the initial thread. */
td_thrhandle_t th = { ta, 0 };
return callback (&th, cbdata_p) != 0 ? TD_DBERR : TD_OK;
}
...
while in the former case we don't because this preceding statement doesn't
result in next == 0:
...
err = DB_GET_FIELD (next, ta, head, list_t, next, 0);
...
Note that the comment mentions __pthread_initialize_minimal, but in both cases
it has already run before we hit the callback, so it's possible the comment is
no longer accurate.
The change in behaviour bisect to glibc commit 1daccf403b "nptl: Move stack
list variables into _rtld_global", which moves the initialization of stack
list variables such as __stack_user to an earlier moment, which explains well
enough the observed difference.
Fix this by updating the regexp patterns to agree with what libthread-db is
telling us.
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with glibc 2.33 and 2.26.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/27690
* gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp: Update patterns for glibc 2.33.
2021-07-13 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
gdb, dwarf: Don't follow the parent of a subprogram to get a prefix.
During prefix resolution, if the parent is a subprogram, there is no need
to go to the parent of the subprogram. The DIE will be local.
For a program like:
~~~
class F1
{
public:
int a;
int
vvv ()
{
class F2
{
int f;
};
F2 abcd;
return 1;
}
};
~~~
The class F2 should not be seen as a member of F1.
Before:
~~~
(gdb) ptype abcd
type = class F1::F2 {
private:
int f;
}
~~~
After:
~~~
(gdb) ptype abcd
type = class F2 {
private:
int f;
}
~~~
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-06-23 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* dwarf2/read.c (determine_prefix): Return an empty prefix if the
parent is a subprogram.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-06-23 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdb.cp/nested-class-func-class.cc: New file.
* gdb.cp/nested-class-func-class.exp: New file.
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: disable commit-resumed on -exec-interrupt --thread-group
As reported in PR gdb/28077, we hit an internal error when using
-exec-interrupt with --thread-group:
info threads
&"info threads\n"
~" Id Target Id Frame \n"
~"* 1 process 403312 \"loop\" (running)\n"
^done
(gdb)
-exec-interrupt --thread-group i1
~"/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:3768: internal-error: void target_stop(ptid_t): Assertion `!proc_target->commit_resumed_state' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugging session? (y or n) "
This is because this code path never disables commit-resumed (a
requirement for calling target_stop, as documented in
process_stratum_target::»commit_resumed_state) before calling
target_stop.
The other 3 code paths in mi_cmd_exec_interrupt use interrupt_target_1,
which does it. But the --thread-group code path uses its own thing
which doesn't do it. Fix this by adding a scoped_disable_commit_resumed
in this code path.
Calling -exec-interrupt with --thread-group is apparently not tested at
the moment (which is why this bug could creep in). Add a new test for
that. The test runs two inferiors and tries to interrupt them with
"-exec-interrupt --thread-group X".
This will need to be merged in the gdb-11-branch, so here are ChangeLog
entries:
gdb/ChangeLog:
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_exec_interrupt): Use
scoped_disable_commit_resumed in the --thread-group case.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.mi/interrupt-thread-group.c: New.
* gdb.mi/interrupt-thread-group.exp: New.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28077
Change-Id: I615efefcbcaf2c15d47caf5e4b9d82854b2a2fcb
2021-07-13 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Enable elf attributes when default configure option isn't set.
Since gcc commit, 3c70b3ca1ef58f302bf8c16d9e7c7bb8626408bf, we now enable
elf attributes for all riscv targets by default in gcc. Therefore, I
think binutils should have the same behavior, in case users are writing
assembly files. If --enable-default-riscv-attribute isn't set, then we
enable the elf attributes for all riscv targets by default.
ChangLog:
binutils/
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s: Add comments for riscv.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64-unused: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64-unused: Likewise.
gas/
* configure.ac: If --enable-default-riscv-attribute isn't set,
then we enable the elf attributes for all riscv targets by
default.
* configure: Regenerated.
2021-07-13 John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
Fix some dangling references to `netbsd-tdep`
These files were renamed in 1b71cfcfdc3e13a655fefa6566b5564cec044c10,
but evidentially a few dangling references were left behind. This causes
builds to fail:
$ ./configure --target i686-netbsdelf
$ make
make: *** No rule to make target 'nbsd-tdep.c', needed by 'nbsd-tdep.o'. Stop.
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: optimize all_matching_threads_iterator
all_matching_threads_iterator is used extensively in some pretty fast
paths, often under the all_non_exited_threads function.
If a filter target and thread-specific ptid are given, it iterates on
all threads of all inferiors of that target, to ultimately yield exactly
on thread. And this happens quite often, which means we unnecessarily
spend time iterating on threads to find the one we are looking for. The
same thing happens if an inferior-specific ptid is given, although there
the iterator yields all the threads of that inferior.
In those cases, the callers of all_non_exited_threads could have
different behaviors depending on the kind of ptid, to avoid this
inefficiency, but that would be very tedious. Using
all_non_exited_threads has the advantage that one simple implementation
can work seamlessly on multiple threads or on one specific thread, just
by playing with the ptid.
Instead, optimize all_matching_threads_iterator directly to detect these
different cases and limiting what we iterate on to just what we need.
- if filter_ptid is minus_one_ptid, do as we do now: filter inferiors
based on filter_target, iterate on all of the matching inferiors'
threads
- if filter_ptid is a pid-only ptid (then a filter_target must
necessarily be given), look up that inferior and iterate on all its
threads
- otherwise, filter_ptid is a thread-specific ptid, so look up that
specific thread and "iterate" only on it
For the last case, what was an iteration on all threads of the filter
target now becomes a call to find_thread_ptid, which is quite efficient
now thanks to inferior::ptid_thread_map.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* thread-iter.h (class all_matching_threads_iterator)
<all_matching_threads_iterator>: Use default.
<enum class mode>: New.
<m_inf, m_thr>: Initialize.
<m_filter_ptid>: Remove.
* thread-iter.c (all_matching_threads_iterator::m_inf_matches):
Don't filter on m_filter_ptid.
(all_matching_threads_iterator::all_matching_threads_iterator):
Choose path based on filter_ptid (all threads, all threads of
inferior, single thread).
(all_matching_threads_iterator::advance): Likewise.
Change-Id: Ic6a19845f5f760fa1b8eac8145793c0ff431bbc9
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: maintain ptid -> thread map, optimize find_thread_ptid
When debugging a large number of threads (thousands), looking up a
thread by ptid_t using the inferior::thread_list linked list can add up.
Add inferior::thread_map, an std::unordered_map indexed by ptid_t, and
change the find_thread_ptid function to look up a thread using
std::unordered_map::find, instead of iterating on all of the
inferior's threads. This should make it faster to look up a thread
from its ptid.
Change-Id: I3a8da0a839e18dee5bb98b8b7dbeb7f3dfa8ae1c
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: optimize selection of resumed thread with pending event
Consider a case where many threads (thousands) keep hitting a breakpoint
whose condition evaluates to false. random_pending_event_thread is
responsible for selecting a thread from an inferior among all that are
resumed with a pending wait status. It is currently implemented by
walking the inferior's thread list twice: once to count the number of
candidates and once to select a random one.
Since we now maintain a per target list of resumed threads with pending
event, we can implement this more efficiently by walking that list and
selecting the first thread that matches the criteria
(random_pending_event_thread looks for an thread from a specific
inferior, and possibly a filter ptid). It will be faster especially in
the common case where there isn't any resumed thread with pending
event. Currently, we have to iterate the thread list to figure this
out. With this patch, the list of resumed threads with pending event
will be empty, so it's quick to figure out.
The random selection is kept, but is moved to
process_stratum_target::random_resumed_with_pending_wait_status. The
same technique is used: do a first pass to count the number of
candidates, and do a second pass to select a random one. But given that
the list of resumed threads with pending wait statuses will generally be
short, or at least shorter than the full thread list, it should be
quicker.
Note that this isn't completely true, in case there are multiple
inferiors on the same target. Imagine that inferior A has 10k resumed
threads with pending wait statuses, and random_pending_event_thread is
called with inferior B. We'll need to go through the list that contains
inferior A's threads to realize that inferior B has no resumed threads
with pending wait status. But I think that this is a corner /
pathological case. And a possible fix for this situation would be to
make random_pending_event_thread work per-process-target, rather than
per-inferior.
Change-Id: I1b71d01beaa500a148b5b9797745103e13917325
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: optimize check for resumed threads with pending wait status in maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets
Consider a test case where many threads (thousands) keep hitting a
breakpoint whose condition evaluates to false.
maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets is called at each handled event,
when the scoped_disable_commit_resumed object in fetch_inferior_event is
reset_and_commit-ed. One particularly expensive check in there is
whether the target has at least one resumed thread with a pending wait
status (in which case, we don't want to commit the resumed threads, as
we want to consume this status first). It is currently implemented as
walking all threads of the target.
Since we now maintain a per-target list of resumed threads with pending
status, we can do this check efficiently, by checking whether that list
is empty or not.
Add the process_stratum_target::has_resumed_with_pending_wait_status
method for this, and use it in maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets.
Change-Id: Ia1595baa1b358338f94fc3cb3af7f27092dad5b6
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: maintain per-process-target list of resumed threads with pending wait status
Looking up threads that are both resumed and have a pending wait
status to report is something that we do quite often in the fast path
and is expensive if there are many threads, since it currently requires
walking whole thread lists.
The first instance is in maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets. This is
called after handling each event in fetch_inferior_event, to see if we
should ask targets to commit their resumed threads or not. If at least
one thread is resumed but has a pending wait status, we don't ask the
targets to commit their resumed threads, because we want to consume and
handle the pending wait status first.
The second instance is in random_pending_event_thread, where we want to
select a random thread among all those that are resumed and have a
pending wait status. This is called every time we try to consume
events, to see if there are any pending events that we we want to
consume, before asking the targets for more events.
To allow optimizing these cases, maintain a per-process-target list of
threads that are resumed and have a pending wait status.
In maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets, we'll be able to check in O(1)
if there are any such threads simply by checking whether the list is
empty.
In random_pending_event_thread, we'll be able to use that list, which
will be quicker than iterating the list of threads, especially when
there are no resumed with pending wait status threads.
About implementation details: using the new setters on class
thread_info, it's relatively easy to maintain that list. Any time the
"resumed" or "pending wait status" property is changed, we check whether
that should cause the thread to be added or removed from the list.
In set_thread_exited, we try to remove the thread from the list, because
keeping an exited thread in that list would make no sense (especially if
the thread is freed). My first implementation assumed that a process
stratum target was always present when set_thread_exited is called.
That's however, not the case: in some cases, targets unpush themselves
from an inferior and then call "exit_inferior", which exits all the
threads. If the target is unpushed before set_thread_exited is called
on the threads, it means we could mistakenly leave some threads in the
list. I tried to see how hard it would be to make it such that targets
have to exit all threads before unpushing themselves from the inferior
(that would seem logical to me, we don't want threads belonging to an
inferior that has no process target). That seemed quite difficult and
not worth the time at the moment. Instead, I changed
inferior::unpush_target to remove all threads of that inferior from the
list.
As of this patch, the list is not used, this is done in the subsequent
patches.
The debug messages in process-stratum-target.c need to print some ptids.
However, they can't use target_pid_to_str to print them without
introducing a dependency on the current inferior (the current inferior
is used to get the current target stack). For debug messages, I find it
clearer to print the spelled out ptid anyway (the pid, lwp and tid
values). Add a ptid_t::to_string method that returns a string
representation of the ptid that is meant for debug messages, a bit like
we already have frame_id::to_string.
Change-Id: Iad8f93db2d13984dd5aa5867db940ed1169dbb67
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: make thread_info::suspend private, add getters / setters
A following patch will want to take some action when a pending wait
status is set on or removed from a thread. Add a getter and a setter on
thread_info for the pending waitstatus, so that we can add some code in
the setter later.
The thing is, the pending wait status field is in the
thread_suspend_state, along with other fields that we need to backup
before and restore after the thread does an inferior function call.
Therefore, make the thread_suspend_state member private
(thread_info::suspend becomes thread_info::m_suspend), and add getters /
setters for all of its fields:
- pending wait status
- stop signal
- stop reason
- stop pc
For the pending wait status, add the additional has_pending_waitstatus
and clear_pending_waitstatus methods.
I think this makes the thread_info interface a bit nicer, because we
now access the fields as:
thread->stop_pc ()
rather than
thread->suspend.stop_pc
The stop_pc field being in the `suspend` structure is an implementation
detail of thread_info that callers don't need to be aware of.
For the backup / restore of the thread_suspend_state structure, add
save_suspend_to and restore_suspend_from methods. You might wonder why
`save_suspend_to`, as opposed to a simple getter like
thread_suspend_state &suspend ();
I want to make it clear that this is to be used only for backing up and
restoring the suspend state, _not_ to access fields like:
thread->suspend ()->stop_pc
Adding some getters / setters allows adding some assertions. I find
that this helps understand how things are supposed to work. Add:
- When getting the pending status (pending_waitstatus method), ensure
that there is a pending status.
- When setting a pending status (set_pending_waitstatus method), ensure
there is no pending status.
There is one case I found where this wasn't true - in
remote_target::process_initial_stop_replies - which needed adjustments
to respect that contract. I think it's because
process_initial_stop_replies is kind of (ab)using the
thread_info::suspend::waitstatus to store some statuses temporarily, for
its internal use (statuses it doesn't intent on leaving pending).
process_initial_stop_replies pulls out stop replies received during the
initial connection using target_wait. It always stores the received
event in `evthread->suspend.waitstatus`. But it only sets
waitstatus_pending_p, if it deems the event interesting enough to leave
pending, to be reported to the core:
if (ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
|| ws.value.sig != GDB_SIGNAL_0)
evthread->suspend.waitstatus_pending_p = 1;
It later uses this flag a bit below, to choose which thread to make the
"selected" one:
if (selected == NULL
&& thread->suspend.waitstatus_pending_p)
selected = thread;
And ultimately that's used if the user-visible mode is all-stop, so that
we print the stop for that interesting thread:
/* In all-stop, we only print the status of one thread, and leave
others with their status pending. */
if (!non_stop)
{
thread_info *thread = selected;
if (thread == NULL)
thread = lowest_stopped;
if (thread == NULL)
thread = first;
print_one_stopped_thread (thread);
}
But in any case (all-stop or non-stop), print_one_stopped_thread needs
to access the waitstatus value of these threads that don't have a
pending waitstatus (those that had TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED +
GDB_SIGNAL_0). This doesn't work with the assertions I've
put.
So, change the code to only set the thread's wait status if it is an
interesting one that we are going to leave pending. If the thread
stopped due to a non-interesting event (TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED +
GDB_SIGNAL_0), don't store it. Adjust print_one_stopped_thread to
understand that if a thread has no pending waitstatus, it's because it
stopped with TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED + GDB_SIGNAL_0.
The call to set_last_target_status also uses the pending waitstatus.
However, given that the pending waitstatus for the thread may have been
cleared in print_one_stopped_thread (and that there might not even be a
pending waitstatus in the first place, as explained above), it is no
longer possible to do it at this point. To fix that, move the call to
set_last_target_status in print_one_stopped_thread. I think this will
preserve the existing behavior, because set_last_target_status is
currently using the current thread's wait status. And the current
thread is the last one for which print_one_stopped_thread is called. So
by calling set_last_target_status in print_one_stopped_thread, we'll get
the same result. set_last_target_status will possibly be called
multiple times, but only the last call will matter. It just means
possibly more calls to set_last_target_status, but those are cheap.
Change-Id: Iedab9653238eaf8231abcf0baa20145acc8b77a7
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: add setter / getter for thread_info resumed state
A following patch will want to do things when a thread's resumed state
changes. Make the `resumed` field private (renamed to `m_resumed`) and
add a getter and a setter for it. The following patch in question will
therefore be able to add some code to the setter.
Change-Id: I360c48cc55a036503174313261ce4e757d795319
2021-07-13 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: use intrusive list for step-over chain
The threads that need a step-over are currently linked using an
hand-written intrusive doubly-linked list, so that seems a very good
candidate for intrusive_list, convert it.
For this, we have a use case of appending a list to another one (in
start_step_over). Based on the std::list and Boost APIs, add a splice
method. However, only support splicing the other list at the end of the
`this` list, since that's all we need.
Add explicit default assignment operators to
reference_to_pointer_iterator, which are otherwise implicitly deleted.
This is needed because to define thread_step_over_list_safe_iterator, we
wrap reference_to_pointer_iterator inside a basic_safe_iterator, and
basic_safe_iterator needs to be able to copy-assign the wrapped
iterator. The move-assignment operator is therefore not needed, only
the copy-assignment operator is. But for completeness, add both.
Change-Id: I31b2ff67c7b78251314646b31887ef1dfebe510c
2021-07-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: make inferior_list use intrusive_list
Change inferior_list, the global list of inferiors, to use
intrusive_list. I think most other changes are somewhat obvious
fallouts from this change.
There is a small change in behavior in scoped_mock_context. Before this
patch, constructing a scoped_mock_context would replace the whole
inferior list with only the new mock inferior. Tests using two
scoped_mock_contexts therefore needed to manually link the two inferiors
together, as the second scoped_mock_context would bump the first mock
inferior from the thread list. With this patch, a scoped_mock_context
adds its mock inferior to the inferior list on construction, and removes
it on destruction. This means that tests run with mock inferiors in the
inferior list in addition to any pre-existing inferiors (there is always
at least one). There is no possible pid clash problem, since each
scoped mock inferior uses its own process target, and pids are per
process target.
Co-Authored-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Change-Id: I7eb6a8f867d4dcf8b8cd2dcffd118f7270756018
2021-07-13 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb: introduce intrusive_list, make thread_info use it
GDB currently has several objects that are put in a singly linked list,
by having the object's type have a "next" pointer directly. For
example, struct thread_info and struct inferior. Because these are
simply-linked lists, and we don't keep track of a "tail" pointer, when
we want to append a new element on the list, we need to walk the whole
list to find the current tail. It would be nice to get rid of that
walk. Removing elements from such lists also requires a walk, to find
the "previous" position relative to the element being removed. To
eliminate the need for that walk, we could make those lists
doubly-linked, by adding a "prev" pointer alongside "next". It would be
nice to avoid the boilerplate associated with maintaining such a list
manually, though. That is what the new intrusive_list type addresses.
With an intrusive list, it's also possible to move items out of the
list without destroying them, which is interesting in our case for
example for threads, when we exit them, but can't destroy them
immediately. We currently keep exited threads on the thread list, but
we could change that which would simplify some things.
Note that with std::list, element removal is O(N). I.e., with
std::list, we need to walk the list to find the iterator pointing to
the position to remove. However, we could store a list iterator
inside the object as soon as we put the object in the list, to address
it, because std::list iterators are not invalidated when other
elements are added/removed. However, if you need to put the same
object in more than one list, then std::list<object> doesn't work.
You need to instead use std::list<object *>, which is less efficient
for requiring extra memory allocations. For an example of an object
in multiple lists, see the step_over_next/step_over_prev fields in
thread_info:
/* Step-over chain. A thread is in the step-over queue if these are
non-NULL. If only a single thread is in the chain, then these
fields point to self. */
struct thread_info *step_over_prev = NULL;
struct thread_info *step_over_next = NULL;
The new intrusive_list type gives us the advantages of an intrusive
linked list, while avoiding the boilerplate associated with manually
maintaining it.
intrusive_list's API follows the standard container interface, and thus
std::list's interface. It is based the API of Boost's intrusive list,
here:
https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_73_0/doc/html/boost/intrusive/list.html
Our implementation is relatively simple, while Boost's is complicated
and intertwined due to a lot of customization options, which our version
doesn't have.
The easiest way to use an intrusive_list is to make the list's element
type inherit from intrusive_node. This adds a prev/next pointers to
the element type. However, to support putting the same object in more
than one list, intrusive_list supports putting the "node" info as a
field member, so you can have more than one such nodes, one per list.
As a first guinea pig, this patch makes the per-inferior thread list use
intrusive_list using the base class method.
Unlike Boost's implementation, ours is not a circular list. An earlier
version of the patch was circular: the intrusive_list type included an
intrusive_list_node "head". In this design, a node contained pointers
to the previous and next nodes, not the previous and next elements.
This wasn't great for when debugging GDB with GDB, as it was difficult
to get from a pointer to the node to a pointer to the element. With the
design proposed in this patch, nodes contain pointers to the previous
and next elements, making it easy to traverse the list by hand and
inspect each element.
The intrusive_list object contains pointers to the first and last
elements of the list. They are nullptr if the list is empty.
Each element's node contains a pointer to the previous and next
elements. The first element's previous pointer is nullptr and the last
element's next pointer is nullptr. Therefore, if there's a single
element in the list, both its previous and next pointers are nullptr.
To differentiate such an element from an element that is not linked into
a list, the previous and next pointers contain a special value (-1) when
the node is not linked. This is necessary to be able to reliably tell
if a given node is currently linked or not.
A begin() iterator points to the first item in the list. An end()
iterator contains nullptr. This makes iteration until end naturally
work, as advancing past the last element will make the iterator contain
nullptr, making it equal to the end iterator. If the list is empty,
a begin() iterator will contain nullptr from the start, and therefore be
immediately equal to the end.
Iterating on an intrusive_list yields references to objects (e.g.
`thread_info&`). The rest of GDB currently expects iterators and ranges
to yield pointers (e.g. `thread_info*`). To bridge the gap, add the
reference_to_pointer_iterator type. It is used to define
inf_threads_iterator.
Add a Python pretty-printer, to help inspecting intrusive lists when
debugging GDB with GDB. Here's an example of the output:
(top-gdb) p current_inferior_.m_obj.thread_list
$1 = intrusive list of thread_info = {0x61700002c000, 0x617000069080, 0x617000069400, 0x61700006d680, 0x61700006eb80}
It's not possible with current master, but with this patch [1] that I
hope will be merged eventually, it's possible to index the list and
access the pretty-printed value's children:
(top-gdb) p current_inferior_.m_obj.thread_list[1]
$2 = (thread_info *) 0x617000069080
(top-gdb) p current_inferior_.m_obj.thread_list[1].ptid
$3 = {
m_pid = 406499,
m_lwp = 406503,
m_tid = 0
}
Even though iterating the list in C++ yields references, the Python
pretty-printer yields pointers. The reason for this is that the output
of printing the thread list above would be unreadable, IMO, if each
thread_info object was printed in-line, since they contain so much
information. I think it's more useful to print pointers, and let the
user drill down as needed.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-April/178050.html
Co-Authored-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Change-Id: I3412a14dc77f25876d742dab8f44e0ba7c7586c0
2021-07-13 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-12 Tucker <tuckkern@sourceware@gmail.com>
Add the SEC_ELF_OCTETS flag to debug sections created by the assembler.
PR 28054
gas * config/obj-elf.c (obj_elf_change_section): Set the
SEF_ELF_OCTETS flag on debug sections.
2021-07-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.btrace/tsx.exp on system with tsx disabled in microcode
Recently I started to see this fail with trunk:
...
(gdb) record instruction-history^M
1 0x00000000004004ab <main+4>: call 0x4004b7 <test>^M
2 0x00000000004004c6 <test+15>: mov $0x1,%eax^M
3 0x00000000004004cb <test+20>: ret ^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.btrace/tsx.exp: speculation indication
...
This is due to an intel microcode update (1) that disables Intel TSX by default.
Fix this by updating the pattern.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with both gcc 7.5.0 and clang 12.0.1.
[1] https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000059422/processors.html
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/28057
* gdb.btrace/tsx.exp: Add pattern for system with tsx disabled in
microcode.
2021-07-12 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated French translation for the binutils sub-directory
Fix a translation problem for the text generated by readelf at the start of a dump of a dynamic section.
PR 28072
binutils * readelf.c (process_dynamic_section): Use ngettext to help with translation of header text.
2021-07-12 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp for extra debug info
When running test-case gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp, I run into:
...
Running src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp ...
ERROR: internal buffer is full.
...
due to extra debug info from the shared libraries.
Fix this by using "nosharedlibrary".
Then I run into these FAILs:
...
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp: debug_read=false: \
-file-list-exec-source-files (unexpected output)
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp: debug_read=true: \
-file-list-exec-source-files (unexpected output)
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp: debug_read=true: \
-file-list-exec-source-files --group-by-objfile, look for \
mi-info-sources.c (unexpected output)
FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp: debug_read=true: \
-file-list-exec-source-files --group-by-objfile, look for \
mi-info-sources-base.c (unexpected output)
...
due to openSUSE executables which have debug info for objects from sources
like sysdeps/x86_64/crtn.S.
Fix these by updating the patterns, and adding "maint expand-symtabs" to
reliably get fully-read objfiles.
Then I run into FAILs when using the readnow target board. Fix these by
skipping the relevant tests.
Then I run into FAILs when using the cc-with-gnu-debuglink board. Fix these
by updating the patterns.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with native, check-read1, readnow, cc-with-gdb-index,
cc-with-debug-names, cc-with-gnu-debuglink, cc-with-dwz, cc-with-dwz-m.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-05 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_readnow): New proc.
* gdb.mi/mi-info-sources.exp: Use nosharedlibrary. Update patterns.
Skip tests for readnow. Use "maint expand-symtabs".
2021-07-12 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
testsuite: fix whitespace problems in gdb.mi/mi-break.exp
Replace leading 8-spaces with tab and remove trailing space in
gdb.mi/mi-break.exp.
2021-07-12 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-11 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Tidy commit 49910fd88dcd
Pointer range checking is UB if the values compared are outside the
underlying array elements (plus one).
* dwarf2.c (read_address): Remove accidental commit.
(read_ranges): Compare offset rather than pointers.
2021-07-10 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28069, assertion fail in dwarf.c:display_discr_list
We shouldn't be asserting on anything to do with leb128 values, or
reporting file and line numbers when something unexpected happens.
leb128 data is of indeterminate length, perfect for fuzzer mayhem.
It would only make sense to assert or report dwarf.c/readelf.c source
lines if the code had already sized and sanity checked the leb128
values.
After removing the assertions, the testcase then gave:
<37> DW_AT_discr_list : 5 byte block: 0 0 0 0 0 (label 0, label 0, label 0, label 0, <corrupt>
readelf: Warning: corrupt discr_list - unrecognized discriminant byte 0x5
<3d> DW_AT_encoding : 0 (void)
<3e> DW_AT_identifier_case: 0 (case_sensitive)
<3f> DW_AT_virtuality : 0 (none)
<40> DW_AT_decimal_sign: 5 (trailing separate)
So the DW_AT_discr_list was showing more data than just the 5 byte
block. That happened due to "end" pointing a long way past the end of
block, and uvalue decrementing past zero on one of the leb128 bytes.
PR 28069
* dwarf.c (display_discr_list): Remove assertions. Delete "end"
parameter, use initial "data" pointer as the end. Formatting.
Don't count down bytes as they are read.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Adjust display_discr_list call.
(read_and_print_leb128): Don't pass __FILE__ and __LINE__ to
report_leb_status.
* dwarf.h (report_leb_status): Don't report file and line
numbers. Delete file and lnum parameters,
(READ_ULEB, READ_SLEB): Adjust.
2021-07-10 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-09 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld/NEWS: Clarify -z [no]indirect-extern-access
-z [no]indirect-extern-access are only for x86 ELF linker.
2021-07-09 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Limits 2 GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED tests to Linux/x86
Run property-1_needed-1b.d and property-1_needed-1c.d, which pass
-z [no]indirect-extern-access to linker, only run for Linux/x86 targets.
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1b.d: Only run for
Linux/x86 targets.
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1c.d: Likewise.
2021-07-09 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Add GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED check
If GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS is set on any input
relocatable files:
1. Don't generate copy relocations.
2. Turn off extern_protected_data since it implies
GNU_PROPERTY_NO_COPY_ON_PROTECTED.
3. Treate reference to protected symbols with indirect external access
as local.
4. Set GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS on output.
5. When generating executable, clear this bit when there are non-GOT or
non-PLT relocations in input relocatable files without the bit set.
6. Add -z [no]indirect-extern-access to control indirect external access.
bfd/
* elf-bfd (elf_obj_tdata): Add has_indirect_extern_access.
(elf_has_indirect_extern_access): New.
* elf-properties.c (_bfd_elf_parse_gnu_properties): Set
elf_has_indirect_extern_access and elf_has_no_copy_on_protected
when seeing GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS.
(elf_write_gnu_propertie): Add an argument to pass link_info.
Set needed_1_p for GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED in memory.
(_bfd_elf_link_setup_gnu_properties): Handle
GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS for
-z indirect-extern-access. Set nocopyreloc to true and
extern_protected_data to false for indirect external access.
(_bfd_elf_convert_gnu_properties): Updated.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_check_relocs): Set
non_got_ref_without_indirect_extern_access on legacy non-GOT or
non-PLT references.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Likewise.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_symbol_refs_local_p): Return true for
STV_PROTECTED symbols with indirect external access.
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_adjust_dynamic_symbol): Clear
indirect_extern_access for legacy non-GOT/non-PLT references.
* elfxx-x86.h (elf_x86_link_hash_entry): Add
non_got_ref_without_indirect_extern_access.
include/
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_info): Add indirect_extern_access and
needed_1_p. Change nocopyreloc to int.
ld/
* NEWS: Mention -z [no]indirect-extern-access
* ld.texi: Document -z [no]indirect-extern-access
* ldmain.c (main): Initialize link_info.indirect_extern_access
to -1.
* emulparams/extern_protected_data.sh: Support
-z [no]indirect-extern-access.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-1.rd: New file
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-1a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-1b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-2.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-2a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-2b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access-3.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect-extern-access.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1c.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/indirect-extern-access.rd: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-data-1.h: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-data-1a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-data-1b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-data-2a.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-data-2b.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-func-2a.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-func-2b.S: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/protected-func-2c.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/linux-x86.exp: Run test with
GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Run tests for protected
function and data with indirect external access.
2021-07-09 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
elf: Add GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED
Add GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED:
#define GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED GNU_PROPERTY_UINT32_OR_LO
to indicate the needed properties by the object file.
Add GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS:
#define GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS (1U << 0)
to indicate that the object file requires canonical function pointers and
cannot be used with copy relocation.
binutils/
* readelf.c (decode_1_needed): New.
(print_gnu_property_note): Handle GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED.
include/
* elf/common.h (GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED): New.
(GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS): Likewise.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1a.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/property-1_needed-1.s: Likewise.
2021-07-09 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-09 Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
Remove unused parameter in maybe_software_singlestep
While working around, I noticed that the last parameter of
maybe_software_singlestep is never used. This path removes
it.
Built on x86_64-linux-gnu and riscv64-linux-gnu.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* infrun.c (maybe_software_singlestep): Remove unused PC
parameter.
(resume_1): Update calls to maybe_software_singlestep.
2021-07-08 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
x86-64: Disallow PC reloc against weak undefined symbols in PIE
Disallow PC relocations against weak undefined symbols in PIE since they
can lead to non-zero address at run-time.
bfd/
PR ld/21782
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_relocate_section): Disallow PC
relocations against weak undefined symbols in PIE.
ld/
PR ld/21782
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pie3.d: Expect linker error.
2021-07-08 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Limit cache size and add --max-cache-size=SIZE
When link_info.keep_memory is true, linker caches the relocation
information and symbol tables of input files in memory. When there
are many input files with many relocations, we may run out of memory.
Add --max-cache-size=SIZE to set the maximum cache size.
bfd/
PR ld/18028
* bfd.c (bfd): Add alloc_size.
* elf-bfd.h (_bfd_elf_link_info_read_relocs): New.
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_check_relocs): Use _bfd_link_keep_memory.
Update cache_size.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Likewise.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_link_read_relocs): Renamed to ...
(_bfd_elf_link_info_read_relocs): This. Update cache_size.
(_bfd_elf_link_read_relocs): New.
(_bfd_elf_link_check_relocs): Call _bfd_elf_link_info_read_relocs
instead of _bfd_elf_link_read_relocs.
(elf_link_add_object_symbols): Likewise.
(elf_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
(init_reloc_cookie_rels): Likewise.
(init_reloc_cookie): Update cache_size. Call
_bfd_elf_link_info_read_relocs instead of
_bfd_elf_link_read_relocs.
(link_info_ok): New.
(elf_gc_smash_unused_vtentry_relocs): Updated. Call
_bfd_elf_link_info_read_relocs instead of
_bfd_elf_link_read_relocs.
(bfd_elf_gc_sections): Use link_info_ok. Pass &link_info_ok
to elf_gc_smash_unused_vtentry_relocs.
* libbfd-in.h (_bfd_link_keep_memory): New.
* linker.c (_bfd_link_keep_memory): New.
* opncls.c (bfd_alloc): Update alloc_size.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerated.
* libbfd.h: Likewise.
include/
PR ld/18028
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_info): Add cache_size and max_cache_size.
ld/
PR ld/18028
* NEWS: Mention --max-cache-size=SIZE.
* ld.texi: Document --max-cache-size=SIZE.
* ldlex.h (option_values): Add OPTION_MAX_CACHE_SIZE.
* ldmain.c: (main): Set link_info.max_cache_size to -1.
* lexsup.c (ld_options): Add --max-cache-size=SIZE.
(parse_args): Support OPTION_MAX_CACHE_SIZE.
* testsuite/ld-bootstrap/bootstrap.exp: Add test for
--max-cache-size=-1.
2021-07-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: don't set Linux-specific displaced stepping methods in s390_gdbarch_init
According to bug 28056, running an s390x binary gives:
(gdb) run
Starting program: /usr/bin/ls
/home/ubuntu/tmp/gdb-11.0.90.20210705/gdb/linux-tdep.c:2550: internal-error: displaced_step_prepare_status linux_displaced_step_prepare(gdbarch*, thread_info*, CORE_ADDR&): Assertion `gdbarch_data->num_disp_step_buffers > 0' failed.
This is because the s390 architecture registers some Linux-specific
displaced stepping callbacks in the OS-agnostic s390_gdbarch_init:
set_gdbarch_displaced_step_prepare (gdbarch, linux_displaced_step_prepare);
set_gdbarch_displaced_step_finish (gdbarch, linux_displaced_step_finish);
set_gdbarch_displaced_step_restore_all_in_ptid
(gdbarch, linux_displaced_step_restore_all_in_ptid);
But then the Linux-specific s390_linux_init_abi_any passes
num_disp_step_buffers=0 to linux_init_abi:
linux_init_abi (info, gdbarch, 0);
The problem happens when linux_displaced_step_prepare is called for the
first time. It tries to allocate the displaced stepping buffers, but
sees that the number of displaced stepping buffers for that architecture
is 0, which is unexpected / invalid.
s390_gdbarch_init should not register the linux_* callbacks, that is
expected to be done by linux_init_abi. If debugging a bare-metal s390
program, or an s390 program on another OS GDB doesn't know about, we
wouldn't want to use them. We would either register no callbacks, if
displaced stepping isn't supported, or register a different set of
callbacks if we wanted to support displaced stepping in those cases.
The commit that refactored the displaced stepping machinery and
introduced these set_gdbarch_displaced_step_* calls is 187b041e2514
("gdb: move displaced stepping logic to gdbarch, allow starting
concurrent displaced steps"). However, even before that,
s390_gdbarch_init did:
set_gdbarch_displaced_step_location (gdbarch, linux_displaced_step_location);
... which already seemed wrong. The Linux-specific callback was used
even for non-Linux system. Maybe that was on purpose, because it would
also happen to work in some other non-Linux case, or maybe it was simply
a mistake. I'll assume that this was a small mistake when
s390-tdep.{h,c} where factored out of s390-linux-tdep.c, in d6e589456475
("s390: Split up s390-linux-tdep.c into two files").
Fix this by removing the setting of these displaced step callbacks from
s390_gdbarch_init. Instead, pass num_disp_step_buffers=1 to
linux_init_abi, in s390_linux_init_abi_any. Doing so will cause
linux_init_abi to register these same callbacks. It will also mean that
when debugging a bare-metal s390 executable or an executable on another
OS that GDB doesn't know about, gdbarch_displaced_step_prepare won't be
set, so displaced stepping won't be used.
This patch will need to be merged in the gdb-11-branch, since this is a
GDB 11 regression, so here's the ChangeLog entry:
gdb/ChangeLog:
* s390-linux-tdep.c (s390_linux_init_abi_any): Pass 1 (number
of displaced stepping buffers to linux_init_abi.
* s390-tdep.c (s390_gdbarch_init): Don't set the Linux-specific
displaced-stepping gdbarch callbacks.
Change-Id: Ieab2f8990c78fde845ce7378d6fd4ee2833800d5
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28056
2021-07-08 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/Makefile.in: remove testsuite from SUBDIRS
When distclean-ing a configured / built gdb directory, like so:
$ ./configure && make all-gdb && make distclean
The distclean operation fails with:
Missing testsuite/Makefile
If we look at the SUBDIRS variable in the generated gdb/Makefile,
testsuite is there twice:
SUBDIRS = doc testsuite data-directory testsuite
So we try distclean-ing the testsuite directory twice. The second time,
gdb/testsuite/Makefile doesn't exist, so it fails.
The first "testsuite" comes from the @subdirs@ replacement, because of
the `AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS` macro in gdb/configure.ac. The second one is
hard-coded in gdb/Makefile.in:
SUBDIRS = doc @subdirs@ data-directory testsuite
The hard-coded was added by:
bdbbcd577460 ("Always build 'all' in gdb/testsuite")
which came after `testsuite` was removed from @subdirs@ by:
f99d1d37496f ("Remove gdb/testsuite/configure")
My commit a100a94530eb ("gdb/testsuite: restore configure script")
should have removed the hard-coded `testsuite`, since it added it back
as a "subdir", but I missed it because I only looked f99d1d37496f to
write my patch.
Fix this by removing the hard-coded one.
This patch should be pushed to both master and gdb-11-branch, hence the
ChangeLog entry:
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SUBDIRS): Remove testsuite.
Change-Id: I63e5590b1a08673c646510b3ecc74600eae9f92d
2021-07-08 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Updated Portuguese translation for the BFD sub-directory
2021-07-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp with guile 3.0
When running test-case gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed
with guile 3.0, I run into:
...
(gdb) guile (define cp (make-breakpoint "syscall" #:type BP_CATCHPOINT))^M
ERROR: In procedure make-breakpoint:^M
In procedure gdbscm_make_breakpoint: unsupported breakpoint type in \
position 3: "BP_CATCHPOINT"^M
Error while executing Scheme code.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: test_catchpoints: \
create a catchpoint via the api
...
The same test passes on openSUSE Leap 15.2 with guile 2.0, where the second
line of the error message starts with the same prefix as the first:
...
ERROR: In procedure gdbscm_make_breakpoint: unsupported breakpoint type in \
position 3: "BP_CATCHPOINT"^M
...
I observe the same difference in many other tests, f.i.:
...
(gdb) gu (print (value-add i '()))^M
ERROR: In procedure value-add:^M
In procedure gdbscm_value_add: Wrong type argument in position 2: ()^M
Error while executing Scheme code.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.guile/scm-math.exp: catch error in guile type conversion
...
but it doesn't cause FAILs anywhere else.
Fix this by updating the regexp to make the "ERROR: " prefix optional.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with both guile 2.0 and 3.0.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-07 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: Make additional "ERROR: " prefix in
exception printing optional.
2021-07-08 Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
sim: erc32: use libsim.a for common objects
We're starting to move more objects to the common build that sis did
not need before, so linking them is causing problems (when common
objects end up needing symbols from non-common objects). Switch it
to the libsim.a archive which will allow the link to pull out only
what it needs.
2021-07-08 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-07 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Remove an accidental change to elfcode.h included as part of commit 6e0dfbf420.
PR 27659
* elfcode.h (elf_swap_symbol_out): Revert accidental change that
removed an abort if the shndx pointer is NULL.
2021-07-07 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Check archive only for archive member
Since plugin_maybe_claim calls bfd_close on the original input BFD if it
isn't an archive member, pass NULL to bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor
to indicate that the BFD isn't an archive member.
bfd/
PR ld/18028
* plugin.c (bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor): Check archive
only of abfd != NULL.
(try_claim): Pass NULL to bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor if
it isn't an archive member.
ld/
PR ld/18028
* plugin.c (plugin_input_file): Add comments for abfd and ibfd.
(plugin_object_p): Set input->ibfd to NULL if it isn't an
archive member.
2021-07-07 Andreas Krebbel <krebbel@linux.ibm.com>
Add changelog entries for last commit
2021-07-07 Andreas Krebbel <krebbel@linux.ibm.com>
IBM Z: Add another arch14 instruction
opcodes/
* opcodes/s390-opc.txt: Add qpaci.
gas/
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-arch14.d: Add qpaci.
* testsuite/gas/s390/zarch-arch14.s: Add qpaci.
2021-07-07 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
Fix Solaris gprof build with --disable-nls
gprof fails to compile on Solaris 10 and 11.3 with --disable-nls:
In file included from /vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/gprof.h:33,
from /vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/basic_blocks.c:24:
/usr/include/libintl.h:45:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'const'
45 | extern char *dcgettext(const char *, const char *, const int);
| ^~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/libintl.h:46:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'const'
46 | extern char *dgettext(const char *, const char *);
| ^~~~~~~~
/usr/include/libintl.h:47:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'const'
47 | extern char *gettext(const char *);
| ^~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/../bfd/sysdep.h:165:33:
error: expected identifier or '(' before 'do'
165 | # define textdomain(Domainname) do {} while (0)
| ^~
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/../bfd/sysdep.h:165:39:
error: expected identifier or '(' before 'while'
165 | # define textdomain(Domainname) do {} while (0)
| ^~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/../bfd/sysdep.h:166:46:
error: expected identifier or '(' before 'do'
166 | # define bindtextdomain(Domainname, Dirname) do {} while (0)
| ^~
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/gprof/../bfd/sysdep.h:166:52:
error: expected identifier or '(' before 'while'
166 | # define bindtextdomain(Domainname, Dirname) do {} while (0)
| ^~~~~
/usr/include/libintl.h:55:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'unsigned'
55 | extern char *dcngettext(const char *, const char *,
| ^~~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/libintl.h:57:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'unsigned'
57 | extern char *dngettext(const char *, const char *,
| ^~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/libintl.h:59:14: error: expected identifier or '(' before 'unsigned'
59 | extern char *ngettext(const char *, const char *, unsigned long int);
| ^~~~~~~~
This is a known issue already partially fixed in binutils/sysdep.h. For
gprof, the same fix needs to be applied in bfd/sysdep.h, as the
following patch does. Tested on i386-pc-solaris2.10 and
i386-pc-solaris2.11.
2021-07-06 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
bfd:
* sysdep.h [!ENABLE_NLS]: Prevent inclusion of <libintl.h> on
Solaris.
2021-07-07 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
Check for strnlen declaration to fix Solaris 10 build
binutils currently fails to compile on Solaris 10:
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/bfd/opncls.c: In function 'bfd_get_debug_link_info_1':
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/bfd/opncls.c:1231:16: error: implicit declaration of function 'strnlen' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
1231 | crc_offset = strnlen (name, size) + 1;
| ^~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/bfd/opncls.c:1231:16: error: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function 'strnlen' [-Werror]
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/bfd/opncls.c: In function 'bfd_get_alt_debug_link_info':
/vol/src/gnu/binutils/hg/binutils-2.37-branch/git/bfd/opncls.c:1319:20: error: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function 'strnlen' [-Werror]
1319 | buildid_offset = strnlen (name, size) + 1;
| ^~~~~~~
and in a couple of other places. The platform lacks strnlen, and while
libiberty.h can provide a fallback declaration, the necessary configure
test isn't run.
Fixed with the following patch. Tested on i386-pc-solaris2.10.
2021-07-06 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
bfd:
* configure.ac: Check for strnlen declaration.
* configure, config.in: Regenerate.
binutils:
* configure.ac: Check for strnlen declaration.
* configure, config.in: Regenerate.
2021-07-07 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Fix problems translating messages when a percentage sign appears at the end of a string.
PR 28051
gas * config/tc-i386.c (offset_in_range): Reformat error messages in
order to fix problems when translating.
(md_assemble): Likewise.
* messages.c (as_internal_value_out_of_range): Likewise.
* read.c (emit_expr_with_reloc): Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/all/overflow.l Change expected output format.
* po/gas.pot: Regenerate.
bfd * coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_reloc_type_tls): Reformat error messages in
order to fix problems when translating.
* cofflink.c (_bfd_coff_write_global_sym): Likewise.
* elfnn-aarch64.c (_bfd_aarch64_erratum_843419_branch_to_stub):
Likewise.
* po/bfd.pot: Regenerate.
2021-07-07 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: introduce iterator_range, remove next_adapter
I was always a bit confused by next_adapter, because it kind of mixes
the element type and the iterator type. In reality, it is not much more
than a class that wraps two iterators (begin and end). However, it
assumes that:
- you can construct the begin iterator by passing a pointer to the
first element of the iterable
- you can default-construct iterator to make the end iterator
I think that by generalizing it a little bit, we can re-use it at more
places.
Rename it to "iterator_range". I think it describes a bit better: it's
a range made by wrapping a begin and end iterator. Move it to its own
file, since it's not related to next_iterator anymore.
iterator_range has two constructors. The variadic one, where arguments
are forwarded to construct the underlying begin iterator. The end
iterator is constructed through default construction. This is a
generalization of what we have today.
There is another constructor which receives already constructed begin
and end iterators, useful if the end iterator can't be obtained by
default-construction. Or, if you wanted to make a range that does not
end at the end of the container, you could pass any iterator as the
"end".
This generalization allows removing some "range" classes, like
all_inferiors_range. These classes existed only to pass some arguments
when constructing the begin iterator. With iterator_range, those same
arguments are passed to the iterator_range constructed and then
forwarded to the constructed begin iterator.
There is a small functional difference in how iterator_range works
compared to next_adapter. next_adapter stored the pointer it received
as argument and constructeur an iterator in the `begin` method.
iterator_range constructs the begin iterator and stores it as a member.
Its `begin` method returns a copy of that iterator.
With just iterator_range, uses of next_adapter<foo> would be replaced
with:
using foo_iterator = next_iterator<foo>;
using foo_range = iterator_range<foo_iterator>;
However, I added a `next_range` wrapper as a direct replacement for
next_adapter<foo>. IMO, next_range is a slightly better name than
next_adapter.
The rest of the changes are applications of this new class.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* next-iterator.h (class next_adapter): Remove.
* iterator-range.h: New.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* breakpoint.h (bp_locations_range): Remove.
(bp_location_range): New.
(struct breakpoint) <locations>: Adjust type.
(breakpoint_range): Use iterator_range.
(tracepoint_range): Use iterator_range.
* breakpoint.c (breakpoint::locations): Adjust return type.
* gdb_bfd.h (gdb_bfd_section_range): Use iterator_range.
* gdbthread.h (all_threads_safe): Pass argument to
all_threads_safe_range.
* inferior-iter.h (all_inferiors_range): Use iterator_range.
(all_inferiors_safe_range): Use iterator_range.
(all_non_exited_inferiors_range): Use iterator_range.
* inferior.h (all_inferiors, all_non_exited_inferiors): Pass
inferior_list as argument.
* objfiles.h (struct objfile) <compunits_range>: Remove.
<compunits>: Return compunit_symtab_range.
* progspace.h (unwrapping_objfile_iterator)
<unwrapping_objfile_iterator>: Take parameter by value.
(unwrapping_objfile_range): Use iterator_range.
(struct program_space) <objfiles_range>: Define with "using".
<objfiles>: Adjust.
<objfiles_safe_range>: Define with "using".
<objfiles_safe>: Adjust.
<solibs>: Return so_list_range, define here.
* progspace.c (program_space::solibs): Remove.
* psymtab.h (class psymtab_storage) <partial_symtab_iterator>:
New.
<partial_symtab_range>: Use iterator_range.
* solist.h (so_list_range): New.
* symtab.h (compunit_symtab_range):
New.
(symtab_range): New.
(compunit_filetabs): Change to a function.
* thread-iter.h (inf_threads_range,
inf_non_exited_threads_range, safe_inf_threads_range,
all_threads_safe_range): Use iterator_range.
* top.h (ui_range): New.
(all_uis): Use ui_range.
Change-Id: Ib7a9d2a3547f45f01aa1c6b24536ba159db9b854
2021-07-06 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb/testsuite: restore configure script
Commit f99d1d37496f ("Remove gdb/testsuite/configure") removed
gdb/testsuite/configure, as anything gdb/testsuite/configure did could
be done by gdb/configure.
There is however one use case that popped up when this changed
propagated to downstream consumers, to run the testsuite on an already
built GDB. In the workflow of ROCm-GDB at AMD, a GDB package is built
in a CI job. This GDB package is then tested on different machines /
hardware configurations as part of other CI jobs. To achieve this,
those CI jobs only configure the testsuite directory and run "make
check" with an appropriate board file.
In light of this use case, the way I see it is that gdb/testsuite could
be considered its own project. It could be stored in a completely
different repo if we want to, it just happens to be stored inside gdb/.
Since the only downside of having gdb/testsuite/configure is that it
takes a few more seconds to run, but on the other hand it's quite useful
for some people, I propose re-adding it.
In a sense, this is revert of f99d1d37496f, but it's not a direct
git-revert, as some things have changed since.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove things that were moved from
testsuite/configure.ac.
* configure: Re-generate.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Restore.
* configure: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* Makefile.in (distclean): Add config.status.
(Makefile): Adjust paths.
(lib/pdtrace): Adjust paths.
(config.status): Add.
Change-Id: Ic38c79485e1835712d9c99649c9dfb59667254f1
2021-07-06 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Rename gdb/ChangeLog to gdb/ChangeLog-2021
Now that ChangeLog entries are no longer used for GDB patches,
this commit renames the file gdb/ChangeLog to gdb/ChangeLog-2021,
similar to what we would do in the context of the "Start of New
Year" procedure.
The purpose of this change is to avoid people merging ChangeLog
entries by mistake when applying existing commits that they are
currently working on.
2021-07-06 Dan Streetman <ddstreet@canonical.com>
sim: ppc: add missing empty targets
These are copied from sim/common/Make-common.in.
On ppc the build fails without at least the 'info' target, e.g.:
Making info in ppc
make[4]: Entering directory '/<<BUILDDIR>>/gdb-10.2.2974.g5b45e89f56d+21.10.20210510155809/build/default/sim/ppc'
make[4]: *** No rule to make target 'info'. Stop.
2021-07-06 Yuri Chornoivan <yurchor@ukr.net>
PR 28053: Fix spelling mistakes: usupported -> unsupported and relocatation -> relocation.
2021-07-06 Michael Matz <matz@suse.de>
elf/riscv: Fix relaxation with aliases [PR28021]
the fix for PR22756 only changed behaviour for hidden aliases,
but the same situation exists for non-hidden aliases: sym_hashes[]
can contain multiple entries pointing to the same symbol structure
leading to relaxation adjustment to be applied twice.
Fix this by testing for duplicates for everything that looks like it
has a version.
PR ld/28021
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_relax_delete_bytes): Check for any
versioning.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/relax-twice.ver: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/relax-twice-1.s: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/relax-twice-2.s: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp
(run_relax_twice_test): New, and call it.
2021-07-06 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Qingchuan Shi <qingchuan.shi@amd.com>
Update gdb performance testsuite to be compatible with Python 3.8
Running "make check-perf" on a system with Python 3.8 (e.g., Ubuntu
20.04) runs into this Python problem:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py", line 65, in run
self.execute_test()
File "<string>", line 35, in execute_test
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/measure.py", line 45, in measure
m.start(id)
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/measure.py", line 102, in start
self.start_time = time.clock()
AttributeError: module 'time' has no attribute 'clock'
Error while executing Python code.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.perf/single-step.exp: python SingleStep(1000).run()
... many times over.
The problem is that the testsuite is using time.clock(), deprecated in
Python 3.3 and finaly removed in Python 3.8. The guidelines say to
use time.perf_counter() or time.process_time() instead depending on
requirements. Looking at the current description of those functions,
at:
https://docs.python.org/3.10/library/time.html
we have:
time.perf_counter() -> float
Return the value (in fractional seconds) of a performance
counter, i.e. a clock with the highest available resolution to
measure a short duration. It does include time elapsed during
sleep and is system-wide. (...)
time.process_time() -> float
Return the value (in fractional seconds) of the sum of the
system and user CPU time of the current process. It does not
include time elapsed during sleep. It is process-wide by
definition. (...)
I'm thinking that it's just best to record both instead of picking
one. So this patch replaces the MeasurementCpuTime measurement class
with two new classes -- MeasurementPerfCounter and
MeasurementProcessTime. Correspondingly, this changes the reports in
testsuite/perftest.log -- we have two new "perf_counter" and
"process_time" measurements and the "cpu_time" measurement is gone. I
don't suppose breaking backward compatibility here is a big problem.
I suspect no one is really tracking long term performance using the
perf testsuite today. And if they are, it shouldn't be hard to adjust.
For backward compatility, with Python < 3.3, both perf_counter and
process_time use the old time.clock.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Qingchuan Shi <qingchuan.shi@amd.com>
Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py: Import sys.
(time.perf_counter, time.process_time): Map to time.clock on
Python < 3.3.
(MeasurementCpuTime): Delete, replaced by...
(MeasurementPerfCounter, MeasurementProcessTime): .. these two new
classes.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py: Import MeasurementPerfCounter
and MeasurementProcessTime instead of MeasurementCpuTime.
(TestCaseWithBasicMeasurements): Use MeasurementPerfCounter and
MeasurementProcessTime instead of MeasurementCpuTime.
Change-Id: Ia850c05d5ce57d2dada70ba5b0061f566444aa2b
2021-07-06 Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
gdb.perf/: FAIL on Python errors, avoid "ERROR: internal buffer is full"
Currently, if you run make check-perf on a system with Python 3.8,
tests seen to PASS, but they actually test a lot less than intended,
due to:
PerfTest::assemble, run ...
python BackTrace(64).run()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py", line 65, in run
self.execute_test()
File "<string>", line 49, in execute_test
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/measure.py", line 45, in measure
m.start(id)
File "/home/pedro/rocm/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.perf/lib/perftest/measure.py", line 102, in start
self.start_time = time.clock()
AttributeError: module 'time' has no attribute 'clock'
Error while executing Python code.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: python BackTrace(64).run()
And then, after fixing the above Python compatibility issues (which
will be a separate patch), I get 86 instances of overflowing expect's
buffer, like:
ERROR: internal buffer is full.
UNRESOLVED: gdb.perf/single-step.exp: python SingleStep(1000).run()
This patch fixes both problems by adding & using a gdb_test_python_run
routine that:
- checks for Python errors
- consumes output line by line
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/disassemble.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/single-step.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/skip-command.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/skip-prologue.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/solib.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* gdb.perf/template-breakpoints.exp: Use gdb_test_python_run.
* lib/perftest.exp (gdb_test_python_run): New.
Change-Id: I007af36f164b3f4cda41033616eaaa4e268dfd2f
2021-07-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Remove read1 timeout factor from gdb.base/info-macros.exp
At the moment some check-read1 timeouts are handled like this in
gdb.base/info-macros.exp:
...
gdb_test_multiple_with_read1_timeout_factor 10 "$test" $testname {
-re "$r1$r2$r3" {
pass $testname
}
-re ".*#define TWO.*\r\n$gdb_prompt" {
fail $testname
}
-re ".*#define THREE.*\r\n$gdb_prompt" {
fail $testname
}
-re ".*#define FOUR.*\r\n$gdb_prompt" {
fail $testname
}
}
...
which is not ideal.
We could use gdb_test_lines, but it currently doesn't support verifying
the absence of regexps, which is done using the clauses above calling fail.
Fix this by using gdb_test_lines and adding a -re-not syntax to
gdb_test_lines, such that we can do:
...
gdb_test_lines $test $testname $r1.*$r2 \
-re-not "#define TWO" \
-re-not "#define THREE" \
-re-not "#define FOUR"
...
Tested on x86_64-linux, whith make targets check and check-read1.
Also observed that check-read1 execution time is reduced from 6m35s to 13s.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/info-macros.exp: Replace use of
gdb_test_multiple_with_read1_timeout_factor with gdb_test_lines.
(gdb_test_multiple_with_read1_timeout_factor): Remove.
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_test_lines): Add handling or -re-not <regexp>.
2021-07-06 Nelson Chu <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Fix the build broken with -Werror.
ChangeLog:
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c(riscv_elf_additional_program_headers): Removed the
unused variable s.
(riscv_elf_modify_segment_map): Added ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED for the
unused parameter info.
2021-07-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/symtab] Fix skipping of import of C++ CU
Tom Tromey observed that when changing the language in
gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-bp.exp from c to c++, the test failed.
This is due to this code in process_imported_unit_die:
...
/* We're importing a C++ compilation unit with tag DW_TAG_compile_unit
into another compilation unit, at root level. Regard this as a hint,
and ignore it. */
if (die->parent && die->parent->parent == NULL
&& per_cu->unit_type == DW_UT_compile
&& per_cu->lang == language_cplus)
return;
...
which should have a partial symtabs counterpart.
Add the missing counterpart in process_psymtab_comp_unit.
Tested on x86_64-linux (openSUSE Leap 15.2), no regressions for config:
- using default gcc version 7.5.0
(with 5 unexpected FAILs)
- gcc 10.3.0 and target board
unix/-flto/-O0/-flto-partition=none/-ffat-lto-objects
(with 1000 unexpected FAILs)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-06 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* dwarf2/read.c (scan_partial_symbols): Skip top-level imports of
c++ CU.
* testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-bp.exp: Moved to ...
* testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-bp.exp.tcl: ... here.
* testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-bp-c++.exp: New test.
* testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit-bp-c.exp: New test.
* testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit.exp: Update.
2021-07-06 Kito Cheng <kito.cheng@sifive.com>
RISC-V: Add PT_RISCV_ATTRIBUTES and add it to PHDR.
We added PT_RISCV_ATTRIBUTES to program header to make
.riscv.attribute easier to find in dynamic loader or kernel.
Ref:
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/pull/71
ChangeLog:
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c(RISCV_ATTRIBUTES_SECTION_NAME): New.
(riscv_elf_additional_program_headers): Ditto.
(riscv_elf_modify_segment_map): Ditto.
(elf_backend_additional_program_headers): Ditto.
(elf_backend_modify_segment_map): Ditto.
(elf_backend_obj_attrs_section): Use RISCV_ATTRIBUTES_SECTION_NAME
rather than string literal.
binutils/
* readelf.c(get_riscv_segment_type): New.
(get_segment_type): Handle EM_RISCV.
include/
* elf/riscv.h (PT_RISCV_ATTRIBUTES): New.
* testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-region.ld: Discard .riscv.attributes
section for simplify testcase.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-phdr.d: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-phdr.s: Ditto.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Add attr-phdr to
testcase.
2021-07-06 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: PR28055, segfault in bpf special reloc function
PR 28055
* elf64-bpf.c (bpf_elf_generic_reloc): Add missing ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
2021-07-06 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Simplify debug_names index writing
This changes the .debug_names writer to find the TU indices in the
main loop over all CUs and TUs. (An earlier patch applied this same
treatment to the .gdb_index writer.)
Simplify gdb_index writing
write_gdbindex writes the CUs first, then walks the signatured type
hash table to write out the TUs. However, now that CUs and TUs are
unified in the DWARF reader, it's simpler to handle both of these in
the same loop.
Minor cleanup to addrmap_index_data::previous_valid
This changes addrmap_index_data::previous_valid to a bool, and
initializes it inline.
2021-07-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix oddity in write_gdbindex
My recent patch to unify CUs and TUs introduced an oddity in
write_gdbindex. Here, we pass 'i' to recursively_write_psymbols, but
we must instead pass 'counter', to handle the situation where a TU is
mixed in with the CUs.
I am not sure a test case for this is possible. I think it can only
happen when using DWARF 5, where a TU appears in .debug_info.
However, this situation is already not handled correctly by
.gdb_index. I filed a bug about this.
2021-07-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix warning in symtab.c
The compiler gives this warning when building symtab.c:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/symtab.c:4247:28: warning: 'to_match' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
This patch fixes the warning by adding a gdb_assert_not_reached.
2021-07-05 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
ld: Cache and reuse the IR archive file descriptor
Linker plugin_object_p opens the IR archive for each IR archive member.
For GCC plugin, plugin_object_p closes the archive file descriptor. But
for LLVM plugin, the archive file descriptor remains open. If there are
3000 IR archive members, there are 3000 file descriptors for them. We
can run out of file descriptors petty easily.
1. Add archive_plugin_fd and archive_plugin_fd_open_count to bfd so that
we can cache and reuse the IR archive file descriptor for all IR archive
members in the archive.
2. Add bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor to properly close the IR archive
file descriptor.
bfd/
PR ld/28040
* archive.c (_bfd_archive_close_and_cleanup): Close the archive
plugin file descriptor if needed.
* bfd.c (bfd): Add archive_plugin_fd and
archive_plugin_fd_open_count.
* opncls.c (_bfd_new_bfd): Initialize to -1.
* plugin.c (bfd_plugin_open_input): Cache and reuse the archive
plugin file descriptor.
(bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor): New function.
(try_claim): Call bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor.
* plugin.h (bfd_plugin_close_file_descriptor): New.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerated.
ld/
PR ld/28040
* plugin.c (plugin_input_file): Add ibfd.
(release_plugin_file_descriptor): New function.
(release_input_file): Call release_plugin_file_descriptor to
close input->fd.
(plugin_object_p): Call release_plugin_file_descriptor to close
input->fd. Also call release_plugin_file_descriptor if not
claimed.
* testsuite/config/default.exp (RANLIB): New.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Run ranlib test.
2021-07-05 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
Restore the libiberty component of commit 50ad1254d5030d0804cbf89c758359ae202e8d55.
This commit has not yet been applied to the master sources in the gcc repository.
It was submitted here: https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2021-July/574405.html
The commit allows options to be set for the AR and RANLIB programs used when building libiberty, which in turn allows building with LTO enabled.
Updated translations (mainly Ukranian and French) triggered by creation of 2.37 branch.
2021-07-05 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
[gdb/testsuite] Fix fail in gdb.fortran/ptype-on-functions.exp with gcc-7
Since commit 05b85772061 "gdb/fortran: Add type info of formal parameter for
clang" I see:
...
(gdb) ptype say_string^M
type = void (character*(*), integer(kind=4))^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.fortran/ptype-on-functions.exp: ptype say_string
...
The part of the commit causing the fail is:
...
gdb_test "ptype say_string" \
- "type = void \\(character\\*\\(\\*\\), integer\\(kind=\\d+\\)\\)"
+ "type = void \\(character\[^,\]+, $integer8\\)"
...
which fails to take into account that for gcc-7 and before, the type for
string length of a string argument is int, not size_t.
Fix this by allowing both $integer8 and $integer4.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc-7 and gcc-10.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2021-07-05 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.fortran/ptype-on-functions.exp: Allow both $integer8 and
$integer4 for size of string length.
2021-07-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: fall back on sigpending + sigwait if sigtimedwait is not available
The macOS platform does not provide sigtimedwait, so we get:
CXX compile/compile.o
In file included from /Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/compile/compile.c:46:
/Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/scoped_ignore_signal.h:69:4: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sigtimedwait'
sigtimedwait (&set, nullptr, &zero_timeout);
^
An alternative to sigtimedwait with a timeout of 0 is to use sigpending,
to first check which signals are pending, and then sigwait, to consume
them. Since that's slightly more expensive (2 syscalls instead of 1),
keep using sigtimedwait for the platforms that provide it, and fall back
to sigpending + sigwait for the others.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* scoped_ignore_signal.h (struct scoped_ignore_signal)
<~scoped_ignore_signal>: Use sigtimedwait if HAVE_SIGTIMEDWAIT
is defined, else use sigpending + sigwait.
Change-Id: I2a72798337e81dd1bbd21214736a139dd350af87
Co-Authored-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
2021-07-05 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdbsupport/common.m4: check for sigtimedwait
The next patch will make the use of sigtimedwait conditional to whether
the platform provides it. Start by adding a configure check for it.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for sigtimedwait.
* config.in, configure: Re-generate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* config.in, configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* config.in, configure: Re-generate.
Change-Id: Ic7613fe14521b966b4d991bbcd0933ab14629c05
2021-07-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Re: opcodes: constify & local meps macros
Commit f375d32b35ce changed a generated file. Edit the source instead.
* mep.opc (macros): Make static and const.
(lookup_macro): Return and use const pointer.
(expand_macro): Make mac param const.
(expand_string): Make pmacro const.
2021-07-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28055, segfault in bpf special reloc function
The testcase in this PR tickled two bugs fixed here. output_bfd is
NULL when a reloc special_function is called for final linking and
when called from bfd_generic_get_relocated_section_contents. Clearly
using output_bfd is wrong as it results in segfaults. Not only that,
the endianness of the reloc field really should be that of the input.
The second bug was not checking that the entire reloc field was
contained in the section contents.
PR 28055
* elf64-bpf.c (bpf_elf_generic_reloc): Use correct bfd for bfd_put
and bfd_put_32 calls. Correct section limit checks.
2021-07-05 Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
PR28047, readelf crash due to assertion failure
DW_FORM_ref1, DW_FORM_ref2, DW_FORM_ref4, DW_FORM_ref1, and
DW_FORM_ref_udata are all supposed to be within the containing unit.
PR 28047
* dwarf.c (get_type_abbrev_from_form): Add cu_end parameter.
Check DW_FORM_ref1 etc. arg against cu_end rather than end of
section. Adjust all callers.
2021-07-05 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-04 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
gdb: return early if no execution in darwin_solib_create_inferior_hook
When loading a file using the file command on macOS, we get:
$ ./gdb -nx --data-directory=data-directory -q -ex "file ./test"
Reading symbols from ./test...
Reading symbols from /Users/smarchi/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/test.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/test...
/Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:72: internal-error: struct thread_info *inferior_thread(): Assertion `current_thread_ != nullptr' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
The backtrace is:
* frame #0: 0x0000000101fcb826 gdb`internal_error(file="/Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c", line=72, fmt="%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at errors.cc:52:3
frame #1: 0x00000001018a2584 gdb`inferior_thread() at thread.c:72:3
frame #2: 0x0000000101469c09 gdb`get_current_regcache() at regcache.c:421:31
frame #3: 0x00000001015f9812 gdb`darwin_solib_get_all_image_info_addr_at_init(info=0x0000603000006d00) at solib-darwin.c:464:34
frame #4: 0x00000001015f7a04 gdb`darwin_solib_create_inferior_hook(from_tty=1) at solib-darwin.c:515:5
frame #5: 0x000000010161205e gdb`solib_create_inferior_hook(from_tty=1) at solib.c:1200:3
frame #6: 0x00000001016d8f76 gdb`symbol_file_command(args="./test", from_tty=1) at symfile.c:1650:7
frame #7: 0x0000000100abab17 gdb`file_command(arg="./test", from_tty=1) at exec.c:555:3
frame #8: 0x00000001004dc799 gdb`do_const_cfunc(c=0x000061100000c340, args="./test", from_tty=1) at cli-decode.c:102:3
frame #9: 0x00000001004ea042 gdb`cmd_func(cmd=0x000061100000c340, args="./test", from_tty=1) at cli-decode.c:2160:7
frame #10: 0x00000001018d4f59 gdb`execute_command(p="t", from_tty=1) at top.c:674:2
frame #11: 0x0000000100eee430 gdb`catch_command_errors(command=(gdb`execute_command(char const*, int) at top.c:561), arg="file ./test", from_tty=1, do_bp_actions=true)(char const*, int), char const*, int, bool) at main.c:523:7
frame #12: 0x0000000100eee902 gdb`execute_cmdargs(cmdarg_vec=0x00007ffeefbfeba0 size=1, file_type=CMDARG_FILE, cmd_type=CMDARG_COMMAND, ret=0x00007ffeefbfec20) at main.c:618:9
frame #13: 0x0000000100eed3a4 gdb`captured_main_1(context=0x00007ffeefbff780) at main.c:1322:3
frame #14: 0x0000000100ee810d gdb`captured_main(data=0x00007ffeefbff780) at main.c:1343:3
frame #15: 0x0000000100ee8025 gdb`gdb_main(args=0x00007ffeefbff780) at main.c:1368:7
frame #16: 0x00000001000044f1 gdb`main(argc=6, argv=0x00007ffeefbff8a0) at gdb.c:32:10
frame #17: 0x00007fff20558f5d libdyld.dylib`start + 1
The solib_create_inferior_hook call in symbol_file_command was added by
commit ea142fbfc9c1 ("Fix breakpoints on file reloads for PIE
binaries"). It causes solib_create_inferior_hook to be called while
the inferior is not running, which darwin_solib_create_inferior_hook
does not expect. darwin_solib_get_all_image_info_addr_at_init, in
particular, assumes that there is a current thread, as it tries to get
the current thread's regcache.
Fix it by adding a target_has_execution check and returning early. Note
that there is a similar check in svr4_solib_create_inferior_hook.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* solib-darwin.c (darwin_solib_create_inferior_hook): Return
early if no execution.
Change-Id: Ia11dd983a1e29786e5ce663d0fcaa6846dc611bb
2021-07-04 GDB Administrator <gdbadmin@sourceware.org>
Automatic date update in version.in
2021-07-03 H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
gprof: Regenerate configure
* configure: Regenerated.
2021-07-03 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Update NEWS post GDB 11 branch creation.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Create a new section for the next release branch.
Rename the section of the current branch, now that it has
been cut.
2021-07-03 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Bump version to 12.0.50.DATE-git.
Now that the GDB 11 branch has been created, we can
bump the version number.
gdb/ChangeLog:
GDB 11 branch created (4b51505e33441c6165e7789fa2b6d21930242927):
* version.in: Bump version to 12.0.50.DATE-git.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/default.exp: Change $_gdb_major to 12.
2021-07-03 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Use 'bool' more idiomatically in dwarf_decode_lines
I noticed a couple of spots related to dwarf_decode_lines where the
'include_p' field was not being used idiomatically -- it is of type
bool now, so treat it as such.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-07-03 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* dwarf2/read.c (lnp_state_machine::record_line): Use 'true'.
(dwarf_decode_lines): Remove '=='.
2021-07-03 Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com>
More minor updates to the how-to-make-a-release documentation
Update version number and regenerate files
Add markers for 2.37 branch
Synchronize libiberty sources (and include/demangle.h) with GCC master version