binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-crisv32-low.cc

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/* GNU/Linux/CRIS specific low level interface, for the remote server for GDB.
Copyright (C) 1995-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
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 "server.h"
#include "linux-low.h"
#include "nat/gdb_ptrace.h"
gdb/ChangeLog: * regformats/regdat.sh: Rename init_registers function in generated file to init_registers_${name}. * regformats/reg-crisv32.dat: Set "name" to crisv32. * regformats/reg-ppc64.dat: Set "name" to ppc64. * regformats/reg-s390x.dat: Set "name" to s390x. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * server.h (init_registers): Remove prototype. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Add arch_setup field. * linux-low.c (initialize_low): Call the_low_target.arch_setup () instead of init_registers (). * linux-arm-low.c (init_registers_arm): Add prototype. (init_registers_arm_with_iwmmxt): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-cris-low.c (init_registers_cris): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-crisv32-low.c (init_registers_crisv32): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-i386-low.c (init_registers_i386_linux): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ia64-low.c (init_registers_ia64): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-m32r-low.c (init_registers_m32r): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-m68k-low.c (init_registers_m68k): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-mips-low.c (init_registers_mips_linux): Add prototype. (init_registers_mips64_linux): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ppc-low.c (init_registers_ppc): Add prototype. (init_registers_powerpc_32, init_registers_powerpc_e500): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ppc64-low.c (init_registers_ppc64): Add prototype. (init_registers_powerpc_64): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-s390-low.c (init_registers_s390): Add prototype. (init_registers_s390x): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-sh-low.c (init_registers_sh): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-x86-64-low.c (init_registers_x86_64_linux): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-xtensa-low.c (init_registers_xtensa): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): Add arch_setup field. * win32-low.c (initialize_low): Call the_low_target.arch_setup () instead of init_registers (). * win32-arm-low.c (init_registers_arm): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * win32-i386-low.c (init_registers_i386): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * spu-low.c (init_registers_spu): Add prototype. (initialize_low): Call initialie_registers_spu () instead of initialize_registers ().
2008-02-27 04:27:40 +01:00
/* Defined in auto-generated file reg-crisv32.c. */
void init_registers_crisv32 (void);
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
extern const struct target_desc *tdesc_crisv32;
gdb/ChangeLog: * regformats/regdat.sh: Rename init_registers function in generated file to init_registers_${name}. * regformats/reg-crisv32.dat: Set "name" to crisv32. * regformats/reg-ppc64.dat: Set "name" to ppc64. * regformats/reg-s390x.dat: Set "name" to s390x. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * server.h (init_registers): Remove prototype. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Add arch_setup field. * linux-low.c (initialize_low): Call the_low_target.arch_setup () instead of init_registers (). * linux-arm-low.c (init_registers_arm): Add prototype. (init_registers_arm_with_iwmmxt): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-cris-low.c (init_registers_cris): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-crisv32-low.c (init_registers_crisv32): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-i386-low.c (init_registers_i386_linux): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ia64-low.c (init_registers_ia64): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-m32r-low.c (init_registers_m32r): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-m68k-low.c (init_registers_m68k): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-mips-low.c (init_registers_mips_linux): Add prototype. (init_registers_mips64_linux): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ppc-low.c (init_registers_ppc): Add prototype. (init_registers_powerpc_32, init_registers_powerpc_e500): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-ppc64-low.c (init_registers_ppc64): Add prototype. (init_registers_powerpc_64): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-s390-low.c (init_registers_s390): Add prototype. (init_registers_s390x): Likewise. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-sh-low.c (init_registers_sh): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-x86-64-low.c (init_registers_x86_64_linux): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * linux-xtensa-low.c (init_registers_xtensa): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): Add arch_setup field. * win32-low.c (initialize_low): Call the_low_target.arch_setup () instead of init_registers (). * win32-arm-low.c (init_registers_arm): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * win32-i386-low.c (init_registers_i386): Add prototype. (the_low_target): Add initializer for arch_setup field. * spu-low.c (init_registers_spu): Add prototype. (initialize_low): Call initialie_registers_spu () instead of initialize_registers ().
2008-02-27 04:27:40 +01:00
/* CRISv32 */
#define cris_num_regs 49
#ifndef PTRACE_GET_THREAD_AREA
#define PTRACE_GET_THREAD_AREA 25
#endif
/* Note: Ignoring USP (having the stack pointer in two locations causes trouble
without any significant gain). */
/* Locations need to match <include/asm/arch/ptrace.h>. */
static int cris_regmap[] = {
1*4, 2*4, 3*4, 4*4,
5*4, 6*4, 7*4, 8*4,
9*4, 10*4, 11*4, 12*4,
13*4, 14*4, 24*4, 15*4,
-1, -1, -1, 16*4,
-1, 22*4, 23*4, 17*4,
-1, -1, 21*4, 20*4,
-1, 19*4, -1, 18*4,
25*4,
26*4, -1, -1, 29*4,
30*4, 31*4, 32*4, 33*4,
34*4, 35*4, 36*4, 37*4,
38*4, 39*4, 40*4, -1
};
static const unsigned short cris_breakpoint = 0xe938;
#define cris_breakpoint_len 2
Add the target_ops needed for software breakpoints in GDBServer. This patch is in preparation for software breakpoints on ARM linux. It refactors breakpoint and breakpoint_len into breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from kind to prepare the case where we have multiple types of breakpoints. Kind is the type of breakpoint (hardware or software) to be inserted, usually it is the lenght of the software breakpoint but can be something else depending on the target. This patch introduces the linux_target_ops breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind. breakpoint_kind_from_pc returns the breakpoint kind and adjusts the PC to the real memory location in case a flag was present in the PC. E.g the instruction mode on ARM. sw_breakpoint_from_kind returns the software breakpoint for this kind as a string of bytes, the length of the breakpoint is adjusted for the breakpoint's size in memory. For targets that have only one kind of breakpoint, the default value 0 is returned by linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc so that not all targets need to implement the breakpoint_kind_from_pc operation. No regressions, tested on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86 With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Also since the target_ops have been changed compilation was tested on affected archs namely : aarch64, arm, bfin, cris, crisv32, m32r, m68k, mips, nios2, ppc, s390, sparc, tic6x, tile, x86, steins. Not tested : sh gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_breakpoint_kind_from_pc): New function. (arm_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-low.c (linux_wait_1): Call breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind to increment the pc. (linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc): New function. (linux_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. (initialize_low): Call breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind to replace breakpoint_data/len. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Likewise. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-nios2-low.c (nios2_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_sw_breakpoint_from_kind) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field.
2015-10-21 17:17:26 +02:00
/* Implementation of linux_target_ops method "sw_breakpoint_from_kind". */
static const gdb_byte *
cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind (int kind, int *size)
{
*size = cris_breakpoint_len;
return (const gdb_byte *) &cris_breakpoint;
}
static int
cris_breakpoint_at (CORE_ADDR where)
{
unsigned short insn;
* acconfig.h: Remove. * configure.ac: Add a test for socklen_t. Use three-argument AC_DEFINE throughout. * config.in: Regenerated using autoheader 2.59. * configure: Regenerated. * gdbreplay.c (socklen_t): Provide a default. (remote_open): Use socklen_t. * remote-utils.c (socklen_t): Provide a default. (remote_open): Use socklen_t. (convert_int_to_ascii, convert_ascii_to_int, decode_M_packet): Use unsigned char. * i387-fp.c (struct i387_fsave, struct i387_fxsave): Use unsigned char for buffers. * linux-low.c (linux_read_memory, linux_write_memory) (linux_read_auxv): Likewise. * mem-break.c (breakpoint_data, set_breakpoint_data, check_mem_read) (check_mem_write): Likewise. * mem-break.h (set_breakpoint_data, check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Likewise. * regcache.c (struct inferior_rgcache_data, registers_to_string) (registers_from_string, register_data): Likewise. * server.c (handle_query, main): Likewise. * server.h (convert_ascii_to_int, convert_int_to_ascii) (decode_M_packet): Likewise. * target.c (read_inferior_memory, write_inferior_memory): Likewise. * target.h (struct target_ops): Update read_memory, write_memory, and read_auxv. (read_inferior_memory, write_inferior_memory): Update. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Change type of breakpoint to unsigned char *. * linux-arm-low.c, linux-cris-low.c, linux-crisv32-low.c, linux-i386-low.c, linux-m32r-low.c, linux-m68k-low.c, linux-mips-low.c, linux-ppc-low.c, linux-ppc64-low.c, linux-s390-low.c, linux-sh-low.c: Update for changes in read_inferior_memory and the_low_target->breakpoint.
2005-06-13 03:59:22 +02:00
(*the_target->read_memory) (where, (unsigned char *) &insn,
cris_breakpoint_len);
if (insn == cris_breakpoint)
return 1;
/* If necessary, recognize more trap instructions here. GDB only uses the
one. */
return 0;
}
static void
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
cris_write_data_breakpoint (struct regcache *regcache,
int bp, unsigned long start, unsigned long end)
{
switch (bp)
{
case 0:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s3", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s4", &end);
break;
case 1:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s5", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s6", &end);
break;
case 2:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s7", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s8", &end);
break;
case 3:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s9", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s10", &end);
break;
case 4:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s11", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s12", &end);
break;
case 5:
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s13", &start);
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s14", &end);
break;
}
}
static int
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
cris_supports_z_point_type (char z_type)
{
switch (z_type)
{
case Z_PACKET_WRITE_WP:
case Z_PACKET_READ_WP:
case Z_PACKET_ACCESS_WP:
return 1;
default:
return 0;
}
}
static int
cris_insert_point (enum raw_bkpt_type type, CORE_ADDR addr,
int len, struct raw_breakpoint *bp)
{
int bp;
unsigned long bp_ctrl;
unsigned long start, end;
unsigned long ccs;
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
struct regcache *regcache;
Rename current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver GDB has a function named "current_inferior" and gdbserver has a global variable named "current_inferior", but the two are not equivalent; indeed, gdbserver does not have any real equivalent of what GDB calls an inferior. What gdbserver's "current_inferior" is actually pointing to is a structure describing the current thread. This commit renames current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver to clarify this. It also renames the function "set_desired_inferior" to "set_desired_thread" and renames various local variables from foo_inferior to foo_thread. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * inferiors.h (current_inferior): Renamed as... (current_thread): New variable. All uses updated. * linux-low.c (get_pc): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (maybe_move_out_of_jump_pad): Likewise. (cancel_breakpoint): Likewise. (linux_low_filter_event): Likewise. (wait_for_sigstop): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Likewise. (need_step_over_p): Likewise. (start_step_over): Likewise. (linux_stabilize_threads): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Likewise. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Renamed reg_inferior as reg_thread and save_inferior as saved_thread. * regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (prepare_resume_reply): Likewise. * thread-db.c (thread_db_get_tls_address): Likewise. (disable_thread_event_reporting): Likewise. (remove_thread_event_breakpoints): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (gdb_agent_about_to_close): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * target.h (set_desired_inferior): Renamed as... (set_desired_thread): New declaration. All uses updated. * server.c (myresume): Updated comment to reference thread instead of inferior. (handle_serial_event): Likewise. (handle_target_event): Likewise.
2014-09-10 11:37:11 +02:00
regcache = get_thread_regcache (current_thread, 1);
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
/* Read watchpoints are set as access watchpoints, because of GDB's
inability to deal with pure read watchpoints. */
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
if (type == raw_bkpt_type_read_wp)
type = raw_bkpt_type_access_wp;
/* Get the configuration register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s0", &bp_ctrl);
/* The watchpoint allocation scheme is the simplest possible.
For example, if a region is watched for read and
a write watch is requested, a new watchpoint will
be used. Also, if a watch for a region that is already
covered by one or more existing watchpoints, a new
watchpoint will be used. */
/* First, find a free data watchpoint. */
for (bp = 0; bp < 6; bp++)
{
/* Each data watchpoint's control registers occupy 2 bits
(hence the 3), starting at bit 2 for D0 (hence the 2)
with 4 bits between for each watchpoint (yes, the 4). */
if (!(bp_ctrl & (0x3 << (2 + (bp * 4)))))
break;
}
if (bp > 5)
{
/* We're out of watchpoints. */
return -1;
}
/* Configure the control register first. */
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
if (type == raw_bkpt_type_read_wp || type == raw_bkpt_type_access_wp)
{
/* Trigger on read. */
bp_ctrl |= (1 << (2 + bp * 4));
}
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
if (type == raw_bkpt_type_write_wp || type == raw_bkpt_type_access_wp)
{
/* Trigger on write. */
bp_ctrl |= (2 << (2 + bp * 4));
}
/* Setup the configuration register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s0", &bp_ctrl);
/* Setup the range. */
start = addr;
end = addr + len - 1;
/* Configure the watchpoint register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
cris_write_data_breakpoint (regcache, bp, start, end);
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "ccs", &ccs);
/* Set the S1 flag to enable watchpoints. */
ccs |= (1 << 19);
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "ccs", &ccs);
return 0;
}
static int
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
cris_remove_point (enum raw_bkpt_type type, CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
struct raw_breakpoint *bp)
{
int bp;
unsigned long bp_ctrl;
unsigned long start, end;
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
struct regcache *regcache;
unsigned long bp_d_regs[12];
Rename current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver GDB has a function named "current_inferior" and gdbserver has a global variable named "current_inferior", but the two are not equivalent; indeed, gdbserver does not have any real equivalent of what GDB calls an inferior. What gdbserver's "current_inferior" is actually pointing to is a structure describing the current thread. This commit renames current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver to clarify this. It also renames the function "set_desired_inferior" to "set_desired_thread" and renames various local variables from foo_inferior to foo_thread. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * inferiors.h (current_inferior): Renamed as... (current_thread): New variable. All uses updated. * linux-low.c (get_pc): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (maybe_move_out_of_jump_pad): Likewise. (cancel_breakpoint): Likewise. (linux_low_filter_event): Likewise. (wait_for_sigstop): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Likewise. (need_step_over_p): Likewise. (start_step_over): Likewise. (linux_stabilize_threads): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Likewise. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Renamed reg_inferior as reg_thread and save_inferior as saved_thread. * regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (prepare_resume_reply): Likewise. * thread-db.c (thread_db_get_tls_address): Likewise. (disable_thread_event_reporting): Likewise. (remove_thread_event_breakpoints): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (gdb_agent_about_to_close): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * target.h (set_desired_inferior): Renamed as... (set_desired_thread): New declaration. All uses updated. * server.c (myresume): Updated comment to reference thread instead of inferior. (handle_serial_event): Likewise. (handle_target_event): Likewise.
2014-09-10 11:37:11 +02:00
regcache = get_thread_regcache (current_thread, 1);
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
/* Read watchpoints are set as access watchpoints, because of GDB's
inability to deal with pure read watchpoints. */
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
if (type == raw_bkpt_type_read_wp)
type = raw_bkpt_type_access_wp;
/* Get the configuration register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s0", &bp_ctrl);
/* Try to find a watchpoint that is configured for the
specified range, then check that read/write also matches. */
/* Ugly pointer arithmetic, since I cannot rely on a
single switch (addr) as there may be several watchpoints with
the same start address for example. */
/* Get all range registers to simplify search. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s3", &bp_d_regs[0]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s4", &bp_d_regs[1]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s5", &bp_d_regs[2]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s6", &bp_d_regs[3]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s7", &bp_d_regs[4]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s8", &bp_d_regs[5]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s9", &bp_d_regs[6]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s10", &bp_d_regs[7]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s11", &bp_d_regs[8]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s12", &bp_d_regs[9]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s13", &bp_d_regs[10]);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "s14", &bp_d_regs[11]);
for (bp = 0; bp < 6; bp++)
{
if (bp_d_regs[bp * 2] == addr
&& bp_d_regs[bp * 2 + 1] == (addr + len - 1)) {
/* Matching range. */
int bitpos = 2 + bp * 4;
int rw_bits;
/* Read/write bits for this BP. */
rw_bits = (bp_ctrl & (0x3 << bitpos)) >> bitpos;
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
if ((type == raw_bkpt_type_read_wp && rw_bits == 0x1)
|| (type == raw_bkpt_type_write_wp && rw_bits == 0x2)
|| (type == raw_bkpt_type_access_wp && rw_bits == 0x3))
{
/* Read/write matched. */
break;
}
}
}
if (bp > 5)
{
/* No watchpoint matched. */
return -1;
}
/* Found a matching watchpoint. Now, deconfigure it by
both disabling read/write in bp_ctrl and zeroing its
start/end addresses. */
bp_ctrl &= ~(3 << (2 + (bp * 4)));
/* Setup the configuration register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
supply_register_by_name (regcache, "s0", &bp_ctrl);
start = end = 0;
/* Configure the watchpoint register. */
* regcache.h (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (struct regcache): New. (new_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (get_thread_regcache): Declare. (free_register_cache): Adjust prototype. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Ditto. (supply_register, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * regcache.c (struct inferior_regcache_data): Delete. (get_regcache): Rename to ... (get_thread_regcache): ... this. Adjust. Switch inferior before fetching registers. (regcache_invalidate_one): Adjust. (regcache_invalidate): Fix prototype. (new_register_cache): Return the new register cache. (free_register_cache): Change prototype. (realloc_register_cache): Adjust. (registers_to_string): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (registers_from_string): Ditto. (register_data): Ditto. (supply_register): Ditto. (supply_register_by_name): Ditto. (collect_register): Ditto. (collect_register_as_string): Ditto. (collect_register_by_name): Ditto. * server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust. * linux-low.h (regset_fill_func, regset_store_func): Change prototype. (get_pc, set_pc, collect_ptrace_register, supply_ptrace_register): Change prototype. * linux-low.c (get_stop_pc): Adjust. (check_removed_breakpoint): Adjust. (linux_wait_for_event): Adjust. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust. (fetch_register): Add regcache parameter. Adjust. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Ditto. (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Ditto. (linux_fetch_registers, linux_store_registers): Ditto. * i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_fsave): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (i387_fsave_to_cache, i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * i387-fp.h (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Change prototype to take a regcache. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache): Ditto. * remote-utils.c (convert_ascii_to_int, outreg) (prepare_resume_reply): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * target.h (struct target_ops) <fetch_registers, store_registers>: Change prototype to take a regcache. (fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Adjust. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset) (x86_fill_fpregset, x86_store_fpregset, x86_fill_fpxregset) (x86_store_fpxregset, x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_fill_gregset, arm_store_gregset) (arm_fill_wmmxregset, arm_store_wmmxregset, arm_fill_vfpregset) (arm_store_vfpregset, arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): (arm_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc) (cris_cannot_fetch_register): (cris_breakpoint_at): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc, cris_reinsert_addr, cris_write_data_breakpoint): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (cris_breakpoint_at, cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_fill_gregset, m68k_store_gregset) (m68k_fill_fpregset, m68k_store_fpregset, m68k_get_pc, (m68k_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_get_pc): (mips_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_reinsert_addr): Adjust. (mips_collect_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (mips_supply_register): (mips_collect_register_32bit, mips_supply_register_32bit) (mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset, mips_fill_fpregset) (mips_store_fpregset): Ditto. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, ppc_supply_ptrace_register): Ditto. (parse_spufs_run): Adjust. (ppc_get_pc, ppc_set_pc, ppc_fill_gregset, ppc_fill_vsxregset) (ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset, ppc_store_vrregset) (ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register) (s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_fill_gregset, s390_get_pc) (s390_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_breakpoint_at) (sh_fill_gregset): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack) (sparc_fill_gregset, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack) (sparc_store_gregset, sparc_get_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (sparc_breakpoint_at): Adjust. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_fill_gregset): (xtensa_store_gregset): (xtensa_fill_xtregset, xtensa_store_xtregset, xtensa_get_pc) (xtensa_set_pc): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-arm-low.c (arm_fetch_inferior_register) (arm_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_fetch_inferior_register) (i386_store_inferior_register): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. * win32-low.c (child_fetch_inferior_registers) (child_store_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_wait): Adjust. (win32_fetch_inferior_registers): Change prototype to take a regcache. Adjust. (win32_store_inferior_registers): Adjust. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <fetch_inferior_register, store_inferior_register>: Change prototype to take a regcache.
2010-01-20 23:55:38 +01:00
cris_write_data_breakpoint (regcache, bp, start, end);
/* Note that we don't clear the S1 flag here. It's done when continuing. */
return 0;
}
static int
cris_stopped_by_watchpoint (void)
{
unsigned long exs;
Rename current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver GDB has a function named "current_inferior" and gdbserver has a global variable named "current_inferior", but the two are not equivalent; indeed, gdbserver does not have any real equivalent of what GDB calls an inferior. What gdbserver's "current_inferior" is actually pointing to is a structure describing the current thread. This commit renames current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver to clarify this. It also renames the function "set_desired_inferior" to "set_desired_thread" and renames various local variables from foo_inferior to foo_thread. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * inferiors.h (current_inferior): Renamed as... (current_thread): New variable. All uses updated. * linux-low.c (get_pc): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (maybe_move_out_of_jump_pad): Likewise. (cancel_breakpoint): Likewise. (linux_low_filter_event): Likewise. (wait_for_sigstop): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Likewise. (need_step_over_p): Likewise. (start_step_over): Likewise. (linux_stabilize_threads): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Likewise. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Renamed reg_inferior as reg_thread and save_inferior as saved_thread. * regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (prepare_resume_reply): Likewise. * thread-db.c (thread_db_get_tls_address): Likewise. (disable_thread_event_reporting): Likewise. (remove_thread_event_breakpoints): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (gdb_agent_about_to_close): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * target.h (set_desired_inferior): Renamed as... (set_desired_thread): New declaration. All uses updated. * server.c (myresume): Updated comment to reference thread instead of inferior. (handle_serial_event): Likewise. (handle_target_event): Likewise.
2014-09-10 11:37:11 +02:00
struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (current_thread, 1);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "exs", &exs);
return (((exs & 0xff00) >> 8) == 0xc);
}
static CORE_ADDR
cris_stopped_data_address (void)
{
unsigned long eda;
Rename current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver GDB has a function named "current_inferior" and gdbserver has a global variable named "current_inferior", but the two are not equivalent; indeed, gdbserver does not have any real equivalent of what GDB calls an inferior. What gdbserver's "current_inferior" is actually pointing to is a structure describing the current thread. This commit renames current_inferior as current_thread in gdbserver to clarify this. It also renames the function "set_desired_inferior" to "set_desired_thread" and renames various local variables from foo_inferior to foo_thread. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * inferiors.h (current_inferior): Renamed as... (current_thread): New variable. All uses updated. * linux-low.c (get_pc): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (maybe_move_out_of_jump_pad): Likewise. (cancel_breakpoint): Likewise. (linux_low_filter_event): Likewise. (wait_for_sigstop): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Likewise. (need_step_over_p): Likewise. (start_step_over): Likewise. (linux_stabilize_threads): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Likewise. * proc-service.c (ps_lgetregs): Renamed reg_inferior as reg_thread and save_inferior as saved_thread. * regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Renamed saved_inferior as saved_thread. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (prepare_resume_reply): Likewise. * thread-db.c (thread_db_get_tls_address): Likewise. (disable_thread_event_reporting): Likewise. (remove_thread_event_breakpoints): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (gdb_agent_about_to_close): Renamed save_inferior as saved_thread. * target.h (set_desired_inferior): Renamed as... (set_desired_thread): New declaration. All uses updated. * server.c (myresume): Updated comment to reference thread instead of inferior. (handle_serial_event): Likewise. (handle_target_event): Likewise.
2014-09-10 11:37:11 +02:00
struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (current_thread, 1);
collect_register_by_name (regcache, "eda", &eda);
/* FIXME: Possibly adjust to match watched range. */
return eda;
}
ps_err_e
Sync proc_service definition with GLIBC GLIBC BZ#20311 [1] proc_service.h install patch also remove 'const' attributes from ps_get_thread_area and comment #15 discuss why to remove the const attribute (basically since it a callback with the struct ps_prochandle owned by the client it should be able to modify it if it the case). On default build this is not the issue and current g++ does not trigger any issue with this mismatch declaration. However, on some bootstrap build configuration where gdbserver is build with gcc instead this triggers: error: conflicting types for 'ps_get_thread_area' This patch fixes it by syncing the declaration with GLIBC. [1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20311 gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-25 Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> * aarch64-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Remove const from struct ps_prochandle. * amd64-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * arm-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * gdb_proc_service.h (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * i386-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * m68klinux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * mips-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * nat/aarch64-linux.c (aarch64_ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * nat/aarch64-linux.h (aarch64_ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * xtensa-linux-nat.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-08-25 Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> PR server/20491 * gdb_proc_service.h (ps_get_thread_area): Remove const from struct ps_prochandle. * linux-aarch64-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-arm-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-crisv32-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-m68k-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-mips-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-nios2-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-tic6x-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-x86-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise. * linux-xtensa-low.c (ps_get_thread_area): Likewise.
2016-08-25 09:42:03 +02:00
ps_get_thread_area (struct ps_prochandle *ph,
lwpid_t lwpid, int idx, void **base)
{
if (ptrace (PTRACE_GET_THREAD_AREA, lwpid, NULL, base) != 0)
return PS_ERR;
/* IDX is the bias from the thread pointer to the beginning of the
thread descriptor. It has to be subtracted due to implementation
quirks in libthread_db. */
*base = (void *) ((char *) *base - idx);
return PS_OK;
}
static void
cris_fill_gregset (struct regcache *regcache, void *buf)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < cris_num_regs; i++)
{
if (cris_regmap[i] != -1)
collect_register (regcache, i, ((char *) buf) + cris_regmap[i]);
}
}
static void
cris_store_gregset (struct regcache *regcache, const void *buf)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < cris_num_regs; i++)
{
if (cris_regmap[i] != -1)
supply_register (regcache, i, ((char *) buf) + cris_regmap[i]);
}
}
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
static void
cris_arch_setup (void)
{
current_process ()->tdesc = tdesc_crisv32;
}
Refactor queries for hardware and software single stepping support in GDBServer. Before this patch there was only one call: can_hardware_single_step. Its implementation was a check on breakpoint_reinsert_addr if NULL it assumed that the target could hardware single step. This patch prepares for the case where this is not true anymore. In order to improve software single stepping in GDBServer the breakpoint_reinsert_addr operation of targets that had a very simple software implementation used only for stepping over thread creation events will be removed. This will create a case where a target does not support hardware single step and has the operation breakpoint_reinsert_addr set to NULL, thus can_hardware_single_step needs to be implemented another way. A new target operation supports_hardware_single_step is introduced and is to return true if the target does support such a feature, support for the feature is manually hardcoded. Note that the hardware single step support was enabled as per the current behavior, I did not check if tile for example really has ptrace singlestep support but since the current implementation assumed it had, I kept it that way. No regressions on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86. With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Compilation tested on: aarch64,arm,bfind,crisv32,m32r,ppc,s390,tic6x,tile, xtensa. Not tested : sh. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <bfin_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.c (can_hardware_single_step): Use supports_hardware_single_step. (can_software_single_step): New function. (start_step_over): Call can_software_single_step. (linux_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct target_ops) <supports_software_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step> Initialize. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tile_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_hardware_single_step) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * target.h (struct target_ops): <supports_software_single_step>: New field. (target_supports_software_single_step): New macro.
2015-11-19 17:29:10 +01:00
/* Support for hardware single step. */
static int
cris_supports_hardware_single_step (void)
{
return 1;
}
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
static struct regset_info cris_regsets[] = {
{ PTRACE_GETREGS, PTRACE_SETREGS, 0, cris_num_regs * 4,
GENERAL_REGS, cris_fill_gregset, cris_store_gregset },
NULL_REGSET
};
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
static struct regsets_info cris_regsets_info =
{
cris_regsets, /* regsets */
0, /* num_regsets */
NULL, /* disabled_regsets */
};
static struct usrregs_info cris_usrregs_info =
{
cris_num_regs,
cris_regmap,
};
static struct regs_info regs_info =
{
NULL, /* regset_bitmap */
&cris_usrregs_info,
&cris_regsets_info
};
static const struct regs_info *
cris_regs_info (void)
{
return &regs_info;
}
struct linux_target_ops the_low_target = {
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
cris_arch_setup,
cris_regs_info,
NULL,
gdb/ * features/mips-dsp.xml: New file. * features/mips64-dsp.xml: New file. * features/mips-dsp-linux.xml: New file. * features/mips64-dsp-linux.xml: New file. * features/Makefile (WHICH): Add mips-dsp-linux and mips64-dsp-linux. (mips-dsp-expedite, mips64-dsp-expedite): New variables. * features/mips-dsp-linux.c: New file. * features/mips64-dsp-linux.c: New file. * regformats/mips-dsp-linux.dat: New file. * regformats/mips64-dsp-linux.dat: New file. * mips-linux-nat.c (mips_linux_register_addr): Handle DSP registers. (mips64_linux_register_addr): Likewise. (mips64_linux_regsets_fetch_registers): Likewise. (mips64_linux_regsets_store_registers): Likewise. (mips64_linux_fetch_registers): Update call to mips64_linux_regsets_fetch_registers. (mips64_linux_store_registers): Update call to mips64_linux_regsets_store_registers. (mips_linux_read_description): Probe for DSP registers. (_initialize_mips_linux_nat): Call initialize_tdesc_mips_dsp_linux and initialize_tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux. * mips-linux-tdep.c (supply_gregset, mips64_supply_gregset): Remove padding of no longer used embedded register slots. * mips-linux-tdep.h (DSP_BASE, DSP_CONTROL): New macros. (MIPS_RESTART_REGNUM): Redefine enum value. * mips-tdep.c (mips_generic_reg_names): Remove trailing null strings. (mips_tx39_reg_names): Likewise. (mips_linux_reg_names): New array of register names for Linux targets. (mips_register_name): Check for a null pointer in mips_processor_reg_names and return an empty string. (mips_register_type): Exclude embedded registers for the IRIX and Linux ABIs. (mips_pseudo_register_type): Likewise. Use dynamic numbers to refer to FP registers, LO, HI, BadVAddr, Cause and PC. Handle DSP registers. (mips_stab_reg_to_regnum): Handle DSP accumulators. (mips_dwarf_dwarf2_ecoff_reg_to_regnum): Likewise. (mips_gdbarch_init): Likewise. Initialize internal register indices for the Linux ABI. Use dynamic numbers to refer to registers, as applicable, while parsing the target description. * mips-tdep.h (struct mips_regnum): Add dspacc/dspctl offsets. gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (MIPS Features): Add org.gnu.gdb.mips.dsp. gdb/gdbserver/ * linux-low.h (linux_target_ops): Add regset_bitmap member. * linux-low.c (use_linux_regsets): New macro. [!HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Likewise. [!HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (regsets_store_inferior_registers): Likewise. (linux_register_in_regsets): New function. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers): Skip registers covered by regsets. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Likewise. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers): New macro. (usr_store_inferior_registers): Likewise. (linux_fetch_registers): Handle mixed regset/non-regset targets. (linux_store_registers): Likewise. * linux-mips-low.c (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): New prototype. (init_registers_mips64_dsp_linux): Likewise. (init_registers_mips_linux): New macro. (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Likewise. (mips_dsp_num_regs): Likewise. (DSP_BASE, DSP_CONTROL): New fallback macros. (mips_base_regs): New macro. (mips_regmap): Use it. Fix the size. (mips_dsp_regmap): New variable. (mips_dsp_regset_bitmap): Likewise. (mips_arch_setup): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register): Use the_low_target.regmap rather than mips_regmap. (mips_cannot_store_register): Likewise. (the_low_target): Update .arch_setup, .num_regs and .regmap initializers. Add .regset_bitmap initializer. * linux-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Add .regset_bitmap initializer. * linux-bfin-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-cris-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-crisv32-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-ia64-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-m32r-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-m68k-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-sh-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-tic6x-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-x86-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-xtensa-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * configure.srv <mips*-*-linux*>: Add mips-dsp-linux.o and mips64-dsp-linux.o to srv_regobj. Add mips-dsp-linux.xml, mips64-dsp-linux.xml, mips-dsp.xml and mips64-dsp.xml to srv_xmlfiles. * Makefile.in (mips-dsp-linux.o, mips-dsp-linux.c): New targets. (mips64-dsp-linux.o, mips64-dsp-linux.c): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Add "mips-dsp.xml" to the list of MIPS core registers.
2012-03-01 23:19:48 +01:00
NULL,
NULL, /* fetch_register */
Replace some $ARCH_{get,set}_pc with linux_{get,set}_pc_32bit This patch adds a pair of new functions linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit which get and set 32-bit register "pc" from regcache. This function can be used some targets and these own $ARCH_{get,set}_pc are replaced by linux_{get,set}_pc_32bit respectively. This patch touches many targets, but I only have arm board to test and no regression. I also rebuilt nios2-linux GDBserver. If it is right to go, I'll post the 64-bit counterpart later. gdb/gdbserver: 2016-01-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org> * linux-arm-low.c (debug_threads): Remove declaration. (arm_get_pc, arm_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_get_pc, bfin_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-cris-low.c (debug_threads): Remove declaration. (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc,): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-crisv32-low.c (debug_threads): Remove declaration. (cris_get_pc, cris_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-low.c: Include inttypes.h. (linux_get_pc_32bit, linux_set_pc_32bit): New functions. * linux-low.h (linux_get_pc_32bit, linux_set_pc_32bit): Declare. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_get_pc, m32r_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_get_pc, m68k_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-nios2-low.c (nios2_get_pc, nios2_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_get_pc, sh_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_get_pc, xtensa_set_pc): Remove. (the_low_target): Use linux_get_pc_32bit and linux_set_pc_32bit.
2016-01-18 15:49:50 +01:00
linux_get_pc_32bit,
linux_set_pc_32bit,
Add the target_ops needed for software breakpoints in GDBServer. This patch is in preparation for software breakpoints on ARM linux. It refactors breakpoint and breakpoint_len into breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from kind to prepare the case where we have multiple types of breakpoints. Kind is the type of breakpoint (hardware or software) to be inserted, usually it is the lenght of the software breakpoint but can be something else depending on the target. This patch introduces the linux_target_ops breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind. breakpoint_kind_from_pc returns the breakpoint kind and adjusts the PC to the real memory location in case a flag was present in the PC. E.g the instruction mode on ARM. sw_breakpoint_from_kind returns the software breakpoint for this kind as a string of bytes, the length of the breakpoint is adjusted for the breakpoint's size in memory. For targets that have only one kind of breakpoint, the default value 0 is returned by linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc so that not all targets need to implement the breakpoint_kind_from_pc operation. No regressions, tested on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86 With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Also since the target_ops have been changed compilation was tested on affected archs namely : aarch64, arm, bfin, cris, crisv32, m32r, m68k, mips, nios2, ppc, s390, sparc, tic6x, tile, x86, steins. Not tested : sh gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_breakpoint_kind_from_pc): New function. (arm_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-cris-low.c (cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-low.c (linux_wait_1): Call breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind to increment the pc. (linux_breakpoint_kind_from_pc): New function. (linux_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. (initialize_low): Call breakpoint_kind_from_pc and sw_breakpoint_from_kind to replace breakpoint_data/len. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Likewise. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-m68k-low.c (m68k_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-nios2-low.c (nios2_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-sparc-low.c (sparc_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_sw_breakpoint_from_kind) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_len>: Remove. (struct linux_target_ops) <breakpoint_kind_from_pc>: Initialize field. (struct linux_target_ops) <sw_breakpoint_from_kind>: Initialize field.
2015-10-21 17:17:26 +02:00
NULL, /* breakpoint_kind_from_pc */
cris_sw_breakpoint_from_kind,
NULL, /* get_next_pcs */
0,
cris_breakpoint_at,
[GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent. This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for "PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least. gdb.sum: gdb.sum: FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test gdb.log: (gdb) next Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap. factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113 113 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it. After that patch, GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on. The bug is easy to trigger with always-inserted on. The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support, if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting that for Z packets other than Z0/z0. E.g., with "set breakpoint always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1": (gdb) b main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) b main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK And for Z1, similarly: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) hbreak main Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943. Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028. Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK ^^^^^^^^^^^^ So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent. On the GDBserver side (with monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see: $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629 Listening on port 9999 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute): CONTROL (DR7): 00000101 STATUS (DR6): 00000000 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4 DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0 That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet. Notice how ref.count increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4! IOW, the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB end it's gone. If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards, then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a spurious SIGTRAP. This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends... That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be addressed on the GDB side. GDB resends Zx packets because the way to change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the server with the new condition. (That's an option in the packet: e.g., "Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0". The packets in the examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have conditions attached). GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint. The conditions actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart enough to realize that. (TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition evaluation is on the host side. The resends are caused by the 'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.' line.) But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still handle the resends anyway. So target-side conditions also aren't really to blame. The documentation of the Z/z packets says: "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations should be implemented in an idempotent way." As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix GDBserver. The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too). GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent way. mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as a GDB breakpoint. But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one reference to a software breakpoint location. IOW, if gdbserver sees a Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint. However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints. The same logic should apply to all kinds of Zx packets. Currently, gdbserver passes down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the target->insert_point routine. The x86 watchpoint support itself refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping watchpoints, and save debug registers. But that code doesn't (and really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for each insert there will be a corresponding remove. So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx breakpoints, and filter out duplicates. As mentioned, this ends up adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet). Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out. Before, the target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints. The internal breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly bypassing the insert/remove target methods. That's not good when the target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as is the case of NTO. Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods. The insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type. They're also passed a pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint / remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow buffer. I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's "struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then decided against it as unnecessary complication. As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads). If that operation fails, we need to return error to GDB. Seeing an error, if this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert, GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may actually not be. So we need to check whether the type is supported at all before preparing to access memory. And to solve that, the patch adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before actually trying to insert the breakpoint. Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious. New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before main is reached. Tested by building GDBserver for: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf i686-pc-linux-gnu i686-w64-mingw32 m68k-linux-gnu mips-linux-gnu mips-uclinux nios2-linux-gnu powerpc-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu x86_64-redhat-linux x86_64-w64-mingw32 And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/gdbserver/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point) (aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is supported here. Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function. (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a Z packet char. Adjust. (arm_supports_z_point_type): New function. (arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function. (cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Don't check whether the type is supported here. (the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type. * linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function. (linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char. Add raw_breakpoint pointer parameter. <supports_z_point_type>: New method. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function. (mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. Use mips_supports_z_point_type. (the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function. (x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface. Use insert_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface. (x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface. Use remove_memory_breakpoint. Adjust to new i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface. (the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type. * lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type callback. * nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New. (nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type. * mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment. (struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields. <inserted>: Update comment. <shlib_disabled>: Delete field. (enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value. <gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2, gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function. (find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function. (find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters. Use them. (insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off set_raw_breakpoint_at. (remove_memory_breakpoint): New function. (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at. (set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement. (delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoints. (find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions. (find_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (z_type_supported): New function. (set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off set_gdb_breakpoint_at. (check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off delete_gdb_breakpoint_at. (delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function. (clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ... (clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this. Don't handle a NULL breakpoint. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static. (add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add z_type parameter. (gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ... (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter. Return true if no breakpoint was found. Change debug output. (gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement. (run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ... (run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this. Add z_type parameter, and change return type to boolean. (run_breakpoint_commands): New function. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints. (uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled breakpoint. Go through the_target->remove_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert software and hardware breakpoints. (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point instead of assuming memory breakpoint. (reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert software and hardware breakpoints. (check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here): Check both software and hardware breakpoints. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a software breakpoint. Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of setting shlib_disabled. (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust. (validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. (check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other than software breakpoints. Adjust to inserted flag change. * mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum. (raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare. (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration. (raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type) (set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint) (clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations. (set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete. (breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment. (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter. (gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment. (delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete. (insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare. * server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint pointer instead of an address. Adjust. (process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and delete_gdb_breakpoint. * spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type method. * target.h: Include mem-break.h. (struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment. <supports_z_point_type>: New field. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. * win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as supports_z_point_type. * win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function. (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function. (win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface. (win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type. * win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops): <supports_z_point_type>: New method. <insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument instead of a char. Also take a raw breakpoint pointer. gdb/testsuite/ 2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file. * gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 19:24:28 +02:00
cris_supports_z_point_type,
cris_insert_point,
cris_remove_point,
cris_stopped_by_watchpoint,
cris_stopped_data_address,
Refactor queries for hardware and software single stepping support in GDBServer. Before this patch there was only one call: can_hardware_single_step. Its implementation was a check on breakpoint_reinsert_addr if NULL it assumed that the target could hardware single step. This patch prepares for the case where this is not true anymore. In order to improve software single stepping in GDBServer the breakpoint_reinsert_addr operation of targets that had a very simple software implementation used only for stepping over thread creation events will be removed. This will create a case where a target does not support hardware single step and has the operation breakpoint_reinsert_addr set to NULL, thus can_hardware_single_step needs to be implemented another way. A new target operation supports_hardware_single_step is introduced and is to return true if the target does support such a feature, support for the feature is manually hardcoded. Note that the hardware single step support was enabled as per the current behavior, I did not check if tile for example really has ptrace singlestep support but since the current implementation assumed it had, I kept it that way. No regressions on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86. With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Compilation tested on: aarch64,arm,bfind,crisv32,m32r,ppc,s390,tic6x,tile, xtensa. Not tested : sh. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <bfin_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.c (can_hardware_single_step): Use supports_hardware_single_step. (can_software_single_step): New function. (start_step_over): Call can_software_single_step. (linux_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct target_ops) <supports_software_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step> Initialize. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tile_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_hardware_single_step) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * target.h (struct target_ops): <supports_software_single_step>: New field. (target_supports_software_single_step): New macro.
2015-11-19 17:29:10 +01:00
NULL, /* collect_ptrace_register */
NULL, /* supply_ptrace_register */
NULL, /* siginfo_fixup */
NULL, /* new_process */
NULL, /* delete_process */
Refactor queries for hardware and software single stepping support in GDBServer. Before this patch there was only one call: can_hardware_single_step. Its implementation was a check on breakpoint_reinsert_addr if NULL it assumed that the target could hardware single step. This patch prepares for the case where this is not true anymore. In order to improve software single stepping in GDBServer the breakpoint_reinsert_addr operation of targets that had a very simple software implementation used only for stepping over thread creation events will be removed. This will create a case where a target does not support hardware single step and has the operation breakpoint_reinsert_addr set to NULL, thus can_hardware_single_step needs to be implemented another way. A new target operation supports_hardware_single_step is introduced and is to return true if the target does support such a feature, support for the feature is manually hardcoded. Note that the hardware single step support was enabled as per the current behavior, I did not check if tile for example really has ptrace singlestep support but since the current implementation assumed it had, I kept it that way. No regressions on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86. With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Compilation tested on: aarch64,arm,bfind,crisv32,m32r,ppc,s390,tic6x,tile, xtensa. Not tested : sh. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <bfin_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.c (can_hardware_single_step): Use supports_hardware_single_step. (can_software_single_step): New function. (start_step_over): Call can_software_single_step. (linux_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct target_ops) <supports_software_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step> Initialize. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tile_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_hardware_single_step) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * target.h (struct target_ops): <supports_software_single_step>: New field. (target_supports_software_single_step): New macro.
2015-11-19 17:29:10 +01:00
NULL, /* new_thread */
lwp_info: Make the arch code free arch_lwp_info I have the goal of "poisoning" the XNEW/xfree-family of functions, so that we catch their usages with non-POD types. A few things need to be fixed in the mean time, this is one. The common lwp code in linux-nat.c and gdbserver/linux-low.c xfrees the private lwp data of type arch_lwp_info. However, that type is opaque from its point of view, as its defined differently in each arch-specific implementation. This trips on the std::is_pod<T> check, since the compiler can't tell whether the type is POD or not if it doesn't know about it. My initial patch [1] made a class hierarchy with a virtual destructor. However, as Pedro pointed out, we only have one native architecture at the time built in gdb and gdbserver, so that's overkill. Instead, we can move the responsibility of free'ing arch_lwp_info to the arch code (which is also the one that allocated it in the first place). This is what this patch does. Also, I had the concern that if we wanted to use C++ features in these structures, we would have a problem with the one-definition rule. However, since a build will only have one version of arch_lwp_info, that's not a problem. There are changes in arch-specific files, I was only able to built-test this patch with the following cross-compilers: aarch64-linux-gnu alpha-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf hppa-linux-gnu m68k-linux-gnu mips64el-linux-gnuabi64 powerpc64-linux-gnu s390x-linux-gnu sh4-linux-gnu sparc64-linux-gnu x86_64-linux-gnu x86_64-w64-mingw32 A buildbot run didn't find any regression. [1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-08/msg00255.html gdb/ChangeLog: * linux-nat.h (linux_nat_set_delete_thread): New declaration. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_delete_thread): New variable. (lwp_free): Invoke linux_nat_delete_thread if set. (linux_nat_set_delete_thread): New function. * aarch64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_nat): Assign thread delete callback. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_linux_delete_thread): New function. (_initialize_arm_linux_nat): Assign thread delete callback. * s390-linux-nat.c (s390_delete_thread): New function. (_initialize_s390_nat): Assign thread delete callback. * x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_add_target): Likewise. * nat/aarch64-linux.c (aarch64_linux_delete_thread): New function. * nat/aarch64-linux.h (aarch64_linux_delete_thread): New declaration. * nat/x86-linux.c (x86_linux_delete_thread): New function. * nat/x86-linux.h (x86_linux_delete_thread): New declaration. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (the_low_target): Add thread delete callback. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_delete_thread): New function. (the_low_target): Add thread delete callback. * linux-bfin-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-crisv32-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-low.c (delete_lwp): Invoke delete_thread callback if set. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <delete_thread>: New field. * linux-m32r-low.c (the_low_target): Add thread delete callback. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_linux_delete_thread): New function. (the_low_target): Add thread delete callback. * linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-sh-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-tic6x-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-tile-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-x86-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise. * linux-xtensa-low.c (the_low_target): Likewise.
2017-10-12 22:48:22 +02:00
NULL, /* delete_thread */
Refactor queries for hardware and software single stepping support in GDBServer. Before this patch there was only one call: can_hardware_single_step. Its implementation was a check on breakpoint_reinsert_addr if NULL it assumed that the target could hardware single step. This patch prepares for the case where this is not true anymore. In order to improve software single stepping in GDBServer the breakpoint_reinsert_addr operation of targets that had a very simple software implementation used only for stepping over thread creation events will be removed. This will create a case where a target does not support hardware single step and has the operation breakpoint_reinsert_addr set to NULL, thus can_hardware_single_step needs to be implemented another way. A new target operation supports_hardware_single_step is introduced and is to return true if the target does support such a feature, support for the feature is manually hardcoded. Note that the hardware single step support was enabled as per the current behavior, I did not check if tile for example really has ptrace singlestep support but since the current implementation assumed it had, I kept it that way. No regressions on Ubuntu 14.04 on ARMv7 and x86. With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb } Compilation tested on: aarch64,arm,bfind,crisv32,m32r,ppc,s390,tic6x,tile, xtensa. Not tested : sh. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-bfin-low.c (bfin_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <bfin_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.c (can_hardware_single_step): Use supports_hardware_single_step. (can_software_single_step): New function. (start_step_over): Call can_software_single_step. (linux_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct target_ops) <supports_software_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-m32r-low.c (m32r_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step> Initialize. * linux-s390-low.c (s390_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-sh-low.c (sh_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tic6x_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-tile-low.c (tile_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <tile_supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_hardware_single_step) New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * linux-xtensa-low.c (xtensa_supports_hardware_single_step): New function. (struct linux_target_ops) <supports_hardware_single_step>: Initialize. * target.h (struct target_ops): <supports_software_single_step>: New field. (target_supports_software_single_step): New macro.
2015-11-19 17:29:10 +01:00
NULL, /* new_fork */
NULL, /* prepare_to_resume */
NULL, /* process_qsupported */
NULL, /* supports_tracepoints */
NULL, /* get_thread_area */
NULL, /* install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad */
NULL, /* emit_ops */
NULL, /* get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len */
NULL, /* supports_range_stepping */
NULL, /* breakpoint_kind_from_current_state */
cris_supports_hardware_single_step,
};
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
2013-06-07 12:46:59 +02:00
void
initialize_low_arch (void)
{
init_registers_crisv32 ();
[GDBserver] Multi-process + multi-arch This patch makes GDBserver support multi-process + biarch. Currently, if you're debugging more than one process at once with a single gdbserver (in extended-remote mode), then all processes must have the same architecture (e.g., 64-bit vs 32-bit). Otherwise, you see this: Added inferior 2 [Switching to inferior 2 [<null>] (<noexec>)] Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32...done. Temporary breakpoint 2 at 0x4004cf: main. (2 locations) Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/tests/main32 warning: Selected architecture i386 is not compatible with reported target architecture i386:x86-64 warning: Architecture rejected target-supplied description Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000090cfffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000020000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000b042f7460000000000020000230000002b0000002b0000002b000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007f03000000000000ffff0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000801f00003b0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ... etc, etc ... Even though the process was running a 32-bit program, GDBserver sent back to GDB a register set in 64-bit layout. A patch (http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-11/msg00228.html) a while ago made GDB track a target_gdbarch per inferior, and as consequence, fetch a target description per-inferior. This patch is the GDBserver counterpart, that makes GDBserver keep track of each process'es XML target description and register layout. So in the example above, GDBserver will send the correct register set in 32-bit layout to GDB. A new "struct target_desc" object (tdesc for short) is added, that holds the target description and register layout information about each process. Each `struct process_info' holds a pointer to a target description. The regcache also gains a pointer to a target description, mainly for convenience, and parallel with GDB (and possible future support for programs that flip processor modes). The low target's arch_setup routines are responsible for setting the process'es correct tdesc. This isn't that much different to how things were done before, except that instead of detecting the inferior process'es architecture and calling the corresponding init_registers_FOO routine, which would change the regcache layout globals and recreate the threads' regcaches, the regcache.c globals are gone, and the init_registers_$BAR routines now each initialize a separate global struct target_desc object (one for each arch variant GDBserver supports), and so all the init_registers_$BAR routines that are built into GDBserver are called early at GDBserver startup time (similarly to how GDB handles its built-in target descriptions), and then the arch_setup routine is responsible for making process_info->tdesc point to one of these target description globals. The regcache module is all parameterized to get the regcache's layout from the tdesc object instead of the old register_bytes, etc. globals. The threads' regcaches are now created lazily. The old scheme where we created each of them when we added a new thread doesn't work anymore, because we add the main thread/lwp before we see it stop for the first time, and it is only when we see the thread stop for the first time that we have a chance of determining the inferior's architecture (through the_low_target.arch_setup). Therefore when we add the main thread we don't know which architecture/tdesc its regcache should have. This patch makes the gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp test now pass against (extended-remote) GDBserver. It currently fails, without this patch. The IPA also uses the regcache, so it gains a new global struct target_desc pointer, which points at the description of the process it is loaded in. Re. the linux-low.c & friends changes. Since the register map etc. may differ between processes (64-bit vs 32-bit) etc., the linux_target_ops num_regs, regmap and regset_bitmap data fields are no longer sufficient. A new method is added in their place that returns a pointer to a new struct that includes all info linux-low.c needs to access registers of the current inferior. The patch/discussion that originally introduced linux-low.c:disabled_regsets mentions that the disabled_regsets set may be different per mode (in a biarch setup), and indeed that is cleared whenever we start a new (first) inferior, so that global is moved as well behind the new `struct regs_info'. On the x86 side: I simply replaced the i387-fp.c:num_xmm_registers global with a check for 64-bit or 32-bit process, which is equivalent to how the global was set. This avoided coming up with some more general mechanism that would work for all targets that use this module (GNU/Linux, Windows, etc.). Tested: GNU/Linux IA64 GNU/Linux MIPS64 GNU/Linux PowerPC (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux s390x (Fedora 16) GNU/Linux sparc64 (Debian) GNU/Linux x86_64, -m64 and -m32 (Fedora 17) Cross built, and smoke tested: i686-w64-mingw32, under Wine. GNU/Linux TI C6x, by Yao Qi. Cross built but otherwise not tested: aarch64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnu m68k-linux nios2-linux-gnu sh-linux-gnu spu tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu Completely untested: GNU/Linux Blackfin GNU/Linux CRIS GNU/Linux CRISv32 GNU/Linux TI Xtensa GNU/Linux M32R LynxOS QNX NTO gdb/gdbserver/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (OBS): Add tdesc.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add tdesc-ipa.o. (tdesc-ipa.o): New rule. * ax.c (gdb_eval_agent_expr): Adjust register_size call to new interface. * linux-low.c (new_inferior): Delete. (disabled_regsets, num_regsets): Delete. (linux_add_process): Adjust to set the new per-process new_inferior flag. (linux_detach_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (linux_wait_for_lwp): Adjust. Only call arch_setup if the event was a stop. When calling arch_setup, switch the current inferior to the thread that got an event. (linux_resume_one_lwp): Adjust to call regcache_invalidate_thread. (regsets_fetch_inferior_registers) (regsets_store_inferior_registers): New regsets_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (linux_register_in_regsets): New regs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (register_addr, fetch_register, store_register): New usrregs_info parameter. Adjust to use it. (usr_fetch_inferior_registers, usr_store_inferior_registers): New parameter regs_info. Adjust to use it. (linux_fetch_registers): Get the current inferior's regs_info, and adjust to use it. (linux_store_registers): Ditto. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): New. (initialize_low): Don't initialize the target_regsets here. Call initialize_low_arch. * linux-low.h (target_regsets): Delete declaration. (struct regsets_info): New. (struct usrregs_info): New. (struct regs_info): New. (struct process_info_private) <new_inferior>: New field. (struct linux_target_ops): Delete the num_regs, regmap, and regset_bitmap fields. New field regs_info. [HAVE_LINUX_REGSETS] (initialize_regsets_info): Declare. * i387-fp.c (num_xmm_registers): Delete. (i387_cache_to_fsave, i387_fsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. (i387_cache_to_fxsave, i387_cache_to_xsave, i387_fxsave_to_cache) (i387_xsave_to_cache): Adjust find_regno calls to new interface. Infer the number of xmm registers from the regcache's target description. * i387-fp.h (num_xmm_registers): Delete. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Don't install the thread's regcache here. * proc-service.c (gregset_info): Fetch the current inferior's regs_info. Adjust to use it. * regcache.c: Include tdesc.h. (register_bytes, reg_defs, num_registers) (gdbserver_expedite_regs): Delete. (get_thread_regcache): If the thread doesn't have a regcache yet, create one, instead of aborting gdbserver. (regcache_invalidate_one): Rename to ... (regcache_invalidate_thread): ... this. (regcache_invalidate_one): New. (regcache_invalidate): Only invalidate registers of the current process. (init_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (new_register_cache): Ditto. Assert the target description has a non zero registers_size. (regcache_cpy): Add assertions. Adjust. (realloc_register_cache, set_register_cache): Delete. (registers_to_string, registers_from_string): Adjust. (find_register_by_name, find_regno, find_register_by_number) (register_cache_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (free_register_cache_thread, free_register_cache_thread_one) (regcache_release, register_cache_size): New. (register_size): Add target_desc parameter, and use it. (register_data, supply_register, supply_register_zeroed) (supply_regblock, supply_register_by_name, collect_register) (collect_register_as_string, collect_register_by_name): Adjust. * regcache.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct regcache) <tdesc>: New field. (init_register_cache, new_register_cache): Add target_desc parameter. (regcache_invalidate_thread): Declare. (regcache_invalidate_one): Delete declaration. (regcache_release): Declare. (find_register_by_number, register_cache_size, register_size) (find_regno): Add target_desc parameter. (gdbserver_expedite_regs, gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declarations. * remote-utils.c: Include tdesc.h. (outreg, prepare_resume_reply): Adjust. * server.c: Include tdesc.h. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete declaration. (get_features_xml, process_serial_event): Adjust. * server.h [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (struct process_info) <tdesc>: New field. (ipa_tdesc): Declare. * tdesc.c: New file. * tdesc.h: New file. * tracepoint.c: Include tdesc.h. [IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (ipa_tdesc): Define. (get_context_regcache): Adjust to pass ipa_tdesc down. (do_action_at_tracepoint): Adjust to get the register cache size from the context regcache's description. (traceframe_walk_blocks): Adjust to get the register cache size from the current trace frame's description. (traceframe_get_pc): Adjust to get current trace frame's description and pass it down. (gdb_collect): Adjust to get the register cache size from the IPA's description. * linux-amd64-ipa.c (tdesc_amd64_linux): Declare. (gdbserver_xmltarget): Delete. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-i386-ipa.c (tdesc_i386_linux): Declare. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Set the ipa's target description. * linux-x86-low.c: Include tdesc.h. [__x86_64__] (is_64bit_tdesc): New. (ps_get_thread_area, x86_get_thread_area): Use it. (i386_cannot_store_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_store_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (i386_cannot_fetch_register): Rename to ... (x86_cannot_fetch_register): ... this. Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_fill_gregset, x86_store_gregset): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (x86_regsets): ... this. (x86_get_pc, x86_set_pc): Adjust register_size calls to new interface. (x86_siginfo_fixup): Use is_64bit_tdesc. [__x86_64__] (tdesc_amd64_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_linux) (tdesc_x32_avx_linux, tdesc_x32_linux) (tdesc_i386_linux, tdesc_i386_mmx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_linux): Declare. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): Delete. (I386_LINUX_XSAVE_XCR0_OFFSET): Define. (have_ptrace_getfpxregs, have_ptrace_getregset): New. (AMD64_LINUX_USER64_CS): New. (x86_linux_read_description): New, based on x86_linux_update_xmltarget. (same_process_callback): New. (x86_arch_setup_process_callback): New. (x86_linux_update_xmltarget): New. (x86_regsets_info): New. (amd64_linux_regs_info): New. (i386_linux_usrregs_info): New. (i386_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_linux_regs_info): New. (x86_arch_setup): Reimplement. (x86_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Use is_64bit_tdesc. (x86_emit_ops): Ditto. (the_low_target): Adjust. Install x86_linux_regs_info, x86_cannot_fetch_register, and x86_cannot_store_register. (initialize_low_arch): New. * linux-ia64-low.c (tdesc_ia64): Declare. (ia64_fetch_register): Adjust. (ia64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (ia64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sparc-low.c (tdesc_sparc64): Declare. (sparc_fill_gregset_to_stack, sparc_store_gregset_from_stack): Adjust. (sparc_arch_setup): New function. (sparc_regsets_info, sparc_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell32l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l, tdesc_powerpc_e500l) (tdesc_powerpc_64l, tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_cell64l, tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l, tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l) (tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l): Declare. (ppc_cannot_store_register, ppc_collect_ptrace_register) (ppc_supply_ptrace_register, parse_spufs_run, ppc_get_pc) (ppc_set_pc, ppc_get_hwcap): Adjust. (ppc_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (!__powerpc64__) ppc_regmap_adjusted: New global. (ppc_arch_setup): Adjust to the current process'es target description. (ppc_fill_vsxregset, ppc_store_vsxregset, ppc_fill_vrregset) (ppc_store_vrregset, ppc_fill_evrregset, ppc_store_evrregse) (ppc_store_evrregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (ppc_regsets): ... this, and make static. (ppc_usrregs_info, ppc_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. (ppc_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-s390-low.c (tdesc_s390_linux32, tdesc_s390_linux32v1) (tdesc_s390_linux32v2, tdesc_s390_linux64, tdesc_s390_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390_linux64v2, tdesc_s390x_linux64, tdesc_s390x_linux64v1) (tdesc_s390x_linux64v2): Declare. (s390_collect_ptrace_register, s390_supply_ptrace_register) (s390_fill_gregset, s390_store_last_break): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (s390_regsets): ... this, and make static. (s390_get_pc, s390_set_pc): Adjust. (s390_get_hwcap): New target_desc parameter, and use it. [__s390x__] (have_hwcap_s390_high_gprs): New global. (s390_arch_setup): Adjust to set the current process'es target description. Don't adjust the regmap. (s390_usrregs_info, s390_regsets_info, regs_info): New globals. [__s390x__] (s390_usrregs_info_3264, s390_regsets_info_3264) (regs_info_3264): New globals. (s390_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-mips-low.c (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux) (tdesc_mips64_linux, tdesc_mips64_dsp_linux): Declare. [__mips64] (init_registers_mips_linux) (init_registers_mips_dsp_linux): Delete defines. [__mips64] (tdesc_mips_linux, tdesc_mips_dsp_linux): New defines. (have_dsp): New global. (mips_read_description): New, based on mips_arch_setup. (mips_arch_setup): Reimplement. (get_usrregs_info): New function. (mips_cannot_fetch_register, mips_cannot_store_register) (mips_get_pc, mips_set_pc, mips_fill_gregset, mips_store_gregset) (mips_fill_fpregset, mips_store_fpregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (mips_regsets): ... this, and make static. (mips_regsets_info, mips_dsp_usrregs_info, mips_usrregs_info) (dsp_regs_info, regs_info): New globals. (mips_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm, tdesc_arm_with_iwmmxt) (tdesc_arm_with_vfpv2, tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare. (arm_fill_vfpregset, arm_store_vfpregset): Adjust. (arm_read_description): New, with bits factored from arm_arch_setup. (arm_arch_setup): Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (arm_regsets): ... this, and make static. (arm_regsets_info, arm_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (arm_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m68k-low.c (tdesc_m68k): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (m68k_regsets): ... this, and make static. (m68k_regsets_info, m68k_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m68k_regs_info): New function. (m68k_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-sh-low.c (tdesc_sharch): Declare. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (sh_regsets): ... this, and make static. (sh_regsets_info, sh_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (sh_regs_info, sh_arch_setup): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-bfin-low.c (tdesc_bfin): Declare. (bfin_arch_setup): New function. (bfin_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (bfin_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_cris): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-cris-low.c (tdesc_crisv32): Declare. (cris_arch_setup): New function. (cris_regsets_info, cris_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (cris_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-m32r-low.c (tdesc_m32r): Declare. (m32r_arch_setup): New function. (m32r_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (m32r_regs_info): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tic6x-low.c (tdesc_tic6x_c64xp_linux) (tdesc_tic6x_c64x_linux, tdesc_tic6x_c62x_linux): Declare. (tic6x_usrregs_info): Forward declare. (tic6x_read_description): New function, based on ... (tic6x_arch_setup): ... this. Reimplement. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tic6x_regsets): ... this, and make static. (tic6x_regsets_info, tic6x_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tic6x_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-xtensa-low.c (tdesc_xtensa): Declare. (xtensa_fill_gregset, xtensa_store_gregset): Adjust. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (xtensa_regsets): ... this, and make static. (xtensa_regsets_info, xtensa_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (xtensa_arch_setup, xtensa_regs_info): New functions. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-nios2-low.c (tdesc_nios2_linux): Declare. (nios2_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (nios2_regsets): ... this. (nios2_regsets_info, nios2_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (nios2_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-aarch64-low.c (tdesc_aarch64): Declare. (aarch64_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (aarch64_regsets): ... this. (aarch64_regsets_info, aarch64_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (aarch64_regs_info): New function. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * linux-tile-low.c (tdesc_tilegx, tdesc_tilegx32): Declare globals. (target_regsets): Rename to ... (tile_regsets): ... this. (tile_regsets_info, tile_usrregs_info, regs_info): New globals. (tile_regs_info): New function. (tile_arch_setup): Set the current process'es tdesc. (the_low_target): Adjust. (initialize_low_arch): New function. * spu-low.c (tdesc_spu): Declare. (spu_create_inferior, spu_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-arm-low.c (tdesc_arm): Declare. (arm_arch_setup): New function. (the_low_target): Install arm_arch_setup instead of init_registers_arm. * win32-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386, tdesc_amd64): Declare. (init_windows_x86): Rename to ... (i386_arch_setup): ... this. Set `win32_tdesc'. (the_low_target): Adjust. * win32-low.c (win32_tdesc): New global. (child_add_thread): Don't create the thread cache here. (do_initial_child_stuff): Set the new process'es tdesc. * win32-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (win32_tdesc): Declare. * lynx-i386-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare global. (lynx_i386_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * lynx-low.c (lynx_tdesc): New global. (lynx_add_process): Set the new process'es tdesc. * lynx-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (lynx_tdesc): Declare global. * lynx-ppc-low.c (tdesc_powerpc_32): Declare global. (lynx_ppc_arch_setup): Set `lynx_tdesc'. * nto-low.c (nto_tdesc): New global. (do_attach): Set the new process'es tdesc. * nto-low.h (struct target_desc): Forward declare. (nto_tdesc): Declare. * nto-x86-low.c (tdesc_i386): Declare. (nto_x86_arch_setup): Set `nto_tdesc'. gdb/ 2013-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * regformats/regdat.sh: Output #include tdesc.h. Make globals static. Output a global target description pointer. (init_registers_${name}): Adjust to initialize a target description structure.
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initialize_regsets_info (&cris_regsets_info);
}