The goal of this patch is to provide an easy way to make
--disable-werror the default when building binutils, or the parts
of binutils that need to get built when building GDB. In development
mode, we want to continue making -Werror the default with GCC.
But, when making releases, I think we want to make it as easy as
possible for regular users to successfully build from sources.
GDB already has this kind of feature to turn -Werror as well as
the use of the libmcheck library. As GDB Release Manager, I take
advantage of it to turn those off after having cut the branch.
I'd like to be able to do the same for the binutils bits. And
perhaps Tristan will want to do the same for his releases too
(not sure, binutils builders might be a little savvier than GDB
builders).
This patch introduces a new file, called development.sh, which
just sets a variable called $development. In our development branches
(Eg. "master"), it's set to true. But setting it to false would allow
us to change the default behavior of various development-related
features to be turned off; in this case, it turns off the use of
-Werror by default (use --enable-werror to turn it back on).
bfd/ChangeLog:
* development.sh: New file.
* warning.m4 (AM_BINUTILS_WARNINGS): Source bfd/development.sh.
Make -Werror the default with GCC only if DEVELOPMENT is true.
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add
$(srcdir)/development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
bfd's development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
gas/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
bfd's development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
gold/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): New.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
gprof/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
bfd's development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
ld/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
bfd's development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
bfd's development.sh.
* Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* development.sh: Delete.
* Makefile.in (config.status): Adjust dependency on development.sh.
* configure.ac: Adjust development.sh source call.
* configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Adjust development.sh source call.
* Makefile.in (config.status): Adjust dependency on development.sh.
* configure: Regenerate.
Tested on x86_64-linux by building two ways: One with DEVELOPMENT
set to true, and one with DEVELOPMENT set to false. In the first
case, I could see the use of -Werror, while it disappeared in
the second case.
If GDB decides to change the breakpoint's conditions or commands,
it'll reinsert the same breakpoint again, with the new options
attached, without deleting the previous breakpoint. E.g.,
(gdb) set breakpoint always-inserted on
(gdb) b main if 0
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400594: file foo.c, line 21.
Sending packet: $Z0,400594,1;X3,220027#68...Packet received: OK
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 15 at 0x400594: file foo.c, line 21.
Sending packet: $Z0,400594,1#49...Packet received: OK
GDBserver understands this and deletes the breakpoint's previous
conditions. But, it forgets to delete the previous commands.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-06-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ax.c (gdb_free_agent_expr): New function.
* ax.h (gdb_free_agent_expr): New declaration.
* mem-break.c (delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): Also clear the commands
list.
(clear_breakpoint_conditions, clear_breakpoint_commands): Make
static.
(clear_breakpoint_conditions_and_commands): New function.
* mem-break.h (clear_breakpoint_conditions): Delete declaration.
(clear_breakpoint_conditions_and_commands): New declaration.
A recent change to glibc removed asm/ptrace.h from user.h for AArch64.
This meant that cross-native builds of gdbserver using trunk glibc broke
because linux-aarch64-low.c because user_hwdebug_state couldn't be found.
This is like commit #036cd38182bde32d8297b630cd5c861d53b8949e
2014-05-23 Ramana Radhakrishnan <ramana.radhakrishnan@arm.com>
* linux-aarch64-low.c (asm/ptrace.h): Include.
I have posted:
TLS variables access for -static -lpthread executables
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-help/2014-03/msg00024.html
and the GDB patch below has been confirmed as OK for current glibcs.
Further work should be done for newer glibcs:
Improve TLS variables glibc compatibility
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16954
Still the patch below implements the feature in a fully functional way backward
compatible with current glibcs, it depends on the following glibc source line:
csu/libc-tls.c
main_map->l_tls_modid = 1;
gdb/
2014-05-21 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix TLS access for -static -pthread.
* linux-thread-db.c (struct thread_db_info): Add td_thr_tlsbase_p.
(try_thread_db_load_1): Initialize it.
(thread_db_get_thread_local_address): Call it if LM is zero.
* target.c (target_translate_tls_address): Remove LM_ADDR zero check.
* target.h (struct target_ops) (to_get_thread_local_address): Add
load_module_addr comment.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-05-21 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix TLS access for -static -pthread.
* gdbserver/thread-db.c (struct thread_db): Add td_thr_tlsbase_p.
(thread_db_get_tls_address): Call it if LOAD_MODULE is zero.
(thread_db_load_search, try_thread_db_load_1): Initialize it.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-05-21 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix TLS access for -static -pthread.
* gdb.threads/staticthreads.c <HAVE_TLS> (tlsvar): New.
<HAVE_TLS> (thread_function, main): Initialize it.
* gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp: Try gdb_compile_pthreads for $have_tls.
Add clean_restart.
<$have_tls != "">: Check TLSVAR.
Message-ID: <20140410115204.GB16411@host2.jankratochvil.net>
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.
The Aarch64, MIPS and x86 Linux backends all have Z packet number
defines and corresponding protocol number to internal type convertion
routines. Factor them all out to gdbserver's core code, so we only
have one shared copy.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, and also cross built for aarch64-linux-gnu
and mips-linux-gnu.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* mem-break.h: Include break-common.h.
(Z_PACKET_SW_BP, Z_PACKET_HW_BP, Z_PACKET_WRITE_WP)
(Z_PACKET_READ_WP, Z_PACKET_ACCESS_WP): New defines.
(Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): New declaration.
* mem-break.c (Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function.
* i386-low.c (Z_PACKET_HW_BP, Z_PACKET_WRITE_WP, Z_PACKET_READ_WP)
(Z_PACKET_ACCESS_WP): Delete macros.
(Z_packet_to_hw_type): Delete function.
* i386-low.h: Don't include break-common.h here.
(Z_packet_to_hw_type): Delete declaration.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_insert_point, x86_insert_point): Call
Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type instead of Z_packet_to_hw_type.
* win32-i386-low.c (i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Call
Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type instead of Z_packet_to_hw_type.
* linux-aarch64-low.c: Don't include break-common.h here.
(Z_PACKET_SW_BP, Z_PACKET_HW_BP, Z_PACKET_WRITE_WP)
(Z_PACKET_READ_WP, Z_PACKET_ACCESS_WP): Delete macros.
(Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete function.
* linux-mips-low.c (rsp_bp_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete
function.
(mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Use
Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type.
This makes linux-aarch64-low.c use target_hw_bp_type, like gdb's
aarch64-linux-nat.c. The original motivation is decoupling
insert_point/remove_point from Z packet numbers, but I think making
the files a little bit more similar is a good thing on its own right.
Ideally we'd merge these files even... The
aarch64_point_encode_ctrl_reg change is taken straight from GDB's
copy.
I confirmed with a cross compiler that this builds, but it's otherwise
untested.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-05-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-aarch64-low.c: Include break-common.h.
(enum target_point_type): Delete.
(Z_packet_to_point_type): Rename to ...
(Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): ... this, and return a
target_hw_bp_type instead.
(aarch64_show_debug_reg_state): Take an enum target_hw_bp_type
instead of an enum target_point_type.
(aarch64_point_encode_ctrl_reg): Likewise. Compute type mask from
breakpoint type.
(aarch64_dr_state_insert_one_point)
(aarch64_dr_state_remove_one_point, aarch64_handle_breakpoint)
(aarch64_handle_aligned_watchpoint)
(aarch64_handle_unaligned_watchpoint, aarch64_handle_watchpoint):
Take an enum target_hw_bp_type instead of an enum
target_point_type.
(aarch64_supports_z_point_type): New function.
(aarch64_insert_point, aarch64_remove_point): Use it. Adjust to
use Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type.
On GDB release branches, we change $development in gdb/development.sh
to false, in order to build the GDB release without -Werror by default,
thus avoiding harmless compiler warnings from breaking the build of
someone who's only interested in building GDB rather than working
on it.
This patch implements the same strategy for gdbserver, using the exact
same method.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Only use -Werror by default when DEVELOPMENT
is true.
* configure: Regenerate.
Tested on x86_64-linux, by rebuilding GDBserver first with development
set to true, and then doing it again with development set to false.
Werror was used in the first case, but not in the second.
gdbserver makes libthread_db to access uninitialized memory. Surprisingly it
does not harm normally, even -fsanitize=address works with current gdbserver.
I have found just valgrind detects it as a very first warning for gdbserver:
Syscall param ptrace(addr) contains uninitialised byte(s)
at 0x3721EECEBE: ptrace (ptrace.c:45)
by 0x436EE5: ps_get_thread_area (linux-x86-low.c:252)
by 0x5559D02: __td_ta_lookup_th_unique (td_ta_map_lwp2thr.c:157)
by 0x5559EC3: td_ta_map_lwp2thr (td_ta_map_lwp2thr.c:207)
by 0x43F87D: find_one_thread (thread-db.c:281)
by 0x440038: thread_db_get_tls_address (thread-db.c:505)
by 0x40F6D0: handle_query (server.c:2004)
by 0x4124CF: process_serial_event (server.c:3445)
by 0x4136B6: handle_serial_event (server.c:3889)
by 0x419571: handle_file_event (event-loop.c:434)
by 0x418D38: process_event (event-loop.c:189)
by 0x419AB7: start_event_loop (event-loop.c:552)
Reproducible with:
cd gdb/testsuite
g++ -o gdb.threads/tls gdb.threads/tls{,2}.c -m32 -pthread
../gdbserver/gdbserver :1234 gdb.threads/tls
../gdb -batch gdb.threads/tls -ex 'target remote :1234' -ex 'b spin' -ex c -ex 'p a_thread_local'
It is more easily reproducible even without valgrind using s/0x00/0xff/ in the
attached patch. It will then turn the output of reproducer above:
$1 = 0
->
Cannot find thread-local storage for Thread 29044, executable file .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/tls:
Remote target failed to process qGetTLSAddr request
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-05-19 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix gdbserver qGetTLSAddr for x86_64 -m32.
* linux-x86-low.c (X86_64_USER_REGS): New.
(x86_fill_gregset): Call memset for BUF first in x86_64 -m32 case.
Message-ID: <20140410114901.GA16411@host2.jankratochvil.net>
The makefile rule i386-avx512.c is to generate i386-avx512.c, but it
is written to i386-avx.c by mistake. This patch is to fix this typo.
gdb/gdbserver:
2014-04-28 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (i386-avx512.c): Fix the typo of generated file
name.
2014-04-25 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR server/16255
* linux-low.c (linux_attach_fail_reason_string): New function.
(linux_attach_lwp): Delete.
(linux_attach_lwp_1): Rename to ...
(linux_attach_lwp): ... this. Take a ptid instead of a pid as
argument. Remove "initial" parameter. Return int instead of
void. Don't error or warn here.
(linux_attach): Adjust to call linux_attach_lwp. Call error on
failure to attach to the tgid. Call warning when failing to
attach to an lwp.
* linux-low.h (linux_attach_lwp): Take a ptid instead of a pid as
argument. Remove "initial" parameter. Return int instead of
void. Don't error or warn here.
(linux_attach_fail_reason_string): New declaration.
* thread-db.c (attach_thread): Adjust to linux_attach_lwp's
interface change. Use linux_attach_fail_reason_string.
This patch adds support for the Intel(R) Advanced Vector
Extensions 512 (Intel(R) AVX-512) registers. Native and remote
debugging are covered by this patch.
Intel(R) AVX-512 is an extension to AVX to support 512-bit wide
SIMD registers in 64-bit mode (XMM0-XMM31, YMM0-YMM31, ZMM0-ZMM31).
The number of available registers in 32-bit mode is still 8
(XMM0-7, YMM0-7, ZMM0-7). The lower 256-bits of the ZMM registers
are aliased to the respective 256-bit YMM registers. The lower
128-bits are aliased to the respective 128-bit XMM registers.
There are also 8 new, dedicated mask registers (K0-K7) in both 32-bit
mode and 64-bit mode.
For more information please see
Intel(R) Developer Zone: Intel(R) AVX
http://software.intel.com/en-us/intel-isa-extensions#pid-16007-1495
Intel(R) Architecture Instruction Set Extensions Programming Reference:
http://software.intel.com/en-us/file/319433-017pdf
2014-04-24 Michael Sturm <michael.sturm@mintel.com>
Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>
* amd64-linux-nat.c (amd64_linux_gregset32_reg_offset): Add
AVX512 registers.
(amd64_linux_read_description): Add code to handle AVX512 xstate
mask and return respective tdesc.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Include features/i386/amd64-avx512-linux.c
and features/i386/x32-avx512-linux.c.
(amd64_linux_gregset_reg_offset): Add AVX512 registers.
(amd64_linux_core_read_description): Add code to handle AVX512
xstate mask and return respective tdesc.
(_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Initialize AVX512 tdesc.
* amd64-linux-tdep.h (AMD64_LINUX_ORIG_RAX_REGNUM): Adjust regnum
calculation.
(AMD64_LINUX_NUM_REGS): Adjust to new number of registers.
(tdesc_amd64_avx512_linux): New prototype.
(tdesc_x32_avx512_linux): Likewise.
* amd64-tdep.c: Include features/i386/amd64-avx512.c and
features/i386/x32-avx512.c.
(amd64_ymm_avx512_names): New register names for pseudo
registers YMM16-31.
(amd64_ymmh_avx512_names): New register names for raw registers
YMMH16-31.
(amd64_k_names): New register names for K registers.
(amd64_zmmh_names): New register names for ZMM raw registers.
(amd64_zmm_names): New registers names for ZMM pseudo registers.
(amd64_xmm_avx512_names): New register names for XMM16-31
registers.
(amd64_pseudo_register_name): Add code to return AVX512 pseudo
registers.
(amd64_init_abi): Add code to intitialize AVX512 tdep variables
if feature is present.
(_initialize_amd64_tdep): Call AVX512 tdesc initializers.
* amd64-tdep.h (enum amd64_regnum): Add AVX512 registers.
(AMD64_NUM_REGS): Adjust to new number of registers.
* i386-linux-nat.c (GETXSTATEREGS_SUPPLIES): Extend range of
registers supplied via XSTATE by AVX512 registers.
(i386_linux_read_description): Add case for AVX512.
* i386-linux-tdep.c: Include i386-avx512-linux.c.
(i386_linux_gregset_reg_offset): Add AVX512 registers.
(i386_linux_core_read_description): Add case for AVX512.
(i386_linux_init_abi): Install supported register note section
for AVX512.
(_initialize_i386_linux_tdep): Add call to tdesc init function for
AVX512.
* i386-linux-tdep.h (I386_LINUX_NUM_REGS): Set number of
registers to be number of zmm7h + 1.
(tdesc_i386_avx512_linux): Add tdesc for AVX512 registers.
* i386-tdep.c: Include features/i386/i386-avx512.c.
(i386_zmm_names): Add ZMM pseudo register names array.
(i386_zmmh_names): Add ZMM raw register names array.
(i386_k_names): Add K raw register names array.
(num_lower_zmm_regs): Add constant for the number of lower ZMM
registers. AVX512 has 16 more ZMM registers than there are YMM
registers.
(i386_zmmh_regnum_p): Add function to look up register number of
ZMM raw registers.
(i386_zmm_regnum_p): Likewise for ZMM pseudo registers.
(i386_k_regnum_p): Likewise for K raw registers.
(i386_ymmh_avx512_regnum_p): Likewise for additional YMM raw
registers added by AVX512.
(i386_ymm_avx512_regnum_p): Likewise for additional YMM pseudo
registers added by AVX512.
(i386_xmm_avx512_regnum_p): Likewise for additional XMM registers
added by AVX512.
(i386_register_name): Add code to hide YMMH16-31 and ZMMH0-31.
(i386_pseudo_register_name): Add ZMM pseudo registers.
(i386_zmm_type): Construct and return vector registers type for ZMM
registers.
(i386_pseudo_register_type): Return appropriate type for YMM16-31,
ZMM0-31 pseudo registers and K registers.
(i386_pseudo_register_read_into_value): Add code to read K, ZMM
and YMM16-31 registers from register cache.
(i386_pseudo_register_write): Add code to write K, ZMM and
YMM16-31 registers.
(i386_register_reggroup_p): Add code to include/exclude AVX512
registers in/from respective register groups.
(i386_validate_tdesc_p): Handle AVX512 feature, add AVX512
registers if feature is present in xcr0.
(i386_gdbarch_init): Add code to initialize AVX512 feature
variables in tdep structure, wire in pseudo registers and call
initialize_tdesc_i386_avx512.
* i386-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep): Add AVX512 related
variables.
(i386_regnum): Add AVX512 registers.
(I386_SSE_NUM_REGS): New define for number of SSE registers.
(I386_AVX_NUM_REGS): Likewise for AVX registers.
(I386_AVX512_NUM_REGS): Likewise for AVX512 registers.
(I386_MAX_REGISTER_SIZE): Change to 64 bytes, ZMM registers are
512 bits wide.
(i386_xmm_avx512_regnum_p): New prototype for register look up.
(i386_ymm_avx512_regnum_p): Likewise.
(i386_k_regnum_p): Likewise.
(i386_zmm_regnum_p): Likewise.
(i386_zmmh_regnum_p): Likewise.
* i387-tdep.c : Update year in copyright notice.
(xsave_ymm_avx512_offset): New table for YMM16-31 offsets in
XSAVE buffer.
(XSAVE_YMM_AVX512_ADDR): New macro.
(xsave_xmm_avx512_offset): New table for XMM16-31 offsets in
XSAVE buffer.
(XSAVE_XMM_AVX512_ADDR): New macro.
(xsave_avx512_k_offset): New table for K register offsets in
XSAVE buffer.
(XSAVE_AVX512_K_ADDR): New macro.
(xsave_avx512_zmm_h_offset): New table for ZMM register offsets
in XSAVE buffer.
(XSAVE_AVX512_ZMM_H_ADDR): New macro.
(i387_supply_xsave): Add code to supply AVX512 registers to XSAVE
buffer.
(i387_collect_xsave): Add code to collect AVX512 registers from
XSAVE buffer.
* i387-tdep.h (I387_NUM_XMM_AVX512_REGS): New define for number
of XMM16-31 registers.
(I387_NUM_K_REGS): New define for number of K registers.
(I387_K0_REGNUM): New define for K0 register number.
(I387_NUM_ZMMH_REGS): New define for number of ZMMH registers.
(I387_ZMM0H_REGNUM): New define for ZMM0H register number.
(I387_NUM_YMM_AVX512_REGS): New define for number of YMM16-31
registers.
(I387_YMM16H_REGNUM): New define for YMM16H register number.
(I387_XMM16_REGNUM): New define for XMM16 register number.
(I387_YMM0_REGNUM): New define for YMM0 register number.
(I387_KEND_REGNUM): New define for last K register number.
(I387_ZMMENDH_REGNUM): New define for last ZMMH register number.
(I387_YMMH_AVX512_END_REGNUM): New define for YMM31 register
number.
(I387_XMM_AVX512_END_REGNUM): New define for XMM31 register
number.
* common/i386-xstate.h: Add AVX 3.1 feature bits, mask and XSTATE
size.
* features/Makefile: Add AVX512 related files.
* features/i386/32bit-avx512.xml: New file.
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/amd64-avx512-linux.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/amd64-avx512-linux.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/amd64-avx512.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/amd64-avx512.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/i386-avx512-linux.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/i386-avx512-linux.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/i386-avx512.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/i386-avx512.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/x32-avx512-linux.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/x32-avx512-linux.xml: Likewise.
* features/i386/x32-avx512.c: Likewise.
* features/i386/x32-avx512.xml: Likewise.
* regformats/i386/amd64-avx512-linux.dat: New file.
* regformats/i386/amd64-avx512.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/i386/i386-avx512-linux.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/i386/i386-avx512.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/i386/x32-avx512-linux.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/i386/x32-avx512.dat: Likewise.
* NEWS: Add note about new support for AVX512.
testsuite/
* Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Added i386-avx512.
* gdb.arch/i386-avx512.c: New file.
* gdb.arch/i386-avx512.exp: Likewise.
gdbserver/
* Makefile.in: Added rules to handle new files
i386-avx512.c i386-avx512-linux.c amd64-avx512.c
amd64-avx512-linux.c x32-avx512.c x32-avx512-linux.c.
* configure.srv (srv_i386_regobj): Add i386-avx512.o.
(srv_i386_linux_regobj): Add i386-avx512-linux.o.
(srv_amd64_regobj): Add amd64-avx512.o and x32-avx512.o.
(srv_amd64_linux_regobj): Add amd64-avx512-linux.o and
x32-avx512-linux.o.
(srv_i386_32bit_xmlfiles): Add i386/32bit-avx512.xml.
(srv_i386_64bit_xmlfiles): Add i386/64bit-avx512.xml.
(srv_amd64_xmlfiles): Add i386/amd64-avx512.xml and
i386/x32-avx512.xml.
(srv_i386_linux_xmlfiles): Add i386/i386-avx512-linux.xml.
(srv_amd64_linux_xmlfiles): Add i386/amd64-avx512-linux.xml and
i386/x32-avx512-linux.xml.
* i387-fp.c (num_avx512_k_registers): New constant for number
of K registers.
(num_avx512_zmmh_low_registers): New constant for number of
lower ZMM registers (0-15).
(num_avx512_zmmh_high_registers): New constant for number of
higher ZMM registers (16-31).
(num_avx512_ymmh_registers): New contant for number of higher
YMM registers (ymm16-31 added by avx521 on x86_64).
(num_avx512_xmm_registers): New constant for number of higher
XMM registers (xmm16-31 added by AVX512 on x86_64).
(struct i387_xsave): Add space for AVX512 registers.
(i387_cache_to_xsave): Change raw buffer size to 64 characters.
Add code to handle AVX512 registers.
(i387_xsave_to_cache): Add code to handle AVX512 registers.
* linux-x86-low.c (init_registers_amd64_avx512_linux): New
prototypei from generated file.
(tdesc_amd64_avx512_linux): Likewise.
(init_registers_x32_avx512_linux): Likewise.
(tdesc_x32_avx512_linux): Likewise.
(init_registers_i386_avx512_linux): Likewise.
(tdesc_i386_avx512_linux): Likewise.
(x86_64_regmap): Add AVX512 registers.
(x86_linux_read_description): Add code to handle AVX512 XSTATE
mask.
(initialize_low_arch): Add code to initialize AVX512 registers.
doc/
* gdb.texinfo (i386 Features): Add description of AVX512
registers.
Change-Id: Ifc4c08c76b85dbec18d02efdbe6182e851584438
Signed-off-by: Michael Sturm <michael.sturm@intel.com>
My main motivation here is moving in the direction of decoupling
insert_point/remove_point from packet numbers, though this bit alone
should make it a little bit easier to merge gdb/gdbserver/i386-low.c
and gdb/i386-nat.c (which are largely the same).
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, and cross built for i686-mingw32 too.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-04-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* i386-low.c: Don't include break-common.h here.
(i386_low_insert_watchpoint, i386_low_remove_watchpoint): Change
prototype to take target_hw_bp_type as argument instead of a Z
packet char.
* i386-low.h: Include break-common.h here.
(Z_packet_to_hw_type): Declare.
(i386_low_insert_watchpoint, i386_low_remove_watchpoint): Change
prototypes.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_insert_point): Convert the packet number to
a target_hw_bp_type before calling i386_low_insert_watchpoint.
(x86_remove_point): Convert the packet number to a
target_hw_bp_type before calling i386_low_remove_watchpoint.
* win32-i386-low.c (i386_insert_point): Convert the packet number
to a target_hw_bp_type before calling i386_low_insert_watchpoint.
(i386_remove_point): Convert the packet number to a
target_hw_bp_type before calling i386_low_remove_watchpoint.
While trying to fix hbreak2.exp against GDBserver I noticed this...
(gdb) hbreak main if 1
Sending packet: $m400580,40#2e...Packet received: e8d2ffffff5dc3554889e54883ec10c745fc00000000eb0eb800000000e8c1ffffff8345fc01817dfce70300007ee9b800000000c9c3662e0f1f840000000000
Sending packet: $m40058f,1#31...Packet received: c7
Hardware assisted breakpoint 1 at 0x40058f: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break-idempotent.c, line 46.
Sending packet: $Z1,40058f,1;X3,220127#9b...
*hangs forever*
The issue is that nothing advances the packet pointer if
add_breakpoint_condition either fails to parse the agent expression,
or fails to find the breakpoint, resulting in an infinite loop in
process_point_options. The latter case should really be fixed by
GDBserver tracking GDB Z1 breakpoints in its breakpoint structures
like Z0 breakpoints are, but the latter case still needs handling.
add_breakpoint_commands has the same issue, though at present I don't
know any way to trigger it other than sending a manually cooked
packet.
Unbelievably, it doesn't look like we have any test that tries setting
a conditional hardware breakpoint. Looking at cond-eval-mode.exp, it
looks like the file was meant to actually test something, but it's
mostly empty today. This patch adds tests that tries all sorts of
conditional breakpoints and watchpoints. The test hangs/fails without
the GDBserver fix.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-04-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* mem-break.c (add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands):
Check if the condition or command is NULL before checking if the
breakpoint is known. On success, return true.
* mem-break.h (add_breakpoint_condition): Document return.
(add_breakpoint_commands): Add describing comment.
* server.c (skip_to_semicolon): New function.
(process_point_options): Use it.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-04-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/cond-eval-mode.c: New file.
* gdb.base/cond-eval-mode.exp: Use standard_testfile. Adjust
prepare_for_testing to build the new file. Check result of
runto_main.
(test_break, test_watch): New procedures.
(top level): Use them.
sh-linux-gnu-gcc (...) src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c
.../src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c: In function 'linux_read_loadmap':
.../src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:5284:13: error: 'struct lwp_info' has no member named 'entry'
make[1]: *** [linux-low.o] Error 1
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-04-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (linux_read_loadmap): Pass current_inferior directly
to lwpid_of.
GDBserver currently hangs forever in waitpid if the leader thread
exits before other threads, or if all resumed threads exit - e.g.,
next over a thread exit with sched-locking on. This is exposed by
leader-exit.exp. leader-exit.exp is part of a series of tests for a
set of related problems. See
<http://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2011-10/msg00704.html>:
"
To recap, on the Linux kernel, ptrace/waitpid don't allow reaping the
leader thread until all other threads in the group are reaped. When
the leader exits, it goes zombie, but waitpid will not return an exit
status until the other threads are gone. This is presently exercised
by the gdb.threads/leader-exit.exp test. The fix for that test, in
linux-nat.c:wait_lwp, handles the case where we see the leader gone
when we're stopping all threads to report an event to some other
thread to the core.
(...)
The latter bit about not blocking if there no resumed threads in the
process also applies to some other thread exiting, not just the main
thread. E.g., this test starts a thread, and runs to a breakpoint in
that thread:
...
(gdb) c
Continuing.
[New Thread 0x7ffff75a4700 (LWP 23397)]
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff75a4700 (LWP 23397)]
Breakpoint 2, thread_a (arg=0x0) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.c:28
28 return 0; /* break-here */
(gdb) info threads
* 2 Thread 0x7ffff75a4700 (LWP 23397) thread_a (arg=0x0) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.c:28
1 Thread 0x7ffff7fcb720 (LWP 23391) 0x00007ffff7bc606d in pthread_join (threadid=140737343276800, thread_return=0x0) at pthread_join.c:89
The thread will exit as soon as we resume it. But if we only resume
that thread, leaving the rest of the threads stopped:
(gdb) set scheduler-locking on
(gdb) c
Continuing.
^C^C^C^C^C^C^C^C
"
This patch fixes the issues by implementing TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED
on GDBserver, similarly to what the patch above did for native
Linux GDB.
gdb.threads/leader-exit.exp now passes.
gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp now at least errors out instead
of hanging:
continue
Continuing.
warning: Remote failure reply: E.No unwaited-for children left.
[Thread 15454] #1 stopped.
0x00000034cf408e60 in pthread_join (threadid=140737353922368, thread_return=0x0) at pthread_join.c:93
93 lll_wait_tid (pd->tid);
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue stops when the main thread exits
The gdb.threads/non-ldr-exc-*.exp tests are skipped because GDBserver
unfortunately doesn't support fork/exec yet, but I'm confident this
fixes the related issues.
I'm leaving modeling TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED in the RSP for a
separate pass.
(BTW, in case of error in response to a vCont, it would be better for
GDB to query the target for the current thread, or re-select one,
instead of assuming current inferior_ptid is still the selected
thread.)
This implementation is a little different from GDB's, because I'm
avoiding bringing in more of this broken use of waitpid(PID) into
GDBserver. Specifically, this avoids waitpid(PID) when stopping all
threads. There's really no need for wait_for_sigstop to wait for each
LWP in turn. Instead, with some refactoring, we make it reuse
linux_wait_for_event.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR 12702
* inferiors.h (A_I_NEXT, ALL_INFERIORS_TYPE, ALL_PROCESSES): New
macros.
* linux-low.c (delete_lwp, handle_extended_wait): Add debug
output.
(last_thread_of_process_p): Take a PID argument instead of a
thread pointer.
(linux_wait_for_lwp): Delete.
(num_lwps, check_zombie_leaders, not_stopped_callback): New
functions.
(linux_low_filter_event): New function, party factored out from
linux_wait_for_event.
(linux_wait_for_event): Rename to ...
(linux_wait_for_event_filtered): ... this. Add new filter ptid
argument. Partly rewrite. Always use waitpid(-1, WNOHANG) and
sigsuspend. Check for zombie leaders.
(linux_wait_for_event): Reimplement as wrapper around
linux_wait_for_event_filtered.
(linux_wait_1): Handle TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED. Assume that if
a normal or signal exit is seen, it's the whole process exiting.
(wait_for_sigstop): No longer a for_each_inferior callback.
Rewrite on top of linux_wait_for_event_filtered.
(stop_all_lwps): Call wait_for_sigstop directly.
* server.c (resume, handle_target_event): Handle
TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED.
This is the GDBserver counterpart of a change we recently made in
GDB to only rely on get_image_name to determine its name.
This simplification, in turn, allows us to remove a fair amount of
functions and globals which now become unused.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* win32-low.c (psapi_get_dll_name,
* win32_CreateToolhelp32Snapshot): Delete.
(win32_CreateToolhelp32Snapshot, win32_Module32First)
(win32_Module32Next, load_toolhelp, toolhelp_get_dll_name):
Delete.
(handle_load_dll): Add function description.
Remove code using psapi_get_dll_name and toolhelp_get_dll_name.
This patch is a small cleanup that moves the magic 0x1000 offset
to apply to a DLL's base address inside the win32_add_one_solib
function, rather than delegate that reponsibility to its callers.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* win32-low.c (win32_add_one_solib): Add 0x1000 to load_addr.
Add comment.
(win32_add_all_dlls): Remove 0x1000 offset applied to DLL
base address when calling win32_add_one_solib.
(handle_load_dll): Delete local variable load_addr.
Remove 0x1000 offset applied to DLL base address when calling
win32_add_one_solib.
(handle_unload_dll): Add comment.
This GDBserver patch mirrors a change made in GDB wich aims at
simplifying DLL handling during the inferior initialization
(process creation during the "run", or during an "attach").
Instead of processing each DLL load event, which is sometimes
incomplete, we ignore these events until the inferior has completed
its startup phase, and then just iterate over all DLLs via
EnumProcessModules.
As a side-effect, it fixes a small bug where win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded
was missing a 0x1000 offset in the DLL base address. This problem
should only be visible on the 64bit version of Windows 8.1, since
this is the only platform where win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded is actually
needed.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* win32-low.c (win32_add_all_dlls): Renames
win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded. Rewrite function documentation.
Adjust implementation to always load all DLLs.
Add 0x1000 offset to DLL base address when calling
win32_add_one_solib.
(child_initialization_done): New static global.
(do_initial_child_stuff): Set child_initialization_done to
zero during child initialization, and 1 after. Replace call
to win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded by call to win32_add_all_dlls.
Add comment.
(match_dll_by_basename, dll_is_loaded_by_basename): Delete.
(handle_unload_dll): Add function documentation.
(get_child_debug_event): Ignore load and unload DLL events
during child initialization.
* gdbthread.h (add_thread): Change result type to struct thread_info *.
* inferiors.c (add_thread): Change result type to struct thread_info *.
All callers updated.
(add_lwp): Call add_thread here instead of in callers.
All callers updated.
* linux-low.h (get_lwp_thread): Rewrite.
(struct lwp_info): New member "thread".
This speeds up gdbserver attach in non-stop mode because now get_lwp_thread
doesn't do a linear search for the corresponding thread_info object.
* dll.c (clear_dlls): Replace accessing list implemention details
with API function.
* gdbthread.h (get_first_thread): Declare.
* inferiors.c (for_each_inferior_with_data): New function.
(get_first_thread): New function.
(find_thread_ptid): Simplify.
(get_first_inferior): New function.
(clear_list): Delete.
(one_inferior_p): New function.
(clear_inferior_list): New function.
(clear_inferiors): Update.
* inferiors.h (for_each_inferior_with_data): Declare.
(clear_inferior_list): Declare.
(one_inferior_p): Declare.
(get_first_inferior): Declare.
* linux-low.c (linux_wait_for_event): Replace accessing list
implemention details with API function.
* server.c (target_running): Ditto.
(accumulate_file_name_length): New function.
(emit_dll_description): New function.
(handle_qxfer_libraries): Replace accessing list implemention
details with API function.
(handle_qxfer_threads_worker): New function.
(handle_qxfer_threads_proper): Replace accessing list implemention
details with API function.
(handle_query): Ditto.
(visit_actioned_threads_callback_ftype): New typedef.
(visit_actioned_threads_data): New struct.
(visit_actioned_threads): Rewrite to be find_inferior callback.
(resume): Call find_inferior.
(handle_status): Replace accessing list implemention
details with API function.
(process_serial_event): Replace accessing list implemention details
with API function.
* target.c (set_desired_inferior): Replace accessing list implemention
details with API function.
* tracepoint.c (same_process_p): New function.
(gdb_agent_about_to_close): Replace accessing list implemention
details with API function.
* win32-low.c (child_delete_thread): Replace accessing list
implemention details with API function.
(match_dll_by_basename): New function.
(dll_is_loaded_by_basename): New function.
(win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded): Replace accessing list implemention
details call to dll_is_loaded_by_basename.
This adds a "self" argument to to_supports_btrace. Due to how one
implementation of this method is shared with gdbserver this required a
small change to gdbserver as well.
2014-02-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/linux-btrace.c (linux_supports_btrace): Add "ops"
argument.
* common/linux-btrace.h (linux_supports_btrace): Update.
* remote.c (remote_supports_btrace): Add "self" argument.
* target-delegates.c: Rebuild.
* target.c (target_supports_btrace): Remove.
* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_supports_btrace>: Add
target_ops argument.
(target_supports_btrace): New define.
2014-02-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* target.h (struct target_ops) <supports_btrace>: Add target_ops
argument.
(target_supports_btrace): Update.
unhexify and hex2bin are identical, so this removes unhexify. The
particular choice of which to keep was made on the basis of
parallelism with the earlier patch that removed hexify.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/rsp-low.h (unhexify): Don't declare.
* common/rsp-low.c (unhexify): Remove.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* server.c (handle_query, handle_v_run): Use hex2bin, not
unhexify.
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtdpsrc, cmd_qtdv, cmd_qtnotes): Likewise.
convert_int_to_ascii is identical to bin2hex. This removes the
former. In this case I made the choice of which to keep on the basis
that I consider the name bin2hex to be superior to
convert_int_to_ascii.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/rsp-low.h (convert_int_to_ascii): Don't declare.
* common/rsp-low.c (convert_int_to_ascii): Remove.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* ax.c (gdb_unparse_agent_expr): Use bin2hex, not
convert_int_to_ascii.
* regcache.c (registers_to_string, collect_register_as_string):
Likewise.
* remote-utils.c (look_up_one_symbol, relocate_instruction):
Likewise.
* server.c (process_serial_event): Likewise.
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtstatus, response_source, response_tsv)
(cmd_qtbuffer, cstr_to_hexstr): Likewise.
This removes hexify in favor of bin2hex.
The choice of which to keep was arbitrary.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/rsp-low.h (hexify): Don't declare.
* common/rsp-low.c (hexify): Remove.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* remote-utils.c (look_up_one_symbol, monitor_output): Use
bin2hex, not hexify.
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtstatus): Likewise.
hexify had the same issue as bin2hex; and the fix is the same.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/rsp-low.c (hexify): Never take strlen of argument.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* remote-utils.c (monitor_output): Pass explicit length to
hexify.
This moves various low-level remote serial protocol bits into
common/rsp-low.[ch].
This is as close to a pure move as possible. There are some
redundancies remaining but those will be dealt with in a subsequent
patch.
Note that the two variants of remote_escape_output disagreed on the
treatment of "*". On the theory that quoting cannot hurt but the
absence possibly can, I chose the gdbserver variant to be the
canonical one.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c: Include rsp-low.h.
* remote.h (hex2bin, bin2hex, unpack_varlen_hex): Don't declare.
* remote.c: Include rsp-low.h.
(hexchars, ishex, unpack_varlen_hex, pack_nibble, pack_hex_byte)
(fromhex, hex2bin, tohex, bin2hex, remote_escape_output)
(remote_unescape_input): Move to common/rsp-low.c.
* common/rsp-low.h: New file.
* common/rsp-low.c: New file.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/rsp-low.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/rsp-low.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Add rsp-low.o.
(rsp-low.o): New target.
2014-02-12 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c: Include rsp-low.h.
* server.c: Include rsp-low.h.
* remote-utils.h (convert_ascii_to_int, convert_int_to_ascii)
(unhexify, hexify, remote_escape_output, unpack_varlen_hex): Don't
declare.
* remote-utils.c: Include rsp-low.h.
(fromhex, hexchars, ishex, unhexify, tohex, hexify)
(remote_escape_output, remote_unescape_input, unpack_varlen_hex)
(convert_int_to_ascii, convert_ascii_to_int): Move to
common/rsp-low.c.
* regcache.c: Include rsp-low.h.
* ax.c: Include rsp-low.h.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/rsp-low.c.
(OBS): Add rsp-low.o.
(rsp-low.o): New target.
Currently, xtensa code using the Linux ptrace interface only include
sys/ptrace.h. This file comes from the C library (glibc and uClibc,
at least), and includes a declaration of the ptrace() functions, along
with some cross architecture constants that are mostly copied from the
file located at include/uapi/linux/ptrace.h in recent Linux kernels.
For xtensa specific constants like PTRACE_GETXTREGS and
PTRACE_SETXTREGS the asm/ptrace.h include from the Linux kernel UAPI
is needed. The code in gdbserver xtensa specific part doesn't call
ptrace() directly, so we can remove the unneeded sys/ptrace.h include.
The gdb xtensa specific code needs both headers, since it calls
ptrace().
gdb/
* xtensa-linux-nat.c: Include asm/ptrace.h.
gdb/gdbserver/
* linux-xtensa-low.c: Include asm/ptrace.h instead of
sys/ptrace.h.
If gdb_proc_service.h ends up including linux/elf.h, we'll trip on
duplicate definitions:
In file included from ../../../gdb/gdbserver/linux-x86-low.c:29:0:
../../../gdb/gdbserver/../../include/elf/common.h:36:0: error: "ELFMAG0"
redefined [-Werror]
... etc ...
Handle this the same way linux-low.c and linux-arm-low.c handle this.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-01-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR PR16445
* linux-x86-low.c (linux-x86-low.c): Don't include elf/common.h if
ELFMAG0 is defined after including gdb_proc_service.h.
Read branch trace data incrementally and extend the current trace rather than
discarding it and reading the entire trace buffer each time.
If the branch trace buffer overflowed, we can't extend the current trace so we
discard it and start anew by reading the entire branch trace buffer.
2014-01-16 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
* common/linux-btrace.c (perf_event_read_bts, linux_read_btrace):
Support delta reads.
(linux_disable_btrace): Change return type.
* common/linux-btrace.h (linux_read_btrace): Change parameters
and return type to allow error reporting. Update users.
(linux_disable_btrace): Change return type. Update users.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_read_type) <BTRACE_READ_DELTA>:
New.
(btrace_error): New.
(btrace_block) <begin>: Comment on BEGIN == 0.
* btrace.c (btrace_compute_ftrace): Start from the end of
the current trace.
(btrace_stitch_trace, btrace_clear_history): New.
(btrace_fetch): Read delta trace, return if replaying.
(btrace_clear): Move clear history code to btrace_clear_history.
(parse_xml_btrace): Throw an error if parsing failed.
* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_read_btrace>: Change parameters
and return type to allow error reporting.
(target_read_btrace): Change parameters and return type to allow
error reporting.
* target.c (target_read_btrace): Update.
* remote.c (remote_read_btrace): Support delta reads. Pass
errors on.
* NEWS: Announce it.
gdbserver/
* target.h (target_ops) <read_btrace>: Change parameters and
return type to allow error reporting.
* server.c (handle_qxfer_btrace): Support delta reads. Pass
trace reading errors on.
* linux-low.c (linux_low_read_btrace): Pass trace reading
errors on.
(linux_low_disable_btrace): New.
... not when a new GDB connection sends the status packet ('?').
Mainly just a cleanup/simplification, as GDB always sends '?' first.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
2014-01-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.c (handle_status): Don't discard previous queued stop
replies or thread's pending status here.
(main) <disconnection>: Do it here instead.
Currently, when GDB connects in all-stop mode, GDBserver always
responds to the status packet with a GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP, even if the
program is actually stopped for some other signal.
(gdb) tar rem ...
...
(gdb) c
Program received signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1.
(gdb) disconnect
(gdb) tar rem ...
(gdb) c
(Or a GDB crash instead of an explicit disconnect.)
This results in the program losing that signal on that last continue,
because gdb will tell the target to resume with no signal (to suppress
the GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP, due to 'handle SISGTRAP nopass'), and that will
actually suppress the real signal the program had stopped for
(SIGUSR1). To fix that, I think we should make GDBserver report the
real signal the thread had stopped for in response to the status
packet:
@item ?
@cindex @samp{?} packet
Indicate the reason the target halted. The reply is the same as for
step and continue.
But, that raises the question -- which thread are we reporting the
status for? Due to how the RSP in all-stop works, we can only report
one status. The status packet's response is a stop reply packet, so
it includes the thread identifier, so it's not a problem packet-wise.
However, GDBserver is currently always reporting the status for first
thread in the thread list, even though that may well not be the thread
that got the signal that caused the program to stop. So the next
logical step would be to report the status for the
last_ptid/last_status thread (the last event reported to gdb), if it's
still around; and if not, fallback to some other thread.
There's an issue on the GDB side with that, though...
GDB currently always adds the thread reported in response to the
status query as the first thread in its list. That means that if we
start with e.g.,
(gdb) info threads
3 Thread 1003 ...
* 2 Thread 1002 ...
1 Thread 1001 ...
And reconnect:
(gdb) disconnect
(gdb) tar rem ...
We end up with:
(gdb) info threads
3 Thread 1003 ...
2 Thread 1001 ...
* 1 Thread 1002 ...
Not a real big issue, but it's reasonably fixable, by having GDB
fetch/sync the thread list before fetching the status/'?', and then
using the status to select the right thread as current on the GDB
side. Holes in the thread numbers are squashed before/after
reconnection (e.g., 2,3,5 becomes 1,2,3), but the order is preserved,
which I think is both good, and good enough.
However (yes, there's more...), the previous GDB that was connected
might have had gdbserver running in non-stop mode, or could have left
gdbserver doing disconnected tracing (which also forces non-stop), and
if the new gdb/connection is in all-stop mode, we can end up with more
than one thread with a signal to report back to gdb. As we can only
report one thread/status (in the all-stop RSP variant; the non-stop
variant doesn't have this issue), we get to do what we do at every
other place we have this situation -- leave events we can't report
right now as pending, so that the next resume picks them up.
Note all this ammounts to a QoI change, within the existing framework.
There's really no RSP change here.
The only user visible change (other than that the signal is program is
stopped at isn't lost / is passed to the program), is in "info
program", that now can show the signal the program stopped for. Of
course, the next resume will respect the pass/nopass setting for the
signal in question. It'd be reasonable to have the initial connection
tell the user the program was stopped with a signal, similar to when
we load a core to debug, but I'm leaving that out for a future change.
I think we'll need to either change how handle_inferior_event & co
handle stop_soon, or maybe bypass them completely (like
fork-child.c:startup_inferior) for that.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2014-01-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <status_pending_p>: New field.
* server.c (visit_actioned_threads, handle_pending_status): New
function.
(handle_v_cont): Factor out parts to ...
(resume): ... this new function. If in all-stop, and a thread
being resumed has a pending status, report it without actually
resuming.
(myresume): Adjust to use the new 'resume' function.
(clear_pending_status_callback, set_pending_status_callback)
(find_status_pending_thread_callback): New functions.
(handle_status): Handle the case of multiple threads having
interesting statuses to report. Report threads' real last signal
instead of always reporting GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP. Look for a thread
with an interesting thread to report the status for, instead of
always reporting the status of the first thread.
gdb/
2014-01-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* remote.c (remote_add_thread): Add threads silently if starting
up.
(remote_notice_new_inferior): If in all-stop, and starting up,
don't call notice_new_inferior.
(get_current_thread): New function, factored out from ...
(add_current_inferior_and_thread): ... this. Adjust.
(remote_start_remote) <all-stop>: Fetch the thread list. If we
found any thread, then select the remote's current thread as GDB's
current thread too.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-01-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/reconnect-signal.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/reconnect-signal.exp: New file.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* top.c (print_gdb_version): Set copyright year to 2014.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* gdbserver.c (gdbserver_version): Set copyright year to 2014.
* gdbreplay.c (gdbreplay_version): Likewise.
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_set_debug_regs): Set
iov.iov_len with the real length in use.
gdb/gdbserver/
* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_linux_set_debug_regs): Set
iov.iov_len with the real length in use.
This is the gdbserver-equivalent of the change made in GDB to handle
the case, in x64 windows version 2012, where the kernel produces
a LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT where the name of the associated DLL cannot
be determined at that time, and thus has to be processed later.
The visible symptom is that ntdll.dll is missing from the list of
shared libraries known to be mapped by the inferior, with other
side-effects such as failure to unwind through code provided by
that DLL (such as exception handling routines).
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (safe-ctype.o, lbasename.o): New rules.
* configure.srv: Add safe-ctype.o and lbasename.o to srv_tgtobj
for all targets that use win32-low.c.
* win32-low.c (win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded): New function.
(do_initial_child_stuff): Add call to win32_ensure_ntdll_loaded.
This is a preparatory patch that achieves two goals:
. Makes the initial event handling more similar to GDB's;
. Opens the door for implementing post-inititial-handling
operations.
At the moment, this is only done on Windows, where the
post-initial-handling is going to be needed (in the context of
Windows 2012). And because we're close to creating the gdb 7.7
branch, making that change for all platforms is a little more
risk that we'd like. So the change is currently implemented
on Windows.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* target.c (mywait): Set OURSTATUS->KIND to TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
if equal to TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED.
* win32-low.c (cached_status): New static global.
(win32_wait): Add declaration.
(do_initial_child_stuff): Flush all initial pending debug events
up to the initial breakpoint.
(win32_wait): If CACHED_STATUS was set, return that instead
of doing a real wait. Remove the code resuming the execution
of the inferior after receiving a TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED event
during the initial phase. Also remove the code changing
OURSTATUS->KIND from TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED to
TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED.
Due to copy-n-paste, the problem caused PR remote/15974 also exists
in gdbserver. This patch fixes it in the same way. Patch to fix
remote/15974 can be found:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00014.html
gdb/gdbserver:
2013-12-11 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* notif.c (handle_notif_ack): Return 0 if no notification
matches.
stdlib.h is universal as well, so there is no need to check for it.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't check for stdlib.h
* defs.h: Include stdlib.h unconditionally.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't check for stdlib.h.
* gdbreplay.c: Unconditionally include stdlib.h.
This removes gdb_dirent.h and updates the code to use dirent.h
instead. It also removes the now-useless configure checks.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* common/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Don't use AC_HEADER_DIRENT.
* common/gdb_dirent.h: Remove.
* common/filestuff.c: Use dirent.h.
* common/linux-osdata.c: Use dirent.h.
(NAMELEN): Define.
* config.in: Rebuild.
* configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't use AC_HEADER_DIRENT.
* linux-fork.c: Use dirent.h
* linux-nat.c: Use dirent.h.
* nto-procfs.c: Use dirent.h.
* procfs.c: Use dirent.h.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* config.in: Rebuild.
* configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't use AC_HEADER_DIRENT.
Now that we are using the gnulib string.h module, we don't need to
check for string.h or strings.h. This removes the last few checks
from the source and from the configure scripts.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* configure: Rebuild.
* common/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Don't check for string.h or
strings.h.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* server.h: Don't check HAVE_STRING_H.
* gdbreplay.c: Don't check HAVE_STRING_H.
* configure: Rebuild.
Later patches in this series will make changes to gdb and gdbserver
configury, necessitating the use of gnulib in gdbreplay. This patch
introduces the dependency early, so that subsequent patches don't
break the build.
2013-11-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (gdbreplay$(EXEEXT)): Depend on and link against
LIBGNU.
It has bothered me for a while that files in common/ use macros
defined via autoconf checks, but rely on each configure.ac doing the
proper checks independently.
This patch introduces common/common.m4 which consolidates the checks
assumed by code in common.
The rule I propose is that if something is needed or used by common,
it should be checked for by common.m4. However, if the check is also
needed by gdb or gdbserver, then it should be duplicated there.
Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 18 (though this is hardly the
most strenuous case) and using the Fedora 18 mingw cross compilers. I
also examined the config.in diffs to ensure that symbols did not go
missing.
2013-11-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* acinclude.m4: Include common.m4.
* common/common.m4: New file.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Use GDB_AC_COMMON.
2013-11-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* acinclude.m4: Include common.m4, codeset.m4.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Use GDB_AC_COMMON.
When checking for the presence of the TDB regset, the current code
interprets ENODATA from PTRACE_GETREGSET as an indication that the TDB
regset *could* occur on this system, but the inferior stopped outside
a transaction. However, the Linux kernel actually reports ENODATA
even on systems without the transactional execution facility. Thus
the logic is now changed to check the TE field in the HWCAP as well.
This version also checks the existence of the TDB regset -- just to be
on the safe side when running on TE-enabled hardware with a kernel
that does not offer the TDB regset for some reason.
gdb/
* s390-linux-nat.c (s390_read_description): Consider the TE field
in the HWCAP for determining 'have_regset_tdb'.
gdbserver/
* linux-s390-low.c (HWCAP_S390_TE): New define.
(s390_arch_setup): Consider the TE field in the HWCAP for
determining 'have_regset_tdb'.
The first one, dw2_get_real_path from gdb/dwarf2read.c, was actually
making use of OBSTACK_CALLOC which already calls "sizeof" for its third
argument.
The second, download_tracepoint_1 from gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c, was
explicitly calling "sizeof" inside another "sizeof".
This patch fixed both functions.
gdb/ChangeLog
2013-10-16 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
PR gdb/16014
* dwarf2read.c (dw2_get_real_path): Remove unnecessary call to
sizeof.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2013-10-16 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
PR gdb/16014
* tracepoint.c (download_tracepoint_1): Remove unnecessary double
call to sizeof.
If we make gdbserver gdb_continue_to_end actually expect a process
exit with GDBserver, we get many testsuite failures with the remote
stdio board:
-PASS: gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step.exp: continue until exit at amd64-disp-step
+FAIL: gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step.exp: continue until exit at amd64-disp-step (the program exited)
-PASS: gdb.base/break.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test
+FAIL: gdb.base/break.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test (the program exited)
-PASS: gdb.base/chng-syms.exp: continue until exit at breakpoint first time through
+FAIL: gdb.base/chng-syms.exp: continue until exit at breakpoint first time through (the program exited)
... etc. ...
This is what the log shows for all of them:
(gdb) continue
Continuing.
Child exited with status 0
GDBserver exiting
[Inferior 1 (process 22721) exited normally]
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/amd64-disp-step.exp: continue until exit (the program exited)
The problem is the whole "Child exited ... GDBserver exiting" output,
that comes out of GDBserver, and that the testsuite is not expecting.
I pondered somehow making the testsuite adjust to this. But,
testsuite aside, I think GDBserver should not be outputting this at
all when GDB is connected through stdio. GDBserver will be printing
this in GDB's console, but the user can already tell from the regular
output that the inferior is gone.
Again, manually:
(gdb) tar remote | ./gdbserver/gdbserver - program
Remote debugging using | ./gdbserver/gdbserver - program
Process program created; pid = 22486
stdin/stdout redirected
Remote debugging using stdio
done.
Loaded symbols for /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
0x000000323d001530 in _start () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Child exited with status 1
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
GDBserver exiting
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
[Inferior 1 (process 22486) exited with code 01]
(gdb)
Suppressing those two lines makes the output be exactly like when
debugging against a remote tcp gdbserver:
(gdb) c
Continuing.
[Inferior 1 (process 22914) exited with code 01]
(gdb)
2013-10-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.c (process_serial_event): Don't output "GDBserver
exiting" if GDB is connected through stdio.
* target.c (mywait): Likewise, be silent if GDB is connected
through stdio.
The current implementation is forgetting to populate the thread list
when attaching to the process. This results in an incomplete list of
threads when debugging a threaded program.
Unfortunately, as the added comments hints, there appears to be
no way of getting the list of threads via ptrace, other than by
spawning the "ps" command, and parsing its output. Not great,
but it appears to be the best we can do.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (lynx_add_threads_after_attach): New function.
(lynx_attach): Remove call to add_thread. Add call to
lynx_add_threads_after_attach instead.
It is possible to have a build of glibc where SYS_perf_event_open is not
defined (because when the glibc was compiled, the syscall did not exist),
but have newer kernel headers installed so that linux/perf_event.h is
available. In this setup, you get a build failure:
./common/linux-btrace.c: In function 'kernel_supports_btrace':
./common/linux-btrace.c:316:23: error: 'SYS_perf_event_open' undeclared (first use in this function)
Update the ifdef check to also see if the syscall is available.
URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/473522
Reported-by: William Throwe <wtt6@cornell.edu>
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Apply the same fix that was applied to aarch64-linux-nat.c.
2013-09-16 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_linux_set_debug_regs): Zero
out regs.
These two are still written in the pre-auto-dependency-tracking style.
They probably were written before that, and committed afterwards
without adjustment. An easy oversight to make.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (linux-btrace.o, mips-linux-watch.o): Remove
explicit header dependencies and use $COMPILE/$POSTCOMPILE.
Somehow, my builds yesterdays didn't trip on this...
../src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c: In function ‘initialize_low_tracepoint’:
../src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c:172:3: error: ‘ipa_tdesc’ undeclared (first use in this function)
../src/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c:172:3: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-amd64-ipa.c: Include tracepoint.h.
* linux-i386-ipa.c: Include tracepoint.h.
One misspelled function call, and one superfluous typedef. The latter
causes an error of the following type when building:
linux-crisv32-low.c:372: error: conflicting types for 'elf_gregset_t'
/.../target/include/asm/elf.h:36:
error: previous declaration of 'elf_gregset_t' was here
2013-09-06 Ricard Wanderlof <ricardw@axis.com>
* linux-crisv32-low.c (elf_gregset_t): Delete typedef.
(initialize_low_arch): Call init_registers_crisv32 rather than
init_register_crisv32.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.h (gdb_client_data, handler_func, callback_handler_func)
(delete_file_handler, add_file_handler, append_callback_event)
(delete_callback_event, start_event_loop, initialize_event_loop):
Move to event-loop.h and include it.
* event-loop.h: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.h (perror_with_name, error, fatal, warning, paddress)
(pulongest, plongest, phex_nz, pfildes): Move to utils.h, and
include it.
* utils.h: New file.
server.h nowadays includes gdb_locale.h, which already brings this in.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.h (_): Delete.
I'm seeing trace-buffer-size.exp failing (with gdbserver):
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.exp: tstatus check 2
show trace-buffer-size 4
Requested size of trace buffer is 4.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.exp: show trace buffer size
set trace-buffer-size -1
memory clobbered past end of allocated block
Remote connection closed
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.exp: set trace buffer size 2
set trace-buffer-size unlimited
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.exp: set trace-buffer-size unlimited
That "memory clobbered past end of allocated block" is mcheck triggering.
Valgrind shows:
==23624== Invalid write of size 1
==23624== at 0x418DD8: clear_trace_buffer (tracepoint.c:1443)
==23624== by 0x418F3A: init_trace_buffer (tracepoint.c:1497)
==23624== by 0x41D95B: cmd_bigqtbuffer_size (tracepoint.c:4061)
==23624== by 0x41DEEC: handle_tracepoint_general_set (tracepoint.c:4193)
clear_trace_buffer does:
static void
clear_trace_buffer (void)
{
trace_buffer_start = trace_buffer_lo;
trace_buffer_free = trace_buffer_lo;
trace_buffer_end_free = trace_buffer_hi;
trace_buffer_wrap = trace_buffer_hi;
/* A traceframe with zeroed fields marks the end of trace data. */
((struct traceframe *) trace_buffer_free)->tpnum = 0;
((struct traceframe *) trace_buffer_free)->data_size = 0;
traceframe_read_count = traceframe_write_count = 0;
traceframes_created = 0;
}
And the tpnum+data_size fields are over 4 bytes... This fixes it by
ensuring we allocate space at least for an EOB. We have code
elsewhere that relies on the EOB being present (like e.g.,
find_traceframe), so this seems simplest.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c (TRACEFRAME_EOB_MARKER_SIZE): New macro.
(init_trace_buffer): Ensure at least TRACEFRAME_EOB_MARKER_SIZE is
allocated.
(trace_buffer_alloc): Use TRACEFRAME_EOB_MARKER_SIZE.
When I added gdb_read_memory, with bits factored out from elsewhere, I
missed adjusting this error return. gdb_read_memory has an interface
similar to Like GDB's xfer_partial:
> /* Read trace frame or inferior memory. Returns the number of bytes
> actually read, zero when no further transfer is possible, and -1 on
> error. Return of a positive value smaller than LEN does not
> indicate there's no more to be read, only the end of the transfer.
Returning EIO, a positive value, is obviously bogus, for the caller
will confuse it with a successful partial transfer.
Found by inspection.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-09-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.c (gdb_read_memory): Return -1 on traceframe memory read
error instead of EIO.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Remove common/target-common.c and
add target/waitstatus.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove common/target-common.h and add
target/resume.h, target/wait.h and target/waitstatus.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Remove target-common.o and add
waitstatus.o.
(target-common.o): Remove.
(waitstatus.o): New target object file.
* common/target-common.c: Move contents to
target/waitstatus.c and remove.
* common/target-common.h: Move contents to other files and
remove.
(enum resume_kind: Move to target/resume.h.
(TARGET_WNOHANG): Move to target/wait.h.
(enum target_waitkind): Move to target/waitstatus.h.
(struct target_waitstatus): Likewise.
* target.h: Do not include target-common.h and
include target/resume.h, target/wait.h and
target/waitstatus.h.
* target/resume.h: New file.
* target/wait.h: New file.
* target/waitstatus.h: New file.
* target/waitstatus.c: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/
* Makefile.in (INCLUDE_CFLAGS): Include -I$(srcdir)/../.
(SFILES): Remove $(srcdir)/common/target-common.c and
add $(srcdir)/target/waitstatus.c.
(OBS): Remove target-common.o and add waitstatus.o.
(server_h): Remove $(srcdir)/../common/target-common.h and
add $(srcdir)/../target/resume.h, $(srcdir)/../target/wait.h
and $(srcdir)/../target/waitstatus.h.
(target-common.o): Remove.
(waitstatus.o): New target object file.
* target.h: Do not include target-common.h and
include target/resume.h, target/wait.h and
target/waitstatus.h.
to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3.
* linux-low.c: Rename all occurrences of PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE
to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3 and PTRACE_ARG4_TYPE to
PTRACE_TYPE_ARG4.
* linux-low.h (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE): Rename to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3.
(PTRACE_ARG4_TYPE): Rename to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG4.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/mips-linux-watch.c.
(mips-linux-watch.o): New rule.
(mips_linux_watch_h): New variable.
* configure.srv <mips*-*-linux*>: Add mips-linux-watch.o to
srv_tgtobj.
* linux-mips-low.c: Include mips-linux-watch.h.
(struct arch_process_info, struct arch_lwp_info): New.
(update_watch_registers_callback): New function.
(mips_linux_new_process, mips_linux_new_thread) New functions.
(mips_linux_prepare_to_resume, mips_insert_point): New
functions.
(mips_remove_point, mips_stopped_by_watchpoint): New
functions.
(rsp_bp_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function.
(mips_stopped_data_address): New function.
(the_low_target): Add watchpoint support functions.
gdb/
* NEWS: Mention that GDBserver now supports hardware
watchpoints on the MIPS GNU/Linux target.
2013-07-04 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
Revert:
2013-06-27 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* common/create-version.sh: Update comments. Handle the case
that TARGET_ALIAS is empty.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-07-04 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (host_alias): Use @host_noncanonical@.
(target_alias): Use @target_noncanonical@.
* configure.ac: Use ACX_NONCANONICAL_TARGET and
ACX_NONCANONICAL_HOST.
* configure: Regenerated.
Revert:
2013-06-28 Mircea Gherzan <mircea.gherzan@intel.com>
* configure.ac (version_host, version_target): Set and AC_SUBST them.
* configure: Rebuild.
* Makefile.in (version_host, version_target): Get from configure.
(version.c): Use $(version_host) and $(version_target).
This factors --enable-libmcheck related bits from GDB's configure.ac
and makes GDBserver use them too. Specifically, the 'development'
global is moved to a separate script to it can be sourced by both GDB
and GDBserver, and the --enable-libmcheck/--disable-libmcheck bits
proper are moved to a new m4 file.
I started out by defining 'development' in the m4 file, but in the end
decided against it, as a separate script has the advantage that
changing it in release branches does not require regenerating
configure, unlike today.
I had also started out by making the new GDB_AC_LIBMCHECK itself
handle the yes/no default fallback depending on release/developement,
but since I had split out 'development' to a separate script, and, GDB
needs the python checks anyway (hence we'd need to do the python
checks in gdb's configure.ac, and pass in a 'default lmcheck yes/no'
parameter to GDB_AC_LIBMCHECK anyway), I ended up keeping
GDB_AC_LIBMCHECK isolated from the 'development' global. IOW, it's
the caller's business to handle it.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17. Built GDB and GDBserver with and without
--enable-libmcheck, and observed --enable-libmcheck overrides the
disablement of -lmcheck caused by python supporting threads, and that
GDBserver links with -lmcheck when expected. Also observed that
changing the 'development' global, and issuing "make" triggers a
relink, and '-lmcheck' is included or not from the link accordingly.
gdb/
2013-07-03 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (config.status): Depend on development.sh.
(aclocal_m4_deps): Add libmcheck.m4.
* acinclude.m4: Include libmcheck.m4.
* configure.ac: Source development.sh instead of setting
'development' here. --enable-libmcheck/--disable-libmcheck code
factored out to GDB_AC_LIBMCHECK. Run it.
* development.sh: New file.
* libmcheck.m4: New file.
* configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-07-03 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (config.status): Depend on development.sh.
* acinclude.m4: Include libmcheck.m4.
* configure: Regenerate.
2013-06-25 Mircea Gherzan <mircea.gherzan@intel.com>
gdbserver/
* notif.h (notif_event): Add a dummy member to avoid compiler
errors.
Change-Id: I490dbdb70a24f52b3947371f7c0397bf7a18423c
Signed-off-by: Mircea Gherzan <mircea.gherzan@intel.com>
PATH_MAX is not defined on systems which have no limit on filename
length, such as GNU/Hurd. As designed, the hostio RSP packets carry
the paths as parameters in the request/reply packets, which themselves
have an upper size limit, so lifting the filename limit completely
would require a redesign with new hostio packets. While that doesn't
happen, we can at least support filename lengths as long as the packet
buffer can fit.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-07-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* hostio.c (HOSTIO_PATH_MAX): Define.
(require_filename, handle_open, handle_unlink, handle_readlink):
Use it.
With the pathmax gnulib module in place, we can use PATH_MAX
consistently throughout, instead of the current mixbag of PATH_MAX and
MAXPATHLEN uses. It's no longer necessary to include sys/param.h
(supposedly, I can't check all ports touched here) for MAXPATHLEN.
Don't remove sys/param.h from GDB's configure.ac, as later tests in
the file use HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H checks.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
Also cross-built for --host=i686-w64-mingw32, and --host=i586-pc-msdosdjgpp.
gdb/
2013-07-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* defs.h: Include "pathmax.h".
* utils.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(gdb_realpath): Remove code that checks for MAXPATHLEN.
* solib-ia64-hpux.c (ia64_hpux_handle_load_event): Use PATH_MAX
instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* solib-sunos.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* xcoffread.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* bsd-kvm.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* darwin-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(darwin_pid_to_exec_file): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* darwin-nat-info.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_pid_to_exec_file): Use PATH_MAX instead of
MAXPATHLEN.
* i386obsd-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* inf-child.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(inf_child_fileio_readlink): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* linux-fork.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(fork_save_infrun_state): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* linux-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(linux_child_pid_to_exec_file, linux_proc_pending_signals)
(linux_proc_pending_signals): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* m68klinux-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* nbsd-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(nbsd_pid_to_exec_file): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
* ppc-linux-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* rs6000-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* spu-linux-nat.c. Don't include sys/param.h.
* windows-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* xtensa-linux-nat.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
* config/i386/nm-fbsd.h: Don't include sys/param.h.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-07-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.h: Include "pathmax.h".
* linux-low.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(linux_pid_exe_is_elf_64_file): Use PATH_MAX instead of
MAXPATHLEN.
* win32-low.c: Don't include sys/param.h.
(win32_create_inferior): Use PATH_MAX instead of MAXPATHLEN.
With gnulib's unistd module, we can assume unistd.h is always present, and that
STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO, STDERR_FILENO are always defined.
Don't remove unistd.h from GDB's configure.ac, as later tests in the
file use HAVE_UNISTD_H checks.
gdb/
2013-07-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* defs.h: Don't check HAVE_UNISTD_H before including <unistd.h>.
(STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO, STDERR_FILENO): Delete.
* tracepoint.c: Don't check HAVE_UNISTD_H before including
<unistd.h>.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-07-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* event-loop.c: Don't check HAVE_UNISTD_H before including
<unistd.h>.
* gdbreplay.c: Likewise.
* remote-utils.c: Likewise.
* server.c: Likewise.
* configure.ac: Don't check for unistd.h.
* configure: Regenerate.
This reverts part of the earlier version.in change. It moves
version.in back to the gdb directory. This works around the CVS bug
we've found.
gdb
* Makefile.in (version.c): Use version.in, not
common/version.in.
* common/create-version.sh: Likewise.
* common/version.in: Move...
* version.in: ...here.
gdb/doc
* Makefile.in (version.subst): Use version.in, not
common/version.in.
* gdbint.texinfo (Versions and Branches, Releasing GDB):
Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver
* Makefile.in (version.c): Use version.in, not
common/version.in.
sim/common
* Make-common.in (version.c): Use version.in, not
common/version.in.
* create-version.sh: Likewise.
sim/ppc:
* Make-common.in (version.c): Use version.in, not
common/version.in.
When directly invoking gdb/gdbserver/configure && make, the build will
fail because the $(host_alias) is empty and thus create-version.sh does
not get enough parameters.
The output of gdbserver --version without this patch (built like above):
[...]
This gdbserver was configured as ""
After applying this patch:
[...]
This gdbserver was configured as "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
2013-06-28 Mircea Gherzan <mircea.gherzan@intel.com>
gdbserver:
* configure.ac (version_host, version_target): Set and AC_SUBST
them.
* configure: Rebuild.
* Makefile.in (version_host, version_target): Get from
configure.
(version.c): Use $(version_host) and $(version_target).
Change-Id: Id48240532ad3d624ec78867a6db5ebd4c09583ff
Signed-off-by: Mircea Gherzan <mircea.gherzan@intel.com>
2013-06-26 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* ctf.c (ctf_traceframe_info): Push trace state variables
present in the trace data into the traceframe info object.
* breakpoint.c (DEF_VEC_I): Remove.
* common/filestuff.c (DEF_VEC_I): Likewise.
* dwarf2loc.c (DEF_VEC_I): Likewise.
* mi/mi-main.c (DEF_VEC_I): Likewise.
* common/gdb_vecs.h (DEF_VEC_I): Define vector for int.
* features/traceframe-info.dtd: Add tvar element and its
attributes.
* tracepoint.c (free_traceframe_info): Free vector 'tvars'.
(build_traceframe_info): Push trace state variables present in the
trace data into the traceframe info object.
(traceframe_info_start_tvar): New function.
(tvar_attributes): New.
(traceframe_info_children): Add "tvar" element.
* tracepoint.h (struct traceframe_info) <tvars>: New field.
* NEWS: Mention the change in GDB and GDBserver.
gdb/doc:
2013-06-26 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Traceframe Info Format): Document tvar element and
its attributes.
gdb/gdbserver:
2013-06-26 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
* tracepoint.c (build_traceframe_info_xml): Output trace state
variables present in the trace buffer.
Right now there are two nightly commits to update a file in the tree
with the current date. One commit is for BFD, one is for gdb.
It seems unnecessary to me to do this twice. We can make do with a
single such commit.
This patch changes gdb in a minimal way to reuse the BFD date -- it
extracts it from bfd/version.h and changes version.in to use the
placeholder string "DATE" for those times when a date is wanted.
I propose removing the cron job that updates the version on trunk, and
then check in this patch.
For release branches, we can keep the cron job, but just tell it to
rewrite bfd/version.h. I believe this is a simple change in the
crontab -- the script will work just fine on this file.
This also moves version.in and version.h into common/, to reflect
their shared status; and updates gdbserver to use version.h besides.
* common/create-version.sh: New file.
* Makefile.in (version.c): Use bfd/version.h, common/version.in,
create-version.sh.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Use common/version.h.
* version.in: Move to ...
* common/version.in: ... here. Replace date with "DATE".
* version.h: Move to ...
* common/version.h: ... here.
gdbserver:
* Makefile.in (version.c): Use bfd/version.h, common/version.in,
create-version.sh.
(version.o): Remove.
* gdbreplay.c: Include version.h.
(version, host_name): Don't declare.
* server.h: Include version.h.
(version, host_name): Don't declare.
doc:
* Makefile.in (POD2MAN1, POD2MAN5): Use version.subst.
(GDBvn.texi): Use version.subst.
(version.subst): New target.
(mostlyclean): Remove version.subst.
This fixes the regressions reported at
<http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-06/msg00280.html>:
$ runtest-gdbserver gdb.base/siginfo-obj.exp gdb.base/siginfo-thread.exp gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp
Running ./gdb.base/siginfo-thread.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/siginfo-thread.exp: p ssi_addr
Running ./gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: signal 0 si_pid
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: signal 1 si_pid
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: signal 2 si_pid
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: signal 3 si_pid
Running ./gdb.base/siginfo-obj.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/siginfo-obj.exp: p ssi_addr
FAIL: gdb.base/siginfo-obj.exp: p ssi_addr
The multi-arch patch made GDBserver do the the wrong siginfo layout
conversion, because most uses of `linux_is_elf64' were removed, and it
ended up never set. A global really is the wrong thing to use as
elf64-ness is a per-process property; `linux_is_elf64' was just
accidentally left behind.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-06-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-x86-low.c (linux_is_elf64): Delete global.
(x86_siginfo_fixup): Replace reference to `linux_is_elf64' global
with local linux_pid_exe_is_elf_64_file use.
There's no need for every arch to pre-allocate disabled_regsets.
Chances are the array won't be used.
(I have a hunch that with some more work we could dispense with
initialize_regsets_info.)
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17 w/ -lmcheck.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-06-11 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (regset_disabled, disable_regset): New functions.
(regsets_fetch_inferior_registers)
(regsets_store_inferior_registers): Use them.
(initialize_regsets_info); Don't allocate the disabled_regsets
array here.
* linux-low.h (struct regsets_info) <disabled_regsets>: Extend
comment.
This fixes the regression reported at
<http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-06/msg00185.html>.
GDBserver was reaching:
static int
regsets_fetch_inferior_registers (struct regsets_info *regsets_info,
struct regcache *regcache)
{
struct regset_info *regset;
int saw_general_regs = 0;
int pid;
struct iovec iov;
regset = regsets_info->regsets;
pid = lwpid_of (get_thread_lwp (current_inferior));
while (regset->size >= 0)
{
void *buf, *data;
int nt_type, res;
if (regset->size == 0
|| regsets_info->disabled_regsets[regset - regsets_info->regsets])
{
>>>>>>> regset ++; <<<<<<< HERE
continue;
}
Because info->disabled_regsets[] was not being initialized, and that
causes all sorts of wrong.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-06-11 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (initialize_regsets_info): Use xcalloc instead of
xmalloc.
All target descriptions must be initialized at startup, but this one was forgotten.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-06-11 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-x86-low.c (initialize_low_arch): Call
init_registers_x32_avx_linux.
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.
The GDBserver Aarch64 port includes the aarch64-without-fpu
description in the build, but doesn't actually use it anywhere. As
Linux always requires an FPU, just remove the dead code.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-05-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (clean): Remove reference to aarch64-without-fpu.c.
(aarch64-without-fpu.c): Delete rule.
* configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Remove references to
aarch64-without-fpu.o and aarch64-without-fpu.xml.
* linux-aarch64-low.c (init_registers_aarch64_without_fpu): Remove
declaration.
This bit:
+ p1 = strchr (p, ':');
+ decode_address (&resume_info[i].step_range_end, p, p1 - p);
should not expect the ':' to be there. An action without a ptid is
valid:
"If an action is specified with no thread-id, then it is applied to any
threads that don't have a specific action specified"
This is handled further below:
if (p[0] == 0)
{
resume_info[i].thread = minus_one_ptid;
default_action = resume_info[i];
/* Note: we don't increment i here, we'll overwrite this entry
the next time through. */
}
else if (p[0] == ':')
A stub that doesn't support and report to gdb thread ids at all (like
metal metal targets) only will always only see a single default action
with no ptid.
Use unpack_varlen_hex instead of decode_address. The former doesn't
need to be told where the hex number ends, and it actually returns
that info instead, which we can use for validation.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-05-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* server.c (handle_v_cont) <vCont;r>: Use unpack_varlen_hex
instead of strchr/decode_address. Error if the range isn't split
with a ','. Don't assume there's be a ':' in the action.
This patch adds support for range stepping to GDBserver, teaching it
about vCont;r.
It'd be easy to enable this for all hardware single-step targets
without needing the linux_target_ops hook, however, at least PPC needs
special care, due to the fact that PPC atomic sequences can't be
hardware single-stepped through, a thing which GDBserver doesn't know
about. So this leaves the support limited to x86/x86_64.
gdb/
2013-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* NEWS: Mention GDBserver range stepping support.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-05-23 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (lwp_in_step_range): New function.
(linux_wait_1): If the thread was range stepping and stopped
outside the stepping range, report the stop to GDB. Otherwise,
continue stepping. Add range stepping debug output.
(linux_set_resume_request): Copy the step range from the resume
request to the lwp.
(linux_supports_range_stepping): New.
(linux_target_ops) <supports_range_stepping>: Set to
linux_supports_range_stepping.
* linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops)
<supports_range_stepping>: New field.
(struct lwp_info) <step_range_start, step_range_end>: New fields.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_range_stepping): New.
(the_low_target) <supports_range_stepping>: Set to
x86_supports_range_stepping.
* server.c (handle_v_cont): Handle 'r' action.
(handle_v_requests): Append ";r" if the target supports range
stepping.
* target.h (struct thread_resume) <step_range_start,
step_range_end>: New fields.
(struct target_ops) <supports_range_stepping>:
New field.
(target_supports_range_stepping): New macro.
On ppc-lynx178, resuming the execution of a program after hitting
a breakpoint sometimes triggers a spurious SIG61 event:
(gdb) cont
Continuing.
Program received signal SIG61, Real-time event 61.
[Switching to Thread 39]
0x10002324 in a_test.task1 (<_task>=0x3ffff774) at a_test.adb:30
30 select -- Task 1
From this point on, continuing again lets the signal kill the program.
Using "signal 0" or configuring GDB to discard the signal does not
help either, as the program immediately reports the same signal again.
What happens is the following:
- GDB sends a single-step order to gdbserver: $vCont;s:31
This tells GDBserver to do a step using thread 0x31=49.
GDBserver does the step, and thread 49 receives the SIGTRAP
indicating that the step has finished.
- GDB then sends a "continue", but this time does not specify
which thread to continue: $vCont;c
GDBserver uses an arbitrary thread's ptid to resume the program's
execution (the current_inferior's ptid was chosen for that).
See lynx-low.c:lynx_resume:
if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
ptid = thread_to_gdb_id (current_inferior);
So far on all LynxOS platforms, this has been good enough. But
not so on LynxOS 178. If the ptid used to resume the execution
is not the same as the thread that did the step, we get the weird
signal.
This patch fixes the problem by saving the ptid of the thread
that last caused an event, received during a call to waitpid.
The ptid is saved in per-process private data.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (struct process_info_private): New type.
(lynx_add_process): New function.
(lynx_create_inferior, lynx_attach): Replace calls to
add_process by calls to lynx_add_process.
(lynx_resume): If PTID is null, then try using
current_process()->private->last_wait_event_ptid.
Add comments.
(lynx_clear_inferiors): Delete. The contents of that function
has been inlined in lynx_mourn;
(lynx_wait_1): Save the ptid in the process's private data.
(lynx_mourn): Free the process' private data. Replace call
to lynx_clear_inferiors by call to clear_inferiors.
PT_DATA_ADDR and PT_TEXT_END_ADDR. Update comments.
(linux_read_offsets): Remove PT_TEXT_ADDR, PT_DATA_ADDR and
PT_TEXT_END_ADDR guards. Update comments.
(linux_target_op) <read_offsets>: Conditionally define to
linux_read_offsets if the target is UCLIBC and if it defines
PT_TEXT_ADDR, PT_DATA_ADDR and PT_TEXT_END_ADDR.
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtinit): Call 'stop_tracing'.
2013-05-03 Hafiz Abid Qadeer <abidh@codesourcery.com>
* status-stop.exp (test_tstart_tstart): Check for error
returned by the second 'tstart' command.
A small cleanup. 'struct lwp_info'::thread_known is only useful for
thread-db.c.
gdbserver/
2013-04-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.h (struct lwp_info) <thread_known>: Move under
the USE_THREAD_DB #ifdef.
The previous patches are still not sufficient to build gdbserver with
our copy of thread_db.h.
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c: In function ‘find_one_thread’:
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c:316:6: error: ‘struct lwp_info’ has no member named ‘th’
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c: In function ‘attach_thread’:
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c:341:6: error: ‘struct lwp_info’ has no member named ‘th’
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c: In function ‘thread_db_get_tls_address’:
../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c:514:47: error: ‘struct lwp_info’ has no member named ‘th’
make: *** [thread-db.o] Error 1
First, linux-low.h is including <thread_db.h> directly instead of our
gdb_thread_db.h, although thread-db.c includes the latter. Then the
'th' field of struct lwp_info is only defined if HAVE_THREAD_DB_H is
defined, which is not true if we're using our replacement copy of
thread_db.h. We have a USE_THREAD_DB symbol defined if we're building
thread-db.c that's ideal for this, however, it's currently only
defined when compiling linux-low.c (through a Makefile rule). The
patch makes it defined when compiling any file.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-04-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (INTERNAL_CFLAGS): Add @USE_THREAD_DB@.
(linux-low.o): Delete rule.
* linux-low.h: Always include "gdb_thread_db.h" instead of
conditionally including thread_db.h.
(struct lwp_info) <th>: Guard with #ifdef USE_THREAD_DB instead of
HAVE_THREAD_DB_H.
Oleg Nesterov told me that the Linux kernel copies the parent's ptrace
options to fork/clone children, so there's no need for GDB to do that
manually.
I was actually a bit surprised, since I thought the ptracer had to
always set the ptrace options itself, and GDB is indeed calling
PTRACE_SETOPTIONS for each new fork child, if it'll stay attached.
Looking at the history of that code, I found that is was actually I
who added that set-ptrace-options-in-children bit, back in
http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2009-05/msg00656.html. But,
honestly, I don't recall why I needed that. I think I may have just
blindly believed it was necessary.
I then looked back at the history of all the PTRACE_SETOPTIONS code we
have, and found that gdb never did copy the ptrace options before my
patch. But, when gdbserver learnt to use PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE, at
http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2007-10/msg00547.html, it was
made to do 'ptrace (PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, new_pid, 0,
PTRACE_O_TRACECLONE)' for all new clones. Hmmm. But, GDB itself
never did that, so it can't really ever have been necessary, I
believe, otherwise GDB should have been doing it too.
(GDBserver doesn't support following forks, and so naturally doesn't
do any PTRACE_SETOPTIONS on fork children.)
So this patch removes the -I believe- unnecessary ptrace syscalls.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, native/gdbserver, and on x86_64 RHEL5
native/gdbserver (Linux 2.6.18, I think a ptrace-on-utrace kernel).
No regressions.
gdb/
2013-03-22 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (linux_child_follow_fork): Don't call
linux_enable_event_reporting.
(linux_handle_extended_wait): Don't call
linux_enable_event_reporting.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-03-22 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (handle_extended_wait): Don't call
linux_enable_event_reporting.
This fixes the followin error when HAVE_LINUX_BTRACE is not defined:
linux-low.c:5943: error: excess elements in struct initializer
linux-low.c:5943: error: (near initialization for 'linux_target_ops')
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-low.c (linux_target_ops) [!HAVE_LINUX_BTRACE]:
Remove extraneous NULL element.
the last matched 'V' blcok in trace frame.
gdb/gdbserver:
* tracepoint.c (traceframe_read_tsv): Look for the last matched
'V' block in trace frame.
gdb/testsuite:
* gdb.trace/tsv.exp (check_tsv): New.
(top level): Save a tfile on current trace session. Call
check_tsv on live target. Load the tfile with target tfile
and call check_tsv again.
We define the following packets:
Qbtrace:bts enable branch tracing for the current thread
returns "OK" or "Enn"
Qbtrace:off disable branch tracing for the current thread
returns "OK" or "Enn"
qXfer:btrace:read read the full branch trace data for the current thread
gdb/
* target.h (enum target_object): Add TARGET_OBJECT_BTRACE.
* remote.c: Include btrace.h.
(struct btrace_target_info): New struct.
(remote_supports_btrace): New function.
(send_Qbtrace): New function.
(remote_enable_btrace): New function.
(remote_disable_btrace): New function.
(remote_teardown_btrace): New function.
(remote_read_btrace): New function.
(init_remote_ops): Add btrace ops.
(enum <unnamed>): Add btrace packets.
(struct protocol_feature remote_protocol_features[]): Add btrace packets.
(_initialize_remote): Add packet configuration for branch tracing.
gdbserver/
* target.h (struct target_ops): Add btrace ops.
(target_supports_btrace): New macro.
(target_enable_btrace): New macro.
(target_disable_btrace): New macro.
(target_read_btrace): New macro.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Add btrace field.
* server.c: Include btrace-common.h.
(handle_btrace_general_set): New function.
(handle_btrace_enable): New function.
(handle_btrace_disable): New function.
(handle_general_set): Call handle_btrace_general_set.
(handle_qxfer_btrace): New function.
(struct qxfer qxfer_packets[]): Add btrace entry.
* inferiors.c (remove_thread): Disable btrace.
* linux-low: Include linux-btrace.h.
(linux_low_enable_btrace): New function.
(linux_low_read_btrace): New function.
(linux_target_ops): Add btrace ops.
* configure.srv (i[34567]86-*-linux*): Add linux-btrace.o.
Add srv_linux_btrace=yes.
(x86_64-*-linux*): Add linux-btrace.o.
Add srv_linux_btrace=yes.
* configure.ac: Define HAVE_LINUX_BTRACE.
* config.in: Regenerated.
* configure: Regenerated.
Hafiz Abid Qadeer <abidh@codesourcery.com>
gdb/
* NEWS: Mention set and show trace-buffer-size commands.
Mention new packet.
* target.h (struct target_ops): New method
to_set_trace_buffer_size.
(target_set_trace_buffer_size): New macro.
* target.c (update_current_target): Set up new method.
* tracepoint.c (trace_buffer_size): New global.
(start_tracing): Send it to the target.
(set_trace_buffer_size): New function.
(_initialize_tracepoint): Add new setshow for trace-buffer-size.
* remote.c (remote_set_trace_buffer_size): New function.
(_initialize_remote): Use it.
(QTBuffer:size) New remote command.
(PACKET_QTBuffer_size): New enum.
(remote_protocol_features): Add an entry for
PACKET_QTBuffer_size.
gdb/gdbserver/
* tracepoint.c (trace_buffer_size): New global.
(DEFAULT_TRACE_BUFFER_SIZE): New define.
(init_trace_buffer): Change to one-argument function. Allocate
trace buffer memory.
(handle_tracepoint_general_set): Call cmd_bigqtbuffer_size to
handle QTBuffer:size packet.
(cmd_bigqtbuffer_size): New function.
(initialize_tracepoint): Call init_trace_buffer with
DEFAULT_TRACE_BUFFER_SIZE.
* server.c (handle_query): Add QTBuffer:size in the
supported packets.
gdb/doc/
* gdb.texinfo (Starting and Stopping Trace Experiments): Document
trace-buffer-size set and show commands.
(Tracepoint Packets): Document QTBuffer:size.
(General Query Packets): Document QTBuffer:size.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.exp: New file.
* gdb.trace/trace-buffer-size.c: New file.
* tracepoint.c (cur_action, cur_step_action): Make them unsigned.
(cmd_qtfp): Initialize cur_action and cur_step_action 0 instead
of -1.
(cmd_qtsp): Adjust condition. Do post increment.
Set cur_action and cur_step_action back to 0.
PROBLEM:
The function linux_write_memory () in linux-low.c allocates a buffer
on the stack to hold a copy of the data to be written.
register PTRACE_XFER_TYPE *buffer = (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE *)
alloca (count * sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE));
"count" is the number of bytes to be written, rounded up to the
nearest multiple of sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE) and allowing for not
being an aligned address. The function later uses
buffer[0] = ptrace (PTRACE_PEEKTEXT, pid,
(PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) (uintptr_t) addr, 0);
The problem is that this function can be called to write zero bytes on
an aligned address, for example when receiving an X packet of length 0
(used to test if 8-bit write is supported). Under these circumstances,
count can be zero.
Since in this case, buffer[0] may never have been allocated, the stack
is corrupted and gdbserver may crash.
SOLUTION:
Writing zero bytes should always succeed. The patch below returns
successfully early if the length is zero, so avoiding the stack
corruption.
Verified on the ARC GDB 7.5.1 port.
2013-03-07 Jeremy Bennett <jeremy.bennett@embecosm.com>
PR server/15236
* linux-low.c (linux_write_memory): Return early success if LEN is
zero.
printf-like functions to avoid type related warnings on all
platforms.
(get_child_debug_event): Print dwDebugEventCode as hex since
that's how it's usually documented.
* regformats/reg-tilegx.dat (name): Change abi name to "tilegx".
* regformats/reg-tilegx32.dat: New.
gdbserver/
* Makefile.in (clean): Remove reg-tilegx.c, reg-tilegx32.c.
(reg-tilegx32.c): New rule.
* configure.srv (tilegx-*-linux*): Add reg-tilegx32.o to srv_regobj.
* linux-tile-low.c (tile_arch_setup): New function. Invoke
different register info initializer according to elf class.
(init_registers_tilgx32): New function. The tilegx32 register info
initializer.
(tile_fill_gregset): Use "uint_reg_t" to represent register size.
(tile_store_gregset): Likewise.
Addresses, as most numbers in the RSP are hex encoded, with variable
length (that just means the width isn't specified, and there's no top
cap. So they should be extracted with unpack_varlen_hex.
A couple spots in server.c are using strto(u)l, which doesn't work on
LLP64 targets.
This patch fixes it.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
2013-02-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Kai Tietz <ktietz@redhat.com>
PR gdb/15161
* server.c (handle_query) <CRC check>: Use unpack_varlen_hex
instead of strtoul to extract address from packet.
(process_serial_event) <'z'>: Likewise.
The previous notes aren't being released before setting new ones.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-02-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Plug memory leak.
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtnotes): Free TRACING_USER_NAME,
TRACING_NOTES and TRACING_STOP_NOTE before clobbering.
An obvious use case for savestring.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
2013-02-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c (cmd_qtdpsrc): Use savestring.
This makes gdbserver share gdb's savestring, instead of baking its own.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.
gdb/
2013-02-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* utils.c (savestring): Don't #undef it. Move function to
common/common-utils.c.
* common/common-utils.c: Include gdb_string.h.
(savestring): Move here from utils.c.
* common/common-utils.h (savestring): Declare.
gdb/gdbserver/
2013-02-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c (save_string): Delete.
(add_tracepoint_action): Use savestring instead of save_string.
null ptr check to prevent gdbserver from crashing
Evaluating a thread local storage variable in a remote scenario crashes
gdbserver if libthread-db could not be loaded.
2013-02-12 Sanimir Agovic <sanimir.agovic@intel.com>
gdbserver/
* thread-db.c (thread_db_get_tls_address):
NULL pointer check thread_db.
testsuite/
* gdb.server/no-thread-db.exp: New file.
* gdb.server/no-thread-db.c: New file.
* gdb.server/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add no-thread-db.
* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_arch_setup): Clamp
aarch64_num_wp_regs and aarch64_num_bp_regs to
AARCH64_HWP_MAX_NUM and AARCH64_HBP_MAX_NUM respectively.
... following Pedro's advice of using a temporary macro.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (ptrace_request_to_str): Define a temporary
macro and use it to simplify this function's implementation.
This is not strictly needed, since both GDB and GDBserver seem
to agree on the register numbering without this. But this allows
us to make sure that this is always going to be the case.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.srv (i[34567]86-*-lynxos*): Set srv_xmlfiles.
... back to GDB. The transfer occurs when GDB sends the
'qXfer:features:read:target.xml' packet. This allows us to make
sure that GDB and GDBserver use the same register numbering.
This is important on Lynx 178, where GDB selects the rs6000:6000
architecture by default instead of the powerpc:common architecture.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.srv (powerpc-*-lynxos*): Set srv_xmlfiles.
Before this patch, the ptid passed to lynx_resume was completely
ignored, and we used the current_inferior. This resulted in trying
to resume the inferior execution using the wrong ptid after having
received a thread create/exit event, because the inferior_ptid
was still set to the ptid prior to receiving the signal.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (lynx_resume): Use the resume_info parameter
to determine the ptid for the lynx_ptrace call, unless
it is equal to minus_one_ptid, in which case we use the
ptid of the current_inferior.
(lynx_wait_1): After having received a thread create/exit
event, resume the inferior's execution using the signaling
thread's ptid, rather than the old ptid.
We use this ptrace request when handling SIGTRAP signals,
and without this change, the debug trances show:
PTRACE (<unknown-request>, ...
This patch fixes this.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (ptrace_request_to_str): Add handling for
PTRACE_GETTRACESIG.
LynxOS 178 does not define this macro.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* lynx-low.c (ptrace_request_to_str): Do not handle
PTRACE_GETTHREADLIST if this macro does not exist.
2012-11-26 Maxime Villard <rustyBSD@gmx.fr>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/linux-osdata.c (linux_xfer_osdata_fds): Decrease buffer
size parameter passed to readlink by one byte.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_pid_to_exec_file): Ditto.
* linux-nat.c (linux_child_pid_to_exec_file): Ditto.
* nbsd-nat.c (nbsd_pid_to_exec_file): Ditto.
* inf-child.c (inf_child_fileio_readlink): Decrease local buffer's
size by one byte.
gdb/gdbserver/
2012-11-26 Maxime Villard <rustyBSD@gmx.fr>
* hostio.c (handle_readlink): Decrease buffer size
parameter passed to readlink by one byte.
ARI fixes: move gdb_wait and gdb_stat headers to common subdirectory.
* gdb_stat.h: Delete. Moved to common directory.
* common/gdb_stat.h: New file.
* gdb_wait.h: Delete. Moved to common directory.
* common/gdb_wait.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (H_FILES_NO_SRC): Adapt to new header
location.
* contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh (wait.h rule): Adapt to new gdb_wait.h
location.
(stat.h rule): Adapt to new gdb_stat.h location.
* common/linux-osdata.c: Include "gdb_stat.h" header instead of
<sys/stat.h> header.
* common/linux-ptrace.c: Include "gdb_wait.h" header instead of
<sys/wait.h> header.
gdbserver ChangeLog entry:
2012-11-15 Pierre Muller <muller@sourceware.org>
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_HEADERS): Add wait.h header.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* linux-low.c: Use "gdb_stat.h" header instead of <sys/stat.h> header.
Use "gdb_wait.h" header instead of <sys/wait.h> header.
* lynx-low.c: Use "gdb_wait.h" header instead of <sys/wait.h> header.
* remote-utils.c: Use "gdb_stat.h" header instead of <sys/stat.h>
header.
* server.c: Remove HAVE_WAIT_H conditional. Use "gdb_wait.h" header
instead of <sys/wait.h> header.
* spu-low.c: Use "gdb_wait.h" header instead of <sys/wait.h> header.
gdb/ChangeLog
* target.c (simple_search_memory): Include access length in
warning message.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
* server.c (handle_search_memory_1): Include access length in
warning message.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
Test find command on unmapped memory.
* gdb.base/find-unmapped.c: New file.
* gdb.base/find-unmapped.exp: New file.
* common/gdb_string.h: ... here.
* common/vec.h: Remove #ifndef GDBSERVER conditional inclusion of
gdb_string.h and gdb_assert.h.
gdbserver/
* configure.ac: Add check for strstr.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* linux-thread-db.c: #include "gdb_vecs.h".
(try_thread_db_load_from_pdir_1): New arg "subdir". All callers
updated.
(try_thread_db_load_from_pdir): New arg "subdir". All callers updated.
(thread_db_load_search): Use a vector to iterate over path elements.
Handle text appearing after "$pdir".
gdbserver/
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add gdb_vecs.c.
(OBS): Add gdb_vecs.o.
(gdb_vecs_h, host_defs_h): New variables.
(thread-db.o): Add $(gdb_vecs_h) dependency.
(gdb_vecs.o): New rule.
* thread-db.c: #include "gdb_vecs.h".
(thread_db_load_search): Use a vector to iterate over path elements.
Handle text appearing after "$pdir".
* inf-child.c (inf_child_fileio_pwrite): If pwrite fails, fall back
to attempting lseek/write.
(inf_child_fileio_pread): Likewise for pread.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* hostio.c (handle_pread): If pread fails, fall back to attempting
lseek/read.
(handle_pwrite): Likewise for pwrite.
* linux-arm-low.c (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Distinguish
between unsupported TYPE and unimplementable ADDR/LEN combination.
(arm_insert_point): Act on new return value.
testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/watchpoint.exp (test_wide_location_1): Expect software
watchpoints on ARM. When expecting software watchpoints, tolerate
(remote) targets that report unsupported hardware watchpoint only
at continue time.
(test_wide_location_2): Likewise.
* server.c (process_point_options): Only skip tokens if we find
one that is unrecognized. Don't treat 'X' specially while
skipping unrecognized tokens.
* arm-linux-nat.c (arm_linux_hw_breakpoint_initialize): Do not
attempt to 4-byte-align HW breakpoint addresses for Thumb.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-arm-low.c (arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Do not attempt
to 4-byte-align HW breakpoint addresses for Thumb.
* solib-svr4.c (svr4_current_sos): New comment on
svr4_current_sos_via_xfer_libraries fall back.
gdb/gdbserver/
* linux-low.c (linux_qxfer_libraries_svr4): Return -1 if R_DEBUG is -1.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.server/solib-list-lib.c: New file.
* gdb.server/solib-list-main.c: New file.
* gdb.server/solib-list.exp: New file.
* linux-low (__UCLIBC__ && !(__UCLIBC_HAS_MMU__ || __ARCH_HAS_MMU__)):
Include asm/ptrace.h.
(PT_TEXT_ADDR, PT_DATA_ADDR, PT_TEXT_END_ADDR): Define only if not
already defined.
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (enum stopping_threads_kind): New.
(stopping_threads): Change type to `enum stopping_threads_kind'.
(handle_extended_wait): If stopping and suspending threads, leave
the new_lwp suspended too.
(linux_wait_for_event): Adjust.
(stop_all_lwps): Set `stopping_threads' to
STOPPING_AND_SUSPENDING_THREADS or STOPPING_THREADS depending on
whether we're suspending threads or just stopping them. Assert no
recursion happens.
(PTRACE_ARG4_TYPE): Likewise.
(PTRACE_XFER_TYPE): Likewise.
* linux-arm-low.c (arm_prepare_to_resume): Cast third argument of
ptrace to PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE.
* linux-low.c (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE): Move macro to linux-low.h.
(PTRACE_ARG4_TYPE): Likewise.
(PTRACE_XFER_TYPE): Likewise.
(linux_detach_one_lwp): Cast fourth argument of
ptrace to long then PTRACE_ARG4_TYPE.
(regsets_fetch_inferior_registers): Cast third argument of
ptrace to long then PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE.
(regsets_store_inferior_registers): Likewise.