Commit Graph

38165 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Tromey 17621150cc PR gdb/16483 - simplify "info frame-filters" output
PR gdb/16483 notes that the output of "info frame-filters" is quite
voluminous.  In particular it prints an entry for each objfile, even if
only to say that the objfile does not have any associated frame filters.

I think it's better to only print output when there is a frame filter.
There's nothing worth doing with the no-frame-filter information, and
limiting the output makes it much more readable.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-06-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/16483:
	* python/lib/gdb/command/frame_filters.py
	(InfoFrameFilter.list_frame_filters): Rename to print_list.  Print
	nothing if no filters found.  Return value indicating whether
	filters were printed.
	(InfoFrameFilter.print_list): Remove.
	(InfoFrameFilter.invoke): Print message if no frame filters
	found.

2016-06-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/16483:
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter.exp: Add "info frame-filter" test
	before any filters are loaded.
2016-06-23 07:56:35 -06:00
Walfred Tedeschi 04d59df6f3 Improve user experience in printing Fortran derived types.
Output for Fortran derived classes is like:

  "( 9, 'abc')"

with this changes the output is changed to:

  "( lucky_number = 9, letters = 'abc')"

2016-06-21  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

	* f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Add field names for printing
	derived types fields.


gdb/testsuite:

	* gdb.fortran/derived-type.exp (print q): Add fields to the output.
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp (print twov): Fix vla tests with
	structs.
	* gdb.fortran/derived-type-function.exp: New file.
	* gdb.fortran/derived-type-function.f90: New file.
2016-06-21 15:15:04 +02:00
Andreas Arnez 782c112285 S390 gdbserver: Mark local funcs/vars as static
Compiling with '-Wmissing-declarations' yields warnings in
linux-s390-low.c.  To fix this, mark appropriate functions as static.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* linux-s390-low.c (s390_emit_eq_goto): Mark function static.
	(s390_emit_ne_goto): Likewise.
	(s390_emit_lt_goto): Likewise.
	(s390_emit_le_goto): Likewise.
	(s390_emit_gt_goto): Likewise.
	(s390_emit_ge_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_eq_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_ne_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_lt_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_le_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_gt_goto): Likewise.
	(s390x_emit_ge_goto): Likewise.
	(s390_emit_ops_impl): Mark variable static.
	(s390x_emit_ops): Likewise.
2016-06-21 13:26:11 +02:00
Andreas Arnez 34a60ddbad S390: Fix typo "s930" -> "s390"
This fixes a typo in the name of the "last-break" regset.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* s390-linux-tdep.c (s390_iterate_over_regset_sections): Fix typo
	in name of last-break regset.
2016-06-21 13:26:11 +02:00
Pedro Alves ac69f7863a Add "new-ui console" tests
This adds a test that uses new-ui to create a secondary console, and
then runs some basic smoke tests.  It ensures that:

 - synchronous commands send output to the UI that initiated it

 - asynchronous events like breakpoint hits are reported on all
   consoles.

 - "new-ui" without arguments doesn't crash.

 - The "new-ui" command doesn't repeat.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/new-ui.exp: New file.
	* lib/mi-support.exp (switch_gdb_spawn_id): Move to ...
	* lib/gdb.exp (switch_gdb_spawn_id): ... here.
	(with_spawn_id): New procedure.
2016-06-21 01:11:57 +01:00
Pedro Alves 49940788ab Always switch fork child to the main UI
The following scenario:

 - gdb started in normal CLI mode.

 - separate MI channel created with new-ui

 - inferior output redirected with the "set inferior-tty" command.

 - use -exec-run in the MI channel to run the inferior

is presently mishandled.

When we create the inferior, in fork-child.c, right after vfork, we'll
close all the file descriptors in the vfork child, and then dup the
tty to file descriptors 0/1/2, create a session, etc.  Note that when
we close all descriptors, we close the file descriptors behind
gdb_stdin/gdb_stdout/gdb_stderr of all secondary UIs...  So if
anything goes wrong in the child and it calls warning/error, it'll end
up writting to the current UI's stdout/stderr streams, which are
backed by file descriptors that have since been closed.  Because this
happens in a vfork region, the corresponding stdin/stdout/stderr in
the parent/gdb end up corrupted.

The fix is to switch to the main UI right after the vfork, so that
gdb_stdin/gdb_stdout/gdb_stderr are correctly mapped to
stdin/stdout/stderr (and thus to file descriptors 0/1/2), so this code
works as it has always worked.

(Technically, we're doing a lot of stuff we shouldn't be doing after a
vfork, while we should only be calling async-signal-safe functions.)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* fork-child.c (fork_inferior): Switch the child to the main UI
	right after vfork.  Save/restore the current UI in the parent.
	Flush outputs of the main UI instead of the current UI.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: New file.
2016-06-21 01:11:57 +01:00
Pedro Alves ef274d26b5 Make mi-break.exp always expect breakpoint commands output on the main UI
mi-break.exp regresses when tested with MI running on a secondary UI,
with RUNTESTFLAGS="FORCE_SEPARATE_MI_TTY=1".

The problem is simply that the test sets a breakpoint, and attaches
"print" commands to the breakpoint.  Since breakpoint commands always
run with the main UI as current UI, the breakpoint command's output
goes to the main UI.  So we need to tweak the test to expect it there.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-break.exp (test_breakpoint_commands): Always expect
	breakpoint command's output on the main UI.
	(test_break): New procedure, factored out from calls in the top
	level.
	(top level): Use foreach_with_prefix to test MI as main UI and as
	separate UI.
2016-06-21 01:11:56 +01:00
Pedro Alves 468afe6c5f Send deleted watchpoint-scope output to all UIs
Testing with:

  make check RUNTESTFLAGS="SEPARATE_MI_TTY=1"

shows this, in gdb.mi/mi-watch.exp:

 -*stopped,reason="watchpoint-scope",wpnum="2",frame={addr="0x00000000004005cb",
 +*stopped,frame={addr="0x00000000004005cb",
 (...)
 -PASS: gdb.mi/mi-watch.exp: hw: watchpoint trigger
 +FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-watch.exp: hw: watchpoint trigger (unknown output after running)

That is, we lose the "watchpoint-scope" output on the MI UI.

This commit fixes it, and makes the test run with MI running as both
main UI and separate UI.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* breakpoint.c (watchpoint_check): Send watchpoint-deleted output
	to all UIs.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-watch.exp (test_watchpoint_creation_and_listing)
	(test_awatch_creation_and_listing)
	(test_rwatch_creation_and_listing, test_watchpoint_triggering):
	Remove 'type' parameter.
	(test_watchpoint_all): New parameter mi_mode.  Remove
	with_test_prefix.
	(top level): Use foreach_with_prefix, and add main/separate UI MI
	testing axis.
2016-06-21 01:11:56 +01:00
Pedro Alves 51f77c3704 Add testing infrastruture bits for running with MI on a separate UI
With this, a specific test may can start GDB with MI on a separate UI
by using:

  mi_gdb_start separate-mi-tty

In addition, it's also possible to run the whole testsuite with MI on
a separate tty, with:

 make check RUNTESTFLAGS="FORCE_SEPARATE_MI_TTY=1"

gdb_main_spawn_id and mi_spawn_id are added so that tests may expect
output from either channel.

While at it, inferior_spawn_id was not being cleared when gdb exits,
unlike the other spawn ids, thus a test that starts gdb more than once
would end up using a stale spawn id.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* README (Testsuite Parameters): Document FORCE_SEPARATE_MI_TTY.
	* lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_exit): Clear inferior_spawn_id.
	* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_uncatched_gdb_exit): Unset
	gdb_main_spawn_id, mi_spawn_id, unset inferior_spawn_id.
	(gdb_main_spawn_id, mi_spawn_id): Declare and
	comment.
	(mi_create_inferior_pty): New procedure,
	factored out from default_mi_gdb_start.
	(switch_gdb_spawn_id, mi_gdb_start_separate_mi_tty): New
	procedures.
	(default_mi_gdb_start): Call mi_gdb_start_separate_mi_tty if the
	separate-mi-tty option is specified, or SEPARATE_MI_TTY is set.
	Use mi_create_inferior_pty.
	(mi_gdb_start): Use eval to pass down args list.
2016-06-21 01:11:55 +01:00
Pedro Alves 86f78169c8 [DOC] Document support for running interpreters on separate UIs
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* NEWS: Mention support for running interpreters on separate
	UIs and the new new-ui command.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Interpreters): Update intepreter-exec section,
	document new-ui and explain use case.
2016-06-21 01:11:55 +01:00
Pedro Alves 60eb5395fa Add new command to create extra console/mi UIs
With all the previous plumbing in place, it's now easy to add a
command that actually creates a new console/mi UI.

The intended use case is to make it possible and easy for MI frontends
to provide a fully featured GDB console to users, with readline
support, command line editing, history, etc., just like if gdb was
started on the command line.  Currently MI frontends have to try to
implement all of that theirselves and make use of "-interpreter-exec
console ...", which is far from perfect.  If you ever tried Eclipse's
gdb console window, you'll know what I mean...

Instead of trying to multiplex console through MI, this command let's
just leverage all the built in readline/editing support already inside
gdb.

The plan is for the MI frontend to start GDB in regular console mode,
running inside a terminal emulator widget embedded in Eclipse (which
already exists, for supporting the shell widget; other frontends have
similar widgets), and then tell GDB to run a full MI interpreter on an
specified input/output device, independent of the console.

My original prototype planned to do things the other way around --
start GDB in MI mode, and then start an extra CLI console on separate
tty.  I handed over that prototype to Marc Khouzam @ Eclipse CDT, and
after experimentation and discussion, we ended up concluding that
starting GDB in CLI mode instead was both easier and actually also
supported an interesting use case -- connect an Eclipse frontend to a
GDB that is already running outside Eclipse.

The current usage is "new-ui <interpreter> <tty>".

E.g., on a terminal run this scriplet:

 $ cat gdb-client
 #!/bin/bash

 reset
 tty
 tail -f /dev/null

 $ gdb-client
 /dev/pts/15

Now run gdb on another terminal, and tell it to start a MI interpreter
on the tty of the other terminal:

 ...
 (gdb) new-ui mi /dev/pts/15
 New UI allocated

Now back to the the gdb-client terminal, we'll get an MI prompt, ready
for MI input:

 /dev/pts/15
 =thread-group-added,id="i1"
 (gdb)

You can also start a new UI running a CLI, with:

 (gdb) new-ui console /dev/pts/15

Though note that this console won't support readline command editing.
It works as if "set editing off" was entered.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* interps.c (set_top_level_interpreter): New function, factored
	out from captured_main.
	(interpreter_completer): Make extern.
	* interps.h (set_top_level_interpreter, interpreter_completer):
	New declarations.
	(captured_main): Use set_top_level_interpreter.
	* top.c [!O_NOCTTY] (O_NOCTTY): Define as 0.
	(open_terminal_stream, new_ui_command): New functions.
	(init_main): Install the "new-ui" command.
2016-06-21 01:11:55 +01:00
Pedro Alves 268a799a45 Make stdin be per UI
This commit makes each UI have its own "stdin" stream pointer.  This
is used to determine whether the "from_tty" argument to
execute_command, etc. should be true.

Related, this commit makes input_from_terminal_p take an UI parameter,
and then avoids the gdb_has_a_terminal in it.  gdb_has_a_terminal only
returns info on gdb's own main/primary terminal (the real stdin).
However, the places that call input_from_terminal_p really want to
know is whether the command came from an interactive tty.  This patch
thus renames input_from_terminal_p to input_interactive_p for clarity,
and then makes input_interactive_p check for "set interactive" itself,
along with ISATTY, instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal.  Actually,
quit_force wants to call input_interactive_p _after_ stdin is closed,
we can't call ISATTY that late.  So instead we save the result of
ISATTY in a field of the UI.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-script.c (read_next_line): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
	(read_command_lines): Use input_interactive_p instead of
	input_from_terminal_p.
	* defs.h (struct ui): Forward declare.
	(input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ...
	(input_interactive_p): ... this.
	* event-top.c (stdin_event_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument
	to quit_command.
	(command_handler): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
	(handle_line_of_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and use
	input_interactive_p instead of ISATTY and input_from_terminal_p.
	(gdb_readline_no_editing_callback): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
	(command_line_handler): Always pass true as "from_tty" parameter
	of handle_line_of_input and execute_command.
	(async_sigterm_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to
	quit_command.
	* inflow.c (interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Moved to ...
	(gdb_has_a_terminal): Don't check interactive_mode here.
	(_initialize_inflow): Don't install "set interactive-mode" here.
	* main.c (captured_command_loop): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_execute_command_wrapper): Adjust to per-UI
	stdin.
	* top.c (new_ui): Save the stdin stream and whether it's a tty.
	(dont_repeat): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
	(command_line_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use
	input_interactive_p.
	(quit_force): Write history if any UI supports interactive input.
	(interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Move here, from
	inflow.c.
	(input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ...
	(input_interactive_p): ... this, and check the "interactive_mode"
	global instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal.
	(_initialize_top): Install "set interactive-mode" here.
	* top.h (struct ui) <stdin_stream, input_interactive_p>: New
	fields.
	* utils.c (quit): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to quit_force.
	(defaulted_query): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use
	input_interactive_p.
2016-06-21 01:11:54 +01:00
Pedro Alves 07169ff772 Handle UI's terminal closing
Without this, GDB exits if a secondary UIs terminal/input stream is
closed:

 $ ./gdb -ex "new-ui mi /dev/pts/6"
 New UI allocated
	 <<< close /dev/pts/6
 (gdb) Error detected on fd 9
 $

We want that for the main UI, but not secondary UIs.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (stdin_event_handler): Don't quit gdb if it was a
	secondary UI's input stream that closed.  Instead, just delete the
	UI.
2016-06-21 01:11:54 +01:00
Pedro Alves 98d9f24ed1 Make main_ui be heap allocated
This is preparation for being able to create more than one UI object.

The change to gdb_main to stop using catch_errors is necessary because
catch_errors references current_uiout, which expands to
current_ui->m_current_ui, which would crash because current_ui is not
initialized yet at that point.  It didn't trigger earlier in the
series because before this patch, main_ui/current_ui always start out
non-NULL.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (main_ui_): Delete.
	(main_ui, current_ui, ui_list): No longer initialize here.
	* main.c (captured_main): UI initialization code factored out to
	new new_ui function.
	(gdb_main): Wrap captured_main with TRY/CATCH instead of
	catch_errors.
	* top.c (highest_ui_num): New global.
	(new_ui): New function.
	* top.h (struct ui) <num>: New field.
	(new_ui): New declaration.
2016-06-21 01:11:53 +01:00
Pedro Alves eaae60fd94 Only send sync execution command output to the UI that ran the command
Currently when a "step", "next", etc. finishes, the current source
line is printed on all console UIs.

This patch makes the CLI and TUI interpreters reuse MI's logic to only
emit console output related to a synchronous command on the
console-like interpreter that started the command in the first place.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_on_normal_stop): Bail out early if there's
	nothing to print.  Use should_print_stop_to_console.
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_on_normal_stop): Likewise.
2016-06-21 01:11:53 +01:00
Pedro Alves 8980e177bb Push thread->control.command_interp to the struct thread_fsm
I noticed that if we step into an inline function, step_1 never
reaches proceed, and thus nevers sets the thread's
tp->control.command_interp.  Because of that,
should_print_stop_to_console fails to determine that is should print
stop output to the console.

The fix is to set the thread's command_interp earlier.  However, I
realized that we can move that field to the thread_fsm, given that its
lifetime is exactly the same as thread_fsm.  So the patch plumbs all
fsms constructors to take the command interp and store it in the
thread_fsm.

We can see the fix in action, with e.g., the gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp
test, and issuing a step when stopped at line 67:

 &"s\n"
 ^running
 *running,thread-id="all"
 (gdb)
 ~"67\t  result = func2 ();\n"
 *stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",frame={addr="0x00000000004004d0",func="main",args=[],file="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c",line="67"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="0"
 (gdb)
 s
 &"s\n"
 ^running
 *running,thread-id="all"
 (gdb)
+ ~"func2 () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c:67\n"
+ ~"67\t  result = func2 ();\n"
 *stopped,reason="end-stepping-range",frame={addr="0x00000000004004d0",func="func2",args=[],file="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c",line="67"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="0"
 (gdb)

(The inline-cmds.exp command is adjusted to exercise this.)

(Due to the follow_fork change, this also fixes "next N" across a fork
with "set follow-fork child" with "set detach-on-fork on".  Commands
that rely on internal breakpoints, like "finish" will still require
more work to migrate breakpoints etc. to the child thread.)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* breakpoint.c (new_until_break_fsm): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.
	(until_break_fsm_should_stop, until_break_fsm_clean_up): Add
	thread parameter.
	(until_break_command): Pass command interpreter to thread fsm
	ctor.
	* cli/cli-interp.c (should_print_stop_to_console): Adjust.
	* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state) <command_interp>:
	Delete field.
	* infcall.c (new_call_thread_fsm): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.
	Pass it down.
	(call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Add thread parameter.
	(call_function_by_hand_dummy): Pass command interpreter to thread
	fsm ctor.  Pass thread pointer to fsm clean up method.
	* infcmd.c: Include interps.h.
	(struct step_command_fsm) <thread>: Delete field.
	(new_step_command_fsm): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.  Pass it down.
	(step_command_fsm_prepare): Remove references to fsm's thread
	field.
	(step_1): Pass command interpreter to thread
	fsm ctor.  Pass thread pointer to fsm clean up method.
	(step_command_fsm_should_stop, step_command_fsm_clean_up): Add
	thread parameter and use it.
	(new_until_next_fsm): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.  Pass it down.
	(until_next_fsm_should_stop, until_next_fsm_clean_up): Add thread
	parameter and use it.
	(until_next_command): Pass command interpreter to thread fsm ctor.
	(struct finish_command_fsm) <thread>: Delete field.
	(finish_command_fsm_ops): Add NULL slot for should_notify_stop.
	(new_finish_command_fsm): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter and pass it
	down.  Remove thread parameter and adjust.
	(finish_command_fsm_should_stop, finish_command_fsm_clean_up): Add
	thread parameter and use it.
	(finish_command): Pass command interpreter to thread fsm ctor.
	Don't pass thread.
	* infrun.c (follow_fork): Move thread fsm to child fork instead of
	command interpreter, only.
	(clear_proceed_status_thread): Remove reference to command_interp.
	(proceed): Don't record the thread's command interpreter.
	(clean_up_just_stopped_threads_fsms): Pass thread to fsm clean_up
	method.
	(fetch_inferior_event): Pass thread to fsm should_stop method.
	* thread-fsm.c (thread_fsm_ctor): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.
	Store it.
	(thread_fsm_clean_up, thread_fsm_should_stop): Add thread
	parameter and pass it down.
	* thread-fsm.h (struct thread_fsm) <command_interp>: New field.
	(struct thread_fsm_ops) <clean_up, should_stop>: Add thread
	parameter.
	(thread_fsm_ctor): Add 'cmd_interp' parameter.
	(thread_fsm_clean_up, thread_fsm_should_stop): Add thread
	parameter.
	* thread.c (thread_cancel_execution_command): Pass thread to
	thread fsm clean_up method.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c: Add "set mi break here" marker.
	* gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: Add MI tests.
2016-06-21 01:11:53 +01:00
Pedro Alves 26cde2cc30 New function should_print_stop_to_console
There's code in the MI interpreter that decides whether a stop should
be sent to MI's console stream.  Move this check to the CLI
interpreter code, so that we can reuse it in both the CLI and TUI
interpreters.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-interp.c: Include gdbthread.h and thread-fsm.h.
	(should_print_stop_to_console): New function, factored out from
	mi_on_normal_stop_1.
	* cli/cli-interp.h (should_print_stop_to_console): Declare.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_on_normal_stop_1): Use
	should_print_stop_to_console.  Pass it the current UI's console
	interpreter.
	* mi/mi-main.c (captured_mi_execute_command): Use the
	INTERP_CONSOLE symbol rather than explicit "console".
2016-06-21 01:11:52 +01:00
Pedro Alves a8836c9358 Fix for spurious prompts in secondary UIs
Running mi-break.exp with MI on a secondary UI reveals that MI emits
spurious prompts compared MI running as primary UI:

   -exec-continue
   ^running
   *running,thread-id="all"
   (gdb)
   =breakpoint-modified,bkpt={number="9",type="breakpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",func="callee2",line="39",script={"set $i=0","while $i<10","print $i","set $i=$i+1","end","continue"}}
   ~"\n"
   ~"Breakpoint 9, callee2 (intarg=2, strarg=0x400730 \"A string argument.\") at ...src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c:39\n"
   ~"39\t  callee3 (strarg);\n"
   *stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="9",frame={addr="0x00000000004005dd",func="callee2",...
   *running,thread-id="all"
>> (gdb)
   =breakpoint-modified,bkpt={number="9",...
   ~"\n"
   ~"Breakpoint 9, callee2 (intarg=2, strarg=0x400730 \"A string argument.\") at ...src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c:39\n"
   ~"39\t  callee3 (strarg);\n"
   *stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="9",...
   *running,thread-id="all"
   ~"[Inferior 1 (process 12639) exited normally]\n"
   =thread-exited,id="1",group-id="i1"
   =thread-group-exited,id="i1",exit-code="0"
   *stopped,reason="exited-normally"
   FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-break.exp: intermediate stop and continue
   FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-break.exp: test hitting breakpoint with commands (timeout)

Note the line marked >> above.

The test sets a breakpoint that runs "continue", a foreground command.
When we get to run the "continue", we've already emitted the *stopped
event on the MI UI, and set its prompt state to PROMPT_NEEDED (this is
done from within normal_stop).  Since inferior events are always
handled with the main UI as current UI, breakpoint commands always run
with the main UI as current UI too.  This means that the "continue"
ends up always disabling the prompt on the main UI, instead of the UI
that had just been done with synchronous execution.

I think we'll want to extend this with a concept of "set of
threads/inferiors a UI/interpreter is blocked waiting on", but I'm
leaving that for a separate series.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infcmd.c (prepare_execution_command): Use
	all_uis_on_sync_execution_starting.
	* infrun.c (all_uis_on_sync_execution_starting): New function.
	* infrun.h (all_uis_on_sync_execution_starting): Declare.
2016-06-21 01:11:52 +01:00
Pedro Alves 3b12939dfc Replace the sync_execution global with a new enum prompt_state tristate
When sync_execution (a boolean) is true, it means we're running a
foreground command -- we hide the prompt stop listening to input, give
the inferior the terminal, then go to the event loop waiting for the
target to stop.

With multiple independent UIs, we need to track whether each UI is
synchronously blocked waiting for the target.  IOW, if you do
"continue" in one console, that console stops accepting commands, but
you should still be free to type other commands in the others
consoles.

Just simply making sync_execution be per-UI alone not sufficient,
because of this in fetch_inferior_event:

  /* If the inferior was in sync execution mode, and now isn't,
     restore the prompt (a synchronous execution command has finished,
     and we're ready for input).  */
  if (current_ui->async && was_sync && !sync_execution)
    observer_notify_sync_execution_done ();

We'd have to record at entry the "was_sync" state for each UI, not
just of the current UI.

This patch instead replaces the sync_execution flag by a per-UI
tristate flag indicating the command line prompt state:

 enum prompt_state
 {
   /* The command line is blocked simulating synchronous execution.
      This is used to implement the foreground execution commands
      ('run', 'continue', etc.).  We won't display the prompt and
      accept further commands until the execution is actually over.  */
   PROMPT_BLOCKED,

   /* The command finished; display the prompt before returning back to
      the top level.  */
   PROMPT_NEEDED,

   /* We've displayed the prompt already, ready for input.  */
   PROMPTED,
 ;

I think the end result is _much_ clearer than the current code, and,
it addresses the original motivation too.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* annotate.c: Include top.h.
	(async_background_execution_p): Delete.
	(print_value_flags): Check the UI's prompt state rather then
	async_background_execution_p.
	* event-loop.c (start_event_loop): Set the prompt state to
	PROMPT_NEEDED.
	* event-top.c (display_gdb_prompt, async_enable_stdin)
	(async_disable_stdin): Check the current UI's prompt state instead
	of the sync_execution global.
	(command_line_handler): Set the prompt state to PROMPT_NEEDED
	before running a command, and display the prompt if still needed
	afterwards.
	* infcall.c (struct call_thread_fsm) <waiting_ui>: New field.
	(new_call_thread_fsm): New parameter 'waiting_ui'.  Store it.
	(call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Set the prompt state to
	PROMPT_NEEDED.
	(run_inferior_call): Adjust to temporarily set the prompt state to
	PROMPT_BLOCKED instead of using the sync_execution global.
	(call_function_by_hand_dummy): Pass the current UI to
	new_call_thread_fsm.
	* infcmd.c: Include top.h.
	(continue_1): Check the current UI's prompt state instead of the
	sync_execution global.
	(continue_command): Validate global execution state before calling
	prepare_execution_command.
	(step_1): Call all_uis_check_sync_execution_done.
	(attach_post_wait): Don't call async_enable_stdin here.  Remove
	reference to sync_execution.
	* infrun.c (sync_execution): Delete global.
	(follow_fork_inferior)
	(reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup): Check the current
	UI's prompt state instead of the sync_execution global.
	(check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done)
	(all_uis_check_sync_execution_done): New functions.
	(fetch_inferior_event): Call all_uis_check_sync_execution_done
	instead of trying to determine whether the global sync execution
	changed.
	(handle_no_resumed): Check the prompt state of all UIs.
	(normal_stop): Emit the no unwait-for even to all PROMPT_BLOCKED
	UIs.  Emit the "Switching to" notification to all UIs.  Enable
	stdin in all UIs.
	* infrun.h (sync_execution): Delete.
	(all_uis_check_sync_execution_done): Declare.
	* main.c (captured_command_loop): Don't call
	interp_pre_command_loop if the prompt is blocked.
	(catch_command_errors, catch_command_errors_const): Adjust.
	(captured_main): Set the initial prompt state to PROMPT_NEEDED.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (display_mi_prompt): Set the prompt state to
	PROMPTED.
	(mi_interpreter_resume): Don't clear sync_execution.  Remove hack
	comment.
	(mi_execute_command_input_handler): Set the prompt state to
	PROMPT_NEEDED before executing the command, and only display the
	prompt if the prompt state is PROMPT_NEEDED afterwards.
	(mi_on_resume_1): Adjust to check the prompt state.
	* target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Adjust to check the prompt
	state.
	* top.c (wait_sync_command_done, maybe_wait_sync_command_done)
	(execute_command): Check the current UI's prompt state instead of
	sync_execution.
	* top.h (enum prompt_state): New.
	(struct ui) <prompt_state>: New field.
	(ALL_UIS): New macro.
2016-06-21 01:11:51 +01:00
Pedro Alves dbf30ca3f5 Make gdb_in_secondary_prompt_p() be per UI
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* top.c (gdb_secondary_prompt_depth): Delete.
	(gdb_in_secondary_prompt_p): Add ui parameter.  Use it.
	(gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup, gdb_readline_wrapper): Adjust to
	per-UI gdb_secondary_prompt_depth.
	* top.h (struct ui) <secondary_prompt_depth>: New field.
2016-06-21 01:11:51 +01:00
Pedro Alves b2d86570b3 Simplify starting the command event loop
All interpreter types (CLI/TUI/MI) print the prompt, and then call
start_event_loop.

Because we'll need an interpreter hook to display the
interpreter-specific prompt before going back to the event loop,
without actually starting an event loop, this patch moves the
start_event_loop call to common code, and replaces the command_loop
hook with a pre_command_look hook, that now just prints the prompt.

Turns out to be a cleanup on its own right anyway.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_interpreter_pre_command_loop): New
	function.
	(cli_interp_procs): Install it instead of cli_command_loop.
	* cli/cli-interp.h (cli_interpreter_pre_command_loop): Declare.
	* event-top.c (cli_command_loop): Delete.
	* interps.c (interp_new): Remove reference to command_loop_proc.
	(current_interp_command_loop): Delete.
	(interp_pre_command_loop): New function.
	(interp_command_loop_ftype): Delete.
	* interps.h (interp_pre_command_loop_ftype): New typedef.
	(struct interp_procs) <command_loop_proc>: Delele field.
	<pre_command_loop_proc>: New field.
	(current_interp_command_loop): Delete declaration.
	(interp_pre_command_loop): New declaration.
	* main.c (captured_command_loop): Call interp_pre_command_loop
	instead of current_interp_command_loop and start an event loop.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_command_loop): Delete.
	(mi_interpreter_pre_command_loop): New.
	(mi_interp_procs): Update.
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_interp_procs): Install
	cli_interpreter_pre_command_loop instead of cli_command_loop.
2016-06-21 01:11:51 +01:00
Pedro Alves 9204d6922c Make raw_stdout be per MI instance
Each MI instance should obviously have its own raw output channel,
along with save_raw_stdout.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* interps.c (current_interpreter): New function.
	* interps.h (current_interpreter): New declaration.
	* mi/mi-cmds.h (raw_stdout): Delete declaration.
	* mi/mi-common.h (struct mi_interp) <raw_stdout,
	saved_raw_stdout>: New field.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (display_mi_prompt): New parameter 'mi'.  Adjust
	to per-UI raw_stdout.
	(mi_interpreter_init): Adjust to per-UI raw_stdout.
	(mi_on_sync_execution_done, mi_execute_command_input_handler)
	(mi_command_loop): Pass MI instance to display_mi_prompt.
	(mi_on_normal_stop_1, mi_output_running_pid, mi_on_resume_1)
	(mi_on_resume): Adjust to per-UI raw_stdout.
	(saved_raw_stdout): Delete.
	(mi_set_logging): Adjust to per-UI raw_stdout and
	saved_raw_stdout.
	* mi/mi-main.c (raw_stdout): Delete.
	(mi_cmd_gdb_exit, captured_mi_execute_command)
	(mi_print_exception, mi_load_progress): Adjust to per-UI
	raw_stdout.
	(print_diff_now, mi_print_timing_maybe): New ui_file parameter.
	Pass it along.
	(print_diff): New ui_file parameter.  Send output there instead of
	raw_stdout.
	* mi/mi-main.h (struct ui_file): Forward declare.
	(mi_print_timing_maybe): Add ui_file parameter.
2016-06-21 01:11:50 +01:00
Pedro Alves 05beb2750c Introduce display_mi_prompt
Just a refactor.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* mi/mi-interp.c (display_mi_prompt): New function.
2016-06-21 01:11:50 +01:00
Pedro Alves 215d3118fe Make target_terminal_inferior/ours almost nops on non-main UIs
Since we always run the inferior in the main console (unless "set
inferior-tty" is in effect), when some UI other than the main one
calls target_terminal_inferior/target_terminal_inferior, then we only
register/unregister the UI's input from the event loop, but leave the
main UI's terminal settings as is.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Bail out after
	unregistering input_fd if not on the main UI.
	(target_terminal_ours): Bail out after registering input_fd if not
	on the main UI.
	(target_terminal_ours_for_output): Bail out if not on the main UI.
2016-06-21 01:11:49 +01:00
Pedro Alves c61db772bf Always process target events in the main UI
This makes target events always be always processed with the main UI
as current UI.  This way, warnings, debug output, etc. are always
consistently sent to the main console.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (restore_ui_cleanup): Make extern.
	* infrun.c (fetch_inferior_event): Always switch to the main UI.
	* top.h (restore_ui_cleanup): Declare.
2016-06-21 01:11:49 +01:00
Pedro Alves 3c216924d6 Make command line editing (use of readline) be per UI
Due to the way that readline's API works (based on globals), we can
only have one instance of readline in a process.  So the goal of this
patch is to only allow editing in the main UI, and make sure that only
one UI calls into readline.  Some MI paths touch readline variables
currently, which is bad as that is changing variables that matter for
the main console UI.  This patch fixes those.

This actually fixes a nasty bug -- starting gdb in MI mode ("gdb
-i=mi"), and then doing "set editing on" crashes GDB, because MI is
not prepared to use readline:

 set editing on
 &"set editing on\n"
 =cmd-param-changed,param="editing",value="on"
 ^done
 (gdb)
 p 1
 readline: readline_callback_read_char() called with no handler!
 Aborted (core dumped)

The fix for that was to add an interp_proc method to query the
interpreter whether it actually supports editing.  New test included.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR mi/20034
	* cli/cli-interp.c: Include cli-interp.h and event-top.h.
	(cli_interpreter_resume): Pass 1 to gdb_setup_readline.  Set the
	UI's input_handler here.
	(cli_interpreter_supports_command_editing): New function.
	(cli_interp_procs): Install it.
	* cli/cli-interp.h: New file.
	* event-top.c (async_command_editing_p): Rename to ...
	(set_editing_cmd_var): ... this.
	(change_line_handler): Add parameter 'editing', and use it.  Bail
	early if the interpreter doesn't support editing.  Don't touch
	readline state if editing is off.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove, gdb_rl_callback_handler_install)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_reinstall): Assert the current UI is the
	main UI.
	(display_gdb_prompt): Don't call gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove if
	not using readline.  Check whether the current UI is using command
	editing instead of checking the async_command_editing_p global.
	(set_async_editing_command): Delete.
	(gdb_setup_readline): Add 'editing' parameter.  Only allow editing
	on the main UI.  Don't touch readline state if editing is off.
	(gdb_disable_readline): Don't touch readline state if editing is
	off.
	* event-top.h (gdb_setup_readline): Add 'int' parameter.
	(set_async_editing_command): Delete declaration.
	(change_line_handler, command_line_handler): Declare.
	(async_command_editing_p): Rename to ...
	(set_editing_cmd_var): ... this.
	* infrun.c (reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup): Check
	whether the current UI has editing enabled rather than checking
	the async_command_editing_p global.
	* interps.c (interp_supports_command_editing): New function.
	* interps.h (interp_supports_command_editing_ftype): New typedef.
	(struct interp_procs) <supports_command_editing_proc>: New field.
	(interp_supports_command_editing): Declare.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_interpreter_resume): Pass 0 to
	gdb_setup_readline.  Don't clear the async_command_editing_p
	global.  Update comments.
	* top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_line, gdb_readline_wrapper): Check
	whether the current UI has editing enabled rather than checking
	the async_command_editing_p global.  Don't touch readline state if
	editing is off.
	(undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Switch to the main UI.
	Unconditionally call gdb_disable_readline.
	(set_editing): New function.
	(show_async_command_editing_p): Rename to ...
	(show_editing): ... this.  Show the state of the current UI.
	(_initialize_top): Adjust.
	* top.h (struct ui) <command_editing>: New field.
	* tui/tui-interp.c: Include cli/cli-interp.h.
	(tui_resume): Pass 1 to gdb_setup_readline.  Set the UI's
	input_handler.
	(tui_interp_procs): Install
	cli_interpreter_supports_command_editing.
	* tui/tui-io.c (tui_getc): Check whether the current UI has
	editing enabled rather than checking the async_command_editing_p
	global.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR mi/20034
	* gdb.mi/mi-editing.exp: New file.
2016-06-21 01:11:48 +01:00
Pedro Alves b6dcde571e Make current_ui_out be per UI
Similarly to gdb_stdout&co.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* top.c: Call gen_ret_current_ui_field_ptr for current_uiout.
	* top.h (struct ui) <m_current_uiout>: New field.
	* ui-out.c (current_uiout): Delete.
	* ui-out.h (current_uiout): Delete.
	(current_ui_current_uiout_ptr): New declaration.
	(current_uiout): Reimplement as wrapper around
	current_ui_current_uiout_ptr.
2016-06-21 01:11:48 +01:00
Pedro Alves 23ff98d2fe Delete def_uiout
Currently, current_uiout starts out pointing to def_uiout, a dummy
ui_out implementation.

Since we create a replacement uiout early on as soon as we create the
interpreter, we never actually use def_uiout.  So this patch removes
it.

The proof that it works is that starting with current_uiout set to
NULL does not crash.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ui-out.c (default_ui_out_impl): Delete.
	(def_uiout): Delete.
	(current_uiout): Set to NULL.
	(default_table_begin, default_table_body, default_table_end)
	(default_table_header, default_begin, default_end)
	(default_field_int, default_field_skip, default_field_string)
	(default_field_fmt, default_spaces, default_text, default_message)
	(default_wrap_hint, default_flush, default_data_destroy): Delete.
2016-06-21 01:11:48 +01:00
Pedro Alves 694ec099d2 Make out and error streams be per UI
stderr_fileopen () references stderr directly, which doesn't work when
we have a separate UI with its own stderr-like stream.  So this also
adds a "errstream" to "struct ui", and plumbs stderr_fileopen to take
a stream parameter.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (gdb_setup_readline): Pass the UI's outstream and
	errstream to stdout_fileopen and stderr_fileopen.
	* exceptions.c: Include top.h.
	(print_flush): Open the current UI's outstream file descriptor,
	instead of hardcoding file descriptor 1.
	* main.c (captured_main): Save the main UI's out and error
	streams.  Adjust stderr_fileopen call.
	* top.h (struct ui) <outstream, errstream>: New fields.
	* ui-file.c (stderr_fileopen): Add stream parameter.  Use it
	instead of stderr.
	* ui-file.h (stderr_fileopen): Add stream parameter and update
	comment.
2016-06-21 01:11:47 +01:00
Pedro Alves 41fd2b0f5d Make input_fd be per UI
And with that, we can switch the current UI to the UI whose input
descriptor woke up the event loop.  IOW, if the user types in UI 2,
the event loop wakes up, switches to UI 2, and processes the input.
Next the user types in UI 3, the event loop wakes up and switches to
UI 3, etc.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (input_fd): Delete.
	(stdin_event_handler): Switch to the UI whose input descriptor got
	the event.  Adjust to per-UI input_fd.
	(gdb_setup_readline): Don't set the input_fd global.  Adjust to
	per-UI input_fd.
	(gdb_disable_readline): Adjust to per-UI input_fd.
	* event-top.h (input_fd): Delete declaration.
	* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Don't remove input_fd
	from the event-loop here.
	(linux_nat_terminal_ours): Don't register input_fd in the
	event-loop here.
	* main.c (captured_main): Adjust to per-UI input_fd.
	* remote.c (remote_terminal_inferior): Don't remove input_fd from
	the event-loop here.
	(remote_terminal_ours): Don't register input_fd in the event-loop
	here.
	* target.c: Include top.h and event-top.h.
	(target_terminal_inferior): Remove input_fd from the event-loop
	here.
	(target_terminal_ours): Register input_fd in the event-loop.
	* top.h (struct ui) <input_fd>: New field.
2016-06-21 01:11:47 +01:00
Pedro Alves f38d3ad186 Make instream be per UI
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-script.c (execute_user_command, read_next_line)
	(read_next_line): Adjust to per-UI instream.
	* event-top.c (stdin_event_handler, command_handler)
	(handle_line_of_input, command_line_handler)
	(gdb_readline_no_editing_callback, async_sigterm_handler)
	(gdb_setup_readline): Likewise.
	* inflow.c: Include top.h.
	(gdb_has_a_terminal, child_terminal_init_with_pgrp)
	(gdb_save_tty_state, child_terminal_inferior)
	(child_terminal_ours_1, copy_terminal_info): Use the main UI.
	(initialize_stdin_serial): Adjust to per-UI instream.
	* main.c (captured_command_loop, captured_main): Adjust to per-UI
	instream.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_execute_command_wrapper): Likewise.
	* python/python.c (python_interactive_command): Likewise.
	* terminal.h (struct ui): Forward declare.
	(initialize_stdin_serial): Add struct ui parameter.
	* top.c (instream): Delete.
	(do_restore_instream_cleanup, read_command_file, dont_repeat)
	(gdb_readline_no_editing, command_line_input)
	(input_from_terminal_p, gdb_init): Adjust to per-UI instream.
	* top.h (struct ui) <instream>: New field.
	(instream): Delete declaration.
	(quit): Adjust to per-UI instream.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.gdb/selftest.exp (do_steps_and_nexts): Add new regexp.
2016-06-21 01:11:46 +01:00
Pedro Alves 7c36c34e4c Always run async signal handlers in the main UI
Async signal handlers have no connection to whichever was the current
UI, and thus always run on the main one.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-loop.c: Include top.h.
	(invoke_async_signal_handlers): Switch to the main UI.
	* event-top.c (main_ui_): Update comment.
	(main_ui): New global.
	* top.h (main_ui): Declare.
2016-06-21 01:11:46 +01:00
Pedro Alves 73ab01a07d Make the intepreters output to all UIs
When we have multiple consoles, MI channels, etc., then we need to
broadcast breakpoint hits, etc. to all UIs.  In the past, I've
adjusted most of the run control to communicate events to the
interpreters through observer notifications, so events would be
properly sent to console and MI streams, in sync and async modes.

This patch does the next logical step -- have each interpreter's
observers output interpreter-specific info to _all_ UIs.

Note that when we have multiple instances of active cli/tui
interpreters, then the cli_interp and tui_interp globals no longer
work.  This is addressed by this patch.

Also, the interpreters currently register some observers when resumed
and remove them when suspended.  If we have multiple instances of the
interpreters, and they can be suspended/resumed at different,
independent times, that no longer works.  What we instead do is always
install the observers, and then have the observers themselves know
when to do nothing.

An earlier prototype of this series did the looping over struct UIs in
common code, and then dispatched events to the interpreters through a
matching interp_on_foo method for each observer.  That turned out a
lot more complicated than the present solution, as we'd end up with
having to create a new interp method every time some interpreter
wanted to listen to some observer notification, resulting in a lot of
duplicated make-work and more coupling than desirable.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_interp): Delete.
	(as_cli_interp): New function.
	(cli_on_normal_stop, cli_on_signal_received)
	(cli_on_end_stepping_range, cli_on_signal_exited, cli_on_exited)
	(cli_on_no_history): Send output to all CLI UIs.
	(cli_on_sync_execution_done, cli_on_command_error): Skip output if
	the top level interpreter is not a CLI.
	(cli_interpreter_init): Don't set cli_interp or install observers
	here.
	(_initialize_cli_interp): Install observers here.
	* event-top.c (main_ui_, ui_list): New globals.
	(current_ui): Point to main_ui_.
	(restore_ui_cleanup, switch_thru_all_uis_init)
	(switch_thru_all_uis_cond, switch_thru_all_uis_next): New
	functions.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (as_mi_interp): New function.
	(mi_interpreter_init): Don't install observers here.
	(mi_on_sync_execution_done): Skip output if the top level
	interpreter is not a MI.
	(mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit, mi_record_changed)
	(mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared, mi_inferior_exit)
	(mi_inferior_removed): Send output to all MI UIs.
	(find_mi_interpreter, mi_interp_data): Delete.
	(find_mi_interp): New function.
	(mi_on_signal_received, mi_on_end_stepping_range)
	(mi_on_signal_exited, mi_on_exited, mi_on_no_history): Send output
	to all MI UIs.
	(mi_on_normal_stop): Rename to ...
	(mi_on_normal_stop_1): ... this.
	(mi_on_normal_stop): Reimplement, sending output to all MI UIs.
	(mi_traceframe_changed, mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted)
	(mi_tsv_modified, mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted)
	(mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_output_running_pid): Send output to
	all MI UIs.
	(mi_on_resume): Rename to ...
	(mi_on_resume_1): ... this.  Don't handle infcalls here.
	(mi_on_resume): Reimplement, sending output to all MI UIs.
	(mi_solib_loaded, mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed)
	(mi_memory_changed): Send output to all MI UIs.
	(report_initial_inferior): Install observers here.
	* top.h (struct ui) <next>: New field.
	(ui_list): Declare.
	(struct switch_thru_all_uis): New.
	(switch_thru_all_uis_init, switch_thru_all_uis_cond)
	(switch_thru_all_uis_next): Declare.
	(SWITCH_THRU_ALL_UIS): New macro.
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_interp): Delete global.
	(as_tui_interp): New function.
	(tui_on_normal_stop, tui_on_signal_received)
	(tui_on_end_stepping_range, tui_on_signal_exited, tui_on_exited)
	(tui_on_no_history): Send output to all TUI UIs.
	(tui_on_sync_execution_done, tui_on_command_error): Skip output if
	the top level interpreter is not a TUI.
	(tui_init): Don't set tui_interp or install observers here.
	(_initialize_tui_interp): Install observers here.
2016-06-21 01:11:45 +01:00
Pedro Alves 8322445e05 Introduce interpreter factories
If every UI instance has its own set of interpreters, then the current
scheme of creating the interpreters at GDB initialization time no
longer works.  We need to create them whenever a new UI instance is
created.

The scheme implemented here has each interpreter register a factory
callback that when called creates a new instance of a specific
interpreter type.  Then, when some code in gdb looks up an interpreter
(always by name), if there's none yet, the factory method is called to
construct one.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_uiout): Delete, moved into ...
	(struct cli_interp): ... this new structure.
	(cli_on_normal_stop, cli_on_signal_received)
	(cli_on_end_stepping_range, cli_on_signal_exited, cli_on_exited)
	(cli_on_no_history): Use interp_ui_out.
	(cli_interpreter_init): If top level, set the cli_interp global.
	(cli_interpreter_init): Return the interp's data instead of NULL.
	(cli_interpreter_resume, cli_interpreter_exec, cli_ui_out): Adjust
	to cli_uiout being in the interpreter's data.
	(cli_interp_procs): New, factored out from _initialize_cli_interp.
	(cli_interp_factory): New function.
	(_initialize_cli_interp): Call interp_factory_register.
	* interps.c (get_interp_info): New, factored out from ...
	(get_current_interp_info): ... this.
	(interp_new): Add parameter 'data'.  Store it.
	(struct interp_factory): New function.
	(interp_factory_p): New typedef.  Define a VEC_P.
	(interpreter_factories): New global.
	(interp_factory_register): New function.
	(interp_add): Add 'ui' parameter.  Use get_interp_info and
	interp_lookup_existing.
	(interp_lookup): Rename to ...
	(interp_lookup_existing): ... this.  Add 'ui' parameter.  Don't
	check for NULL or empty name here.
	(interp_lookup): Add 'ui' parameter and reimplement.
	(interp_set_temp, interpreter_exec_cmd): Adjust.
	(interpreter_completer): Complete on registered interpreter
	factories instead of interpreters.
	* interps.h (interp_factory_func): New typedef.
	(interp_factory_register): Declare.
	(interp_new, interp_add): Adjust.
	(interp_lookup): Declare.
	* main.c (captured_main): Adjust.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_cmd_interpreter_exec): Adjust.
	(mi_interp_procs): New, factored out from
	_initialize_mi_interp.
	(mi_interp_factory): New function.
	* python/python.c (execute_gdb_command): Adjust.
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_init): If top level, set the tui_interp
	global.
	(tui_interp_procs): New.
	(tui_interp_factory): New function.
	(_initialize_tui_interp): Call interp_factory_register.
2016-06-21 01:11:45 +01:00
Pedro Alves cb81451067 Make the interpreters be per UI
Make each UI have its own interpreter list, top level interpreter,
current interpreter, etc.  The "interpreter_async" global is not
really specific to an struct interp (it crosses interpreter-exec ...),
so I moved it to "struct ui" directly, while the other globals were
left hidden in interps.c, opaque to the rest of GDB.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* breakpoint.c (bpstat_do_actions_1): Access the current UI's
	async field instead of the interpreter_async global.
	* cli/cli-script.c (execute_user_command, while_command)
	(if_command, script_from_file): Likewise.
	* compile/compile.c: Include top.h instead of interps.h.
	(compile_file_command, compile_code_command)
	(compile_print_command): Access the current UI's async field
	instead of the interpreter_async global.
	* guile/guile.c: Include top.h instead of interps.h.
	(guile_repl_command, guile_command, gdbscm_execute_gdb_command):
	Access the current UI's async field instead of the
	interpreter_async global.
	* guile/scm-ports.c: Include top.h instead of interps.h.
	(ioscm_with_output_to_port_worker): Access the current UI's async
	field instead of the interpreter_async global.
	* inf-loop.c (inferior_event_handler): Likewise.
	* infcall.c (run_inferior_call): Likewise.
	* infrun.c (reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup)
	(fetch_inferior_event): Likewise.
	* interps.c (interpreter_async): Delete.
	(struct ui_interp_info): New.
	(get_current_interp_info): New function.
	(interp_list, current_interpreter, top_level_interpreter_ptr):
	Delete.
	(interp_add, interp_set, interp_lookup, interp_ui_out)
	(current_interp_set_logging, interp_set_temp)
	(current_interp_named_p): Adjust to per-UI interpreters.
	(command_interpreter): Delete.
	(command_interp, current_interp_command_loop, interp_quiet_p)
	(interp_exec, interpreter_exec_cmd, interpreter_completer)
	(top_level_interpreter, top_level_interpreter_data): Adjust to
	per-UI interpreters.
	* interps.h (interpreter_async): Delete.
	* main.c (captured_command_loop): Access the current UI's async
	field instead of the interpreter_async global.
	* python/python.c (python_interactive_command, python_command)
	(execute_gdb_command): Likewise.
	* top.c (maybe_wait_sync_command_done, execute_command_to_string):
	Access the current UI's async field instead of the
	interpreter_async global.
	* top.h (struct tl_interp_info): Forward declare.
	(struct ui) <interp_info, async>: New fields.
2016-06-21 01:11:45 +01:00
Pedro Alves 79aa2fe86f Make gdb_stdout&co be per UI
We need to have these send output to the proper UI.

However, this patch still make them look like globals.  Kind of like
__thread variables, if you will.  Changing everything throughout to
write something like current_ui->gdb_stdout instead would be massive
overkill, IMNSHO.

This leaves gdb_stdtargin/stdtarg/stdtargerr global, but maybe that was a
mistake, I'm not sure -- IIRC, MI formats target I/O differently, so
if we have a separate MI channel, then I guess target output should go
there instead of to gdb's stdout.  OTOH, maybe GDB should send that
instead to "set inferior-tty", instead of multiplexing it over MI.  We
can always fix those later when it gets clearer where they should go.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* main.c (gdb_stdout, gdb_stderr, gdb_stdlog, gdb_stdin): Delete
	globals.
	(gen_ret_current_ui_field_ptr): New macro.  Use it to generate
	wrappers for gdb_stdout, gdb_stderr, gdb_stdlog and gdb_stdin.
	* top.h (struct ui) <m_gdb_stdout, m_gdb_stdin, m_gdb_stderr,
	m_gdb_stdlog>: New fields.
	(current_ui_gdb_stdout_ptr, current_ui_gdb_stdin_ptr)
	(current_ui_gdb_stderr_ptr, current_ui_gdb_stdlog_ptr): Declare.
	(gdb_stdout, gdb_stdin, gdb_stderr, gdb_stdlog): Reimplement as
	macros.
2016-06-21 01:11:44 +01:00
Pedro Alves a74e1786ac Introduce "struct ui"
This is a step towards supporting multiple consoles/MIs, each on its
own stdio streams / terminal.

See intro comment in top.h.

(I've had trouble picking a name for this object.  I've started out
with "struct console" originally.  But then this is about MI as well,
and there's "interpreter-exec console", which is specifically about
the CLI...

So I changed to "struct terminal", but, then we have a terminal object
that works when the input is not a terminal as well ...

Then I sort of gave up and renamed it to "struct top_level".  But it
then gets horribly confusing when we talk about the "top level
interpreter that's running on the current top level".

In the end, I realized we're already sort of calling this "ui", in
struct ui_out, struct ui_file, and a few coments here and there.)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c: Update readline-related comments.
	(input_handler, call_readline): Delete globals.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler): Call the current UI's input_handler
	method.
	(change_line_handler): Adjust to set current UI's properties
	instead of globals.
	(current_ui_, current_ui): New globals.
	(get_command_line_buffer): Rewrite to refer to the current UI.
	(stdin_event_handler): Adjust to call the call_readline method of
	the current UI.
	(gdb_readline_no_editing_callback): Adjust to call the current UI's
	input_handler method.
	(gdb_setup_readline): Adjust to set current UI's properties
	instead of globals.
	* event-top.h (call_readline, input_handler): Delete declarations.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_interpreter_resume): Adjust to set current
	UI's properties instead of globals.
	* top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup): Adjust to set current UI's
	properties instead of globals.
	(gdb_readline_wrapper): Adjust to call and set current UI's
	methods instead of globals.
	* top.h: Include buffer.h and event-loop.h.
	(struct ui): New struct.
	(current_ui): New declaration.
2016-06-21 01:11:44 +01:00
Pedro Alves 45db7c09c3 [Ada catchpoints] Fix "warning: failed to get exception name: No definition of \"e.full_name\" in current context"
Looking at testsuite results, I noticed this warning in an MI test:

 ~"\nCatchpoint "
 ~"2, "
 &"warning: failed to get exception name: No definition of \"e.full_name\" in current context.\n"
 ~"exception at 0x000000000040192d in foo () at /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex/foo.adb:20\n"
 ~"20\t      raise Constraint_Error;  -- SPOT1\n"
 *stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="keep",bkptno="2",exception-name="CONSTRAINT_ERROR",frame={addr="0x000000000040192d",func="foo",args=[],file="/home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex/foo.adb",fullname="/home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex/foo.adb",line="20"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="5"
 (gdb)
 PASS: gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex.exp: continue until CE caught by all-exceptions catchpoint

The problem is that:

  - MI prints the breakpoint hit twice: once on the MI stream;
    another time on the console stream.

  - After printing the Ada catchpoint hit, gdb selects a non-current
    frame, from within the catchpoint's print_it routine.

So the second time the breakpoint is printed, the selected frame is no
longer the current frame, and then evaluating e.full_name in
ada_exception_name_addr fails.

This commit fixes the problem and enhances the gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex.exp
test to make sure the catchpoint hit is printed correctly on the
console stream too.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ada-lang.c (ada_exception_name_addr_1): Add comment.
	(print_it_exception): Select the current frame.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.ada/mi_catch_ex.exp (continue_to_exception): New procedure.
	(top level): Use it instead of mi_execute_to.
2016-06-21 01:11:43 +01:00
Pedro Alves 5a069ab36d Prepare gdb.python/mi-py-events.exp for Python/MI in separate channels
Similarly to 5068630ad3
(gdb.python/py-events.exp and normal_stop observers ordering) [1],
this commit makes the gdb.python/py-mi-events.exp test not rely on
order in which MI and Python observers run, or even on where each
observer sends its output to.

This shows up as a problem when testing with MI running as a separate
terminal, for example, where Python event output and MI output go to
different channels, even.  But in any case, relying on the order in
which observers run is always going to be fragile.

The fix is to save the string output in the handlers in some variables
and then having MI print them explicitly, instead of printing them
directly from the Python events.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 23.

https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-07/msg00290.html

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.python/py-mi-events-gdb.py (stop_handler_str)
	(cont_handler_str): New.
	(signal_stop_handler): Set stop_handler_str instead of printing to
	stdout.
	(continue_handler): Set cont_handler_str instead of printing to
	stdout.
	* gdb.python/py-mi-events.exp: Ues mi_execute_to instead of
	mi_send_resuming_command.  Print stop_handler_str and
	cont_handler_str instead of expecting the python events print
	directly.
2016-06-21 01:11:43 +01:00
Sanjoy Das 2838cc1d36 Add a test case for the jit-reader interface
Originally intended to be committed on 2013-01-17 in
675921c059 (Test case for the
jit-reader), but by mistake the files were not added.  Fortunately
they still work.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-06-17  Sanjoy Das  <sanjoy@playingwithpointers.com>

	* gdb.base/jit-reader.exp: New file.
	* gdb.base/jithost.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/jithost.h: New file.
	* gdb.base/jitreader.c : New file.
	* gdb.base/jit-protocol.h: New file.
2016-06-17 19:24:08 +01:00
Yao Qi 21a770913c Extend step-over-syscall.exp with different detach-on-fork and follow-fork modes
This patch extends step-over-syscall.exp by setting different values to
detach-on-fork and follow-fork.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp (break_cond_on_syscall): New
	parameters follow_fork and detach_on_fork.  Set follow-fork-mode
	and detach-on-fork.  Adjust tests.
	(top level): Invoke break_cond_on_syscall with combinations of
	syscall, follow-fork-mode and detach-on-fork.
2016-06-17 10:38:55 +01:00
Yao Qi 2e7b624b85 Handle reinsert breakpoints for vforked child
When a thread is doing step-over with reinsert breakpoint, and the
instruction executed is a syscall doing vfork, both parent and child
share the memory, so the reinsert breakpoint in the space is visible
to both of them.  Also, removing the reinsert breakpoints from the
child will effectively remove them from the parent.  We should
carefully manipulate reinsert breakpoints for both processes.

What we are doing here is that

 - uninsert reinsert breakpoints from the parent before cloning the
   breakpoint list.  We use "uninsert" instead of "remove", because
   we need to "reinsert" them back after vfork is done.  In fact,
   "uninsert" removes them from both child and parent process space.
 - reinsert breakpoints in parent process are still copied to child's
   breakpoint list,
 - remove them from child's breakpoint list as what we did for fork,
   at this point, reinsert breakpoints are removed from the child and
   the parent, but they are still tracked by the parent's breakpoint
   list,
 - once vfork is done, "reinsert" them back to the parent,

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (handle_extended_wait): Call
	uninsert_reinsert_breakpoints for the parent process.  Remove
	reinsert breakpoints from the child process.  Reinsert them to
	the parent process when vfork is done.
	* mem-break.c (uninsert_reinsert_breakpoints): New function.
	(reinsert_reinsert_breakpoints): New function.
	* mem-break.h (uninsert_reinsert_breakpoints): Declare
	(reinsert_reinsert_breakpoints): Declare.
2016-06-17 10:38:55 +01:00
Yao Qi 8a81c5d7a7 Delete reinsert breakpoints from forked child
When a thread is stepping over a syscall instruction with software
single step, GDBserver inserts reinsert breakpoints at the next pcs.
If the syscall call is fork, the forked child has reinsert breakpoint
in its space, and GDBserver clones parent's breakpoint list to child's.
When GDBserver resumes the child, its bp_reinsert is zero, but has
reinsert breakpoints, so the following assert is triggered if I apply
the patch extending step-over-syscall.exp.

gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:4292: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.^M
void linux_resume_one_lwp_throw(lwp_info*, int, int, siginfo_t*): Assertion `!has_reinsert_breakpoints (proc)' failed.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (handle_extended_wait): If the parent is doing
	step-over, remove the reinsert breakpoints from the forked child.
2016-06-17 10:38:55 +01:00
Yao Qi f50bf8e515 Step over exit with reinsert breakpoints
This patch fixes a GDBserver crash when one thread is stepping over
a syscall instruction which is exit.  Step-over isn't finished due
to the exit, but GDBserver doesn't clean up the state of step-over,
so in the wait next time, GDBserver will wait on step_over_bkpt,
which is already exited, and GDBserver crashes because
'requested_child' is NULL.  See gdbserver logs below,

Need step over [LWP 14858]? yes, found breakpoint at 0x2aaaaad91307^M
proceed_all_lwps: found thread 14858 needing a step-over^M
Starting step-over on LWP 14858.  Stopping all threads^M
>>>> entering void stop_all_lwps(int, lwp_info*)
....
<<<< exiting void stop_all_lwps(int, lwp_info*)^M
Done stopping all threads for step-over.^M
pc is 0x2aaaaad91307^M
Writing 0f to 0x2aaaaad91307 in process 14858^M
Could not find fast tracepoint jump at 0x2aaaaad91307 in list (uninserting).^M
  pending reinsert at 0x2aaaaad91307^M
  step from pc 0x2aaaaad91307^M
Resuming lwp 14858 (step, signal 0, stop not expected)^M

 # Start step-over for LWP 14858

>>>> entering ptid_t linux_wait_1(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, int)
....
LLFE: 14858 exited.
...
<<<< exiting ptid_t linux_wait_1(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, int)

  # LWP 14858 exited
.....
>>>> entering ptid_t linux_wait_1(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, int)^M
linux_wait_1: [<all threads>]^M
step_over_bkpt set [LWP 14858.14858], doing a blocking wait

  # but step_over_bkpt is still LWP 14858, which is wrong

The fix is to finish step-over if it is ongoing, and unsuspend other
threads.  Without the fix in linux-low.c, GDBserver will crash in
with running gdb.base/step-over-exit.exp.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (unsuspend_all_lwps): Declare.
	(linux_low_filter_event): If thread exited, call finish_step_over.
	If step-over is finished, unsuspend other threads.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/step-over-exit.c: New.
	* gdb.base/step-over-exit.exp: New.
2016-06-17 10:38:55 +01:00
Yao Qi 8376a3cbf7 More assert checks on reinsert breakpoint
This patch adds more asserts, so the incorrect or sub-optimal
reinsert breakpoints manipulations (from the tests in the following
patches) can trigger them.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (linux_resume_one_lwp_throw): Assert
	has_reinsert_breakpoints returns false.
	* mem-break.c (delete_disabled_breakpoints): Assert
	bp type isn't reinsert_breakpoint.
2016-06-17 10:38:19 +01:00
Yao Qi f79b145de3 Switch to current thread in finish_step_over
This patch adds some sanity check that reinsert breakpoints must be
there when doing step-over on software single step target.  The check
triggers an assert when running forking-threads-plus-breakpoint.exp
on arm-linux target,

 gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:4714: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.^M
 int finish_step_over(lwp_info*): Assertion `has_reinsert_breakpoints ()' failed.

the error happens when GDBserver has already resumed a thread of
process A for step-over (and wait for it hitting reinsert breakpoint),
but receives detach request for process B from GDB, which is shown in
the backtrace below,

 (gdb) bt
 #2  0x000228aa in finish_step_over (lwp=0x12bbd98) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:4703
 #3  0x00025a50 in finish_step_over (lwp=0x12bbd98) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:4749
 #4  complete_ongoing_step_over () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:4760
 #5  linux_detach (pid=25228) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:1503
 #6  0x00012bae in process_serial_event () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/server.c:3974
 #7  handle_serial_event (err=<optimized out>, client_data=<optimized out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/server.c:4347
 #8  0x00016d68 in handle_file_event (event_file_desc=<optimized out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/event-loop.c:429
 #9  0x000173ea in process_event () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/event-loop.c:184
 #10 start_event_loop () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/event-loop.c:547
 #11 0x0000aa2c in captured_main (argv=<optimized out>, argc=<optimized out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/server.c:3719
 #12 main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbserver/server.c:3804

the sanity check tries to find the reinsert breakpoint from process B,
but nothing is found.  It is wrong, we need to search in process A,
since we started step-over of a thread of process A.

 (gdb) p lwp->thread->entry.id
 $3 = {pid = 25120, lwp = 25131, tid = 0}
 (gdb) p current_thread->entry.id
 $4 = {pid = 25228, lwp = 25228, tid = 0}

This patch switched current_thread to the thread we are doing step-over
in finish_step_over.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-06-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (maybe_hw_step): New function.
	(linux_resume_one_lwp_throw): Call maybe_hw_step.
	(finish_step_over): Switch current_thread to lwp temporarily,
	and assert has_reinsert_breakpoints returns true.
	(proceed_one_lwp): Call maybe_hw_step.
	* mem-break.c (has_reinsert_breakpoints): New function.
	* mem-break.h (has_reinsert_breakpoints): Declare.
2016-06-17 10:38:19 +01:00
Yan-Ting Lin a28d8e5037 gdb: new AndesTech NDS32 port
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add nds32-tdep.o.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add nds32-tdep.h.
	(ALLDEPFILES): Add nds32-tdep.c.
	* NEWS: Mention new NDS32 port.
	* configure.tgt: Add NDS32.
	* nds32-tdep.c: New file.
	* nds32-tdep.h: New file.
	* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Add nds32.xml.
	* features/nds32-core.xml: New file.
	* features/nds32-fpu.xml: New file.
	* features/nds32-system.xml: New file.
	* features/nds32.c: New file (generated).
	* features/nds32.xml: New file.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (Standard Target Features): Document NDS32 features.
	(NDS32 Features): New Section.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/float.exp: Add target check for nds32*-*-*.
	* gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Set core-regs for nds32*-*-*.
2016-06-17 16:58:05 +08:00
John Baldwin 4bf5402d91 Remove unneeded checks on type lengths.
Type lengths are unsigned, so they are always greater than or equal to
zero.  A check against the length of 'tgt_type' is retained to prevent
dividing by zero.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* v850-tdep.c (v850_use_struct_convention): Trim type length checks.
2016-06-14 11:50:58 -07:00
John Baldwin 683cd65eb4 Pass a NULL pointer as the last argument to find_pc_partial_function.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* tui/tui-stack.c (tui_show_frame_info): Fix type mismatch.
2016-06-14 11:49:34 -07:00
John Baldwin bec734b212 Initialize 'ra' to zero to avoid uninitialized use.
If the instruction in this case does not include an RA field, then 'ra'
is used uninitialized.  Use the same idiom used elsewhere in this file of
initializing ra to zero before check for an RA field.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_process_record_op31): Initialize ra.
2016-06-14 11:47:11 -07:00
Andrew Burgess cad8e26d2a gdb: Use UNSUPPORTED not XFAIL for unsupported target features
If a target does not support making function calls from GDB then in a
number of test files, we currently report an XFAIL and skip some, or all
of the tests.  This commit changes the XFAIL to an UNSUPPORTED as this
seems more appropriate in these cases.

Some of the tests used bug ID 2416 to be reported in the XFAIL.  In the
current GDB bugzilla bug 2416 has nothing to do with calling target
functions from GDB.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/call-ar-st.exp: Report unsupported rather than xfail
	for unsupported target features.
	* gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/call-sc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/call-strs.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/callexit.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/callfuncs.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/nodebug.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/printcmds.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/ptype.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/structs.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/unwindonsignal.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/gdb2495.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/templates.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/virtfunc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/hand-call-in-threads.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/interrupted-hand-call.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/thread-unwindonsignal.exp: Likewise.
2016-06-13 15:26:26 +01:00
Nick Clifton e46dd0f46b Fix compile time warning about a redundant comparison in an assertion statement.
* gdbtypes.c (replace_type): Fix assertion.
2016-06-13 14:22:21 +01:00
Tom Tromey 695bfa52cc Constify arch_type and friends
While working on the Rust support, I happened to notice that arch_type
and related functions take "char *" arguments, where "const char *"
would be more correct.  This patch fixes this oversight.  Tested by
rebuilding.

2016-06-10  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdbtypes.c (arch_type, arch_integer_type, arch_character_type)
	(arch_boolean_type, arch_float_type, arch_complex_type)
	(arch_flags_type, append_flags_type_field)
	(append_flags_type_flag, arch_composite_type)
	(append_composite_type_field_raw)
	(append_composite_type_field_aligned)
	(append_composite_type_field): Make "name" parameter const.
	* gdbtypes.h (arch_type, arch_integer_type, arch_character_type)
	(arch_boolean_type, arch_float_type, arch_complex_type)
	(append_composite_type_field, append_composite_type_field_aligned)
	(append_composite_type_field_raw, arch_flags_type)
	(append_flags_type_field, append_flags_type_flag): Constify.
2016-06-10 10:10:17 -06:00
Tom Tromey 347dc1025d Fix PR rust/20110
PR rust/20110 concerns the type of an integer constant that is too
large for "i32", the default integer type.  This patch changes the
type of such a constant to i64.  This is important because such values
are often addresses, so truncating them by default is unfriendly.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-06-10  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR rust/20110:
	* rust-exp.y (lex_number): Don't truncate large numbers to i32.

2016-06-10  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR rust/20110:
	* gdb.rust/expr.exp: Add test for integer constant larger than
	i32.
2016-06-10 09:57:09 -06:00
Tom Tromey edef7b8cf3 Fix rust-exp handling in makefile
I noticed that the rust-exp handling in the Makefile differed from
that of other .y files.  I believe I noticed this by seeing a stray
"rm" in the build log.

This patch changes the Makefile to bring the rust-exp handling in line
with that of other .y files.

2016-06-10  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMMON_OBS): Remove rust-exp.o.
	(YYFILES): Add rust-exp.c.
	(YYOBJ): Add rust-exp.o.
	(local-maintainer-clean): Remove rust-exp.c.
2016-06-10 09:57:08 -06:00
Bernhard Heckel 5e13cf2543 Fortran: Testsuite, non-local references in nested functions.
Non-local references in nested functions are usually implemented
by using DWARF static link. This feature was added
with commit 63e43d3aed
(DWARF: handle non-local references in nested functions) but
a testcase was missing in Fortran.

2016-06-10  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/nested-funcs.exp: New.
	* gdb.fortran/nested-funcs.f90:	New.
2016-06-10 11:16:49 +02:00
Toshihito Kikuchi bb556f1fac
Add negative repeat count to 'x' command
This change adds support for specifying a negative repeat count to
all the formats of the 'x' command to examine memory backward.
A new testcase 'examine-backward' is added to cover this new feature.

Here's the example output from the new feature:

<format 'i'>
(gdb) bt
#0  Func1 (n=42, p=0x40432e "hogehoge") at main.cpp:5
#1  0x00000000004041fa in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffdff8) at main.cpp:19
(gdb) x/-4i 0x4041fa
  0x4041e5 <main(int, char**)+11>: mov   %rsi,-0x10(%rbp)
  0x4041e9 <main(int, char**)+15>: lea   0x13e(%rip),%rsi
  0x4041f0 <main(int, char**)+22>: mov   $0x2a,%edi
  0x4041f5 <main(int, char**)+27>: callq 0x404147

<format 'x'>
(gdb) x/-4xw 0x404200
0x4041f0 <main(int, char**)+22>: 0x00002abf 0xff4de800 0x76e8ffff 0xb8ffffff
(gdb) x/-4
0x4041e0 <main(int, char**)+6>:  0x7d8910ec 0x758948fc 0x358d48f0 0x0000013e

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention that GDB now supports a negative repeat count in
	the 'x' command.
	* printcmd.c (decode_format): Allow '-' in the parameter
	"string_ptr" to accept a negative repeat count.
	(find_instruction_backward): New function.
	(read_memory_backward): New function.
	(integer_is_zero): New function.
	(find_string_backward): New function.
	(do_examine): Use new functions to examine memory backward.
	(_initialize_printcmd): Mention that 'x' command supports a negative
	repeat count.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (Examining Memory): Document negative repeat
	count in the 'x' command.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/examine-backward.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/examine-backward.exp: New file.
2016-06-09 22:50:47 -07:00
Toshihito Kikuchi c040f3fb55
Add myself as a write-after-approval GDB maintainer
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* MAINTAINERS (Write After Approval): Add Toshihito Kikuchi.
2016-06-09 22:01:38 -07:00
Tom Tromey 4dee35314b PR python/19819 - remove unused globals from py-xmethods.c
PR python/19819 concerns some unused global variables in
py-xmethods.c.  This patch deletes the unused globals.

Tested by rebuilding.

2016-06-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/19819:
	* python/py-xmethods.c (invoke_method_name)
	(py_get_result_type_method_name, py_invoke_method_name): Remove.
	(gdbpy_initialize_xmethods): Don't initialize
	py_invoke_method_name, py_get_result_type_method_name.
2016-06-09 14:29:21 -06:00
Simon Marchi 1aec0b6ad6 mi/mi-interp.c: Add missing braces
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_record_changed): Add missing braces.
2016-06-07 11:46:25 -04:00
Bernhard Heckel 2091da296f Frame static link: Handle null pointer.
2016-06-07  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* findvar.c (follow_static_link): Check for valid pointer.
2016-06-07 13:36:05 +02:00
Simon Marchi 38b022b445 Add method/format information to =record-started
Eclipse CDT now supports enabling execution recording using two methods
(full and btrace) and both formats for btrace (bts and pt).  In the
event that recording is enabled behind the back of the GUI (by the user
on the command line, or a script), we need to know which method/format
are being used, so it can be correctly reflected in the interface.  This
patch adds this information to the =record-started async record.

Before:

  =record-started,thread-group="i1"

After:

  =record-started,thread-group="i1",method="btrace",format="bts"
  =record-started,thread-group="i1",method="btrace",format="pt"
  =record-started,thread-group="i1",method="full"

The "format" field is only present when the current method supports
multiple formats (only the btrace method as of now).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention the new fields in =record-started.
	* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_format_short_string): New function
	declaration.
	* common/btrace-common.c (btrace_format_short_string): New
	function.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_record_changed): Output method and format
	fields in the =record-started record.
	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_open): Adapt record_changed
	notification.
	* record-full.c (record_full_open): Likewise.
	* record.c (cmd_record_stop): Likewise.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Async Records): Document method and
	format fields in =record-started.
	* observer.texi (record_changed): Add method and format
	parameters.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.mi/mi-record-changed.exp: Adjust =record-started output
	matching.
2016-06-06 17:10:18 -04:00
Jon Turney 0ae534d2cf Fix C++ build for Cygwin
gdb/ChangeLog:

2016-06-02  Jon Turney  <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>

	* windows-nat.c (handle_output_debug_string): Return type of
	gdb_signal_from_host() is gdb_signal, not an int.
	(windows_get_exec_module_filename): Add pointer casts for C++.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

2016-06-02  Jon Turney  <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>

	* win32-low.c (win32_create_inferior): Add pointer casts for C++.
2016-06-03 11:29:25 +00:00
Tom Tromey 1b40ec0559 Fix PR python/18984
This fixes PR python/18984.

The bug is that gdbpy_solib_name uses GDB_PY_LL_ARG, whereas it should
use GDB_PY_LLU_ARG to avoid overflow.

Built and tested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-06-02  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/18984:
	* python/python.c (gdbpy_solib_name): Use GDB_PY_LLU_ARG.

2016-06-02  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/18984:
	* gdb.python/py-shared.exp: Add solib_name test.
2016-06-02 13:18:42 -06:00
Simon Marchi 193bd37899 mi-memory-changed.exp: Fix filename passed to untested
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.mi/mi-memory-changed.exp: Fix filename passed to untested.
2016-06-02 10:08:28 -04:00
Pedro Alves bb7c96deb1 gdb/remote-fileio.c: Eliminate custom SIGINT signal handler
... and fix Ctrl-C races.

The current remote-fileio.c SIGINT/EINTR code can lose Ctrl-C --
there's a period where SIG_IGN is installed as signal handler, for
example.

Since:

 - remote.c no longer installs a custom SIGINT handler;

 - The current remote-fileio.c SIGINT handler is basically the same as
   the default SIGINT handler (event-top.c:handle_sigint), in
   principle, except that instead of setting the quit flag, it sets a
   separate flag.

I think we should be able to completely remove the remote-fileio.c
SIGINT handler, and centralize on the quit flag, thus fixing the
Ctrl-C race.

gdb/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* remote-fileio.c (remote_fio_ctrl_c_flag, remote_fio_sa)
	(remote_fio_osa)
	(remote_fio_ofunc, remote_fileio_sig_init, remote_fileio_sig_set)
	(remote_fileio_sig_exit, remote_fileio_ctrl_c_signal_handler):
	Delete.
	(remote_fileio_o_quit_handler): New global.
	(remote_fileio_quit_handler): New function.
	(remote_fileio_reply): Check the quit flag instead of the custom
	'remote_fio_ctrl_c_flag' flag.  Restore the quit handler instead
	of changing the SIGINT handler.
	(do_remote_fileio_request): Override the quit handler instead of
	changing the SIGINT handler.
2016-06-01 16:34:49 +01:00
Nick Clifton 51403f74d9 Add xmalloc_failed() function to common-utils.c in to avoid the need to link in libiberty's xmalloc code. 2016-06-01 11:44:08 +01:00
Markus Metzger e3b5daf9f7 infcmd, btrace: fix crash in 'finish' for tailcall-only frames
Patch 7eb895307f Skip unwritable frames in command "finish"
skips non-writable frames in addition to tailcall frames.

If skip_tailcall_frames already returns NULL, skip_unwritable_frames
will be called with a NULL frame and crash in get_frame_arch.  This is
caught by gdb.btrace/tailcall-only.exp.

Further, if we ever end up with a mixture of tailcall and non-writable
frames, we may not skip all of them, as intended.

Loop over skip_tailcall_frames and skip_unwritable_frames as long as at least
one of them makes progress.

gdb/
	* infcmd.c (skip_finish_frames): New.
	(finish_command): Call skip_finish_frames.
2016-06-01 11:14:02 +02:00
Yao Qi 03d73f1fd9 Wake up interruptible_select in remote_fileio ctrl-c handler
As reported in PR 19998, after type ctrl-c, GDB hang there and does
not send interrupt.  It causes a fail in gdb.base/interrupt.exp.
All targets support remote fileio should be affected.

When we type ctrc-c, SIGINT is handled by remote_fileio_sig_set,
as shown below,

 #0  remote_fileio_sig_set (sigint_func=0x4495d0 <remote_fileio_ctrl_c_signal_handler(int)>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/remote-fileio.c:325
 #1  0x00000000004495de in remote_fileio_ctrl_c_signal_handler (signo=<optimised out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/remote-fileio.c:349
 #2  <signal handler called>
 #3  0x00007ffff647ed83 in __select_nocancel () at ../sysdeps/unix/syscall-template.S:81
 #4  0x00000000005530ce in interruptible_select (n=10, readfds=readfds@entry=0x7fffffffd730, writefds=writefds@entry=0x0, exceptfds=exceptfds@entry=0x0,
    timeout=timeout@entry=0x0) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/event-top.c:1017
 #5  0x000000000061ab20 in stdio_file_read (file=<optimised out>, buf=0x12d02e0 "\n\022-\001", length_buf=16383)
    at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/ui-file.c:577
 #6  0x000000000044a4dc in remote_fileio_func_read (buf=0x12c0360 "") at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/remote-fileio.c:583
 #7  0x0000000000449598 in do_remote_fileio_request (uiout=<optimised out>, buf_arg=buf_arg@entry=0x12c0340)
    at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/remote-fileio.c:1179

we don't set quit_serial_event,

  do
    {
      res = gdb_select (n, readfds, writefds, exceptfds, timeout);
    }
  while (res == -1 && errno == EINTR);

  if (res == 1 && FD_ISSET (fd, readfds))
    {
      errno = EINTR;
      return -1;
    }
  return res;

we can't go out of the loop above, and that is why GDB can't send
interrupt.

Recently, we stop throwing exception from SIGINT handler
(remote_fileio_ctrl_c_signal_handler)
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-03/msg00372.html, which
is correct, because gdb_select is interruptible.  However, in the
same patch series, we add interruptible_select later as a wrapper
to gdb_select, https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-03/msg00375.html
and it is not interruptible (because of the loop in it) unless
select/poll-able file descriptors are marked.

This fix in this patch is to call quit_serial_event_set, so that we can
go out of the loop above, return -1 and set errno to EINTR.

2016-06-01  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	PR remote/19998
	* remote-fileio.c (remote_fileio_ctrl_c_signal_handler): Call
	quit_serial_event_set.
2016-06-01 09:33:40 +01:00
Joel Brobecker c799dec78a Document the GDB 7.11.1 release in gdb/ChangeLog
gdb/ChangeLog:

	GDB 7.11.1 released.
2016-05-31 17:49:49 -07:00
Martin Galvan 3326303bf5 [PR gdb/19893] Fix handling of synthetic C++ references
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19893

I've traced the main source of the problem to pieced_value_funcs.coerce_ref not being
implemented. Since gdb always assumes references are implemented as pointers, this
causes it to think that it's dealing with a NULL pointer, thus breaking any operations
involving synthetic references.

What I did here was implementing pieced_value_funcs.coerce_ref using some of the synthetic
pointer handling code from indirect_pieced_value, as Pedro suggested. I also made a few
adjustments to the reference printing code so that it correctly shows either the address
of the referenced value or (if it's non-addressable) the "<synthetic pointer>" string.

I also wrote some unit tests based on Dwarf::assemble; these took a while to make
because in most cases I needed a synthetic reference to a physical variable. Additionally,
I started working on a unit test for classes that have a vtable, but ran into a few issues
so that'll probably go in a future patch. One thing that should definitely be fixed is that
proc function_range (called for MACRO_AT_func) will always try to compile/link using gcc
with the default options instead of g++, thus breaking C++ compilations that require e.g. libstdc++.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2loc.c (coerce_pieced_ref, indirect_synthetic_pointer,
	fetch_const_value_from_synthetic_pointer): New functions.
	(indirect_pieced_value): Move lower half to indirect_synthetic_pointer.
	(pieced_value_funcs): Implement coerce_ref.
	* valops.c (value_addr): Call coerce_ref for synthetic references.
	* valprint.c (valprint_check_validity): Return true for synthetic
	references.  Also, don't show "<synthetic pointer>" if they reference
	addressable values.
	(generic_val_print_ref): Handle synthetic references.  Also move some
	code to print_ref_address.
	(print_ref_address, get_value_addr_contents): New functions.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.dwarf2/implref.exp: Rename to...
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-const.exp: ...this.  Also add more test statements.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-array.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-array.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-global.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-global.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-struct.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/implref-struct.exp: Likewise.
2016-05-31 15:56:34 -03:00
Antoine Tremblay 825c8ef28f Add tests for 64bit values in trace-condition.exp
This patch adds tests for emit operations with 64 bit values. It takes
special care to avoid mistakes that one could make on a 32bit architecture
using 64bit values.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Add 64bit tests.
2016-05-30 12:51:13 -04:00
Antoine Tremblay 2320162a62 Add variable length tests for emit_ref in trace-condition.exp
This patch add variable length tests for emit_ref by reading the variable
passed as argument of 8 to 64 bit.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.c (marker): Adapt signature to 8 to 64
	bits types.
	(main): Adapt to 8 to 64 bits types.
	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Add new tests.
2016-05-30 12:51:13 -04:00
Antoine Tremblay a781823347 Add emit_less_unsigned test in trace-condition.exp
This patch adds coverage for emit_less_unsigned.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Add emit_less_unsigned test.
2016-05-30 12:51:13 -04:00
Antoine Tremblay 0d33646690 Move trace conditions tests from ftrace.exp to trace-condition.exp
This patch moves conditional tests that were done in ftrace.exp to
trace-condition.exp.

Note that emit_ref is now tested by the anarg local variable there is no
need to test the register directly.

All emit calls have been tested using asserts before / after the move, to
ensure that the tests cover the same functions.

Note that these function were not covered before and are still not:
emit_gt_goto, emit_lt_goto, emit_pop, emit_unsigned_less.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/ftrace.exp (test_ftrace_condition): Remove.
	Move condition tests...
	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Here.
2016-05-30 12:51:13 -04:00
Antoine Tremblay 7faeb45ae3 Add counter-cases for trace-condition.exp tests
In trace-condition.exp, tests are done by doing a conditional tracepoint
and validating that the trace contains all the frames that could be
collected if that condition is true.

E.g. test_tracepoints $trace_command "21 + 21 == 42" 10

This will always return true and collect the 10 frames possible to collect
with the test program.

However, if the condition evaluation is broken such that the condition is
unconditional we will not notice this problem.

This patch adds counter-cases to such conditions like so:

$trace_command "21 + 11 == 42" 0

This way such a problem would be noticed.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Add counter-case tests.
2016-05-30 12:51:13 -04:00
Jan Kratochvil e385593eef PR 15231: import bare DW_TAG_lexical_block
Local variables in lambdas are not accessible
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15231

GDB: read_lexical_block_scope
  /* Ignore blocks with missing or invalid low and high pc attributes.  */
[...]
  if (!dwarf2_get_pc_bounds (die, &lowpc, &highpc, cu, NULL))
    return;

But sometimes there is:

FAIL: gcc-5.3.1-6.fc23.x86_64
 <2><92>: Abbrev Number: 11 (DW_TAG_lexical_block)
 <3><9c>: Abbrev Number: 13 (DW_TAG_structure_type)
    <9d>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x3c): <lambda()>
    [...]

Where DW_TAG_lexical_block has no attributes.  Such whole subtree is currently
dropped by GDB while I think it should just import all its children DIEs.

It even XFAIL->XPASSes gdb.ada/out_of_line_in_inlined.exp:
	commit 0fa7fe506c
	Author: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
	    out of line functions nested inside inline functions.
So I have removed that xfail.

gdb/ChangeLog
2016-05-30  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR c++/15231
	* dwarf2read.c (enum pc_bounds_kind): Add PC_BOUNDS_INVALID.
	(process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader, read_func_scope): Adjust callers.
	(read_lexical_block_scope): Import DIEs from bare DW_TAG_lexical_block.
	(read_call_site_scope): Adjust callers.
	(dwarf2_get_pc_bounds): Implement pc_bounds_invalid.
	(dwarf2_get_subprogram_pc_bounds, get_scope_pc_bounds): Adjust callers.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2016-05-30  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR c++/15231
	* gdb.ada/out_of_line_in_inlined.exp: Remove xfails.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-lexical-block-bare.exp: New file.
2016-05-30 14:14:43 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil 3a2b436ae9 Code cleanup: dwarf2_get_pc_bounds: -1/0/+1 -> enum
Make the code (maybe) more readable + primarily prepare it for [patch 2/2]
enum extension.

This change should have no code change impact.

gdb/ChangeLog
2016-05-30  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	Code cleanup: dwarf2_get_pc_bounds: -1/0/+1 -> enum
	* dwarf2read.c (enum pc_bounds_kind) New.
	(dwarf2_get_pc_bounds): Use it in the declaration.
	(process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader): Adjust caller.  Rename has_pc_info
	to cu_bounds_kind.
	(read_func_scope, read_lexical_block_scope, read_call_site_scope):
	Adjust callers.
	(dwarf2_get_pc_bounds): Use enum pc_bounds_kind in the definition.
	(dwarf2_get_subprogram_pc_bounds, get_scope_pc_bounds): Adjust callers.
2016-05-30 14:11:43 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil aab3c527d7 NEWS: QCatchSyscalls: simplify
Standardize the QCatchSyscalls NEWS entry.

gdb/ChangeLog
2016-05-29  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (QCatchSyscalls): Remove the parameter.  Include ...
	(QCatchSyscalls:1 in qSupported) ... this separate entry which got
	deleted.
2016-05-29 20:45:42 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil c64e0f6165 NEWS: Remove empty line.
gdb/ChangeLog
2016-05-29  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (N stop reply): Remove empty line.
2016-05-29 18:42:15 +02:00
Alan Modra 1a72702bb3 Return void from linker callbacks
The ldmain.c implementation of these linker callback functions always
return true, so any code handling a false return is dead.  What's
more, some of the bfd backends abort if ever a false return is seen,
and there seems to be some confusion in gdb's compile-object-load.c.
The return value was never meant to be "oh yes, a multiple_definition
error occurred", but rather "out of memory or other catastrophic
failure".

This patch removes the status return on the callbacks that always
return true.  I kept the return status for "notice" because that one
does happen to need to return "out of memory".

include/
	* bfdlink.h (struct bfd_link_callbacks): Update comments.
	Return void from multiple_definition, multiple_common,
	add_to_set, constructor, warning, undefined_symbol,
	reloc_overflow, reloc_dangerous and unattached_reloc.
bfd/
	* aoutx.h: Adjust linker callback calls throughout file,
	removing dead code.
	* bout.c: Likewise.
	* coff-alpha.c: Likewise.
	* coff-arm.c: Likewise.
	* coff-h8300.c: Likewise.
	* coff-h8500.c: Likewise.
	* coff-i960.c: Likewise.
	* coff-mcore.c: Likewise.
	* coff-mips.c: Likewise.
	* coff-ppc.c: Likewise.
	* coff-rs6000.c: Likewise.
	* coff-sh.c: Likewise.
	* coff-tic80.c: Likewise.
	* coff-w65.c: Likewise.
	* coff-z80.c: Likewise.
	* coff-z8k.c: Likewise.
	* coff64-rs6000.c: Likewise.
	* cofflink.c: Likewise.
	* ecoff.c: Likewise.
	* elf-bfd.h: Likewise.
	* elf-m10200.c: Likewise.
	* elf-m10300.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-arc.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-arm.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-avr.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-bfin.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-cr16.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-cr16c.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-cris.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-crx.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-d10v.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-epiphany.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-fr30.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-frv.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-ft32.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-h8300.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-hppa.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-i370.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-i386.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-i860.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-ip2k.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-iq2000.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-lm32.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-m32c.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-m32r.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-m68hc1x.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-m68k.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-mep.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-metag.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-microblaze.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-moxie.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-msp430.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-mt.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-nds32.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-nios2.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-or1k.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-ppc.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-s390.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-score.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-score7.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-sh.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-sh64.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-spu.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-tic6x.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-tilepro.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-v850.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-vax.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-visium.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-xstormy16.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-xtensa.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-alpha.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-hppa.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-ia64-vms.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-mmix.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-ppc.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-s390.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-sh64.c: Likewise.
	* elf64-x86-64.c: Likewise.
	* elflink.c: Likewise.
	* elfnn-aarch64.c: Likewise.
	* elfnn-ia64.c: Likewise.
	* elfxx-mips.c: Likewise.
	* elfxx-sparc.c: Likewise.
	* elfxx-tilegx.c: Likewise.
	* linker.c: Likewise.
	* pdp11.c: Likewise.
	* pe-mips.c: Likewise.
	* reloc.c: Likewise.
	* reloc16.c: Likewise.
	* simple.c: Likewise.
	* vms-alpha.c: Likewise.
	* xcofflink.c: Likewise.
	* elf32-rl78.c (get_symbol_value, get_romstart, get_ramstart): Delete
	status param.  Adjust calls to these and linker callbacks throughout.
	* elf32-rx.c: (get_symbol_value, get_gp, get_romstart,
	get_ramstart): Delete status param.  Adjust calls to these and
	linker callbacks throughout.
ld/
	* ldmain.c (multiple_definition, multiple_common, add_to_set,
	constructor_callback, warning_callback, undefined_symbol,
	reloc_overflow, reloc_dangerous, unattached_reloc): Return void.
	* emultempl/elf32.em: Adjust callback calls.
gdb/
	* compile/compile-object-load.c (link_callbacks_multiple_definition,
	link_callbacks_warning, link_callbacks_undefined_symbol,
	link_callbacks_undefined_symbol, link_callbacks_reloc_overflow,
	link_callbacks_reloc_dangerous,
	link_callbacks_unattached_reloc): Return void.
2016-05-28 11:17:20 +09:30
Pedro Alves 744608cc85 Skip attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp on known-broken DejaGnu versions
If the testsuite is run with a DejaGnu version that predates the fix
from last year:

  [PATCH] DejaGnu kills the wrong process due to PID-reuse races
  http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/dejagnu/2015-07/msg00005.html

... gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp fails randomly,
often.  Other tests randomly fail due to that issue too, but this one
is _much_ more exposed.

DejaGnu 1.6 was released meanwhile, which includes that DejaGnu fix,
and also some distros backported the fix too.

So skip the test when run with older/broken DejaGnus.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-05-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp (bad_dejagnu):
	New procedure.
	(top level): Call it, and bail out of DejaGnu is known to be bad.
2016-05-27 16:18:28 +01:00
Eli Zaretskii c185ba27ca Improve documentation of general query packets
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (General Query Packets): Move the description of the
	response before the long list of the specific 'read' and 'write'
	requests.
2016-05-27 16:59:22 +03:00
Andrew Burgess 51415b9f30 gdb: Forward VALUE_LVAL when avoiding side effects for STRUCTOP_STRUCT
When evaluating an expression with EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS if the value
we return is forced to be of type not_lval then GDB will be unable to
take the address of the returned value.

Instead, we should properly initialise the LVAL of the returned value.

This commit builds on two previous commits 2520f728b7 (Forward
VALUE_LVAL when avoiding side effects for STRUCTOP_STRUCT) and
ac775bf4d3 (gdb: Forward VALUE_LVAL when avoiding side effects for
STRUCTOP_PTR), which in turn build on ac1ca910d7 (Fixes for PR
exp/15364).

This commit is currently untested due to my lack of access to an OpenCL
compiler, however, if follows the same pattern as the first two commits
mentioned above and so I believe that it is correct.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* opencl-lang.c (evaluate_subexp_opencl): If
	EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode, forward the VALUE_LVAL attribute to
	the returned value in the STRUCTOP_STRUCT case.
2016-05-27 13:07:15 +01:00
Andrew Burgess ac775bf4d3 gdb: Forward VALUE_LVAL when avoiding side effects for STRUCTOP_PTR
Assume that we have a C program like this:

  struct foo_type
  {
    int var;
  } foo;

  struct foo_type *foo_ptr = &foo;

  int
  main ()
  {
    return foo_ptr->var;
  }

Then GDB should be able to evaluate the following, however, it currently
does not:

  (gdb) start
  ...
  (gdb) whatis &(foo_ptr->var)
  Attempt to take address of value not located in memory.

The problem is that in EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode,
eval.c:evaluate_subexp_standard always returns a not_lval value as the
result for a STRUCTOP_PTR operation. As a consequence, the rest of
the code believes that one cannot take the address of the returned
value.

This patch fixes STRUCTOP_PTR handling so that the VALUE_LVAL
attribute for the returned value is properly initialized.  After this
change, the above session becomes:

  (gdb) start
  ...
  (gdb) whatis &(foo_ptr->var)
  type = int *

This commit is largely the same as commit 2520f728b7 (Forward
VALUE_LVAL when avoiding side effects for STRUCTOP_STRUCT) but applied
to STRUCTOP_PTR rather than STRUCTOP_STRUCT.  Both of these commits are
building on top of commit ac1ca910d7 (Fixes for PR exp/15364).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): If EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS
	mode, forward the VALUE_LVAL attribute to the returned value in
	the STRUCTOP_PTR case.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/whatis.c: Extend the test case.
	* gdb.base/whatis.exp: Add additional tests.
2016-05-27 13:06:25 +01:00
Tom Tromey 7bd787e877 fix spelling of HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_4 in py-value.c
Ulrich pointed out that an earlier patch had misspelled
HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_4, adding an extra "_".  This caused a build failure.
This patch fixes the bug.

2016-05-25  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/py-value.c (value_object_as_number): Use correct spelling
	of HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_4.
2016-05-25 07:54:44 -06:00
Bernhard Heckel 2bbad2ea11 Fortran, typeprint: Forward level of details to be printed for pointers.
Variable "show" was hardcoded to zero for pointer and reference types.
This implementation didn't allow a correct "whatis" print
for those types and results in same output for "ptype" and "whatis".

Before:
(gdb) whatis t3p
type = PTR TO -> ( Type t3
    integer(kind=4) :: t3_i
    Type t2 :: t2_n
End Type t3 )

After:
(gdb) whatis t3p
type = PTR TO -> ( Type t3 )

2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* f-typeprint.c (f_type_print_base): Replace 0 by show.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/type.f90: Add pointer variable.
	* gdb.fortran/whatis_type.exp: Add whatis/ptype of pointers.
2016-05-25 08:47:18 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 8b70175dfa Fortran, testsuite: Fix duplicate testcase name.
2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp: Fix testcase name.
2016-05-25 08:47:18 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 86d8a84882 Fortran, testsuite: Add testcases for nested structures.
As as result of printing only the outer elements of nested structures,
some testcases have to be added to check for corner cases with VLA's.

2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp: Access elements in nested structs.
2016-05-25 08:47:18 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel e188eb3621 Fortran, typeprint: Decrease level of details when printing elements of a structure.
According to the typeprint's description, the level of details is
decreased by one for the typeprint of elements of a structure.

Before:
(gdb) ptype t3v
type = Type t3
    integer(kind=4) :: t3_i
    Type t2
        integer(kind=4) :: t2_i
        Type t1
            integer(kind=4) :: t1_i
            real(kind=4) :: t1_r
        End Type t1 :: t1_n
    End Type t2 :: t2_n
End Type t3

After:
(gdb) ptype t3v
type = Type t3
    integer(kind=4) :: t3_i
    Type t2 :: t2_n
End Type t3

2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* f-typeprint.c (f_type_print_base): Decrease show by one.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/type.f90: Add nested structures.
	* gdb.fortran/whatis-type.exp: Whatis/ptype nested structures.
	* gdb.fortran/derived-type.exp: Adapt expected output.
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp: Adapt expected output.
2016-05-25 08:47:17 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 9b2db1fd27 Fortran, typeprint: Take level of details into account when printing elements of a structure.
According to the typeprint's description, elements of a structure
should not be printed when show is < 1.
This variable is also used to distinguish the level of details
between "ptype" and "whatis" expressions.

Before:
(gdb) whatis t1v
type = Type t1
    integer(kind=4) :: t1_i
    real(kind=4) :: t1_r
End Type t1

After:
(gdb) whatis t1v
type = Type t1

2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* f-typeprint.c (f_type_print_base): Don't print fields when show < 0.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/whatis_type.exp: Adapt expected output.
2016-05-25 08:47:17 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 72b1705502 Fortran, typeprint: Fix wrong indentation when ptype nested structures.
Level of indentation was not proper handled when printing
the elements type's name.

Before:
type = Type t1
integer(kind=4) :: var_1
integer(kind=4) :: var_2
End Type t1

After:
type = Type t1
    integer(kind=4) :: var_1
    integer(kind=4) :: var_2
End Type t1

2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* f-typeprint.c (f_type_print_base): Take print level into account.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/print_type.exp: Fix expected output.
	* gdb.fortran/whatis_type.exp: Fix expected output.
2016-05-25 08:47:16 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 3cd81d8df7 Fortran, testsuite: Use multi_line in whatis_type testcase.
2016-05-25  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/whatis_type.exp: Use multi_line.
2016-05-25 08:47:16 +02:00
Tom Tromey ddae946278 Fix PR python/17386 - add __index__ method to gdb.Value
This patch fixes PR python/17386.

The bug is that gdb.Value does not implement the Python __index__
method.  This method is needed to convert a Python object to an index
and is used by various operations in Python, such as indexing an
array.

The fix is to implement the nb_index method for gdb.Value.

nb_index was added in Python 2.5.  I don't have a good way to test
Python 2.4, but I made an attempt to accomodate it.

I chose to use valpy_long in all cases because this simplifies porting
to Python 3, and because there didn't seem to be any harm.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-05-24  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/17386:
	* python/py-value.c (value_object_as_number): Add
	nb_inplace_floor_divide, nb_inplace_true_divide, nb_index.

2016-05-24  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/17386:
	* gdb.python/py-value.exp (test_value_numeric_ops): Add tests that
	use value as an index.
2016-05-24 10:05:59 -06:00
Tom Tromey e2b7f516fc add nb_inplace_divide for python 2
Python 2's PyNumberMethods has nb_inplace_divide, but Python 3 does
not.  This patch adds it for Python 2.

This buglet didn't cause much fallout because the only non-NULL entry
in value_object_as_number after this is for valpy_divide; and the
missing slot caused it to slide up to nb_floor_divide (where
nb_true_divide was intended).

2016-05-24  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/py-value.c (value_object_as_number): Add
	nb_inplace_divide for Python 2.
2016-05-24 10:05:58 -06:00
Tom Tromey 1957f6b89f Fix PR python/17981
PR python/17981 notes that gdb.breakpoints() returns None when there
are no breakpoints; whereas an empty list or tuple would be more in
keeping with Python and the documentation.

This patch fixes the bug by changing the no-breakpoint return to make
an empty tuple.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-05-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/17981:
	* python/py-breakpoint.c (gdbpy_breakpoints): Return a new tuple
	when there are no breakpoints.

2016-05-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python.texi (Basic Python): Document gdb.breakpoints return.

2016-05-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/17981:
	* gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp (test_bkpt_basic): Add test for
	no-breakpoint case.
2016-05-24 09:55:01 -06:00
Tom Tromey 224f10c1ae PR gdb/19194 - fix typo in the manual
PR gdb/19194 points out a typo in the documentation.  I'm checking
this in as obvious.

2016-05-24  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/19194:
	* gdb.texinfo (gdb man): Fix typo.
2016-05-24 09:41:39 -06:00
Pedro Alves 026a917475 Fix PR gdb/19828: gdb -p <process from a container>: internal error
When GDB attaches to a process, it looks at the /proc/PID/task/ dir
for all clone threads of that process, and attaches to each of them.

Usually, if there is more than one clone thread, it means the program
is multi threaded and linked with pthreads.  Thus when GDB soon after
attaching finds and loads a libthread_db matching the process, it'll
add a thread to the thread list for each of the initially found
lower-level LWPs.

If, however, GDB fails to find/load a matching libthread_db, nothing
is adding the LWPs to the thread list.  And because of that, "detach"
hits an internal error:

  (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/clone-attach-detach.exp: fg attach 1: attach
  info threads
    Id   Target Id         Frame
  * 1    LWP 6891 "clone-attach-de" 0x00007f87e5fd0790 in __nanosleep_nocancel () at ../sysdeps/unix/syscall-template.S:84
  (gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/clone-attach-detach.exp: fg attach 1: info threads shows two LWPs
  detach
  .../src/gdb/thread.c:1010: internal-error: is_executing: Assertion `tp' failed.
  A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
  further debugging may prove unreliable.
  Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
  FAIL: gdb.threads/clone-attach-detach.exp: fg attach 1: detach (GDB internal error)

From here:

  ...
  #8  0x00000000007ba7cc in internal_error (file=0x98ea68 ".../src/gdb/thread.c", line=1010, fmt=0x98ea30 "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.")
      at .../src/gdb/common/errors.c:55
  #9  0x000000000064bb83 in is_executing (ptid=...) at .../src/gdb/thread.c:1010
  #10 0x00000000004c23bb in get_pending_status (lp=0x12c5cc0, status=0x7fffffffdc0c) at .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1235
  #11 0x00000000004c2738 in detach_callback (lp=0x12c5cc0, data=0x0) at .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1317
  #12 0x00000000004c1a2a in iterate_over_lwps (filter=..., callback=0x4c2599 <detach_callback>, data=0x0) at .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:899
  #13 0x00000000004c295c in linux_nat_detach (ops=0xe7bd30, args=0x0, from_tty=1) at .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1358
  #14 0x000000000068284d in delegate_detach (self=0xe7bd30, arg1=0x0, arg2=1) at .../src/gdb/target-delegates.c:34
  #15 0x0000000000694141 in target_detach (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at .../src/gdb/target.c:2241
  #16 0x0000000000630582 in detach_command (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at .../src/gdb/infcmd.c:2975
  ...

Tested on x86-64 Fedora 23.  Also confirmed the test passes against
gdbserver with "maint set target-non-stop".

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-nat.c (attach_proc_task_lwp_callback): Mark the lwp
	resumed, and add the thread to GDB's thread list.

testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* gdb.threads/clone-attach-detach.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/clone-attach-detach.exp: New file.
2016-05-24 14:51:32 +01:00
Pedro Alves 72b049d38c Make gdb/linux-nat.c consider a waitstatus pending on the infrun side
Working on the fix for gdb/19828, I saw
gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp fail once in an
unusual way.  Unfortunately I didn't keep debug logs, but it's an
issue similar to what's been fixed in remote.c a while ago --
linux-nat.c was not fetching the pending status from the right place.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-nat.c (get_pending_status): If the thread reported the
	event to the core and it's pending, use the pending status signal
	number.
2016-05-24 14:51:03 +01:00
Pedro Alves 774113b02f [Linux] Optimize PID -> struct lwp_info lookup
Hacking the gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp test to
spawn thousands of threads instead of dozens, and running gdb under
perf, I saw that GDB was spending most of the time in find_lwp_pid:

   - captured_main
      - 93.61% catch_command_errors
         - 87.41% attach_command
            - 87.40% linux_nat_attach
               - 87.40% linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads
                  - 82.38% attach_proc_task_lwp_callback
                     - 81.01% find_lwp_pid
                          5.30% ptid_get_lwp
                        + 0.10% ptid_lwp_p
                     + 0.64% add_thread
                     + 0.26% set_running
                     + 0.24% set_executing
                       0.12% ptid_get_lwp
                     + 0.01% ptrace
                     + 0.01% add_lwp

attach_proc_task_lwp_callback is called once for each LWP that we
attach to, found by listing the /proc/PID/task/ directory.  In turn,
attach_proc_task_lwp_callback calls find_lwp_pid to check whether the
LWP we're about to try to attach to is already known.  Since
find_lwp_pid does a linear walk over the whole LWP list, this becomes
quadratic.  We do the /proc/PID/task/ listing until we get two
iterations in a row where we found no new threads.  So the second and
following times we walk the /proc/PID/task/ dir, we're going to take
an even worse find_lwp_pid hit.

Fix this by adding a hash table keyed by LWP PID, for fast lookup.

The linked list embedded in the LWP structure itself is kept, and made
a double-linked list, so that removals from that list are O(1).  An
earlier version of this patch got rid of this list altogether, but
that revealed hidden dependencies / assumptions on how the list is
sorted.  For example, killing a process and then waiting for all the
LWPs status using iterate_over_lwps only works as is because the
leader LWP is always last in the list.  So I thought it better to take
an incremental approach and make this patch concern itself _only_ with
the PID lookup optimization.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-nat.c (lwp_lwpid_htab): New htab.
	(lwp_info_hash, lwp_lwpid_htab_eq, lwp_lwpid_htab_create)
	(lwp_lwpid_htab_add_lwp): New functions.
	(lwp_list): Tweak comment.
	(lwp_list_add, lwp_list_remove, lwp_lwpid_htab_remove_pid): New
	functions.
	(purge_lwp_list): Rewrite, using htab_traverse_noresize.
	(add_initial_lwp): Add lwp to htab too.  Use lwp_list_add.
	(delete_lwp): Use lwp_list_remove.  Remove htab too.
	(find_lwp_pid): Search in htab.
	(_initialize_linux_nat): Call lwp_lwpid_htab_create.
	* linux-nat.h (struct lwp_info) <prev>: New field.
2016-05-24 14:50:37 +01:00
Pedro Alves 1ad3de988d [Linux] Avoid refetching core-of-thread if thread hasn't run
Hacking the gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp test to
spawn thousands of threads instead of dozens, I saw GDB having trouble
keeping up with threads being spawned too fast, when it tried to stop
them all.  This was because while gdb is doing that, it updates the
thread list to make sure no new thread has sneaked in that might need
to be paused.  It does this a few times until it sees no-new-threads
twice in a row.  The thread listing update itself is not that
expensive, however, in the Linux backend, updating the threads list
calls linux_common_core_of_thread for each LWP to record on which core
each LWP was last seen running, which opens/reads/closes a /proc file
for each LWP which becomes expensive when you need to do it for
thousands of LWPs.

perf shows gdb in linux_common_core_of_thread 44% of the time, in the
stop_all_threads -> update_thread_list path in this use case.

This patch simply makes linux_common_core_of_thread avoid updating the
core the thread is bound to if the thread hasn't run since the last
time we updated that info.  This makes linux_common_core_of_thread
disappear into the noise in the perf report.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-nat.c (linux_resume_one_lwp_throw): Clear the LWP's core
	field.
	(linux_nat_update_thread_list): Don't fetch the core if already
	known.
2016-05-24 14:48:57 +01:00
Pedro Alves 95e94c3f18 [Linux] Read vDSO range from /proc/PID/task/PID/maps instead of /proc/PID/maps
... as it's _much_ faster.

Hacking the gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp test to
spawn thousands of threads instead of dozens to stress and debug
timeout problems with gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp,
I saw that GDB would spend several seconds just reading the
/proc/PID/smaps file, to determine the vDSO mapping range.  GDB opens
and reads the whole file just once, and caches the result, but even
that is too slow.  For example, with almost 8000 threads:

 $ ls /proc/3518/task/ | wc -l
 7906

reading the /proc/PID/smaps file grepping for "vdso" takes over 15
seconds :

 $ time cat /proc/3518/smaps | grep vdso
 7ffdbafee000-7ffdbaff0000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0                          [vdso]

 real    0m15.371s
 user    0m0.008s
 sys     0m15.017s

Looking around the web for hints, I found a nice description of the
issue here:

 http://backtrace.io/blog/blog/2014/11/12/large-thread-counts-and-slow-process-maps/

The problem is that /proc/PID/smaps wants to show the mappings as
being thread stack, and that has the kernel iterating over all threads
in the thread group, for each mapping.

The fix is to use the "map" file under /proc/PID/task/PID/ instead of
the /proc/PID/ one, as the former doesn't mark thread stacks for all
threads.

That alone drops the timing to the millisecond range on my machine:

 $ time cat /proc/3518/task/3518/smaps | grep vdso
 7ffdbafee000-7ffdbaff0000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0                          [vdso]

 real    0m0.150s
 user    0m0.009s
 sys     0m0.084s

And since we only need the vdso mapping's address range, we can use
"maps" file instead of "smaps", and it's even cheaper:

/proc/PID/task/PID/maps :

 $ time cat /proc/3518/task/3518/maps | grep vdso
 7ffdbafee000-7ffdbaff0000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0                          [vdso]

 real    0m0.027s
 user    0m0.000s
 sys     0m0.017s

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-tdep.c (find_mapping_size): Delete.
	(linux_vsyscall_range_raw): Rewrite reading from
	/proc/PID/task/PID/maps directly instead of using
	gdbarch_find_memory_regions.
2016-05-24 14:48:34 +01:00
Pedro Alves aa01bd3689 Linux native thread create/exit events support
A following patch (fix for gdb/19828) makes linux-nat.c add threads to
GDB's thread list earlier in the "attach" sequence, and that causes a
surprising regression on
gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp on my machine.  The
extra "thread x exited" handling and traffic slows down that test
enough that GDB core has trouble keeping up with new threads that are
spawned while trying to stop existing ones.

I saw the exact same issue with remote/gdbserver a while ago and fixed
it in 65706a29ba (Remote thread create/exit events) so part of the
fix here is the exact same -- add support for thread created events to
gdb/linux-nat.c.  infrun.c:stop_all_threads enables those events when
it tries to stop threads, which ensures that new threads never get a
chance to themselves start new threads, thus fixing the race.

gdb/
2016-05-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19828
	* linux-nat.c (report_thread_events): New global.
	(linux_handle_extended_wait): Report
	TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED if thread event reporting is
	enabled.
	(wait_lwp, linux_nat_filter_event): Report all thread exits if
	thread event reporting is enabled.  Remove comment.
	(filter_exit_event): New function.
	(linux_nat_wait_1): Use it.
	(linux_nat_thread_events): New function.
	(linux_nat_add_target): Install it as target_thread_events method.
2016-05-24 14:47:56 +01:00
Francis Ricci e70a7231e6 Fix syntax error in annota-input-while-running.exp
This patch fixes a syntax error which caused a failure in
annota-input-while-running.exp to crash the test suite runner.

2016-05-24  Francis Ricci  <francisjricci@gmail.com>

	* gdb.base/annota-input-while-running.exp: Fix syntax error.
2016-05-24 12:11:38 +01:00
Yan-Ting Lin 00a3cb9c7c Add myself as a write-after-approval GDB maintainer
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* MAINTAINERS (Write After Approval): Add "Yan-Ting Lin".
2016-05-24 16:47:14 +08:00
Yao Qi 7eb895307f Skip unwritable frames in command "finish"
Nowadays, GDB can't insert breakpoint on the return address of the
exception handler on ARM M-profile, because the address is a magic
one 0xfffffff9,

 (gdb) bt
 #0  CT32B1_IRQHandler () at ../src/timer.c:67
 #1  <signal handler called>
 #2  main () at ../src/timer.c:127

(gdb) info frame
Stack level 0, frame at 0x200ffa8:
 pc = 0x4ec in CT32B1_IRQHandler (../src/timer.c:67); saved pc = 0xfffffff9
 called by frame at 0x200ffc8
 source language c.
 Arglist at 0x200ffa0, args:
 Locals at 0x200ffa0, Previous frame's sp is 0x200ffa8
 Saved registers:
  r7 at 0x200ffa0, lr at 0x200ffa4

(gdb) x/x 0xfffffff9
0xfffffff9:     Cannot access memory at address 0xfffffff9

(gdb) finish
Run till exit from #0  CT32B1_IRQHandler () at ../src/timer.c:67
Ed:15: Target error from Set break/watch: Et:96: Pseudo-address (0xFFFFFFxx) for EXC_RETURN is invalid (GDB error?)

Warning:
Cannot insert hardware breakpoint 0.
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.

Command aborted.

even some debug probe can't set hardware breakpoint on the magic
address too,

(gdb) hbreak *0xfffffff9
Hardware assisted breakpoint 2 at 0xfffffff9
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Ed:15: Target error from Set break/watch: Et:96: Pseudo-address (0xFFFFFFxx) for EXC_RETURN is invalid (GDB error?)

Warning:
Cannot insert hardware breakpoint 2.
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.

Command aborted.

The problem described above is quite similar to PR 8841, in which GDB
can't set breakpoint on signal trampoline, which is mapped to a read-only
page by kernel.  The rationale of this patch is to skip "unwritable"
frames when looking for caller frames in command "finish", and a new
gdbarch method code_of_frame_writable is added.  This patch fixes
the problem on ARM cortex-m target, but it can be used to fix
PR 8841 too.

gdb:

2016-05-10  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@arm.com>

	* arch-utils.c (default_code_of_frame_writable): New function.
	* arch-utils.h (default_code_of_frame_writable): Declare.
	* arm-tdep.c (arm_code_of_frame_writable): New function.
	(arm_gdbarch_init): Install gdbarch method
	code_of_frame_writable if the target is M-profile.
	* frame.c (skip_unwritable_frames): New function.
	* frame.h (skip_unwritable_frames): Declare.
	* gdbarch.sh (code_of_frame_writable): New.
	* gdbarch.c, gdbarch.h: Re-generated.
	* infcmd.c (finish_command): Call skip_unwritable_frames.
2016-05-23 17:32:56 +01:00
Tom Tromey 0f6ed0e0ef Fix PR python/19438, PR python/18393 - initialize dictionaries
This fixes PR python/19438 and PR python/18393.  Both bugs are about
invoking dir() on some Python object implemented by gdb, and getting a
crash.

The crash happens because the dictionary field of these objects was
not initialized.  Apparently what happens is that this field can be
lazily initialized by Python when assigning to an attribute; and it
can also be handled ok when using dir() but without __dict__ defined;
but gdb defines __dict__ because this isn't supplied automatically by
Python.

The docs on this seem rather sparse, but this patch works ok.

An alternative might be to lazily create the dictionary in
gdb_py_generic_dict, but I went with this approach because it seemed
more straightforward.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 23.

2016-05-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/19438, PR python/18393:
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfpy_initialize): Initialize self->dict.
	* python/py-progspace.c (pspy_initialize): Initialize self->dict.

2016-05-23  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR python/19438, PR python/18393:
	* gdb.python/py-progspace.exp: Add "dir" test.
	* gdb.python/py-objfile.exp: Add "dir" test.
2016-05-23 10:08:34 -06:00
Yao Qi ffd19d610b Use standard_testfile in gdb.arch/thumb-prologue.exp and gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp
This patch fixes the errors below:

Running /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/thumb-prologue.exp ...
gdb compile failed, arm-linux-gnueabihf/bin/ld: cannot open output file /scratch/yao/gdb/build-git/arm-linux-gnueabihf/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/thumb-prologue: No such file or directory
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Running /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp ...
gdb compile failed, arm-linux-gnueabihf/bin/ld: cannot open output file /scratch/yao/gdb/build-git/arm-linux-gnueabihf/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/thumb2-it: No such file or directory

gdb/testsuite:

2016-05-23  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.arch/thumb-prologue.exp: Use standard_testfile.
	* gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp: Likewise.
2016-05-23 15:50:56 +01:00
Gary Benson d0571b9934 Remove unused libthread_db td_thr_validate reference
Native GDB looks up the function td_thr_validate from libthread_db.so
on Linux, but the value is never used.  This commit removes this dead
code.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* nat/gdb_thread_db.h (td_thr_validate_ftype): Remove typedef.
	* linux-thread-db.c (struct thread_db_info) <td_thr_validate_p>:
	Remove field.
	(try_thread_db_load_1): Remove td_thr_validate initialization.
2016-05-23 13:26:47 +01:00
Jon Boden 37773e7803 Search for libutil-freebsd as alternative to libutil
GDB needs kinfo_getvmmap() on GNU/kFreeBSD systems same as on
pure FreeBSD.  However on these systems the FreeBSD version of libutil
is renamed to libutil-freebsd.

2016-05-23  Jon Boden  <jon@ubuntubsd.org>

	* configure.ac: Search for libutil-freebsd as alternative to libutil.
	* configure: Re-generated.
2016-05-23 08:46:33 +01:00
Andreas Schwab bfb0d950a5 Fix invalid implicit conversions from void *
* ia64-libunwind-tdep.c (libunwind_descr): Add cast from void *.
	(libunwind_frame_set_descr): Likewise.
	(libunwind_frame_cache): Likewise.
	(libunwind_frame_dealloc_cache): Likewise.
	(libunwind_frame_sniffer): Likewise.
	(libunwind_search_unwind_table): Likewise.
	(libunwind_sigtramp_frame_sniffer): Likewise.
	(libunwind_get_reg_special): Likewise.
	(libunwind_load): Likewise.
	* ia64-linux-nat.c (ia64_linux_fetch_register): Likewise.
	(ia64_linux_store_register): Likewise.
	(ia64_linux_xfer_partial): Likewise.
	* ia64-tdep.c (ia64_access_reg): Likewise.
	(ia64_access_fpreg): Likewise.
	(ia64_access_rse_reg): Likewise.
	(ia64_access_rse_fpreg): Likewise.
2016-05-19 15:31:56 +02:00
Tom Tromey 45f4ed92d1 Fix build failure with GCC 4.1.
2016-05-18  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* rust-lang.c (rust_subscript): Initialize "high".
2016-05-18 11:15:31 -06:00
Simon Marchi 9e8f9b05ad Add mi-threads-interrupt.exp test (PR 20039)
Add a new test for PR 20039.  The test spawns new threads, then tries to
interrupt, continue, and interrupt again.  This use case was fixed by
commit 5fe966540d in master, but gdb 7.11
is affected (so if you try it on the gdb-7.11-branch right now, the test
will fail).

New in v2, the test now handles mi-async on mode properly.  The failure
was specific to mi-async off, but I don't think it's bad to test the
same thing under async on mode.  I added a little hack when running in
async mode to work around bug 20045.

I also removed one continue/interrupt pair, as a single one was enough to
trigger the problem.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.mi/mi-threads-interrupt.c: New file.
	* gdb.mi/mi-threads-interrupt.exp: New file.
2016-05-18 10:13:16 -04:00
Simon Marchi 28addb40c7 Fix double prompt output after run control MI commands with mi-async on (PR 20045)
When you use a run control command (-exec-run, -exec-continue,
-exec-next, ...) with mi-async on, an extra (gdb) prompt is displayed:

  -exec-continue
  ^running
  *running,thread-id="all"
  (gdb)
  (gdb)

It doesn't seem to be a big problem for front-ends, since this behavior
started in gdb 7.9 and we haven't heard anything about that.  However,
it caused me some trouble while writing a test for PR 20039 [1].

The problem comes from an extra (gdb) prompt that we write when running
in mi-async off mode to emulate a past buggy behavior.  When executing a
run control command synchronously, previous gdbs always printed a prompt
right away, even though they are not ready to accept new MI commands
until the target stops.  Only at this time should they display a prompt.
But to keep backwards compatibility apparently, we print it anyway.
Since commit 198297aaf, the condition that decides whether we should
print that "bogus" prompt or not has become true, even when running with
mi-async on.  Since we already print a prompt at the end of the
asynchronous command execution, it results in two prompts for one
command.

The proposed fix is to call target_can_async_p instead of
target_is_async_p, to make the condition:

  if (!target_can_async_p () || sync_execution)
    ... show prompt ...

That shows the prompt if we are emulating a synchronous command on top
of an asynchronous target (sync_execution) or if the target simply can't
run asynchronously (!target_can_async_p ()).

Note that this code is changed and this bug fixed by Pedro's separate
console series, but I think it would be nice to have it fixed in the
mean time.

I ran the gdb.mi directory of the testsuite with mi-async on and off, I
didn't see any regressions.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_on_resume): Call target_can_async_p instead
	of target_is_async_p.

[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-05/msg00075.html
2016-05-18 10:12:54 -04:00
Simon Marchi 61c6156df6 Fix -exec-run not running asynchronously with mi-async on (PR gdb/18077)
When doing -exec-run on a freshly started GDB, the only target on the
target stack at the time the dummy one.  When mi_async_p is called to
know whether the run should be async, it queries whether the current
target (dummy) supports async, and the answer is no.  The fix is to make
the code query the target that will be used for the run, which is not
necessarily the current target.

No regressions in the gdb.mi directory using the unix, native-gdbserver
and native-extended-gdbserver boards.  The test doesn't pass when
forcing maint set target-async off, obviously, since it makes mi-async
have no effect.  It doesn't seem like other tests are checking for that
eventuality, so I didn't in the new test.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* mi/mi-main.c (run_one_inferior): Use run target to determine
	whether to run async or not.
	(mi_cmd_exec_run): Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.mi/mi-async-run.exp: New file.
	* gdb.mi/mi-async-run.c: New file.
2016-05-17 16:46:18 -04:00
Tom Tromey 01739a3b6a Rename OP_F90_RANGE to OP_RANGE.
This renames OP_F90_RANGE to OP_RANGE, and similarly renames the
f90_range_type enum.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* std-operator.def (OP_RANGE): Rename from OP_F90_RANGE.
	* rust-lang.c: Don't include f-lang.h.
	(rust_range, rust_compute_range, rust_subscript)
	(rust_evaluate_subexp): Update.
	* rust-exp.y: Don't include f-lang.h.
	(ast_range, convert_ast_to_expression): Update.
	* parse.c (operator_length_standard): Update.
	* f-lang.h (enum f90_range_type): Move to expression.h.
	* f-exp.y: Use OP_RANGE.
	* expression.h (enum range_type): New enum; renamed from
	f90_range_type.
	* expprint.c: Don't include f-lang.h.
	(print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard): Use OP_RANGE.
	* eval.c (value_f90_subarray, evaluate_subexp_standard): Update.
2016-05-17 12:02:03 -06:00
Tom Tromey 0bdfa368bc Add Rust documentation
This patch adds documentation for the new Rust support in gdb.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* NEWS: Add Rust item.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Supported Languages): Mention Rust.  Update menu.
	(Rust): New node.
2016-05-17 12:02:02 -06:00
Tom Tromey 67218854b1 Update gdb test suite for Rust
This updates the gdb test suite for Rust.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>
	    Manish Goregaokar <manishsmail@gmail.com>

	* lib/rust-support.exp: New file.
	* lib/gdb.exp (skip_rust_tests): New proc.
	(build_executable_from_specs): Handle rust.
	* lib/future.exp (gdb_find_rustc): New proc.
	(gdb_default_target_compile): Handle rust.
	* gdb.rust/expr.exp: New file.
	* gdb.rust/generics.exp: New file.
	* gdb.rust/generics.rs: New file.
	* gdb.rust/methods.exp: New file.
	* gdb.rust/methods.rs: New file.
	* gdb.rust/modules.exp: New file.
	* gdb.rust/modules.rs: New file.
	* gdb.rust/simple.exp: New file.
	* gdb.rust/simple.rs: New file.
2016-05-17 12:02:01 -06:00
Tom Tromey c44af4ebc0 Add support for the Rust language
This patch adds support for the Rust language.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>
	    Manish Goregaokar <manishsmail@gmail.com>

	* symtab.c (symbol_find_demangled_name): Handle Rust.
	* symfile.c (init_filename_language_table): Treat ".rs" as Rust.
	* std-operator.def (STRUCTOP_ANONYMOUS, OP_RUST_ARRAY): New
	constants.
	* rust-lang.h: New file.
	* rust-lang.c: New file.
	* rust-exp.y: New file.
	* dwarf2read.c (read_file_scope): Add Rust producer sniffing.
	(dwarf2_compute_name, read_func_scope, read_structure_type)
	(read_base_type, read_subrange_type, set_cu_language)
	(new_symbol_full, determine_prefix): Handle Rust.
	* defs.h (enum language) <language_rust>: New constant.
	* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add rust-exp.y, rust-lang.c.
	(COMMON_OBS): Add rust-exp.o, rust-lang.o.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.base/default.exp (set language): Add rust.
2016-05-17 12:02:00 -06:00
Tom Tromey 00272ec4b0 Add array start and end strings to generic_val_print_decorations
For Rust value-printing, I wanted to use generic_val_print_array, but
I also wanted to control the starting and ending strings.

This patch adds new strings to generic_val_print_decorations, updates
generic_val_print_array to use them, and updates all the existing
instances of generic_val_print_decorations.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* valprint.h (struct generic_val_print_array) <array_start,
	array_end>: New fields.
	* valprint.c (generic_val_print_array): Add "decorations"
	parameter.  Use "array_start", "array_end".
	(generic_val_print) <TYPE_CODE_ARRAY>: Update.
	* p-valprint.c (p_decorations): Update.
	* m2-valprint.c (m2_decorations): Update.
	* f-valprint.c (f_decorations): Update.
	* c-valprint.c (c_decorations): Update.
2016-05-17 12:02:00 -06:00
Tom Tromey dcd1f97951 Add self-test framework to gdb
I wanted to unit test the Rust lexer, so I added a simple unit testing
command to gdb.

The intent is that self tests will only be compiled into gdb in
development mode.  In release mode they simply won't exist.  So, this
exposes $development to C code as GDB_SELF_TEST.

In development mode, test functions are registered with the self test
module.  A test function is just a function that does some checks, and
throws an exception on failure.

Then this adds a new "maint selftest" command which invokes the test
functions, and a new dejagnu test case that invokes it.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* NEWS: Add "maint selftest" entry.
	* selftest.h: New file.
	* selftest.c: New file.
	* maint.c: Include selftest.h.
	(maintenance_selftest): New function.
	(_initialize_maint_cmds): Add "maint selftest" command.
	* configure.ac (GDB_SELF_TEST): Maybe define.
	* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
	* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add selftest.c.
	(COMMON_OBS): Add selftest.o.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document "maint selftest".

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.gdb/unittest.exp: New file.
2016-05-17 12:01:59 -06:00
Tom Tromey e4b8a1c839 Make gdb expression debugging handle OP_F90_RANGE
print_subexp_standard and dump_subexp_body_standard did not handle
OP_F90_RANGE.  Attempting to dump an expression using this opcode
would fail.

This patch adds support for this opcode to these functions.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* expprint.c: Include f-lang.h.
	(print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard): Handle
	OP_F90_RANGE.
2016-05-17 12:01:58 -06:00
Tom Tromey 9ab0bb2a67 Fix latent yacc-related bug in gdb/Makefile.in init.c rule
gdb's Makefile.in does not currently scan .y files to add global
initializers from these files to init.c.  However, at least ada-exp.y
tries to use this feature.

This patch fixes the problem.

2016-05-17  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* Makefile.in (init.c): Search .y files for initialization
	functions.
2016-05-17 12:01:57 -06:00
Yao Qi fcdad592cd Use unsuspend_all_lwps
This patch is to replace find_inferior (&all_threads, unsuspend_one_lwp, NULL)
with unsuspend_all_lwps (NULL), which is shorter.  They are equivalent
to each other.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-05-17  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (linux_stabilize_threads): Call unsuspend_all_lwps
	instead of find_inferior.
2016-05-17 08:24:26 +01:00
Yao Qi 155b7f573b Match shell_prompt # in batch-preserve-term-settings.exp
batch-preserve-term-settings.exp fails if the shell prompt isn't $.  It
is # in our testing env.  In fact, the shell prompt can be anything.

The perfect solution would be "set_board_info shell_prompt" in the
host board file, and use board_info shell_prompt in
batch-preserve-term-settings.exp.  This is a little bit overkill to
me, and we still need to figure out the different prompts on different
shells.  I also tried to start shell with the prompt preset, but there is
not unique way to set shell prompt in different shells, so I give up.

It is reasonably simple to match either $ or # for the shell prompt, and
we can easily extend it to match other char, like >.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-05-16  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/batch-preserve-term-settings.exp: Remove variable
	shell_prompt.  Update shell_prompt_re.
2016-05-16 17:32:43 +01:00
Doug Evans 8ddd5a6cd6 PR symtab/19999 gdb unable to resolve vars with fission+PIE
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2loc.c (dwarf2_find_location_expression): For DWO files still
	add base_offset.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/dwarf.exp (build_executable_from_fission_assembler): Pass
	$options when building executable.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists-pie.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists-pie.exp: New file.
2016-05-12 09:24:24 -07:00
Trevor Saunders df140a0bc3 fix up two issues with the removal of unused variables
gdb/ChangeLog:

2016-05-10  Trevor Saunders  <tbsaunde+binutils@tbsaunde.org>

	* iq2000-tdep.c (iq2000_scan_prologue): Remove if that shouldn't guard
	anything.
	* linespec.c (add_sal_to_sals): Restore call to symtab_to_fullname.
2016-05-10 21:36:02 -04:00
Thomas Preud'homme 39d911fc3c Use getters/setters to access ARM branch type
2016-05-10  Thomas Preud'homme  <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>

bfd/
	* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_size_stubs): Use new macros
	ARM_GET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE and ARM_SET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE to respectively get
	and set branch type of a symbol.
	(bfd_elf32_arm_process_before_allocation): Likewise.
	(elf32_arm_relocate_section): Likewise and fix identation along the
	way.
	(allocate_dynrelocs_for_symbol): Likewise.
	(elf32_arm_finish_dynamic_symbol): Likewise.
	(elf32_arm_swap_symbol_in): Likewise.
	(elf32_arm_swap_symbol_out): Likewise.

gas/
	* config/tc-arm.c (arm_adjust_symtab): Use ARM_SET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE to
	set branch type of a symbol.

gdb/
	* arm-tdep.c (arm_elf_make_msymbol_special): Use
	ARM_GET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE to get branch type of a symbol.

include/
	* arm.h (enum arm_st_branch_type): Add new ST_BRANCH_ENUM_SIZE
	enumerator.
	(NUM_ENUM_ARM_ST_BRANCH_TYPE_BITS): New macro.
	(ENUM_ARM_ST_BRANCH_TYPE_BITMASK): Likewise.
	(ARM_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE): Replace by ...
	(ARM_GET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE): This and ...
	(ARM_SET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE): This in two versions depending on whether
	BFD_ASSERT is defined or not.

ld/
	* emultempl/armelf.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): Use
	ARM_GET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE to get branch type of a symbol.

opcodes/
	* arm-dis.c (get_sym_code_type): Use ARM_GET_SYM_BRANCH_TYPE to get
	branch type of a symbol.
	(print_insn): Likewise.
2016-05-10 16:17:04 +01:00
Trevor Saunders 870f88f755 remove trivialy unused variables
gdb/ChangeLog:

2016-05-07  Trevor Saunders  <tbsaunde+binutils@tbsaunde.org>

	* aarch64-linux-tdep.c (aarch64_linux_sigframe_init): Remove unused
	variables.
	* aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_skip_prologue): Likewise.
	(aarch64_scan_prologue): Likewise.
	(aarch64_prologue_prev_register): Likewise.
	(aarch64_dwarf2_prev_register): Likewise.
	(pass_in_v): Likewise.
	(aarch64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(aarch64_breakpoint_from_pc): Likewise.
	(aarch64_return_in_memory): Likewise.
	(aarch64_return_value): Likewise.
	(aarch64_displaced_step_b_cond): Likewise.
	(aarch64_displaced_step_cb): Likewise.
	(aarch64_displaced_step_tb): Likewise.
	(aarch64_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	(aarch64_process_record): Likewise.
	* alpha-mdebug-tdep.c (alpha_mdebug_init_abi): Likewise.
	* alpha-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_tdep): Likewise.
	* amd64-dicos-tdep.c (amd64_dicos_init_abi): Likewise.
	* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_dtrace_parse_probe_argument): Likewise.
	* amd64-tdep.c (fixup_riprel): Likewise.
	* amd64-windows-tdep.c (amd64_windows_frame_decode_epilogue): Likewise.
	(amd64_windows_frame_decode_insns): Likewise.
	(amd64_windows_frame_cache): Likewise.
	(amd64_windows_frame_prev_register): Likewise.
	(amd64_windows_frame_this_id): Likewise.
	(amd64_windows_init_abi): Likewise.
	* arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_linux_get_syscall_number): Likewise.
	(arm_linux_get_next_pcs_syscall_next_pc): Likewise.
	* arm-symbian-tdep.c (arm_symbian_init_abi): Likewise.
	* arm-tdep.c (arm_make_epilogue_frame_cache): Likewise.
	(arm_epilogue_frame_prev_register): Likewise.
	(arm_record_vdata_transfer_insn): Likewise.
	(arm_record_exreg_ld_st_insn): Likewise.
	* auto-load.c (execute_script_contents): Likewise.
	(print_scripts): Likewise.
	* avr-tdep.c (avr_frame_prev_register): Likewise.
	(avr_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* bfin-linux-tdep.c (bfin_linux_sigframe_init): Likewise.
	* bfin-tdep.c (bfin_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* blockframe.c (find_pc_partial_function_gnu_ifunc): Likewise.
	* break-catch-throw.c (fetch_probe_arguments): Likewise.
	* breakpoint.c (breakpoint_xfer_memory): Likewise.
	(breakpoint_init_inferior): Likewise.
	(breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Likewise.
	(software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Likewise.
	(hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Likewise.
	(bpstat_what): Likewise.
	(break_range_command): Likewise.
	(save_breakpoints): Likewise.
	* coffread.c (coff_symfile_read): Likewise.
	* cris-tdep.c (cris_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(cris_scan_prologue): Likewise.
	(cris_register_size): Likewise.
	(_initialize_cris_tdep): Likewise.
	* d-exp.y: Likewise.
	* dbxread.c (dbx_read_symtab): Likewise.
	(process_one_symbol): Likewise.
	(coffstab_build_psymtabs): Likewise.
	(elfstab_build_psymtabs): Likewise.
	* dicos-tdep.c (dicos_init_abi): Likewise.
	* disasm.c (do_mixed_source_and_assembly): Likewise.
	(gdb_disassembly): Likewise.
	* dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_process_dof): Likewise.
	* dwarf2read.c (error_check_comp_unit_head): Likewise.
	(build_type_psymtabs_1): Likewise.
	(skip_one_die): Likewise.
	(process_imported_unit_die): Likewise.
	(dwarf2_physname): Likewise.
	(read_file_scope): Likewise.
	(setup_type_unit_groups): Likewise.
	(create_dwo_cu_reader): Likewise.
	(create_dwo_cu): Likewise.
	(create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v1): Likewise.
	(create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v2): Likewise.
	(lookup_dwo_unit_in_dwp): Likewise.
	(free_dwo_file): Likewise.
	(check_producer): Likewise.
	(dwarf2_add_typedef): Likewise.
	(dwarf2_add_member_fn): Likewise.
	(read_unsigned_leb128): Likewise.
	(read_signed_leb128): Likewise.
	(dwarf2_const_value): Likewise.
	(follow_die_sig_1): Likewise.
	(dwarf_decode_macro_bytes): Likewise.
	* extension.c (restore_active_ext_lang): Likewise.
	* frv-linux-tdep.c (frv_linux_sigtramp_frame_cache): Likewise.
	* ft32-tdep.c (ft32_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	* gdbtypes.c (lookup_typename): Likewise.
	(resolve_dynamic_range): Likewise.
	(check_typedef): Likewise.
	* h8300-tdep.c (h8300_is_argument_spill): Likewise.
	(h8300_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* hppa-tdep.c (hppa32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(hppa_frame_this_id): Likewise.
	(_initialize_hppa_tdep): Likewise.
	* hppanbsd-tdep.c (hppanbsd_sigtramp_cache_init): Likewise.
	* hppaobsd-tdep.c (hppaobsd_supply_fpregset): Likewise.
	* i386-dicos-tdep.c (i386_dicos_init_abi): Likewise.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_bnd_type): Likewise.
	(i386_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	(i386_mpx_bd_base): Likewise.
	* i386nbsd-tdep.c (i386nbsd_sigtramp_cache_init): Likewise.
	* i386obsd-tdep.c (i386obsd_elf_init_abi): Likewise.
	* ia64-tdep.c (examine_prologue): Likewise.
	(ia64_frame_cache): Likewise.
	(ia64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* infcmd.c (finish_command_fsm_async_reply_reason): Likewise.
	(default_print_one_register_info): Likewise.
	* infrun.c (infrun_thread_ptid_changed): Likewise.
	(thread_still_needs_step_over): Likewise.
	(stop_all_threads): Likewise.
	(restart_threads): Likewise.
	(keep_going_stepped_thread): Likewise.
	* iq2000-tdep.c (iq2000_scan_prologue): Likewise.
	* language.c (language_init_primitive_type_symbols): Likewise.
	* linespec.c (add_sal_to_sals): Likewise.
	* linux-nat.c (status_callback): Likewise.
	(kill_unfollowed_fork_children): Likewise.
	(linux_nat_kill): Likewise.
	* linux-tdep.c (linux_fill_prpsinfo): Likewise.
	* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_notice_clone): Likewise.
	(record_thread): Likewise.
	* location.c (string_to_event_location_basic): Likewise.
	* m32c-tdep.c (m32c_prev_register): Likewise.
	* m32r-linux-tdep.c (m32r_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	* m32r-tdep.c (decode_prologue): Likewise.
	* m68klinux-tdep.c (m68k_linux_sigtramp_frame_cache): Likewise.
	* machoread.c (macho_symtab_read): Likewise.
	(macho_symfile_read): Likewise.
	(macho_symfile_offsets): Likewise.
	* maint.c (set_per_command_cmd): Likewise.
	* mi/mi-cmd-stack.c (mi_cmd_stack_list_locals): Likewise.
	(mi_cmd_stack_list_variables): Likewise.
	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_exec_run): Likewise.
	(output_register): Likewise.
	(mi_cmd_execute): Likewise.
	(mi_cmd_trace_define_variable): Likewise.
	(print_variable_or_computed): Likewise.
	* minsyms.c (prim_record_minimal_symbol_full): Likewise.
	* mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_frame_prev_register): Likewise.
	* msp430-tdep.c (msp430_pseudo_register_write): Likewise.
	* mt-tdep.c (mt_registers_info): Likewise.
	* nios2-tdep.c (nios2_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	(nios2_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(nios2_frame_unwind_cache): Likewise.
	(nios2_stub_frame_cache): Likewise.
	(nios2_stub_frame_sniffer): Likewise.
	(nios2_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Likewise.
	* ppcfbsd-tdep.c (ppcfbsd_sigtramp_frame_cache): Likewise.
	* python/py-evts.c (add_new_registry): Likewise.
	* python/py-finishbreakpoint.c (bpfinishpy_init): Likewise.
	(bpfinishpy_detect_out_scope_cb): Likewise.
	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_value): Likewise.
	* python/py-inferior.c (infpy_write_memory): Likewise.
	* python/py-infevents.c (create_inferior_call_event_object): Likewise.
	* python/py-infthread.c (thpy_get_ptid): Likewise.
	* python/py-linetable.c (ltpy_get_pcs_for_line): Likewise.
	(ltpy_get_all_source_lines): Likewise.
	(ltpy_is_valid): Likewise.
	(ltpy_iternext): Likewise.
	* python/py-symtab.c (symtab_and_line_to_sal_object): Likewise.
	* python/py-unwind.c (pyuw_object_attribute_to_pointer): Likewise.
	(unwind_infopy_str): Likewise.
	* python/py-varobj.c (py_varobj_get_iterator): Likewise.
	* ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_inferior_created): Likewise.
	* rs6000-aix-tdep.c (rs6000_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c (rs6000_lynx178_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_deal_with_atomic_sequence): Likewise.
	* s390-linux-tdep.c (s390_supply_tdb_regset): Likewise.
	(s390_frame_prev_register): Likewise.
	(s390_dwarf2_frame_init_reg): Likewise.
	(s390_record_vr): Likewise.
	(s390_process_record): Likewise.
	* score-tdep.c (score_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(score3_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	* sh-tdep.c (sh_extract_return_value_nofpu): Likewise.
	* sh64-tdep.c (sh64_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	(sh64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(sh64_extract_return_value): Likewise.
	(sh64_do_fp_register): Likewise.
	* solib-aix.c (solib_aix_get_section_offsets): Likewise.
	* solib-darwin.c (darwin_read_exec_load_addr_from_dyld): Likewise.
	(darwin_solib_read_all_image_info_addr): Likewise.
	* solib-dsbt.c (enable_break): Likewise.
	* solib-frv.c (enable_break2): Likewise.
	(frv_fdpic_find_canonical_descriptor): Likewise.
	* solib-svr4.c (svr4_handle_solib_event): Likewise.
	* sparc-tdep.c (sparc_skip_stack_check): Likewise.
	* sparc64-linux-tdep.c (sparc64_linux_get_longjmp_target): Likewise.
	* sparcobsd-tdep.c (sparc32obsd_init_abi): Likewise.
	* spu-tdep.c (info_spu_dma_cmdlist): Likewise.
	* stack.c (read_frame_local): Likewise.
	* symfile.c (symbol_file_add_separate): Likewise.
	(remove_symbol_file_command): Likewise.
	* symmisc.c (maintenance_print_one_line_table): Likewise.
	* symtab.c (symbol_cache_flush): Likewise.
	(basic_lookup_transparent_type): Likewise.
	(sort_search_symbols_remove_dups): Likewise.
	* target.c (target_memory_map): Likewise.
	(target_detach): Likewise.
	(target_resume): Likewise.
	(acquire_fileio_fd): Likewise.
	(target_store_registers): Likewise.
	* thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Likewise.
	* tic6x-tdep.c (tic6x_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	* tilegx-linux-tdep.c (tilegx_linux_sigframe_init): Likewise.
	* tilegx-tdep.c (tilegx_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(tilegx_analyze_prologue): Likewise.
	(tilegx_stack_frame_destroyed_p): Likewise.
	(tilegx_frame_cache): Likewise.
	* tracefile.c (trace_save): Likewise.
	* tracepoint.c (encode_actions_and_make_cleanup): Likewise.
	(start_tracing): Likewise.
	(print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Likewise.
	* tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Likewise.
	* valops.c (value_struct_elt_bitpos): Likewise.
	(find_overload_match): Likewise.
	(find_oload_champ): Likewise.
	* value.c (value_contents_copy_raw): Likewise.
	* windows-tdep.c (windows_get_tlb_type): Likewise.
	* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_enable_btrace): Likewise.
	* xcoffread.c (record_minimal_symbol): Likewise.
	(scan_xcoff_symtab): Likewise.
	* xtensa-tdep.c (execute_code): Likewise.
	(xtensa_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	(_initialize_xtensa_tdep): Likewise.
2016-05-07 20:12:53 -04:00
Simon Marchi cbe14bcfad Fix ChangeLog entry format 2016-05-05 09:46:06 -04:00
Yao Qi 9e78496443 Initialize res in get_next_pcs_read_memory_unsigned_integer
This patch initialize res to zero, otherwise, it may have some garbage
bits after the *the_target->read_memory call.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-05-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-arm-low.c (get_next_pcs_read_memory_unsigned_integer):
	Initialize res to zero.
2016-05-05 09:00:56 +01:00
Yao Qi cf2ebb6e09 Change type of cpsr in arm_sigreturn_next_pc
Variable cpsr holds the value of cpsr register, which is 32-bit.  It
is better to explicitly use uint32_t.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-05-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-arm-low.c (arm_sigreturn_next_pc): Change type of cpsr
	to uint32_t.
2016-05-05 09:00:56 +01:00
Ulrich Weigand c1aebf87fd [spu] Fix C++ build problems
ChangeLog:

	* spu-linux-nat.c (spu_bfd_iovec_pread): Add pointer cast for C++.
	(spu_bfd_open): Likewise.

gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* spu-low.c (fetch_ppc_register): Cast PowerPC-Linux-specific value
	used as first ptrace argument to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG1 for C++.
	(fetch_ppc_memory_1, store_ppc_memory_1): Likewise.
2016-05-04 19:42:09 -04:00
Yao Qi edf689f027 Throw NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR in read_stack and read_code
Nowadays, read_memory may throw NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR (it is done by
patch http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-08/msg00625.html)
however, read_stack and read_code still throws MEMORY_ERROR only.  This
causes PR 19947, that is prologue unwinder is unable unwind because
code memory isn't available, but MEMORY_ERROR is thrown, while unwinder
catches NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR.

 #0  memory_error (err=err@entry=TARGET_XFER_E_IO, memaddr=memaddr@entry=140737349781158) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/corefile.c:217
 #1  0x000000000065f5ba in read_code (memaddr=memaddr@entry=140737349781158, myaddr=myaddr@entry=0x7fffffffd7b0 "\340\023<\001", len=len@entry=1)
     at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/corefile.c:288
 #2  0x000000000065f7b5 in read_code_unsigned_integer (memaddr=memaddr@entry=140737349781158, len=len@entry=1, byte_order=byte_order@entry=BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE)
     at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/corefile.c:363
 #3  0x00000000004717e0 in amd64_analyze_prologue (gdbarch=gdbarch@entry=0x13c13e0, pc=140737349781158, current_pc=140737349781165, cache=cache@entry=0xda0cb0)
     at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/amd64-tdep.c:2267
 #4  0x0000000000471f6d in amd64_frame_cache_1 (cache=0xda0cb0, this_frame=0xda0bf0) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/amd64-tdep.c:2437
 #5  amd64_frame_cache (this_frame=0xda0bf0, this_cache=<optimised out>) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/amd64-tdep.c:2508
 #6  0x000000000047214d in amd64_frame_this_id (this_frame=<optimised out>, this_cache=<optimised out>, this_id=0xda0c50)
     at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/amd64-tdep.c:2541
 #7  0x00000000006b94c4 in compute_frame_id (fi=0xda0bf0) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:481
 #8  get_prev_frame_if_no_cycle (this_frame=this_frame@entry=0xda0b20) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1809
 #9  0x00000000006bb6c9 in get_prev_frame_always_1 (this_frame=0xda0b20) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1983
 #10 get_prev_frame_always (this_frame=this_frame@entry=0xda0b20) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1999
 #11 0x00000000006bbe11 in get_prev_frame (this_frame=this_frame@entry=0xda0b20) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:2241
 #12 0x00000000006bc13c in unwind_to_current_frame (ui_out=<optimised out>, args=args@entry=0xda0b20) at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1485

The fix is to let read_stack and read_code throw NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR too,
in order to align with read_memory.

gdb:

2016-05-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	PR gdb/19947
	* corefile.c (read_memory): Rename it to ...
	(read_memory_object): ... it.  Add parameter object.
	(read_memory): Call read_memory_object.
	(read_stack): Likewise.
	(read_code): Likewise.
2016-05-04 15:04:01 +01:00
Simon Marchi 02e370d94e Fix solib-display.exp remote check
This test currently uses [is_remote target] to check if the test is
supported.  This is not quite correct, as the limitation is actually
that it requires support for "running", ruling out stub-like targets.
Therefore, it should check for use_gdb_stub.

This has no visible effect right now, but it will once we make the
native-gdbserver board non-dejagnu-remote.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/solib-display.exp: Check for [use_gdb_stub] instead
	of [is_remote target],
2016-05-04 09:29:28 -04:00
Simon Marchi 8929ad8bbc Introduce procedure use_gdb_stub
This patch introduces the use_gdb_stub procedure, which allows getting
the right value of the use_gdb_stub variable/property in any all
situations.

When calling it before the $use_gdb_stub global variable has been set,
it will return the value of the use_gdb_stub property from the board
file.  This happens when tests want to bail out early (even before gdb
has been started) when the current test setup is a stub.

Otherwise, it returns the value of the $use_gdb_stub global.

It's possible for these two to differ when a test file overrides the
value of the global.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/gdb.exp (use_gdb_stub): New procedure.
2016-05-04 09:28:45 -04:00
Doug Evans 6c4474237a PR symtab/19914 fix handling of dwp + split debug
PR symtab/19914
	* dwarf2read.c (open_and_init_dwp_file): Look at backlink if objfile
	is separate debug file.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.dwarf2/dwp-sepdebug.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dwp-sepdebug.exp: New file.
2016-05-03 16:30:58 -07:00
Don Breazeal a1ec3d244a Fix typos in gdb_pipe function comment
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-03  Don Breazeal <donb@codesourcery.com>

	* serial.h (gdb_pipe): Fix argument names in comment.
2016-05-03 16:02:34 -07:00
Pedro Alves 86f1abec45 Fix gdb/python/python.c use-after-free
Valgrind shows:

 ==26964== Invalid read of size 1
 ==26964==    at 0x6E14100: __GI_strcmp (strcmp.S:180)
 ==26964==    by 0x6DB55AA: setlocale (setlocale.c:238)
 ==26964==    by 0x4E0455: _initialize_python() (python.c:1731)
 ==26964==    by 0x786731: initialize_all_files() (init.c:319)
 ==26964==    by 0x72EF0A: gdb_init(char*) (top.c:1929)
 ==26964==    by 0x60BCAC: captured_main(void*) (main.c:863)
 ==26964==    by 0x606AD5: catch_errors(int (*)(void*), void*, char*, return_mask) (exceptions.c:234)
 ==26964==    by 0x60C608: gdb_main(captured_main_args*) (main.c:1165)
 ==26964==    by 0x40CAEC: main (gdb.c:32)
 ==26964==  Address 0x81d30a0 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 181 free'd
 ==26964==    at 0x4C29CF0: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:530)
 ==26964==    by 0x6DB5B65: setname (setlocale.c:201)
 ==26964==    by 0x6DB5B65: setlocale (setlocale.c:388)
 ==26964==    by 0x4E037F: _initialize_python() (python.c:1712)
 ==26964==    by 0x786731: initialize_all_files() (init.c:319)
 ==26964==    by 0x72EF0A: gdb_init(char*) (top.c:1929)
 ==26964==    by 0x60BCAC: captured_main(void*) (main.c:863)
 ==26964==    by 0x606AD5: catch_errors(int (*)(void*), void*, char*, return_mask) (exceptions.c:234)
 ==26964==    by 0x60C608: gdb_main(captured_main_args*) (main.c:1165)
 ==26964==    by 0x40CAEC: main (gdb.c:32)

The problem is doing this:

  oldloc = setlocale (LC_ALL, NULL);
  setlocale (LC_ALL, "");
  ...
  setlocale (LC_ALL, oldloc);

I.e., the second setlocale call frees 'oldloc'.

From http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/setlocale.html :

 "The returned string pointer might be invalidated or the string
 content might be overwritten by a subsequent call to setlocale()."

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-03  Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>

	PR python/20037
	* python/python.c (_initialize_python) [IS_PY3K]: xstrdup/xfree
	oldloc.
2016-05-03 12:16:56 +01:00
Pedro Alves 1aa9670288 Remove gdb/python/python.c code that handles strlen failing with -1
This makes no sense -- strlen doesn't really ever fail with -1.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-03  Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>

	* python/python.c (_initialize_python) [IS_PY3K]: Remove dead
	code.
2016-05-03 12:16:55 +01:00
Pedro Alves a4a1c15754 Fix PR gdb/16818, workaround Python's forcing of -export-dynamic
GDB's use of --dynamic-list to only export the proc-service symbols is
broken due to Python's "python-config --ldflags" saying we should link
with -export-dynamic, causing us to export _all_ extern symbols
anyway.  On Fedora 23:

 $ python-config --ldflags
 -lpython2.7 -lpthread -ldl -lutil -lm -Xlinker -export-dynamic
 $ python3.4-config --ldflags
  -L/usr/lib64 -lpython3.4m -lpthread -ldl  -lutil -lm  -Xlinker -export-dynamic

Having GDB export all its symbols leads to issues such as PR gdb/16818
(GDB crashes when using name for target remote hostname:port), where a
GDB symbol unintentionally preempts a symbol in one of the NSS modules
glibc loads into the process.  NSS modules should not define symbols
outside the implementation namespace or the relevant standards, but,
alas, that's a longstanding and hard to fix issue.  See libc-alpha
discussion at:

  [symbol name space issues with NSS modules]
  https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2016-04/msg00130.html

Python should instead be either using GCC's symbol visibility feature
or -Wl,--dynamic-list as well, to only export Python API symbols, but,
it doesn't.  There are bugs open upstream for that:

  [Use -Wl,--dynamic-list=x.list, not -Xlinker -export-dynamic]
  http://bugs.python.org/issue10112

  [Use GCC visibility attrs in PyAPI_*]
  http://bugs.python.org/issue11410

But that's taking a long while to resolve.

I thought of working around this Python issue by making GDB build with
-fvisibility=hidden, as Jan suggests in Python issue 10112, as then
Python's "-Xlinker -export-dynamic" has no effect.  However, that
would need to be done in the whole source tree (bfd, libiberty, etc.),
and I think that would break GCC plugins, as I believe those have
access to all of GCCs symbols, by "design".  So we'd need a new
configure switch, or have the libraries in the tree detect which of
GCC or GDB is being built, but that doesn't work, because the answer
can be "both" with combined builds...

So this patch instead works around Python's bug, by simply sed'ing
away "-Xlinker -export-dynamic" from the result of python-config.py
--ldflags, making -Wl,--dynamic-list work again as it used to.  It's
ugly, but so is the bug...

Note that if -Wl,--dynamic-list doesn't work, we always link with
-rdynamic, so static Python should still work.

Tested on F23 with --python=python (Python 2.7) and
--python=python3.4.

gdb/ChangeLog:y
2016-05-03  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* configure.ac (PYTHON_LIBS): Sed away "-Xlinker -export-dynamic".
	* configure: Regenerate.
2016-05-03 10:31:22 +01:00
Pedro Alves 1b4f615e40 Fix "-Wl,--dynamic-list" gdb/configure test
The -Wl,--dynamic-list test is currently broken on Fedora 23, when you
configure with --with-python=python3.4.  We see:

 configure:13741: checking for the dynamic export flag
 configure:13796: gcc -o conftest -g3 -O0  -fno-strict-aliasing -DNDEBUG -fwrapv    -Wl,--dynamic-list=/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/proc-service.list conftest.c -ldl -lncurses -lm -ldl  -lpthread -ldl -lutil -lm -lpython3.4m -Xlinker -export-dynamic >&5
 conftest.c:182:30: fatal error: python3.4/Python.h: No such file or directory
 compilation terminated.
 configure:13796: $? = 1

The correct -I path is in PYTHON_CPPFLAGS:

 PYTHON_CPPFLAGS='-I/usr/include/python3.4m -I/usr/include/python3.4m'

(Other Python-related tests in the file are already doing this.)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-05-03  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* configure.ac (checking for the dynamic export flag): Add
	$PYTHON_CPPFLAGS to CPPFLAGS.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2016-05-03 10:30:51 +01:00
Kyrylo Tkachov b631e59ba0 [gdb] Fix -Wparentheses warnings
2016-05-03  Kyrylo Tkachov  <kyrylo.tkachov@arm.com>

	* symfile.c (find_pc_overlay): Add braces to avoid -Wparentheses
	warning.
	(find_pc_mapped_section): Likewise.
	(list_overlays_command): Likewise.
2016-05-03 09:40:54 +01:00
Simon Marchi 444e826c91 Fix detach.exp remote check
This test seems to work with both native-gdbserver and
native-extended-gdbserver, so I removed the remote check.

When running with native-gdbserver (a stub-like target), detach makes
gdbserver stop and gdb disconnect.  runto_main just spawns a brand new
gdbserver.  So it tests the exact same thing twice.  It doesn't hurt
though.

With native-extended-gdbserver, the test is probably a bit more useful
(and similar to native).  It tests running/detaching twice using the
same gdb/gdbserver instances, since with extended-remote, you can
detach/attach/run all you want, unlike with remote.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/detach.exp: Remove is_remote check.
2016-05-02 13:10:33 -04:00
Simon Marchi 740feeaa20 Fix annota-input-while-running.exp remote check
The comment says that we can't use runto_main here becore it doesn't
know how to handle annotation.  Instead, the test puts a breakpoint at
main and calls run by hand.  Therefore, it can't work with stub targets,
since they can't "run".  The check should be then changed to check the
use_gdb_stub variable instead of [is_remote target].

But as an alternative, we can just use runto_main and enable annotations
after, since the "run to main" part is not really part of what we want
to test.

I also removed the "set test..." line that is unused.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/annota-input-while-running.exp: Don't check for
	[is_remote target].  Enable annotations after running to main.
	Remove unused "set test..." line.
2016-05-02 13:04:56 -04:00
Eli Zaretskii 1270fac69d Fix startup on MS-Windows when 'gdb.ini' is found in $HOME
* windows-nat.c (_initialize_check_for_gdb_ini): Fix off-by-one
	error in allocation of space for "$HOME/.gdbinit" string.  This
	caused GDB to abort on startup whenever a '~/gdb.ini' file was
	actually found, because xsnprintf would hit an assertion
	violation.
2016-05-02 19:37:43 +03:00
Simon Marchi 0400cf2f56 Don't show deprecated commands in help
Just like completion doesn't show deprecated commands, I think that help
should not list them, so that we don't incite users to use them.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* cli/cli-decode.c (help_cmd_list): Do not list commands that
	are deprecated.
2016-04-28 14:11:51 -04:00
Simon Marchi 9080ac9d99 Add test for tracepoint enable/disable
This patch adds a test for tracepoints enabling/disabling, which
didn't work properly for fast tracepoints on big endian systems.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.trace/trace-enable-disable.exp: New file.
	* gdb.trace/trace-enable-disable.c: New file.
2016-04-28 12:56:08 -04:00
Par Olsson 35fd2deb69 Fix write endianness/size problem for fast tracepoint enabled flag
I am sending this fix on behalf of Par Olsson, as a follow-up of this
one:

https://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-10/msg00196.html

This problem is exposed when enabling/disabling fast tracepoints on big
endian machines.  The flag is defined as an int8_t, but is written from
gdbserver as an integer (usually 32 bits).  When the agent code reads it
as an int8_t, it only considers the most significant byte, which is
always 0.

Also, we were writing 32 bits in an 8 bits field, so the write would
overflow, but since the following bytes are padding (the next field is
an uint64_t), it luckily didn't cause any issue on little endian
systems.

The fix was originally tested on ARM big endian systems, but I don't
have access to such a system.  However, thanks to Marcin's PowerPC fast
tracepoint patches and gcc110 (big endian Power7) on the gcc compile
farm, I was able to reproduce the problem, test the fix and write a
test (the following patch).

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

YYYY-MM-DD  Par Olsson  <par.olsson@windriver.com>

	* tracepoint.c (write_inferior_int8): New function.
	(cmd_qtenable_disable): Write enable flag using
	write_inferior_int8.
2016-04-28 12:56:05 -04:00
Simon Marchi 952ebca583 ftrace tests: Use gdb_load_shlib result to lookup IPA in info sharedlibrary
Some fast tracepoints tests make sure that the in-process agent library
is properly loaded, by searching for the library name in "info
sharedlibrary".

Originally, it would search for the full path.  Since patch "Make ftrace
tests work with remote targets" [1], the "runtime" location of the IPA,
in the standard output directory, is not the same as the original
location, in the gdbserver build directory.  Therefore, the patch
changed the checks:

  gdb_test "info sharedlibrary" ".*${libipa}.*" "IPA loaded"

to

  gdb_test "info sharedlibrary" ".*[file tail ${libipa}].*" "IPA loaded"

so that only the "libinproctrace.so" part would be searched for.
Antoine (in CC) pointed out that I missed some, so I have to update
them.  In the mean time, I noticed that I missed a few test failures:
adding the SONAME to the IPA makes it possible for the test executable
to erroneously pick up libinproctrace.so from /usr/lib if the test
harness failed to put the libinproctrace.so we want to test in the right
place.  To mitigate that kind of error in the future, we can use the
return value of gdb_load_shlib (the path of the "runtime" version of the
library) and use that to search in the output of info sharedlibrary.

When testing locally, gdb_load_shlib returns the full normalized path of
the destination library, which the test executable should use e.g.:

  /path/to/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.trace/thetest/libinproctrace.so

My testing showed that it was the same path that gdb displayed in info
sharedlibrary.  If the test executable picks up another
libinproctrace.so, the test will fail.

When testing remotely, gdb_load_shlib/gdb_remote_download only returns
us "libinproctrace.so", so the situation doesn't really change.  If
there is a rogue libinproctrace.so in /usr/lib on the target and we fail
to download ours, it might cover up a test failure.  But that situation
is probably still better than the original one, where it wasn't possible
to test remotely using the IPA at all.

[1] https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=commit;h=6e774b13c3b81ac2599812adf058796948ce7e95

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.arch/ftrace-insn-reloc.exp: Save gdb_load_shlib result,
	use it in info sharedlibrary test.
	* gdb.trace/ftrace-lock.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/ftrace.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-break.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-mt.exp: Likewise.
2016-04-28 09:49:01 -04:00
Yao Qi f166f943f3 Remove need_step_over from struct lwp_info
Hi,
I happen to see that field need_step_over in struct lwp_info is only
used to print a debug info.  need_step_over is set in linux_wait_1
when breakpoint_here is true, however, we check breakpoint_here too in
need_step_over_p and do the step over.  I think we don't need field
need_step_over, and check breakpoint_here directly in need_step_over_p.

This field was added in this patch
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-03/msg00605.html and the code
wasn't changed much since then.

This patch is to remove it.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-28  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.h (struct lwp_info) <need_step_over>: Remove.
	* linux-low.c (linux_wait_1): Update.
	(need_step_over_p): Likewise.
2016-04-28 11:52:23 +01:00
Simon Marchi d9019901f8 Rename gdb_load_shlibs to gdb_load_shlib
Rename gdb_load_shlibs to gdb_load_shlib to reflect that it can only
load a single shlib at the time.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_load_shlibs): Rename to...
	(gdb_load_shlib): ... this.
	* gdb.arch/ftrace-insn-reloc.exp: Adjust gdb_load_shlibs ->
	gdb_load_shlib.
	* gdb.base/catch-load.exp (one_catch_load_test): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/ctxobj.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/dprintf-pending.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/dso2dso.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/fixsection.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/gcore-relro.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/gdb1555.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/global-var-nested-by-dso.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/hbreak-in-shr-unsupported.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/jit-so.exp (one_jit_test): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/pending.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/print-file-var.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/print-symbol-loading.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/shreloc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/so-impl-ld.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-disc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-nodir.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-overlap.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-symbol.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-weak.exp (do_test): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/sym-file.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/symtab-search-order.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/type-opaque.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/unload.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/watchpoint-solib.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.compile/compile.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/gdb2384.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/infcall-dlopen.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.cp/re-set-overloaded.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.fortran/library-module.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.opt/solib-intra-step.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-finish-breakpoint.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-shared.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/solib-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/solib-reverse.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.server/solib-list.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/tls-shared.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/tls-so_extern.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/change-loc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/ftrace-lock.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/ftrace.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/mi-tracepoint-changed.exp (test_reconnect): Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/pending.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/strace.exp (strace_remove_socket): Likewise.
	(strace_info_marker): Likewise.
	(strace_probe_marker): Likewise.
	(strace_trace_on_same_addr): Likewise.
	(strace_trace_on_diff_addr): Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-break.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-condition.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/trace-mt.exp: Likewise.
2016-04-27 18:09:14 -04:00
Simon Marchi fca4cfd9ec Make gdb_load_shlibs return the destination path of the library
This patch makes gdb_load_shlibs return the destination path of the
copied library.  To make the procedure implementation and interface more
straightforward, it also changes it so that it accepts a single shared
library path at the time.  Therefore, calls that are passed multiple
libraries:

  gdb_load_shlibs $lib1 $lib2

must be changed to separate calls:

  gdb_load_shlibs $lib1
  gdb_load_shlibs $lib2

A subtle impact is the solib-search-path handling.  In the former
version, solib-search-path is set using the directory of the first
passed lib (further calls overwrite the value).  In the later version,
the directory of the library passed to the last call to gdb_load_shlibs
remnains.  I don't think that's a problem in practice, since if we had
tests that needed multiple different paths in solib-search-path, they
wouldn't work in the first place.

Changed in v2:

	* Split behavioural and rename changes in two separate patches.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_load_shlibs):  Accept a single argument.  Return
	result of gdb_remote_download.
	* gdb.base/ctxobj.exp: Split gdb_load_shlibs call.
	* gdb.base/dso2dso.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/global-var-nested-by-dso.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/print-file-var.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/shreloc.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-overlap.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/solib-weak.exp (do_test): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/unload.exp: Likewise.
2016-04-27 18:09:14 -04:00
Jan Kratochvil 57809e5e5a Workaround gdbserver<7.7 for setfs
With current FSF GDB HEAD and old FSF gdbserver I expected I could do:
	gdb -ex 'file target:/root/redhat/threadit' -ex 'target remote :1234'
(supplying that unsupported qXfer:exec-file:read by "file")
But that does not work because:
	Sending packet: $vFile:setfs:0#bf...Packet received: OK
	Packet vFile:setfs (hostio-setfs) is supported
	...
	Sending packet: $vFile:setfs:104#24...Packet received: OK
	"target:/root/redhat/threadit": could not open as an executable file: Invalid argument

GDB documentation says:
	The valid responses to Host I/O packets are:
	An empty response indicates that this operation is not recognized.

This "empty response" vs. "OK" was a bug in gdbserver < 7.7.  It was fixed by:
	commit e7f0d979dd
	Author: Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
	Date:   Tue Dec 10 21:59:20 2013 +0800
	    Fix a bug in matching notifications.
	Message-ID: <1386684626-11415-1-git-send-email-yao@codesourcery.com>
	https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00373.html
	2013-12-10  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>
		* notif.c (handle_notif_ack): Return 0 if no notification
		matches.

with unpatched old FSF gdbserver and patched FSF GDB HEAD:
	gdb -ex 'file target:/root/redhat/threadit' -ex 'target remote :1234'
	Sending packet: $vFile:setfs:0#bf...Packet received: OK
	Packet vFile:setfs (hostio-setfs) is NOT supported
	...
	(gdb) info sharedlibrary
	From                To                  Syms Read   Shared Object Library
	0x00007ffff7ddbae0  0x00007ffff7df627a  Yes (*)     target:/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
	0x00007ffff7bc48a0  0x00007ffff7bcf514  Yes (*)     target:/lib64/libpthread.so.0

gdb/ChangeLog
2016-04-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* remote.c (remote_start_remote): Detect PACKET_vFile_setfs.support.
2016-04-27 21:27:40 +02:00
Yao Qi 11cf4ffb5e Skip gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp if gdb,nosignals exists
I get a timeout fail in branch-to-self.exp when it is compiled by a
bare-mental target running qemu, which doesn't have signal.

The test should be skipped if gdb,nosignals exists, and that is
what this patch does.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-27  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp: Skip it if gdb,nosignals
	exists.
2016-04-27 16:13:52 +01:00
Martin Galvan 476350ba48 c_value_print: Revert 'val' to a reference for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
Currently c_value_print will turn struct reference values into pointers before
doing a set of RTTI checks.  This was introduced as a fix to PR c++/15401.
If there's RTTI the pointer will be adjusted and converted back to a reference.
However, if there's no RTTI the value will still be treated as a pointer during
the remainder of the function.
This patch moves the conversion down so that it's always performed when needed.

Notice this currently has not user-visible effects, so can be seen as a small
code cleanup.  However, it'll be necessary for the bug-fix for handling
synthetic C++ references.  It causes no testsuite regressions.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-26  Martin Galvan  <martin.galvan@tallertechnologies.com>

	* c-valprint.c (c_value_print): Always convert val back to reference
	type if we converted it to a pointer type.
2016-04-27 12:05:43 -03:00
Yao Qi 310cdbb651 Tweak doc on command tfind
Hi,
command "tfind" will find the first trace snapshot if no trace
snapshot is selected, but this behavior isn't documented.

This patch completes the doc of command "tfind" without argument.

gdb/doc:

2016-04-27  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.texinfo (tfind): Complete doc about tfind without
	argument.
2016-04-27 15:01:20 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 2d681be471 Avoid non-C++-enabled babeltrace versions
In some babeltrace versions before 1.2.0, the header file iterator.h
declares the enum values `BT_SEEK_*' within the struct declaration of
bt_iter_pos.  The enum values are supposed to be globally-scoped, which
works for C, but not for C++.  Later babeltrace versions declare the
enum outside the struct:

  https://lists.lttng.org/pipermail/lttng-dev/2013-September/021411.html

Now that GDB is compiled with C++, the GDB build fails on a system with
an affected babeltrace version: the compiler complains about a missing
declaration of BT_SEEK_BEGIN in ctf.c.

This patch enhances the configure check to recognize such babeltrace
versions as unusable for GDB.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* configure.ac: Enhance configure check for babeltrace to reject
	non-C++-enabled versions.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2016-04-27 15:52:16 +02:00
Keven Boell 3e2e34f862 fort_dyn_array: Use value constructor instead of raw-buffer manipulation.
Instead of pre-computing indices into a fortran array re-use
the value_* interfaces to subscript a fortran array.
The benefit of using the new interface is that it takes care of
dynamic types and resolve them when needed.
This fixes issues when printing structures with dynamic arrays from toplevel.

Before:
(gdb) p twov
$1 = ( (( ( 6352320, 0, -66, -1, 267) ( 343476, 1, -15, 1, 0) ( 5, 0, 5, 0, 1) ...

After:
(gdb) p twov
$1 = ( (( ( 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) ( 1, 1, 321, 1, 1) ( 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) ...

2016-04-26  Sanimir Agovic  <sanimir.agovic@intel.com>
            Keven Boell  <keven.boell@intel.com>
            Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* f-valprint.c (f77_create_arrayprint_offset_tbl): Remove
	function.
	(F77_DIM_SIZE, F77_DIM_OFFSET): Remove macro.
	(f77_print_array_1): Use value_subscript to subscript a
	value array.
	(f77_print_array): Remove call to f77_create_arrayprint_offset_tbl.
	(f_val_print): Use value_field to construct a field value.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* vla-type.exp: Print structure from toplevel.
2016-04-26 16:48:41 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 8f07e298b1 fort_dyn_array: Support evaluation of dynamic elements inside arrays.
Resolve type of an array's element to be printed in case it is dynamic.
Otherwise we don't use the correct boundaries nor the right location.

Before:
  ptype fivearr(1)
  type = Type five
      Type one
          integer(kind=4) :: ivla(34196784:34196832,34197072:34197120,34197360:34197408)
      End Type one :: tone
  End Type five

After:
  ptype fivearr(1)
  type = Type five
      Type one
          integer(kind=4) :: ivla(2,4,6)
      End Type one :: tone
  End Type five

2016-04-26  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>

gdb/Changelog:
	* valarith.c (value_address): Resolve dynamic types.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.f90: Add test for static and dynamic arrays
	of dynamic types.
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp: Add test for static and dynamic arrays
	of dynamic types.
2016-04-26 16:38:19 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 9920b4348e fort_dyn_array: Enable dynamic member types inside a structure.
Fortran supports dynamic types for which bounds, size and location
can vary during their lifetime. As a result of the dynamic
behaviour, they have to be resolved at every query.
This patch will resolve the type of a structure field when it
is dynamic.

2016-04-26  Bernhard Heckel  <bernhard.heckel@intel.com>
2016-04-26  Keven Boell  <keven.boell@intel.com>

Before:
(gdb) print threev%ivla(1)
Cannot access memory at address 0x3
(gdb) print threev%ivla(5)
no such vector element

After:
(gdb) print threev%ivla(1)
$9 = 1
(gdb) print threev%ivla(5)
$10 = 42

gdb/Changelog:

	* NEWS: Add new supported features for fortran.
	* gdbtypes.c (remove_dyn_prop): New.
	(resolve_dynamic_struct): Keep type length for fortran structs.
	* gdbtypes.h: Forward declaration of new function.
	* value.c (value_address): Return dynamic resolved location of a value.
	(set_value_component_location): Adjust the value address
	for single value prints.
	(value_primitive_field): Support value types with a dynamic location.
	(set_internalvar): Remove dynamic location property of
	internal variables.

gdb/testsuite/Changelog:

	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.f90: New file.
	* gdb.fortran/vla-type.exp: New file.
2016-04-26 16:28:43 +02:00
Yao Qi f3abeff575 New test case gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp
gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-25  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/branch-to-self.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp: New file.
2016-04-25 09:53:51 +01:00
Yao Qi 484b3c325d Resume the inferior with signal rather than stepping over
When GDBserver steps over a breakpoint using software single step, it
enqueues the signal, single step and deliver the signal in the next
resume if step over is not needed.  In this way, the program won't
receive the signal if the conditional breakpoint is set a branch to
self instruction, because the step over is always needed.

This patch removes the restriction that don't deliver the signal to
the inferior if we are trying to reinsert a breakpoint for software
single step and change the decision on resume vs. step-over when the
LWP has pending signals to deliver.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-25  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (lwp_signal_can_be_delivered): Adjust.
	(need_step_over_p): Return zero if the LWP has pending signals
	can be delivered on software single step target.
2016-04-25 09:46:36 +01:00
Yao Qi 85ba7d867a [GDBserver] Don't error in reinsert_raw_breakpoint if bp->inserted
GDBserver steps over a breakpoint while the single step breakpoint
is inserted at the same address, there are two breakpoint objects
using single raw breakpoint, which is inserted (for single step).
When step over is finished, GDBserver reinsert the breakpoint, but
it finds the raw breakpoint is already inserted, and error out
"Breakpoint already inserted at reinsert time."  Even if I change the
order to delete reinsert breakpoints first (which only decreases the
refcount, but leave inserted flag unchanged), the error is still
there.

The fix is to remove the error and return instead.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-25  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (reinsert_raw_breakpoint): If bp->inserted is true
	return instead of error.
2016-04-25 09:46:36 +01:00
Yao Qi 20249ae455 Insert breakpoint even when the raw breakpoint is found
When GDBserver inserts a breakpoint, it looks for raw breakpoint, if
the raw breakpoint is found, increase its refcount, and return.  This
doesn't work when it steps over a breakpoint using software single
step and the underneath instruction of breakpoint is branch to self.

When stepping over a breakpoint on ADDR using software single step,
GDBserver uninsert the breakpoint, so the corresponding raw breakpoint
RAW's 'inserted' flag is zero.  Then, GDBserver insert single step
breakpoint at the same address ADDR because the instruction is branch
to self, the same raw brekapoint RAW is found, and increase the
refcount.  However, the raw breakpoint is not inserted, and the
program won't stop.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-25  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>
	    Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* mem-break.c (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Create a raw breakpoint
	object.  Insert it if it is not inserted yet.  Increase the
	refcount and link it into the proc's raw breakpoint list.
2016-04-25 09:43:36 +01:00
Yao Qi 21edc42f4e Force to insert software single step breakpoint
GDB doesn't insert software single step breakpoint if the instruction
branches to itself, so that the program can't stop after command "si".

(gdb) b 32
Breakpoint 2 at 0x8680: file git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/branch-to-self.c, line 32.
(gdb) c
Continuing.

Breakpoint 2, main () at gdb/git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/branch-to-self.c:32
32	  asm (".Lhere: " BRANCH_INSN " .Lhere"); /* loop-line */
(gdb) si
infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 3991.3991)
infrun: proceed (addr=0xffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT)
infrun: step-over queue now empty
infrun: resuming [Thread 3991.3991] for step-over
infrun: skipping breakpoint: stepping past insn at: 0x8680
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Sending packet: $Z0,8678,4#f3...Packet received: OK
infrun: skipping breakpoint: stepping past insn at: 0x8680
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Sending packet: $Z0,b6fe86c8,4#82...Packet received: OK
infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=1, current thread [Thread 3991.3991] at 0x868

breakpoint.c:should_be_inserted thinks the breakpoint shouldn't be
inserted, which is wrong.  This patch restrict the condition that
only skip the non-single-step breakpoints if they are inserted at
the place we are stepping over, however we don't want to skip
single-step breakpoint if its thread is the thread we are stepping
over, so in this patch, I add a thread num in 'struct step_over_info'
to record the thread we're stepping over.

gdb:

2016-04-25  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* breakpoint.c (should_be_inserted): Return 0 if the location's
	owner is not single step breakpoint or single step breakpoint's
	thread isn't the thread which is stepping past a breakpoint.
	* gdbarch.sh (software_single_step): Update comments.
	* gdbarch.h: Regenerated.
	* infrun.c (struct step_over_info) <thread>: New field.
	(set_step_over_info): New argument 'thread'.  Callers updated.
	(clear_step_over_info): Set field thread to -1.
	(thread_is_stepping_over_breakpoint): New function.
	* infrun.h (thread_is_stepping_over_breakpoint): Declaration.
2016-04-25 09:16:21 +01:00
Edjunior Barbosa Machado 0154d99053 Fix checks for VSX and Altivec availability on Power
gdb/ChangeLog

	* ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_read_description): Use PPC_FEATURE_HAS_VSX
	and PPC_FEATURE_HAS_ALTIVEC to check if such features are available.
2016-04-22 19:39:12 -03:00
Yao Qi 0a5d52f0ec Fix fails in gdb.trace/unavailable.exp
I am seeing some test fails in gdb.trace/unavailable.exp on aarch64-linux,
like this,

print derived_whole^M
$43 = (Derived) {<Middle> = {<Base> = {x = 2}, _vptr.Middle = 0x401860 <VTT for Derived>, y = 3}, _vptr.Derived = 0x401848 <vtable for Derived+32>, z = 4}^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/unavailable.exp: collect globals: print object on: print derived_whole

print derived_whole^M
$47 = {<Middle> = {<Base> = {x = 2}, _vptr.Middle = 0x401860 <VTT for Derived>, y = 3}, _vptr.Derived = 0x401848 <vtable for Derived+32>, z = 4}^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/unavailable.exp: collect globals: print object off: print derived_whole

these fails are also found by recent x86_64-linux buildbot,
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-testers/2016-q2/msg00622.html

The fix is exactly the same as this one
http://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-10/msg00252.html (the
extra "VTT" after hex), in which we match extra things after $hex.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.trace/unavailable.exp (gdb_collect_globals_test_1): Match
	more after $hex.
2016-04-22 17:23:23 +01:00
Yao Qi 6d7e9d3b8d Choose TARGET_OBJECT_STACK_MEMORY and TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY in read_value_memory
Before this patch
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-02/msg00709.html
read_value_memory checks parameter 'stack', and call read_stack or
read_memory respectively.  However, 'stack' is not checked and
TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY is always used in target_xfer_partial, which is
a mistake in the patch above.

This patch checks parameter 'stack', and choose TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY
or TARGET_OBJECT_STACK_MEMORY accordingly.

gdb:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* valops.c (read_value_memory): New local variable 'stack'.
	Set it to either TARGET_OBJECT_STACK_MEMORY or
	TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY.
2016-04-22 17:20:24 +01:00
Pedro Alves b3f11165aa Centralize yacc interface names remapping (yyparse, yylex, yyerror, etc)
This factors out all the yy-variables remapping to a single file,
instead of each parser having to do the same, with different prefixes.

With this, a parser just needs to define the prefix they want and
include yy-remap.h, which does the dirty job.

Note this renames the c_error, ada_error, etc. functions.  Writing the
remapping pattern as:

 #define yyerror GDB_YY_REMAP (error)

instead of:

 #define yyerror GDB_YY_REMAP (yyerror)

would have avoided the renaming.  However, that would be problematic
if we have a macro 'foo' in scope, when we write:

 #define yyfoo GDB_YY_REMAP (foo)

as that would expand 'foo'.

The c_yyerror etc. naming end ups indicating that this is a yacc
related function more clearly, so feels like a good change, anyway.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ada-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* ada-lang.c (ada_language_defn): Adjust.
	* ada-lang.h (ada_error): Rename to ...
	(ada_yyerror): ... this.
	* c-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* c-lang.c (c_language_defn, cplus_language_defn)
	(asm_language_defn, minimal_language_defn): Adjust.
	* c-lang.h (c_error): Rename to ...
	(c_yyerror): ... this.
	* d-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* d-lang.c (d_language_defn): Adjust.
	* d-lang.h (d_error): Rename to ...
	(d_yyerror): ... this.
	* f-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* f-lang.c (f_language_defn): Adjust.
	* f-lang.h (f_error): Rename to ...
	(f_yyerror): ... this.
	* go-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* go-lang.c (go_language_defn): Adjust.
	* go-lang.h (go_error): Rename to ...
	(go_yyerror): ... this.
	* jv-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* jv-lang.c (java_language_defn): Adjust.
	* jv-lang.h (java_error): Rename to ...
	(java_yyerror): ... this.
	* m2-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Adjust.
	* m2-lang.h (m2_error): Rename to ...
	(m2_yyerror): ... this.
	* objc-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* objc-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Adjust.
	* opencl-lang.c (opencl_language_defn): Adjust.
	* p-exp.y: Remove all yy symbol remappings.
	(GDB_YY_REMAP_PREFIX): Define.
	Include "yy-remap.h".
	* p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Adjust.
	* p-lang.h (pascal_error): Rename to ...
	(pascal_yyerror): ... this.
	* yy-remap.h: New file.
2016-04-22 16:40:33 +01:00
Pedro Alves 6290672f89 Switch gdb's TRY/CATCH to C++ try/catch
The exceptions-across-readline issue was fixed by the previous commit.
Let's try this again.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_TRY): Remove mention of
	the foreign frames issue.
	[__cplusplus] (GDB_XCPT): Define as GDB_XCPT_TRY.
2016-04-22 16:20:49 +01:00
Pedro Alves 89525768cd Propagate GDB/C++ exceptions across readline using sj/lj-based TRY/CATCH
If we map GDB'S TRY/CATCH macros to C++ try/catch, GDB breaks on
systems where readline isn't built with exceptions support.  The
problem is that readline calls into GDB through the callback
interface, and if GDB's callback throws a C++ exception/error, the
system unwinder won't manage to unwind past the readline frame, and
ends up calling std::terminate(), which aborts the process:

 (gdb) whatever-command-that-causes-an-error
 terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR'
 Aborted
 $

This went unnoticed for so long because:

- the x86-64 ABI requires -fasynchronous-unwind-tables, making it
  possible for exceptions to cross readline with no special handling.
  But e.g., on ARM or AIX, unless you build readline with
  -fexceptions, you trip on the problem.

- TRY/CATCH was mapped to setjmp/longjmp, even in C++ mode, until
  quite recently.

The fix is to catch and save any GDB exception that is thrown inside
the GDB readline callback, and then once the callback returns back to
the GDB code that called into readline in the first place, rethrow the
saved GDB exception.

This is similar in spirit to how we catch/map GDB exceptions at the
GDB/Python and GDB/Guile API boundaries.

The next question is then: if we intercept all exceptions within GDB's
readline callback, should we simply return normally to readline?  The
callback prototype has no way to signal an error back to readline (*).
The answer is no -- if we return normally, we'll be returning to a
loop inside rl_callback_read_char that continues processing pending
input, calling into GDB again, redisplaying the prompt, etc.  Thus if
we want to error out of rl_callback_read_char, we need to long jump
across it, just like we always did before TRY/CATCH were ever mapped
to C++ exceptions.

My first approach built a specialized API to handle this, with a
couple macros to hide the setjmp/longjmp and the struct gdb_exception
saving/rethrowing.

However, I realized that we need to:

 - Handle multiple active rl_callback_read_char invocations.  If,
   while processing input something triggers a secondary prompt, we
   end up in a nested rl_callback_read_char call, through
   gdb_readline_wrapper.

 - Propagate a struct gdb_exception along with the longjmp.

... and that this is exactly what the setjmp/longjmp-based TRY/CATCH
does.

So the fix makes the setjmp/longjmp TRY/CATCH always available under
new TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ aliases, even when TRY/CATCH is mapped to C++
try/catch, and then uses TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ to propagate GDB
exceptions across the readline callback.

This turns out to be a much better looking fix than my bespoke API
attempt, even.  We'll probably be able to simplify TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ
when we finally get rid of TRY/CATCH all over the tree, but until
then, this reuse seems quite nice for avoiding a second parallel
setjmp/longjmp mechanism.

(*) - maybe we could propose a readline API change, but we still need
      to handle current readline, anyway.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* common/common-exceptions.c (enum catcher_state, struct catcher)
	(current_catcher): Define in C++ mode too.
	(exceptions_state_mc_catch): Call throw_exception_sjlj instead of
	throw_exception.
	(throw_exception_sjlj, throw_exception_cxx): New functions,
	factored out from throw_exception.
	(throw_exception): Reimplement.
	* common/common-exceptions.h (exceptions_state_mc_init)
	(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter)
	(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter_1, exceptions_state_mc_catch):
	Declare in C++ mode too.
	(TRY): Rename to ...
	(TRY_SJLJ): ... this.
	(CATCH): Rename to ...
	(CATCH_SJLJ): ... this.
	(END_CATCH): Rename to ...
	(END_CATCH_SJLJ): ... this.
	[GDB_XCPT == GDB_XCPT_SJMP] (TRY, CATCH, END_CATCH): Map to SJLJ
	equivalents.
	(throw_exception): Update comments.
	(throw_exception_sjlj): Declare.
	* event-top.c (gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper): Extend intro
	comment.  Wrap body in TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ and rethrow any
	intercepted exception.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler): New function.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_install): Always install
	gdb_rl_callback_handler as readline callback.
2016-04-22 16:20:04 +01:00
Pedro Alves 3c610247ab Rename rl_callback_read_char_wrapper -> gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper
Use the "gdb_rl_" prefix like other gdb readline function wrappers to
make it clear this is a gdb function, not a readline function.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (rl_callback_read_char_wrapper): Rename to ...
	(gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper): ... this.
	(change_line_handler, gdb_setup_readline): Adjust.
2016-04-22 16:18:33 +01:00
Yao Qi 3539aa13fb [ARM] Clear reserved bits in CPSR
Bits 20 ~ 23 of CPSR are reserved (RAZ, read as zero), but they are not
zero if the arm program runs on aarch64-linux.  AArch64 tracer gets PSTATE
from arm 32-bit tracee as CPSR, but bits 20 ~ 23 are used in PSTATE.  I
think kernel should clear these bits when it is read through ptrace, but
the fix in user space is still needed.

This patch fixes these two fails,

-FAIL: gdb.reverse/insn-reverse.exp: ext_reg_push_pop: compare registers on insn 0:vldr	d7, [r11, #-12]
-FAIL: gdb.reverse/insn-reverse.exp: ext_reg_push_pop: compare registers on insn 0:vldr	d7, [r7]

gdb:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* aarch32-linux-nat.c (aarch32_gp_regcache_supply): Clear CPSR
	bits 20 to 23.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-aarch32-low.c (arm_store_gregset): Clear CPSR bits 20
	to 23.
2016-04-22 15:54:43 +01:00
Yao Qi 495346f6f0 Fix fail in gdb.base/annota1.exp and gdb.base/annota3.exp
Hi,

I am seeing the fail below on aarch64-linux with gcc 4.9.2,

break main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4006e8: file binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/annota1.c, line 14.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: breakpoint main

the test expects the breakpoint is set on line 15.  Let us look at
the main function,

12	int
13	main (void)
14	{
15	  int my_array[3] = { 1, 2, 3 };  /* break main */
16
17	  value = 7;
18
19	#ifdef SIGUSR1
20	  signal (SIGUSR1, handle_USR1);
21	#endif

(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00000000004006e0 <+0>:	stp	x29, x30, [sp,#-48]!
   0x00000000004006e4 <+4>:	mov	x29, sp
   0x00000000004006e8 <+8>:	adrp	x0, 0x411000 <signal@got.plt>
   0x00000000004006ec <+12>:	add	x0, x0, #0x40

the breakpoint is set on the right address after skipping prologue, but
0x00000000004006e8 is mapped to the line 14, as shown below,

(gdb) maintenance info line-table
objfile: /home/yao.qi/source/build-aarch64/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/annota1/annota1 ((struct objfile *) 0x2b0e1850)
compunit_symtab: ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x2b0ded50)
symtab: /home/yao.qi/source/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/annota1.c ((struct symtab *) 0x2b0dedd0)
linetable: ((struct linetable *) 0x2b12c8b0):
INDEX    LINE ADDRESS
0           7 0x00000000004006d0
1           8 0x00000000004006d8
2          14 0x00000000004006e0
3          14 0x00000000004006e8
4          15 0x00000000004006fc

so GDB does nothing wrong.  Program hits breakpoint on either line 14
or line 15 is right to me.  With anther gcc (4.9.3), the line-table looks
correct, and no test fail.  Instead of setting breakpoint on main and
assuming the line is what we get from the source, we can set breakpoint
on that line.  On the other hand, the test prints the values of the
array and check, so we need to set breakpoint on the line setting the
values of array and "next", rather than setting the breakpoint on main.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.base/annota1.exp: Set breakpoint on line $main_line.
	* gdb.base/annota3.exp: Likewise.
2016-04-22 15:35:07 +01:00
Joel Brobecker 0f60e29b5a Joel Brobecker stepping down as AIX Maintainer
gdb/ChangeLog:

        * MAINTAINERS: Remove myself as AIX Maintainer.
2016-04-22 10:16:31 -04:00
Walfred Tedeschi 7915f48c28 [obv] [PR gdb/19980] Typo in gdbserver/configure.srv
Simple exchange of mpx-avx for avx-mpx.
Other occurrences were not found.

2016-04-22  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* configure.srv (srv_amd64_xmlfiles): Exchange
	i386/amd64-mpx-avx.xml for i386/amd64-avx-mpx.xml.
2016-04-22 14:23:29 +02:00
Yao Qi 4a7e075c3f Tweak gdb.reverse/step-precsave.exp and gdb.reverse/step-reverse.exp
I see the following test fail in arm-linux with -marm and -fomit-frame-pointer,

 step
 callee () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.reverse/step-reverse.c:27
 27      }                       /* RETURN FROM CALLEE */
 (gdb) step
 main () at /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.reverse/step-reverse.c:58
 58         callee();    /* STEP INTO THIS CALL */
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.reverse/step-precsave.exp: reverse step into fn call

As we can see, the "step" has already stepped into the function callee,
but in the last line.  The second "step" attempts to step to function
body, but it goes out of callee, which isn't expected.

The program is compiled with -marm and -fomit-frame-pointer, the
function callee is prologue-less, because nothing needs to be saved
on stack,

(gdb) disassemble callee
Dump of assembler code for function callee:
   0x00010680 <+0>:	movw	r3, #2364	; 0x93c
   0x00010684 <+4>:	movt	r3, #2
   0x00010688 <+8>:	ldr	r3, [r3]
   0x0001068c <+12>:	add	r2, r3, #1
   0x00010690 <+16>:	movw	r3, #2364	; 0x93c
   0x00010694 <+20>:	movt	r3, #2
   0x00010698 <+24>:	str	r2, [r3]
   0x0001069c <+28>:	mov	r3, #0
   0x000106a0 <+32>:	mov	r0, r3
   0x000106a4 <+36>:	bx	lr

program stops at the 0x106a0 (passed the epilogue) after the first
"step".  When second "step" is executed, the stepping range is
[0x10680-0x106a0], which starts from the first instruction of function
callee (because it doesn't have prologue).

infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=0, current thread [LWP 2461] at 0x1069c^M
infrun: prepare_to_wait^M
infrun: target_wait (-1.0.0, status) =^M
infrun:   2461.2461.0 [LWP 2461],^M
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP^M
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED^M
infrun: stop_pc = 0x10698^M
infrun: stepping inside range [0x10680-0x106a0]

When program goes out of the range, it stops at the caller of callee,
and test fails.  IOW, if function callee has prologue, the stepping
range won't start from the first instruction of the function, and
program stops at the prologue and test passes.

IMO, GDB does nothing wrong, but test shouldn't expect the program
stops in callee after the second "step".  I decide to fix test rather
than GDB.  In this patch, I change to test to do one "step", and check
the program is still in callee, then, do multiple "step" until program
goes out of the callee.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.reverse/step-precsave.exp: Do one step and test program
	stops in "callee" and do multiple steps until program goes out
	of "callee".
	* gdb.reverse/step-reverse.exp: Likewise.
2016-04-22 12:14:40 +01:00
Yao Qi 5b061e9886 Deliver signal in hardware single step
GDBserver doesn't deliver signal when stepping over a breakpoint even
hardware single step is used.  When GDBserver started to step over
(thread creation) breakpoint for mutlit-threaded debugging in 2002 [1],
GDBserver behaves this way.

This behavior gets trouble on conditional breakpoints on branch to
self instruction like this,

   0x00000000004005b6 <+29>:	jmp    0x4005b6 <main+29>

and I set breakpoint

$(gdb) break branch-to-self.c:43 if counter > 3

and the variable counter will be set to 5 in SIGALRM signal handler.
Since GDBserver keeps stepping over breakpoint, the SIGALRM can never
be dequeued and delivered to the inferior, so the program can't stop.
The test can be found in gdb.base/branch-to-self.exp.

GDBserver didn't deliver signal when stepping over a breakpoint because
a tracepoint is collected twice if GDBserver does so in the following
scenario, which can be reproduced by gdb.trace/signal.exp.

 - program stops at tracepoint, and tracepoint is collected,
 - gdbserver starts a step-over,
 - a signal arrives, step-over is canceled, and signal should be passed,
 - gdbserver starts a new step-over again, pass the signal as well,
 - program stops at the entry of signal handler, step-over finished,
 - gdbserver proceeds,
 - program returns from the signal handler, again to the tracepoint,
   and thus is collected again.

The spurious collection isn't that harmful, IMO, so it should be OK
to let GDBserver deliver signal when stepping over a breakpoint.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-low.c (lwp_signal_can_be_delivered): Don't deliver
	signal when stepping over breakpoint with software single
	step.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.trace/signal.exp: Also pass if
	$tracepoint_hits($i) > $iterations.
2016-04-22 11:59:18 +01:00
Yao Qi 5c5dc57fcf New test case gdb.trace/signal.exp
This is to test whether GDBserver deliver signal to the inferior while
doing the step over.  Nowadays, GDBserver doesn't deliver signal, so
there won't be spurious collection, however, if GDBserver does deliver
signal, there might be spurious collection.

gdb/testsuite:

2016-04-22  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* gdb.trace/signal.c: New file.
	* gdb.trace/signal.exp: New file.
2016-04-22 11:59:18 +01:00
Maciej W. Rozycki 3877922e56 MIPS: Go back with the default Linux # of registers to 90
Set the number of registers for non-XML-described Linux targets to 90,
reverting a change made here with the addition of DSP register support:

commit 1faeff088b
Author: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@linux-mips.org>
Date:   Thu Mar 1 22:19:48 2012 +0000

and fixing a regression introduced for legacy `gdbserver' targets
causing a "Remote 'g' packet reply is too long" error message where the
amount of register data received with a `g' packet (90) exceeds the
maximum number of registers expected (79).

Update the setting for XML-described targets, reflecting the actual
number of registers which have been assigned numbers, matching the:

      gdb_assert (gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch) <= MIPS_RESTART_REGNUM);

requirement in `mips_linux_init_abi'.

	gdb/
	* mips-tdep.c (mips_gdbarch_init): For GDB_OSABI_LINUX set
	`num_regs' to 90 rather than 79.  Where a target description is
	present adjust the setting appropriately.
2016-04-22 01:20:59 +01:00
Pedro Alves 88c3cd8dcb Switch gdb's TRY/CATCH to sjlj again
We don't currently handle the case of gdb's readline callback throwing
gdb C++ exceptions across a readline that wasn't built with
-fexceptions.  The end result is:

 (gdb) whatever-command-that-causes-an-error
 terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR'
 Aborted
 $

Until that is fixed, revert back to sjlj-based exceptions again.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_TRY): Add comment.
	(GDB_XCPT): Always define as GDB_XCPT_SJMP.
2016-04-21 17:28:58 +01:00
Pedro Alves 71829b1a3f Fix AIX gdb build with C++ compiler
We currently get:

 ../../src/gdb/aix-thread.c: In function 'int pdc_read_data(pthdb_user_t, void*, pthdb_addr_t, size_t)':
 ../../src/gdb/aix-thread.c:465:46: error: invalid conversion from 'void*' to 'gdb_byte* {aka unsigned char*}' [-fpermissive]
    status = target_read_memory (addr, buf, len);
					       ^


 ../../src/gdb/aix-thread.c: In function 'void aix_thread_resume(target_ops*, ptid_t, int, gdb_signal)':
 ../../src/gdb/aix-thread.c:1010:46: error: invalid conversion from 'void*' to 'int*' [-fpermissive]
	 gdb_signal_to_host (sig), (void *) tid);
					       ^
 ../../src/gdb/aix-thread.c:243:1: error:   initializing argument 5 of 'int ptrace64aix(int, int, long long int, int, int*)' [-fpermissive]
  ptrace64aix (int req, int id, long long addr, int data, int *buf)


 ../../src/gdb/rs6000-nat.c: In function 'gdb_byte* rs6000_ptrace_ldinfo(ptid_t)':
 ../../src/gdb/rs6000-nat.c:596:36: error: invalid conversion from 'void*' to 'gdb_byte* {aka unsigned char*}' [-fpermissive]
    gdb_byte *ldi = xmalloc (ldi_size);
				     ^
 ../../src/gdb/rs6000-nat.c:615:36: error: invalid conversion from 'void*' to 'gdb_byte* {aka unsigned char*}' [-fpermissive]
	ldi = xrealloc (ldi, ldi_size);
				     ^

(and more instances of the same).

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* aix-thread.c (pdc_read_data, pdc_write_data): Add cast.
	(aix_thread_resume): Use PTRACE_TYPE_ARG5.
	* rs6000-nat.c (rs6000_ptrace64): Use PTRACE_TYPE_ARG5.
	(rs6000_ptrace_ldinfo): Change type of 'ldi' local to void
	pointer, and cast return to gdb_byte pointer.
2016-04-21 14:02:20 +01:00
Pedro Alves 3451269c41 Fix s390 GNU/Linux gdb and gdbserver builds
Now that gdb/gdbserver compile as C++ programs by default, the s390
GNU/Linux build started failing with:

 In file included from ../../src/gdb/common/common-defs.h:64:0,
		  from ../../src/gdb/defs.h:28,
		  from ../../src/gdb/s390-linux-nat.c:22:
 ../../src/gdb/s390-linux-nat.c: In function ‘void fetch_regset(regcache*, int, int, int, const regset*)’:
 ../../src/gdb/../include/libiberty.h:711:38: error: invalid conversion from ‘void*’ to ‘gdb_byte* {aka unsigned char*}’ [-fpermissive]
  # define alloca(x) __builtin_alloca(x)
				       ^
 ../../src/gdb/s390-linux-nat.c:297:19: note: in expansion of macro ‘alloca’
    gdb_byte *buf = alloca (regsize);
		    ^

etc.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* s390-linux-nat.c (fetch_regset, store_regset, check_regset): Use
	void * instead of gdb_byte *.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-s390-low.c (s390_collect_ptrace_register)
	(s390_supply_ptrace_register, s390_get_hwcap): Use gdb_byte * and
	add casts.
	(s390_check_regset): Use void * instead of gdb_byte *.
2016-04-21 12:03:53 +01:00
Pedro Alves b36cec19e8 Add missing sentinel 'char *' casts in concat/reconcat calls
The wildebeest-debian-wheezy-i686 buildslave's build is broken due to:

 ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/python/python.c: In function void _initialize_python():
 ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/python/python.c:1709:36: error: missing sentinel in function call [-Werror=format]

Reproduced on Fedora 23 by sticking a few:

 #undef NULL
 #define 0

in build/gdb/build-gnulib/{stddef|signal|stdio}.h.  Hopefully this
caught all instances.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* dwarf2read.c (try_open_dwop_file, open_dwo_file)
	(file_file_name, file_full_name): Add char * cast to sentinel in
	concat/reconcat calls.
	* event-top.c (top_level_prompt): Likewise.
	* guile/guile.c (initialize_scheme_side): Likewise.
	* linux-tdep.c (linux_fill_prpsinfo): Likewise.
	* macrotab.c (macro_source_fullname): Likewise.
	* main.c (get_init_files, captured_main): Likewise.
	* psymtab.c (psymtab_to_fullname): Likewise.
	* python/python.c (_initialize_python)
	(gdbpy_finish_initialization): Likewise.
	* source.c (symtab_to_fullname): Likewise.
2016-04-21 11:34:18 +01:00
Pedro Alves a23585089d Build GDB as a C++ program by default
This makes --enable-build-with-cxx be "yes" by default.

One must now configure with --enable-build-with-cxx=no in order to
build with a C compiler.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* build-with-cxx.m4 (GDB_AC_BUILD_WITH_CXX): Default to yes.
	* configure: Renegerate.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-04-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* configure: Renegerate.
2016-04-20 23:20:15 +01:00
Pedro Alves 5ae0055212 Fix host signal vs gdb signal mixup in gdb/darwin-nat.c
Building in C++ mode caught a bug here:

 .../src/gdb/darwin-nat.c: In function 'ptid_t darwin_decode_message(mach_msg_header_t*, darwin_thread_t**, inferior**, target_waitstatus*)':
 .../src/gdb/darwin-nat.c:1016:25: error: invalid conversion from 'int' to 'gdb_signal' [-fpermissive]
      status->value.sig = WTERMSIG (wstatus);
			  ^

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* darwin-nat.c (darwin_decode_message): Use gdb_signal_from_host.
2016-04-20 23:01:54 +01:00
Pedro Alves d9436c7c71 Fix "incompatible pointer type" warning in gdb/aarch64-tdep.c
Fixes, with x86_64-apple-darwin15-gcc (gcc 5.3.0):

 .../src/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c: In function 'aarch64_record_load_store':
 .../src/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c:3479:67: error: passing argument 3 of 'regcache_raw_read_unsigned' from incompatible pointer type [-Werror=incompatible-pointer-types]
		       bits (aarch64_insn_r->aarch64_insn, 16, 20), &reg_rm_val);
								    ^
 In file included from .../src/gdb/regcache.h:23:0,
		  from .../src/gdb/gdbarch.h:69,
		  from .../src/gdb/defs.h:620,
		  from .../src/gdb/aarch64-tdep.c:21:
 .../src/gdb/common/common-regcache.h:60:29: note: expected 'ULONGEST * {aka long unsigned int *}' but argument is of type 'uint64_t * {aka long long unsigned int *}'
  extern enum register_status regcache_raw_read_unsigned
			      ^

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_record_load_store): Change type of
	'reg_rm_val' local to ULONGEST.
2016-04-20 22:52:50 +01:00
Pedro Alves 597e448caf gdb/darwin-nat.c: Fix "cast to pointer from integer of different size" warning
Fixes, with gcc 5.3.0:

 .../src/gdb/darwin-nat.c: In function 'void darwin_resume_thread(inferior*, darwin_thread_t*, int, int)':
 .../src/gdb/darwin-nat.c:731:21: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size [-Wint-to-pointer-cast]
     (caddr_t)thread->gdb_port, nsignal);
		      ^
 .../src/gdb/darwin-nat.c:84:35: note: in definition of macro 'PTRACE'
   darwin_ptrace(#CMD, CMD, (PID), (ADDR), (SIG))
				    ^

thread->gdb_port is an unsigned int, caddr_t is a void pointer.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* darwin-nat.c (darwin_resume_thread): Add uintptr_t cast.
2016-04-20 21:42:57 +01:00
Doug Evans 6c739336e5 symmisc.c (dump_symtab_1): Print owning compunit for identical blockvectors.
* symmisc.c (dump_symtab_1): Print owning compunit for identical
	blockvectors.
2016-04-20 10:17:12 -07:00
Yao Qi 8cef59a2e3 Include arch/arm-linux.h in aarch32-linux-nat.c
Fix the compilation failure by including arch/arm-linux.h in
aarch32-linux-nat.c.

gdb:

2016-04-20  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* aarch32-linux-nat.c: Include "arch/arm-linux.h".
2016-04-20 15:02:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 6885166d99 Move ARM_CPSR_GREGNUM to arch/arm-linux.h
This patch moves macro ARM_CPSR_GREGNUM to arch/arm-linux.h so that it
can be used in GDBserver side.

gdb:

2016-04-20  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* arm-linux-tdep.h (ARM_CPSR_GREGNUM): Move it to ...
	* arch/arm-linux.h: ... here.

gdb/gdbserver:

2016-04-20  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-aarch32-low.c: Include "arch/arm-linux.h".
	(arm_fill_gregset): Use ARM_CPSR_GREGNUM rather than magic
	number 16.
	(arm_store_gregset): Likewise.
2016-04-20 12:32:15 +01:00
John Baldwin 21002a635b Handle void * conversions in FreeBSD/x86 native code to fix C++ build.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* amd64bsd-nat.c (amd64bsd_fetch_inferior_registers): Change xstateregs
	to void *.
	(amd64bsd_store_inferior_registers): Likewise.
	* fbsd-nat.c (resume_one_thread_cb): Explicitly cast data to ptid_t *.
	(resume_all_threads_cb): Likewise.
	* i386bsd-nat.c (i386bsd_supply_gregset): Cast gregs to char *.
	(i386bsd_collect_gregset): Likewise.
	(i386bsd_fetch_inferior_registers): Change xstateregs to void *.
	(i386bsd_store_inferior_registers): Likewise.
2016-04-19 15:42:17 -07:00
John Baldwin f39c07acc8 Cast the pointer assigned to ss_sp to char *.
FreeBSD versions older than 11.0 use char * as the type of ss_sp in
stack_t instead of the standards-defined void *.  C++ allows a char *
pointer to be converted to a void *, so it is safe to cast the return
value of xmalloc to char * if ss_sp is either a char * or void *.
Just always use the cast to char * since that is less ugly than having
to add a special case.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* main.c (setup_alternate_signal_stack): Cast to char *.
2016-04-19 15:41:56 -07:00
Doug Evans ee2915c993 Add pr number to earlier entry. 2016-04-19 09:57:04 -07:00
Doug Evans d04c1a59f3 symmisc.c (dump_symtab_1, dump_symtab): Delete arg objfile.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symmisc.c (dump_symtab_1, dump_symtab): Delete arg objfile.
	All callers updated.
2016-04-19 09:52:45 -07:00
Doug Evans 85c10f77b7 Fix copyright year, remove linux only test. 2016-04-19 09:06:53 -07:00
Doug Evans a55411b9ff * source.c (is_regular_file): New arg errno_ptr.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* source.c (is_regular_file): New arg errno_ptr.
	All callers updated.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/bad-file.exp: New file.
2016-04-19 09:01:44 -07:00
Andreas Arnez 73e6209fae linux-record: Squash cases with identical handling
In record_linux_system_call there are some cases with identical
handling.  These are merged together to reduce code duplication.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* linux-record.c (record_linux_system_call): Merge handling for
	readlink/recv/read and pipe/pipe2.
2016-04-19 16:53:40 +02:00
Walfred Tedeschi f42bf748e4 Re-factor (i386|amd64)mpx target descriptions.
In the previous patch a new set of target descriptions
(i386|amd64)-avx-mpx were added  being same as the (i386|amd64)-mpx.
This patch removes AVX feature from  (i386|amd64)-mpx target
description set.

This way the (i386|amd64)avx_mpx(_linux|) set has AVX and MPX features
and (i386|amd64)mpx(_linux|) only MPX.

2016-04-14  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

	* features/i386/amd64-mpx-linux.xml: Remove AVX feature.
	* features/i386/amd64-mpx.xml: Remove AVX feature.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx-linux.xml: Remove AVX feature.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx.xml: Remove AVX feature.
	* features/i386/amd64-mpx-linux.c: Regenerate.
	* features/i386/amd64-mpx.c: Regenerate.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx-linux.c: Regenerate.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx.c: Regenerate.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-mpx-linux.dat: Regenerate.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-mpx.dat: Regenerate.
	* regformats/i386/i386-mpx-linux.dat: Regenerate.
	* regformats/i386/i386-mpx.dat: Regenerate.
2016-04-19 15:45:50 +02:00