Commit Graph

35447 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Arnez d1fbcd564a Eliminate literal line numbers in mi-console.exp
Remove the literal line number from a regexp in mi-console.exp.  Add
an appropriate eye-catcher to mi-console.c and refer to that instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.mi/mi-console.c: Add eye-catcher.
	* gdb.mi/mi-console.exp (semihosted_string): Refer to eye-catcher
	instead of literal line number.
2014-11-13 10:20:39 +01:00
Andreas Arnez b0e59b8f1c Eliminate literal line numbers in shlib-call.exp
Remove the literal line number from a regexp in shlib-call.exp.  Add
an appropriate eye-catcher to shr2.c and refer to that instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/shr2.c: Add eye-catcher.
	* gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: Refer to eye-catcher instead of literal
	line number.
2014-11-13 10:20:39 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 78f98cca31 Eliminate literal line numbers in jump.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in jump.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to jump.c and refer to those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/jump.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/jump.exp: Refer to eye-catchers instead of literal line
	numbers.
2014-11-13 10:20:38 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 58fa2af0b3 Eliminate literal line numbers in foll-exec.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in foll-exec.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to foll-exec.c and execd-proc.c and refer to
those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/execd-prog.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/foll-exec.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/foll-exec.exp: Refer to eye-catchers instead of literal
	line numbers.
2014-11-13 10:20:38 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 04e5059ba6 Eliminate literal line numbers in ending-run.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in ending-run.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to ending-run.c and refer to those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/ending-run.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/ending-run.exp: Refer to eye-catchers instead of
	literal line numbers.
2014-11-13 10:20:37 +01:00
Andreas Arnez dbfdb174e3 Eliminate literal line numbers in call-rt-st.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in call-rt-st.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to call-rt-st.c and refer to those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/call-rt-st.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp: Refer to eye-catchers instead of
	literal line numbers.
2014-11-13 10:14:30 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 888a2adec7 Eliminate literal line numbers in call-ar-st.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in call-ar-st.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to call-ar-st.c and refer to those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/call-ar-st.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/call-ar-st.exp: Refer to eye-catchers instead of
	literal line numbers.
2014-11-13 10:14:30 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 6acc2ddee2 Eliminate literal line numbers in dbx.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the commands and regexps in dbx.exp.
Add appropriate eye-catchers to average.c and sum.c and refer to those
instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/average.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/sum.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/dbx.exp: Use eye-catchers to determine line numbers for
	regexps dynamically.
2014-11-13 10:14:29 +01:00
Andreas Arnez 9ecfcd1d02 Eliminate literal line numbers in so-impl-ld.exp
Remove literal line numbers from the regexps in so-impl-ld.exp.  Add
appropriate eye-catchers to solib1.c and refer to those instead.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/solib1.c: Add eye-catchers.
	* gdb.base/so-impl-ld.exp: Match against eye-catchers instead of
	literal line numbers.
2014-11-13 10:14:29 +01:00
Pedro Alves 40e91bc71f GDBserver: clean up 'cont_thread' handling
As no place in the backends check cont_thread anymore, we can stop
setting and clearing it in places that resume the target and wait for
events.  Instead simply clear it whenever a new GDB connects.

gdb/gdbserver/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* server.c (cont_thread): Update comment.
	(start_inferior, attach_inferior): No longer clear cont_thread.
	(handle_v_cont): No longer set cont_thread.
	(captured_main): Clear cont_thread each time a GDB connects.
2014-11-12 11:30:49 +00:00
Pedro Alves c2c118cfe1 GDBserver: don't resume all threads if the Hc thread disapears
There's code in linux_wait_1 that resumes all threads if the Hc thread
disappears.  It's the wrong thing to do, as GDB has told GDBserver to
resume only one thread, because e.g., the user has scheduler-locking
enabled, or because GDB was stepping the program over a breakpoint.
Resuming all threads behind GDB's back can't be good in either case.

The right thing to do is to detect that that the (only) resumed thread
is gone, and let GDB know about it.  The Linux backend is already
doing that nowadays, since:

 commit fa96cb382c
 Author:     Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
 AuthorDate: Thu Feb 27 14:30:08 2014 +0000

     Teach GDBserver's Linux backend about no unwaited-for children (TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED).

The backend detects that all resumed threads have disappeared, and
returns TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED to the core of GDBserver, which
then reports an error to GDB.

There's no need to frob the passed in ptid to wait for the continue
thread either -- linux_wait_for_event only returns events for resumed
threads.

The badness (of resuming threads) can actually be observed in the
testsuite, if we force-disable vCont support in GDBserver -- before
the patch, gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp hangs if we disable
vCont:

 (gdb) continue
 Continuing.
 FAIL: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue to breakpoint: break-here (timeout)
 ... more cascading timeouts ....

After the patch, gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp behaves the same
with or without vCont support:

 (gdb) continue
 Continuing.
 [New Thread 32226]
 [Switching to Thread 32226]

 Breakpoint 2, thread_a (arg=0x0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.c:28
 28	  return 0; /* break-here */
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue to breakpoint: break-here
...
 continue
 Continuing.
 warning: Remote failure reply: E.No unwaited-for children left.

 [Thread 32222] #1 stopped.
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue stops when the main thread exits

Overall, this is also good for getting rid of a RSP detail from the backend.

gdb/gdbserver/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-low.c (linux_wait_1): Don't force a wait for the Hc
	thread, and don't resume all threads if the Hc thread has exited.
2014-11-12 11:30:49 +00:00
Pedro Alves 78708b7c8c GDBserver: ctrl-c after leader has exited
The target->request_interrupt callback implements the handling for
ctrl-c.  User types ctrl-c in GDB, GDB sends a \003 to the remote
target, and the remote targets stops the program with a SIGINT, just
like if the user typed ctrl-c in GDBserver's terminal.

The trouble is that using kill_lwp(signal_pid, SIGINT) sends the
SIGINT directly to the program's main thread.  If that thread has
exited already, then that kill won't do anything.

Instead, send the SIGINT to the process group, just like GDB
does (see inf-ptrace.c:inf_ptrace_stop).

gdb.threads/leader-exit.exp is extended to cover the scenario.  It
fails against GDBserver before the patch.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and GDBserver.

gdb/gdbserver/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-low.c (linux_request_interrupt): Always send a SIGINT to
	the process group instead of to a specific LWP.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/leader-exit.exp: Test sending ctrl-c works after the
	leader has exited.
2014-11-12 11:30:49 +00:00
Pedro Alves 6218dc4bdb Garbage collect the infwait_state global
No longer used since the non-continuable watchpoints handling rework.

gdb/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (enum infwait_states, infwait_state): Delete.
2014-11-12 11:02:11 +00:00
Pedro Alves af48d08f97 fix skipping permanent breakpoints
The gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.exp test is currently failing an
assertion recently added:

 (gdb) stepi
 ../../src/gdb/infrun.c:2237: internal-error: resume: Assertion `sig != GDB_SIGNAL_0' failed.
 A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
 further debugging may prove unreliable.
 Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
 FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.exp: Single stepping past permanent breakpoint. (GDB internal error)

The assertion expects that the only reason we currently need to step a
breakpoint instruction is when we have a signal to deliver.  But when
stepping a permanent breakpoint (with or without a signal) we also
reach this code.

The assertion is correct and the permanent breakpoints skipping code
is wrong.

Consider the case of the user doing "step/stepi" when stopped at a
permanent breakpoint.  GDB's `resume' calls the
gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint hook and then happily continues
stepping:

  /* Normally, by the time we reach `resume', the breakpoints are either
     removed or inserted, as appropriate.  The exception is if we're sitting
     at a permanent breakpoint; we need to step over it, but permanent
     breakpoints can't be removed.  So we have to test for it here.  */
  if (breakpoint_here_p (aspace, pc) == permanent_breakpoint_here)
    {
      gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint (gdbarch, regcache);
    }

But since gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint already advanced the PC
manually, this ends up executing the instruction that is _after_ the
breakpoint instruction.  The user-visible result is that a single-step
steps two instructions.

The gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.exp test is actually ensuring that
that's indeed how things work.  It runs to an int3 instruction, does
"stepi", and checks that "leave" was executed with that "stepi".  Like
this:

 (gdb) b *0x0804848c
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x804848c
 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Breakpoint 2, 0x0804848c in standard ()
 (gdb) disassemble
 Dump of assembler code for function standard:
    0x08048488 <+0>:     push   %ebp
    0x08048489 <+1>:     mov    %esp,%ebp
    0x0804848b <+3>:     push   %edi
 => 0x0804848c <+4>:     int3
    0x0804848d <+5>:     leave
    0x0804848e <+6>:     ret
    0x0804848f <+7>:     nop
 (gdb) si
 0x0804848e in standard ()
 (gdb) disassemble
 Dump of assembler code for function standard:
    0x08048488 <+0>:     push   %ebp
    0x08048489 <+1>:     mov    %esp,%ebp
    0x0804848b <+3>:     push   %edi
    0x0804848c <+4>:     int3
    0x0804848d <+5>:     leave
 => 0x0804848e <+6>:     ret
    0x0804848f <+7>:     nop
 End of assembler dump.
 (gdb)

One would instead expect that a stepi at 0x0804848c stops at
0x0804848d, _before_ the "leave" is executed.  This commit changes GDB
this way.  Care is taken to make stepping into a signal handler when
the step starts at a permanent breakpoint instruction work correctly.

The patch adjusts gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.exp in this direction,
and also makes it work on x86_64 (currently it only works on i*86).

The patch also adds a new gdb.base/bp-permanent.exp test that
exercises many different code paths related to stepping permanent
breakpoints, including the stepping with signals cases.  The test uses
"hack/trick" to make it work on all (or most) platforms -- it doesn't
really hard code a breakpoint instruction.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (resume): Clear the thread's 'stepped_breakpoint' flag.
	Rewrite stepping over a permanent breakpoint.
	(thread_still_needs_step_over, proceed): Don't set
	stepping_over_breakpoint for permanent breakpoints.
	(handle_signal_stop): Don't clear stepped_breakpoint.  Also pull
	single-step breakpoints out of the target on hardware step
	targets.
	(process_event_stop_test): If stepping a permanent breakpoint
	doesn't hit the step-resume breakpoint, delete the step-resume
	breakpoint.
	(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Also check if the stepped thread
	has advanced already on hardware step targets.
	(currently_stepping): Return true if the thread stepped a
	breakpoint.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.c: New file.
	* gdb.arch/i386-bp_permanent.exp: Don't skip on x86_64.
	(srcfile): Set to i386-bp_permanent.c.
	(top level): Adjust to work in both 32-bit and 64-bit modes.  Test
	that stepi does not execute the 'leave' instruction, instead of
	testing it does execute.
	* gdb.base/bp-permanent.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/bp-permanent.exp: New file.
2014-11-12 10:39:00 +00:00
Pedro Alves 1a853c5224 make "permanent breakpoints" per location and disableable
"permanent"-ness is currently a property of the breakpoint.  But, it
should actually be an implementation detail of a _location_.  Consider
this bit in infrun.c:

  /* Normally, by the time we reach `resume', the breakpoints are either
     removed or inserted, as appropriate.  The exception is if we're sitting
     at a permanent breakpoint; we need to step over it, but permanent
     breakpoints can't be removed.  So we have to test for it here.  */
  if (breakpoint_here_p (aspace, pc) == permanent_breakpoint_here)
    {
      if (gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint_p (gdbarch))
	gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint (gdbarch, regcache);
      else
	error (_("\
The program is stopped at a permanent breakpoint, but GDB does not know\n\
how to step past a permanent breakpoint on this architecture.  Try using\n\
a command like `return' or `jump' to continue execution."));
    }

This will wrongly skip a non-breakpoint instruction if we have a
multiple location breakpoint where the whole breakpoint was set to
"permanent" because one of the locations happened to be permanent,
even if the one GDB is resuming from is not.

Related, because the permanent breakpoints are only marked as such in
init_breakpoint_sal, we currently miss marking momentary breakpoints
as permanent.  A test added by a following patch trips on that.
Making permanent-ness be per-location, and marking locations as such
in add_location_to_breakpoint, the natural place to do this, fixes
this issue...

... and then exposes a latent issue with mark_breakpoints_out.  It's
clearing the inserted flag of permanent breakpoints.  This results in
assertions failing like this:

 Breakpoint 1, main () at testsuite/gdb.base/callexit.c:32
 32        return 0;
 (gdb) call callexit()
 [Inferior 1 (process 15849) exited normally]
 gdb/breakpoint.c:12854: internal-error: allegedly permanent breakpoint is not actually inserted
 A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
 further debugging may prove unreliable.

The call dummy breakpoint, which is a momentary breakpoint, is set on
top of a manually inserted breakpoint instruction, and so is now
rightfully marked as a permanent breakpoint.  See "Write a legitimate
instruction at the point where the infcall breakpoint is going to be
inserted." comment in infcall.c.

Re. make_breakpoint_permanent.  That's only called by solib-pa64.c.
Permanent breakpoints were actually originally invented for HP-UX [1].
I believe that that call (the only one in the tree) is unnecessary
nowadays, given that nowadays the core breakpoints code analyzes the
instruction under the breakpoint to automatically detect whether it's
setting a breakpoint on top of a breakpoint instruction in the
program.  I know close to nothing about HP-PA/HP-UX, though.

[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/1999-q3/msg00245.html, and
    https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/1999-q3/msg00242.html

In addition to the per-location issue, "permanent breakpoints" are
currently always displayed as enabled=='n':

 (gdb) b main
 Breakpoint 3 at 0x40053c: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S, line 29.
 (gdb) info breakpoints
 Num     Type           Disp Enb Address            What
 3       breakpoint     keep n   0x000000000040053c ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S:29

But OTOH they're always enabled; there's no way to disable them...

In turn, this means that if one adds commands to such a breakpoint,
they're _always_ run:

 (gdb) start
 Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt
 ...
 Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S:29
 29              int3
 (gdb) b main
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x40053c: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S, line 29.
 (gdb) info breakpoints
 Num     Type           Disp Enb Address            What
 2       breakpoint     keep n   0x000000000040053c ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S:29
 (gdb) commands
 Type commands for breakpoint(s) 2, one per line.
 End with a line saying just "end".
 >echo "hello!"
 >end
 (gdb) disable 2
 (gdb) start
 The program being debugged has been started already.
 Start it from the beginning? (y or n) y
 Temporary breakpoint 3 at 0x40053c: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S, line 29.
 Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt

 Breakpoint 2, main () at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-permbkpt.S:29
 29              int3
 "hello!"(gdb)

IMO, one should be able to disable such a breakpoint, and GDB should
then behave just like if the user hadn't created the breakpoint in the
first place (that is, report a SIGTRAP).

By making permanent-ness a property of the location, and eliminating
the bp_permanent enum enable_state state ends up fixing that as well.

No tests are added for these changes yet; they'll be added in a follow
up patch, as skipping permanent breakpoints is currently broken and
trips on an assertion in infrun.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	Mark locations as permanent, not the whole breakpoint.
	* breakpoint.c (remove_breakpoint_1, remove_breakpoint): Adjust.
	(mark_breakpoints_out): Don't mark permanent breakpoints as
	uninserted.
	(breakpoint_init_inferior): Use mark_breakpoints_out.
	(breakpoint_here_p): Adjust.
	(bpstat_stop_status, describe_other_breakpoints): Remove handling
	of permanent breakpoints.
	(make_breakpoint_permanent): Mark each location as permanent,
	instead of marking the breakpoint.
	(add_location_to_breakpoint): If the location is permanent, mark
	it as such, and as inserted.
	(init_breakpoint_sal): Don't make the breakpoint permanent here.
	(bp_location_compare, update_global_location_list): Adjust.
	(update_breakpoint_locations): Don't make the breakpoint permanent
	here.
	(disable_breakpoint, enable_breakpoint_disp): Don't skip permanent
	breakpoints.
	* breakpoint.h (enum enable_state) <bp_permanent>: Delete field.
	(struct bp_location) <permanent>: New field.
	* guile/scm-breakpoint.c (bpscm_enable_state_to_string): Remove
	reference to bp_permanent.
2014-11-12 10:37:57 +00:00
Pedro Alves ae9bb220ca add a default method for gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint
breakpoint.c uses gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc to determine whether a
breakpoint location points at a permanent breakpoint:

 static int
 bp_loc_is_permanent (struct bp_location *loc)
 {
 ...
   addr = loc->address;
   bpoint = gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (loc->gdbarch, &addr, &len);
 ...
  if (target_read_memory (loc->address, target_mem, len) == 0
      && memcmp (target_mem, bpoint, len) == 0)
    retval = 1;
 ...

So I think we should default the gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint
hook to advancing the PC by the length of the breakpoint instruction,
as determined by gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc.  I believe that simple
implementation does the right thing for most architectures.  If
there's an oddball architecture where that doesn't work, then it
should override the hook, just like it should be overriding the hook
if there was no default anyway.

The only two implementation of skip_permanent_breakpoint are
i386_skip_permanent_breakpoint, for x86, and
hppa_skip_permanent_breakpoint, for PA-RISC/HP-UX

The x86 implementation is trivial, and can clearly be replaced by the
new default.

I don't know about the HP-UX one though, I know almost nothing about
PA.  It may well be advancing the PC ends up being equivalent.
Otherwise, it must be that "jump $pc_after_bp" doesn't work either...

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20 native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-11-12  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* arch-utils.c (default_skip_permanent_breakpoint): New function.
	* arch-utils.h (default_skip_permanent_breakpoint): New
	declaration.
	* gdbarch.sh (skip_permanent_breakpoint): Now an 'f' function.
	Install default_skip_permanent_breakpoint as default method.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_skip_permanent_breakpoint): Delete function.
	(i386_gdbarch_init): Don't install it.
	* infrun.c (resume): Assume there's always a
	gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint implementation.
	* gdbarch.h, gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
2014-11-12 10:32:53 +00:00
Daniel Colascione 015de6884f Warn users about mismatched PID namespaces
Linux supports multiple "PID namespaces".  Processes in different PID
namespaces have different views of the system process list.  Sometimes,
a single process can appear in more than one PID namespace, but with a
different PID in each.  When GDB and its target are in different PID
namespaces, various features can break due to the mismatch between
what the target believes its PID to be and what GDB believes its PID
to be.  The most visible broken functionality is thread enumeration
silently failing.

This patch explicitly warns users against trying to debug across PID
namespaces.

The patch introduced no new failures in my test suite run on an x86_64
installation of Ubuntu 14.10.  It doesn't include a test: writing an
automated test that exercises this code would be very involved because
CLONE_NEWNS requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN; the easier way to reproduce the
problem is to start a new lxc container.

gdb/
2014-11-11  Daniel Colascione  <dancol@dancol.org>

	Warn about cross-PID-namespace debugging.
	* nat/linux-procfs.h (linux_proc_pid_get_ns): New prototype.
	* nat/linux-procfs.c (linux_proc_pid_get_ns): New function.
	* linux-thread-db.c (check_pid_namespace_match): New function.
	(thread_db_inferior_created): Call it.
2014-11-11 14:18:23 +00:00
Doug Evans 26a8485972 symmisc.c: Remove trailing whitespace.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symmisc.c (print_objfile_statistics): Remove trailing whitespace.
	(maintenance_info_symtabs, maintenance_check_symtabs): Ditto.
2014-11-10 17:19:57 -08:00
Doug Evans 712a2e6d22 source.c (select_source_symtab): Rewrite to use ALL_SYMTABS.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* source.c (select_source_symtab): Rewrite to use ALL_SYMTABS.
2014-11-10 16:49:44 -08:00
Doug Evans af3768e945 PR 17564: Fix objfile search order for static symbols.
When searching static symbols, gdb would search over all
expanded symtabs of all objfiles, and if that fails only then
would it search all partial/gdb_index tables of all objfiles.
This means that the user could get a random instance of the
symbol depending on what symtabs have been previously expanded.
Now the search is consistent, searching each objfile completely
before proceeding to the next one.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR symtab/17564
	* symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_all_objfiles): Delete.
	(lookup_static_symbol): Move definition to new location and rewrite.
	(lookup_symbol_in_objfile): New function.
	(lookup_symbol_global_iterator_cb): Call it.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	PR symtab/17564
	* gdb.base/symtab-search-order.exp: New file.
	* gdb.base/symtab-search-order.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/symtab-search-order-1.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/symtab-search-order-shlib-1.c: New file.
2014-11-10 15:48:49 -08:00
Ulrich Weigand b1f28d992c Work around GCC bug 63748
A recent change to eval.c triggered a GCC bug that causes a false positive
"may be used uninitialized" warning in evaluate_subexp_standard.  This seems
to be triggered by a specific CFG constructed via setjmp and gotos.

While the GCC bug is in the process of being fixed, there are released
compiler versions (in particular GCC 4.9) in the field that show this
problem.  In order to allow compiling GDB with one of those compilers,
this commit slightly reworks the CFG (in an equivalent way) of the
affected function, so that the GCC bug is no longer triggered.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Work around GCC bug 63748.
2014-11-10 15:11:44 +01:00
Pedro Alves 9de00a4aa0 gdb.base/sigstep.exp: xfail gdb/17511 on i?86 Linux
Running gdb.base/sigstep.exp with --target=i686-pc-linux-gnu on a
64-bit kernel naturally trips on PR gdb/17511 as well, given this is a
kernel bug.

I haven't really tested a real 32-bit kernel/machine, but given the
code in question in the kernel is shared between 32-bit and 64-bit,
I'm quite sure the bug triggers in those cases as well.

So, simply xfail i?86-*-linux* too.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-11-07  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17511
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (in_handler_map) <si+advance>: xfail
	i?86-*-linux*.
2014-11-07 15:20:47 +00:00
Pedro Alves b7a084bebe Revert old nexti prologue check and eliminate in_prologue
The in_prologue check in the nexti code is obsolete; this commit
removes that, and then removes the in_prologue function as nothing
else uses it.

Looking at the code in GDB that makes use in_prologue, all we find is
this one caller:

      if ((ecs->event_thread->control.step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_NONE)
	  || ((ecs->event_thread->control.step_range_end == 1)
	      && in_prologue (gdbarch, ecs->event_thread->prev_pc,
			      ecs->stop_func_start)))
	{
	  /* I presume that step_over_calls is only 0 when we're
	     supposed to be stepping at the assembly language level
	     ("stepi").  Just stop.  */
	  /* Also, maybe we just did a "nexti" inside a prolog, so we
	     thought it was a subroutine call but it was not.  Stop as
	     well.  FENN */
	  /* And this works the same backward as frontward.  MVS */
	  end_stepping_range (ecs);
	  return;
	}

This was added by:

 commit 100a02e1de
 ...
     From Fernando Nasser:
     * infrun.c (handle_inferior_event): Handle "nexti" inside function
     prologues.

The mailing list thread is here:

  https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2001-01/msg00047.html

Not much discussion there, and no test, but looking at the code around
what was patched in that revision, we see that the checks that detect
whether the program has just stepped into a subroutine didn't rely on
the unwinders at all back then.

From 'git show 100a02e1:gdb/infrun.c':

    if (stop_pc == ecs->stop_func_start         /* Quick test */
        || (in_prologue (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_start) &&
            ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
            !IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name))
        || IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name)
        || ecs->stop_func_name == 0)
      {
        /* It's a subroutine call.  */

        if ((step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_NONE)
            || ((step_range_end == 1)
                && in_prologue (prev_pc, ecs->stop_func_start)))
          {
            /* I presume that step_over_calls is only 0 when we're
               supposed to be stepping at the assembly language level
               ("stepi").  Just stop.  */
            /* Also, maybe we just did a "nexti" inside a prolog,
               so we thought it was a subroutine call but it was not.
               Stop as well.  FENN */
            stop_step = 1;
            print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
            stop_stepping (ecs);
            return;
          }

Stripping the IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE checks for simplicity, we had:

    if (stop_pc == ecs->stop_func_start         /* Quick test */
        || in_prologue (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_start)
        || ecs->stop_func_name == 0)
      {
        /* It's a subroutine call.  */

That is, detecting a subroutine call was based on prologue detection
back then.  So the in_prologue check in the current tree only made
sense back then as it was undoing a bad decision the in_prologue check
that used to exist above did.

Today, the check for a subroutine call relies on frame ids instead,
which are stable throughout the function.  So we can just remove the
in_prologue check for nexti, and the whole in_prologue function along
with it.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, and also by nexti-ing manually a prologue.

gdb/
2014-11-07  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (process_event_stop_test) <subroutine check>: Don't
	check if we did a "nexti" inside a prologue.
	* symtab.c (in_prologue): Delete function.
	* symtab.h (in_prologue): Delete declaration.
2014-11-07 13:53:01 +00:00
Doug Evans 67be31e5aa symtab.h (lookup_global_symbol): Improve function comment.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.h (lookup_global_symbol): Improve function comment.
2014-11-06 23:51:21 -08:00
Doug Evans 08724ab7ca Rename lookup_symbol_global to lookup_global_symbol.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_global_symbol): Renamed from lookup_symbol_global.
	All callers updated.
	* symtab.h (lookup_global_symbol): Update decl.
	(lookup_static_symbol): Move decl to better location.
2014-11-06 23:48:18 -08:00
Doug Evans d9060ba60d symtab.c (basic_lookup_symbol_nonlocal): Add comment.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (basic_lookup_symbol_nonlocal): Add comment.
2014-11-06 23:34:28 -08:00
Doug Evans 74016e1224 Rename some "aux" functions.
"aux" doesn't contribute anything to the name, and it makes the
reader wonder what it's supposed to mean.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_local_symbol): Renamed from lookup_symbol_aux_local.
	All callers updated.
	(lookup_symbol_in_all_objfiles): Renamed from
	lookup_symbol_aux_symtabs.  All callers updated.
	(lookup_symbol_via_quick_fns): Renamed from lookup_symbol_aux_quick.
	All callers updated.
	(lookup_symbol_in_objfile_symtabs): Renamed from
	lookup_symbol_aux_objfile.  All callers updated.
2014-11-06 23:29:49 -08:00
Doug Evans d1a2d36d58 lookup_symbol_in_block: Renamed from lookup_symbol_aux_block.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_block): Renamed from
	lookup_symbol_aux_block.  All callers updated.
2014-11-06 23:04:15 -08:00
Doug Evans 24d864bb95 Rename lookup_symbol_static to lookup_symbol_in_static_block,
and lookup_static_symbol_aux to lookup_static_symbol.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_static_symbol): Renamed from
	lookup_static_symbol_aux.  All callers updated.
	(lookup_symbol_in_static_block): Renamed from lookup_symbol_static.
	All callers updated.
2014-11-06 22:56:46 -08:00
Doug Evans 358d6ab39c New macro ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS_WITH_NAME.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* block.h (ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS_WITH_NAME): New macro.
	* block.c (block_lookup_symbol): Use it.
	* cp-support.c (make_symbol_overload_list_block): Use it.
	* symtab.c (iterate_over_symbols): Use it.
2014-11-06 22:50:12 -08:00
Doug Evans 16b2eaa164 Move lookup_block_symbol to block.c, rename to block_lookup_symbol.
There is another function, lookup_symbol_aux_block, and
the names lookup_block_symbol and lookup_symbol_aux_block don't
convey any real difference between them.

The difference is that lookup_block_symbol lives in the lower level
block API, and lookup_symbol_aux_block lives in the higher level symtab API.
This patch makes this distinction clear.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_block_symbol): Moved to ...
	* block.c (block_lookup_symbol):  ... here and renamed.
	All callers updated.
	* block.h (block_lookup_symbol): Declare.
	* symtab.h (lookup_block_symbol): Delete.
2014-11-06 22:32:25 -08:00
Doug Evans 2dd2cd1c92 Use ALL_PRIMARY_SYMTABS instead of ALL_SYMTABS in some places.
Non-primary symtabs share the block vector with their primary symtabs.
In these cases there's no need to use ALL_SYMTABS.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* ada-lang.c (ada_make_symbol_completion_list): Use
	ALL_PRIMARY_SYMTABS instead of ALL_SYMTABS.
	* symtab.c (lookup_objfile_from_block): Ditto.
2014-11-06 17:27:55 -08:00
Doug Evans d4c589159d Forgotten ChangeLog entry for previous commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbtypes.h (TYPE_CODE_CLASS): Delete.  All uses changed to use
	TYPE_CODE_STRUCT.
2014-11-06 17:24:12 -08:00
Doug Evans 4753d33b40 Delete TYPE_CODE_CLASS, it's just an alias of TYPE_CODE_STRUCT.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbtypes.h (TYPE_CODE_CLASS): Delete.  All uses changed to use
	TYPE_CODE_STRUCT.
2014-11-06 17:19:06 -08:00
Doug Evans 9c1877ead0 solib_global_lookup: Fetch arch from objfile, not target_gdbarch.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* objfiles.c (get_objfile_arch): Constify.
	* objfiles.h (get_objfile_arch): Update prototype.
	* solib.c (solib_global_lookup): Fetch arch from objfile,
	not target_gdbarch.
2014-11-06 17:10:51 -08:00
Sandra Loosemore 426a40796a Update Nios II prologue analysis to remove detection of long-obsolete
code sequences.

2014-11-06  Sandra Loosemore  <sandra@codesourcery.com>

	gdb/
	* nios2-tdep.c (wild_insn): Delete.
	(profiler_insn, irqentry_insn): Delete.
	(nios2_match_sequence): Delete.
	(nios2_analyze_prologue): Update comments.  Remove matching
	of obsolete profiler_insn and irqentry_insn sequences.
2014-11-06 12:56:27 -08:00
Alan Modra 1ae1b8cc65 Cast result of obstack_next_free
obstack_next_free is supposed to return a void*, rather than a char*
as it does currently.  Avoid warning on void* arithmetic when
obstack_next_free gets it proper return type.

	* cp-valprint.c (cp_print_value_fields): Cast obstack_next_free
	to char* before doing pointer arithmetic.
2014-11-05 16:38:10 +10:30
Alan Modra ee11262d06 Use obstack_blank_fast to shrink obstacks
obstack_blank isn't the correct macro to call for shrinking obstacks
since it does size checking.

	* charset.c (convert_between_encodings): Shrink obstack using
	obstack_blank_fast.
	* minsyms.c (install_minimal_symbols): Likewise.
2014-11-05 16:38:02 +10:30
Simon Marchi c87e6d0015 tui: Fix newterm call for older ncurses
Older versions of ncurses' newterm can't take NULL for their ofp and ifp
parameters. Newer versions can, and they fall back on stdout/stdin if
that is the case.

This patch explicitly passes stdout/stdin to the call to newterm to
avoid segfaulting with older ncurses.

gdb/Changelog:

2014-11-04  Simon Marchi  <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>

	* tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Pass stdout and stdin to newterm.
2014-11-04 14:15:53 -05:00
Pedro Alves 441ef17f09 garbage collect gdb/breakpoint.c:breakpoint_thread_match
Used to be necessary for the thread-hop code, but that's gone now.
Nothing uses this anymore.

gdb/
2014-11-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* breakpoint.c (breakpoint_thread_match): Delete function.
	* breakpoint.h (breakpoint_thread_match): Delete declaration.
2014-11-04 18:42:28 +00:00
Siva Chandra e0f52461c2 Fix evaluation of method calls under EVAL_SKIP.
When evaluating method calls under EVAL_SKIP, the "object" and the
arguments to the method should also be evaluated under EVAL_SKIP,
instead of skipping to evaluate them as was being done previously.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR c++/17494
	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Evaluate the "object" and
	the method args also under EVAL_SKIP when evaluating method
	calls under EVAL_SKIP.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	PR c++/17494
	* gdb.cp/pr17494.cc: New file.
	* gdb.cp/pr17494.exp: New file.
2014-11-03 18:01:39 -08:00
Yao Qi a0b4d89011 Add missing changelog entries
Some changelog entries are missing in previous commits.  Add them.
2014-11-03 20:12:18 +08:00
Doug Evans e82149ff2a mdebugread.c (parse_procedure): Delete unnecessary forward decl.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* mdebugread.c (parse_procedure): Delete unnecessary forward decl.
2014-11-02 21:34:59 -08:00
Doug Evans d7ee84f117 xcoffread.c (process_linenos): Delete unnecessary code.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* xcoffread.c (process_linenos): Delete unnecessary zeroing of
	main_subfile before returning.
2014-11-02 20:17:12 -08:00
Victor Kamensky ca45ab26f5 read_pieced_value do big endian processing only in case of valid gdb_regnum
During armv7b testing gdb.base/store.exp test was failling with
'GDB internal error' with the following message:

Temporary breakpoint 1, wack_double (u=
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:177: internal-error: register_size: Assertion `regnum >= 0 && regnum < (gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch) + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (gdbarch))' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.

It turns out that compiler generated DWARF with non-existent
register numbers. The compiler issue is present in both little endian
(armv7) and big endian (armv7b) (it is separate issue). Here is
example for one of formal parameters of wack_double function:

 <2><792>: Abbrev Number: 10 (DW_TAG_formal_parameter)
    <793>   DW_AT_name        : u
    <795>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
    <796>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 115
    <797>   DW_AT_type        : <0x57c>
    <79b>   DW_AT_location    : 6 byte block: 6d 93 4 6c 93 4   (DW_OP_reg29 (r29); DW_OP_piece: 4; DW_OP_reg28 (r28); DW_OP_piece: 4)

In both big and little endian cases gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum
returns -1 which is stored into gdb_regnum. But it causes severe
problem only in big endian case because in read_pieced_value and
write_pieced_value functions BFD_ENDIAN_BIG related processing
happen regardless of gdb_regnum value, for example register_size
function is called and in case of gdb_regnum=-1, it cause
'GDB internal error' and crash.

Solution is to move BFD_ENDIAN_BIG related processing under
(gdb_regnum != -1) branch of processing.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2014-11-02  Victor Kamensky  <victor.kamensky@linaro.org>

	* dwarf2loc.c (read_pieced_value): Do big endian
	processing only if gdb_regnum is not -1.
	(write_pieced_value): Ditto.
2014-11-02 13:30:14 -08:00
Victor Kamensky dcd4a3a4e7 ARM: arm_breakpoint should be little endian form in case for arm BE8
tdep->arm_breakpoint, tdep->thumb_breakpoint, tdep->thumb2_breakpoint
should be set le_ variants in case of arm BE8 code. Those instruciton
sequences are writen to target with simple write_memory, without
regarding gdbarch_byte_order_for_code. But in BE8 case even data
memory is in big endian form, instructions are still in little endian
form.

Because of this issue there are many issues while running gdb test
case in armv7b mode. For example gdb.arch/arm-disp-step.exp test fails
because it gets SIGILL when displaced instrucion sequence reaches
break instruction, which is in wrong byte order.

Solution is to set tdep->xxx_breakpoint sequences in BE8 case (i.e
when gdbarch_byte_order_for_code is BFD_ENDIAN_BIG.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2014-11-02  Victor Kamensky  <victor.kamensky@linaro.org>

	* arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_linux_init_abi): Use
	info.byte_order_for_code to choose endianity of breakpoint
	instructions snippets.
2014-11-02 13:30:02 -08:00
Victor Kamensky 2959fed98c ARM: extract_arm_insn function need to read instrs correctly in be8 case
extract_arm_insn function needs to read instructions in
gdbarch_byte_order_for_code byte order, because in case armv7b,
even data is big endian, instructions are still little endian.
Currently function uses gdbarch_byte_order which would be
big endian in armv7b case.

Because of this issue pretty much all gdb.reverse/ tests are
failing with 'Process record does not support instruction' message.

Fix is to change gdbarch_byte_order to gdbarch_byte_order_for_code,
when passed to extract_unsigned_integer that reads instruction.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2014-11-02  Victor Kamensky  <victor.kamensky@linaro.org>

	* arm-tdep.c (extract_arm_insn): Use
	gdbarch_byte_order_for_code to read arm instruction.
2014-11-02 13:29:45 -08:00
Yao Qi 6ce8c98020 Match the working directory on remote host
The test in gdb.python/python.exp tests "extended-prompt" and expects
working directory is printed.  However, working directory on remote
host doesn't have "gdb/testsuite", so the test fails on remote host
like:

set extended-prompt \w ^M
^M
/home/yao FAIL: gdb.python/python.exp: set extended prompt working directory (timeout)

This patch is to get the working directory first, and use it to match
the output of "set extended-prompt \\w ".  It works for remote host
and non remote host.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-11-02  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.python/python.exp: Get working directory and match the
	output of "set extended-prompt \\w " with it.
2014-11-02 21:08:06 +08:00
Doug Evans 4f072d17b2 objfiles.h: Remove some unused macros.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* objfiles.h (ALL_PSPACE_OBJFILES_SAFE): Delete, unused.
	(ALL_PSPACE_SYMTABS, ALL_PSPACE_PRIMARY_SYMTABS): Ditto.
2014-10-31 21:46:08 -07:00
Doug Evans 8301c89eb5 valops.c: Fix some whitespace.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* valops.c (value_cast_pointers): Fix whitespace.
	(typecmp, search_struct_method, value_struct_elt, find_oload_champ):
	Ditto.
2014-10-31 20:20:48 -07:00
Doug Evans 02be9a7100 Add ability to add attributes to gdb.Objfile and gdb.Progspace objects.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention ability add attributes to gdb.Objfile and
	gdb.Progspace objects.
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfile_object): New member dict.
	(objfpy_dealloc): Py_XDECREF dict.
	(objfpy_initialize): Initialize dict.
	(objfile_getset): Add __dict__.
	(objfile_object_type): Set tp_dictoffset member.
	* python/py-progspace.c (progspace_object): New member dict.
	(pspy_dealloc): Py_XDECREF dict.
	(pspy_initialize): Initialize dict.
	(pspace_getset): Add __dict__.
	(pspace_object_type): Set tp_dictoffset member.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Progspaces In Python): Document ability to add
	random attributes to gdb.Progspace objects.
	(Objfiles In Python): Document ability to add random attributes to
	gdb.objfile objects.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-objfile.exp: Add tests for setting random attributes
	in objfiles.
	* gdb.python/py-progspace.exp: Add tests for setting random attributes
	in progspaces.
2014-10-30 17:05:17 -07:00
Luis Machado 3bdff46b67 Skip tests that use cd for remote hosts
Several GDB tests change directory before compiling the test program
in order to test source file names that include directories.  This
doesn't work on a remote host because default_target_compile in
DejaGnu's target.exp copies each source file with
"[remote_download host $x]" which uses "[file tail $file] to strip
off the directory of each file.  If the source directory is remote
mounted on the host, this also leaves copied files in the source
directory.

A similar skip is already used in gdb.test/fullname.exp:

    # We rely on being able to copy things around.

    if { [is_remote host] } {
	untested "setting breakpoints by full path"
	return -1
    }

This patch causes three GDB tests that use "cd" to be skipped for a
remote host.  For gdb.base/fullpath-expand.exp this eliminates two
failures and prevents the test from leaving files fullpath-expand.c
and fullpath-expand-func.c in gdb/testsuite.  For
gdb.base/realname-expand.exp it eliminates two failures.  For
gdb.linespec/macro-relative.exp it prevents file macro-relative.c
from being left in gdb/testsuite/gdb.linespec/base/two.

gdb/testsuite/

	* gdb.base/fullpath-expand.exp: Skip for a remote host.
	* gdb.base/realname-expand.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.linespec/macro-relative.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-30 09:48:10 -02:00
Yao Qi 6427bef6d1 Don't replace '\' with '\\' in before_prompt_hook
In gdb/command/prompt.py:before_prompt_hook, the '\' in the new prompt
is replaced with '\\', shown as below,

>     def before_prompt_hook(self, current):
>         if self.value is not '':
>             newprompt = gdb.prompt.substitute_prompt(self.value)
>             return newprompt.replace('\\', '\\\\')
>         else:
>             return None

I don't see any explanations on this in comments nor email.  As doc
said, "set extended-prompt \w" substitute the current working
directory, but it prints something different from what pwd or
os.getcwdu() prints on mingw32 host.

(gdb) python print os.getcwdu()^M
\\build2-lucid-cs\yqi\yqi\arm-none-eabi

(gdb) pwd^M
Working directory \\build2-lucid-cs\yqi\yqi\arm-none-eabi

(gdb) set extended-prompt \w
\\\\build2-lucid-cs\\yqi\\yqi\\arm-none-eabi

This makes me think whether the substitution in before_prompt_hook is
necessary or not.  This patch is to remove this substitution.

Run gdb.python on x86_64-linux and arm-none-eabi on mingw32 host.  No
regressions.

gdb:

2014-10-30  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* python/lib/gdb/command/prompt.py (before_prompt_hook): Don't
	replace '\\' with '\\\\'.
2014-10-30 09:42:36 +08:00
Joel Brobecker f60325bea5 Document the GDB 7.8.1 release in gdb/ChangeLog
gdb/ChangeLog:

	GDB 7.8.1 released.
2014-10-29 12:57:04 -07:00
Pedro Alves ab917dfb5a This PR shows that GDB can easily trigger an assertion here, in
infrun.c:

 5392              /* Did we find the stepping thread?  */
 5393              if (tp->control.step_range_end)
 5394                {
 5395                  /* Yep.  There should only one though.  */
 5396                  gdb_assert (stepping_thread == NULL);
 5397
 5398                  /* The event thread is handled at the top, before we
 5399                     enter this loop.  */
 5400                  gdb_assert (tp != ecs->event_thread);
 5401
 5402                  /* If some thread other than the event thread is
 5403                     stepping, then scheduler locking can't be in effect,
 5404                     otherwise we wouldn't have resumed the current event
 5405                     thread in the first place.  */
 5406                  gdb_assert (!schedlock_applies (currently_stepping (tp)));
 5407
 5408                  stepping_thread = tp;
 5409                }

Like:

 gdb/infrun.c:5406: internal-error: switch_back_to_stepped_thread: Assertion `!schedlock_applies (1)' failed.

The way the assertion is written is assuming that with schedlock=step
we'll always leave threads other than the one with the stepping range
locked, while that's not true with the "next" command.  With schedlock
"step", other threads still run unlocked when "next" detects a
function call and steps over it.  Whether that makes sense or not,
still, it's documented that way in the manual.  If another thread hits
an event that doesn't cause a stop while the nexting thread steps over
a function call, we'll get here and fail the assertion.

The fix is just to adjust the assertion.  Even though we found the
stepping thread, we'll still step-over the breakpoint that just
triggered correctly.

Surprisingly, gdb.threads/schedlock.exp doesn't have any test that
steps over a function call.  This commits fixes that.  This ensures
that "next" doesn't switch focus to another thread, and checks whether
other threads run locked or not, depending on scheduler locking mode
and command.  There's a lot of duplication in that file that this ends
cleaning up.  There's more that could be cleaned up, but that would
end up an unrelated change, best done separately.

This new coverage in schedlock.exp happens to trigger the internal
error in question, like so:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (1) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (3) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (5) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (7) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (9) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next does not change thread (switched to thread 0)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: current thread advanced - unlocked (wrong amount)

That's because we have more than one thread running the same loop, and
while one thread is stepping over a function call, the other thread
hits the step-resume breakpoint of the first, which needs to be
stepped over, and we end up in switch_back_to_stepped_thread exactly
in the problem case.

I think a simpler and more directed test is also useful, to not rely
on internal breakpoint magics.  So this commit also adds a test that
has a thread trip on a conditional breakpoint that doesn't cause a
user-visible stop while another thread is stepping over a call.  That
currently fails like this:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: schedlock=step: next over function call (GDB internal error)

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* infrun.c (switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use currently_stepping
	instead of assuming a thread with a stepping range is always
	stepping.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.c (some_function): New function.
	(call_function): New global.
	(MAYBE_CALL_SOME_FUNCTION): New macro.
	(thread_function): Call it.
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp (get_args): Add description parameter,
	and use it instead of a global counter.  Adjust all callers.
	(get_current_thread): Use "find current thread" for test message
	here rather than having all callers pass down the same string.
	(goto_loop): New procedure, factored out from ...
	(my_continue): ... this.
	(step_ten_loops): Change parameter from test message to command to
	use.  Adjust.
	(list_count): Delete global.
	(check_result): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top
	level code.
	(continue tests): Wrap in with_test_prefix.
	(test_step): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top level
	code.
	(top level): Test "step" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes.  Test "next" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes, and in combination with stepping over a function call or
	not.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 18:25:27 +00:00
Pedro Alves 354204061c PR 17408 - assertion failure in switch_back_to_stepped_thread
This PR shows that GDB can easily trigger an assertion here, in
infrun.c:

 5392              /* Did we find the stepping thread?  */
 5393              if (tp->control.step_range_end)
 5394                {
 5395                  /* Yep.  There should only one though.  */
 5396                  gdb_assert (stepping_thread == NULL);
 5397
 5398                  /* The event thread is handled at the top, before we
 5399                     enter this loop.  */
 5400                  gdb_assert (tp != ecs->event_thread);
 5401
 5402                  /* If some thread other than the event thread is
 5403                     stepping, then scheduler locking can't be in effect,
 5404                     otherwise we wouldn't have resumed the current event
 5405                     thread in the first place.  */
 5406                  gdb_assert (!schedlock_applies (currently_stepping (tp)));
 5407
 5408                  stepping_thread = tp;
 5409                }

Like:

 gdb/infrun.c:5406: internal-error: switch_back_to_stepped_thread: Assertion `!schedlock_applies (1)' failed.

The way the assertion is written is assuming that with schedlock=step
we'll always leave threads other than the one with the stepping range
locked, while that's not true with the "next" command.  With schedlock
"step", other threads still run unlocked when "next" detects a
function call and steps over it.  Whether that makes sense or not,
still, it's documented that way in the manual.  If another thread hits
an event that doesn't cause a stop while the nexting thread steps over
a function call, we'll get here and fail the assertion.

The fix is just to adjust the assertion.  Even though we found the
stepping thread, we'll still step-over the breakpoint that just
triggered correctly.

Surprisingly, gdb.threads/schedlock.exp doesn't have any test that
steps over a function call.  This commits fixes that.  This ensures
that "next" doesn't switch focus to another thread, and checks whether
other threads run locked or not, depending on scheduler locking mode
and command.  There's a lot of duplication in that file that this ends
cleaning up.  There's more that could be cleaned up, but that would
end up an unrelated change, best done separately.

This new coverage in schedlock.exp happens to trigger the internal
error in question, like so:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (1) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (3) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (5) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (7) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (9) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next does not change thread (switched to thread 0)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: current thread advanced - unlocked (wrong amount)

That's because we have more than one thread running the same loop, and
while one thread is stepping over a function call, the other thread
hits the step-resume breakpoint of the first, which needs to be
stepped over, and we end up in switch_back_to_stepped_thread exactly
in the problem case.

I think a simpler and more directed test is also useful, to not rely
on internal breakpoint magics.  So this commit also adds a test that
has a thread trip on a conditional breakpoint that doesn't cause a
user-visible stop while another thread is stepping over a call.  That
currently fails like this:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: schedlock=step: next over function call (GDB internal error)

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* infrun.c (switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use currently_stepping
	instead of assuming a thread with a stepping range is always
	stepping.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.c (some_function): New function.
	(call_function): New global.
	(MAYBE_CALL_SOME_FUNCTION): New macro.
	(thread_function): Call it.
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp (get_args): Add description parameter,
	and use it instead of a global counter.  Adjust all callers.
	(get_current_thread): Use "find current thread" for test message
	here rather than having all callers pass down the same string.
	(goto_loop): New procedure, factored out from ...
	(my_continue): ... this.
	(step_ten_loops): Change parameter from test message to command to
	use.  Adjust.
	(list_count): Delete global.
	(check_result): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top
	level code.
	(continue tests): Wrap in with_test_prefix.
	(test_step): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top level
	code.
	(top level): Test "step" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes.  Test "next" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes, and in combination with stepping over a function call or
	not.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 18:15:39 +00:00
Pedro Alves d3d4baedb6 PR python/17372 - Python hangs when displaying help()
This is more of a readline/terminal issue than a Python one.

PR17372 is a regression in 7.8 caused by the fix for PR17072:

 commit 0017922d02
 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
 Date:   Mon Jul 14 19:55:32 2014 +0100

    Background execution + pagination aborts readline/gdb

    gdb_readline_wrapper_line removes the handler after a line is
    processed.  Usually, we'll end up re-displaying the prompt, and that
    reinstalls the handler.  But if the output is coming out of handling
    a stop event, we don't re-display the prompt, and nothing restores the
    handler.  So the next input wakes up the event loop and calls into
    readline, which aborts.
...
    gdb/
    2014-07-14  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

        PR gdb/17072
        * top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_line): Tweak comment.
        (gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup): If readline is enabled, reinstall
        the input handler callback.

The problem is that installing the input handler callback also preps
the terminal, putting it in raw mode and with echo disabled, which is
bad if we're going to call a command that assumes cooked/canonical
mode, and echo enabled, like in the case of the PR, Python's
interactive shell.  Another example I came up with that doesn't depend
on Python is starting a subshell with "(gdb) shell /bin/sh" from a
multi-line command.  Tests covering both these examples are added.

The fix is to revert the original fix for PR gdb/17072, and instead
restore the callback handler after processing an asynchronous target
event.

Furthermore, calling rl_callback_handler_install when we already have
some input in readline's line buffer discards that input, which is
obviously a bad thing to do while the user is typing.  No specific
test is added for that, because I first tried calling it even if the
callback handler was still installed and that resulted in hundreds of
failures in the testsuite.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR python/17372
	* event-top.c (change_line_handler): Call
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove.
	(callback_handler_installed): New global.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove, gdb_rl_callback_handler_install)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_reinstall): New functions.
	(display_gdb_prompt): Call gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove and
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_install instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove and rl_callback_handler_install.
	(gdb_disable_readline): Call gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove
	instead of rl_callback_handler_remove.
	* event-top.h (gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_install)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_reinstall): New declarations.
	* infrun.c (reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup): New
	cleanup function.
	(fetch_inferior_event): Install it.
	* top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_line) Call
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove.
	(gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup): Don't call
	rl_callback_handler_install.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR python/17372
	* gdb.python/python.exp: Test a multi-line command that spawns
	interactive Python.
	* gdb.base/multi-line-starts-subshell.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 17:29:26 +00:00
Pedro Alves 6e5d7f393e Fix uninitialized value access when very first GDB command entered is <RET>
While running GDB under Valgrind, I noticed that if the very first
command entered is just <RET>, GDB accesses an uninitialized value:

 $ valgrind ./gdb -q -nx
 ==26790== Memcheck, a memory error detector
 ==26790== Copyright (C) 2002-2013, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
 ==26790== Using Valgrind-3.9.0 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
 ==26790== Command: ./gdb -q -nx
 ==26790==

 (gdb)
 ==26790== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
 ==26790==    at 0x619DFC: command_line_handler (event-top.c:588)
 ==26790==    by 0x7813D5: rl_callback_read_char (callback.c:220)
 ==26790==    by 0x6194B4: rl_callback_read_char_wrapper (event-top.c:166)
 ==26790==    by 0x61988A: stdin_event_handler (event-top.c:372)
 ==26790==    by 0x61847D: handle_file_event (event-loop.c:762)
 ==26790==    by 0x617964: process_event (event-loop.c:339)
 ==26790==    by 0x617A2B: gdb_do_one_event (event-loop.c:403)
 ==26790==    by 0x617A7B: start_event_loop (event-loop.c:428)
 ==26790==    by 0x6194E6: cli_command_loop (event-top.c:181)
 ==26790==    by 0x60F86B: current_interp_command_loop (interps.c:317)
 ==26790==    by 0x610A34: captured_command_loop (main.c:321)
 ==26790==    by 0x60C728: catch_errors (exceptions.c:237)
 ==26790==
 (gdb)

It's this check here:

  /* If we just got an empty line, and that is supposed to repeat the
     previous command, return the value in the global buffer.  */
  if (repeat && p == linebuffer && *p != '\\')
    {

The problem is that linebuffer's contents were never initialized at
this point.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (command_line_handler): Clear the first byte of
	linebuffer, when it is first allocated.
2014-10-29 14:54:17 +00:00
Pedro Alves 1e1e619b6b PR tui/16138 is about failure to initialize curses resulting in GDB
exiting instead of throwing an error.  E.g.:

 $ TERM=foo gdb
 (gdb) layout asm
 Error opening terminal: foo.
 $

The problem is that we're calling initscr to initialize the screen.
As mentioned in
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/initscr.html:

 If errors occur, initscr() writes an appropriate error message to
 standard error and exits.
                    ^^^^^

Instead, we should use newterm:

 "A program that needs an indication of error conditions, so it can
 continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal cannot support
 a screen-oriented program, would also use this function."

After the patch:

 $ TERM=foo gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: error opening terminal [TERM=foo]
 (gdb)

And then PR tui/17519 is about GDB not validating whether the terminal
has the necessary capabilities when enabling the TUI.  If one tries to
enable the TUI with TERM=dumb (and e.g., from a shell within emacs),
GDB ends up with a clear screen, the cursor is placed at the
bottom/right corner of the screen, there's no prompt, typing shows no
echo, and there's no indication of what's going on.  c-x,a gets you
out of the TUI, but it's completely non-obvious.

After the patch, we get:

 $ TERM=dumb gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

While at it, I've moved all the tui_allowed_p validation to
tui_enable, and expanded the error messages.  Previously we'd get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"TUI mode not allowed\n"
 ^error,msg="TUI mode not allowed"

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 TUI mode not allowed

While now we get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'\n"
 ^error,msg="Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'"
 (gdb)

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR tui/16138
	PR tui/17519
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_is_toplevel): Delete global.
	(tui_allowed_p): Delete function.
	* tui/tui.c: Include "interps.h".
	(tui_enable): Don't use tui_allowed_p.  Error out here with
	detailed error messages if the TUI is the top level interpreter,
	or if output is not a terminal.  Use newterm instead of initscr,
	and error out if initializing the terminal fails.  Also error out if
	the terminal doesn't support cursor addressing.
	* tui/tui.h (tui_allowed_p): Delete declaration.
2014-10-29 14:49:05 +00:00
Pedro Alves 551cb6a52d TUI: don't let exceptions escape while handling readline key bindings
I noticed that with:

 $ TERM=dumb ./gdb -q -nx
 <c-x,a>
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

The next key the user types is silently eaten.

The problem is that we're throwing an exception while in a readline
callback that isn't prepared for that:

(top-gdb) bt
#0  tui_enable () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/tui/tui.c:388
#1  0x000000000051f47b in tui_rl_switch_mode (notused1=1, notused2=1) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/tui/tui.c:101
#2  0x0000000000768d6f in _rl_dispatch_subseq (key=1, map=0xd069c0 <emacs_ctlx_keymap>, got_subseq=0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/readline.c:774
#3  0x0000000000768acb in _rl_dispatch_callback (cxt=0x1ce6190) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/readline.c:686
#4  0x000000000078120b in rl_callback_read_char () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/callback.c:170
#5  0x0000000000619445 in rl_callback_read_char_wrapper (client_data=0x0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-top.c:166
#6  0x000000000061981b in stdin_event_handler (error=0, client_data=0x0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-top.c:372
#7  0x000000000061840e in handle_file_event (data=...) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:762
#8  0x00000000006178f5 in process_event () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:339
#9  0x00000000006179bc in gdb_do_one_event () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:403
#10 0x0000000000617a0c in start_event_loop () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:428

Here, in _rl_dispatch_subseq:

769
770               rl_executing_keymap = map;
771
772               rl_dispatching = 1;
773               RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_DISPATCHING);
774               (*map[key].function)(rl_numeric_arg * rl_arg_sign, key);
775               RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_DISPATCHING);
776               rl_dispatching = 0;
777
778               /* If we have input pending, then the last command was a prefix
779                  command.  Don't change the state of rl_last_func.  Otherwise,

GDB is called from line 774, but longjmp'ing at that point leaves
rl_dispatching and RL_STATE_DISPATCHING set.

Fix this by wrapping tui_rl_switch_mode in a TRY_CATCH.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* tui/tui.c (tui_rl_switch_mode): Wrap tui_enable/tui_disable in
	TRY_CATCH.
2014-10-29 14:36:21 +00:00
Pedro Alves 84eda397bc PR tui/16138, PR tui/17519, and misc failures to initialize the terminal
PR tui/16138 is about failure to initialize curses resulting in GDB
exiting instead of throwing an error.  E.g.:

 $ TERM=foo gdb
 (gdb) layout asm
 Error opening terminal: foo.
 $

The problem is that we're calling initscr to initialize the screen.
As mentioned in
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/initscr.html:

 If errors occur, initscr() writes an appropriate error message to
 standard error and exits.
                    ^^^^^

Instead, we should use newterm:

 "A program that needs an indication of error conditions, so it can
 continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal cannot support
 a screen-oriented program, would also use this function."

After the patch:

 $ TERM=foo gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: error opening terminal [TERM=foo]
 (gdb)

And then PR tui/17519 is about GDB not validating whether the terminal
has the necessary capabilities when enabling the TUI.  If one tries to
enable the TUI with TERM=dumb (and e.g., from a shell within emacs),
GDB ends up with a clear screen, the cursor is placed at the
bottom/right corner of the screen, there's no prompt, typing shows no
echo, and there's no indication of what's going on.  c-x,a gets you
out of the TUI, but it's completely non-obvious.

After the patch, we get:

 $ TERM=dumb gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

While at it, I've moved all the tui_allowed_p validation to
tui_enable, and expanded the error messages.  Previously we'd get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"TUI mode not allowed\n"
 ^error,msg="TUI mode not allowed"

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 TUI mode not allowed

While now we get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'\n"
 ^error,msg="Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'"
 (gdb)

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR tui/16138
	PR tui/17519
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_is_toplevel): Delete global.
	(tui_allowed_p): Delete function.
	* tui/tui.c: Include "interps.h".
	(tui_enable): Don't use tui_allowed_p.  Error out here with
	detailed error messages if the TUI is the top level interpreter,
	or if output is not a terminal.  Use newterm instead of initscr,
	and error out if initializing the terminal fails.  Also error out if
	the terminal doesn't support cursor addressing.
	* tui/tui.h (tui_allowed_p): Delete declaration.
2014-10-29 14:23:57 +00:00
Yao Qi 563e8d8516 Prepare directory in case test_system fails
In gdb.base/fileio.c, some functions may depend on others.  For
example, test_rename renames a file to one directory which is created
in test_system.  That is means, if test_system fails, test_rename
fails too, which is not a good practise, IMO.

In test_system, system ("mkdir -p XX") is used to create directories
needed for test_rename.  In this patch, we use dejagnu remote_exec
proc to create these directories on host.

In my gdb testing, mingw32 host and arm-none-eabi target, system
("mkdir -p XX") doesn't work properly (this issue can be addressed
separately), and this patch fixes the following fails.

FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Renaming a directory to a non-empty directory returns ENOTEMPTY or EEXIST
FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Unlink a file
FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Unlinking a file in a directory w/o write access returns EACCES

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/fileio.exp: Make directories on host.
2014-10-29 21:43:05 +08:00
Yao Qi 0ea4d52e43 Close the file in fileio.exp test
I see the following fail in fileio.exp on mingw32 host gdb,

rename 1: ret = -1, errno = 13^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, stop () at fileio.c:76^M
76      static void stop () {}^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Rename a file

the test fails to rename a file which is not expected.  The previous
test test_write doesn't close the file, so the rename fails as a
result on Windows.  This patch fixes it by closing file in test_write,
and the fail goes away.

rename 1: ret = 0, errno = 0 OK^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, stop () at fileio.c:76^M
76      static void stop () {}^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Rename a file

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/fileio.c (test_write): Close the file.
2014-10-29 21:43:05 +08:00
Joel Brobecker 6041179a74 ARM: stricter __stack_chk_guard check during prologue analysis
We are trying to insert a breakpoint on line 4 for the following
Ada code.

  3 procedure STR is
  4    XX : String (1 .. Blocks.Sz) := (others => 'X'); -- STOP
  5    K : Integer;
  6 begin
  7    K := 13;

The code generated on ARM (-march=armv7-m) starts like this:

    (gdb) disass str'address
    Dump of assembler code for function _ada_str:
       --# Line str.adb:3
       0x08000014 <+0>:     push    {r4, r7, lr}
       0x08000016 <+2>:     sub     sp, #28
       0x08000018 <+4>:     add     r7, sp, #0
       0x0800001a <+6>:     mov     r3, sp
       0x0800001c <+8>:     mov     r4, r3
       --# Line str.adb:4
       0x0800001e <+10>:    ldr     r3, [pc, #84]   ; (0x8000074 <_ada_str+96>)
       0x08000020 <+12>:    ldr     r3, [r3, #0]
       0x08000022 <+14>:    str     r3, [r7, #20]
       0x08000024 <+16>:    ldr     r3, [r7, #20]
       [...]

When computing the address related to str.adb:4, GDB correctly
resolves it to 0x0800001e first, but then considers the next
3 instructions as being part of the prologue because it thinks
they are part of stack-protector code. As a result, instead
of inserting the breakpoint at line 4, it skips those instruction
and consequently the rest of the instructions until the start
of the next line, which his line 7.

The stack-protector code is expected to start like this...

        ldr     Rn, .Label
        ....
        .Lable:
        .word   __stack_chk_guard

... but the implementation actually accepts a sequence where
the ldr location points to an address for which there is no symbol.
It only aborts if the address points to a symbol which is not
__stack_chk_guard.

Since the __stack_chk_guard symbol is always expected to exist
when used (it lives in .dynsym), this patch fixes the issue by
requiring that the ldr gets the address of the __stack_chk_guard
symbol. If the address could not be resolved, then it rejects
the sequence as being stack-protector code.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * arm-tdep.c (arm_skip_stack_protector): Return early if
        address loaded by first "ldr" instruction does not have
        a corresponding minimal symbol.  Update comment.

Tested on arm-eabi using AdaCore's testsuite.
Tested on arm-linux-gnueabi by Yao as well.
2014-10-29 06:10:24 -07:00
Yao Qi 6ae274b7dc Fix skipping stack protector on arm
This patch fixes the bug in my patch skipping stack protector
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-12/msg00110.html

In my skipping stack protector patch, I misunderstood the constant vs.
immediate on instruction encodings, and treated immediate as constant
by mistake.  The instruction 'ldr Rd, [PC, #immed]' loads the
address of __stack_chk_guard to Rd, and #immed is an offset from PC.
We should get the __stack_chk_guard from *(pc + #immed).

As a result of this mistake, arm_analyze_load_stack_chk_guard returns
the wrong address of __stack_chk_guard, and the symbol
__stack_chk_guard can't be found.  However, we continue to match the
following instructions when symbol isn't found, so the code still
works.  In other words, the code just matches the instruction pattern
without checking __stack_chk_guard symbol correctly.

Joel's patch <https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00605.html>
makes the heuristics stricter that we stop matching instructions if
symbol __stack_chk_guard isn't found.  Then the bug is exposed.  This
patch is to correct the load address computation for ldr instruction,
and it fixes some fails in gdb.mi/gdb792.exp on armv4t both arm and
thumb mode.

Regression tested on arm-linux-gnueabi target with
{armv4t, armv7-a} x {marm, mthumb} x {-fstack-protector,-fno-stack-protector}

gdb:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* arm-tdep.c (arm_analyze_load_stack_chk_guard): Compute the
	loaded address correctly of ldr instruction.
2014-10-29 13:39:16 +08:00
Pedro Alves 7f5ef60532 PR gdb/12623: non-stop crashes inferior, PC adjustment and 1-byte insns
TL;DR - if we step an instruction that is as long as
decr_pc_after_break (1-byte on x86) right after removing the
breakpoint at PC, in non-stop mode, adjust_pc_after_break adjusts the
PC, but it shouldn't.

In non-stop mode, when a breakpoint is removed, it is moved to the
"moribund locations" list.  This is because other threads that are
running may have tripped on that breakpoint as well, and we haven't
heard about it.  When a trap is reported, we check if perhaps it was
such a deleted breakpoint that caused the trap.  If so, we also need
to adjust the PC (decr_pc_after_break).

Now, say that, on x86:

 - a breakpoint was placed at an address where we have an instruction
of the same length as decr_pc_after_break on this arch (1 on x86).

 - the breakpoint is removed, and thus put on the moribund locations
   list.

 - the thread is single-stepped.

As there's no breakpoint inserted at PC anymore, the single-step
actually executes the 1-byte instruction normally.  GDB should _not_
adjust the PC for the resulting SIGTRAP.  But, adjust_pc_after_break
confuses the step SIGTRAP reported for this single-step as being a
SIGTRAP for the moribund location of the breakpoint that used to be at
the previous PC, and so infrun applies the decr_pc_after_break
adjustment incorrectly.

The confusion comes from the special case mentioned in the comment:

 static void
 adjust_pc_after_break (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
 {
 ...
	  As a special case, we could have hardware single-stepped a
	  software breakpoint.  In this case (prev_pc == breakpoint_pc),
	  we also need to back up to the breakpoint address.  */

       if (thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set (ecs->event_thread)
	   || !ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)
	   || !currently_stepping (ecs->event_thread)
	   || (ecs->event_thread->stepped_breakpoint
	       && ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc))
	 regcache_write_pc (regcache, breakpoint_pc);

The condition that incorrectly triggers is the
"ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc" one.

Afterwards, the next resume resume re-executes an instruction that had
already executed, which if you're lucky, results in the inferior
crashing.  If you're unlucky, you'll get silent bad behavior...

The fix is to remember that we stepped a breakpoint.  Turns out the
only case we step a breakpoint instruction today isn't covered by the
testsuite.  It's the case of a 'handle nostop" signal arriving while a
step is in progress _and_ we have a software watchpoint, which forces
always single-stepping.  This commit extends sigstep.exp to cover
that, and adds a new test for the adjust_pc_after_break issue.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/12623
	* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <stepped_breakpoint>: New
	field.
	* infrun.c (resume) <stepping breakpoint instruction>: Set the
	thread's stepped_breakpoint field.  Skip if reverse debugging.
	Add comment.
	(init_thread_stepping_state, handle_signal_stop): Clear the
	thread's stepped_breakpoint field.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/12623
	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (no_handler): New global.
	(main): If 'no_handler is true, set the signal handlers to
	SIG_IGN.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (breakpoint_over_handler): Add
	with_sw_watch and no_handler parameters.  Handle them.
	(top level) <stepping over handler when stopped at a breakpoint
	test>: Add a test axis for testing with a software watchpoint, and
	another for testing with the signal handler set to SIG_IGN.
	* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.exp: New file.
2014-10-28 16:00:06 +00:00
Pedro Alves abbdbd03db Test for PR gdb/17511, spurious SIGTRAP after stepping into+in signal handler
I noticed that when I single-step into a signal handler with a
pending/queued signal, the following single-steps while the program is
in the signal handler leave $eflags.TF set.  That means subsequent
continues will trap after one instruction, resulting in a spurious
SIGTRAP being reported to the user.

This is a kernel bug; I've reported it to kernel devs (turned out to
be a known bug).  I'm seeing it on x86_64 Fedora 20 (Linux
3.16.4-200.fc20.x86_64), and I was told it's still not fixed upstream.

This commit extends gdb.base/sigstep.exp to cover this use case,
xfailed.

Here's what the bug looks like:

 (gdb) start
 Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at si-handler.c:48
 48        setup ();
 (gdb) next
 50        global = 0; /* set break here */

Let's queue a signal, so we can step into the handler:

 (gdb) handle SIGUSR1
 Signal        Stop      Print   Pass to program Description
 SIGUSR1       Yes       Yes     Yes             User defined signal 1
 (gdb) queue-signal SIGUSR1

TF is not set:

 (gdb) display $eflags
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]

Now step into the handler -- "si" does PTRACE_SINGLESTEP+SIGUSR1:

 (gdb) si
 sigusr1_handler (sig=0) at si-handler.c:31
 31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]

No TF yet.  But another single-step...

 (gdb) si
 0x0000000000400621      31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]

... ends up with TF left set.  This results in PTRACE_CONTINUE
trapping after each instruction is executed:

 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
 0x0000000000400624 in sigusr1_handler (sig=0) at si-handler.c:31
 31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]

 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
 sigusr1_handler (sig=10) at si-handler.c:32
 32        global = 0;
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)

Note that even another PTRACE_SINGLESTEP does not fix it:

 (gdb) si
 33      }
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)

Eventually, it gets "fixed" by the rt_sigreturn syscall, when
returning out of the handler:

 (gdb) bt
 #0  sigusr1_handler (sig=10) at si-handler.c:33
 #1  <signal handler called>
 #2  main () at si-handler.c:50
 (gdb) set disassemble-next-line on
 (gdb) si
 0x0000000000400632      33      }
    0x0000000000400631 <sigusr1_handler+17>:     5d      pop    %rbp
 => 0x0000000000400632 <sigusr1_handler+18>:     c3      retq
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)
 <signal handler called>
 => 0x0000003b36a358f0 <__restore_rt+0>: 48 c7 c0 0f 00 00 00    mov    $0xf,%rax
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb) si
 <signal handler called>
 => 0x0000003b36a358f7 <__restore_rt+7>: 0f 05   syscall
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)
 main () at si-handler.c:50
 50        global = 0; /* set break here */
 => 0x000000000040066b <main+9>: c7 05 cb 09 20 00 00 00 00 00   movl   $0x0,0x2009cb(%rip)        # 0x601040 <global>
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]
 (gdb)

The bug doesn't happen if we instead PTRACE_CONTINUE into the signal
handler -- e.g., set a breakpoint in the handler, queue a signal, and
"continue".

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17511
	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (handler): Add a few more writes to 'done'.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (other_handler_location): New global.
	(advance): Support stepping into the signal handler, and running
	commands while in the handler.
	(in_handler_map): New global.
	(top level): In the advance test, add combinations for getting
	into the handler with stepping commands, and for running commands
	in the handler.  Add comment descripting the advancei tests.
2014-10-28 15:51:30 +00:00
Pedro Alves 1df4399f27 gdb.base/sigstep.exp: cleanup and make it easier to extend
Hacking on sigstep.exp, I found it harder to understand and extend
than ideal.

 - GDB is currently not restarted between the different
   tests/combinations in the file, and some parts of the tests' setup
   are done on the top level, and shared between tests.  It's not
   trivial to understand which breakpoints each test procedure expects
   to be set or not set.  And it's not trivial to disable parts of the
   test if you want quickly try out just a subset of the tests
   (running the whole file takes a bit).

 - Because GDB is currently not restarted between tests, if some test
   triggers a ptrace/kernel bug, the following tests may end up with
   cascading fails.  That makes it hard to add a test to cover a
   kernel bug that isn't fixed yet, with a xfail/kfail.  E.g,. note
   how with kernels with bug gdb/8744 (stepi over sigreturn syscall
   exits program) the test program exits, and nothing restarts it
   afterwards...

 - The manual test message prefix management gets a bit in the way.
   Nowadays, we have with_test_prefix which makes it simpler.

 - 'i' is used as parameter name in the various procedures, meaning
   'the command the test', which isn't as obvious as it could.

This commit addresses all that.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp: Use build_executable instead of
	prepare_for_testing.
	(top level): Move code that starts GDB, runs to main and creates a
	display to ...
	(restart): ... this new procedure.
	(top level): Move backtrace from signal handler test to ...
	(validate_backtrace): ... this new procedure.
	(advance, advancei): Rename parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use
	with_test_prefix.  Always restart GDB.
	(skip_to_handler): Rename parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use
	with_test_prefix.  Always restart GDB.  No need to delete
	breakpoints after the test.
	(test_skip_handler): Remove prefix parameter.
	(skip_over_handler, breakpoint_to_handler)
	(breakpoint_to_handler_entry, breakpoint_over_handler): Rename
	parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use with_test_prefix.  Always
	restart GDB.  No need to delete breakpoints after the test.
	(top level): Use foreach to call the test procedures with
	different commands.
2014-10-28 15:34:00 +00:00
Pedro Alves a5b6e449e3 update bug numbers (GNATS -> Bugzilla) in a few signal related tests
This makes it easier to find the bugs in Bugzilla.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigaltstack.exp: Update to use Bugzilla bug numbers
	instead of GNATS numbers.
	* gdb.base/sigbpt.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/siginfo.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-28 15:31:55 +00:00
Pedro Alves 7d1a114c44 Workaround remote targets that report an empty list to qfThreadInfo
In https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00652.html, Sandra
shows a target that was broken by the recent update_thread_list
optimization:

 (gdb) target remote qa8-centos32-cs:10514
 ...
 (gdb) continue
 Continuing.
 Cannot execute this command without a live selected thread.
 (gdb)

The error means that the current thread is in "exited" state when the
continue command is processed.  The root of the problem was found
here:

 > Sending packet: $Hg0#df...Packet received:
 ...
 > Sending packet: $?#3f...Packet received: S00
 > Sending packet: $qfThreadInfo#bb...Packet received: l
 > Sending packet: $Hc-1#09...Packet received:
 > Sending packet: $qC#b4...Packet received: unset

This target doesn't really support threads (no thread indication in
stop reply packets; no support for qC), but then supports
qfThreadInfo, and returns an empty thread list to GDB.

See https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00665.html for
why the target does that.

As remote_update_thread_list deletes threads from GDB's list that are
not found in the thread list that the target reports, the result is
that GDB deletes the "fake" main thread that GDB added itself.  (As
that thread is currently selected, it is marked "exited" instead of
being deleted straight away.)

This commit avoids deleting the main thread in this scenario.

gdb/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* remote.c (remote_thread_alive): New, factored out from ...
	(remote_thread_alive): ... this.
	(remote_update_thread_list): Bail out before deleting threads if
	the target returned an empty list, and, the current thread has a
	magic/fake ptid.
2014-10-28 11:35:10 +00:00
Pedro Alves e5f8a7cc2d stepi/nexti: skip signal handler if "handle nostop" signal arrives
I noticed that "si" behaves differently when a "handle nostop" signal
arrives while the step is in progress, depending on whether the
program was stopped at a breakpoint when "si" was entered.
Specifically, in case GDB needs to step off a breakpoint, the handler
is skipped and the program stops in the next "mainline" instruction.
Otherwise, the "si" stops in the first instruction of the signal
handler.

I was surprised the testsuite doesn't catch this difference.  Turns
out gdb.base/sigstep.exp covers a bunch of cases related to stepping
and signal handlers, but does not test stepi nor nexti, only
step/next/continue.

My first reaction was that stopping in the signal handler was the
correct thing to do, as it's where the next user-visible instruction
that is executed is.  I considered then "nexti" -- a signal handler
could be reasonably considered a subroutine call to step over, it'd
seem intuitive to me that "nexti" would skip it.

But then, I realized that signals that arrive while a plain/line
"step" is in progress _also_ have their handler skipped.  A user might
well be excused for being confused by this, given:

  (gdb) help step
  Step program until it reaches a different source line.

And the signal handler's sources will be in different source lines,
after all.

I think that having to explain that "stepi" steps into handlers, (and
that "nexti" wouldn't according to my reasoning above), while "step"
does not, is a sign of an awkward interface.

E.g., if a user truly is interested in stepping into signal handlers,
then it's odd that she has to either force the signal to "handle
stop", or recall to do "stepi" whenever such a signal might be
delivered.  For that use case, it'd seem nicer to me if "step" also
stepped into handlers.

This suggests to me that we either need a global "step-into-handlers"
setting, or perhaps better, make "handle pass/nopass stop/nostop
print/noprint" have have an additional axis - "handle
stepinto/nostepinto", so that the user could configure whether
handlers for specific signals should be stepped into.

In any case, I think it's simpler (and thus better) for all step
commands to behave the same.  This commit thus makes "si/ni" skip
handlers for "handle nostop" signals that arrive while the command was
already in progress, like step/next do.

To be clear, nothing changes if the program was stopped for a signal,
and the user enters a stepping command _then_ -- GDB still steps into
the handler.  The change concerns signals that don't cause a stop and
that arrive while the step is in progress.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (handle_signal_stop): Also skip handlers when a random
	signal arrives while handling a "stepi" or a "nexti".  Set the
	thread's 'step_after_step_resume_breakpoint' flag.

gdb/doc/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Continuing and Stepping): Add cross reference to
	info on stepping and signal handlers.
	(Signals): Explain stepping and signal handlers.  Add context
	index entry, and cross references.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (dummy): New global.
	(main): Issue a couple writes to the new global.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (get_next_pc, test_skip_handler): New
	procedures.
	(skip_over_handler): Use test_skip_handler.
	(top level): Call skip_over_handler for stepi and nexti too.
	(breakpoint_over_handler): Use test_skip_handler.
	(top level): Call breakpoint_over_handler for stepi and nexti too.
2014-10-27 20:26:12 +00:00
Yao Qi 763905a3ad Fix trace file fails on powerpc64
I see the following fails on powerpc64-linux,

(gdb) target tfile tfile-basic.tf^M
warning: Uploaded tracepoint 1 has no source location, using raw address^M
Tracepoint 1 at 0x10012358^M
Created tracepoint 1 for target's tracepoint 1 at 0x10012358.^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/tfile.exp: target tfile tfile-basic.tf
info trace^M
Num     Type           Disp Enb Address            What^M
1       tracepoint     keep y   0x0000000010012358 <write_basic_trace_file>^M
        installed on target^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/tfile.exp: info tracepoints on trace file

-target-select tfile tfile-basic.tf^M
=thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="1"^M
=thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"^M
&"warning: Uploaded tracepoint 1 has no source location, using raw address\n"^M
=breakpoint-created,bkpt={number="1",type="tracepoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",
addr="0x0000000010012358",at="<write_basic_trace_file>",thread-groups=["i1"],
times="0",installed="y",original-location="*0x10012358"}^M
~"Created tracepoint 1 for target's tracepoint 1 at 0x10012358.\n"^M
^connected^M
(gdb) ^M
FAIL: gdb.trace/mi-traceframe-changed.exp: tfile: select trace file

These fails are caused by writing function descriptor address into trace
file instead of function address.  This patch is to teach tfile.c to
write function address on powerpc64 target.  With this patch applied,
fails in tfile.exp and mi-traceframe-changed.exp are fixed.  Is it
OK?

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-27  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.trace/tfile.c (adjust_function_address)
	[__powerpc64__ && _CALL_ELF != 2]: Get function address from
	function descriptor.
2014-10-27 20:09:19 +08:00
Luis Machado 71e396f920 Fix ARM machine state testcase failures
When running GDB's reverse debugging testsuite against a few ARM
multilibs, i noticed failures in the machinestate* testcases.

Further investigation showed that push and pop instruction encodings
A1 and A2 were not being handled properly, thus we missed saving
important contents from registers and memory. When going backwards,
such contents were not restored and thus we ended up with a corrupted
state that did not correspond to the real values we had at a
particular point in time.

Attached is a patch that fixes around 36 failures for both
gdb.reverse/machinestate.exp and
gdb.reverse/machinestate-precsave.exp testcases, making them fully
pass. This is for both armv7 and armv4. I still see failures for
armv4 thumb though, so it needs a bit more investigation.

I see no regressions due to this patch for armv7, armv7 thumb, armv4
and armv4 thumb.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* arm-tdep.c (INSN_S_L_BIT_NUM): Document.
	(arm_record_ld_st_imm_offset): Reimplement to cover all
	load/store cases for ARM opcode 010.
	(arm_record_ld_st_multiple): Reimplement to cover all
	load/store cases for ARM opcode 100.
2014-10-27 08:57:58 -02:00
Doug Evans 3aee438bbb symtab.c (lookup_symbol_aux_local): Fix typo in comment.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_symbol_aux_local): Fix typo in comment.
2014-10-26 16:46:52 -07:00
Doug Evans f88cb4b683 Rename parameter "kind" to "block_index" in quick lookup functions.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symfile.h (struct quick_symbol_functions) <lookup_symbol>: Rename
	parameter "kind" to "block_index".
	* symtab.c (error_in_psymtab_expansion): Rename parameter "kind" to
	"block_index".
	(lookup_symbol_aux_quick, basic_lookup_transparent_type_quick): Ditto.
2014-10-26 13:53:58 -07:00
Doug Evans a023a30fb4 * block.h (ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS): Fix comment.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* block.h (ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS): Fix comment.
2014-10-26 12:26:20 -07:00
Doug Evans 4c35218eab block.c (allocate_block): Use OBSTACK_ZALLOC instead of obstack_alloc.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* block.c (allocate_block): Use OBSTACK_ZALLOC instead of
	obstack_alloc.
2014-10-26 11:36:59 -07:00
Doug Evans f08e8df3ab Move block_found decl to symtab.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* parser-defs.h (block_found): Move decl from here ...
	* symtab.h (block_found): ... to here.
2014-10-26 10:42:26 -07:00
Doug Evans cf901d3bba Clean up some function comments in symtab.[ch].
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.h (struct field_of_this_result): Fix typo in comment.
	(lookup_symbol_in_language): Move function comment here.
	(lookup_symbol): Improve function comment.
	(basic_lookup_symbol_nonlocal): Ditto.
	(lookup_symbol_static, lookup_symbol_global): Ditto.
	(lookup_symbol_aux_block): Ditto.
	(lookup_language_this): Add function comment.
	(lookup_static_symbol_aux): Explicitly mark as extern.  Improve
	function comment.
	(lookup_block_symbol): Improve function comment.
	(lookup_struct): Fix capitalization in function comment.
	(lookup_transparent_type): Add function comment.
	(lookup_global_symbol_from_objfile): Explicitly mark as extern.
	Improve function comment.
	(lookup_objfile_from_block): Add function comment.
	* symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Update function comment.
	(lookup_symbol, lookup_language_this): Ditto.
	(lookup_static_symbol_aux, lookup_objfile_from_block): Ditto.
	(lookup_symbol_aux_block, lookup_global_symbol_from_objfile): Ditto.
	(basic_lookup_symbol_nonlocal): Ditto.
	(lookup_symbol_static, lookup_symbol_global): Ditto.
	(lookup_transparent_type, lookup_block_symbol): Ditto.
2014-10-26 09:35:53 -07:00
Doug Evans ff6c39cf9c symtab.c: forward decl cleanup
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (types_info): Delete forward decl.
	(functions_info, variables_info, sources_info): Ditto.
	(_initialize_symtab): Rewrite forward decl to use
	initialize_file_ftype.
2014-10-25 22:22:47 -07:00
Doug Evans ec201f0cd1 symtab.c (lookup_symbol_aux_quick): Set block_found upon success.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* symtab.c (lookup_symbol_aux_quick): Set block_found upon success.
2014-10-25 22:07:54 -07:00
Doug Evans ca040673e0 Remove second (nested) copy of local var child_die.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2read.c (process_structure_scope): Remove second (nested) copy
	of local var child_die.
2014-10-25 21:46:00 -07:00
Don Breazeal 6f259a235d Follow-fork message printing improvements
This commit modifies the code that prints attach and detach messages
related to following fork and vfork.  The changes include using
target_terminal_ours_for_output instead of target_terminal_ours,
printing "vfork" instead of "fork" for all vfork-related messages,
and using _() for the format strings of all of the messages.

We also add a "detach" message for when a fork parent is detached.
Previously in this case the only message was notification of attaching
to the child.  We still do not print any messages when following the
parent and detaching the child (the default).  The rationale for this
is that from the user's perspective the new child was never attached.

Note that all of these messages are only printed when 'verbose' is set
or when debugging is turned on.

The tests gdb.base/foll-fork.exp and gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp were
modified to check for the new message.

Tested on x64 Ubuntu Lucid, native only.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior): Update fork message printing
	to use target_terminal_ours_for_output instead of
	target_terminal_ours, to use _() for all format strings, to print
	"vfork" instead of "fork" for vforks, and to add a detach message.
	(handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit): Update message printing to use
	target_terminal_ours_for_output instead of target_terminal_ours, to
	use _() for all format strings, and to fix some formatting.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/foll-fork.exp (test_follow_fork,
	catch_fork_child_follow): Check for updated fork messages emitted
	from infrun.c.
	* gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp (vfork_parent_follow_through_step,
	vfork_parent_follow_to_bp, vfork_and_exec_child_follow_to_main_bp,
	vfork_and_exec_child_follow_through_step): Check for updated vfork
	messages emitted from infrun.c.
2014-10-24 11:36:06 -07:00
Pedro Alves 09dd9a6907 Remove Vax Ultrix and VAX BSD support
Built and tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, with --enable-targets=all.

gdb/
2014-10-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* Makefile.in (ALLDEPFILES): Remove vax-nat.c.
	* NEWS (Removed targets): Add VAX BSD and VAX Ultrix.
	* config/vax/vax.mh: Delete.
	* configure.host: Move vax-*-bsd* and vax-*-ultrix* to the
	obsolete configurations section.
	* configure.tgt (vax-*-*): Don't mention 4.2BSD nor Ultrix.
	* vax-nat.c: Delete file.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/corefile.exp: Remove references to ultrix.
	* gdb.base/interrupt.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/whatis.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.gdb/selftest.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/manythreads.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/print-threads.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/pthreads.exp:: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-24 17:56:56 +01:00
Pedro Alves 5ab806deff NEWS: Clarify removed targets
gdb/
2014-10-24  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (Removed targets): Add OS/arch column.
2014-10-24 17:56:29 +01:00
Siva Chandra 3433cfa51f Guard a call to TYPE_TARGET_TYPE in gnuv3_pass_by_reference.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gnu-v3-abi.c (gnuv3_pass_by_reference): Call TYPE_TARGET_TYPE
	on the arg type of a constructor only if it is of reference type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.cc: Add a test case.
	* gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.exp: Add a test.
2014-10-24 05:45:06 -07:00
Sandra Loosemore 96ba42336f Refactoring/cleanup of nios2 opcodes and assembler code.
2014-10-23  Sandra Loosemore  <sandra@codesourcery.com>

	include/opcode/
	* nios2.h (enum iw_format_type): New.
	(struct nios2_opcode): Update comments.  Add size and format fields.
	(NIOS2_INSN_OPTARG): New.
	(REG_NORMAL, REG_CONTROL, REG_COPROCESSOR): New.
	(struct nios2_reg): Add regtype field.
	(GET_INSN_FIELD, SET_INSN_FIELD): Delete.
	(IW_A_LSB, IW_A_MSB, IW_A_SZ, IW_A_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_B_LSB, IW_B_MSB, IW_B_SZ, IW_B_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_C_LSB, IW_C_MSB, IW_C_SZ, IW_C_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_IMM16_LSB, IW_IMM16_MSB, IW_IMM16_SZ, IW_IMM16_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_IMM26_LSB, IW_IMM26_MSB, IW_IMM26_SZ, IW_IMM26_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_OP_LSB, IW_OP_MSB, IW_OP_SZ, IW_OP_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_OPX_LSB, IW_OPX_MSB, IW_OPX_SZ, IW_OPX_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_SHIFT_IMM5_LSB, IW_SHIFT_IMM5_MSB): Delete.
	(IW_SHIFT_IMM5_SZ, IW_SHIFT_IMM5_MASK): Delete.
	(IW_CONTROL_REGNUM_LSB, IW_CONTROL_REGNUM_MSB): Delete.
	(IW_CONTROL_REGNUM_SZ, IW_CONTROL_REGNUM_MASK): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_OP, OP_SH_OP): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IOP, OP_SH_IOP): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IRD, OP_SH_IRD): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IRT, OP_SH_IRT): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IRS, OP_SH_IRS): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_ROP, OP_SH_ROP): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_RRD, OP_SH_RRD): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_RRT, OP_SH_RRT): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_RRS, OP_SH_RRS): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_JOP, OP_SH_JOP): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IMM26, OP_SH_IMM26): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_RCTL, OP_SH_RCTL): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_IMM5, OP_SH_IMM5): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CACHE_OPX, OP_SH_CACHE_OPX): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CACHE_RRS, OP_SH_CACHE_RRS): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CUSTOM_A, OP_SH_CUSTOM_A): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CUSTOM_B, OP_SH_CUSTOM_B): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CUSTOM_C, OP_SH_CUSTOM_C): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_CUSTOM_N, OP_SH_CUSTOM_N): Delete.
	(OP_<insn>, OPX_<insn>, OP_MATCH_<insn>, OPX_MATCH_<insn>): Delete.
	(OP_MASK_<insn>, OP_MASK): Delete.
	(GET_IW_A, GET_IW_B, GET_IW_C, GET_IW_CONTROL_REGNUM): Delete.
	(GET_IW_IMM16, GET_IW_IMM26, GET_IW_OP, GET_IW_OPX): Delete.
	Include nios2r1.h to define new instruction opcode constants
	and accessors.
	(nios2_builtin_opcodes): Rename to nios2_r1_opcodes.
	(bfd_nios2_num_builtin_opcodes): Rename to nios2_num_r1_opcodes.
	(bfd_nios2_num_opcodes): Rename to nios2_num_opcodes.
	(NUMOPCODES, NUMREGISTERS): Delete.
	* nios2r1.h: New file.

	opcodes/
	* nios2-opc.c (nios2_builtin_regs): Add regtype field initializers.
	(nios2_builtin_opcodes): Rename to nios2_r1_opcodes.  Use new
	MATCH_R1_<insn> and MASK_R1_<insn> macros in initializers.  Add
	size and format initializers.  Merge 'b' arguments into 'j'.
	(NIOS2_NUM_OPCODES): Adjust definition.
	(bfd_nios2_num_builtin_opcodes): Rename to nios2_num_r1_opcodes.
	(nios2_opcodes): Adjust.
	(bfd_nios2_num_opcodes): Rename to nios2_num_opcodes.
	* nios2-dis.c (INSNLEN): Update comment.
	(nios2_hash_init, nios2_hash): Delete.
	(OPCODE_HASH_SIZE): New.
	(nios2_r1_extract_opcode): New.
	(nios2_disassembler_state): New.
	(nios2_r1_disassembler_state): New.
	(nios2_init_opcode_hash): Add state parameter.  Adjust to use it.
	(nios2_find_opcode_hash): Use state object.
	(bad_opcode): New.
	(nios2_print_insn_arg): Add op parameter.  Use it to access
	format.  Remove 'b' case.
	(nios2_disassemble): Remove special case for nop.  Remove
	hard-coded instruction size.

	gas/
	* config/tc-nios2.c (nios2_insn_infoS): Add constant_bits field.
	(nios2_arg_infoS, nios2_arg_hash, nios2_arg_lookup): Delete.
	(nios2_control_register_arg_p): Delete.
	(nios2_coproc_reg): Delete.
	(nios2_relax_frag): Remove hard-coded instruction size.
	(md_convert_frag): Use new insn accessor macros.
	(nios2_diagnose_overflow): Remove hard-coded instruction size.
	(md_apply_fix): Likewise.
	(bad_opcode): New.
	(nios2_parse_reg): New.
	(nios2_assemble_expression): Remove prev_reloc parameter.  Adjust
	uses and callers.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_c): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_d): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_s): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_t): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_i): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_u): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_o): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_j): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_l): New.
	(nios2_assemble_arg_m): New.
	(nios2_assemble_args): New.
	(nios2_assemble_args_dst): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_tsi): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_tsu): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_sto): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_o): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_is): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_m): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_s): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_tis): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_dc): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_cs): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_ds): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_ldst): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_none): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_dsj): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_d): Delete.
	(nios2_assemble_args_b): Delete.
	(nios2_arg_info_structs): Delete.
	(NIOS2_NUM_ARGS): Delete.
	(nios2_consume_arg): Remove insn parameter.  Use new macros.
	Don't check register arguments here.  Remove 'b' case.
	(nios2_consume_separator): Move check for missing separators to...
	(nios2_parse_args): ...here.  Remove special case for optional
	arguments.
	(output_insn): Avoid using hard-coded insn size.
	(output_ubranch): Likewise.
	(output_cbranch): Likewise.
	(output_call): Use new macros.
	(output_addi): Likewise.
	(output_ori): Likewise.
	(output_xori): Likewise.
	(output_movia): Likewise.
	(md_begin): Remove nios2_arg_info_structs initialization.
	(md_assemble): Initialize constant_bits field.  Use
	nios2_parse_args instead of looking up parse function in hash table.

	gdb/
	* nios2-tdep.c (nios2_analyze_prologue): Use new instruction field
	accessors and constants from nios2 opcodes update.
	(nios2_get_next_pc): Likewise.
2014-10-23 09:54:15 -07:00
Simon Marchi fab3a15dfb Small fixes to the Python API doc
First:
"Breakpoint.delete" is missing parenthesis.

Second:
Someone on IRC asked, how come there is no disable() method in the
Breakpoint object.  It turns out you have to do "bp.enabled = False".
Since every normal person would probably search for "disable" in that page
if their intent is to disable a python breakpoint, I thought it would be
useful if the description contained "disable" so it would be easy to find.
The result might seem a bit silly and redundant, so I am open to
suggestions.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Breakpoints In Python): Add parenthesis after
	Breakpoint.delete.  Clarify Breakpoint.enabled description so
	that it	contains "disable".
2014-10-20 13:29:36 -04:00
Yao Qi 092f880b8e Rename py-objfile-script-gdb.py.in to py-objfile-script-gdb.py
Patch <https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2011-07/msg00225.html> was
to fix the problem that py-objfile-script-gdb.py is removed after an
in-tree build and test.  As a result of the previous patch (we don't
remove files copied to host any more), this patch is no longer needed.
This patch is to revert it logically.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-20  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.python/py-objfile-script-gdb.py.in: Rename it to ...
	* gdb.python/py-objfile-script-gdb.py: New file.
	* gdb.python/py-objfile-script.exp: Update reference to
	py-objfile-script-gdb.py.in.  Use gdb_remote_donwload instead
	of remote_download.  Remove the dest file.
2014-10-20 13:34:33 +08:00
Yao Qi acbdb7f355 Don't remove files copied to host
Nowadays, if we do in-tree build and run tests sequentially, some source
files are removed, due to the following pattern:

set pi_txt [gdb_remote_download host ${srcdir}/${subdir}/pi.txt]

remote_exec host "rm -f $pi_txt"

If testing is run sequentially, file ${srcdir}/${subdir}/pi.txt is
copied to ${objdir}/${subdir}/pi.txt.  However, ${objdir} is ${srcdir}
in the in-tree build/test, so the file is coped to itself, as a nop.
As a result, the file in source is removed at the end of test.

This patch fixes this problem by not removing files copied to host in
each test.  This patch also addresses the question we've had that why
don't we keep files copied to host because they are needed to reproduce
certain fails.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-20  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/checkpoint.exp: Don't remove file copied on host.
	* gdb.base/step-line.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-anonymous-func.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-basic.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-compressed.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-filename.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-intercu.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-intermix.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-producer.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/mac-fileno.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-frame-args.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-mi.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-objfile-script.exp: Likewise
	* gdb.python/py-pp-integral.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-pp-re-notag.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-prettyprint.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-section-script.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-typeprint.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-xmethods.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.stabs/weird.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-20 13:34:28 +08:00
Doug Evans 28153fd321 Fix some comments to say minus_one_ptid instead of PID == -1.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbthread.h (set_running): Fix comment.
	(set_executing, finish_thread_state): Fix comment.
2014-10-19 13:36:54 -07:00
Doug Evans fc9b8e475d linux-nat.c (linux_nat_wait_1): Make local prev_mask non-static.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	linux-nat.c (linux_nat_wait_1): Make local prev_mask non-static.
2014-10-18 21:24:47 -07:00
Kwok Cheung Yeung bd286a290b Fix the gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp test on MIPS
This patch fixes the failures that occur with the
gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp test on 64-bit MIPS and compressed
MIPS ISAs (i.e. MIPS16 and microMIPS).

The failures on 64-bit occur because the generated DWARF address
information is always 32-bit, which causes the upper 32-bits of
addresses to be truncated and causes breakpoints to be set on the
wrong address if any of the upper 32-bits are non-zero.  I suspect
that other 64-bit architectures get away with it because they
place all their instructions at a VMA lower than 2^32 by default.
This patch causes 64-bit addresses to be generated if a 64-bit
target is detected.

The failures on MIPS16 and microMIPS occur because the breakpoint
address needs to have the LSB set to 1 (used to indicate that the
code is compressed). However, the function name is interpreted as
a data label, causing GDB to set breakpoints at even addresses.
This is fixed by explicitly adding a '.insn' directive (see
https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/as/MIPS-insn.html) after the
label on MIPS only.

gdb/testsuite/

2014-10-18  Kwok Cheung Yeung  <kcy@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp (addr_len): New.
	(out_cu): Use addr_len for the size of addresses.
	(out_line): Likewise.  Size DW_LNE_set_address instruction
	according to addr_len.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.c (START_INSNS): New.
	(FUNC): Add START_INSNS to definition.
2014-10-18 21:53:15 +01:00
Yao Qi 673dc4a054 Skip testing argv[0] on target argv[0] isn't available
I see the following two fails on arm-none-eabi target, because argv[0]
isn't available.

print argv[0]^M
$1 = 0x1f78 "/dev/null"^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/argv0-symlink.exp: kept file symbolic link name

print argv[0]^M
$1 = 0x1f78 "/dev/null"^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/argv0-symlink.exp: kept directory symbolic link name

My first thought is to check [target_info exists noargs], and skip the
test if it returns true.  However, noargs is set in gdbserver board
files, so argv0-symlink.exp will be skipped on gdbserver board file.
The change is too aggressive.

When the program is running with gdbserver, argv[1] to argv[N] aren't
available, but argv[0] is.  Fortunately, argv0-symlink.exp only
requires argv[0].  argv0-symlink.exp can be run with gdbserver board
file, as what we do now.

What we need to check is whether argv[0] is available, so I add a new
proc gdb_has_argv0 to do so by starting a program, and check
argc/argv[0] to see whether argv[0] is available.

Dan fixed the similar problem by checking noargs, which is too strong.
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-02/msg00398.html as a
result, the test is skipped on gdbserver.  This patch fixed it too.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-18  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/argv0-symlink.exp: Check argv[0] value if
	gdb_has_argv0 return true.
	* gdb.guile/scm-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Don't
	check [target_info exists noargs], check [gdb_has_argv0]
	instead.
	* gdb.python/py-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Likewise.
	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_has_argv0, gdb_has_argv0_1): New
	procedures.
2014-10-18 20:58:06 +08:00
Doug Evans 4ffbba72f3 New python event "clear_objfiles".
If one is watching new_objfile events in python, it helps to know
when the list of objfiles is cleared.  This patch adds a new
clear_objfiles event to support this.

This patch is all just cut-n-paste-n-tweak derived from
the new_objfiles event.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention new event gdb.clear_objfiles.
	* python/py-event.h (emit_clear_objfiles_event): Clear
	* python/py-events.h (events_object): New member clear_objfiles.
	* python/py-evts.c (gdbpy_initialize_py_events): Add clear_objfiles
	event.
	* python/py-inferior.c (python_new_objfile): If objfile is NULL,
	emit clear_objfiles event.
	* python/py-newobjfileevent.c (create_clear_objfiles_event_object): New
	function.
	(emit_clear_objfiles_event): New function.
	(clear_objfiles): New event.
	* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_initialize_clear_objfiles_event):
	Declare.
	* python/python.c (_initialize_python): Call
	gdbpy_initialize_clear_objfiles_event.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Events In Python): Document clear_objfiles event.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-events.exp: Update expected output for clear_objfiles
	event.
	* gdb.python/py-events.py: Add clear_objfiles event.
2014-10-17 11:12:17 -07:00
Doug Evans d096d8c11e Add gdb.Objfile.progspace attribute.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention new gdb.Objfile.progspace attribute.
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfpy_get_progspace): New function.
	(objfile_getset): New entry for "progspace".

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Objfiles In Python): Document new progspace attribute.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-objfile.exp: Test progspace attribute.
2014-10-17 10:57:26 -07:00
Luis Machado a80db0157c Fix mingw32 failures due to incorrect directory separator in pattern
Some testcases, mostly gdb.reverse ones, assume the presence of a
'/' directory separator before the source file name. This is
incorrect for mingw32 hosts, generating false failures for those
tests.

I attempted to catch most of the occurrences of the pattern
".*/$srcfile" and replaced them with ".*$srcfile". The latter
is used elsewhere in the testsuite. The resulting patch is attached.

I also see other occurrences of the same assumption throughout the
testsuite, but usually they are arguments for function calls and i
seem to recall either the test harness or GDB deals with those
paths properly.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-17  Luis Machado  <lgustavo@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: Do not assume any
	directory separators when matching source file paths.
	* gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/break-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/break-reverse.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/consecutive-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/finish-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/finish-reverse-bkpt.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/finish-reverse.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/i386-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/i387-env-reverse.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/i387-stack-reverse.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/machinestate-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/machinestate.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/sigall-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/solib-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/step-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/until-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/watch-precsave.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/watch-reverse.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-17 11:28:17 -03:00
Yao Qi b22089abcb Copy xml files to host
When I run test with board file local-remote-host-native.exp, I see
the following warning,

$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--host_board=local-remote-host-native
--target_board=local-remote-host-native tdesc-arch.exp
HOST_DIR=/tmp/foo/"

(gdb) set tdesc filename ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.xml/trivial.xml^M
warning: Could not open "../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.xml/trivial.xml"
(gdb) quit^

because "${srcdir}/gdb.xml/trivial.xml" doesn't exist on host.  This
patch is to copy trivial.xml to host and the warning goes away.

(gdb) set tdesc filename /tmp/foo/trivial.xml^M
(gdb) quit^

tdesc-regs.exp has the similar problem that single-reg.xml may not
exist on host at all, and it should be copied to host too.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-17  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_skip_xml_test): Copy trivial.xml to host.
	* gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Copy single-reg.xml to host.
2014-10-17 21:22:55 +08:00
Pedro Alves 6c4486e63f PR gdb/17471: Repeating a background command makes it foreground
When we repeat a command, by just pressing <ret>, the input from the
previous command is reused for the new command invocation.

When an execution command strips the "&" out of its incoming argument
string, to detect background execution, we poke a '\0' directly to the
incoming argument string.

Combine both, and a repeat of a background command loses the "&".

This is actually only visible if args other than "&" are specified
(e.g., "c 1&" or "next 2&" or "c -a&"), as in the special case of "&"
alone (e.g. "c&") doesn't actually clobber the incoming string.

Fix this by making strip_bg_char return a new string instead of poking
a hole in the input string.

New test included.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17471
	* infcmd.c (strip_bg_char): Change prototype and rewrite.  Now
	returns a copy of the input.
	(run_command_1, continue_command, step_1, jump_command)
	(signal_command, until_command, advance_command, finish_command)
	(attach_command): Adjust and install a cleanup to free the
	stripped args.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17471
	* gdb.base/bg-execution-repeat.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/bg-execution-repeat.exp: New file.
2014-10-17 13:34:16 +01:00
Pedro Alves 0ff33695ee PR gdb/17300: Input after "c -a" crashes readline/GDB
If all threads in the target were already running when the user does
"c -a", nothing puts the inferior's terminal settings in effect and
removes stdin from the event loop, which we must when running a
foreground command.  The result is that user input afterwards crashes
readline/gdb:

 (gdb) start
 Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x4005d4: file continue-all-already-running.c, line 23.
 Starting program: continue-all-already-running

 Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at continue-all-already-running.c:23
 23        sleep (10);
 (gdb) c -a&
 Continuing.
 (gdb) c -a
 Continuing.
 p 1
 readline: readline_callback_read_char() called with no handler!
 Aborted (core dumped)
 $

Backtrace:

 Program received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
 0x0000003b36a35877 in __GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:56
 56        return INLINE_SYSCALL (tgkill, 3, pid, selftid, sig);
 (top-gdb) p 1
 $1 = 1
 (top-gdb) bt
 #0  0x0000003b36a35877 in __GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:56
 #1  0x0000003b36a36f68 in __GI_abort () at abort.c:89
 #2  0x0000000000784aa9 in rl_callback_read_char () at readline/callback.c:116
 #3  0x0000000000619181 in rl_callback_read_char_wrapper (client_data=0x0) at gdb/event-top.c:167
 #4  0x0000000000619557 in stdin_event_handler (error=0, client_data=0x0) at gdb/event-top.c:373
 #5  0x000000000061814a in handle_file_event (data=...) at gdb/event-loop.c:763
 #6  0x0000000000617631 in process_event () at gdb/event-loop.c:340
 #7  0x00000000006176f8 in gdb_do_one_event () at gdb/event-loop.c:404
 #8  0x0000000000617748 in start_event_loop () at gdb/event-loop.c:429
 #9  0x00000000006191b3 in cli_command_loop (data=0x0) at gdb/event-top.c:182
 #10 0x000000000060f538 in current_interp_command_loop () at gdb/interps.c:318
 #11 0x0000000000610701 in captured_command_loop (data=0x0) at gdb/main.c:323
 #12 0x000000000060c3f5 in catch_errors (func=0x6106e6 <captured_command_loop>, func_args=0x0, errstring=0x9002c1 "", mask=RETURN_MASK_ALL)
     at gdb/exceptions.c:237
 #13 0x0000000000611bff in captured_main (data=0x7fffffffd780) at gdb/main.c:1151
 #14 0x000000000060c3f5 in catch_errors (func=0x610afe <captured_main>, func_args=0x7fffffffd780, errstring=0x9002c1 "", mask=RETURN_MASK_ALL)
     at gdb/exceptions.c:237
 #15 0x0000000000611c28 in gdb_main (args=0x7fffffffd780) at gdb/main.c:1159
 #16 0x000000000045ef97 in main (argc=5, argv=0x7fffffffd888) at gdb/gdb.c:32
 (top-gdb)

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17300
	* infcmd.c (continue_1): If continuing all threads in the
	foreground, make sure the inferior's terminal settings are put in
	effect.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17300
	* gdb.base/continue-all-already-running.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/continue-all-already-running.exp: New file.
2014-10-17 13:33:30 +01:00