Commit Graph

41885 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pedro Alves 6769f2765d gdb.base/warning.exp tweaks
#1- Check that the warning is emitted.

#2- Avoid overriding INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS, as per documentated in
    gdb/testsuite/README:

 ~~~
 The testsuite does not override a value provided by the user.
 ~~~

We don't actually need to tweak INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS, we just need to
append out -data-directory to GDBFLAGS, because each passed
-data-directory option leads to a call to the warning:

 $ ./gdb -data-directory=foo -data-directory=bar
 Warning: foo: No such file or directory.
 Warning: bar: No such file or directory.
 [...]

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-19  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/warning.exp: Don't override INTERNAL_FLAGS.  Use
	gdb_spawn_with_cmdline_opts instead of gdb_start.  Check that we
	see the expected warning.
2018-11-19 15:08:46 +00:00
Tom Tromey c2a6c5da37 Fix ia64-linux-nat.c
PR build/23814 points out that ia64-linux-nat.c will not compile any
more.  This patch fixes the problem.  Thanks to Andreas Schwab for
trying the patch.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-18  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR build/23814:
	* target-delegates.c: Rebuild.
	* ia64-linux-nat.c (class ia64_linux_nat_target)
	<have_steppable_watchpoint>: Use override.  Return true, not 1.
	(ia64_linux_nat_target::can_use_hw_breakpoint): Rename.  Remove
	"self" argument.
	(ia64_linux_nat_target::low_new_thread): Rename.
	(class ia64_linux_nat_target) <read_description>: Don't declare.
	* target.h (struct target_ops) <have_steppable_watchpoint>: Return
	bool.
2018-11-18 09:30:55 -07:00
Alan Hayward 38a72da0f1 Aarch64: Fix segfault when casting dummy calls
The following will segfault on aarch64 if foo is in another object,
was compiled as c++ and has no debug symbols:
(gdb) p (int)foo()

This is because aarch64_push_dummy_call determines the return type
of the function and then does not check for null pointer.

A null pointer for the return type means the call has no debug
information.  For the code to get here, then the call must have
been cast, otherwise we'd error out sooner.  In the case of a
no-debug-info call cast, the return type is the type the user
had cast the call to, but we do not have that information
available here.

However, aarch64_push_dummy_call only requires the return type in
order to calculate lang_struct_return. This information is available
in the return_method enum. The fix is to simply use this instead.

Adds testcase to check calls across objects, with all combinations
of c, c++, debug and no debug.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR gdb/22736:
	* aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_push_dummy_call): Remove
	lang_struct_return code.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	PR gdb/22736:
	* gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-lib.c: New test.
	* gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-main.c: New test.
	* gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug.exp: New file.
2018-11-16 13:45:38 +00:00
Alan Hayward cf84fa6bcf Pass return_method to _push_dummy_call
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_push_dummy_call): Replace arg with
	return_method.
	* alpha-tdep.c (alpha_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_push_arguments): Likewise.
	(amd64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* amd64-windows-tdep.c (amd64_windows_push_arguments): Likewise.
	* arc-tdep.c (arc_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* arm-tdep.c (arm_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* avr-tdep.c (avr_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* bfin-tdep.c (bfin_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* cris-tdep.c (cris_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* csky-tdep.c (csky_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* frv-tdep.c (frv_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
	* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
	* gdbarch.sh (gdbarch_push_dummy_call): Replace arg with
	return_method.
	* h8300-tdep.c (h8300_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* hppa-tdep.c (hppa32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(hppa64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* i386-darwin-tdep.c (i386_darwin_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* ia64-tdep.c (ia64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand_dummy): Likewise.
	* iq2000-tdep.c (iq2000_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* lm32-tdep.c (lm32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* m32c-tdep.c (m32c_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* m32r-tdep.c (m32r_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* m68k-tdep.c (m68k_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* mep-tdep.c (mep_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* mips-tdep.c (mips_eabi_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(mips_n32n64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(mips_o32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(mips_o64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* msp430-tdep.c (msp430_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* nds32-tdep.c (nds32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* nios2-tdep.c (nios2_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* or1k-tdep.c (or1k_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* ppc-sysv-tdep.c (ppc_sysv_abi_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(ppc64_sysv_abi_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* ppc-tdep.h (ppc_sysv_abi_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	(ppc64_sysv_abi_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rl78-tdep.c (rl78_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rs6000-aix-tdep.c (rs6000_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c (rs6000_lynx178_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* rx-tdep.c (rx_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* s390-tdep.c (s390_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* score-tdep.c (score_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* sh-tdep.c (sh_push_dummy_call_fpu): Likewise.
	(sh_push_dummy_call_nofpu): Likewise.
	* sparc-tdep.c (sparc32_store_arguments): Likewise.
	(sparc32_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* sparc64-tdep.c (sparc64_store_arguments): Likewise.
	(sparc64_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* spu-tdep.c (spu_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* tic6x-tdep.c (tic6x_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* tilegx-tdep.c (tilegx_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* v850-tdep.c (v850_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* vax-tdep.c (vax_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
	* xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_push_dummy_call): Likewise.
2018-11-16 13:45:38 +00:00
Alan Hayward c5ac5cbb5b Use enum for return method for dummy calls
In call_function_by_hand_dummy, struct_return and hidden_first_param_p
are used to represent a single concept. Replace with an enum.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbarch.sh (enum function_call_return_method): Add enum.
	* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
	* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand_dummy): Replace vars with enum.
2018-11-16 13:45:38 +00:00
Joel Brobecker f9db0c4c6c Move copy_bitwise unittests to own unittest file
Now that copy_bitwise has been made public, and considering that
its implementation could move to a different file again in the future,
this patch moves its unittest to its own file in gdb/unittests.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: New file.
        * utils.c (selftests::bits_to_str, selftests::check_copy_bitwise)
        (selftests::copy_bitwise_tests): Delete, moving this code to
        unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c instead.
        (_initialize_utils): Do not register copy_bitwise tests.
        * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
        unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c.

Tested on x86_64-linux using the official testsuite, but also by
verifying that "maintenance selftests" still runs the copy_bitwise
tests.
2018-11-15 10:53:57 -05:00
Joel Brobecker a99bc3d23c delete ada-lang.c::move_bits, sharing and re-using copy_bitwise instead
This patch deletes ada-lang.c's move_bits function entirely, and
replaces all calls to it by calls to copy_bitwise instead. Because
the latter function was declared locally inside dwarf2loc.c, this
patch also move the function to a common area, and makes it non-static.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-lang.c (move_bits): Delete. Update all callers to use
        copy_bitwise instead.
        * dwarf2loc.c (copy_bitwise, bits_to_str::bits_to_str)
        (selftests::check_copy_bitwise, selftests::copy_bitwise_tests):
        Move from here to utils.c.
        (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Remove call to register copy_bitwise
        selftests.
        * utils.h (copy_bitwise): Add declaration.
        * utils.c (copy_bitwise, bits_to_str::bits_to_str)
        (selftests::check_copy_bitwise, selftests::copy_bitwise_tests):
        Moved here from dwarf2loc.c.
        (_initialize_utils): Register copy_bitwise selftests.

Tested on x86_64-linux, no regression. Also tested using AdaCore's
testsuite on a collection of small endian and big endian platforms.
2018-11-14 18:18:49 -05:00
Jim Wilson 8b2d40cbba RISC-V: Fix unnamed arg alignment in registers.
For riscv64-linux target, second half of fix for
FAIL: gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp: call add_various_floatvecs

Unnamed arguments with 2*XLEN alignment are passed in aligned register pairs.

	gdb/
	* riscv-tdep.c (struct riscv_arg_info): New field is_unnamed.
	(riscv_call_arg_scalar_int): If unnamed arg with twice xlen alignment,
	then increment next_regnum if odd.
	(riscv_arg_location): New arg is_unnamed.  Set ainfo->is_unnamed.
	(riscv_push_dummy_call): New local ftype.  Call check_typedef to set
	function type.  Pass new arg to riscv_arg_location based on function
	type.
	(riscv_return_value): Pass new arg to riscv_arg_location.
2018-11-14 14:54:10 -08:00
Jim Wilson ef2de9e7eb RISC-V: Handle vector type alignment.
For riscv64-linux target, first half of fix for
FAIL: gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp: call add_various_floatvecs

GCC gives vectors natural aligment based on total size, not element size,
bounded by the maximum supported type alignment.

	gdb/
	* riscv-tdep.c (BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT): New.
	(riscv_type_alignment) <TYPE_CODE_ARRAY>: If TYPE_VECTOR, return min
	of TYPE_LENGTH and BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT.
2018-11-14 14:52:34 -08:00
Jim Wilson 174f8ac8d4 RISC-V: Give stack slots same align as XLEN.
For riscv64-linux target, fixes
FAIL: gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp: call add_many_charvecs

Ensure that stack slots are always the same alignment as XLEN by rounding
up arg align to xlen.

	gdb/
	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_call_arg_scalar_int): Use std::min when
	setting len.  New local align, set to max of arg align and xlen,
	and pass to first riscv_assign_stack_location call.
2018-11-14 14:51:40 -08:00
Simon Marchi 53a89d6e58 Add completer for skip numbers
Add completer to various commands that accept skip numbers:

  - skip enable
  - skip disable
  - skip delete
  - info skip

These commands also accept ranges, the completer works for that but is
not very smart.  It will suggest invalid ranges, for example when doing
"2-<TAB>" it will suggest "1", which would not result in a valid range.
Also, it will keep suggesting when doing "1-2-<TAB>", even though it's
an invalid syntax.

A future idea would be to make a re-usable and well-tested completer for
numbers and ranges.  I think it could at least be re-used for breakpoint
and thread numbers (for example with the "enable breakpoints" command).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* skip.c (complete_skip_number): New function.
	(_initialize_step_skip): Add completers to some skip commands.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/skip.exp: Add standard_testfile.  Add "skip delete"
	completer tests.
2018-11-12 10:38:44 -05:00
Tom Tromey eefce37f62 Remove a VEC from remote.c
This removes the VEC from remote_g_packet_data, replacing it with a
std::vector.  This is a bit odd in that this object is never
destroyed, and is obstack-allocated.  I believe a gdbarch is never
destroyed, so this seemed ok.

Tested by the buildbot.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* remote.c (remote_g_packet_guess_s): Remove typedef and DEF_VEC.
	(struct remote_g_packet_data): Derive from allocate_on_obstack.
	<guesses>: Now a std::vector.
	(remote_g_packet_data_init, register_remote_g_packet_guess):
	Update.
	(remote_read_description_p): Update.  Return bool.
	(remote_target::read_description): Update.
	(struct remote_g_packet_guess): Add constructor.
2018-11-09 16:04:03 -07:00
Tom Tromey 2179fbc36d Return scoped_fd from open_source_file and find_and_open_source
This changes open_source_file and find_and_open_source to return
scoped_fd, then updates the callers as appropriate, including using
scoped_fd::to_file.

Tested by the buildbot.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* common/scoped_fd.h (class scoped_fd): Add move constructor and
	move assignment operator.
	* psymtab.c (psymtab_to_fullname): Update.
	* source.h (open_source_file): Return scoped_fd.
	(find_and_open_source): Likewise.
	* source.c (open_source_file): Return scoped_fd.
	(get_filename_and_charpos): Update.
	(print_source_lines_base): Update.  Use scoped_fd::to_file.
	(forward_search_command): Likewise.
	(reverse_search_command): Likewise.
	(find_and_open_source): Return scoped_fd.
	* tui/tui-source.c (tui_set_source_content): Update.  Use
	gdb_file_up.
2018-11-09 15:47:45 -07:00
John Baldwin 9c122c7f9c Fix unsigned overflow in minsyms reader.
Use a ssize_t helper variable for the number of bytes to shrink the
msymbols obstack rather than relying on unsigned overflow to shrink
the size of the obstack.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* minsyms.c (minimal_symbol_reader::install): Fix unsigned
	overflow.
2018-11-09 11:44:20 -08:00
Pedro Franco de Carvalho 4b905ae1b4 [PowerPC] Document requirements for VSX feature
As suggested in
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2018-10/msg00510.html, this
patch changes the documentation for the VSX tdesc feature to make it
clear that the altivec and FPU features are requirements.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2018-11-09  Pedro Franco de Carvalho  <pedromfc@linux.ibm.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (PowerPC Features): Document the altivec and fpu
	requirements for the org.gnu.gdb.power.vsx feature.
2018-11-09 16:09:03 -02:00
Hafiz Abid Qadeer 5d762de01c Fix a typo in iconv.m4.
config/
2018-11-09  Hafiz Abid Qadeer  <abidh@codesourcery.com>

	* iconv.m4 (AM_ICONV_LINK): Don't overwrite CPPFLAGS.
	Append $INCICONV to it.

gdb/
2018-11-09  Hafiz Abid Qadeer  <abidh@codesourcery.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

binutils/
2018-11-09  Hafiz Abid Qadeer  <abidh@codesourcery.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

intl/
2018-11-09  Hafiz Abid Qadeer  <abidh@codesourcery.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.
2018-11-09 16:08:10 +00:00
Tom de Vries 9325300dc2 [gdb/symtab] Fix language of duplicate static minimal symbol
Consider a test-case with source files msym.c:
...
static int foo (void) { return 1; }
...
and msym_main.c:
...
static int foo (void) { return 2; }
int main (void) { return 0; }
..
compiled as c++ with minimal symbols:
...
$ g++ msym_main.c msym.c
...

With objdump -x we find the two foo symbols prefixed with their corresponding
files in the symbol table:
...
0000000000000000 l    df *ABS*  0000000000000000              msym_main.c
00000000004004c7 l     F .text  000000000000000b              _ZL3foov
0000000000000000 l    df *ABS*  0000000000000000              msym.c
00000000004004dd l     F .text  000000000000000b              _ZL3foov
...

However, when we use gdb to print info on foo, both foos are listed, but we
get one symbol mangled and one symbol demangled:
...
$ gdb ./a.out -batch -ex "info func foo"
All functions matching regular expression "foo":

Non-debugging symbols:
0x00000000004004c7  foo()
0x00000000004004dd  _ZL3foov
...

During minimal symbol reading symbol_set_names is called for each symbol.

First, it's called with foo from msym.c, an entry is created in
per_bfd->demangled_names_hash and symbol_find_demangled_name is called, which
has the side effect of setting the language of the symbol to language_cplus.

Then, it's called with foo from msym_main.c.  Since
per_bfd->demangled_names_hash already has an entry for that name,
symbol_find_demangled_name is not called, and the language of the symbol
remains language_auto.

Fix this by doing the symbol_find_demangled_name call unconditionally.

Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2018-11-09  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	* symtab.c (symbol_set_names): Call symbol_find_demangled_name
	unconditionally, to set the language of the symbol.  Manage freeing
	returned pointer using gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2018-11-09  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	* gdb.base/msym-lang.c: New test.
	* gdb.base/msym-lang.exp: New file.
	* gdb.base/msym-lang-main.c: New test.
2018-11-09 11:54:04 +01:00
Tom Tromey 9c710e1157 Capitalize "<TAB>" in require_record_target error
This changes require_record_target to say "<TAB>" rather than "<tab>".
I think capitalizing here is a bit more GNU-ish, based on Emacs usage
and one other case in gdb.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* record.c (require_record_target): Upper-case "<TAB>".
2018-11-08 16:17:01 -07:00
Tom Tromey 3c6618cd22 Fix output indentation for "info pretty-printers"
I noticed that "info pretty-printers" will indent the "objfile" line
like:

    (top-gdb) info pretty-printer
    global pretty-printers:
      builtin
	mpx_bound128
      objfile /home/tromey/gdb/build/gdb/gdb pretty-printers:
      type_lookup_function

I think the "objfile" line should be "out-dented", following the same
style as the "global" and "progspace" (not shown) lines.

This patch implements this.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/lib/gdb/command/pretty_printers.py
	(InfoPrettyPrinter.invoke): Don't indent "objfile" heading.
2018-11-08 16:17:01 -07:00
Tom Tromey 20f0d60db4 Avoid crash when calling warning too early
I noticed that if you pass the name of an existing file (not a
directory) as the argument to --data-directory, gdb will crash:

    $ ./gdb -nx  --data-directory  ./gdb
    ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:590:56: runtime error: member call on null pointer of type 'struct target_ops'

This was later reported as PR gdb/23838.

This happens because warning ends up calling
target_supports_terminal_ours, which calls current_top_target, which
returns nullptr this early.

This fixes the problem by handling this case specially in
target_supports_terminal_ours.  I also changed
target_supports_terminal_ours to return bool.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/23555:
	PR gdb/23838:
	* target.h (target_supports_terminal_ours): Return bool.
	* target.c (target_supports_terminal_ours): Handle case where
	current_top_target returns nullptr.  Return bool.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2018-11-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/23555:
	PR gdb/23838:
	* gdb.base/warning.exp: New file.
2018-11-08 16:10:21 -07:00
Joel Brobecker d4718d5c9f (AArch64) wrong value returned by "finish" for HFA
Consider the gdb.ada/array_return.exp testcase, and in particular,
consider the following code...

   type Small_Float_Vector is array (1 .. 2) of Float;

   function Create_Small_Float_Vector return Small_Float_Vector is
   begin
      return (others => 4.25);
   end Create_Small_Float_Vector;

... which declares a type which is an array with 2 floats in it
(floats are 4 bytes on AArch64), trying to get GDB to print
the return value from that function does not work:

    (gdb) fin
    Run till exit from #0  pck.create_small_float_vector () at /[...]/pck.adb:15
    0x000000000000062c in p () at /[...]/p.adb:11
    11         Vector := Create_Small_Float_Vector;
    Value returned is $1 = (4.25, 0.0)
                                  ^^^
                                  |||

We expected the value shown to be:

    (gdb) fin
    Run till exit from #0  pck.create_small_float_vector () at /[...]/pck.adb:15
    0x000000000000062c in p () at /[...]/p.adb:11
    11         Vector := Create_Small_Float_Vector;
    Value returned is $1 = (4.25, 4.25)

Because the return type is an HFA, it is returned via the first two
SIMD registers. However, what happens is that the current implementation
fails to realize that this is an HFA, and therefore fetches the return
value from the wrong location. And the reason why it fails to realize
this is because it thinks that our array has 8 elements (HFAs have
a maximum of 4). Looking at aapcs_is_vfp_call_or_return_candidate_1,
where this is determined, we can easily see why (looks like a thinko):

        | case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
        | [...]
        |         struct type *target_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
        |         int count = aapcs_is_vfp_call_or_return_candidate_1
        |                       (target_type, fundamental_type);
        |
        |         if (count == -1)
        |           return count;
        |
  !! -> |         count *= TYPE_LENGTH (type);
        |           return count;

Here, we first determine the count for one element of our array,
and so we should then be multiplying that count by the number
of elements in our array (2 in our case). But instead, we multiply it
by the total size (8). As a result, we do not classify the return
type as an HFA, and thus pick the wrong location for fetching
the return value.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * aarch64-tdep.c (aapcs_is_vfp_call_or_return_candidate_1):
        return the correct count for potential HFAs.

Tested on aarch64-linux, fixes:

    array_return.exp: value printed by finish of Create_Small_Float_Vector
2018-11-08 10:27:31 -05:00
Jan Beulich b5420128da x86-64: fix ZMM register state tracking
The three AVX512 state components are entirely independent - one being
in its "init state" has no implication whatsoever on either of the other
two. Fully separate X86_XSTATE_ZMM_H and X86_XSTATE_ZMM handling, to
prevent upper halves of the upper 16 ZMM registers to display as if they
were zero (when they aren't) after e.g. VZEROALL/VZEROUPPER.
2018-11-08 12:12:05 +01:00
Andrew Burgess cd115d615c gdb/riscv: Update test to support targets without FP hardware
Update gdb.arch/riscv-reg-aliases.exp test to support targets without
floating point registers.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.arch/riscv-reg-aliases.exp: Handle targets without floating
	point hardware.
2018-11-08 09:34:19 +00:00
Andrew Burgess 17cf289784 gdb/riscv: Handle errors while setting the frame id
When we connect to a remote target one of the first things GDB does is
establish a frame id.  If an error is thrown while building this frame
id then GDB will disconnect from the target.

This can mean that, if the user is attempting to connect to a target
that doesn't yet have a program loaded, or the program the user is
going to load onto the target doesn't match what is already loaded, or
the target is just in some undefined state, then the very first
request for a frame id can fail (for example, by trying to load from
an invalid memory address), and GDB will disconnect.  It is then
impossible for the user to connect to the target and load a new
program at all.

An example of such a session might look like this:

    Reading symbols from ./gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.arch/riscv-reg-aliases/riscv-reg-aliases...
    (gdb) target remote :37191
    Remote debugging using :37191
    0x0000000000000100 in ?? ()
    Cannot access memory at address 0x0
    (gdb) load
    You can't do that when your target is `exec'
    (gdb) info frame
    /path/to/gdb/gdb/thread.c:93: internal-error: thread_info* inferior_thread(): Assertion `tp' failed.
    A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
    further debugging may prove unreliable.
    Quit this debugging session? (y or n)

The solution is to handle errors in riscv_frame_this_id, and leave the
this_id variable with its default value, which is the predefined
'outermost' frame.

With this fix in place, connecting to the same target now looks like
this:

    (gdb) target remote :37191
    Remote debugging using :37191
    0x0000000000000100 in ?? ()
    (gdb) info frame
    Stack level 0, frame at 0x0:
     pc = 0x100; saved pc = <not saved>
     Outermost frame: outermost
     Arglist at unknown address.
     Locals at unknown address, Previous frame's sp in sp

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_insn::decode): Update header comment.
	(riscv_frame_this_id): Catch errors thrown while building the
	frame cache, leave the frame id as the default, which is the outer
	frame id.
2018-11-08 09:34:19 +00:00
Joel Brobecker 76136aeda5 (Ada/tasking) fix array or string index out of range warning
A recent change in the compiler highlighted a small weakness in
the function reading the contents of the Ada Task Control Block
(ATCB -- the data that allows us to inspect Ada tasks). As a result,
anytime we read it, we started getting some warnings. For instance,
using the gdb.ada/tasks.exp testcase...

        $ gnatmake -g foo.adb
        $ gdb foo
        (gdb) b foo.adb:60
        Breakpoint 1 at 0x403e07: file foo.adb, line 60.
        (gdb) run
        [...]
        Thread 1 "foo" hit Breakpoint 1, foo () at foo.adb:60
        60         for J in Task_List'Range loop  -- STOP_HERE

... we can see that the "info tasks" command produces some warnings,
followed by the correct output.

        (gdb) info tasks
  !! ->  warning: array or string index out of range
  !! ->  warning: array or string index out of range
  !! ->  warning: array or string index out of range
  !! ->  warning: array or string index out of range
           ID       TID P-ID Pri State                  Name
        *   1    654050       48 Runnable               main_task
            2    654ef0    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(1)
            3    658680    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(2)
            4    65be10    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(3)

The problem comes from the fact that read_atcb, the function responsible
for loading the contents of the ATCB, blindly tries to read some data
which is only relevant when a task is waiting for another task on
an entry call. A comment in that code's section gives a hint as to
how the information is meant to be decoded:

      /* Let My_ATCB be the Ada task control block of a task calling the
         entry of another task; then the Task_Id of the called task is
         in My_ATCB.Entry_Calls (My_ATCB.ATC_Nesting_Level).Called_Task.  */

What the comment shows is that, to get the Id of the task being called,
one has to go through the entry calls field, which is an array pointer.
Up to now, we were lucky that, for tasks that are _not_ waiting on an
entry call, its ATCB atc_nesting_level used to be set to 1, and so
we were able to silently read some irrelevant data. But a recent change
now causes this field to be zero instead, and this triggers the warning,
since we are now trying to read outside of the array's range (arrays
in Ada often start at index 1, as is the case here).

We avoid this issue by simply only reading that data when the data
is actually known to be relevant (state == Entry_Caller_Sleep).

This, in turn, allows us to simplify a bit the use of the task_info->state
field, where we no longer need to check task the task has a state equal
to Entry_Caller_Sleep before using this field. Indeed, with this new
approach, we now know that, unless task_info->state == Entry_Caller_Sleep,
the state is now guaranteed to be zero. In other words, we no longer set
task_info->called_task to some random value, forcing to check the task's
state first as a way to verify that the data is not random.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-lang.c (read_atcb): Only set task_info->called_task if
        task_info->state == Entry_Caller_Sleep.
        (print_ada_task_info): Do not check task_info->state before
        checking task_info->called_task.
        (info_task): Likewise.
2018-11-07 16:28:52 -05:00
Joel Brobecker 07deea26b5 ada-tasks.c::read_atcb: start from a cleared ada_task_info result
The purpose of this patch is not to fix a bug per se, but rather
to robustify this function to make sure it never returns a struct
ada_task_info where some of the fields are left uninitialized.
Reading the current implementation, it attempts to methodically
set them all one by one: but it's not excluded that a future
change might miss something. A memset is cheap and make sure that
this function returns repeatable results.

This in turns allows us to remove some assignments which have become
redundant.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-tasks.c (read_atcb): Clear task_info before computing
        the value of each of its fields.
2018-11-07 16:28:07 -05:00
Andrew Burgess 35ee2dc2e4 gdb: Guard against NULL dereference in dwarf2_init_integer_type
In this commit:

    commit eb77c9df9f
    Date:   Thu Oct 18 14:04:27 2018 +0100

        gdb: Handle ICC's unexpected void return type

A potential dereference of a NULL pointer was introduced if a
DW_TAG_base_type is missing a DW_AT_name attribute.

I have taken this opportunity to fix a slight confusion that existed
in the test also added in the above commit, the test had two C
variables, declared like this:

    int var_a = 5;

    void *var_ptr = &var_a;

However, the fake DWARF in the test script declared them like this:

    void var_a = 5;

    void *var_ptr = &var_a;

This wasn't a problem as the test never uses 'var_a' directly, this
only exists so 'var_ptr' can be initialised.  However, it seemed worth
fixing.

I've also added a test for a DW_TAG_base_type with a missing
DW_AT_name, as clearly there's not test currently that covers this
(the original patch tested cleanly).  I can confirm that the new test
causes GDB to crash before this patch, and passes with this patch.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_init_integer_type): Check for name being
	NULL before dereferencing it.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.dwarf2/void-type.exp: Rename types, and make var_a an 'int'.
	* gdb.dwarf2/missing-type-name.exp: New file.
2018-11-07 12:58:56 +00:00
Tom de Vries 31aceee863 [gdb] Fix gdb crash when reading core file
Consider the test-case from this patch, compiled with O0.

The executable segfaults, and generates a core dump:
...
$ ./a.out
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
...

When loading the core file, limiting stack size to 4MB, gdb crashes:
...
$ ulimit -s 4096
$ gdb -batch ./a.out core.saved
[New LWP 19379]
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
...

The crash originates here in linux_vsyscall_range_raw, where we call alloca
with phdrs_size == 4194112 (roughly 4MB):
...
      phdrs = (Elf_Internal_Phdr *) alloca (phdrs_size);
...

While for this test-case gdb runs fine with the system default stack limit of
8MB, there are cases reported of 12MB phdrs_size where gdb also crashes with
the system default stack limit.

Fix this by using xmalloc instead of alloca, which prevents the crash provided
the stack limit is at least 112kb.

Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.

2018-11-06  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	* linux-tdep.c (linux_vsyscall_range_raw): Use xmalloc to allocate
	program headers.

	* gdb.base/many-headers.c: New test.
	* gdb.base/many-headers.exp: New file.
2018-11-06 23:15:41 +01:00
Jim Wilson 109be305bb RISC-V: Force variables to .data for code_elim.
RISC-V puts a global variable in .sdata by default, which causes the
add-symbol-file commands with -s .data to fail as there is no .data section.
This fixes 3 testsuite failures.

	gdb/testsuite/
	* gdb.base/code_elim.exp: For riscv, set additional_flags
	to include -msmall-data-limit=0.
2018-11-06 11:06:23 -08:00
Max Filippov f11acc5ec0 gdb: xtensa: use linux ABI code for uclinux
gdb/
2018-11-06  Max Filippov  <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>

	* configure.tgt (xtensa*-*-linux*): Change to xtensa*-*-*linux*
	so that it applies to uclinux as well.
2018-11-06 10:25:11 -08:00
Marius Muench 9e237747bd ARM: Do not use FP reg when on AAPCS
GDB tries to dereference the frame pointer in arm_scan_prologue as a
last resort to create frame information.
However, the more recent AAPCS ABI does not make use of a frame pointer.

This patch checks whether the specified arm_abi is AAPCS before
dereferencing the "frame pointer". If so, just return as efforts to use
it for restoring frame information won't work.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-06  Marius Muench  <marius.muench@eurecom.fr>

	* arm-tdep.c (arm_scan_prologue): Don't dereference FP reg
	when on AAPCS.
2018-11-06 10:54:08 -07:00
John Baldwin bcecc11da2 Note that PT_GETREGS supplies SSTATUS for FreeBSD/riscv.
This permits reading the value of the SSTATUS CSR returned by ptrace()
for live FreeBSD/riscv processes.

	* riscv-fbsd-nat.c (getregs_supplies): Return true for
	RISCV_CSR_SSTATUS_REGNUM.
2018-11-06 09:47:21 -08:00
Philippe Waroquiers bb20ccab70 ChangeLog for 'Fix 4K leak each time next/step changes of function.' 2018-11-05 23:09:44 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers 8e6a5953e1 Fix 4K leak in open_source_file each time next/step changes of function.
When current function changes after a next/step, GDB shows a message such as:
  (gdb) s
  info_fun1 ()
      at /bd/home/philippe/gdb/git/build_smallthing/gdb/testsuite/../../../smallthing/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/info_qt.c:41
  41	  info_qt_inc++;
  (gdb)

Valgrind reports a 4K definite leak for each such message (full stacktrace of
the leak below).

This patch fixes this leak, by transferring the current s->fullname to the
unique_xmalloc_ptr fullname given to find_and_open_source.

Note that I do not understand why find_and_open_source always tries to
re-execute the substitution rules on the provided fullname, as source.c
symtab_to_fullname just blindly returns a non NULL s->fullname, counting on
forget_cached_source_info to be called if search dir or substitution rules are
changed.  Similarly, psymtab_to_fullname also just returns a non NULL
ps->fullname.

==15309== VALGRIND_GDB_ERROR_BEGIN
==15309== 69,632 bytes in 17 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 3,158 of 3,186
==15309==    at 0x4C2BE2D: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==15309==    by 0x5BF0987: realpath@@GLIBC_2.3 (canonicalize.c:78)
==15309==    by 0x41F713: gdb_realpath(char const*) (pathstuff.c:72)
==15309==    by 0x608833: openp(char const*, enum_flags<openp_flag>, char const*, int, std::unique_ptr<char, gdb::xfree_deleter<char> >*) (source.c:861)
==15309==    by 0x608B89: find_and_open_source(char const*, char const*, std::unique_ptr<char, gdb::xfree_deleter<char> >*) (source.c:1049)
==15309==    by 0x608D0B: open_source_file(symtab*) (source.c:1074)
==15309==    by 0x609101: print_source_lines_base(symtab*, int, int, enum_flags<print_source_lines_flag>) (source.c:1291)
==15309==    by 0x614ADF: print_frame_info(frame_info*, int, print_what, int, int) (stack.c:911)
==15309==    by 0x614C45: print_stack_frame(frame_info*, int, print_what, int) (stack.c:181)
==15309==    by 0x511D5E: print_stop_location (infrun.c:8044)
==15309==    by 0x511D5E: print_stop_event(ui_out*) (infrun.c:8061)
==15309==    by 0x40DD6D: cli_on_normal_stop(bpstats*, int) (cli-interp.c:145)
==15309==    by 0x512409: operator() (functional:2127)
==15309==    by 0x512409: notify (observable.h:106)
==15309==    by 0x512409: normal_stop() (infrun.c:8334)
==15309==    by 0x5156D8: fetch_inferior_event(void*) (infrun.c:3955)
==15309==    by 0x4B3EEC: gdb_wait_for_event(int) (event-loop.c:859)
==15309==    by 0x4B3FF6: gdb_do_one_event() [clone .part.4] (event-loop.c:322)
==15309==    by 0x4B41B4: gdb_do_one_event (common-exceptions.h:219)
==15309==    by 0x4B41B4: start_event_loop() (event-loop.c:371)
==15309==    by 0x551217: captured_command_loop() (main.c:330)
==15309==    by 0x55220C: captured_main (main.c:1177)
==15309==    by 0x55220C: gdb_main(captured_main_args*) (main.c:1193)
==15309==    by 0x29B4F7: main (gdb.c:32)
==15309==
==15309== VALGRIND_GDB_ERROR_END

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-04  Philippe Waroquiers  <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>

	* source.c (open_source_file): Fix leak by transferring the
	current s->fullname to the unique_xmalloc_ptr fullname given
	to find_and_open_source.
2018-11-05 21:26:03 +01:00
Tom Tromey a31abe80ea Return gdbpy_ref from gdbpy_get_varobj_pretty_printer
This changes gdbpy_get_varobj_pretty_printer to return a gdbpy_ref.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-04  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* varobj.c (install_default_visualizer): Update.
	* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_get_varobj_pretty_printer):
	Return gdbpy_ref.
	* python/py-prettyprint.c (search_pp_list): Return gdbpy_ref.
	(find_pretty_printer_from_progspace)
	(find_pretty_printer_from_gdb, find_pretty_printer)
	(gdbpy_get_varobj_pretty_printer): Return gdbpy_ref.
	(gdbpy_get_varobj_pretty_printer, gdbpy_default_visualizer):
	Update.
2018-11-04 08:01:01 -07:00
Tom Tromey 833d985d1c Return gdbpy_ref from some Python string functions
This changes python_string_to_unicode,
python_string_to_target_python_string, and
host_string_to_python_string to return gdbpy_ref.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-04  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Update.
	* python/python-internal.h (python_string_to_unicode)
	(python_string_to_target_python_string)
	(host_string_to_python_string): Return gdbpy_ref.
	* python/py-utils.c (python_string_to_unicode)
	(unicode_to_encoded_python_string)
	(unicode_to_target_python_string)
	(python_string_to_target_string)
	(python_string_to_target_python_string): Return gdbpy_ref.
	(python_string_to_host_string): Update.
	(host_string_to_python_string): Return gdbpy_ref.
	* python/py-symtab.c (stpy_get_filename, stpy_get_producer)
	(stpy_fullname): Update.
	* python/py-progspace.c (pspy_get_filename, pspy_solib_name):
	Update.
	* python/py-prettyprint.c (print_string_repr): Update.
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfpy_get_filename, objfpy_get_username)
	(objfpy_get_build_id): Update.
	* python/py-breakpoint.c (bppy_get_location)
	(bppy_get_expression, bppy_get_condition, bppy_get_commands):
	Update.
2018-11-04 08:01:01 -07:00
Tom Tromey 12dfa12a3c Return gdbpy_ref from gdb_py_object_from_*longest
This changes gdb_py_object_from_longest and
gdb_py_object_from_ulongest to return a gdbpy_ref rather than a
PyObject*.

gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-04  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/python-internal.h (gdb_py_object_from_longest)
	(gdb_py_object_from_ulongest): Return gdbpy_ref.
	* python/py-value.c (valpy_int): Update.
	* python/py-utils.c (gdb_py_object_from_longest): Return
	gdbpy_ref.
	(gdb_py_object_from_ulongest): Likewise.
	* python/py-type.c (typy_get_alignof): Update.
	* python/py-linetable.c (ltpy_get_all_source_lines)
	(ltpy_entry_get_line, ltpy_entry_get_pc): Update.
	* python/py-block.c (blpy_get_start, blpy_get_end): Update.
2018-11-04 08:01:00 -07:00
Philippe Waroquiers 470678d7c9 OBVIOUS Fix a typo in ada-lang.c add_prefix_cmd for "set ada"
Correct typo in add_prefix_cmd doc arg for "set ada".
2018-11-03 21:33:42 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers 814fa4f632 OBVIOUS Remove a useless const char *type and its initialization.
Valgrind detected a leak for the line:
  type = xstrdup ("auto");

as the compile probably dropped the type variable completely, as its
only usage was this initialization.

So, remove the useless variable.
2018-11-03 19:31:41 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers 3c6dd3d1c7 OBVIOUS fix the month of the last gdb/ChangeLog entry to be 11 instead of 12. 2018-11-03 19:19:05 +01:00
Joel Brobecker e8bf1ce461 (Ada) Add ravenscar tasking support on AArch64
This patch adds support for debugging Ravenscar tasks, similar to what
is done for ppc and sparc.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.h, aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c:
        New files.
        * aarch64-tdep.c: #include "aarch64-ravenscar-thread.h".
        (aarch64_gdbarch_init): Add call to register_aarch64_ravenscar_ops.
        * Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS): Add aarch64-ravenscar-thread.o.
        (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add aarch64-ravenscar-thread.h.
        (ALLDEPFILES): Add aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c.
        * configure.tgt (cpu_obs) [aarch64*-*-*]: Add ravenscar-thread.o
        and aarch64-ravenscar-thread.o.
        * NEWS: Add entry documenting Ravenscar tasking support
        on AArch64 ELF.
2018-11-02 13:37:29 -04:00
Philippe Waroquiers d54cfd762b QUIET flag initialization missing in 2 places.
Fix by Matthew Malcomson  <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>

Pushed as obvious.
2018-11-02 14:20:59 +01:00
Jim Wilson 3ba2ee38a6 RISC-V: Don't allow unaligned breakpoints.
Some hardware doesn't support unaligned accesses, and a bare metal target
may not have an unaligned access trap handler.  So if the PC is 2-byte
aligned, then use a 2-byte breakpoint to avoid unaligned accesses.

Tested on native RV64GC Linux with gdb testsuite and cross on spike
simulator and openocd with riscv-tests/debug.

	gdb/
	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_breakpoint_kind_from_pc): New local unaligned_p.
	Set if pcptr if unaligned.  Return 2 if unaligned_p true.  Update
	debugging messages.
2018-11-01 17:25:15 -07:00
Joel Brobecker e2b7af7242 (Ada) fix "error in expression" when using watch -location command
The "watch -l EXPR" command with the language set to Ada currently
fails with the following error:

     (gdb) watch -l global_var
     Error in expression, near ` 0x000000000062d2d8'.

The error occurs because GDB internally translate the request into
a watchpoint on a different expression: "* (TYPE *) ADDR" where
TYPE and ADDR are the type and the address of the object returned
by the expression's evaluation (resp.). So, in the example above,
global_var being an integer stored at 0x000000000062d2d8, GDB tries
to set a watchpoint on "* (integer *) 0x000000000062d2d8", which
fails, because we try to parse this expression with Ada, when
in fact it is not valid.

This patch fixes the issue by implementing the la_watch_location_expression
language method, using a syntax that the Ada parser recognizes
("{TYPE} ADDR").

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* ada-lang.c (ada_watch_location_expression): New function.
        (ada_language_defn): Set la_watch_location_expression to
        ada_watch_location_expression.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/watch_minus_l: New testcase.
2018-11-01 15:15:41 -07:00
Joel Brobecker 8b578f9c76 remove trailing spaces in print-utils.c ("int_string" function)
gdb/ChangeLog:

        * print-utils.c (int_string): Remove unnecessary trailing spaces.
2018-11-01 15:08:57 -07:00
Joel Brobecker 87f7ab7b84 gdb.texinfo: Fix the output of the "info tasks 2" example
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.texinfo (Ada Tasks): Update the "info task 2" example
        output to match the current implementation.
2018-11-01 15:05:40 -07:00
Joel Brobecker 1cc62f2e44 rs6000-tdep.c:skip_prologue avoid negative left shift
the rs6000-tdep.c::skip_prologue function has the following code:

          unsigned int all_mask = ~((1U << fdata->saved_gpr) - 1);

          /* Not a recognized prologue instruction.
             Handle optimizer code motions into the prologue by continuing
             the search if we have no valid frame yet or if the return
             address is not yet saved in the frame.  Also skip instructions
             if some of the GPRs expected to be saved are not yet saved.  */
          if (fdata->frameless == 0 && fdata->nosavedpc == 0
              && (fdata->gpr_mask & all_mask) == all_mask)
            break;

The problem is that fdata->saved_gpr is initialized to -1, and so,
if no instruction is found in the function's prologue that causes us
to set that field to a non-negative value, the sanitizer crashes
with the following message:

    rs6000-tdep.c:1965:34: runtime error: shift exponent -1 is negative

This patch fixes the issue the by only doing the shift if saved_gpr
is not negative. When saved_gpr is negative, we actually don't need
the shift.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * rs6000-tdep.c (skip_prologue): Fix potential negative left
        shifting.

Tested on ppc-linux native.
Also tested on ppc-elf (baremetal) using AdaCore's testsuite.
2018-11-01 17:46:58 -04:00
Jerome Guitton e1c3a37375 arm-pikeos: software single step
On ARM, PikeOS does not support hardware single step, causing various
semi-random errors when trying to next/step over some user code. So
this patch changes this target to use software-single-step instead.

The challenge is that, up to now, the PikeOS target was in all respects
identical to a baremetal target as far as GDB was concerned, meaning
we were using the baremetal osabi for this target too. This is no longer
possible, and we need to introduce a new OSABI variant. Unfortunately,
there isn't anything in the object file that would allow us to
differentiate between the two platforms. So we have to rely on a
heuristic instead, where we look for some known symbols that are
required in a PikeOS application (these symbols are expected to be
defined by the default linker script, and correspond to routines used
to allocate the application stack).

For the long run, the hope is that the stub implementation provided
by PikeOS is enhanced so that it includes vContSupported+ to the
$qSupported query, and then that the reply to the "vCont?" query
only return support for "continue" operations (thus exclusing "step"
operations). We could then use that information to reliably determine
at connection time that the target does not support single-stepping
and therefore automatically turn software single-stepping automatically
based on it.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * defs.h (enum gdb_osabi): Add GDB_OSABI_PIKEOS.
        * osabi.c (gdb_osabi_names): Add name for GDB_OSABI_PIKEOS.
        * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: New file.
        * configure.tgt: Add arm-pikeos-tdep.o to the case of ARM
        embedded system.
        * Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add arm-pikeos-tdep.o.

Tested on arm-pikeos and arm-elf using AdaCore's testsuite.
We also evaluated it on armhf-linux as a cross platform.
2018-11-01 14:43:44 -07:00
Simon Marchi e8d8cce69b Import mkdtemp gnulib module, fix mingw build
Building with mingw currently fails:

  CXX    unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.o
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c: In function ‘void selftests::mkdir_recursive::test()’:
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c:49:20: error: ‘mkdtemp’ was not declared in this scope
   if (mkdtemp (base) == NULL)
                    ^
Commit

    e418a61a67 ("Move mkdir_recursive to common/filestuff.c")

moved this code, but also removed the HAVE_MKDTEMP guard which prevented
the mkdtemp call to be compiled on mingw.

We can either put back the HAVE_MKDTEMP ifdef, or import the gnulib
mkdtemp module, which provides the function for mingw.  Since the
mkdir_recursive is susceptible to be used on mingw at some point, I
think it would be nice to have it tested on mingw, so I did the latter.

Once built, I tested it on Windows (copied the resulting gdb.exe on a
Windows machine, ran it, and ran "maint selftest mkdir_recursive").  It
failed, because the temporary directory is hardcoded to "/tmp/...".  I
therefore added and used a new get_standard_temp_dir function, which
returns an appropriate temporary directory for the host platform.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* common/pathstuff.c (get_standard_temp_dir): New.
	* common/pathstuff.h (get_standard_temp_dir): New.
	* config.in: Re-generate.
	* configure: Re-generate.
	* configure.ac: Don't check for mkdtemp.
	* gnulib/aclocal-m4-deps.mk: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/config.in: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/configure: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/import/Makefile.am: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/import/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Re-generate.
	* gnulib/import/m4/mkdtemp.m4: New file.
	* gnulib/import/mkdtemp.c: New file.
	* gnulib/update-gnulib.sh (IMPORTED_GNULIB_MODULES):
	Add mkdtemp module.
	* unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c (test): Use
	get_standard_temp_dir.
	(_initialize_mkdir_recursive_selftests): Remove HAVE_MKDTEMP
	ifdef.
	* compile/compile.c (get_compile_file_tempdir): Likewise.
2018-11-01 15:41:43 -04:00
Sangamesh Mallayya cdcda965ea Reading signal handler frame in AIX
In AIX if gdb is debugging an application which has a signal handler
and reaches the signal handler frame, then we need to read the back
chain address from sigcontext saved on the stack, similarly the LR.

As backchain at an offset 0 will be 0, because we will have a
sigconext saved after the minimum stack size. So the correct
backchain will be at an offset after minimum stack and the LR at
an offset 8 will be of the signal millicode address.
If the back chain pointer is NULL and the LR field is in the kernel
segment(ex. 0x00004a14) then we can probably assume we are in a
signal  handler.

sample output

(gdb) bt
0  sig_handle_aix (signo=11) at aix-sighandle.c:7
1  0x0000000000004a94 in ?? ()
(gdb)

expected output

(gdb) bt
0  sig_handle_aix (signo=11) at aix-sighandle.c:7
1  <signal handler called>
2  0x0000000100000748 in foo () at aix-sighandle.c:14
3  0x000000010000079c in main () at aix-sighandle.c:19

gdb/ChangeLog:

2018-11-01  Sangamesh Mallayya <sangamesh.swamy@in.ibm.com>

	* rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Include "trad-frame.h" and "frame-unwind.h".
	(SIG_FRAME_LR_OFFSET64): New define.
	(SIG_FRAME_FP_OFFSET64): New define.
	(aix_sighandle_frame_cache): New Function.
	(aix_sighandle_frame_this_id): New Function.
	(aix_sighandle_frame_prev_register): New Function.
	(aix_sighandle_frame_sniffer): New Function.
	(aix_sighandle_frame_unwind): New global variable.
	(rs6000_aix_init_osabi): Install new frame unwinder.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2018-11-01  Sangamesh Mallayya <sangamesh.swamy@in.ibm.com>

	* gdb.arch/aix-sighandle.c: New file.
	* gdb.arch/aix-sighandle.exp: New file.
2018-11-01 06:23:59 -04:00