This file was only under gdb/ currently because it predates the
gdb/unittests/ directory.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/common-utils-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add common-utils-selftests.o.
(COMMON_OBS): Remove utils-selftests.o.
* utils-selftests.c: Move to ...
* unittests/common-utils-selftests.c: ... here and rename self
test to "string_printf".
gdb/monitor.c was removed by 40e0b27 (Delete the remaining ROM monitor
targets).
gdb:
2017-09-19 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (monitor.o): Remove the rule.
The following patch modifies xml_escape_text, so I took the opportunity
to write a unit test for it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add new source file.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add new object file.
* unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c: New file.
Support for collecting and supplying general purpose and floating point
register sets is provided along with signal frame unwinding.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS): Add aarch64-fbsd-tdep.o.
(ALLDEPFILES): Add aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c.
* NEWS: Mention new FreeBSD/aarch64 target.
* configure.tgt: Add aarch64*-*-freebsd*.
* aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c: New file.
* aarch64-fbsd-tdep.h: New file.
This patch changes amd64-linux target descriptions so that they can be
dynamically generated in both GDB and GDBserver.
gdb/gdbserver:
2017-09-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (arch-amd64.o): New rule.
* configure.srv: Append arch-amd64.o.
* linux-amd64-ipa.c: Include common/x86-xstate.h.
(get_ipa_tdesc): Call amd64_linux_read_description.
(initialize_low_tracepoint): Don't call init_registers_x32_XXX
and init_registers_amd64_XXX.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_read_description): Call
amd64_linux_read_description.
(x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): Call amd64_get_ipa_tdesc_idx.
(initialize_low_arch): Don't call init_registers_x32_XXX and
init_registers_amd64_XXX.
* linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c: Declare init_registers_amd64_XXX
and tdesc_amd64_XXX.
[__x86_64__] (amd64_tdesc_test): New function.
(initialize_low_tdesc) [__x86_64__]: Call init_registers_x32_XXX
and init_registers_amd64_XXX.
* linux-x86-tdesc.c: Include arch/amd64.h.
(xcr0_to_tdesc_idx): New function.
(i386_linux_read_description): New function.
(amd64_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function.
* linux-x86-tdesc.h (amd64_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): Declare.
(amd64_get_ipa_tdesc): Declare.
gdb:
2017-09-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Include arch/amd64.h. Don't include
features/i386/*.c.
(amd64_linux_read_description): Call
amd64_create_target_description.
* arch/amd64.c: New file.
* arch/amd64.h: New file.
* configure.tgt (x86_64-*-linux*): Append amd64.o.
* Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS): Append amd64.o.
The code on creating i386-linux target descriptions are quite similar
between GDB and GDBserver, so this patch moves them into a shared file
arch/i386.c. I didn't name it as i386-linux.c, because I want to reuse it
to create other i386 non-linux target descriptions later.
gdb:
2017-09-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add i386.o.
(SFILES): Add arch/i386.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add arch/i386.h.
* arch/i386.c: New file.
* arch/i386.h: New file.
* arch/tdesc.h (allocate_target_description): Declare.
(set_tdesc_architecture): Declare.
(set_tdesc_osabi): Declare.
* configure.tgt (i[34567]86-*-linux*): Add i386.o.
* i386-linux-tdep.c: Don't include ../features/i386/32bit-XXX.c.
include arch/i386.h.
(i386_linux_read_description): Remove code and call
i386_create_target_description.
(set_tdesc_architecture): New function.
(set_tdesc_osabi): New function.
* target-descriptions.h (allocate_target_description): Remove.
gdb/gdbserver:
2017-09-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (arch-i386.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (i[34567]86-*-linux*): Add arch-i386.o.
(x86_64-*-linux*): Likewise.
* linux-x86-tdesc.c: Don't include ../features/i386/32bit-XXX.c,
include arch/i386.h.
(i386_linux_read_description): Remove code and call
i386_create_target_description.
* tdesc.c (allocate_target_description): New function.
* tdesc.h (set_tdesc_architecture): Remove declaration.
(set_tdesc_osabi): Likewise.
An array_view is an abstraction that provides a non-owning view over a
sequence of contiguous objects.
A way to put it is that array_view is to std::vector (and std::array
and built-in arrays with rank==1) like std::string_view is to
std::string.
The main intent of array_view is to use it as function input parameter
type, making it possible to pass in any sequence of contiguous
objects, irrespective of whether the objects live on the stack or heap
and what actual container owns them. Implicit construction from the
element type is supported too, making it easy to call functions that
expect an array of elements when you only have one element (usually on
the stack). For example:
struct A { .... };
void function (gdb::array_view<A> as);
std::vector<A> std_vec = ...;
std::array<A, N> std_array = ...;
A array[] = {...};
A elem;
function (std_vec);
function (std_array);
function (array);
function (elem);
Views can be either mutable or const. A const view is simply created
by specifying a const T as array_view template parameter, in which
case operator[] of non-const array_view objects ends up returning
const references. (Making the array_view itself const is analogous to
making a pointer itself be const. I.e., disables re-seating the
view/pointer.) Normally functions will pass around array_views by
value.
Uses of gdb::array_view (other than the ones in the unit tests) will
be added in a follow up patch.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/array-view-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add array-view-selftests.o.
* common/array-view.h: New file.
* unittests/array-view-selftests.c: New file.
This patch uses GDB self test in GDBserver. The self tests are run if
GDBserver is started with option --selftest.
gdb:
2017-08-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* NEWS: Mention GDBserver's new option "--selftest".
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Remove selftest.c, add common/selftest.c.
* selftest.c: Move it to common/selftest.c.
* selftest.h: Move it to common/selftest.h.
* selftest-arch.c (reset): New function.
(tests_with_arch): Call reset.
gdb/gdbserver:
2017-08-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (OBS): Add selftest.o.
* configure.ac: AC_DEFINE GDB_SELF_TEST if $development.
* configure, config.in: Re-generated.
* server.c: Include common/sefltest.h.
(captured_main): Handle option --selftest.
gdb/testsuite:
2017-08-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.server/unittest.exp: New.
gdb/doc:
2017-08-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.texinfo (Server): Document "--selftest".
Tab completion when debugging a program binary that uses GDB index is
surprisingly much slower than when GDB uses psymtabs instead. Around
1.5x/3x slower. That's surprising, because the whole point of GDB
index is to speed things up...
For example, with:
set pagination off
set $count = 0
while $count < 400
complete b string_prin # matches gdb's string_printf
printf "count = %d\n", $count
set $count = $count + 1
end
$ time ./gdb --batch -q ./gdb-with-index -ex "source script.cmd"
real 0m11.042s
user 0m10.920s
sys 0m0.042s
$ time ./gdb --batch -q ./gdb-without-index -ex "source script.cmd"
real 0m4.635s
user 0m4.590s
sys 0m0.037s
Same but with:
- complete b string_prin
+ complete b zzzzzz
to exercise the no-matches worst case, master currently gets you
something like:
with index without index
real 0m11.971s 0m8.413s
user 0m11.912s 0m8.355s
sys 0m0.035s 0m0.035s
Running gdb under perf shows 80% spent inside
maybe_add_partial_symtab_filename, and 20% spent in the lbasename
inside that.
The problem that tab completion walks over all compunit symtabs, and
for each, walks the contained file symtabs. And there a huge number
of file symtabs (each included system header, etc.) that appear in
each compunit symtab's file symtab list. As in, when debugging GDB, I
have 367381 symtabs iterated, when of those only 5371 filenames are
unique...
This was a regression from the earlier (nice) split of symtabs in
compunit symtabs + file symtabs.
The fix here is to add a cache of unique filenames per objfile so that
the walk / uniquing is only done once. There's already a abstraction
for this in symtab.c; this patch moves that code out to a separate
file and C++ifies it bit.
This makes the worst-case scenario above consistently drop to ~2.5s
(1.5s for the "string_prin" hit case), making it over 3.3x times
faster than psymtabs in this use case (7x in the "string_prin" hit
case).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-07-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (COMMON_OBS): Add filename-seen-cache.o.
* dwarf2read.c: Include "filename-seen-cache.h".
* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_per_objfile) <filenames_cache>: New field.
(dw2_map_symbol_filenames): Build and use a filenames_seen_cache.
* filename-seen-cache.c: New file.
* filename-seen-cache.h: New file.
* symtab.c: Include "filename-seen-cache.h".
(struct filename_seen_cache, INITIAL_FILENAME_SEEN_CACHE_SIZE)
(create_filename_seen_cache, clear_filename_seen_cache)
(delete_filename_seen_cache, filename_seen): Delete, parts moved
to filename-seen-cache.h/filename-seen-cache.c.
(output_source_filename, sources_info)
(maybe_add_partial_symtab_filename)
(make_source_files_completion_list): Adjust to use
filename_seen_cache.
As part of the preparation necessary for my upcoming task, I'd like to
propose that we turn gdb_environ into a class. The approach taken
here is simple: the class gdb_environ contains everything that is
needed to manipulate the environment variables. These variables are
stored in an std::vector<char *>, which can be converted to a 'char
**' and passed as argument to functions that need it.
The usage has not changed much. As per Pedro's suggestion, this class
uses a static factory method initialization. This means that when an
instance is created, it is initially empty. When needed, it has to be
initialized using the static method 'from_host_environ'.
As mentioned before, this is a preparation for an upcoming work that I
will be posting in the next few weeks or so. For that work, I'll
probably create another data structure that will contain all the
environment variables that were set by the user using the 'set
environment' command, because I'll need access to them. This will be
much easier with the class-ification of gdb_environ.
As noted, this has been regression-tested with the new version of
environ.exp and no regressions were found.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-20 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
'unittests/environ-selftests.c'.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add 'environ-selftests.o'.
* charset.c (find_charset_names): Declare object 'iconv_env'.
Update code to use 'iconv_env' object. Remove call to
'free_environ'.
* common/environ.c: Include <utility>.
(make_environ): Delete function.
(free_environ): Delete function.
(gdb_environ::clear): New function.
(gdb_environ::operator=): New function.
(gdb_environ::get): Likewise.
(environ_vector): Delete function.
(set_in_environ): Delete function.
(gdb_environ::set): New function.
(unset_in_environ): Delete function.
(gdb_environ::unset): New function.
(gdb_environ::envp): Likewise.
* common/environ.h: Include <vector>.
(struct gdb_environ): Delete; transform into...
(class gdb_environ): ... this class.
(free_environ): Delete prototype.
(init_environ, get_in_environ, set_in_environ, unset_in_environ,
environ_vector): Likewise.
* infcmd.c (run_command_1): Update code to call
'envp' from 'gdb_environ' class.
(environment_info): Update code to call methods from 'gdb_environ'
class.
(unset_environment_command): Likewise.
(path_info): Likewise.
(path_command): Likewise.
* inferior.c (inferior::~inferior): Delete call to 'free_environ'.
(inferior::inferior): Initialize 'environment' using the host's
information.
* inferior.h: Remove forward declaration of 'struct gdb_environ'.
Include "environ.h".
(class inferior) <environment>: Change type from 'struct
gdb_environ' to 'gdb_environ'.
* mi/mi-cmd-env.c (mi_cmd_env_path): Update code to call
methods from 'gdb_environ' class.
* solib.c (solib_find_1): Likewise
* unittests/environ-selftests.c: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-06-20 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (linux_create_inferior): Adjust code to access the
environment information via 'gdb_environ' class.
* lynx-low.c (lynx_create_inferior): Likewise.
* server.c (our_environ): Make it an instance of 'gdb_environ'.
(get_environ): Return a pointer to 'our_environ'.
(captured_main): Initialize 'our_environ'.
* server.h (get_environ): Adjust prototype.
* spu-low.c (spu_create_inferior): Adjust code to access the
environment information via 'gdb_environ' class.
Because we are compiling .c files containing C++ code, clang++ complains
with:
clang: error: treating 'c' input as 'c++' when in C++ mode, this behavior is deprecated
If renaming all the source files to .cpp is out of the question, an
alternative is to pass "-x c++" to convince the compiler that we are
really compiling C++. It works fine with GCC too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (COMPILE.pre): Add "-x c++".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (COMPILE.pre): Add "-x c++".
This is the most important (and the biggest, sorry) patch of the
series. It moves fork_inferior from gdb/fork-child.c to
nat/fork-inferior.c and makes all the necessary adjustments to both
GDB and gdbserver to make sure everything works OK.
There is no "most important change" with this patch; all changes are
made in a progressive way, making sure that gdbserver had the
necessary features while not breaking GDB at the same time.
I decided to go ahead and implement a partial support for starting the
inferior with a shell on gdbserver, although the full feature comes in
the next patch. The user won't have the option to disable the
startup-with-shell, and also won't be able to change which shell
gdbserver will use (other than setting the $SHELL environment
variable, that is).
Everything is working as expected, and no regressions were present
during the tests.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/common-inferior.h"
and "nat/fork-inferior.h".
* common/common-inferior.h: New file, with contents from
"gdb/inferior.h".
* commom/common-utils.c: Include "common-utils.h".
(stringify_argv): New function.
* common/common-utils.h (stringify_argv): New prototype.
* configure.nat: Add "fork-inferior.o" as a dependency for
"*linux*", "fbsd*" and "nbsd*" hosts.
* corefile.c (get_exec_file): Update comment.
* darwin-nat.c (darwin_ptrace_him): Call "gdb_startup_inferior"
instead of "startup_inferior".
(darwin_create_inferior): Call "add_thread_silent" after
"fork_inferior".
* fork-child.c: Cleanup unnecessary includes.
(SHELL_FILE): Move to "common/common-fork-child.c".
(environ): Likewise.
(exec_wrapper): Initialize.
(get_exec_wrapper): New function.
(breakup_args): Move to "common/common-fork-child.c"; rename to
"breakup_args_for_exec".
(escape_bang_in_quoted_argument): Move to
"common/common-fork-child.c".
(saved_ui): New variable.
(prefork_hook): New function.
(postfork_hook): Likewise.
(postfork_child_hook): Likewise.
(gdb_startup_inferior): Likewise.
(fork_inferior): Move to "common/common-fork-child.c". Update
function to support gdbserver.
(startup_inferior): Likewise.
* gdbcore.h (get_exec_file): Remove declaration.
* gnu-nat.c (gnu_create_inferior): Call "gdb_startup_inferior"
instead of "startup_inferior". Call "add_thread_silent" after
"fork_inferior".
* inf-ptrace.c: Include "nat/fork-inferior.h" and "utils.h".
(inf_ptrace_create_inferior): Call "gdb_startup_inferior"
instead of "startup_inferior". Call "add_thread_silent" after
"fork_inferior".
* inferior.h: Include "common-inferior.h".
(trace_start_error): Move to "common/common-utils.h".
(trace_start_error_with_name): Likewise.
(fork_inferior): Move prototype to "nat/fork-inferior.h".
(startup_inferior): Likewise.
(gdb_startup_inferior): New prototype.
* nat/fork-inferior.c: New file, with contents from "fork-child.c".
* nat/fork-inferior.h: New file.
* procfs.c (procfs_init_inferior): Call "gdb_startup_inferior"
instead of "startup_inferior". Call "add_thread_silent" after
"fork_inferior".
* target.h (target_terminal_init): Move prototype to
"target/target.h".
(target_terminal_inferior): Likewise.
(target_terminal_ours): Likewise.
* target/target.h (target_terminal_init): New prototype, moved
from "target.h".
(target_terminal_inferior): Likewise.
(target_terminal_ours): Likewise.
* utils.c (gdb_flush_out_err): New function.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add "nat/fork-inferior.o".
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.srv (srv_linux_obj): Add "fork-child.o" and
"fork-inferior.o".
(i[34567]86-*-lynxos*): Likewise.
(spu*-*-*): Likewise.
* fork-child.c: New file.
* linux-low.c: Include "common-inferior.h", "nat/fork-inferior.h"
and "environ.h".
(linux_ptrace_fun): New function.
(linux_create_inferior): Adjust function prototype to reflect
change on "target.h". Adjust function code to use
"fork_inferior".
(linux_request_interrupt): Delete "signal_pid".
* lynx-low.c: Include "common-inferior.h" and "nat/fork-inferior.h".
(lynx_ptrace_fun): New function.
(lynx_create_inferior): Adjust function prototype to reflect
change on "target.h". Adjust function code to use
"fork_inferior".
* nto-low.c (nto_create_inferior): Adjust function prototype and
code to reflect change on "target.h". Update comments.
* server.c: Include "common-inferior.h", "nat/fork-inferior.h",
"common-terminal.h" and "environ.h".
(terminal_fd): Moved to fork-child.c.
(old_foreground_pgrp): Likewise.
(restore_old_foreground_pgrp): Likewise.
(last_status): Make it global.
(last_ptid): Likewise.
(our_environ): New variable.
(startup_with_shell): Likewise.
(program_name): Likewise.
(program_argv): Rename to...
(program_args): ...this.
(wrapper_argv): New variable.
(start_inferior): Delete function.
(get_exec_wrapper): New function.
(get_exec_file): Likewise.
(get_environ): Likewise.
(prefork_hook): Likewise.
(post_fork_inferior): Likewise.
(postfork_hook): Likewise.
(postfork_child_hook): Likewise.
(handle_v_run): Update code to deal with arguments coming from the
remote host. Update calls from "start_inferior" to
"create_inferior".
(captured_main): Likewise. Initialize environment variable. Call
"have_job_control".
* server.h (post_fork_inferior): New prototype.
(get_environ): Likewise.
(last_status): Declare.
(last_ptid): Likewise.
(signal_pid): Likewise.
* spu-low.c: Include "common-inferior.h" and "nat/fork-inferior.h".
(spu_ptrace_fun): New function.
(spu_create_inferior): Adjust function prototype to reflect change
on "target.h". Adjust function code to use "fork_inferior".
* target.c (target_terminal_init): New function.
(target_terminal_inferior): Likewise.
(target_terminal_ours): Likewise.
* target.h: Include <vector>.
(struct target_ops) <create_inferior>: Update prototype.
(create_inferior): Update macro.
* utils.c (gdb_flush_out_err): New function.
* win32-low.c (win32_create_inferior): Adjust function prototype
and code to reflect change on "target.h".
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* gdb.server/non-existing-program.exp: Update regex in order to
reflect the fact that gdbserver is now using fork_inferior (with a
shell) to startup the inferior.
GDB and gdbserver now share 'switch_to_thread' because of
fork_inferior. To make things clear, I created a new file name
common/common-gdbthread.h, and left the implementation specific to
each part.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/common-gdbthread.h".
* common/common-gdbthread.h: New file, with parts from
"gdb/gdbthread.h".
* gdbthread.h: Include "common-gdbthread.h".
(switch_to_thread): Moved to "common/common-gdbthread.h".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* inferiors.c (switch_to_thread): New function.
This commit moves a few bits responsible for dealing with inferior job
control from GDB to common/, which makes them available to gdbserver.
This is necessary for the upcoming patches that will share
fork_inferior et al between GDB and gdbserver.
We move some parts of gdb/terminal.h to gdb/common/common-terminal.h,
especifically the code that checks terminal features and that are used
to set job_control accordingly.
After sharing parts of gdb/terminal.h, we also to share the two
functions on gdb/inflow.c that are going to be needed by the
fork_inferior rework. They are 'gdb_setpgid' and the new
'have_job_control'. I've also taken the opportunity to give a more
meaningful name to "inflow.c" on common/. Now it is called
"job-control.c" (thanks Pedro for the suggestion).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add "common/job-control.c".
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/job-control.h".
(COMMON_OBS): Add "job-control.o".
* common/job-control.c: New file, with contents from
"gdb/inflow.c".
* common/job-control.h: New file, with contents from "terminal.h".
* fork-child.c: Include "job-control.h".
* inflow.c: Include "job-control.h".
(gdb_setpgid): Move to "common/common-inflow.c".
(_initialize_inflow): Move setting of "job_control" to
"handle_job_control".
* terminal.h (job_control): Moved to "common/common-terminal.h".
(gdb_setpgid): Likewise.
* top.c: Include "job_control.h".
* utils.c: Likewise.
(job_control): Moved to "job-control.c".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILE): Add "common/job-control.c".
(OBS): Add "job-control.o".
This patch replaces compile_rx_or_error and make_regfree_cleanup with
a class that wraps a regex_t.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add gdb_regex.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add gdb_regex.o.
* ada-lang.c (ada_add_standard_exceptions)
(ada_add_exceptions_from_frame, name_matches_regex)
(ada_add_global_exceptions, ada_exceptions_list_1): Change regex
parameter type to compiled_regex. Adjust.
(ada_exceptions_list): Use compiled_regex.
* break-catch-throw.c (exception_catchpoint::pattern): Now a
std::unique_ptr<compiled_regex>.
(exception_catchpoint::~exception_catchpoint): Remove regfree
call.
(check_status_exception_catchpoint): Adjust to use compiled_regex.
(handle_gnu_v3_exceptions): Adjust to use compiled_regex.
* breakpoint.c (solib_catchpoint::compiled): Now a
std::unique_ptr<compiled_regex>.
(solib_catchpoint::~solib_catchpoint): Remove regfree call.
(check_status_catch_solib): Adjust to use compiled_regex.
(add_solib_catchpoint): Adjust to use compiled_regex.
* cli/cli-cmds.c (apropos_command): Use compiled_regex.
* cli/cli-decode.c (apropos_cmd): Change regex parameter to
compiled_regex reference. Adjust to use it.
* cli/cli-decode.h: Remove struct re_pattern_buffer forward
declaration. Include "gdb_regex.h".
(apropos_cmd): Change regex parameter to compiled_regex reference.
* gdb_regex.c: New file.
* gdb_regex.h (make_regfree_cleanup, get_regcomp_error): Delete
declarations.
(class compiled_regex): New.
* linux-tdep.c: Include "common/gdb_optional.h".
(struct mapping_regexes): New, factored out from
mapping_is_anonymous_p, and adjusted to use compiled_regex.
(mapping_is_anonymous_p): Use mapping_regexes wrapped in a
gdb::optional and remove cleanups. Adjust to compiled_regex.
* probe.c: Include "common/gdb_optional.h".
(collect_probes): Use compiled_regex and gdb::optional and remove
cleanups.
* skip.c: Include "common/gdb_optional.h".
(skiplist_entry::compiled_function_regexp): Now a
gdb::optional<compiled_regex>.
(skiplist_entry::compiled_function_regexp_is_valid): Delete field.
(free_skiplist_entry): Remove regfree call.
(compile_skip_regexp, skip_rfunction_p): Adjust to use
compiled_regex and gdb::optional.
* symtab.c: Include "common/gdb_optional.h".
(search_symbols): Use compiled_regex and gdb::optional.
* utils.c (do_regfree_cleanup, make_regfree_cleanup)
(get_regcomp_error, compile_rx_or_error): Delete. Some bits moved
to gdb_regex.c.
This patch adds one unit test for gdbarch methods register_to_value and
value_to_register. The test pass different combinations of {regnu, type}
to gdbarch_register_to_value and gdbarch_value_to_register. In order
to do the test, add a new function create_new_frame to create a fake
frame. It can be improved after we converted frame_info to class.
In order to isolate regcache (from target_ops operations on writing
registers, like target_store_registers), the sub-class of regcache in the
test override raw_write. Also, in order to get the right regcache from
get_thread_arch_aspace_regcache, the sub-class of regcache inserts itself
to current_regcache.
Suppose I incorrectly modified the size of buffer as below,
@@ -1228,7 +1228,7 @@ ia64_register_to_value (struct frame_info *frame, int regnum,
int *optimizedp, int *unavailablep)
{
struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_frame_arch (frame);
- gdb_byte in[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
+ gdb_byte in[1];
/* Convert to TYPE. */
if (!get_frame_register_bytes (frame, regnum, 0,
build GDB with "-fsanitize=address" and run unittest.exp, asan can detect
such error
==2302==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow on address 0x7fff98193870 at pc 0xbd55ea bp 0x7fff981935a0 sp 0x7fff98193598
WRITE of size 16 at 0x7fff98193870 thread T0
#0 0xbd55e9 in frame_register_unwind(frame_info*, int, int*, int*, lval_type*, unsigned long*, int*, unsigned char*) /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1119
#1 0xbd58c8 in frame_register(frame_info*, int, int*, int*, lval_type*, unsigned long*, int*, unsigned char*) /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1147
#2 0xbd6e25 in get_frame_register_bytes(frame_info*, int, unsigned long, int, unsigned char*, int*, int*) /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/frame.c:1427
#3 0x70080a in ia64_register_to_value /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/ia64-tdep.c:1236
#4 0xbf570e in gdbarch_register_to_value(gdbarch*, frame_info*, int, type*, unsigned char*, int*, int*) /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbarch.c:2619
#5 0xc05975 in register_to_value_test /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/gdbarch-selftests.c:131
Or, even if GDB is not built with asan, GDB just crashes.
*** stack smashing detected ***: ./gdb terminated
Aborted (core dumped)
gdb:
2017-05-24 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add gdbarch-selftests.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add gdbarch-selftests.o.
* frame.c [GDB_SELF_TESTS] (create_new_frame): New function.
* frame.h [GDB_SELF_TESTS] (create_new_frame): Declare.
* gdbarch-selftests.c: New file.
* regcache.h (regcache) <~regcache>: Mark it virtual if
GDB_SELF_TEST.
<raw_write>: Likewise.
Due to my ongoing work to make it possible for gdbserver to start the
inferior using the shell, I had to share the fork_inferior function
under the "nat/" directory. In order to do that, I created a new file
and put the function there; however, this meant that I now had to
update some of the *.mh files (under "gdb/config") and add the new
file as a dependency to be built natively. Bleh...
After talking a bit to Pedro about this, the idea came up to write a
new "gdb/configure.nat" file, a la "gdb/configure.tgt", which would
concentrate all of the native settings for each host/system. I
decided to tackle this issue.
The patch is simple. All of the previous Makefile variables that were
being declared inside the *.mh files are now inside "gdb/Makefile.in",
and "gdb/configure" is responsible for AC_SUBST'ing them. The
definitions of these variables were put inside "gdb/configure.nat", so
now they're shell variables. For excerpts of Makefile code, one must
create a file under "gdb/config/${gdb_cpu_host}" and reference it on
the "nat_extra_makefile_frag" variable.
It should now be easier to update the native dependencies of hosts in
this single file.
This has been tested on x86_64 without regressions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-05-06 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in: Remove "@host_makefile_frag@". Add variables
NAT_FILE, NATDEPFILES, NAT_CDEPS, LOADLIBES, MH_CFLAGS, XM_CLIBS,
NAT_GENERATED_FILES, HAVE_NATIVE_GCORE_HOST. Add
"@nat_extra_makefile_frag@".
(Makefile): Remove dependency on "@frags@".
($(GNULIB_BUILDDIR)/Makefile): Likewise.
(data-directory/Makefile): Likewise.
* config/aarch64/linux.mh: Deleted; moved contents to
"gdb/configure.nat".
* config/alpha/alpha-linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/alpha/nbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/arm/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/arm/nbsdelf.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/cygwin.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/cygwin64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/darwin.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/fbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/fbsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/go32.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/i386gnu.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/i386sol2.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/linux64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/mingw.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/mingw64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/nbsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/nbsdelf.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/nto.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/obsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/sol2-64.mh: Likewise.
* config/ia64/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/m32r/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/m68k/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/m68k/nbsdelf.mh: Likewise.
* config/m68k/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/m88k/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/mips/fbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/mips/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/mips/nbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/mips/obsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/pa/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/pa/nbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/pa/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/aix.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/fbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/nbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/powerpc/spu-linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/s390/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/sh/nbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/fbsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux64.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/nbsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/nbsdelf.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/obsd64.mh: Likewise.
* config/sparc/sol2.mh: Likewise.
* config/tilegx/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/vax/nbsdelf.mh: Likewise.
* config/vax/obsd.mh: Likewise.
* config/xtensa/linux.mh: Likewise.
* config/i386/i386gnu.mn: New file, with excerpts from
"config/i386/i386gnu.mh".
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Rewrite code to use "gdb/configure.nat" instead of
*.mh files under "gdb/config".
* configure.nat: New file, with contents from the
"gdb/config/*/*.mh" files.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-05-06 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile: Remove "@host_makefile_frag@".
After all the make_cleanup_restore_current_thread fixing, I thought
I'd convert that and its relatives (which are all cleanups) to RAII
classes.
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread was put in a separate file to
avoid a circular dependency.
Tested on x86-64 Fedora 23, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-05-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add progspace-and-thread.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add progspace-and-thread.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Add progspace-and-thread.o.
* breakpoint.c: Include "progspace-and-thread.h".
(update_inserted_breakpoint_locations)
(insert_breakpoint_locations, create_longjmp_master_breakpoint):
Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(create_std_terminate_master_breakpoint): Use
scoped_restore_current_program_space.
(remove_breakpoint): Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(print_breakpoint_location): Use
scoped_restore_current_program_space.
(bp_loc_is_permanent): Use
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(resolve_sal_pc): Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(download_tracepoint_locations): Use
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(breakpoint_re_set): Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
* exec.c (exec_close_1): Use scoped_restore_current_program_space.
(enum step_over_calls_kind): Moved from inferior.h.
(class scoped_restore_current_thread): New class.
* gdbthread.h (make_cleanup_restore_current_thread): Delete
declaration.
(scoped_restore_current_thread): New class.
* infcmd.c: Include "common/gdb_optional.h".
(continue_1, proceed_after_attach): Use
scoped_restore_current_thread.
(notice_new_inferior): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
* inferior.c: Include "progspace-and-thread.h".
(restore_inferior, save_current_inferior): Delete.
(add_inferior_command, clone_inferior_command): Use
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
* inferior.h (scoped_restore_current_inferior): New class.
* infrun.c: Include "progspace-and-thread.h" and
"common/gdb_optional.h".
(follow_fork_inferior): Use
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(scoped_restore_exited_inferior): New class.
(handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit): Use
scoped_restore_exited_inferior,
scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread,
scoped_restore_current_thread and scoped_restore.
(fetch_inferior_event): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
* linespec.c (decode_line_full, decode_line_1): Use
scoped_restore_current_program_space.
* mi/mi-main.c: Include "progspace-and-thread.h".
(exec_continue): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
(mi_cmd_exec_run): Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
(mi_cmd_trace_frame_collected): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
* proc-service.c (ps_pglobal_lookup): Use
scoped_restore_current_program_space.
* progspace-and-thread.c: New file.
* progspace-and-thread.h: New file.
* progspace.c (release_program_space, clone_program_space): Use
scoped_restore_current_program_space.
(restore_program_space, save_current_program_space)
(save_current_space_and_thread): Delete.
(switch_to_program_space_and_thread): Moved to
progspace-and-thread.c.
* progspace.h (save_current_program_space)
(save_current_space_and_thread): Delete declarations.
(scoped_restore_current_program_space): New class.
* remote.c (remote_btrace_maybe_reopen): Use
scoped_restore_current_thread.
* symtab.c: Include "progspace-and-thread.h".
(skip_prologue_sal): Use scoped_restore_current_pspace_and_thread.
* thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Use
scoped_restore_current_thread.
(struct current_thread_cleanup): Delete.
(do_restore_current_thread_cleanup)
(restore_current_thread_cleanup_dtor): Rename/convert both to ...
(scoped_restore_current_thread::~scoped_restore_current_thread):
... this new dtor.
(make_cleanup_restore_current_thread): Rename/convert to ...
(scoped_restore_current_thread::scoped_restore_current_thread):
... this new ctor.
(thread_apply_all_command): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
(thread_apply_command): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
* tracepoint.c (tdump_command): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
* varobj.c (value_of_root_1): Use scoped_restore_current_thread.
I left making inferior::detaching a bool to a separate patch, because
doing that makes a make_cleanup_restore_integer call in
infrun.c:prepare_for_detach no longer compile (passing a 'bool *' when
an 'int *' is expected). Since we want to get rid of cleanups anyway,
I looked at converting that to a scoped_restore. However,
prepare_for_detach wants to discard the cleanup on success, and
scoped_restore doesn't have an equivalent for that. So I added one --
I called it "release()" because it seems like a natural fit in the way
standard components call similarly-spirited methods, and, it's also
what the proposal for a generic scope guard calls it too, AFAICS:
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2014/n4189.pdf
I've added some scoped_guard unit tests, while at it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add scoped_restore-selftests.o.
* common/scoped_restore.h (scoped_restore_base): Make "class".
(scoped_restore_base::release): New public method.
(scoped_restore_base::scoped_restore_base): New protected ctor.
(scoped_restore_base::m_saved_var): New protected field.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::scoped_restore_tmpl(T*)): Initialize the
scoped_restore_base base class instead of m_saved_var directly.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::scoped_restore_tmpl(T*, T2)): Likewise.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::scoped_restore_tmpl(const
scoped_restore_tmpl<T>&)): Likewise.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::~scoped_restore_tmpl): Use the saved_var
method.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::saved_var): New method.
(scoped_restore_tmpl::m_saved_var): Delete.
* inferior.h (inferior::detaching): Now a bool.
* infrun.c (prepare_for_detach): Use a scoped_restore instead of a
cleanup.
* unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c: New file.
Note to self: 'o' before 'p'.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS, SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS):
Re-sort in alphabetic order.
I thought I'd add some unit tests to make sure gdb::optional behaved
correctly, and started writing some, but then thought/realized that
libstdc++ already has extensive testing for C++17 std::optional, which
gdb::optional is a subset of, and thought why bother writing something
from scratch. So I tried copying over a subset of libstdc++'s tests
(that ones that cover the subset supported by gdb::optional), and was
positively surprised that they mostly work OOTB. This did help shake
out a few bugs from what I was implementing in the previous patch to
gdb::optional. Still, it's a good chunk of code being copied over, so
if people dislike this copying/duplication, I can drop this patch.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/optional-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add optional-selftests.o.
* unittests/optional-selftests.c: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/1.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/2.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/3.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/4.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/5.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/6.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/assignment/7.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/cons/copy.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/cons/default.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/cons/move.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/cons/value.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/in_place.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/observers/1.cc: New file.
* unittests/optional/observers/2.cc: New file.
As requested, I'm sending this as a separate patch because it is ready
to be included as-is.
The idea here is that both gdb/terminal.h and gdb/gdbserver/terminal.h
share the same code, which is responsible for setting a bunch of
defines on based on the presence of termios.h and a few other headers.
This simple patch just moves this common code to common/gdb_termios.h
and makes the necessary adjustments on both GDB and gdbserver so that
they can use this new header. It also implements the some header
checks on common/common.m4.
As a bonus, gdb/gdbserver/terminal.h can be removed because it's now
empty.
Built on x86_64, no regressions found.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-12 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/gdb_termios.h".
* common/common.m4: Check headers 'termios.h', 'termio.h' and
'sgtty.h'.
* common/gdb_termios.h: New file, with parts of "terminal.h".
* inflow.c: Include "gdb_termios.h".
* ser-unix.c: Include "gdb_termios.h".
* terminal.h: Move terminal-related defines to
"common/gdb_termios.h".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-04-12 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* remote-utils.c: Include "gdb_termios.h" instead of
"terminal.h".
* terminal.h: Delete file.
I posit that this makes them easier to find.
The other day while working on the wchar_t patch, I had a bit of
trouble finding the DJGPP/go32 tdep bits. My initial reaction was
looking for a go32-specific tdep file, but there's none.
Confirmed that a --host=i586-pc-msdosdjgpp GDB still builds
successfully and includes the i386-go32-tdep.o object.
Confirmed that an --enable-targets=all build of GDB on x86-64
GNU/Linux includes the DJGPP/go32 bits too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add i386-go32-tdep.o.
* configure.tgt: Handle i[34567]86-*-go32* and
i[34567]86-*-msdosdjgpp*.
* i386-tdep.c (i386_svr4_reg_to_regnum):
Make extern.
(i386_go32_init_abi, i386_coff_osabi_sniffer): Moved to
i386-go32-tdep.c.
(_initialize_i386_tdep): DJGPP bits moved to i386-go32-tdep.c.
* i386-go32-tdep.c: New file.
* i386-tdep.h (tdesc_i386_mmx, i386_svr4_reg_to_regnum): New
declarations.
I grew a bit tired of using ptid_get_{lwp,pid,tid} and friends, so I decided to
make it a bit easier to use by making it a proper class. The fields are now
private, so it's not possible to change a ptid_t field by mistake.
The new methods of ptid_t map to existing functions/practice like this:
ptid_t (pid, lwp, tid) -> ptid_build (pid, lwp, tid)
ptid_t (pid) -> pid_to_ptid (pid)
ptid.is_pid () -> ptid_is_pid (ptid)
ptid == other -> ptid_equal (ptid, other)
ptid != other -> !ptid_equal (ptid, other)
ptid.pid () -> ptid_get_pid (ptid)
ptid.lwp_p () -> ptid_lwp_p (ptid)
ptid.lwp () -> ptid_get_lwp (ptid)
ptid.tid_p () -> ptid_tid_p (ptid)
ptid.tid () -> ptid_get_tid (ptid)
ptid.matches (filter) -> ptid_match (ptid, filter)
I've replaced the implementation of the existing functions with calls to
the new methods. People are encouraged to gradually switch to using the
ptid_t methods instead of the functions (or we can change them all in
one pass eventually).
Also, I'm not sure if it's worth it (because of ptid_t's relatively
small size), but I have made the functions and methods take ptid_t
arguments by const reference instead of by value.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/ptid.h (struct ptid): Change to...
(class ptid_t): ... this.
<ptid_t>: New constructors.
<pid, lwp_p, lwp, tid_p, tid, is_pid, operator==, operator!=,
matches>: New methods.
<make_null, make_minus_one>: New static methods.
<pid>: Rename to...
<m_pid>: ...this.
<lwp>: Rename to...
<m_lwp>: ...this.
<tid>: Rename to...
<m_tid>: ...this.
(ptid_build, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal,
ptid_is_pid, ptid_lwp_p, ptid_tid_p, ptid_match): Take ptid arguments
as references, move comment to class ptid_t.
* common/ptid.c (null_ptid, minus_one_ptid): Initialize with
ptid_t static methods.
(ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_tid,
ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid, ptid_lwp_p, ptid_tid_p, ptid_match):
Take ptid arguments as references, implement using ptid_t methods.
* unittests/ptid-selftests.c: New file.
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/ptid-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add unittests/ptid-selftests.o.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (handle_v_cont): Initialize thread_resume::thread
with null_ptid.
FreeBSD last shipped a release for Alpha (6.3) in 2008.
This also removes support for GNU/kFreeBSD on Alpha.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS): Remove alpha-fbsd-tdep.o.
(ALLDEPFILES): Remove alpha-fbsd-tdep.c
* NEWS: Mention that support for FreeBSD/alpha was removed.
* alpha-fbsd-tdep.c: Delete file.
* config/alpha/fbsd.mh: Delete file.
* configure.host: Delete alpha*-*-freebsd* and
alpha*-*-kfreebsd*-gnu.
* configure.tgt: Delete alpha*-*-freebsd* and
alpha*-*-kfreebsd*-gnu.
A while ago, back when GDB was a C program, the sect_offset and
cu_offset types were made structs in order to prevent incorrect mixing
of those offsets. Now that we require C++11, we can make them
integers again, while keeping the safety, by exploiting "enum class".
We can add a bit more safety, even, by defining operators that the
types _should_ support, helping making the suspicious uses stand out
more.
Getting at the underlying type is done with the new to_underlying
function added by the previous patch, which also helps better spot
where do we need to step out of the safety net. Mostly, that's around
parsing the DWARF, and when we print the offset for complaint/debug
purposes. But there are other occasional uses.
Since we have to define the sect_offset/cu_offset types in a header
anyway, I went ahead and generalized/library-fied the idea of "offset"
types, making it trivial to add more such types if we find a use. See
common/offset-type.h and the DEFINE_OFFSET_TYPE macro.
I needed a couple generaly-useful preprocessor bits (e.g., yet another
CONCAT implementation), so I started a new common/preprocessor.h file.
I included units tests covering the "offset" types API. These are
mostly compile-time tests, using SFINAE to check that expressions that
shouldn't compile (e.g., comparing unrelated offset types) really are
invalid and would fail to compile. This same idea appeared in my
pending enum-flags revamp from a few months ago (though this version
is a bit further modernized compared to what I had posted), and I plan
on reusing the "check valid expression" bits added here in that
series, so I went ahead and defined the CHECK_VALID_EXPR macro in its
own header -- common/valid-expr.h. I think that's nicer regardless.
I was borderline between calling the new types "offset" types, or
"index" types, BTW. I stuck with "offset" simply because that's what
we're already calling them, mostly.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/offset-type-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add offset-type-selftests.o.
* common/offset-type.h: New file.
* common/preprocessor.h: New file.
* common/traits.h: New file.
* common/valid-expr.h: New file.
* dwarf2expr.c: Include "common/underlying.h". Adjust to use
sect_offset and cu_offset strong typedefs throughout.
* dwarf2expr.h: Adjust to use sect_offset and cu_offset strong
typedefs throughout.
* dwarf2loc.c: Include "common/underlying.h". Adjust to use
sect_offset and cu_offset strong typedefs throughout.
* dwarf2read.c: Adjust to use sect_offset and cu_offset strong
typedefs throughout.
* gdbtypes.h: Include "common/offset-type.h".
(cu_offset): Now an offset type (strong typedef) instead of a
struct.
(sect_offset): Likewise.
(union call_site_parameter_u): Rename "param_offset" field to
"param_cu_off".
* unittests/offset-type-selftests.c: New file.
We will need access to the environment functions when we share
fork_inferior between GDB and gdbserver, therefore we simply make the
API on gdb/environ.[ch] available on common/. No extra adjustments
are needed to make it compile on gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-03-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Replace "environ.c" with
"common/environ.c".
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Likewise, for "environ.h".
* environ.c: Include "common-defs.h" instead of "defs.h. Moved
to...
* common/environ.c: ... here.
* environ.h: Moved to...
* common/environ.h: ... here.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-03-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add "common/environ.c".
(OBJS): Add "common/environ.h".
This commit adds a new function_view type. This type holds a
non-owning reference to a callable. It is meant to be used as
callback type of functions, instead of using the C-style pair of
function pointer and 'void *data' arguments. function_view allows
passing references to stateful function objects / lambdas with
captures as callbacks efficiently, while function pointer + 'void *'
does not.
See the intro in the new function-view.h header for more.
Unit tests included, put into a new gdb/unittests/ subdir.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-02-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS, SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): New.
(%.o) <unittests/%.c>: New pattern.
* configure.ac ($development): Add $(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS) to
CONFIG_OBS, and $(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS) to CONFIG_SRCS.
* common/function-view.h: New file.
* unittests/function-view-selftests.c: New file.
* configure: Regenerate.
This patch implements the gdb.Record Python object methods and fields for
record target btrace. Also, implement a stub for record target full.
Signed-off-by: Tim Wiederhake <tim.wiederhake@intel.com>
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_PYTHON_OBS): Add py-record-btrace.o,
py-record-full.o.
(SUBDIR_PYTHON_SRCS): Add py-record-btrace.c, py-record-full.c.
* python/py-record-btrace.c, python/py-record-btrace.h,
python/py-record-full.c, python/py-record-full.h: New file.
* python/py-record.c: Add include for py-record-btrace.h and
py-record-full.h.
(recpy_method, recpy_format, recpy_goto, recpy_replay_position,
recpy_instruction_history, recpy_function_call_history, recpy_begin,
recpy_end): Use functions from py-record-btrace.c and py-record-full.c.
* python/python-internal.h (PyInt_FromSsize_t, PyInt_AsSsize_t):
New definition.
(gdbpy_initialize_btrace): New export.
* python/python.c (_initialize_python): Add gdbpy_initialize_btrace.
Change-Id: I8bd893672ffc7e619cc1386767897249e125973a
This patch adds three new functions to the gdb module in Python:
- start_recording
- stop_recording
- current_recording
start_recording and current_recording return an object of the new type
gdb.Record, which can be used to access the recorded data.
Signed-off-by: Tim Wiederhake <tim.wiederhake@intel.com>
gdb/ChangeLog
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_PYTHON_OBS): Add python/py-record.o.
(SUBDIR_PYTHON_SRCS): Add python/py-record.c.
* python/py-record.c: New file.
* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_start_recording,
gdbpy_current_recording, gdpy_stop_recording,
gdbpy_initialize_record): New export.
* python/python.c (_initialize_python): Add gdbpy_initialize_record.
(python_GdbMethods): Add gdbpy_start_recording,
gdbpy_current_recording and gdbpy_stop_recording.
Change-Id: I772aa9aa068621443f10a330b11dc7dc9a63face
This patch adds one unit test, which disassemble one instruction for
every gdbarch if available. The test needs one valid instruction of
each gdbarch, and most of them are got from breakpoint instruction.
For the rest gdbarch whose breakpoint instruction isn't a valid
instruction, I copy one instruction from the gas/testsuite/gas/
directory.
I get the valid instruction of most gdbarch except ia64, mep, mips,
tic6x, and xtensa. People familiar with these arch should be easy
to extend the test.
In order to achieve "do the unit test for every gdbarch", I add
selftest-arch.[c,h], so that we can register a function pointer,
which has one argument gdbarch. selftest.c will iterate over all
gdbarches to call the registered function pointer.
gdb:
2017-01-26 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add disasm-selftests.c and
selftest-arch.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add disasm-selftests.o and selftest-arch.o.
* disasm-selftests.c: New file.
* selftest-arch.c: New file.
* selftest-arch.h: New file.
If I run 'make check-headers', I get these errors,
....
In file included from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/common/common-defs.h:78:0,
from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/defs.h:28,
from <command-line>:0:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/common/common-utils.h:23:18: fatal error: string: No such file or directory
#include <string>
^
because we still parse headers as c file with a c compiler, which is no
longer true after we moved to C++. This patch changes it to use C++
compiler and parse headers as c++ headers.
gdb:
2017-01-13 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (checker-headers): Use CXX and CXX_DIALET instead
of CC. Pass "-x c++-header" instead of "-x c".
Commit e379037 (Move gdb_ptrace.h to nat/), so we should update
file name in HFILES_NO_SRCDIR too. Otherwise, 'make tags' complains,
$ make tags
make: *** No rule to make target `gdb_ptrace.h', needed by `TAGS'. Stop.
gdb:
2017-01-06 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Replace gdb_ptrace.h
with nat/gdb_ptrace.h.
This has been tested for the n64 and o32 ABIs. Signal frame unwinders for
both ABIs are provided. FreeBSD/mips requires custom linkmap offsets since
it contains an additional l_off member in 'struct link_map' that other
FreeBSD platforms do not have. Support for collecting and supplying
general purpose and floating point register sets are provided. Common
routines for working with native format register sets are exported for
use by the native target.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add mips-fbsd-tdep.o.
(ALLDEPFILES): Add mips-fbsd-tdep.c.
* NEWS: Mention new FreeBSD/mips target.
* configure.tgt: Add mips*-*-freebsd*.
* mips-fbsd-tdep.c: New file.
* mips-fbsd-tdep.h: New file.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Contributors): Add SRI International and University
of Cambridge for FreeBSD/mips.
This applies the second part of GDB's End of Year Procedure, which
updates the copyright year range in all of GDB's files.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
Since we don't use suffix rules nor implicit rules in gdb, we can
disable them. The advantage is a slightly faster make [1].
Here are some numbers about the speedup. I ran this on my trusty old
Intel Q6600, so the time numbers are probably higher than what you'd get
on any recent hardware. I ran "make" in the gdb/ directory of an
already built repository (configured with --enable-targets=all). I
recorded the time of execution (average of 5). I then ran "make -d" and
recorded the number of printed lines, which gives a rough idea of the
number of operations done.
I compared the following configurations, to see the impact of both the
empty .SUFFIXES target and the empty pattern rules, as well as running
"make -r", which can be considered the "ideal" case.
A - baseline
B - baseline + .SUFFIXES
C - baseline + pattern rules
D - baseline + .SUFFIXES + pattern rules
E - baseline + make -r
config | time (s) | "make -d"
-----------------------------
A | 5.74 | 2396643
B | 1.19 | 298469
C | 2.81 | 1266573
D | 1.13 | 245489
E | 1.01 | 163914
We can see that the empty .SUFFIXES target has a bigger impact than the
empty pattern rules, but still it doesn't hurt to disable the implicit
pattern rules as well.
There are still some mentions of implicit rules I can't get rid of in
the "make -d" output. For example, it's trying to build .c files from
.w files:
Looking for an implicit rule for '/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c'.
Trying pattern rule with stem 'infrun'.
Trying implicit prerequisite '/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.w'.
and trying to build Makefile.in from a bunch of extensions:
Looking for an implicit rule for 'Makefile.in'.
Trying pattern rule with stem 'Makefile.in'.
Trying implicit prerequisite 'Makefile.in.o'.
Trying pattern rule with stem 'Makefile.in'.
Trying implicit prerequisite 'Makefile.in.c'.
Trying pattern rule with stem 'Makefile.in'.
Trying implicit prerequisite 'Makefile.in.cc'.
... many more ...
If somebody knows how to disable them, we can do it, but at this point
the returns are minimal, so it is not that important.
I verified that both in-tree and out-of-tree builds work.
[1] Switching from explicit rules to pattern rules for files in
subdirectories actually made it slower, so this is kind of a way to
redeem myself. But it the end it's faster than it was previously,
so it was all worth it. :)
gdb/ChangeLog:
* disable-implicit-rules.mk: New file.
* Makefile.in: Include disable-implicit-rules.mk.
* data-directory/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* gnulib/Makefile.in: Likewise.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Include disable-implicit-rules.mk.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Include disable-implicit-rules.mk.
This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling.
#1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support
On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's
gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's
timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct
timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the
system's.
E.g., in code like this:
gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL);
timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started);
timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time,
&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta);
That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at
all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with
if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode
adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard
errors with -Werror.
#2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic...
We're using it to:
a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis
b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop
c) print debug timestamps
But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from
the man page:
~~~
The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by
discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system
administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a
monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2).
~~~
std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock
exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit
switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues
mentioned above.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o.
* common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files.
* defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete
declarations.
* event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a
std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point.
(create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc.
(delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree.
(duration_cast_timeval): New.
(update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday.
* maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h>
and "timeval-utils.h".
(scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats)
(scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use
std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use
user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time.
* maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>.
(scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a
user_cpu_time_clock::time_point.
<m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point.
* mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of
"gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>.
(rusage): Delete.
(mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW.
(mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday.
(timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock,
user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock.
(timeval_diff): Delete.
(print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock,
user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock.
* mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead
of "gdb_sys_time.h".
(struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to
std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time
and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval.
* symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and
"gdb_sys_time.h".
(struct time_range): New.
(generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday.
(print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust.
* utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h",
"gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>.
(prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration.
(defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use
std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add.
(reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval.
(get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval.
(vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'.
* utils.h: Include <chrono>.
(get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h".
(debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'.
* tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h".
(get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of
gettimeofday.
Mostly some whitespace changes to make things a bit more consistent.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Fix whitespace formatting.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Fix whitespace formatting.
I find the big file lists in the Makefiles a bit ugly and not very
practical. Since there are multiple filenames on each line (as much as
fits in 80 columns), it's not easy to add, remove or change a name in
the middle. As a result, we have a mix of long and short lines in no
particular order (ALL_TARGET_OBS is a good example).
I therefore suggest flattening the lists (one name per line) and keeping
them in alphabetical order. The diffs will be much clearer and merge
conflicts will be easier to resolve.
A nice (IMO) side-effect I observed is that the files are compiled
alphabetically by make, so it gives a rough idea of the progress of the
build.
I added a comment in gdb/Makefile.in to mention to keep the file lists
ordered, and gave the general guidelines on what order to respect. I
added a comment in other Makefiles which refers to gdb/Makefile.in, to
avoid duplication.
Running the patch through the buildbot found that gdb.base/default.exp
started to fail. The languages in the error message shown when typing
"set language" have changed order. We could probably improve gdb so
that it prints them in a stable order, regardless of the order of the
object list passed to the linked, but just fixing the test is easier for
now.
New in v2:
- Change ordering style, directories go at the end.
- Cleanup gdbserver's and data-directory's Makefile as well.
- Add comments at top of Makefiles about the ordering.
- Remove wrong trailing backslahes.
- Fix test gdb.base/default.exp.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Add comment about file lists ordering.
(SUBDIR_CLI_OBS, SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS, SUBDIR_MI_OBS, SUBDIR_MI_SRCS,
SUBDIR_TUI_OBS, SUBDIR_TUI_SRCS, SUBDIR_GCC_COMPILE_OBS,
SUBDIR_GCC_COMPILE_SRCS, SUBDIR_GUILE_OBS, SUBDIR_GUILE_SRCS,
SUBDIR_PYTHON_OBS, SUBDIR_PYTHON_SRCS, SUBDIR_GDBTK_OBS,
SUBDIR_GDBTK_SRCS, XMLFILES, REMOTE_OBS, ALL_64_TARGET_OBS,
ALL_TARGET_OBS, SFILES, HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, HFILES_WITH_SRCDIR,
COMMON_OBS, YYFILES, YYOBJ, generated_files, ALLDEPFILES):
Flatten list and order alphabetically.
* data-directory/Makefile.in: Add comment about file lists
ordering.
(GEN_SYSCALLS_FILES, PYTHON_FILE_LIST): Flatten list and order
alphabetically.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES, OBS): Flatten list and order
alphabetically.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/default.exp: Fix output of "set language".
A little oversight from my part, it caused the Makefile not to track
the dependencies from mi/*.c files.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (%o: $(srcdir)/mi/%.c): Add missing POSTCOMPILE
step.
When adding a .c file in subdirectory (e.g. mi/), the current practice
is to add an explicit rule, such as:
mi-cmd-break.o: $(srcdir)/mi/mi-cmd-break.c
$(COMPILE) $(srcdir)/mi/mi-cmd-break.c
$(POSTCOMPILE)
I find it a bit verbose and cumbersome. Since we now require GNU make,
we can change those rules with pattern rules, one for each subdirectory.
For example, the following rule works for all files under mi:
%.o: $(srcdir)/mi/%.c
$(COMPILE) $<
$(POSTCOMPILE)
Those pattern rules assume that the source and target files have the
same stem (foo.c and foo.o). In one case, common-agent.o is generated
from common/agent.c, to avoid a conflict with the agent.o in gdb/. In
this case, I kept the explicit rule, which takes precedence over the
pattern rule. We could also rename common/agent.c to
common/common-agent.c to get rid of the special case and still avoid the
clash, as it is done with common/common-regcache.c, for example.
This strategy was the least intrusive I found, as it only requires
changing the rules, not the target names.
I also considered two other solutions, which I did not like because I
would have had to change target names a bit everywhere.
- Replicate the source directory structure in the build directory,
which would generate common/agent.o from common/agent.c. However,
something was not right with the dependency tracking (the .deps
directory). It's probably not hard to fix, but I did not
investigate further.
- Name the object files after the directory they are in, so that
common/agent.c would generate common_agent.c.
GDBserver can benefit from the same treatment, but I'll do it in another
patch.
Built-tested with --enable-targets=all.
New in v2:
- Regroup pattern rules for .c -> .o compilation in a single place.
- Add comment about common-agent.o.
gdb/ChangeLog:
(PYTHON_CFLAGS): Move up.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/arch/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/cli/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/common/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/compile/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/gdbtk/generic/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/guile/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/mi/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/nat/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/python/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/target/%.c): New rule.
(%.o: $(srcdir)/tui/%.c): New rule.
(cli-cmds.o): Remove.
(cli-decode.o): Likewise.
(cli-dump.o): Likewise.
(cli-interp.o): Likewise.
(cli-logging.o): Likewise.
(cli-script.o): Likewise.
(cli-setshow.o): Likewise.
(cli-utils.o): Likewise.
(compile.o): Likewise.
(compile-c-types.o): Likewise.
(compile-c-symbols.o): Likewise.
(compile-object-load.o): Likewise.
(compile-object-run.o): Likewise.
(compile-loc2c.o): Likewise.
(compile-c-support.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-bp.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-cmds.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-hooks.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-interp.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-main.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-register.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-stack.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-varobj.o): Likewise.
(gdbtk-wrapper.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-break.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-catch.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-disas.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-env.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-file.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-info.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmds.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-stack.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-target.o): Likewise.
(mi-cmd-var.o): Likewise.
(mi-console.o): Likewise.
(mi-getopt.o): Likewise.
(mi-interp.o): Likewise.
(mi-main.o): Likewise.
(mi-out.o): Likewise.
(mi-parse.o): Likewise.
(mi-symbol-cmds.o): Likewise.
(mi-common.o): Likewise.
(signals.o): Likewise.
(common-utils.o): Likewise.
(gdb_vecs.o): Likewise.
(xml-utils.o): Likewise.
(ptid.o): Likewise.
(buffer.o): Likewise.
(filestuff.o): Likewise.
(format.o): Likewise.
(vec.o): Likewise.
(print-utils.o): Likewise.
(rsp-low.o): Likewise.
(errors.o): Likewise.
(common-debug.o): Likewise.
(cleanups.o): Likewise.
(common-exceptions.o
(posix-strerror.o): Likewise.
(mingw-strerror.o): Likewise.
(btrace-common.o): Likewise.
(fileio.o): Likewise.
(common-regcache.o): Likewise.
(signals-state-save-restore.o): Likewise.
(new-op.o): Likewise.
(waitstatus.o): Likewise.
(arm.o): Likewise.
(arm-linux.o): Likewise.
(arm-get-next-pcs.o): Likewise.
(x86-dregs.o): Likewise.
(linux-btrace.o): Likewise.
(linux-osdata.o): Likewise.
(linux-procfs.o): Likewise.
(linux-ptrace.o): Likewise.
(linux-waitpid.o): Likewise.
(mips-linux-watch.o): Likewise.
(ppc-linux.o): Likewise.
(linux-personality.o): Likewise.
(x86-linux.o): Likewise.
(x86-linux-dregs.o): Likewise.
(amd64-linux-siginfo.o): Likewise.
(linux-namespaces.o): Likewise.
(aarch64-linux-hw-point.o): Likewise.
(aarch64-linux.o): Likewise.
(aarch64-insn.o): Likewise.
(tui.o): Likewise.
(tui-command.o): Likewise.
(tui-data.o): Likewise.
(tui-disasm.o): Likewise.
(tui-file.o): Likewise.
(tui-hooks.o): Likewise.
(tui-interp.o): Likewise.
(tui-io.o): Likewise.
(tui-layout.o): Likewise.
(tui-out.o): Likewise.
(tui-regs.o): Likewise.
(tui-source.o): Likewise.
(tui-stack.o): Likewise.
(tui-win.o): Likewise.
(tui-windata.o): Likewise.
(tui-wingeneral.o): Likewise.
(tui-winsource.o): Likewise.
(guile.o): Likewise.
(scm-arch.o): Likewise.
(scm-auto-load.o): Likewise.
(scm-block.o): Likewise.
(scm-breakpoint.o): Likewise.
(scm-cmd.o): Likewise.
(scm-disasm.o): Likewise.
(scm-exception.o): Likewise.
(scm-frame.o): Likewise.
(scm-gsmob.o): Likewise.
(scm-iterator.o): Likewise.
(scm-lazy-string.o): Likewise.
(scm-math.o): Likewise.
(scm-objfile.o): Likewise.
(scm-param.o): Likewise.
(scm-ports.o): Likewise.
(scm-pretty-print.o): Likewise.
(scm-progspace.o): Likewise.
(scm-safe-call.o): Likewise.
(scm-string.o): Likewise.
(scm-symbol.o): Likewise.
(scm-symtab.o): Likewise.
(scm-type.o): Likewise.
(scm-utils.o): Likewise.
(scm-value.o): Likewise.
(python.o): Likewise.
(py-arch.o): Likewise.
(py-auto-load.o): Likewise.
(py-block.o): Likewise.
(py-bpevent.o): Likewise.
(py-breakpoint.o): Likewise.
(py-cmd.o): Likewise.
(py-continueevent.o): Likewise.
(py-xmethods.o): Likewise.
(py-event.o): Likewise.
(py-evtregistry.o): Likewise.
(py-evts.o): Likewise.
(py-exitedevent.o): Likewise.
(py-finishbreakpoint.o): Likewise.
(py-frame.o): Likewise.
(py-framefilter.o): Likewise.
(py-function.o): Likewise.
(py-gdb-readline.o): Likewise.
(py-inferior.o): Likewise.
(py-infevents.o): Likewise.
(py-infthread.o): Likewise.
(py-lazy-string.o): Likewise.
(py-linetable.o): Likewise.
(py-newobjfileevent.o): Likewise.
(py-objfile.o): Likewise.
(py-param.o): Likewise.
(py-prettyprint.o): Likewise.
(py-progspace.o): Likewise.
(py-signalevent.o): Likewise.
(py-stopevent.o): Likewise.
(py-symbol.o): Likewise.
(py-symtab.o): Likewise.
(py-threadevent.o): Likewise.
(py-type.o): Likewise.
(py-unwind.o): Likewise.
(py-utils.o): Likewise.
(py-value.o): Likewise.
(py-varobj.o): Likewise.