Commit Graph

39739 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Tromey eb1e02fd05 Use std::vector in add_using_directive
This changes add_using_directive to accept a std::vector and then
changes the callers.  This allows removing a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* namespace.h (add_using_directive): Update.
	* namespace.c (add_using_directive): Change type of excludes to
	std::vector.
	* dwarf2read.c (read_import_statement): Use std::vector.
	(read_namespace): Update.
	* cp-namespace.c (cp_scan_for_anonymous_namespaces): Update.
2017-09-09 14:10:51 -06:00
Tom Tromey 0fc21fd8cf Use gdb::def_vector in create_sals_line_offset
This changes create_sals_line_offset to use gdb::def_vector, removing
some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* linespec.c (create_sals_line_offset): Use gdb::def_vector.
2017-09-09 14:10:50 -06:00
Tom Tromey 49663d051c Use gdb::byte_vector in pascal_object_print_value
This changes pascal_object_print_value to use a gdb::byte_vector.
This removes a cleanup.  This change also points out how the previous
code had a possible use-after-free bug.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* p-valprint.c (pascal_object_print_value): Use gdb::byte_vector.
2017-09-09 14:10:49 -06:00
Tom Tromey 0b868b60c9 Use gdb::def_vector in func_command
This changes func_command to use gdb::def_vector, removing a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* stack.c (func_command): Use gdb::def_vector.
2017-09-09 14:10:48 -06:00
Tom Tromey c0470d489b Use ui_out_emit_list and ui_out_emit_tuple with gdb::optional
This changes a few spots to use ui_out_emit_list and/or
ui_out_emit_tuple with gdb::optional, to preserve existing behavior.
This allows for the removal of a few more cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_list_children): Use gdb::optional,
	ui_out_emit_list, ui_out_emit_tuple.
	(mi_cmd_var_update): Likewise.
2017-09-09 13:46:09 -06:00
Tom Tromey ca5909c7de Remove make_cleanup_ui_out_redirect_pop
This patch introduces ui_out_redirect_pop.  All uses of
make_cleanup_ui_out_redirect_pop are replaced with this new class.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_user_selected_context_changed): Use
	ui_out_redirect_pop.
	* guile/scm-ports.c (ioscm_with_output_to_port_worker): Use
	ui_out_redirect_pop.
	* utils.c (do_ui_out_redirect_pop)
	(make_cleanup_ui_out_redirect_pop): Remove.
	* top.c (execute_command_to_string): Use ui_out_redirect_pop.
	* utils.h (make_cleanup_ui_out_redirect_pop): Remove.
	* ui-out.h (ui_out_redirect_pop): New class.
2017-09-09 13:46:08 -06:00
Tom Tromey e6a2252ac3 Use ui_out_emit_list in more places
This changes various spots to use ui_out_emit_list, removing some
cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* mi/mi-main.c (output_cores): Use ui_out_emit_list.
	(list_available_thread_groups, mi_cmd_list_thread_groups)
	(mi_cmd_data_list_changed_registers, mi_cmd_data_read_memory)
	(mi_cmd_data_read_memory_bytes, mi_cmd_trace_frame_collected):
	Likewise.
2017-09-09 13:46:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 393702cd59 Use ui_out_emit_tuple in disasm.c
This changes one spot in disasm.c to use ui_out_emit_tuple.  This
patch required a large reindentation, so I've separated it out.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Use
	ui_out_emit_tuple.
2017-09-09 13:46:06 -06:00
Tom Tromey 76f9c9cfd4 Use ui_out_emit_tuple in more places
This changes more places to use ui_out_emit_tuple, removing cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* target.c (flash_erase_command): Use ui_out_emit_tuple.
	* stack.c (print_frame): Use ui_out_emit_tuple.
	* spu-tdep.c (info_spu_event_command): Use ui_out_emit_tuple.
	(info_spu_mailbox_command, info_spu_dma_command)
	(info_spu_proxydma_command): Likewise.
	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_trace_frame_collected): Use
	ui_out_emit_tuple, gdb::byte_vector, bin2hex.
	* mi/mi-cmd-file.c (mi_cmd_file_list_shared_libraries): Use
	ui_out_emit_tuple.
	* breakpoint.c (print_it_watchpoint): Use ui_out_emit_tuple.
2017-09-09 13:46:05 -06:00
Tom Tromey dc9fe180a4 Remove make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end
This changes the few remaining uses of
make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end to use ui_out_emit_table instead,
and then removes the cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* ui-out.h (make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end): Remove.
	(class ui_out_emit_table): Update comment.
	* ui-out.c (do_cleanup_table_end)
	(make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end): Remove.
	* spu-tdep.c (info_spu_mailbox_list): Use ui_out_emit_table.
	(info_spu_dma_cmdlist): Likewise.
	* probe.c (info_probes_for_ops): Use ui_out_emit_table.
	* darwin-nat-info.c (darwin_debug_regions_recurse): Use
	ui_out_emit_table.
2017-09-09 13:46:04 -06:00
Tom Tromey f8cc3da6e4 Use ui_out_emit_table and ui_out_emit_list in print_thread_info_1
This changes print_thread_info_1 to use ui_out_emit_table and
ui_out_emit_list.  Which one is used depends on whether the ui-out is
mi-like; so the emitters are wrapped in gdb::optional.

ChangeLog
2017-09-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Use ui_out_emit_table,
	ui_out_emit_list, gdb::optional.
2017-09-09 13:46:04 -06:00
John Baldwin 481695ed5f Remove unnecessary function prototypes.
These prototypes were required when compiling GDB as C but are not
required for C++.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* aarch64-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_aarch64_linux_nat
	prototype.
	* aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_aarch64_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* aarch64-newlib-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_aarch64_newlib_tdep
	prototype.
	* aarch64-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_aarch64_tdep prototype.
	* ada-exp.y: Remove _initialize_ada_exp prototype.
	* ada-lang.c: Remove _initialize_ada_language prototype.
	* ada-tasks.c: Remove _initialize_tasks prototype.
	* addrmap.c: Remove _initialize_addrmap prototype.
	* agent.c: Remove _initialize_agent prototype.
	* aix-thread.c: Remove _initialize_aix_thread prototype.
	* alpha-bsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_alphabsd_nat prototype.
	* alpha-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_alpha_linux_nat prototype.
	* alpha-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_alpha_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_alphanbsd_tdep prototype.
	* alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_alphaobsd_tdep prototype.
	* alpha-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_alpha_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_darwin_tdep
	prototype.
	* amd64-dicos-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_dicos_tdep
	prototype.
	* amd64-fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64fbsd_nat prototype.
	* amd64-fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64fbsd_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_linux_nat prototype.
	* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* amd64-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64nbsd_nat prototype.
	* amd64-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64nbsd_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64obsd_nat prototype.
	* amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64obsd_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-sol2-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_sol2_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_tdep prototype.
	* amd64-windows-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_windows_nat
	prototype.
	* amd64-windows-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_windows_tdep
	prototype.
	* annotate.c: Remove _initialize_annotate prototype.
	* arc-newlib-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arc_newlib_tdep prototype.
	* arc-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arc_tdep prototype.
	* arch-utils.c: Remove _initialize_gdbarch_utils prototype.
	* arm-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_arm_linux_nat prototype.
	* arm-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arm_linux_tdep prototype.
	* arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arm_netbsd_tdep prototype.
	* arm-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_armobsd_tdep prototype.
	* arm-symbian-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arm_symbian_tdep
	prototype.
	* arm-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arm_tdep prototype.
	* arm-wince-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_arm_wince_tdep prototype.
	* auto-load.c: Remove _initialize_auto_load prototype.
	* auxv.c: Remove _initialize_auxv prototype.
	* avr-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_avr_tdep prototype.
	* ax-gdb.c: Remove _initialize_ax_gdb prototype.
	* bfin-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_bfin_linux_tdep prototype.
	* bfin-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_bfin_tdep prototype.
	* break-catch-sig.c: Remove _initialize_break_catch_sig prototype.
	* break-catch-syscall.c: Remove _initialize_break_catch_syscall
	prototype.
	* break-catch-throw.c: Remove _initialize_break_catch_throw
	prototype.
	* breakpoint.c: Remove _initialize_breakpoint prototype.
	* bsd-uthread.c: Remove _initialize_bsd_uthread prototype.
	* btrace.c: Remove _initialize_btrace prototype.
	* charset.c: Remove _initialize_charset prototype.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c: Remove _initialize_cli_cmds prototype.
	* cli/cli-dump.c: Remove _initialize_cli_dump prototype.
	* cli/cli-interp.c: Remove _initialize_cli_interp prototype.
	* cli/cli-logging.c: Remove _initialize_cli_logging prototype.
	* cli/cli-script.c: Remove _initialize_cli_script prototype.
	* coff-pe-read.c: Remove _initialize_coff_pe_read prototype.
	* coffread.c: Remove _initialize_coffread prototype.
	* compile/compile.c: Remove _initialize_compile prototype.
	* complaints.c: Remove _initialize_complaints prototype.
	* completer.c: Remove _initialize_completer prototype.
	* copying.awk: Remove _initialize_copying prototype.
	* copying.c: Regenerate.
	* core-regset.c: Remove _initialize_core_regset prototype.
	* corefile.c: Remove _initialize_core prototype.
	* corelow.c: Remove _initialize_corelow prototype.
	* cp-abi.c: Remove _initialize_cp_abi prototype.
	* cp-namespace.c: Remove _initialize_cp_namespace prototype.
	* cp-support.c: Remove _initialize_cp_support prototype.
	* cp-valprint.c: Remove _initialize_cp_valprint prototype.
	* cris-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_cris_linux_tdep prototype.
	* cris-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_cris_tdep prototype.
	* ctf.c: Remove _initialize_ctf prototype.
	* d-lang.c: Remove _initialize_d_language prototype.
	* darwin-nat-info.c: Remove _initialize_darwin_info_commands
	prototype.
	* darwin-nat.c: Remove _initialize_darwin_inferior prototype.
	* dbxread.c: Remove _initialize_dbxread prototype.
	* dcache.c: Remove _initialize_dcache prototype.
	* demangle.c: Remove _initialize_demangler prototype.
	* disasm-selftests.c: Remove _initialize_disasm_selftests
	prototype.
	* disasm.c: Remove _initialize_disasm prototype.
	* dtrace-probe.c: Remove _initialize_dtrace_probe prototype.
	* dummy-frame.c: Remove _initialize_dummy_frame prototype.
	* dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c: Remove _initialize_tailcall_frame
	prototype.
	* dwarf2-frame.c: Remove _initialize_dwarf2_frame prototype.
	* dwarf2expr.c: Remove _initialize_dwarf2expr prototype.
	* dwarf2loc.c: Remove _initialize_dwarf2loc prototype.
	* dwarf2read.c: Remove _initialize_dwarf2_read prototype.
	* elfread.c: Remove _initialize_elfread prototype.
	* exec.c: Remove _initialize_exec prototype.
	* extension.c: Remove _initialize_extension prototype.
	* f-lang.c: Remove _initialize_f_language prototype.
	* f-valprint.c: Remove _initialize_f_valprint prototype.
	* fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_fbsd_nat prototype.
	* fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_fbsd_tdep prototype.
	* filesystem.c: Remove _initialize_filesystem prototype.
	* findcmd.c: Remove _initialize_mem_search prototype.
	* fork-child.c: Remove _initialize_fork_child prototype.
	* frame-base.c: Remove _initialize_frame_base prototype.
	* frame-unwind.c: Remove _initialize_frame_unwind prototype.
	* frame.c: Remove _initialize_frame prototype.
	* frv-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_frv_linux_tdep prototype.
	* frv-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_frv_tdep prototype.
	* ft32-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ft32_tdep prototype.
	* gcore.c: Remove _initialize_gcore prototype.
	* gdb_bfd.c: Remove _initialize_gdb_bfd prototype.
	* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
	* gdbarch.sh: Remove _initialize_gdbarch prototype.
	* gdbtypes.c: Remove _initialize_gdbtypes prototype.
	* gnu-nat.c: Remove _initialize_gnu_nat prototype.
	* gnu-v2-abi.c: Remove _initialize_gnu_v2_abi prototype.
	* gnu-v3-abi.c: Remove _initialize_gnu_v3_abi prototype.
	* go-lang.c: Remove _initialize_go_language prototype.
	* go32-nat.c: Remove _initialize_go32_nat prototype.
	* guile/guile.c: Remove _initialize_guile prototype.
	* h8300-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_h8300_tdep prototype.
	* hppa-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_hppa_linux_nat prototype.
	* hppa-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_hppa_linux_tdep prototype.
	* hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_hppanbsd_nat prototype.
	* hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_hppanbsd_tdep prototype.
	* hppa-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_hppaobsd_nat prototype.
	* hppa-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_hppaobsd_tdep prototype.
	* hppa-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_hppa_tdep prototype.
	* i386-bsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386bsd_nat prototype.
	* i386-cygwin-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386_cygwin_tdep
	prototype.
	* i386-darwin-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386_darwin_tdep
	prototype.
	* i386-dicos-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386_dicos_tdep prototype.
	* i386-fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386fbsd_nat prototype.
	* i386-fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386fbsd_tdep prototype.
	* i386-gnu-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386gnu_nat prototype.
	* i386-gnu-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386gnu_tdep prototype.
	* i386-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386_linux_nat prototype.
	* i386-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386_linux_tdep prototype.
	* i386-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386nbsd_nat prototype.
	* i386-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386nbsd_tdep prototype.
	* i386-nto-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386nto_tdep prototype.
	* i386-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386obsd_nat prototype.
	* i386-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386obsd_tdep prototype.
	* i386-sol2-nat.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_sol2_nat prototype.
	* i386-sol2-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_amd64_sol2_tdep prototype.
	* i386-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_i386_tdep prototype.
	* i386-windows-nat.c: Remove _initialize_i386_windows_nat
	prototype.
	* ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_libunwind_frame
	prototype.
	* ia64-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_ia64_linux_nat prototype.
	* ia64-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ia64_linux_tdep prototype.
	* ia64-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ia64_tdep prototype.
	* ia64-vms-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ia64_vms_tdep prototype.
	* infcall.c: Remove _initialize_infcall prototype.
	* infcmd.c: Remove _initialize_infcmd prototype.
	* inferior.c: Remove _initialize_inferiors prototype.
	* inflow.c: Remove _initialize_inflow prototype.
	* infrun.c: Remove _initialize_infrun prototype.
	* interps.c: Remove _initialize_interpreter prototype.
	* iq2000-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_iq2000_tdep prototype.
	* jit.c: Remove _initialize_jit prototype.
	* language.c: Remove _initialize_language prototype.
	* linux-fork.c: Remove _initialize_linux_fork prototype.
	* linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_linux_nat prototype.
	* linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_linux_tdep prototype.
	* linux-thread-db.c: Remove _initialize_thread_db prototype.
	* lm32-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_lm32_tdep prototype.
	* m2-lang.c: Remove _initialize_m2_language prototype.
	* m32c-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m32c_tdep prototype.
	* m32r-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_m32r_linux_nat prototype.
	* m32r-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m32r_linux_tdep prototype.
	* m32r-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m32r_tdep prototype.
	* m68hc11-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m68hc11_tdep prototype.
	* m68k-bsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_m68kbsd_nat prototype.
	* m68k-bsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m68kbsd_tdep prototype.
	* m68k-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_m68k_linux_tdep prototype.
	* m68k-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m68k_linux_tdep prototype.
	* m68k-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m68k_tdep prototype.
	* m88k-bsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_m68kbsd_nat prototype.
	* m88k-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_m68kbsd_tdep prototype.
	* machoread.c: Remove _initialize_machoread prototype.
	* macrocmd.c: Remove _initialize_macrocmd prototype.
	* macroscope.c: Remove _initialize_macroscope prototype.
	* maint.c: Remove _initialize_maint_cmds prototype.
	* mdebugread.c: Remove _initialize_mdebugread prototype.
	* memattr.c: Remove _initialize_mem prototype.
	* mep-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mep_tdep prototype.
	* mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Remove _initialize_mi_cmd_env prototype.
	* mi/mi-cmds.c: Remove _initialize_mi_cmds prototype.
	* mi/mi-interp.c: Remove _initialize_mi_interp prototype.
	* mi/mi-main.c: Remove _initialize_mi_main prototype.
	* microblaze-linux-tdep.c: Remove
	_initialize_microblaze_linux_tdep prototype.
	* microblaze-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_microblaze_tdep prototype.
	* mips-fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_mips_fbsd_nat prototype.
	* mips-fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mips_fbsd_tdep prototype.
	* mips-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_mips_linux_nat prototype.
	* mips-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mips_linux_tdep prototype.
	* mips-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_mipsnbsd_nat prototype.
	* mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mipsnbsd_tdep prototype.
	* mips-sde-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mips_sde_tdep prototype.
	* mips-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mips_tdep prototype.
	* mips64-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_mips64obsd_nat prototype.
	* mips64-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mips64obsd_tdep
	prototype.
	* mipsread.c: Remove _initialize_mipsread prototype.
	* mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mn10300_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* mn10300-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mn10300_tdep prototype.
	* moxie-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_moxie_tdep prototype.
	* msp430-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_msp430_tdep prototype.
	* mt-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_mt_tdep prototype.
	* nds32-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_nds32_tdep prototype.
	* nios2-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_nios2_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* nios2-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_nios2_tdep prototype.
	* nto-procfs.c: Remove _initialize_procfs prototype.
	* nto-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_nto_tdep prototype.
	* objc-lang.c: Remove _initialize_objc_language prototype.
	* objfiles.c: Remove _initialize_objfiles prototype.
	* observer.c: Remove observer_test_first_notification_function,
	observer_test_second_notification_function,
	observer_test_third_notification_function, and
	_initialize_observer prototypes.
	* opencl-lang.c: Remove _initialize_opencl_language prototypes.
	* osabi.c: Remove _initialize_gdb_osabi prototype.
	* osdata.c: Remove _initialize_osdata prototype.
	* p-valprint.c: Remove _initialize_pascal_valprint prototype.
	* parse.c: Remove _initialize_parse prototype.
	* ppc-fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_ppcfbsd_nat prototype.
	* ppc-fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ppcfbsd_tdep prototype.
	* ppc-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_ppc_linux_nat prototype.
	* ppc-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ppc_linux_tdep prototype.
	* ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_ppcnbsd_nat prototype.
	* ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ppcnbsd_tdep prototype.
	* ppc-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_ppcobsd_nat prototype.
	* ppc-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_ppcobsd_tdep prototype.
	* printcmd.c: Remove _initialize_printcmd prototype.
	* probe.c: Remove _initialize_probe prototype.
	* proc-api.c: Remove _initialize_proc_api prototype.
	* proc-events.c: Remove _initialize_proc_events prototype.
	* proc-service.c: Remove _initialize_proc_service prototype.
	* procfs.c: Remove _initialize_procfs prototype.
	* psymtab.c: Remove _initialize_psymtab prototype.
	* python/python.c: Remove _initialize_python prototype.
	* ravenscar-thread.c: Remove _initialize_ravenscar prototype.
	* record-btrace.c: Remove _initialize_record_btrace prototype.
	* record-full.c: Remove _initialize_record_full prototype.
	* record.c: Remove _initialize_record prototype.
	* regcache.c: Remove _initialize_regcache prototype.
	* reggroups.c: Remove _initialize_reggroup prototype.
	* remote-notif.c: Remove _initialize_notif prototype.
	* remote-sim.c: Remove _initialize_remote_sim prototype.
	* remote.c: Remove _initialize_remote prototype.
	* reverse.c: Remove _initialize_reverse prototype.
	* rl78-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_rl78_tdep prototype.
	* rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_rs6000_aix_tdep prototype.
	* rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_rs6000_lynx178_tdep
	prototype.
	* rs6000-nat.c: Remove _initialize_rs6000_nat prototype.
	* rs6000-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_rs6000_tdep prototype.
	* rust-exp.y: Remove _initialize_rust_exp prototype.
	* rx-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_rx_tdep prototype.
	* s390-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_s390_nat prototype.
	* s390-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_s390_tdep prototype.
	* score-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_score_tdep prototype.
	* selftest-arch.c: Remove _initialize_selftests_foreach_arch
	prototype.
	* ser-go32.c: Remove _initialize_ser_dos prototype.
	* ser-mingw.c: Remove _initialize_ser_windows prototype.
	* ser-pipe.c: Remove _initialize_ser_pipe prototype.
	* ser-tcp.c: Remove _initialize_ser_tcp prototype.
	* ser-unix.c: Remove _initialize_ser_hardwire prototype.
	* serial.c: Remove _initialize_serial prototype.
	* sh-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sh_linux_tdep prototype.
	* sh-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_shnbsd_nat prototype.
	* sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_shnbsd_tdep prototype.
	* sh-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sh_tdep prototype.
	* skip.c: Remove _initialize_step_skip prototype.
	* sol-thread.c: Remove _initialize_sol_thread prototype.
	* solib-aix.c: Remove _initialize_solib_aix prototype.
	* solib-darwin.c: Remove _initialize_darwin_solib prototype.
	* solib-dsbt.c: Remove _initialize_dsbt_solib prototype.
	* solib-frv.c: Remove _initialize_frv_solib prototype.
	* solib-spu.c: Remove _initialize_spu_solib prototype.
	* solib-svr4.c: Remove _initialize_svr4_solib prototype.
	* solib-target.c: Remove _initialize_solib_target prototype.
	* solib.c: Remove _initialize_solib prototype.
	* source.c: Remove _initialize_source prototype.
	* sparc-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_linux_nat prototype.
	* sparc-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_nat prototype.
	* sparc-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparcnbsd_nat prototype.
	* sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparcnbsd_tdep prototype.
	* sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc32obsd_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc-sol2-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_sol2_nat prototype.
	* sparc-sol2-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_sol2_tdep prototype.
	* sparc-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc_tdep prototype.
	* sparc64-fbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64fbsd_nat
	prototype.
	* sparc64-fbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64fbsd_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc64-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64_linux_nat
	prototype.
	* sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc64-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64_nat prototype.
	* sparc64-nbsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64nbsd_nat
	prototype.
	* sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64nbsd_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc64-obsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64obsd_nat
	prototype.
	* sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64obsd_tdep
	prototype.
	* sparc64-sol2-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_sparc64_sol2_tdep
	prototype.
	* spu-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_spu_nat prototype.
	* spu-multiarch.c: Remove _initialize_spu_multiarch prototype.
	* spu-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_spu_tdep prototype.
	* stabsread.c: Remove _initialize_stabsread prototype.
	* stack.c: Remove _initialize_stack prototype.
	* stap-probe.c: Remove _initialize_stap_probe prototype.
	* std-regs.c: Remove _initialize_frame_reg prototype.
	* symfile-debug.c: Remove _initialize_symfile_debug prototype.
	* symfile-mem.c: Remove _initialize_symfile_mem prototype.
	* symfile.c: Remove _initialize_symfile prototype.
	* symmisc.c: Remove _initialize_symmisc prototype.
	* symtab.c: Remove _initialize_symtab prototype.
	* target-dcache.c: Remove _initialize_target_dcache prototype.
	* target-descriptions.c: Remove _initialize_target_descriptions
	prototype.
	* thread.c: Remove _initialize_thread prototype.
	* tic6x-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_tic6x_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* tic6x-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_tic6x_tdep prototype.
	* tilegx-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_tile_linux_nat prototype.
	* tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_tilegx_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* tilegx-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_tilegx_tdep prototype.
	* tracefile-tfile.c: Remove _initialize_tracefile_tfile prototype.
	* tracefile.c: Remove _initialize_tracefile prototype.
	* tracepoint.c: Remove _initialize_tracepoint prototype.
	* tui/tui-hooks.c: Remove _initialize_tui_hooks prototype.
	* tui/tui-interp.c: Remove _initialize_tui_interp prototype.
	* tui/tui-layout.c: Remove _initialize_tui_layout prototype.
	* tui/tui-regs.c: Remove _initialize_tui_regs prototype.
	* tui/tui-stack.c: Remove _initialize_tui_stack prototype.
	* tui/tui-win.c: Remove _initialize_tui_win prototype.
	* tui/tui.c: Remove _initialize_tui prototype.
	* typeprint.c: Remove _initialize_typeprint prototype.
	* user-regs.c: Remove _initialize_user_regs prototype.
	* utils.c: Remove _initialize_utils prototype.
	* v850-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_v850_tdep prototype.
	* valarith.c: Remove _initialize_valarith prototype.
	* valops.c: Remove _initialize_valops prototype.
	* valprint.c: Remove _initialize_valprint prototype.
	* value.c: Remove _initialize_values prototype.
	* varobj.c: Remove _initialize_varobj prototype.
	* vax-bsd-nat.c: Remove _initialize_vaxbsd_nat prototype.
	* vax-nbsd-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_vaxnbsd_tdep prototype.
	* vax-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_vax_tdep prototype.
	* windows-nat.c: Remove _initialize_windows_nat,
	_initialize_check_for_gdb_ini, and _initialize_loadable
	prototypes.
	* windows-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_windows_tdep prototype.
	* xcoffread.c: Remove _initialize_xcoffread prototype.
	* xml-support.c: Remove _initialize_xml_support prototype.
	* xstormy16-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_xstormy16_tdep prototype.
	* xtensa-linux-nat.c: Remove _initialize_xtensa_linux_nat
	prototype.
	* xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_xtensa_linux_tdep
	prototype.
	* xtensa-tdep.c: Remove _initialize_xtensa_tdep prototype.
2017-09-09 11:02:37 -07:00
Keith Seitz a611b5cb00 Remove unused field field_info.fnfields
Since at least 7.3 the "fnfields" field in struct field_info has been
unused.  This patch simply removes it.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2read.c (struct field_info) <fnfields>: Remove unused
	field.
2017-09-08 16:47:13 -07:00
Christoph Weinmann 469412dd9c Remove C/C++ relevant code in Fortran specific file.
Remove code relevant for printing C/C++ Integer values in a
Fortran specific file to unify printing of Fortran values.
This does not change the output.
2017-09-08 15:11:47 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel e0f86435f8 fortran: Testsuite, fix typos in vla-value. 2017-09-08 15:11:47 +02:00
Bernhard Heckel 9e9af4be9f Fortran: Testsuite, fix differences in type naming. 2017-09-08 15:11:47 +02:00
Frank Penczek a5ad232b3e Fix indentation for printing Fortran types with pointers
Printing the prefix "PTR TO -> (" resp. "REF TO ->(" ignored the active
indentation level.  This caused inconsistent appearance of user-defined
Fortran types containing pointers.  Fix by using "fprintfi_filtered" with the
current indentation level for outputting the prefix string.  Add test case
ptr-indentation.

Example using 'ptype' on object of type:
  type TypeWithPointer
    integer i
    integer, pointer:: p
  end type TypeWithPointer

Before:
  type = Type typewithpointer
      integer(kind=4) :: i
  PTR TO -> ( integer(kind=4) :: p)
  End Type typewithpointer

After:
  type = Type typewithpointer
      integer(kind=4) :: i
      PTR TO -> ( integer(kind=4) :: p)
  End Type typewithpointer
2017-09-08 15:11:47 +02:00
Joel Brobecker e50142270b Document the GDB 8.0.1 release in gdb/ChangeLog
gdb/ChangeLog:

	GDB 8.0.1 released.
2017-09-07 07:53:34 -07:00
Joel Brobecker 63c99141de remove QStartupWithShell entry from NEWS::Changes in GDB 7.11
This entry was added twice within the same commit, back in Dec 2017
by the following change:

    commit aefd8b33d9
    Date:   Thu Dec 22 22:14:02 2016 -0500
    Subject: Implement proper "startup-with-shell" support on gdbserver

I think the second entry is just a rebase/merge oversight, and it wasn't
meant to be added there, particularly since the 7.11 branch was no longer
active at that time anymore.

This patch just removes the entry.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS (Changes in GDB 7.11): Remove entry for QStartupWithShell.
2017-09-07 07:24:33 -07:00
Tom Tromey 69c1e056df Change funcall_chain to be a std::vector
This simplifies the handling of funcall_chain, by changing it to be a
std::vector<int> and then fixing the users.  This allows the removal
of a cleanup.

It would be even cleaner to replace this with better logic in the
parsers; but a baby step seemed ok.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* parse.c (funcall_chain): Now a std::vector.
	(start_arglist, end_arglist): Simplify.
	(free_funcalls): Remove.
	(parse_exp_in_context_1): Remove cleanup.
2017-09-06 15:49:32 -06:00
Tom Tromey fef704bfec Remove last cleanups from go-exp.y
This removes the last remaining cleanups from go-exp.y.

2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* go-exp.y (go_parse): Don't create a cleanup.
2017-09-06 15:49:31 -06:00
Tom Tromey 5613c5857a Remove last cleanups from d-exp.y
This removes the last remaining cleanups from d-exp.y.

2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* d-exp.y (PrimaryExpression): Use std::string.
	(d_parse): Don't create a cleanup.
2017-09-06 15:49:31 -06:00
Tom Tromey eae49211e1 Remove make_cleanup_clear_parser_state
This removes make_cleanup_clear_parser_state in favor of
scoped_restore.

2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* utils.c (do_clear_parser_state): Remove.
	(make_cleanup_clear_parser_state): Remove.
	* p-exp.y (pascal_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* m2-exp.y (m2_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* f-exp.y (f_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* d-exp.y (d_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* c-exp.y (c_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* ada-exp.y (ada_parse): Use scoped_restore.
	* utils.h (make_cleanup_clear_parser_state): Remove.
2017-09-06 15:49:30 -06:00
Keith Seitz 73b9be8b53 Introduce dw2_linkage_name and dw2_linkage_name_attr.
The DWARF reader is littered with the following idiom to read a linkage name
from the debug info:

  mangled = dwarf2_string_attr (die, DW_AT_linkage_name, cu);
  if (mangled == NULL)
    mangled = dwarf2_string_attr (die, DW_AT_MIPS_linkage_name, cu);

This patch introduces functions to simplify this to:

  mangled = dw2_linkage_name (die, cu);

or

  attr = dw2_linkage_name_attr (die, cu);

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2read.c (dw2_linkage_name_attr): New function.
	(dw2_linkage_name): New function.
	(dwarf2_compute_name, dwarf2_physname, read_call_site_scope)
	(guess_full_die_structure_name, dwarf2_name): Use dw2_linkage_name.
	(anonymous_struct_prefix, dwarf2_name): Use dw2_linkage_name_attr.
2017-09-06 12:50:52 -07:00
Tom Tromey 5aec60eb2f Cast char constant to int in sizeof.exp
PR gdb/22010 concerns a regression I introduced with the scalar
printing changes.  The bug is that this code in sizeof.exp:

    set signof_byte [get_integer_valueof "'\\377'" -1]

can incorrectly compute sizeof_byte.  One underlying problem here is
that gdb's C parser doesn't treat a char constant as an int (this is
PR 19973).

However, it seems good to have an immediate fix for the regression.
The simplest is to cast to an int here.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/22010:
	* gdb.base/sizeof.exp (check_valueof): Cast char constant to int.
2017-09-06 11:11:03 -06:00
Kamil Rytarowski a102602bc5 Correct shell compatibility issue detected with pkgsrc.
String comparison of in a POSIX bourne shell must be done
with '=', not '=='. For example the NetBSD sh(1) does not
support it.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-06  Kamil Rytarowski  <n54@gmx.com>

	* config/djgpp/djconfig.sh: Correct shell portability issue.
2017-09-06 18:52:08 +02:00
Thomas Preud'homme 8f8f815255 Fix calls in gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp
Tests in gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp call functions defined in assembly
without type debugging information. Since
7022349d5c ("Stop assuming no-debug-info
functions return int") this triggers an error which leads to many tests
to FAIL. This patch cast the call to indicate the return type of the
functions when calling them.

2017-09-06  Thomas Preud'homme  <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>

gdb/testsuite/
	* gdb.arch/thumb2-it.exp: Cast call to assembly defined function.
2017-09-06 17:54:26 +01:00
Kamil Rytarowski 28ad437d7a Define HAVE_NATIVE_GCORE_HOST on NetBSD
NetBSD ships with gcore(1) againg since the version 2.0.
This tool is functional and actively maintained.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-06  Kamil Rytarowski  <n54@gmx.com>

	* configure.nat: Define HAVE_NATIVE_GCORE_HOST on NetBSD.
2017-09-06 18:40:29 +02:00
John Baldwin 351787dd4c Add native target for FreeBSD/aarch64.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (ALLDEPFILES): Add mips-fbsd-nat.c.
	* NEWS: Mention new FreeBSD/mips native configuration.
	* configure.host: Add aarch64*-*-freebsd*.
	* configure.nat: Likewise.
	* aarch64-fbsd-nat.c: New file.
2017-09-06 09:42:08 -07:00
John Baldwin c0f84956d0 Add FreeBSD/aarch64 architecture.
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.
2017-09-06 09:40:47 -07:00
Kamil Rytarowski 7610297ab5 Add myself as a write-after-approval GDB maintainer.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-06  Kamil Rytarowski  <n54@gmx.com>

	* MAINTAINERS (Write After Approval): Add Kamil Rytarowski.
2017-09-06 18:01:18 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil fbd1b77155 Fix accessing TLS variables with no debug info
Since 2273f0ac95 ("change minsyms not to be relocated at
read-time"), printing TLS symbols of objfiles with a non-zero base
address, without debug info, fails.

E.g., with:

 $ mv /usr/lib/debug /usr/lib/debug-x

to get debug info out of the way, we get:

 $ echo 'int main(){}' | gcc -pthread -x c -
 $ ./gdb -q -ex start -ex 'p (int) errno' ./a.out
 Cannot access memory at address 0xffffef7c0698

instead of the expected:

 $1 = 0

The regression is not visible with glibc debuginfo installed.

The problem is that we compute the address of TLS minsyms incorrectly.

To trigger the problem, it is important that the variable is in an
objfile with a non-zero base address.  While glibc is a shared library
for 'errno', it's easier for the testcase to use PIE instead of a
shlib.  For TLS variables in PT_EXEC the regression obviously does not
happen.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-06  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* parse.c (find_minsym_type_and_address): Don't relocate addresses
	of TLS symbols.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-09-06  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/tls-nodebug-pie.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/tls-nodebug-pie.exp: New file.
2017-09-06 12:32:46 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers 5ca79eae06 Fix leak of auto_obstack objfile_per_bfd_storage->storage_obstack;
commit 23732b1e32
  Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
  Date:   Tue Jun 27 16:22:08 2017 +0100
changed objfile_per_bfd_storage->storage_obstack
from  'struct obstack storage_obstack;'
to    'auto_obstack storage_obstack;'
So the obstack is auto allocated when the  objfile_per_bfd_storage ctor is
manually called by get_objfile_bfd_data).
However, the ctor call was still followed by a manual call to
      obstack_init (&storage->storage_obstack);

This results in a bunch of leaks detected by valgrind, such as:
==24665== 4,064 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 11,469 of 11,590
==24665==    at 0x4C27BF5: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==24665==    by 0x5437B7: xmalloc (common-utils.c:44)
==24665==    by 0x77CAA7: _obstack_begin_worker (obstack.c:141)
==24665==    by 0x60168F: auto_obstack (gdb_obstack.h:70)
==24665==    by 0x60168F: get_objfile_bfd_data(objfile*, bfd*) (objfiles.h:188)
==24665==    by 0x601DB6: allocate_objfile(bfd*, char const*, enum_flags<objfile_flag>) (objfiles.c:423)
==24665==    by 0x647753: symbol_file_add_with_addrs(bfd*, char const*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>, section_addr_info*, enum_flags<objfile_flag>, objfile*) (symfile.c:1158)
==24665==    by 0x647C7B: symbol_file_add_separate(bfd*, char const*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>, objfile*) (symfile.c:1252)
==24665==    by 0x4C7D79: elf_symfile_read(objfile*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>) (elfread.c:1270)
==24665==    by 0x647CB4: read_symbols(objfile*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>) (symfile.c:861)
==24665==    by 0x647809: syms_from_objfile_1 (symfile.c:1062)

-> remove the manual call to obstack_init.
Reg-tested on Debian 8/amd64, tests results are the same before/after the patch.
valgrind still show some leaks, but less.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-05  Philippe Waroquiers  <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>

	* objfiles.c (get_objfile_bfd_data): Remove useless obstack_init
	call.
2017-09-05 20:51:23 +02:00
Tom Tromey 5eb5f85062 Don't use -fdiagnostics-color=never for rustc
I noticed that the gdb.rust tests fail because the test suite passes
-fdiagnostics-color=never to rustc.  This is not a recognized rustc
option, and the test suite already handles passing the appropriate
option to the Rust compiler.

This patch fixes the problem.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-09-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_compile): Don't use universal_compile_options
	for rust.
2017-09-05 12:08:03 -06:00
Simon Marchi ae780a21f2 Test different follow-exec-mode settings in gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp
Using follow-exec-mode "new" takes a different code path than "same", so
it's interesting to test this path in combination with a change in
architecture of the inferior.  This test fails if you remove the
previous patch.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp: Test with different
	"follow-exec-mode" settings.
	(do_test): New procedure.
2017-09-05 17:42:04 +02:00
Simon Marchi bf93d7ba99 Add thread after updating gdbarch when exec'ing
As mentioned in the previous patch, we should avoid doing register reads
after a process does an exec and before we've updated that inferior's
gdbarch.  Otherwise, we may interpret the registers using the wrong
architecture.  When a process does an exec with "follow-exec-mode new",
a new inferior is added by follow_exec.  The gdbarch of that new
inferior is at first set to some default value, probably specific to the
gdb build (I get "i386" here), which may not be the right one.  It is
updated later by the call to target_find_description.  Before that
point, if we try to read the inferior's registers, we may not interpret
them correctly.  This has been exposed by a failure in
gdb.base/foll-exec-mode.exp after the previous patch, with:

  Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 312 bytes, got 816 bytes)

The call to "add_thread" done just after adding the inferior is
problematic, because it ends up reading the registers (because the ptid
is re-used, we end up doing a switch_to_thread to it, which tries to
update stop_pc).  The registers returned by gdbserver are the x86-64
ones, while we try to interpret them using the "i386" gdbarch.

Postponing the call to add_thread to until the target
description/gdbarch has been updated seems to fix the issue.

As to why this issue was uncovered by the previous patch: what I think
happened before that patch is that since we were updating stop_pc before
switching to the new inferior, we were filling the regcache associated
to the ptid (this worked fine as long as the architectures of the
previous and new process images were the same).  The call to
switch_to_thread then worked, because the register read hit the
regcache.  Now, it triggers a register read, while the gdbarch is not
set correctly, leading to the "reply is too long" error.  If this is
right, it sounds wrong that we delete and re-add a thread with the same
ptid, and are able to access the registers from the deleted thread.
When we delete a thread, should we clear the regcache associated to that
ptid, so that the new thread starts with a fresh/empty regcache?

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* infrun.c (follow_exec): Call add_thread after
	target_find_description.
2017-09-05 17:41:03 +02:00
Simon Marchi 1bb7c05977 Read stop_pc after updating the gdbarch when exec'ing
When an inferior execs and changes architecture (e.g. 64 bits to 32
bits), the gdbarch associated to the inferior is updated by the
follow_exec call in handle_inferior_event_1.  We should avoid doing any
register read before that point, because the registers sent by the
remote side will be those of the new architecture, but we would
interpret them using the old architecture.  We do just that by setting
stop_pc during this window, which obviously requires reading the
registers.  This results in gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp failing, GDB
outputting the following error:

  Truncated register 50 in remote 'g' packet

This patch fixes that by postponing the setting of stop_pc to after
we've updated the inferior gdbarch.

This bug was hiding another problem, and as such introduces some
failures in gdb.base/foll-exec-mode.exp.  The following patch takes care
of that.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* infrun.c (handle_inferior_event_1): When exec'ing, read
	stop_pc after follow_exec.
2017-09-05 17:41:03 +02:00
Simon Marchi fc80982757 Improve "'g' reply is is to long" error message
... by adding the expected size, and the received size.  I found this
useful when debugging gdbarch/remote issues, since it gives a hint of
what gdb expects and what the remote sent.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* remote.c (process_g_packet): Update error message.
2017-09-05 17:41:03 +02:00
Yao Qi d2fcdd8546 Add i386.o to gdb_target_obs for x86_64-* targets
This patch fixes the build failure caused by 22916b0
(Convert the rest x86 target descriptions).

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.tgt (gdb_target_obs): Add i386.o for x86_64-*
	targets.
2017-09-05 14:46:47 +01:00
Pedro Alves e69570ee18 eval.c:evaluate_subexp_standard: Factor out function call handling
While working on the no-debug-info debugging improvements, I found
evaluate_subexp_standard's function call code unnecessarily long and
hard to navigate and debug.  The use of goto doesn't help either.

This commit tries to improve things by factoring out the
function-call-related code to separate helper functions.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-05  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (eval_call, evaluate_funcall): New functions, factored
	out from ...
	(evaluate_subexp_standard): ... this.
2017-09-05 12:13:57 +01:00
Yao Qi 22916b0786 Convert the rest x86 target descriptions
This patch changes the rest of x86 target descriptions in GDB and
GDBserver.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_target_description): Create target
	descriptions.
	(_initialize_amd64_tdep): Don't call functions
	initialize_tdesc_amd64_*.  Add self tests.
	* arch/amd64.c (amd64_create_target_description): Add parameter
	is_linux.  Call set_tdesc_osabi if is_linux is true.
	* arch/amd64.h (amd64_create_target_description): Update the
	declaration.
	* arch/i386.c (i386_create_target_description): Add parameter
	is_linux.  Call set_tdesc_osabi if is_linux is true.
	* arch/i386.h (i386_create_target_description): Update
	declaration.
	* configure.tgt: Add i386.o to gdb_target_obs.
	* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Remove i386/*.xml.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-avx512.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/amd64-mpx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/amd64.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-avx512.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-mmx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386.c: Remove.
	* i386-tdep.c: Don't include features/i386/i386*.c., include
	target-descriptions.h and arch/i386.h.
	(i386_target_description): Create target descriptions.
	(i386_gdbarch_init): Don't call initialize_tdesc_i386_*
	functions.  Do self tests.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_i386_regobj): Remove.
	(srv_amd64_regobj): Remove.
	(srv_regobj): Set it to "" for x86 non-linux targets.
	* linux-x86-tdesc.c (i386_linux_read_description):
	* lynx-i386-low.c: Include x86-xstate.h and arch/i386.h.
	(init_registers_i386): Remove the declaration.
	(tdesc_i386): Remove the declaration.
	(lynx_i386_arch_setup): Call i386_create_target_description.
	* nto-x86-low.c: Likewise.
	* win32-i386-low.c [__x86_64__]: include arch/amd64.h.
	[!__x86_64__]: include arch/i386.h.
	(i386_arch_setup) [__x86_64__]: Call amd64_create_target_description.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 0854b7b187 Remove features/i386/amd64-*linux.c and features/i386/x32-*linux.c
gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Remove i386/amd64XXX-linux.xml.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-avx512-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-avx512-pku-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/amd64-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/amd64-mpx-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-avx-avx512-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-avx-linux.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-linux.c: Removed.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 38602d55e0 [GDBserver] Shorten srv_amd64_linux_xmlfiles
GDBserver now is able to generate target descriptions from features, so
don't need to remember these target description files.

Note that it should be i386/amd64-avx-avx512-linux.xml instead of
i386/amd64-avx-avx512.xml in $srv_amd64_linux_xmlfiles.  This patch
removes it anyway.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_amd64_linux_xmlfiles): Remove
	i386/amd64-XXX-linux from it.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 44b886ff15 [GDBserver] Use pre-generated amd64-linux tdesc as test
Now, all these amd64-linux pre-generated tdesc can be used as test, so
don't need to build them if $development is false.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv: Empty srv_amd64_linux_regobj if $development is
	false.
	(ipa_amd64_linux_regobj): Remove.
	(ipa_x32_linux_regobj): Remove.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi b4570e4b30 Convert amd64-linux target descriptions
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.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 6c73f67f9c Lazily and dynamically create amd64-linux target descriptions
This patch starts to use the generate c feature files to dynamically
create amd64-linux target descriptions.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Don't include amd64-XXX-linux and
	x32-XXX-linux.c.  Include 64bit-XX.c and x32-XX.c.
	(amd64_linux_read_description): Create target descriptions.
	(_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Don't call initialize_tdesc_XXX
	functions.  Add unit tests.
	* features/Makefile (FEATURE_XMLFILES): Append 64bit-XXX.xml and
	x32-core.xml.
	* features/i386/64bit-avx.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-avx512.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-core.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-linux.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-mpx.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-pkeys.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-segments.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/64bit-sse.c: Generated.
	* features/i386/x32-core.c: Generated.
	* target-descriptions.c (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Print feature
	c files for amd64-linux and x32-linux.
2017-09-05 09:54:54 +01:00
Yao Qi 9d3d478be5 Centralize amd64-linux target descriptions
This patch adds a new function amd64_linux_read_description, which
creates amd64-linux target descriptions according to its two
arguments, xcr0 and is_x32.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_linux_read_description): New
	function.
	(amd64_linux_core_read_description): Call
	amd64_linux_read_description.
	(amd64_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	(amd64_x32_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	* amd64-linux-tdep.h (amd64_linux_read_description): Declare.
	* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_read_description): Call
	amd64_linux_read_description.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi b9f1d50ffc Update comments in amd64_linux_core_read_description
gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_linux_core_read_description): Update
	comments.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi d1f28ea24a [GDBserver] Shorten srv_i386_linux_xmlfiles
GDBserver now is able to generate target descriptions from features, so
don't need to remember these target description files.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_i386_linux_xmlfiles): Remove
	i386/i386-XXX-linux.xml from it.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 25a93583f3 [GDBserver] Use pre-generated tdesc as test
Now, these *-generate.c files are only used in GDBserver for unit test.
If $development is false (in release), these *-generate.c files won't be
used at all.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv: Set srv_i386_linux_regobj empty if $development
	is false.
	* linux-i386-ipa.c (initialize_low_tracepoint): Don't call
	initialize_low_tdesc.
	* linux-x86-low.c (initialize_low_arch): Wrap initialize_low_tdesc
	with #if initialize_low_tdesc.
	* linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c: New file.
	* linux-x86-tdesc.c: Move code to linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 188c9e6dcb Remove features/i386/i386-*linux.c
Now, features/i386/i386-XXX-linux.c are not used, remove them.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Remove i386/i386-XX-linux.xml.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-avx512-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-mmx-linux.c: Remove.
	* features/i386/i386-mpx-linux.c: Remove.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 5f035c0716 Share i386-linux target description between GDB and GDBserver
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.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 0abe8a8992 Dynamically composite xml in reply to GDB
GDBserver still uses pre-generated target descriptions in order to
reply to GDB's query on target description (see xml-builtin-generated.c
in GDBserver build directory).  This patch teaches GDBserver to
create XML contents according to the target descriptions rather than
using pre-generated ones.

First, change target feature c files to pass the feature xml file
name to tdesc_create_feature, so that target description in GDBserver
can record them, and create XML contents from these features in
buffer, like

  ...
  <xi:include href="$FEATURE1_XML_NAME"/>
  <xi:include href="$FEATURE2_XML_NAME"/>
  ...

and send this buffer back to GDB.

Note that this patch reuses target_desc.xmltarget a little bit, which is
to hold the XML contents dynamically generated in tdesc_get_features_xml.
However, it is not xfree'ed in ~target_desc, because we can't tell it is
from xstrdup or a literal string.  Since we don't delete target_desc,
there is no memory leak yet.  After we change all target descriptions to
the new style, target_desc.xmltarget is from xstrdup, then, we can safely
xfree it in ~target_desc.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* arch/tdesc.h (tdesc_create_feature): Add an argument xml.
	* target-descriptions.c (tdesc_create_feature): Likewise, and
	adjust code.
	* features/i386/32bit-avx.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-avx512.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-core.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-linux.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-mpx.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-sse.c: Re-generated.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-x86-tdesc.c: Don't include <inttypes.h>.
	(i386_linux_read_description) [!IN_PROCESS_AGENT]: Call
	set_tdesc_architecture and set_tdesc_osabi.  Remove code setting
	.xmltarget.
	* server.c (get_features_xml): Call tdesc_get_features_xml.
	* tdesc.c (set_tdesc_architecture): New function.
	(set_tdesc_osabi): New function.
	(tdesc_get_features_xml): New function.
	(tdesc_create_feature): Add an argument.
	* tdesc.h (struct target_desc) <features>: New field.
	<arch, osabi>: New field.
	(~target_desc): xfree features, arch, and osabi.
	(target_desc::oerator==): Don't compare .xmltarget.
	[!IN_PROCESS_AGENT] (set_tdesc_architecture): Declare.
	(set_tdesc_osabi): Likewise.
	(tdesc_get_features_xml): Likewise.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 0a188386c0 [GDBserver] unit test to i386_tdesc
This patch adds a unit test in GDBserver to test dynamically created
target descriptions equal these pre-generated ones.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-x86-tdesc.c: Include selftest.h.
	(i386_tdesc_test): New function.
	(initialize_low_tdesc): Call selftests::register_test.
	* tdesc.h: Include regdef.h.
	(target_desc): Override operator == and !=.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* regformats/regdef.h (struct reg): Override operator == and !=.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi f49ff00066 [GDBserver] Centralize tdesc for i386-linux
tdesc_i386_XXX_linux is used in many places in linux-x86-low.c and this
patch adds a new function i386_linux_read_description to return the right
tdesc according to xcr0.  i386_linux_read_description is quite similar to
the counterpart in GDB, and the following patch will share the duplicated
code, so this patch adds arch/tdesc.h includes the declarations of various
tdesc apis which are used by the shared code.  The generated c feature
files can include arch/tdesc.h only.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_tgtobj): Append linux-x86-tdesc.o.
	(ipa_obj): Likewise.
	* linux-i386-ipa.c: Include common/x86-xstate.h
	(get_ipa_tdesc): Call i386_linux_read_description.
	(initialize_low_tracepoint): Don't call  init_registers_XXX
	functions, call initialize_low_tdesc instead.
	* linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_read_description): Call
	i386_linux_read_description.
	(initialize_low_arch): Don't call init_registers_i386_XXX
	functions, call initialize_low_tdesc.
	* linux-x86-tdesc.c: New file.
	* linux-x86-tdesc.h (x86_linux_tdesc): New X86_TDESC_LAST.
	(i386_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): Declare.
	(i386_get_ipa_tdesc): Declare.
	(initialize_low_tdesc): Declare.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* arch/tdesc.h: New file.
	* regformats/regdat.sh: Generate code using tdesc_create_reg.
	* target-descriptions.c: Update comments.
	* target-descriptions.h: Include "arch/tdesc.h".  Remove the
	declarations.
	* features/i386/32bit-avx.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-avx512.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-core.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-linux.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-mpx.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c: Re-generated.
	* features/i386/32bit-sse.c: Re-generated.
2017-09-05 09:54:53 +01:00
Yao Qi 2b68ef2f11 Return X86_TDESC_MMX in x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx
gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* linux-x86-low.c (x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): Use X86_TDESC_MMX
	instead of 0.
2017-09-05 09:54:52 +01:00
Yao Qi f7000548a2 Use VEC for target_desc.reg_defs
Nowadays, target_desc.reg_defs is a pointer points to a pre-generated
array, which is not flexible.  This patch changes it from an array
to a VEC so that GDBserver can create target descriptions dynamically
later.  Instead of using pre-generated array, the -generated.c calls
VEC_safe_push to add each register to vector.

Since target_desc.reg_defs is used in IPA, we need to build common/vec.c
for IPA too.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* Makefile.in (IPA_OBJS): Add vec-ipa.o
	* regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Use VEC_length.
	(init_register_cache): Likewise.
	(regcache_cpy): Likewise.
	(registers_to_string): Iterate reg_defs via VEC_iterate.
	(find_regno): Likewise.
	(find_register_by_number): Use VEC_index.
	(register_size): Call find_register_by_number.
	(register_data): Call find_register_by_number.
	(supply_regblock): Use VEC_length.
	(regcache_raw_read_unsigned): Likewise.
	* tdesc.c (init_target_desc): Iterate reg_defs via
	VEC_iterate.
	(default_description): Update initializer.
	(copy_target_description): Don't update field num_registers.
	* tdesc.h (struct target_desc) <reg_defs>: Change it to VEC.
	<num_registers>: Remove.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* regformats/regdat.sh: Update generated code.
2017-09-05 09:54:52 +01:00
Yao Qi c9a5e2a5b2 Adjust code generated by regformats/regdat.sh
regformats/regdat.sh generate some *-generated.c files when GDBserver
is built.  Each .c file has some static variables, which are only used
within function init_registers_XXX, like this,

static struct reg regs_i386_linux[] = {
  { "eax", 0, 32 },
  { "ecx", 32, 32 },
  ...
};

static const char *expedite_regs_i386_linux[] = { "ebp", "esp", "eip", 0 };
static const char *xmltarget_i386_linux = "i386-linux.xml";

void
init_registers_i386_linux (void)
{
  ...
}

This patch moves these static variables' definitions to function
init_registers_XXX, so the generated files look like this,

void
init_registers_i386_linux (void)
{
  static struct target_desc tdesc_i386_linux_s;
  struct target_desc *result = &tdesc_i386_linux_s;
static struct reg regs_i386_linux[] = {
  ...
};

static const char *expedite_regs_i386_linux[] = { "ebp", "esp", "eip", 0 };
static const char *xmltarget_i386_linux = "i386-linux.xml";

  ...
}

We want GDBserver create target descriptions dynamically in each
init_registers_XXXX functions, so this patch moves all the related code
into function init_registers_XXXX, so that the following patch can easily
change function init_registers_XXXX to create target description
dynamically, rather than using current pre-generated array.

gdb:

2017-09-05  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* regformats/regdat.sh: Adjust code order.
2017-09-05 09:54:52 +01:00
Simon Marchi d6b687ac7a expprint: Fix format string warning
My compiler (gcc 5.4.0, clang 3.8) gives this warning:

/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/expprint.c: In lambda function:
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/expprint.c:1055:35: error: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Werror=format-security]
      fprintf_filtered (stream, mod);
                                   ^

Fix it by not using the passed string as the format string.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* expprint.c (dump_subexp_body_standard): Use constant format
	string in fprintf_filtered call.
2017-09-05 09:01:13 +02:00
John Baldwin a379bfd00e Enable support for x86 debug registers on NetBSD.
NetBSD recently added PT_GETDBREGS and PT_SETDBREGS ptrace operations
that match the existing ones supported by x86-bsd-nat.c.  NetBSD's
headers do not provide the DBREG_DRX helper macro, so define a local
version in x86-bsd-nat.c.  In addition, add the x86-nat.o and x86-dregs.o
object files to the native NetBSD x86 build targets.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* configure.nat: Add "x86-nat.o x86-dregs.o" for NetBSD/amd64 and
	NetBSD/i386.
	* x86-bsd-nat.c [!DBREG_DRX && __NetBSD__]: Define DBREG_DRX.
2017-09-04 19:34:48 -07:00
John Baldwin f7efc967ba Make <sys/user.h> include in bsd-kvm.c conditional on HAVE_SYS_USER_H.
NetBSD has recently removed <sys/user.h>.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* bsd-kvm.c: Make <sys/user.h> conditional on HAVE_SYS_USER_H.
2017-09-04 19:34:48 -07:00
John Baldwin c49fbc6c79 Define _KMEMUSER before including BSD kernel headers.
Recent versions of NetBSD hide certain kernel structures needed by the
KVM target from userland unless this macro is defined.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* bsd-kvm.o: Define _KMEMUSER.
	* configure.ac: Define _KMEMUSER when checking for "struct lwp".
	* configure: Regenerate.
2017-09-04 19:34:48 -07:00
John Baldwin 26562e73d8 Include "x86-xstate.h" for X86_XSTATE_* constants.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* amd64-fbsd-nat.c: Add include of "x86-xstate.h".
	* i386-fbsd-nat.c: Likewise.
2017-09-04 19:31:33 -07:00
John Baldwin 31cf148787 Explicitly include <array> for std::array<>.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* unittests/array-view-selftests.c: Add include of <array>.
2017-09-04 15:58:38 -07:00
John Baldwin 5b9f8a7c6e Catch up to recent changes to call_function_by_hand().
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* spu-tdep.c (flush_ea_cache): Add missing argument to
	call_function_by_hand.
2017-09-04 15:57:02 -07:00
Pedro Alves d69cf9b207 Document "no debug info debugging" improvements
Here's the documentation bits for all the improvements done in
previous commits.

Note that the original "weak alias functions" paragraph ends up
disappearing, because this patch, which I'm considering kind of part
of this series, makes the alias case Just Work:
  https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-07/msg00018.html

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (Safer support for debugging with no debug info): New.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Variables) <Program Variables>: Document inspecting
	no-debug-info variables.
	(Symbols) <Examining the Symbol Table>: Document inspecting
	no-debug-info types.
	(Calling) <Calling functions with no debug info>: New subsection,
	documenting calling no-debug-info functions.
	(Non-debug DLL Symbols) <Working with Minimal Symbols>: Update.
2017-09-04 20:21:16 +01:00
Pedro Alves 3693fdb3c8 Make "p S::method() const::static_var" work too
Trying to print a function local static variable of a const-qualified
method still doesn't work after the previous fixes:

  (gdb) p 'S::method() const'::static_var
  $1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
  (gdb) p S::method() const::static_var
  No symbol "static_var" in specified context.

The reason is that the expression parser/evaluator loses the "const",
and the above unquoted case is just like trying to print a variable of
the non-const overload, if it exists, even.  As if the above unquoted
case had been written as:

  (gdb) p S::method()::static_var
  No symbol "static_var" in specified context.

We can see the problem without static vars in the picture.  With:

 struct S
 {
    void method ();
    void method () const;
 };

Compare:

  (gdb) print 'S::method(void) const'
  $1 = {void (const S * const)} 0x400606 <S::method() const>
  (gdb) print S::method(void) const
  $2 = {void (S * const)} 0x4005d8 <S::method()>   # wrong method!

That's what we need to fix.  If we fix that, the function local static
case starts working.

The grammar production for function/method types is this one:

  exp:       exp '(' parameter_typelist ')' const_or_volatile

This results in a TYPE_INSTANCE expression evaluator operator.  For
the example above, we get something like this ("set debug expression 1"):

...
            0  TYPE_INSTANCE         1 TypeInstance: Type @0x560fda958be0 (void)
            5    OP_SCOPE              Type @0x560fdaa544d8 (S) Field name: `method'
...

While evaluating TYPE_INSTANCE, we end up in
value_struct_elt_for_reference, trying to find the method named
"method" that has the prototype recorded in TYPE_INSTANCE.  In this
case, TYPE_INSTANCE says that we're looking for a method that has
"(void)" as parameters (that's what "1 TypeInstance: Type
@0x560fda958be0 (void)" above means.  The trouble is that nowhere in
this mechanism do we communicate to value_struct_elt_for_reference
that we're looking for the _const_ overload.
value_struct_elt_for_reference only compared parameters, and the
non-const "method()" overload has matching parameters, so it's
considered the right match...

Conveniently, the "const_or_volatile" production in the grammar
already records "const" and "volatile" info in the type stack.  The
type stack is not used in this code path, but we can borrow the
information.  The patch converts the info in the type stack to an
"instance flags" enum, and adds that as another element in
TYPE_INSTANCE operators.  This type instance flags is then applied to
the temporary type that is passed to value_struct_elt_for_reference
for matching.

The other side of the problem is that methods in the debug info aren't
marked const/volatile, so with that in place, the matching never finds
const/volatile-qualified methods.

The problem is that in the DWARF, there's no indication at all whether
a method is const/volatile qualified...  For example (c++filt applied
to the linkage name for convenience):

   <2><d3>: Abbrev Number: 6 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
      <d4>   DW_AT_external    : 1
      <d4>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x3df): method
      <d8>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
      <d9>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 58
      <da>   DW_AT_linkage_name: (indirect string, offset: 0x5b2): S::method() const
      <de>   DW_AT_declaration : 1
      <de>   DW_AT_object_pointer: <0xe6>
      <e2>   DW_AT_sibling     : <0xec>

I see the same with both GCC and Clang.  The patch works around this
by extracting the cv qualification from the "const" and "volatile" in
the demangled name.  This will need further tweaking for "&" and
"const &" overloads, but we don't support them in the parser yet,
anyway.

The TYPE_CONST changes were necessary otherwise the comparisons in valops.c:

  if (TYPE_CONST (intype) != TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONST (f, j))
    continue;

would fail, because when both TYPE_CONST() TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONST() were
true, their values were different.

BTW, I'm recording the const/volatile-ness of methods in the
TYPE_FN_FIELD info because #1 - I'm not sure it's kosher to change the
method's type directly (vs having to call make_cv_type to create a new
type), and #2 it's what stabsread.c does:

...
	    case 'A':		/* Normal functions.  */
	      new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 0;
	      new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 0;
	      (*pp)++;
	      break;
	    case 'B':		/* `const' member functions.  */
	      new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 1;
	      new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 0;
...

After all this, this finally all works:

  print S::method(void) const
  $1 = {void (const S * const)} 0x400606 <S::method() const>
  (gdb) p S::method() const::static_var
  $2 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* c-exp.y (function_method, function_method_void): Add current
	instance flags to TYPE_INSTANCE.
	* dwarf2read.c (check_modifier): New.
	(compute_delayed_physnames): Assert that only C++ adds delayed
	physnames.  Mark fn_fields as const/volatile depending on
	physname.
	* eval.c (make_params): New type_instance_flags parameter.  Use
	it as the new type's instance flags.
	(evaluate_subexp_standard) <TYPE_INSTANCE>: Extract the instance
	flags element and pass it to make_params.
	* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard) <TYPE_INSTANCE>: Handle
	instance flags element.
	(dump_subexp_body_standard) <TYPE_INSTANCE>: Likewise.
	* gdbtypes.h: Include "enum-flags.h".
	(type_instance_flags): New enum-flags type.
	(TYPE_CONST, TYPE_VOLATILE, TYPE_RESTRICT, TYPE_ATOMIC)
	(TYPE_CODE_SPACE, TYPE_DATA_SPACE): Return boolean.
	* parse.c (operator_length_standard) <TYPE_INSTANCE>: Adjust.
	(follow_type_instance_flags): New function.
	(operator_check_standard) <TYPE_INSTANCE>: Adjust.
	* parser-defs.h (follow_type_instance_flags): Declare.
	* valops.c (value_struct_elt_for_reference): const/volatile must
	match too.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/func-static.c (S::method const, S::method volatile)
	(S::method volatile const): New methods.
	(c_s, v_s, cv_s): New instances.
	(main): Call method() on them.
	* gdb.base/func-static.exp (syntax_re, cannot_resolve_re): New variables.
	(cannot_resolve): New procedure.
	(cxx_scopes_list): Test cv methods.  Add print-scope-quote and
	print-quote-unquoted columns.
	(do_test): Test printing each scope too.
2017-09-04 20:21:16 +01:00
Pedro Alves e68cb8e001 Handle "p 'S::method()::static_var'" (quoted) in symbol lookup
While the previous commit made "p method()::static_var" (no
single-quotes) Just Work, if users (or frontends) try wrapping the
expression with quotes, they'll get:

  (gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
  'S::method()::static_var' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type

even if we _do_ have debug info for that variable.  That's better than
the bogus/confusing value what GDB would print before the
stop-assuming-int patch:

  (gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
  $1 = 1

but I think it'd still be nice to make this case Just Work too.

In this case, due to the quoting, the C/C++ parser (c-exp.y)
interprets the whole expression/string as a single symbol name, and we
end up calling lookup_symbol on that name.  There's no debug symbol
with that fully-qualified name, but since the compiler gives the
static variable a mangled linkage name exactly like the above, it
appears in the mininal symbols:

  $ nm -A local-static | c++filt | grep static_var
  local-static:0000000000601040 d S::method()::static_var

... and that's what GDB happens to find/print.  This only happens in
C++, note, since for C the compiler uses different linkage names:

  local-static-c:0000000000601040 d static_var.1848

So while (in C++, not C) function local static variables are given a
mangled name that demangles to the same syntax that GDB
documents/expects as the way to access function local statics, there's
no global symbol in the debug info with that name at all.  The debug
info for a static local variable for a non-inline function looks like
this:

 <1><2a1>: Abbrev Number: 19 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
 ...
 <2><2f7>: Abbrev Number: 20 (DW_TAG_variable)
    <2f8>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x4e9): static_var
    <2fc>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
    <2fd>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 64
    <2fe>   DW_AT_type        : <0x25>
    <302>   DW_AT_location    : 9 byte block: 3 40 10 60 0 0 0 0 0      (DW_OP_addr: 601040)

and for an inline function, it looks like this (linkage name run
through c++filt for convenience):

 <2><21b>: Abbrev Number: 16 (DW_TAG_variable)
    <21c>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x21a): static_var
    <220>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
    <221>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 48
    <222>   DW_AT_linkage_name: (indirect string, offset: 0x200): S::inline_method()::static_var
    <226>   DW_AT_type        : <0x25>
    <22a>   DW_AT_external    : 1
    <22a>   DW_AT_location    : 9 byte block: 3 a0 10 60 0 0 0 0 0      (DW_OP_addr: 6010a0)

(The inline case makes the variable external so that the linker can
merge the different inlined copies.  It seems like GCC never outputs
the linkage name for non-extern globals.)

When we read the DWARF, we record the static_var variable as a regular
variable of the containing function's block.  This makes stopping in
the function and printing the variable as usual.  The variable just so
happens to have a memory address as location.

So one way to make "p 'S::method()::static_var'" work would be to
record _two_ copies of the symbols for these variables.  One in the
function's scope/block, with "static_var" as name, as we currently do,
and another in the static or global blocks (depending on whether the
symbol is external), with a fully-qualified name.  I wrote a prototype
patch for that, and it works.  For the non-inline case above, since
the debug info doesn't point to the linkage same, that patch built the
physname of the static local variable as the concat of the physname of
the containing function, plus "::", plus the variable's name.  We
could make that approach work for C too, though it kind of feels
awkward to record fake symbol names like that in C.

The other approach I tried is to change the C++ symbol lookup routines
instead.  This is the approach this commit takes.  We can already
lookup up symbol in namespaces and classes, so this feels like a good
fit, and was easy enough.  The advantage is that this doesn't require
recording extra symbols.

The test in gdb.cp/m-static.exp that exposed the need for this is
removed, since the same functionality is now covered by
gdb.cp/local-static.exp.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cp-namespace.c (cp_search_static_and_baseclasses): Handle
	function/method scopes; lookup the nested name as a function local
	static variable.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/local-static.exp: Also test with
	class::method::variable wholly quoted.
	* gdb.cp/m-static.exp (class::method::variable): Remove test.
2017-09-04 20:21:16 +01:00
Pedro Alves 858be34c5a Handle "p S::method()::static_var" in the C++ parser
This commit makes "print S::method()::static_var" actually find the
debug symbol for static_var.  Currently, you get:

  (gdb) print S::method()::static_var
  A syntax error in expression, near `'.

Quoting the whole string would seemingly work before the previous
patch that made GDB stop assuming int for no-debug-info variables:

  (gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
  $1 = 1

... except that's incorrect output, because:

  (gdb) ptype 'S::method()::static_var'
  type = <data variable, no debug info>

The way to make it work correctly currently is by quoting the
function/method part, like this:

  (gdb) print 'S::method()'::static_var
  $1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
  (gdb) ptype 'S::method()'::static_var
  type = struct aggregate {
      int i1;
      int i2;
      int i3;
  }

At least after the "stop assuming int" patch, this is what we
now get:

  (gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
  'S::method()::static_var' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type
  (gdb) p (struct aggregate) 'S::method()::static_var'
  $1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}

However, IMO, users shouldn't really have to care about any of this.
GDB should Just Work, without quoting, IMO.

So here's a patch that implements support for that in the C++ parser.
With this patch, you now get:

  (gdb) p S::method()::S_M_s_var_aggregate
  $1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
  (gdb) ptype S::method()::S_M_s_var_aggregate
  type = struct aggregate {
      int i1;
      int i2;
      int i3;
  }

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	(%type <voidval>): Add function_method.
	* c-exp.y (exp): New production for calls with no arguments.
	(function_method, function_method_void_or_typelist): New
	productions.
	(exp): New production for "method()::static_var".
	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
	* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
	Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
	* parse.c (operator_length_standard):
	Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
	* std-operator.def (OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR): New.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/local-static.c: New.
	* gdb.base/local-static.cc: New.
	* gdb.base/local-static.exp:  New.
2017-09-04 20:21:15 +01:00
Pedro Alves dd5901a6a5 Eliminate UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS
Since minsym references now go via OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE, UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS
is no longer used anywhere.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Remove UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS
	handling.
	* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
	Ditto.
	* parse.c (operator_length_standard, operator_check_standard):
	Ditto.
	* std-operator.def (UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS): Delete.
2017-09-04 20:21:15 +01:00
Pedro Alves 46a4882b3c Stop assuming no-debug-info variables have type int
An earlier commit made GDB no longer assume no-debug-info functions
return int.  This commit gives the same treatment to variables.

Currently, you can end misled by GDB over output like this:

  (gdb) p var
  $1 = -1
  (gdb) p /x var
  $2 = 0xffffffff

until you realize that GDB is assuming that the variable is an "int",
because:

  (gdb) ptype var
  type = <data variable, no debug info>

You may try to fix it by casting, but that doesn't really help:

  (gdb) p /x (unsigned long long) var
  $3 = 0xffffffffffffffff            # incorrect
         ^^

That's incorrect output, because the variable was defined like this:

  uint64_t var = 0x7fffffffffffffff;
                   ^^

What happened is that with the cast, GDB did an int -> 'unsigned long
long' conversion instead of reinterpreting the variable as the cast-to
type.  To get at the variable properly you have to reinterpret the
variable's address manually instead, with either:

  (gdb) p /x *(unsigned long long *) &var
  $4 = 0x7fffffffffffffff
  (gdb) p /x {unsigned long long} &var
  $5 = 0x7fffffffffffffff

After this commit GDB does it for you.  This is what you'll get
instead:

  (gdb) p var
  'var' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type
  (gdb) p /x (unsigned long long) var
  $1 = 0x7fffffffffffffff

As in the functions patch, the "compile" machinery doesn't currently
have the cast-to type handy, so it continues assuming no-debug
variables have int type, though now at least it warns.

The change to gdb.cp/m-static.exp deserves an explanation:

 - gdb_test "print 'gnu_obj_1::method()::sintvar'" "\\$\[0-9\]+ = 4" \
 + gdb_test "print (int) 'gnu_obj_1::method()::sintvar'" "\\$\[0-9\]+ = 4" \

That's printing the "sintvar" function local static of the
"gnu_obj_1::method()" method.

The problem with that test is that that "'S::method()::static_var'"
syntax doesn't really work in C++ as you'd expect.  The way to make it
work correctly currently is to quote the method part, not the whole
expression, like:

  (gdb) print 'gnu_obj_1::method()'::sintvar

If you wrap the whole expression in quotes, like in m-static.exp, what
really happens is that the parser considers the whole string as a
symbol name, but there's no debug symbol with that name.  However,
local statics have linkage and are given a mangled name that demangles
to the same string as the full expression, so that's what GDB prints.
After this commit, and without the cast, the print in m-static.exp
would error out saying that the variable has unknown type:

  (gdb) p 'gnu_obj_1::method()::sintvar'
  'gnu_obj_1::method()::sintvar' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type

TBC, if currently (even before this series) you try to print any
function local static variable of type other than int, you'll get
bogus results.  You can see that with m-static.cc as is, even.
Printing the "svar" local, which is a boolean (1 byte) still prints as
"int" (4 bytes):

  (gdb) p 'gnu_obj_1::method()::svar'
  $1 = 1
  (gdb) ptype 'gnu_obj_1::method()::svar'
  type = <data variable, no debug info>

This probably prints some random bogus value on big endian machines.

If 'svar' was of some aggregate type (etc.) we'd still print it as
int, so the problem would have been more obvious...  After this
commit, you'll get instead:

  (gdb) p 'gnu_obj_1::method()::svar'
  'gnu_obj_1::method()::svar' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type

... so at least GDB is no longer misleading.  Making GDB find the real
local static debug symbol is the subject of the following patches.  In
the end, it'll all "Just Work".

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ax-gdb.c: Include "typeprint.h".
	(gen_expr_for_cast): New function.
	(gen_expr) <OP_CAST, OP_CAST_TYPE>: Use it.
	<OP_VAR_VALUE, OP_MSYM_VAR_VALUE>: Error out if the variable's
	type is unknown.
	* dwarf2read.c (new_symbol_full): Fallback to int instead of
	nodebug_data_symbol.
	* eval.c: Include "typeprint.h".
	(evaluate_subexp_standard) <OP_VAR_VALUE, OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE>:
	Error out if symbol has unknown type.
	<UNOP_CAST, UNOP_CAST_TYPE>: Common bits factored out to
	evaluate_subexp_for_cast.
	(evaluate_subexp_for_address, evaluate_subexp_for_sizeof): Handle
	OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	(evaluate_subexp_for_cast): New function.
	* gdbtypes.c (init_nodebug_var_type): New function.
	(objfile_type): Use it to initialize types of variables with no
	debug info.
	* typeprint.c (error_unknown_type): New.
	* typeprint.h (error_unknown_type): New declaration.
	* compile/compile-c-types.c (convert_type_basic): Handle
	TYPE_CODE_ERROR; warn and fallback to int for variables with
	unknown type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.asm/asm-source.exp: Add casts to int.
	* gdb.base/nodebug.c (dataglobal8, dataglobal32_1, dataglobal32_2)
	(dataglobal64_1, dataglobal64_2): New globals.
	* gdb.base/nodebug.exp: Test different expressions involving the
	new globals, with print, whatis and ptype.  Add casts to int.
	* gdb.base/solib-display.exp: Add casts to int.
	* gdb.compile/compile-ifunc.exp: Expect warning.  Add cast to int.
	* gdb.cp/m-static.exp: Add cast to int.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-skip-prologue.exp: Add cast to int.
	* gdb.threads/tls-nodebug.exp: Check that gdb errors out printing
	tls variable with no debug info without a cast.  Test with a cast
	to int too.
	* gdb.trace/entry-values.exp: Add casts.
2017-09-04 20:21:15 +01:00
Pedro Alves fe13dfecbf evaluate_subexp_standard: Factor out OP_VAR_VALUE handling.
A following patch will want to call the new evaluate_var_value
function in another spot.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_var_value): New function, factored out from ...
	(evaluate_subexp_standard): ... here.
2017-09-04 20:21:14 +01:00
Pedro Alves d008ee2156 evaluate_subexp_standard: Remove useless assignments
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard) <UNOP_COMPLEMENT, UNOP_ADDR>:
	Remove useless assignments to 'op'.
2017-09-04 20:21:14 +01:00
Pedro Alves 827d0c517e evaluate_subexp_standard: Eliminate one goto
A following patch will want to factor out a bit of
evaluate_subexp_standard, and it'd be handy to reuse the code under the
"nosideret:" label there too.  This commits moves it to a separate
function as preparation for that.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (eval_skip_value): New function.
	(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
2017-09-04 20:21:14 +01:00
Pedro Alves 2c5a2be190 Make ptype/whatis print function name of functions with no debug info too
The patch to make GDB stop assuming functions return int left GDB with
an inconsistency.  While with normal expression evaluation the
"unknown return type" error shows the name of the function that misses
debug info:

  (gdb) p getenv ("PATH")
  'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
   ^^^^^^

which is handy in more complicated expressions, "ptype" does not:

  (gdb) ptype getenv ("PATH")
  function has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
  ^^^^^^^^

This commit builds on the new OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE to fix it, by making
OP_FUNCALL extract the function name from the symbol stored in
OP_VAR_VALUE/OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.  We now get the same error in "print"
vs "ptype":

  (gdb) ptype getenv()
  'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
  (gdb) p getenv()
  'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): <OP_FUNCALL>: Extract
	function name from symbol/minsym and pass it to
	error_call_unknown_return_type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/nodebug.exp: Test that ptype's error about functions
	with unknown return type includes the function name too.
2017-09-04 20:21:14 +01:00
Pedro Alves 74ea4be48e Introduce OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE
The previous patch left GDB with an inconsistency.  While with normal
expression evaluation the "unknown return type" error shows the name
of the function that misses debug info:

  (gdb) p getenv ("PATH")
  'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
   ^^^^^^

which can by handy in more complicated expressions, "ptype" does not:

  (gdb) ptype getenv ("PATH")
  function has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
  ^^^^^^^^

This commit is a step toward fixing it.

The problem is that while evaluating the expression above, we have no
reference to the minimal symbol where we could extract the name from.
This is because the resulting expression tree has no reference to the
minsym at all.  During parsing, the type and address of the minsym are
extracted and an UNOP_MEMVAL / UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS operator is generated
(see write_exp_elt_msym).  With "set debug expression", here's what
you see:

            0  OP_FUNCALL            Number of args: 0
            3    UNOP_MEMVAL           Type @0x565334a51930 (<text variable, no debug info>)
            6      OP_LONG               Type @0x565334a51c60 (__CORE_ADDR), value 140737345035648 (0x7ffff7751d80)

The "print" case finds the function name, because
call_function_by_hand looks up the function by address again.
However, for "ptype", we don't reach that code, because obviously we
don't really call the function.

Unlike minsym references, references to variables with debug info have
a pointer to the variable's symbol in the expression tree, with
OP_VAR_VALUE:

  (gdb) ptype main()
  ...
            0  OP_FUNCALL            Number of args: 0
            3    OP_VAR_VALUE          Block @0x0, symbol @0x559bbbd9b358 (main(int, char**))
  ...

so I don't see why do minsyms need to be different.  So to prepare for
fixing the missing function name issue, this commit adds a new
OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE operator that mimics OP_VAR_VALUE, except that it's
for minsyms instead of debug symbols.  For infcalls, we now get
expressions like these:

            0  OP_FUNCALL            Number of args: 0
            3    OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE     Objfile @0x1e41bf0, msymbol @0x7fffe599b000 (getenv)

In the following patch, we'll make OP_FUNCALL extract the function
name from the symbol stored in OP_VAR_VALUE/OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.

OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE will be used more in a later patch in the series
too.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	* ax-gdb.c (gen_msym_var_ref): New function.
	(gen_expr): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	* eval.c (evaluate_var_msym_value): New function.
	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	<OP_FUNCALL>: Extract function name from symbol/minsym and pass it
	to call_function_by_hand.
	* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
	Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	(union exp_element) <msymbol>: New field.
	* minsyms.h (struct type): Forward declare.
	(find_minsym_type_and_address): Declare.
	* parse.c (write_exp_elt_msym): New function.
	(write_exp_msymbol): Delete, refactored as ...
	(find_minsym_type_and_address): ... this new function.
	(write_exp_msymbol): Reimplement using OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	(operator_length_standard, operator_check_standard): Handle
	OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
	* std-operator.def (OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE): New.
2017-09-04 20:21:13 +01:00
Pedro Alves 7022349d5c Stop assuming no-debug-info functions return int
The fact that GDB defaults to assuming that functions return int, when
it has no debug info for the function has been a recurring source of
user confusion.  Recently this came up on the errno pretty printer
discussions.  Shortly after, it came up again on IRC, with someone
wondering why does getenv() in GDB return a negative int:

  (gdb) p getenv("PATH")
  $1 = -6185

This question (with s/getenv/random-other-C-runtime-function) is a FAQ
on IRC.

The reason for the above is:

 (gdb) p getenv
 $2 = {<text variable, no debug info>} 0x7ffff7751d80 <getenv>
 (gdb) ptype getenv
 type = int ()

... which means that GDB truncated the 64-bit pointer that is actually
returned from getent to 32-bit, and then sign-extended it:

 (gdb) p /x -6185
 $6 = 0xffffe7d7

The workaround is to cast the function to the right type, like:

 (gdb) p ((char *(*) (const char *)) getenv) ("PATH")
 $3 = 0x7fffffffe7d7 "/usr/local/bin:/"...

IMO, we should do better than this.

I see the "assume-int" issue the same way I see printing bogus values
for optimized-out variables instead of "<optimized out>" -- I'd much
rather that the debugger tells me "I don't know" and tells me how to
fix it than showing me bogus misleading results, making me go around
tilting at windmills.

If GDB prints a signed integer when you're expecting a pointer or
aggregate, you at least have some sense that something is off, but
consider the case of the function actually returning a 64-bit integer.
For example, compile this without debug info:

 unsigned long long
 function ()
 {
   return 0x7fffffffffffffff;
 }

Currently, with pristine GDB, you get:

 (gdb) p function ()
 $1 = -1                      # incorrect
 (gdb) p /x function ()
 $2 = 0xffffffff              # incorrect

maybe after spending a few hours debugging you suspect something is
wrong with that -1, and do:

 (gdb) ptype function
 type = int ()

and maybe, just maybe, you realize that the function actually returns
unsigned long long.  And you try to fix it with:

(gdb) p /x (unsigned long long) function ()
 $3 = 0xffffffffffffffff      # incorrect

... which still produces the wrong result, because GDB simply applied
int to unsigned long long conversion.  Meaning, it sign-extended the
integer that it extracted from the return of the function, to 64-bits.

and then maybe, after asking around on IRC, you realize you have to
cast the function to a pointer of the right type, and call that.  It
won't be easy, but after a few missteps, you'll get to it:

.....  (gdb) p /x ((unsigned long long(*) ()) function) ()
 $666 = 0x7fffffffffffffff             # finally! :-)


So to improve on the user experience, this patch does the following
(interrelated) things:

 - makes no-debug-info functions no longer default to "int" as return
   type.  Instead, they're left with NULL/"<unknown return type>"
   return type.

    (gdb) ptype getenv
    type = <unknown return type> ()

 - makes calling a function with unknown return type an error.

    (gdb) p getenv ("PATH")
    'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type

 - and then to make it easier to call the function, makes it possible
   to _only_ cast the return of the function to the right type,
   instead of having to cast the function to a function pointer:

    (gdb) p (char *) getenv ("PATH")                      # now Just Works
    $3 = 0x7fffffffe7d7 "/usr/local/bin:/"...

    (gdb) p ((char *(*) (const char *)) getenv) ("PATH")  # continues working
    $4 = 0x7fffffffe7d7 "/usr/local/bin:/"...

   I.e., it makes GDB default the function's return type to the type
   of the cast, and the function's parameters to the type of the
   arguments passed down.

After this patch, here's what you'll get for the "unsigned long long"
example above:

 (gdb) p function ()
 'function' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
 (gdb) p /x (unsigned long long) function ()
 $4 = 0x7fffffffffffffff     # correct!

Note that while with "print" GDB shows the name of the function that
has the problem:

  (gdb) p getenv ("PATH")
  'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type

which can by handy in more complicated expressions, "ptype" does not:

  (gdb) ptype getenv ("PATH")
  function has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type

This will be fixed in the next patch.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ada-lang.c (ada_evaluate_subexp) <TYPE_CODE_FUNC>: Don't handle
	TYPE_GNU_IFUNC specially here.  Throw error if return type is
	unknown.
	* ada-typeprint.c (print_func_type): Handle functions with unknown
	return type.
	* c-typeprint.c (c_type_print_base): Handle functions and methods
	with unknown return type.
	* compile/compile-c-symbols.c (convert_symbol_bmsym)
	<mst_text_gnu_ifunc>: Use nodebug_text_gnu_ifunc_symbol.
	* compile/compile-c-types.c: Include "objfiles.h".
	(convert_func): For functions with unknown return type, warn and
	default to int.
	* compile/compile-object-run.c (compile_object_run): Adjust call
	to call_function_by_hand_dummy.
	* elfread.c (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Adjust calls to
	call_function_by_hand.  Handle functions and methods with unknown
	return type.  Pass expect_type to call_function_by_hand.
	* f-typeprint.c (f_type_print_base): Handle functions with unknown
	return type.
	* gcore.c (call_target_sbrk): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* gdbtypes.c (objfile_type): Leave nodebug text symbol with NULL
	return type instead of int.  Make nodebug_text_gnu_ifunc_symbol be
	an integer address type instead of nodebug.
	* guile/scm-value.c (gdbscm_value_call): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* infcall.c (error_call_unknown_return_type): New function.
	(call_function_by_hand): New "default_return_type" parameter.
	Pass it down.
	(call_function_by_hand_dummy): New "default_return_type"
	parameter.  Use it instead of defaulting to int.  If there's no
	default and the return type is unknown, throw an error.  If
	there's a default return type, and the called function has no
	debug info, then assume the function is prototyped.
	* infcall.h (call_function_by_hand, call_function_by_hand_dummy):
	New "default_return_type" parameter.
	(error_call_unknown_return_type): New declaration.
	* linux-fork.c (call_lseek): Cast return type of lseek.
	(inferior_call_waitpid, checkpoint_command): Adjust calls to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* linux-tdep.c (linux_infcall_mmap, linux_infcall_munmap): Adjust
	calls to call_function_by_hand.
	* m2-typeprint.c (m2_procedure): Handle functions with unknown
	return type.
	* objc-lang.c (lookup_objc_class, lookup_child_selector)
	(value_nsstring, print_object_command): Adjust calls to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* p-typeprint.c (pascal_type_print_varspec_prefix): Handle
	functions with unknown return type.
	(pascal_type_print_func_varspec_suffix): New function.
	(pascal_type_print_varspec_suffix) <TYPE_CODE_FUNC,
	TYPE_CODE_METHOD>: Use it.
	* python/py-value.c (valpy_call): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* rust-lang.c (rust_evaluate_funcall): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* valarith.c (value_x_binop, value_x_unop): Adjust calls to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* valops.c (value_allocate_space_in_inferior): Adjust call to
	call_function_by_hand.
	* typeprint.c (type_print_unknown_return_type): New function.
	* typeprint.h (type_print_unknown_return_type): New declaration.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/break-main-file-remove-fail.exp (test_remove_bp): Cast
	return type of munmap in infcall.
	* gdb.base/break-probes.exp: Cast return type of foo in infcall.
	* gdb.base/checkpoint.exp: Simplify using for loop.  Cast return
	type of ftell in infcall.
	* gdb.base/dprintf-detach.exp (dprintf_detach_test): Cast return
	type of getpid in infcall.
	* gdb.base/infcall-exec.exp: Cast return type of execlp in
	infcall.
	* gdb.base/info-os.exp: Cast return type of getpid in infcall.
	Bail on failure to extract the pid.
	* gdb.base/nodebug.c: #include <stdint.h>.
	(multf, multf_noproto, mult, mult_noproto, add8, add8_noproto):
	New functions.
	* gdb.base/nodebug.exp (test_call_promotion): New procedure.
	Change expected output of print/whatis/ptype with functions with
	no debug info.  Test all supported languages.  Call
	test_call_promotion.
	* gdb.compile/compile.exp: Adjust expected output to expect
	warning.
	* gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: Likewise.
2017-09-04 20:21:13 +01:00
Pedro Alves 54990598c4 Fix calling prototyped functions via function pointers
Calling a prototyped function via a function pointer with the right
prototype doesn't work correctly, if the called function requires
argument coercion...  Like, e.g., with:

  float mult (float f1, float f2) { return f1 * f2; }

  (gdb) p mult (2, 3.5)
  $1 = 7
  (gdb) p ((float (*) (float, float)) mult) (2, 3.5)
  $2 = 0

both calls should have returned the same, of course.  The problem is
that GDB misses marking the type of the function pointer target as
prototyped...

Without the fix, the new test fails like this:

 (gdb) p ((int (*) (float, float)) t_float_values2)(3.14159,float_val2)
 $30 = 0
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/callfuncs.exp: p ((int (*) (float, float)) t_float_values2)(3.14159,float_val2)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdbtypes.c (lookup_function_type_with_arguments): Mark function
	types with more than one parameter as prototyped.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (do_function_calls): New parameter
	"prototypes".  Test calling float functions via prototyped and
	unprototyped function pointers.
	(perform_all_tests): New parameter "prototypes".  Pass it down.
	(top level): Pass down "prototypes" parameter to
	perform_all_tests.
2017-09-04 20:21:13 +01:00
Simon Marchi 34d16ea2a1 gdb.base/commands.exp: Test loop_break and loop_continue in nested loops
This patch improves the loop_break and loop_continue tests to verify
that they work as expected when multiple loops are nested (they affect
the inner loop).

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/commands.exp (loop_break_test, loop_continue_test):
	Test with nested loops.
2017-09-04 21:19:17 +02:00
Pedro Alves 9a24775b97 Introduce gdb_disassembly_flags
For some reason I ended up staring at some of the "int flags" in
btrace-related code, and I got confused because I had no clue what the
flags where supposed to indicate.

Fix that by using enum_flags, so that:
  #1 - it's clear from the type what the flags are about, and
  #2 - the compiler can catch mismatching mistakes

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-cmds.c (print_disassembly, disassemble_current_function)
	(disassemble_command): Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of bare
	int.
	* disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn)
	(dump_insns, do_mixed_source_and_assembly_deprecated)
	(do_mixed_source_and_assembly, do_assembly_only, gdb_disassembly):
	Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of bare int.
	* disasm.h (DISASSEMBLY_SOURCE_DEPRECATED, DISASSEMBLY_RAW_INSN)
	(DISASSEMBLY_OMIT_FNAME, DISASSEMBLY_FILENAME)
	(DISASSEMBLY_OMIT_PC, DISASSEMBLY_SOURCE)
	(DISASSEMBLY_SPECULATIVE): No longer macros.  Instead they're...
	(enum gdb_disassembly_flag): ... values of this new enumeration.
	(gdb_disassembly_flags): Define.
	(gdb_disassembly)
	(gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Use it.
	* mi/mi-cmd-disas.c (mi_cmd_disassemble): Use
	gdb_disassembly_flags instead of bare int.
	* record-btrace.c (btrace_insn_history)
	(record_btrace_insn_history, record_btrace_insn_history_range)
	(record_btrace_insn_history_from): Use gdb_disassembly_flags
	instead of bare int.
	* record.c (get_insn_history_modifiers, cmd_record_insn_history):
	Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of bare int.
	* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_gdb_disassembly_flags):
	Define.
	* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
	* target.c (target_insn_history, target_insn_history_from)
	(target_insn_history_range): Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of
	bare int.
	* target.h: Include "disasm.h".
	(struct target_ops) <to_insn_history, to_insn_history_from,
	to_insn_history_range>: Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of bare
	int.
	(target_insn_history, target_insn_history_from)
	(target_insn_history_range): Use gdb_disassembly_flags instead of
	bare int.
2017-09-04 18:23:22 +01:00
Simon Marchi 9521ecda68 Add tests for loop_break and loop_continue commands
I grepped the testsuite for loop_break and loop_continue and didn't find
anything, so I wrote some simple tests for those.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/commands.exp: Call the new procedures.
	(loop_break_test, loop_continue_test): New procedures.
2017-09-04 19:15:59 +02:00
Simon Marchi 80a65e9b8f Error out immediatly when using if command without args in command list
When using "if" (or while) without args directly on gdb's command line,
you get this:

  (gdb) if
  if/while commands require arguments

When doing the same when entering a command list, you only get an error
when the command is executed, when parse_exp_in_context_1 fails to
evaluate the expression.

  (gdb) define foo
  Type commands for definition of "foo".
  End with a line saying just "end".
  >if
   >end
  >end
  (gdb) foo
  Argument required (expression to compute).

I think it would make more sense to error out when inputting the command
list directly:

  (gdb) define foo
  Type commands for definition of "foo".
  End with a line saying just "end".
  >if
  if/while commands require arguments.

The only required change is to check whether args is an empty string in
build_command_line.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* cli/cli-script.c (build_command_line): For if/while commands,
	check whether args is empty.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/commands.exp: Call new procedure.
	(define_if_without_arg_test): New procedure.
2017-09-04 19:13:48 +02:00
Simon Marchi 6b66338c70 Move command lines types/declarations to cli-script.h
I think it would make more sense if the types and function declarations
related to command lines were in cli-script.h rather than defs.h, since
the related function definitions are in cli-script.c.

I had to add a few includes here and there.  I also had to rename the
"lines" parameter of command_lines_deleter::operator(), because ncurses
has a "#define lines ..." that was interfering when cli-script.h is
included by some TUI source files that also include ncurses header files.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* cli/cli-script.h (enum misc_command_type): Move from defs.h.
	(enum command_control_type): Likewise.
	(struct command_line): Likewise.
	(free_command_lines): Likewise.
	(struct command_lines_deleter): Likewise.
	(command_line_up): Likewise.
	(read_command_lines): Likewise.
	(read_command_lines_1): Likewise.
	* defs.h (enum misc_command_type): Move to cli/cli-script.h.
	(enum command_control_type): Likewise.
	(struct command_line): Likewise.
	(free_command_lines): Likewise.
	(struct command_lines_deleter): Likewise.
	(command_line_up): Likewise.
	(read_command_lines): Likewise.
	(read_command_lines_1): Likewise.
	* breakpoint.h: Include cli/cli-script.h.
	* extension-priv.h: Likewise.
	* gdbcmd.h: Likewise.
2017-09-04 19:09:12 +02:00
Simon Marchi 50a421ac3a gdbserver Makefile: don't delete intermediary files
If you "make" from scratch in gdbserver/, you'll notice that make
deletes the files it considers as intermediary at the end:

  $ make clean && make
  ...
  rm i386-mmx-linux-generated.c x32-avx-avx512-linux-generated.c ...

Then, if you type make again, make will rebuild these files and rebuild
gdbserver.  To avoid this, we can add the .SECONDARY special target.  If
it has no pre-requisites, all intermediary files will be kept.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (.SECONDARY): Define target.
2017-09-04 19:02:56 +02:00
Pedro Alves 51abb42130 Kill init_sal
Instead, make symtab_and_line initialize its members itself.  Many
symtab_and_line declarations are moved to where the object is
initialized at the same time both for clarity and to avoid double
initialization.  A few functions, like e.g., find_frame_sal are
adjusted to return the sal using normal function return instead of an
output parameter likewise to avoid having to default-construct a sal
and then immediately have the object overwritten.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ada-lang.c (is_known_support_routine): Move sal declaration to
	where it is initialized.
	* breakpoint.c (create_internal_breakpoint, init_catchpoint)
	(parse_breakpoint_sals, decode_static_tracepoint_spec)
	(clear_command, update_static_tracepoint): Remove init_sal
	references.  Move declarations closer to initializations.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (list_command): Move sal declarations closer to
	initializations.
	* elfread.c (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop): Remove init_sal
	references.  Move sal declarations closer to initializations.
	* frame.c (find_frame_sal): Return a symtab_and_line via function
	return instead of output parameter.  Remove init_sal references.
	* frame.h (find_frame_sal): Return a symtab_and_line via function
	return instead of output parameter.
	* guile/scm-frame.c (gdbscm_frame_sal): Adjust.
	* guile/scm-symtab.c (stscm_make_sal_smob): Use in-place new
	instead of memset.
	(gdbscm_find_pc_line): Remove init_sal reference.
	* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand_dummy): Remove init_sal
	references.  Move declarations closer to initializations.
	* infcmd.c (set_step_frame): Update.  Move declarations closer to
	initializations.
	(finish_backward): Remove init_sal references.  Move declarations
	closer to initializations.
	* infrun.c (process_event_stop_test, handle_step_into_function)
	(insert_hp_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame)
	(insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller): Likewise.
	* linespec.c (create_sals_line_offset, decode_digits_ordinary)
	(symbol_to_sal): Likewise.
	* probe.c (parse_probes_in_pspace): Remove init_sal reference.
	* python/py-frame.c (frapy_find_sal): Move sal declaration closer
	to its initialization.
	* reverse.c (save_bookmark_command): Use new/delete.  Remove
	init_sal references.  Move declarations closer to initializations.
	* source.c (get_current_source_symtab_and_line): Remove brace
	initialization.
	(set_current_source_symtab_and_line): Now takes the sal by const
	reference.  Remove brace initialization.
	(line_info): Remove init_sal reference.
	* source.h (set_current_source_symtab_and_line): Now takes a
	symtab_and_line via const reference.
	* stack.c (set_current_sal_from_frame): Adjust.
	(print_frame_info): Adjust.
	(get_last_displayed_sal): Return the sal via function return
	instead of via output parameter.  Simplify.
	(frame_info): Adjust.
	* stack.h (get_last_displayed_sal): Return the sal via function
	return instead of via output parameter.
	* symtab.c (init_sal): Delete.
	(find_pc_sect_line): Remove init_sal references.  Move
	declarations closer to initializations.
	(find_function_start_sal): Remove init_sal references.  Move
	declarations closer to initializations.
	* symtab.h (struct symtab_and_line): In-class initialize all
	fields.
	* tracepoint.c (set_traceframe_context)
	(print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Remove init_sal references.
	Move declarations closer to initializations.
	* tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_show_disassem_and_update_source): Adjust.
	* tui/tui-stack.c (tui_show_frame_info): Adjust.  Move
	declarations closer to initializations.
	* tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_update_source_window_as_is): Remove
	init_sal references.  Adjust.
2017-09-04 17:11:45 +01:00
Pedro Alves 6c5b2ebeac struct symtabs_and_lines -> std::vector<symtab_and_line>
This replaces "struct symtabs_and_lines" with
std::vector<symtab_and_line> in most cases.  This removes a number of
cleanups.

In some cases, the sals objects do not own the sals they point at.
Instead they point at some sal that lives on the stack.  Typically
something like this:

  struct symtab_and_line sal;
  struct symtabs_and_lines sals;

  // fill in sal

  sals.nelts = 1;
  sals.sals = &sal;

  // use sals

Instead of switching those cases to std::vector too, such usages are
replaced by gdb::array_view<symtab_and_line> instead.  This avoids
introducing heap allocations.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* ax-gdb.c (agent_command_1): Use range-for.
	* break-catch-throw.c (re_set_exception_catchpoint): Update.
	* breakpoint.c: Include "common/array-view.h".
	(init_breakpoint_sal, create_breakpoint_sal): Change sals
	parameter from struct symtabs_and_lines to
	array_view<symtab_and_line>.  Adjust.  Use range-for.  Update.
	(breakpoint_sals_to_pc): Change sals parameter from struct
	symtabs_and_lines to std::vector reference.
	(check_fast_tracepoint_sals): Change sals parameter from struct
	symtabs_and_lines to std::array_view.  Use range-for.
	(decode_static_tracepoint_spec): Return a std::vector instead of
	symtabs_and_lines.  Update.
	(create_breakpoint): Update.
	(break_range_command, until_break_command, clear_command): Update.
	(base_breakpoint_decode_location, bkpt_decode_location)
	(bkpt_probe_create_sals_from_location)
	(bkpt_probe_decode_location, tracepoint_decode_location)
	(tracepoint_probe_decode_location)
	(strace_marker_create_sals_from_location): Return a std::vector
	instead of symtabs_and_lines.
	(strace_marker_create_breakpoints_sal): Update.
	(strace_marker_decode_location): Return a std::vector instead of
	symtabs_and_lines.  Update.
	(update_breakpoint_locations): Change struct symtabs_and_lines
	parameters to gdb::array_view.  Adjust.
	(location_to_sals): Return a std::vector instead of
	symtabs_and_lines.  Update.
	(breakpoint_re_set_default): Use std::vector instead of struct
	symtabs_and_lines.
	(decode_location_default): Return a std::vector instead of
	symtabs_and_lines.  Update.
	* breakpoint.h: Include "common/array-view.h".
	(struct breakpoint_ops) <decode_location>: Now returns a
	std::vector instead of returning a symtabs_and_lines via output
	parameter.
	(update_breakpoint_locations): Change sals parameters to use
	gdb::array_view.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (edit_command, list_command): Update to use
	std::vector and gdb::array_view.
	(ambiguous_line_spec): Adjust to use gdb::array_view and
	range-for.
	(compare_symtabs): Rename to ...
	(cmp_symtabs): ... this.  Change parameters to symtab_and_line
	const reference and adjust.
	(filter_sals): Rewrite using std::vector and standard algorithms.
	* elfread.c (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolver_return_stop): Simplify.
	(jump_command): Update to use std::vector.
	* linespec.c (struct linespec_state) <canonical_names>: Update
	comment.
	(add_sal_to_sals_basic): Delete.
	(add_sal_to_sals, filter_results, convert_results_to_lsals)
	(decode_line_2, create_sals_line_offset)
	(convert_address_location_to_sals, convert_linespec_to_sals)
	(convert_explicit_location_to_sals, parse_linespec)
	(event_location_to_sals, decode_line_full, decode_line_1)
	(decode_line_with_current_source)
	(decode_line_with_last_displayed, decode_objc)
	(decode_digits_list_mode, decode_digits_ordinary, minsym_found)
	(linespec_result::~linespec_result): Adjust to use std::vector
	instead of symtabs_and_lines.
	* linespec.h (linespec_sals::sals): Now a std::vector.
	(struct linespec_result): Use std::vector, bool, and in-class
	initialization.
	(decode_line_1, decode_line_with_current_source)
	(decode_line_with_last_displayed): Return std::vector.
	* macrocmd.c (info_macros_command): Use std::vector.
	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_trace_find): Use std::vector.
	* probe.c (parse_probes_in_pspace, parse_probes): Adjust to use
	std::vector.
	* probe.h (parse_probes): Return a std::vector.
	* python/python.c (gdbpy_decode_line): Use std::vector and
	gdb::array_view.
	* source.c (select_source_symtab, line_info): Use std::vector.
	* stack.c (func_command): Use std::vector.
	* symtab.h (struct symtabs_and_lines): Delete.
	* tracepoint.c (tfind_line_command, scope_info): Use std::vector.
2017-09-04 17:11:15 +01:00
Pedro Alves 7c44b49cb6 Introduce gdb::array_view
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.
2017-09-04 17:10:12 +01:00
Pedro Alves e439fa140a Clarify "list" output when specified lines are ambiguous
Currently, with "list LINESPEC1,LINESPEC2", if one of the linespecs is
ambiguous, i.e., if it expands to multiple locations, you get this
seemingly odd output:

 (gdb) list foo,bar
 file: "file0.c", line number: 26
 file: "file1.c", line number: 29

Since "foo" above expands to multiple locations, the specified range
is indeterminate, and GDB is trying to be helpful by showing you what
was ambiguous.  It looks confusing to me, though.  I think it'd be
much more user friendly if GDB actually told you that, like this:

 (gdb) list foo,bar
 Specified first line 'foo' is ambiguous:
 file: "file0.c", line number: 26
 file: "file1.c", line number: 29

 (gdb) list bar,foo
 Specified last line 'foo' is ambiguous:
 file: "file0.c", line number: 26
 file: "file1.c", line number: 29

Note, I'm using "first" and "last" in the output because that's what
the manual uses:

 ~~~
 list first,last

     Print lines from first to last. [...]
 ~~~

Tested on x86-64 GNU/Linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-cmds.c (edit_command): Pass message to
	ambiguous_line_spec.
	(list_command): Pass message to ambiguous_line_spec.  Say
	"first"/"last" instead of "start" and "end" to be consistent with
	the manual.
	(ambiguous_line_spec): Add 'format' and vararg parameters.  Use
	them to print formatted message.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/list-ambiguous.exp: New file.
	* gdb.base/list-ambiguous0.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/list-ambiguous1.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/list.exp (test_list_range): Adjust expected output.
2017-09-04 16:49:29 +01:00
Pedro Alves 7525b645df Fix build breakage when libipt is available
Fix build regression introduced by 0860c437cb ("btrace: Store
btrace_insn in an std::vector"):

  src/gdb/btrace.c: In function ‘void ftrace_add_pt(btrace_thread_info*, pt_insn_decoder*, int*, std::vector<unsigned int>&)’:
  src/gdb/btrace.c:1329:38: error: invalid initialization of reference of type ‘const btrace_insn&’ from expression of type ‘btrace_insn*’
      ftrace_update_insns (bfun, &btinsn);
					^
  src/gdb/btrace.c:648:1: note: in passing argument 2 of ‘void ftrace_update_insns(btrace_function*, const btrace_insn&)’
   ftrace_update_insns (struct btrace_function *bfun, const btrace_insn &insn)
   ^

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* btrace.c (ftrace_add_pt): Pass btrace_insn to
	ftrace_update_insns by reference instead of pointer.
2017-09-04 16:01:17 +01:00
Yao Qi badc002020 Let i386_target_description return tdesc_i386_mmx
This patch remove the usage of tdesc_i386_mmx in i386-go32-tdep.c, and use
i386_target_description to get it instead.

gdb:

2017-09-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* i386-go32-tdep.c: Include x86-xstate.h.
	(i386_go32_init_abi): Call i386_target_description.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_target_description): Return tdesc_i386_mmx
	if xcr0 is X86_XSTATE_X87_MASK.
	* i386-tdep.h (tdesc_i386): Remove the declaration.
	(tdesc_i386_mmx): Likewise.
2017-09-04 11:33:56 +01:00
Yao Qi d78bdb54ac Return X86_XSTATE_SSE_MASK instead of 0 in i386fbsd_core_read_xcr0
i386fbsd_core_read_xcr0 reads the value of xcr0 from the corefile.  If
it fails, returns 0.  This makes its caller {i386,amd64}_target_description
has to handle this special value.  IMO, i386fbsd_core_read_xcr0 should
return the default xcr0 in case of error.

gdb:

2017-09-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* i386-fbsd-tdep.c (i386fbsd_core_read_xcr0): Return
	X86_XSTATE_SSE_MASK instead of 0.
2017-09-04 11:33:56 +01:00
Yao Qi ca1fa5eef2 Use i386_target_description to get tdesc_i386
GDB can call function i386_target_description to get the right target
description rather than tdesc_i386

gdb:

2017-09-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-fbsd-nat.c (amd64fbsd_read_description): Call
	i386_target_description.
	* i386-fbsd-nat.c (i386fbsd_read_description): Call
	i386_target_description.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
2017-09-04 11:33:56 +01:00
Yao Qi 2434b0199d Use amd64_target_description to get tdesc_amd64
This patch changes amd64-*-tdep.c files to use function
amd64_target_description to get the right target description rather than
use the variable tdesd_amd64.

gdb:

2017-09-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Include "x86-xstate.h".
	(x86_darwin_init_abi_64): Call amd64_target_description.
	* amd64-dicos-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-fbsd-nat.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-fbsd-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-nbsd-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-sol2-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-windows-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* amd64-tdep.h (tdesc_amd64): Remove the declaration.
2017-09-04 11:33:56 +01:00
Simon Marchi 0860c437cb btrace: Store btrace_insn in an std::vector
Because it contains a non-POD type field (flags), the type btrace_insn
should be new'ed/delete'd.  Replace the VEC (btrace_insn_s) in
btrace_function with an std::vector.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* btrace.h (btrace_insn_s, DEF_VEC_O (btrace_insn_s)): Remove.
	(btrace_function) <insn>: Change type to use std::vector.
	* btrace.c (ftrace_debug, ftrace_call_num_insn,
	ftrace_find_call, ftrace_new_gap, ftrace_update_function,
	ftrace_update_insns, ftrace_compute_global_level_offset,
	btrace_stitch_bts, btrace_clear, btrace_insn_get,
	btrace_insn_end, btrace_insn_next, btrace_insn_prev): Adjust to
	change to std::vector.
	(ftrace_update_insns): Adjust to change to std::vector, change
	type of INSN parameter.
	(btrace_compute_ftrace_bts): Adjust call to ftrace_update_insns.
	* record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_insn_range,
	btrace_compute_src_line_range,
	record_btrace_frame_prev_register): Adjust to change to
	std::vector.
	* python/py-record-btrace.c (recpy_bt_func_instructions): Adjust
	to change to std::vector.
2017-09-04 10:46:36 +02:00
Tom Tromey 0638b7f902 Use std::string in reopen_exec_file
This changes reopen_exec_file to use a std::string, removing a
cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* corefile.c (reopen_exec_file): Use std::string.
2017-09-03 13:03:11 -06:00
Tom Tromey 8f84fb0ee8 Use std::string and unique_xmalloc_ptr in compile/ code
Change various things in the compile/ code to use std::string or
unique_xmalloc_ptr as appropriate.  This allows the removal of some
cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* compile/compile.c (compile_register_name_mangled): Return
	std::string.
	* compile/compile-loc2c.c (pushf_register_address): Update.
	(pushf_register): Update.
	* compile/compile-c-types.c (convert_array): Update.
	* compile/compile-c-symbols.c (generate_vla_size): Update.
	(error_symbol_once): Use a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	(symbol_substitution_name): Return a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	(convert_one_symbol): Update.
	(generate_c_for_for_one_variable): Update.
	* compile/compile-c-support.c (c_get_range_decl_name): Return a
	std::string.
	(generate_register_struct): Update.
	* compile/compile-internal.h (c_get_range_decl_name): Return a
	std::string.
	(compile_register_name_mangled): Return std::string.
2017-09-03 13:03:10 -06:00
Tom Tromey 18e9961f02 Return std::string from perror_string
Change perror_string to return a std::string, removing a cleanup in
the process.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* utils.c (perror_string): Return a std::string.
	(throw_perror_with_name, perror_warning_with_name): Update.
2017-09-03 13:03:09 -06:00
Tom Tromey 453437863c Use std::string and unique_xmalloc_ptr in demangle_command
Change demangle_command to use std::string and unique_xmalloc_ptr,
removing some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* demangle.c (demangle_command): Use std::string,
	unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-09-03 13:03:08 -06:00
Tom Tromey b57af50345 Use std::string in do_set_command
Change do_set_command to use std::string, removing a cleanup and some
manual resizing code.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Use std::string.
2017-09-03 13:03:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 6eecf35f97 Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in cd_command
Change cd_command to use unique_xmalloc_ptr, removing a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* cli/cli-cmds.c (cd_command): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-09-03 13:03:06 -06:00
Tom Tromey 56496dd4d6 Use std::string in mi_cmd_interpreter_exec
Change mi_cmd_interpreter_exec to use std::string, removing a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_cmd_interpreter_exec): Use std::string.
2017-09-03 13:03:05 -06:00
Tom Tromey e91a1fa7d4 Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in env_execute_cli_command
Change env_execute_cli_command to use unique_xmalloc_ptr, removing a
cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* mi/mi-cmd-env.c (env_execute_cli_command): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-09-03 13:03:04 -06:00
Tom Tromey 7ffd83d70f Use std::string thread.c
This changes a few spots in thread.c to use std::string, removing some
cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Use string_printf.
	(thread_apply_command, thread_apply_all_command): Use
	std::string.
2017-09-03 13:03:03 -06:00
Tom Tromey 1ccbe9985f Return std::string from memory_error_message
This changes memory_error_message to return a std::string and fixes up
the callers.  This removes some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-09-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* valprint.c (val_print_string): Update.
	* gdbcore.h (memory_error_message): Return std::string.
	* corefile.c (memory_error_message): Return std::string.
	(memory_error): Update.
	* breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location): Update.
2017-09-03 13:03:02 -06:00
Simon Marchi 23fdd69e42 Make target_waitstatus_to_string return an std::string
A quite straightforward change.  It does "fix" leaks in record-btrace.c,
although since this is only used in debug printing code, it has no real
world impact.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* target/waitstatus.h (target_waitstatus_to_string): Change
	return type to std::string.
	* target/waitstatus.c (target_waitstatus_to_string): Return
	std::string.
	* target.h (target_waitstatus_to_string): Remove declaration.
	* infrun.c (resume, clear_proceed_status_thread,
	print_target_wait_results, do_target_wait, save_waitstatus,
	stop_all_threads): Adjust.
	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_wait): Adjust.
	* target-debug.h
	(target_debug_print_struct_target_waitstatus_p): Adjust.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* linux-low.c (linux_wait_1): Adjust.
	* server.c (queue_stop_reply_callback): Adjust.
2017-09-03 10:23:31 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil 5c811d30d1 PR gdb/22046: Fix T-stopped detach regression on old Linux kernels
On <=RHEL6 hosts Fedora/RHEL GDB started to 'kill -STOP' all processes it
detached.  Even those not originally T-stopped.  This is a Fedora-specific
patch which is based on upstream GDB's PROC_STATE_STOPPED state.

I believe (I did not verify) this patch did regress it:
commit d617208bb0
Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Date:   Mon Jul 25 12:42:17 2016 +0100
    linux-procfs: Introduce enum proc_state

As originally there was strstr() but now there is strcmp() and so the missing
trailing '\n' no longer matches.

The Bug was found by Michal Kolar.

Reproducibility:
$ gdb -p $PID
(gdb) quit
$ ...

Actual results:
===
RHEL6.9 x86_64 # scl enable devtoolset-7 bash
RHEL6.9 x86_64 # which gdb
/opt/rh/devtoolset-7/root/usr/bin/gdb
RHEL6.9 x86_64 # ./testcase.sh
24737 pts/0    S+     0:00 /bin/sleep 4
24737 pts/0    T+     0:00 /bin/sleep 4
RHEL6.9 x86_64 #
===

Expected results:
===
RHEL6.9 x86_64 # which gdb
/usr/bin/gdb
RHEL6.9 x86_64 # ./testcase.sh
24708 pts/0    S+     0:00 /bin/sleep 4
24708 pts/0    S+     0:00 /bin/sleep 4
./testcase.sh: line 20: kill: (24708) - No such process
RHEL6.9 x86_64 #
===

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-01  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/22046
	* nat/linux-procfs.c (parse_proc_status_state): Fix PROC_STATE_STOPPED
	detection.
2017-09-01 06:14:43 +02:00
Sergio Durigan Junior 0a2dde4a32 Implement the ability to set/unset environment variables to GDBserver when starting the inferior
This patch implements the ability to set/unset environment variables
on the remote target, mimicking what GDB already offers to the user.
There are two features present here: user-set and user-unset
environment variables.

User-set environment variables are only the variables that are
explicitly set by the user, using the 'set environment' command.  This
means that variables that were already present in the environment when
starting GDB/GDBserver are not transmitted/considered by this feature.

User-unset environment variables are variables that are explicitly
unset by the user, using the 'unset environment' command.

The idea behind this patch is to store user-set and user-unset
environment variables in two separate sets, both part of gdb_environ.
Then, when extended_remote_create_inferior is preparing to start the
inferior, it will iterate over the two sets and set/unset variables
accordingly.  Three new packets are introduced:

- QEnvironmentHexEncoded, which is used to set environment variables,
  and contains an hex-encoded string in the format "VAR=VALUE" (VALUE
  can be empty if the user set a variable with a null value, by doing
  'set environment VAR=').

- QEnvironmentUnset, which is used to unset environment variables, and
  contains an hex-encoded string in the format "VAR".

- QEnvironmentReset, which is always the first packet to be
  transmitted, and is used to reset the environment, i.e., discard any
  changes made by the user on previous runs.

The QEnvironmentHexEncoded packet is inspired on LLDB's extensions to
the RSP.  Details about it can be seen here:

  <https://raw.githubusercontent.com/llvm-mirror/lldb/master/docs/lldb-gdb-remote.txt>

I decided not to implement the QEnvironment packet because it is
considered deprecated by LLDB.  This packet, on LLDB, serves the same
purpose of QEnvironmentHexEncoded, but sends the information using a
plain text, non-hex-encoded string.

The other two packets are new.

This patch also includes updates to the documentation, testsuite, and
unit tests, without introducing regressions.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-31  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (Changes since GDB 8.0): Add entry mentioning new support
	for setting/unsetting environment variables on the remote target.
	(New remote packets): Add entries for QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset.
	* common/environ.c (gdb_environ::operator=): Extend method to
	handle m_user_set_env_list and m_user_unset_env_list.
	(gdb_environ::clear): Likewise.
	(match_var_in_string): Change type of first parameter from 'char
	*' to 'const char *'.
	(gdb_environ::set): Extend method to handle
	m_user_set_env_list and m_user_unset_env_list.
	(gdb_environ::unset): Likewise.
	(gdb_environ::clear_user_set_env): New method.
	(gdb_environ::user_set_envp): Likewise.
	(gdb_environ::user_unset_envp): Likewise.
	* common/environ.h (gdb_environ): Handle m_user_set_env_list and
	m_user_unset_env_list on move constructor/assignment.
	(unset): Add new default parameter 'update_unset_list = true'.
	(clear_user_set_env): New method.
	(user_set_envp): Likewise.
	(user_unset_envp): Likewise.
	(m_user_set_env_list): New std::set.
	(m_user_unset_env_list): Likewise.
	* common/rsp-low.c (hex2str): New function.
	(bin2hex): New overload for bin2hex function.
	* common/rsp-low.c (hex2str): New prototype.
	(str2hex): New overload prototype.
	* remote.c: Include "environ.h". Add QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset.
	(remote_protocol_features): Add QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset packets.
	(send_environment_packet): New function.
	(extended_remote_environment_support): Likewise.
	(extended_remote_create_inferior): Call
	extended_remote_environment_support.
	(_initialize_remote): Add QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset packet configs.
	* unittests/environ-selftests.c (gdb_selftest_env_var):
	New variable.
	(test_vector_initialization): New function.
	(test_init_from_host_environ): Likewise.
	(test_reinit_from_host_environ): Likewise.
	(test_set_A_unset_B_unset_A_cannot_find_A_can_find_B):
	Likewise.
	(test_unset_set_empty_vector): Likewise.
	(test_vector_clear): Likewise.
	(test_std_move): Likewise.
	(test_move_constructor):
	(test_self_move): Likewise.
	(test_set_unset_reset): Likewise.
	(run_tests): Rewrite in terms of the functions above.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-08-31  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	* server.c (handle_general_set): Handle QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset packets.
	(handle_query): Inform remote that QEnvironmentHexEncoded,
	QEnvironmentUnset and QEnvironmentReset are supported.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-08-31  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (set environment): Add @anchor.  Explain that
	environment variables set by the user are sent to GDBserver.
	(unset environment): Likewise, but for unsetting variables.
	(Connecting) <Remote Packet>: Add "environment-hex-encoded",
	"QEnvironmentHexEncoded", "environment-unset", "QEnvironmentUnset",
	"environment-reset" and "QEnvironmentReset" to the table.
	(Remote Protocol) <QEnvironmentHexEncoded, QEnvironmentUnset,
	QEnvironmentReset>: New item, explaining the packet.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-31  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/share-env-with-gdbserver.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/share-env-with-gdbserver.exp: Likewise.
2017-08-31 17:22:10 -04:00
Weimin Pan 654670a4f0 Unbreak gdb build on 32-bit host with ADI support
The problem of failing to build with arm-linux-gnueabihf-g++-4.8 was
that type CORE_ADDR is of "unsigned long" on a 64-bit machine so it's
OK to use %lx but is of type "unsigned long long" on a 32 bit system.

Fixed the problem in three places - (1) use a temp variable of type
CORE_ADDR as argument 3 when calling target_auxv_search() then assign
its value to "blksize" and "nbits" in 2 calls; (2) redo
adi_normalize_address() using masks and xor operators to calculate
normalized address; (3) call paddress() to print CORE_ADDR in either
printf_filtered() or error(). Thank you, Pedro, for all your
suggestions.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-31  Weimin Pan  <weimin.pan@oracle.com>

	* sparc64-tdep.c (adi_stat_t): Fix comment formatting.
	(adi_available): Use a temp variable of type CORE_ADDR as argument
	3 when calling target_auxv_search.
	(adi_normalize_address): Use masks and xor operators to calculate
	normalized address.
	(adi_read_versions, adi_write_versions, adi_print_versions)
	(do_examine, do_assign): Use paddress.
2017-08-31 10:07:17 +02:00
John Baldwin 7755ddb77d Look for FIR in the last FreeBSD/mips floating-point register.
FreeBSD/mips kernels were recently changed to include the floating
point implementation revision register in the floating point register
set exported in process cores and via ptrace() (r318067).  This change
will first ship in FreeBSD 12.0 when it is eventually released.  The
space used to hold FIR was previously reserved in 'struct fpreg' as a
zero-filled dummy for padding, so 'struct fpreg' has not changed in
size.  Since FIR should be non-zero on all MIPS processors supported
by FreeBSD, ignore a value of 0 from 'struct fpreg' and only report
non-zero values as a valid FIR register.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* mips-fbsd-nat.c (getfpregs_supplies): Return true for FIR.
	* mips-fbsd-tdep.c (mips_fbsd_supply_fpregs): Split supply of FSR
	out of loop and add supply of FIR.
	(mips_fbsd_collect_fpregs): Split collect of FSR out of loop and
	add collect of FIR.
2017-08-29 15:04:09 -07:00
Simon Marchi 5e89eb3ab0 gdb.base/commands.exp: Remove unused global references
There are a few unused references to the gdb_prompt global.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/commands.exp (gdbvar_simple_if_test,
	gdbvar_simple_if_test, gdbvar_complex_if_while_test,
	progvar_simple_if_test, progvar_simple_while_test,
	progvar_complex_if_while_test, user_defined_command_test,
	user_defined_command_args_eval,
	user_defined_command_args_stack_test,
	user_defined_command_manyargs_test, bp_deleted_in_command_test,
	temporary_breakpoint_commands,
	gdb_test_no_prompt, redefine_hook_test,
	redefine_backtrace_test): Remove "global gdb_prompt".
2017-08-28 23:39:18 +02:00
Simon Marchi 3804a3431a Add missing PR number in ChangeLog
This should have been included in the previous commit.
2017-08-28 23:09:12 +02:00
Simon Marchi fd437cbc43 define_command: Don't convert command name to lower case
Commit

  Command names: make them case sensitive
  3d7b173c29

made command name lookup case sensitive.  However, define_command, used
when creating a user-defined command, converts the command name to
lowercase, assuming that the command name lookup works in a case
insensitive way.  This causes user-defined commands with capital letters
in their name to only be callable with a lowercase version:

  (gdb) define Foo
  Type commands for definition of "Foo".
  End with a line saying just "end".
  >print 1
  >end
  (gdb) Foo
  Undefined command: "Foo".  Try "help".
  (gdb) foo
  $1 = 1

This patch removes that conversion to lowercase, so that the user can
call the command with the same name they provided.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* cli/cli-script.c (define_command): Don't convert command name
	to lower case.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/commands.exp (user_defined_command_case_sensitivity):
	New proc, call it from toplevel.
2017-08-28 23:05:04 +02:00
Joel Brobecker 988f6b3dc6 remove param "dispp" from ada-lang.c::ada_lookup_struct_elt_type
The function is always called with DISPP set to NULL, so there is
no need for this parameter anymore. This patch removes it, and
eliminates some dead code associated to that.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-lang.c (ada_lookup_struct_elt_type): Remove parameter "dispp".
        Update all callers accordingly. Remove all code blocks handling
        the case where DISPP is not NULL.

Tested on x86_64-linux, no regression.
2017-08-25 20:29:41 -04:00
Simon Marchi 6afd337d1a gdbserver: Rename some functions, thread -> inferior
These functions apply to thread, and not inferiors (in the gdbserver
sense, the abstraction for threads and processes, as in
inferior_list).  Therefore, it would make more sense if these functions
were named with "thread" rather than "inferior".

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* inferiors.h (inferior_target_data): Rename to ...
	(thread_target_data): ... this.
	(inferior_regcache_data): Rename to ...
	(thread_regcache_data): ... this.
	(set_inferior_regcache_data): Rename to ...
	(set_thread_regcache_data): ... this.
	* inferiors.c (inferior_target_data): Rename to ...
	(thread_target_data): ... this.
	(inferior_regcache_data): Rename to ...
	(thread_regcache_data): ... this.
	(set_inferior_regcache_data): Rename to ...
	(set_thread_regcache_data): ... this.
	(free_one_thread): Update.
	* linux-low.h (get_thread_lwp): Update.
	* regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Update.
	(regcache_invalidate_thread): Update.
	(free_register_cache_thread): Update.
	* win32-i386-low.c (update_debug_registers_callback): Update.
	(win32_get_current_dr): Update.
	* win32-low.c (thread_rec): Update.
	(delete_thread_info): Update.
	(continue_one_thread): Update.
	(suspend_one_thread): Update.
2017-08-25 10:45:33 +02:00
Simon Marchi a160cc4628 Remove unused function set_inferior_target_data
The inferior (thread) target data is always set through add_thread.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* inferiors.c (set_inferior_target_data): Remove.
	* inferiors.h (set_inferior_target_data): Remove.
2017-08-24 23:34:43 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil 663c44ac4d DWARF-5 Fix DW_FORM_implicit_const
-gdwarf-4:
ptype logical
type = const char [2]
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/constvars.exp: ptype logical

-gdwarf-5:
ptype logical
type = const char []
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/constvars.exp: ptype logical

 <2><2fc>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_variable)
    <2fd>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x2eb): logical
    <301>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1

   1      DW_TAG_variable    [no children]
    DW_AT_name         DW_FORM_strp
    DW_AT_decl_file    DW_FORM_implicit_const: 1

During symbol reading, invalid attribute class or form for
'DW_FORM_implicit_const' in '(null)'.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-08-24  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR symtab/22003
	* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_const_value_attr, dump_die_shallow)
	(dwarf2_get_attr_constant_value, dwarf2_fetch_constant_bytes)
	(skip_form_bytes, attr_form_is_constant): Handle DW_FORM_implicit_const.
2017-08-24 16:39:11 +02:00
Jan Kratochvil f1902523c9 DWARF-5: Fix -fdebug-types-section
GDB was now accessing as signatured_type memory allocated only by size of
dwarf2_per_cu_data.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-08-24  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* dwarf2read.c (build_type_psymtabs_reader): New prototype.
	(process_psymtab_comp_unit): Accept IS_DEBUG_TYPES.
	(read_comp_units_from_section): New parameter abbrev_section, use
	read_and_check_comp_unit_head, allocate signatured_type if needed.
	(create_all_comp_units): Update read_comp_units_from_section caller.
2017-08-24 10:26:52 +02:00
Sergio Durigan Junior 87215ad165 Fix PR remote/21852: Remote run without specifying a local binary crashes GDB
There is an assertion that is triggering when we start GDB and
instruct it to debug a remote inferior, but don't provide a local
binary, like:

  ./gdb -nx -q --data-directory=data-directory -ex "tar ext :1234" \
    -ex "set remote exec-file /bin/ls" -ex r

In this case, when calling exec_file_locate_attach to locate the
inferior, GDB is incorrectly resetting the breakpoints without a
thread/inferior even running, which causes an assertion to be
triggered:

  binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:1609: internal-error: scoped_restore_current_thread::scoped_restore_current_thread(): Assertion `tp != NULL' failed.
  A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
  further debugging may prove unreliable.
  Quit this debugging session? (y or n)

This happens because add_current_inferior_and_thread (on remote.c) is
breaking an invariant: making inferior_ptid point to a non-existing
thread and then calling common code, which in this case is
breakpoint_re_set.  The fix is to make sure that inferior_ptid points
to null_ptid if there is no thread present.

A testcase is provided.  Regtested on buildbot.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-23  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR remote/21852
	* remote.c (add_current_inferior_and_thread): Set inferior_ptid
	to null_ptid and switch to thread without reading the registers
	after adding the inferior.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-23  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR remote/21852
	* gdb.server/normal.c: New file, copied from gdb.base.
	* gdb.server/run-without-local-binary.exp: New file.
2017-08-23 17:28:02 -04:00
Jan Kratochvil 6e41ddec97 compile: Add 'set compile-gcc'
As discussed in
	How to use compile & execute function in GDB
	https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2015-04/msg00026.html

GDB currently searches for compilers on /usr/bin/ARCH-OS-gcc and
chooses a match from there.  However, it is not currently possible for
the user to override which compiler to use.  This is what this patch
implements.

It is also a sync between GCC's and GDB's interfaces.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-08-23  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* NEWS (Changes since GDB 7.9): Add set compile-gcc and show
	compile-gcc.
	* compile/compile.c (compile_gcc, show_compile_gcc): New.
	(compile_to_object): Implement compile_gcc.
	(_initialize_compile): Install "set compile-gcc".  Initialize
	compile_gcc.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2017-08-23  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Compiling and Injecting Code): Add to subsection
	"Compiler search for the compile command" descriptions of set
	compile-gcc and show compile-gcc.

include/ChangeLog
2017-08-23  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gcc-interface.h (enum gcc_base_api_version): Update comment for
	GCC_FE_VERSION_1.
	(struct gcc_base_vtable): Rename set_arguments to set_arguments_v0.
	Add set_arguments, set_triplet_regexp and set_driver_filename.
2017-08-23 11:16:35 -04:00
Jan Kratochvil e68c32d53e compile: set debug compile: Display GCC driver filename
As discussed in
	How to use compile & execute function in GDB
	https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2015-04/msg00026.html

GDB currently searches for compilers on /usr/bin/ARCH-OS-gcc and
chooses a match from there.  However, it is not currently possible for
the user to display which compiler was selected.  Up until now, GDB's
compiler interface was not up-to-date with GCC's one, which means that
it wasn't possible to obtain this information.  This patch implements
the mechanisms necessary for that.

gdb/ChangeLog
2017-08-23  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* compile/compile.c (compile_to_object): Conditionally call
	set_verbose.  Conditionally call compile or compile_v0.

include/ChangeLog
2017-08-23  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gcc-interface.h (enum gcc_base_api_version): Add
	GCC_FE_VERSION_1.
	(struct gcc_base_vtable): Rename compile to compile_v0.  Update
	comment for compile.  New methods set_verbose and compile.
2017-08-23 11:15:03 -04:00
Weimin Pan 58afddc6c7 gdb: SPARC ADI support
The M7 processor supports an Application Data Integrity (ADI) feature
that detects invalid data accesses.  When software allocates data, it
chooses a 4-bit version number, sets the version in the upper 4 bits
of the 64-bit pointer to that data, and stores the 4-bit version in
every cacheline of the object.  Hardware saves the latter in spare
bits in the cache and memory hierarchy. On each load and store, the
processor compares the upper 4 VA (virtual address) bits to the
cacheline's version. If there is a mismatch, the processor generates a
version mismatch trap which can be either precise or disrupting.  The
trap is an error condition which the kernel delivers to the process as
a SIGSEGV signal.

The upper 4 bits of the VA represent a version and are not part of the
true address.  The processor clears these bits and sign extends bit 59
to generate the true address.

Note that 32-bit applications cannot use ADI.

This patch adds ADI support in gdb which allows the user to examine
current version tags and assign new version tags in the program.  It
also catches and reports precise or disrupting memory corruption
traps.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-07  Weimin Pan  <weimin.pan@oracle.com>

	* sparc64-tdep.h: (adi_normalize_address): New export.
	* sparc-nat.h: (open_adi_tag_fd): New export.
	* sparc64-linux-nat.c: (open_adi_tag_fd): New function.
	* sparc64-linux-tdep.c:
	(SEGV_ACCADI, SEGV_ADIDERR, SEGV_ADIPERR) New defines.
	(sparc64_linux_handle_segmentation_fault): New function.
	(sparc64_linux_init_abi): Register
	sparc64_linux_handle_segmentation_fault
	* sparc64-tdep.c: Include cli-utils.h,gdbcmd.h,auxv.h.
	(sparc64_addr_bits_remove): New function.
	(sparc64_init_abi): Register sparc64_addr_bits_remove.
	(MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE): New macro.
	(AT_ADI_BLKSZ, AT_ADI_NBITS, AT_ADI_UEONADI) New defines.
	(sparc64adilist): New variable.
	(adi_proc_list): New variable.
	(find_adi_info): New function.
	(add_adi_info): New function.
	(get_adi_info_proc): New function.
	(get_adi_info): New function.
	(info_adi_command): New function.
	(read_maps_entry): New function.
	(adi_available): New function.
	(adi_normalize_address): New function.
	(adi_align_address): New function.
	(adi_convert_byte_count): New function.
	(adi_tag_fd): New function.
	(adi_is_addr_mapped): New function.
	(adi_read_versions): New function.
	(adi_write_versions): New function.
	(adi_print_versions): New function.
	(do_examine): New function.
	(do_assign): New function.
	(adi_examine_command): New function.
	(adi_assign_command): New function.
	(_initialize_sparc64_adi_tdep): New function.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-08-07  Weimin Pan  <weimin.pan@oracle.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Architectures): Add new Sparc64 section to document
	ADI support.
	* NEWS: Add "adi examine" and "adi assign" commands.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-07  Weimin Pan  <weimin.pan@oracle.com>

	* gdb.arch/sparc64-adi.exp: New file.
	* gdb.arch/sparc64-adi.c: New file.
2017-08-23 10:57:37 +02:00
Simon Marchi 11db943032 Rename some command functions
This patch renames a few functions implementing CLI commands to follow
the style <command-name>_command, so that they are easier to search for.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* breakpoint.c (breakpoints_info): Rename to ...
	(info_breakpoints_command): ... this.
	(watchpoints_info): Rename to ...
	(info_watchpoints_command): ... this.
	(tracepoints_info): Rename to ...
	(info_tracepoints_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_breakpoint): Adjust.
	* dcache.c (dcache_info): Rename to ...
	(info_display_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_dcache): Adjust.
	* frame.h (args_info): Rename to ...
	(info_args_command): ... this.
	(locals_info): Rename to ...
	(info_locals_command): ... this.
	* infcmd.c (nofp_registers_info): Rename to ...
	(info_registers_command): ... this.
	(float_info): Rename to ...
	(info_float_command): ... this.
	(program_info): Rename to ...
	(info_program_command): ... this.
	(all_registers_info): Rename to ...
	(info_all_registers_command): ... this.
	(vector_info): Rename to ...
	(info_vector_command): ... this.
	(float_info): Rename to ...
	(info_float_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_infcmd): Adjust.
	* inferior.h (term_info): Rename to ...
	(info_terminal_command): ... this.
	* inflow.c (term_info): Rename to ...
	(info_terminal_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_inflow): Adjust.
	* infrun.c (signals_info): Rename to ...
	(info_signals_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_infrun): Adjust.
	* objc-lang.c (classes_info): Rename to ...
	(info_classes_command): ... this.
	(selectors_info): Rename to ...
	(info_selectors_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_objc_language): Adjust.
	* printcmd.c (sym_info): Rename to ...
	(info_symbol_command): ... this.
	(address_info): Rename to ...
	(info_address_command): ... this.
	(display_info): Rename to ...
	(info_display_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_printcmd): Adjust.
	* reverse.c (bookmarks_info): Rename to ...
	(info_breakpoints_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_reverse): Adjust.
	* ser-go32.c (dos_info): Rename to ...
	(info_serial_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_ser_dos): Adjust.
	* skip.c (skip_info): Rename to ...
	(info_skip_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_step_skip): Adjust.
	* source.c (line_info): Rename to ...
	(info_line_command): ... this.
	(source_info): Rename to ...
	(info_source_command)
	* stack.c (frame_info): Rename to ...
	(info_frame_command): ... this.
	(locals_info): Rename to ...
	(info_locals_command): ... this.
	(args_info): Rename to ...
	(info_args_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_stack): Adjust.
	* symtab.c (sources_info): Rename to ...
	(info_sources_command): ... this.
	(variables_info): Rename to ...
	(info_variables_command): ... this.
	(functions_info): Rename to ...
	(info_functions_command): ... this.
	(types_info): Rename to ...
	(info_types_command): ... this.
	(_initialize_symtab): Adjust.
	* target.c (target_info): Rename to ...
	(info_target_command): ... this.
	(initialize_targets): Adjust.
	* tracepoint.c (tvariables_info): Rename to ...
	(info_tvariables_command): ... this.
	(scope_info): Rename to ...
	(info_scope_command): ... this.
	(trace_dump_actions): Adjust.
	(_initialize_tracepoint): Adjust.
2017-08-22 22:09:55 +02:00
Pedro Alves 5277199aeb Add test for "List actual code around more than one location" change
This adds a test for the "list" command change done in 0d999a6ef0
("List actual code around more than one location").

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.cp/overload.exp (line_range_pattern): New procedure.
	(top level): Add "list all overloads" tests.
2017-08-22 17:02:14 +01:00
Tom Tromey b270e6f9e0 Change install_breakpoint to take a std::unique_ptr
This changes install_breakpoint to take a std::unique_ptr rvalue-ref
argument.  This makes it clear that install_breakpoint takes ownership
of the pointer, and prevents bugs like the one fixed by the previous
patch.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* breakpoint.h (install_breakpoint): Update.
	* breakpoint.c (add_solib_catchpoint): Update.
	(install_breakpoint): Change argument to a std::unique_ptr.
	(create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint): Use std::unique_ptr.
	(create_breakpoint_sal, create_breakpoint): Update.
	(watch_command_1, catch_exec_command_1)
	(strace_marker_create_breakpoints_sal): Use std::unique_ptr.
	(add_to_breakpoint_chain): Change argument to a std::unique_ptr.
	Return the breakpoint.
	(set_raw_breakpoint_without_location, set_raw_breakpoint)
	(new_single_step_breakpoint): Update.
	* break-catch-throw.c (handle_gnu_v3_exceptions): Use
	std::unique_ptr.
	* break-catch-syscall.c (create_syscall_event_catchpoint): Use
	std::unique_ptr.
	* break-catch-sig.c (create_signal_catchpoint): Use
	std::unique_ptr.
	* ada-lang.c (create_ada_exception_catchpoint): Use
	std::unique_ptr.
2017-08-22 09:38:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 36bd8eaaa0 Fix erroneous cleanup use in add_solib_catchpoint
I happened to notice that add_solib_catchpoint allocated the new
catchpoint with "new" but installed a cleanup using "xfree".  This
patch fixes the bug by changing the function to use std::unique_ptr
instead.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* breakpoint.c (add_solib_catchpoint): Use std::unique_ptr.
2017-08-22 09:38:06 -06:00
Tom Tromey 56f3764524 Change psymtab_search_name to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr
This changes psymtab_search_name to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr and
fixes up its one caller.  This allows the removal of some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* psymtab.c (psymtab_search_name): Return a unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	(lookup_partial_symbol): Update.
2017-08-22 09:30:13 -06:00
Tom Tromey 0b581c69fe Change rewrite_source_path to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr
This changes rewrite_source_path to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr and
fixes up the callers.  This allows removing some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* source.h (rewrite_source_path): Return a unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* source.c (rewrite_source_path): Return a unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	(find_and_open_source, symtab_to_fullname): Update.
	* psymtab.c (psymtab_to_fullname): Update.
2017-08-22 09:30:12 -06:00
Tom Tromey 14278e1fdb Change gdb_realpath to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr
This changes gdb_realpath to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr and fixes up
the callers.  This allows removing some cleanups.  This change by
itself caused xfullpath.exp to fail; and attempting to fix that ran
into various problems (like .get() being optimized out); so this patch
also rewrites xfullpath.exp to be a C++ selftest instead.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* exec.c (exec_file_attach): Update.
	* linux-thread-db.c (try_thread_db_load): Update.
	* guile/scm-safe-call.c (gdbscm_safe_source_script): Update.
	* utils.c (gdb_realpath): Change return type.
	(gdb_realpath_keepfile): Update.
	(gdb_realpath_check_trailer, gdb_realpath_tests): New functions.
	(_initialize_utils): Register the new self test.
	* source.c (openp): Update.
	(find_and_open_source): Update.
	* nto-tdep.c (nto_find_and_open_solib): Update.
	* main.c (set_gdb_data_directory): Update.
	(captured_main_1): Update.
	* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Update
	(dw2_map_symbol_filenames): Update.
	* auto-load.c (auto_load_safe_path_vec_update): Update.
	(filename_is_in_auto_load_safe_path_vec): Change type of
	"filename_realp".
	(auto_load_objfile_script): Update.
	(file_is_auto_load_safe): Update.  Use std::string.
	* utils.h (gdb_realpath): Return a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.gdb/xfullpath.exp: Remove.
2017-08-22 09:30:12 -06:00
Tom Tromey 4971c9a74b Change gdb_realpath_keepfile to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr
This changes gdb_realpath_keepfile to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr, and
fixes up the callers.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* utils.c (gdb_realpath_keepfile): Return a
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* exec.c (exec_file_attach): Update.
	* utils.h (gdb_realpath_keepfile): Return a
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-08-22 09:30:11 -06:00
Tom Tromey e3e41d588a Change gdb_abspath to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr
This changes gdb_abspath to return a unique_xmalloc_ptr, and fixes up
the callers.  This allows the removal of a cleanup, and also puts
ownership rules into the API, where they belong.

ChangeLog
2017-08-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* compile/compile.c (compile_file_command): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr, std::string.
	* utils.c (gdb_abspath): Change return type.
	* source.c (openp): Update.
	* objfiles.c (allocate_objfile): Update.
	* main.c (set_gdb_data_directory): Update.
	* utils.h (gdb_abspath): Return a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-08-22 09:30:10 -06:00
Zhouyi Zhou 0d999a6ef0 List actual code around more than one location
With the following C++ code:
 int bar() { return 0;}
 int bar(int) { return 0; }

GDB behaves as:
 (gdb) list bar
  file: "overload.cc", line number: 1
  file: "overload.cc", line number: 2

It would be better for GDB to list the actual code around those two
locations, not just print the location.  Like:

 (gdb) list bar
 file: "overload.cc", line number: 1
 1       int bar() { return 0;}
 2       int bar(int) { return 0; }
 file: "overload.cc", line number: 2
 1       int bar() { return 0;}
 2       int bar(int) { return 0; }

That's what this this commit implements.

Tested on x86-64 GNU/Linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-22  Zhouyi Zhou  <zhouzhouyi@gmail.com>

	* cli-cmds.c (list_commands): List actual code around more than
	one location.
2017-08-22 15:32:19 +01:00
John Baldwin 329d5e7e56 Use an array type (lwpid_t[]) for the array of lwp IDs.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_add_threads): Use array type for `lwps'.
2017-08-21 09:35:25 -07:00
John Baldwin af3881e612 Correct earlier ChangeLog entry for fbsd_add_threads. 2017-08-21 09:34:55 -07:00
Pedro Alves bf223d3e80 Handle function aliases better (PR gdb/19487, errno printing)
(Ref: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2017-06/msg00048.html)

This patch improves GDB support for function aliases defined with
__attribute__ alias.  For example, in the test added by this commit,
there is no reference to "func_alias" in the debug info at all, only
to "func"'s definition:

 $ nm  ./testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/symbol-alias/symbol-alias  | grep " func"
 00000000004005ae t func
 00000000004005ae T func_alias

 $ readelf -w ./testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/symbol-alias/symbol-alias | grep func -B 1 -A 8
 <1><db>: Abbrev Number: 5 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
    <dc>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x111): func
    <e0>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
    <e1>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 27
    <e2>   DW_AT_prototyped  : 1
    <e2>   DW_AT_type        : <0xf8>
    <e6>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x4005ae
    <ee>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0xb
    <f6>   DW_AT_frame_base  : 1 byte block: 9c         (DW_OP_call_frame_cfa)
    <f8>   DW_AT_GNU_all_call_sites: 1

So all GDB knows about "func_alias" is from the minsym (elf symbol):

 (gdb) p func_alias
 $1 = {<text variable, no debug info>} 0x4005ae <func>
 (gdb) ptype func_alias
 type = int ()

 (gdb) p func
 $2 = {struct S *(void)} 0x4005ae <func>
 (gdb) ptype func
 type = struct S {
     int field1;
     int field2;
 } *(void)

The result is that calling func_alias from the command line produces
incorrect results.

This is similar (though not exactly the same) to the glibc
errno/__errno_location/__GI___errno_location situation.  On glibc,
errno is defined like this:

  extern int *__errno_location (void);
  #define errno (*__errno_location ())

with __GI___errno_location being an internal alias for
__errno_location.  On my system's libc (F23), I do see debug info for
__errno_location, in the form of name vs linkage name:

 <1><95a5>: Abbrev Number: 18 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
    <95a6>   DW_AT_external    : 1
    <95a6>   DW_AT_name        : (indirect string, offset: 0x2c26): __errno_location
    <95aa>   DW_AT_decl_file   : 1
    <95ab>   DW_AT_decl_line   : 24
    <95ac>   DW_AT_linkage_name: (indirect string, offset: 0x2c21): __GI___errno_location
    <95b0>   DW_AT_prototyped  : 1
    <95b0>   DW_AT_type        : <0x9206>
    <95b4>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x20f40
    <95bc>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0x11
    <95c4>   DW_AT_frame_base  : 1 byte block: 9c       (DW_OP_call_frame_cfa)
    <95c6>   DW_AT_GNU_all_call_sites: 1

however that doesn't matter in practice, because GDB doesn't record
demangled names anyway, and so we end up with the exact same situation
covered by the testcase.

So the fix is to make the expression parser find a debug symbol for
the same address as the just-found minsym, when a lookup by name
didn't find a debug symbol by name.  We now get:

 (gdb) p func_alias
 $1 = {struct S *(void)} 0x4005ae <func>
 (gdb) p __errno_location
 $2 = {int *(void)} 0x7ffff6e92830 <__errno_location>

I've made the test exercise variable aliases too, for completeness.
Those already work correctly, because unlike for function aliases, GCC
emits debug information for variable aliases.

Tested on GNU/Linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19487
	* c-exp.y (variable production): Handle function aliases.
	* minsyms.c (msymbol_is_text): New function.
	* minsyms.h (msymbol_is_text): Declare.
	* symtab.c (find_function_alias_target): New function.
	* symtab.h (find_function_alias_target): Declare.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/19487
	* gdb.base/symbol-alias.c: New.
	* gdb.base/symbol-alias2.c: New.
	* gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp: New.
2017-08-21 11:34:32 +01:00
Pedro Alves c973d0aa4a Fix type casts losing typedefs and reimplement "whatis" typedef stripping
(Ref: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2017-06/msg00020.html)

Assuming int_t is a typedef to int:

 typedef int int_t;

gdb currently loses this expression's typedef:

 (gdb) p (int_t) 0
 $1 = 0
 (gdb) whatis $1
 type = int

or:

 (gdb) whatis (int_t) 0
 type = int

or, to get "whatis" out of the way:

 (gdb) maint print type (int_t) 0
 ...
 name 'int'
 code 0x8 (TYPE_CODE_INT)
 ...

This prevents a type printer for "int_t" kicking in, with e.g.:

 (gdb) p (int_t) 0

From the manual, we can see that that "whatis (int_t) 0" command
invocation should have printed "type = int_t":

 If @var{arg} is a variable or an expression, @code{whatis} prints its
 literal type as it is used in the source code.  If the type was
 defined using a @code{typedef}, @code{whatis} will @emph{not} print
 the data type underlying the @code{typedef}.
 (...)
 If @var{arg} is a type name that was defined using @code{typedef},
 @code{whatis} @dfn{unrolls} only one level of that @code{typedef}.

That one-level stripping is currently done here, in
gdb/eval.c:evaluate_subexp_standard, handling OP_TYPE:

...
     else if (noside == EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS)
	{
	  struct type *type = exp->elts[pc + 1].type;

	  /* If this is a typedef, then find its immediate target.  We
	     use check_typedef to resolve stubs, but we ignore its
	     result because we do not want to dig past all
	     typedefs.  */
	  check_typedef (type);
	  if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF)
	    type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
	  return allocate_value (type);
	}

However, this stripping is reachable in both:

 #1 - (gdb) whatis (int_t)0     # ARG is an expression with a cast to
                                # typedef type.
 #2 - (gdb) whatis int_t        # ARG is a type name.

while only case #2 should strip the typedef.  Removing that code from
evaluate_subexp_standard is part of the fix.  Instead, we make the
"whatis" command implementation itself strip one level of typedefs
when the command argument is a type name.

We then run into another problem, also fixed by this commit:
value_cast always drops any typedefs of the destination type.

With all that fixed, "whatis (int_t) 0" now works as expected:

 (gdb) whatis int_t
 type = int
 (gdb) whatis (int_t)0
 type = int_t

value_cast has many different exit/convertion paths, for handling many
different kinds of casts/conversions, and most of them had to be
tweaked to construct the value of the right "to" type.  The new tests
try to exercise most of it, by trying castin of many different
combinations of types.  With:

 $ make check TESTS="*/whatis-ptype*.exp */gnu_vector.exp */dfp-test.exp"

... due to combinatorial explosion, the testsuite results for the
tests above alone grow like:

 - # of expected passes            246
 + # of expected passes            3811

You'll note that the tests exposed one GCC buglet, filed here:

  Missing DW_AT_type in DW_TAG_typedef of "typedef of typedef of void"
  https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=81267

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard) <OP_TYPE>: Don't dig past
	typedefs.
	* typeprint.c (whatis_exp): If handling "whatis", and expression
	is OP_TYPE, strip one typedef level.  Otherwise don't strip
	typedefs here.
	* valops.c (value_cast): Save "to" type before resolving
	stubs/typedefs.  Use that type as resulting value's type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/dfp-test.c
	(d32_t, d64_t, d128_t, d32_t2, d64_t2, d128_t2, v_d32_t, v_d64_t)
	(v_d128_t, v_d32_t2, v_d64_t2, v_d128_t2): New.
	* gdb.base/dfp-test.exp: Add whatis/ptype/cast tests.
	* gdb.base/gnu_vector.exp: Add whatis/ptype/cast tests.
	* gdb.base/whatis-ptype-typedefs.c: New.
	* gdb.base/whatis-ptype-typedefs.exp: New.
	* gdb.python/py-prettyprint.c (int_type, int_type2): New typedefs.
	(an_int, an_int_type, an_int_type2): New globals.
	* gdb.python/py-prettyprint.exp (run_lang_tests): Add tests
	involving typedefs and cast expressions.
	* gdb.python/py-prettyprint.py (class pp_int_typedef): New.
	(lookup_typedefs_function): New.
	(typedefs_pretty_printers_dict): New.
	(top level): Register lookup_typedefs_function in
	gdb.pretty_printers.
2017-08-21 11:34:32 +01:00
Tom Tromey 2989a3651d Remove save_inferior_ptid
This removes save_inferior_ptid, a cleanup function, in favor of
scoped_restore.

This also fixes a possible (it seems unlikely that it could happen in
practice) memory leak -- save_inferior_ptid should have used
make_cleanup_dtor, because it allocated memory.

I tested this on the buildbot.  However, there are two caveats to
this.  First, sometimes it seems I misread the results.  Second, I
think this patch touches some platforms that can't be tested by the
buildbot.  So, extra care seems warranted.

ChangeLog
2017-08-18  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* spu-multiarch.c (parse_spufs_run): Use scoped_restore.
	* sol-thread.c (sol_thread_resume, sol_thread_wait)
	(sol_thread_xfer_partial, rw_common): Use scoped_restore.
	* procfs.c (procfs_do_thread_registers): Use scoped_restore.
	* proc-service.c (ps_xfer_memory): Use scoped_restore.
	* linux-tdep.c (linux_corefile_thread): Remove a cleanup.
	(linux_get_siginfo_data): Add "thread" argument.  Use
	scoped_restore.
	* linux-nat.c (linux_child_follow_fork)
	(check_stopped_by_watchpoint): Use scoped_restore.
	* infrun.c (displaced_step_prepare_throw, write_memory_ptid)
	(THREAD_STOPPED_BY, handle_signal_stop): Use scoped_restore.
	(restore_inferior_ptid, save_inferior_ptid): Remove.
	* btrace.c (btrace_fetch): Use scoped_restore.
	* bsd-uthread.c (bsd_uthread_fetch_registers)
	(bsd_uthread_store_registers): Use scoped_restore.
	* breakpoint.c (reattach_breakpoints, detach_breakpoints): Use
	scoped_restore.
	* aix-thread.c (aix_thread_resume, aix_thread_wait)
	(aix_thread_xfer_partial): Use scoped_restore.
	* inferior.h (save_inferior_ptid): Remove.
2017-08-18 11:06:26 -06:00
Yao Qi e60eb28803 [ARM] Mark USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE in disassemble_info.flags
opcodes/arm-dis.c:print_insn may update disassemble_info.mach to
bfd_mach_arm_unknown unless USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE is marked.
When default_print_insn is called for the first time,
disassemble_info.mach is correctly set in GDB, but arm-dis.c:print_insn
sets it to bfd_mach_arm_unknown.  Then, when default_print_insn is
called again (in a loop), it triggers the assert.

The patch fixes the assert by marking USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE so that
opcodes won't reset disassemble_info.mach.

gdb:

2017-08-18  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	PR tdep/21818
	* arm-tdep.c (gdb_print_insn_arm): Mark
	USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE if exec_bfd isn't NULL.
2017-08-18 09:30:12 +01:00
Yao Qi 6d580b635f GDBserver self tests
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".
2017-08-18 09:20:43 +01:00
Yao Qi 86dcbf50fe Remove some GDB specific stuff from selftest.c
The next patch moves selftest.c to common/selftest.c, so that GDBserver
can use it as well.  However selftest.c uses something isn't "portable" on
GDB and GDBserver.

First, this patch removes QUIT.  I don't expect that we type ctrl-c during
self/unit tests, and each test shouldn't take long time.  Secondly, I
replace exception_fprintf and printf_filtered with debug_printf.  Verified
that unit tests still catch fails.

gdb:

2017-08-18  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* selftest.c (run_tests): Don't call QUIT.  Call debug_printf
	instead of exception_fprintf and printf_filtered.
2017-08-18 09:20:43 +01:00
Yao Qi 7649770c8e Put selftests api into selftests namespace
This patch changes register_self_test to selftests::register_test,
and run_self_tests to selftest::run_tests.

gdb:

2017-08-18  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* selftest.c (register_self_test): Rename it to
	selftests::register_test.
	(run_self_tests): selftest::run_tests.
	* selftest.h: Update declarations.
	* selftest-arch.c (register_self_test_foreach_arch): Rename it to
	selftests::register_test_foreach_arch.
	* selftest-arch.h: Update declaration.
	* aarch64-tdep.c: Update.
	* arm-tdep.c: Likewise.
	* disasm-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* dwarf2loc.c: Likewise.
	* dwarf2-frame.c: Likewise.
	* findvar.c: Likewise.
	* gdbarch-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* maint.c (maintenance_selftest): Likewise.
	* regcache.c: Likewise.
	* rust-exp.y: Likewise.
	* selftest-arch.c: Likewise.
	* unittests/environ-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* unittests/function-view-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* unittests/offset-type-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* unittests/optional-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c: Likewise.
	* utils-selftests.c: Likewise.
2017-08-18 09:20:43 +01:00
Pedro Alves b0cba12e07 Plug source_command leak
The heap-allocated 'old_source_verbose' local was accidentally left
behind by commit 2ec845e758 ("More uses of scoped_restore").

Valgrind caught it, like:

 ==20123== 8 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 4,609 of 13,785
 ==20123==    at 0x4C2A988: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:711)
 ==20123==    by 0x60A2F8: xcalloc (common-utils.c:84)
 ==20123==    by 0x4CDBE5: build_command_line(command_control_type, char const*) (cli-script.c:159)
 ==20123==    by 0x4CDC32: get_command_line(command_control_type, char const*) (cli-script.c:172)
 ==20123==    by 0x5230F1: python_command(char*, int) (python.c:421)
 ==20123==    by 0x4C61AD: do_cfunc(cmd_list_element*, char*, int) (cli-decode.c:106)
 ==20123==    by 0x4C911F: cmd_func(cmd_list_element*, char*, int) (cli-decode.c:1902)
 ==20123==    by 0x7CA79E: execute_command(char*, int) (top.c:650)
 ==20123==    by 0x695A0C: command_handler(char*) (event-top.c:590)
 ==20123==    by 0x7CA33F: read_command_file(_IO_FILE*) (top.c:461)
 ==20123==    by 0x4D0C3A: script_from_file(_IO_FILE*, char const*) (cli-script.c:1584)
 ==20123==    by 0x4C2727: source_script_from_stream(_IO_FILE*, char const*, char const*) (cli-cmds.c:589)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cli/cli-cmds.c (source_command): Delete 'old_source_verbose'
	local.
2017-08-17 23:57:45 +01:00
Pedro Alves 4c8aa72d0e Plug line_header leaks
This plugs a couple leaks introduced by commit fff8551cf5
("dwarf2read.c: Some C++fycation, use std::vector, std::unique_ptr").

The first problem is that nothing owns the temporary line_header that
handle_DW_AT_stmt_list creates in some cases.  Before the commit
mentioned above, the temporary line_header case used to have:

  make_cleanup (free_cu_line_header, cu);

and that cleanup was assumed to be run by process_die, after
handle_DW_AT_stmt_list returns and before child DIEs were processed.

The second problem is found in setup_type_unit_groups: that also used
to have a similar make_cleanup call, and ended up with a similar leak
after the commit mentioned above.

Fix both cases by recording in dwarf2_cu whether a line header is
owned by the cu/die, and have process_die explicitly free the
line_header if so, making use of a new RAII object that also replaces
the reset_die_in_process cleanup, while at it.

Thanks to Philippe Waroquiers for noticing the leak and pointing in
the right direction.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* dwarf2read.c (struct dwarf2_cu) <line_header_die_owner>: New
	field.
	(reset_die_in_process): Delete, replaced by ...
	(process_die_scope): ... this new class.  Make it responsible for
	freeing cu->line_header too.
	(process_die): Use process_die_scope.
	(handle_DW_AT_stmt_list): Record the line header's owner CU/DIE in
	cu->line_header_die_owner.  Don't release the line header if it's
	owned by the CU.
	(setup_type_unit_groups): Make the CU/DIE own the line header.
	Don't release the line header here.
2017-08-17 22:53:53 +01:00
Alex Lindsay ba7139188c Synthetic symbol leak in elf_read_minimal_symbols
Detected this leak with valgrind memcheck:

==30840== 194 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 9,138 of 10,922
==30840==    at 0x4C2DB8F: malloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==30840==    by 0x80DF82: bfd_malloc (libbfd.c:193)
==30840==    by 0x80E12D: bfd_zmalloc (libbfd.c:278)
==30840==    by 0x819E80: elf_x86_64_get_synthetic_symtab (elf64-x86-64.c:6835)
==30840==    by 0x4F7B01: elf_read_minimal_symbols(objfile*, int, elfinfo const*) (elfread.c:1124)
==30840==    by 0x4F7CE7: elf_symfile_read(objfile*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>) (elfread.c:1182)
==30840==    by 0x7557FC: read_symbols(objfile*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>) (symfile.c:861)
==30840==    by 0x755EE1: syms_from_objfile_1(objfile*, section_addr_info*, enum_flags<symfile_add_flag>) (symfile.c:1062)

We perform a dynamic allocation in
elf64-x86-64.c:elf_x86_64_get_synthetic_symtab

  s = *ret = (asymbol *) bfd_zmalloc (size);

that appear to never get freed.

gdb:

2017-08-17  Alex Lindsay  <alexlindsay239@gmail.com>

	* elfread.c (elf_read_minimal_symbols): xfree synthsyms.
2017-08-17 11:53:53 +01:00
Ruslan Kabatsayev 44d0fb3a0a Mention new TUI Single-Key mode shortcuts for nexti and stepi in NEWS
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention new shortcuts for nexti and stepi in TUI
	Single-Key mode
2017-08-17 08:45:02 +03:00
Ruslan Kabatsayev a5afdb1665 Add shortcuts for "nexti" and "stepi" commands in Single-Key mode
Currently, "layout asm" is not so useful as "layout src" with Single-Key mode:
you have to use multi-key commands like "ni" and "si" to do single-stepping.
This patch adds, in addition to "next" and "step" commands, corresponding
assembly-level ones - "nexti" and "stepi" - to Single-Key mode, with the
shortcuts of "o" (from "step Over") and "i" (from "Step Into") respectively.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* tui/tui.c (tui_commands): Add "nexti" and "stepi" to the Single-Key
	mode command list.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (TUI Single Key Mode): Document the new shortcuts in
	Single-Key mode.
2017-08-16 21:44:29 +03:00
Stafford Horne 47613aeb8a Add myself as a write-after-approval GDB maintainer.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* MAINTAINERS (Write After Approval): Add Stafford Horne.
2017-08-16 06:38:24 +09:00
Stafford Horne 9c3cc99930 xtensa: Properly strdup string when building reggroup
I noticed this while looking at the reggroup intializations.  It seems
for xtensa the "cpN" reggroup->name is getting assigned to the same text
pointer for each iteration of XTENSA_MAX_COPROCESSOR.

Note, internally reggroup_new() does not do any xstrdup().

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-15  Stafford Horne  <shorne@gmail.com>

	* xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_init_reggroups): Use xstrdup for cpname.
2017-08-16 06:12:45 +09:00
Sergio Durigan Junior 206726fbfd Fix PR gdb/21954: make 'unset environment' work again
When I made commit 9a6c7d9c02, which
C++-fied gdb/common/environ.[ch], I mistakenly altered the behaviour
of the 'unset environment' command.  This command, which should delete
all environment variables, is now resetting the list of variables to
the state they were when GDB was started.

This commit fixes this regression, and also adds a test on
gdb.base/environ.exp which really checks if 'unset environment'
worked.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-15  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/21954
	* infcmd.c (unset_environment_command): Use the 'clear' method on
	the environment instead of resetting it.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-08-15  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/21954
	* gdb.base/environ.exp: Add test to check if 'unset environment'
	works.
2017-08-15 13:49:18 -04:00
John Baldwin 0335ac6d12 Fix compile on big-endian platforms in siginfo_t converter.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_convert_siginfo): Fix compile on big-endian
	platforms.
2017-08-15 08:05:21 -07:00
Andreas Arnez bf0ec4c276 GDB testsuite: Suppress GCC's colored output
Newer GCC versions yield colored diagnostic messages by default, which may
be useful when executing GDB interactively from a terminal.  But when run
from a GDB test case, the compiler output is written into gdb.log, where
such escape sequences are usually more inhibiting than helpful to the
evaluation of test results.  So this patch suppresses that.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/gdb.exp (universal_compile_options): New caching proc.
	(gdb_compile): Suppress GCC's coloring of messages.
2017-08-14 20:31:09 +02:00
Tom Tromey d3abe1c8ef Remove BITS_IN_BYTES define
While working on the previous patch, I noticed that BITS_IN_BYTES can be
replaced by HOST_CHAR_BIT, which is used more widely in gdb.

ChangeLog
2017-08-14  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* valprint.c (print_octal_chars): Use HOST_CHAR_BIT.
	(print_binary_chars): Likewise.
	(BITS_IN_BYTES): Remove.
2017-08-14 10:14:06 -06:00
Tom Tromey d6382fffde Fix two regressions in scalar printing
PR gdb/21675 points out a few regressions in scalar printing.

One type of regression is due to not carrying over the old handling of
floating point printing -- where a format like "/d" causes a floating
point number to first be cast to a signed integer.  This patch restores
this behavior.

The other regression is a longstanding bug in print_octal_chars: one of
the constants was wrong.  This patch fixes the constant and adds static
asserts to help catch this sort of error.

ChangeLog
2017-08-14  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/21675
	* valprint.c (LOW_ZERO): Change value to 034.
	(print_octal_chars): Add static_asserts for octal constants.
	* printcmd.c (print_scalar_formatted): Add 'd' case.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-08-14  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	PR gdb/21675:
	* gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_radices): New function.
	* gdb.dwarf2/var-access.exp: Use p/u, not p/d.
	* gdb.base/sizeof.exp (check_valueof): Use p/d.
	* lib/gdb.exp (get_integer_valueof): Use p/d.
2017-08-14 10:14:05 -06:00
Tom Tromey f978cb06db Fix memory leak in add_symbol_file_command
I happened to notice that add_symbol_file_command leaks "sect_opts".
This patch fixes the leak by changing sect_opts to be a std::vector.

I had to change the logic in the loop a little bit.  Previously, it
was incrementing section_index after completing an entry; but this
changes it to push a new entry when the name is seen.

I believe the argument parsing here is mildly incorrect, in that
nothing checks whether the -s option actually had any arguments.
Maybe gdb can crash if "-s NAME" is given without an argument.  I
didn't try to fix this in this patch, but I do have another patch I
can send later that fixes it up.

Regression tested on the buildbot.

ChangeLog
2017-08-11  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* symfile.c (add_symbol_file_command): Use std::vector.
2017-08-14 08:31:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 2f5404b358 Use std::move in a few places
This patch adds std::move to few spots where it seems to be missing.

Regression tested by the buildbot.

ChangeLog
2017-08-14  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* break-catch-throw.c (handle_gnu_v3_exceptions): Use std::move.
	* break-catch-syscall.c (create_syscall_event_catchpoint): Use
	std::move.
	* break-catch-sig.c (create_signal_catchpoint): Use std::move.
2017-08-14 08:24:15 -06:00
Sergio Durigan Junior ca145713f3 Fix typo on documentation ("show set startup-with-shell")
The documentation was erroneously saying that there is a command named
"show set startup-with-shell", while the correct version is "show
startup-with-shell".  This commit fixes obvious mistake.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-08-12  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/21925
	* gdb.texinfo (Starting) <startup-with-shell>: Fix typo ("show
	set...").
2017-08-12 12:46:03 -04:00
Simon Marchi c2c2dd9f09 testsuite: Exclude end-of-line characters from get_valueof result
The get_valueof procedure allows tests to conveniently make gdb evaluate
an expression an return the value as a string.  However, it includes an
end-of-line character in its result.  I stumbled on this when trying to
use that result as part of a regex further in a test.

You can see this for example by adding a puts in
gdb.dwarf2/implref-struct.exp:get_members:

    set members [get_valueof "" ${var} ""]
    puts "<$members>"

The output is

    <{a = 0, b = 1, c = 2}
    >

This is because the regex in get_valueof is too greedy, the captured
portion matches anything up to the gdb_prompt, including the end of line
characters.  This patch changes it to capture everything but end of line
characters.

The output of the puts becomes:

    <{a = 0, b = 1, c = 2}>

I tested this by running gdb.dwarf2/implref-array.exp and
gdb.dwarf2/implref-struct.exp, the two only current users of that
procedure.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* lib/gdb.exp (get_valueof): Don't capture end-of-line
	characters.
2017-08-12 10:33:00 +02:00
Pedro Alves de7985c3cc More gdb/skip.c C++ification
- Make skiplist_entry a class with private data members.
- Move all construction logic to the ctor.
- Make skip_file_p etc be methods of skiplist_entry.
- Use std::list for the skip entries chain.  Make the list own its
  elements.
- Get rid of the ALL_SKIPLIST_ENTRIES/ALL_SKIPLIST_ENTRIES_SAFE
  macros, use range-for / iterators instead.
- function_name_is_marked_for_skip 'function_sal' argument must be
  non-NULL, so make it a reference instead.

All skiplist_entry invariants are now controlled by skiplist_entry
methods/internals.  Some gdb_asserts disappear for being redundant.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-11  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (process_event_stop_test): Adjust
	function_name_is_marked_for_skip call.
	* skip.c: Include <list>.
	(skiplist_entry): Make it a class with private fields, and
	getters/setters.
	(skiplist_entry_chain): Delete.
	(skiplist_entries): New.
	(skiplist_entry_count): Delete.
	(highest_skiplist_entry_num): New.
	(ALL_SKIPLIST_ENTRIES, ALL_SKIPLIST_ENTRIES_SAFE): Delete.
	(add_skiplist_entry): Delete.
	(skiplist_entry::skiplist_entry): New.
	(skiplist_entry::add_entry): New.
	(skip_file_command, skip_function): Adjust.
	(compile_skip_regexp): Delete.
	(skip_command): Don't compile regexp here.  Adjust to use
	skiplist_entry::add_entry.
	(skip_info): Adjust to use range-for and getters.
	(skip_enable_command, skip_disable_command): Adjust to use
	range-for and setters.
	(skip_delete_command): Adjust to use std::list.
	(add_skiplist_entry): Delete.
	(skip_file_p): Delete, refactored as ...
	(skiplist_entry::do_skip_file_p): ... this new method.
	(skip_gfile_p): Delete, refactored as ...
	(skiplist_entry::do_gskip_file_p): ... this new method.
	(skip_function_p, skip_rfunction_p): Delete, refactored as ...
	(skiplist_entry::skip_function_p): ... this new method.
	(function_name_is_marked_for_skip): Now returns bool, and takes
	the function sal by const reference.  Adjust to use range-for and
	skiplist_entry methods.
	(_initialize_step_skip): Remove references to
	skiplist_entry_chain, skiplist_entry_count.
	* skip.h (function_name_is_marked_for_skip): Now returns bool, and
	takes the function sal by const reference.
2017-08-11 12:11:28 +01:00
Yao Qi be7d3cd5f1 Reset *THIS_CACHE in frame_unwind_try_unwinder in case of exception
It is required that unwinder->sniffer should set *this_cache to NULL if
the unwinder is not applicable or exception is thrown, so
78ac5f8316 adds clear_pointer_cleanup to set
*this_cache to NULL in case of exception in order to fix PR 14100.
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2012-08/msg00075.html

This patch removes that clear_pointer_cleanup, and catch all exception in
the caller of unwinder->sniffer.  In case of exception, reset *this_case.

gdb:

2017-08-11  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* dwarf2-frame.c (clear_pointer_cleanup): Remove.
	(dwarf2_frame_cache): Remove reset_cache_cleanup.
	(dwarf2_frame_cache):
	* frame-unwind.c (frame_unwind_try_unwinder): Catch
	RETURN_MASK_ALL and set *this_case to NULL.
	* frame-unwind.h: Update comments.
2017-08-11 09:30:02 +01:00
Yao Qi 1c90d9f022 Class-fy dwarf2_frame_state_reg_info
This patch adds dwarf2_frame_state_reg_info ctor, dtor, copy ctor,
assignment operator, and move assignment.  This patch also adds unit test
to execute_cfa_program to cover the changes.

gdb:

2017-08-11  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_state_alloc_regs): Remove.
	(dwarf2_frame_state_copy_regs): Remove.
	(dwarf2_frame_state_free_regs): Remove.
	(dwarf2_frame_state::~dwarf2_frame_state): Remove.
	(dwarf2_restore_rule): Call method .alloc_regs instead of
	dwarf2_frame_state_alloc_regs.
	(execute_cfa_program): Likewise.  Call dwarf2_frame_state_reg_info
	constructor.  Call std::move.
	(dwarf2_fetch_cfa_info): Don't call dwarf2_frame_state_copy_regs.
	(dwarf2_frame_cache): Likewise.

	[GDB_SELF_TEST]: Include selftest.h and
	selftest-arch.h.
	[GDB_SELF_TEST] (execute_cfa_program_test): New function.
	(_initialize_dwarf2_frame) [GDB_SELF_TEST]: Register
	execute_cfa_program_test.

	* dwarf2-frame.h (dwarf2_frame_state_reg_info): Add ctor, dtor,
	copy ctor, assignment operator, move assignment.
	<alloc_regs>: New method.
	<swap>: New method.
	(struct dwarf2_frame_state): Delete dtor.
	(dwarf2_frame_state_alloc_regs): Remove declaration.
	* sparc-tdep.c (sparc_execute_dwarf_cfa_vendor_op): Don't call
	dwarf2_frame_state_alloc_regs, use .alloc_regs instead.
2017-08-11 09:30:02 +01:00
Yao Qi afe37d6be5 Class-fy dwarf2_frame_state
This patch adds ctor and dtor to dwarf2_frame_state, so that we can
remove one cleanup "old_chain".

gdb:

2017-08-11  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_state_free): Remove.
	(dwarf2_frame_state::dwarf2_frame_state): New.
	(dwarf2_frame_state::~dwarf2_frame_state): New.
	(dwarf2_fetch_cfa_info): Update.
	(dwarf2_frame_cache): Remove old_chain.  Change 'fs' to an object
	rather than a pointer.  Update code.
	* dwarf2-frame.h (struct dwarf2_frame_state): Declare ctor and
	dtor.
	<data_align, code_align, retaddr_column>: Change them to const.
	<armcc_cfa_offsets_sf, armcc_cfa_offsets_reversed>: Change them
	to bool.
2017-08-11 09:30:02 +01:00
Yao Qi b348037fd8 Move dwarf2_frame_state_reg.exp_len to union .loc
dwarf2_frame_state_reg.exp_len is only used together with .loc.exp, so
it makes more sense to exp_len to the union as well.

gdb:

2017-08-11  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* dwarf2-frame.h (struct dwarf2_frame_state_reg) <exp_len>: Remove.
	<loc.exp>: New field.
	* dwarf2-frame.c (execute_cfa_program): Update.
	(dwarf2_frame_prev_register): Update.
2017-08-11 09:30:02 +01:00
Pedro Alves e7c9de2678 Allow gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<T[]>
Currently, if you try to use the array version of
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr (i.e., std::unique_ptr) in order to have
access to operator[], like:

  gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char[]> buf ((char *) xmalloc (10));
  return buf[0];

then the build fails, like:

  /usr/include/c++/5.3.1/bits/unique_ptr.h: In instantiation of ‘std::unique_ptr<_Tp [], _Dp>::~unique_ptr() [with _Tp = char; _Dp = gdb::xfree_deleter<char []>]’:
  main.c:30:61:   required from here
  /usr/include/c++/5.3.1/bits/unique_ptr.h:484:17: error: no match for call to ‘(std::unique_ptr<char [], gdb::xfree_deleter<char []> >::deleter_type {aka gdb::xfree_deleter<char []>}) (char*&)’
      get_deleter()(__ptr);
		   ^
  In file included from src/gdb/common/common-defs.h:92:0,
		   from src/gdb/defs.h:28,
		   from src/gdb/main.c:20:
  src/gdb/common/gdb_unique_ptr.h:34:8: note: candidate: void gdb::xfree_deleter<T>::operator()(T*) const [with T = char []]
     void operator() (T *ptr) const { xfree (ptr); }
	  ^
  src/gdb/common/gdb_unique_ptr.h:34:8: note:   no known conversion for argument 1 from ‘char*’ to ‘char (*)[]’
  Makefile:1911: recipe for target 'main.o' failed
  make: *** [main.o] Error 1

The problem is that we're missing an xfree_deleter specialization for
arrays.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-10  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* common/gdb_unique_ptr.h (xfree_deleter<T[]>): Define.
2017-08-10 14:18:02 +01:00
John Baldwin e8c6b620f7 Replace home-grown linked-lists in FreeBSD's native target with STL lists.
FreeBSD's native target uses linked-lists to keep track of pending fork
events and fake vfork done events.  Replace the first list with std::list
and the second with std::forward_list.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* fbsd-nat.c (struct fbsd_fork_info): Remove.
	(fbsd_pending_children): Use std::list.
	(fbsd_remember_child): Likewise.
	(fbsd_is_child_pending): Likewise.
	(fbsd_pending_vfork_done): Use std::forward_list.
	(fbsd_add_vfork_done): Likewise.
	(fbsd_is_vfork_done_pending): Likewise.
	(fbsd_next_vfork_done): Likewise.
2017-08-09 15:24:46 -07:00
John Baldwin e4a26669b9 Replace remaining cleanups in fbsd-nat.c.
- Use a custom deleter with std::unique_ptr to free() memory returned
  by kinfo_getvmmap().
- Use std::string with string_printf() to generate the pathname of the
  procfs 'map' file.
- Use gdb::byte_vector to manage the dynamic buffer for
  TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV and the dynamically allocated array of LWP IDs.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* fbsd-nat.c [HAVE_KINFO_GETVMMAP] (struct free_deleter): New.
	(fbsd_find_memory_regions): Use free_deleter with std::unique_ptr.
	[!HAVE_KINFO_GETVMMAP] (fbsd_find_memory_regions): Use std::string
	for `mapfilename'.
	(fbsd_xfer_partial): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	(fbsd_add_threads): Likewise.
2017-08-09 15:24:46 -07:00
John Baldwin 142311d325 Fix compile in the !HAVE_KINFO_GETVMMAP case.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* fbsd-nat.c: [!HAVE_KINFO_GETVMMAP]: Include <sys/user.h> and
	"filestuff.h".
	(fbsd_find_memory_regions): Fix `mapfile' initialization.
2017-08-09 15:24:46 -07:00
Simon Marchi 0968fbae6b doc: Fix copy-pasto in Z0 packet documentation
The documentation for the cmd_list field of the Z0 packet refers to its
content as a conditional expression, which seems like a copy-paste error
from the cond_list field.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (Packets): Fix Z0 cmd_list doc referring to
	conditional expression.
2017-08-09 22:16:14 +02:00
Tom Tromey 42fa2e0e1b C++-ify skip.c
I happened to notice that skiplist_entry, in skip.c, contains a
gdb::optional<compiled_regex> -- but that this object's destructor is
never run.  This can result in a memory leak.

This patch fixes the bug by applying a bit more C++: changing this
code to use new and delete, and std::unique_ptr; and removing cleanups
in the process.

Built and regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 25.

ChangeLog
2017-08-09  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* skip.c (skiplist_entry): New constructor.
	(skiplist_entry::enabled, skiplist_entry::function_is_regexp)
	(skiplist_entry::file_is_glob): Now bool.
	(skiplist_entry::file, skiplist_entry::function): Now
	std::string.
	(make_skip_entry): Return a unique_ptr.  Use new.
	(free_skiplist_entry, free_skiplist_entry_cleanup)
	(make_free_skiplist_entry_cleanup): Remove.
	(skip_command, skip_disable_command, add_skiplist_entry)
	(skip_form_bytes, compile_skip_regexp, skip_command, skip_info)
	(skip_file_p, skip_gfile_p, skip_function_p, skip_rfunction_p)
	(function_name_is_marked_for_skip): Update.
	(skip_delete_command): Update.  Use delete.
2017-08-09 12:32:06 -06:00
Jiong Wang cd3af38d7b [AArch64] Implement gdbarch_core_read_description
Recommit with missing header files added.

gdb/
	* aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Include "auxv.h" and "elf/common.h".
	(aarch64_linux_core_read_description): New function.
	(aarch64_linux_init_abi): Register gdbarch_core_read_description.
2017-08-09 17:46:06 +01:00
Jiong Wang 0f76ffafce Revert "[AArch64] Implement gdbarch_core_read_description"
This reverts commit b1a6c1cea3.
2017-08-09 15:51:56 +01:00
Jiong Wang b1a6c1cea3 [AArch64] Implement gdbarch_core_read_description
Currently, AArch64 only have one target description which is tdesc_aarch64.  So,
we haven't implemented any target description detection mechanism for core file.

This patch is an initial implementation of core_read_description method.  Future
features can use this to return selected description.

gdb/
	* aarch64-linux-tdep.c (aarch64_linux_core_read_description): New
	function.
	(aarch64_linux_init_abi): Register gdbarch_core_read_description.
2017-08-09 15:37:20 +01:00
Pedro Alves 29592bde87 Make cp_comp_to_string return a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>
To help avoid issues like the one fixed by e88e8651cf ("Fix memory
leak in cp-support.c").

gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-08-09  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* cp-name-parser.y (cp_comp_to_string): Return a
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
	* cp-support.c (replace_typedefs_qualified_name)
	(replace_typedefs): Adjust to use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
	(cp_canonicalize_string_full): Use op= instead of explicit
	convertion.
	(cp_class_name_from_physname, method_name_from_physname)
	(cp_func_name, cp_remove_params): Adjust to use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
	* cp-support.h (cp_comp_to_string): Return a
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
	* python/py-type.c (typy_lookup_type): Adjust to use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
2017-08-09 15:04:32 +01:00
H.J. Lu b33404388e gdb: Fix build failure with GCC 7
Fix:

/export/gnu/import/git/sources/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c: In function ‘const char* dwarf2_string_attr(die_info*, unsigned int, dwarf2_cu*)’:
/export/gnu/import/git/sources/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17626:39: error: enum constant in boolean context [-Werror=int-in-bool-context]
    || attr->form == DW_FORM_string || DW_FORM_GNU_str_index

	* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_string_attr): Fix a typo.
2017-08-09 05:01:55 -07:00
Yao Qi e88e8651cf Fix memory leak in cp-support.c
The return value of cp_comp_to_string was never freed, creating a
sizable memory leak detectable with valgrind.

==21225== 8 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 4,599 of 10,949^M
==21225==    at 0x4C2DB8F: malloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)^M
==21225==    by 0x4C2FDEF: realloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)^M
==21225==    by 0x76CB31: d_growable_string_resize (cp-demangle.c:3963)^M
==21225==    by 0x76CB31: d_growable_string_init (cp-demangle.c:3942)^M
==21225==    by 0x76CB31: cplus_demangle_print (cp-demangle.c:4308)^M
==21225==    by 0x4C9535: cp_comp_to_string(demangle_component*, int) (cp-name-parser.y:1972)^M
==21225==    by 0x53E1D4: cp_canonicalize_string_full[abi:cxx11](char const*, char const* (*)(type*, void*), void*) (cp-support.c:530)^M
==21225==    by 0x53E360: cp_canonicalize_string_no_typedefs[abi:cxx11](char const*) (cp-support.c:548)^M
==21225==    by 0x5D51D2: find_linespec_symbols(linespec_state*, VEC_symtab_ptr*, char const*, VEC_symbolp**, VEC_bound_minimal_symbol_d**) (linespec.c:4030)^M
==21225==    by 0x5D6CF6: linespec_parse_basic (linespec.c:1907)

==21279== 32 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 6,066 of 10,947^M
==21279==    at 0x4C2DB8F: malloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)^M
==21279==    by 0x4C2FDEF: realloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)^M
==21279==    by 0x76CB31: d_growable_string_resize (cp-demangle.c:3963)^M
==21279==    by 0x76CB31: d_growable_string_init (cp-demangle.c:3942)^M
==21279==    by 0x76CB31: cplus_demangle_print (cp-demangle.c:4308)^M
==21279==    by 0x4C9535: cp_comp_to_string(demangle_component*, int) (cp-name-parser.y:1972)^M
==21279==    by 0x53EF14: cp_canonicalize_string[abi:cxx11](char const*) (cp-support.c:569)^M
==21279==    by 0x561B75: dwarf2_canonicalize_name(char const*, dwarf2_cu*, obstack*) [clone .isra.210] (dwarf2read.c:20159)

This patch fixes the leak.  It is a regression by 2f408ecb.

gdb:

2017-08-09  Alex Lindsay  <alexlindsay239@gmail.com>
	    Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* cp-support.c (cp_canonicalize_string_full): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>.
	(cp_canonicalize_string): Likewise.
2017-08-09 12:39:16 +01:00
Yao Qi f5a29eb0a6 Clean up x86 non-linux GDBserver target descriptions
In GDBserver, only tdesc_i386 and tdesc_amd64 are used.  There is no point
of generating these *.dat files (which are used to generate *.c files during
GDBserver build.).

gdb:

2017-08-09  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* features/Makefile (WHICH): Remove i386/ non-linux stuff.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-avx-avx512.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.dat:Remove.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-avx.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/amd64-mpx.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/i386-avx-avx512.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/i386-avx-mpx.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/i386-mmx.dat: Remove.
	* regformats/i386/i386-mpx.dat: Remove.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-08-09  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_i386_regobj): Remove i386-avx.o,
	i386-avx-avx512.o, i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.o, i386-mpx.o,
	i386-avx-mpx.o and i386-mmx.o.
	(srv_amd64_regobj): Remove amd64-avx.o, amd64-avx-avx512.o,
	amd64-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.o, amd64-mpx.o and amd64-avx-mpx.o.
	(srv_i386_xmlfiles): Remove i386/i386-avx.xml,
	i386/i386-avx-avx512.xml, i386/i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.xml,
	i386/i386-mpx.xml, i386/i386-avx-mpx.xml and i386/i386-mmx.xml.
	(srv_amd64_xmlfile):i386/amd64-avx.xml, i386/amd64-avx-avx512.xml,
	i386/amd64-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.xml, i386/amd64-mpx.xml,
	i386/amd64-avx-mpx.xml.
2017-08-09 12:29:21 +01:00
Yao Qi 57757c2f09 Remove x32 non-linux target descriptions
x32 non-linux target descriptions are not used in GDB or GDBserver.  This
patch removes them.

gdb:

2017-08-09  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* amd64-tdep.h (tdesc_x32): Remove the declaration.
	* amd64-tdep.c: Don't include features/i386/x32*.c.
	(_initialize_amd64_tdep): Don't call initialize_tdesc_x32*
	functions.
	* features/Makefile (WHICH): Remove i386/x32, i386/x32-avx,
	and i386/x32-avx-avx512.
	(XMLTOC): Remove i386/x32-avx.xml, i386/x32-avx-avx512.xml,
	and i386/x32.xml.
	* features/i386/x32-avx-avx512.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-avx-avx512.xml: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-avx.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32-avx.xml: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32.c: Removed.
	* features/i386/x32.xml: Removed.
	* regformats/i386/x32-avx-avx512.dat: Removed.
	* regformats/i386/x32-avx.dat: Removed.
	* regformats/i386/x32.dat: Removed.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-08-09  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (srv_amd64_regobj): Remove x32.o, x32-avx.o
	and x32-avx-avx512.o.
	(srv_amd64_xmlfiles): Remove i386/x32.xml, i386/x32-avx.xml
	i386/x32-avx-avx512.xml.
2017-08-09 12:28:59 +01:00
Simon Marchi 7b005726f9 Add missing PR mention in ChangeLog
I noticed that the patch pushed previously had an open bug about it, so
add a reference to it.
2017-08-07 18:27:29 +02:00
Maciej W. Rozycki ba7b109b29 PR breakpoints/21886: mem-break: Fix breakpoint insertion location
Fix a commit cd6c3b4ffc ("New gdbarch methods breakpoint_kind_from_pc
and sw_breakpoint_from_kind") regression and restore the use of
`->placed_address' rather than `->reqstd_address' as the location for a
memory breakpoint to be inserted at.  Previously
`gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc' was used that made that adjustment in
`default_memory_insert_breakpoint' from the preinitialized value,
however with the said commit that call is gone, so the passed
`->placed_address' has to be used for the initialization.

The regression manifests itself as the inability to debug any MIPS/Linux
compressed ISA dynamic executable as GDB corrupts the dynamic loader
with one of its implicit breakpoints, causing the program to crash, as
seen for example with the `mips-linux-gnu' target, o32 ABI, MIPS16 code,
and the gdb.base/advance.exp test case:

(gdb) continue
Continuing.

Program received signal SIGBUS, Bus error.
_dl_debug_initialize (ldbase=0, ns=0) at dl-debug.c:51
51	    r = &_r_debug;
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/advance.exp: Can't run to main

	gdb/
	PR breakpoints/21886
	* mem-break.c (default_memory_insert_breakpoint): Use
	`->placed_address' rather than `->reqstd_address' for the
	breakpoint location.
2017-08-07 17:02:04 +01:00
Maciej W. Rozycki e347efc38b GDB/opcodes: Remove arch/mach/endian disassembler assertions
Fix `set architecture' and `set endian' command disassembly regressions
from commit 39503f8242 ("Delegate opcodes to select disassembler in
GDB"), and commit 003ca0fd22 ("Refactor disassembler selection"), as
well as a MIPS compressed ISA disassembly target regression from commit
6394c60699 ("Don't use print_insn_XXX in GDB"), which caused assertion
failures to trigger.

For example with the `mips-linux-gnu' target we get:

$ cat main.c
int
main (void)
{
  return 0;
}
$ gcc -mips32r2 -O2 main.c -o main
$ gcc -mips16 -mips32r2 -O2 main.c -o main16
$ gdb
GNU gdb (GDB) 8.0.50.20170731-git
[...]
(gdb) file main
Reading symbols from main...done.
(gdb) show architecture
The target architecture is set automatically (currently mips:isa32r2)
(gdb) show endian
The target endianness is set automatically (currently big endian)
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:	jr	ra
   0x00400504 <+4>:	move	v0,zero
End of assembler dump.
(gdb) set architecture mips:isa64r2
The target architecture is assumed to be mips:isa64r2
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:
.../gdb/arch-utils.c:979: internal-error: int default_print_insn(bfd_vma, disassemble_info*): Assertion `info->mach == bfd_get_mach (exec_bfd)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) n
[...]
Command aborted.
(gdb) set architecture auto
The target architecture is set automatically (currently mips:isa32r2)
(gdb) set endian little
The target is assumed to be little endian
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:
.../gdb/arch-utils.c:978: internal-error: int default_print_insn(bfd_vma, disassemble_info*): Assertion `info->endian == (bfd_big_endian (exec_bfd) ? BFD_ENDIAN_BIG : BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) n
[...]
Command aborted.
(gdb) set endian auto
The target endianness is set automatically (currently big endian)
(gdb) set architecture i386
The target architecture is assumed to be i386
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:
.../gdb/arch-utils.c:976: internal-error: int default_print_insn(bfd_vma, disassemble_info*): Assertion `info->arch == bfd_get_arch (exec_bfd)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) n
[...]
Command aborted.
(gdb) set architecture auto
The target architecture is set automatically (currently mips:isa32r2)
(gdb) file main16
Load new symbol table from "main16"? (y or n) y
Reading symbols from main16...done.
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400501 <+0>:
.../gdb/arch-utils.c:979: internal-error: int default_print_insn(bfd_vma, disassemble_info*): Assertion `info->mach == bfd_get_mach (exec_bfd)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) n
Command aborted.
(gdb)

Remove the assertions then, restoring previous semantics:

(gdb) file main
Reading symbols from main...done.
(gdb) set architecture mips:isa64r2
The target architecture is assumed to be mips:isa64r2
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:	jr	ra
   0x00400504 <+4>:	move	v0,zero
End of assembler dump.
(gdb) set endian little
The target is assumed to be little endian
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:	j	0x3800c
   0x00400504 <+4>:	addiu	s0,t0,0
End of assembler dump.
(gdb) set architecture i386
The target architecture is assumed to be i386
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400500 <+0>:	add    %eax,%esp
   0x00400502 <+2>:	add    %cl,(%eax)
   0x00400504 <+4>:	add    %al,(%eax)
   0x00400506 <+6>:	adc    %ah,0x0
End of assembler dump.
(gdb) set architecture auto
The target architecture is set automatically (currently mips:isa32r2)
(gdb) set endian auto
The target endianness is set automatically (currently big endian)
(gdb) file main16
Load new symbol table from "main16"? (y or n) y
Reading symbols from main16...done.
(gdb) disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
   0x00400501 <+0>:	jr	ra
   0x00400503 <+2>:	li	v0,0
End of assembler dump.
(gdb)

	gdb/
	* arch-utils.c (default_print_insn): Remove arch/mach/endian
	assertions.

	opcodes/
	* disassemble.c (disassembler): Remove arch/mach/endian
	assertions.
2017-08-07 15:53:54 +01:00
Maciej W. Rozycki 0dba2a6c09 gdbarch: Use an anonymous union for target data in `gdbarch_info'
As an update to commit ede5f15146 ("gdbarch.h: Change
gdbarch_info::tdep_info's type to void *") replace the definition of the
`tdep_info' member in `struct gdbarch_info' with an anonymous union,
comprising the original member, with its type reverted to `struct
gdbarch_tdep_info *', a `tdesc_data' member of a `struct tdesc_arch_data
*' type and an `id' member of an `int *' type.  Remove now unnecessary
casts throughout use places then, making code easier to read an less
prone to errors, which may happen with casting.

	gdb/
	* gdbarch.sh (gdbarch_info): Replace the `tdep_info' member with
	a union of `tdep_info', `tdesc_data' and `id'.
	* aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_gdbarch_init): Use `info.tdesc_data'
	rather than `info.tdep_info'.
	* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	* i386-linux-tdep.c (i386_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* mips-linux-tdep.c (mips_linux_init_abi): Likewise.
	* mips-tdep.c (mips_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* nds32-tdep.c (nds32_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* rs6000-tdep.c (rs6000_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* ppc-linux-tdep.c (ppu2spu_sniffer): Use `info.id' rather than
	`info.tdep_info'.
	(ppc_linux_init_abi): Use `info.tdesc_data' rather than
	`info.tdep_info'.
	* sparc-tdep.c (sparc32_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* spu-multiarch.c (spu_gdbarch): Use `info.id' rather than
	`info.tdep_info'.
	* spu-tdep.c (spu_gdbarch_init): Likewise.
	* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
2017-08-07 15:53:54 +01:00
Leszek Swirski 16eb6b2db4 Fix dwarf2_string_attr for -gsplit-dwarf
The dwarf2_string_attr did not allow DW_FORM_GNU_str_index as a form for
string types. This manifested as null strings in the namespace_name
lookup (replaced with "(anonymous namespace)") when debugging
Fission-compiled code.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_string_attr): Allow DW_FORM_GNU_strp_alt.
2017-08-07 16:40:46 +02:00
Simon Marchi 74cbb09e74 remote-sim.c: Fix arg variables conflicts
The recent change introducing gdb_argv introduced some build failures in
remote-sim.c.

  /home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote-sim.c: In function 'void gdbsim_load(target_ops*, const char*, int)':
  /home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote-sim.c:573:22: error: conflicting declaration 'gdb_argv argv'
     gdb_argv argv (args);
                        ^
  /home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote-sim.c:565:10: note: previous declaration as 'char** argv'
     char **argv;
            ^~~~
  /home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote-sim.c: In function 'void gdbsim_open(const char*, int)':
  /home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/remote-sim.c:730:25: error: declaration of 'gdb_argv args' shadows a parameter
     gdb_argv args (arg_buf);

In gdbsim_load, the new gdb_argv object conflicts with old char **argv
variable.  I think the old variable should be removed.

In gdbsim_open, the new gdb_argv object conflicts with the args
parameter.  This patch renames it to argv.

Built-tested for a mips host.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_load): Remove char **argv local variable.
	(gdbsim_open): Rename gdb_argv args object to argv.
2017-08-07 12:13:00 +02:00
Tom Tromey ee0c32930c Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr when calling tilde_expand
This patch changes most sites calling tilde_expand to use
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr, rather than a cleanup.  It also changes
scan_expression_with_cleanup to return a unique pointer, because the
patch was already touching code in that area.

Regression tested on the buildbot.

ChangeLog
2017-08-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* compile/compile-object-load.c (compile_object_load): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* cli/cli-dump.c (scan_filename): Rename from
	scan_filename_with_cleanup.  Change return type.
	(scan_expression): Rename from scan_expression_with_cleanup.
	Change return type.
	(dump_memory_to_file, dump_value_to_file, restore_command):
	Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.  Update.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (find_and_open_script): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_open): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* symmisc.c (maintenance_print_symbols)
	(maintenance_print_msymbols): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* symfile.c (symfile_bfd_open, generic_load)
	(add_symbol_file_command, remove_symbol_file_command): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* source.c (openp): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* psymtab.c (maintenance_print_psymbols): Use
	gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* corelow.c (core_open): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* breakpoint.c (save_breakpoints): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	* solib.c (solib_map_sections): Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
	(reload_shared_libraries_1): Likewise.
2017-08-05 15:52:49 -06:00
Tom Tromey fdffd6f411 Fix Rust test suite for 1.20 beta
I ran the gdb.rust tests against Rust 1.20 (beta) and saw a few
failures.  The failures all came because a particular item moved to a
different module.  Since the particular choice of module name isn't
important here, I simply widened the allowable results.

Tested locally against rustc 1.19, 1.20, and 1.21.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2017-08-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.rust/simple.exp: Allow String to appear in a different
	namespace.
2017-08-05 15:38:32 -06:00
Tom Tromey 3232fabd2d Remove cleanups from Rust parser
This removes the few remaining cleanups in the Rust language code.
The main difficulty here was that the earlier code allocated VEC heads
on an obstack.  The new code instead introduces an object that
allocates and maintains the storage for whatever vectors are needed
during the parse.

Regression tested on the buildbot.

ChangeLog
2017-08-05  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* rust-exp.y (rust_op_ptr, set_field): Remove typedefs.
	(rust_op_vector, rust_set_vector): New typedefs.
	(current_parser): New global.
	(work_obstack): Change to pointer type.  Update all users.
	(rust_ast, pstate): Remove globals.
	(struct rust_parser): New.
	(%union) <params, field_inits>: Change type.
	(start, tuple_expr, unit_expr, struct_expr_list, literal)
	(field_expr, expr_list, maybe_expr_list, type_list): Update.
	(ast_call_ish, ast_path, ast_function_type, ast_tuple_type)
	(convert_params_to_types, convert_params_to_expression): Change
	type of "params".
	(ast_string): Change type of "fields".
	(rust_parse): Make a rust_parser.  Remove cleanups.
	(rust_lex_tests): Make and install an auto_obstack.
2017-08-05 11:14:06 -06:00
Yao Qi f02fd7745d Unbreak GDBserver build for x32
When I verify my target description changes, I build GDB and GDBserver for
x32, but it failed.

/../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c
../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c: In function ‘const target_desc* get_ipa_tdesc(int)’:
../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c:184:10: error: ‘X86_TDESC_AVX512’ was not declared in this scope
     case X86_TDESC_AVX512:
          ^
../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c:185:14: error: ‘tdesc_x32_avx512_linux’ was not declared in this scope
       return tdesc_x32_avx512_linux;
              ^
../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c: In function ‘void initialize_low_tracepoint()’:
../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/linux-amd64-ipa.c:282:36: error: ‘init_registers_x32_avx512_linux’ was not declared in this scope
   init_registers_x32_avx512_linux ();
                                    ^

ipa_x32_linux_regobj use to be there, but removed by
22049425ce by mistake.

gdb/gdbserver:

2017-08-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* configure.srv (ipa_x32_linux_regobj): New.
	* linux-amd64-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): Use X86_TDESC_AVX_AVX512
	instead of X86_TDESC_AVX512.
	(initialize_low_tracepoint): Call
	init_registers_x32_avx_avx512_linux.
2017-08-04 16:06:01 +01:00
Yao Qi 91975afd35 Add namespace std to nullptr_t
This patch fixes the build failure for target i686-w64-mingw32,

In file included from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/defs.h:786:0,
                 from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:19:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.h:188:20: error: ‘nullptr_t’ has not been declared
   bool operator!= (nullptr_t)
                    ^
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.h:193:20: error: ‘nullptr_t’ has not been declared
   bool operator== (nullptr_t)
                    ^

gdb:

2017-08-04  Yao Qi  <yao.qi@linaro.org>

	* utils.h (gdb_argv): Add namespace std for nullptr_t.
2017-08-04 14:27:58 +01:00
Ruslan Kabatsayev 2331fa3af5 Add myself as a write-after-approval GDB maintainer. 2017-08-03 22:23:22 +03:00
Tom Tromey 744e4fe1db Remove make_cleanup_freeargv and gdb_buildargv
After the previous patches in this series, make_cleanup_freeargv and
gdb_buildargv are now unused and can be removed.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* utils.c (make_cleanup_freeargv, do_freeargv, gdb_buildargv):
	Remove.
	* utils.h (make_cleanup_freeargv, gdb_buildargv): Remove.
2017-08-03 07:59:10 -06:00
Tom Tromey 1c034b67a0 Use gdb_argv in Python
This changes one spot in the Python code to use gdb_argv.  This
removes the last cleanup from the Python layer.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/py-param.c (compute_enum_values): Use gdb_argv.
2017-08-03 07:59:09 -06:00
Tom Tromey 773a1edcd1 Introduce gdb_argv, a class wrapper for buildargv
This introduces gdb_argv, a class wrapping an "argv" pointer; that is,
a pointer to a NULL-terminated array of char*, where both the array
and each non-NULL element in the array are xmalloc'd.

This patch then changes most users of gdb_buildargv to use gdb_argv
instead.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* utils.h (struct gdb_argv_deleter): New.
	(gdb_argv): New class.
	* utils.c (gdb_argv::reset): New method.
	* tracepoint.c (delete_trace_variable_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* tracefile.c (tsave_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* top.c (new_ui_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* symmisc.c (maintenance_print_symbols)
	(maintenance_print_msymbols, maintenance_expand_symtabs): Use gdb_argv.
	* symfile.c (symbol_file_command, generic_load)
	(remove_symbol_file_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* stack.c (backtrace_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* source.c (add_path, show_substitute_path_command)
	(unset_substitute_path_command, set_substitute_path_command):
	Use gdb_argv.
	* skip.c (skip_command): Use gdb_argv.  Use gdb_buildargv.
	* ser-mingw.c (pipe_windows_open): Use gdb_argv.
	* remote.c (extended_remote_run, remote_put_command)
	(remote_get_command, remote_delete_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_load, gdbsim_create_inferior)
	(gdbsim_open): Use gdb_argv.
	* python/py-cmd.c (gdbpy_string_to_argv): Use gdb_argv.
	* psymtab.c (maintenance_print_psymbols): Use gdb_argv.
	* procfs.c (procfs_info_proc): Use gdb_argv.
	* interps.c (interpreter_exec_cmd): Use gdb_argv.
	* infrun.c (handle_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* inferior.c (add_inferior_command, clone_inferior_command):
	Use gdb_argv.
	* guile/scm-string.c (gdbscm_string_to_argv): Use gdb_argv.
	* exec.c (exec_file_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (alias_command): Use gdb_argv.
	* compile/compile.c (build_argc_argv): Use gdb_argv.
2017-08-03 07:59:08 -06:00
Tom Tromey 0d50bde32b Remove a cleanup in Python
This removes cleanups from gdbpy_decode_line, in favor of a use of
unique_xmalloc_ptr.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/python.c (gdbpy_decode_line): Use unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-08-03 07:59:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 7f968c899f Avoid some manual memory management in Python
This changes a few places in the Python code to avoid manual memory
management, in favor of letting std::string do the work.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python/python.c (compute_python_string): Return std::string.
	(gdbpy_eval_from_control_command): Update.
	(do_start_initialization): Use std::string.
	* python/py-varobj.c (py_varobj_iter_next): Use string_printf, not
	xstrprintf.
	* python/py-breakpoint.c (local_setattro): Use string_printf, not
	xstrprintf.
2017-08-03 07:59:07 -06:00
Tom Tromey 3c9ebddd93 Replace do_restore_instream_cleanup with scoped_restore
This changes the users of do_restore_instream_cleanup to use a
scoped_restore instead.  This patch is broken out because it warrants
some additional attention: in particular it's unclear to me whether
current_ui can change in the body of these functions -- but if it can,
then the cleanup would have modified a different UI's instream member.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* top.h (do_restore_instream_cleanup): Remove.
	* top.c (do_restore_instream_cleanup): Remove.
	(read_command_file): Use scoped_restore.
	* cli/cli-script.c (execute_user_command): Use scoped_restore.
2017-08-03 07:59:06 -06:00
Tom Tromey b51b225eb9 Use a scoped_restore for command_nest_depth
This changes a couple of places to use a scoped_restore when
manipulating command_nest_depth.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* cli/cli-script.c (execute_user_command)
	(execute_control_command): Use scoped_restore.
2017-08-03 07:59:05 -06:00
Tom Tromey ac991630ca Remove user_call_depth
This changes execute_user_command to remove user_call_depth, using the
size of user_args_stack instead.  This avoids a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* cli/cli-script.c (do_restore_user_call_depth): Remove.
	(execute_user_command): Remove user_call_depth; use
	user_args_stack's size instead.
2017-08-03 07:59:04 -06:00
Tom Tromey 898e0c8e87 Remove in_user_command
While working on the next patch in this series, I found that the
global in_user_command is not used.  This patch removes it.  (I didn't
think to check Insight until submitting this series; and it's not very
convenient to do so, so if someone has it checked out and could look
at it, that would be nice.)

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* top.h (in_user_command): Remove.
	* top.c (in_user_command): Remove.
	* cli/cli-script.c (do_restore_user_call_depth)
	(execute_user_command): Update.
2017-08-03 07:59:03 -06:00
Tom Tromey 26fcd5d757 Use containers to avoid cleanups
This patch introduces the use of various containers -- std::vector,
std::string, or gdb::byte_vector -- in several spots in gdb that were
using xmalloc and a cleanup.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* valops.c (search_struct_method): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	* valarith.c (value_concat): Use std::vector.
	* target.c (memory_xfer_partial): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	(simple_search_memory): Likewise.
	* printcmd.c (find_string_backward): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_data_write_memory): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	* gcore.c (gcore_copy_callback): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	* elfread.c (elf_rel_plt_read): Use std::string.
	* cp-valprint.c (cp_print_value): Use gdb::byte_vector.
	* cli/cli-dump.c (restore_section_callback): Use
	gdb::byte_vector.
2017-08-03 07:59:02 -06:00
Tom Tromey 7c218e6c9c Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in jit.c
This removes some cleanups from jit.c by using unique_xmalloc_ptr
instead.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* jit.c (jit_reader_load_command): Use unique_xmalloc_ptr.
2017-08-03 07:59:01 -06:00
Tom Tromey 31b68d4ad7 Replace tui_restore_gdbout with scoped_restore
This patch replaces tui_restore_gdbout (a cleaup function) with a use
of scoped_restore.  This one is broken out into its own patch because
it might slightly change the behavior of gdb: it saves and restores
pagination_enabled, whereas the tui_restore_gdbout unconditionally set
pagination_enabled to 1; and I think this warrants closer review.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-regs.c (tui_restore_gdbout): Remove.
	(tui_register_format): Use scoped_restore.
2017-08-03 07:59:01 -06:00
Tom Tromey 2ec845e758 More uses of scoped_restore
There were a few more places in gdb that could easily use
scoped_restore, replacing some cleanups.

ChangeLog
2017-08-03  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* reverse.c (exec_direction_default): Remove.
	(exec_reverse_once): Use scoped_restore.
	* remote.c (restore_remote_timeout): Remove.
	(remote_flash_erase, remote_flash_write, remote_flash_done)
	(readchar, remote_serial_write): Use scoped_restore.
	* cli/cli-script.c (struct source_cleanup_lines_args)
	(source_cleanup_lines): Remove.
	(script_from_file): Use scoped_restore.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (source_verbose_cleanup): Remove.
	(source_command): Use scoped_restore.
2017-08-03 07:59:00 -06:00