Commit Graph

80574 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yao Qi d9a4728770 Restrict the pattern in gdb.base/jit.exp
I see the following fail in some thumb multi-lib in arm-none-linux-gnueabi,

info function jit_function^M
All functions matching regular expression "jit_function":^M
^M
Non-debugging symbols:^M
0x00000790  __real_jit_function_XXXX^M
0x0000079c  __jit_function_XXXX_from_arm^M
0x0000079c  jit_function_0000^M
0x00000790  __real_jit_function_XXXX^M
0x0000079c  __jit_function_XXXX_from_arm^M
0x0000079c  jit_function_0001^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/jit.exp: one_jit_test-2: info function jit_function

the test expects to see only jit_function_0000 and jit_function_0001

one_jit_test 2 "${hex}  jit_function_0000\[\r\n\]+${hex}  jit_function_0001"

Symbols with the prefix "__real_" or suffix "_from_arm" is generated
by gcc/ld for arm/thumb interworking.

This patch is to restrict the pattern from "jit_function" to
"^jit_function", the output becomes expected.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/jit.exp (one_jit_test): Restrict the pattern
	from "jit_function" to "^jit_function".
2014-06-06 21:43:26 +08:00
Yao Qi e5e01dbf89 Tweak gdb.base/async.exp
I see two fails in async.exp on arm-none-eabi target:

nexti&^M
(gdb) 0x000001ba        14       x = 5; x = 5;^M
completed.^M
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: nexti&
finish&^M
Run till exit from #0  0x000001ba in foo () at /scratch/yqi/arm-none-eabi-lite/src/gdb-trunk/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/async.c:14^M
(gdb) 0x000001e6 in main () at /scratch/yqi/arm-none-eabi-lite/src/gdb-trunk/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/async.c:32^M
32       y = foo ();^M
Value returned is $1 = 8^M
completed.^M
FAIL: gdb.base/async.exp: finish&

The corresponding test is "test_background "nexti&" "" ".*y = 3.*"",
and it assumes that GDB "nexti" into the next source line.  It is wrong
on arm.  After "nexti", it still stops at the same source line, and it
fails.

When gdb does "finish", if the PC is in the middle of a source line,
the PC address is printed too.  See stack.c:print_frame,

  if (opts.addressprint)
    if (!sal.symtab
	|| frame_show_address (frame, sal)
	|| print_what == LOC_AND_ADDRESS)
      {
	annotate_frame_address ();
	if (pc_p)
	  ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr", gdbarch, pc);
	else
	  ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<unavailable>");
	annotate_frame_address_end ();
	ui_out_text (uiout, " in ");
      }

frame_show_address checks whether PC is the middle of a source line.
Since after "nexti", the inferior stops at the middle of a source line,
when we do "finish" the PC address is displayed.

In sum, GDB works well, but test case needs update.  This patch is to
add a statement at the same line to make sure "nexti" doesn't go to
the new line, match the next instruction address in the output and
match the hex address the output of "finish".

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/async.c (foo): Add one statement.
	* gdb.base/async.exp: Get the next instruction address and
	match the output of "nexti" by instruction address.  Match
	the hex address in the output of "finish".
2014-06-06 21:43:20 +08:00
xmj 0a770bb257 update ChangeLog 2014-06-06 17:51:30 +08:00
Gary Benson 73ba372ccf Remove preprocessor conditionals for ANSI-standard signals
The six signals SIGINT, SIGILL, SIGABRT, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV and SIGTERM
are ANSI-standard and thus guaranteed to be available.  This patch
removes all preprocessor conditionals relating to these symbols.

gdb/
2014-06-06  Gary Benson  <gbenson@redhat.com>

	* common/signals.c: Remove preprocessor conditionals for
	always-defined signals SIGINT, SIGILL, SIGABRT, SIGFPE,
	SIGSEGV and SIGTERM.
	* proc-events.c: Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-06-06  Gary Benson  <gbenson@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/call-signals.c: Remove preprocessor conditionals
	for always-defined signals SIGINT, SIGILL, SIGABRT, SIGFPE,
	SIGSEGV and SIGTERM.
	* gdb.base/sigall.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/unwindonsignal.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.reverse/sigall-reverse.c: Likewise.
2014-06-06 10:32:12 +01:00
xmj adcc0a31cc add -q in help info and doc 2014-06-06 17:28:19 +08:00
Yao Qi 831517df13 Skip hbreak-unmapped.exp if memory at address 0 is readable
hbreak-unmapped.exp assumes that memory at address 0 is unmapped or
unreadable, but on bare metal or uclinux targets, memory at address
0 is readable.  For example, on arm-none-eabi, the vector table base
address is 0x0.

hbreak *0^M
Hardware assisted breakpoint 3 at 0x0: file
/scratch/yqi/arm-none-eabi-lite/obj/cs3-2014.11-999999-arm-none-eabi-i686-pc-linux-gnu/generated/arm-vector.S,
line 25.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak-unmapped.exp: hbreak *0
info break^M
Num     Type           Disp Enb Address    What^M
3       hw breakpoint  keep y   0x00000000
/scratch/yqi/arm-none-eabi-lite/obj/cs3-2014.11-999999-arm-none-eabi-i686-pc-linux-gnu/generated/arm-vector.S:25^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak-unmapped.exp: info break shows hw breakpoint
delete $bpnum

This patch is to check whether address 0 is readable via command 'x 0'.
If it is, skip the test.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/hbreak-unmapped.exp: Read memory at address 0.  If
	readable, skip the test.
2014-06-06 16:57:15 +08:00
Markus Metzger c33b2f1258 symfile, vdso: remove target sections
Target sections added by the add-symbol-file-from-memory command are not
removed when the process exits.  In fact, they are not removed, at all.

This causes GDB to crash in gdb.base/break-interp.exp.

Change the owner of those target sections to the object file generated in
symbol_file_add_from_memory and generalize the free_objfile observer in
symfile.c to remove target sections of any freed object file.
2014-06-06 09:40:02 +02:00
Martin Storsjo 34fd659b79 [AArch64] Fix the documentation on :pg_hi21: 2014-06-06 07:29:19 +01:00
Yao Qi b8b91e982e Fix the race in gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp
The code in gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp about checking the value of
tlsvar in main thread is racy, because when child thread hits
breakpoint, the main thread may not go into pthread_join yet, and
may not be unwind to main.

This patch is to move the line setting breakpoint on after sem_wait,
so that the child thread will hit breakpoint after main thread calls
sem_post.  IOW, when child thread hits breakpoint, the main thread is
in either sem_post or pthread_join.  "up 10" can unwind main thread to
main.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.threads/staticthreads.c (thread_function): Move the line
	setting breakpoint on forward.
	* gdb.threads/staticthreads.exp: Update comments.
2014-06-06 09:45:22 +08:00
Alan Modra 872a9dd881 daily update 2014-06-06 09:30:43 +09:30
Ludovic Courtès fb9347707f guile: Type-check the argument to 'history-append!'.
gdb/
2014-06-05  Ludovic Courtès  <ludo@gnu.org>

	* guile/scm-value.c (gdbscm_history_append_x): Use
	'vlscm_get_value_smob_arg_unsafe' instead of
	'vlscm_scm_to_value'.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-06-05  Ludovic Courtès  <ludo@gnu.org>

	* gdb.guile/scm-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Add test
	"history-append! type error".
2014-06-06 00:05:18 +02:00
Simon Marchi 6ef284bd18 PR mi/15806: Fix quoting of async events
Original patch:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-04/msg00552.html

New in v2:
* In remote.c:escape_buffer, pass '\\' to fputstrn_unfiltered/printchar to
make sure backslashes are escaped in remote debug output.
* Updated function documentation for printchar.

See updated ChangeLog below.

--------------------

The quoting in whatever goes in the event_channel of MI is little bit broken.

Link for the lazy:
  https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15806

Here is an example of a =library-loaded event with an ill-named directory,
/tmp/how"are\you (the problem is present with every directory on Windows since
it uses backslashes as a path separator). The result will be the following:

=library-loaded,id="/tmp/how"are\\you/libexpat.so.1",...

The " between 'how' and 'are' should be escaped.

Another bad behavior is double escaping in =breakpoint-created, for example:

=breakpoint-created,bkpt={...,fullname="/tmp/how\\"are\\\\you/test.c",...}

The two backslashes before 'how' should be one and the four before 'you' should
be two.

The reason for this is that when sending something to an MI console, escaping
can take place at two different moments (the actual escaping work is always
done in the printchar function):

1. When generating the content, if ui_out_field_* functions are used. Here,
fields are automatically quoted with " and properly escaped. At least
mi_field_string does it, not sure about mi_field_fmt, I need to investigate
further.

2. When gdb_flush is called, to send the data in the buffer of the console to
the actual output (stdout). At this point, mi_console_raw_packet takes the
whole string in the buffer, quotes it, and escapes all occurences of the
quoting character and backslashes. The event_channel does not specify a quoting
character, so quotes are not escaped here, only backslashes.

The problem with =library-loaded is that it does use fprintf_unfiltered, which
doesn't do escaping (so, no #1). When gdb_flush is called, backslashes are
escaped (#2).

The problem with =breakpoint-created is that it first uses ui_out_field_*
functions to generate its output, so backslashes and quotes are escaped there
(#1). backslashes are escaped again in #2, leading to an overdose of
backslashes.

In retrospect, there is no way escaping can be done reliably in
mi_console_raw_packet for data that is already formatted, such as
event_channel. At this point, there is no way to differentiate quotes that
delimit field values from those that should be escaped. In the case of other MI
consoles, it is ok since mi_console_raw_packet receives one big string that
should be quoted and escaped as a whole.

So, first part of the fix: for the MI channels that specify no quoting
character, no escaping at all should be done in mi_console_raw_packet (that's
the change in printchar, thanks to Yuanhui Zhang for this). For those channels,
whoever generates the content is responsible for proper quoting and escaping.
This will fix the =breakpoint-created kind of problem.

Second part of the fix is to make =library-loaded generate content that is
properly escaped. For this, we use ui_out_field_* functions, instead of one big
fprintf_unfiltered. =library-unloaded suffered from the same problem so it is
modified as well. There might be other events that need fixing too, but that's
all I found with a quick scan. Those that use fprintf_unfiltered but whose sole
variable data is a %d are not critical, since it won't generate a " or a \.

Finally, a test has been fixed, as it was expecting an erroneous output.
Otherwise, all other tests that were previously passing still pass (x86-64
linux).

gdb/ChangeLog:

2014-06-02  Simon Marchi  <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>

	PR mi/15806
	* utils.c (printchar): Don't escape at all if quoter is NUL.
	Update function documentation to clarify effect of parameter
	QUOTER.
	* remote.c (escape_buffer): Pass '\\' as the quoter to
	fputstrn_unfiltered.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_solib_loaded): Use ui_out_field_* functions to
	generate the output.
	(mi_solib_unloaded): Same.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2014-06-02  Simon Marchi  <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp (test_insert_delete_modify): Fix
	erroneous dprintf expected input.
2014-06-05 17:59:46 -04:00
Joel Brobecker 270c993744 Make it easy to make --disable-werror the default for both binutils and gdb
The goal of this patch is to provide an easy way to make
--disable-werror the default when building binutils, or the parts
of binutils that need to get built when building GDB. In development
mode, we want to continue making -Werror the default with GCC.
But, when making releases, I think we want to make it as easy as
possible for regular users to successfully build from sources.

GDB already has this kind of feature to turn -Werror as well as
the use of the libmcheck library. As GDB Release Manager, I take
advantage of it to turn those off after having cut the branch.
I'd like to be able to do the same for the binutils bits. And
perhaps Tristan will want to do the same for his releases too
(not sure, binutils builders might be a little savvier than GDB
builders).

This patch introduces a new file, called development.sh, which
just sets a variable called $development. In our development branches
(Eg. "master"), it's set to true. But setting it to false would allow
us to change the default behavior of various development-related
features to be turned off; in this case, it turns off the use of
-Werror by default (use --enable-werror to turn it back on).

bfd/ChangeLog:

        * development.sh: New file.
        * warning.m4 (AM_BINUTILS_WARNINGS): Source bfd/development.sh.
        Make -Werror the default with GCC only if DEVELOPMENT is true.
        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add
        $(srcdir)/development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

binutils/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
        bfd's development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

gas/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
        bfd's development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

gold/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): New.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

gprof/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
        bfd's development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

ld/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
        bfd's development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

opcodes/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.am (CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES): Add dependency on
        bfd's development.sh.
        * Makefile.in, configure: Regenerate.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * development.sh: Delete.
        * Makefile.in (config.status): Adjust dependency on development.sh.
        * configure.ac: Adjust development.sh source call.
        * configure: Regenerate.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

        * configure.ac: Adjust development.sh source call.
        * Makefile.in (config.status): Adjust dependency on development.sh.
        * configure: Regenerate.

Tested on x86_64-linux by building two ways: One with DEVELOPMENT
set to true, and one with DEVELOPMENT set to false. In the first
case, I could see the use of -Werror, while it disappeared in
the second case.
2014-06-05 05:47:29 -07:00
Doug Evans a872e241e2 Delete scm-generics.exp.
Support for smobs as goops classes is changing in guile 2.2.
We may eventually switch to using structs instead of smobs,
so remove any claim we support goops or generics for now.

	* gdb.guile/scm-generics.exp: Delete.
2014-06-04 20:01:40 -07:00
Doug Evans 16f691fb2e Split create-breakpoint! into make-breakpoint, register-breakpoint!.
Rename breakpoint-delete! to delete-breakpoint!.

	* guile/scm-breakpoint.c (struct gdbscm_breakpoint_object): New members
	is_scheme_bkpt, spec.
	(bpscm_make_breakpoint_smob): Initialize new members.
	(gdbscm_create_breakpoint_x): Split into two ...
	(gdbscm_make_breakpoint, gdbscm_register_breakpoint_x): New functions.
	(bpscm_breakpoint_deleted): Reset breakpoint number and stop function.
	(scheme_function breakpoint_functions): Update.
	* guile/lib/gdb.scm: Delete create-breakpoint!.  Rename
	breakpoint-delete! to delete-breakpoint!.  Add make-breakpoint,
	register-breakpoint!.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: Update.
	Add tests for breakpoint registration.

	doc/
	* guile.texi (Breakpoints In Guile): Update.
2014-06-04 19:44:30 -07:00
Alan Modra c5cad97c38 daily update 2014-06-05 09:31:07 +09:30
Joel Brobecker ef7cab6ba1 gdbserver crash if the_target->supports_z_point_type is NULL
When debugging on LynxOS targets (and probably on SPU targets as well),
inserting a breakpoint and resuming the program's execution causes
GDBserver to crash.

The crash occurs while handling the Z0 packet sent by GDB to insert
our breakpoint, because z_type_supported calls
the_target->supports_z_point_type without checking that it is not NULL
This patch fixes the issue by making z_type_supported return false if
the_target->supports_z_point_type is NULL.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

        PR server/17023
        * mem-break.c (z_type_supported): Return zero if
        THE_TARGET->SUPPORTS_Z_POINT_TYPE is NULL.

Tested on ppx-lynx5.
2014-06-04 17:57:21 -04:00
Tom Tromey 012370f681 handle VLA in a struct or union
It is valid in GNU C to have a VLA in a struct or union type, but gdb
did not handle this.

This patch adds support for these cases in the obvious way.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 20.
New tests included.

2014-06-04  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* ada-lang.c (ada_template_to_fixed_record_type_1): Use
	value_from_contents_and_address_unresolved.
	(ada_template_to_fixed_record_type_1): Likewise.
	(ada_which_variant_applies): Likewise.
	* value.h (value_from_contents_and_address_unresolved): Declare.
	* value.c (value_from_contents_and_address_unresolved): New
	function.
	* gdbtypes.c (is_dynamic_type, resolve_dynamic_type)
	<TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, TYPE_CODE_UNION>: New cases.
	(resolve_dynamic_struct, resolve_dynamic_union): New functions.

2014-06-04  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/vla-datatypes.exp: Add tests for VLA-in-structure and
	VLA-in-union.
	* gdb.base/vla-datatypes.c (vla_factory): Add vla_struct,
	inner_vla_struct, vla_union types.  Initialize objects of those
	types and compute their sizes.
2014-06-04 14:28:22 -06:00
Tom Tromey 92e2a17f9b minor cleanups in is_dynamic_type
I noticed that gdbtypes.c:is_dynamic_type has some unneeded "break"s.
This patch cleans up the function a bit, removing those and removing
the switch's default case so that the end of the function is a bit
clearer.

2014-06-04  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdbtypes.c (is_dynamic_type): Remove unneeded "break"s.
2014-06-04 14:28:20 -06:00
Tom Tromey c0939df1ce constify to_attach
This constifies the "args" argument to the target_ops to_attach
method.

I updated all instances of the method.  I could not compile all of
them but I hand-inspected them.  In all cases either the argument is
ignored, or it is passed to parse_pid_to_attach.  (linux-nat does some
extra stuff, but that one I built...)

If you want to try it on your host of choice, please do so.

The code in parse_pid_to_attach seems a little bogus to me.  If there
is a platform with a broken strtoul, we have better methods for fixing
the issue now.  However, I left the code as is since it is clearly ok
to do so.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 20.

2014-06-04  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* procfs.c (procfs_attach): Make "args" const.
	* windows-nat.c (windows_attach): Make "args" const.
	* nto-procfs.c (procfs_attach): Make "args" const.
	* inf-ttrace.c (inf_ttrace_attach): Make "args" const.
	* go32-nat.c (go32_attach): Make "args" const.
	* gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Make "args" const.
	* darwin-nat.c (darwin_attach): Make "args" const.
	* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_attach): Make "args" const.
	* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach): Make "args" const.
	* remote.c (extended_remote_attach_1, extended_remote_attach):
	Make "args" const.
	* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_attach>: Make "args" const.
	(find_default_attach): Likewise.
	* utils.c (parse_pid_to_attach): Make "args" const.
	* utils.h (parse_pid_to_attach): Update.
2014-06-04 11:11:43 -06:00
Tom Tromey 8eaff7cd13 convert to_thread_address_space to use TARGET_DEFAULT_FUNC
This converts to_thread_address_space to use TARGET_DEFAULT_FUNC.

This method was one of a handful not using the normal target
delegation approach.  The only rationale here is consistency in the
target vector.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 20.

2014-06-04  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* target-delegates.c: Rebuild.
	* target.c (default_thread_address_space): New function.
	(target_thread_address_space): Simplify.
	* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_thread_address_space>: Add
	TARGET_DEFAULT_FUNC.
2014-06-04 09:24:27 -06:00
Yao Qi 03388bb71c Tweak sss-bp-on-user-bp.exp
sss-bp-on-user-bp.c has an assumption that write to integer can be
compiled to a single instruction, which isn't true on some arch, such
as arm.  This test requires setting two breakpoints on two consecutive
instructions, so this patch is to get the address of the next
instruction via disassemble and set the 2nd breakpoint there.  This
approach is portable.

This patch fixes the fails in sss-bp-on-user-bp.exp on arm-none-abi
target.  There is no change in x86 test results.  I also revert the
patch to PR breakpoints/17000, and verified that the patched
sss-bp-on-user-bp.exp still trigger the fail on
x86-with-software-single-step.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-04  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp.c (main): Remove comments.
	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp.exp: Don't set breakpoint on
	"set bar break here".  Get the next instruction address and
	set breakpoint there.  Remove "bar break" from the regexp
	patterns.
2014-06-04 20:53:47 +08:00
Will Newton ac21917f6b bfd/elfnn-aarch64.c: Cleanup a couple of TLS functions
Add an assert and remove an unused line of code.

bfd/ChangeLog:

2014-06-04  Will Newton  <will.newton@linaro.org>

        * elfnn-aarch64.c (tpoff_base): Make test of tls_sec
	being non-NULL into an assert.
	(elfNN_aarch64_tls_relax): Remove unused code.
2014-06-04 09:35:08 +01:00
Doug Evans 1913f160bd * guile/scm-type.c (type_smob): Remove duplicate typedef. 2014-06-04 00:26:03 -07:00
Markus Metzger 70ad5bfff3 btrace: async support
Add support for async command execution.  This fixes the gdb.btrace tests.

	* record-btrace.c: Include event-loop.h and inf-loop.h.
	(record_btrace_resume_exec_dir)
	(record_btrace_async_inferior_event_handler)
	(record_btrace_handle_async_inferior_event): New.
	(record_btrace_open): Create async event handler.
	(record_btrace_close): Delete async event handler.
	(record_btrace_resume): Set record_btrace_resume_exec_dir,
	Mark async event handler.
	(record_btrace_execution_direction): New.
	(init_record_btrace_ops): Initialize to_execution_direction.
2014-06-04 09:09:21 +02:00
Hui Zhu 9f5a4cef68 Add system test before "set remote system-call-allowed 1" to fileio.exp
This patch is update version according to the discussion in
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2009-11/msg00090.html.
If test get the target doesn't support fileio system according to the
remote log.   It will set this test as "unsupported".

Before I made this patch, I want add a check before all of tests in this
file.  But I found that the target maybe support one call but not others.
For example: my target support Fwrite, Fopen and so on.  But not Fgettimeofday.
And it doesn't support Fsystem NULL but it support Fsystem not NULL.
So I think if we want to check target support fileio, we need check them
one by one.

2014-06-04  Nathan Sidwell  <nathan@codesourcery.com>
	    Hui Zhu  <hui@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/fileio.exp: Add test for shell not available as well as
	available.
	* gdb.base/fileio.c (test_system): Check for shell twice.
2014-06-04 14:38:16 +08:00
Yao Qi 90a45c4d5f Fix a regexp pattern in gdb.base/auto-connect-native-target.exp
When I test gdb head (for 7.8 release) on arm-none-eabi, I find the
following this failure, which are caused by the improper regexp
pattern in the test.

(gdb) help target native^M
Undefined target command: "native".  Try "help target".^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/auto-connect-native-target.exp: help target native

The space in front of "$gdb_prompt $" looks redundant, and this patch
is to remove it from the regexp pattern.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-04  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/auto-connect-native-target.exp: Remove redundant
	space from the regexp pattern.
2014-06-04 13:30:44 +08:00
Yao Qi 70017e417c Fix regexp pattern in gdb.base/default.exp
I see this failure on arm-none-eabi gdb testing.

target native^M
Undefined target command: "native".  Try "help target".^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/default.exp: target native

This patch is to update the regexp pattern to match "native" instead of
"child".

gdb/testsuite:

2014-06-04  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/default.exp: Replace "child" with "native" in
	regexp pattern.
2014-06-04 13:30:39 +08:00
Doug Evans b6210538cf * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_make_param_smob): Add ARI comment.
(gdbscm_make_parameter): Ditto.
2014-06-03 20:37:56 -07:00
Alan Modra d03cec6e44 daily update 2014-06-04 09:30:43 +09:30
Doug Evans a5b1fd2780 resize_section_table cleanup
* exec.c (exec_close_1): Call clear_section_table instead of
	resize_section_table.
	(clear_section_table): New function.
	(resize_section_table): Make static.  Rename arg num_added to
	adjustment.
	* exec.h (clear_section_table): Declare.
	(resize_section_table): Delete.
	* progspace.c (release_program_space): Call clear_section_table
	instead of resize_section_table.
2014-06-03 13:48:12 -07:00
DJ Delorie 33ac0ca144 * elf32-rx.c (rx_table_map): Use BFD_VMA_FMT for portability. 2014-06-03 16:23:21 -04:00
Joel Brobecker 1e47491b33 gdb/doc/python.texi: Fix reference to "Progspaces In Python".
A recent change broke the documentation build due to a think-o
in a reference.  Fixed thusly.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * python.texi (Xmethod API): Fix reference to "Progspaces In
        Python".

Tested by rebuilding all documentation formats.
2014-06-03 10:41:17 -07:00
Siva Chandra 0c6e92a52c Documentation of the xmethod support in GDB Python API.
* NEWS (Python Scripting): Add entry about the new xmethods
	feature.

	doc/
	*  python.texi (Xmethods In Python, XMethod API)
	(Writing an Xmethod): New nodes.
	(Python API): New menu entries "Xmethods In Python",
	"Xmethod API", "Writing an Xmethod".
2014-06-03 10:07:45 -07:00
Siva Chandra 883964a75e Xmethod support in Python.
* python/py-xmethods.c: New file.
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfile_object): New field 'xmethods'.
	(objfpy_dealloc): XDECREF on the new xmethods field.
	(objfpy_new, objfile_to_objfile_object): Initialize xmethods
	field.
	(objfpy_get_xmethods): New function.
	(objfile_getset): New entry 'xmethods'.
	* python/py-progspace.c (pspace_object): New field 'xmethods'.
	(pspy_dealloc): XDECREF on the new xmethods field.
	(pspy_new, pspace_to_pspace_object): Initialize	xmethods
	field.
	(pspy_get_xmethods): New function.
	(pspace_getset): New entry 'xmethods'.
	* python/python-internal.h: Add declarations for new functions.
	* python/python.c (_initialize_python): Invoke
	gdbpy_initialize_xmethods.
	* python/lib/gdb/__init__.py (xmethods): New
	attribute.
	* python/lib/gdb/xmethod.py: New file.
	* python/lib/gdb/command/xmethods.py: New file.

	testuite/
	* gdb.python/py-xmethods.cc: New testcase to test xmethods.
	* gdb.python/py-xmethods.exp: New tests to test xmethods.
	* gdb.python/py-xmethods.py: Python script supporting the
	new testcase and tests.
2014-06-03 10:03:07 -07:00
Siva Chandra 58992dc550 Missed ChangeLog entry in the previous commit. 2014-06-03 09:56:58 -07:00
Siva Chandra 233e8b28cf Lookup and invoke debug methods of C++ classes if they are the best match.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Call the xmethod if the
	best match method returned by find_overload_match is an xmethod.
	* valarith.c (value_x_binop, value_x_unop): Call the xmethod if
	the best matching operator returned by find_overload_match is an
	xmethod.
	* valops.c: #include "extension.h".
	(find_method_list): Add "fn_list" and "xm_worker_vec" arguments.
	Return void.  The list of matching source methods is returned in
	"fn_list" and a vector of matching debug method workers is
	returned in "xm_worker_vec".  Update all callers.
	(value_find_oload_method_list): Likewise.
	(find_oload_champ): Add "xm_worker_vec" parameter.  If it is
	non-NULL, then the index of the best matching method in this
	vector is returned.  Update all callers.
	(find_overload_match): Include xmethods while performing overload
	resolution.
2014-06-03 09:54:21 -07:00
Siva Chandra e81e7f5e38 Add xmethod interface to the extension language API.
* defs.h (enum lval_type): New enumerator "lval_xcallable".
	* extension-priv.h (struct extension_language_ops): Add the
	xmethod interface.
	* extension.c (new_xmethod_worker, clone_xmethod_worker,
	get_matching_xmethod_workers, get_xmethod_argtypes,
	invoke_xmethod, free_xmethod_worker,
	free_xmethod_worker_vec): New functions.
	* extension.h: #include "common/vec.h".
	New function declarations.
	(struct xmethod_worker): New struct.
	(VEC (xmethod_worker_ptr)): New vector type.
	(xmethod_worker_ptr): New typedef.
	(xmethod_worker_vec): Likewise.
	* gdbtypes.c (gdbtypes_post_init): Initialize "xmethod" field of
	builtin_type.
	* gdbtypes.h (enum type_code): New enumerator TYPE_CODE_XMETHOD.
	(struct builtin_type): New field "xmethod".
	* valarith.c (value_ptradd): Assert that the value argument is not
	lval_xcallable.
	* valops.c (value_must_coerce_to_target): Return 0 for
	lval_xcallable values.
	* value.c (struct value): New field XM_WORKER in the field
	LOCATION.
	(value_address, value_raw_address): Return 0 for lval_xcallable
	values.
	(set_value_address): Assert that the value is not an
	lval_xcallable.
	(value_free): Free the associated xmethod worker when freeing
	lval_xcallable values.
	(set_value_component_location): Assert that the WHOLE value is not
	lval_xcallable.
	(value_of_xmethod, call_xmethod): New functions.
	* value.h: Declare "struct xmethod_worker".
	Declare new functions value_of_xmethod, call_xmethod.
2014-06-03 09:49:26 -07:00
Joel Brobecker ef370185fc User breakpoint ignored if software-single-step at same location
with the following code...

    12    Nested;   -- break #1
    13    return I; -- break #2
    14  end;

(line 12 is a call to function Nested)

... we have noticed the following errorneous behavior on ppc-aix,
where, after having inserted a breakpoint at line 12 and line 13,
and continuing from the breakpoint at line 12, the program never
stops at line 13, running away until the program terminates:

    % gdb -q func
    (gdb) b func.adb:12
    Breakpoint 1 at 0x10000a24: file func.adb, line 12.
    (gdb) b func.adb:13
    Breakpoint 2 at 0x10000a28: file func.adb, line 13.
    (gdb) run
    Starting program: /[...]/func

    Breakpoint 1, func () at func.adb:12
    12        Nested;   -- break #1
    (gdb) c
    Continuing.
    [Inferior 1 (process 4128872) exited with code 02]

When resuming from the first breakpoint, GDB first tries to step out
of that first breakpoint.  We rely on software single-stepping on this
platform, and it just so happens that the address of the first
software single-step breakpoint is the same as the user's breakpoint
#2 (0x10000a28).  So, with infrun and target traces turned on (but
uninteresting traces snip'ed off), the "continue" operation looks like
this:

    (gdb) c
    ### First, we insert the user breakpoints (the second one is an internal
    ### breakpoint on __pthread_init). The first user breakpoint is not
    ### inserted as we need to step out of it first.
    target_insert_breakpoint (0x0000000010000a28, xxx) = 0
    target_insert_breakpoint (0x00000000d03f3800, xxx) = 0
    ### Then we proceed with the step-out-of-breakpoint...
    infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=1, current thread [process 15335610] at 0x10000a24
    ### That's when we insert the SSS breakpoints...
    target_insert_breakpoint (0x0000000010000a28, xxx) = 0
    target_insert_breakpoint (0x00000000100009ac, xxx) = 0
    ### ... then let the inferior resume...
    target_resume (15335610, continue, 0)
    infrun: wait_for_inferior ()
    target_wait (-1, status, options={}) = 15335610,   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
    infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
    infrun:   15335610 [process 15335610],
    infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
    infrun: infwait_normal_state
    infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
    infrun: stop_pc = 0x100009ac
    ### At this point, we stopped at the second SSS breakpoint...
    target_stopped_by_watchpoint () = 0
    ### We remove the SSS breakpoints...
    target_remove_breakpoint (0x0000000010000a28, xxx) = 0
    target_remove_breakpoint (0x00000000100009ac, xxx) = 0
    target_stopped_by_watchpoint () = 0
    ### We find that we're not done, so we resume....
    infrun: no stepping, continue
    ### And thus insert the user breakpoints again, except we're not
    ### inserting the second breakpoint?!?
    target_insert_breakpoint (0x0000000010000a24, xxx) = 0
    infrun: resume (step=0, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=0, current thread [process 15335610] at 0x100009ac
    target_resume (-1, continue, 0)
    infrun: prepare_to_wait
    target_wait (-1, status, options={}) = 15335610,   status->kind = exited, status = 2

What happens is that the removal of the software single-step
breakpoints effectively removed the breakpoint instruction from
inferior memory.  But because such breakpoints are inserted directly
as raw breakpoints rather than through the normal chain of
breakpoints, we fail to notice that one of the user breakpoints points
to the same address and that this user breakpoint is therefore
effectively un-inserted.  When resuming after the single-step, GDB
thinks that the user breakpoint is still inserted and therefore does
not need to insert it again.

This patch teaches the insert and remove routines of both regular and
raw breakpoints to be aware of each other.  Special care needs to be
applied in case the target supports evaluation of breakpoint
conditions or commands.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR breakpoints/17000
	* breakpoint.c (find_non_raw_software_breakpoint_inserted_here):
	New function, extracted from software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p.
	(software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Replace factored out code
	by call to find_non_raw_software_breakpoint_inserted_here.
	(bp_target_info_copy_insertion_state): New function.
	(bkpt_insert_location): Handle the case of a single-step
	breakpoint already inserted at the same address.
	(bkpt_remove_location): Handle the case of a single-step
	breakpoint still inserted at the same address.
	(deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint): Handle the case of non-raw
	breakpoint already inserted at the same address.
	(deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint): Handle the case of a
	non-raw breakpoint still inserted at the same address.
	(find_single_step_breakpoint): New function, extracted from
	single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p.
	(find_single_step_breakpoint): New function,
	factored out from single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p.
	(single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Reimplement.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	PR breakpoints/17000
	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp.exp: Remove kfail.
	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.exp: Remove kfail.

Tested on ppc-aix with AdaCore's testsuite.  Tested on x86_64-linux,
(native and gdbserver) with the official testsuite.  Also tested on
x86_64-linux through Pedro's branch enabling software single-stepping
on that platform (native and gdbserver).
2014-06-03 17:42:19 +01:00
Nick Clifton c32abae845 This is to fix a further problem with merging resource sections. It turns
out that the section is supposed to be page-aligned, but the newly merged
section was not being padded out to a page boundary.  This meant that when
the executable was stripped a badly sized .rsrc section was written out.

	PR ld/16807
	* peXXigen.c (rsrc_process_section): Page align the new contents
	befgore writing out.
2014-06-03 17:18:27 +01:00
Brad Mouring 1e2ccb612d gdb/source.c: Fix matching path substitute rule listing
The check for the source (or "from") directory snippet in listing
matching path substitution rules currently will not match anything
other than a direct match of the "from" field in a substitution rule,
resulting in the incorrect behavior below:

...
(gdb) set substitute-path /a/path /another/path
(gdb) show substitute-path
List of all source path substitution rules:
  `/a/path' -> `/another/path'.
(gdb) show substitute-path /a/path/to/a/file.ext
Source path substitution rule matching `/a/path/to/a/file.ext':
(gdb) show substitute-path /a/path
Source path substitution rule matching `/a/path':
  `/a/path' -> `/another/path'.
...

This change effects the following behavior by (sanely) checking
with the length of the "from" portion of a rule and ensuring that
the next character of the path considered for substitution is a path
delimiter (or NULL). With this change, the following behavior is
garnered:
...
(gdb) set substitute-path /a/path /another/path
(gdb) show substitute-path
List of all source path substitution rules:
  `/a/path' -> `/another/path'.
(gdb) show substitute-path /a/path/to/a/file.ext
Source path substitution rule matching `/a/path/to/a/file.ext':
  `/a/path' -> `/another/path'.
(gdb) show substitute-path /a/pathological/case/that/should/fail.err
Source path substitution rule matching `/a/pathological/case/that/should/fail.err':
(gdb)

Also included is a couple of tests added to subst.exp to verify
this behavior in the test suite.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * source.c (show_substitute_path_command): Fix display of matching
        substitution rules.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/subst.exp: Add tests to verify partial path matching
        output.

This was tested on x86_64 Linux.
2014-06-03 07:17:06 -07:00
Pedro Alves c6ec5ab23a Skip sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.exp on remote hardware step targets.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-06-03  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.exp: Skip if testing with a remote
	target that doesn't use software single-stepping.
2014-06-03 14:04:48 +01:00
Gary Benson d3448d8523 This patch replaces a call to cplus_demangle with a call to
gdb_demangle.  This change was included in an RFC from last
March [1] but omitted from the eventual commit.

[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-03/msg00235.html

2014-06-03  Gary Benson  <gbenson@redhat.com>

	* gnu-v2-abi.c (gnuv2_value_rtti_type): Use gdb_demangle.
2014-06-03 13:49:20 +01:00
Pedro Alves 835c559fd5 PR breakpoints/17000: user breakpoint not inserted if software-single-step at same location - test
GDB gets confused when removing a software single-step breakpoint that
is at the same address as another breakpoint.  Add another kfailed
test.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-06-03  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR breakpoints/17000
	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.exp: New file.
2014-06-03 12:46:46 +01:00
Doug Evans 06eb158633 Add parameter support for Guile.
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_GUILE_OBS): Add scm-param.o.
	(SUBDIR_GUILE_SRCS): Add scm-param.c.
	(scm-param.o): New rule.
	* guile/guile-internal.h (gdbscm_gc_dup_argv): Declare.
	(gdbscm_misc_error): Declare.
	(gdbscm_canonicalize_command_name): Declare.
	(gdbscm_scm_to_host_string): Declare.
	(gdbscm_scm_from_host_string): Declare.
	(gdbscm_initialize_parameters): Declare.
	* guile/guile.c (initialize_gdb_module): Call
	gdbscm_initialize_parameters.
	* guile/lib/gdb.scm: Export parameter symbols.
	* guile/scm-cmd.c (gdbscm_canonicalize_command_name): Renamed from
	cmdscm_canonicalize_name and made public.  All callers updated.
	* guile/scm-exception.c (gdbscm_misc_error): New function.
	* guile/scm-param.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-string.c (gdbscm_scm_to_string): Add comments.
	(gdbscm_scm_to_host_string): New function.
	(gdbscm_scm_from_host_string): New function.
	* scm-utils.c (gdbscm_gc_dup_argv): New function.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.guile/scm-parameter.exp: New file.

	doc/
	* guile.texi (Guile API): Add entry for Parameters In Guile.
	(GDB Scheme Data Types): Mention <gdb:parameter> object.
	(Parameters In Guile): New node.
2014-06-03 01:58:15 -07:00
Nick Clifton aef392c4ae Fix a small but in the emulation of the MSP430 hardware multiply.
* msp430-sim.c (get_op): Handle reads of low result register when
	in MAC mode.
	(put_op): Copy MAC result into result words.
	Handle writes to the low result register.
2014-06-03 09:00:57 +01:00
Nick Clifton 9f44512958 Fix the disassembly of MSP430 extended index addressing mode.
* msp430-dis.c (msp430_doubleoperand): Use extension_word to
	decide when extended addressing is being used.
2014-06-03 08:54:04 +01:00
Nick Clifton 69227609dc Change -mz command line option to -my for the MSP430 port of GAS.
* config/tc-msp430.c (OPTION_WARN_INTR_NOPS): Use y instead of z.
	(OPTION_NO_WARN_INTR_NOPS): Use Y instead of Z.
	* doc/c-msp430.texi: Update command line option description.

	* gas/msp430/bad.d: Use -my not -mz.
2014-06-03 08:49:02 +01:00
Nick Clifton 9bc24099c8 If the binutils testsuite is run on an installed toolchain the tests involving
the bfdtest1 and bfdtest2 executables will fail because they are not installed.
 Since the programs only exist to be used by the testsuite it does not make sense
to install them, so instead I have chosen to create a patch which skips the tests
when they are not present.

	* binutils-all/ar.exp: Skip tests involving bfdtest1 and bfdtest2
	if these executables are not present.
2014-06-03 08:40:39 +01:00
Doug Evans e698b8c41c Add command support for Guile.
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_GUILE_OBS): Add scm-cmd.o.
	(SUBDIR_GUILE_SRCS): Add scm-cmd.c.
	(scm-cmd.o): New rule.
	* guile/guile-internal.h (gdbscm_gc_xstrdup): Declare.
	(gdbscm_user_error_p): Declare.
	(gdbscm_parse_command_name): Declare.
	(gdbscm_valid_command_class_p): Declare.
	(gdbscm_initialize_commands): Declare.
	* guile/guile.c (initialize_gdb_module): Call
	gdbscm_initialize_commands.
	* guile/lib/gdb.scm: Export command symbols.
	* guile/lib/gdb/init.scm (%exception-keys): Add gdb:user-error.
	(throw-user-error): New function.
	* guile/scm-cmd.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-exception.c (user_error_symbol): New static global.
	(gdbscm_user_error_p): New function.
	(gdbscm_initialize_exceptions): Set user_error_symbol.
	* scm-utils.c (gdbscm_gc_xstrdup): New function.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.guile/scm-cmd.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-cmd.exp: New file.

	doc/
	* guile.texi (Guile API): Add entry for Commands In Guile.
	(Basic Guile) <parse-and-eval>: Add reference.
	(Basic Guile) <string->argv>: Move definition to Commands In Guile.
	(GDB Scheme Data Types): Mention <gdb:command> object.
	(Commands In Guile): New node.
2014-06-03 00:29:49 -07:00