Nowadays, if we build GDB with -fsanitize=address, we can get the asan
error below,
(gdb) quit
=================================================================
==9723==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: alloc-dealloc-mismatch (malloc vs operator delete) on 0x60200003bf70
#0 0x7f88f3837527 in operator delete(void*) (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.1+0x55527)
#1 0xac8e13 in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<void (*)()>::deallocate(void (**)(), unsigned long) /usr/include/c++/4.9/ext/new_allocator.h:110
#2 0xac8cc2 in __gnu_cxx::__alloc_traits<std::allocator<void (*)()> >::deallocate(std::allocator<void (*)()>&, void (**)(), unsigned long) /usr/include/c++/4.9/ext/alloc_traits.h:185
....
0x60200003bf70 is located 0 bytes inside of 8-byte region [0x60200003bf70,0x60200003bf78)
allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f88f38367ef in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.1+0x547ef)
#1 0xbd2762 in operator new(unsigned long) /home/yao/SourceCode/gnu/gdb/git/gdb/common/new-op.c:42
#2 0xac8edc in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<void (*)()>::allocate(unsigned long, void const*) /usr/include/c++/4.9/ext/new_allocator.h:104
#3 0xac8d81 in __gnu_cxx::__alloc_traits<std::allocator<void (*)()> >::allocate(std::allocator<void (*)()>&, unsigned long) /usr/include/c++/4.9/ext/alloc_traits.h:182
The reason for this is that we override operator new but don't override
operator delete. This patch does the override if the code is NOT
compiled with asan.
gdb:
2016-10-25 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
PR gdb/20716
* common/new-op.c (__has_feature): New macro.
Don't override operator new if asan is used.
This patch replaces many (but not all) uses of
make_cleanup_restore_integer with a simple RAII-based template class.
It also removes the similar restore_execution_direction cleanup in
favor of this new class. Subsequent patches will replace other
similar cleanups with this class.
The class is typically instantiated using make_scoped_restore. This
allows for template argument deduction.
2016-10-21 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* common/scoped_restore.h: New file.
* utils.h: Include scoped_restore.h.
* top.c (execute_command_to_string): Use scoped_restore.
* python/python.c (python_interactive_command): Use
scoped_restore.
(python_command, execute_gdb_command): Likewise.
* printcmd.c (do_one_display): Use scoped_restore.
* mi/mi-main.c (exec_continue): Use scoped_restore.
* mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_assign): Use scoped_restore.
* linux-fork.c (checkpoint_command): Use scoped_restore.
* infrun.c (restore_execution_direction): Remove.
(fetch_inferior_event): Use scoped_restore.
* compile/compile.c (compile_file_command): Use
scoped_restore.
(compile_code_command, compile_print_command): Likewise.
* cli/cli-script.c (execute_user_command): Use
scoped_restore.
(while_command, if_command, script_from_file): Likewise.
* arm-tdep.c (arm_insert_single_step_breakpoint): Use
scoped_restore.
My gnulib fix at:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2015-11/msg00010.html
was merged upstream meanwhile and our gnulib copy now includes it.
As a concidence, Kevin was telling me today that these macros are
causing a build problem on FreeBSD:
common/common-defs.h:47:0: error: "__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS" redefined [-Werror]
#define __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS 1
/usr/include/sys/cdefs.h:408:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
#define __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS
(and a similar error for __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS)
The problem seems to be that we should be defining these input macros
before including any system header, but, we're not.
So let's just revert e063da6790 ([C++] Define __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS
/ __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS for stdint.h). If this causes a problem
somewhere, we can re-define the macros higher up in the file, before
system headers are included.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-defs.h (__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS)
(__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS): Delete.
Many make_cleanup uses in the code base are best eliminated by using a
"owning" smart pointer to manage ownership of the resource
automatically.
The question is _which_ smart pointer.
GDB currently supports building with a C++03 compiler. We have
std::auto_ptr in C++03, but, as is collective wisdom by now, that's
too easy to misuse, and has therefore been deprecated in C++11 and
finally removed in C++17.
It'd be nice to be able to use std::unique_ptr instead, which is the
modern, safe std::auto_ptr replacement in C++11.
In addition to extra safety -- moving (i.e., transfer of ownership of
the managed pointer between smart pointers) must be explicit --
std::unique_ptr has (among others) one nice feature that std::auto_ptr
doesn't --- ability to specify a custom deleter as template parameter.
In gdb's context, that allows easily creating a smart pointer for
memory allocated with xmalloc -- the smart pointer then knows to
release with xfree instead of delete. This is particularly
interesting when managing objects allocated in C libraries, and also,
for C++-fying parts of GDB that interact with other parts that still
return objects allocated with xmalloc.
Since std::unique_ptr's API is quite nice, and eventually we'd like to
move to C++11, this patch adds a C++03-compatible smart pointer that
exposes the subset of the std::unique_ptr API that we're interested
in. An advantage is that whenever we start requiring C++11, we won't
have to learn a new API. Meanwhile, this allows continuing to support
building with a C++03 compiler.
Since C++03 doesn't support rvalue references (boost gets close to
emulating them, but it's not fully transparent to user code), the
C++03 std::unique_ptr emulation here doesn't try hard to prevent
accidentally moving, which is where most of complication of a more
thorough emulation would be. Instead, we rely on the fact that GDB
will be usually compiled with a C++11 compiler, and use the real
std::unique_ptr in that case to catch such accidental moves. IOW, the
goal here is to allow code that would be correct using std::unique_ptr
to be equally correct in C++03 mode, and, just as efficient.
The C++03 version was originally based on GCC 7.0's std::auto_ptr and
then heavily customized to behave more like C++11's std::unique_ptr:
- Support for custom (stateless) deleters. (Support for stateful
deleters could be added, if necessary.)
- unique_ptr<T[]> partial specialization (auto_ptr<T> does not know
to use delete[]).
- Support for all of 'ptr != NULL', 'ptr == NULL' and 'if (ptr)'
using the safe bool idiom to emulate C++11's explicit bool
operator.
- There's no nullptr in C++03, so this allows initialization and
assignment from NULL instead (std::auto_ptr allows neither).
- Variable names un-uglified (ie., no leading __ prefix everywhere).
- Formatting made to follow GDB's coding conventions, including
comment style.
- Converting "move" constructors done differently in order to truly
support:
unique_ptr<Derived> func_returning_unique_ptr (.....);
...
unique_ptr<Base> ptr = func_returning_unique_ptr (.....);
At this point, it no longer shares much at all with the original file,
but, that's the history.
See comments in the code to find out more.
I thought of putting the "emulation" / shim in the "std" namespace, so
that when we start requiring C++11 at some point, no actual changes to
users of the smart pointer throughout would be necessary. Putting
things in the std namespace is technically undefined, however in
practice it doesn't cause any issue with any compiler. However,
thinking that people might be confused with seeing std::unique_ptr and
thinking that we're actually requiring C++11 already, I put the new
types in the "gdb" namespace instead.
For managing xmalloc pointers, this adds a gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<T>
"specialization" with a custom xfree deleter.
No actual use of any smart pointer is introduced in this patch.
That'll be done in following patches.
Tested (along with the rest of the series) on:
- NetBSD 5.1 (gcc70 on the compile farm), w/ gcc 4.1.3
- x86-64 Fedora 23, gcc 5.3.1 (gnu++03)
- x86-64 Fedora 23, and gcc 7.0 (gnu++14)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-defs.h: Include "gdb_unique_ptr.h".
* common/gdb_unique_ptr.h: New.
gdb/ChangeLog
2016-10-14 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
* common/common-defs.h [HAVE_STRINGS_H]: Include strings.h if
available, to get prototypes of 'strcasecmp' and 'strncasecmp'.
If xmalloc fails allocating memory, usually because something tried a
huge allocation, like xmalloc(-1) or some such, GDB asks the user what
to do:
.../src/gdb/utils.c:1079: internal-error: virtual memory exhausted.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
If the user says "n", that throws a QUIT exception, which is caught by
one of the multiple CATCH(RETURN_MASK_ALL) blocks somewhere up the
stack.
The default implementations of operator new / operator new[] call
malloc directly, and on memory allocation failure throw
std::bad_alloc. Currently, if that happens, since nothing catches it,
the exception escapes out of main, and GDB aborts from unhandled
exception.
This patch replaces the default operator new variants with versions
that, just like xmalloc:
#1 - Raise an internal-error on memory allocation failure.
#2 - Throw a QUIT gdb_exception, so that the exact same CATCH blocks
continue handling memory allocation problems.
A minor complication of #2 is that operator new can _only_ throw
std::bad_alloc, or something that extends it:
void* operator new (std::size_t size) throw (std::bad_alloc);
That means that if we let a gdb QUIT exception escape from within
operator new, the C++ runtime aborts due to unexpected exception
thrown.
So to bridge the gap, this patch adds a new gdb_quit_bad_alloc
exception type that inherits both std::bad_alloc and gdb_exception,
and throws _that_.
If we decide that we should be catching memory allocation errors in
fewer places than all the places we currently catch them (everywhere
we use RETURN_MASK_ALL currently), then we could change operator new
to throw plain std::bad_alloc then. But I'm considering such a change
as separate matter from this one -- it'd make sense to do the same to
xmalloc at the same time, for instance.
Meanwhile, this allows using new/new[] instead of xmalloc/XNEW/etc.
without losing the "virtual memory exhausted" internal-error
safeguard.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 23.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-09-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/new-op.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add common/new-op.o.
(new-op.o): New rule.
* common/common-exceptions.h: Include <new>.
(struct gdb_quit_bad_alloc): New type.
* common/new-op.c: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-09-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/new-op.c.
(OBS): Add common/new-op.o.
(new-op.o): New rule.
Ref: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-09/msg00203.html
The std::{min,max} patch caused build failures when configuring GDB
with with --disable-nls and using GCC 4.1.
The reason is this bit in common/gdb_locale.h:
#ifdef ENABLE_NLS
...
#else
# define gettext(Msgid) (Msgid)
...
#endif
This causes problems if the <libintl.h> header is first included at
any point after "gdb_locale.h".
Specifically, the gettext&co declarations in libintl.h:
extern char *gettext (__const char *__msgid)
__THROW __attribute_format_arg__ (1);
end up broken after preprocessing:
extern char *(__const char *__msgid)
throw () __attribute__ ((__format_arg__ (1)));
After the std::min/std::max change to include <algorithm>, this now
happens with at least the GCC 4.1 copy of <algorithm>, which includes
<libintl.h> via <bits/stl_algobase.h>, <iosfwd>, and
<bits/c++locale.h>.
The fix is to simply remove the troublesome *gettext and *textdomain
macros, leaving only the _ and N_ ones.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-09-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/gdb_locale.h [!ENABLE_NLS] (gettext, dgettext, dcgettext,
textdomain, bindtextdomain): Delete macros.
* main.c (captured_main) [!ENABLE_NLS]: Skip bintextdomain and
textdomain calls.
The ARI complains about this new file:
common/signals-state-save-restore.c:46: warning: gettext: All messages should be marked up with _.
common/signals-state-save-restore.c:59: warning: gettext: All messages should be marked up with _.
common/signals-state-save-restore.c:87: warning: gettext: All messages should be marked up with _.
common/signals-state-save-restore.c:92: warning: gettext: All messages should be marked up with _.
Since these are untranslatable strings, use () instead of _().
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-08-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/signals-state-save-restore.c
(save_original_signals_state, restore_original_signals_state):
Wrap perror_with_name arguments with '()'.
gdb's (or gdbserver's) own signal handling should not interfere with
the signal dispositions their spawned children inherit. However, it
currently does. For example, some paths in gdb cause SIGPIPE to be
set to SIG_IGN, and as consequence, the child starts with SIGPIPE to
set to SIG_IGN too, even though gdb was started with SIGPIPE set to
SIG_DFL.
This is because the exec family of functions does not reset the signal
disposition of signals that are set to SIG_IGN:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xsh/execve.html
Signals set to the default action (SIG_DFL) in the calling process
image are set to the default action in the new process
image. Signals set to be ignored (SIG_IGN) by the calling process
image are set to be ignored by the new process image. Signals set to
be caught by the calling process image are set to the default action
in the new process image (see <signal.h>).
And neither does it reset signal masks or flags.
In order to be transparent, when spawning new child processes to debug
(with "run", etc.), reset signal actions and mask back to what was
originally inherited from gdb/gdbserver's parent, just before execing
the target program to debug.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/18653
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add
common/signals-state-save-restore.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/signals-state-save-restore.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Add signals-state-save-restore.o.
(signals-state-save-restore.o): New rule.
* configure: Regenerate.
* fork-child.c: Include "signals-state-save-restore.h".
(fork_inferior): Call restore_original_signals_state.
* main.c: Include "signals-state-save-restore.h".
(captured_main): Call save_original_signals_state.
* common/common.m4: Add sigaction to AC_CHECK_FUNCS checks.
* common/signals-state-save-restore.c: New file.
* common/signals-state-save-restore.h: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/18653
* Makefile.in (OBS): Add signals-state-save-restore.o.
(signals-state-save-restore.o): New rule.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* linux-low.c: Include "signals-state-save-restore.h".
(linux_create_inferior): Call
restore_original_signals_state.
* server.c: Include "dispositions-save-restore.h".
(captured_main): Call save_original_signals_state.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/18653
* gdb.base/signals-state-child.c: New file.
* gdb.base/signals-state-child.exp: New file.
* gdb.gdb/selftest.exp (do_steps_and_nexts): Add new pattern.
FreeBSD's librt uses SIGLIBRT as an internal signal to implement
SIGEV_THREAD sigevent notifications. Similar to SIGLWP or SIGCANCEL
this signal should be passed through to child processes by default.
include/ChangeLog:
* signals.def: Add GDB_SIGNAL_LIBRT.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/signals.c (gdb_signal_from_host): Handle SIGLIBRT.
(do_gdb_signal_to_host): Likewise.
* infrun.c (_initialize_infrun): Pass GDB_SIGNAL_LIBRT through to
programs.
* proc-events.c (signal_table): Add entry for SIGLIBRT.
Eclipse CDT now supports enabling execution recording using two methods
(full and btrace) and both formats for btrace (bts and pt). In the
event that recording is enabled behind the back of the GUI (by the user
on the command line, or a script), we need to know which method/format
are being used, so it can be correctly reflected in the interface. This
patch adds this information to the =record-started async record.
Before:
=record-started,thread-group="i1"
After:
=record-started,thread-group="i1",method="btrace",format="bts"
=record-started,thread-group="i1",method="btrace",format="pt"
=record-started,thread-group="i1",method="full"
The "format" field is only present when the current method supports
multiple formats (only the btrace method as of now).
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Mention the new fields in =record-started.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_format_short_string): New function
declaration.
* common/btrace-common.c (btrace_format_short_string): New
function.
* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_record_changed): Output method and format
fields in the =record-started record.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_open): Adapt record_changed
notification.
* record-full.c (record_full_open): Likewise.
* record.c (cmd_record_stop): Likewise.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Async Records): Document method and
format fields in =record-started.
* observer.texi (record_changed): Add method and format
parameters.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.mi/mi-record-changed.exp: Adjust =record-started output
matching.
The exceptions-across-readline issue was fixed by the previous commit.
Let's try this again.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_TRY): Remove mention of
the foreign frames issue.
[__cplusplus] (GDB_XCPT): Define as GDB_XCPT_TRY.
If we map GDB'S TRY/CATCH macros to C++ try/catch, GDB breaks on
systems where readline isn't built with exceptions support. The
problem is that readline calls into GDB through the callback
interface, and if GDB's callback throws a C++ exception/error, the
system unwinder won't manage to unwind past the readline frame, and
ends up calling std::terminate(), which aborts the process:
(gdb) whatever-command-that-causes-an-error
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR'
Aborted
$
This went unnoticed for so long because:
- the x86-64 ABI requires -fasynchronous-unwind-tables, making it
possible for exceptions to cross readline with no special handling.
But e.g., on ARM or AIX, unless you build readline with
-fexceptions, you trip on the problem.
- TRY/CATCH was mapped to setjmp/longjmp, even in C++ mode, until
quite recently.
The fix is to catch and save any GDB exception that is thrown inside
the GDB readline callback, and then once the callback returns back to
the GDB code that called into readline in the first place, rethrow the
saved GDB exception.
This is similar in spirit to how we catch/map GDB exceptions at the
GDB/Python and GDB/Guile API boundaries.
The next question is then: if we intercept all exceptions within GDB's
readline callback, should we simply return normally to readline? The
callback prototype has no way to signal an error back to readline (*).
The answer is no -- if we return normally, we'll be returning to a
loop inside rl_callback_read_char that continues processing pending
input, calling into GDB again, redisplaying the prompt, etc. Thus if
we want to error out of rl_callback_read_char, we need to long jump
across it, just like we always did before TRY/CATCH were ever mapped
to C++ exceptions.
My first approach built a specialized API to handle this, with a
couple macros to hide the setjmp/longjmp and the struct gdb_exception
saving/rethrowing.
However, I realized that we need to:
- Handle multiple active rl_callback_read_char invocations. If,
while processing input something triggers a secondary prompt, we
end up in a nested rl_callback_read_char call, through
gdb_readline_wrapper.
- Propagate a struct gdb_exception along with the longjmp.
... and that this is exactly what the setjmp/longjmp-based TRY/CATCH
does.
So the fix makes the setjmp/longjmp TRY/CATCH always available under
new TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ aliases, even when TRY/CATCH is mapped to C++
try/catch, and then uses TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ to propagate GDB
exceptions across the readline callback.
This turns out to be a much better looking fix than my bespoke API
attempt, even. We'll probably be able to simplify TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ
when we finally get rid of TRY/CATCH all over the tree, but until
then, this reuse seems quite nice for avoiding a second parallel
setjmp/longjmp mechanism.
(*) - maybe we could propose a readline API change, but we still need
to handle current readline, anyway.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-22 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.c (enum catcher_state, struct catcher)
(current_catcher): Define in C++ mode too.
(exceptions_state_mc_catch): Call throw_exception_sjlj instead of
throw_exception.
(throw_exception_sjlj, throw_exception_cxx): New functions,
factored out from throw_exception.
(throw_exception): Reimplement.
* common/common-exceptions.h (exceptions_state_mc_init)
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter)
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter_1, exceptions_state_mc_catch):
Declare in C++ mode too.
(TRY): Rename to ...
(TRY_SJLJ): ... this.
(CATCH): Rename to ...
(CATCH_SJLJ): ... this.
(END_CATCH): Rename to ...
(END_CATCH_SJLJ): ... this.
[GDB_XCPT == GDB_XCPT_SJMP] (TRY, CATCH, END_CATCH): Map to SJLJ
equivalents.
(throw_exception): Update comments.
(throw_exception_sjlj): Declare.
* event-top.c (gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper): Extend intro
comment. Wrap body in TRY_SJLJ/CATCH_SJLJ and rethrow any
intercepted exception.
(gdb_rl_callback_handler): New function.
(gdb_rl_callback_handler_install): Always install
gdb_rl_callback_handler as readline callback.
We don't currently handle the case of gdb's readline callback throwing
gdb C++ exceptions across a readline that wasn't built with
-fexceptions. The end result is:
(gdb) whatever-command-that-causes-an-error
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR'
Aborted
$
Until that is fixed, revert back to sjlj-based exceptions again.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-21 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_TRY): Add comment.
(GDB_XCPT): Always define as GDB_XCPT_SJMP.
The current MPX target descriptions assume that MPX is always combined
with AVX, however that's not correct. We can have machines with MPX
and without AVX; or machines with AVX and without MPX.
This patch adds new target descriptions for machines that support
both MPX and AVX, as duplicates of the existing MPX descriptions.
The following commit will remove AVX from the MPX-only descriptions.
2016-04-16 Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>
gdb/ChangeLog:
* amd64-linux-tdep.c (features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.c):
New include.
(amd64_linux_core_read_description): Add case for
X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
(_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Call initialize_tdesc_amd64_avx_mpx_linux.
* amd64-linux-tdep.h (tdesc_amd64_avx_mpx_linux): New definition.
* amd64-tdep.c (features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.c): New include.
(amd64_target_description): Add case for X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
(_initialize_amd64_tdep): Call initialize_tdesc_amd64_avx_mpx.
* common/x86-xstate.h (X86_XSTATE_MPX_MASK): Remove AVX bits.
(X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK): New case.
* features/Makefile (i386/i386-avx-mpx, i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux)
(i386/amd64-avx-mpx, i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux): New rules.
(i386/i386-avx-mpx-expedite, i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux-expedite)
(i386/amd64-avx-mpx-expedite, i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux-expedite):
New expedites.
* i386-linux-tdep.c (features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.c): New
include.
(i386_linux_core_read_description): Add case
X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
(_initialize_i386_linux_tdep): Call
initialize_tdesc_i386_avx_mpx_linux.
* i386-linux-tdep.h (tdesc_i386_avx_mpx_linux): New include.
* i386-tdep.c (features/i386/i386-avx-mpx.c): New include.
(i386_target_description): Add case for X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_read_description): Add case for
X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.xml: New file.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.xml: New file.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx.xml: New file.
* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.xml: New file.
* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.c: Generated.
* features/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.c: Generated.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.c: Generated.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx.c: Generated.
* regformats/i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.dat: Generated.
* regformats/i386/amd64-avx-mpx.dat: Generated.
* regformats/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.dat: Generated.
* regformats/i386/i386-avx-mpx.dat: Generated.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (clean): Add removal for i386-avx-mpx.c,
i386-avx-mpx-linux.c, amd64-avx-mpx.c and amd64-avx-mpx-linux.c.
(i386-avx-mpx.c, i386-avx-mpx-linux.c, amd64-avx-mpx.c)
(amd64-avx-mpx-linux.c): New rules.
(amd64-avx-mpx-linux-ipa.o, i386-avx-mpx-linux-ipa.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (srv_i386_regobj): Add i386-avx-mpx.o.
(srv_i386_linux_regobj): Add i386-avx-mpx-linux.o.
(srv_amd64_regobj): Add amd64-avx-mpx.o.
(srv_amd64_linux_regobj): Add amd64-avx-mpx-linux.o.
(srv_i386_xmlfiles): Add i386/i386-avx-mpx.xml.
(srv_amd64_xmlfiles): Add i386/amd64-avx-mpx.xml.
(srv_i386_linux_xmlfiles): Add i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.xml.
(srv_amd64_linux_xmlfiles): Add i386/amd64-avx-mpx-linux.xml.
(ipa_i386_linux_regobj): Add i386-avx-mpx-linux-ipa.o.
(ipa_amd64_linux_regobj): Add amd64-avx-mpx-linux-ipa.o.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_read_description): Add case for
X86_XSTATE_AVX_MPX_MASK.
(x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): Add cases for avx_mpx.
(initialize_low_arch): Call init_registers_amd64_avx_mpx_linux and
init_registers_i386_avx_mpx_linux.
* linux-i386-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): Add case for avx_mpx.
(initialize_low_tracepoint): Call
init_registers_i386_avx_mpx_linux.
* linux-amd64-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): Add case for avx_mpx.
(initialize_low_tracepoint): Call
init_registers_amd64_avx_mpx_linux.
* linux-x86-tdesc.h (X86_TDESC_AVX_MPX): New enum value.
(init_registers_amd64_avx_mpx_linux, tdesc_amd64_avx_mpx_linux)
(init_registers_i386_avx_mpx_linux, tdesc_i386_avx_mpx_linux): New
declarations.
Now that we don't ever throw GDB exceptions from signal handlers [1],
we can switch back to having TRY/CATCH implemented in terms of C++
try/catch instead of sigjmp/longjmp.
[1] - https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-03/msg00351.html
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 23, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_TRY): Update comment.
[__cplusplus] (GDB_XCPT): Define as GDB_XCPT_TRY.
Now that we don't ever throw GDB exceptions from signal handlers [1],
we can switch to have TRY/CATCH implemented in terms of plain
setjmp/longjmp instead of sigsetjmp/siglongjmp.
In https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-02/msg00114.html, Yichun
Zhang mentions a 11%/14%+ speedup in his GDB python scripts with a
patch that did something similar to only a specific set of TRY/CATCH
calls.
[1] - https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-03/msg00351.html
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 23, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.c (struct catcher) <buf>: Now a
'jmp_buf' instead of SIGJMP_BUF.
(exceptions_state_mc_init): Change return type to 'jmp_buf'.
(throw_exception): Use longjmp instead of SIGLONGJMP.
* common/common-exceptions.h: Include <setjmp.h> instead of
"gdb_setjmp.h".
(exceptions_state_mc_init): Change return type to 'jmp_buf'.
[GDB_XCPT == GDB_XCPT_SJMP] (TRY): Use setjmp instead of
SIGSETJMP.
* cp-support.c: Include "gdb_setjmp.h".
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-03-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/buffer.h (buffer_grow_char): New function.
* top.c: Include buffer.h.
(gdb_readline_no_editing): Rename 'prompt_arg' parameter to
'prompt'. Use struct buffer instead of xrealloc.
Add a new function to print a thread ID, in the style of paddress,
plongest, etc. and adjust all CLI-reachable paths to use it.
This gives us a single place to tweak to print inferior-qualified
thread IDs later:
- [Switching to thread 1 (Thread 0x7ffff7fc2740 (LWP 8155))]
+ [Switching to thread 1.1 (Thread 0x7ffff7fc2740 (LWP 8155))]
etc., though for now, this has no user-visible change.
No regressions on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-01-13 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (remove_threaded_breakpoints)
(print_one_breakpoint_location): Use print_thread_id.
* btrace.c (btrace_enable, btrace_disable, btrace_teardown)
(btrace_fetch, btrace_clear): Use print_thread_id.
* common/print-utils.c (CELLSIZE): Delete.
(get_cell): Rename to ...
(get_print_cell): ... this and made extern. Adjust call callers.
Adjust to use PRINT_CELL_SIZE.
* common/print-utils.h (get_print_cell): Declare.
(PRINT_CELL_SIZE): New.
* gdbthread.h (print_thread_id): Declare.
* infcmd.c (signal_command): Use print_thread_id.
* inferior.c (print_inferior): Use print_thread_id.
* infrun.c (handle_signal_stop)
(insert_exception_resume_breakpoint)
(insert_exception_resume_from_probe)
(print_signal_received_reason): Use print_thread_id.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_info)
(record_btrace_resume_thread, record_btrace_cancel_resume)
(record_btrace_step_thread, record_btrace_wait): Use
print_thread_id.
* thread.c (thread_apply_all_command): Use print_thread_id.
(print_thread_id): New function.
(thread_apply_command): Use print_thread_id.
(thread_command, thread_find_command, do_captured_thread_select):
Use print_thread_id.
The GNU Coding Standards say:
"Please do not include any trademark acknowledgements in GNU
software packages or documentation."
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-01-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Remove use of the registered trademark symbol throughout.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-01-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Remove use of the registered trademark symbol throughout.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2016-01-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Remove use of the registered trademark symbol throughout.
This patch teaches GDBServer how to software single step on ARM
linux by sharing code with GDB.
The arm_get_next_pcs function in GDB is now shared with GDBServer. So
that GDBServer can use the function to return the possible addresses of
the next PC.
A proper shared context was also needed so that we could share the code,
this context is described in the arm_get_next_pcs structure.
Testing :
No regressions, tested on ubuntu 14.04 ARMv7 and x86.
With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb }
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Append arm-get-next-pcs.o,
arm-linux.o.
(ALLDEPFILES): Append arm-get-next-pcs.c, arm-linux.c
(arm-linux.o): New rule.
(arm-get-next-pcs.o): New rule.
* arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: New file.
* arch/arm-get-next-pcs.h: New file.
* arch/arm-linux.h: New file.
* arch/arm-linux.c: New file.
* arm.c: Include common-regcache.c.
(thumb_advance_itstate): Moved from arm-tdep.c.
(arm_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(thumb_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(thumb2_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(shifted_reg_val): Likewise.
* arm.h (submask): Move macro from arm-tdep.h
(bit): Likewise.
(bits): Likewise.
(sbits): Likewise.
(BranchDest): Likewise.
(thumb_advance_itstate): Moved declaration from arm-tdep.h
(arm_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(thumb_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(thumb2_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(shifted_reg_val): Likewise.
* arm-linux-tdep.c: Include arch/arm.h, arch/arm-get-next-pcs.h
arch/arm-linux.h.
(arm_linux_get_next_pcs_ops): New struct.
(ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0, ARM_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT,
ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_SIGINFO, ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT,
ARM_NEW_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT, ARM_NEW_SIGFRAME_MAGIC): Move stack
layout defines to arch/arm-linux.h.
(arm_linux_sigreturn_next_pc_offset): Move to arch/arm-linux.c.
(arm_linux_software_single_step): Adjust for arm_get_next_pcs
implementation.
* arm-tdep.c: Include arch/arm-get-next-pcs.h.
(arm_get_next_pcs_ops): New struct.
(submask): Move macro to arm.h.
(bit): Likewise.
(bits): Likewise.
(sbits): Likewise.
(BranchDest): Likewise.
(thumb_instruction_changes_pc): Move to arm.c
(thumb2_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(arm_instruction_changes_pc): Likewise.
(shifted_reg_val): Likewise.
(thumb_advance_itstate): Likewise.
(thumb_get_next_pc_raw): Move to arm-get-next-pcs.c.
(arm_get_next_pc_raw): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pc): Likewise.
(thumb_deal_with_atomic_sequence_raw): Likewise.
(arm_deal_with_atomic_sequence_raw): Likewise.
(arm_deal_with_atomic_sequence): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pcs_read_memory_unsigned_integer): New function.
(arm_get_next_pcs_addr_bits_remove): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pcs_syscall_next_pc): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pcs_is_thumb): Likewise.
(arm_software_single_step): Adjust for arm_get_next_pcs
implementation.
* arm-tdep.h: (arm_get_next_pc): Remove declaration.
(arm_get_next_pcs_read_memory_unsigned_integer):
New declaration.
(arm_get_next_pcs_addr_bits_remove): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pcs_syscall_next_pc): Likewise.
(arm_get_next_pcs_is_thumb): Likewise.
(arm_deal_with_atomic_sequence: Remove declaration.
* common/gdb_vecs.h: Add CORE_ADDR vector definition.
* configure.tgt (aarch64*-*-linux): Add arm-get-next-pcs.o,
arm-linux.o.
(arm*-wince-pe): Add arm-get-next-pcs.o.
(arm*-*-linux*): Add arm-get-next-pcs.o, arm-linux.o,
arm-get-next-pcs.o
(arm*-*-netbsd*,arm*-*-knetbsd*-gnu): Add arm-get-next-pcs.o.
(arm*-*-openbsd*): Likewise.
(arm*-*-symbianelf*): Likewise.
(arm*-*-*): Likewise.
* symtab.h: Move CORE_ADDR vector definition to gdb_vecs.h.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Append arch/arm-linux.c,
arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c.
(arm-linux.o): New rule.
(arm-get-next-pcs.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (arm*-*-linux*): Add arm-get-next-pcs.o,
arm-linux.o.
* linux-aarch32-low.c (arm_abi_breakpoint): Remove macro. Moved
to linux-aarch32-low.c.
(arm_eabi_breakpoint, arm_breakpoint): Likewise.
(arm_breakpoint_len, thumb_breakpoint): Likewise.
(thumb_breakpoint_len, thumb2_breakpoint): Likewise.
(thumb2_breakpoint_len): Likewise.
(arm_is_thumb_mode): Make non-static.
* linux-aarch32-low.h (arm_abi_breakpoint): New macro. Moved
from linux-aarch32-low.c.
(arm_eabi_breakpoint, arm_breakpoint): Likewise.
(arm_breakpoint_len, thumb_breakpoint): Likewise.
(thumb_breakpoint_len, thumb2_breakpoint): Likewise.
(thumb2_breakpoint_len): Likewise.
(arm_is_thumb_mode): New declaration.
* linux-arm-low.c: Include arch/arm-linux.h
aarch/arm-get-next-pcs.h, sys/syscall.h.
(get_next_pcs_ops): New struct.
(get_next_pcs_addr_bits_remove): New function.
(get_next_pcs_is_thumb): New function.
(get_next_pcs_read_memory_unsigned_integer): Likewise.
(arm_sigreturn_next_pc): Likewise.
(get_next_pcs_syscall_next_pc): Likewise.
(arm_gdbserver_get_next_pcs): Likewise.
(struct linux_target_ops) <arm_gdbserver_get_next_pcs>:
Initialize.
* linux-low.h: Move CORE_ADDR vector definition to gdb_vecs.h.
* server.h: Include gdb_vecs.h.
This patch is in preparation for software single step support on ARM in
GDBServer. It adds a new shared function regcache_raw_read_unsigned and
regcache_raw_get_unsigned so that GDB and GDBServer can use the same call
to fetch a raw register into an integer.
No regressions, tested on ubuntu 14.04 ARMv7 and x86.
With gdbserver-{native,extended} / { -marm -mthumb }
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Append common/common-regcache.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Append common/common-regcache.o.
(common-regcache.o): New rule.
* common/common-regcache.h (register_status) New enum.
(regcache_raw_read_unsigned): New declaration.
* common/common-regcache.c: New file.
* regcache.h (enum register_status): Move to common-regcache.h.
(regcache_raw_read_unsigned): Likewise.
(regcache_raw_get_unsigned): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Append common/common-regcache.c.
(OBS): Append common-regcache.o.
(common-regcache.o): New rule.
* regcache.c (init_register_cache): Initialize cache to
REG_UNAVAILABLE.
(regcache_raw_read_unsigned): New function.
* regcache.h (REG_UNAVAILABLE, REG_VALID): Replaced by shared
register_status enum.
Ref: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2015-12/msg00014.html
Fixes the build in C++ mode with g++ 4.4:
gdb/btrace.h: In function ‘size_t VEC_btrace_insn_s_embedded_size(int)’:
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: invalid access to non-static data member ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s::vec’ of NULL object
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: (perhaps the ‘offsetof’ macro was used incorrectly)
gdb/btrace.h: In function ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s* VEC_btrace_insn_s_alloc(int)’:
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: invalid access to non-static data member ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s::vec’ of NULL object
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: (perhaps the ‘offsetof’ macro was used incorrectly)
gdb/btrace.h: In function ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s* VEC_btrace_insn_s_copy(VEC_btrace_insn_s*)’:
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: invalid access to non-static data member ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s::vec’ of NULL object
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: (perhaps the ‘offsetof’ macro was used incorrectly)
gdb/btrace.h: In function ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s* VEC_btrace_insn_s_merge(VEC_btrace_insn_s*, VEC_btrace_insn_s*)’:
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: invalid access to non-static data member ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s::vec’ of NULL object
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: (perhaps the ‘offsetof’ macro was used incorrectly)
gdb/btrace.h: In function ‘int VEC_btrace_insn_s_reserve(VEC_btrace_insn_s**, int, const char*, unsigned int)’:
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: invalid access to non-static data member ‘VEC_btrace_insn_s::vec’ of NULL object
gdb/btrace.h:84: error: (perhaps the ‘offsetof’ macro was used incorrectly)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-12-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/vec.h (vec_offset): New macro.
(DEF_VEC_ALLOC_FUNC_I, DEF_VEC_ALLOC_FUNC_O): Use it instead of
offsetof.
We currently throw exceptions from signal handlers (e.g., for
Quit/ctrl-c). But throwing C++ exceptions from signal handlers is
undefined. (That doesn't restore signal masks, like siglongjmp does,
and, because asynchronous signals can arrive at any instruction, we'd
have to build _everything_ with -fasync-unwind-tables to make it
reliable.) It happens to work on x86_64 GNU/Linux at least, but it's
likely broken on other ports.
Until we stop throwing from signal handlers, use setjmp/longjmp based
exceptions in C++ mode as well.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-11-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.h (GDB_XCPT_SJMP, GDB_XCPT_TRY)
(GDB_XCPT_RAW_TRY, GDB_XCPT): Define.
Replace __cplusplus checks with GDB_XCPT checks throughout.
* common/common-exceptions.c: Replace __cplusplus checks with
GDB_XCPT checks throughout.
Cross building gdbserver for --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 with gcc 4.8.4
20141219 (Fedora MinGW 4.8.4-1.fc20), I get:
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c: In function 'cmd_qtdp':
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:2577:7: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
trace_debug ("Defined %stracepoint %d at 0x%s, "
^
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:2577:7: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:2577:7: error: too many arguments for format [-Werror=format-extra-args]
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c: In function 'stop_tracing':
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:3447:7: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
trace_debug ("Stopping the trace because "
^
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:3447:7: error: too many arguments for format [-Werror=format-extra-args]
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c: In function 'collect_data_at_tracepoint':
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:4651:3: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
trace_debug ("Making new traceframe for tracepoint %d at 0x%s, hit %" PRIu64,
^
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:4651:3: error: too many arguments for format [-Werror=format-extra-args]
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c: In function 'collect_data_at_step':
src/gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:4687:3: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
trace_debug ("Making new step traceframe for "
^
trace_debug is a macro that calls:
static void trace_vdebug (const char *, ...) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 2);
The calls that fail checking use PRIu64, etc., like:
trace_debug ("Defined %stracepoint %d at 0x%s, "
"enabled %d step %" PRIu64 " pass %" PRIu64,
tpoint->type == fast_tracepoint ? "fast "
: tpoint->type == static_tracepoint ? "static " : "",
tpoint->number, paddress (tpoint->address), tpoint->enabled,
tpoint->step_count, tpoint->pass_count);
gnulib's stdio/printf module replacements may make %llu, etc. work on
mingw, instead of the MS-specific %I64u, and thus may make PRIu64
expand to %llu. However, gcc isn't aware of that, because libiberty's
ansidecl.h defines ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF as using attribute format(printf).
But, with that format, gcc checks for MS-style format strings (%I64u).
In order to have gcc expect gnu/standard formats, we need to use
gnu_printf format instead. Which version to use (printf/gnu_printf)
depends on msvcrt and mingw version, and so gnulib has a
configure-time check, and defines _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT_PRINTF
accordingly.
Since _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT_PRINTF is compatible with ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF,
the fix is simply to make use of the former.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-11-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-defs.h (ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF): Redefine in terms of
_GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT_PRINTF after including ansidecl.h.
With some toolchains, building in C++ mode stumbles on many instances
of:
In file included from ../../src/gdb/../include/splay-tree.h:43:0,
from ../../src/gdb/dcache.c:26:
build-gnulib/import/inttypes.h:61:3: error: #error "This file assumes that 'int' has exactly 32 bits. Please report your platform and compiler to <bug-gnulib@gnu.org>."
# error "This file assumes that 'int' has exactly 32 bits. Please report your platform and compiler to <bug-gnulib@gnu.org>."
^
make: *** [dcache.o] Error 1
That's:
#if !(INT_MIN == INT32_MIN && INT_MAX == INT32_MAX)
# error "This file assumes that 'int' has exactly 32 bits. Please report your platform and compiler to <bug-gnulib@gnu.org>."
#endif
I see it when cross building for --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 using
Fedora 20's g++ (gcc version 4.8.4 20141219 (Fedora MinGW
4.8.4-1.fc20)), Simon reports seeing this on several cross compilers
too.
The issue is that on some hosts that predate C++11, when using C++ one
must define __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS/__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS to make visible
the definitions of INTMAX_C / INTMAX_MAX etc.
This was a C99 requirement that later C++11 -- the first to define
stdint.h -- removed, and then C11 removed it as well.
https://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/manual/html_node/stdint_002eh.html
says that gnulib's stdint.h fixes this, but because we run gnulib's
configure tests with a C compiler, gnulib determines that mingw's
stdint.h is C99-compliant, and doesn't actually replace it. Actually,
even though configuring gnulib with a C++ compiler does result in
gnulib replacing stdint.h, the resulting replacement is broken for
mingw, because it defines uintptr_t incorrectly. I sent a gnulib
patch upstream to fix that, here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2015-11/msg00004.html
but then even with that, gnulib still stumbles on other
configured-with-C++-compiler problems.
So for now, until gnulib + C++ is fixed upstream and then gdb's copy
is updated, which may take a while, I think it's best to keep
configuring gnulib in C, and define
__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS/__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS ourselves, just like C99
intended.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-11-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-defs.h (__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS)
(__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS): Define before including stdint.h.
This patch fixes C++ build errors like this:
/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/cxx-convertion/src/gdb/linux-tdep.c:1126:35: error: invalid conversion from ‘int’ to ‘filterflags’ [-fpermissive]
| COREFILTER_HUGETLB_PRIVATE);
^
This is a case of enums used as bit flags. Unlike "regular" enums,
these values are supposed to be or'ed together. However, in C++, the
type of "(ENUM1 | ENUM2)" is int, and you then can't assign an int to
an enum variable without a cast. That means that this:
enum foo_flags flags = 0;
if (...)
flags |= FOO_FLAG1;
if (...)
flags |= FOO_FLAG2;
... would have to be written as:
enum foo_flags flags = (enum foo_flags) 0;
if (...)
flags = (enum foo_flags) (flags | FOO_FLAG1);
if (...)
flags = (enum foo_flags) (flags | FOO_FLAG2);
which is ... ugly. Alternatively, we'd have to use an int for the
variable's type, which isn't ideal either.
This patch instead adds an "enum flags" class. "enum flags" are
exactly the enums where the values are bits that are meant to be ORed
together.
This allows writing code like the below, while with raw enums this
would fail to compile without casts to enum type at the assignments to
'f':
enum some_flag
{
flag_val1 = 1 << 1,
flag_val2 = 1 << 2,
flag_val3 = 1 << 3,
flag_val4 = 1 << 4,
};
DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE(enum some_flag, some_flags)
some_flags f = flag_val1 | flag_val2;
f |= flag_val3;
It's also possible to assign literal zero to an enum flags variable
(meaning, no flags), dispensing either adding an awkward explicit "no
value" value to the enumeration or the cast to assignments from 0.
For example:
some_flags f = 0;
f |= flag_val3 | flag_val4;
Note that literal integers other than zero do fail to compile:
some_flags f = 1; // error
C is still supported -- DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE is just a typedef in that
case.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-11-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* btrace.h: Include common/enum-flags.h.
(btrace_insn_flags): Define.
(struct btrace_insn) <flags>: Change type.
(btrace_function_flags): Define.
(struct btrace_function) <flags>: Change type.
(btrace_thread_flags): Define.
(struct btrace_thread_info) <flags>: Change type.
* c-exp.y (token_flags): Rename to ...
(token_flag): ... this.
(token_flags): Define.
(struct token) <flags>: Change type.
* common/enum-flags.h: New file.
* compile/compile-c-types.c (convert_qualified): Change type of
'quals' local.
* compile/compile-internal.h: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(gcc_qualifiers_flags): Define.
* completer.c (enum reg_completer_targets): Rename to ...
(enum reg_completer_target): ... this.
(reg_completer_targets): Define.
(reg_or_group_completer_1): Change type of 'targets' parameter.
* disasm.c (do_mixed_source_and_assembly_deprecated): Change type
of 'psl_flags' local.
(do_mixed_source_and_assembly): Change type of 'psl_flags' local.
* infrun.c: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(enum step_over_what): Rename to ...
(enum step_over_what_flag): ... this.
(step_over_what): Change type.
(start_step_over): Change type of 'step_what' local.
(thread_still_needs_step_over): Now returns a step_over_what.
Adjust.
(keep_going_pass_signal): Change type of 'step_what' local.
* linux-tdep.c: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(enum filterflags): Rename to ...
(enum filter_flag): ... this.
(filter_flags): Define.
(dump_mapping_p): Change type of 'filterflags' parameter.
(linux_find_memory_regions_full): Change type of 'filterflags'
local.
(linux_find_memory_regions_full): Pass the address of an unsigned
int to sscanf instead of the address of an enum.
* record-btrace.c (btrace_print_lines): Change type of local
'psl_flags'.
(btrace_call_history): Replace 'flags' parameter
with 'int_flags' parameter. Adjust.
(record_btrace_call_history, record_btrace_call_history_range)
(record_btrace_call_history_from): Rename 'flags' parameter to
'int_flags'. Use record_print_flags.
* record.h: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(record_print_flags): Define.
* source.c: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(print_source_lines_base, print_source_lines): Change type of
flags parameter.
* symtab.h: Include "common/enum-flags.h".
(enum print_source_lines_flags): Rename to ...
(enum print_source_lines_flag): ... this.
(print_source_lines_flags): Define.
(print_source_lines): Change prototype.
Fixes this in C++:
../../src/gdb/break-catch-sig.c: In function ‘int VEC_gdb_signal_type_iterate(const VEC_gdb_signal_type*, unsigned int, gdb_signal_type*)’:
../../src/gdb/common/vec.h:576:12: error: invalid conversion from ‘int’ to ‘gdb_signal_type {aka gdb_signal}’ [-fpermissive]
*ptr = 0; \
^
../../src/gdb/common/vec.h:417:1: note: in expansion of macro ‘DEF_VEC_FUNC_P’
DEF_VEC_FUNC_P(T) \
^
../../src/gdb/break-catch-sig.c:37:1: note: in expansion of macro ‘DEF_VEC_I’
DEF_VEC_I (gdb_signal_type);
^
I actually carried a different fix in the C++ branch that removed this
assignment and then adjusted all callers that depended on it. The
thinking was that this is for the case where we're returning false,
indicating end of iteration. But that results in a much larger and
tricker patch; looking back it seems quite pointless. I looked at the
history of GCC's C++ conversion and saw that they added this same cast
to their version of vec.h, FWIW. (GCC's vec.h is completely different
nowadays, having been converted to templates meanwhile.)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-10-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/vec.h (DEF_VEC_FUNC_P) [iterate]: Cast 0 to type T.
Fixes, in C++ mode:
../../src/gdb/common/common-exceptions.c:23:69: error: invalid conversion from ‘int’ to ‘return_reason’ [-fpermissive]
const struct gdb_exception exception_none = { 0, GDB_NO_ERROR, NULL };
^
(I considered adding an enum value for '0', but the code and comments
around return_reason and its uses explain how 0 is special/internal,
so I'm leaving it be.)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-10-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.c (exception_none): Add cast.
In C++, this:
try
{
break;
}
catch (..)
{}
is invalid. However, because our TRY/CATCH macros support it in C,
the C++ version of those macros support it too. To catch such
assumptions, this adds a (disabled) hack that maps TRY/CATCH to raw
C++ try/catch. Then it goes through all instances that building on
x86_64 GNU/Linux trips on, fixing them.
This isn't strictly necessary yet, but I think it's nicer to try to
keep the tree in a state where it's easier to eliminate the TRY/CATCH
macros.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-10-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c (dwarf2_tailcall_sniffer_first): Don't
assume that "break" breaks out of a TRY/CATCH.
* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_single_arg): Don't assume
"continue" breaks out of a TRY/CATCH.
* python/py-value.c (valpy_binop_throw): New function, factored
out from ...
(valpy_binop): ... this.
(valpy_richcompare_throw): New function, factored
out from ...
(valpy_richcompare): ... this.
* solib.c (solib_read_symbols): Don't assume "break" breaks out
of a TRY/CATCH.
* common/common-exceptions.h [USE_RAW_CXX_TRY]
<TRY/CATCH/END_CATCH>: Define as 1-1 wrappers around try/catch.
Fixes a set of errors like:
../../src/gdb/symfile-debug.c: In function ‘int debug_qf_map_symtabs_matching_filename(objfile*, const char*, const char*, int (*)(symtab*, void*), void*)’:
../../src/gdb/symfile-debug.c:137:39: error: invalid conversion from ‘int (*)(symtab*, void*)’ to ‘const void*’ [-fpermissive]
host_address_to_string (callback),
^
Note this has to work with data and function pointers. In C++11 we
may perhaps do something a bit safer, but we're not there yet, and I
don't think it really matters. For now just always do a simple
C-style cast in host_address_to_string itself. No point in adding a
void * cast to each and every caller.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-10-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/print-utils.c (host_address_to_string): Rename to ...
(host_address_to_string_1): ... this.
* common/print-utils.h (host_address_to_string): Reimplement as
wrapper around host_address_to_string_1.
* utils.c (gdb_print_host_address): Rename to ...
(gdb_print_host_address_1): ... this.
* utils.h (gdb_print_host_address): Reimplement as wrapper macro
around host_address_to_string_1.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/gdb_wait.h (W_STOPCODE): Define, moved here from
gdbserver/linux-low.c.
(WSETSTOP): Simplify.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-low.c (W_STOPCODE): Moved to common/gdb_wait.h.
Nowadays, both aarch64 GDB and linux kernel assumes that address for
setting breakpoint should be 4-byte aligned. However that is not true
after we support multi-arch, because thumb instruction can be at 2-byte
aligned address. Patch http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2015-October/375141.html
to linux kernel is to teach kernel to handle 2-byte aligned address for
HW breakpoint, while this patch is to teach aarch64 GDB handle 2-byte
aligned address.
First of all, we call gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc to get the instruction
length rather than using hard-coded 4. Secondly, in GDBserver, we set
length back to 2 if it is 3, because GDB encode 3 in it to indicate it
is a 32-bit thumb breakpoint. Then we relax the address alignment
check from 4-byte aligned to 2-byte aligned.
This patch enables some tests (such as gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp,
gdb.base/cond-eval-mode.exp, gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp,) and
fixes many fails (such as gdb.base/hbreak2.exp) when the program is
compiled in thumb mode on aarch64.
Regression tested on aarch64-linux, both native and gdbserver. This
is the last patch of multi-arch work.
gdb:
2015-10-15 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint):
Call gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc to instruction length.
(aarch64_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint): Likewise.
* common/common-regcache.h (regcache_register_size): Declare.
* nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c: Include "common-regcache.h".
(aarch64_point_is_aligned): Set alignment to 2 for breakpoint if
the process is 32bit, otherwise set alignment to 4.
(aarch64_handle_breakpoint): Update comments.
* regcache.c (regcache_register_size): New function.
gdb/gdbserver:
2015-10-15 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point): Set len to 2
if it is 3.
(aarch64_remove_point): Likewise.
* regcache.c (regcache_register_size): New function.
Nowadays, GDB calls target_can_download_tracepoint at the entry of
download_tracepoint_locations, which is called by.
update_global_location_list. Sometimes, it is not needed to call
target_can_download_tracepoint at all because there is no tracepoint
created. In remote target, target_can_download_tracepoint send
qTStatus to the remote in order to know whether tracepoint can be
downloaded or not. This means some redundant qTStatus packets are
sent.
This patch is to teach GDB to call target_can_download_tracepoint
lazily, only on the moment there are tracepoint to download.
gdb.perf/single-step.exp (with a local patch to measure RSP packets)
shows the number of RSP packets is reduced because there is no
tracepoint at all, so GDB doesn't send qTStatus any more.
# of RSP packets
original patched
single-step rsp 1000 7000 6000
single-step rsp 2000 14000 12000
single-step rsp 3000 21000 18000
single-step rsp 4000 28000 24000
gdb:
2015-09-10 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* breakpoint.c (download_tracepoint_locations): New local
can_download_tracepoint. Check the result of
target_can_download_tracepoint and save it in
can_download_tracepoint if there are tracepoints to download.
* linux-nat.h (enum tribool): Move it to ...
* common/common-types.h: ... here.
After the last gnulib import (Dec 2012), gnulib upstream started
replacing mingw's 'struct timeval' with a version with 64-bit time_t,
for POSIX compliance:
commit f8e84098084b3b53bc6943a5542af1f607ffd477
Author: Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
Date: Sat Jan 28 18:12:10 2012 +0100
sys_time: Override 'struct timeval' on some native Windows platforms.
See:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-01/msg00372.html
However, that results in conflicts with native Winsock2's 'select':
select()'s argument
http://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/mailman/message/29610438/
... and libiberty's timeval-utils.h timeval_add/timeval_sub, at the
least.
We don't really need the POSIX compliance, so this patch prepares us
to simply not use gnulib's 'struct timeval' replacement once a more
recent gnulib is imported, thus preserving the current behavior, by
adding a sys/time.h wrapper header that undefs gnulib's replacements,
and including that everywhere instead.
The SIZE -> OSIZE change is necessary because newer gnulib's
sys/time.h also includes windows.h/winsock2.h, which defines a
conflicting SIZE symbol.
Cross build-tested mingw-w64 32-bit and 64-bit.
Regtested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/gdb_sys_time.h.
* common/gdb_sys_time.h: New file.
* event-loop.c: Include gdb_sys_time.h instead of sys/time.h.
* gdb_select.h: Likewise.
* gdb_usleep.c: Likewise.
* maint.c: Likewise.
* mi/mi-main.c: Likewise.
* mi/mi-parse.h: Likewise.
* remote-fileio.c: Likewise.
* remote-m32r-sdi.c: Likewise.
* remote.c: Likewise.
* ser-base.c: Likewise.
* ser-pipe.c: Likewise.
* ser-tcp.c: Likewise.
* ser-unix.c: Likewise.
* symfile.c: Likewise.
* symfile.c: Likewise. Rename OSIZE to SIZE throughout.
* target-memory.c: Include gdb_sys_time.h instead of sys/time.h.
* utils.c: Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-08-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* debug.c: Include gdb_sys_time.h instead of sys/time.h.
* event-loop.c: Likewise.
* remote-utils.c: Likewise.
* tracepoint.c: Likewise.
This field was never set nor used. This patch removes it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/agent.c (symbol_list) <required>: Remove.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* tracepoint.c (symbol_list) <required>: Remove.
Later patches need regex support also in gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Change gdb_regex.h to
common/gdb_regex.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Add gdb_regex.o.
(gdb_regex.o): New.
* common/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Add gdb_use_included_regex,
--without-included-regex and USE_INCLUDED_REGEX.
* common/gdb_regex.c: New file from utils.c functions.
* common/gdb_regex.h: Move it here from gdb_regex.h, update include
file wrapping define name.
* configure: Rebuilt.
* configure.ac (gdb_use_included_regex, --without-included-regex)
(USE_INCLUDED_REGEX): Move them to common/common.m4.
* gdb_regex.h: Move it to common/gdb_regex.h.
* utils.c: Remove include gdb_regex.h.
(do_regfree_cleanup, make_regfree_cleanup, get_regcomp_error)
(compile_rx_or_error): Move them to common/gdb_regex.c.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (OBS): Add gdb_regex.o.
(gdb_regex.o): New.
* config.in: Rebuilt.
* configure: Rebuilt.
Fix the ARI warning about the use of unsigned long long. We can't use
ULONGEST as this is defined unsigned long on 64-bit systems. This will
result in a compile error when storing a pointer to an unsigned long long
structure field (declared in perf_event.h as __u64) in a ULONGEST * variable.
Use size_t to hold the buffer size inside GDB and __u64 when interfacing the
Linux kernel.
gdb/
* nat/linux-btrace.c (perf_event_read): Change the type of DATA_HEAD.
(perf_event_read_all): Change the type of SIZE and DATA_HEAD.
(perf_event_read_bts): Change the type of SIZE and READ.
(linux_enable_bts): Change the type of SIZE, PAGES, DATA_SIZE,
and DATA_OFFSET. Move DATA_SIZE declaration. Restrict the buffer size
to UINT_MAX. Check for overflows when using DATA_HEAD from the perf
mmap page.
(linux_enable_pt): Change the type of PAGES and SIZE. Restrict the
buffer size to UINT_MAX.
(linux_read_bts): Change the type of BUFFER_SIZE, SIZE, DATA_HEAD, and
DATA_TAIL.
* nat/linux-btrace.h (struct perf_event_buffer)<size, data_head>
<last_head>: Change type.
* common/btrace-common.h (struct btrace_dat_pt) <size>: Change type.
* common/btrace-common.c (btrace_data_append): Change the type of
SIZE.
* btrace.c (parse_xml_raw): Change the type of SIZE. Change oddness
check.
Store the raw branch trace data that has been read from the target.
This data can be used for maintenance commands as well as for generating
a core file for the "record save" command.
gdb/
* btrace.c (btrace_fetch): Append the new trace data.
(btrace_clear): Clear the stored trace data.
* btrace.h (btrace_thread_info) <data>: New.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_data_clear)
(btrace_data_append): New.
* common/btrace-common.c (btrace_data_clear)
(btrace_data_append): New.
Adds a new command "record btrace pt" to configure the kernel to use
Intel(R) Processor Trace instead of Branch Trace Strore.
The "record btrace" command chooses the tracing format automatically.
Intel(R) Processor Trace support requires Linux 4.1 and libipt.
gdb/
* NEWS: Announce new commands "record btrace pt" and "record pt".
Announce new options "set|show record btrace pt buffer-size".
* btrace.c: Include "rsp-low.h".
Include "inttypes.h".
(btrace_add_pc): Add forward declaration.
(pt_reclassify_insn, ftrace_add_pt, btrace_pt_readmem_callback)
(pt_translate_cpu_vendor, btrace_finalize_ftrace_pt)
(btrace_compute_ftrace_pt): New.
(btrace_compute_ftrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(check_xml_btrace_version): Update version check.
(parse_xml_raw, parse_xml_btrace_pt_config_cpu)
(parse_xml_btrace_pt_raw, parse_xml_btrace_pt)
(btrace_pt_config_cpu_attributes, btrace_pt_config_children)
(btrace_pt_children): New.
(btrace_children): Add support for "pt".
(parse_xml_btrace_conf_pt, btrace_conf_pt_attributes): New.
(btrace_conf_children): Add support for "pt".
* btrace.h: Include "intel-pt.h".
(btrace_pt_error): New.
* common/btrace-common.c (btrace_format_string, btrace_data_fini)
(btrace_data_empty): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_format): Add BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(struct btrace_config_pt): New.
(struct btrace_config)<pt>: New.
(struct btrace_data_pt_config, struct btrace_data_pt): New.
(struct btrace_data)<pt>: New.
* features/btrace-conf.dtd (btrace-conf)<pt>: New.
(pt): New.
* features/btrace.dtd (btrace)<pt>: New.
(pt, pt-config, cpu): New.
* nat/linux-btrace.c (perf_event_read, perf_event_read_all)
(perf_event_pt_event_type, kernel_supports_pt)
(linux_supports_pt): New.
(linux_supports_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(linux_enable_bts): Free tinfo on error.
(linux_enable_pt): New.
(linux_enable_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(linux_disable_pt): New.
(linux_disable_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(linux_fill_btrace_pt_config, linux_read_pt): New.
(linux_read_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
* nat/linux-btrace.h (struct btrace_tinfo_pt): New.
(struct btrace_target_info)<pt>: New.
* record-btrace.c (set_record_btrace_pt_cmdlist)
(show_record_btrace_pt_cmdlist): New.
(record_btrace_print_pt_conf): New.
(record_btrace_print_conf): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(btrace_ui_out_decode_error): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(cmd_record_btrace_pt_start): New.
(cmd_record_btrace_start): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(cmd_set_record_btrace_pt, cmd_show_record_btrace_pt): New.
(_initialize_record_btrace): Add new commands.
* remote.c (PACKET_Qbtrace_pt, PACKET_Qbtrace_conf_pt_size): New.
(remote_protocol_features): Add "Qbtrace:pt".
Add "Qbtrace-conf:pt:size".
(remote_supports_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(btrace_sync_conf): Support PACKET_Qbtrace_conf_pt_size.
(remote_enable_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(_initialize_remote): Add new commands.
gdbserver/
* linux-low.c: Include "rsp-low.h"
(linux_low_encode_pt_config, linux_low_encode_raw): New.
(linux_low_read_btrace): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(linux_low_btrace_conf): Support BTRACE_FORMAT_PT.
(handle_btrace_enable_pt): New.
(handle_btrace_general_set): Support "pt".
(handle_btrace_conf_general_set): Support "pt:size".
doc/
* gdb.texinfo (Process Record and Replay): Spell out that variables
and registers are not available during btrace replay.
Describe the new "record btrace pt" command.
Describe the new "set|show record btrace pt buffer-size" options.
(General Query Packets): Describe the new Qbtrace:pt and
Qbtrace-conf:pt:size packets.
Expand "bts" to "Branch Trace Store".
Update the branch trace DTD.
stdint.h was added to common-defs.h some months ago and should
no longer be included directly by any file.
gdb_assert.h was added to common-defs.h nearly a year ago, but
three includes have crept in since then.
This commit removes all such redundant include directives.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/buffer.c (stdint.h): Do not include.
* common/print-utils.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* compile/compile-c-symbols.c (gdb_assert.h): Likewise.
* compile/compile-c-types.c (gdb_assert.h): Likewise.
* ft32-tdep.c (gdb_assert.h): Likewise.
* guile/scm-utils.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* i386-linux-tdep.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* i386-tdep.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* nat/linux-btrace.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* nat/linux-btrace.h (stdint.h): Likewise.
* nat/linux-ptrace.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* nat/mips-linux-watch.h (stdint.h): Likewise.
* ppc-linux-nat.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* python/python-internal.h (stdint.h): Likewise.
* stub-termcap.c (stdlib.h): Likewise.
* target/target.h (stdint.h): Likewise.
* xtensa-linux-nat.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-i386-ipa.c (stdint.h): Do not include.
* lynx-i386-low.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* lynx-ppc-low.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* mem-break.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* thread-db.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* tracepoint.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
* win32-low.c (stdint.h): Likewise.
Adapt code in remote.c to take into account addressable unit size when
reading/writing memory.
A few variables are renamed and suffixed with _bytes or _units. This
way, it's more obvious if there is any place where we add or compare
values of different kinds (which would be a mistake).
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/rsp-low.c (needs_escaping): New.
(remote_escape_output): Add unit_size parameter. Refactor to
support multi-byte addressable units. Rename parameters.
* common/rsp-low.h (remote_escape_output): Add unit_size
parameter and rename others. Update doc.
* remote.c (align_for_efficient_write): New.
(remote_write_bytes_aux): Add unit_size parameter and use it.
Rename some variables. Update doc.
(remote_xfer_partial): Get unit size and use it.
(remote_read_bytes_1): Add unit_size parameter and use it.
Rename some variables. Update doc.
(remote_write_bytes): Same.
(remote_xfer_live_readonly_partial): Same.
(remote_read_bytes): Same.
(remote_flash_write): Update call to remote_write_bytes_aux.
(remote_write_qxfer): Update call to remote_escape_output.
(remote_search_memory): Same.
(remote_hostio_pwrite): Same.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (write_qxfer_response): Update call to
remote_escape_output.
This commit moves the function make_cleanup_close from gdb/utils.[ch]
to gdb/common/filestuff.[ch] to make it usable from common code.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* utils.h (make_cleanup_close): Moved to common/filestuff.h.
* utils.c (do_close_cleanup): Moved to common/filestuff.c.
(make_cleanup_close): Likewise.
* common/filestuff.h (make_cleanup_close): Moved from utils.h.
* common/filestuff.c (do_close_cleanup): Moved from utils.c.
(make_cleanup_close): Likewise.
inf_child_fileio_open and its gdbserver equivalent both assume that
the mode_t bits defined in gdb/fileio.h are the same as those used
by the open system call, but there is no mechanism to ensure this is
the case. This commit adds a conversion function to handle systems
where the File-I/O definitions do not align with the host's.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/fileio.h (fileio_to_host_mode): New declaration.
* common/fileio.c (fileio_to_host_mode): New Function.
* inf-child.c (inf_child_fileio_open): Process mode argument
with fileio_to_host_mode.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* hostio.c (handle_open): Process mode argument with
fileio_to_host_mode.
This commit fixes a typo in common/fileio.c where S_IWGRP was
misspelled as S_IWRGRP in a preprocessor conditional, causing
Host-I/O "vFile:fstat:" and File-I/O "Fstat" and "Ffstat"
responses to always indicate files were not group-writable
regardless of their actual status.
This commit introduces a new shared function to replace three
identical functions in various places in the codebase.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-remote-fileio.h (remote_fileio_to_fio_error):
New declaration.
* common/common-remote-fileio.c (remote_fileio_to_fio_error):
New function, factored out the named functions below.
* inf-child.c (gdb/fileio.h): Remove include.
(common-remote-fileio.h): New include.
(inf_child_errno_to_fileio_error): Remove function. Update
all callers to use remote_fileio_to_fio_error.
* remote-fileio.c (remote_fileio_errno_to_target): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* hostio-errno.c (errno_to_fileio_error): Remove function.
Update caller to use remote_fileio_to_fio_error.
Forward declarations of struct stat break the Windows build.
This commit removes a forward declaration of struct stat and
includes sys/stat.h directly instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/18131
* common/common-remote-fileio.h (sys/stat.h): New include.
(stuct stat): Remove forward declaration.
This reverts 366c75fc.
We don't actually need to access the object through
"struct sockaddr *", so we don't need the union:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-03/msg00213.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Revert:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/gdb_socket.h: New file.
* ser-tcp.c: Include gdb_socket.h. Don't include netinet/in.h nor
sys/socket.h.
(net_open): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-03-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Revert:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbreplay.c: No longer include <netinet/in.h>, <sys/socket.h>,
or <winsock2.h> here. Instead include "gdb_socket.h".
(remote_open): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
* remote-utils.c: No longer include <netinet/in.h>, <sys/socket.h>
or <winsock2.h> here. Instead include "gdb_socket.h".
(handle_accept_event, remote_prepare): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
* tracepoint.c: Include "gdb_socket.h" instead of <sys/socket.h>
or <sys/un.h>.
(init_named_socket, gdb_agent_helper_thread): Use union
gdb_sockaddr_u.
Building gdbserver in C++ mode shows:
gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c: In function ‘void* gdb_agent_helper_thread(void*)’:
gdb/gdbserver/tracepoint.c:7190:47: error: cannot convert ‘sockaddr_un*’ to ‘sockaddr*’ for argument ‘2’ to ‘int accept(int, sockaddr*, socklen_t*)’
fd = accept (listen_fd, &sockaddr, &tmp);
A few places in the tree already have an explicit cast to struct
sockaddr *, but that's a strict aliasing violation. Instead of
propagating invalid code, fix this by using a union instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/gdb_socket.h: New file.
* ser-tcp.c: Include gdb_socket.h. Don't include netinet/in.h nor
sys/socket.h.
(net_open): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbreplay.c: No longer include <netinet/in.h>, <sys/socket.h>,
or <winsock2.h> here. Instead include "gdb_socket.h".
(remote_open): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
* remote-utils.c: No longer include <netinet/in.h>, <sys/socket.h>
or <winsock2.h> here. Instead include "gdb_socket.h".
(handle_accept_event, remote_prepare): Use union gdb_sockaddr_u.
* tracepoint.c: Include "gdb_socket.h" instead of <sys/socket.h>
or <sys/un.h>.
(init_named_socket, gdb_agent_helper_thread): Use union
gdb_sockaddr_u.
Although the current TRY/CATCH implementation works in C++ mode too,
it relies on setjmp/longjmp, and longjmp bypasses calling the
destructors of objects on the stack, which is obviously bad for C++.
This patch fixes this by makes TRY/CATCH use real try/catch in C++
mode behind the scenes. The way this is done allows RAII and cleanups
to coexist while we phase out cleanups, instead of requiring a flag
day.
This patch is not strictly necessary until we require a C++ compiler
and start actually using RAII, though I'm all for baby steps, and it
shows my proposed way forward. Putting it in now, allows for easier
experimentation and exposure of potential problems with real C++
exceptions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.c [!__cplusplus] (enum catcher_state)
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter)
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter_1, exceptions_state_mc_catch):
Don't define.
[__cplusplus] (try_scope_depth): New global.
[__cplusplus] (exception_try_scope_entry)
(exception_try_scope_exit, gdb_exception_sliced_copy)
(exception_rethrow): New functions.
(throw_exception): In C++ mode, throw
gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_QUIT for RETURN_QUIT and
gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR for RETURN_ERROR.
(throw_it): In C++ mode, use try_scope_depth.
* common/common-exceptions.h [!__cplusplus]
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter)
(exceptions_state_mc_action_iter_1, exceptions_state_mc_catch):
Don't declare.
[__cplusplus] (exception_try_scope_entry)
(exception_try_scope_exit, exception_rethrow): Declare.
[__cplusplus] (struct exception_try_scope): New struct.
[__cplusplus] (TRY, CATCH, END_CATCH): Reimplement on top of real
C++ exceptions.
(struct gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ALL)
(struct gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
(struct gdb_exception_RETURN_MASK_QUIT): New types.
This patch splits the TRY_CATCH macro into three, so that we go from
this:
~~~
volatile gdb_exception ex;
TRY_CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
{
}
if (ex.reason < 0)
{
}
~~~
to this:
~~~
TRY
{
}
CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
{
}
END_CATCH
~~~
Thus, we'll be getting rid of the local volatile exception object, and
declaring the caught exception in the catch block.
This allows reimplementing TRY/CATCH in terms of C++ exceptions when
building in C++ mode, while still allowing to build GDB in C mode
(using setjmp/longjmp), as a transition step.
TBC, after this patch, is it _not_ valid to have code between the TRY
and the CATCH blocks, like:
TRY
{
}
// some code here.
CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
{
}
END_CATCH
Just like it isn't valid to do that with C++'s native try/catch.
By switching to creating the exception object inside the CATCH block
scope, we can get rid of all the explicitly allocated volatile
exception objects all over the tree, and map the CATCH block more
directly to C++'s catch blocks.
The majority of the TRY_CATCH -> TRY+CATCH+END_CATCH conversion was
done with a script, rerun from scratch at every rebase, no manual
editing involved. After the mechanical conversion, a few places
needed manual intervention, to fix preexisting cases where we were
using the exception object outside of the TRY_CATCH block, and cases
where we were using "else" after a 'if (ex.reason) < 0)' [a CATCH
after this patch]. The result was folded into this patch so that GDB
still builds at each incremental step.
END_CATCH is necessary for two reasons:
First, because we name the exception object in the CATCH block, which
requires creating a scope, which in turn must be closed somewhere.
Declaring the exception variable in the initializer field of a for
block, like:
#define CATCH(EXCEPTION, mask) \
for (struct gdb_exception EXCEPTION; \
exceptions_state_mc_catch (&EXCEPTION, MASK); \
EXCEPTION = exception_none)
would avoid needing END_CATCH, but alas, in C mode, we build with C90,
which doesn't allow mixed declarations and code.
Second, because when TRY/CATCH are wired to real C++ try/catch, as
long as we need to handle cleanup chains, even if there's no CATCH
block that wants to catch the exception, we need for stop at every
frame in the unwind chain and run cleanups, then rethrow. That will
be done in END_CATCH.
After we require C++, we'll still need TRY/CATCH/END_CATCH until
cleanups are completely phased out -- TRY/CATCH in C++ mode will
save/restore the current cleanup chain, like in C mode, and END_CATCH
catches otherwise uncaugh exceptions, runs cleanups and rethrows, so
that C++ cleanups and exceptions can coexist.
IMO, this still makes the TRY/CATCH code look a bit more like a
newcomer would expect, so IMO worth it even if we weren't considering
C++.
gdb/ChangeLog.
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.c (struct catcher) <exception>: No
longer a pointer to volatile exception. Now an exception value.
<mask>: Delete field.
(exceptions_state_mc_init): Remove all parameters. Adjust.
(exceptions_state_mc): No longer pop the catcher here.
(exceptions_state_mc_catch): New function.
(throw_exception): Adjust.
* common/common-exceptions.h (exceptions_state_mc_init): Remove
all parameters.
(exceptions_state_mc_catch): Declare.
(TRY_CATCH): Rename to ...
(TRY): ... this. Remove EXCEPTION and MASK parameters.
(CATCH, END_CATCH): New.
All callers adjusted.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Adjust all callers of TRY_CATCH to use TRY/CATCH/END_CATCH
instead.
This commit introduces a new inline common function "startswith"
which takes two string arguments and returns nonzero if the first
string starts with the second. It also updates the 295 places
where this logic was written out longhand to use the new function.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-utils.h (startswith): New inline function.
All places where this logic was used updated to use the above.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common-exceptions.h (exception_none): Declare.
* common/common-exceptions.c (exception_none): Moved from
exceptions.c.
(exceptions_state_mc_init): Use exception_none.
* exceptions.c (exception_none): Move to
common/common-exceptions.c.
* exceptions.h (exception_none): Move to
common/common-exceptions.h.
Functions and variables that are exported by the IPA DSO (that
GDBserver needs to look up) should have "C" mangling, thus be declared
with extern "C".
Function and variable declarations need the extern "C" marker, but
variable definitions can't be marked extern, so the patch splits
IP_AGENT_EXPORT into three.
Building in C++ mode revealed that a few variables were missing
IP_AGENT_EXPORT, thus the IPA has been broken when stripped, even in C
mode... So this ends being a bug fix as well.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/agent.h (IPA_SYM_EXPORTED_NAME): New.
(IPA_SYM): Use it.
* common/common-defs.h (EXTERN_C_PUSH, EXTERN_C_POP): New macros.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-amd64-ipa.c (gdb_agent_get_raw_reg): Use
IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC.
* linux-i386-ipa.c (gdb_agent_get_raw_reg): Use
IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC.
* tracepoint.c (ATTR_USED, ATTR_NOINLINE, ATTR_CONSTRUCTOR)
(IP_AGENT_EXPORT): Delete.
(gdb_tp_heap_buffer, gdb_jump_pad_buffer, gdb_jump_pad_buffer_end)
(gdb_trampoline_buffer, gdb_trampoline_buffer_end)
(gdb_trampoline_buffer_error, collecting, gdb_collect)
(stop_tracing, flush_trace_buffer, about_to_request_buffer_space)
(trace_buffer_is_full, stopping_tracepoint, expr_eval_result)
(error_tracepoint, tracepoints, tracing, trace_buffer_ctrl)
(trace_buffer_ctrl_curr, trace_buffer_lo, trace_buffer_hi)
(traceframe_read_count, traceframe_write_count)
(traceframes_created, trace_state_variables, get_raw_reg)
(get_trace_state_variable_value, set_trace_state_variable_value)
(ust_loaded, helper_thread_id, cmd_buf): Use
IPA_SYM_EXPORTED_NAME.
(stop_tracing, flush_trace_buffer): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC.
(tracepoints) Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR.
(stopping_tracepoint, trace_buffer_is_full, expr_eval_result): Use
IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR and wrap in EXTERN_C_PUSH/EXTERN_C_POP.
(last_tracepoint): Move into !IN_PROCESS_AGENT block.
(error_tracepoint): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR and wrap in
EXTERN_C_PUSH/EXTERN_C_POP.
(trace_state_variables): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR.
(trace_buffer_lo, trace_buffer_hi): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR and
wrap in EXTERN_C_PUSH/EXTERN_C_POP.
(trace_buffer_ctrl, trace_buffer_ctrl_curr)
(traceframe_write_count, traceframe_read_count)
(traceframes_created, tracing): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR.
(about_to_request_buffer_space, get_trace_state_variable_value)
(set_trace_state_variable_value): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC.
(collecting): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR and wrap in
EXTERN_C_PUSH/EXTERN_C_POP.
(gdb_collect): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC.
(ust_loaded, cmd_buf): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR.
(helper_thread_id, gdb_agent_capability): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR
and wrap in EXTERN_C_PUSH/EXTERN_C_POP.
(gdb_tp_heap_buffer, gdb_jump_pad_buffer, gdb_jump_pad_buffer_end)
(gdb_trampoline_buffer, gdb_trampoline_buffer_end)
(gdb_trampoline_buffer_error): Use IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR.
* tracepoint.h (ATTR_USED, ATTR_NOINLINE, EXPORTED_SYMBOL):
Define.
(IP_AGENT_EXPORT_FUNC, IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR)
(IP_AGENT_EXPORT_VAR_DECL): Define.
(tracing): Declare.
(gdb_agent_get_raw_reg): Declare.
These symbols are defined in C code, so in C++ mode we need to use
extern "C" to declare them. As extern "C" can't be used inside a
function's scope, we move the declarations to the global scope at the
same time.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cli-out.c (_rl_erase_entire_line): Move declaration out of
cli_mld_erase_entire_line, and make it extern "C".
* common/common-defs.h (EXTERN_C): New.
* completer.c (_rl_completion_prefix_display_length)
(_rl_print_completions_horizontally, QSFUNC): Move declarations
out of gdb_display_match_list_1.
(_rl_qsort_string_compare): Move declaration out of
gdb_display_match_list_1, and make it extern "C".
* defs.h (re_comp): Use EXTERN_C.
* maint.c (_mcleanup): Move declaration out of mcleanup_wrapper,
and make it extern "C".
(monstartup): Move declaration out of maintenance_set_profile_cmd,
and make it extern "C".
(main): Move declaration out of maintenance_set_profile_cmd.
* nat/linux-ptrace.c (linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason_string): Use
EXTERN_C.
This patch renames symbols that happen to have names which are
reserved keywords in C++.
Most of this was generated with Tromey's cxx-conversion.el script.
Some places where later hand massaged a bit, to fix formatting, etc.
And this was rebased several times meanwhile, along with re-running
the script, so re-running the script from scratch probably does not
result in the exact same output. I don't think that matters anyway.
gdb/
2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
gdb/doc/agentexpr.texi documents the "setv" opcode as follow:
@item @code{setv} (0x2d) @var{n}: @result{} @var{v}
Set trace state variable number @var{n} to the value found on the top
of the stack. The stack is unchanged, so that the value is readily
available if the assignment is part of a larger expression. The
handling of @var{n} is as described for @code{getv}.
The @item line is incorrect (and does not match with its
description), so this patch fixes it.
Additionally, in gdb/common/ax.def we find the line:
DEFOP (setv, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0x2d)
From the comment earlier in the file:
Each line is of the form:
DEFOP (name, size, data_size, consumed, produced, opcode)
[...]
CONSUMED is the number of stack elements consumed.
PRODUCED is the number of stack elements produced.
which is saying that nothing is consumed and one item is produced.
Both should be 0 or both should be 1.
This patch sets them both to 1, which seems better since if nothing
is on the stack an error will occur.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/ax.def (setv): Fix consumed entry in setv DEFOP.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* agentexpr.texi (Bytecode Descriptions): Fix summary line for setv.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Add a struct for identifying a processor and use it in linux-btrace.c when
identifying the processor we're running on.
We will need this feature for the new btrace format.
2015-02-09 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_cpu_vendor, btrace_cpu): New.
* nat/linux-btrace.c: (btrace_this_cpu): New.
(cpu_supports_bts): Call btrace_this_cpu.
(intel_supports_bts): Add cpu parameter.
Allow the size of the branch trace ring buffer to be defined by the
user. The specified buffer size will be used when BTS tracing is
enabled for new threads.
The obtained buffer size may differ from the requested size. The
actual buffer size for the current thread is shown in the "info record"
command.
Bigger buffers mean longer traces, but also longer processing time.
2015-02-09 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
* btrace.c (parse_xml_btrace_conf_bts): Add size.
(btrace_conf_bts_attributes): New.
(btrace_conf_children): Add attributes.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_config_bts): New.
(btrace_config)<bts>: New.
(btrace_config): Update comment.
* nat/linux-btrace.c (linux_enable_btrace, linux_enable_bts):
Use config.
* features/btrace-conf.dtd: Increment version. Add size
attribute to bts element.
* record-btrace.c (set_record_btrace_bts_cmdlist,
show_record_btrace_bts_cmdlist): New.
(record_btrace_adjust_size, record_btrace_print_bts_conf,
record_btrace_print_conf, cmd_set_record_btrace_bts,
cmd_show_record_btrace_bts): New.
(record_btrace_info): Call record_btrace_print_conf.
(_initialize_record_btrace): Add commands.
* remote.c: Add PACKET_Qbtrace_conf_bts_size enum.
(remote_protocol_features): Add Qbtrace-conf:bts:size packet.
(btrace_sync_conf): Synchronize bts size.
(_initialize_remote): Add Qbtrace-conf:bts:size packet.
* NEWS: Announce new commands and new packets.
doc/
* gdb.texinfo (Branch Trace Configuration Format): Add size.
(Process Record and Replay): Describe new set|show commands.
(General Query Packets): Describe Qbtrace-conf:bts:size packet.
testsuite/
* gdb.btrace/buffer-size: New.
gdbserver/
* linux-low.c (linux_low_btrace_conf): Print size.
* server.c (handle_btrace_conf_general_set): New.
(hanle_general_set): Call handle_btrace_conf_general_set.
(handle_query): Report Qbtrace-conf:bts:size as supported.
Add a struct to describe the branch trace configuration and use it for
enabling branch tracing.
The user will be able to set configuration fields for each tracing format
to be used for new threads.
The actual configuration that is active for a given thread will be shown
in the "info record" command.
At the moment, the configuration struct only contains a format field
that is set to the only available format.
The format is the only configuration option that can not be set via set
commands. It is given as argument to the "record btrace" command when
starting recording.
2015-02-09 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
* Makefile.in (XMLFILES): Add btrace-conf.dtd.
* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(x86_linux_btrace_conf): New.
(x86_linux_create_target): Initialize to_btrace_conf.
* nat/linux-btrace.c (linux_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
Check format. Split into this and ...
(linux_enable_bts): ... this.
(linux_btrace_conf): New.
(perf_event_skip_record): Renamed into ...
(perf_event_skip_bts_record): ... this. Updated users.
(linux_disable_btrace): Split into this and ...
(linux_disable_bts): ... this.
(linux_read_btrace): Check format.
* nat/linux-btrace.h (linux_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(linux_btrace_conf): New.
(btrace_target_info)<ptid>: Moved.
(btrace_target_info)<conf>: New.
(btrace_target_info): Split into this and ...
(btrace_tinfo_bts): ... this. Updated users.
* btrace.c (btrace_enable): Update parameters.
(btrace_conf, parse_xml_btrace_conf_bts, parse_xml_btrace_conf)
(btrace_conf_children, btrace_conf_attributes)
(btrace_conf_elements): New.
* btrace.h (btrace_enable): Update parameters.
(btrace_conf, parse_xml_btrace_conf): New.
* common/btrace-common.h (btrace_config): New.
* feature/btrace-conf.dtd: New.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_conf): New.
(record_btrace_cmdlist): New.
(record_btrace_enable_warn, record_btrace_open): Pass
&record_btrace_conf.
(record_btrace_info): Print recording format.
(cmd_record_btrace_bts_start): New.
(cmd_record_btrace_start): Call cmd_record_btrace_bts_start.
(_initialize_record_btrace): Add "record btrace bts" subcommand.
Add "record bts" alias command.
* remote.c (remote_state)<btrace_config>: New.
(remote_btrace_reset, PACKET_qXfer_btrace_conf): New.
(remote_protocol_features): Add qXfer:btrace-conf:read.
(remote_open_1): Call remote_btrace_reset.
(remote_xfer_partial): Handle TARGET_OBJECT_BTRACE_CONF.
(btrace_target_info)<conf>: New.
(btrace_sync_conf, btrace_read_config): New.
(remote_enable_btrace): Update parameters. Call btrace_sync_conf and
btrace_read_conf.
(remote_btrace_conf): New.
(init_remote_ops): Initialize to_btrace_conf.
(_initialize_remote): Add qXfer:btrace-conf packet.
* target.c (target_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(target_btrace_conf): New.
* target.h (target_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(target_btrace_conf): New.
(target_object)<TARGET_OBJECT_BTRACE_CONF>: New.
(target_ops)<to_enable_btrace>: Update parameters and comment.
(target_ops)<to_btrace_conf>: New.
* target-delegates: Regenerate.
* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_const_struct_btrace_config_p)
(target_debug_print_const_struct_btrace_target_info_p): New.
NEWS: Announce new command and new packet.
doc/
* gdb.texinfo (Process Record and Replay): Describe the "record
btrace bts" command.
(General Query Packets): Describe qXfer:btrace-conf:read packet.
(Branch Trace Configuration Format): New.
gdbserver/
* linux-low.c (linux_low_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(linux_low_btrace_conf): New.
(linux_target_ops)<to_btrace_conf>: Initialize.
* server.c (current_btrace_conf): New.
(handle_btrace_enable): Rename to ...
(handle_btrace_enable_bts): ... this. Pass ¤t_btrace_conf
to target_enable_btrace. Update comment. Update users.
(handle_qxfer_btrace_conf): New.
(qxfer_packets): Add btrace-conf entry.
(handle_query): Report qXfer:btrace-conf:read as supported packet.
* target.h (target_ops)<enable_btrace>: Update parameters and comment.
(target_ops)<read_btrace_conf>: New.
(target_enable_btrace): Update parameters.
(target_read_btrace_conf): New.
testsuite/
* gdb.btrace/delta.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/enable.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/finish.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/next.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/nexti.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/step.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/stepi.exp: Update "info record" output.
* gdb.btrace/nohist.exp: Update "info record" output.
Add a structure to hold the branch trace data and an enum to describe
the format of that data. So far, only BTS is supported. Also added
a NONE format to indicate that no branch trace data is available.
This will make it easier to support different branch trace formats in
the future.
2015-02-09 Markus Metzger <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/btrace-common.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add common/btrace-common.o.
(btrace-common.o): Add build rules.
* btrace.c (parse_xml_btrace): Update parameters.
(parse_xml_btrace_block): Set format field.
(btrace_add_pc, btrace_fetch): Use struct btrace_data.
(do_btrace_data_cleanup, make_cleanup_btrace_data): New.
(btrace_compute_ftrace): Split into this and...
(btrace_compute_ftrace_bts): ...this.
(btrace_stitch_trace): Split into this and...
(btrace_stitch_bts): ...this.
* btrace.h (parse_xml_btrace): Update parameters.
(make_cleanup_btrace_data): New.
* common/btrace-common.c: New.
* common/btrace-common.h: Include common-defs.h.
(btrace_block_s): Update comment.
(btrace_format): New.
(btrace_format_string): New.
(btrace_data_bts): New.
(btrace_data): New.
(btrace_data_init, btrace_data_fini, btrace_data_empty): New.
* remote.c (remote_read_btrace): Update parameters.
* target.c (target_read_btrace): Update parameters.
* target.h (target_read_btrace): Update parameters.
(target_ops)<to_read_btrace>: Update parameters.
* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_read_btrace): Update parameters.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target-debug (target_debug_print_struct_btrace_data_p): New.
* nat/linux-btrace.c (linux_read_btrace): Split into this and...
(linux_read_bts): ...this.
* nat/linux-btrace.h (linux_read_btrace): Update parameters.
gdbserver/
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/btrace-common.c.
(OBS): Add common/btrace-common.o.
(btrace-common.o): Add build rules.
* linux-low: Include btrace-common.h.
(linux_low_read_btrace): Use struct btrace_data. Call
btrace_data_init and btrace_data_fini.
This commit adds a new exception, MAX_COMPLETIONS_REACHED_ERROR, to be
thrown whenever the completer has generated too many candidates to
be useful. A new user-settable variable, "max_completions", is added
to control this behaviour. A top-level completion limit is added to
complete_line_internal, as the final check to ensure the user never
sees too many completions. An additional limit is added to
default_make_symbol_completion_list_break_on, to halt time-consuming
symbol table expansions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR cli/9007
PR cli/11920
PR cli/15548
* cli/cli-cmds.c (complete_command): Notify user if max-completions
reached.
* common/common-exceptions.h (enum errors)
<MAX_COMPLETIONS_REACHED_ERROR>: New value.
* completer.h (get_max_completions_reached_message): New declaration.
(max_completions): Likewise.
(completion_tracker_t): New typedef.
(new_completion_tracker): New declaration.
(make_cleanup_free_completion_tracker): Likewise.
(maybe_add_completion_enum): New enum.
(maybe_add_completion): New declaration.
(throw_max_completions_reached_error): Likewise.
* completer.c (max_completions): New global variable.
(new_completion_tracker): New function.
(free_completion_tracker): Likewise.
(make_cleanup_free_completion_tracker): Likewise.
(maybe_add_completions): Likewise.
(throw_max_completions_reached_error): Likewise.
(complete_line): Remove duplicates and limit result to max_completions
entries.
(get_max_completions_reached_message): New function.
(gdb_display_match_list): Handle max_completions.
(_initialize_completer): New declaration and function.
* symtab.c: Include completer.h.
(completion_tracker): New static variable.
(completion_list_add_name): Call maybe_add_completion.
(default_make_symbol_completion_list_break_on_1): Renamed from
default_make_symbol_completion_list_break_on. Maintain
completion_tracker across calls to completion_list_add_name.
(default_make_symbol_completion_list_break_on): New function.
* top.c (init_main): Set rl_completion_display_matches_hook.
* tui/tui-io.c: Include completer.h.
(tui_old_rl_display_matches_hook): New static global.
(tui_rl_display_match_list): Notify user if max-completions reached.
(tui_setup_io): Save/restore rl_completion_display_matches_hook.
* NEWS (New Options): Mention set/show max-completions.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Command Completion): Document new
"set/show max-completions" option.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/completion.exp: Disable completion limiting for
existing tests. Add new tests to check completion limiting.
* gdb.linespec/ls-errs.exp: Disable completion limiting.
This patch moves the shared code present on
gdb/linux-nat.c:linux_nat_create_inferior and
gdb/gdbserver/linux-low.c:linux_create_inferior to
nat/linux-personality.c. This code is responsible for disabling
address space randomization based on user setting, and using
<sys/personality.h> to do that. I decided to put the prototype of the
maybe_disable_address_space_randomization on nat/linux-osdata.h
because it seemed the best place to put it.
I regression-tested this patch on Fedora 20 x86_64, and found no
regressions.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-01-15 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add nat/linux-personality.h.
(linux-personality.o): New rule.
* common/common-defs.h: Include <stdint.h>.
* config/aarch64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Include
linux-personality.o.
* config/alpha/alpha-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/arm/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/i386/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/i386/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/ia64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/m32r/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/m68k/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/mips/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/pa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/spu-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/s390/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/tilegx/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/xtensa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* defs.h: Remove #include <stdint.h> (moved to
common/common-defs.h).
* linux-nat.c: Include nat/linux-personality.h. Remove #include
<sys/personality.h>; do not define ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE (moved to
nat/linux-personality.c).
(linux_nat_create_inferior): Remove code to disable address space
randomization (moved to nat/linux-personality.c). Create cleanup
to disable address space randomization.
* nat/linux-personality.c: New file.
* nat/linux-personality.h: Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2015-01-15 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add linux-personality.c.
(linux-personality.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (srv_linux_obj): Add linux-personality.o to the
list of objects to be built.
* linux-low.c: Include nat/linux-personality.h.
(linux_create_inferior): Remove code to disable address space
randomization (moved to ../nat/linux-personality.c). Create
cleanup to disable address space randomization.
This patch moves safe_strerror from the gdb/{posix,mingw}-hdep.c files
to the respective common/{posix,mingw}-strerror.c files. This is a
preparation for the next patch, which shares a common code (to disable
address space randomization when creating a new inferior).
The patch has been regtested on Fedora 20 x86_64, and no regressions
were found.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-01-15 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (ALLDEPFILES): Including common/mingw-strerror.c and
common/posix-strerror.c.
(posix-strerror.o): New rule.
(mingw-strerror.o): Likewise.
* common/common-utils.h (safe_strerror): Move prototype to here,
from utils.h.
* common/common.host: New file.
* common/mingw-strerror.c: Likewise.
* common/posix-strerror.c: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerated.
* configure.ac: Source common/common.host. Add variable
common_host_obs to gdb_host_obs.
* contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Mention gdb/common/mingw-strerror.c and
gdb/common/posix-strerror.c when warning about the use of
strerror.
* mingw-hdep.c (safe_strerror): Remove definition; move it to
common/mingw-strerror.c.
* posix-hdep.c (safe_strerror): Remove definition; move it to
common/posix-hdep.c.
* utils.h (safe_strerror): Remove prototype; move to
common/common-utils.h.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2015-01-15 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (posix-strerror.o): New rule.
(mingw-strerror.o): Likewise.
* configure: Regenerated.
* configure.ac: Source file ../common/common.host. Initialize new
variable srv_host_obs. Add srv_host_obs to GDBSERVER_DEPFILES.
The definition does not use the typedef for the dtor function pointer
type that the declaration uses. It's a cosmetic-only change.
ChangeLog:
* common/cleanups.c (make_cleanup_dtor): Use typedef for dtor
type.
Since gnulib alloca module was imported, we can include alloca.h in
both gdb and gdbserver unconditionally, so this patch adds inclusion
of alloca.h in common-defs.h. This patch also removes AC_FUNC_ALLOCA
in configure.ac because we don't need to check alloca any more.
This patch below is removed in fact.
[RFA/commit] include alloca.h if available.
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-08/msg00566.html
Since alloca.h is from gnulib now, we don't have to check malloc.h in
configure and include malloc.h in code. This patch also remove them
too.
gdb:
2014-11-21 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* common/common-defs.h: Include alloca.h
* configure.ac: Don't invoke AC_FUNC_ALLOCA.
* configure: Re-generated.
* defs.h: Remove code handling alloca.
* utils.c (gdb_realpath): Don't check HAVE_ALLOCA is defined
or not.
gdb/gdbserver:
2014-11-21 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* configure.ac: Don't invoke AC_FUNC_ALLOCA.
(AC_CHECK_HEADERS): Remove malloc.h.
* configure: Re-generated.
* config.in: Re-generated.
* server.h: Don't include alloca.h and malloc.h.
* gdbreplay.c: Don't check HAVE_ALLOCA_H is defined.
Don't include malloc.h.
When trying to build gdbserver on ppc-lynx178, the compiler reports
while trying to compile gdbserver/ax.c that vsprintf is not declared.
Looking at my C99 reference manual (a draft), I see the following
synopsis:
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int vsprintf(char * restrict s, [etc]);
Looking at stdio.h on LynxOS-178, if found where vsprintf gets
declared:
#if defined(__varargs_h) || defined(__stdarg_h) \
|| defined(_VARARGS_H) || defined(_STDARG_H)
extern int vsprintf _AP((char *, const char *, va_list));
#endif
Digging further, I noticed that common-defs.h, which is included
via server.h, includes stdarg.h after including stdio, explaining
why vsprintf does not get declared in this case.
This patch fixes the problem by including stdarg.h before stdio.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-defs.h: Move <stdarg.h> #include ahead of
<stdio.h> #include.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
This commit includes common-exceptions.h in common-defs.h and removes
all other inclusions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-defs.h: Include common-exceptions.h.
* exceptions.h: Do not include common-exceptions.h.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.h: Do not include common-exceptions.h.
This commit includes cleanups.h in common-defs.h and removes all other
inclusions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-defs.h: Include cleanups.h.
* common/common-exceptions.c: Do not include cleanups.h.
* utils.h: Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.h: Do not include cleanups.h.
This commit renames target_stop_ptid as target_stop_and_wait and
target_continue_ptid as target_continue_no_signal. Comments are
updated to more fully describe the functions' behaviour.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target/target.h (target_stop_ptid): Renamed as...
(target_stop_and_wait): New function. Updated comment.
All uses updated.
(target_continue_ptid): Renamed as...
(target_continue_no_signal): New function. Updated comment.
All uses updated.
This commit makes 19 of the 22 shared .c files in common, nat and
target include common-defs.h instead of defs.h/server.h. The
remaining three files need slight extra work and are dealt with
in separate commits.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/agent.c: Include common-defs.h.
Don't include defs.h or server.h.
* common/buffer.c: Likewise.
* common/common-debug.c: Likewise.
* common/common-utils.c: Likewise.
* common/errors.c: Likewise.
* common/filestuff.c: Likewise.
* common/format.c: Likewise.
* common/gdb_vecs.c: Likewise.
* common/print-utils.c: Likewise.
* common/ptid.c: Likewise.
* common/rsp-low.c: Likewise.
* common/signals.c: Likewise.
* common/vec.c: Likewise.
* common/xml-utils.c: Likewise.
* nat/linux-osdata.c: Likewise.
* nat/linux-procfs.c: Likewise.
* nat/linux-ptrace.c: Likewise.
* nat/mips-linux-watch.c: Likewise.
* target/waitstatus.c: Likewise.
This introduces common-regcache.h. This contains two functions that
allow nat/linux-btrace.c to be simplified. A better long term
solution would be unify the regcache code, but this is sufficient for
now.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-regcache.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/common-regcache.h.
* regcache.h: Include common-regcache.h.
(regcache_read_pc): Don't declare.
* regcache.c (get_thread_regcache_for_ptid): New function.
* nat/linux-btrace.c: Don't include regcache.h.
Include common-regcache.h.
(perf_event_read_bts): Use get_thread_regcache_for_ptid.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* regcache.h: Include common-regcache.h.
(regcache_read_pc): Don't declare.
* regcache.c (get_thread_regcache_for_ptid): New function.
This introduces common/symbol.h. This file declares a function that
the shared code can use and that the clients must implement. It also
changes some shared code to use these functions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/symbol.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/symbol.h.
* minsyms.c (find_minimal_symbol_address): New function.
* common/agent.c: Include common/symbol.h.
[!GDBSERVER]: Don't include objfiles.h.
(agent_look_up_symbols): Use find_minimal_symbol_address.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* symbol.c: New file.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add symbol.c.
(OBS): Add symbol.o.
This commit introduces two new functions to stop and restart target
processes that shared code can use and that clients must implement.
It also changes some shared code to use these functions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target/target.h (target_stop_ptid, target_continue_ptid):
Declare.
* target.c (target_stop_ptid, target_continue_ptid): New
functions.
* common/agent.c [!GDBSERVER]: Don't include infrun.h.
(agent_run_command): Always use target_stop_ptid and
target_continue_ptid.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* target.c (target_stop_ptid, target_continue_ptid): New
functions.
This introduces target/target.h. This file declares some functions
that the shared code can use and that clients must implement. It also
changes some shared code to use these functions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target/target.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add target/target.h.
* target.h: Include target/target.h.
(target_read_memory, target_write_memory): Don't declare.
* target.c (target_read_uint32): New function.
* common/agent.c: Include target/target.h.
[!GDBSERVER]: Don't include target.h.
(helper_thread_id): Type changed to uint32_t.
(agent_get_helper_thread_id): Use target_read_uint32.
(agent_run_command): Always use target_read_memory and
target_write_memory.
(agent_capability): Type changed to uint32_t.
(agent_capability_check): Use target_read_uint32.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* target.h: Include target/target.h.
* target.c (target_read_memory, target_read_uint32)
(target_write_memory): New functions.
This commit adds a new global flag show_debug_regs to common-debug.h
to replace the flag debug_hw_points used by gdbserver and by the
Linux x86 and AArch64 ports, and to replace the flag maint_show_dr
used by the Linux MIPS port.
Note that some debug printing in the AArch64 port was enabled only if
debug_hw_points > 1 but no way to set debug_hw_points to values other
than 0 and 1 was provided; that code was effectively dead. This
commit enables all debug printing if show_debug_regs is nonzero, so
the AArch64 output will be more verbose than previously.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-debug.h (show_debug_regs): Declare.
* common/common-debug.c (show_debug_regs): Define.
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (debug_hw_points): Don't define. Replace
all uses with show_debug_regs. Replace all uses that considered
debug_hw_points as a multi-value integer with straight boolean
uses.
* x86-nat.c (debug_hw_points): Don't define. Replace all uses
with show_debug_regs.
* nat/x86-dregs.c (debug_hw_points): Don't declare. Replace
all uses with show_debug_regs.
* mips-linux-nat.c (maint_show_dr): Don't define. Replace all
uses with show_debug_regs.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.h (debug_hw_points): Don't declare.
* server.c (debug_hw_points): Don't define. Replace all uses
with show_debug_regs.
* linux-aarch64-low.c (debug_hw_points): Don't define. Replace
all uses with show_debug_regs.
This commit renames nine files that contain code used by both 32- and
64-bit Intel ports such that their names are prefixed with "x86"
rather than "i386". All types, functions and variables within these
files are likewise renamed such that their names are prefixed with
"x86" rather than "i386". This makes GDB follow the convention used
by gdbserver such that 32-bit Intel code lives in files called
"i386-*", 64-bit Intel code lives in files called "amd64-*", and code
for both 32- and 64-bit Intel lives in files called "x86-*".
This commit only renames OS-independent files. The Linux ports of
both GDB and gdbserver now follow the i386/amd64/x86 convention fully.
Some ports still use the old convention where "i386" in file/function/
type/variable names can mean "32-bit only" or "32- and 64-bit" but I
don't want to touch ports I can't fully test except where absolutely
necessary.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* i386-nat.h: Renamed as...
* x86-nat.h: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
* i386-nat.c: Renamed as...
* x86-nat.c: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
* common/i386-xstate.h: Renamed as...
* common/x86-xstate.h: New file. All type, function and variable
name prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references
updated.
* nat/i386-cpuid.h: Renamed as...
* nat/x86-cpuid.h: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
* nat/i386-gcc-cpuid.h: Renamed as...
* nat/x86-gcc-cpuid.h: New file. All type, function and variable
name prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references
updated.
* nat/i386-dregs.h: Renamed as...
* nat/x86-dregs.h: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
* nat/i386-dregs.c: Renamed as...
* nat/x86-dregs.c: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* i386-low.h: Renamed as...
* x86-low.h: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
* i386-low.c: Renamed as...
* x86-low.c: New file. All type, function and variable name
prefixes changed from "i386_" to "x86_". All references updated.
This commit creates a new file, common/gdb_setjmp.h, to hold some
portability macros for setjmp/longjmp et al. that are used by the
exceptions subsystem and by the demangler crash catcher.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/gdb_setjmp.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/gdb_setjmp.h.
* configure.ac: Move sigsetjmp check...
* common/common.m4: ...here.
* configure: Regenerate.
* cp-support.c (SIGJMP_BUF): Delete.
(SIGSETJMP): Likewise.
(SIGLONGJMP): Likewise.
* exceptions.h (gdb_setjmp.h): Include.
(setjmp.h): Do not include.
(EXCEPTIONS_SIGJMP_BUF): Delete.
(EXCEPTIONS_SIGSETJMP): Likewise.
(EXCEPTIONS_SIGLONGJMP): Likewise.
Replace all uses of EXCEPTIONS_SIG* macros with SIG* macros
from gdb_setjmp.h.
* exceptions.c: Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Likewise.
This commit moves cleanups.[ch] into gdb/common/. The only change to
the content of the files is that cleanups.c's include list was altered
to match its new location.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* cleanups.h: Moved to...
* common/cleanups.h: New file.
* cleanups.c: Moved to...
* common/cleanups.c: New file. Include common-defs.h and
cleanups.h. Do not include defs.h.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Replace cleanups.c with common/cleanups.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Replace cleanups.h with common/cleanups.h.
(cleanups.o): New rule.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/cleanups.c.
(OBS): cleanups.o.
(cleanups.o): New rule.