Alan Modra [Thu, 15 Jan 2015 09:12:59 +0000 (19:42 +1030)]
Fix ARM fail of gap test
ld-elf/gap test was failing due to the ARM backend attempting to output
arch symbols when ld -s (strip all symbols) is in force. This patch
stops that happening and tidies the code a little.
PR 17842
* elflink.c (elf_link_output_sym): Assert elf_onesymtab set.
(bfd_elf_final_link): Always create a symbol table when emit_relocs.
Don't assign symtab file position unless symbols will be output.
Merge blocks with condition in common. Don't call
elf_backend_output_arch_local_syms or elf_backend_output_arch_syms
unless other symbols are output. Move assignment of symtab_shndx
file position. Localize variable.
Joel Brobecker [Thu, 15 Jan 2015 06:09:32 +0000 (10:09 +0400)]
[Ada] 'first/'last/'length of array whose bound is a discriminant
Consider the following code:
type Table is array (Positive range <>) of Integer;
type Object (N : Integer) is record
Data : Table (1 .. N);
end record;
My_Object : Object := (N => 3, Data => (3, 5, 8));
Trying to print the range and length of the My_Object.Data array yields:
(gdb) print my_object.data'first
$1 = 1
(gdb) print my_object.data'last
$2 = 0
(gdb) print my_object.data'length
$3 = 0
The first one is correct, and that is thanks to the fact that
the lower bound is statically known. However, for the upper
bound, and consequently the array's length, the values are incorrect.
It should be:
(gdb) print my_object.data'last
$2 = 3
(gdb) print my_object.data'length
$3 = 3
What happens here is that ada_array_bound_from_type sees that
our array has a parallel "___XA" type, and therefore tries to
use it. In particular, it described our array's index type as:
[...]___XDLU_1__n, which means lower bound = 1, and upper bound
is value of "n". Unfortunately, ada_array_bound_from_type does
not have access to the discriminant, and is therefore unable to
compute the bound correctly.
Fortunately, at this stage, the bound has already been computed
a while ago, and therefore doesn't need to be re-computed here.
This patch fixes the issue by ignoring that ___XA type if the array
is marked as already fixed.
This also fixes the same issue with packed arrays.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ada-lang.c (ada_array_bound_from_type): Ignore array's parallel
___XA type if the array has already been fixed.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.ada/var_arr_attrs: New testcase.
Joel Brobecker [Thu, 15 Jan 2015 03:14:45 +0000 (07:14 +0400)]
Build failure in sim/rx/gdb-if.c on windows
This should fix a build failure reported on x86_64-mingw32 by Daniel
Calcoen due to conflicting declarations of "open". This patch just
renames the static global in sim/rx/gdb-if.c into "rx_sim_is_open".
sim/rx/ChangeLog:
* gdb-if.c (open): Rename to...
(rx_sim_is_open): This. Replace all uses of "open" by uses of
"rx_sim_is_open" throughout.
Tested by rebuilding on x86_64-linux.
Anthony Green [Thu, 15 Jan 2015 00:08:12 +0000 (19:08 -0500)]
Don't disable gprof for moxie
GDB Administrator [Thu, 15 Jan 2015 00:00:13 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Jan-Benedict Glaw [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 21:10:15 +0000 (22:10 +0100)]
Merge include/libiberty.h from GCC
This pulls in some missing prototypes and also adds corresponding entries
to the ChangeLog file. Please note that for one function, strverscmp(),
the ChangeLog entry was already there, but the actual prototype wasn't.
These ChangeLog entries are added:
2014-10-28 Yury Gribov <y.gribov@samsung.com>
* libiberty.h (strtol, strtoul, strtoll, strtoull): New prototypes.
2014-10-15 David Malcolm <dmalcolm@redhat.com>
* libiberty.h (choose_tmpdir): New prototype.
Jiong Wang [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 19:11:54 +0000 (19:11 +0000)]
[ARM] Reject R_ARM_REL32 when trying to defer it to runtime
bfd/
* elf32-arm.c (elf32_arm_final_link_relocate): Reject R_ARM_32/_NOI when
trying to defer them to runtime.
ld/testsuite/
* ld-arm/elf32-reject.s: New testcase.
* ld-arm/elf32-reject.d: Likewise.
* ld-arm/elf32-reject-pie.s: Likewise.
* ld-arm/elf32-reject-pie.d: Likewise.
* ld-arm/arm-elf.exp: Run new testcases.
* ld-arm/ifunc-7.s: Delete f2/f4 test items.
* ld-arm/ifunc-7.rd: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-7.gd: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-7.dd: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-8.s: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-8.rd: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-8.gd: Likewise.
* ld-arm/ifunc-8.dd: Likewise.
Cary Coutant [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 18:30:14 +0000 (10:30 -0800)]
Fix a bug in resolving HI16/LO16 relocation pairs for MIPS.
2015-01-14 Sasa Stankovic <Sasa.Stankovic@imgtec.com>
gold/
* mips.cc (reloc_high): Add r_sym.
(Mips_relocate_functions::relhi16): Add r_sym parameter. Pass r_sym to
reloc_high constructor.
(Mips_relocate_functions::relgot16_local): Likewise.
(Mips_relocate_functions::rello16): Add r_sym parameter. Use r_sym and
r_type to decide whether LO16 matches HI16.
(Target_mips::Relocate::relocate): Pass r_sym to calls to relhi16,
rello16 and relgot16_local.
Yao Qi [Fri, 28 Nov 2014 01:18:26 +0000 (09:18 +0800)]
Detect 64-bit-ness in PowerPC Book III-E
This patch is to teach both GDB and GDBServer to detect 64-bit inferior
correctly. We find a problem that GDBServer is unable to detect on a
e5500 core processor. Current GDBServer assumes that MSR is a 64-bit
register, but MSR is a 32-bit register in Book III-E. This patch is
to fix this problem by checking the right bit in MSR, in order to handle
both Book III-S and Book III-E. In order to detect Book III-S and
Book III-E, we check the PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE from the host's HWCAP (by
getauxval on glibc >= 2.16. If getauxval doesn't exist, we implement
the fallback by parsing /proc/self/auxv), because it should an invariant
on the same machine cross different processes.
In order to share code, I add nat/ppc-linux.c for both GDB and
GDBserver side.
gdb:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (ppc-linux.o): New rule.
* config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add ppc-linux.o.
* configure.ac: AC_CHECK_FUNCS(getauxval).
* config.in: Re-generated.
* configure: Re-generated.
* nat/ppc-linux.h [__powerpc64__] (ppc64_64bit_inferior_p):
Declare.
* nat/ppc-linux.c: New file.
* ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_target_wordsize) [__powerpc64__]:
Call ppc64_64bit_inferior_p.
gdb/gdbserver:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add nat/ppc-linux.c.
(ppc-linux.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (powerpc*-*-linux*): Add ppc-linux.o.
* configure.ac: AC_CHECK_FUNCS(getauxval).
* config.in: Re-generated.
* configure: Re-generated.
* linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_arch_setup) [__powerpc64__]: Call
ppc64_64bit_inferior_p
Yao Qi [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 09:23:55 +0000 (17:23 +0800)]
Move some ppc macros to nat/ppc-linux.h
When I use PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE in GDBserver, I find it is defined in GDB
but not in GDBserver. After taking a further look, I find some macros
are duplicated between ppc-linux-nat.c and linux-ppc-low.c, so this
patch is to move them into nat/ppc-linux.h.
gdb/gdbserver:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* linux-ppc-low.c: Include "nat/ppc-linux.h".
(PPC_FEATURE_HAS_VSX): Move to nat/ppc-linux.h.
(PPC_FEATURE_HAS_ALTIVEC, PPC_FEATURE_HAS_SPE): Likewise.
(PT_ORIG_R3, PT_TRAP): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, PTRACE_SETVSXREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETVRREGS, PTRACE_SETVRREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, PTRACE_SETEVRREGS): Likewise.
gdb:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* ppc-linux-nat.c (PT_ORIG_R3, PT_TRAP): Move to
nat/ppc-linux.h.
(PPC_FEATURE_CELL, PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE): Likewise.
(PPC_FEATURE_HAS_DFP): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETVRREGS, PTRACE_SETVRREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, PTRACE_SETVSXREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, PTRACE_SETEVRREGS): Likewise.
Include "nat/ppc-linux.h".
* nat/ppc-linux.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add nat/ppc-linux.h.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 19:30:08 +0000 (19:30 +0000)]
PR17525 - breakpoint commands not executed when program run from -x script
Executing a gdb script that runs the inferior (from the command line
with -x), and has it hit breakpoints with breakpoint commands that
themselves run the target, is currently broken on async targets
(Linux, remote).
While we're executing a command list or a script, we force the
interpreter to be sync, which results in some functions nesting an
event loop and waiting for the target to stop, instead of returning
immediately and having the top level event loop handle the stop.
The issue with this bug is simply that bpstat_do_actions misses
checking whether the interpreter is sync. When we get here, in the
case of executing a script (or, when the interpreter is sync), the
program has already advanced to the next breakpoint, through
maybe_wait_sync_command_done. We need to process its breakpoints
immediately, just like with a sync target.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/
2015-01-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/17525
* breakpoint.c: Include "interps.h".
(bpstat_do_actions_1): Also check whether the interpreter is
async.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
PR gdb/17525
* gdb.base/bp-cmds-execution-x-script.c: New file.
* gdb.base/bp-cmds-execution-x-script.exp: New file.
* gdb.base/bp-cmds-execution-x-script.gdb: New file.
Pedro Alves [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 11:51:06 +0000 (11:51 +0000)]
PR cli/17828: -batch -ex r breaks terminal
Commit
d3d4baed (PR python/17372 - Python hangs when displaying
help()) had the side effect of causing 'gdb -batch' to leave the
terminal in the wrong state if the program was run. E.g,.
$ echo 'main(){*(int*)0=0;}' | gcc -x c -; ./gdb/gdb -batch -ex r ./a.out
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x00000000004004ff in main ()
$
If you start typing the next command, seemingly nothing happens - GDB
left the terminal with echo disabled.
The issue is that that "r" ends up in fetch_inferior_event, which
calls reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup, which causes
readline to prep the terminal (raw, echo disabled). But "-batch"
causes GDB to exit before the top level event loop is first started,
and then nothing de-preps the terminal.
The reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup function's intro
comment mentions:
"Need to do this as we go back to the event loop, ready to process
further input."
but the implementation forgets the case of when the interpreter is
sync, which indicates we won't return to the event loop yet, or as in
the case of -batch, we have not started it yet.
The fix is to not install the readline callback in that case.
For the test, in this case, checking that command echo still works is
sufficient. Comparing stty output before/after running GDB is even
better. Because stty may not be available, the test tries both ways.
In any case, since expect's spawn (what we use to start gdb) creates a
new pseudo tty, another expect spawn or tcl exec after GDB exits would
not see the wrong terminal settings. So instead, the test spawns a
shell and runs stty and GDB in it.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/
2015-01-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR cli/17828
* infrun.c (reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup): Don't
reinstall if the interpreter is sync.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR cli/17828
* gdb.base/batch-preserve-term-settings.c: New file.
* gdb.base/batch-preserve-term-settings.exp: New file.
Doug Evans [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 01:00:31 +0000 (17:00 -0800)]
Enhance gdb.lookup_objfile so that it works with a symlinked binary.
gdb/Changelog:
* objfiles.c (objfile_filename): New function.
* objfiles.h (objfile_filename): Declare it.
(objfile_name): Add function comment.
* python/py-objfile.c (objfpy_lookup_objfile_by_name): Try both the
bfd file name (which may be realpath'd), and the original name.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.python/py-objfile.exp: Test gdb.lookup_objfile on symlinked
binary.
GDB Administrator [Wed, 14 Jan 2015 00:00:09 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Jiong Wang [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 15:44:47 +0000 (15:44 +0000)]
[ARM] vcmp/vcmpe should accept #0x0 as an operand
gas/
2015-01-13 Matthew Wahab <matthew.wahab@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (parse_ifimm_zero): Accept #0x0 as a synonym for
#0, restoring previous behaviour.
gas/testsuite/
2015-01-13 Matthew Wahab <matthew.wahab@arm.com>
* gas/arm/ual-vcmp.s: Add vcmp, vcmpe with #0x0 operand.
* gas/ual/vcmp.d: Update expected output.
* gas/ual/vcmp-zero-bad.l: Likewise
Joel Brobecker [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 14:59:32 +0000 (18:59 +0400)]
gdb/testsuite: Make clean mostlyclean should not delete *.py.
A sanity-check in my release scripts caught something: After having
created the tarballs, I verify that no checked-in file disappeared
in the process, and lo and behod, it found that the following file
got wiped:
- gdb/testsuite/dg-extract-results.py:
And it's not part of the tarball either.
I don't understand while we delete all *.py files in gdb/testsuite,
since I don't see a rule that expected to create one. A run of the
testsuite also doesn't seem to be creating .py files there.
I traced this to the following commit, which unfortunately provided
no explanation. Perhaps we used to run some tests in the gdb/testsuite
directory and caused files to be left behind there. Perhaps we still
do today?
In the meantime, Executive Decision: In order to allow me to create
tarballs without losing files, I removed it. It's easy to put something
back if we find out why it might still be needed.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (clean mostlyclean): Do not delete *.py.
Tested on x86_64-linux by running the src-release.sh script again,
and this time, dg-extract-results.py no longer gets wiped.
Joel Brobecker [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 12:24:45 +0000 (16:24 +0400)]
Update NEWS post GDB 7.9 branch creation.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Create a new section for the next release branch.
Rename the section of the current branch, now that it has
been cut.
Joel Brobecker [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 12:16:07 +0000 (16:16 +0400)]
Bump version to 7.9.50.DATE-cvs.
Now that the GDB 7.9 branch has been created, we can
bump the version number.
gdb/ChangeLog:
GDB 7.9 branch created (
92fc2e6978d9a7c8324c7e851dbee59e22ec7a37):
* version.in: Bump version to 7.9.50.DATE-cvs.
Jiong Wang [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 11:36:54 +0000 (11:36 +0000)]
[AArch64] Fix function pointer variable with -Bsymbolic-functions
bfd/ChangeLog
2015-01-13 Thomas Preud'homme <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>
* elfnn-aarch64.c (elfNN_aarch64_final_link_relocate): Use
SYMBOLIC_BIND to check if a symbol should be bound symbolically.
ld/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-01-13 Thomas Preud'homme <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>
* ld-aarch64/aarch64-elf.exp: Added relocs-257-symbolic-func test.
* ld-aarch64/relocs-257-symbolic-func.d: New file.
* ld-aarch64/relocs-257-symbolic-func.s: Likewise.
Jiong Wang [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 11:21:43 +0000 (11:21 +0000)]
[AArch64] Enable overflow check for TLSLE_MOVW_TPREL_G2
bfd/
* elfnn-aarch64.c: (elfNN_aarch64_howto_table): Enable overflow check for
TLSLE_MOVW_TPREL_G2.
ld/testsuite/
* ld-aarch64/tprel_g2_overflow.s: New testcase.
* ld-aarch64/tprel_g2_overflow.d: New expectation file.
* ld-aarch64/aarch64-elf.exp: Run new testcase.
Jiong Wang [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 11:18:10 +0000 (11:18 +0000)]
[AArch64] Enable overflow check for R_AARCH64_TLSLE_ADD_TPREL_HI12
bfd/
PR ld/17415
* elfnn-aarch64.c (elfNN_aarch64_howto_table): Mark
R_AARCH64_TLSLE_ADD_TPREL_HI12 as complain_overflow_unsigned.
* elfxx-aarch64.c (_bfd_aarch64_elf_resolve_relocation): Correct the bit
mask.
ld/testsuite/
PR ld/17415
* ld-aarch64/pr17415.s: Source file for new test.
* ld-aarch64/pr17415.d: Expect file for new test.
* ld-aarch64/aarch64-elf.exp: Run the new test.
Joel Brobecker [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 10:36:34 +0000 (14:36 +0400)]
[ARI] Remove trailing new-line in argument of call to warning.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* nat/linux-procfs.c (linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads):
Remove trailing new-line in argument of call to warning.
Joel Brobecker [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 10:35:49 +0000 (14:35 +0400)]
[ARI] Remove trailing new-line in argument of call to warning.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* linux-nat.c (attach_proc_task_lwp_callback): Remove trailing
new-line in argument of call to "warning".
Joel Brobecker [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 11:46:34 +0000 (15:46 +0400)]
[python/Ada] gdb.lookup_type fails to looking primitive type
The following change...
commit
1994afbf19892c9e614a034fbf1a5233e9addce3
Date: Tue Dec 23 07:55:39 2014 -0800
Subject: Look up primitive types as symbols.
... caused the following regression:
% gdb
(gdb) set lang ada
(gdb) python print gdb.lookup_type('character')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
gdb.error: No type named character.
Error while executing Python code.
This is because the language_lookup_primitive_type_as_symbol call
was moved to the la_lookup_symbol_nonlocal hook. A couple of
implementations have been upated accordingly, but the Ada version
has not. This patch fixes this omission.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ada-lang.c (ada_lookup_symbol_nonlocal): If name not found
in static block, then try searching for primitive types.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.python/py-lookup-type.exp: New file.
GDB Administrator [Tue, 13 Jan 2015 00:00:13 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Patrick Palka [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 22:51:33 +0000 (17:51 -0500)]
Append to input history file instead of overwriting it
This patch makes readline append new history lines to the GDB history
file on exit instead of overwriting the entire history file on exit.
This change allows us to run multiple simultaneous GDB sessions without
having each session overwrite the added history of each other session on
exit.
Care must be taken to ensure that the history file doesn't get corrupted
when multiple GDB processes are trying to simultaneously append to and
then truncate it. Safety is achieved in such a situation by using an
intermediate local history file to mutually exclude multiple processes
from simultaneously performing write operations on the global history
file.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* top.h (gdb_add_history): Declare.
* top.c (command_count): New variable.
(gdb_add_history): New function.
(gdb_safe_append_history): New static function.
(quit_force): Call it.
(command_line_input): Use gdb_add_history instead of
add_history.
* event-top.c (command_line_handler): Likewise.
H.J. Lu [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 21:34:24 +0000 (13:34 -0800)]
Properly check abbrev size
abbrev_base is independent of abbrev_size. We should use abbrev_base +
abbrev_size to check abbrev section size.
* dwarf.c (process_debug_info): Properly check abbrev size.
Nick Clifton [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 17:28:55 +0000 (17:28 +0000)]
Another fix for memory access errors trigegred by running readelf on a corrupt binary.
PR binutils/17531
* dwarf.c (display_debug_addr): Use xcalloc to allocate the debug_addr_info
array. Check for an address_base that is too large.
James Clarke [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 17:13:54 +0000 (21:13 +0400)]
[darwin/gdb] Use <setjmp.h> instead of <machine/setjmp.h>
The `machine/setjmp.h' header is no longer present on OS X 10.10, and is
non-standard. Instead, `darwin-nat.c' should be using the standard
`setjmp.h' header.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-01-12 James Clarke <jrtc27@jrtc27.com> (tiny patch)
PR gdb/17046
* darwin-nat.c: Replace <machine/setjmp.h> #include by
<setjmp.h> #include.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 17:10:06 +0000 (17:10 +0000)]
gdb.python/py-prompt.exp: restore GDBFLAGS
The previous change to py-prompt.exp made it return without restoring
GDBFLAGS, resulting in breaking the following tests:
$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver --directory=gdb.python"
...
Running src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-prompt.exp ...
Running src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-section-script.exp ...
ERROR: (timeout) GDB never initialized after 10 seconds.
ERROR: no fileid for gdbuild
ERROR: Couldn't send python print ('test') to GDB.
ERROR: no fileid for gdbuild
ERROR: Couldn't send python print (sys.version_info[0]) to GDB.
ERROR: no fileid for gdbuild
ERROR: Couldn't send python print (sys.version_info[1]) to GDB.
ERROR: no fileid for gdbuild
ERROR: no fileid for gdbuild
...
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.python/py-prompt.exp: When the board can't spawn for attach,
restore GDBFLAGS before returning.
Nick Clifton [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 16:08:41 +0000 (16:08 +0000)]
More fixes for memory access errors when running readelf on fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17531
* dwarf.c (process_debug_info): Check for abbrev_base being larger
than the section size.
(process_cu_tu_index): Use xcalloc2 to allocate the CU and TU
arrays.
(xcalloc2): New function. Like xcalloc, but checks for overflow.
* dwarf.h (xcalloc2): Prototype.
Jan Beulich [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 14:24:20 +0000 (15:24 +0100)]
gas: allow labeling of CFI instructions
When runtime patching code (like e.g. done by the Linux kernel) there
may be cases where the set of stack frame alterations differs between
unpatched and patched code. Consequently the corresponding unwind data
needs patching too. Locating the right places within an FDE, however,
is rather cumbersome without a way to insert labels in the resulting
section. Hence this patch introduces a new directive, .cfi_label. Note
that with the way CFI data gets emitted currently (at the end of the
assembly process) this can't support local FB- and dollar-labels.
gas/
2015-01-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
* gas/dw2gencfi.c (cfi_add_label, dot_cfi_label): New.
(cfi_pseudo_table): Add "cfi_label".
(output_cfi_insn): Handle CFI_label.
(select_cie_for_fde): Als terminate CIE when encountering
CFI_label.
* dw2gencfi.h (cfi_add_label): Declare.
(struct cfi_insn_data): New member "sym_name".
(CFI_label): New.
* read.c (read_symbol_name): Drop "static".
* read.h (read_symbol_name): Declare.
gas/testsuite/
2015-01-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
gas/cfi/cfi-label.d, gas/cfi/cfi-label.s: New.
gas/cfi/cfi.exp: Run new tests.
Terry Guo [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 11:00:00 +0000 (21:30 +1030)]
Fix GDB crash caused by discarding grouped debug sections
Keep a group containing just debug sections or the other special
sections we currently mark against garbage collection.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_gc_mark_debug_special_section_group): New
function.
(_bfd_elf_gc_mark_extra_sections): Use it.
Alan Modra [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 09:54:12 +0000 (20:24 +1030)]
Fix build without makeinfo from release binutils tar
PR 17817
* Makefile.am (aoutx.stamp): cp -p $srcdir/aoutx.texi to keep
timestamps so that makeinfo need not be installed.
(archive.stamp, archures.stamp, bfdt.stamp, cache.stamp,
coffcode.stamp, core.stamp, elf.stamp, elfcode.stamp, mmo.stamp,
format.stamp, libbfd.stamp, bfdio.stamp, bfdwin.stamp,
opncls.stamp, reloc.stamp, section.stamp, syms.stamp, targets.stamp,
init.stamp, hash.stamp, linker.stamp): Similarly.
(bfdver.texi): Use test rather than [ ] in commands.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
Jan Kratochvil [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 10:02:46 +0000 (11:02 +0100)]
[testsuite patch] Fix new FAIL: py-frame.exp: test Frame.read_register(rip)
for x86_64 -m32 run one gets:
+FAIL: gdb.python/py-frame.exp: test Frame.read_register(rip)
I do not have x32 OS here but the %rip test should PASS there I think.
On Sun, 11 Jan 2015 14:58:06 +0100, Yao Qi wrote:
With your patch applied, this test is skipped on 'x86_64 -m32'. I
prefer to increasing the test coverage, so how about extending the test
for 'x86_64 -m32'? I mean test Frame.read_register(eip)...
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-01-12 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* gdb.python/py-frame.exp (test Frame.read_register(rip)): Use
is_amd64_regs_target and is_x86_like_target.
Jan Beulich [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 08:05:19 +0000 (09:05 +0100)]
arm: properly range check immediate operands of VSHL and VQSHL
These two, other than VQSHLU, didn't have their immediates properly range
checked so far.
(Re-sending unchanged from the original v2 due to never having got an
answer to https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2013-04/msg00121.html.)
gas/
2015-01-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
* gas/config/tc-arm.c (do_neon_shl_imm): Check immediate range.
(do_neon_qshl_imm): Likewise.
gas/testsuite/
2015-01-12 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
* gas/arm/neon-addressing-bad.s: Add test for invalid VSHL,
VQSHL, and VQSHLU immediates.
* gas/arm/neon-addressing-bad.l: Update accordingly.
Alan Modra [Sat, 10 Jan 2015 22:00:33 +0000 (08:30 +1030)]
Assorted compiler warning fixes
The C standard doesn't guarantee a function pointer can be cast to
void* and vice versa.
binutils/
* prdbg.c (print_debugging_info): Don't use void* for function
pointer param.
* budbg.h (print_debugging_info): Update prototype.
gas/
* read.c (s_altmacro, s_reloc): Make definition static.
Doug Evans [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 00:39:46 +0000 (16:39 -0800)]
dwarf2read.c (compute_delayed_physnames): Use TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2read.c (compute_delayed_physnames): Use TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME.
GDB Administrator [Mon, 12 Jan 2015 00:00:12 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 23:45:43 +0000 (15:45 -0800)]
Require numeric attributes to specify the form.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* lib/dwarf.exp (Dwarf): Flag an error if a numeric attribute value
is given without an explicit form.
* gdb.dwarf2/arr-subrange.exp: Specify forms for all numeric
attributes.
* gdb.dwarf/corrupt.exp: Ditto.
* gdb.dwarf2/enum-type.exp: Ditto.
* gdb.trace/entry-values.exp: Ditto.
* gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp: Ditto.
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 23:16:26 +0000 (15:16 -0800)]
Temporarily revert symbol lookup cache.
clear_symtab_users calls breakpoint_re_set before
observer_notify_new_objfile(NULL), and thus symbol lookup
done during breakpoint_re_set will see a stale cache.
Presumably we just need to move the call to observer_notify_new_objfile(NULL)
to before breakpoint_re_set, but need to check for other such issues,
and 7.9 is scheduled to branch tomorrow.
Reverts commits:
b2fb95e006c29e2cbe4b30523879fe3640f906ad
400678a494713abf8f7ea2367f213109a2c4b886
d98b9ccbccf36563dad92f6093a93655b38bc51b
77087adf50cedf78cc216ac6eb3b2863839d713c
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (eq_symbol_entry): Use SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME and
symbol_matches_domain for symbol comparisons.
* symtab.c (symbol_cache_mark_found): Improve function comment.
Rename parameter objfile to objfile_context.
(symbol_cache_mark_not_found): Improve function comment.
Add symbol lookup cache.
* NEWS: Document new options and commands.
* symtab.c (symbol_cache_key): New static global.
(DEFAULT_SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE, MAX_SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE): New macros.
(SYMBOL_LOOKUP_FAILED): New macro.
(symbol_cache_slot_state): New enum.
(block_symbol_cache): New struct.
(symbol_cache): New struct.
(new_symbol_cache_size, symbol_cache_size): New static globals.
(hash_symbol_entry, eq_symbol_entry): New functions.
(symbol_cache_byte_size, resize_symbol_cache): New functions.
(make_symbol_cache, free_symbol_cache): New functions.
(get_symbol_cache, symbol_cache_cleanup): New function.
(set_symbol_cache_size, set_symbol_cache_size_handler): New functions.
(symbol_cache_lookup, symbol_cache_clear_slot): New function.
(symbol_cache_mark_found, symbol_cache_mark_not_found): New functions.
(symbol_cache_flush, symbol_cache_dump): New functions.
(maintenance_print_symbol_cache): New function.
(maintenance_flush_symbol_cache): New function.
(symbol_cache_stats): New function.
(maintenance_print_symbol_cache_statistics): New function.
(symtab_new_objfile_observer): New function.
(symtab_free_objfile_observer): New function.
(lookup_static_symbol, lookup_global_symbol): Use symbol cache.
(_initialize_symtab): Init symbol_cache_key. New parameter
maint symbol-cache-size. New maint commands print symbol-cache,
print symbol-cache-statistics, flush-symbol-cache.
Install new_objfile, free_objfile observers.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Symbols): Document new commands
"maint print symbol-cache", "maint print symbol-cache-statistics",
"maint flush-symbol-cache". Document new option
"maint set symbol-cache-size".
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 22:06:34 +0000 (14:06 -0800)]
PR gdb/15830
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/15830
* NEWS: The "maint demangle" command is renamed as "demangle".
* demangle.c: #include cli/cli-utils.h, language.h.
(demangle_command): New function.
(_initialize_demangle): Add new command "demangle".
* maint.c (maintenance_demangle): Stub out.
(_initialize_maint_cmds): Update help text for "maint demangle",
and mark as deprecated.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Mention "demangle".
(Symbols): Ditto.
(Maintenance Commands): Delete docs for "maint demangle".
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/maint.exp: Remove references to "maint demangle".
* gdb.cp/demangle.exp: Update. "maint demangle" -> "demangle".
Add tests for explicitly specifying language to demangle.
* gdb.dlang/demangle.exp: Ditto.
Mark Kettenis [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 21:16:11 +0000 (22:16 +0100)]
Fix build on OpenBSD.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_follow_fork): Adjust now that
inferior_thread is a function.
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 20:02:23 +0000 (12:02 -0800)]
symtab.c (eq_symbol_entry): Use SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME and symbol_matches_domain.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (eq_symbol_entry): Use SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME and
symbol_matches_domain for symbol comparisons.
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 19:40:41 +0000 (11:40 -0800)]
tweak previous entry
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 19:36:36 +0000 (11:36 -0800)]
Improve comments for symbol_cache_mark_{not_,}found.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (symbol_cache_mark_found): Improve function comment.
Rename parameter objfile to objfile_context.
(symbol_cache_mark_not_found): Ditto.
H.J. Lu [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 16:04:27 +0000 (08:04 -0800)]
Only discard space for pc-relative relocs symbols
When building PIE, we should only discard space for pc-relative relocs
symbols which turn out to need copy relocs.
bfd/
PR ld/17827
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_allocate_dynrelocs): For PIE,
only discard space for pc-relative relocs symbols which turn
out to need copy relocs.
ld/testsuite/
PR ld/17827
* ld-x86-64/pr17689.out: Updated.
* ld-x86-64/pr17689b.S: Likewise.
* ld-x86-64/pr17827.rd: New file.
* ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Run PR ld/17827 test.
Doug Evans [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 06:27:10 +0000 (22:27 -0800)]
Add symbol lookup cache.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Add symbol lookup cache.
* NEWS: Document new options and commands.
* symtab.c (symbol_cache_key): New static global.
(DEFAULT_SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE, MAX_SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE): New macros.
(SYMBOL_LOOKUP_FAILED): New macro.
(symbol_cache_slot_state): New enum.
(block_symbol_cache): New struct.
(symbol_cache): New struct.
(new_symbol_cache_size, symbol_cache_size): New static globals.
(hash_symbol_entry, eq_symbol_entry): New functions.
(symbol_cache_byte_size, resize_symbol_cache): New functions.
(make_symbol_cache, free_symbol_cache): New functions.
(get_symbol_cache, symbol_cache_cleanup): New function.
(set_symbol_cache_size, set_symbol_cache_size_handler): New functions.
(symbol_cache_lookup, symbol_cache_clear_slot): New function.
(symbol_cache_mark_found, symbol_cache_mark_not_found): New functions.
(symbol_cache_flush, symbol_cache_dump): New functions.
(maintenance_print_symbol_cache): New function.
(maintenance_flush_symbol_cache): New function.
(symbol_cache_stats): New function.
(maintenance_print_symbol_cache_statistics): New function.
(symtab_new_objfile_observer): New function.
(symtab_free_objfile_observer): New function.
(lookup_static_symbol, lookup_global_symbol): Use symbol cache.
(_initialize_symtab): Init symbol_cache_key. New parameter
maint symbol-cache-size. New maint commands print symbol-cache,
print symbol-cache-statistics, flush-symbol-cache.
Install new_objfile, free_objfile observers.
doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Symbols): Document new commands
"maint print symbol-cache", "maint print symbol-cache-statistics",
"maint flush-symbol-cache". Document new option
"maint set symbol-cache-size".
GDB Administrator [Sun, 11 Jan 2015 00:00:20 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Joel Brobecker [Sat, 10 Jan 2015 05:50:44 +0000 (09:50 +0400)]
Fix use of wrong struct i387_xsave field in i387_cache_to_xsave
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* i387-fp.c (i387_cache_to_xsave): In look over
num_avx512_zmmh_high_registers, replace use of struct i387_xsave
zmmh_low_space field by use of zmmh_high_space.
Tested on x86_64-linux, using boards/native-gdbserver.exp.
Andrew Burgess [Sun, 4 Jan 2015 00:03:16 +0000 (00:03 +0000)]
gas/avr: Prevent incorrect overflow errors for diff fixups.
When fixups are converted to a difference type within md_apply_fix, we
previously left the contents of VALP (the value that was initially
computed within write.c:fixup_segment) unchanged. This is harmless,
except that this value is used within write.c:fixup_segment once we
return from md_apply_fix to perform an overflow check.
In some cases, the value computed in write.c:fixup_segment is so wrong
that an overflow error can be triggered. These errors are incorrect.
This patch avoids the overflow errors by adjusting the value in
write.c:fixup_segment using the VALP pointer in md_apply_fix.
A test for this issue is included.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-avr.c (md_apply_fix): Update the contents of VALP for
diff fixups.
gas/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gas/avr/large-debug-line-table.d: New file.
* gas/avr/large-debug-line-table.s: New file.
GDB Administrator [Sat, 10 Jan 2015 00:00:16 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Cary Coutant [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 23:55:50 +0000 (15:55 -0800)]
Don't align start of segment unless alignment is larger than page size.
This fixes an issue where a page-aligned data section, combined with -z relro,
could lead to a gap between text and data segments larger than a page, and
we would fail to overlap the segments in the file.
gold/
* layout.cc (Layout::set_segment_offsets): Don't align start of segment
unless alignment is larger than page size.
Patrick Palka [Sun, 30 Nov 2014 16:47:16 +0000 (11:47 -0500)]
Don't munge yacc's #line directives
The #line directives within GDB's autogenerated yacc files (e.g.
c-exp.c) are being incorrectly munged, causing these directives to refer
to nonexistent source files, e.g.
#line 36 "/home/patrick/binutils-gdb/gdb//home/patrick/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-exp.y"
as opposed to
#line 36 "/home/patrick/binutils-gdb/gdb/c-exp.y"
The munging happens due to a sed expression added by commit
954d8cae
whose intended purpose[1] was to work around the fact that ylwrap emitted #line
directives without any directory information, e.g.
#line 36 "c-exp.y"
So the sed expression was meant to munge such directives to refer to
absolute paths instead. But the behavior of ylwrap was changed some
years ago[2] to emit absolute paths within #line directives. And when
our local copy of ylwrap was synced by commit
e30465112, the sed
expression in question became unnecessary, and indeed harmful.
This patch removes the now-obsolete sed expression. The emitted #line
directives are now correct without it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (.y.c): Don't munge yacc's #line
directives.
[1]: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-11/msg00265.html
[2]: http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/automake.git/commit/lib/ylwrap?id=
b6359a5f3
Nick Clifton [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 21:56:30 +0000 (21:56 +0000)]
Fixes a bug in the previous delat to tekhex.c which meant that valid tekhex files were being rejected.
* tekhex.c (getvalue): Fix thinko in test for correct extraction
of value.
(getsym): Return false if there was not enough data to extract the
symbol.
Philipp Tomsich [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 20:00:14 +0000 (20:00 +0000)]
This patch adds the necessary support to the assembler to allow wiring
the X-Gene scheduling description up in the respective GCC backend.
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_cpus): Add support for APM X-Gene 1 and
X-Gene 2.
* doc/c-arm.texi (ARM Options): Mention xgene1 and xgene2.
Patrick Palka [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 18:27:56 +0000 (13:27 -0500)]
Consolidate the custom TUI query hook with the default query hook
This patch primarily rewrites defaulted_query() to use
gdb_readline_wrapper() to prompt the user for input, like
prompt_for_continue() does. The motivation for this rewrite is to be
able to reuse the default query hook in TUI, obviating the need for a
custom TUI query hook.
However, having TUI use the default query mechanism exposed a couple of
latent bugs in tui_redisplay_readline() related to the handling of
multi-line prompts, in particular GDB's multi-line quit prompt.
The first issue is an off-by-one error in the calculation of the height
of the prompt. The check in question should be col <= prev_col, not c <
prev_col, to properly account for the case when a prompt contains
multiple consecutive newlines. Failing to do so makes TUI have the
wrong idea of the vertical height of the prompt. This patch fixes the
column check.
The second issue is that cur_line does not get updated to reflect the
cursor position if the user's prompt cursor is at the end of the prompt
(i.e. if rl_point == rl_end). cur_line only gets updated if rl_point
lies between 0..rl_end-1 because that is the bounds of the for loop
responsible for updating cur_line. This patch changes the loop's bounds
to 0..rl_end so that cur_line always gets updated.
With these two bug fixes out of the way, the default query mechanism
works well in TUI even with multi-line prompts like GDB's quit prompt.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* utils.c (defaulted_query): Rewrite to use gdb_readline_wrapper
to prompt for input.
* tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Remove.
(tui_install_hooks): Don't set deprecated_query_hook.
* tui/tui-io.c (tui_redisplay_readline): Fix off-by-one error in
height calculation. Always update the command window's cur_line.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:07 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
add non-stop test that stresses thread starvation issues
This commit adds a non-stop mode test originally inspired by
signal-while-stepping-over-bp-other-thread.exp, that exposes the
thread starvation issues fixed by the previous patches. It sets a set
of threads stepping in parallel, and has one of them get a signal.
Without the previous fixes, this would fail with timeouts.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/non-stop-fair-events.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/non-stop-fair-events.exp: New file.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:07 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
[gdbserver] linux-low.c: better starvation avoidance, handle non-stop mode too
This patch applies the same starvation avoidance improvements of the
previous patch to the Linux gdbserver side.
Without this, the test added by the following commit
(gdb.threads/non-stop-fair-events.exp) always fails with time outs.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (step_over_bkpt): Move higher up in the file.
(handle_extended_wait): Don't store the stop_pc here.
(get_stop_pc): Adjust comments and rename to ...
(check_stopped_by_breakpoint): ... this. Record whether the LWP
stopped for a software breakpoint or hardware breakpoint.
(thread_still_has_status_pending_p): New function.
(status_pending_p_callback): Use
thread_still_has_status_pending_p. If the event is no longer
interesting, resume the LWP.
(handle_tracepoints): Add assert.
(maybe_move_out_of_jump_pad): Remove cancel_breakpoints call.
(wstatus_maybe_breakpoint): New function.
(cancel_breakpoint): Delete function.
(check_stopped_by_watchpoint): New function, factored out from
linux_low_filter_event.
(lp_status_maybe_breakpoint): Delete function.
(linux_low_filter_event): Remove filter_ptid argument.
Leave thread group exits pending here. Store the LWP's stop PC.
Always leave events pending.
(linux_wait_for_event_filtered): Pull all events out of the
kernel, and leave them all pending.
(count_events_callback, select_event_lwp_callback): Consider all
events.
(cancel_breakpoints_callback, linux_cancel_breakpoints): Delete.
(select_event_lwp): Only give preference to the stepping LWP in
all-stop mode. Adjust comments.
(ignore_event): New function.
(linux_wait_1): Delete 'retry' label. Use ignore_event. Remove
references to cancel_breakpoints. Adjust to renames. Also give
equal priority to all LWPs that have had events in non-stop mode.
If reporting a software breakpoint event, unadjust the LWP's PC.
(linux_wait): If linux_wait_1 returned an ignored event, retry.
(stuck_in_jump_pad_callback, move_out_of_jump_pad_callback):
Adjust.
(linux_resume_one_lwp): Store the LWP's PC. Adjust.
(resume_status_pending_p): Use thread_still_has_status_pending_p.
(linux_stopped_by_watchpoint): Adjust.
(linux_target_ops): Remove reference to linux_cancel_breakpoints.
* linux-low.h (enum lwp_stop_reason): New.
(struct lwp_info) <stop_pc>: Adjust comment.
<stopped_by_watchpoint>: Delete field.
<stop_reason>: New field.
* linux-x86-low.c (x86_linux_prepare_to_resume): Adjust.
* mem-break.c (software_breakpoint_inserted_here)
(hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here): New function.
* mem-break.h (software_breakpoint_inserted_here)
(hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here): Declare.
* target.h (struct target_ops) <cancel_breakpoints>: Remove field.
(cancel_breakpoints): Delete.
* tracepoint.c (clear_installed_tracepoints, stop_tracing)
(upload_fast_traceframes): Remove references to
cancel_breakpoints.
Pedro Alves [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 12:48:32 +0000 (12:48 +0000)]
linux-nat.c: better starvation avoidance, handle non-stop mode too
Running the testsuite with a series that reimplements user-visible
all-stop behavior on top of a target running in non-stop mode revealed
problems related to event starvation avoidance.
For example, I see
gdb.threads/signal-while-stepping-over-bp-other-thread.exp failing.
What happens is that GDB core never gets to see the signal event. It
ends up processing the events for the same threads over an over,
because Linux's waitpid(-1, ...) returns that first task in the task
list that has an event, starving threads on the tail of the task list.
So I wrote a non-stop mode test originally inspired by
signal-while-stepping-over-bp-other-thread.exp, to stress this
independently of all-stop on top of non-stop. Fixing it required the
changes described below. The test will be added in a following
commit.
1) linux-nat.c has code in place that picks an event LWP at random out
of all that have had events. This is because on the kernel side,
"waitpid(-1, ...)" just walks the task list linearly looking for the
first that had an event. But, this code is currently only used in
all-stop mode. So with a multi-threaded program that has multiple
events triggering debug events in parallel, GDB ends up starving some
threads.
To make the event randomization work in non-stop mode too, the patch
makes us pull out all the already pending events on the kernel side,
with waitpid, before deciding which LWP to report to the core.
There's some code in linux_wait that takes care of leaving events
pending if they were for LWPs the caller is not interested in. The
patch moves that to linux_nat_filter_event, so that we only have one
place that leaves events pending. With that in place, conceptually,
the flow is simpler and more normalized:
#1 - walk the LWP list looking for an LWP with a pending event to report.
#2 - if no pending event, pull events out of the kernel, and store
them in the LWP structures as pending.
#3- goto #1.
2) Then, currently the event randomization code only considers SIGTRAP
(or trap-like) events. That means that if e.g., have have multiple
threads stepping in parallel that hit a breakpoint that needs stepping
over, and one gets a signal, the signal may end up never getting
processed, because GDB will always be giving priority to the SIGTRAPs.
The patch fixes this by making the randomization code consider all
kinds of pending events.
3) If multiple threads hit a breakpoint, we report one of those, and
"cancel" the others. Cancelling means decrementing the PC, and
discarding the event. If the next time the LWP is resumed the
breakpoint is still installed, the LWP should hit it again, and we'll
report the hit then. The problem I found is that this delays threads
from advancing too much, with the kernel potentially ending up
scheduling the same threads over and over, and others not advancing.
So the patch switches away from cancelling the breakpoints, and
instead remembering that the LWP had stopped for a breakpoint. If on
resume the breakpoint is still installed, we report it. If it's no
longer installed, we discard the pending event then. This is actually
how GDBserver used to handle this before
d50171e4 (Teach linux
gdbserver to step-over-breakpoints), but with the difference that back
then we'd delay adjusting the PC until resuming, which made it so that
"info threads" could wrongly see threads with unadjusted PCs.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): New
function.
* breakpoint.h (hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): New
declaration.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_status_is_event): Move higher up in file.
(linux_resume_one_lwp): Store the thread's PC. Adjust to clear
stop_reason.
(check_stopped_by_watchpoint): New function.
(save_sigtrap): Reimplement.
(linux_nat_stopped_by_watchpoint): Adjust.
(linux_nat_lp_status_is_event): Delete.
(stop_wait_callback): Only call save_sigtrap after storing the
pending status.
(status_callback): If the thread had been stopped for a breakpoint
that has since been removed, discard the event and resume the LWP.
(count_events_callback, select_event_lwp_callback): Use
lwp_status_pending_p instead of linux_nat_lp_status_is_event.
(cancel_breakpoint): Rename to ...
(check_stopped_by_breakpoint): ... this. Record whether the LWP
stopped for a software breakpoint or hardware breakpoint.
(select_event_lwp): Only give preference to the stepping LWP in
all-stop mode. Adjust comments.
(stop_and_resume_callback): Remove references to new_pending_p.
(linux_nat_filter_event): Likewise. Leave exit events of the
leader thread pending here. Handle signal short circuiting here.
Only call save_sigtrap after storing the pending waitstatus.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Remove 'retry' label. Remove references to
new_pending. Don't handle leaving events the caller is not
interested in pending here, nor handle signal short-circuiting
here. Also give equal priority to all LWPs that have had events
in non-stop mode. If reporting a software breakpoint event,
unadjust the LWP's PC.
* linux-nat.h (enum lwp_stop_reason): New.
(struct lwp_info) <stop_pc>: New field.
(struct lwp_info) <stopped_by_watchpoint>: Delete field.
(struct lwp_info) <stop_reason>: New field.
* x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_prepare_to_resume): Adjust.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:06 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
linux-nat.c: always mark execing LWP as resumed
A subsequent patch will make the Linux backend's target_wait method
pull all events out of the kernel (with waitpid) and store them as
pending status in the LWP structure if no pending status was already
available. Then, the backend goes over the pending statuses and pick
one to report to the core.
With that, the existing thread-execl.exp test exposes a bug, like:
(gdb) set scheduler-locking on
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/thread-execl.exp: schedlock on: set scheduler-locking on
next
FAIL: gdb.threads/thread-execl.exp: schedlock on: get to main in new image (timeout)
Recall that when the non-leader thread execs, all threads in the
process die, the execing thread changes its pid to the tgid, and then
waitpid returns an exec event to the tgid. If GDB didn't resume the
leader LWP, then GDB sees an event for an LWP that was supposedly
stopped, and thus not marked as resumed. Because the code that picks
a pending event to report to the core ignores not-resumed LWPs:
/* Return non-zero if LP has a wait status pending. */
static int
status_callback (struct lwp_info *lp, void *data)
{
/* Only report a pending wait status if we pretend that this has
indeed been resumed. */
if (!lp->resumed)
return 0;
the event ends up pending forever, thus the timeout.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (linux_handle_extended_wait) <PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC>:
Set the LWP's 'resumed' flag.
Pedro Alves [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 19:41:06 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
linux-nat.c: clean up pending status checking and resuming LWPs
Whenever we resume an LWP, we must clear a few flags and flush the
LWP's register cache. We actually currently flush the register cache
of all LWPs, but that's unnecessary. This patch makes us flush the
register cache of only the LWP that is resumed. Instead of open
coding all that in many places, we use a helper function.
Likewise, we have two fields in the LWP structure where a pending
status may be recorded. Add a helper predicate that checks both and
use it throughout instead of open coding the checks.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (linux_resume_one_lwp): New function.
(resume_lwp): Use lwp_status_pending_p and linux_resume_one_lwp.
(linux_nat_resume): Use lwp_status_pending_p and
linux_resume_one_lwp.
(linux_handle_syscall_trap): Use linux_resume_one_lwp.
(linux_handle_extended_wait): Use linux_resume_one_lwp.
(status_callback, running_callback): Use lwp_status_pending_p.
(lwp_status_pending_p): New function.
(stop_and_resume_callback): Use lwp_status_pending_p.
(linux_nat_filter_event): Use linux_resume_one_lwp.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Always use status_callback to look for an LWP
with a pending status. Use linux_resume_one_lwp.
(resume_stopped_resumed_lwps): Use lwp_status_pending_p and
linux_resume_one_lwp.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:05 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
cleanup and speed up (software_)breakpoint_inserted_here_p
Factor out common code, and use the more efficient
ALL_BP_LOCATIONS_AT_ADDR.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (bp_location_inserted_here_p): New function,
factored out from ...
(breakpoint_inserted_here_p): ... here. Use
ALL_BP_LOCATIONS_AT_ADDR.
(software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Use
bp_location_inserted_here_p and ALL_BP_LOCATIONS_AT_ADDR.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:05 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
watch_thread_num.exp and targets with fairer event reporting
This patch fixes the watch_thread_num.exp test to work when the target
is better at making event handling be fair among threads.
I wrote patches that make GDB native and GDBserver event handling
fairer between threads. That is, if threads A and B both
simultaneously trigger some debug event, GDB will pick either A or B
at random, rather than always handling the event of A first. There's
code for that in the Linux backends (gdb and gdbserver) already, but
it can be improved, and only works in all-stop mode.
With those fixes in place, I found that the watch_thread_num.exp would
often time out. The problem is that the test only works _because_
event handling isn't as fair as intended. With the fairness fixes,
the test falls victim of PR10116 (gdb drops watchpoints on
multi-threaded apps) quite often.
To expand on the PR10116 reference, consider that stop events are
serialized to GDB core, through target_wait. Say a thread-specific
watchpoint as set on thread A. When the "right" thread and some other
"wrong" thread both trigger a watchpoint simultaneously, the target
may report the "wrong" thread's hit to GDB first (thread B). When
handling that event, GDB notices the watchpoint is for another thread,
and so shouldn't cause a user-visible stop. On resume, GDB saves the
now current value of the watched expression. Afterwards, the "right"
thread (thread A) reports its watchpoint trigger. But the watched
value hasn't changed since GDB last saved it, and so GDB doesn't
report the watchpoint hit to the user.
The way the test is written, the watchpoint is associated with the
first thread that happens to report an event. It happens that GDB is
processing events much more often for one of the threads, which
usually will be that same first thread.
Hacking the test with "set debug infrun 1", we see exactly that:
$ grep "infrun.*\[Thread.*," testsuite/gdb.log | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
70 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8798],
37 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8802],
36 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8804],
36 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8803],
35 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8805],
34 infrun: 8798 [Thread 8806],
The first column shows the number of times the target reported an
event for that thread, from:
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun: 8798 [Thread 8798],
infrun: status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
This masks out the PR10116 issue.
However, if the target is better at giving equal priority to all
threads, the PR10116 issue happens often, so it may take quite a while
for the right thread to be the first to report its watchpoint event
just after the memory being watched really changed, resulting in test
time outs.
Here's the number of events handled for each thread on a gdbserver run
with the event fairness patches:
$ grep "infrun.*\[Thread.*," gdb.log | sort | uniq -c
2961 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13591],
2956 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13595],
2941 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13596],
2932 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13597],
2905 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13598],
2891 infrun: 13591 [Thread 13599],
Note how the number of events is much higher. The test routinely
takes over 10 seconds to finish on my machine rather than under a
second as with unpatched gdbserver, when it succeeds, but often it'll
fail with timeouts too.
So to make the test robust, this patch switches the tests to using
"awatch" instead of "watch", as access watchpoints don't care about
the watchpoint's "old value". With this, the test always finishes
quickly, and we can even bump the number of threads concurrently
writting to the shared variable, to have better assurance we're really
testing the case of the "wrong" thread triggering a watchpoint.
Here's the number of events I see for each thread on a run on my
machine, with a gdbserver patched with the event fairness series:
$ grep "infrun.*\[Thread.*," testsuite/gdb.log | sort | uniq -c
5 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5302],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5303],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5304],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5305],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5306],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5307],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5308],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5309],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5310],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5311],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5312],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5313],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5314],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5315],
4 infrun: 5298 [Thread 5316],
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/annota1.exp (thread_test): Use srcfile and binfile from
the global scope. Set a breakpoint after all threads are started
rather than stepping over two source lines. Expect the prompt.
* gdb.base/watch_thread_num.c (threads_started_barrier): New
global.
(NUM): Now 15.
(main): Use threads_started_barrier to wait for all threads to
start. Main thread no longer calls thread_function. Exit after
180 seconds.
(loop): New function.
(thread_function): Wait on threads_started_barrier barrier. Call
'loop' at each iteration.
* gdb.base/watch_thread_num.exp: Continue to breakpoint after all
threads have started, instead of hardcoding number of "next"
steps. Use an access watchpoint instead of a write watchpoint.
Pedro Alves [Mon, 29 Dec 2014 19:41:04 +0000 (19:41 +0000)]
gdb.threads/{siginfo-thread.c,watchthreads-reorder.c,ia64-sigill.c} races with GDB
These three test all spawn a few threads and then send a SIGSTOP to
their parent GDB in order to pause it while the new threads set things
up for the test. With a GDB patch that changes the inferior thread's
scheduling a bit, I sometimes see:
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: catch signal 0 (timeout)
...
FAIL: gdb.threads/watchthreads-reorder.exp: reorder1: continue a (timeout)
...
FAIL: gdb.threads/ia64-sigill.exp: continue (timeout)
...
The issue is that the test program stops GDB before it had a chance of
processing the new thread's clone event:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: get pid
continue
Continuing.
Stopping GDB PID 21541.
Waiting till the threads initialize their TIDs.
FAIL: gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: catch signal 0 (timeout)
On Linux (at least), new threads start stopped, and the debugger must
resume them. The fix is to make the test program wait for the new
threads to be running before stopping GDB.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/ia64-sigill.c (threads_started_barrier): New global.
(thread_func): Wait on barrier.
(main): Wait for all threads to start before stopping GDB.
* gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.c (threads_started_barrier): New
global.
(thread1_func, thread2_func): Wait on barrier.
(main): Wait for all threads to start before stopping GDB.
* gdb.threads/watchthreads-reorder.c (threads_started_barrier):
New global.
(thread1_func, thread2_func): Wait on barrier.
(main): Wait for all threads to start before stopping GDB.
Anthony Green [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 12:12:37 +0000 (07:12 -0500)]
Use official ELF machine number for moxie
Pedro Alves [Wed, 17 Dec 2014 20:40:05 +0000 (20:40 +0000)]
Test attaching to a program that constantly spawns short-lived threads
Before the previous fixes, on Linux, this would trigger several
different problems, like:
[New LWP 27106]
[New LWP 27047]
warning: unable to open /proc file '/proc/-1/status'
[New LWP 27813]
[New LWP 27869]
warning: Can't attach LWP 11962: No child processes
Warning: couldn't activate thread debugging using libthread_db: Cannot find new threads: debugger service failed
warning: Unable to find libthread_db matching inferior's thread library, thread debugging will not be available.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp: New file.
Pedro Alves [Tue, 16 Dec 2014 16:12:25 +0000 (16:12 +0000)]
Linux: Skip thread_db thread event reporting if PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE is supported
[A test I wrote stumbled on a libthread_db issue related to thread
event breakpoints. See glibc PR17705:
[nptl_db: stale thread create/death events if debugger detaches]
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17705
This patch avoids that whole issue by making GDB stop using thread
event breakpoints in the first place, which is good for other reasons
as well, anyway.]
Before PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE (Linux 2.6), the only way to learn about new
threads in the inferior (to attach to them) or to learn about thread
exit was to coordinate with the inferior's glibc/runtime, using
libthread_db. That works by putting a breakpoint at a magic address
which is called when a new thread is spawned, or when a thread is
about to exit. When that breakpoint is hit, all threads are stopped,
and then GDB coordinates with libthread_db to read data structures out
of the inferior to learn about what happened. Then the breakpoint is
single-stepped, and then all threads are re-resumed. This isn't very
efficient (stops all threads) and is more fragile (inferior's thread
list in memory may be corrupt; libthread_db bugs, etc.) than ideal.
When the kernel supports PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE (which we already make use
of), there's really no need to use libthread_db's event reporting
mechanism to learn about new LWPs. And if the kernel supports that,
then we learn about LWP exits through regular WIFEXITED wait statuses,
so no need for the death event breakpoint either.
GDBserver has been likewise skipping the thread_db events for a long
while:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2007-10/msg00547.html
There's one user-visible difference: we'll no longer print about
threads being created and exiting while the program is running, like:
[Thread 0x7ffff7dbb700 (LWP 30670) exited]
[New Thread 0x7ffff7db3700 (LWP 30671)]
[Thread 0x7ffff7dd3700 (LWP 30667) exited]
[New Thread 0x7ffff7dab700 (LWP 30672)]
[Thread 0x7ffff7db3700 (LWP 30671) exited]
[Thread 0x7ffff7dcb700 (LWP 30668) exited]
This is exactly the same behavior as when debugging against remote
targets / gdbserver. I actually think that's a good thing (and as
such have listed this in the local/remote parity wiki page a while
ago), as the printing slows down the inferior. It's also a
distraction to keep bothering the user about short-lived threads that
she won't be able to interact with anyway. Instead, the user (and
frontend) will be informed about new threads that currently exist in
the program when the program next stops:
(gdb) c
...
* ctrl-c *
[New Thread 0x7ffff7963700 (LWP 7797)]
[New Thread 0x7ffff796b700 (LWP 7796)]
Program received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff796b700 (LWP 7796)]
clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:81
81 testq %rax,%rax
(gdb) info threads
A couple of tests had assumptions on GDB thread numbers that no longer
hold.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/
2014-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Skip enabling event reporting if the kernel supports
PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE.
* linux-thread-db.c: Include "nat/linux-ptrace.h".
(thread_db_use_events): New function.
(try_thread_db_load_1): Check thread_db_use_events before enabling
event reporting.
(update_thread_state): New function.
(attach_thread): Use it. Check thread_db_use_events before
enabling event reporting.
(thread_db_detach): Check thread_db_use_events before disabling
event reporting.
(find_new_threads_callback): Check thread_db_use_events before
enabling event reporting. Update the thread's state if not using
libthread_db events.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/fork-thread-pending.exp: Switch to the main thread
instead of to thread 2.
* gdb.threads/signal-command-multiple-signals-pending.c (main):
Add barrier around each pthread_create call instead of around all
calls.
* gdb.threads/signal-command-multiple-signals-pending.exp (test):
Set a break on thread_function and have the child threads hit it
one at at a time.
Pedro Alves [Tue, 16 Dec 2014 16:12:24 +0000 (16:12 +0000)]
libthread_db: Skip attaching to terminated and joined threads
I wrote a test that attaches to a program that constantly spawns
short-lived threads, which exposed several issues. This is one of
them.
On GNU/Linux, attaching to a multi-threaded program sometimes prints
out warnings like:
...
[New LWP 20700]
warning: unable to open /proc file '/proc/-1/status'
[New LWP 20850]
[New LWP 21019]
...
That happens because when a thread exits, and is joined, glibc does:
nptl/pthread_join.c:
pthread_join ()
{
...
if (__glibc_likely (result == 0))
{
/* We mark the thread as terminated and as joined. */
pd->tid = -1;
...
/* Free the TCB. */
__free_tcb (pd);
}
So if we attach or interrupt the program (which does an implicit "info
threads") at just the right (or rather, wrong) time, we can find and
return threads in the libthread_db/pthreads thread list with kernel
thread ID -1. I've filed glibc PR nptl/17707 for this. You'll find
more info there.
This patch handles this as a special case in GDB.
This is actually more than just a cosmetic issue. lin_lwp_attach_lwp
will think that this -1 is an LWP we're not attached to yet, and after
failing to attach will try to check we were already attached to the
process, using a waitpid call, which in this case ends up being
"waitpid (-1, ...", which obviously results in GDB potentially
discarding an event when it shouldn't...
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* thread-db.c (find_new_threads_callback): Ignore thread if the
kernel thread ID is -1.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (lin_lwp_attach_lwp): Assert that the lwp id we're
about to wait for is > 0.
* linux-thread-db.c (find_new_threads_callback): Ignore thread if
the kernel thread ID is -1.
Pedro Alves [Tue, 16 Dec 2014 16:12:24 +0000 (16:12 +0000)]
Linux: on attach, attach to lwps listed under /proc/$pid/task/
... instead of relying on libthread_db.
I wrote a test that attaches to a program that constantly spawns
short-lived threads, which exposed several issues. This is one of
them.
On Linux, we need to attach to all threads of a process (thread group)
individually. We currently rely on libthread_db to list the threads,
but that is problematic, because libthread_db relies on reading data
structures out of the inferior (which may well be corrupted). If
threads are being created or exiting just while we try to attach, we
may trip on inconsistencies in the inferior's thread list. To work
around that, when we see a seemingly corrupt list, we currently retry
a few times:
static void
thread_db_find_new_threads_2 (ptid_t ptid, int until_no_new)
{
...
if (until_no_new)
{
/* Require 4 successive iterations which do not find any new threads.
The 4 is a heuristic: there is an inherent race here, and I have
seen that 2 iterations in a row are not always sufficient to
"capture" all threads. */
...
That heuristic may well fail, and when it does, we end up with threads
in the program that aren't under GDB's control. That's obviously bad
and results in quite mistifying failures, like e.g., the process dying
for seeminly no reason when a thread that wasn't attached trips on a
breakpoint.
There's really no reason to rely on libthread_db for this nowadays
when we have /proc mounted. In that case, which is the usual case, we
can list the LWPs from /proc/PID/task/. In fact, GDBserver is already
doing this. The patch factors out that code that knows to walk the
task/ directory out of GDBserver, and makes GDB use it too.
Like GDBserver, the patch makes GDB attach to LWPs and _not_ wait for
them to stop immediately. Instead, we just tag the LWP as having an
expected stop. Because we can only set the ptrace options when the
thread stops, we need a new flag in the lwp structure to keep track of
whether we've already set the ptrace options, just like in GDBserver.
Note that nothing issues any ptrace command to the threads between the
PTRACE_ATTACH and the stop, so this is safe (unlike one scenario
described in gdbserver's linux-low.c).
When we attach to a program that has threads exiting while we attach,
it's easy to race with a thread just exiting as we try to attach to
it, like:
#1 - get current list of threads
#2 - attach to each listed thread
#3 - ooops, attach failed, thread is already gone
As this is pretty normal, we shouldn't be issuing a scary warning in
step #3.
When #3 happens, PTRACE_ATTACH usually fails with ESRCH, but sometimes
we'll see EPERM as well. That happens when the kernel still has the
thread in its task list, but the thread is marked as dead.
Unfortunately, EPERM is ambiguous and we'll get it also on other
scenarios where the thread isn't dead, and in those cases, it's useful
to get a warning. To distiguish the cases, when we get an EPERM
failure, we open /proc/PID/status, and check the thread's state -- if
the /proc file no longer exists, or the state is "Z (Zombie)" or "X
(Dead)", we ignore the EPERM error silently; otherwise, we'll warn.
Unfortunately, there seems to be a kernel race here. Sometimes I get
EPERM, and then the /proc state still indicates "R (Running)"... If
we wait a bit and retry, we do end up seeing X or Z state, or get an
ESRCH. I thought of making GDB retry the attach a few times, but even
with a 500ms wait and 4 retries, I still see the warning sometimes. I
haven't been able to identify the kernel path that causes this yet,
but in any case, it looks like a kernel bug to me. As this just
results failure to suppress a warning that we've been printing since
about forever anyway, I'm just making the test cope with it, and issue
an XFAIL.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-low.c (linux_attach_fail_reason_string): Move to
nat/linux-ptrace.c, and rename.
(linux_attach_lwp): Update comment.
(attach_proc_task_lwp_callback): New function.
(linux_attach): Adjust to rename and use
linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads.
(linux_attach_fail_reason_string): Delete declaration.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (attach_proc_task_lwp_callback): New function.
(linux_nat_attach): Use linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads.
(wait_lwp, linux_nat_filter_event): If not set yet, set the lwp's
ptrace option flags.
* linux-nat.h (struct lwp_info) <must_set_ptrace_flags>: New
field.
* nat/linux-procfs.c: Include <dirent.h>.
(linux_proc_get_int): New parameter "warn". Handle it.
(linux_proc_get_tgid): Adjust.
(linux_proc_get_tracerpid): Rename to ...
(linux_proc_get_tracerpid_nowarn): ... this.
(linux_proc_pid_get_state): New function, factored out from
(linux_proc_pid_has_state): ... this. Add new parameter "warn"
and handle it.
(linux_proc_pid_is_gone): New function.
(linux_proc_pid_is_stopped): Adjust.
(linux_proc_pid_is_zombie_maybe_warn)
(linux_proc_pid_is_zombie_nowarn): New functions.
(linux_proc_pid_is_zombie): Use
linux_proc_pid_is_zombie_maybe_warn.
(linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads): New function.
* nat/linux-procfs.h (linux_proc_get_tgid): Update comment.
(linux_proc_get_tracerpid): Rename to ...
(linux_proc_get_tracerpid_nowarn): ... this, and update comment.
(linux_proc_pid_is_gone): New declaration.
(linux_proc_pid_is_zombie): Update comment.
(linux_proc_pid_is_zombie_nowarn): New declaration.
(linux_proc_attach_lwp_func): New typedef.
(linux_proc_attach_tgid_threads): New declaration.
* nat/linux-ptrace.c (linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason): Adjust to
use nowarn functions.
(linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason_string): Move here from
gdbserver/linux-low.c and rename.
(ptrace_supports_feature): If the current ptrace options are not
known yet, check them now, instead of asserting.
* nat/linux-ptrace.h (linux_ptrace_attach_fail_reason_string):
Declare.
Pedro Alves [Tue, 16 Dec 2014 16:12:23 +0000 (16:12 +0000)]
libthread_db: debug output should go to gdb_stdlog
Some debug output in linux-thread-db.c was being sent to gdb_stdout,
and some to gdb_stderr, while the right place to send debug output to is
gdb_stdlog.
gdb/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_find_new_threads_silently)
(try_thread_db_load_1, try_thread_db_load, thread_db_load_search)
(find_new_threads_once): Print debug output on gdb_stdlog.
Pedro Alves [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 11:04:19 +0000 (11:04 +0000)]
skip "attach" tests when testing against stub-like targets
We already skip "attach" tests if the target board is remote, in
dejagnu's sense, as we use TCL's exec to spawn the program on the
build machine. We should also skip these tests if testing with
"target remote" or other stub-like targets where "attach" doesn't make
sense.
Add a helper procedure that centralizes the checks a test that needs
to spawn a program for testing "attach" and make all test files that
use spawn_wait_for_attach check it.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-01-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* lib/gdb.exp (can_spawn_for_attach): New procedure.
(spawn_wait_for_attach): Error out if can_spawn_for_attach returns
false.
* gdb.base/attach.exp: Use can_spawn_for_attach instead of
checking whether the target board is remote.
* gdb.multi/multi-attach.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.python/py-sync-interp.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.server/ext-attach.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.python/py-prompt.exp: Use can_spawn_for_attach before the
tests that need to attach, instead of checking whether the target
board is remote at the top of the file.
Chen Gang [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 10:09:03 +0000 (10:09 +0000)]
gdb/compile/compile.c: Check return value of 'system' to avoid compiler warning
Add missing ChangeLog entry.
2015-01-09 Chen Gang <gang.chen.5i5j@gmail.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* compile/compile.c: Include "gdb_wait.h".
(do_rmdir): Check return value, and free 'zap'.
Chen Gang [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 02:40:42 +0000 (10:40 +0800)]
gdb/compile/compile.c: Check return value of 'system' to avoid compiler warning
Under Ubuntu 12, we need to check the return value of system(), or the
compiler warns:
gcc -g -O2 -I. -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/common -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/config -DLOCALEDIR="\"/usr/local/share/locale\"" -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../include/opcode -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../opcodes/.. -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../readline/.. -I../bfd -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../bfd -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../include -I../libdecnumber -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/../libdecnumber -I../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gnulib/import -Ibuild-gnulib/import -DTUI=1 -Wall -Wdeclaration-after-statement -Wpointer-arith -Wpointer-sign -Wno-unused -Wunused-value -Wunused-function -Wno-switch -Wno-char-subscripts -Wmissing-prototypes -Wdeclaration-after-statement -Wempty-body -Wmissing-parameter-type -Wold-style-declaration -Wold-style-definition -Wformat-nonliteral -Werror -c -o compile.o -MT compile.o -MMD -MP -MF .deps/compile.Tpo ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/compile/compile.c
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/compile/compile.c: In function ‘do_rmdir’:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/compile/compile.c:175:10: error: ignoring return value of ‘system’, declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Werror=unused-result]
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
make[2]: *** [compile.o] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/upstream/build-binutils-s390/gdb'
make[1]: *** [all-gdb] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/upstream/build-binutils-s390'
make: *** [all] Error 2
Also, 'zap' is leaking.
2015-01-09 Chen Gang <gang.chen.5i5j@gmail.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* compile/compile.c: Include "gdb_wait.h".
(do_rmdir): Check return value, and free 'zap'.
GDB Administrator [Fri, 9 Jan 2015 00:00:11 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Nick Clifton [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 16:23:16 +0000 (16:23 +0000)]
Adds code to the MSP430 linker to transform a 4-byte BR instruction into
a 2-byte JMP instruction, when this can be done safely.
* elf32-msp430.c (msp430_elf_relax_section): Add relaxation of
16-bit absolute BR instructions to 10-bit pc-relative JMP
instructions.
Nick Clifton [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 15:39:49 +0000 (15:39 +0000)]
Fix memory access violations exposed by running strip on fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17512
* coffcode.h (coff_slurp_symbol_table): Return false if we failed
to load the line table.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_map_sections_to_segments): Enforce a minimum
maxpagesize of 1.
* peXXigen.c (_bfd_XX_bfd_copy_private_bfd_data_common): Fail if
the Data Directory Size is too large.
* objcopy.c (copy_object): Free the symbol table if no symbols
could be loaded.
(copy_file): Use bfd_close_all_done to close files that could not
be copied.
Nick Clifton [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 13:52:42 +0000 (13:52 +0000)]
Fix memory access violations triggered by running sysdump on fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17512
* sysdump.c (getINT): Fail if reading off the end of the buffer.
Replace call to abort with a call to fatal.
(getCHARS): Prevetn reading off the end of the buffer.
Jan Beulich [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 13:10:36 +0000 (14:10 +0100)]
ld/x86-64: adjust pr14207 test expectations
The original test output expectations cause it to fail when configure
determines enable_initfini_array=no (which was observed on a cross
build on an old 32-bit host, pointing out that taking into account host
properties in such a case is bogus anyway).
ld/testsuite/
2015-01-08 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
* ld-x86-64/pr14207.d: Adjust expecations to cover the
enable_initfini_array=no case.
Yao Qi [Sun, 28 Dec 2014 08:12:53 +0000 (16:12 +0800)]
always read synthetic pointers as signed integers
I see the error message "access outside bounds of object referenced
via synthetic pointer" in the two fails below of mips gdb testing
print d[-2]^M
access outside bounds of object referenced via synthetic pointer^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/implptrconst.exp: print d[-2]
(gdb) print/d p[-1]^M
access outside bounds of object referenced via synthetic pointer^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/implptrpiece.exp: print/d p[-1]
in the first test, 'd[-2]' is processed by GDB as '* (&d[-2])'. 'd'
is a synthetic pointer, so its value is zero, the address of 'd[-2]'
is -2. In dwarf2loc.c:indirect_pieced_value,
/* This is an offset requested by GDB, such as value subscripts.
However, due to how synthetic pointers are implemented, this is
always presented to us as a pointer type. This means we have to
sign-extend it manually as appropriate. */
byte_offset = value_as_address (value);
if (TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (value)) < sizeof (LONGEST))
byte_offset = gdb_sign_extend (byte_offset,
8 * TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (value)));
byte_offset += piece->v.ptr.offset;
We know that the value is really an offset instead of address, so the
fix is to extract the value as an (signed) offset.
gdb:
2015-01-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* dwarf2loc.c (indirect_pieced_value): Don't call
gdb_sign_extend. Call extract_signed_integer instead.
* utils.c (gdb_sign_extend): Remove.
* utils.h (gdb_sign_extend): Remove declaration.
Nick Clifton [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 12:37:46 +0000 (12:37 +0000)]
Fixes for memory access violations triggered by running nlmconv on
fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17512
* nlmconv.c (i386_mangle_relocs): Skip relocs without an
associated symbol.
(powerpc_mangle_relocs): Skip unrecognised relocs. Check address
range before applying a reloc.
Pierre Muller [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 07:53:26 +0000 (08:53 +0100)]
Set language for C++ special symbols.
The special handling of C++ special symbol
generates symbols that have no language.
Those symbols cannot be displayed correctly in the backtrace stack.
See
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17811
for details and examples in C++ and pascal language.
The patch below fixes this issue, by
setting language of new symbol before
special handling of special C++ symbols.
2015-01-07 Pierre Muller <muller@sourceware.org>
PR symtab/17811
* stabsread.c (define_symbol): Set language for C++ special symbols.
Yao Qi [Tue, 30 Dec 2014 06:40:49 +0000 (14:40 +0800)]
Recognize branch instruction on MIPS in gdb.trace/entry-values.exp
The test entry-values.exp doesn't recognize the call instructions
on MIPS, such as JAL, JALS and etc, so this patch sets call_insn
to match various jump and branch instructions first.
Currently, we assume the next instruction address of call instruction
is the address returned from foo, however it is not correct on MIPS
which has delay slot. We extend variable call_insn to match one
instruction after jump or branch instruction, so that
$returned_from_foo is correct on MIPS.
All tests in entry-values.exp are PASS.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-01-08 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* gdb.trace/entry-values.exp: Set call_insn for MIPS target.
GDB Administrator [Thu, 8 Jan 2015 00:00:11 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Patrick Palka [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 21:23:39 +0000 (16:23 -0500)]
Trivially tweak the comment documenting initial_gdb_ttystate
gdb/ChangeLog:
* inflow.c (initial_gdb_ttystate): Tweak comment.
Richard Earnshaw [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 17:32:24 +0000 (17:32 +0000)]
Sync with gcc/libiberty.
Nick Clifton [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 17:33:17 +0000 (17:33 +0000)]
Fix memory access violations uncovered by running the dlltool on fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17512
* dlltool.c (scan_obj_file): Break loop if the last archive
displayed matches the current archive.
Nick Clifton [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 16:41:25 +0000 (16:41 +0000)]
Fix memory access violations exposed by running the srconv tool on fuzzed binaries.
PR binutils/17512
* objdump.c (display_any_bfd): Add a depth limit to nested archive
display in order to avoid infinite loops.
* srconv.c: Replace calls to abort with calls to fatal with an
error message.
Joel Brobecker [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 14:49:49 +0000 (18:49 +0400)]
Empty line after comment documenting set_initial_gdb_ttystate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* inflow.c (set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Add empty line after
comment documenting function.
Jan Kratochvil [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 14:42:57 +0000 (15:42 +0100)]
[testsuite patch] Fix avx512.exp regression
+gdb compile failed, ^[[01m^[[Kgdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-avx512.c:20:27:^[[m^[[K ^[[01;31m^[[Kfatal error: ^[[m^[[Knat/x86-cpuid.h: No
such file or directory
+ #include "nat/x86-cpuid.h"
+^[[01;32m^[[K ^^[[m^[[K
+compilation terminated.
+UNTESTED: gdb.arch/i386-avx512.exp: i386-avx512.exp
125f8a3ddedd413a2290dae011f0bed9ffc78278 is the first bad commit
commit
125f8a3ddedd413a2290dae011f0bed9ffc78278
Author: Gary Benson <gbenson@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Jun 19 14:46:38 2014 +0100
Move shared native target specific code to gdb/nat
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-01-07 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix testcase compilation.
* gdb.arch/i386-avx512.exp (comp_flags): Remove /common.
Patrick Palka [Sat, 22 Nov 2014 19:12:49 +0000 (14:12 -0500)]
Don't propagate our current terminal state to the inferior
Currently when we start an inferior we have the inferior inherit our
terminal state. Under TUI, our terminal is highly modified by ncurses
and readline. So when starting an inferior under TUI, the inferior will
have a highly modified terminal state which will interfere with standard
I/O. For example,
$ gdb gdb
(gdb) break main
(gdb) run
(gdb) print puts ("a\nb")
a
b
$1 = 4
(gdb) [enter TUI mode]
(gdb) run
(gdb) [exit TUI mode]
(gdb) print puts ("a\nb")
a
b
$2 = 4
(gdb) print puts ("a\r\nb\r")
a
b
$3 = 6
As you can see, when we start the inferior under the regular interface,
puts() prints the text properly. But when we start the inferior under
TUI, puts() does not print the text properly. This is because when we
start the inferior under TUI it inherits our current terminal state
which has been modified by ncurses to, among other things, require an
explicit \r\n to print a new line. As a result the inferior performs
standard I/O in an unexpected way.
Because of this discrepancy, it doesn't seem like a good idea to have
the inferior inherit our _current_ terminal state for it may have been
modified by readline and/or ncurses. Instead, we should have the
inferior inherit a pristine snapshot of our terminal state taken before
readline or ncurses have had a chance to alter it. This enables the
inferior to run in a more accurate way, more closely mimicking the
program's behavior had it run standalone. And it fixes the above
mentioned issue.
Tested on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* terminal.h (set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Declare.
* inflow.c (initial_gdb_ttystate): New static variable.
(set_initial_gdb_ttystate): New setter.
(child_terminal_init_with_pgrp): Copy initial_gdb_ttystate
instead of our current terminal state.
* top.c (gdb_init): Call set_initial_gdb_ttystate.
Andrew Burgess [Tue, 6 Jan 2015 15:58:57 +0000 (15:58 +0000)]
ld/testing: Extend comment on run_dump_test
Mention that readelf can be used as a test program in the comment of
run_dump_test.
ld/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* lib/ld-lib.exp (run_dump_test): Extend comment to mention
readelf.
Joel Brobecker [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 09:42:51 +0000 (13:42 +0400)]
Regenerate sim/common/aclocal.m4 and sim/common/configure...
... using automake 1.11.1, which is the version we're currently
using throughout, instead of 1.11.3. This should be a no-op in
practice, but will help automake/aclocal version-related
differences to cloud real changes being made.
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* aclocal.m4, configure: Regenerate using automake 1.11.1.
Jan Beulich [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 08:39:27 +0000 (09:39 +0100)]
arm: fix extension feature disabling
Using e.g.
.arch_extension simd
.arch_extension nocrypto
so far results in SIMD support getting disabled, which I can't see being
the purpose of the "no"-prefixed variants of architecture extension
specifications.
Of course it is questionable whether the current, counter intuitive
behavior needs to be retained, and the new behavior perhaps be made work
through e.g. a newly recognized "no-" prefix.
gas/
2015-01-07 Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
* gas/config/tc-arm.c (struct arm_option_extension_value_table):
Split field "value" into fields "merge_value" and "clear_value".
(arm_extensions): Adjust initializer accordingly.
Joel Brobecker [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 03:34:29 +0000 (07:34 +0400)]
[python,guile] Add comment beside conditions testing empty arrays.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* guile/scm-type.c (tyscm_array_1): Add comment.
* python/py-type.c (typy_array_1): Add comment.
H.J. Lu [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 00:46:36 +0000 (16:46 -0800)]
Skip unknown relocation
PR binutils/17512
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_get_plt_sym_val): Skip unknown relocation.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_get_plt_sym_val): Likewise.
GDB Administrator [Wed, 7 Jan 2015 00:00:14 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
H.J. Lu [Thu, 18 Dec 2014 19:09:28 +0000 (11:09 -0800)]
Handle stack split for x32
X32 uses cmp %fs:NN,%esp, lea NN(%rsp),%r10d, lea NN(%rsp),%r11d,
instead of cmp %fs:NN,%rsp, lea NN(%rsp),%r10, lea NN(%rsp),%r11.
This patch handles it.
PR gold/17729
* configure.ac (DEFAULT_TARGET_X86_64): Don't set for x32.
(DEFAULT_TARGET_X32): Set for x32.
* x86_64.cc (cmp_insn_32): New.
(lea_r10_insn_32): Likewise.
(lea_r11_insn_32): Likewise.
(cmp_insn_64): Likewise.
(lea_r10_insn_64): Likewise.
(lea_r11_insn_64): Likewise.
(Target_x86_64<size>::do_calls_non_split): Handle x32.
* testsuite/Makefile.am (check_SCRIPTS): Add split_x32.sh.
(check_DATA): Add split_x32 files.
(split_x32_[1234n].o): New targets.
(split_x32_[124]): New targets.
(split_x32_[1234r].stdout): New targets.
* testsuite/split_x32.sh: New file.
* testsuite/split_x32_1.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/split_x32_2.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/split_x32_3.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/split_x32_4.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/split_x32_n.s: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerated.
* testsuite/Makefile.in: Likewise.
Nick Clifton [Tue, 6 Jan 2015 22:02:55 +0000 (22:02 +0000)]
Another fix for an objdump crash when parsing a corrupt binary.
PR binutils/17512
* mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_read_symtab_strtab): Zero terminate the
string table.
H.J. Lu [Tue, 6 Jan 2015 20:58:54 +0000 (12:58 -0800)]
Handle Initial-Exec to Local-Exec for x32
PR gold/17809
* x86_64.cc (Target_x86_64<size>::Relocate::tls_ie_to_le): Handle
x32.