Tom Tromey [Wed, 1 Jun 2022 20:52:28 +0000 (14:52 -0600)]
Allow registry to refer to const types
So far, the registry hasn't been used to refer to a 'const' type, but
this changes with the gdbarch change. This patch arranges to let the
registry store a pointer-to-const, by removing const in the 'set'
method.
Tom Tromey [Wed, 1 Jun 2022 19:13:28 +0000 (13:13 -0600)]
Use new and delete for gdbarch
This changes gdbarch to use new and delete.
Tom Tromey [Wed, 1 Jun 2022 19:00:11 +0000 (13:00 -0600)]
Use bool in gdbarch
This changes gdbarch to use bool for initialized_p.
Tom de Vries [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 17:56:06 +0000 (19:56 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix .debug_aranges in gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.S
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.exp, I noticed:
...
warning: Section .debug_aranges in fission-loclists has duplicate \
debug_info_offset 0x8f, ignoring .debug_aranges.^M
...
Fix this by removing the duplicate .debug_aranges entry.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Tom de Vries [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 17:54:38 +0000 (19:54 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix ERROR in gdb.base/watchpoint-unaligned.exp
In PR23888 an error is reported:
...
ERROR: tcl error sourcing watchpoint-unaligned.exp.
ERROR: expected boolean value but got ""
while executing
"if {$wpnum} {
...
This presumably happens when:
- skip_hw_watchpoint_tests returns 0 meaning hw watchpoints are supported
- gdb fails to set a hw watchpoint and instead sets a sw watchpoint
That particular situation is handled for arm:
...
-re "Watchpoint (\[0-9\]+): .*\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
if {[istarget "arm*-*-*"]} {
untested $test
set wpnum 0
}
}
...
but not for any other targets so wpnum remains "", triggering the ERROR.
Possibly this has been fixed for powerpc by commit
8d4e4d13afb ("gdb Power 9
add test for HW watchpoint support."), but it's still possible for other
targets.
Fix this by:
- initializing wpnum to 0 instead of ""
- signalling the failure to set a hw watchpoint by a fail
Tested on x86_64-linux, also by adding:
...
gdb_test_no_output "set can-use-hw-watchpoints 0"
...
and verifying that it triggers the fail.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23888
Tom de Vries [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 13:23:34 +0000 (15:23 +0200)]
[gdb/tdep] Fix gdb.base/large-frame.exp for aarch64
On aarch64, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/large-frame.exp: optimize=-O0: backtrace
...
The problem is that the architecture-specific prologue analyzer fails to
handle the first two insns in the prologue properly:
...
0000000000400610 <func>:
400610:
d2880210 mov x16, #0x4010
400614:
cb3063ff sub sp, sp, x16
400618:
a9007bfd stp x29, x30, [sp]
40061c:
910003fd mov x29, sp
400620:
910043a0 add x0, x29, #0x10
400624:
97fffff0 bl 4005e4 <blah>
...
so we get:
...
$ gdb -q -batch ./outputs/gdb.base/large-frame/large-frame-O0 -ex "b func"
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400614
...
Fix this by:
- fixing the support for the first insn to extract the immediate operand, and
- adding support for the second insn,
such that we have:
...
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400624
...
Note that we're overshooting by one insn (0x400620 is the first insn after the
prologue), but that's a pre-existing problem.
Tested on aarch64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29408
Alan Modra [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 02:52:39 +0000 (12:22 +0930)]
Don't use BFD_VMA_FMT in binutils
BFD_VMA_FMT can't be used in format strings that need to be
translated, because the translation won't work when the type of
bfd_vma differs from the machine used to compile .pot files. We've
known about this for a long time, but patches slip through review.
So just get rid of BFD_VMA_FMT, instead using the appropriate PRId64,
PRIu64, PRIx64 or PRIo64 and SCN variants for scanf. The patch is
mostly mechanical, the only thing requiring any thought is casts
needed to preserve PRId64 output from bfd_vma values, or to preserve
one of the unsigned output formats from bfd_signed_vma values.
Alan Modra [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 00:42:51 +0000 (10:12 +0930)]
Re: Get rid of fprintf_vma and sprintf_vma
Commit
f493c2174e messed the formatting in linker map files,
particularly for 32-bit builds where a number of tests using map files
regressed. I should have noticed the BFD64 conditional printing of
spaces to line up output due to the original %V printing hex vmas with
16 digits when BFD64 and 8 digits when not. Besides that, it is nicer
to print 32-bit vmas for 32-bit targets. So change %V back to be
target dependent, now using bfd_sprintf_vma. Since minfo doesn't
return the number of chars printed, that means some places that
currently use %V must instead sprintf to a buffer in order to find the
length printed.
* ldmisc.h (print_spaces): Declare.
(print_space): Change to a macro.
* ldmisc.c (vfinfo): Use bfd_sprintf_vma for %V. Tidy %W case.
(print_space): Delete.
(print_spaces): New function.
* emultempl/aix.em (print_symbol): Use print_spaces.
* ldctor.c (ldctor_build_sets): Likewise.
* ldmain.c (add_archive_element): Likewise.
* ldlang.c (print_one_symbol, lang_print_asneeded): Likewise.
(print_output_section_statement, print_data_statement): Likewise.
(print_reloc_statement, print_padding_statement): Likewise.
(print_assignment): Likewise. Also replace %V printing of vmas
with printing to a buffer in order to properly format output.
(print_input_section, lang_one_common): Likewise.
Alan Modra [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 12:38:01 +0000 (22:08 +0930)]
MIPS: Use R_MIPS_REL16 for BFD_RELOC_16
R_MIPS_REL16 isn't a pc-relative reloc as the name might indicate.
* elf64-mips.c (mips_reloc_map): Map BFD_RELOC_16 to R_MIPS_REL16.
* elfn32-mips.c (mips_reloc_map): Likewise.
GDB Administrator [Thu, 4 Aug 2022 00:00:08 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
H.J. Lu [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 23:02:39 +0000 (16:02 -0700)]
elf: Reset alignment for each PT_LOAD segment
Reset alignment for each PT_LOAD segment to avoid using alignment from
the previous PT_LOAD segment.
bfd/
PR ld/29435
* elf.c (assign_file_positions_for_load_sections): Reset
alignment for each PT_LOAD segment.
ld/
PR ld/29435
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29435.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr29435.s: Likewise.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 18:01:01 +0000 (12:01 -0600)]
Use unique_ptr to destroy per-bfd object
In some cases, the objfile owns the per-bfd object. This is yet
another object that can sometimes be destroyed before the registry is
destroyed, possibly reslting in a use-after-free. Also, I noticed
that the condition for deleting the object is not the same as the
condition used to create it -- so it could possibly result in a memory
leak in some situations. This patch fixes the problem by introducing
a new unique_ptr that holds this object when necessary.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 17:57:20 +0000 (11:57 -0600)]
Use auto_obstack in objfile
This changes objfile to use an auto_obstack. This helps prevent
use-after-free bugs, because it ensures that anything allocated on the
objfile obstack will live past the point at which the registry object
is destroyed.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 15:55:32 +0000 (09:55 -0600)]
Use gdb_bfd_ref_ptr in objfile
This changes struct objfile to use a gdb_bfd_ref_ptr. In addition to
removing some manual memory management, this fixes a use-after-free
that was introduced by the registry rewrite series. The issue there
was that, in some cases, registry shutdown could refer to memory that
had already been freed. This help fix the bug by delaying the
destruction of the BFD reference (and thus the per-bfd object) until
after the registry has been shut down.
Ruud van der Pas [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 17:13:48 +0000 (10:13 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29410 - Argument " 0." isn't numeric in numeric gt (>)
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-08-02 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29410
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: Remove non-breaking spaces.
Alan Modra [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 12:31:57 +0000 (13:31 +0100)]
Fix a conflict between the linker's need to rename some PE format input libraries and the BFD library's file caching mechanism.
PR 29389
bfd * bfd.c (BFD_CLOSED_BY_CACHE): New bfd flag.
* cache.c (bfd_cache_delete): Set BFD_CLOSED_BY_DELETE on the
closed bfd.
(bfd_cache_lookup_worker): Clear BFD_CLOSED_BY_DELETE on the newly
reopened bfd.
* opncls.c (bfd_set_filename): Refuse to change the name of a bfd
that has been closed by bfd_cache_delete. Mark changed bfds as
uncacheable.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
ld * ldlang.h (lang_input_statement_struct): Add sort_key field.
* emultempl/pe.em (after_open): If multiple import libraries refer
to the same bfd, store their names in the sort_key field.
* emultempl/pep.em (after_open): Likewise.
* ldlang.c (sort_filename): New function. Returns the filename to
be used when sorting input files.
(wild_sort): Use the sort_filename function.
Enze Li [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 22:11:50 +0000 (06:11 +0800)]
gdb/amd64: clean up unused variable
When building with clang 15, I got this,
CXX amd64-tdep.o
amd64-tdep.c:1410:13: error: variable 'insn' set but not used[-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
gdb_byte *insn = insn_details->raw_insn + modrm_offset;
^
1 error generated.
The function that uses this variable has been removed in this commit,
commit
870f88f7551b0f2d6aaaa36fb684b5ff8f468107
Date: Mon Apr 18 13:16:27 2016 -0400
remove trivialy unused variables
Fix this by removing unused variable.
Tested by rebuilding on x86_64-linux with clang 15 and gcc 12.
Lancelot SIX [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 12:14:20 +0000 (13:14 +0100)]
gdb: Fix regression in varobj recreation
Commit
bc20e562ec0 "Fix use after free in varobj" introduced a
regression. This commit makes sure that the varobj object does not
keeps stale references to object being freed when we unload an objfile.
This includes the "valid_block" field which is reset to nullptr if the
pointed to block is tied to an objfile being freed.
However, at some point varobj_invalidate_iter might try to recreate
varobjs tracking either floating or globals. Varobj tracking globals
are identified as having the "valid_block" field set nullptr, but as
bc20e562ec0 might clear this field, we have lost the ability to
distinguish between varobj referring to globals and non globals.
Fix this by introducing a "global" flag which tracks if a given varobj
was initially created as tracking a global.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29426
Alan Modra [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 05:36:15 +0000 (15:06 +0930)]
Re: PE objdump -x
All of these buffer overrun tests are better written as a comparison
against size remaining, due to ISO C 9899 standard 6.5.2 para 8
regarding adding a constant to a pointer:
"If both the pointer operand and the result point to elements of the
same array object, or one past the last element of the array object,
the evaluation shall not produce an overflow; otherwise, the behavior
is undefined."
So "ex_dta + 4" might be undefined behaviour, if you interpret "the
array object" in this case to be the malloc'd section contents!
* pei-x86_64.c (pex64_get_unwind_info): Tidy sanity checks.
(pex64_xdata_print_uwd_codes): Likewise.
Jan Beulich [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 07:01:10 +0000 (09:01 +0200)]
x86: improve/shorten vector zeroing-idiom optimization conditional
- Drop the rounding type check: We're past template matching, and none
of the involved insns support embedded rounding.
- Drop the extension opcode check: None of the involved opcodes have
variants with it being other than None.
- Instead check opcode space, even if just to be on the safe side going
forward.
- Reduce the number of comparisons by folding two groups.
Jan Beulich [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 07:00:39 +0000 (09:00 +0200)]
x86: properly mark i386-only insns
Just like all Size64 insns are marked Cpu64, all Size32 insns ought to
be marked Cpu386.
Jan Beulich [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 06:59:46 +0000 (08:59 +0200)]
x86: also use D for MOVBE
First of all rename the meanwhile misleading Opcode_SIMD_FloatD, as it
has also been used for KMOV* and BNDMOV. Then simplify the condition
selecting which form if "reversing" to use - except for the MOV to/from
control/debug/test registers all extended opcode space insns use bit 0
(rather than bit 1) to indicate the direction (from/to memory) of an
operation. With that, D can simply be set on the first of the two
templates, while the other can be dropped.
GDB Administrator [Wed, 3 Aug 2022 00:00:07 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Cary Coutant [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 23:19:43 +0000 (16:19 -0700)]
Add ELFCOMPRESS_ZSTD.
include/elf/
* common.h: Add ELFCOMPRESS_ZSTD.
John Baldwin [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 21:54:28 +0000 (14:54 -0700)]
fbsd-nat: Correct the return type of the have_regset method.
During the development of
40c23d880386d6e8202567eaa2a6b041feb1a652,
the return value of fbsd_nat_target::have_regset was changed from a
simple boolean to returning the size of the register set. The
comments and callers were all updated for this change, but the actual
return type was accidentally left as a bool. This change fixes the
return type to be a size_t.
Current callers of this only checked the value against 0 and thus
still worked correctly.
Jan Beulich [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 13:43:26 +0000 (15:43 +0200)]
ELF: emit symbol table when there are relocations
Even when there are no symbols (e.g. all relocations being against
absolute values), a symbol table (with just the first placeholder entry)
needs to be emitted. Otherwise tools like objdump won't properly process
the relocations. The respective checks in assign_section_numbers() and
_bfd_elf_compute_section_file_positions() support also this view. Oddly
enough so far HAS_RELOC was only set when reading in an object file, but
not when generating one anew; the flag would only have been cleared when
no relocations were found (anymore).
While there also amend the affected function's leading comment to also
mention gas.
Matthew Malcomson [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 11:10:01 +0000 (12:10 +0100)]
ld: aarch64: Adjust TLS relaxation condition
In aarch64_tls_transition_without_check and elfNN_aarch64_tls_relax we
choose whether to perform a relaxation to an IE access model or an LE
access model based on whether the symbol itself is marked as local (i.e.
`h == NULL`).
This is problematic in two ways. The first is that sometimes a global
dynamic access can be relaxed to an initial exec access when creating a
shared library, and if that happens on a local symbol then we currently
relax it to a local exec access instead. This usually does not happen
since we only relax an access if aarch64_can_relax_tls returns true and
aarch64_can_relax_tls does not have the same problem. However, it can
happen when we have seen both an IE and GD access on the same symbol.
This case is exercised in the newly added testcase tls-relax-gd-ie-2.
The second problem is that deciding based on whether the symbol is local
misses the case when the symbol is global but is still non-interposable
and known to be located in the executable. This happens on all global
symbols in executables.
This case is exercised in the newly added testcase tls-relax-ie-le-4.
Here we adjust the condition we base our relaxation on so that we relax
to local-exec if we are creating an executable and the relevant symbol
we're accessing is stored inside that executable.
-- Updating tests for new relaxation criteria
Many of the tests added to check our relaxation to IE were implemented
by taking advantage of the fact that we did not relax a global symbol
defined in an executable.
Since a global symbol defined in an executable is still not
interposable, we know that a TLS version of such a symbol will be in the
main TLS block. This means that we can perform a stronger relaxation on
such symbols and relax their accesses to a local-exec access.
Hence we have to update all tests that relied on the older suboptimal
decision making.
The two cases when we still would want to relax a general dynamic access
to an initial exec one are:
1) When in a shared library and accessing a symbol which we have already
seen accessed with an initial exec access sequence.
2) When in an executable and accessing a symbol defined in a shared
library.
Both of these require shared library support, which means that these
tests are now only available on targets with that.
I have chosen to switch the existing testcases from a plain executable
to one dynamically linked to a shared object as that doesn't require
changing the testcases quite so much (just requires accessing a
different variable rather than requiring adding another code sequence).
The tls-relax-all testcase was an outlier to the above approach, since
it included a general dynamic access to both a local and global symbol
and inspected for the difference accordingly.
Matthew Malcomson [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 11:07:00 +0000 (12:07 +0100)]
ld: aarch64: Update test linker scripts relocs.ld and relocs-ilp32.ld
The updates are to ensure that the .data section exists. This means
that we always have a data section. That means that we don't create a
RWX segment and avoid the corresponding warning.
We get this warning when testing aarch64-none-elf with -mcmodel=tiny.
N.b. this changes quite a few testcases from fail to pass.
Victor Do Nascimento [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 10:34:42 +0000 (11:34 +0100)]
arm: Add cfi expression support for ra_auth_code
This patch extends assembler support for the use of register names to
allow for pseudo-registers, e.g. ra_auth_code register.
This is done particularly with CFI directives in mind, allowing for
expressions of the type:
.cfi_register ra_auth_code, 12
gas/Changelog:
* config/tc-arm.c (tc_arm_regname_to_dw2regnum): Add
REG_TYPE_PSEUDO handling.
* testsuite/gas/arm/cfi-pacbti-m-readelf.d: New.
* testsuite/gas/arm/cfi-pacbti-m.s: New.
Victor Do Nascimento [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 21:07:27 +0000 (22:07 +0100)]
arm: Use DWARF numbering convention for pseudo-register representation
This patch modifies the internal `struct reg_entry' numbering of DWARF
pseudo-registers to match values assigned in DWARF standards (see "4.1
DWARF register names" in [1])so ra_auth_code goes from 12 to 143 and
amends the unwinder .save directive-processing code to correctly handle
mixed register-type save directives.
The mechanism for splitting the register list is also re-written to
comply with register ordering on push statements, being that registers
are stored on the stack in numerical order, with the lowest numbered
register at the lowest address [2].
Consequently, the parsing of the hypothetical directive
.save{r4-r7, r10, ra_auth_core, lr}
has been changed such as rather than producing
.save{r4-r7, r10}
.save{ra_auth_code}
.save{lr}
as was the case with previous implementation, now produces:
.save{lr}
.save{ra_auth_code}
.save{r4-r7, r10}
[1] <https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aadwarf32/aadwarf32.rst>
[2] <https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dui0473/j/arm-and-thumb-instructions/push>
gas/Changelog:
* config/tc-arm.c (REG_RA_AUTH_CODE): New.
(parse_dot_save): Likewise.
(parse_reg_list): Remove obsolete code.
(reg_names): Set ra_auth_code to 143.
(s_arm_unwind_save): Handle core and pseudo-register lists via
parse_dot_save.
(s_arm_unwind_save_mixed): Deleted.
(s_arm_unwind_save_pseudo): Handle one register at a time.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m-readelf.d: Fix test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/unwind-pacbti-m.d: Likewise.
Alan Modra [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 07:23:54 +0000 (16:53 +0930)]
PE objdump -x
objdump -x on PE executables produces lots of "xdata section corrupt"
and "corrupt unwind data" warnings, and refuses to dump that info. It
turns out that the sanity checks were bad, not the data. Fix them.
* pei-x86_64.c (pex64_get_unwind_info): Correct buffer overrun
sanity checks.
(pex64_xdata_print_uwd_codes): Similarly.
Jan Beulich [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 06:03:17 +0000 (08:03 +0200)]
x86: XOP shift insns don't really allow B suffix
By mistake it was permitted to be used from the very introduction of XOP
support.
GDB Administrator [Tue, 2 Aug 2022 00:00:08 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Martin Storsjö [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 21:57:19 +0000 (00:57 +0300)]
ld: Support the -exclude-symbols option via COFF def files, with the EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS keyword
This was requested in review.
Martin Storsjö [Tue, 19 Jul 2022 19:48:06 +0000 (22:48 +0300)]
ld: Add support for a new option, -exclude-symbols, in COFF object file directives
This maps to the same as ld's --exclude-symbols command line option,
but allowing specifying the option via directives embedded in the
object files instead of passed manually on the command line.
Tom de Vries [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 12:00:59 +0000 (14:00 +0200)]
[gdb/symtab] Fix .debug_aranges duplicate offset warning
The function read_addrmap_from_aranges contains code to issue a warning:
...
if (!insertpair.second)
{
warning (_("Section .debug_aranges in %s has duplicate "
"debug_info_offset %s, ignoring .debug_aranges."),
objfile_name (objfile), sect_offset_str (per_cu->sect_off));
return false;
}
...
but the warning is in fact activated when all_comp_units has duplicate
entries, which is very misleading.
Fix this by:
- adding a test-case that should trigger the warning,
- replacing the current implementation of the warning with an
assert that all_comp_units should not contain duplicates, and
- properly re-implementing the warning, such that it is triggered
by the test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29381
Jan Beulich [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 08:53:14 +0000 (10:53 +0200)]
x86: SKINIT with operand needs IgnoreSize
Without it in 16-bit mode a pointless operand size prefix would be
emitted.
WANG Xuerui [Wed, 27 Jul 2022 11:07:57 +0000 (19:07 +0800)]
opcodes: LoongArch: add "ret" instruction to reduce typing
This syntactic sugar is present in both classical and emerging
architectures, like Alpha, SPARC and RISC-V, and assembler macros
doing the same thing can already be found in the wild e.g. [1], proving
the feature's popularity. It's better to provide support directly in the
assembler so downstream users wouldn't have to re-invent this over and
over again.
[1]: https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=blob;f=sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/loongarch/sysdep.h;h=
c586df819cd90;hb=HEAD#l28
WANG Xuerui [Wed, 27 Jul 2022 11:07:56 +0000 (19:07 +0800)]
opcodes: LoongArch: make all non-native jumps desugar to canonical b{lt/ge}[u] forms
Also re-order the jump/branch opcodes while at it, so that insns are
sorted in ascending order according to opcodes, and the label form
preceding the real definition.
Alan Modra [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 02:03:46 +0000 (11:33 +0930)]
Get rid of fprintf_vma and sprintf_vma
These two macros print either a 16 digit hex number or an 8 digit
hex number. Unfortunately they depend on both target and host, which
means that the output for 32-bit targets may be either 8 or 16 hex
digits.
Replace them in most cases with code that prints a bfd_vma using
PRIx64. In some cases, deliberately lose the leading zeros.
This change some output, notably in base/offset fields of m68k
disassembly which I think looks better that way, and in error
messages. I've kept leading zeros in symbol dumps (objdump -t)
and in PE header dumps.
bfd/
* bfd-in.h (fprintf_vma, sprintf_vma, printf_vma): Delete.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* bfd.c (bfd_sprintf_vma): Don't use sprintf_vma.
(bfd_fprintf_vma): Don't use fprintf_vma.
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_reloc_type_tls): Don't use sprintf_vma.
Instead use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
(xcoff_ppc_relocate_section): Likewise.
* cofflink.c (_bfd_coff_write_global_sym): Likewise.
* mmo.c (mmo_write_symbols_and_terminator): Likewise.
* srec.c (srec_write_symbols): Likewise.
* elf32-xtensa.c (print_r_reloc): Similarly for fprintf_vma.
* pei-x86_64.c (pex64_dump_xdata): Likewise.
(pex64_bfd_print_pdata_section): Likewise.
* som.c (som_print_symbol): Likewise.
* ecoff.c (_bfd_ecoff_print_symbol): Use bfd_fprintf_vma.
opcodes/
* dis-buf.c (perror_memory, generic_print_address): Don't use
sprintf_vma. Instead use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
* i386-dis.c (print_operand_value, print_displacement): Likewise.
* m68k-dis.c (print_base, print_indexed): Likewise.
* ns32k-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Likewise.
* ia64-gen.c (_opcode_int64_low, _opcode_int64_high): Delete.
(opcode_fprintf_vma): Delete.
(print_main_table): Use PRIx64 to print opcode.
binutils/
* od-macho.c: Replace all uses of printf_vma with bfd_printf_vma.
* objcopy.c (copy_object): Don't use sprintf_vma. Instead use
PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
(copy_main): Likewise.
* readelf.c (CHECK_ENTSIZE_VALUES): Likewise.
(dynamic_section_mips_val): Likewise.
(print_vma): Don't use printf_vma. Instead use PRIx64 to print
bfd_vma values.
(dump_ia64_vms_dynamic_fixups): Likewise.
(process_version_sections): Likewise.
* rddbg.c (stab_context): Likewise.
gas/
* config/tc-i386.c (offset_in_range): Don't use sprintf_vma.
Instead use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
(md_assemble): Likewise.
* config/tc-mips.c (load_register, macro): Likewise.
* messages.c (as_internal_value_out_of_range): Likewise.
* read.c (emit_expr_with_reloc): Likewise.
* config/tc-ia64.c (note_register_values): Don't use fprintf_vma.
Instead use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
(print_dependency): Likewise.
* listing.c (list_symbol_table): Use bfd_sprintf_vma.
* symbols.c (print_symbol_value_1): Use %p to print pointers.
(print_binary): Likewise.
(print_expr_1): Use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
* write.c (print_fixup): Use %p to print pointers. Don't use
fprintf_vma.
* testsuite/gas/all/overflow.l: Update expected output.
* testsuite/gas/m68k/mcf-mov3q.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/m68k/operands.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/s12z/truncated.d: Likewise.
ld/
* deffilep.y (def_file_print): Don't use fprintf_vma. Instead
use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
* emultempl/armelf.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): Don't use
sprintf_vma. Instead use PRIx64 to print bfd_vma values.
* emultempl/pe.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_finish): Likewise.
* ldlang.c (lang_map): Use %V to print region origin.
(lang_one_common): Don't use sprintf_vma.
* ldmisc.c (vfinfo): Don't use fprintf_vma or sprintf_vma.
* pe-dll.c (pe_dll_generate_def_file): Likewise.
gdb/
* remote.c (remote_target::trace_set_readonly_regions): Replace
uses of sprintf_vma with bfd_sprintf_vma.
liuzhensong [Mon, 25 Jul 2022 02:22:27 +0000 (10:22 +0800)]
LoongArch: Set defaults to exec stack 0.
Alan Modra [Sun, 31 Jul 2022 13:21:55 +0000 (22:51 +0930)]
libctf: Avoid use of uninitialised variables
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_add_ctf_internal): Don't free uninitialised
pointers.
Alan Modra [Sun, 31 Jul 2022 09:55:32 +0000 (19:25 +0930)]
PR29348, BFD_VMA_FMT wrong
There is a problem with my commit
0e3c1eebb2, which replaced
bfd_uint64_t with uint64_t: Some hosts typedef int64_t to long long
even when long is the same size as long long. That confuses the code
choosing one of "l", "ll", or "I64" for BFD_VMA_FMT, and results in
warnings.
Write a direct configure test for the printf int64_t style instead.
This removes the last use of BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG, so delete that.
Note that the changes to configure.com are pure guesswork.
PR 29348
* bfd-in.h (BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG): Don't define.
(BFD_VMA_FMT): Define using BFD_INT64_FMT when 64-bit.
(bfd_vma, bfd_signed_vma): Move comments to 64-bit typedefs.
* configure.ac (BFD_HOST_64BIT_LONG): Delete.
(BFD_INT64_FMT): New config test.
* configure.com: Update similarly.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
GDB Administrator [Mon, 1 Aug 2022 00:00:06 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
GDB Administrator [Sun, 31 Jul 2022 00:00:07 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Tom de Vries [Sat, 30 Jul 2022 06:02:20 +0000 (08:02 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/literals.exp with aarch64
On aarch64-linux, I run into:
...
(gdb) print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#^M
$7 =
18446744073709551615^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/literals.exp: print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#
...
while on x86_64-linux instead, I get:
...
(gdb) print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#^M
$7 = -1^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/literals.exp: print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#
...
We can easily reproduce this on x86_64-linux using:
...
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set lang ada" -ex "set arch i386" \
-ex "print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#"
$1 = -1
$ gdb -q -batch -ex "set lang ada" -ex "set arch aarch64" \
-ex "print 16#
ffffffffffffffff#"
$1 =
18446744073709551615
...
With i386, we have:
...
(gdb) p int_bits
$3 = 32
(gdb) p long_bits
$4 = 32
(gdb) p long_long_bits
$5 = 64
...
and so in processInt we hit the fits-in-unsigned-long-long case where we use
as type long long:
...
/* Note: Interprets ULLONG_MAX as -1. */
yylval.typed_val.type = type_long_long (par_state);
...
With aarch64, we have instead:
...
(gdb) p int_bits
$1 = 32
(gdb) p long_bits
$2 = 64
(gdb) p long_long_bits
$3 = 64
...
and so in processInt we hit the fits-in-unsigned-long case where we use
as type unsigned long:
...
yylval.typed_val.type
= builtin_type (par_state->gdbarch ())->builtin_unsigned_long;
...
It's not clear why for ada we're using long long for the
fits-in-unsigned-long-long case.
Fix this by using unsigned long long for the fits-in-unsigned-long-long case,
meaning the new reference output is
18446744073709551615 instead of -1.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29416
Simon Marchi [Mon, 28 Mar 2022 15:03:53 +0000 (11:03 -0400)]
gdb/testsuite: add macros test for source files compiled in various ways
Using different ways of passing source file paths to compilers results n
different file and directory paths in the line header. For example:
- gcc foo.c
- gcc ./foo.c
- gcc ../cwd/foo.c
- gcc $PWD/foo.c
Because of this, GDB sometimes failed to look up macros. The previous
patch fixed that as much as possible. This patch adds the corresponding
tests.
Add both a DWARF assembler-based test and a regular test. The DWARF
assembled-based one tests some hard-coded debug info based on what I
have observed some specific versions of gcc and clang generate. We want
to make sure that GDB keeps handling all these cases correctly, even if
it's not always clear whether they are really valid DWARF. Also, they
will be tested no matter what the current target compiler is for a given
test run.
The regular test is compiled using the target compiler, so it may help
find bugs when testing against some other toolchains than what was used
to generate the DWARF assembler-based test.
For the DWARF assembler-based test, add to testsuite/lib/dwarf.exp the
necessary code to generate a DWARF5 .debug_macro section. The design of
the new procs is based on what was done for rnglists and loclists.
To test against a specific compiler one can use this command, for
example:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.base/macro-source-path.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="CC_FOR_TARGET=clang --target_board unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5"
Change-Id: Iab8da498e57d10cc2a3d09ea136685d9278cfcf6
Simon Marchi [Wed, 27 Apr 2022 16:47:35 +0000 (12:47 -0400)]
gdb: remove code to prepend comp dir in buildsym_compunit::start_subfile
The bit of code removed by this patch was introduced to fix the same
kind of problem that the previous patch fixes. That is, to try to match
existing subfiles when different name forms are used to refer to a same
file.
The thread for the patch that introduced this code is:
https://pi.simark.ca/gdb-patches/
45F8CBDF.
9090501@hq.tensilica.com/
The important bits are that the compiler produced a compilation unit
with:
DW_AT_name : test.c
DW_AT_comp_dir : /home/maxim/W/BadgerPass/PR_14999
and DWARF v2 line table with:
The Directory Table:
/home/maxim/W/BadgerPass/PR_14999
The File Name Table:
Entry Dir Time Size Name
1 1
1173897037 152 test.c
Because the main symtab was created with only DW_AT_name, it was named
"test.c". And because the path built from the line header contained the
"directory" part, it was "/home/maxim/W/BadgerPass/PR_14999/test.c".
Because of this mismatch, thing didn't work, so they added this code to
prepend the compilation directory to the existing subfile names, so that
this specific case would work.
With the changes done earlier in this series, where subfiles are
identified using the "most complete path possible", this case would be
handled. The main subfile's would be
"/home/maxim/W/BadgerPass/PR_14999/test.c" from the start
(DW_AT_comp_dir + DW_AT_name). It's not so different from some DWARF 5
cases actually, which make the compilation directory explicit in the
line table header.
I therefore think that this code is no longer needed. It does feel like
a quick hack to make one specific case work, and we have a more general
solution now. Also, this code was introduced to work around a problem
in the DWARF debug info or the DWARF debug info reader. In general, I
think it's preferable for these hacks to be located in the specific
debug info reader code, rather than in the common code.
Even though this code was added to work around a DWARF reader problem,
it's possible that some other debug info reader has started taking
advantage of this code in the mean time. It's very difficult to
know or verify, but I think the likelyhood is quite small, so I'm
proposing to get rid of it to simplify things a little bit.
Change-Id: I710b8ec0d449d1b110d67ddf9fcbdb2b37108306
Simon Marchi [Thu, 28 Jul 2022 16:34:47 +0000 (12:34 -0400)]
gdb: add "id" fields to identify symtabs and subfiles
Printing macros defined in the main source file doesn't work reliably
using various toolchains, especially when DWARF 5 is used. For example,
using the binaries produced by either of these commands:
$ gcc --version
gcc (GCC) 11.2.0
$ ld --version
GNU ld (GNU Binutils) 2.38
$ gcc test.c -g3 -gdwarf-5
$ clang --version
clang version 13.0.1
$ clang test.c -gdwarf-5 -fdebug-macro
I get:
$ ./gdb -nx -q --data-directory=data-directory a.out
(gdb) start
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x111d: file test.c, line 6.
Starting program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/a.out
Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at test.c:6
6 return ZERO;
(gdb) p ZERO
No symbol "ZERO" in current context.
When starting to investigate this (taking the gcc-compiled binary as an
example), we see that GDB fails to look up the appropriate macro scope
when evaluating the expression. While stopped in
macro_lookup_inclusion:
(top-gdb) p name
$1 = 0x62100011a980 "test.c"
(top-gdb) p source.filename
$2 = 0x62100011a9a0 "/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/test.c"
`source` is the macro_source_file that we would expect GDB to find.
`name` comes from the symtab::filename field of the symtab we are
stopped in. GDB doesn't find the appropriate macro_source_file because
the name of the macro_source_file doesn't match exactly the name of the
symtab.
The name of the main symtab comes from the compilation unit's
DW_AT_name, passed to the buildsym_compunit's constructor:
https://gitlab.com/gnutools/binutils-gdb/-/blob/
4815d6125ec580cc02a1094d61b8c9d1cc83c0a1/gdb/dwarf2/read.c#L10627-10630
The contents of DW_AT_name, in this case, is "test.c". It is typically
(what I witnessed all compilers do) the same string that was passed to
the compiler on the command-line.
The name of the macro_source_file comes from the line number program
header's file table, from the call to the line_header::file_file_name
method:
https://gitlab.com/gnutools/binutils-gdb/-/blob/
4815d6125ec580cc02a1094d61b8c9d1cc83c0a1/gdb/dwarf2/macro.c#L54-65
line_header::file_file_name prepends the directory path that the file
entry refers to, in the file table (if the file name is not already
absolute). In this case, the file name is "test.c", appended to the
directory "/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb".
Because the symtab's name is not created the same way as the
macro_source_file's name is created, we get this mismatch. GDB fails to
find the appropriate macro scope for the symtab, and we can't print
macros when stopped in that symtab.
To make this work, we must ensure that paths produced in these two ways
end up identical. This can be tricky because of the different ways a
path can be passed to the compiler by the user.
Another thing to consider is that while the main symtab's name (or
subfile, before it becomes a symtab) is created using DW_AT_name, the
main symtab is also referred to using its entry in the line table
header's file table, when processing the line table. We must therefore
ensure that the same name is produced in both cases, so that a call to
"start_subfile" for the main subfile will correctly find the
already-created subfile, created by buildsym_compunit's constructor. If
we fail to do that, things still often work, because of a fallback: the
watch_main_source_file_lossage method. This method determines that if
the main subfile has no symbols but there exists another subfile with
the same basename (e.g. "test.c") that does have symbols, it's probably
because there was some filename mismatch. So it replaces the main
subfile with that other subfile. I think that heuristic is useful as a
last effort to work around any bug or bad debug info, but I don't think
we should design things such as to rely on it. It's a heuristic, it can
get things wrong. So in my search for a fix, it is important that given
some good debug info, we don't end up relying on that for things to
work.
A first attempt at fixing this was to try to prepend the compilation
directory here or not prepend it there. In practice, because of all the
possible combinations of debug info the compilers produce, it was not
possible to get something that would produce reliable, consistent paths.
Another attempt at fixing this was to make both macro_source_file
objects and symtab objects use the most complete form of path possible.
That means to prepend directories at least until we get an absolute
path. In theory, we should end up with the same path in all cases.
This generally worked, but because it changed the symtab names, it
resulted in user-visible changes (for example, paths to source files in
Breakpoint hit messages becoming always absolute). I didn't find this
very good, first because there is a "set filename-display" setting that
lets the user control how they want the paths to be displayed, and that
would suddenly make this setting completely ineffective (although even
today, it is a bit dependent on the debug info). Second, it would
require a good amount of testsuite tweaks to make tests accept these
suddenly absolute paths.
This new patch is a slight variation of that: it adds a new field called
"filename_for_id" in struct symtab and struct subfile, next to the
existing filename field. The goal is to separate the internal ids used
for finding objects from the names used for presentation. This field is
used for identifying subfiles, symtabs and macro_source_files
internally. For DWARF symtabs, this new field is meant to contain the
"most complete possible" path, as discussed above. So for a given file,
it must always be in the same form, everywhere. The existing
symtab::filename field remains the one used for printing to the user, so
there shouldn't be any change in how paths are printed.
Changes in the core symtab files are:
- Add "name_for_id" and "filename_for_id" fields to "struct subfile"
and "struct symtab", next to existing "name" and "filename" fields.
- Make buildsym_compunit::buildsym_compunit and
buildsym_compunit::start_subfile accept a "name_for_id" parameter
next to the existing "name" ones.
- Make buildsym_compunit::start_subfile use "name_for_id" for looking
up existing subfiles. This is the key thing for making calls
to start_subfile for the main source file look up the existing
subfile successfully, and avoid relying on
watch_main_source_file_lossage.
- Make sal_macro_scope pass "filename_for_id", rather than "filename",
to macro_lookup_inclusion. This is the key thing to making the
lookup work and macro printing work.
Changes in the DWARF files are:
- Make line_header::file_file_name return the "most complete possible"
name. The only pre-existing user of this method is the macro code,
to give the macro_source_file objects their name. And we now want
them to have this "most complete possible" name, which will match the
corresponding symtab's "filename_for_id".
- Make dwarf2_cu::start_compunit_symtab pass the "most complete
possible" name for the main symtab's "filename_for_id". In this
context, where the info comes from the compilation unit's DW_AT_name
/ DW_AT_comp_dir, it means prepending DW_AT_comp_dir to DW_AT_name if
DW_AT_name is not already absolute.
- Change dwarf2_start_subfile to build a name_for_id for the subfile
being started. The simplest way is to re-use
line_header::file_file_name, since the callers always have a
file_entry handy. This ensures that it will get the exact same path
representation as the macro code does, for the same file (since it
also uses line_header::file_file_name).
- Update calls to allocate_symtab to pass the "name_for_id" from the
subfile.
Tests exercising all this are added by the following patch.
Of all the cases I tried, the only one I found that ends up relying on
watch_main_source_file_lossage is the following one:
$ clang --version
clang version 13.0.1
Target: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
Thread model: posix
InstalledDir: /usr/bin
$ clang ./test.c -g3 -O0 -gdwarf-4
$ ./gdb -nx --data-directory=data-directory -q -readnow -iex "set debug symtab-create 1" a.out
...
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = test.c, name_for_id = /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/test.c
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = ./test.c, name_for_id = /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/./test.c
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = ./test.c, name_for_id = /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/./test.c
[symtab-create] start_subfile: found existing symtab with name_for_id /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/./test.c (/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/./test.c)
[symtab-create] watch_main_source_file_lossage: using subfile ./test.c as the main subfile
As we can see, there are two forms used for "test.c", one with a "." and
one without. This comes from the fact that the compilation unit DIE
contains:
DW_AT_name ("test.c")
DW_AT_comp_dir ("/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb")
without a ".", and the line table for that file contains:
include_directories[ 1] = "."
file_names[ 1]:
name: "test.c"
dir_index: 1
When assembling the filename from that entry, we get a ".".
It is a bit unexpected that the main filename resulting from the line
table header does not match exactly the name in the compilation unit.
For instance, gcc uses "./test.c" for the DW_AT_name, which gives
identical paths in the compilation unit and in the line table header.
Similarly, with DWARF 5:
$ clang ./test.c -g3 -O0 -gdwarf-5
clang create two entries that refer to the same file but are of in a different
form.
include_directories[ 0] = "/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb"
include_directories[ 1] = "."
file_names[ 0]:
name: "test.c"
dir_index: 0
file_names[ 1]:
name: "test.c"
dir_index: 1
The first file name produces a path without a "." while the second does.
This is not caught by watch_main_source_file_lossage, because of
dwarf_decode_lines that creates a symtab for each file entry in the line
table. It therefore appears as "non-empty" to
watch_main_source_file_lossage. This results in two symtabs:
(gdb) maintenance info symtabs
{ objfile /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb/a.out ((struct objfile *) 0x613000005d00)
{ ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x62100011aca0)
debugformat DWARF 5
producer clang version 13.0.1
name test.c
dirname /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb
blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x621000129ec0)
user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null))
{ symtab test.c ((struct symtab *) 0x62100011ad20)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x0)
}
{ symtab ./test.c ((struct symtab *) 0x62100011ad60)
fullname (null)
linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x621000129ef0)
}
}
}
I am not sure what is the consequence of this, but this is also what
happens before my patch, so I think its acceptable to leave it as-is.
To handle these two cases nicely, I think we will need a function that
removes the unnecessary "." from path names, something that can be done
later.
Finally, I made a change in find_file_and_directory is necessary to
avoid breaking test
gdb.dwarf2/dw2-compdir-oldgcc.exp: info source gcc42
Without that change, we would get:
(gdb) info source
Current source file is /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
Compilation directory is /dir/d
whereas the expected result is:
(gdb) info source
Current source file is dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
Compilation directory is /dir/d
This test was added here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2012-November/098144.html
Long story short, GCC <= 4.2 apparently had a bug where it would
generate a DW_AT_name with a full path ("/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S")
and no DW_AT_comp_dir. The line table has one entry with filename
"dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", which refers to directory 0. Directory 0
normally refers to the compilation unit's comp dir, but it is
non-existent in this case.
This caused some symtab lookup problems, and to work around them, some
workaround was added, which today reads as:
if (res.get_comp_dir () == nullptr
&& producer_is_gcc_lt_4_3 (cu)
&& res.get_name () != nullptr
&& IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH (res.get_name ()))
res.set_comp_dir (ldirname (res.get_name ()));
Source: https://gitlab.com/gnutools/binutils-gdb/-/blob/
6577f365ebdee7dda71cb996efa29d3714cbccd0/gdb/dwarf2/read.c#L9428-9432
It extracts an artificial DW_AT_comp_dir from DW_AT_name, if there is no
DW_AT_comp_dir and DW_AT_name is absolute.
Prior to my patch, a subfile would get created with filename
"/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", from DW_AT_name, and another would get
created with filename "dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S" from the line table's
file table. Then watch_main_source_file_lossage would kick in and merge
them, keeping only the "dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S" one:
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: found existing symtab with name dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S (dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S)
[symtab-create] watch_main_source_file_lossage: using subfile dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S as the main subfile
And so "info source" would show "dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S" as the
filename.
With my patch applied, but without the change in
find_file_and_directory, both DW_AT_name and the line table would try to
start a subfile with the same filename_for_id, and there was no need for
watch_main_source_file_lossage - which is what we want:
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S, name_for_id = /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S, name_for_id = /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: found existing symtab with name_for_id /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S (/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S)
[symtab-create] start_subfile: name = dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S, name_for_id = /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S
[symtab-create] start_subfile: found existing symtab with name_for_id /dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S (/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S)
But since the one with name == "/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", coming
from DW_AT_name, gets created first, it wins, and the symtab ends up
with "/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S" as the name, "info source" shows
"/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S" and the test breaks.
This is not wrong per-se, after all DW_AT_name is
"/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", so it wouldn't be wrong to report the
current source file as "/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S". If you compile
a file passing "/an/absolute/path.c", DW_AT_name typically contains (at
least with GCC) "/an/absolute/path.c" and GDB tells you that the source
file is "/an/absolute/path.c". But we can also keep the existing
behavior fairly easily with a little change in find_file_and_directory.
When extracting an artificial DW_AT_comp_dir from DW_AT_name, we now
modify the name to just keep the file part. The result is coherent with
what compilers do when you compile a file by just passing its filename
("gcc path.c -g"):
DW_AT_name ("path.c")
DW_AT_comp_dir ("/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-one-target/gdb")
With this change, filename_for_id is still the full name,
"/dir/d/dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", but the filename of the subfile /
symtab (what ends up shown by "info source") is just
"dw2-compdir-oldgcc42.S", and that makes the test happy.
Change-Id: I8b5cc4bb3052afdb172ee815c051187290566307
Simon Marchi [Wed, 27 Apr 2022 02:50:22 +0000 (22:50 -0400)]
gdb/dwarf: pass a file_entry to line_header::file_file_name
In the following patch, there will be some callers of file_file_name
that will already have access to the file_entry object for which they
want the file name. It would be inefficient to have them pass an index,
only for line_header::file_file_name to re-lookup the same file_entry
object. Change line_header::file_file_name to accept a file_entry
object reference, instead of an index to look up.
I think this change makes sense in any case. Callers that have an index
can first obtain a file_entry using line_header::file_name_at or
line_header::file_names.
When passing a file_entry object, we can assume that the file_entry's
index is valid, unlike when passing an index. So, push the special case
about an invalid index to the sole current caller of file_file_name,
macro_start_file. I think that error belongs there anyway, since it
specifically talks about "bad file number in macro information".
This requires recording the file index in the file_entry structure, so
add that.
Change-Id: Ic6e44c407539d92b7863d7ba82405ade17f384ad
Simon Marchi [Wed, 27 Apr 2022 01:40:51 +0000 (21:40 -0400)]
gdb/dwarf: pass compilation directory to line header
The following patch changes line_header::file_file_name to prepend the
compilation directory to the file name, if needed. For that, the line
header needs to know about the compilation directory. Prepare for that
by adding a constructor that takes it as a parameter, and passing the
value down everywhere needed. Add a second constructor for the special
case of building a line_header for doing a hash table lookup, since that
case doesn't require a compilation directory value.
Change-Id: Iba3ba0293e4e2d13a64b257cf9a3094684d54330
Simon Marchi [Thu, 7 Apr 2022 13:27:18 +0000 (09:27 -0400)]
gdb: add debug prints in buildsym.c
Add a few debug prints in buildsym.c that were helpful to me in writing
this series.
Change-Id: If10a818feaee3ce1b78a2a254013b62dd578002b
Simon Marchi [Thu, 7 Apr 2022 12:00:16 +0000 (08:00 -0400)]
gdb: introduce symtab_create_debug_printf
Introduce symtab_create_debug_printf and symtab_create_debug_printf_v,
to print the debug messages enabled by "set debug symtab-create".
Change-Id: I442500903f72d4635c2dd9eaef770111f317dc04
GDB Administrator [Sat, 30 Jul 2022 00:00:08 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Tom de Vries [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 14:12:55 +0000 (16:12 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.ada/convvar_comp.exp with broken debug info
On aarch64-linux I run into this failure with gcc 7.5.0:
...
(gdb) print $item.started^M
$1 = (-5312, 65535,
4202476)^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/convvar_comp.exp: print $item.started
...
The test-case expects (0, 0, 0), but we're getting another value due to
incorrect location information.
Work around this by:
- first printing the value, and then
- verifying that the convenience variable matches the printed value.
I've verified that the test-case still checks what it should by disabling
the fix from commit
cc0e770c0d0 ("memory error printing component of record
from convenience variable") and observing the test-case fail.
Tested on x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29420
Alan Modra [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 13:05:13 +0000 (22:35 +0930)]
Re: PR16005, avr linker crash on a particular instruction sequence with --relax
The last patch wasn't so clever. The contents in fact have already
been read, just not cached where relax_delete_bytes expects them.
relax_delete_bytes also modifies relocs and syms, so they should be
cached too.
PR 16005
* elf32-avr.c (elf32_avr_relax_delete_bytes): Revert last change.
(elf32_avr_relax_section): Cache contents, relocs and syms
before calling relax_delete_bytes.
Andrew Burgess [Thu, 28 Apr 2022 12:31:07 +0000 (13:31 +0100)]
libopcodes/aarch64: add support for disassembler styling
This commit enables disassembler styling for AArch64. After this
commit it is possible to have objdump style AArch64 disassembler
output (using --disassembler-color option). Once the required GDB
patches are merged, GDB will also style the disassembler output.
The changes to support styling are mostly split between two files
opcodes/aarch64-dis.c and opcodes/aarch64-opc.c.
The entry point for the AArch64 disassembler can be found in
aarch64-dis.c, this file handles printing the instruction mnemonics,
and assembler directives (e.g. '.byte', '.word', etc). Some operands,
mostly relating to assembler directives are also printed from this
file. This commit changes all of this to pass through suitable
styling information.
However, for most "normal" instructions, the instruction operands are
printed using a two step process. From aarch64-dis.c, in the
print_operands function, the function aarch64_print_operand is called,
this function is in aarch64-opc.c, and converts an instruction operand
into a string. Then, back in print_operands (aarch64-dis.c), the
operand string is printed.
Unfortunately, the string returned by aarch64_print_operand can be
quite complex, it will include syntax elements, like '[' and ']', in
addition to register names and immediate values. In some cases, a
single operand will expand into what will appear (to the user) as
multiple operands separated with a ','.
This makes the task of styling more complex, all these different
components need to by styled differently, so we need to get the
styling information out of aarch64_print_operand in some way.
The solution that I propose here is similar to the solution that I
used for the i386 disassembler.
Currently, aarch64_print_operand uses snprintf to write the operand
text into a buffer provided by the caller.
What I propose is that we pass an extra argument to the
aarch64_print_operand function, this argument will be a structure, the
structure contains a callback function and some state.
When aarch64_print_operand needs to format part of its output this can
be done by using the callback function within the new structure, this
callback returns a string with special embedded markers that indicate
which mode should be used for each piece of text. Back in
aarch64-dis.c we can spot these special style markers and use this to
split the disassembler output up and apply the correct style to each
piece.
To make aarch64-opc.c clearer a series of new static functions have
been added, e.g. 'style_reg', 'style_imm', etc. Each of these
functions formats a piece of text in a different style, 'register' and
'immediate' in this case.
Here's an example taken from aarch64-opc.c of the new functions in
use:
snprintf (buf, size, "[%s, %s]!",
style_reg (styler, base),
style_imm (styler, "#%d", opnd->addr.offset.imm));
The aarch64_print_operand function is also called from the assembler
to aid in printing diagnostic messages. Right now I have no plans to
add styling to the assembler output, and so, the callback function
used in the assembler ignores the styling information and just returns
an plain string.
I've used the source files in gas/testsuite/gas/aarch64/ for testing,
and have manually gone through and checked that the styling looks
reasonable, however, I'm not an AArch64 expert, so it is possible that
the odd piece is styled incorrectly. Please point out any mistakes
I've made.
With objdump disassembler color turned off, there should be no change
in the output after this commit.
Nick Clifton [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 11:58:10 +0000 (12:58 +0100)]
Stop the linker from complaining about unrecognised DW_FORM-rnglistx and DW_FORM_loclistx format attributes.
PR 29424
* dwarf2.c (read_attribute_value): Handle DW_FORM_rnglistx and
DW_FORM_loclistx.
Alan Modra [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 07:22:52 +0000 (16:52 +0930)]
PR16005, avr linker crash on a particular instruction sequence with --relax
It's possible for relax_delete_bytes to be called with section
contents NULL, as demonstrated by the testcase in this PR.
PR 16005
* elf32-avr.c (elf32_avr_relax_delete_bytes): Get section contents
if not already available.
Jan Beulich [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 07:27:22 +0000 (09:27 +0200)]
x86: drop stray NoRex64 from KeyLocker insns
It's entirely unclear why some of the KeyLocker insns had NoRex64 on
them - there's nothing here which could cause emission of REX.W (except
of course a user-specified "rex.w", which we ought to honor anyway).
Jan Beulich [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 07:26:47 +0000 (09:26 +0200)]
Arm64: re-work PR gas/27217 fix
The original approach has resulted in anomalies when . is involved in an
operand of one of the affected insns. We cannot leave . unresolved, or
else it'll be resolved at the end of assembly, then pointing to the
address of a section rather than at the insn of interest. Undo part of
the original change and instead check whether a relocation cannot be
omitted in md_apply_fix().
By resolving the expressions again, equates (see the adjustment of the
respective testcase) will now be evaluated, and hence relocations
against absolute addresses be emitted. This ought to be okay as long as
the equates aren't global (and hence can't be overridden). If a need
for such arises, quite likely the only way to address this would be to
invent yet another expression evaluation mode, leaving everything
_except_ . un-evaluated.
There's a further anomaly in how transitive equates are handled. In
.set x, 0x12345678
.eqv bar, x
foo:
adrp x0, x
add x0, x0, :lo12:x
adrp x0, bar
add x0, x0, :lo12:bar
the first two relocations are now against *ABS*:0x12345678 (as said
above), whereas the latter two relocations would be against x. (Before
the change here, the first two relocations are against x and the latter
two against bar.) But this is an issue seen elsewhere as well, and would
likely require adjustments in the target-independent parts of the
assembler instead of trying to hack around this for every target.
Rainer Orth [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 07:06:40 +0000 (09:06 +0200)]
ld: Extend ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments to all SPARC targets [PR29411]
As discussed in PR ld/29411, the ld warning
[...] has a LOAD segment with RWX permissions
needs to be disabled on all SPARC targets, not just Solaris/SPARC: the
.plt section is required to be RWX by the 32-bit SPARC ELF psABI and the
64-bit SPARC Compliance Definition 2.4.1. Given that ld only supports
SPARC ELF targets, this patch implements this.
Tested on sparc64-unknown-linux-gnu and sparc-sun-solaris2.11.
2022-07-28 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
ld:
PR ld/29411
* configure.tgt (ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Extend to all
sparc targets. Expand comment.
Tom de Vries [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 06:49:45 +0000 (08:49 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp on aarch64
On aarch64 (and likewise on arm), I run into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp: get pid of inferior
Executing on target: kill -9 11516 (timeout = 300)
builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP kill -9 11516^M
continue^M
Continuing.^M
Unable to fetch general registers: No such process.^M
(gdb) [Thread 0xfffff7d511e0 (LWP 11518) exited]^M
^M
Program terminated with signal SIGKILL, Killed.^M
The program no longer exists.^M
FAIL: gdb.threads/killed-outside.exp: prompt after first continue (timeout)
...
due to a mismatch between the actual "No such process" line and the expected
one:
...
set no_such_process_msg "Couldn't get registers: No such process\."
...
Fix this by updating the regexp.
Tested on aarch64-linux, and x86_64-linux.
Tsukasa OI [Thu, 28 Jul 2022 13:02:05 +0000 (22:02 +0900)]
RISC-V: Add `OP_V' to .insn named opcodes
This commit adds `OP_V' (OP-V: vector instruction opcode for now
ratified `V' extension) to .insn opcode name list. Although vector
instruction encoding is not implemented in `.insn' directive, it will
help future implementation of custom vector `.insn'.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-riscv.c (opcode_name_list): Add `OP_V'.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.s: Add testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn-dwarf.d: Reflect insn.s update.
GDB Administrator [Fri, 29 Jul 2022 00:00:12 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Tom Tromey [Sun, 29 May 2022 03:06:19 +0000 (21:06 -0600)]
Remove some unneeded checks in Guile code
The Guile code generally checks to see if an htab is non-null before
destroying it. However, the registry code already ensures this, so we
can change these checks to asserts and simplify the code a little.
Tom Tromey [Sat, 28 May 2022 15:08:47 +0000 (09:08 -0600)]
Change registry to use less memory
The registry code creates "registry_data" objects that hold the free
function and the index; then the registry keys refer to this object.
However, only the index is really useful, and now that registries have
a private implementation, just the index can be stored and we can
reduce the memory use of registries a little bit. This also
simplifies the code somewhat.
Tom Tromey [Sun, 18 Oct 2020 17:38:10 +0000 (11:38 -0600)]
Rewrite registry.h
This rewrites registry.h, removing all the macros and replacing it
with relatively ordinary template classes. The result is less code
than the previous setup. It replaces large macros with a relatively
straightforward C++ class, and now manages its own cleanup.
The existing type-safe "key" class is replaced with the equivalent
template class. This approach ended up requiring relatively few
changes to the users of the registry code in gdb -- code using the key
system just required a small change to the key's declaration.
All existing users of the old C-like API are now converted to use the
type-safe API. This mostly involved changing explicit deletion
functions to be an operator() in a deleter class.
The old "save/free" two-phase process is removed, and replaced with a
single "free" phase. No existing code used both phases.
The old "free" callbacks took a parameter for the enclosing container
object. However, this wasn't truly needed and is removed here as
well.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 24 May 2022 22:55:04 +0000 (16:55 -0600)]
Remove some unused functions from guile code
The guile code has a couple of unused functions that touch on the
registry API. This patch removes them.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 24 May 2022 21:17:19 +0000 (15:17 -0600)]
Change allocation of type-copying hash table
When an objfile is destroyed, types that are still in use and
allocated on that objfile are copied. A temporary hash map is created
during this process, and it is allocated on the destroyed objfile's
obstack -- which normally is fine, as that is going to be destroyed
shortly anyway.
However, this approach requires that the objfile be passed to registry
destruction, and this won't be possible in the rewritten registry.
This patch changes the copied type hash table to simply use the heap
instead. It also removes the 'objfile' parameter from
copy_type_recursive, to make this all more clear.
This patch also fixes an apparent bug in copy_type_recursive.
Previously it was copying the dynamic property list to the dying
objfile's obstack:
- = copy_dynamic_prop_list (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
However I think this is incorrect -- that obstack is about to be
destroyed.
Tom Tromey [Sun, 18 Oct 2020 16:47:48 +0000 (10:47 -0600)]
Change address_space to use new and delete
This changes address_space to use new and delete, and makes some other
small C++-ification changes as well, like changing address_space_num
to be a method.
This patch was needed for the subsequent patch to rewrite the registry
system.
Simon Farre [Tue, 7 Jun 2022 11:57:48 +0000 (13:57 +0200)]
gdb/python: Add BreakpointLocation type
PR python/18385
v7:
This version addresses the issues pointed out by Tom.
Added nullchecks for Python object creations.
Changed from using PyLong_FromLong to the gdb_py-versions.
Re-factored some code to make it look more cohesive.
Also added the more safe Python reference count decrement PY_XDECREF,
even though the BreakpointLocation type is never instantiated by the
user (explicitly documented in the docs) decrementing < 0 is made
impossible with the safe call.
Tom pointed out that using the policy class explicitly to decrement a
reference counted object was not the way to go, so this has instead been
wrapped in a ref_ptr that handles that for us in blocpy_dealloc.
Moved macro from py-internal to py-breakpoint.c.
Renamed section at the bottom of commit message "Patch Description".
v6:
This version addresses the points Pedro gave in review to this patch.
Added the attributes `function`, `fullname` and `thread_groups`
as per request by Pedro with the argument that it more resembles the
output of the MI-command "-break-list". Added documentation for these attributes.
Cleaned up left overs from copy+paste in test suite, removed hard coding
of line numbers where possible.
Refactored some code to use more c++-y style range for loops
wrt to breakpoint locations.
Changed terminology, naming was very inconsistent. Used a variety of "parent",
"owner". Now "owner" is the only term used, and the field in the
gdb_breakpoint_location_object now also called "owner".
v5:
Changes in response to review by Tom Tromey:
- Replaced manual INCREF/DECREF calls with
gdbpy_ref ptrs in places where possible.
- Fixed non-gdb style conforming formatting
- Get parent of bploc increases ref count of parent.
- moved bploc Python definition to py-breakpoint.c
The INCREF of self in bppy_get_locations is due
to the individual locations holding a reference to
it's owner. This is decremented at de-alloc time.
The reason why this needs to be here is, if the user writes
for instance;
py loc = gdb.breakpoints()[X].locations[Y]
The breakpoint owner object is immediately going
out of scope (GC'd/dealloced), and the location
object requires it to be alive for as long as it is alive.
Thanks for your review, Tom!
v4:
Fixed remaining doc issues as per request
by Eli.
v3:
Rewritten commit message, shortened + reworded,
added tests.
Patch Description
Currently, the Python API lacks the ability to
query breakpoints for their installed locations,
and subsequently, can't query any information about them, or
enable/disable individual locations.
This patch solves this by adding Python type gdb.BreakpointLocation.
The type is never instantiated by the user of the Python API directly,
but is produced by the gdb.Breakpoint.locations attribute returning
a list of gdb.BreakpointLocation.
gdb.Breakpoint.locations:
The attribute for retrieving the currently installed breakpoint
locations for gdb.Breakpoint. Matches behavior of
the "info breakpoints" command in that it only
returns the last known or currently inserted breakpoint locations.
BreakpointLocation contains 7 attributes
6 read-only attributes:
owner: location owner's Python companion object
source: file path and line number tuple: (string, long) / None
address: installed address of the location
function: function name where location was set
fullname: fullname where location was set
thread_groups: thread groups (inferiors) where location was set.
1 writeable attribute:
enabled: get/set enable/disable this location (bool)
Access/calls to these, can all throw Python exceptions (documented in
the online documentation), and that's due to the nature
of how breakpoint locations can be invalidated
"behind the scenes", either by them being removed
from the original breakpoint or changed,
like for instance when a new symbol file is loaded, at
which point all breakpoint locations are re-created by GDB.
Therefore this patch has chosen to be non-intrusive:
it's up to the Python user to re-request the locations if
they become invalid.
Also there's event handlers that handle new object files etc, if a Python
user is storing breakpoint locations in some larger state they've
built up, refreshing the locations is easy and it only comes
with runtime overhead when the Python user wants to use them.
gdb.BreakpointLocation Python type
struct "gdbpy_breakpoint_location_object" is found in python-internal.h
Its definition, layout, methods and functions
are found in the same file as gdb.Breakpoint (py-breakpoint.c)
1 change was also made to breakpoint.h/c to make it possible
to enable and disable a bp_location* specifically,
without having its LOC_NUM, as this number
also can change arbitrarily behind the scenes.
Updated docs & news file as per request.
Testsuite: tests the .source attribute and the disabling of
individual locations.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18385
Change-Id: I302c1c50a557ad59d5d18c88ca19014731d736b0
yaowenbin [Thu, 28 Jul 2022 09:22:47 +0000 (17:22 +0800)]
gdb/gdb_mbuild.sh: use return instead of continue to avoid shellcheck error
Fix:
In gdb_mbuild.sh line 174:
continue
^------^ SC2104 (error): In functions, use return instead of continue.
Change-Id: I5ce95b01359c5cfbb1612f2f48b80bfeea66c96c
GDB Administrator [Thu, 28 Jul 2022 00:00:06 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
GDB Administrator [Wed, 27 Jul 2022 00:00:06 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Vladimir Mezentsev [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 06:57:46 +0000 (23:57 -0700)]
gprofng: check for the makeinfo version
gprofng/ChangeLog
2022-07-25 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29368
* configure.ac: Check for the makeinfo version.
* configure: Rebuild.
Keith Seitz [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 18:11:04 +0000 (19:11 +0100)]
gdb/linux_nat: Write memory using ptrace if /proc/pid/mem is not writable
Commit
05c06f318fd9a112529dfc313e6512b399a645e4 enabled GDB to access
memory while threads are running. It did this by accessing
/proc/PID/task/LWP/mem.
Unfortunately, this interface is not implemented for writing in older
kernels (such as RHEL6). This means that GDB is unable to insert
breakpoints on these hosts:
$ ./gdb -q gdb -ex start
Reading symbols from gdb...
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x40fdd5: file ../../src/gdb/gdb.c, line 28.
Starting program: /home/rhel6/fsf/linux/gdb/gdb
Warning:
Cannot insert breakpoint 1.
Cannot access memory at address 0x40fdd5
(gdb)
Before this patch, linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial (previously called
linux_proc_xfer_partial) would return TARGET_XFER_EOF if the write to
/proc/PID/mem failed. [More specifically, linux_proc_xfer_partial
would not "bother for one word," but the effect is the essentially
same.]
This status was checked by linux_nat_target::xfer_partial, which would
then fallback to using ptrace to perform the operation.
This is the specific hunk that removed the fallback:
- xfer = linux_proc_xfer_partial (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
- offset, len, xfered_len);
- if (xfer != TARGET_XFER_EOF)
- return xfer;
+ return linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial (readbuf, writebuf,
+ offset, len, xfered_len);
+ }
return inf_ptrace_target::xfer_partial (object, annex, readbuf, writebuf,
offset, len, xfered_len);
This patch makes linux_nat_target::xfer_partial go straight to writing
memory via ptrace if writing via /proc/pid/mem is not possible in the
running kernel, enabling GDB to insert breakpoints on these older
kernels. Note that a recent patch changed the return status from
TARGET_XFER_EOF to TARGET_XFER_E_IO.
Tested on {unix,native-gdbserver,native-extended-gdbserver}/-m{32,64}
on x86_64, s390x, aarch64, and ppc64le.
Change-Id: If1d884278e8c4ea71d8836bedd56e6a6c242a415
Pedro Alves [Thu, 21 Jul 2022 18:11:16 +0000 (19:11 +0100)]
gdb/linux-nat: Check whether /proc/pid/mem is writable
Probe whether /proc/pid/mem is writable, by using it to write to a GDB
variable. This will be used in the following patch to avoid falling
back to writing to inferior memory with ptrace if /proc/pid/mem _is_
writable.
Change-Id: If87eff0b46cbe5e32a583e2977a9e17d29d0ed3e
Tiezhu Yang [Mon, 25 Jul 2022 12:42:59 +0000 (20:42 +0800)]
gdb: LoongArch: Handle the function return value
According to LoongArch ELF ABI specification [1], handle the function
return value of various types.
[1] https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html#_return_values
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
Tiezhu Yang [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 11:05:39 +0000 (19:05 +0800)]
gdb: LoongArch: Fix code style issues
Fix some code style issues suggested by Tom Tromey and Andrew Burgess,
thank you.
(1) Put an introductory comment to explain the purpose for some functions.
(2) Modify the the attribute code to make it portable.
(3) Remove globals and pass pointers to locals.
(4) Remove "*" in the subsequent comment lines.
(5) Put two spaces before "{" and "}".
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
Nick Clifton [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 13:25:33 +0000 (14:25 +0100)]
Stop the linker from complaining about RWX segments in sparc-solaris targets.
PR 29411
* configure.tgt (ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Disable for
sparc-solaris configurations.
Tom de Vries [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 13:02:18 +0000 (15:02 +0200)]
[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.opt/inline-small-func.exp with clang
When running test-case gdb.opt/inline-small-func.exp with clang 12.0.1, I run
into:
...
gdb compile failed, /usr/bin/ld: inline-small-func0.o: in function `main':
inline-small-func.c:21: undefined reference to `callee'
clang-12.0: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 \
(use -v to see invocation)
UNTESTED: gdb.opt/inline-small-func.exp: failed to prepare
...
Fix this by using __attribute__((always_inline)).
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Alan Modra [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 12:31:39 +0000 (22:01 +0930)]
PowerPC32 ld test fails with --enable-targets=all
Three pppc32 ld tests fail when spe support is included in the linker
due to this snippet in ld/emulparams/elf32ppc.sh.
if grep -q 'ld_elf32_spu_emulation' ldemul-list.h; then
DATA_START_SYMBOLS="${RELOCATING+*crt1.o(.data .data.* .gnu.linkonce.d.*)
PROVIDE (__spe_handle = .);
*(.data.spehandle)
. += 4 * (DEFINED (__spe_handle) || . != 0);}"
fi
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32.r: Pass with .data section present.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsexe32no.r: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsso32.r: Likewise.
Enze Li [Sun, 24 Jul 2022 03:20:46 +0000 (11:20 +0800)]
gdb/hurd: pass memory_tagged as false to find_memory_region_ftype
I tried building GDB on GNU/Hurd, and ran into this error:
CXX gnu-nat.o
gnu-nat.c: In member function ‘virtual int gnu_nat_target::find_memory_regions(find_memory_region_ftype, void*)’:
gnu-nat.c:2620:21: error: too few arguments to function
2620 | (*func) (last_region_address,
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2621 | last_region_end - last_region_address,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2622 | last_protection & VM_PROT_READ,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2623 | last_protection & VM_PROT_WRITE,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2624 | last_protection & VM_PROT_EXECUTE,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2625 | 1, /* MODIFIED is unknown, pass it as true. */
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2626 | data);
| ~~~~~
gnu-nat.c:2635:13: error: too few arguments to function
2635 | (*func) (last_region_address, last_region_end - last_region_address,
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2636 | last_protection & VM_PROT_READ,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2637 | last_protection & VM_PROT_WRITE,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2638 | last_protection & VM_PROT_EXECUTE,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2639 | 1, /* MODIFIED is unknown, pass it as true. */
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2640 | data);
| ~~~~~
make[2]: *** [Makefile:1926: gnu-nat.o] Error 1
This is because in this commit:
commit
68cffbbd4406b4efe1aa6e18460b1d7ca02549f1
Date: Thu Mar 31 11:42:35 2022 +0100
[AArch64] MTE corefile support
Added a new argument to find_memory_region_ftype, but did not pass it to
the function in gnu-nat.c. Fix this by passing memory_tagged as false.
As Luis pointed out, similar bugs may also appear on FreeBSD and NetBSD,
and I have reproduced them on both systems. This patch fixes them
incidentally.
Tested by rebuilding on GNU/Hurd, FreeBSD/amd64 and NetBSD/amd64.
Enze Li [Sun, 24 Jul 2022 02:38:19 +0000 (10:38 +0800)]
gdb/netbsd: add missing header file
I ran into this error when building GDB on NetBSD:
CXX netbsd-nat.o
netbsd-nat.c: In member function 'virtual bool nbsd_nat_target::info_proc(const char*, info_proc_what)':
netbsd-nat.c:314:3: error: 'gdb_argv' was not declared in this scope
gdb_argv built_argv (args);
^~~~~~~~
netbsd-nat.c:314:3: note: suggested alternative: 'gdbarch'
gdb_argv built_argv (args);
^~~~~~~~
gdbarch
netbsd-nat.c:315:7: error: 'built_argv' was not declared in this scope
if (built_argv.count () == 0)
^~~~~~~~~~
netbsd-nat.c:315:7: note: suggested alternative: 'buildargv'
if (built_argv.count () == 0)
^~~~~~~~~~
buildargv
gmake[2]: *** [Makefile:1893: netbsd-nat.o] Error 1
Fix this by adding the missing header file, as it is obvious.
Tested by rebuilding on NetBSD/amd64.
Nick Clifton [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 12:06:07 +0000 (13:06 +0100)]
Updated translations for various sub-directories
Andrew Burgess [Mon, 25 Jul 2022 11:07:11 +0000 (12:07 +0100)]
gdb: rename gdbarch_tdep struct to fix g++ 4.8 build
After the commit:
commit
08106042d9f5fdff60c129bf33190639f1a98b2a
Date: Thu May 19 13:20:17 2022 +0100
gdb: move the type cast into gdbarch_tdep
GDB would no longer build using g++ 4.8. The issue appears to be some
confusion caused by GDB having 'struct gdbarch_tdep', but also a
templated function called 'gdbarch_tdep'. Prior to the above commit
the gdbarch_tdep function was not templated, and this compiled just
fine. Note that the above commit compiles just fine with later
versions of g++, so this issue was clearly fixed at some point, though
I've not tried to track down exactly when.
In this commit I propose to fix the g++ 4.8 build problem by renaming
'struct gdbarch_tdep' to 'struct gdbarch_tdep_base'. This rename
better represents that the struct is only ever used as a base class,
and removes the overloading of the name, which allows GDB to build
with g++ 4.8.
I've also updated the comment on 'struct gdbarch_tdep_base' to fix a
typo, and the comment on the 'gdbarch_tdep' function, to mention that
in maintainer mode a run-time type check is performed.
Nick Clifton [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 10:33:51 +0000 (11:33 +0100)]
Fix indentation in loongarch code, preventing a compile time warning.
Lancelot SIX [Fri, 8 Jul 2022 10:37:19 +0000 (11:37 +0100)]
gdb/varobj: Fix varobj_invalidate_iter
The varobj_invalidate function is meant to be called when restarting a
process, and check at this point if some of the previously existing
varobj can be recreated in the context of the new process.
Two kind of varobj are subject to re-creation: global varobj (i.e.
varobj which reference a global variable), and floating varobj (i.e.
varobj which are always re-evaluated in the context of whatever is
the currently selected frame at the time of evaluation).
However, in the re-creation process, the varobj_invalidate_iter
recreates floating varobj as non-floating, due to an invalid parameter.
This patches fixes this and adds an assertion to check that if a varobj
is indeed recreated, it matches the original varobj "floating" property.
Another issue is that if at this recreation time the expression watched
by the floating varobj is not in scope, then the varobj is marked as
invalid. If later the user selects a frame where the expression becomes
valid, the varobj remains invalid and this is wrong. This patch also
make sure that floating varobj are not invalidated if they cannot be
evaluated.
The last important thing to note is that due to the previous patch, when
varobj_invalidate is executed (in the context of a new process), any
global var have already been invalidated (this has been done when the
objfile it referred to got invalidated). As a consequence,
varobj_invalidate tries to recreate vars which are already marked as
invalid. This does not entirely feels right, but I keep this behavior
for backward compatibility.
Tested on x86_64-linux
Lancelot SIX [Fri, 8 Jul 2022 10:37:18 +0000 (11:37 +0100)]
gdb/varobj: Fix use after free in varobj
Varobj object contains references to types, variables (i.e. struct
variable) and expression. All of those can reference data on an
objfile's obstack. It is possible for this objfile to be deleted (and
the obstack to be feed), while the varobj remains valid. Later, if the
user uses the varobj, this will result in a use-after-free error. With
address sanitizer build, this leads to a plain error. For non address
sanitizer build we might see undefined behaviour, which manifest
themself as assertion failures when accessing data backed by feed
memory.
This can be observed if we create a varobj that refers to ta symbol in a
shared library, after either the objfile gets reloaded (using the `file`
command) or after the shared library is unloaded (with a call to dlclose
for example).
This patch fixes those issues by:
- Adding cleanup procedure to the free_objfile observable. When
activated this observer clears expressions referencing the objfile
being freed, and removes references to blocks belonging to this
objfile.
- Adding varobj support in the `preserve_values` (gdb.value.c). This
ensures that before the objfile is unloaded, any type owned by the
objfile referenced by the varobj is replaced by an equivalent type
not owned by the objfile. This process is done here instead of in the
free_objfile observer in order to reuse the type hash table already
used for similar purpose when replacing types of values kept in the
value history.
This patch also makes sure to keep a reference to the expression's
gdbarch and language_defn members when the varobj->root->exp is
initialized. Those structures outlive the objfile, so this is safe.
This is done because those references might be used initialize a python
context even after exp is invalidated. Another approach could have been
to initialize the python context with default gdbarch and language_defn
(i.e. nullptr) if expr is NULL, but since we might still try to display
the value which was obtained by evaluating exp when it was still valid,
keeping track of the context which was used at this time seems
reasonable.
Tested on x86_64-Linux.
Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Pedro Alves [Fri, 8 Jul 2022 10:37:17 +0000 (11:37 +0100)]
MI: mi_runto -pending
With the CLI testsuite's runto proc, we can pass "allow-pending" as an
option, like:
runto func allow-pending
That is currently not possible with MI's mi_runto, however. This
patch makes it possible, by adding a new "-pending" option to
mi_runto.
A pending breakpoint shows different MI attributes compared to a
breakpoint with a location, so the regexp returned by
mi_make_breakpoint isn't suitable. Thus, add a new
mi_make_breakpoint_pending proc for pending breakpoints.
Tweak mi_runto to let it take and pass down arguments.
Change-Id: I185fef00ab545a1df2ce12b4dbc3da908783a37c
GDB Administrator [Tue, 26 Jul 2022 00:00:07 +0000 (00:00 +0000)]
Automatic date update in version.in
Ruud van der Pas [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 13:15:12 +0000 (06:15 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29356 - Execution fails if gprofng is not included in PATH
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29356
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: fixed a problem to execute
gp-display-text in case gprofng is not included in the search
path.
Ruud van der Pas [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 12:59:17 +0000 (05:59 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29392 - Unexpected line format in summary file
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29392
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: modified a regex, plus the
code to handle the results; renamed a variable to improve the
consistency in naming.
Ruud van der Pas [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 13:21:49 +0000 (06:21 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29353 - Fix a lay-out issue in the html disassembly files
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29353
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: fixed a problem in the
generation of html for the disassembly where instructions
without arguments were not handled correctly.
Ruud van der Pas [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 13:27:41 +0000 (06:27 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29352 - Fix the message Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29352
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: the hex subroutine from
the bigint module is now used.
Ruud van der Pas [Fri, 22 Jul 2022 13:32:51 +0000 (06:32 -0700)]
gprofng: fix bug 29351 - Move dynamic loading of modules to a later stage
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-07-22 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
PR gprofng/29351
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: the dynamic loading of
modules occurred too early, resulting in the generation of the
man page to fail in case a module is missing; the loading part is
now done somewhat later in the execution to avoid this problem.
Kevin Buettner [Mon, 25 Jul 2022 19:04:10 +0000 (12:04 -0700)]
set/show python dont-write-bytecode fixes
GDB uses the environment variable PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE to
determine whether or not to write the result of byte-compiling
python modules when the "python dont-write-bytecode" setting
is "auto". Simon noticed that GDB's implementation doesn't
follow the Python documentation.
At present, GDB only checks for the existence of this environment
variable. That is not sufficient though. Regarding
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE, this document...
https://docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html
...says:
If this is set to a non-empty string, Python won't try to write
.pyc files on the import of source modules.
This commit fixes GDB's handling of PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE by adding
an empty string check.
This commit also corrects the set/show command documentation for
"python dont-write-bytecode". The current doc was just a copy
of that for set/show python ignore-environment.
During his review of an earlier version of this patch, Eli Zaretskii
asked that the help text that I proposed for "set/show python
dont-write-bytecode" be expanded. I've done that in addition to
clarifying the documentation of this option in the GDB manual.
Andrew Burgess [Wed, 20 Jul 2022 12:57:08 +0000 (13:57 +0100)]
gdb/python: fix invalid use disassemble_info::stream
After this commit:
commit
81384924cdcc9eb2676dd9084b76845d7d0e0759
Date: Tue Apr 5 11:06:16 2022 +0100
gdb: have gdb_disassemble_info carry 'this' in its stream pointer
The disassemble_info::stream field will no longer be a ui_file*. That
commit failed to update one location in py-disasm.c though.
While running some tests using the Python disassembler API, I
triggered a call to gdbpy_disassembler::print_address_func, and, as I
had compiled GDB with the undefined behaviour sanitizer, GDB crashed
as the code currently (incorrectly) casts the stream field to be a
ui_file*.
In this commit I fix this error.
In order to test this case I had to tweak the existing test case a
little. I also spotted some debug printf statements in py-disasm.py,
which I have removed.
Andrew Burgess [Wed, 20 Jul 2022 12:00:40 +0000 (13:00 +0100)]
gdb: fix use of uninitialised gdb_printing_disassembler::m_in_comment
Simon pointed out that gdb_printing_disassembler::m_in_comment can be
used uninitialised by the Python disassembler API code. This issue
was spotted when GDB was built with the undefined behaviour sanitizer,
and causes the gdb.python/py-disasm.exp test to fail like this:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.python/py-disasm.exp: global_disassembler=GlobalPreInfoDisassembler: python add_global_disassembler(GlobalPreInfoDisassembler)
disassemble main
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x0000555555555119 <+0>: push %rbp
0x000055555555511a <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp
0x000055555555511d <+4>: nop
/home/user/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm.h:144:12: runtime error: load of value 118, which is not a valid value for type 'bool'
The problem is that in disasmpy_builtin_disassemble we create a new
instance of gdbpy_disassembler, which is a sub-class of
gdb_printing_disassembler, however, the m_in_comment field is never
initialised.
This commit fixes the issue by providing a default initialisation
value for m_in_comment in disasm.h. As we only ever disassemble a
single instruction in disasmpy_builtin_disassemble then we don't need
to worry about reseting m_in_comment back to false after the single
instruction has been disassembled.
With this commit the above issue is resolved and
gdb.python/py-disasm.exp now passes.