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2023-11-13Fix gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit.exp raceusers/palves/step-over-thread-exit-test-racePedro Alves1-0/+10
Change-Id: I9d0a6fab069a02ac5557525b93b129940dbd4bf7
2023-11-13GNU-ld: ARM: Issues when trying to set target output architectureNick Clifton2-1/+7
PR 28910 * lexsup.c (ld_options): Ensure that the --format option is correctly recognised.
2023-11-13Regenerate gas/config.in and ld/configureMark Wielaard2-5/+9
commit d173146d9 "MIPS: Change all E_MIPS_* to EF_MIPS_*" changed gas/config.in to rename USE_E_MIPS_ABI_O32 to USE_EF_MIPS_ABI_O32 this new name sorts differently when regenerating gas/config.in commit e922d1eaa "Add ability to change linker warning messages into errors when reporting executable stacks and/or executable segments." Introduced two new help strings for --enable-error-execstack and --enable-error-rwx-segments in configure.ac which weren't included in ld/configure when regenerated. * gas/config.in: Regenerate. * ld/configure: Likewise.
2023-11-13Add documentation for the MIPS assembler's -march=from-abi command line optionNick Clifton1-0/+5
2023-11-13MIPS: Fix binutils-all tests for r6 triplesYunQiang Su2-1/+3
2023-11-13Fix redundant space typo in linker documentation.Chung-Ju Wu2-1/+5
2023-11-13Cancel execution command on thread exit, when stepping, nexting, etc.Pedro Alves2-36/+118
If your target has no support for TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED events (and no way to support them, such as the yet-unsubmitted AMDGPU target), and you step over thread exit with scheduler-locking on, this is what you get: (gdb) n [Thread ... exited] *hang* Getting back the prompt by typing Ctrl-C may not even work, since no inferior thread is running to receive the SIGINT. Even if it works, it seems unnecessarily harsh. If you started an execution command for which there's a clear thread of interest (step, next, until, etc.), and that thread disappears, then I think it's more user friendly if GDB just detects the situation and aborts the command, giving back the prompt. That is what this commit implements. It does this by explicitly requesting the target to report thread exit events whenever the main resumed thread has a thread_fsm. Note that unlike stepping over a breakpoint, we don't need to enable clone events in this case. With this patch, we get: (gdb) n [Thread 0x7ffff7d89700 (LWP 3961883) exited] Command aborted, thread exited. (gdb) Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I901ab64c91d10830590b2dac217b5264635a2b95
2023-11-13Document remote clone events, and QThreadOptions packetPedro Alves2-3/+145
This commit documents in both manual and NEWS: - the new remote clone event stop reply, - the new QThreadOptions packet and its current defined options, - the associated "set/show remote thread-events-packet" command, - and the associated QThreadOptions qSupported feature. Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Change-Id: Ic1c8de1fefba95729bbd242969284265de42427e
2023-11-13Testcases for stepping over thread exit syscall (PR gdb/27338)Simon Marchi6-0/+333
Add new gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit.exp and gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit-while-stop-all-threads.exp testcases, exercising stepping over thread exit syscall. These make use of lib/my-syscalls.S to define the exit syscall. Co-authored-by: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27338 Change-Id: Ie8b2c5747db99b7023463a897a8390d9e814a9c9
2023-11-13gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S: Refactor new SYSCALL macroPedro Alves1-18/+32
Refactor the syscall assembly code in gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S behind a SYSCALL macro so that it's easy to add new syscalls without duplicating code. Note that the way the macro is implemented, it only works correctly for syscalls with up to 3 arguments, and, if the syscall doesn't return (the macro doesn't bother to save/restore callee-saved registers). The following patch will want to use the macro to define a wrapper for the "exit" syscall, so the limitations continue to be sufficient. Change-Id: I8acf1463b11a084d6b4579aaffb49b5d0dea3bba Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2023-11-13Report thread exit event for leader if reporting thread exit eventsPedro Alves2-12/+68
If GDB sets the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT option on a thread, then if the thread disappears from the thread list, GDB expects to shortly see a thread exit event for it. See e.g., here, in remote_target::update_thread_list(): /* Do not remove the thread if we've requested to be notified of its exit. For example, the thread may be displaced stepping, infrun will need to handle the exit event, and displaced stepping info is recorded in the thread object. If we deleted the thread now, we'd lose that info. */ if ((tp->thread_options () & GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT) != 0) continue; There's one scenario that is deleting a thread from the remote/gdbserver thread list without ever reporting a corresponding thread exit event though -- check_zombie_leaders. This can lead to GDB getting confused. For example, with a following patch that enables GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT whenever schedlock is enabled, we'd see this regression: $ make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver" TESTS="gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp" ... Running src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp ... FAIL: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue stops when the main thread exits (timeout) ... some more cascading FAILs ... gdb.log shows: (gdb) continue Continuing. FAIL: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue stops when the main thread exits (timeout) A passing run would have resulted in: (gdb) continue Continuing. No unwaited-for children left. (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.exp: continue stops when the main thread exits note how the leader thread is not listed in the remote-reported XML thread list below: (gdb) set debug remote 1 (gdb) set debug infrun 1 (gdb) info threads Id Target Id Frame * 1 Thread 1163850.1163850 "no-unwaited-for" main () at /home/pedro/rocm/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/no-unwaited-for-left.c:65 3 Thread 1163850.1164130 "no-unwaited-for" [remote] Sending packet: $Hgp11c24a.11c362#39 (gdb) c Continuing. [infrun] clear_proceed_status_thread: 1163850.1163850.0 ... [infrun] resume_1: step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0, trap_expected=1, current thread [1163850.1163850.0] at 0x55555555534f [remote] Sending packet: $QPassSignals:#f3 [remote] Packet received: OK [remote] Sending packet: $QThreadOptions;3:p11c24a.11c24a#f3 [remote] Packet received: OK ... [infrun] target_set_thread_options: [options for Thread 1163850.1163850 are now 0x3] ... [infrun] do_target_resume: resume_ptid=1163850.1163850.0, step=0, sig=GDB_SIGNAL_0 [remote] Sending packet: $vCont;c:p11c24a.11c24a#98 [infrun] prepare_to_wait: prepare_to_wait [infrun] reset: reason=handling event [infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target extended-remote [infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets: calling commit_resumed for target extended-remote [infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit [infrun] fetch_inferior_event: enter [infrun] scoped_disable_commit_resumed: reason=handling event [infrun] random_pending_event_thread: None found. [remote] wait: enter [remote] Packet received: N [remote] wait: exit [infrun] print_target_wait_results: target_wait (-1.0.0 [process -1], status) = [infrun] print_target_wait_results: -1.0.0 [process -1], [infrun] print_target_wait_results: status->kind = NO_RESUMED [infrun] handle_inferior_event: status->kind = NO_RESUMED [remote] Sending packet: $Hgp0.0#ad [remote] Packet received: OK [remote] Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,1000#92 [remote] Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="p11c24a.11c362" core="0" name="no-unwaited-for" handle="0097d8f7ff7f0000"/>\n</threads>\n [infrun] handle_no_resumed: TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED (ignoring: found resumed) ... ... however, infrun decided there was a resumed thread still, so ignored the TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED event. Debugging GDB, we see that the "found resumed" thread that GDB finds, is the leader thread. Even though that thread is not on the remote-reported thread list, it is still on the GDB thread list, due to the special case in remote.c mentioned above. This commit addresses the issue by fixing GDBserver to report a thread exit event for the zombie leader too, i.e., making GDBserver respect the "if thread has GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT set, report a thread exit" invariant. To do that, it takes a bit more code than one would imagine off hand, due to the fact that we currently always report LWP exit pending events as TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED, and then decide whether to convert it to TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED just before reporting the event to GDBserver core. For the zombie leader scenario described, we need to record early on that we want to report a THREAD_EXITED event, and then make sure that decision isn't lost along the way to reporting the event to GDBserver core. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I1e68fccdbc9534434dee07163d3fd19744c8403b
2023-11-13Don't resume new threads if scheduler-locking is in effectPedro Alves5-9/+164
If scheduler-locking is in effect, e.g., with "set scheduler-locking on", and you step over a function that spawns a new thread, the new thread is allowed to run free, at least until some event is hit, at which point, whether the new thread is re-resumed depends on a number of seemingly random factors. E.g., if the target is all-stop, and the parent thread hits a breakpoint, and GDB decides the breakpoint isn't interesting to report to the user, then the parent thread is resumed, but the new thread is left stopped. I think that letting the new threads run with scheduler-locking enabled is a defect. This commit fixes that, making use of the new clone events on Linux, and of target_thread_events() on targets where new threads have no connection to the thread that spawned them. Testcase and documentation changes included. Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Ie12140138b37534b7fc1d904da34f0f174aa11ce
2023-11-13gdbserver: Queue no-resumed event after thread exitPedro Alves5-20/+53
Normally, if the last resumed thread on the target exits, the server sends a no-resumed event to GDB. If however, GDB enables the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT option on a thread, and, that thread exits, the server sends a thread exit event for that thread instead. In all-stop RSP mode, since events can only be forwarded to GDB one at a time, and the whole target stops whenever an event is reported, GDB resumes the target again after getting a THREAD_EXITED event, and then the server finally reports back a no-resumed event if/when appropriate. For non-stop RSP though, events are asynchronous, and if the server sends a thread-exit event for the last resumed thread, the no-resumed event is never sent. This patch makes sure that in non-stop mode, the server queues a no-resumed event after the thread-exit event if it was the last resumed thread that exited. Without this, we'd see failures in step-over-thread-exit testcases added later in the series, like so: continue Continuing. - No unwaited-for children left. - (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit.exp: displaced-stepping=off: non-stop=on: target-non-stop=on: schedlock=off: ns_stop_all=1: continue stops when thread exits + FAIL: gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit.exp: displaced-stepping=off: non-stop=on: target-non-stop=on: schedlock=off: ns_stop_all=1: continue stops when thread exits (timeout) (and other similar ones) Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I927d78b30f88236dbd5634b051a716f72420e7c7
2023-11-13stop_all_threads: (re-)enable async before waiting for stopsPedro Alves1-0/+81
Running the gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit-while-stop-all-threads.exp testcase added later in the series against gdbserver, after the TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED fix from the following patch, would run into an infinite loop in stop_all_threads, leading to a timeout: FAIL: gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit-while-stop-all-threads.exp: displaced-stepping=off: target-non-stop=on: iter 0: continue (timeout) The is really a latent bug, and it is about the fact that stop_all_threads stops listening to events from a target as soon as it sees a TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED, ignoring that TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED may be delayed. handle_no_resumed knows how to handle delayed no-resumed events, but stop_all_threads was never taught to. In more detail, here's what happens with that testcase: #1 - Multiple threads report breakpoint hits to gdb. #2 - gdb picks one events, and it's for thread 1. All other stops are left pending. thread 1 needs to move past a breakpoint, so gdb stops all threads to start an inline step over for thread 1. While stopping threads, some of the threads that were still running report events that are also left pending. #2 - gdb steps thread 1 #3 - Thread 1 exits while stepping (it steps over an exit syscall), gdbserver reports thread exit for thread 1 #4 - Thread 1 was the last resumed thread, so gdbserver also reports no-resumed: [remote] Notification received: Stop:w0;p3445d0.3445d3 [remote] Sending packet: $vStopped#55 [remote] Packet received: N [remote] Sending packet: $vStopped#55 [remote] Packet received: OK #5 - gdb processes the thread exit for thread 1, finishes the step over and restarts threads. #6 - gdb picks the next event to process out of one of the resumed threads with pending events: [infrun] random_resumed_with_pending_wait_status: Found 32 events, selecting #11 #7 - This is again a breakpoint hit and the breakpoint needs to be stepped over too, so gdb starts a step-over dance again. #8 - We reach stop_all_threads, which finds that some threads need to be stopped. #9 - wait_one finally consumes the no-resumed event queue by #4. Seeing this, wait_one disable target async, to stop listening for events out of the remote target. #10 - We still haven't seen all the stops expected, so stop_all_threads tries another iteration. #11 - Because the remote target is no longer async, and there are no other targets, wait_one return no-resumed immediately without polling the remote target. #12 - We still haven't seen all the stops expected, so stop_all_threads tries another iteration. goto #11, looping forever. Fix this by explicitly enabling/re-enabling target async on targets that can async, before waiting for stops. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Ie3ffb0df89635585a6631aa842689cecc989e33f
2023-11-13gdb: clear step over information on thread exit (PR gdb/27338)Pedro Alves5-17/+174
GDB doesn't handle correctly the case where a thread steps over a breakpoint (using either in-line or displaced stepping), and the executed instruction causes the thread to exit. Using the test program included later in the series, this is what it looks like with displaced-stepping, on x86-64 Linux, where we have two displaced-step buffers: $ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit -ex "b my_exit_syscall" -ex r Reading symbols from build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit... Breakpoint 1 at 0x123c: file src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S, line 68. Starting program: build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] Using host libthread_db library "/usr/lib/../lib/libthread_db.so.1". [New Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915510)] [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915510)] Thread 2 "step-over-threa" hit Breakpoint 1, my_exit_syscall () at src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S:68 68 syscall (gdb) c Continuing. [New Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915524)] [Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915510) exited] [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915524)] Thread 3 "step-over-threa" hit Breakpoint 1, my_exit_syscall () at src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S:68 68 syscall (gdb) c Continuing. [New Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915616)] [Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915524) exited] [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2915616)] Thread 4 "step-over-threa" hit Breakpoint 1, my_exit_syscall () at src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S:68 68 syscall (gdb) c Continuing. ... hangs ... The first two times we do "continue", we displaced-step the syscall instruction that causes the thread to exit. When the thread exits, the main thread, waiting on pthread_join, is unblocked. It spawns a new thread, which hits the breakpoint on the syscall again. However, infrun was never notified that the displaced-stepping threads are done using the displaced-step buffer, so now both buffers are marked as used. So when we do the third continue, there are no buffers available to displaced-step the syscall, so the thread waits forever for its turn. When trying the same but with in-line step over (displaced-stepping disabled): $ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory \ build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit \ -ex "b my_exit_syscall" -ex "set displaced-stepping off" -ex r Reading symbols from build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit... Breakpoint 1 at 0x123c: file src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S, line 68. Starting program: build/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-thread-exit/step-over-thread-exit [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] Using host libthread_db library "/usr/lib/../lib/libthread_db.so.1". [New Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2928290)] [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2928290)] Thread 2 "step-over-threa" hit Breakpoint 1, my_exit_syscall () at src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S:68 68 syscall (gdb) c Continuing. [Thread 0x7ffff7c5f640 (LWP 2928290) exited] No unwaited-for children left. (gdb) i th Id Target Id Frame 1 Thread 0x7ffff7c60740 (LWP 2928285) "step-over-threa" 0x00007ffff7f7c9b7 in __pthread_clockjoin_ex () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0 The current thread <Thread ID 2> has terminated. See `help thread'. (gdb) thread 1 [Switching to thread 1 (Thread 0x7ffff7c60740 (LWP 2928285))] #0 0x00007ffff7f7c9b7 in __pthread_clockjoin_ex () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0 (gdb) c Continuing. ^C^C ... hangs ... The "continue" causes an in-line step to occur, meaning the main thread is stopped while we step the syscall. The stepped thread exits when executing the syscall, the linux-nat target notices there are no more resumed threads to be waited for, so returns TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED, which causes the prompt to return. But infrun never clears the in-line step over info. So if we try continuing the main thread, GDB doesn't resume it, because it thinks there's an in-line step in progress that we need to wait for to finish, and we are stuck there. To fix this, infrun needs to be informed when a thread doing a displaced or in-line step over exits. We can do that with the new target_set_thread_options mechanism which is optimal for only enabling exit events of the thread that needs it; or, if that is not supported, by using target_thread_events, which enables thread exit events for all threads. This is done by this commit. This patch then modifies handle_inferior_event in infrun.c to clean up any step-over the exiting thread might have been doing at the time of the exit. The cases to consider are: - the exiting thread was doing an in-line step-over with an all-stop target - the exiting thread was doing an in-line step-over with a non-stop target - the exiting thread was doing a displaced step-over with a non-stop target The displaced-stepping buffer implementation in displaced-stepping.c is modified to account for the fact that it's possible that we "finish" a displaced step after a thread exit event. The buffer that the exiting thread was using is marked as available again and the original instructions under the scratch pad are restored. However, it skips applying the fixup, which wouldn't make sense since the thread does not exist anymore. Another case that needs handling is if a displaced-stepping thread exits, and the event is reported while we are in stop_all_threads. We should call displaced_step_finish in the handle_one function, in that case. It was already called in other code paths, just not the "thread exited" path. This commit doesn't make infrun ask the target to report the TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED events yet, that'll be done later in the series. Note that "stop_print_frame = false;" line is moved to normal_stop, because TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED can also end up with the event transmorphed into TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED. Moving it to normal_stop keeps it centralized. Co-authored-by: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com> Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27338 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I745c6955d7ef90beb83bcf0ff1d1ac8b9b6285a5
2023-11-13Implement GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT support for native LinuxPedro Alves1-13/+31
This implements support for the new GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT thread option for native Linux. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Ia69fc0b9b96f9af7de7cefc1ddb1fba9bbb0bb90 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27338
2023-11-13Implement GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT support for Linux GDBserverPedro Alves2-17/+30
This implements support for the new GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT thread option for Linux GDBserver. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I96b719fdf7fee94709e98bb3a90751d8134f3a38 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27338
2023-11-13Introduce GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT thread option, fix step-over-thread-exitPedro Alves4-5/+24
When stepping over a breakpoint with displaced stepping, GDB needs to be informed if the stepped thread exits, otherwise the displaced stepping buffer that was allocated to that thread leaks, and this can result in deadlock, with other threads waiting for their turn to displaced step, but their turn never comes. Similarly, when stepping over a breakpoint in line, GDB also needs to be informed if the stepped thread exits, so that is can clear the step over state and re-resume threads. This commit makes it possible for GDB to ask the target to report thread exit events for a given thread, using the new "thread options" mechanism introduced by a previous patch. This only adds the core bits. Following patches in the series will teach the Linux backends (native & gdbserver) to handle the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT option, and then a later patch will make use of these thread exit events to clean up displaced stepping and inline stepping state properly. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I96b719fdf7fee94709e98bb3a90751d8134f3a38 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27338
2023-11-13Move deleting thread on TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED to corePedro Alves2-12/+41
Currently, infrun assumes that when TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED is reported, the corresponding GDB thread has already been removed from the GDB thread list. Later in the series, that will no longer work, as infrun will need to refer to the thread's thread_info when it processes TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_EXITED. As preparation, this patch makes deleting the GDB thread responsibility of infrun, instead of the target. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I013d87f61ffc9aaca49f0d6ce2a43e3ea69274de
2023-11-13gdbserver/linux-low.cc: Ignore event_ptid if TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNOREPedro Alves1-1/+0
gdbserver's linux_process_target::wait loops if: - called in sync mode, and, - wait_1 returns TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE, _and_, - wait_1 also returns null_ptid. The null_ptid check fails however when this path is taken: ptid_t linux_process_target::filter_exit_event (lwp_info *event_child, target_waitstatus *ourstatus) { ... if (!is_leader (thread)) { if (report_exit_events_for (thread)) ourstatus->set_thread_exited (0); else ourstatus->set_ignore (); <<<<<<< delete_lwp (event_child); } return ptid; } This makes linux_process_target::wait return TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE in sync mode, which is unexpected by the core and fails an assertion. This commit fixes it by just making linux_process_target::wait loop if it got a TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE, irrespective of event_ptid. Change-Id: I39776908a6c75cbd68aa04139ffcf7be334868cf
2023-11-13all-stop/synchronous RSP support thread-exit eventsPedro Alves2-1/+7
Currently, GDB does not understand the THREAD_EXITED stop reply in remote all-stop mode. There's no good reason for this, it just happened that THREAD_EXITED was only ever reported in non-stop mode so far. This patch teaches GDB to parse that event in all-stop RSP too. There is no need to add a qSupported feature for this, because the server won't send a THREAD_EXITED event unless GDB explicitly asks for it, with QThreadEvents, or with the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_EXIT QThreadOptions option added in the next patch. Change-Id: Ide5d12391adf432779fe4c79526801c4a5630966
2023-11-13Remove gdb/19675 kfails (displaced stepping + clone)Pedro Alves1-41/+3
Now that gdb/19675 is fixed for both native and gdbserver GNU/Linux, remove the gdb/19675 kfails. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I95c1c38ca370100675d303cd3c8995860bef465d
2023-11-13gdbserver: Hide and don't detach pending clone childrenPedro Alves5-20/+31
This commit extends the logic added by these two commits from a while ago: #1 7b961964f866 (gdbserver: hide fork child threads from GDB), #2 df5ad102009c (gdb, gdbserver: detach fork child when detaching from fork parent) ... to handle thread clone events, which are very similar to (v)fork events. For #1, we want to hide clone children as well, so just update the comments. For #2, unlike (v)fork children, pending clone children aren't full processes, they're just threads, so don't detach them in handle_detach. linux-low.cc will take care of detaching them along with all other threads of the process, there's nothing special that needs to be done. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I7f5901d07efda576a2522d03e183994e071b8ffc
2023-11-13Thread options & clone events (Linux GDBserver)Pedro Alves3-146/+160
This patch teaches the Linux GDBserver backend to report clone events to GDB, when GDB has requested them with the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE thread option, via the new QThreadOptions packet. This shuffles code in linux_process_target::handle_extended_wait around to a more logical order when we now have to handle and potentially report all of fork/vfork/clone. Raname lwp_info::fork_relative -> lwp_info::relative as the field is no longer only about (v)fork. With this, gdb.threads/stepi-over-clone.exp now cleanly passes against GDBserver, so remove the native-target-only requirement from that testcase. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I3a19bc98801ec31e5c6fdbe1ebe17df855142bb2
2023-11-13Thread options & clone events (native Linux)Pedro Alves2-0/+9
This commit teaches the native Linux target about the GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE thread option. It's actually simpler to just continue reporting all clone events unconditionally to the core. There's never any harm in reporting a clone event when the option is disabled. All we need to do is to report support for the option, otherwise GDB falls back to use target_thread_events(). Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: If90316e2dcd0c61d0fefa0d463c046011698acf9
2023-11-13Thread options & clone events (core + remote)Pedro Alves14-2/+493
A previous patch taught GDB about a new TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED event kind, and made the Linux target report clone events. A following patch will teach Linux GDBserver to do the same thing. However, for remote debugging, it wouldn't be ideal for GDBserver to report every clone event to GDB, when GDB only cares about such events in some specific situations. Reporting clone events all the time would be potentially chatty. We don't enable thread create/exit events all the time for the same reason. Instead we have the QThreadEvents packet. QThreadEvents is target-wide, though. This patch makes GDB instead explicitly request that the target reports clone events or not, on a per-thread basis. In order to be able to do that with GDBserver, we need a new remote protocol feature. Since a following patch will want to enable thread exit events on per-thread basis too, the packet introduced here is more generic than just for clone events. It lets you enable/disable a set of options at once, modelled on Linux ptrace's PTRACE_SETOPTIONS. IOW, this commit introduces a new QThreadOptions packet, that lets you specify a set of per-thread event options you want to enable. The packet accepts a list of options/thread-id pairs, similarly to vCont, processed left to right, with the options field being a number interpreted as a bit mask of options. The only option defined in this commit is GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE (0x1), which ask the remote target to report clone events. Another patch later in the series will introduce another option. For example, this packet sets option "1" (clone events) on thread p1000.2345: QThreadOptions;1:p1000.2345 and this clears options for all threads of process 1000, and then sets option "1" (clone events) on thread p1000.2345: QThreadOptions;0:p1000.-1;1:p1000.2345 This clears options of all threads of all processes: QThreadOptions;0 The target reports the set of supported options by including "QThreadOptions=<supported options>" in its qSupported response. infrun is then tweaked to enable GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE when stepping over a breakpoint. Unlike PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, fork/vfork/clone children do NOT inherit their parent's thread options. This is so that GDB can send e.g., "QThreadOptions;0;1:TID" without worrying about threads it doesn't know about yet. Documentation for this new remote protocol feature is included in a documentation patch later in the series. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Ie41e5093b2573f14cf6ac41b0b5804eba75be37e
2023-11-13Avoid duplicate QThreadEvents packetsPedro Alves1-0/+8
Similarly to QProgramSignals and QPassSignals, avoid sending duplicate QThreadEvents packets. Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Iaf5babb0b64e1527ba4db31aac8674d82b17e8b4
2023-11-13Support clone events in the remote protocolPedro Alves3-38/+89
The previous patch taught GDB about a new TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED event kind, and made the Linux target report clone events. A following patch will teach Linux GDBserver to do the same thing. But before we get there, we need to teach the remote protocol about TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED. That's what this patch does. Clone is very similar to vfork and fork, and the new stop reply is likewise handled similarly. The stub reports "T05clone:...". GDBserver core is taught to handle TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED and forward it to GDB in this patch, but no backend actually emits it yet. That will be done in a following patch. Documentation for this new remote protocol feature is included in a documentation patch later in the series. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: If271f20320d864f074d8ac0d531cc1a323da847f Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830
2023-11-13Step over clone syscall w/ breakpoint, TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONEDPedro Alves10-192/+775
(A good chunk of the problem statement in the commit log below is Andrew's, adjusted for a different solution, and for covering displaced stepping too. The testcase is mostly Andrew's too.) This commit addresses bugs gdb/19675 and gdb/27830, which are about stepping over a breakpoint set at a clone syscall instruction, one is about displaced stepping, and the other about in-line stepping. Currently, when a new thread is created through a clone syscall, GDB sets the new thread running. With 'continue' this makes sense (assuming no schedlock): - all-stop mode, user issues 'continue', all threads are set running, a newly created thread should also be set running. - non-stop mode, user issues 'continue', other pre-existing threads are not affected, but as the new thread is (sort-of) a child of the thread the user asked to run, it makes sense that the new threads should be created in the running state. Similarly, if we are stopped at the clone syscall, and there's no software breakpoint at this address, then the current behaviour is fine: - all-stop mode, user issues 'stepi', stepping will be done in place (as there's no breakpoint to step over). While stepping the thread of interest all the other threads will be allowed to continue. A newly created thread will be set running, and then stopped once the thread of interest has completed its step. - non-stop mode, user issues 'stepi', stepping will be done in place (as there's no breakpoint to step over). Other threads might be running or stopped, but as with the continue case above, the new thread will be created running. The only possible issue here is that the new thread will be left running after the initial thread has completed its stepi. The user would need to manually select the thread and interrupt it, this might not be what the user expects. However, this is not something this commit tries to change. The problem then is what happens when we try to step over a clone syscall if there is a breakpoint at the syscall address. - For both all-stop and non-stop modes, with in-line stepping: + user issues 'stepi', + [non-stop mode only] GDB stops all threads. In all-stop mode all threads are already stopped. + GDB removes s/w breakpoint at syscall address, + GDB single steps just the thread of interest, all other threads are left stopped, + New thread is created running, + Initial thread completes its step, + [non-stop mode only] GDB resumes all threads that it previously stopped. There are two problems in the in-line stepping scenario above: 1. The new thread might pass through the same code that the initial thread is in (i.e. the clone syscall code), in which case it will fail to hit the breakpoint in clone as this was removed so the first thread can single step, 2. The new thread might trigger some other stop event before the initial thread reports its step completion. If this happens we end up triggering an assertion as GDB assumes that only the thread being stepped should stop. The assert looks like this: infrun.c:5899: internal-error: int finish_step_over(execution_control_state*): Assertion `ecs->event_thread->control.trap_expected' failed. - For both all-stop and non-stop modes, with displaced stepping: + user issues 'stepi', + GDB starts the displaced step, moves thread's PC to the out-of-line scratch pad, maybe adjusts registers, + GDB single steps the thread of interest, [non-stop mode only] all other threads are left as they were, either running or stopped. In all-stop, all other threads are left stopped. + New thread is created running, + Initial thread completes its step, GDB re-adjusts its PC, restores/releases scratchpad, + [non-stop mode only] GDB resumes the thread, now past its breakpoint. + [all-stop mode only] GDB resumes all threads. There is one problem with the displaced stepping scenario above: 3. When the parent thread completed its step, GDB adjusted its PC, but did not adjust the child's PC, thus that new child thread will continue execution in the scratch pad, invoking undefined behavior. If you're lucky, you see a crash. If unlucky, the inferior gets silently corrupted. What is needed is for GDB to have more control over whether the new thread is created running or not. Issue #1 above requires that the new thread not be allowed to run until the breakpoint has been reinserted. The only way to guarantee this is if the new thread is held in a stopped state until the single step has completed. Issue #3 above requires that GDB is informed of when a thread clones itself, and of what is the child's ptid, so that GDB can fixup both the parent and the child. When looking for solutions to this problem I considered how GDB handles fork/vfork as these have some of the same issues. The main difference between fork/vfork and clone is that the clone events are not reported back to core GDB. Instead, the clone event is handled automatically in the target code and the child thread is immediately set running. Note we have support for requesting thread creation events out of the target (TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED). However, those are reported for the new/child thread. That would be sufficient to address in-line stepping (issue #1), but not for displaced-stepping (issue #3). To handle displaced-stepping, we need an event that is reported to the _parent_ of the clone, as the information about the displaced step is associated with the clone parent. TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED includes no indication of which thread is the parent that spawned the new child. In fact, for some targets, like e.g., Windows, it would be impossible to know which thread that was, as thread creation there doesn't work by "cloning". The solution implemented here is to model clone on fork/vfork, and introduce a new TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED event. This event is similar to TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED and TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED, except that we end up with a new thread in the same process, instead of a new thread of a new process. Like FORKED and VFORKED, THREAD_CLONED waitstatuses have a child_ptid property, and the child is held stopped until GDB explicitly resumes it. This addresses the in-line stepping case (issues #1 and #2). The infrun code that handles displaced stepping fixup for the child after a fork/vfork event is thus reused for THREAD_CLONE, with some minimal conditions added, addressing the displaced stepping case (issue #3). The native Linux backend is adjusted to unconditionally report TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED events to the core. Following the follow_fork model in core GDB, we introduce a target_follow_clone target method, which is responsible for making the new clone child visible to the rest of GDB. Subsequent patches will add clone events support to the remote protocol and gdbserver. displaced_step_in_progress_thread becomes unused with this patch, but a new use will reappear later in the series. To avoid deleting it and readding it back, this patch marks it with attribute unused, and the latter patch removes the attribute again. We need to do this because the function is static, and with no callers, the compiler would warn, (error with -Werror), breaking the build. This adds a new gdb.threads/stepi-over-clone.exp testcase, which exercises stepping over a clone syscall, with displaced stepping vs inline stepping, and all-stop vs non-stop. We already test stepping over clone syscalls with gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp, but this test uses pthreads, while the other test uses raw clone, and this one is more thorough. The testcase passes on native GNU/Linux, but fails against GDBserver. GDBserver will be fixed by a later patch in the series. Co-authored-by: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Change-Id: I95c06024736384ae8542a67ed9fdf6534c325c8e Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2023-11-13gdb/linux: Delete all other LWPs immediately on ptrace exec eventPedro Alves4-5/+131
I noticed that on an Ubuntu 20.04 system, after a following patch ("Step over clone syscall w/ breakpoint, TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED"), the gdb.threads/step-over-exec.exp was passing cleanly, but still, we'd end up with four new unexpected GDB core dumps: === gdb Summary === # of unexpected core files 4 # of expected passes 48 That said patch is making the pre-existing gdb.threads/step-over-exec.exp testcase (almost silently) expose a latent problem in gdb/linux-nat.c, resulting in a GDB crash when: #1 - a non-leader thread execs #2 - the post-exec program stops somewhere #3 - you kill the inferior Instead of #3 directly, the testcase just returns, which ends up in gdb_exit, tearing down GDB, which kills the inferior, and is thus equivalent to #3 above. Vis (after said patch is applied): $ gdb --args ./gdb /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-exec/step-over-exec-execr-thread-other-diff-text-segs-true ... (top-gdb) r ... (gdb) b main ... (gdb) r ... Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffdb88) at /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/step-over-exec.c:69 69 argv0 = argv[0]; (gdb) c Continuing. [New Thread 0x7ffff7d89700 (LWP 2506975)] Other going in exec. Exec-ing /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-exec/step-over-exec-execr-thread-other-diff-text-segs-true-execd process 2506769 is executing new program: /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.threads/step-over-exec/step-over-exec-execr-thread-other-diff-text-segs-true-execd Thread 1 "step-over-exec-" hit Breakpoint 1, main () at /home/pedro/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/step-over-exec-execd.c:28 28 foo (); (gdb) k ... Thread 1 "gdb" received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0x000055555574444c in thread_info::has_pending_waitstatus (this=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/gdbthread.h:393 393 return m_suspend.waitstatus_pending_p; (top-gdb) bt #0 0x000055555574444c in thread_info::has_pending_waitstatus (this=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/gdbthread.h:393 #1 0x0000555555a884d1 in get_pending_child_status (lp=0x5555579b8230, ws=0x7fffffffd130) at ../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1345 #2 0x0000555555a8e5e6 in kill_unfollowed_child_callback (lp=0x5555579b8230) at ../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:3564 #3 0x0000555555a92a26 in gdb::function_view<int (lwp_info*)>::bind<int, lwp_info*>(int (*)(lwp_info*))::{lambda(gdb::fv_detail::erased_callable, lwp_info*)#1}::operator()(gdb::fv_detail::erased_callable, lwp_info*) const (this=0x0, ecall=..., args#0=0x5555579b8230) at ../../src/gdb/../gdbsupport/function-view.h:284 #4 0x0000555555a92a51 in gdb::function_view<int (lwp_info*)>::bind<int, lwp_info*>(int (*)(lwp_info*))::{lambda(gdb::fv_detail::erased_callable, lwp_info*)#1}::_FUN(gdb::fv_detail::erased_callable, lwp_info*) () at ../../src/gdb/../gdbsupport/function-view.h:278 #5 0x0000555555a91f84 in gdb::function_view<int (lwp_info*)>::operator()(lwp_info*) const (this=0x7fffffffd210, args#0=0x5555579b8230) at ../../src/gdb/../gdbsupport/function-view.h:247 #6 0x0000555555a87072 in iterate_over_lwps(ptid_t, gdb::function_view<int (lwp_info*)>) (filter=..., callback=...) at ../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:864 #7 0x0000555555a8e732 in linux_nat_target::kill (this=0x55555653af40 <the_amd64_linux_nat_target>) at ../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:3590 #8 0x0000555555cfdc11 in target_kill () at ../../src/gdb/target.c:911 ... The root of the problem is that when a non-leader LWP execs, it just changes its tid to the tgid, replacing the pre-exec leader thread, becoming the new leader. There's no thread exit event for the execing thread. It's as if the old pre-exec LWP vanishes without trace. The ptrace man page says: "PTRACE_O_TRACEEXEC (since Linux 2.5.46) Stop the tracee at the next execve(2). A waitpid(2) by the tracer will return a status value such that status>>8 == (SIGTRAP | (PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC<<8)) If the execing thread is not a thread group leader, the thread ID is reset to thread group leader's ID before this stop. Since Linux 3.0, the former thread ID can be retrieved with PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG." When the core of GDB processes an exec events, it deletes all the threads of the inferior. But, that is too late -- deleting the thread does not delete the corresponding LWP, so we end leaving the pre-exec non-leader LWP stale in the LWP list. That's what leads to the crash above -- linux_nat_target::kill iterates over all LWPs, and after the patch in question, that code will look for the corresponding thread_info for each LWP. For the pre-exec non-leader LWP still listed, won't find one. This patch fixes it, by deleting the pre-exec non-leader LWP (and thread) from the LWP/thread lists as soon as we get an exec event out of ptrace. GDBserver does not need an equivalent fix, because it is already doing this, as side effect of mourning the pre-exec process, in gdbserver/linux-low.cc: else if (event == PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC && cs.report_exec_events) { ... /* Delete the execing process and all its threads. */ mourn (proc); switch_to_thread (nullptr); The crash with gdb.threads/step-over-exec.exp is not observable on newer systems, which postdate the glibc change to move "libpthread.so" internals to "libc.so.6", because right after the exec, GDB traps a load event for "libc.so.6", which leads to GDB trying to open libthread_db for the post-exec inferior, and, on such systems that succeeds. When we load libthread_db, we call linux_stop_and_wait_all_lwps, which, as the name suggests, stops all lwps, and then waits to see their stops. While doing this, GDB detects that the pre-exec stale LWP is gone, and deletes it. If we use "catch exec" to stop right at the exec before the "libc.so.6" load event ever happens, and issue "kill" right there, then GDB crashes on newer systems as well. So instead of tweaking gdb.threads/step-over-exec.exp to cover the fix, add a new gdb.threads/threads-after-exec.exp testcase that uses "catch exec". The test also uses the new "maint info linux-lwps" command if testing on Linux native, which also exposes the stale LWP problem with an unfixed GDB. Also tweak a comment in infrun.c:follow_exec referring to how linux-nat.c used to behave, as it would become stale otherwise. Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: I21ec18072c7750f3a972160ae6b9e46590376643
2023-11-13Add "maint info linux-lwps" commandAndrew Burgess3-0/+55
This adds a maintenance command that lets you list all the LWPs under control of the linux-nat target. For example: (gdb) maint info linux-lwps LWP Ptid Thread ID 560948.561047.0 None 560948.560948.0 1.1 This shows that "560948.561047.0" LWP doesn't map to any thread_info object, which is bogus. We'll be using this in a testcase in a following patch. Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> Change-Id: Ic4e9e123385976e5cd054391990124b7a20fb3f5
2023-11-13[gdb/tui] Fix Wmaybe-uninitialized in tui_find_disassembly_addressTom de Vries1-1/+1
When building gdb with -O2, we run into: ... gdb/tui/tui-disasm.c: In function ‘CORE_ADDR tui_find_disassembly_address \ (gdbarch*, CORE_ADDR, int)’: gdb/tui/tui-disasm.c:293:7: warning: ‘last_addr’ may be used uninitialized \ in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized] if (last_addr < pc) ^~ ... The warning triggers since commit 72535eb14bd ("[gdb/tui] Fix segfault in tui_find_disassembly_address"). Fix the warning by ensuring that last_addr is initialized at the point of use: ... + last_addr = asm_lines.back ().addr; if (last_addr < pc) ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2023-11-13[gdb/tui] Make assert in tui_find_disassembly_address more strictTom de Vries1-6/+6
In tui_find_disassembly_address we find an assert: ... if (asm_lines.size () < max_lines) { if (!possible_new_low.has_value ()) return new_low; /* Take the best possible match we have. */ new_low = *possible_new_low; next_addr = tui_disassemble (gdbarch, asm_lines, new_low, max_lines); last_addr = asm_lines.back ().addr; gdb_assert (asm_lines.size () >= max_lines); } ... The comment right above: ... /* If we failed to disassemble the required number of lines then the following walk forward is not going to work, it assumes that ASM_LINES contains exactly MAX_LINES entries. Instead we should consider falling back to a previous possible start address in POSSIBLE_NEW_LOW. */ ... claims that the more strict asm_lines.size () == max_line is required. Update the assert to reflect this, and move it to after the if because it's supposed to hold in general, not just when entering the if. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2023-11-12Remove declaration of re_compTom Tromey1-6/+0
defs.h declares re_comp, but it shouldn't. If this is needed, it should be picked up from xregex.h via gdb_regex.h. Tested by rebuilding. Reviewed-by: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
2023-11-13Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-11-12Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-11-11Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-11-10bfd, binutils: add gfx11 amdgpu architecturesSimon Marchi8-1/+37
Teach bfd and readelf about some recent gfx11 architectures. This code is taken from the rocgdb 5.7.x branch [1]. [1] https://github.com/rocm-Developer-Tools/rocgdb/tree/rocm-5.7.x bfd/ChangeLog: * archures.c (bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1100, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1101, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1102): New. * bfd-in2.h (bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1100, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1101, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1102): New. * cpu-amdgcn.c (arch_info_struct): Add entries for bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1100, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1101, bfd_mach_amdgcn_gfx1102. binutils/ChangeLog: * readelf.c (decode_AMDGPU_machine_flags): Handle gfx1100, gfx1101, gfx1102. include/ChangeLog: * elf/amdgpu.h (EF_AMDGPU_MACH_AMDGCN_GFX1100, EF_AMDGPU_MACH_AMDGCN_GFX1101, EF_AMDGPU_MACH_AMDGCN_GFX1102): New. Change-Id: I95a8a62942e359781a1c9fa2079950fbcf2a78b8 Co-Authored-By: Laurent Morichetti <laurent.morichetti@amd.com> Cc: Lancelot Six <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2023-11-10Correct formatting errors in elf32-microblaze.cMichael J. Eager1-10/+10
Signed-off-by: Michael J. Eager <eager@eagercon.com>
2023-11-10Gold/MIPS: Use EM_MIPS instead of EM_MIPS_RS3_LE for little endianYunQiang Su2-1/+6
2023-11-10GAS/MIPS: Fix testcase module-defer-warn2 for r2+ triplesYunQiang Su4-1/+14
2023-11-10readelf..debug-dump=loc displays bogus base addressesVsevolod Alekseyev2-305/+166
PR 30880 * dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Fix loclist handling. (display_loclists_list): Likewise.
2023-11-10GAS/MIPS: Add mips16-e-irix.d testcaseYunQiang Su2-1/+51
2023-11-10MIPS: Change all E_MIPS_* to EF_MIPS_*Ying Huang10-327/+415
2023-11-10Add ability to change linker warning messages into errors when reporting ↵Nick Clifton83-137/+488
executable stacks and/or executable segments. include * bfdlink.h (struct bfd_link_info): Update descriptions of the 'execstack', 'noexecstack' and 'warn_execstack' fields. Add 'error_exectack' and 'warn_is_error_for_rwx_segments' fields. bfd * elf.c (assign_file_positions_except_relocs): Turn warnings about executable segments into errors if so requested. * elflink.c (bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Turn warnings about executable stacks into errors if so requested. ld * ldlex.h (enum option_values): Add OPTION_ERROR_EXECSTACK, OPTION_NO_ERROR_EXECSTACK, OPTION_WARN_EXECSTACK_OBJECTS, OPTION_ERROR_RWX_SEGMENTS and OPTION_NO_ERROR_RWX_SEGMENTS. (struct ld_option): Add new long options. (parse_args): Parse new long options. (elf_static_list_options): Display the new options. * ld.texi: Document the new command line options. * configure.ac (error-execstack): New configuration option. (error-rwx-segments): New configuration option. * emultempl/elf.em (_before_parse): Initialse the new linkinfo fields. * NEWS: Mention the new features. * config.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. * testsuite/ld-elf/commonpage2.d: Disable errors for RWX segments and/or executable stacks. * testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/header.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/loadaddr1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/loadaddr2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/maxpage4.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/nobits-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/note-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-10.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-11.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-12.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-5.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-7.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-8.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-9.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan-region.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/orphan.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr19539.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr26256-1a.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr26907.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr28597.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/retain2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/size-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/textaddr7.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/warn1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/warn2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-i386/discarded1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-i386/pr19175.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-i386/pr19539.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-i386/pr23189.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-plugin/lto-3r.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-plugin/lto-5r.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-powerpc/ppc476-shared.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-powerpc/ppc476-shared2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-powerpc/pr28827-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-s390/s390.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/align2a.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/align2b.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/align5.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/alignof.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/crossref.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/defined2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/defined3.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/defined5.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/pr14962.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/pr18963.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/pr20302.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/print-memory-usage.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at10.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at4.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at6.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at8.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-at9.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-over1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-over2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-over4.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-over5.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/rgn-over6.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/script.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/sizeof.exp: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-scripts/sort-file.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/discarded1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19175.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19539a.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr19539b.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr23189.d: Likewise.
2023-11-10Move new features above the 'Changes in 2.41' commentNick Clifton1-6/+6
2023-11-10Add support for ilp32 register alias.Lulu Cai5-39/+34
2023-11-10Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-11-09bfd: use less memory in string mergingMichael Matz1-0/+14
the offset-to-entry mappings are allocated in blocks, which may become a bit wasteful in case there are extremely many small input files or sections. This made it so that a large project (Qt5WebEngine) didn't build anymore on x86 32bit due to address space limits. It barely fit into address space before the new string merging, and then got pushed over the limit by this. So instead of leaving the waste reallocate the maps to their final size once known. Now the link barely fits again. bfd/ * merge.c (record_section): Reallocate offset maps to their final size.
2023-11-09ld: Avoid overflows in string mergingMichael Matz1-4/+8
as the bug report shows we had an overflow in the test if hash table resizing is needed. Reorder the expression to avoid that. There's still a bug somewhere in gracefully handling failure in resizing (e.g. out of memory), but this pushes the boundary for that occurring somewhen into the future and immediately helps the reporter. bfd/ PR ld/31009 * merge.c (NEEDS_RESIZE): New macro avoiding overflow. (sec_merge_maybe_resize): Use it. (sec_merge_hash_insert): Ditto.