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This updates the copyright headers to include 2025. I did this by
running gdb/copyright.py and then manually modifying a few files as
noted by the script.
Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
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This commit is the result of the following actions:
- Running gdb/copyright.py to update all of the copyright headers to
include 2024,
- Manually updating a few files the copyright.py script told me to
update, these files had copyright headers embedded within the
file,
- Regenerating gdbsupport/Makefile.in to refresh it's copyright
date,
- Using grep to find other files that still mentioned 2023. If
these files were updated last year from 2022 to 2023 then I've
updated them this year to 2024.
I'm sure I've probably missed some dates. Feel free to fix them up as
you spot them.
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This commit is the result of running the gdb/copyright.py script,
which automated the update of the copyright year range for all
source files managed by the GDB project to be updated to include
year 2023.
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This commit brings all the changes made by running gdb/copyright.py
as per GDB's Start of New Year Procedure.
For the avoidance of doubt, all changes in this commits were
performed by the script.
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This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start
of New Year procedure...
gdb/ChangeLog
Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
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This commit applies all changes made after running the gdb/copyright.py
script.
Note that one file was flagged by the script, due to an invalid
copyright header
(gdb/unittests/basic_string_view/element_access/char/empty.cc).
As the file was copied from GCC's libstdc++-v3 testsuite, this commit
leaves this file untouched for the time being; a patch to fix the header
was sent to gcc-patches first.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files
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The "server" command prefix no longer turns confirmation queries off.
We can reproduce this with any program by tring to delete all breakpoints,
for instance:
(gdb) break main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40049b: file /[...]/break-fun-addr1.c, line 21.
(gdb) server delete breakpoints
Delete all breakpoints? (y or n)
GDB should not be asking "Delete all breakpoints? (y or n)", but
instead just delete all breakpoints without asking for confirmation.
Looking at utils.c::defaulted_query gives a glimpse of how this feature
is expected to work:
/* Automatically answer the default value if the user did not want
prompts or the command was issued with the server prefix. */
if (!confirm || server_command)
return def_value;
So, it relies on the server_command global to be set when the "server "
command prefix is used, which is no longer the case since the following
commit:
commit b69d38afdea34e4fecab5ea47ffe1e594e0b6233
Date: Wed Mar 9 18:25:00 2016 +0000
Subject: Command line input handling TLC
The patch was simplifying the handling for the command line, and
I believe there was just a small oversight of removing the setting
of the server_command global.
This patch restores that, and adds a testcase to make sure we test
that feature.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* event-top.c (handle_line_of_input): Set server_command.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/server-del-break.c: New file.
* gdb.base/server-del-break.exp: New file.
Tested on x86_64-linux, no regression.
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