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2023-10-16Handle gdb.LazyString in DAPTom Tromey6-2/+170
Andry pointed out that the DAP code did not properly handle gdb.LazyString results from a pretty-printer, yielding: TypeError: Object of type LazyString is not JSON serializable This patch fixes the problem, partly with a small patch in varref.py, but mainly by implementing tp_str for LazyString. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
2023-10-16Fix register-setting response from DAPTom Tromey2-4/+29
Andry noticed that given a DAP setExpression request, where the expression to set is a register, DAP will return the wrong value -- it will return the old value, not the updated one. This happens because gdb.Value.assign (which was recently added for DAP) does not update the value. In this patch, I chose to have the assign method update the Value in-place. It's also possible to have it return a new value, but this didn't seem very useful to me.
2023-10-16Add DAP scope cacheTom Tromey2-9/+36
Andry Ogorodnik, a co-worker, noticed that multiple "scopes" requests with the same frame would yield different variableReference values in the response. This patch adds a regression test for this, and adds a scope cache in scopes.py, ensuring that multiple identical requests will get the same response. Tested-By: Alexandra Petlanova Hajkova <ahajkova@redhat.com>
2023-10-16Only allow closure lookup by address if there are threads displaced-steppingLuis Machado3-1/+62
Since commit 1e5ccb9c5ff4fd8ade4a8694676f99f4abf2d679, we have an assertion in displaced_step_buffers::copy_insn_closure_by_addr that makes sure a closure is available whenever we have a match between the provided address argument and the buffer address. That is fine, but the report in PR30872 shows this assertion triggering when it really shouldn't. After some investigation, here's what I found out. The 32-bit Arm architecture is the only one that calls gdbarch_displaced_step_copy_insn_closure_by_addr directly, and that's because 32-bit Arm needs to figure out the thumb state of the original instruction that we displaced-stepped through the displaced-step buffer. Before the assertion was put in place by commit 1e5ccb9c5ff4fd8ade4a8694676f99f4abf2d679, there was the possibility of getting nullptr back, which meant we were not doing a displaced-stepping operation. Now, with the assertion in place, this is running into issues. It looks like displaced_step_buffers::copy_insn_closure_by_addr is being used to return a couple different answers depending on the state we're in: 1 - If we are actively displaced-stepping, then copy_insn_closure_by_addr is supposed to return a valid closure for us, so we can determine the thumb mode. 2 - If we are not actively displaced-stepping, then copy_insn_closure_by_addr should return nullptr to signal that there isn't any displaced-step buffers in use, because we don't have a valid closure (but we should always have this). Since the displaced-step buffers are always allocated, but not always used, that means the buffers will always contain data. In particular, the buffer addr field cannot be used to determine if the buffer is active or not. For instance, we cannot set the buffer addr field to 0x0, as that can be a valid PC in some cases. My understanding is that the current_thread field should be a good candidate to signal that a particular displaced-step buffer is active or not. If it is nullptr, we have no threads using that buffer to displaced-step. Otherwise, it is an active buffer in use by a particular thread. The following fix modifies the displaced_step_buffers::copy_insn_closure_by_addr function so we only attempt to return a closure if the buffer has an assigned current_thread and if the buffer address matches the address argument. Alternatively, I think we could use a function to answer the question of whether we're actively displaced-stepping (so we have an active buffer) or not. I've also added a testcase that exercises the problem. It should reproduce reliably on Arm, as that is the only architecture that faces this problem at the moment. Regression-tested on Ubuntu 20.04. OK? Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30872 Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2023-10-16Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-15Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-14Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-13Use SVE_VQ_BYTES instead of __SVE_VQ_BYTESLuis Machado1-4/+4
__SVE_VQ_BYTES is only available if SVE definitions are available in the system's headers, and this is not true for all systems. For this purpose, we define SVE_VQ_BYTES. This patch fixes the name of the constant being used.
2023-10-12Move -lsocket check to common.m4Tom Tromey5-65/+177
A user pointed out that the -lsocket check in gdb should also apply to gdbserver -- otherwise it can't find the Solaris socketpair. This patch makes the change. It also removes a couple of redundant function checks from gdb's configure.ac. This was tested by the person who reported the bug. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30927 Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2023-10-13Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-12Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-11Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-10Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-09Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-08Bump GDB's version number to 14.0.91.DATE-git.Joel Brobecker1-1/+1
This commit changes gdb/version.in to 14.0.91.DATE-git.
2023-10-08Set GDB version number to 14.0.91.Joel Brobecker1-1/+1
This commit changes gdb/version.in to 14.0.91.
2023-10-08gdb/NEWS: Change "since GDB 13" to "in GDB 14"Joel Brobecker1-1/+1
This commit updates the NEWS files for the upcoming GDB 14 release.
2023-10-08Set development mode to "off" by default.Joel Brobecker1-1/+1
This is done by setting the "development" variable to "false" in bfd/development.sh.
2023-10-08Bump version to 14.0.90.DATE-git.Joel Brobecker1-1/+1
Now that the GDB 14 branch has been created, this commit bumps the version number in gdb/version.in to 14.0.90.DATE-git For the record, the GDB 14 branch was created from commit 8f12a1a841cd0c447de7a5a0f134a0efece73588.
2023-10-08Add testsuits for new assembler option of mthin-add-sub.gdb-14-branchpointcailulu6-24/+131
2023-10-08as: add option for generate R_LARCH_32/64_PCREL.cailulu3-6/+37
Some older kernels cannot handle the newly generated R_LARCH_32/64_PCREL, so the assembler generates R_LARCH_ADD32/64+R_LARCH_SUB32/64 by default, and use the assembler option mthin-add-sub to generate R_LARCH_32/64_PCREL as much as possible. The Option of mthin-add-sub does not affect the generation of R_LARCH_32_PCREL relocation in .eh_frame.
2023-10-08Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-07Revert "opcodes: microblaze: Add new bit-field instructions"Michael J. Eager10-196/+5
This reverts commit 6bbf249557ba17cfebe01c67370df4da9e6a56f9. Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk>: Yet it has caused numerous regressions: microblaze-elf +FAIL: unordered .debug_info references to .debug_ranges microblaze-elf +FAIL: binutils-all/pr26548 microblaze-elf +FAIL: readelf -Wwi pr26548e (reason: unexpected output) microblaze-elf +FAIL: readelf --debug-dump=loc locview-1 (reason: unexpected output) Yet it has caused numerous regressions: microblaze-elf +FAIL: unordered .debug_info references to .debug_ranges microblaze-elf +FAIL: binutils-all/pr26548 microblaze-elf +FAIL: readelf -Wwi pr26548e (reason: unexpected output) ...
2023-10-07[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.arch/i386-signal.exp on x86_64Tom de Vries2-1/+10
On x86_64-linux, with test-case gdb.arch/i386-signal.exp I run into: ... builtin_spawn -ignore SIGHUP gcc -fno-stack-protector i386-signal.c \ -fdiagnostics-color=never -fno-pie -g -no-pie -lm -o i386-signal^M /tmp/cc2xydTG.s: Assembler messages:^M /tmp/cc2xydTG.s:50: Error: operand size mismatch for `push'^M compiler exited with status 1 output is: /tmp/cc2xydTG.s: Assembler messages:^M /tmp/cc2xydTG.s:50: Error: operand size mismatch for `push'^M gdb compile failed, /tmp/cc2xydTG.s: Assembler messages: /tmp/cc2xydTG.s:50: Error: operand size mismatch for `push' UNTESTED: gdb.arch/i386-signal.exp: failed to compile ... This is with gas 2.41, it compiles without problems with gas 2.40. Some more strict checking was added in commit 5cc007751cd ("x86: further adjust extend-to-32bit-address conditions"). This may or may not be a gas regression ( https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2023-October/129818.html ). The offending bit is: ... " push $sigframe\n" ... which refers to a function: ... " .globl sigframe\n" "sigframe:\n" ... The test-case passes with target board unix/-m32. Make the test-case work by using pushq instead of push for the is_amd64_regs_target case. Tested on x86_64-linux, with target boards: - unix/-m64 (is_amd64_regs_target == 1), and - unix/-m32 (is_amd64_regs_target == 0), PR testsuite/30928 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30928
2023-10-06gdb: support rseq auxvsIlya Leoshkevich2-0/+6
Linux kernel commit commit 317c8194e6ae ("rseq: Introduce feature size and alignment ELF auxiliary vector entries") introduced two new auxvs: AT_RSEQ_FEATURE_SIZE and AT_RSEQ_ALIGN. Support them in GDB. This fixes auxv.exp on kernels >= v6.3. Change-Id: I8966c4d5c73eb7b45de6d410a9b28a6628edad2e Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30540 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06gprofng: 30910 cross test fail: can't read "CHECK_TARGET": no such variableVladimir Mezentsev2-23/+12
When TCL_TRY is FALSE, the wrong check-DEJAGNU is generated. Place "if TCL_TRY / endif" in the right place. gprofng/ChangeLog 2023-10-05 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com> PR gprofng/30910 * Makefile.am: Correct "if TCL_TRY / endif". * Makefile.in: Rebuild.
2023-10-07Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-06process-dies-while-detaching.exp: Exit early if GDB misses sync breakpointThiago Jung Bauermann2-7/+7
I'm seeing a lot of variability in the failures of gdb.threads/process-dies-while-detaching.exp on aarch64-linux. On this platform, a problem yet to be investigated causes GDB to miss the _exit breakpoint. What happens next is random because after missing that breakpoint, GDB is out of sync with the inferior. This causes the tests following that point in the testcase to fail in a random way. In this scenario it's better to exit the testcase early to avoid random results in the testsuite. We are relying on gdb_continue_to_breakpoint to return the result of gdb_test_multiple. This is already the case because in Tcl the return value of a function is the return value of the last command it runs. But change gdb_continue_to_breakpoint to explicitly return this value, to make it clear this is the intended behaviour. Tested on aarch64-linux. Tested-By: Guinevere Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com> Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2023-10-06opcodes: microblaze: Add new bit-field instructionsNeal Frager10-5/+196
This patches adds new bsefi and bsifi instructions. BSEFI- The instruction shall extract a bit field from a register and place it right-adjusted in the destination register. The other bits in the destination register shall be set to zero. BSIFI- The instruction shall insert a right-adjusted bit field from a register at another position in the destination register. The rest of the bits in the destination register shall be unchanged. Further documentation of these instructions can be found here: https://docs.xilinx.com/v/u/en-US/ug984-vivado-microblaze-ref This patch has been tested for years of AMD Xilinx Yocto releases as part of the following patch set: https://github.com/Xilinx/meta-xilinx/tree/master/meta-microblaze/recipes-devtools/binutils/binutils Signed-off-by: nagaraju <nagaraju.mekala@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Ibai Erkiaga <ibai.erkiaga-elorza@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Neal Frager <neal.frager@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Michael J. Eager <eager@eagercon.com>
2023-10-06gdb/NEWS: reorder some entries in the NEWS fileAndrew Burgess1-12/+12
I spotted two entries in the NEWS file that I believe are in the wrong place, these are: - An entry about MI v1 being deprecated, this feels like it should be the first entry under the 'MI changes' heading, and - An entry for the $_shell convenience function which is currently under the 'New commands' heading (sort of), when I think this should be listed in the general news section.
2023-10-06gdbserver: fix gdbserver builds after expedite_regs changesAndrew Burgess3-6/+16
After this commit: commit 6a65998a8a94abaaae7ca4ff0ab9c3f25dc2e766 Date: Mon Sep 11 12:42:00 2023 +0100 Convert tdesc's expedite_regs to a string vector The risc-v, loongarch, and csky gdbserver builds were broken. A use of target_desc::expedite_regs (for each architecture) was not updated to take account of the type change. I've tested that this fixes the risc-v build. I haven't tested the other architectures, but they should be fine.
2023-10-06gdb/testsuite: cleanup in gdb.base/args.expAndrew Burgess1-52/+36
The last few commits resolved the KFAILs in gdb.base/args.exp. With those out of the way we can clean up this test script a little. In this commit I have: - Stopped passing 'nowarnings' flag when building the source file. I see no reason why this source should issue a warning, - Moved setup of GDBFLAGS into args_test proc, callers that passed a newline needed a small tweak, and also the matching code needs updating for newline handling, but I think this is nicer, the argument lists are now given just once, - Updated comment on args_test, - Updated other comments. There should be no change in what is tested after this commit. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06gdbserver: cleanup in handle_v_runAndrew Burgess1-19/+5
After the previous commit there is now a redundant string copy in handle_v_run, this commit cleans that up. There should be no functional change after this commit. During review I was pointed to this older series: https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/20211022071933.3478427-1-m.weghorn@posteo.de/ which also includes this fix as part of a larger set of changes. I'm giving a Co-Authored-By credit to the author of that original series. I believe this smaller fix brings some benefits on its own, though the original series does offer additional improvements. Once this is merged I'll take a look at rebasing and resubmitting the original series. Co-Authored-By: Michael Weghorn <m.weghorn@posteo.de> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06gdbserver: handle newlines in inferior argumentsAndrew Burgess2-32/+5
Similarly to how single quotes were mishandled, which was fixed two commits ago, this commit fixes handling of newlines in arguments passed to gdbserver. We already had a test that covered this, gdb.base/args.exp, which, when run with the native-extended-gdbserver board contained several KFAIL covering this situation. In this commit I remove the unnecessary, attempt to quote incoming newlines within arguments, and do some minimal cleanup of the related code. There is additional cleanup that can be done, but I'm leaving that for the next commit. Then I've removed the KFAIL from the test case, and performed some minimal cleanup there too. After this commit the gdb.base/args.exp is 100% passing with the native-extended-gdbserver board file. During review I was pointed to this older series: https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/20211022071933.3478427-1-m.weghorn@posteo.de/ which also includes this fix as part of a larger set of changes. I'm giving a Co-Authored-By credit to the author of that original series. I believe this smaller fix brings some benefits on its own, though the original series does offer additional improvements. Once this is merged I'll take a look at rebasing and resubmitting the original series. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27989 Co-Authored-By: Michael Weghorn <m.weghorn@posteo.de> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06gdbserver: fix handling of trailing empty argumentAndrew Burgess2-6/+11
When I posted the previous patch for review Andreas Schwab pointed out that passing a trailing empty argument also doesn't work. The fix for this is in the same area of code as the previous patch, but is sufficiently different that I felt it deserved a patch of its own. I noticed that passing arguments containing single quotes to gdbserver didn't work correctly: gdb -ex 'set sysroot' --args /tmp/show-args Reading symbols from /tmp/show-args... (gdb) target extended-remote | gdbserver --once --multi - /tmp/show-args Remote debugging using | gdbserver --once --multi - /tmp/show-args stdin/stdout redirected Process /tmp/show-args created; pid = 176054 Remote debugging using stdio Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2... (No debugging symbols found in /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2) 0x00007ffff7fd3110 in _start () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (gdb) set args abc "" (gdb) run The program being debugged has been started already. Start it from the beginning? (y or n) y Starting program: /tmp/show-args \' stdin/stdout redirected Process /tmp/show-args created; pid = 176088 2 args are: /tmp/show-args abc Done. [Inferior 1 (process 176088) exited normally] (gdb) target native Done. Use the "run" command to start a process. (gdb) run Starting program: /tmp/show-args \' 2 args are: /tmp/show-args abc Done. [Inferior 1 (process 176095) exited normally] (gdb) q The 'shows-args' program used here just prints the arguments passed to the inferior. Notice that when starting the inferior using the extended-remote target there is only a single argument 'abc', while when using the native target there is a second argument, the blank line, representing the empty argument. The problem here is that the vRun packet coming from GDB looks like this (I've removing the trailing checksum): $vRun;PROGRAM_NAME;616263; If we compare this to a packet with only a single argument and no trailing empty argument: $vRun;PROGRAM_NAME;616263 Notice the lack of the trailing ';' character here. The problem is that gdbserver processes this string in a loop. At each point we maintain a pointer to the character just after a ';', and then we process everything up to either the next ';' character, or to the end of the string. We break out of this loop when the character we start with (in that loop iteration) is the null-character. This means in the trailing empty argument case, we abort the loop before doing anything with the empty argument. In this commit I've updated the loop, we now break out using a 'break' statement at the end of the loop if the (sub-)string we just processed was empty, with this change we now notice the trailing empty argument. I've updated the test case to cover this issue. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06gdbserver: fix handling of single quote argumentsAndrew Burgess3-10/+7
I noticed that passing arguments containing single quotes to gdbserver didn't work correctly: gdb -ex 'set sysroot' --args /tmp/show-args Reading symbols from /tmp/show-args... (gdb) target extended-remote | gdbserver --once --multi - /tmp/show-args Remote debugging using | gdbserver --once --multi - /tmp/show-args stdin/stdout redirected Process /tmp/show-args created; pid = 176054 Remote debugging using stdio Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2... (No debugging symbols found in /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2) 0x00007ffff7fd3110 in _start () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (gdb) set args \' (gdb) r The program being debugged has been started already. Start it from the beginning? (y or n) y Starting program: /tmp/show-args \' stdin/stdout redirected Process /tmp/show-args created; pid = 176088 2 args are: /tmp/show-args \' Done. [Inferior 1 (process 176088) exited normally] (gdb) target native Done. Use the "run" command to start a process. (gdb) run Starting program: /tmp/show-args \' 2 args are: /tmp/show-args ' Done. [Inferior 1 (process 176095) exited normally] (gdb) q The 'shows-args' program used here just prints the arguments passed to the inferior. Notice that when starting the inferior using the extended-remote target the second argument is "\'", while when running using native target the argument is "'". The second of these is correct, the \' used with the "set args" command is just to show GDB that the single quote is not opening an argument string. It turns out that the extra backslash is injected on the gdbserver side when gdbserver processes the arguments that GDB passes it, the code that does this was added as part of this much larger commit: commit 2090129c36c7e582943b7d300968d19b46160d84 Date: Thu Dec 22 21:11:11 2016 -0500 Share fork_inferior et al with gdbserver In this commit I propose removing the specific code that adds what I believe is a stray backslash. I've extended an existing test to cover this case, and I now see identical behaviour when using an extended-remote target as with the native target. This partially fixes PR gdb/27989, though there are still some issues with newline handling which I'll address in a later commit. During review I was pointed to this older series: https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/20211022071933.3478427-1-m.weghorn@posteo.de/ which also includes this fix as part of a larger set of changes. I'm giving a Co-Authored-By credit to the author of that original series. I believe this smaller fix brings some benefits on its own, though the original series does offer additional improvements. Once this is merged I'll take a look at rebasing and resubmitting the original series. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27989 Co-Authored-By: Michael Weghorn <m.weghorn@posteo.de> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06Fix: alpha: ld segfaults inNick Clifton2-2/+7
PR 30940 * elf64-alpha.c (elf64_alpha_check_relocs): Correct error message.
2023-10-05gdb/configure.ac: Add option --with-additional-debug-dirsThiago Jung Bauermann7-4/+51
If you want to install GDB in a custom prefix, have it look for debug info in that prefix but also in the distro's default location (typically, /usr/lib/debug) and run the GDB testsuite before doing "make install", you have a bit of a problem: Configuring GDB with '--prefix=$PREFIX' sets the GDB 'debug-file-directory' parameter to $PREFIX/lib/debug. Unfortunately this precludes GDB from looking for distro-installed debug info in /usr/lib/debug. For regular GDB use you could set debug-file-directory to $PREFIX:/usr/lib/debug in $PREFIX/etc/gdbinit so that GDB will look in both places, but if you want to run the testsuite then that doesn't help because in that case GDB runs with the '-nx' option. There's the configure option '--with-separate-debug-dir' to set the default value for 'debug-file-directory', but it accepts only one directory and not a list. I considered modifying it to accept a list, but it's not obvious how to do that because its value is also used by BFD, as well as processed for "relocatability". I thought it was simpler to add a new option to specify a list of additional directories that will be appended to the debug-file-directory setting. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-06Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2023-10-05[gdb/go] Handle v3 go_0 mangled prefixTom de Vries1-3/+27
With gcc-10 we have: ... (gdb) break package2.Foo^M Breakpoint 2 at 0x402563: file package2.go, line 5.^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.go/package.exp: setting breakpoint 1 ... but with gcc-11: ... gdb) break package2.Foo^M Function "package2.Foo" not defined.^M Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.go/package.exp: gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at package2.Foo ... In the gcc-10 case, though the exec contains dwarf, it's not used to set the breakpoint (which is an independent problem, filed as PR go/30941), instead the minimal symbol information is used. The minimal symbol information changed between gcc-10 and gcc-11: ... $ nm a.out.10 | grep Foo 000000000040370d T go.package2.Foo 0000000000404e50 R go.package2.Foo..f $ nm a.out.11 | grep Foo 0000000000403857 T go_0package2.Foo 0000000000405030 R go_0package2.Foo..f ... A new v3 mangling scheme was used. The mangling schemes define a separator character and mangling character: - for v2, dot is used both as separator character and mangling character, and - for v3, dot is used as separator character and underscore as mangling character. For more details, see [1] and [2]. In v3, "_0" demangles to ".". [ See gcc commit a01dda3c23b ("compiler, libgo: change mangling scheme"), function Special_char_code::Special_char_code. ] Handle the new go_0 prefix in unpack_mangled_go_symbol, which fixes the test-case. Note that this doesn't fix this regression: ... $ gccgo-10 package2.go -c -g0 $ gccgo-10 package1.go package2.o -g0 $ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "break go.package2.Foo" Breakpoint 1 at 0x40370d $ gccgo-11 package2.go -c -g0 $ gccgo-11 package1.go package2.o -g0 $ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "break go.package2.Foo" Function "go.package2.Foo" not defined. ... With gcc-10, we set a breakpoint on the mangled minimal symbol. That one has simply changed for gcc-11, so it's equivalent to using: ... $ gdb -q -batch a.out -ex "break go_0package2.Foo" Breakpoint 1 at 0x403857 ... which does work. Tested on x86_64-linux: - openSUSE Leap 15.4, using gccgo-7, - openSUSE Tumbleweed, using gccgo-13. PR go/27238 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27238 [1] https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/gofrontend/+/271726 [2] https://github.com/golang/go/issues/41862#issuecomment-707244103
2023-10-05gdb: use objfile->pspace in free_objfile observersSimon Marchi2-2/+2
Use objfile->pspace instead of current_program_space. Change-Id: I127a1788e155b321563114452ed5b530f1d1f618 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: remove unnecessary nullptr check in free_objfile observersSimon Marchi3-11/+2
The free_objfile observable is never called with a nullptr objfile. Change-Id: I1e990edeb45bc38009ccb129c623911097ab65fe Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: add all_objfiles_removed observerSimon Marchi16-102/+105
The new_objfile observer is currently used to indicate both when a new objfile is added to program space (when passed non-nullptr) and when all objfiles of a program space were just removed (when passed nullptr). I think this is confusing (and Andrew apparently thinks so too [1]). Add a new "all_objfiles_removed" observer to remove the second role from "new_objfile". Some existing users of new_objfile do nothing if the passed objfile is nullptr. For them, we can simply drop the nullptr check. For others, add a new all_objfiles_removed callback, and refactor things a bit to keep the existing behavior as much as possible. Some callbacks relied on current_program_space, and following the refactoring now use either objfile->pspace or the pspace passed to all_objfiles_removed. I think this should be relatively safe, and in general a step in the right direction. On the notify side, I found only one call site to change from new_objfile to all_objfiles_removed, in clear_symtab_users. It is not entirely clear to me that this is entirely correct. clear_symtab_users appears to be called in spots that don't remove all objfiles (functions finish_new_objfile, remove_symbol_file_command, reread_symbols, do_module_cleanups). But I think that this patch at least makes the current code clearer. [1] https://gitlab.com/gnutools/binutils-gdb/-/commit/a0a031bce0527b1521788b5dad640e7883b3a252 Change-Id: Icb648f72862e056267f30f44dd439bd4ec766f13 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: add program_space parameters to some auto-load functionsSimon Marchi4-15/+15
Make the current_program_space references bubble up a bit. Change-Id: Id047a48cc8d8a45504cdbb5960bafe3e7735d652 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: use objfile->pspace in auto-load.cSimon Marchi1-6/+4
Use objfile->pspace instead of current_program_space in two spots. Change-Id: Idf94fad486252d1250380f295e71b0fe76dce76c Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: add program_space parameter to emit_clear_objfiles_eventSimon Marchi3-6/+6
Add program_space space parameters to emit_clear_objfiles_event and create_clear_objfiles_event_object, making the reference to current_program_space bubble up a bit. Change-Id: I5fde2071712781e5d45971fa0ab34d85d3a49a71 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: add program_space parameters to some functions in symtab.cSimon Marchi1-18/+21
Add some program_space parameters to functions related to getting and setting the main name, making the references to current_program_space bubble up a bit. find_main_name calls ada_main_name, which implicitly relies on the current program space, so I didn't add a parameter to that function. Change-Id: I9996955e8ae56832bbd461964d978e700e6feaf4 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: add program_space parameter to ada_clear_symbol_cacheSimon Marchi1-4/+4
Make the references to current_program_space bubble up one level. Change-Id: I82acab5628c30f6535d52aa32ce2c1d0375cbeed Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-10-05gdb: fix auxv cache clearing from new_objfile observerAndrew Burgess1-1/+10
It was pointed out on the mailing list that a recently added test (gdb.python/py-progspace-events.exp) was failing when run with the native-extended-gdbserver board. This test was added with this commit: commit 59912fb2d22f8a4bb0862487f12a5cc65b6a013f Date: Tue Sep 19 11:45:36 2023 +0100 gdb: add Python events for program space addition and removal It turns out though that the test is failing due to a existing bug in GDB, the new test just exposes the problem. Additionally, the failure really doesn't even rely on the new functionality added in the above commit. I reduced the test to a simple set of steps that reproduced the failure and tested against GDB 13, and the test passes; so the bug was introduced since then. In fact, the bug was introduced with this commit: commit a2827364e2bf19910fa5a54364a594a5ba3033b8 Date: Fri Sep 8 15:48:16 2023 +0100 gdb: remove final user of the executable_changed observer This commit changed how the per-inferior auxv data cache is managed, specifically, when the cache is cleared, and it is this that leads to the failure. This bug is interesting because it exposes a number of issues with GDB, I'll explain all of the problems I see, though ultimately, I only propose fixing one problem in this commit, which is enough to resolve the crash we are currently seeing. The crash that we are seeing manifests like this: ... [Inferior 2 (process 3970384) exited normally] +inferior 1 [Switching to inferior 1 [process 3970383] (/tmp/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.python/py-progspace-events/py-progspace-events)] [Switching to thread 1.1 (Thread 3970383.3970383)] #0 breakpt () at /tmp/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.python/py-progspace-events.c:28 28 { /* Nothing. */ } (gdb) step +step terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error' Fatal signal: Aborted ... etc ... What's happening is that GDB attempts to refill the auxv cache as a result of the gdbarch_has_shared_address_space call in program_space::~program_space, the backtrace looks like this: #0 0x00007fb4f419a9a5 in raise () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0 #1 0x00000000008b635d in handle_fatal_signal (sig=6) at ../../src/gdb/event-top.c:912 #2 <signal handler called> #3 0x00007fb4f38e3625 in raise () from /lib64/libc.so.6 #4 0x00007fb4f38cc8d9 in abort () from /lib64/libc.so.6 #5 0x00007fb4f3c70756 in __gnu_cxx::__verbose_terminate_handler() [clone .cold] () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #6 0x00007fb4f3c7c6dc in __cxxabiv1::__terminate(void (*)()) () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #7 0x00007fb4f3c7b6e9 in __cxa_call_terminate () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #8 0x00007fb4f3c7c094 in __gxx_personality_v0 () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #9 0x00007fb4f3a80c63 in _Unwind_RaiseException_Phase2 () from /lib64/libgcc_s.so.1 #10 0x00007fb4f3a8154e in _Unwind_Resume () from /lib64/libgcc_s.so.1 #11 0x0000000000e8832d in target_read_alloc_1<unsigned char> (ops=0x408a3a0, object=TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV, annex=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/target.c:2266 #12 0x0000000000e73dea in target_read_alloc (ops=0x408a3a0, object=TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV, annex=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/target.c:2315 #13 0x000000000058248c in target_read_auxv_raw (ops=0x408a3a0) at ../../src/gdb/auxv.c:379 #14 0x000000000058243d in target_read_auxv () at ../../src/gdb/auxv.c:368 #15 0x000000000058255c in target_auxv_search (match=0x0, valp=0x7ffdee17c598) at ../../src/gdb/auxv.c:415 #16 0x0000000000a464bb in linux_is_uclinux () at ../../src/gdb/linux-tdep.c:433 #17 0x0000000000a464f6 in linux_has_shared_address_space (gdbarch=0x409a2d0) at ../../src/gdb/linux-tdep.c:440 #18 0x0000000000510eae in gdbarch_has_shared_address_space (gdbarch=0x409a2d0) at ../../src/gdb/gdbarch.c:4889 #19 0x0000000000bc7558 in program_space::~program_space (this=0x4544aa0, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at ../../src/gdb/progspace.c:124 #20 0x00000000009b245d in delete_inferior (inf=0x47b3de0) at ../../src/gdb/inferior.c:290 #21 0x00000000009b2c10 in prune_inferiors () at ../../src/gdb/inferior.c:480 #22 0x00000000009c5e3e in fetch_inferior_event () at ../../src/gdb/infrun.c:4558 #23 0x000000000099b4dc in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT) at ../../src/gdb/inf-loop.c:42 #24 0x0000000000cbc64f in remote_async_serial_handler (scb=0x4090a30, context=0x408a6b0) at ../../src/gdb/remote.c:14859 #25 0x0000000000d83d3a in run_async_handler_and_reschedule (scb=0x4090a30) at ../../src/gdb/ser-base.c:138 #26 0x0000000000d83e1f in fd_event (error=0, context=0x4090a30) at ../../src/gdb/ser-base.c:189 So this is problem #1, if we throw an exception while deleting a program_space then this is not caught, and is going to crash GDB. Problem #2 becomes evident when we ask why GDB is throwing an error in this case; the error is thrown because the remote target, operating in non-async mode, can't read the auxv data while an inferior is running and GDB is waiting for a stop reply. The problem here then, is why does GDB get into a position where it tries to interact with the remote target in this way, at this time? The problem is caused by the prune_inferiors call which can be seen in the above backtrace. In prune_inferiors we check if the inferior is deletable, and if it is, we delete it. The problem is, I think, we should also check if the target is currently in a state that would allow us to delete the inferior. We don't currently have such a check available, we'd need to add one, but for the remote target, this would return false if the remote is in async mode and the remote is currently waiting for a stop reply. With this change in place GDB would defer deleting the inferior until the remote target has stopped, at which point GDB would be able to refill the auxv cache successfully. And then, problem #3 becomes evident when we ask why GDB is needing to refill the auxv cache now when it didn't need to for GDB 13. This is where the second commit mentioned above (a2827364e2bf) comes in. Prior to this commit, the auxv cache was cleared by the executable_changed observer, while after that commit the auxv cache was cleared by the new_objfile observer -- but only when the new_objfile observer is used in the special mode that actually means that all objfiles have been unloaded (I know, the overloading of the new_objfile observer is horrible, and unnecessary, but it's not really important for this bug). The difference arises because the new_objfile observer is triggered from clear_symtab_users, which in turn is called from program_space::~program_space. The new_objfile observer for auxv does this: static void auxv_new_objfile_observer (struct objfile *objfile) { if (objfile == nullptr) invalidate_auxv_cache_inf (current_inferior ()); } That is, when all the objfiles are unloaded, we clear the auxv cache for the current inferior. The problem is, then when we look at the prune_inferiors -> delete_inferior -> ~program_space path, we see that the current inferior is not going to be an inferior that exists within the program_space being deleted; delete_inferior removes the deleted inferior from the global inferior list, and then only deletes the program_space if program_space::empty() returns true, which is only the case if the current inferior isn't within the program_space to delete, and no other inferior exists within that program_space either. What this means is that when the new_objfile observer is called we can't rely on the current inferior having any relationship with the program space in which the objfiles were removed. This was an error in the commit a2827364e2bf, the only thing we can rely on is the current program space. As a result of this mistake, after commit a2827364e2bf, GDB was sometimes clearing the auxv cache for a random inferior. In the native target case this was harmless as we can always refill the cache when needed, but in the remote target case, if we need to refill the cache when the remote target is executing, then we get the crash we observed. And additionally, if we think about this a little more, we see that commit a2827364e2bf made another mistake. When all the objfiles are removed, they are removed from a program_space, a program_space might contain multiple inferiors, so surely, we should clear the auxv cache for all of the matching inferiors? Given these two insights, that the current_inferior is not relevant, only the current_program_space, and that we should be clearing the cache for all inferiors in the current_program_space, we can update auxv_new_objfile_observer to: if (objfile == nullptr) { for (inferior *inf : all_inferiors ()) { if (inf->pspace == current_program_space) invalidate_auxv_cache_inf (inf); } } With this change we now correctly clear the auxv cache for the correct inferiors, and GDB no longer needs to refill the cache at an inconvenient time, this avoids the crash we were seeing. And finally, we reach problem #4. Inspired by the observation that using the current_inferior from within the ~program_space function was not correct, I added some debug to see if current_inferior() was called anywhere else (below ~program_space), and the answer is yes, it's called a often. Mostly the culprit is GDB doing: current_inferior ()->top_target ()-> .... But I think all of these calls are most likely doing the wrong thing, and only work because the top target in all these cases is shared between all inferiors, e.g. it's the native target, or the remote target for all inferiors. But if we had a truly multi-connection setup, then we might start to see odd behaviour. Problem #1 I'm just ignoring for now, I guess at some point we might run into this again, and then we'd need to solve this. But in this case I wasn't sure what a "good" solution would look like. We need the auxv data in order to implement the linux_is_uclinux() function. If we can't get the auxv data then what should we do, assume yes, or assume no? The right answer would probably be to propagate the error back up the stack, but then we reach ~program_space, and throwing exceptions from a destructor is problematic, so we'd need to catch and deal at this point. The linux_is_uclinux() call is made from within gdbarch_has_shared_address_space(), which is used like: if (!gdbarch_has_shared_address_space (target_gdbarch ())) delete this->aspace; So, we would have to choose; delete the address space or not. If we delete it on error, then we might delete an address space that is shared within another program space. If we don't delete the address space, then we might leak it. Neither choice is great. A better solution might be to have the address spaces be reference counted, then we could remove the gdbarch_has_shared_address_space call completely, and just rely on the reference count to auto-delete the address space when appropriate. The solution for problem #2 I already hinted at above, we should have a new target_can_delete_inferiors() call, which should be called from prune_inferiors, this would prevent GDB from trying to delete inferiors when a (remote) target is in a state where we know it can't delete the inferior. Deleting an inferior often (always?) requires sending packets to the remote, and if the remote is waiting for a stop reply then this will never work, so the pruning should be deferred in this case. The solution for problem #3 is included in this commit. And, for problem #4, I'm not sure what the right solution is. Maybe delete_inferior should ensure the inferior to be deleted is in place when ~program_space is called? But that seems a little weird, as the current inferior would, in theory, still be using the current program_space... Anyway, after this commit, the gdb.python/py-progspace-events.exp test now passes when run with the native-extended-remote board. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30935 Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com> Change-Id: I41f0e6e2d7ecc1e5e55ec170f37acd4052f46eaf
2023-10-05gprofng: 30894 bison should be no hard dependencyVladimir Mezentsev4-24/+43
When running from a distribution tarball, bison should not be necessary. The generated files (QLParser.tab.cc, QLParser.tab.hh) should be distributed. configure.ac should not abort if bison is missing. configure.ac should remove temporary files (dummy.c, Simple.class). bison must be run once to create QLParser.tab.cc and QLParser.tab.hh. gprofng/ChangeLog 2023-10-03 Vladimir Mezentsev <vladimir.mezentsev@oracle.com> PR gprofng/30894 * configure.ac: Don't abort if bison is missing. Remove temporary files. * src/Makefile.am: Distribute QLParser.tab.cc and QLParser.tab.hh. * Run bison once to create QLParser.tab.cc and QLParser.tab.hh. * configure: Rebuild. * src/Makefile.in: Rebuild.