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2022-11-22fbsd-nat: Use regset supply/collect methods.John Baldwin1-4/+4
fbsd-nat includes various helper routines for fetching and storing register sets via ptrace where the register set is described by a regset. These helper routines directly invoke the supply/collect_regset regcache methods which doesn't permit a regset to provide custom logic when fetching or storing a register set. Instead, just use the function pointers from the struct regset directly. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-11-22regcache: Add collect/supply_regset variants that accept a register base.John Baldwin2-10/+37
Some register sets described by an array of regcache_map_entry structures do not have fixed register numbers in their associated architecture but do describe a block of registers whose numbers are at fixed offsets relative to some base register value. An example of this are the TLS register sets for the ARM and AArch64 architectures. Currently OS-specific architectures create register maps and register sets dynamically using the register base number. However, this requires duplicating the code to create the register map and register set. To reduce duplication, add variants of the collect_regset and supply_regset regcache methods which accept a base register number. For valid register map entries (i.e. not REGCACHE_MAP_SKIP), add this base register number to the value from the map entry to determine the final register number. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-11-22gdb/arm: Fix obvious typo in b0b23e06c3aTorbjörn SVENSSON1-2/+2
As part of the rebase of the patch, I managed to loose the local changes I had for the comments from Tomas in https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-November/193413.html This patch corrects the obvious two typos. Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
2022-11-22gdb/testsuite: remove gcc restriction from gdb.dwarf2/clang-cli-macro.expBruno Larsen1-3/+0
With the recent changes to the dwarf assembler, there is no longer a need to test for gcc in gdb.dwarf2/clang-cli-macro.exp and mark it as untested. This commit removes that logic.
2022-11-21When getting the locno of a bpstat, handle the case of bp with null locations.Philippe Waroquiers1-1/+1
The test py-objfile.exp unloads the current file while debugging the process. This results in bpstat bs->b->loc to become nullptr. Handle this case in breakpoint.c:bpstat_locno. Note: GDB crashes on this problem with an internal error, but the end of gdb summary shows: ... === gdb Summary === # of expected passes 36 The output also does not contain a 'FAIL:'. After the fix, the nr of expected passes increased. In the gdb.log output, one can see: ... Fatal signal: Segmentation fault ----- Backtrace ----- 0x55698905c5b9 gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:122 0x55698905c5b9 _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ... ERROR: Couldn't send python print(objfile.filename) to GDB. ERROR: : spawn id exp9 not open while executing "expect { -i exp9 -timeout 10 -re ".*A problem internal to GDB has been detected" { fail "$message (GDB internal error)" gdb_internal_error..." ("uplevel" body line 1) invoked from within .... Wondering if it might be possible to improve gdb_test to have gdb_test "python print(objfile.filename)" "None" \ "objfile.filename after objfile is unloaded" reporting a failed result instead of just producing the internal error.
2022-11-21Fix use after free introduced by $_hit_bpnum/$_hit_locno variables.Philippe Waroquiers1-26/+36
If the commands of the bpstat bs contain commands such as step or next or continue, the BS and its commands are freed by execute_control_command. So, we cannot remember the BS that was printed. Instead, remember the bpnum and locno. Regtested on debian/amd64 and re-run a few tests under valgrind.
2022-11-21Fix step-over-syscall.exp matching regexp for $bpnum.$locno matchingPhilippe Waroquiers1-2/+2
step-over-syscall.exp has some specific tests for gdbserver. The regexp matching breakpoint hit must take the added locno into account. Test re-run in 3 modes (normal, native-gdbserver and native-extended-gdbserver).
2022-11-21gdb/arm: Ensure that stack pointers are in syncTorbjörn SVENSSON1-28/+62
For targets with secext, msp and psp can be seen as an alias for one of msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s or psp_ns. Without this patch, sp might be secure, but msp or psp is non-secure (this state can not happen in the hardware). Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
2022-11-21gdb/arm: Update active msp/psp when switching stackTorbjörn SVENSSON1-2/+17
For targets with secext, msp and psp can be seen as an alias for one of msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s or psp_ns. When switching active sp, the corresponding msp/psp needs to be switched too. Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
2022-11-21gdb/csky just return type from csky_vector_type() for vector resgistersJiangshuai Li1-4/+7
Some gdb stubs may not describe the type for vector registers in the tdesc-xml and only send bitsize="128", gdb can't deal with a reg with default type int with bitsize==128. So Just return csky_vector_type() for vector resgisters.
2022-11-21gdb/csky return type int32 for float and vector pseudo regsJiangshuai Li1-0/+11
When reg_nr is one of the float and vector pseudo registers, return builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int32 for it.
2022-11-20Fix sol-thread.c compilation on 32-bit SolarisRainer Orth1-10/+10
sol-thread.c fails to compile on 32-bit Solaris: there are several instances of In file included from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/../gdbsupport/common-defs.h:203, from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/defs.h:28, from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/sol-thread.c:51: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/sol-thread.c: In member function ‘virtual void sol_thread_target::resume(ptid_t, int, gdb_signal)’: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/sol-thread.c:416:20: error: format ‘%ld’ expects argument of type ‘long int’, but argument 2 has type ‘ULONGEST’ {aka ‘long long unsigned int’} [-Werror=format=] 416 | warning (_("Specified thread %ld seems to have terminated"), | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/../gdbsupport/gdb_locale.h:28:29: note: in definition of macro ‘_’ 28 | # define _(String) gettext (String) | ^~~~~~ /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/sol-thread.c:416:40: note: format string is defined here 416 | warning (_("Specified thread %ld seems to have terminated"), | ~~^ | | | long int | %lld Fixed by using pulongest () instead. Tested on i386-pc-solaris2.11, amd64-pc-solaris2.11, sparc-sun-solaris2.11, and sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11 (together with Simon's patch for PR build/29798).
2022-11-19Add missing gdb_prompt in ctxobj.exp to avoid random failure, fix typo.Philippe Waroquiers2-3/+3
ctxobj.exp fails randomly when computer is loaded. With the addition of $gdb_prompt in the regexp testing for breakpoint hit, I could not make it fail anymore. Also fixed a typo in a comment.
2022-11-19Show locno for 'multi location' breakpoint hit msg+conv var $_hit_bbnum ↵Philippe Waroquiers28-96/+381
$_hit_locno PR breakpoints/12464 This implements the request given in PR breakpoints/12464. Before this patch, when a breakpoint that has multiple locations is reached, GDB printed: Thread 1 "zeoes" hit Breakpoint 1, some_func () at somefunc1.c:5 This patch changes the message so that bkpt_print_id prints the precise encountered breakpoint: Thread 1 "zeoes" hit Breakpoint 1.2, some_func () at somefunc1.c:5 In mi mode, bkpt_print_id also (optionally) prints a new table field "locno": locno is printed when the breakpoint hit has more than one location. Note that according to the GDB user manual node 'GDB/MI Development and Front Ends', it is ok to add new fields without changing the MI version. Also, when a breakpoint is reached, the convenience variables $_hit_bpnum and $_hit_locno are set to the encountered breakpoint number and location number. $_hit_bpnum and $_hit_locno can a.o. be used in the command list of a breakpoint, to disable the specific encountered breakpoint, e.g. disable $_hit_bpnum.$_hit_locno In case the breakpoint has only one location, $_hit_locno is set to the value 1, so as to allow a command such as: disable $_hit_bpnum.$_hit_locno to disable the breakpoint even when the breakpoint has only one location. This also fixes a strange behaviour: when a breakpoint X has only one location, enable|disable X.1 is accepted but transforms the breakpoint in a multiple locations breakpoint having only one location. The changes in RFA v4 handle the comments of Tom Tromey: - Changed convenience var names from $bkptno/$locno to $_hit_bpnum/$_hit_locno. - updated the tests and user manual accordingly. User manual also explictly describes that $_hit_locno is set to 1 for a breakpoint with a single location. - The variable values are now set in bpstat_do_actions_1 so that they are set for silent breakpoints, and when several breakpoints are hit at the same time, that the variables are set to the printed breakpoint. The changes in RFA v3 handle the additional comments of Eli: GDB/NEW: - Use max 80-column - Use 'code location' instead of 'location'. - Fix typo $bkpno - Ensure that disable $bkptno and disable $bkptno.$locno have each their explanation inthe example - Reworded the 'breakpoint-hit' paragraph. gdb.texinfo: - Use 'code location' instead of 'location'. - Add a note to clarify the distinction between $bkptno and $bpnum. - Use @kbd instead of examples with only one command. Compared to RFA v1, the changes in v2 handle the comments given by Keith Seitz and Eli Zaretskii: - Use %s for the result of paddress - Use bkptno_numopt_re instead of 2 different -re cases - use C@t{++} - Add index entries for $bkptno and $locno - Added an example for "locno" in the mi interface - Added examples in the Break command manual.
2022-11-18Fix deletion of FinishBreakpointsJohnson Sun4-1/+105
Currently, FinishBreakpoints are set at the return address of a frame based on the `finish' command, and are meant to be temporary breakpoints. However, they are not being cleaned up after use, as reported in PR python/18655. This was happening because the disposition of the breakpoint was not being set correctly. This commit fixes this issue by correctly setting the disposition in the post-stop hook of the breakpoint. It also adds a test to ensure this feature isn't regressed in the future. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18655
2022-11-18gdb: fix symtab.c build on 32 bit targetsSimon Marchi1-4/+4
When building on Ubuntu 22.04, gcc 12, x86-64 with -m32 and -O2, I get: CXX symtab.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/symtab.c: In member function ‘std::vector<symbol_search> global_symbol_searcher::search() const’: /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/symtab.c:4961:44: error: ‘__builtin___sprintf_chk’ may write a terminating nul past the end of the destination [-Werror=format-overflow=] 4961 | sprintf (tmp, "operator%.*s%s", fix, " ", opname); | ^ In file included from /usr/include/stdio.h:894, from ../gnulib/import/stdio.h:43, from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/../gdbsupport/common-defs.h:86, from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/defs.h:28, from /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/symtab.c:20: In function ‘int sprintf(char*, const char*, ...)’, inlined from ‘std::vector<symbol_search> global_symbol_searcher::search() const’ at /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/symtab.c:4961:16: /usr/include/i386-linux-gnu/bits/stdio2.h:38:34: note: ‘__builtin___sprintf_chk’ output between 9 and 2147483648 bytes into a destination of size 2147483647 38 | return __builtin___sprintf_chk (__s, __USE_FORTIFY_LEVEL - 1, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 39 | __glibc_objsize (__s), __fmt, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 40 | __va_arg_pack ()); | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PR build/29798 shows a similar error message but on Solaris. Work around that by using string_printf. It is a good thing to get rid of the alloca anyway. Change-Id: Ifbac11fee3062ad7f134d596b4e2229dc5d166f9 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29798
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: rewrite gdb.cp/call-method-register.exp with dwarf assemblerAndrew Burgess2-76/+80
Convert the gdb.cp/call-method-register.exp test to make use of the DWARF assembler. The existing gdb.cp/call-method-register.exp test relies on a GCC extension - forcing a local variable into a particular named register. This means that the test will only work with Clang, and, as we have to name the register into which the variable will be placed, will only work for those targets where we've selected a suitable register, currently this is x86-64, i386, and ppc64. By switching to the DWARF assembler, the test will work with gcc and clang, and should work on most, if not all, architectures. The test creates a small structure, something that can fit within a register, and then tries to call a method on the structure from within GDB. This should fail because GDB can't take the address of the in register structure (for the `this` pointer). As the test is for a failure case, then we don't really care _which_ register the structure is in, and I take advantage of this for the DWARF assembler test, I just declare that the variable is in DW_OP_reg0, whatever that might be. I've tested the new test on x86-64, ppc, aarch64, and risc-v, and the test runs, and passes on all these architectures, which is already more than we used to cover. Additionally, on x86-64, I've tested with Clang and gcc, and the test runs and passed with both compilers. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp with ClangAndrew Burgess2-2/+10
The gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp test is showing a single failure when run with some older versions of Clang, e.g. 9.0.1. The problem appears to be with Clang's generated line table. The test source looks like this: int main() { asm ("main_label: .globl main_label"); return 0; } In GDB, when we 'start', we expect to stop at the 'return 0;' line. This is the behaviour when the compiler is gcc, or later versions of Clang. However, with Clang 9.0.2, I see GDB stop on the 'asm' line. In this commit I'll fix this issue by placing a breakpoint on the return line, and then using gdb_continue_to_breakpoint to ensure we have stopped in the correct place. Of course, using gdb_continue_to_breakpoint will only work if we are not already stopped at the breakpoint location, so I've added some filler work before the 'return 0;' line. With this done we can use gdb_continue_to_breakpoint in all cases. As a result of adding the new filler work, one of the later tests, that used the 'list' command, no longer see the correct expected output (the top line of the source file is no longer included in the output). I've fixed this by listing a known specific line, the test is checking that GDB managed to find the source file, it doesn't matter which source line we list, as long as we can list something.
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: rename source file gdb.debuginfod/main.cAndrew Burgess2-1/+1
The test gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp uses a source file named main.c. I can't see any particular reason why the file is named as such. Usually test source files are named after the test script. This commit just renames the source file inline with the test script, and updates the call to standard_testfile (removing the reference to main.c). There's no particular reason for this change other than seeing the file named main.c made me thing that the source file must be shared with some other test (it isn't). There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: add (and use) a new build-id compile optionAndrew Burgess2-2/+11
I noticed that the gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp test was failing when run with Clang as the compiler. This test relies on the compiled binaries having a build-id within them. For GCC, really GNU ld, the default is to always include a build-id. When compiling with Clang though, the default is for no build-id. I did consider *always* turning on the build-id feature when the compiler is Clang, but that felt a little weird. Instead, I propose that we add a new 'build-id' compiler option to gdb_compile, this flag indicates that the test _requires_ a build-id. In gcc_compile we can then add the required flags if the compiler is Clang so that we do get a build-id. With this change the gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp test now (mostly) passes with Clang 9.0.1 and 15.0.2, and still passes with gcc. The 'mostly' part is an unrelated issue, and will be addressed in a later commit in this series. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.compile/compile-ops.exp with clangAndrew Burgess2-11/+15
I noticed that the gdb.compile/compile-ops.exp test was failing when run with Clang as the compiler. This test makes use of the DWARF assembler, and, it turns out, uses a technique which is not portable to Clang. This problem is described in the comment on the function_range proc in lib/dwarf.exp, the explanation is: # If the compiler is gcc, we can do the following to get function start # and end address too: # # asm ("func_start: .globl func_start"); # static void func (void) {} # asm ("func_end: .globl func_end"); # # however, this isn't portable, because other compilers, such as clang, # may not guarantee the order of global asms and function. The code # becomes: # # asm ("func_start: .globl func_start"); # asm ("func_end: .globl func_end"); # static void func (void) {} These start/end labels are used for computing the function start, end, and length. The portable solution is to place a label within the function, like this: # int main (void) # { # asm ("main_label: .globl main_label"); # return 0; # } And make use of 'proc function_range' (from lib/dwarf.exp). So, that's what I do in this commit. One consequence of this change is that we need to compile the source file, and have it loaded into a GDB session, before calling function_range, so I've added an early call to prepare_for_testing. Additionally, this test script was generating the DWARF assembler into a file called gdbjit-ops.S, I suspect a copy and paste issue there, so I've switched this to use compile-ops-dbg.S instead, which is more inline with what other DWARF assembler tests do. The only other change, which might be a problem, is that I also deleted these two lines from the source file: asm (".section \".text\""); asm (".balign 8"); These lines were setting the alignment of the .text section. What I don't know is whether this was significant or not. If it is significant, then I can't see why. On x86-64, the test still passes fine without these lines, but that doesn't mean the test wont start failing on some other architecture. Still, I figure, lets remove them, then, if/when we find a test that starts failing, we can add the lines back, along with an explanation for why the extra alignment is required. But, if people would prefer to be more conservative, then I'm happy to just add the lines back. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp with ClangAndrew Burgess1-2/+2
I noticed that the test gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp was failing when run with Clang. Or rather, the test was not running as the test executable failed to compile. The problem is that Clang was emitting this warning: warning: argument unused during compilation: '-fdiagnostics-color=never' [-Wunused-command-line-argument] This warning is emitted when compiling the assembler file generated by the DWARF assembler. Most DWARF assembler tests generate the assembler file into a file with the '.S' extension. However, this particular test uses a '.s' extension. Now a .S file will be passed through the preprocessor, while a .s will be sent straight to the assembler. My guess is that Clang doesn't support the -fdiagnostics-color=never option for the assembler, but does for the preprocessor. That's a little annoying, but easily worked around. We don't care if our assembler file is passed through the preprocessor, so, in this commit, I just change the file extension from .s to .S, and the problem is fixed. Currently, the unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp script names the assembler file using standard_output_file, in this commit I've switched to make use of standard_testfile, as that seems to be the more common way of doing this sort of thing. With these changes the test now passes with Clang 9.0.1 and 15.0.2, and also still passes with gcc. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: don't avoid DWARF assembler tests with ClangAndrew Burgess2-11/+0
Two tests make the claim that the DWARF assembler requires gcc, however, this isn't true. I think at one point, when the DWARF assembler was first added, we did use some techniques that were not portable (see the comments in lib/dwarf.exp on function_range for details), however, I think most DWARF assembler tests will now work fine with Clang. The two tests that I modify in this commit both work fine with Clang, at least, I've tested with Clang 9.0.1 and 15.0.2, and don't see any problems, so I'm removing the early return logic that stops these tests from running with Clang. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-17Fix static initialization order problem in windows-nat.cTom Tromey1-3/+6
This patch fixes a static initialization order problem in windows-nat.c that was pointed out by Jon Turney. The underlying problem is that the windows_nat_target constructor relies on serial_logfile already being constructed, but this is not enforced by C++ rules. This patch fixes the problem by initializing the global windows_nat_target later.
2022-11-17PowerPC, fix gdb.base/retval-large-struct.expCarl Love1-1/+7
Support for printining non-trivial return values was recently added in commit: commit a0eda3df5b750ae32576a9be092b361281a41787 Author: Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com> Date: Mon Nov 14 16:22:37 2022 -0500 PowerPC, fix support for printing the function return value for non-trivial values. The functionality can now be used to fix gdb.base/retval-large-struct.exp. The test just needs to be compiled with -fvar-tracking to enable GDB to determine the address off the return buffer when the function is called. The current output from the test: 34 return big_struct; (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/retval-large-struct.exp: continue to breakpoint: Break in print_large_struct finish warning: Cannot determine the function return value. Try compiling with -fvar-tracking. Run till exit from #0 return_large_struct () at binutils-gdb-current/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/retval-large-struct.c:34 main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffcd58) at binutils-gdb-current/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/retval-large-struct.c:44 44 return 0; Value returned has type: struct big_struct_t. Cannot determine contents (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/retval-large-struct.exp: finish from return_large_struct testcase binutils-gdb-current/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/retval-large-struct.exp completed in 1 seconds This patch adds the command line argument -fvar-tracking to enable gdb to determine the return vaule and thus fixing the test. Patch tested on Power 10 with no regressions.
2022-11-17Use boolean literals for pagination_enabledTom Tromey2-2/+2
I noticed a couple of spots that used '0' rather than 'false' when modifying pagination_enabled. This patch cleans these up.
2022-11-17Change NULL to nullptr in gdb/infcmd.c and gdb/infrun.cCarl Love2-142/+142
The GDB coding standard specifies that nullptr should be used instead of NULL. There are numerous uses of NULL and nullptr in files infcmd.c and infrun.c. This patch replaces the various uses of NULL with nullptr in the source files. The use of NULL in the comments was not changed. The patch does not introduce any functional changes. The patch has been tested on PowerPC and Intel X86_64 with no new unexpected test failures, unresolved tests, new core files etc.
2022-11-17gdb: new $_inferior_thread_count convenience variableAndrew Burgess5-2/+62
Add a new convenience variable $_inferior_thread_count that contains the number of live (non-exited) threads in the current inferior. This can be used in command scripts, or breakpoint conditions, etc to adjust the behaviour for multi-threaded inferiors. This value is only stable in all-stop mode. In non-stop mode, where new threads can be started, and existing threads exit, at any time, this convenience variable can give a different value each time it is evaluated.
2022-11-17Remove two obsolete declarationsTom Tromey1-4/+0
I happened to find a couple of obsolete declarations in cli-interp.h. This patch removes them. Tested by rebuilding.
2022-11-17gdb/testsuite: fix failure in gdb.python/py-send-packet.expAndrew Burgess1-3/+3
While working on another patch I noticed that, when run on an AArch64 target, the test gdb.python/py-send-packet.exp was failing: Traceback (most recent call last): File "<string>", line 1, in <module> File "/tmp/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.python/py-send-packet/py-send-packet.py", line 106, in run_auxv_send_packet_test assert string == expected_result AssertionError Error while executing Python code. (gdb) FAIL: gdb.python/py-send-packet.exp: call python run_auxv_send_packet_test function The test uses 'maint packet ...' to send a packet to gdbserver, and then captures the output in TCL. This output is then passed through to a Python function, which performs some actions using the Python API, and compares the results from the Python API to the results captured in TCL from 'maint packet ...'. The problem is that the output captured in TCL contains lots of things like '\x000', when this is passed through to Python the '\x' causes this to be treated as an escape code, which isn't what we want - we want the actual string "\x000". So, in the TCL part of the test we were expanding '\x' to '\\x', this seemed to work fine for my testing on x86-64. However, on AArch64 what I see is that the results from 'maint packet ...' contain a literal '\' character followed by a literal 'x' character. When GDB prints this in the 'maint packet' output, GDB escapes the '\' for us, thus we get '\\x' printed by 'maint packet'. However, now our TCL test script kicks in and tries to "fix" the '\x', this means we now have '\\\x', which isn't correct. The problem is that in the TCL script we are too restrictive, we expand '\x' to '\\x', but really, we should be expanding all '\' characters, regardless of what follows them. This is what this patch does. After this the gdb.python/py-send-packet.exp test passes on AArch64 for me.
2022-11-17Fix call functions command bug in 64 bits programs for AIXAditya Vidyadhar Kamath1-1/+9
In AIX for 64 bit programs we need to zero extend variables of integer or enum or char data type. Otherwise a zero will get dumped in the register as we memset our word to 0 and we copy non zero extended contents to the cache.
2022-11-17gdb/fortran/testsuite: print values and types of string variablesAndrew Burgess2-0/+107
While looking through the Fortran tests, I couldn't find a test of GDB printing the value and type of a Fortran string defined using the 'character*SIZE' notation. This works fine in GDB right now, but I thought it wouldn't hurt to have a test for this, so this commit adds such a test. The test also includes printing a string that includes some embedded special characters: \n \r \t \000 - that's right, as Fortran strings are stored as an address and length, it is fine to include an embedded null, so this test includes an example of that. Standard Fortran doesn't support backslash escape sequences within strings, the special characters must be generated using the `achar` function. However, when GDB prints the strings we currently print using the standard C like backslash sequences. I'm not currently proposing to change that behaviour, the backslash sequences are more compact than the standard Fortran way of doing things, and are so widely used that I suspect most Fortran programmers will understand them.
2022-11-17Fix various procfs.c compilation errorsRainer Orth1-15/+9
procfs.c has accumulated several compilation errors lately (some of them new with GCC 12), which are fixed by this patch: * auxv_parse gets: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:144:7: error: ‘int procfs_target::auxv_parse(gdb_byte**, gdb_byte*, CORE_ADDR*, CORE_ADDR*)’ marked ‘override’, but does not override 144 | int auxv_parse (gdb_byte **readptr, | ^~~~~~~~~~ Obviouly, procfs.c was missed in the auxv_parse constification. * dead_procinfo has: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In function ‘void dead_procinfo(procinfo*, const char*, int)’: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:563:11: warning: the address of ‘procinfo::pathname’ will never be NULL [-Waddress] 563 | if (pi->pathname) | ~~~~^~~~~~~~ /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:238:8: note: ‘procinfo::pathname’ declared here 238 | char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE]; /* Pathname to /proc entry */ | ^~~~~~~~ The warning is correct, so the code can lose support for the NULL pathname case. * create_inferior has this ugly warning: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In member function ‘virtual void procfs_target::create_inferior(const char*, const std::string&, char**, int)’: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:2815:19: warning: ‘char* std::strncpy(char*, const char*, size_t)’ output truncated before terminating nul copying as many bytes from a string as its length [-Wstringop-truncation] 2815 | strncpy (tryname, p, len); | ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:2814:26: note: length computed here 2814 | len = strlen (p); | ~~~~~~~^~~ It seems that this is another case of GCC PR middle-end/88059, which Martin Sebor refuses to fix. So I'm using the hack suggested in the PR to use memcpy instead of strncpy. * find_memory_regions_callback fails with /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In function ‘int find_memory_regions_callback(prmap*, find_memory_region_ftype, void*)’: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:3167:18: error: too few arguments to function 3167 | return (*func) ((CORE_ADDR) map->pr_vaddr, | ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3168 | map->pr_size, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3169 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_READ) != 0, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3170 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_WRITE) != 0, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3171 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_EXEC) != 0, | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3172 | 1, /* MODIFIED is unknown, pass it as true. */ | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3173 | data); | ~~~~~ Again, procfs.c was overlooked when adding the new memory_tagged arg. Unfortunately, it wasn't even documented in gdb/defs.h when it was added in commit 68cffbbd4406b4efe1aa6e18460b1d7ca02549f1 Author: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com> Date: Thu Mar 31 11:42:35 2022 +0100 [AArch64] MTE corefile support With those changes, procfs.c compiles again. Together with the hack from the Solaris gdbsupport breakage reported in PR build/29791, I was able to build and test gdb on both amd64-pc-solaris2.11 and sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-11-17[gdb/testsuite] Fix DUPLICATE in gdb.arch/ppc-fp.expTom de Vries1-2/+2
I noticed: ... DUPLICATE: gdb.arch/ppc-fp.exp: next ... Fix this by adding unique test names. Tested on powerpc64le-linux.
2022-11-17Add myself to the gdb/MAINTAINERS write-after-approval listKévin Le Gouguec1-0/+1
2022-11-17Guard against frame.c destructors running before frame-info.c'sKévin Le Gouguec1-1/+5
On x86_64-windows, since 04e2ac7b2a7, we observe this internal error: [...]/gdbsupport/intrusive_list.h:458: internal-error: erase_element: Assertion `elem_node->prev != INTRUSIVE_LIST_UNLINKED_VALUE' failed. Breaking in the destructors for intrusive_list and frame_info_ptr shows that in this configuration, the destructors for frame.c's statically-stored objects are run before frame-info.c's: Thread 1 hit Breakpoint 7, intrusive_list<frame_info_ptr, intrusive_base_node<frame_info_ptr> >::~intrusive_list (this=0x7ff69c418c90 <frame_info_ptr::frame_list>, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) [...]/../gdbsupport/intrusive_list.h:250 250 clear (); (gdb) bt #0 intrusive_list<frame_info_ptr, intrusive_base_node<frame_info_ptr> > ::~intrusive_list (this=0x7ff69c418c90 <frame_info_ptr::frame_list>, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) [...]/../gdbsupport/intrusive_list.h:250 #1 0x00007ff69b78edba in __tcf_1 () [...]/frame-info.c:27 #2 0x00007ff9c457aa9f in msvcrt!_initterm_e () from C:\Windows\System32\msvcrt.dll #3 0x00007ff69b8246a6 in captured_main_1 (context=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1111 #4 0x00007ff69b825149 in captured_main (data=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1320 #5 0x00007ff69b8251b1 in gdb_main (args=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1345 #6 0x00007ff69b5d1730 in main (argc=2, argv=0x751730) [...]/gdb.c:32 (gdb) c Continuing. Thread 1 hit Breakpoint 8, frame_info_ptr::~frame_info_ptr (this=0x7ff69c418e20 <selected_frame>, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) [...]/frame-info.h:74 74 if (is_linked ()) (gdb) bt #0 frame_info_ptr::~frame_info_ptr (this=0x7ff69c418e20 <selected_frame>, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) [...]/frame-info.h:74 #1 0x00007ff69b79a643 in __tcf_1 () [...]/frame.c:1675 #2 0x00007ff9c457aa9f in msvcrt!_initterm_e () from C:\Windows\System32\msvcrt.dll #3 0x00007ff69b8246a6 in captured_main_1 (context=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1111 #4 0x00007ff69b825149 in captured_main (data=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1320 #5 0x00007ff69b8251b1 in gdb_main (args=0x5ffe00) [...]/main.c:1345 #6 0x00007ff69b5d1730 in main (argc=2, argv=0x751730) [...]/gdb.c:32 Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-11-16[gdb/testsuite] Use gdb_gcore_cmd in gdb.threads/gcore-thread.expTom de Vries1-1/+1
I noticed a plain gcore command in test-case gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp: ... gdb_test "gcore $core0file" "Saved corefile .*" \ "save a zeroed-threads corefile" ... Use gdb_gcore_cmd instead. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-16Bug fix in commit for printing the function return value for non-trivial valuesCarl Love1-14/+16
The recent commit: commit a0eda3df5b750ae32576a9be092b361281a41787 Author: Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com> Date: Mon Nov 14 16:22:37 2022 -0500 PowerPC, fix support for printing the function return value for non-trivial values. Is generating a segmentation fault on x86_64-linux. segfault: ... PASS: gdb.asm/asm-source.exp: info source asmsrc1.s ERROR: GDB process no longer exists UNRESOLVED: gdb.asm/asm-source.exp: finish from foo3 ... Reproduced on command line: ... $ gdb -q -batch -x outputs/gdb.asm/asm-source/gdb.in.1 ... The problem seems to be that: ... Thread 1 "gdb" received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0x000000000043de7a in symbol::type (this=0x0) at .../gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/symtab.h:1287 1287 return m_type; ... because: ... (gdb) up #1 0x0000000000852d94 in finish_command (arg=0x0, from_tty=0) at .../gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/infcmd.c:1887 1887 = check_typedef (sm->function->type ()->target_type ()); (gdb) p sm->function $1 = (symbol *) 0x0 The code is not checking if sm->function is NULL. If sm->function is NULL the check for the return buffer should be skipped.
2022-11-16Update Ada tasks documentationTom Tromey1-1/+13
My co-worker Kévin noticed that the Ada tasks documentation is slightly out of date -- it does not document all the states that can be reported by ada-tasks.c. This patch adds the missing states to the appropriate node, and updates one state to reflect a change made some time ago.
2022-11-16gdb: add "set style tui-current-position on|off", default to offPedro Alves7-5/+83
As discussed at: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-June/169519.html this patch disables source and assembly code highlighting for the text highlighted by the TUI's current position indicator, and adds a command to enable it back.
2022-11-16[gdb/testsuite] Modernize gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.expTom de Vries2-26/+21
I noticed in test-case gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp that we run into the completion limit for "complete set gnutarget": ... set gnutarget vms-libtxt^M set gnutarget *** List may be truncated, max-completions reached. ***^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp: complete set gnutarget ... Fix this by using get_set_option_choices. Also use get_set_option_choices for "complete set architecture i386", which required extending get_set_option_choices to accept a second argument, such that we can do: ... set archs [get_set_option_choices "set architecture" "i386"] ... because this returns an empty list: ... set archs [get_set_option_choices "set architecture i386"] ... because it does "complete set architecture i386 ". Also clean up the explicit gdb_exit/gdb_start and use clean_restart instead. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-16[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.arch/ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp without bzip2Tom de Vries3-8/+32
After de-installing bzip2, I run into: ... Running ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp ... sh: bzip2: command not found PATH: gdb.arch/ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp: failed bzip2 for \ src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/cordic.ko.bz2 ... Fix these by: - using remote_exec instead of catch system, and - using file tail in the untested message. I've tried making output redirection work with remote_exec, but that seems to be broken, so we now: - copy the file $f.bz2 into the desired location $dir/$f.bz2, and - decompress the bz2 file using "bzip2 -df $dir/$f.bz2", resulting in a file $dir/$f. Factor out new function decompress_bz2 to make the test-case less verbose, and also use it in gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp. Tested on x86_64-linux, without and with bzip2 installed.
2022-11-15gdb/configure: regenerateJose E. Marchesi1-2/+4
The commit bbaabc767a4293492817a0840819aef2768cce90 introduced an incorrect thunk for the `configure' script. This patch regenerates configure by calling autoreconf.
2022-11-15gdb: use libtool in GDB_AC_CHECK_BFDJose E. Marchesi3-11/+1652
The GDB_AC_CHECK_BFD macro defined in gdb/acinclude.m4 uses the AC_LINK_IFELSE autoconf macro in order to link a simple program to check features of libbfd. If libbfd's link dependencies change, it was necessary to reflect them either in the definition of the macro, or as a consequence of checking for them with an autoconf macro resulting in an addition to LIBS. This patch modifies the definition of the GDB_CHECK_BFD macro in order to use libtool to perform the test link. This makes it possible to not have to list dependencies of libbfd (which are indirect to GDB) at all. After this patch: configure:28553: checking for ELF support in BFD configure:28573: ./libtool --quiet --mode=link gcc -o conftest \ -I../../gdb/../include -I../bfd \ -I../../gdb/../bfd -g -O2 \ -L../bfd -L../libiberty conftest.c -lbfd -liberty \ -lncursesw -lm -ldl >&5 configure:28573: $? = 0 configure:28583: result: yes Tests performed: - Configure --with-system-zlib and --without-system-zlib. - Check link dependencies of installed GDB with both --enable-shared and --disable-shared. - Run installed GDB in both cases. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-11-15Fix crash in ada_print_typeTom Tromey5-3/+114
The "varstring" paramter to ada_print_type can be null, but one spot failed to check this. This could cause a crash in some situations. As this is Ada-specific, and we've been using it internally at AdaCore for a while, I am going to push it.
2022-11-15gdb/testsuite: get_set_option_choices: expect \r\n after each itemSimon Marchi1-2/+7
I get some random failures since commit 8d45c3a82a0e ("[gdb/testsuite] Set completions to unlimited in get_set_option_choices"), which can be reproduced with: $ make check-read1 TESTS="gdb.base/parse_number.exp" For instance: set architecture A^M Ambiguous item "A".^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: arch=A: set architecture A The problem is the regexp in get_set_option_choices, it is possible that is only matches part of a completion result. With check-read1, that is always one letter. Fix this by expecting the \r\n at the end of the line, so we only match entire results. Use ^ in match patterns to ensure we don't miss any output. Approved-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> Change-Id: Ib1733737feab7dde0f7095866e089081a891054e
2022-11-15[gdb/testsuite] Normalize gdbserver path nameTom de Vries2-5/+4
Currently for the target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost we use the gdbserver file on build, using a file name which includes "/../". Fix this by using a normalized file name instead. This allows us to be more restrictive about which files REMOTE_TARGET_USERNAME can access: ... - remote_exec build "chmod go-rx $objdir/outputs" + remote_exec build "chmod go-rx $objdir" ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-15[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/jit-elf-so.exp for remote targetTom de Vries1-4/+7
With test-case gdb.base/jit-elf-so.exp and target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost (using REMOTE_TARGET_USERNAME) we run into some failures. Fix these by: - setting jit_libname with the name as returned by gdb_load_shlib - allowing the libraries to be prefixed with the remote target directory. Tested on x86_64-linux. Co-Authored-by: Ivan Tetyushkin <ivan.tetyushkin@syntacore.com>
2022-11-15[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/jit-reader-exec.exp for remote targetTom de Vries1-5/+9
With test-case gdb.base/jit-reader-exec.exp and target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost (using REMOTE_TARGET_USERNAME) we run into some failures. Fix this by adding the missing gdb_remote_download. Tested on x86_64-linux. Co-Authored-by: Ivan Tetyushkin <ivan.tetyushkin@syntacore.com>
2022-11-15[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/info-shared.exp for remote targetTom de Vries1-2/+9
With test-case gdb.base/info-shared.exp and target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost (using REMOTE_TARGET_USERNAME) we run into some failures. Fix these by adding the missing gdb_load_shlib. Tested on x86_64-linux. Co-Authored-by: Ivan Tetyushkin <ivan.tetyushkin@syntacore.com>