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author | Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com> | 2022-10-31 14:44:17 -0400 |
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committer | Carl Love <cel@us.ibm.com> | 2022-10-31 14:44:17 -0400 |
commit | bc45f5366eaf4e93cfd675a07a8cc5bb5522b184 (patch) | |
tree | c11b5a96ac7acd42a890f3ac877488f9c371d92f /gdb/guile | |
parent | 15a1e4e2a7dac11fdf338c70efc355348d8a6d49 (diff) | |
download | gdb-bc45f5366eaf4e93cfd675a07a8cc5bb5522b184.zip gdb-bc45f5366eaf4e93cfd675a07a8cc5bb5522b184.tar.gz gdb-bc45f5366eaf4e93cfd675a07a8cc5bb5522b184.tar.bz2 |
Remove REPARSE condition to force hardware resource checking when updating watchpoints
Currently the resource checking is done if REPARSE is true. The hardware
watchpoint resource checking in update_watchpoint needs to be redone on
each call to function update_watchpoints as the value chain may have
changed. The number of hardware registers needed for a watchpoint can
change if the variable being watched changes. This situation occurs in
this test when watching variable **global_ptr_ptr. Initially when the
watch command is issued, only two addresses need to be watched as
**global_ptr_ptr has not yet been initialized. Once the value of
**global_ptr_ptr is initialized the locations to be tracked increase to
three addresses. However, update_watchpoints is not called again with
REPARSE set to 1 to force the resource checking to be redone. When the
test is run on Power 10, an internal gdb error occurs when the PowerPC
routine tries to setup the three hardware watchpoint address since the hw
only has two hardware watchpoint registers. The error occurs because the
resource checking was not redone in update_watchpoints after
**global_ptr_ptr changed.
The following descibes the situation in detail that occurs on Power 10 with
gdb running on the binary for gdb.base/watchpoint.c.
1 break func4
2 run
3 watch *global_ptr
4 next execute source code: buf[0] = 3;
5 next execute source code: global_ptr = buf;
6 next execute source code: buf[0] = 7;
7 delete 2 (delete watch *global_ptr)
8 watch **global_ptr_ptr
9 next execute source code: buf[1] = 5;
10 next global_ptr_ptr = &global_ptr;
11 next buf[0] = 9;
In step 8, the the watch **global_ptr_prt command calls update_watchpoint
in breakpoint.c with REPARSE set to 1. The function update_watchpoint
calls can_use_hardware_watchpoint to see if there are enough
resources available to add the watchpoint since REPARSE is set to 1. At
this point, **global_ptr_ptr has not been initialized so only two addresses
are watched. The val_chain contains the address for **global_ptr_ptr and 0
since **global_ptr_ptr has not been initialized. The update_watchpoint
updates the breakpoint list as follows:
breakpoint 0
loc 0: b->address = 0x100009c0
breakpoint 1
loc 1: b->address = 0x7ffff7f838a0
breakpoint 2
loc 2: b->address = 0x7ffff7b7fc54
breakpoint 3
loc 3: b->address = 0x7ffff7a5788c
breakpoint 4
loc 4: b->address = 0x0 <-- location pointed to by global_ptr_ptr
loc 5: b->address = 0x100200b8 <-- global_ptr_ptr watchpoint
breakpoint 5
loc 6: b->address = 0x7ffff7b7fc54
In step 10, the next command executes the source code
global_ptr_ptr = &global_ptr. This changes the set of locations to be
watched for the watchpoint **global_ptr_prt. The list of addresses for the
breakpoint consist of the address for global_ptr_prt, global_ptr and buf.
The breakpoint list gets updated by update_watchpoint as follows:
breakpoint 0
loc 0: b->address = 0x100009c0
breakpoint 1
loc 1: b->address = 0x7ffff7f838a0
breakpoint 2
loc 2: b->address = 0x7ffff7b7fc54
breakpoint 3
loc 3: b->address = 0x7ffff7a5788c
breakpoint 4
loc 4: b->address = 0x10020050 buf
loc 5: b->address = 0x100200b0 watch *global_ptr
loc 6: b->address = 0x100200b8 watch **global_ptr_ptr
breakpoint 5
loc 7: b->address = 0x7ffff7b7fc54
breakpoint 6
However, the hardware resource checking was not redone because
update_breakpoint was called with REPARSE equal to 0.
Step 11, execute the third next command. The function
ppc_linux_nat_target::low_prepare_to_resume() attempts a ptrace
call to setup each of the three address for breakpoint 4. The slot
value returned for the third ptrace call is -1 indicating an error
because there are only two hardware watchpoint registers available on
Power 10.
This patch removes just the statement "if (reparse)" in function
update_watchpoint to force the resources to be rechecked on every call to
the function. This ensures that any changes to the val_chain resulting
in needing more resources then available will be caught.
The patch has been tested on Power 8, Power 10 and X86-64. Note the patch
has no effect on Power 9 since hardware watchpoint support is disabled on
that processor.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/guile')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions