diff options
author | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2017-03-17 16:08:12 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2017-03-17 16:08:12 +0000 |
commit | 9bcbdca808b5f9fec6217d20bd4b48a56008c460 (patch) | |
tree | d3acc037c9667229df6ad611a5fd45b1ab991ec4 /gdb/ser-unix.c | |
parent | 7503099f3e29739d34cb1224d54fba96404e6e61 (diff) | |
download | gdb-9bcbdca808b5f9fec6217d20bd4b48a56008c460.zip gdb-9bcbdca808b5f9fec6217d20bd4b48a56008c460.tar.gz gdb-9bcbdca808b5f9fec6217d20bd4b48a56008c460.tar.bz2 |
PR remote/21188: Fix remote serial timeout
As Gareth McMullin <gareth@blacksphere.co.nz> reports at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-02/msg00560.html>, the
timeout mechanism in ser-unix.c was broken by commit 048094acc
("target remote: Don't rely on immediate_quit (introduce quit
handlers)").
Instead of applying a local fix, and since we now finally always use
interrupt_select [1], let's get rid of hardwire_readchar entirely, and
use ser_base_readchar instead, which has similar timeout handling,
except for the bug.
Smoke tested with:
$ socat -d -d pty,raw,echo=0 pty,raw,echo=0
2017/03/14 14:08:13 socat[4994] N PTY is /dev/pts/14
2017/03/14 14:08:13 socat[4994] N PTY is /dev/pts/15
2017/03/14 14:08:13 socat[4994] N starting data transfer loop with FDs [3,3] and [5,5]
$ gdbserver /dev/pts/14 PROG
$ gdb PROG -ex "tar rem /dev/pts/15"
and then a few continues/ctrl-c's, plus killing gdbserver and socat.
[1] - See FIXME comments being removed.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-03-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR remote/21188
* ser-base.c (ser_base_wait_for): Add comment.
(do_ser_base_readchar): Improve comment based on the ser-unix.c's
version.
* ser-unix.c (hardwire_raw): Remove reference to
scb->current_timeout.
(wait_for, do_hardwire_readchar, hardwire_readchar): Delete.
(hardwire_ops): Install ser_base_readchar instead of
hardwire_readchar.
* serial.h (struct serial) <current_timeout, timeout_remaining>:
Remove fields.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/ser-unix.c')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/ser-unix.c | 152 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 151 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/ser-unix.c b/gdb/ser-unix.c index b9e55f0..5c93891 100644 --- a/gdb/ser-unix.c +++ b/gdb/ser-unix.c @@ -78,9 +78,6 @@ struct hardwire_ttystate static int hardwire_open (struct serial *scb, const char *name); static void hardwire_raw (struct serial *scb); -static int wait_for (struct serial *scb, int timeout); -static int hardwire_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout); -static int do_hardwire_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout); static int rate_to_code (int rate); static int hardwire_setbaudrate (struct serial *scb, int rate); static int hardwire_setparity (struct serial *scb, int parity); @@ -441,155 +438,11 @@ hardwire_raw (struct serial *scb) state.sgttyb.sg_flags &= ~(CBREAK | ECHO); #endif - scb->current_timeout = 0; - if (set_tty_state (scb, &state)) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "set_tty_state failed: %s\n", safe_strerror (errno)); } -/* Wait for input on scb, with timeout seconds. Returns 0 on success, - otherwise SERIAL_TIMEOUT or SERIAL_ERROR. */ - -/* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-16: Don't replace this with the equivalent - ser_base*() until the old TERMIOS/SGTTY/... timer code has been - flushed. . */ - -/* NOTE: cagney/1999-09-30: Much of the code below is dead. The only - possible values of the TIMEOUT parameter are ONE and ZERO. - Consequently all the code that tries to handle the possability of - an overflowed timer is unnecessary. */ - -static int -wait_for (struct serial *scb, int timeout) -{ - while (1) - { - struct timeval tv; - fd_set readfds; - int numfds; - - /* NOTE: Some OS's can scramble the READFDS when the select() - call fails (ex the kernel with Red Hat 5.2). Initialize all - arguments before each call. */ - - tv.tv_sec = timeout; - tv.tv_usec = 0; - - FD_ZERO (&readfds); - FD_SET (scb->fd, &readfds); - - QUIT; - - if (timeout >= 0) - numfds = interruptible_select (scb->fd + 1, &readfds, 0, 0, &tv); - else - numfds = interruptible_select (scb->fd + 1, &readfds, 0, 0, 0); - - if (numfds == -1 && errno == EINTR) - continue; - else if (numfds == -1) - return SERIAL_ERROR; - else if (numfds == 0) - return SERIAL_TIMEOUT; - - return 0; - } -} - -/* Read a character with user-specified timeout. TIMEOUT is number of - seconds to wait, or -1 to wait forever. Use timeout of 0 to effect - a poll. Returns char if successful. Returns SERIAL_TIMEOUT if - timeout expired, EOF if line dropped dead, or SERIAL_ERROR for any - other error (see errno in that case). */ - -/* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-16: Don't replace this with the equivalent - ser_base*() until the old TERMIOS/SGTTY/... timer code has been - flushed. */ - -/* NOTE: cagney/1999-09-16: This function is not identical to - ser_base_readchar() as part of replacing it with ser_base*() - merging will be required - this code handles the case where read() - times out due to no data while ser_base_readchar() doesn't expect - that. */ - -static int -do_hardwire_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout) -{ - int status, delta; - int detach = 0; - - if (timeout > 0) - timeout++; - - /* We have to be able to keep the GUI alive here, so we break the - original timeout into steps of 1 second, running the "keep the - GUI alive" hook each time through the loop. - - Also, timeout = 0 means to poll, so we just set the delta to 0, - so we will only go through the loop once. */ - - delta = (timeout == 0 ? 0 : 1); - while (1) - { - - /* N.B. The UI may destroy our world (for instance by calling - remote_stop,) in which case we want to get out of here as - quickly as possible. It is not safe to touch scb, since - someone else might have freed it. The - deprecated_ui_loop_hook signals that we should exit by - returning 1. */ - - if (deprecated_ui_loop_hook) - detach = deprecated_ui_loop_hook (0); - - if (detach) - return SERIAL_TIMEOUT; - - scb->timeout_remaining = (timeout < 0 ? timeout : timeout - delta); - status = wait_for (scb, delta); - - if (status < 0) - return status; - - status = read (scb->fd, scb->buf, BUFSIZ); - - if (status <= 0) - { - if (status == 0) - { - /* Zero characters means timeout (it could also be EOF, but - we don't (yet at least) distinguish). */ - if (scb->timeout_remaining > 0) - { - timeout = scb->timeout_remaining; - continue; - } - else if (scb->timeout_remaining < 0) - continue; - else - return SERIAL_TIMEOUT; - } - else if (errno == EINTR) - continue; - else - return SERIAL_ERROR; /* Got an error from read. */ - } - - scb->bufcnt = status; - scb->bufcnt--; - scb->bufp = scb->buf; - return *scb->bufp++; - } -} - -static int -hardwire_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout) -{ - return generic_readchar (scb, timeout, do_hardwire_readchar); -} - - #ifndef B19200 #define B19200 EXTA #endif @@ -882,10 +735,7 @@ static const struct serial_ops hardwire_ops = hardwire_open, hardwire_close, NULL, - /* FIXME: Don't replace this with the equivalent ser_base*() until - the old TERMIOS/SGTTY/... timer code has been flushed. cagney - 1999-09-16. */ - hardwire_readchar, + ser_base_readchar, ser_base_write, hardwire_flush_output, hardwire_flush_input, |