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Clean up some more remains of WITH_DEVICES that escaped notice.
We also clean up GETTWI/SETTWI defines in a few ports where they
were copied & pasted and are unused as they happen to be near the
device code.
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A bunch of places open code the countargv implementation, or outright
duplicate it (as count_argc). Replace all of those w/countargv.
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The --enable-sim-hostendian flag was purely so people had an escape route
for when cross-compiling. This is because historically, AC_C_BIGENDIAN
did not work in those cases. That was fixed a while ago though, so we can
require that macro everywhere now and simplify a good bit of code.
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Rather than re-invent endian defines, as well as maintain our own list
of OS & arch-specific includes, punt all that logic in favor of the bfd
ones already set up and maintained elsewhere. We already rely on the
bfd library, so leveraging the endian aspect should be fine.
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The sim-io module provides output helpers, so no need to define local
ones anymore.
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The iq2000/m32r/sh64 option parsing logic appears to have always been
dead. At least iq2000/sh64 are simply copy & paste rot from m32r.
The lm32 option parsing hack here hasn't been needed for a while -- this
was fixed back in commit 11409fac6b95d71a92848a4499b02d60a4f4c5bb in the
common code.
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The global current_state handle to the current simulator state is a
design idea that was half implemented, but never really cleaned up.
The point was to have a global variable pointing to the state so that
funcs could more quickly & easily access the state anywhere. We've
instead moved in the direction of passing state around everywhere and
don't have any intention of moving back.
I also can't find any references to gdb using this variable, or to
cgen related "dump_regs" functions, both of which were used in the
comments related to this code.
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We don't do this for other ppc targets in this file (we assume the sim
subdir exists), and it has existed for over a decade at this point.
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When connecting to the simulator in gdb, we don't want it to exit on
us when we pass down unknown/invalid/help/etc... options. Plumb down
the kind argument so we can handle both gdb & psim interfaces.
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Note that this does not create bfd/doc/ChangeLog, */testsuite/ChangeLog
and include/*/ChangeLog files.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
Update year range in copyright notice of all files.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
* top.c (print_gdb_version): Change copyright year in version
message.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* gdbreplay.c (gdbreplay_version): Change copyright year in
version message.
* server.c (gdbserver_version): Likewise.
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Per GDB the "Start of New Year Procedure", this patch
- renames the current ChangeLog into ChangeLog-2015;
- starts a new ChangeLog file.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* config/djgpp/fnchange.lst: Add entry for gdb/ChangeLog-2015.
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In this GCC commit:
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2015-12/msg00735.html
GCC started emitting dmb instructions with no operands. The intention
was that dmb with no operands should be an alias for 'dmb 0'.
The following patch extends the arc opcodes library to support dmb with
no operands.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* arc-tbl.h (dmb): Add a no operand version of dmb.
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The previous commit here set the default to little instead of big.
A typo lost when reviewing the different targets in parallel.
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All the state is handled already by the common cpu allocation which
zeros out the entire state.
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We can leverage the cpu->regs array rather than going through the
function helpers to get nice compact code.
Further, fix up the return values: return -1 when we can't find a
register (and let the caller write out warnings), return 2/4 when
we actually write out that amount, and handle the zero reg.
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No point in writing basename ourselves when libiberty provides one.
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to common sim_{fetch,store}_register
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This array isn't used anywhere, and the init phase actually corrupts
some memory because the array has 18 elements but tries to set the
19th (ZERO) position.
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We can also drop the compile.o rule since the common dep generation
logic takes care of this for us.
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This change tracks the "closed" state of file descriptors 0, 1, and 2,
introducing the function fdbad() to emul_netbsd.c and emul_unix.c.
Note that a function of the same name and purpose exists in
sim/common/callback.c.
This patch eliminates all of the "unresolved testcases" when testing
GDB against the powerpc simulator.
This occurs because the powerpc simulator closes, on behalf of the
testcase, the file descriptors associated with stdin, stdout, and
stderr. GDB still needs these descriptors to communicate with the
user or, in this case, with the testing framework.
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Tested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu native-gdbserver, no new regressions.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (crc32_table): Delete.
(crc32): Use libiberty's xcrc32 function.
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2015-12-27 Sandra Loosemore <sandra@codesourcery.com>
bfd/
* elf32-nios2.c (nios2_elf_assign_gp): Correct computation of _gp
address.
(nios2_elf32_relocate_section): Tidy code for R_NIOS2_GPREL error
messages.
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The disasm framework reserves the private_data field for the disassemblers
themselves, not for people who use the disassembler. Instead, there is an
application_data field for callers such as the sim. Switch to it to avoid
random corruption/crashes when the disassemblers use private_data.
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Pretty much all targets are using this module already, so add it to the
common list of objects. The only oddball out here is cris and that's
because it supports loading via an offset for all the phdrs. We drop
support for that.
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No arch is using this anymore, and we want all new ports using the
hardware framework instead. Punt WITH_DEVICES and the two callbacks
device_io_{read,write}_buffer.
We can also punt the tconfig.h file as no port is using it anymore.
This fixes in-tree builds that get confused by picking up the wrong
one (common/ vs <port>/) caused by commit ae7d0cac8ce971f7108d270c.
Any port that needs to set up a global define can use their own
sim-main.h file that they must provide regardless.
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The bfin port is using the WITH_DEVICES framework for two reasons:
- get access to the cpu making the request (if available)
- check the alignment & size for core & system MMRs
We addressed the first part with commit dea10706e9159ba6e94eab4c25010f3,
and we handle the second part with this commit. Arguably this is more
correct too because trying to do bad reads/writes directly (when devices
support is disabled) often results in bad memory accesses.
As part of this clean up, we also adjust all of the existing logic that
would reject invalid accesses: the code was relying on the checks never
returning, but that's not the case when things like gdb (via the user's
commands) are making the requests. Thus we'd still end up with bad mem
accesses, or sometimes gdb being hung due to while(1) loops.
Now we can connect (most of) these models into any address and have them
work correctly.
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We set up an array of 3 elements and then index into it with a 2bit
value. We check the range before we actually use the pointer, but
the indexing is enough to make asan upset, so just stuff a fourth
value in there to keep things simple.
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The bfin port has been using the device callback largely so it could be
passed the cpu when available. Add this logic to the common core code
so all ports get access to the active cpu.
The semantics of these buffer functions are changed slightly in that
errors halt the engine synchronously rather than returning the length
to the caller. We'll probably adjust this in a follow up commit.
The bfin code isn't updated just yet as it has a bit more logic in the
device layer that needs to be unwound at which point we can delete it
entirely.
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The only unique thing about mip's sim_{read,write} helpers is the call to
address_translation on the incoming address. When we look closer at that
function though, we see it's just a stub that maps physical to virtual,
and the cache/return values are hardcoded. If we delete this function,
we can then collapse all the callers and drop the custom sim_{read,write}
logic entirely.
Some day we might want to add MMU support, but when we do, we'll want to
have the common layers handle things so all targets benefit.
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The point of passing down the cpu to core reads/writes is to signal which
cpu is making the access. For system accesses (such as internal memory
initialization), passing the cpu down doesn't make sense, and in the case
of early init like cris, can cause crashes. Since the cpu isn't fully set
up at this point, if the core code tries to access some fields (like the
PC reg), it'll crash. While cris shouldn't be doing this setup here (it
should be in the inferior stage), we'll deal with that later.
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For targets that process argv in sim_create_inferior, improve the code:
- provide more details in the comment
- make the check for when to re-init more robust
- clean out legacy sim_copy_argv code
This will be cleaned up more in the future when we have a common inferior
creation function, but at least help new ports get it right until then.
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2015-12-24 Thomas Preud'homme <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>
ld/testsuite/
* ld-arm/arm-elf.exp: Run new test "Thumb-Thumb farcall v6-M (no
profile)".
* ld-arm/farcall-thumb-thumb-m-no-profile-a.s: New file.
* ld-arm/farcall-thumb-thumb-m-no-profile-b.s: Likewise.
* ld-arm/farcall-thumb-thumb-m-no-profile.d: Likewise.
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