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2022-05-26gdb: Require psymtab before calling quick_functions in objfileLancelot SIX5-15/+148
The recent DWARF indexer rewrite introduced a regression when debugging a forking program. Here is a way to reproduce the issue (there might be other ways, but one is enough and this one mimics the situation we encountered). Consider a program which forks, and the child loads a shared library and calls a function in this shared library: if (fork () == 0) { void *solib = dlopen (some_solib, RTLD_NOW); void (*foo) () = dlsym (some_solib, "foo"); foo (); } Suppose that this program is compiled without debug info, but the shared library it loads has debug info enabled. When debugging such program with the following options: - set detach-on-fork off - set follow-fork-mode child we see something like: (gdb) b foo Function "foo" not defined. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) y Breakpoint 1 (foo) pending. (gdb) run Starting program: a.out [Attaching after process 19720 fork to child process 19723] [New inferior 2 (process 19723)] [Switching to process 19723] Thread 2.1 "a.out" hit Breakpoint 1, 0x00007ffff7fc3101 in foo () from .../libfoo.so (gdb) list Fatal signal: Segmentation fault ----- Backtrace ----- 0x55a278f77d76 gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../gdb/bt-utils.c:122 0x55a278f77f83 _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../gdb/bt-utils.c:168 0x55a27940b83b handle_fatal_signal ../../gdb/event-top.c:914 0x55a27940bbb1 handle_sigsegv ../../gdb/event-top.c:987 0x7effec0343bf ??? /build/glibc-sMfBJT/glibc-2.31/nptl/../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/sigaction.c:0 0x55a27924c9d3 _ZNKSt15__uniq_ptr_implI18dwarf2_per_cu_data26dwarf2_per_cu_data_deleterE6_M_ptrEv /usr/include/c++/9/bits/unique_ptr.h:154 0x55a279248bc9 _ZNKSt10unique_ptrI18dwarf2_per_cu_data26dwarf2_per_cu_data_deleterE3getEv /usr/include/c++/9/bits/unique_ptr.h:361 0x55a2792ae718 _ZN27dwarf2_base_index_functions23find_last_source_symtabEP7objfile ../../gdb/dwarf2/read.c:3164 0x55a279afb93e _ZN7objfile23find_last_source_symtabEv ../../gdb/symfile-debug.c:139 0x55a279aa3040 _Z20select_source_symtabP6symtab ../../gdb/source.c:365 0x55a279aa22a1 _Z34set_default_source_symtab_and_linev ../../gdb/source.c:268 0x55a27903c44c list_command ../../gdb/cli/cli-cmds.c:1185 0x55a279051233 do_simple_func ../../gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:95 0x55a27905f221 _Z8cmd_funcP16cmd_list_elementPKci ../../gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:2514 0x55a279c3b0ba _Z15execute_commandPKci ../../gdb/top.c:660 0x55a27940a6c3 _Z15command_handlerPKc ../../gdb/event-top.c:598 0x55a27940b032 _Z20command_line_handlerOSt10unique_ptrIcN3gdb13xfree_deleterIcEEE ../../gdb/event-top.c:797 0x55a279caf401 tui_command_line_handler ../../gdb/tui/tui-interp.c:278 0x55a279409098 gdb_rl_callback_handler ../../gdb/event-top.c:230 0x55a279ed5df2 rl_callback_read_char ../../../readline/readline/callback.c:281 0x55a279408bd8 gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper_noexcept ../../gdb/event-top.c:188 0x55a279408de7 gdb_rl_callback_read_char_wrapper ../../gdb/event-top.c:205 0x55a27940a061 _Z19stdin_event_handleriPv ../../gdb/event-top.c:525 0x55a27a23771e handle_file_event ../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:574 0x55a27a237f5f gdb_wait_for_event ../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:700 0x55a27a235d81 _Z16gdb_do_one_eventv ../../gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:237 0x55a2796c2ef0 start_event_loop ../../gdb/main.c:418 0x55a2796c3217 captured_command_loop ../../gdb/main.c:478 0x55a2796c717b captured_main ../../gdb/main.c:1340 0x55a2796c7217 _Z8gdb_mainP18captured_main_args ../../gdb/main.c:1355 0x55a278d0b381 main ../../gdb/gdb.c:32 --------------------- A fatal error internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging is not possible. GDB will now terminate. This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. The first issue observed is in the message printed when hitting the breakpoint. It says that there was a break in the .so file as if there was no debug info associated with it, but there is. Later, if we try to display the source where the execution stopped, we have a segfault. Note that not having the debug info on the main binary is not strictly required to encounter some issues, it only is to encounter the segfault. If the main binary has debug information, GDB shows some source form the main binary, unrelated to where we stopped. The core of the issue is that GDB never loads the psymtab for the library. It is not loaded when we first see the .so because in case of detach-on-fork off, follow-fork-mode child, infrun.c sets child_inf->symfile_flags = SYMFILE_NO_READ to delay the psymtab loading as much as possible. If we compare to what was done to handle this before the new indexer was activated, the psymatb construction for the shared library was done under psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching: bool psymbol_functions::expand_symtabs_matching (...) { for (partial_symtab *ps : require_partial_symbols (objfile)) ... } The new indexer's expand_symtabs_matching callback does not have a call to the objfile's require_partial_symbols, so if the partial symbol table is not loaded at this point, there is no mechanism to fix this. Instead of requiring each implementation of the quick_functions to check that partial symbols have been read, I think it is safer to enforce this when calling the quick functions. The general pattern for calling the quick functions is: for (auto *iter : qf) iter->the_actual_method_call (...) This patch proposes to wrap the access of the `qf` field with an accessor which ensures that partial symbols have been read before iterating: qf_require_partial_symbols. All calls to quick functions are updated except: - quick_functions::dump - quick_functions::read_partial_symbols (from objfile::require_partial_symbols) - quick_functions::can_lazily_read_symbols and quick_functions::has_symbols (from objfile::has_partial_symbols) Regression tested on x86_64-gnu-linux. Change-Id: I39a13a937fdbaae613a5cf68864b021000554546
2022-05-26Fix crash in new DWARF indexerTom Tromey2-39/+95
PR gdb/29128 points out a crash in the new DWARF index code. This happens if the aranges for a CU claims a PC, but the symtab that is created during CU expansion does not actually contain the PC. This can only occur due to bad debuginfo, but at the same time, gdb should not crash. This patch fixes the bug and further merges some code into dwarf2_base_index_functions. This merger helps prevent the same issue from arising from the other index implementations. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29128
2022-05-26Finalize each cooked index separatelyTom Tromey3-163/+313
After DWARF has been scanned, the cooked index code does a "finalization" step in a worker thread. This step combines all the index entries into a single master list, canonicalizes C++ names, and splits Ada names to synthesize package names. While this step is run in the background, gdb will wait for the results in some situations, and it turns out that this step can be slow. This is PR symtab/29105. This can be sped up by parallelizing, at a small memory cost. Now each index is finalized on its own, in a worker thread. The cost comes from name canonicalization: if a given non-canonical name is referred to by multiple indices, there will be N canonical copies (one per index) rather than just one. This requires changing the users of the index to iterate over multiple results. However, this is easily done by introducing a new "chained range" class. When run on gdb itself, the memory cost seems rather low -- on my current machine, "maint space 1" reports no change due to the patch. For performance testing, using "maint time 1" and "file" will not show correct results. That approach measures "time to next prompt", but because the patch only affects background work, this shouldn't (and doesn't) change. Instead, a simple way to make gdb wait for the results is to set a breakpoint. Before: $ /bin/time -f%e ~/gdb/install/bin/gdb -nx -q -batch \ -ex 'break main' /tmp/gdb Breakpoint 1 at 0x43ec30: file ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c, line 28. 2.00 After: $ /bin/time -f%e ./gdb/gdb -nx -q -batch \ -ex 'break main' /tmp/gdb Breakpoint 1 at 0x43ec30: file ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c, line 28. 0.65 Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29105
2022-05-26bit-rot in target before_parse functionAlan Modra4-2/+12
Copy initialisation over from the elf.em before_parse. Commit ba951afb999 2022-05-03 changed behaviour on arm and score regarding exec stack. This patch restores the previous behaviour. * emultempl/aarch64elf.em (before_parse): Init separate_code, warn_execstack, no_warn_rwx_segments and default_execstack. * emultempl/armelf.em (before_parse): Likewise. * emultempl/scoreelf.em (before_parse): Likewise. * testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp (target_defaults_to_execstack): Return true for arm and nacl.
2022-05-26 arm: avoid use of GNU builtin function in s_arm_unwind_save_mixedRichard Earnshaw1-40/+17
Whilst reviewing Luis' proposed change to s_arm_unwind_save_mixed yesterday I noticed that we were making use of __builting_clzl directly within the main function, which is not guaranteed to be portable. Whilst studying the code further, I also realized that it could be rewritten without using it and also reworked to remove a lot of unnecessary iterations steps. So this patch does that (and also removes the source of the warning that Luis was trying to fix). Finally, with the rewrite we can also simplify the caller of this routine as the new version can handle all the cases directly. * config/tc-arm.c (s_arm_unwind_save_mixed): Rewrite without using __builtin_clzl. (s_arm_unwind_save): Simplify logic for simple/mixed register saves.
2022-05-26gdb/linux-nat: xfer_memory_partial return E_IO on errorLancelot SIX1-1/+1
When accessing /proc/PID/mem, if pread64/pwrite64/read/write encounters an error and return -1, linux_proc_xfer_memory_partial return TARGET_XFER_EOF. I think it should return TARGET_XFER_E_IO in this case. TARGET_XFER_EOF is returned when pread64/pwrite64/read/frite returns 0, which indicates that the address space is gone and the whole process has exited or execed. This patch makes this change. Regression tested on x86_64-linux-gnu. Change-Id: I6030412459663b8d7933483fdda22a6c2c5d7221
2022-05-26gdb/testsuite: prefer gdb_test in gdb.dwarf2/calling-conventionLancelot SIX1-6/+8
Since ed01945057c "Make gdb_test's question non-optional if specified", if the question and response parameters are given to gdb_test, the framework enforces that GDB asks the question. Before this patch, tests needed to use gdb_test_multiple to enforce this. This patch updates the gdb.dwarf2/calling-convention.exp testcase to use gdb_test to check that GDB asks a question. This replaces the more complicated gdb_test_multiple based implementation. Tested on x86_64-gnu-linux. Change-Id: I7216e822ca68f2727e0450970097d74c27c432fe
2022-05-26bfd: Add Support for DW_FORM_strx* and DW_FORM_addrx*Potharla, Rupesh1-14/+268
2022-05-26ld: add --package-metadataLuca Boccassi17-12/+545
Generate a .note.package FDO package metadata ELF note, following the spec: https://systemd.io/ELF_PACKAGE_METADATA/ If the jansson library is available at build time (and it is explicitly enabled), link ld to it, and use it to validate that the input is correct JSON, to avoid writing garbage to the file. The configure option --enable-jansson has to be used to explicitly enable it (error out when not found). This allows bootstrappers (or others who are not interested) to seamlessly skip it without issues.
2022-05-26Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-26Re: Add bionutils support for DWARF v5's DW_OP_addrxNatarajan, Kavitha2-0/+169
Testsuite files belonging to commit 3ac9da49378c.
2022-05-25Show enabled locations with disabled breakpoint parent as "y-"Pedro Alves4-20/+68
Currently, breakpoint locations that are enabled while their parent breakpoint is disabled are displayed with "y" in the Enb colum of "info breakpoints": (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep n <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x00000000000011b6 in ... 1.2 y 0x00000000000011c2 in ... 1.3 n 0x00000000000011ce in ... Such locations won't trigger a break, so to avoid confusion, show "y-" instead. For example: (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep n <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y- 0x00000000000011b6 in ... 1.2 y- 0x00000000000011c2 in ... 1.3 n 0x00000000000011ce in ... The "-" sign is inspired on how the TUI represents breakpoints on the left side of the source window, with "b-" for a disabled breakpoint. Change-Id: I9952313743c51bf21b4b380c72360ef7d4396a09
2022-05-25Add bionutils support for DWARF v5's DW_OP_addrx.Natarajan, Kavitha3-6/+76
2022-05-25gdb: Fix DUPLICATE and PATH regressions throughoutPedro Alves38-934/+969
The previous patch to add -prompt/-lbl to gdb_test introduced a regression: Before, you could specify an explicit empty message to indicate you didn't want to PASS, like so: gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN "" After said patch, gdb_test no longer distinguishes no-message-specified vs empty-message, so tests that previously would be silent on PASS, now started emitting PASS messages based on COMMAND. This in turn introduced a number of PATH/DUPLICATE violations in the testsuite. This commit fixes all the regressions I could see. This patch uses the new -nopass feature introduced in the previous commit, but tries to avoid it if possible. Most of the patch fixes DUPLICATE issues the usual way, of using with_test_prefix or explicit unique messages. See previous commit's log for more info. In addition to looking for DUPLICATEs, I also looked for cases where we would now end up with an empty message in gdb.sum, due to a gdb_test being passed both no message and empty command. E.g., this in gdb.ada/bp_reset.exp: gdb_run_cmd gdb_test "" "Breakpoint $decimal, foo\\.nested_sub \\(\\).*" was resulting in this in gdb.sum: PASS: gdb.ada/bp_reset.exp: I fixed such cases by passing an explicit message. We may want to make such cases error out. Tested on x86_64 GNU/Linux, native and native-extended-gdbserver. I see zero PATH cases now. I get zero DUPLICATEs with native testing now. I still see some DUPLICATEs with native-extended-gdbserver, but those were preexisting, unrelated to the gdb_test change. Change-Id: I5375f23f073493e0672190a0ec2e847938a580b2
2022-05-25Add -nopass option to gdb_test/gdb_test_multiplePedro Alves1-28/+32
The previous patch to add -prompt/-lbl to gdb_test introduced a regression: Before, you could specify an explicit empty message to indicate you didn't want to PASS, like so: gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN "" After said patch, gdb_test no longer distinguishes no-message-specified vs empty-message, so tests that previously would be silent on PASS, now started emitting PASS messages based on COMMAND. This in turn introduced a number of PATH/DUPLICATE violations in the testsuite. I think that not issuing a PASS should be restricted to only a few cases -- namely in shared routines exported by gdb.exp, which happen to use gdb_test internally. In tests that iterate an unknown number of tests exercising some racy scenario. In the latter case, if we emit PASSes for each iteration, we run into the situation where different testsuite runs emit a different number of PASSes. Thus, this patch preserves the current behavior, and, instead, adds a new "-nopass" option to gdb_test and gdb_test_no_output. Compared to the old way of supressing PASS with an empty message, this has the advantage that you can specify a FAIL message that is distinct from the command string, and, it's also more explicit. Change-Id: I5375f23f073493e0672190a0ec2e847938a580b2
2022-05-25RISC-V: Fix RV32Q conflictTsukasa OI8-5/+22
This commit makes RV32 + 'Q' extension (version 2.2 or later) not conflicting since this combination is no longer prohibited by the specification. bfd/ChangeLog: * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Remove conflict detection that prohibits RV32Q on 'Q' version 2.2 or later. gas/ChangeLog: * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq.d: Removed. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2p0.d: New test showing RV32IQ fails on 'Q' extension version 2.0. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2p0.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-rv32iq-isa-2p2.d: New test showing RV32IQ fails on ISA specification version 2.2. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-ok-rv32iq2p2.d: New test showing RV32IQ succesds on 'Q' extension version 2.2. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-ok-rv32iq-isa-20190608.d: New test showing RV32IQ succesds on ISA specification 20190608.
2022-05-25opcodes: introduce BC field; fix iselDmitry Selyutin5-6/+9
Per Power ISA Version 3.1B 3.3.12, isel uses BC field rather than CRB field present in binutils sources. Also, per 1.6.2, BC has the same semantics as BA and BB fields, so this should keep the same flags and mask, only with the different offset. opcodes/ * ppc-opc.c (BC): Define new field, with the same definition as CRB field, but with the PPC_OPERAND_CR_BIT flag present. gas/ * testsuite/gas/ppc/476.d: Update. * testsuite/gas/ppc/a2.d: Update. * testsuite/gas/ppc/e500.d: Update. * testsuite/gas/ppc/power7.d: Update.
2022-05-25ppc: extend opindex to 16 bitsDmitry Selyutin4-20/+30
With the upcoming SVP64 extension[0] to PowerPC architecture, it became evident that PowerPC operand indices no longer fit 8 bits. This patch switches the underlying type to uint16_t, also introducing a special typedef so that any future extension goes even smoother. [0] https://libre-soc.org include/ * opcode/ppc.h (ppc_opindex_t): New typedef. (struct powerpc_opcode): Use it. (PPC_OPINDEX_MAX): Define. gas/ * write.h (struct fix): Increase size of fx_pcrel_adjust. Reorganise. * config/tc-ppc.c (insn_validate): Use ppc_opindex_t for operands. (md_assemble): Likewise. (md_apply_fix): Likewise. Mask fx_pcrel_adjust with PPC_OPINDEX_MAX. (ppc_setup_opcodes): Adjust opcode index assertion. opcodes/ * ppc-dis.c (skip_optional_operands): Use ppc_opindex_t for operand pointer. (lookup_powerpc, lookup_prefix, lookup_vle, lookup_spe2): Likewise. (print_insn_powerpc): Likewise.
2022-05-25Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-24[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with clangTom de Vries4-17/+50
When running test-case gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with clang 12.0.1, I get: ... (gdb) run ^M Starting program: clobbered-registers-O2 ^M ^M Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.^M gen_movsd (operand0=<optimized out>, operand1=<optimized out>) at \ clobbered-registers-O2.c:31^M 31 return *start_sequence(operand0, operand1);^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: runto: run to start_sequence ... The problem is that the breakpoint in start_sequence doesn't trigger, because: - the call to start_sequence in gen_movsd is optimized away, despite the __attribute__((noinline)), so the actual function start_sequence doesn't get called, and - the debug info doesn't contain inlined function info, so there's only one breakpoint location. Adding noclone and noipa alongside the noinline attribute doesn't fix this. Adding the clang-specific attribute optnone in start_sequence does, but since it inhibits all optimization, that's not a preferred solution in a gdb.opt test-case, and it would work only for clang and not other compilers that possibly have the same issue. Fix this by moving functions start_sequence and gen_movsd into their own files, as a way of trying harder to enforce noinline/noipa/noclone. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-24[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with gcc-12Tom de Vries1-1/+1
When running test-case gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp with gcc-12, I run into: ... (gdb) PASS: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: backtracing print operand0^M $1 = (unsigned int *) 0x7fffffffd070^M (gdb) print *operand0^M $2 = 4195541^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.opt/clobbered-registers-O2.exp: print operand0 ... The problem is that starting gcc-12, the assignments to x and y in main are optimized away: ... int main(void) { unsigned x, y; x = 13; y = 14; return (int)gen_movsd (&x, &y); ... Fix this by making x and y volatile. Note that the test-case intends to check the handling of debug info for optimized code in function gen_movsd, so inhibiting optimization in main doesn't interfere with that. Tested on x86_64-linux. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29161
2022-05-24gdb: LoongArch: Define LOONGARCH_LINUX_NUM_GREGSET as 45Tiezhu Yang1-2/+2
LOONGARCH_LINUX_NUM_GREGSET should be defined as 45 (32 + 1 + 1 + 11) due to reserved 11 for extension in glibc, otherwise when execute: make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/corefile.exp" there exists the following failed testcase: (gdb) core-file /home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile.core [New LWP 7742] warning: Unexpected size of section `.reg/7742' in core file. Core was generated by `/home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/corefile/corefile'. Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted. warning: Unexpected size of section `.reg/7742' in core file. #0 0x000000fff76f4e24 in raise () from /lib/loongarch64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/corefile.exp: core-file warning-free Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
2022-05-24AArch64: add support for DFP (Decimal Floating point)Christophe Lyon1-0/+2
This small patch adds support for TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT in aapcs_is_vfp_call_or_return_candidate_1 and pass_in_v_vfp_candidate, so that GDB for AArch64 knows how to pass DFP parameters and how to read DFP results when calling a function. Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu, with a GCC with DFP support in the PATH, all of GDB's DFP tests pass.
2022-05-24Merge config/ changes from GCC, to enable DFP on AArch64Christophe Lyon2-2/+22
2022-04-28 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@arm.com> config/ * dfp.m4 (enable_decimal_float): Enable BID for AArch64. libdecnumber/ * configure: Regenerate.
2022-05-24PR29171, invalid read causing SIGSEGVAlan Modra1-4/+5
The fix here is to pass "section" down to read_and_display_attr_value. The test in read_and_display_attr_value is a little bit of hardening. PR 29171 * dwarf.c (display_debug_macro, display_debug_names): Pass section to read_and_display_attr_value2. (read_and_display_attr_value): Don't attempt to check for .dwo section name when section is NULL.
2022-05-24PR29170, divide by zero displaying fuzzed .debug_namesAlan Modra1-21/+24
PR 29170 * dwarf.c (display_debug_names): Don't attempt to display bucket clashes when bucket count is zero.
2022-05-24PR29169, invalid read displaying fuzzed .gdb_indexAlan Modra1-58/+22
PR 29169 * dwarf.c (display_gdb_index): Combine sanity checks. Calculate element counts, not word counts.
2022-05-24Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-23Tweak the std::hash<> specialization for aarch64_features.John Baldwin1-12/+15
Move the specialization into an explicit std namespace to workaround a bug in older compilers. GCC 6.4.1 at least fails to compile the previous version with the following error: gdb/arch/aarch64.h:48:13: error: specialization of 'template<class _Tp> struct std::hash' in different namespace [-fpermissive] struct std::hash<aarch64_features>
2022-05-23Fix loongarch_iterate_over_regset_sections for non-native targets.John Baldwin1-2/+12
Define a constant for the number of registers stored in a register set and use this with register_size to compute the size of the general-purpose register set in core dumps. This also fixes the build on hosts such as FreeBSD that do not define an elf_gregset_t type.
2022-05-23gdb: LoongArch: Implement the iterate_over_regset_sections gdbarch methodTiezhu Yang1-0/+16
When execute the following command on LoongArch: make check-gdb TESTS="gdb.base/auxv.exp" there exist the following unsupported and failed testcases: UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: gcore FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: load core file for info auxv on native core dump FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: info auxv on native core dump FAIL: gdb.base/auxv.exp: matching auxv data from live and core UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: info auxv on gcore-created dump UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: matching auxv data from live and gcore we can see the following messages in gdb/testsuite/gdb.log: gcore /home/loongson/build.git/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/auxv/auxv.gcore Target does not support core file generation. (gdb) UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/auxv.exp: gcore In order to fix the above issues, implement the iterate_over_regset_sections gdbarch method to iterate over core file register note sections on LoongArch. By the way, with this patch, the failed testcases in gdb.base/corefile.exp and gdb.base/gcore.exp can also be fixed. Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
2022-05-23[gdb/testsuite] Fix -prompt handling in gdb_testTom de Vries1-1/+1
With check-read1 I run into: ... [infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target native, no resumed threads^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/ui-redirect.exp: debugging: continue [infrun] fetch_inferior_event: exit^M ... The problem is that proc gdb_test doesn't pass down the -prompt option to proc gdb_test_multiple, due to a typo making this lappend without effect: ... set opts {} lappend "-prompt $prompt" ... Fix this by actually appending to opts. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23[gdbsupport] Fix UB in print-utils.cc:int_stringTom de Vries1-1/+5
When building gdb with -fsanitize=undefined, I run into: ... (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/access_to_packed_array.exp: set logging enabled on maint print symbols^M print-utils.cc:281:29:runtime error: negation of -9223372036854775808 cannot \ be represented in type 'long int'; cast to an unsigned type to negate this \ value to itself (gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/access_to_packed_array.exp: maint print symbols ... By running in a debug session, we find that this happens during printing of: ... typedef system.storage_elements.storage_offset: \ range -9223372036854775808 .. 9223372036854775807; ... Possibly, an ada test-case could be created that exercises this in isolation. The problem is here in int_string, where we negate a val with type LONGEST: ... return decimal2str ("-", -val, width); ... Fix this by, as recommend, using "-(ULONGEST)val" instead. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23[gdb/exp] Fix UB in scalar_binopTom de Vries2-1/+6
When building gdb with -fsanitize=undefined, I run into: ... $ gdb -q -batch -ex "p -(-0x7fffffffffffffff - 1)" src/gdb/valarith.c:1385:10: runtime error: signed integer overflow: \ 0 - -9223372036854775808 cannot be represented in type 'long int' $1 = -9223372036854775808 ... Fix this by performing the substraction in scalar_binop using unsigned types. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-05-23[gdb/ada] Fix gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp with gcc 7Tom de Vries1-1/+2
This test in test-case gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp passes with gcc 8: ... (gdb) print obj^M $1 = (n => 3, a => "ABC", value => 93)^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp: print local as interface ... but fails with gcc 7: ... (gdb) print obj^M $1 = ()^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/dynamic-iface.exp: print local as interface ... More concretely, we have trouble finding the type of obj. With gcc 8: ... $ gdb -q -batch main -ex "b concrete.adb:20" -ex run -ex "ptype obj" ... type = <ref> new concrete.intermediate with record value: integer; end record ... and with gcc 7: ... type = <ref> tagged record null; end record ... The translation from tagged type to "full view" type happens in ada_tag_value_at_base_address, where we hit this code: ... /* Storage_Offset'Last is used to indicate that a dynamic offset to top is used. In this situation the offset is stored just after the tag, in the object itself. */ if (offset_to_top == last) { struct value *tem = value_addr (tag); tem = value_ptradd (tem, 1); tem = value_cast (ptr_type, tem); offset_to_top = value_as_long (value_ind (tem)); } ... resulting in an offset_to_top for gcc 8: ... (gdb) p offset_to_top $1 = -16 ... and for gcc 7: ... (gdb) p offset_to_top $1 = 16 ... The difference is expected, it bisects to gcc commit d0567dc0dbf ("[multiple changes]") which mentions this change. There's some code right after the code quoted above that deals with this change: ... else if (offset_to_top > 0) { /* OFFSET_TO_TOP used to be a positive value to be subtracted from the base address. This was however incompatible with C++ dispatch table: C++ uses a *negative* value to *add* to the base address. Ada's convention has therefore been changed in GNAT 19.0w 20171023: since then, C++ and Ada use the same convention. Here, we support both cases by checking the sign of OFFSET_TO_TOP. */ offset_to_top = -offset_to_top; } ... but it's not activated because of the 'else'. Fix this by removing the 'else'. Tested on x86_64-linux, with gcc 7.5.0. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29057
2022-05-23ld: use definitions in generate_reloc rather than raw literalsMark Harmstone2-7/+24
2022-05-23[gdb/testsuite] Skip language auto in gdb.base/parse_number.expTom de Vries1-0/+5
In test-case gdb.base/parse_number.exp, we skip architecture auto in the $supported_archs loop, to prevent duplicate testing. Likewise, skip language auto and its alias local in the $::all_languages loop. This reduces the number of tests from 17744 to 15572. Tested on x86_64-linux, with a build with --enable-targets=all.
2022-05-23Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-22Accept functions with DW_AT_linkage_name presentAlok Kumar Sharma3-1/+115
Currently GDB is not able to debug (Binary generated with Clang) variables present in shared/private clause of OpenMP Task construct. Please note that LLVM debugger LLDB is able to debug. In case of OpenMP, compilers generate artificial functions which are not present in actual program. This is done to apply parallelism to block of code. For non-artifical functions, DW_AT_name attribute should contains the name exactly as present in actual program. (Ref# http://wiki.dwarfstd.org/index.php?title=Best_Practices) Since artificial functions are not present in actual program they not having DW_AT_name and having DW_AT_linkage_name instead should be fine. Currently GDB is invalidating any function not havnig DW_AT_name which is why it is not able to debug OpenMP (Clang). It should be fair to fallback to check DW_AT_linkage_name in case DW_AT_name is absent.
2022-05-22Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-21Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-05-20Rename base_breakpoint -> code_breakpointPedro Alves9-57/+57
Even after the previous patches reworking the inheritance of several breakpoint types, the present breakpoint hierarchy looks a bit surprising, as we have "breakpoint" as the superclass, and then "base_breakpoint" inherits from "breakpoint". Like so, simplified: breakpoint base_breakpoint ordinary_breakpoint internal_breakpoint momentary_breakpoint ada_catchpoint exception_catchpoint tracepoint watchpoint catchpoint exec_catchpoint ... The surprising part to me is having "base_breakpoint" being a subclass of "breakpoint". I'm just refering to naming here -- I mean, you'd expect that it would be the top level baseclass that would be called "base". Just flipping the names of breakpoint and base_breakpoint around wouldn't be super great for us, IMO, given we think of every type of *point as a breakpoint at the user visible level. E.g., "info breakpoints" shows watchpoints, tracepoints, etc. So it makes to call the top level class breakpoint. Instead, I propose renaming base_breakpoint to code_breakpoint. The previous patches made sure that all code breakpoints inherit from base_breakpoint, so it's fitting. Also, "code breakpoint" contrasts nicely with a watchpoint also being typically known as a "data breakpoint". After this commit, the resulting hierarchy looks like: breakpoint code_breakpoint ordinary_breakpoint internal_breakpoint momentary_breakpoint ada_catchpoint exception_catchpoint tracepoint watchpoint catchpoint exec_catchpoint ... ... which makes a lot more sense to me. I've left this patch as last in the series in case people want to bikeshed on the naming. "code" has a nice property that it's exactly as many letters as "base", so this patch didn't require any reindentation. :-) Change-Id: Id8dc06683a69fad80d88e674f65e826d6a4e3f66
2022-05-20Test "set multiple-symbols on" creating multiple breakpointsPedro Alves1-25/+75
To look for code paths that lead to create_breakpoints_sal creating multiple breakpoints, I ran the whole testsuite with this hack: --- a/gdb/breakpoint.c +++ b/gdb/breakpoint.c @@ -8377,8 +8377,7 @@ create_breakpoints_sal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int from_tty, int enabled, int internal, unsigned flags) { - if (canonical->pre_expanded) - gdb_assert (canonical->lsals.size () == 1); + gdb_assert (canonical->lsals.size () == 1); surprisingly, the assert never failed... The way to get to create_breakpoints_sal with multiple lsals is to use "set multiple-symbols ask" and then select multiple options from the menu, like so: (gdb) set multiple-symbols ask (gdb) b overload1arg [0] cancel [1] all [2] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg() [3] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(char) [4] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(double) [5] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(float) [6] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(int) [7] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(long) [8] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(short) [9] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(signed char) [10] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned char) [11] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned int) [12] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned long) [13] /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc:foo::overload1arg(unsigned short) > 2-3 Breakpoint 2 at 0x1532: file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc, line 107. Breakpoint 3 at 0x154b: file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/ovldbreak.cc, line 110. warning: Multiple breakpoints were set. Use the "delete" command to delete unwanted breakpoints. ... which would trigger the assert. This commit makes gdb.cp/ovldbreak.exp test this scenario. It does that by making set_bp_overloaded take a list of expected created breakpoints rather than just one breakpoint. It converts the procedure to use gdb_test_multiple instead of send_gdb/gdb_expect along the way. Change-Id: Id87d1e08feb6670440d926f5344e5081f5e37c8e
2022-05-20Make sure momentary breakpoints are always thread-specificPedro Alves1-37/+46
This adds a new ctor to momentary_breakpoints with a few parameters that are always necessary for momentary breakpoints. In particular, I noticed that set_std_terminate_breakpoint doesn't make the breakpoint be thread specific, which looks like a bug to me. The point of that breakpoint is to intercept std::terminate calls that happen as result of the called thread throwing an exception that won't be caught by the dummy frame. If some other thread calls std::terminate, IMO, it's no different from some other thread calling exit/_exit, for example. Change-Id: Ifc5ff4a6d6e58b8c4854d00b86725382d38a1a02
2022-05-20Momentary breakpoints should have no breakpoint numberPedro Alves1-1/+0
Momentary breakpoints have no breakpoint number, their breakpoint number should be always 0, to avoid constantly incrementing (or decrementing) the internal breakpoint count. Indeed, set_momentary_breakpoint installs the created breakpoint without a number. However, momentary_breakpoint_from_master incorrectly gives an internal breakpoint number to the new breakpoint. This commit fixes that. Change-Id: Iedcae5432cdf232db9e9a6e1a646d358abd34f95
2022-05-20Add/tweak intro comments of struct breakpoint and several subclassesPedro Alves2-8/+17
This tweaks the intro comments of the following classes: internal_breakpoint momentary_breakpoint breakpoint base_breakpoint watchpoint catchpoint Change-Id: If6b31f51ebbb81705fbe5b8435f60ab2c88a98c8
2022-05-20Move add_location(sal) to base_breakpointPedro Alves5-37/+31
After the previous patches, only base_breakpoint subclasses use add_location(sal), so we can move it to base_breakpoint (a.k.a. base class for code breakpoints). This requires a few casts here and there, but always at spots where you can see from context what the breakpoint's type actually is. I inlined new_single_step_breakpoint into its only caller exactly for this reason. I did try to propagate more use of base_breakpoint to avoid casts, but that turned out unwieldy for this patch. Change-Id: I49d959322b0fdce5a88a216bb44730fc5dd7c6f8
2022-05-20Move common bits of catchpoint/exception_catchpoint to breakpoint's ctorPedro Alves3-19/+21
Move common bits of catchpoint and exception_catchpoint to breakpoint's ctor, to avoid duplicating code. Change-Id: I3a115180f4d496426522f1d89a3875026aea3cf2
2022-05-20Make catchpoint inherit breakpoint, eliminate init_raw_breakpointPedro Alves3-37/+7
struct catchpoint's ctor currently calls init_raw_breakpoint, which is a bit weird, as that ctor-like function takes a sal argument, but catchpoints don't have code locations. Instead, make struct catchpoint's ctor add the catchpoint's dummy location using add_dummy_location. init_raw_breakpoint uses add_location under the hood, and with a dummy sal it would ultimately use the breakpoint's gdbarch for the location's gdbarch, so replace the references to loc->gdbarch (which is now NULL) in syscall_catchpoint to references to the catchpoint's gdbarch. struct catchpoint's ctor was the last user of init_raw_breakpoint, so this commit eliminates the latter. Since catchpoint locations aren't code locations, make struct catchpoint inherit struct breakpoint instead of base_breakpoint. This let's us delete the tracepoint::re_set override too. Change-Id: Ib428bf71efb09fdaf399c56e4372b0f41d9c5869
2022-05-20Make breakpoint_address_bits look at the location kindPedro Alves2-37/+23
Software watchpoints allocate a special dummy location using software_watchpoint_add_no_memory_location, and then breakpoint_address_bits checks whether the location is that special location to decide whether the location has a meaninful address to print. Introduce a new bp_loc_software_watchpoint location kind, and make breakpoint_address_bits use bl_address_is_meaningful instead, which returns false for bp_loc_other, which is in accordance with we document for bp_location::address: /* (... snip ...) Valid for all types except bp_loc_other. */ CORE_ADDR address = 0; Rename software_watchpoint_add_no_memory_location to add_dummy_location, and simplify it. This will be used by catchpoints too in a following patch. Note that neither "info breakpoints" nor "maint info breakpoints" actually prints the addresses of watchpoints, but I think it would be useful to do so in "maint info breakpoints". This approach let's us implement that in the future. Change-Id: I50e398f66ef618c31ffa662da755eaba6295aed7