aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorFilesLines
2022-06-27PowerPC64 .branch_lt addressAlan Modra2-3/+3
.branch_lt is really an extension of .plt, as is .iplt. We'd like all of the PLT sections to be fixed relative to .TOC. after stub sizing, because changes in offset to PLT entries might mean a change in stub sizes. When -z relro, the relro layout does this by laying out sections from the end of the relro segment. So for example, a change in .eh_frame (which happens after stub sizing) will keep the same GOT to PLT offset when -z relro. Not so when -z norelro, because then the usual forward layout of section is done and .got is more aligned than .branch_lt. * emulparams/elf64ppc.sh: Set .branch_lt address fixed relative to .got. * testsuite/ld-powerpc/elfv2exe.d: Adjust to suit.
2022-06-27-z relro relaxation and ld script SIZEOFAlan Modra8-26/+33
A number of targets use assignments like: . = DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END (SIZEOF (.got.plt) >= 12 ? 12 : 0, .); (from i386) in linker scripts to put the end of the relro segment past the header in .got.plt. Examination of testcases like those edited by this patch instead sees the end of the relro segment being placed at the start of .got.plt. For the i386 pie1 test: [ 9] .got.plt PROGBITS 00002000 001000 00000c 04 WA 0 0 4 GNU_RELRO 0x000f90 0x00001f90 0x00001f90 0x00070 0x00070 R 0x1 A map file shows: .dynamic 0x0000000000001f90 0x70 *(.dynamic) .dynamic 0x0000000000001f90 0x70 tmpdir/pie1.o 0x0000000000001f90 _DYNAMIC .got 0x0000000000002000 0x0 *(.got) .got 0x0000000000002000 0x0 tmpdir/pie1.o *(.igot) 0x0000000000002ff4 . = DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END (., (SIZEOF (.got.plt) >= 0xc)?0xc:0x0) .got.plt 0x0000000000002000 0xc *(.got.plt) .got.plt 0x0000000000002000 0xc tmpdir/pie1.o 0x0000000000002000 _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ The DATA_SEGMENT_RELRO_END value in the map file is weird too. All of this is triggered by SIZEOF (.got.plt) being evaluated wrongly as zero. Fix it by taking into account the action of lang_reset_memory_regions during relaxation. * ldexp.c (fold_name <SIZEOF>): Use rawsize if size has been reset. * ldlang.c (lang_size_sections_1): Don't reset processed_vma here. * testsuite/ld-i386/pie1.d: Adjust to suit. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830a.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr20830b.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038a.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038b.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr21038c.d: Likewise.
2022-06-27Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-26Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-25arm: Define elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0 [PR 18705]Fangrui Song2-2/+2
Similar to commit 4fb55bf6a9606eb7b626c30a9f4e71d6c2d4fbb2 for aarch64. Commit b68a20d6675f1360ea4db50a9835c073675b9889 changed ld to produce R_ARM_GLOB_DAT but that defeated the purpose of protected visibility as an optimization. Restore the previous behavior (which matches ld.lld) by defining elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0.
2022-06-25Fix corrupt DWARF in dw2-double-set-die-typeTom Tromey1-31/+0
The dw2-double-set-die-type.exp test case caused an AddressSanitizer failure in the new DWARF scanner. The immediate cause was bad DWARF in the test -- in particular, the the sibling attribute here: <2><181>: Abbrev Number: 33 (DW_TAG_subprogram) <182> DW_AT_external : 1 <183> DW_AT_name : address <18b> DW_AT_type : <0x171> <18f> DW_AT_declaration : 1 <190> DW_AT_sibling : <0x1a1> ... <1><1a1>: Abbrev Number: 23 (DW_TAG_pointer_type) <1a2> DW_AT_byte_size : 4 <1a3> DW_AT_type : <0x1a7> ...points to a "sibling" DIE that is at a different child depth. Because this test case doesn't really require sibling attributes, this patch fixes the problem by removing them from the test. Note that gdb is not generally robust against malformed DWARF. Detecting and compensating for this problem would probably be expensive and, IMO, is better left to some (still hypothetical) DWARF linter.
2022-06-25Fix end of CU calculation in cooked_indexer::index_diesTom Tromey1-1/+3
cooked_indexer::index_dies incorrect computes the end of the current CU in the .debug_info. This isn't readily testable without writing intentionally corrupt DWARF, but it's apparent through observation: it is currently based on 'info_ptr', which does not always point to the start of the CU. This patch fixes the expression. Tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-06-25gdb: LoongArch: Implement loongarch_linux_syscall_next_pc()Tiezhu Yang3-0/+36
When FRAME is at a syscall instruction, return the PC of the next instruction to be executed. Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
2022-06-25gdb: LoongArch: Define register numbers and clean up codeTiezhu Yang4-133/+89
This commit defines register numbers of various important registers, we can use them directly in the related code, and also clean up some code to make them more clear and readable. Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
2022-06-25Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-24Eliminate TUI/CLI observers duplicationPedro Alves2-253/+64
For historical reasons, the CLI and the TUI observers are basically exact duplicates, except for the downcast: cli: struct cli_interp *cli = as_cli_interp (interp); tui: struct interp *tui = as_tui_interp (interp); and how they get at the interpreter's ui_out: cli: cli->cli_uiout tui: tui->interp_ui_out () Since interp_ui_out() is a virtual method that also works for the CLI interpreter, and, both the CLI and the TUI interpreters inherit from the same base class (cli_interp_base), we can convert the CLI observers to cast to cli_interp_base instead and use interp_ui_out() too. With that, the CLI observers will work for the TUI interpreter as well. This lets us completely eliminate the TUI observers. That's what this commit does. Change-Id: Iaf6cf12dfa200ed3ab203a895a72b69dfedbd6e0
2022-06-24Revert "Delete delete_thread_silent"Pedro Alves2-5/+27
Turns out we'll be gaining a new use of this function very soon, the incoming AMDGPU port needs it. Let's add it back, as it isn't really hurting anything. This reverts commit 39b8a8090ed7e8967ceca3655aa5f3a2ae91219d.
2022-06-24gdb/arm: Update the value of active sp when base sp changesYvan Roux1-5/+11
For Arm Cortex-M33 with security extensions, there are 4 different stacks pointers (msp_s, msp_ns, psp_s, psp_ns). When plain "sp" is updated during unwinding of the stack, the active stack pointer of the 4 stack pointers needs to be kept in sync. Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com> Signed-off-by: Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@foss.st.com>
2022-06-24gdb/testsuite: remove unneeded calls to get_compiler_infoAndrew Burgess174-714/+10
It is not necessary to call get_compiler_info before calling test_compiler_info, and, after recent commits that removed setting up the gcc_compiled, true, and false globals from get_compiler_info, there is now no longer any need for any test script to call get_compiler_info directly. As a result every call to get_compiler_info outside of lib/gdb.exp is redundant, and this commit removes them all. There should be no change in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-24gdb/testsuite: remove global gcc_compiled from gdb.expAndrew Burgess37-177/+54
After this commit the gcc_compiled global is no longer exported from lib/gdb.exp. In theory we could switch over all uses of gcc_compiled to instead call test_compiler_info directly, however, I have instead added a new proc to gdb.exp: 'is_c_compiler_gcc'. I've then updated the testsuite to call this proc instead of using the global. Having a new proc specifically for this task means that we have a single consistent pattern for detecting gcc. By wrapping this logic within a proc that calls test_compiler_info, rather than using the global, means that test scripts don't need to call get_compiler_info before they read the global, simply calling the new proc does everything in one go. As a result I've been able to remove the get_compiler_info calls from all the test scripts that I've touched in this commit. In some of the tests e.g. gdb.dwarf2/*.exp, the $gcc_compiled flag was being checked at the top of the script to decide if the whole script should be skipped or not. In these cases I've called the new proc directly and removed all uses of gcc_compiled. In other cases, e.g. most of the gdb.base scripts, there were many uses of gcc_compiled. In these cases I set a new global gcc_compiled near the top of the script, and leave the rest of the script unchanged. There should be no changes in what is tested after this commit.
2022-06-24Include count of unexpected core files in gdb.sum summaryPedro Alves2-1/+49
If GDB, GDBserver, a testcase program, Valgrind, etc. unexpectedly crash while running the GDB testsuite, and you've setup your machine such that core files are dumped in the current directory instead of being shoved somewhere by abrt, apport, or similar (as you should for proper GDB testing), you'll end up with an unexpected core file in the $build/gdb/testsuite/ directory. It can happen that GDB, GDBserver, etc. even crashes _after_ gdb_exit, during teardown, and thus such a crash won't be noticed by looking at the gdb.sum file at all. This commit aims at improving that, by including a new "unexpected core files" line in the testrun summary. For example, here's what I get on x86-64 Ubuntu 20.04, with this patch: === gdb Summary === # of unexpected core files 12 << new info # of expected passes 107557 # of unexpected failures 35 # of expected failures 77 # of unknown successes 2 # of known failures 114 # of untested testcases 31 # of unsupported tests 139 I have my core pattern setup like this: $ cat /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern core.%e.%p.%h.%t That's: %e: executable filename %p: pid %h: hostname %t: UNIX time of dump and so I get these core files: $ ls -1 testsuite/core.* testsuite/core.connect-with-no.216191.nelson.1656002431 testsuite/core.connect-with-no.217729.nelson.1656002431 testsuite/core.gdb.194247.nelson.1656002423 testsuite/core.gdb.226014.nelson.1656002435 testsuite/core.gdb.232078.nelson.1656002438 testsuite/core.gdb.352268.nelson.1656002441 testsuite/core.gdb.4152093.nelson.1656002337 testsuite/core.gdb.4154515.nelson.1656002338 testsuite/core.gdb.4156668.nelson.1656002339 testsuite/core.gdb.4158871.nelson.1656002341 testsuite/core.gdb.468495.nelson.1656002444 testsuite/core.vgdb.4192247.nelson.1656002366 where we can see that GDB crashed a number of times, but also Valgrind's vgdb, and a couple testcase programs. Neither of which is good. If your core_pattern is just "core" (but why??), then I guess that you may end up with just a single core file in testsuite/. Still, that is one core file too many. Above, we see a couple cores for "connect-with-no", which are the result of gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp. This is a case mentioned above -- while the program crashed, that happens during testcase teardown, and it goes unnoticed (without this commit) by gdb.sum results. Vis: $ make check TESTS="gdb.server/connect-with-no-symbol-file.exp" ... === gdb Summary === # of unexpected core files 2 # of expected passes 8 ... $ The tests fully passed, but still the testcase program crashed somehow: $ ls -1 testsuite/core.* testsuite/core.connect-with-no.941561.nelson.1656003317 testsuite/core.connect-with-no.941682.nelson.1656003317 Against --target_board=native-extended-gdbserver it's even worse. I get: # of unexpected core files 26 and note that when GDBserver hits an assertion failure, it exits with error, instead of crashing with SIGABRT. I think that should be changed, at least on development builds, but that would be for another patch. After such patch, I suspect the number of unexpected cores will be higher, as there are likely teardown GDBserver assertions that we're not noticing. I decided to put this new info in the "gdb Summary" section, as that's a place people already are used to looking at, either when looking at the tail of gdb.sum, or when diffing gdb.sum files, and we've already extended this section before, to include the count of DUPLICATE and PATH problems, so there's precedent. Implementation-wise, the new line is appended after DejaGnu is finished, with a shell script that is invoked by the Makefile. It is done this way so that serial and parallel testing work the same way. My initial cut at an implementation was in TCL, straight in testsuite/lib/check-test-names.exp, where DUPLICATES and PATH are handled, like so: @@ -148,6 +159,10 @@ namespace eval ::CheckTestNames { $counts(paths,$which) maybe_show_count "# of duplicate test names\t" \ $counts(duplicates,$which) + + set cores [glob -nocomplain -directory $::objdir core*] + maybe_show_count "# of unexpected core files\t" \ + [llength $cores] } But that would only work for serial testing, as in parallel testing, the final gdb.sum is generated by aggregating the results of all the individual gdb.sum files, and dg-extract-results.sh doesn't know about our new summary line. And I don't think that dg-extract-results.sh should be taught about it, since the count of core files is not something that we want to count many times, once per testcase, and then add up the subcounts at the end. Every time we count the core files, we're already counting the final count. I considered using the Tcl implementation in serial mode, and the script approach for parallel testing, but that has the obvious downside of implementing and maintaining the same thing twice. In the end, I settled on the script approach for serial mode too, which requires making the "check-single" rule print the tail end of the gdb.sum file, with a side effect being that if you look at the terminal after a run (instead of at the gdb.sum file), you'll see the "gdb Summary" section twice, once without the unexpected core lines printed, and then another with. IMO, this isn't an issue; when testing in parallel mode, if you look at the terminal after "make -jN check", you'll also see multiple "gdb Summary" sections printed. Change-Id: I190b8d41856d49ad143854b6e3e6ccd7caa04491
2022-06-24Improve core file path detection & put cores in output dirPedro Alves5-54/+117
After a testrun, I noticed that I have some kernel-produced cores for testcase programs, under build/gdb/testsuite/, which shouldn't be there: $ ls -1 testsuite/core.* testsuite/core.annota1.1274351.nelson.1656004407 testsuite/core.annota3.1288474.nelson.1656004414 testsuite/core.exitsignal.1240674.nelson.1656004391 I have my core pattern setup like this: $ cat /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern core.%e.%p.%h.%t That's: %e: executable filename %p: pid %h: hostname %t: UNIX time of dump so it's easy to tell which program produced the core from the core file name. From above, we can tell that the corresponding testcases are gdb.base/annota1.exp, gdb.base/annota3.exp and gdb.base/exitsignal.exp. At least gdb.base/annota1.exp and gdb.base/annota3.exp have code in them to delete the core file. However, that isn't working for me, because said code only looks for cores named exactly either "core" or "core.PID", and my core_pattern doesn't match that. Another issue I noticed, is that I have not been running gdb.base/bigcore.exp, for a similar reason. I get: Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted. The program no longer exists. (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: signal SIGABRT UNTESTED: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: can't generate a core file But I actually have a core file under the testcase's output dir: $ find . -name "core.*" ./testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/bigcore/core.bigcore.2306705.nelson.1656005213 $ This commit fixes these things, by adding a find_core_file routine that searches core files in a way that works with my core pattern as well. This then also adds a convenience remove_core routine as a wrapper around find_core_file that removes the found core file. In addition, it changes some testcases that expect to have their program dump core, to switch the inferior's cwd to the testcase's output dir, so that the core is dumped there instead of in build/gdb/testsuite/. Some testcases were already doing that, but not all. The idea is that any core file dumped in build/gdb/testsuite/ is an unexpected core file. The next patch will add a count of such unexpected core files to gdb.sum. Another change is that the directory changing is now done with "set cwd" instead of with "cd". "set cwd" only affects the inferior cwd, while "cd" affects GDB's cwd too. By using "set cwd" instead of "cd", if GDB dumps core in these testcases, the GDB core dump will still end up in build/gdb/testsuite/, and can thus be detected as an unexpected core. Change-Id: I45068f21ffd4814350aaa8a3cc65cad5e3107607
2022-06-24gdb: make use of RAII in run_inferior_callAndrew Burgess1-14/+11
In passing I noticed that there are three local variables in run_inferior_call that are used to save, and then restore some state, I think these could all be replaced with a RAII style scoped_restore instead. Of the three locals that I've changed, the only one that I believe is now restored in a different location is ui::async, before this commit the async field was restored after a call to either delete_file_handle or ui_register_input_event_handler, and after this commit, the field is restored before these calls. However, I don't believe that either of these functions depend on the value of the async field, so I believe the commit is fine. Tested on x86-64/Linux passes with no regressions.
2022-06-24Delete delete_thread_silentPedro Alves2-27/+5
delete_thread_silent is no longer used anywhere. Delete it. Change-Id: Iafcec12339861d5ab2e29c14d7b1f884c9e11c0f
2022-06-24Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-23Don't declare cli_set_loggingTom Tromey1-5/+0
cli_set_logging is declared but not defined. It's probably a leftover from whenever interpreters were changed to use inheritance. This patch removes the declaration. Tested by grep and rebuilding.
2022-06-23Use PyBool_FromLongTom Tromey3-8/+4
I noticed a few spots that were explicitly creating new references to Py_True or Py_False. It's simpler here to use PyBool_FromLong, so this patch changes all the places I found.
2022-06-23PowerPC64: fix assertion in ppc_build_one_stub with -Os codeAlan Modra1-1/+2
save_res stubs aren't written in ppc_build_one_stub, their offsets (which are zero) should not be checked. * elf64-ppc.c (ppc_build_one_stub): Don't check save_res offsets.
2022-06-23Re: PowerPC64: stub debug dumpAlan Modra1-41/+61
Let's show the current stub as well as the previous one. Of interest is the current offset and a new field, id. Check that the build hash table traversal is in the same order as sizing traversal too. * elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_stub_hash_entry): Add id. (struct ppc_link_hash_table): Add stub_id. (stub_hash_newfunc): Init id and symtype. (dump_stub): New function, extracted from.. (dump_previous_stub): ..here. Deleted. (ppc_build_one_stub): Sanity check stub id as well as offset. Show current stub as well as previous. (ppc_size_one_stub): Set stub id. (ppc64_elf_size_stubs): Init stub_id before traversal. (ppc64_elf_build_stubs): Likewise.
2022-06-23aarch64: Allow PC-relative relocations against protected STT_FUNC for -sharedFangrui Song4-1/+20
__attribute__((visibility("protected"))) void *foo() { return (void *)foo; } gcc -fpic -shared -fuse-ld=bfd fails with the confusing diagnostic: relocation R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21 against symbol `foo' which may bind externally can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC Call _bfd_elf_symbol_refs_local_p with local_protected==true to suppress the error. The new behavior matches gold and ld.lld. Note: if some code tries to use direct access relocations to take the address of foo (likely due to -fno-pic), the pointer equality will break, but the error should be reported on the executable link, not on the innocent shared object link. glibc 2.36 will give a warning at relocation resolving time.
2022-06-23aarch64: Define elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0 [PR 18705]Fangrui Song2-2/+2
Follow-up to commit 90b7a5df152a64d2bea20beb438e8b81049a5c30 ("aarch64: Disallow copy relocations on protected data"). Commit 32f573bcb3aaa1c9defcad79dbb5851fcc02ae2d changed ld to produce R_AARCH64_GLOB_DAT but that defeated the purpose of protected visibility as an optimization. Restore the previous behavior (which matches ld.lld) by defining elf_backend_extern_protected_data to 0.
2022-06-23Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-22Use std::string for interpreter_pTom Tromey4-31/+15
The global interpreter_p is a manually-managed 'char *'. This patch changes it to be a std::string instead, and removes some erroneous comments.
2022-06-22Move mi_interpreter to mi-interp.hTom Tromey3-51/+51
I noticed that touching interps.h caused a lot of recompilation. I tracked this down to mi-common.h including this file. This patch moves the MI interpreter to mi-interp.h, which cuts down on recompilation when modifying interps.h.
2022-06-22Use unique_xmalloc_ptr in interpTom Tromey2-8/+6
This changes interp::m_name to be a unique_xmalloc_ptr, removing some manual memory management. It also cleans up the initialization of the 'inited' member, and moves the 'private:' and 'public:' keywords to their proper spots.
2022-06-22aarch64: Disallow copy relocations on protected dataFangrui Song4-1/+46
If an executable has copy relocations for extern protected data, that can only work if the shared object containing the definition is built with assumptions (a) the compiler emits GOT-generating relocations (b) the linker produces R_*_GLOB_DAT instead of R_*_RELATIVE. Otherwise the shared object uses its own definition directly and the executable accesses a stale copy. Note: the GOT relocations defeat the purpose of protected visibility as an optimization, and it turns out this never worked perfectly. glibc 2.36 will warn on copy relocations on protected data. Let's produce a warning at link time, matching ld.lld which has been used on many aarch64 OSes. Note: x86 requires GNU_PROPERTY_NO_COPY_ON_PROTECTED to have the error. This is to largely due to GCC 5's "x86-64: Optimize access to globals in PIE with copy reloc" which started to use direct access relocations for external data symbols in -fpie mode. GCC's aarch64 port does not have the change. Nowadays with most builds switching to -fpie/-fpic, aarch64 mostly doesn't need to worry about copy relocations. So for aarch64 we simply don't check GNU_PROPERTY_NO_COPY_ON_PROTECTED.
2022-06-22Binutils support for split-dwarf and dwarf-5Kumar N, Bhuvanendra3-15/+56
* dwarf.c (fetch_indexed_string): Added new parameter str_offsets_base to calculate the string offset. (read_and_display_attr_value): Read DW_AT_str_offsets_base attribute. (process_debug_info): While allocating memory and initializing debug_information, do it for do_debug_info also, if its true. (load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_str_offsets if exists. * dwarf.h (struct debug_info): Add str_offsets_base field.
2022-06-22RISC-V: Reorder the prefixed extensions which are out of order.Nelson Chu7-38/+0
This patch has been pending for almost a year... However, I noticed that llvm can already re-order the extensions, even if they are out of orders. Not really sure if they can also re-order the single letter extensions, but at least we can do this for the multi-letter extensions in binutils. bfd/ * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Removed the code which are used to check the prefixed extension orders. gas/ * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x-z.d: Removed since we will help tp reorder the prefixed extensions for now. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x-z.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-x.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-z.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-order-z.l: Likewise.
2022-06-22RISC-V: Use single h extension to control hypervisor CSRs and instructions.Nelson Chu16-364/+411
According to the picture 28.1 in the current ISA spec, h is no larger the multi-letter extension, it is a single extension after v. Therefore, this patch fix the implementation, and use the single h to control hypervisor CSRs and instructions, which we promised to do before. bfd/ * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_ext): Added h with version 1.0 after v. (riscv_supported_std_h_ext): Removed. (riscv_all_supported_ext): Updated since riscv_supported_std_h_ext is removed. (riscv_prefix_ext_class): Removed RV_ISA_CLASS_H. (parse_config): Updated since riscv_prefix_ext_class is removed. (riscv_recognized_prefixed_ext): Likewise. (riscv_get_default_ext_version): Likewise. (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Handle INSN_CLASS_H for hypervisor instructions. (riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Likewise. gas/ * config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_csr_class): Added CSR_CLASS_H and CSR_CLASS_H_32 for hypervisor CSRs. (riscv_csr_address): Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.d: Updated since hypervisor CSRs are controlled by single h extension for now. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p10.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p11.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p12.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-32.d: Added h to architecture string. * testsuite/gas/riscv/h-ext-64.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-single-prefix-h: Removed since h is no longer multi-letter extension. * testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-unknown-h.d: Likewise. include/ * opcode/riscv-opc.h: Control hypervisor CSRs by h extension, rather than the privileged spec verisons. * opcode/riscv.h (riscv_insn_class): Added INSN_CLASS_H. opcodes/ * riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Control hypervisor instructions by h extension.
2022-06-22RISC-V: Add 'H' to canonical extension orderingTsukasa OI1-1/+1
This commit adds 'H' to canonical extension ordering based on current consensus (not officially ratified as a new ISA specification manual but discussion for software compatibility is made). bfd/ChangeLog * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_ext_canonical_order): Add 'H' for canonical extension ordering based on current consensus.
2022-06-22RISC-V: Prepare i18n for required ISA extensionsTsukasa OI1-13/+14
Some strings returned by the riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext function contain not just extension names but words like "and" and "or". This commit wraps such strings with the gettext macro (_) for internationalization in the future. bfd/ChangeLog: * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Wrap some strings with the gettext macro to prepare future i18n.
2022-06-22RISC-V: Fix inconsistent error message (range)Tsukasa OI1-1/+1
This commit fixes inconsistent error message format involving compressed funct<n> fields. In specific, funct6 had an error message with range 0..2^<n> ("0..64") unlike other funct<n> fields with 0..2^<n>-1 (e.g. funct4 with "0..15"). gas/ChangeLog: * config/tc-riscv.c (riscv_ip): Fix inconsistent error message.
2022-06-22readelf: replace xmalloc with malloc in slurp_relr_relocsMarcus Nilsson2-1/+6
Using xmalloc makes the null check redundant since failing allocation will exit the program. Instead use malloc and let the error be conveyed up the call chain.
2022-06-22PowerPC64: stub debug dumpAlan Modra1-2/+57
powerpc64le-linux-ld is failing the assertion in ppc_build_one_stub, again apparently, which means a stub will overwrite the tail of a previous stub. The difficulty with debugging these issues is that it's not a problem with the stub that triggers the assertion, but the previous stub in that section. This patch keeps track of the last stub and adds a debug dump. Hopefully that will help. * elf64-ppc.c (enum _ppc64_sec_type): Add sec_stub. (struct _ppc64_elf_section_data): Add u.last_ent. (dump_previous_stub): New function. (ppc_build_one_stub): Keep track of previous stub, and dump it when finding an overlapping stub.
2022-06-22PR29270, DW_FORM_udata signed outputAlan Modra1-1/+5
PR 29270 * dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Output DW_FORM_udata as unsigned.
2022-06-22Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-21ld: regenerate configure after recent misgenerationNick Alcock1-118/+103
Things work again after this. ld/ChangeLog: * configure: Regenerate.
2022-06-21libctf: tests: prune warnings from compiler outputNick Alcock2-6/+6
We were failing to call prune_warnings appropriately, leading to false-positive test failures on some platforms (observed on sparclinux). libctf/ChangeLog: * testsuite/lib/ctf-lib.exp: Prune warnings from compiler and linker output. * testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu.exp: Likewise, and ar output too.
2022-06-21libctf: avoid mingw warningNick Alcock1-1/+1
A missing paren led to an intended cast to avoid dependence on the size of size_t in one argument of ctf_err_warn applying to the wrong type by mistake. libctf/ChangeLog: * ctf-serialize.c (ctf_write_mem): Fix cast.
2022-06-21libctf: fix linking together multiple objects derived from the same sourceNick Alcock8-33/+280
Right now, if you compile the same .c input repeatedly with CTF enabled and different compilation flags, then arrange to link all of these together, then things misbehave in various ways. libctf may conflate either inputs (if the .o files have the same name, say if they are stored in different .a archives), or per-CU outputs when conflicting types are found: the latter can lead to entirely spurious errors when it tries to produce multiple per-CU outputs with the same name (discarding all but the last, but then looking for types in the earlier ones which have just been thrown away). Fixing this is multi-pronged. Both inputs and outputs need to be differentiated in the hashtables libctf keeps them in: inputs with the same cuname and filename need to be considered distinct as long as they have different associated CTF dicts, and per-CU outputs need to be considered distinct as long as they have different associated input dicts. Right now there is nothing tying the two together other than the CU name: fix this by introducing a new field in the ctf_dict_t named ctf_link_in_out, which (for input dicts) points to the associated per-CU output dict (if any), and for output dicts points to the associated input dict. At creation time the name used is completely arbitrary: it's only important that it be distinct if CTF dicts are distinct. So, when a clash is found, adjust the CU name by sticking the number of elements in the input on the end. At output time, the CU name will appear in the linked object, so it matters a little more that it look slightly less ugly: in conflicting cases, append an incrementing integer, starting at 0. This naming scheme is not very helpful, but it's hard to see what else we can do. The input .o name may be the same. The input .a name is not even visible to ctf_link, and even *that* might be the same, because .a's can contain many members with the same name, all of which participate in the link. All we really know is that the two have distinct dictionaries with distinct types in them, and at least this way they are all represented, any any symbols, variables etc referring to those types are accurately stored. (As a side-effect this also fixes a use-after-free and double-free when errors are found during variable or symbol emission.) Use the opportunity to prevent a couple of sources of problems, to wit changing the active CU mappings when a link has already been done (no effect on ld, which doesn't use CU mappings at all), and causing multiple consecutive ctf_link's to have the same net effect as just doing the last one (no effect on ld, which only ever does one ctf_link) rather than having the links be a sort of half-incremental not-really-intended mess. libctf/ChangeLog: PR libctf/29242 * ctf-impl.h (struct ctf_dict) [ctf_link_in_out]: New. * ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_emit_type): Set it. * ctf-link.c (ctf_link_add_ctf_internal): Set the input CU name uniquely when clashes are found. (ctf_link_add): Document what repeated additions do. (ctf_new_per_cu_name): New, come up with a consistent name for a new per-CU dict. (ctf_link_deduplicating): Use it. (ctf_create_per_cu): Use it, and ctf_link_in_out, and set ctf_link_in_out properly. Don't overwrite per-CU dicts with per-CU dicts relating to different inputs. (ctf_link_add_cu_mapping): Prevent per-CU mappings being set up if we already have per-CU outputs. (ctf_link_one_variable): Adjust ctf_link_per_cu call. (ctf_link_deduplicating_one_symtypetab): Likewise. (ctf_link_empty_outputs): New, delete all the ctf_link_outputs and blank out ctf_link_in_out on the corresponding inputs. (ctf_link): Clarify the effect of multiple ctf_link calls. Empty ctf_link_outputs if it already exists rather than having the old output leak into the new link. Fix a variable name. * testsuite/config/default.exp (AR): Add. (OBJDUMP): Likewise. * testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu.exp: New test. * testsuite/libctf-regression/libctf-repeat-cu*: Main program, library, and expected results for the test.
2022-06-21Document how GDB searches for files when using -s, -e, and -se optionsKevin Buettner1-0/+5
GDB's documentation of the 'file' command says: If you do not specify a directory and the file is not found in the GDB working directory, GDB uses the environment variable PATH as a list of directories to search, just as the shell does when looking for a program to run. The same is true for files specified via commandline options -s, -e, and -se. This commit adds a cross reference to the file command for these options.
2022-06-21Binutils support for dwarf-5 (location and range lists related)Nick Clifton3-13/+51
* dwarf.h (struct debug_info): Add rnglists_base field. * dwarf.c (read_and_display_attr_value): Read attribute DW_AT_rnglists_base. (display_debug_rnglists_list): While handling DW_RLE_base_addressx, DW_RLE_startx_endx, DW_RLE_startx_length items, pass the proper parameter value to fetch_indexed_addr(), i.e. fetch the proper entry in .debug_addr section. (display_debug_ranges): Add rnglists_base to the .debug_rnglists base address. (load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_addr section, if exists.
2022-06-21Default to disabling the linker warnings about execstack and RWX segments if ↵Nick Clifton4-109/+164
the target is the HPPA architecture. PR 29263 * configure.ac (ac_default_ld_warn_execstack): Default to 'no' for HPPA targets. (ac_default_ld_warn_rwx_segments): Likewise. * configure: Regenerate. * testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Add the --warn-execstack command line option to the command line when running execstack tests for the HPPA target.
2022-06-21Automatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
2022-06-20Move finish_print out of value_print_optionsTom Tromey3-9/+10
'finish_print' does not really belong in value_print_options -- this is consulted only when deciding whether or not to print a value, and never during the course of printing. This patch removes it from the structure and makes it a static global in infcmd.c instead. Tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.