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10 daysFix using Page-Up in TUI source window close to the topHannes Domani1-2/+2
Currently, when you're already less than a page from the top in the TUI source window, and you press Page-Up, nothing happens, while I would expect that it then scrolls the source up to the first line. It's happening because scrolling a full page up would result in a negative starting line number, which is then checked if it's higher than the (unsigned) number of available lines, and since this will always be true, the original starting line number is restored. Afterwards it would check if the line number is too low, but since the negative value was already gone, it didn't do much. Fixed by moving the low line number check before the maximum line number check. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
10 daysgdb/testsuite: fix typo 'unsupport' to 'unsupported'Andrew Burgess1-1/+1
I noticed that in commit: commit 5cabc8098e65ac22d4245232ad20b19fa4729802 Date: Wed Jul 31 15:55:57 2024 +0100 gdb/python: implement Python find_exec_by_build_id hook I managed to typo 'unsupported' as 'unsupport'. If you run the test on a target that doesn't support core file creation then you'll get a TCL error. Fixed in this commit.
11 daysgdb/testsuite: fix failure in gdb.base/info_sources.expAndrew Burgess1-10/+50
I ran into an unexpected failure in gdb.base/info_sources.exp. The test in question runs this command: (gdb) info sources -d -- -d That is, list all the source files whose directory name matches the regexp '-d'. The expectation is that no source files will be listed. Unfortunately, when I ran the test some source files are listed; the directory I am running in contains the pattern '-d', and so the test fails. As we cannot control where the developer is building and testing GDB, I propose that instead of just testing with '-d' we should search through all the letters a-z and find one that isn't present in the source file directory name. I'm still including the leading '-' character in the regexp. So now, unless GDB is being built in a directory that contains '-a', '-b', '-c', .... '-z', the test will find one letter which isn't present, and use that for the test. To avoid test names changing between runs in different directories I've had to tweak the test name to something more generic, but there should be no change in which parts of GDB are actually being tested. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
11 days[gdb/testsuite] Reduce quoting in gdb.base/annota1.expTom de Vries1-7/+11
Reduce quoting in gdb.base/annota1.exp, mostly using string_to_regexp. Tested on arm-linux and x86_64-linux.
11 days[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/annota1.exp on arm-linuxTom de Vries1-0/+2
On arm-linux, gdb.base/annota1.exp fails: ... PASS: gdb.base/annota1.exp: breakpoint info run^M ^M ^Z^Zpost-prompt^M Starting program: /home/linux/gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/annota1/annota1 ^M ^M ^Z^Zbreakpoints-invalid^M ^M ^Z^Zframes-invalid^M ^M ^Z^Zstarting^M ^M ^Z^Zframes-invalid^M [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M Using host libthread_db library "/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libthread_db.so.1".^M ^M ^Z^Zbreakpoints-invalid^M ^M ^Z^Zbreakpoint 1^M ^M Breakpoint 1, ^M ^Z^Zframe-begin 0 0x40054a^M ^M ^Z^Zframe-function-name^M main^M ^Z^Zframe-args^M ()^M ^Z^Zframe-source-begin^M at ^M ^Z^Zframe-source-file^M /home/linux/gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/annota1.c^M ^Z^Zframe-source-file-end^M :^M ^Z^Zframe-source-line^M 15^M ^Z^Zframe-source-end^M ^M ^M ^Z^Zsource /home/linux/gdb/binutils-gdb.git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/annota1.c:15:103:beg:0x40054a^M ^M ^Z^Zframe-end^M ^M ^Z^Zstopped^M ^M ^Z^Zpre-prompt^M (gdb) ^M ^Z^Zprompt^M FAIL: gdb.base/annota1.exp: run until main breakpoint (timeout) ... because the regexp doesn't match the first frames-invalid annotation. Fix this by adding an optional frames-invalid annotation in the regexp. Tested on arm-linux and x86_64-linux.
11 days[gdb/testsuite] Avoid intermittent failures on another debuginfod testTom de Vries1-1/+1
With test-case gdb.debuginfod/solib-with-soname.exp on aarch64-linux, I ran into: ... (gdb) core-file solib-with-soname.core^M Downloading 197.86 K file libfoo_1.so...^M [New LWP 997314]^M [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M Core was generated by `solib-with-soname'.^M Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.^M (gdb) FAIL: $exp: load core file, use debuginfod: load core file ... The test-case doesn't expect the "197.86 K" part. The same problem was fixed for another test-case in commit a723c56efb0 ("gdb/testsuite: avoid intermittent failures on a debuginfod test"). Fix this in the same way: by updating the regexp. Tested on aarch64-linux. PR testsuite/32354 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=32354
11 daysUse an iterator range for 'using' directivesTom Tromey6-20/+9
This patch changes block::get_using to return an iterator range. This seemed cleaner to me than the current approach of returning a pointer to the first using directive; all the callers actually use this to iterate.
11 daysEnsure that help text fits in 80 columnsTom Tromey1-1/+9
This patch adds a new unit test that ensures that all help text wraps at 80 columns.
11 daysWrap help options when building help stringTom Tromey2-24/+42
When building a help string, it's possible that the resulting options will go over 80 columns. This patch changes this code to add line wrapping where needed. This can most be seen by looking "help bt" and in particular the "-frame-info" help text.
11 daysShorten internal problem help textTom Tromey1-8/+8
The help text for various "internal problem" settings is longer than 80 columns. This patch tightens this up a bit. Note that these commands are all "maint" commands so, IMO, it is sufficient if they are clear to a gdb developer. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
11 daysRemove the "title" from the remote packet helpTom Tromey1-4/+2
The help for remote packet controls includes the "title". However this is is just the parameter name, and not really useful to see repeated in the help text. Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
11 daysClean up opaque-type-resolution helpTom Tromey1-4/+4
The opaque-type-resolution help says "if set before loading symbols", but I don't think this is accurate. As far as I know, this resolution can be done at any time. This patch cleans up the help, also shortening it to less than 80 characters. Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
11 daysWrap help strings at 80 columnsTom Tromey21-80/+89
This patch ensures that all ordinary help strings are wrapped at 80 columns. For the most part this consists of changing code like this (note the embedded \n and the trailing backslash without a newline): -Manage the space-separated list of debuginfod server URLs that GDB will query \ -when missing debuginfo, executables or source files.\nThe default value is \ -copied from the DEBUGINFOD_URLS environment variable."), ... to end each line with \n\, like: +Manage the space-separated list of debuginfod server URLs that GDB will\n\ +query when missing debuginfo, executables or source files.\n\ +The default value is copied from the DEBUGINFOD_URLS environment variable."), Approved-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
11 daysCall gdbpy_fix_doc_string_indentation for function helpTom Tromey1-0/+2
If you invoke "help function _caller_is", you'll see that the help text is indented strangely. The fix for this is to add a call to gdbpy_fix_doc_string_indentation in the appropriate spot, as is already done for Python commands and parameters.
11 daysAdd setting to control frame language mismatch warningTom Tromey7-6/+41
A customer noted that there is no way to prevent the "current language does not match this frame" warning. This patch adds a new setting to allow this warning to be suppressed. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
11 daysRe-run isortTom Tromey1-1/+1
pre-commit pointed out that one file needed a change to satisfy isort. This patch is the result.
11 daysgdb: fix missing operator % on xmethod matcher outputPedro Silva1-3/+8
Fixed missing operator % on xmethod matcher registration output and, as suggested on bug 32532, converted both uses of operator % to str.format. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=32352 Change-Id: Ic471516292c2f1d6d1284aaeaea3ec14421decb8
11 daysld: Move note sections after .rodata sectionH.J. Lu4-11/+52
Move note sections after .rodata section so that note sections are placed in the same PT_LOAD segment together with .rodata section, instead of a separate PT_LOAD segment. PR ld/32341 * scripttempl/misc-sections.sc: Move note sections to ... * scripttempl/elf.sc: Here, after .rodata section. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr32341.d: New file. * testsuite/ld-elf/pr32341.s: Likewise. Co-Authored-By: Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
11 daysgdb/dwarf2/read.c: Handle empty CU nameLancelot SIX3-0/+71
I recently came across a case where a compiler would emit a CU with an empty name. In such case, the attribute object constructed by GDB will return nullptr when as_string is called. One place is not checking for this possibility. As a result, loading such binary results in a GDB crash: $ gdb -q a.out Reading symbols from a.out... Fatal signal: Segmentation fault ----- Backtrace ----- [...] 0x742f4dd8afab __strcmp_avx2 ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strcmp-avx2.S:283 0x58593704a0bc prepare_one_comp_unit ../../gdb/dwarf2/read.c:21842 0x585937053fd9 process_psymtab_comp_unit ../../gdb/dwarf2/read.c:4633 0x585937053fd9 _ZN23cooked_index_debug_info11process_cusEmN9__gnu_cxx17__normal_iteratorIPSt10unique_ptrI18dwarf2_per_cu_data26dwarf2_per_cu_data_deleterESt6vectorIS5_SaIS5_EEEESA_ ../../gdb/dwarf2/read.c:4943 [...] --------------------- 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/>. Segmentation fault (core dumped) This seems to be a regression introduced by the following commit: commit 00105aa1c4d9933fe3cfe9bc1be0daefe9f8ca36 Date: Tue Sep 24 10:24:22 2024 +0200 [gdb/symtab] Don't expand non-Ada CUs for info exceptions This patch fixes this issue by checking if attr->as_string returns nullptr. Change-Id: I78fe7a090f0bd1045b8cb2f8d088a8d6cf57fe1c Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
11 daysld, LoongArch: print error about linking without -fPIC or -fPIE flag in more ↵Xin Wang6-10/+42
detail
11 daysAutomatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
12 daysgdb/python: implement Python find_exec_by_build_id hookAndrew Burgess15-235/+1615
Implement extension_language_ops::find_objfile_from_buildid within GDB's Python API. Doing this allows users to write Python extensions that can help locate missing objfiles when GDB opens a core file. A handler might perform some project- or site-specific actions to find a missing objfile. Or might provide some project- or site-specific advice to the user on how they can obtain the missing objfile. The implementation is very similar to the approach taken in: commit 8f6c452b5a4e50fbb55ff1d13328b392ad1fd416 Date: Sun Oct 15 22:48:42 2023 +0100 gdb: implement missing debug handler hook for Python The following new commands are added as commands implemented in Python, this is similar to how the Python missing debug and unwinder commands are implemented: info missing-objfile-handlers enable missing-objfile-handler LOCUS HANDLER disable missing-objfile-handler LOCUS HANDLER To make use of this extension hook a user will create missing objfile handler objects, and registers these handlers with GDB. When GDB opens a core file and encounters a missing objfile each handler is called in turn until one is able to help. Here is a minimal handler that does nothing useful: import gdb import gdb.missing_objfile class MyFirstHandler(gdb.missing_objfile.MissingObjfileHandler): def __init__(self): super().__init__("my_first_handler") def __call__(self, pspace, build_id, filename): # This handler does nothing useful. return None gdb.missing_objfile.register_handler(None, MyFirstHandler()) Returning None from the __call__ method tells GDB that this handler was unable to find the missing objfile, and GDB should ask any other registered handlers. Possible return values from a handler: - None: This means the handler couldn't help. GDB will call other registered handlers to see if they can help instead. - False: The handler has done all it can, but the objfile couldn't be found. GDB will not call any other handlers, and will continue without the objfile. - True: The handler has installed the objfile into a location where GDB would normally expect to find it. GDB should repeat its normal lookup process and the objfile should now be found. - A string: The handler can return a filename, which is the missing objfile. GDB will load this file. Handlers can be registered globally, or per program space. GDB checks the handlers for the current program space first, and then all of the global handles. The first handler that returns a value that is not None, has "handled" the missing objfile, at which point GDB continues. The implementation of this feature is mostly straight forward. I have reworked some of the missing debug file related code so that it can be shared with this feature. E.g. gdb/python/lib/gdb/missing_files.py is mostly content moved from gdb/python/lib/gdb/missing_debug.py, but updated to be more generic. Now gdb/python/lib/gdb/missing_debug.py and the new file gdb/python/lib/gdb/missing_objfile.py both call into the missing_files.py file. For gdb/python/lib/gdb/command/missing_files.py this is even more extreme, gdb/python/lib/gdb/command/missing_debug.py is completely gone now and gdb/python/lib/gdb/command/missing_files.py provides all of the new commands in a generic way. I have made one change to the existing Python API, I renamed the attribute Progspace.missing_debug_handlers to Progspace.missing_file_handlers. I don't see this as too problematic. This attribute was only used to implement the missing debug feature and was never documented beyond the fact that it existed. There was no reason for users to be touching this attribute. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
12 daysgdb: add extension hook ext_lang_find_objfile_from_buildidAndrew Burgess7-27/+128
Add a new ext_lang_find_objfile_from_buildid function which is called from find_objfile_by_build_id and gives extension languages a chance to find missing objfiles. This commit adds the ext_lang_find_objfile_from_buildid function and the extension_language_ops::find_objfile_from_buildid() hook, but does not implement the hook for any extension languages, that will come in the next commit. This commit does rewrite find_objfile_by_build_id (build-id.c) to call the new hook though. The basic steps of find_objfile_by_build_id are now this: 1. Try to find the missing objfile using the build-id by looking in the debug-file-directory's .build-id/ sub-directory. If we find the file then we're done. 2. Ask debuginfod to download the missing file for us. If we download the file successfully then we're done. 3. Ask the extension language hook to find the file for us. If the extension language asks us to try again then we repeat step (1) only and if we still don't have the file, we move to step (4). If the extension language told us where the file is then we use that file and we're done. 4. We didn't find the file. Carry on without it. Only step (3) is new in this logic, everything else was already done. There are no tests added here as we can't currently write an extension language callback. The next commit will add the tests. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
12 daysgdb: rename ext_lang_missing_debuginfo_resultAndrew Burgess5-15/+15
In preparation for later commits in this series, rename ext_lang_missing_debuginfo_result to ext_lang_missing_file_result. A later commit will add additional Python APIs to handle different types of missing files beyond just debuginfo. This is just a rename commit, there should be no functional changes after this commit. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
12 daysgdb: use mapped file information to improve debuginfod textAndrew Burgess4-7/+60
When opening a core-file GDB is able to use debuginfod to download the executable that matches the core-file if GDB can find a build-id for the executable in the core-file. In this case GDB calls debuginfod_exec_query to download the executable and GDB prints a message like: Downloading executable for /path/to/core-file... which makes sense in that case. For a long time GDB has also had the ability to download memory-mapped files and shared libraries when opening a core-file. However, recent commits have made these cases more likely to trigger, which is a good thing, but the messaging from GDB in these cases is not ideal. When downloading a memory-mapped file GDB prints: Downloading executable for /path/to/memory-mapped-file And for a shared library: Downloading executable for /path/to/libfoo.so These last two messages could, I think, be improved. I propose making two changes. First, I suggest instead of using /path/to/core-file in the first case, we use the name of the executable that GDB is fetching. This makes the messaging consistent in that we print the name of the file we're fetching rather than the name of the file we're fetching something for. I further propose that we replace 'executable for' with the more generic word 'file'. The messages will then become: Downloading file /path/to/exec-file... Downloading file /path/to/memory-mapped-file... Downloading file /path/to/libfoo.so... I think these messages are clearer than what we used to have, and they are consistent in that we name the thing being downloaded in all cases. There is one tiny problem. The first case relies on GDB knowing the name of the executable it wants to download. The only place we can currently get that from is, I think, the memory-mapped file list. [ ASIDE: There is `bfd_core_file_failing_command` which reports the executable and argument list from the core file, but this information is not ideal for this task. First, the executable and arguments are merged into a single string, and second, the string is a relatively short, fixed length string, so the executable name is often truncated. For these reasons I don't consider fetching the executable name using this bfd function as a solution. ] We do have to consider the case that the core file does not have any mapped file information. This shouldn't ever be the case for a Linux target, but it's worth considering. [ ASIDE: I mention Linux specifically because this only becomes a problem if we try to do a lookup via debuginfod, which requires that we have build-ids available. Linux has special support for embedding build-ids into the core file, but I'm not sure if other kernels do this. ] For the unlikely edge case of a core-file that has build-ids, but doesn't have any mapped file information then I propose that we synthesis a filename like: 'with build-id xxxxxx'. We would then see a message like: Downloading file with build-id xxxxxx... Where 'xxxxxx' would be replaced by the actual build-id. This isn't ideal, but I think is good enough, and, as I said, I think this case is not going to be hit very often, or maybe at all. We already had some tests that emitted two of the above messages, which I've updated, these cover the mapped-file and shared library case. The message about downloading the exec for the core-file is actually really hard to trigger now as usually the exec will also appear in the memory-mapped file list and GDB will download the file at this stage. Then when GDB needs the executable for loading the symbols it'll ask debuginfod, and debuginfod will find the file in its cache, and so no message will be printed. If anyone has any ideas about how to trigger this case then I'm happy to add additional tests. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
12 daysAutomatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
13 daysAutomatic date update in version.inGDB Administrator1-1/+1
13 daysAdd dw2-aranges.expAlexandra Hájková3-2/+77
This test checks that GDB is able to load DWARF information when .debug_aranges has a section address size that is set to 0. This test was originally written by Jan Kratochvil to test commit 927aa2e778d from 2017, titled "DWARF-5: .debug_names index consumer". This test was originally written using a static .S file and has been present in the Fedora tree for a long time. If dwarf2/aranges.c is modified to turn off the address_size check, GDB will crash with SIGFPE when loading the executable with address size set to zero. I modified the DWARF assembler to make it possible to set the address size to zero in a .debug_aranges section and used the DWARF assembler to produce the assembly file. Co-Authored-By: Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> Approved-by: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove pidof(process)Simon Marchi4-15/+10
This function doesn't seem so useful, use `process_info::pid` directly instead. Change-Id: I55d592f38b32a197957ed4c569993cd23a818cb4 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove pid_of(thread)Simon Marchi6-20/+11
This function doesn't seem so useful, use `thread_info::id::pid` directly instead. Change-Id: I7450c4223e5b0bf66788eeb5b070ab6f5287f798 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove lwpid_of(thread)Simon Marchi8-138/+118
This function doesn't seem so useful. Use `thread_info::id::lwp` directly. Change-Id: Ib4a86eeeee6c1342bc1c092f083589ce28009be1 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove ptid_of(thread)Simon Marchi7-60/+51
This function doesn't seem so useful. Use `thread_info::id` directly. Change-Id: I158cd06a752badd30f68424e329aa42d275e43b7 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove current_thread_ptidSimon Marchi1-13/+5
This function doesn't seem so useful. Use `thread_info::id` directly. Change-Id: I4ae4e7baa44e09704631a1c3a5a66e5b8b5a3594 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove current_ptid macroSimon Marchi7-9/+6
I think it just makes things more obscure. Use `thread_info::id` directly instead. Change-Id: I141d5fb08ebf45c13cc32c4bba62773249fcb356 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove get_thread_processSimon Marchi7-43/+21
Remove the `get_thread_process` function, use `thread_info::process` instead. In `server.cc`, use `current_process ()` instead of going through the current thread. Change-Id: Ifc61d65852e392d154b854a45d45df584ab3922e Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: make remove_thread a method of process_infoSimon Marchi6-11/+13
Same idea as the previous patch, but for `remove_thread`. Change-Id: I7e227655be5fcf29a3256e8389eb32051f27882d Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: make add_thread a method of process_infoSimon Marchi6-14/+11
Since thread_info objects are now basically children of process_info objects, I think that makes sense. Change-Id: I7f0a67b921b468e512851cb2f36015d1003412d7 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: add thread -> process backlinkSimon Marchi2-4/+11
In a few spots, we need to get to a process from a thread. Having a backlink from thread to process is cheap and makes the operation trivial, add it. Change-Id: I8a94b2919494b1dcaf954de2246386794308aa82 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdbserver: remove for_each_thread(pid, func)Simon Marchi8-33/+24
Remove this overload, prefer to use `process_info::for_each_thread`. In many instances, the `process_info` is already available, so this saves a map lookup. In other instances, add the `process_info` lookup at the call site. In `linux-arm-low.cc` and `win32-i386-low.cc`, use `current_process ()` instead of `current_thread->id.pid ()`. I presume that if `current_process ()` and `current_thread` don't match, it's a bug orthogonal to this change. Change-Id: I751ed497cb1f313cf937b35125151bee9316fc51 Reviewed-By: Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
14 daysgdb: LoongArch: Remove use of gdbarch_remove_non_address_bits hookSchimpe, Christina1-8/+2
LoongArch doesn't implement the hook gdbarch_remove_non_address_bits, so there is no need to use the hook in gdb/loongarch-linux-nat.c. Approved-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
14 daysgdb: make the error message for unreadable objfiles more informativeGuinevere Larsen1-2/+2
When GDB is unable to read an objfile, it prints the error message "I'm sorry Dave, I can't do that. Symbol format `%s' unknown.". While it is a great reference, an end user won't have much information about the problem. So far this wasn't much of a problem, as it is very uncommon for GDB to be unable to read an objfile. However, a future patch will allow users to selectively disable support to some formats, making it somewhat expected that the message will be seen by end users. This commit makes the end message more informative and direct. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13299 Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
14 daysaarch64: add flag OPD_F_UNSIGNED to distinguish signedness of immediate operandsMatthieu Longo2-23/+77
This patch introduces a new operand flag OPD_F_UNSIGNED to signal that the immediate value should be treated as an unsigned value. The default signedness of immediate operands is signed.
14 daysaarch64: testsuite: remove hard-coded instruction addressesMatthieu Longo1-26/+26
14 daysaarch64: remove redundant register type R_NMatthieu Longo1-5/+1
The register type R_N is redundant with R_ZR_SP. This patch removes it, and replaces its usage by R_ZR_SP.
14 daysaarch64: improve debuggability on array of enumMatthieu Longo2-6/+6
The current space optmization on enum aarch64_opn_qualifier forced its encoding using an unsigned char. This "hard-coded" optimization has the bad consequence of making the array of such enums being completely unreadable when debugging with GDB because the enum type is lost along the way. Keeping this space optimization, and the enum type as well, is possible when the declaration of the enum is tagged with attribute((packed)). attribute((packed)) is a GNU extension, and is wrapped in the macro ATTRIBUTE_PACKED (defined in ansidecl.h), and should be used instead.
14 daysaarch64: change returned type to bool to match semantic of functionsMatthieu Longo3-173/+173
14 daysaarch64: constify unchanged char* argumentsMatthieu Longo1-1/+1
14 daysaarch64: make comment clearer about the locationMatthieu Longo1-1/+2
The enum aarch64_opnd_qualifiers in include/opcode/aarch64.h needs to stay in sync with the array of struct operand_qualifier_data which defines various properties for the different type of operands. For instance, for: - registers: the size of the register, the number of elements. - immediates: lower and upper bits to determine the range of values.
14 daysgdb/testsuite: fix gdb.base/basic-edit-cmd.exp testAndrew Burgess1-1/+4
In the recent commit: commit 31ada87f91b4c5306d81c8a896df9764c32941f3 Date: Wed Nov 6 22:18:55 2024 +0000 gdb: fixes and tests for the 'edit' command the new gdb.base/basic-edit-cmd.exp was added. The Linaro CI highlighted an issue with the test which I failed to address before pushing the above commit. Part of the test loads a file into GDB and then uses the 'edit' command with no arguments to edit the default location. This default location is expected to be the 'main' function. On my local machine the line reported is the opening '{' of main, and that is what the test checks for. The Linaro CI though appears to see the first code line of main. I think either result is fine as far as this test is concerned, so I've expanded the test regexp to check for either line number. This should make the CI testing happy again.
14 daysgdb: fixes and tests for the 'edit' commandAndrew Burgess3-1/+211
This commit was inspired by this mailing list post: https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/osmtfvf5xe3yx4n7oirukidym4cik7lehhy4re5mxpset2qgwt@6qlboxhqiwgm When reviewing that patch, the first thing I wanted to do was add some tests for the 'edit' command because, as far as I can tell, there are no real tests right now. The approach I've taken for testing is to override the EDITOR environment variable, setting this to just 'echo'. Now when the 'edit' command is run, instead of entering an interactive editor, the shell instead echos back the arguments that GDB is trying to pass to the editor. The output might look like this: (gdb) edit +22 /tmp/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/edit-cmd.c (gdb) We can then test this like any other normal command. I then wrote some basic tests covering a few situations like, using 'edit' before the inferior is started. Using 'edit' without any arguments, and using 'edit' with a line number argument. There are plenty of cases that are still not tested, for example, the test program only has a single source file for example. But we can always add more tests later. I then used these tests to validate the fix proposed in the above patch. The patch above does indeed fix some cases, specifically, when GDB stops at a location (e.g. a breakpoint location) and then the 'edit' command without any arguments is fixed. But using the 'list' command to show some other location, and then 'edit' to edit the just listed location broken before and after the above patch. I am instead proposing this alternative patch which I think fixes more cases. When GDB stops at a location then 'edit' with no arguments should correctly edit the current line. And using 'list XX' to list a specific location, followed by 'edit' should also now edit the just listed location. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17669 Co-Authored-By: Lluís Batlle i Rossell <viric@viric.name> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>