Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Add the `is_unsigned` and `set_is_unsigned` methods on `struct type`, in
order to remove the `TYPE_UNSIGNED` macro. In this patch, the
`TYPE_UNSIGNED` macro is changed to use `type::is_unsigned`, so all the
call sites that are used to set this property on a type are changed to
use the new method. The next patch will remove the macro completely.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdbtypes.h (struct type) <is_unsigned, set_is_unsigned>: New
methods.
(TYPE_UNSIGNED): Use type::is_unsigned. Change all write call
sites to use type::set_is_unsigned.
Change-Id: Ib09ddce84eda160a801a8f288cccf61c8ef136bc
|
|
For Cortex-M targets using floating-point, eg the Cortex-M4F, its not possible
to get any call-stack backtrace if setting a breakpoint in ISR.
The exception stack unwinder for Cortex-M does not consider if floating-point
registers was stacked or not, further the Cortex-M has two stack pointers: MSP
(Main Stack Pointer) and PSP (Process Stack Pointer).
This is not handled when GDB tries to backtrace in the exception stack
unwinder.
This patch fixes this, and gives a correct call-stack backtrace from
breakpoints set in a handler or ISR.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* arm-tdep.c (arm_m_exception_cache): Try use correct stack
pointer and stack frame offset when unwinding.
|
|
Fix floating point instructions not recognized when building GCC.
gas/
PR 26608
* config/tc-csky.c (md_begin): Set feature flags for default
cpu.
|
|
When running the rust test-cases with release 1.36.0 and LLVM version 7.0, I
run into:
...
(gdb) UNTESTED: gdb.rust/traits.exp: could not read \
outputs/gdb.rust/traits/traits with readelf
PATH: gdb.rust/traits.exp: could not read \
outputs/gdb.rust/traits/traits with readelf
...
Fix the PATH warning by printing [file tail $binfile] instead $binfile.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-09-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.rust/traits.exp: Fix PATH warning.
|
|
|
|
I've been playing with a board file that forces every testcase to
include a header file that does something like:
#define main __gdb_testcase_main
and then links an actual main() function that does some
initialization and then jumps to __gdb_testcase_main.
That runs into a number of testcases relying on main not having an
explicit return statement, like e.g.,:
gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/catch-follow-exec.c:27:1: warning: non-void function does not return a value [-Wreturn-type]
gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/catch-signal.c:47:1: warning: non-void function does not return a value [-Wreturn-type]
We don't get those warnings without my board because it is valid to
not explicitly return from main. There's an implicit "return 0;".
Since it doesn't hurt to be explicit, I've went ahead and added the
explicit return statements.
Also, a couple testcases either don't explicitly specify main's return
type, or return void. Those are tweaked to explicitly return int.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/catch-follow-exec.c (main): Add explicit return
statement.
* gdb.base/catch-signal.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/condbreak-call-false.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/consecutive.c (main): Add explicit return
statement and return type.
* gdb.base/cursal.c (main): Add explicit return statement.
* gdb.base/cvexpr.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/display.c (main): Add explicit return statement and
return type.
* gdb.base/dprintf-detach.c (main): Add explicit return statement.
* gdb.base/endianity.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/execd-prog.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/gdb1090.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/info_qt.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/lineinc.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/load-command.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/macscp1.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/pr10179-a.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/quit-live.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/scope0.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/settings.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.base/stack-checking.c (main): Return int.
* gdb.base/varargs.c (main): Add explicit return statement.
* gdb.cp/ambiguous.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/anon-struct.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/anon-union.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/bool.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/bs15503.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/cplusfuncs.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/cttiadd.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/extern-c.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/filename.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/formatted-ref.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/mb-ctor.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/member-ptr.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/minsym-fallback-main.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/overload-const.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/paren-type.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/parse-lang.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/pr-1023.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/psmang1.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/readnow-language.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/ref-params.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/rvalue-ref-params.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.cp/virtbase2.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-namespaceless-anonymous.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw4-toplevel-types.cc (main): Likewise.
* gdb.mi/mi-console.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.mi/mi-read-memory.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.modula2/multidim.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.opt/inline-small-func.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.python/py-rbreak.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.stabs/exclfwd1.c (main): Likewise.
* gdb.trace/qtro.c (main): Likewise.
|
|
The testcase has GDB call my_getenv in the inferior, and that fails
with Clang, because Clang optimizes out my_getenv completely, since it
isn't called anywhere (in the program).
This commit fixes it.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/share-env-with-gdbserver.c (main): Call my_getenv
instead of getenv.
|
|
If a board file wants to customize how gdb is launched, the obvious
way is to have the board override gdb_spawn. However, that doesn't
work for either gdb.mi/ testcases or gdb.base/dbx.exp, because
default_mi_gdb_start and dbx_gdb_start don't use gdb_spawn currently.
That is fixed by this patch.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.base/dbx.exp (dbx_gdb_start): Adjust to use gdb_spawn
instead of spawning GDB with remote_spawn.
* lib/mi-support.exp (default_mi_gdb_start): Adjust to use
gdb_spawn instead of spawning GDB with remote_spawn.
|
|
gdb.dwarf2/atomic-type.exp and gdb.dwarf2/ada-linkage-name.exp fail
when testing with "clang -flto" as compiler, like:
$ make check TESTS="gdb.dwarf2/ada-linkage-name.exp" RUNTESTFLAGS="CC_FOR_TARGET='clang -flto'"
because with -flto, functions that aren't referenced anywhere are not
emitted in the final binary. Fix it by adding uses of the functions.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.dwarf2/ada-linkage-name.c (main): Move to the bottom of the
file and add calls to first and second.
* gdb.dwarf2/atomic.c (main): Move to the bottom of the file and
add call to f.
|
|
Currently -break-insert always creates a wildmatching breakpoint, and
there's no way to ask for a fullname match. To address that, this
patch adds the equivalent of "break -qualified" to MI:
"-break-insert --qualified".
For the testcase, curiously, it doesn't look like we have _any_
testcase that tests a breakpoint with multiple locations, and, the
existing mi_create_breakpoint / mi_make_breakpoint procedures are only
good for breakpoints with a single location. This patch thus adds a
few new companion routines to mi-support.exp for breakpoints with
multiple locations: mi_create_breakpoint_multi,
mi_make_breakpoint_loc, mi_make_breakpoint_multi.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Document "-break-insert --qualified".
* mi/mi-cmd-break.c (mi_cmd_break_insert_1): Handle "--qualified".
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Breakpoint Commands): Document
"-break-insert --qualified" and "-dprintf-insert --qualified".
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.mi/mi-break-qualified.cc: New file.
* gdb.mi/mi-break-qualified.exp: New file.
* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_create_breakpoint_multi)
(mi_make_breakpoint_loc, mi_make_breakpoint_multi): New
procedures.
(mi_create_breakpoint_1): New, factored out from
mi_create_breakpoint.
|
|
gdb.cp/misc.cc seems to have been originally copied from
gdb.cp/classes.cc. The testcases that use it, misc.exp and
inherit.exp don't reference the "register" bits anywhere. Remove
them, since they trigger warnings with newer GCCs, given "register" is
being removed in C++17.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.cp/inherit.exp: No longer pass -Wno-deprecated-register.
* gdb.cp/misc.exp: No longer pass -Wno-deprecated-register.
* gdb.cp/misc.cc (class small, small::method, marker_reg1)
(register_class): Delete.
(main): Don't call register_class.
|
|
The gdb.cp/classes.exp testcase has one test that tries to exercise
the case of calling a method on a variable that has been put in a
register.
See the declaration of small in classes.cc:
/* Try to get the compiler to allocate a class in a register. */
class small {
public:
int x;
int method ();
};
and the comment in classes.exp:
# This class is so small that an instance of it can fit in a register.
# When gdb tries to call a method, it gets embarrassed about taking
# the address of a register.
#
# TODO: I think that message should be a PASS, not an XFAIL.
# gdb prints an informative message and declines to do something
# impossible.
#
# The method call actually succeeds if the compiler allocates very
# small classes in memory instead of registers. So this test does
# not tell us anything interesting if the call succeeds.
#
# -- chastain 2003-12-31
And these comments:
https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc/2010-05/msg00116.html
https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc/2010-05/msg00117.html
"register keyword has other uses, e.g. for -O0 code variables
declared with register keyword can be put into registers, while
variables declared without it always get stack slots."
"I think it does, without optimization. There's some unique GDB
tests that use this. It causes them to be live between statements in
a machine register instead of always stored in stack slots."
The "register" keyword seems to be ignored by the compiler nowadays
even at -O0, though. With or without the register keyword, the
variable is given a stack slot, at least on x86-64 with GCC 9.
However, if we use the GCC extension to put the variable
in a specific variable:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-10.2.0/gcc/Local-Register-Variables.html#Local-Register-Variables
diff --git c/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/classes.cc w/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/classes.cc
index 5ea360e4d06..6dcf34689b8 100644
--- c/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/classes.cc
+++ w/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/classes.cc
@@ -629,7 +629,7 @@ register_class ()
/* We don't call any methods for v, so gcc version cygnus-2.3.3-930220
might put this variable in a register. This is a lose, though, because
it means that GDB can't call any methods for that variable. */
- register small v;
+ register small v asm ("rax");
then it works, and we get an XFAIL:
print v.method ()
Address requested for identifier "v" which is in register $rax
(gdb) XFAIL: gdb.cp/classes.exp: calling method for small class (PRMS 2972)
I think that what we should do here is move this test into its own
file, use that GCC syntax to force it to a register, and do as the
comment says -- issue a pass instead of an XFAIL.
That's what this commit does.
Note that we don't need -Wno-deprecated-register (nor -Wno-register)
anymore in the new testcase, because GNU register-asm local variables
don't trigger the warning, with either GCC or Clang.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.cp/classes.exp: No longer pass -Wno-deprecated-register.
(do_tests): Remove "calling method for small class" test.
* gdb.cp/classes.cc (class small, small::method, marker_reg1)
(register_class): Delete.
(main): Don't call register_class.
* gdb.cp/call-method-register.exp: New file, based on bits removed
from classes.exp.
* gdb.cp/call-method-register.cc: New file, based on bits removed
from classes.cc.
|
|
Currently, with a program built from these sources:
$ cat extern.c
void foo () {}
$ cat static.c
static void foo () {}
$ cat main.c
int main () { return 0; }
... if you set a breakpoint on "foo", like:
(gdb) break foo
.. when there's debug info, GDB creates a breakpoint with two
locations, one for each of the external and static functions.
But, when there's no debug info, GDB creates a breakpoint with a
single location, for the external foo. Vis:
$ gcc extern.c static.c main.c -o classify.nodebug
$ gcc extern.c static.c main.c -o classify.debug -g
$ gdb classify.nodebug
Reading symbols from classify.nodebug...
(No debugging symbols found in classify.nodebug)
(gdb) b foo
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40048b
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y 0x000000000040048b <foo+4>
(gdb)
$ gdb classify.debug
Reading symbols from classify.debug...
(gdb) b foo
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40048b: foo. (2 locations)
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x000000000040048b in foo at extern.c:1
1.2 y 0x0000000000400492 in foo at static.c:1
GDB drops the static function is search_minsyms_for_name, where at the
very end of that function we pick only the locations with highest
classification, according to classify_type.
The classify_type logic was introduced here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2011-December/087864.html
which said:
"Previously, linespec was trying to filter out minsyms as they were
seen. However, this isn't faithful to gdb's historical approach,
which is to priority-order minsyms; see lookup_minimal_symbol."
lookup_minimal_symbol's intro says, in the .c file:
/* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
first minimal symbol that matches NAME. If OBJF is non-NULL, limit
the search to that objfile. If SFILE is non-NULL, the only file-scope
symbols considered will be from that source file (global symbols are
still preferred). Returns a pointer to the minimal symbol that
matches, or NULL if no match is found.
Note: One instance where there may be duplicate minimal symbols with
the same name is when the symbol tables for a shared library and the
symbol tables for an executable contain global symbols with the same
names (the dynamic linker deals with the duplication).
It's also possible to have minimal symbols with different mangled
names, but identical demangled names. For example, the GNU C++ v3
ABI requires the generation of two (or perhaps three) copies of
constructor functions --- "in-charge", "not-in-charge", and
"allocate" copies; destructors may be duplicated as well.
Obviously, there must be distinct mangled names for each of these,
but the demangled names are all the same: S::S or S::~S. */
struct bound_minimal_symbol
lookup_minimal_symbol (const char *name, const char *sfile,
struct objfile *objf)
{
If you look inside this function, you'll see:
/* External symbols are best. */
...
/* File-local symbols are next best. */
...
/* Symbols for shared library trampolines are next best. */
...
While this logic is good when you're looking for the single "best"
symbol by name, I question it for linespecs, since we want to set
breakpoints in all the multiple locations that match. I see no point
in hidding static functions.
Now, for breakpoints, it does make sense to filter out PLT/trampoline
symbols if we find the actual global matching function symbol.
Otherwise, if we did no filtering (i.e., just removed the
classify_type logic), you would end up with e.g.:
(gdb) b printf
Breakpoint 1 at 0x413a60 (2 locations)
(top-gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x0000000000413a60 <printf@plt>
1.2 y 0x00007ffff4653640 in __printf at printf.c:28
instead of this (which is what we get currently) before the shared
library is loaded (a location set in the PLT):
(gdb) b printf
Breakpoint 1 at 0x413a60
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y 0x0000000000413a60 <printf@plt>
and this after the library is loaded (only one location, no breakpoint
in the PLT):
(gdb) b printf
Breakpoint 1 at 0x7ffff4653640: file printf.c, line 28.
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y 0x00007ffff4653640 in __printf at printf.c:28
This patch fixes the missing breakpoint locations issue by replacing
the classify_type logic in linespec.c with a different logic.
Instead, discard a trampoline symbol if we also found a
global/external symbol with the same name. The patch adds a couple of
testcases testing locations in external vs static functions vs
trampolines/PLTs.
We now get:
For the msym-bp.exp testcase (extern vs static), without debug info:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x000000000040048b <foo+4> ### missing before patch
1.2 y 0x000000000040049d <foo+4>
For the msym-bp.exp testcase (extern vs static), with debug info:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x000000000040048b in foo at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/msym-bp.c:21
1.2 y 0x000000000040049d in foo at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/msym-bp-2.c:21
For the msym-bp-shl.exp testcase (static vs plt), without debug info, before running to main:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x00000000004004e0 <foo@plt> ### missing before patch
1.2 y 0x00000000004005db <foo+4>
For the msym-bp-shl.exp testcase (static vs plt), without debug info, after running to main:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x00000000004005db <foo+4> ### missing before patch
1.2 y 0x00007ffff7bd65de <foo+4>
For the msym-bp-shl.exp testcase (static vs plt), with debug info, before running to main:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x00000000004004e0 <foo@plt> ### missing before patch
1.2 y 0x00000000004005db in foo at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-main-2.c:21
For the msym-bp-shl.exp testcase (static vs plt), with debug info, after running to main:
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE>
1.1 y 0x00000000004005db in foo at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-main-2.c:21
1.2 y 0x00007ffff7bd65de in foo at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-lib.c:21
gdb/ChangeLog:
* linespec.c (classify_mtype, compare_msyms): Delete.
(search_minsyms_for_name): Remove classification logic. Instead
filter out trampoline symbols if we also found an external
function of the same name.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/msym-bp-2.c: New.
* gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-lib.c: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-main-2.c: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-bp-shl-main.c: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-bp-shl.exp: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-bp.c: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-bp.exp: New file.
|
|
PR 26391
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391.nd: Adjust to match powerpc64 function
descriptors.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Create a new section for the next release branch.
Rename the section of the current branch, now that it has
been cut.
|
|
Now that the GDB 10 branch has been created, we can
bump the version number.
gdb/ChangeLog:
GDB 10 branch created (8087c3fa8b5d695e3e29e69d70d0b35ec902ac59):
* version.in: Bump version to 11.0.50.DATE-git.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/default.exp: Change $_gdb_major to 11.
|
|
|
|
I noticed this while testing the GDB in the context of the upcoming
GDB 10 release branching, because part of the process involves setting
development to False, which in turn changes the default for including
unittest to false as well. As a result, without this patch, we get
compilation errors in infrun.c such as:
infrun.c:9219:5: error: `scoped_mock_context' was not declared in this scope
This patch fixes it by bracketing the unitttest in namespace selftest
with an #if GDB_SELF_TEST.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* infrun.c (namespace selftests): Only define #if GDB_SELF_TEST.
Tested on x86_64-linux, with and without self-tests.
|
|
The symbol string table in the .symtab section is optional and cosmetic.
The contents of the .symtab section have no impact on run-time execution.
The symbol names in the symbol string table help distinguish addresses at
different locations. Add a linker option, -z unique-symbol, to avoid
duplicated local symbol names in the symbol string table.
This feature was well received by the livepatch maintainers. It not only
solves the duplicated local symbol name problem, but also would allow
livepatch to more precisely locate duplicate symbols in general for
patching.
bfd/
PR ld/26391
* elflink.c (elf_final_link_info): Add local_hash_table.
(local_hash_entry): New.
(local_hash_newfunc): Likewise.
(elf_link_output_symstrtab): Append ".COUNT" to duplicated local
symbols.
(bfd_elf_final_link): Initialize and free local_hash_table for
"-z unique-symbol".
include/
PR ld/26391
* bfdlink.h (bfd_link_info): Add unique_symbol.
ld/
PR ld/26391
* NEWS: Mention "-z unique-symbol".
* emultempl/elf.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_handle_option): Handle
"-z unique-symbol" and "-z nounique-symbol".
* ld.texi: Document "-z unique-symbol" and "-z nounique-symbol".
* lexsup.c (elf_static_list_options): Add "-z unique-symbol" and
"-z nounique-symbol".
* testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp: Add PR ld/26391 tests.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391.nd: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391.out: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391c.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26391d.c: Likewise.
|
|
|
|
This adds support for the bfloat16 datatype, which can be seen as a short
version of FP32, skipping the least significant 16 bits of the mantissa.
Since the datatype is currently only supported by the AVX512 registers,
the printing of bfloat16 values is only supported for xmm, ymm and zmm
registers.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-09-11 Moritz Riesterer <moritz.riesterer@intel.com>
Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* gdbarch.sh: Added bfloat16 type.
* gdbarch.c: Regenerated.
* gdbarch.h: Regenerated.
* gdbtypes.c (floatformats_bfloat16): New struct.
(gdbtypes_post_init): Add builtin_bfloat16.
* gdbtypes.h (struct builtin_type) <builtin_bfloat16>: New member.
(floatformats_bfloat16): New struct.
* i386-tdep.c (i386_zmm_type): Add field "v32_bfloat16"
(i386_ymm_type): Add field "v16_bfloat16"
(i386_gdbarch_init): Add set_gdbarch_bfloat16_format.
* target-descriptions.c (make_gdb_type): Add case TDESC_TYPE_BFLOAT16.
* gdbsupport/tdesc.cc (tdesc_predefined_types): New member bfloat16.
* gdbsupport/tdesc.h (tdesc_type_kind): New member TDESC_TYPE_BFLOAT16.
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.xml: Add bfloat16 type.
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.c: Regenerated.
* features/i386/64bit-sse.xml: Add bfloat16 type.
* features/i386/64bit-sse.c: Regenerated.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-09-11 Moritz Riesterer <moritz.riesterer@intel.com>
Felix Willgerodt <Felix.Willgerodt@intel.com>
* x86-avx512bf16.c: New file.
* x86-avx512bf16.exp: Likewise.
* lib/gdb.exp (skip_avx512bf16_tests): New function.
|
|
gdb/Changelog:
2020-07-02 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* i386-tdep.c (i386_zmm_type): Fix field names.
(i386_ymm_type): Fix field names.
|
|
include:
2020-09-10 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
Sync with GCC
2020-08-17 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* floatformat.h (floatformat_bfloat16_big): New.
(floatformat_bfloat16_little): New.
libiberty:
2020-09-10 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
Sync with GCC
2020-08-17 Felix Willgerodt <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>
* floatformat.c (floatformat_bfloat16_big): New.
(floatformat_bfloat16_little): New.
|
|
When -g was used to generate DWARF gas would error out when a .debug_line
already exists. But when a .debug_info section already exists it would
simply skip generating one without warning or error. Do the same for
.debug_line. It is only an error when the user explicitly uses .loc
directives and also generates the .debug_line table itself.
The tests are unfortunately arch specific because the line table is only
generated when actual instructions have been emitted. Use i386 because
that is probably the most used architecture. Before this patch the new
dwarf-line-2 testcase would fail, with this patch it succeeds (and doesn't
try to add its own line table).
gas/ChangeLog:
* as.texi (-g): Explicitly mention when .debug_info and .debug_line
are generated for the DWARF format.
(Loc): Add that it is an error to both use a .loc directive and
generate a .debug_line yourself.
* dwarf2dbg.c (dwarf2_any_loc_directive_seen): New static variable.
(dwarf2_directive_loc): Set dwarf2_any_loc_directive_seen to TRUE.
(dwarf2_finish): Check dwarf2_any_loc_directive_seen before emitting
an error. Only create .debug_line if it is empty (or doesn't exist).
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Add dwarf2-line-{1,2,3,4} when testing
an elf target.
* testsuite/gas/i386/dwarf2-line-{1,2,3,4}.{s,d,l}: New test files.
|
|
The previous patch missed one modification.
Following is the error message:
gas/config/tc-csky.c:806:5: error: 'CSKY_ARCH_804' undeclared here
(not in a function); did you mean 'CSKY_ARCH_807'?
include/
* opcode/csky.h (CSKYV1_ISA_E1): Convert to bfd_uint64_t type.
(CSKYV2_ISA_E1): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_1E2): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_2E3): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_3E7): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_7E10): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_3E3R1): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_3E3R2): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_10E60): Likewise.
(CSKYV2_ISA_3E3R3): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_TRUST): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_CACHE): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_NVIC): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_CP): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_MP): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_MP_1E2): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_JAVA): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_MAC): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_MAC_DSP): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_DSP): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_DSP_1E2): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_DSP_ENHANCE): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_DSPE60): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_FLOAT_E1): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_FLOAT_1E2): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_FLOAT_1E3): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_FLOAT_3E4): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_FLOAT_7E60): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_VDSP): Likewise.
(CSKY_ISA_VDSP_2): Likewise.
(CSKY_ARCH_804): Define.
(CSKY_ARCH_805): Define.
(CSKY_ARCH_800): Define.
|
|
PR 26588
* emultempl/pe.em (_finish): Only generate a import library if not
exporting relocs.
* emultempl/pep.em: Likewise.
|
|
Kfail these FAILs as caused by PR exp/26602:
...
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print x.x
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print n.x
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print j.x
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print jva1.x
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print jva2.x
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print (A1)j
FAIL: gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: print (A1)jva1
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-09-11 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR exp/26602
* gdb.cp/ambiguous.exp: Add KFAILs for PR26602.
|
|
Define NT_X86_CET which is the proposed note for x86 CET state to support
Intel CET in Linux kernel. Double check it after Intel CET patches have
been merged into Linux kernel.
binutils/
* readelf.c (get_note_type): Support NT_X86_CET.
include/
* elf/common.h (NT_X86_CET): New.
|
|
newly loaded debug info.
PR 26595
* dwarf.c (load_separate_debug_info): Return NULL rather than
FALSE in error situations.
(load_separate_debug_file): Move code to load debug links to ...
(check_for_and_load_links): ... here. New function. Load
separate debug information pointed to by debuglink and
debugaltlink sections. Recursively scan newly loaded debug
information for more links and load them too.
|
|
condition-evaluation"
The options for the "breakpoint condition-evaluation" setting are
"host", "target", and "auto". The help message mentions the option
"gdb" at one point instead of "host". Fix this typo. Also add a period.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-09-11 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* breakpoint.c: Fix typo in the help message of the
"set breakpoint condition-evaluation" command.
|
|
Remove a stale command that is apparently forgotten after a copy-paste
from 'gdb.base/break-main-file-remove-fail.exp'.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-09-11 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* gdb.base/bp-cmds-execution-x-script.exp: Remove a stale comment.
|
|
|
|
The fix in 7e05773767820b441b23a16628b55c98cb1aef46 introduced a PLT
for conditional jumps when the target symbol is undefined. This is
incorrect because conditional branch relocations are not allowed to
clobber IP0/IP1 and hence, should not result in a dynamic relocation.
Revert that change and in its place, issue an error when the target
symbol is undefined.
bfd/
2020-09-10 Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddesh.poyarekar@arm.com>
* elfnn-aarch64.c (elfNN_aarch64_final_link_relocate): Revert
changes in 7e05773767820b441b23a16628b55c98cb1aef46. Set
error for undefined symbol in BFD_RELOC_AARCH64_BRANCH19 and
BFD_RELOC_AARCH64_TSTBR14 relocations.
ld/
2020-09-10 Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddesh.poyarekar@arm.com>
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/emit-relocs-560.d: Expect error instead
of valid output.
|
|
Prior to
commit 1e3b96fd6cf0c7d018083994ad951ccf92aba582
Author: Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Sep 4 13:54:21 2020 +0930
Allow plugin syms to mark as-needed shared libs needed
when removing unused IR symbol references, ld didn't add unnecessary
DT_NEEDED libraries which may lead to undefined symbol reference in a
--as-needed library when the symbol is defined in a prior --as-needed
library and there is no reference in relocatable inputs. This behavior
is desirable since it ensures that both lazy and non-lazy bindings work
the same way. The problem is with --as-needed libraries, which happens
with and without LTO. Now, the linker may add many unnecessary DT_NEEDED
libraries for IR inputs.
PR ld/26590
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26590.err: New file.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26590a.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26590b.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26590c.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26590d.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Run ld/26590 tests.
|
|
gcc commit 387d0773f3 changed the D demangler, with the following
commit log:
libiberty: Add support for `in' and `in ref' storage classes.
The storage class `in' is now a first-class citizen with its own mangle
symbol, of which also permits `in ref'. Previously, `in' was an alias
to `const [scope]', which is a type constructor.
The mangle symbol repurposed for this is `I', which was originally used
by identifier types. However, while TypeIdentifier is part of the
grammar, it must be resolved to some other entity during the semantic
passes, and so shouldn't appear anywhere in the mangled name.
Old tests that are now no longer valid have been removed.
This patch makes the same changes to the gdb testsuite as were made to
the upstream gcc libiberty testsuite.
gdb/testsuite/
PR 26597
* gdb.dlang/demangle.exp: Update tests as per gcc commit 387d0773f3.
|
|
Implement the following functionality: create_inferior,
post_create_inferior, attach, kill, detach, mourn, join, thread_alive,
resume, wait, fetch_registers, store_registers, read_memory, write_memory,
request_interrupt, supports_read_auxv, read_auxv,
supports_hardware_single_step, sw_breakpoint_from_kind,
supports_z_point_type, insert_point, remove_point,
stopped_by_sw_breakpoint, supports_qxfer_siginfo, qxfer_siginfo,
supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint, supports_non_stop,
supports_multi_process, supports_fork_events, supports_vfork_events,
supports_exec_events, supports_disable_randomization,
supports_qxfer_libraries_svr4, qxfer_libraries_svr4,
supports_pid_to_exec_file, pid_to_exec_file, thread_name,
supports_catch_syscall.
The only CPU architecture supported: x86_64.
Implement only support for hardware assisted single step and
software breakpoint.
Implement support only for regular X86 registers, thus no FPU.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-low.cc: Add.
* netbsd-low.h: Likewise.
* netbsd-amd64-low.cc: Likewise.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Register "netbsd-low.cc", "netbsd-low.h",
"netbsd-amd64-low.cc".
* configure.srv: Add x86_64-*-netbsd*.
|
|
No functional change as the same functionality inlined in nbsd-nat.c
is offered in gdb/nat/netbsd-nat.c.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* nbsd-nat.c: Include "nat/netbsd-nat.h".
* (nbsd_nat_target::pid_to_exec_file)
(nbsd_nat_target::thread_alive, nbsd_nat_target::thread_name)
(nbsd_nat_target::post_startup_inferior)
(nbsd_nat_target::post_attach, nbsd_nat_target::xfer_partial)
(nbsd_add_threads): Switch local code to common gdb/nat functions.
* (nbsd_pid_to_cmdline): Call sysctl from the global namespace.
* (nbsd_thread_lister): Remove.
|
|
Do not free the last execd pathname as it will be used in
prepare_resume_reply(), after attaching a client side.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Avoid double free.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-nat.h (netbsd_nat::qxfer_siginfo): Add.
* netbsd-nat.c (netbsd_nat::qxfer_siginfo): Likewise.
|
|
Add generic function to enable debugger events in a process.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-nat.h (netbsd_nat::enable_proc_events): Add.
* netbsd-nat.c: Include <sys/ptrace.h>.
* (netbsd_nat::enable_proc_events): Add.
|
|
Add netbsd_nat::netbsd_thread_lister a generic thread lister, used
internally in netbsd-nat.c, copied from gdb/nbsd-nat.c.
Add public extern functions for listing threads:
* netbsd_nat::thread_alive
* netbsd_nat::thread_name
* netbsd_nat::for_each_thread
gdb/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-nat.h: Include "gdbsupport/function-view.h".
* (netbsd_nat::thread_alive, netbsd_nat::thread_name)
(netbsd_nat::for_each_thread): Add.
* netbsd-nat.c: Include "gdbsupport/common-defs.h" and
"gdbsupport/common-debug.h".
* (netbsd_nat::netbsd_thread_lister)
(netbsd_nat::thread_alive, netbsd_nat::thread_name)
(netbsd_nat::for_each_thread): Add.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-nat.h: Include <unistd.h>.
* (netbsd_nat::pid_to_exec_file): Add.
* netbsd-nat.c: Include <sys/types.h> and <sys/sysctl.h>.
* (netbsd_nat::pid_to_exec_file) Add.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.nat (NATDEPFILES): Add nat/netbsd-nat.o when needed.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* netbsd-nat.h: New file.
* netbsd-nat.c: Likewise.
|
|
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* eintr.h: New file.
|
|
disassembly of PowerPC binaries.
* ppc-dis.c (ppc_symbol_is_valid): New function. Returns false
for hidden, local, no-type symbols.
(disassemble_init_powerpc): Point the symbol_is_valid field in the
info structure at the new function.
|
|
gas/
* config/tc-csky.c (md_begin): Enable extend lrw by default for
CK802, CK803 and CK860.
|
|
opcodes/
* csky-opc.h (csky_v2_opcodes): Add L2Cache instructions.
* testsuite/gas/csky/cskyv2_ck860.d : Adjust to icache.iva
opcode fixing.
|
|
Add arches CK804, CK805 and CK800. CK800 is an special arch which
support all instructions for CSKYV2. Refine the cpu tables to
simplify adding a new cpu.
Co-Authored-By: Lifang Xia <lifang_xia@c-sky.com>
gas/
* config/tc-csky.c (struct csky_cpu_info): Add new members
isa_flag, features and ver.
(struct csky_cpu_feature): New.
(struct csky_cpu_version): New.
(CSKY_FEATURE_MAX): Define.
(CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_MAX): Define.
(FEATURE_DSP_EXT, FEATURE_DSP, FEATURE_MMU, FEATURE_VDSP,
FEATURE_FLOAT, FEATURE_TRUST, FEATURE_JAVA, FEATURE_SHIELD):
Define, each standard one collection of instructions.
(CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_NULL, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_e,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_t, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_f, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_v,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_ef, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_jt,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_efht, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_efv,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_eft, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_d,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_df, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_ft,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_tv, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_fv,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_dft, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_dfv,
CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_ftv, CSKY_FEATURES_DEF_eftv): Define,
the features combination used by cpu.
(CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_r0p0, CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_r1p0,
CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_r2p0, CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_r3p0,
CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_RESERVED, CSKY_CPU_REVERISON_R3):
Define, version information used by cpu.
(csky_cpus): Refine, and add CK804, CK805 and CK800.
(parse_cpu): Refine.
(parse_arch): Refine.
(md_show_usage): Refine.
(md_begin): Refine.
include/
* opcode/csky.h (CSKY_ARCH_804): Define.
(CSKY_ARCH_805): Define.
(CSKY_ARCH_800): Define.
|
|
Some MIPS targets, for reasons I didn't analyse, use the larger common
symbol in a shared lib rather than a smaller common in an executable.
That doesn't seem unreasonable, so allow that to pass for pr26580-2.
bfin-elf complains about not supporting copy relocs, but it's quite
silly to want a copy reloc for common symbols, so leave the fail
there. mn10300-elf and score-elf both fail the test with "PHDR
segment not covered by LOAD segment". Other tests fail similarly so
one more doesn't hurt. The failure is a consequence of supporting
dynamic objects but setting EMBEDDED in ld scripts.
PR 26580
* testsuite/ld-elf/pr26580-2.sd: Accept undefined symbol.
|