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I stumbled on this snippet in nat/gdb_ptrace.h:
/* Some systems, in particular DEC OSF/1, Digital Unix, Compaq Tru64
or whatever it's called these days, don't provide a prototype for
ptrace. Provide one to silence compiler warnings. */
#ifndef HAVE_DECL_PTRACE
extern PTRACE_TYPE_RET ptrace();
#endif
I believe this is unnecessary today and should be removed. First, the
comment only mentions OSes we don't support (and to be honest, I had
never even heard of).
But most importantly, in C++, a declaration with empty parenthesis
declares a function that accepts no arguments, unlike in C. So if this
declaration was really used, GDB wouldn't build, since all ptrace call
sites pass some arguments. Since we haven't heard anything about this
causing some build failures since we have transitioned to C++, I
conclude that it's not used.
This patch removes it as well as the corresponding configure check.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ptrace.m4: Don't check for ptrace declaration.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Don't declare ptrace if HAVE_DECL_PTRACE is
not defined.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
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debuginfod is a lightweight web service that indexes ELF/DWARF debugging
resources by build-id and serves them over HTTP.
This patch enables GDB to query debuginfod servers for separate debug
files and source code when it is otherwise not able to find them.
GDB can be built with debuginfod using the --with-debuginfod configure
option.
This requires that libdebuginfod be installed and found at configure time.
debuginfod is packaged with elfutils, starting with version 0.178.
For more information see https://sourceware.org/elfutils/.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 31.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-02-26 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in: Handle optional debuginfod support.
* NEWS: Update.
* README: Add --with-debuginfod summary.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Handle optional debuginfod support.
* debuginfod-support.c: debuginfod helper functions.
* debuginfod-support.h: Ditto.
* doc/gdb.texinfo: Add --with-debuginfod to configure options
summary.
* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Query debuginfod servers
when a dwz file cannot be found.
* elfread.c (elf_symfile_read): Query debuginfod servers when a
debuginfo file cannot be found.
* source.c (open_source_file): Query debuginfod servers when a
source file cannot be found.
* top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Include
--{with,without}-debuginfod in the output.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-02-26 Aaron Merey <amerey@redhat.com>
* gdb.debuginfod: New directory for debuginfod tests.
* gdb.debuginfod/main.c: New test file.
* gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: New tests.
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The motivation behind this commit is to make it easier to bundle the
Python *.py library files with GDB when statically linking GDB against
libpython. The Python files will be manually added into the GDB
installation tree, and GDB should be able to find them at run-time.
The installation tree will look like this:
.
|-- bin/
|-- include/
|-- lib/
| `-- python3.8/
`-- share/
The benefit here is that the entire installation tree can be bundled
into a single archive and copied to another machine with a different
version of Python installed, and GDB will still work, including its
Python support.
In use the new configure options would be used something like this,
first build and install a static Python library:
mkdir python
cd python
# Clone or download Python into a src/ directory.
mkdir build
export PYTHON_INSTALL_PATH=$PWD/install
cd build
../src/configure --disable-shared --prefix=$PYTHON_INSTALL_PATH
make
make install
Now build and install GDB:
mkdir binutils-gdb
cd binutils-gdb
# Clone or download GDB into a src/ directory.
mkdir build
export GDB_INSTALL_DIR=$PWD/install
cd build
../src/configure \
--prefix=$GDB_INSTALL_DIR \
--with-python=$PYTHON_INSTALL_PATH/bin/python3 \
--with-python-libdir=$GDB_INSTALL_DIR/lib
make all-gdb
make install-gdb
Finally, copy the Python libraries into the GDB install:
cp -r $PYTHON_INSTALL_DIR/lib/python3.8/ $GDB_INSTALL_DIR/lib
After this the Python src, build, and install directories are no
longer needed and can be deleted.
If the new --with-python-libdir option is not used then the existing
behaviour is left unchanged, GDB will look for the Python libraries in
the lib/ directory within the python path. The concatenation of the
python prefix and the string 'lib/' is now done at configure time,
rather than at run time in GDB as it was previous, however, this was
never something that the user had dynamic control over, so there's no
loss of functionality.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Add --with-python-libdir option.
* main.c: Use WITH_PYTHON_LIBDIR.
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To do that, this patch makes IPA compile safe-strerror as well. Because
it doesn't use Gnulib, it calls the Glibc version of strerror_r directly.
Consequently this patch also removes the configure checks for strerror.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-12-10 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* gdbsupport/agent.c (gdb_connect_sync_socket): Call
safe_strerror instead of strerror.
* gdbsupport/common.m4: Don't check for strerror.
* gdbsupport/safe-strerror.c: Support both the glibc version
of strerror_r and the XSI version.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2019-12-10 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* Makefile.in: Add safe-strerror.c to gdbreplay and IPA, and change
UNDO_GNULIB_CFLAGS to undo strerror_r instead of strerror.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Don't check for strerror.
* linux-i386-ipa.c (initialize_fast_tracepoint_trampoline_buffer):
Call safe_strerror instead of strerror.
* server.h (strerror): Remove this now-unnecessary declaration.
* tracepoint.c (init_named_socket): Call safe_strerror instead of
strerror.
(gdb_agent_helper_thread): Likewise.
* utils.c (perror_with_name): Likewise.
Change-Id: I74848f072dcde75cb55c435ef9398dc8f958cd73
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This adds some configury so that gdb can set the names of worker
threads. This makes them show up more nicely when debugging gdb
itself.
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdbsupport/thread-pool.c (thread_pool::set_thread_count): Set
name of worker thread.
* gdbsupport/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for
pthread_setname_np.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
Change-Id: I60473d65ae9ae14d8c56ddde39684240c16aaf35
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This adds configury support and an RAII class that can be used to
temporarily block signals that are used by gdb. (This class is not
used in this patch, but it split out for easier review.)
The idea of this patch is that these signals should only be delivered
to the main thread. So, when creating a background thread, they are
temporarily blocked; the blocked state is inherited by the new thread.
The sigprocmask man page says:
The use of sigprocmask() is unspecified in a multithreaded
process; see pthread_sigmask(3).
This patch changes gdb to use pthread_sigmask when appropriate, by
introducing a convenience define.
I've updated gdbserver as well, because I had to touch gdbsupport, and
because the threading patches will make it link against the thread
library.
I chose not to touch the NTO code, because I don't know anything about
that platform and because I cannot test it.
Finally, this modifies an existing spot in the Guile layer to use the
new facility.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdbsupport/signals-state-save-restore.c (original_signal_mask):
Remove comment.
(save_original_signals_state, restore_original_signals_state): Use
gdb_sigmask.
* linux-nat.c (block_child_signals, restore_child_signals_mask)
(_initialize_linux_nat): Use gdb_sigmask.
* guile/guile.c (_initialize_guile): Use block_signals.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add gdb-sigmask.h.
* gdbsupport/gdb-sigmask.h: New file.
* event-top.c (async_sigtstp_handler): Use gdb_sigmask.
* cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Use gdb_sigmask.
* gdbsupport/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for
pthread_sigmask.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* gdbsupport/block-signals.h: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* remote-utils.c (block_unblock_async_io): Use gdb_sigmask.
* linux-low.c (linux_wait_for_event_filtered, linux_async): Use
gdb_sigmask.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
Change-Id: If3f37dc57dd859c226e9e4d79458a0514746e8c6
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This adds a configure check for std::thread. This is needed because
std::thread is not available on some systems, like some versions of
mingw and DJGPP.
This also adds configury to make sure that a threaded gdb links
against the correct threading library (-lpthread or the like), and
passes the right flags (e.g., -pthread) to the compilations.
Note that this also links gdbserver against the thread library. This
is not strictly necessary at this point in the series, but a later
patch will change gdbsupport to use pthread_sigmask, at which point
this will be needed.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* acinclude.m4: Include ax_pthread.m4.
* Makefile.in (PTHREAD_CFLAGS, PTHREAD_LIBS): New variables.
(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Use PTHREAD_CFLAGS.
(CLIBS): Use PTHREAD_LIBS.
(aclocal_m4_deps): Add ax_pthread.m4.
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
* gdbsupport/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for std::thread.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2019-11-26 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* Makefile.in (PTHREAD_CFLAGS, PTHREAD_LIBS): New variables.
(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Use PTHREAD_CFLAGS.
(GDBSERVER_LIBS): Use PTHREAD_LIBS.
* acinclude.m4: Include ax_pthread.m4.
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
Change-Id: I00ec55db6077f2615421a93461fc3be57e916aa0
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Makes sure to assign the return value of strerror_r to an int,
so that we get a compile error if we accidentally get the
wrong version.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-11-15 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* gdbsupport/common.m4: No longer check for strerror_r.
* gdbsupport/posix-strerror.c (safe_strerror): Always call the
POSIX version of strerror_r, now that gnulib provides it if
necessary.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2019-11-15 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
gnulib/ChangeLog:
2019-11-15 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* aclocal.m4: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* import/Makefile.am: Update.
* import/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* import/extra/config.rpath: New file.
* import/glthread/lock.c: New file.
* import/glthread/lock.h: New file.
* import/glthread/threadlib.c: New file.
* import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Update.
* import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Update.
* import/m4/lib-ld.m4: New file.
* import/m4/lib-link.m4: New file.
* import/m4/lib-prefix.m4: New file.
* import/m4/lock.m4: New file.
* import/m4/strerror_r.m4: New file.
* import/m4/threadlib.m4: New file.
* import/strerror_r.c: New file.
* update-gnulib.sh: Import strerror_r-posix.
Change-Id: I5cfeb12a5203a4cd94a78581541e6085a68685c3
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I forgot to do this in the last commit
(b231e86ac9608056ea837e24d42a878927f5787a)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-10-31 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
Change-Id: I60946ffd853a59469c35f19ef8012ac6ea88a31c
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Adds a configure option --with-system-gdbinit-dir to specify a directory
in which to look for gdbinit files. All files in this directory are
loaded on startup (subject to -n/-nx as usual) as long as the extension
matches a known and enabled scripting language (.gdb/.py/.scm).
This also changes get_ext_lang_of_file to support ".gdb" files, similar
to get_ext_lang_defn's handling of EXT_LANG_GDB.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-10-29 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* NEWS: Mention new --with-system-gdbinit-dir option.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Add new option --with-system-gdbinit-dir.
* extension.c (get_ext_lang_of_file): Return extension_language_gdb
for a ".gdb" suffix.
* main.c (get_init_files): Change system_gdbinit argument to
a vector and return the files in SYSTEM_GDBINIT_DIR in
addition to SYSTEM_GDBINIT.
(captured_main_1): Update.
(print_gdb_help): Update.
* top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Also print the value of
SYSTEM_GDBINIT_DIR.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2019-10-29 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* Makefile.in: Also set SYSTEM_GDBINIT_DIR for the info manual
generation.
* gdb.texinfo (many sections): Document new --with-system-gdbinit-dir
option.
Change-Id: If233859ecc21bc6421d589b37cd658a3c7d030f2
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The version checking code is not necessary. It is only used to define
HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_6 or HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_7, which is not used anywhere.
If a version check is desired, the PY_{MAJOR,MINOR}_VERSION macro from
the Python headers can be (and is) used, which does not require updating
configure.ac whenever a new Python version is released.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-10-24 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Remove the code that uses sed to get the python
version and defines HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_6 / HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_7.
Change-Id: I07073870d9040c2bc8519882c8b3c1368edd4513
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XXHash is faster than htab_hash_string:
------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
------------------------------------------------------------
BM_xxh3 11 ns 11 ns 65887249
BM_xxh32 19 ns 19 ns 36511877
BM_xxh64 16 ns 16 ns 42964585
BM_hash_string 182 ns 182 ns 3853125
BM_iterative_hash 77 ns 77 ns 9087638
Unfortunately, XXH3 is still experimental (see
https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash#user-content-new-experimental-hash-algorithm)
However, regular XXH64 is still a lot faster than
htab_hash_string per my benchmark above. I used the
following string for the benchmark:
static constexpr char str[] = "_ZZZL13make_gdb_typeP7gdbarchP10tdesc_typeEN16gdb_type_creator19make_gdb_type_flagsEPK22tdesc_type_with_fieldsE19__PRETTY_FUNCTION__";
htab_hash_string is currently 4.35% + 7.98% (rehashing) of gdb
startup when attaching to Chrome's content_shell.
An additional 5.21% is spent in msymbol_hash, which does not use
this hash function. Unfortunately, since it has to lowercase the
string, it can't use this hash function.
BM_msymbol_hash 52 ns 52 ns 13281495
It may be worth investigating if strlen+XXHash is still faster than
htab_hash_string, which would make it easier to use in more places.
Debian ships xxhash as libxxhash{0,-dev}. Fedora ships it as xxhash-devel.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-10-22 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* Makefile.in: Link with libxxhash.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Search for libxxhash.
* utils.c (fast_hash): Use xxhash if present.
Change-Id: Icab218388b9f829522ed3977f04301ae6d4fc4ca
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This patch drops gdb's configury support for glibc's mcheck function.
It has been observed to cause false abort()s, because it is
thread-unsafe yet interposes every malloc/free operation. So if any
library transitively used by gdb also uses threads, then these
functions can easily corrupt their own checking data. These days, gcc
ASAN and valgrind provide high quality checking, and mcheck is
apparently itself being slowly deprecated.
So, let's stop linking to it. Attached patch drops the
autoconf/Makefile machinery for both gdb and gdbserver. No
testsuite-visible impact. IMHO not worth mentioning in NEWS.
See also: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9939
gdb/ChangeLog
PR build/24886
* configure.ac: Drop enable-libmcheck support.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* libmcheck.m4: Remove.
* acinclude.m4: Don't include it.
* Makefile.in: Don't distribute it.
* top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Don't mention it.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
PR build/24886
* configure.ac: Drop enable-libmcheck support.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* acinclude.m4: Don't include it.
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This removes all the remainings spots I could find that work around
issues in Python 2.4 and 2.5.
I don't have a good way to test that Python 2.6 still works.
Tested by the buildbot.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac (HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_4, HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_5): Never
define.
* python/py-value.c: Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/py-utils.c (gdb_pymodule_addobject): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
* python/py-type.c (convert_field, gdbpy_initialize_types): Remove
Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/python-internal.h: Remove Python 2.4 comment.
(Py_ssize_t): Don't define.
(PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT, Py_TYPE): Don't define.
(gdb_Py_DECREF): Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
(gdb_PyObject_GetAttrString, PyObject_GetAttrString): Remove.
(gdb_PyObject_HasAttrString, PyObject_HasAttrString): Remove.
* python/python.c (do_start_initialization): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
* python/py-prettyprint.c (class dummy_python_frame): Remove.
(print_children): Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/py-inferior.c (buffer_procs): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
(CHARBUFFERPROC_NAME): Remove.
* python/py-breakpoint.c (gdbpy_initialize_breakpoints): Remove
Python 2.4 workaround.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* lib/gdb.exp (skip_python_tests_prompt): Don't check for Python
2.4.
* gdb.python/py-finish-breakpoint.exp: Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac (HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_4, HAVE_LIBPYTHON2_5): Never
define.
* python/py-value.c: Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/py-utils.c (gdb_pymodule_addobject): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
* python/py-type.c (convert_field, gdbpy_initialize_types): Remove
Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/python-internal.h: Remove Python 2.4 comment.
(Py_ssize_t): Don't define.
(PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT, Py_TYPE): Don't define.
(gdb_Py_DECREF): Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
(gdb_PyObject_GetAttrString, PyObject_GetAttrString): Remove.
(gdb_PyObject_HasAttrString, PyObject_HasAttrString): Remove.
* python/python.c (do_start_initialization): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
* python/py-prettyprint.c (class dummy_python_frame): Remove.
(print_children): Remove Python 2.4 workaround.
* python/py-inferior.c (buffer_procs): Remove Python 2.4
workaround.
(CHARBUFFERPROC_NAME): Remove.
* python/py-breakpoint.c (gdbpy_initialize_breakpoints): Remove
Python 2.4 workaround.
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This changes gdb to highlight source using GNU Source Highlight, if it
is available.
This affects the output of the "list" command and also the TUI source
window.
No new test because I didn't see a way to make it work when Source
Highlight is not found.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* utils.h (can_emit_style_escape): Declare.
* utils.c (can_emit_style_escape): No longer static.
* cli/cli-style.c (set_style_enabled): New function.
(_initialize_cli_style): Use it.
* tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_show_source_line): Use tui_puts.
(tui_alloc_source_buffer): Change how source lines are allocated.
* tui/tui-source.c (copy_source_line): New function.
(tui_set_source_content): Use source cache.
* tui/tui-io.h (tui_puts): Update.
* tui/tui-io.c (tui_puts_internal): Add window parameter.
(tui_puts): Likewise.
(tui_redisplay_readline): Update.
* tui/tui-data.c (free_content_elements): Change how source window
contents are freed.
* source.c (forget_cached_source_info): Clear the source cache.
(print_source_lines_base): Use the source cache.
* source-cache.h: New file.
* source-cache.c: New file.
* configure.ac: Check for GNU Source Highlight library.
* configure: Update.
* config.in: Update.
* Makefile.in (SRCHIGH_LIBS, SRCHIGH_CFLAGS): New variables.
(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add SRCHIGH_CFLAGS.
(CLIBS): Add SRCHIGH_LIBS.
(COMMON_SFILES): Add source-cache.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add source-cache.h.
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PR tui/14126 notes that ANSI terminal escape sequences don't affect
the colors shown in the TUI. A simple way to see this is to try the
extended-prompt example from the gdb manual.
Curses does not pass escape sequences through to the terminal.
Instead, it replaces non-printable characters with a visible
representation, for example "^[" for the ESC character.
This patch fixes the problem by adding a simple ANSI terminal sequence
parser to gdb. These sequences are decoded and those that are
recognized are turned into the appropriate curses calls.
The curses approach to color handling is unusual and so there are some
oddities in the implementation.
Standard curses has no notion of the default colors of the terminal.
So, if you set the foreground color, it is not possible to reset it --
you have to pick some other color. ncurses provides an extension to
handle this, so this patch updates configure and uses it when
available.
Second, in curses, colors always come in pairs: you cannot set just
the foreground. This patch handles this by tracking actually-used
pairs of colors and keeping a table of these for reuse.
Third, there are a limited number of such pairs available. In this
patch, if you try to use too many color combinations, gdb will just
ignore some color changes.
Finally, in addition to limiting the number of color pairs, curses
also limits the number of colors. This means that, when using
extended 8- or 24-bit color sequences, it may be possible to exhaust
the curses color table.
I am very sour on the curses design now.
I do not know how to write a test for this, so I did not.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR tui/14126:
* tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Call start_color and
use_default_colors.
* tui/tui-io.c (struct color_pair): New.
(color_pair_map, last_color_pair, last_style): New globals.
(tui_setup_io): Clean up color map when shutting down.
(curses_colors): New constant.
(get_color_pair, apply_ansi_escape): New functions.
(tui_write): Rewrite.
(tui_puts_internal): New function, from tui_puts. Add "height"
parameter.
(tui_puts): Use tui_puts_internal.
(tui_redisplay_readline): Use tui_puts_internal.
(_initialize_tui_io): New function.
(color_map): New globals.
(get_color): New function.
* configure.ac: Check for use_default_colors.
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
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Building with mingw currently fails:
CXX unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.o
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c: In function ‘void selftests::mkdir_recursive::test()’:
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c:49:20: error: ‘mkdtemp’ was not declared in this scope
if (mkdtemp (base) == NULL)
^
Commit
e418a61a67a ("Move mkdir_recursive to common/filestuff.c")
moved this code, but also removed the HAVE_MKDTEMP guard which prevented
the mkdtemp call to be compiled on mingw.
We can either put back the HAVE_MKDTEMP ifdef, or import the gnulib
mkdtemp module, which provides the function for mingw. Since the
mkdir_recursive is susceptible to be used on mingw at some point, I
think it would be nice to have it tested on mingw, so I did the latter.
Once built, I tested it on Windows (copied the resulting gdb.exe on a
Windows machine, ran it, and ran "maint selftest mkdir_recursive"). It
failed, because the temporary directory is hardcoded to "/tmp/...". I
therefore added and used a new get_standard_temp_dir function, which
returns an appropriate temporary directory for the host platform.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/pathstuff.c (get_standard_temp_dir): New.
* common/pathstuff.h (get_standard_temp_dir): New.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* configure.ac: Don't check for mkdtemp.
* gnulib/aclocal-m4-deps.mk: Re-generate.
* gnulib/aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* gnulib/config.in: Re-generate.
* gnulib/configure: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/Makefile.am: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/m4/mkdtemp.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/mkdtemp.c: New file.
* gnulib/update-gnulib.sh (IMPORTED_GNULIB_MODULES):
Add mkdtemp module.
* unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c (test): Use
get_standard_temp_dir.
(_initialize_mkdir_recursive_selftests): Remove HAVE_MKDTEMP
ifdef.
* compile/compile.c (get_compile_file_tempdir): Likewise.
|
|
This reverts commit 98a17ece013cb94cd602496b9efb92b8816b3953.
|
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Commit f19c7ff839d7a32ebb48482ae7d318fb46ca823d added a new member to the
prefixes array which included a use of the symbol AF_LOCAL. Unfortunately,
not all systems declare this symbol. This change only compiles the "unix:"
member if the system knows about AF_LOCAL.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: New test HAVE_AF_LOCAL
* common/netstuff.c (parse_connection_spec) [prefixes]: Only compile "unix:"
if HAVE_AF_LOCAL is true.
* configure: regenerate.
* config.in: regenerate.
|
|
This commit removes a workaround for a bug in glibc 2.1.3, which
was released 2000-02-24 and superseded 2000-11-09.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdb_proc_service.h (gdb_prfpregset_t): Remove typedef.
* proc-service.c (ps_lgetfpregs, ps_lsetfpregs): Use
prfpregset_t instead of gdb_prfpregset_t.
* configure.ac (PRFPREGSET_T_BROKEN): Remove check.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
|
|
This commit adds a workaround from gdbserver's gdb_proc_service.h
to GDB's. It doesn't seem to have been needed on any glibc as far
back as 2001, but it's possibly required for other C libraries so
I've retained it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Check if sys/procfs.h defines elf_fpregset_t.
(AC_CHECK_HEADERS): Check for linux/elf.h.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* gdb_proc_service.h: Include linux/elf.h if sys/procfs.h
doesn't define elf_fpregset_t.
|
|
configure checks for declarations of free, malloc, and realloc; but
the results are only used in a single spot: utils.c. I think these
checks are long since obsolete, so this patch removes them.
Grepping the entire tree for these HAVE_DECL_ symbols, the only uses
of possible interest to gdb come from bfd/sysdep.h; but this is not
(nor should be) included by gdb. (And furthermore I think the code
there is probably also obsolete.)
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-07-24 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* utils.c (malloc, realloc, free): Don't declare.
* configure, config.in: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't check for declarations of free, malloc, or
realloc.
|
|
When trying to run the update-gnulib.sh script in gdb, I get this:
Error: Wrong automake version (Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated, passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/\${ <-- HERE ([^ =:+{}]+)}/ at /opt/automake/1.11.1/bin/automake line 4113.), we need 1.11.1.
Aborting.
Apparently, it's an issue with a regex in automake that triggers a
warning starting with Perl 5.22. It has been fixed in automake 1.15.1.
So I think it's a good excuse to bump the versions of autoconf and
automake used in the gnulib import. And to avoid requiring multiple
builds of autoconf/automake, it was suggested that we bump the required
version of those tools for all binutils-gdb.
For autoconf, the 2.69 version is universally available, so it's an easy
choice. For automake, different distros and distro versions have
different automake versions. But 1.15.1 seems to be the most readily
available as a package. In any case, it's easy to build it from source.
I removed the version checks from AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS and AC_PREREQ,
because I don't think they are useful in our case. They only specify a
lower bound for the acceptable version of automake/autoconf. That's
useful if you let the user choose the version of the tool they want to
use, but want to set a minimum version (because you use a feature that
was introduced in that version). In our case, we force people to use a
specific version anyway. For the autoconf version, we have the check in
config/override.m4 that enforces the version we want. It will be one
less thing to update next time we change autotools version.
I hit a few categories of problems that required some changes. They are
described below along with the chosen solutions.
Problem 1:
configure.ac:17: warning: AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE: two- and three-arguments forms are deprecated. For more info, see:
configure.ac:17: http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/automake.html#Modernize-AM_005fINIT_005fAUTOMAKE-invocation
Solution 1:
Adjust the code based on the example at that URL.
Problem 2 (in zlib/):
Makefile.am: error: required file './INSTALL' not found
Makefile.am: 'automake --add-missing' can install 'INSTALL'
Makefile.am: error: required file './NEWS' not found
Makefile.am: error: required file './AUTHORS' not found
Makefile.am: error: required file './COPYING' not found
Makefile.am: 'automake --add-missing' can install 'COPYING'
Solution 2:
Add the foreign option to AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS.
Problem 3:
doc/Makefile.am:20: error: support for Cygnus-style trees has been removed
Solution 3:
Remove the cygnus options.
Problem 4:
Makefile.am:656: warning: 'INCLUDES' is the old name for 'AM_CPPFLAGS' (or '*_CPPFLAGS')
Solution 4:
Rename "INCLUDES = " to "AM_CPPFLAGS += " (because AM_CPPFLAGS is
already defined earlier).
Problem 5:
doc/Makefile.am:71: warning: suffix '.texinfo' for Texinfo files is discouraged; use '.texi' instead
doc/Makefile.am: warning: Oops!
doc/Makefile.am: It appears this file (or files included by it) are triggering
doc/Makefile.am: an undocumented, soon-to-be-removed automake hack.
doc/Makefile.am: Future automake versions will no longer place in the builddir
doc/Makefile.am: (rather than in the srcdir) the generated '.info' files that
doc/Makefile.am: appear to be cleaned, by e.g. being listed in CLEANFILES or
doc/Makefile.am: DISTCLEANFILES.
doc/Makefile.am: If you want your '.info' files to be placed in the builddir
doc/Makefile.am: rather than in the srcdir, you have to use the shiny new
doc/Makefile.am: 'info-in-builddir' automake option.
Solution 5:
Rename .texinfo files to .texi.
Problem 6:
doc/Makefile.am: warning: Oops!
doc/Makefile.am: It appears this file (or files included by it) are triggering
doc/Makefile.am: an undocumented, soon-to-be-removed automake hack.
doc/Makefile.am: Future automake versions will no longer place in the builddir
doc/Makefile.am: (rather than in the srcdir) the generated '.info' files that
doc/Makefile.am: appear to be cleaned, by e.g. being listed in CLEANFILES or
doc/Makefile.am: DISTCLEANFILES.
doc/Makefile.am: If you want your '.info' files to be placed in the builddir
doc/Makefile.am: rather than in the srcdir, you have to use the shiny new
doc/Makefile.am: 'info-in-builddir' automake option.
Solution 6:
Remove the hack at the bottom of doc/Makefile.am and use
the info-in-builddir automake option.
Problem 7:
doc/Makefile.am:35: error: required file '../texinfo.tex' not found
doc/Makefile.am:35: 'automake --add-missing' can install 'texinfo.tex'
Solution 7:
Use the no-texinfo.tex automake option. We also have one in
texinfo/texinfo.tex, not sure if we should point to that, or move it
(or a newer version of it added with automake --add-missing) to
top-level.
Problem 8:
Makefile.am:131: warning: source file 'config/tc-aarch64.c' is in a subdirectory,
Makefile.am:131: but option 'subdir-objects' is disabled
automake: warning: possible forward-incompatibility.
automake: At least a source file is in a subdirectory, but the 'subdir-objects'
automake: automake option hasn't been enabled. For now, the corresponding output
automake: object file(s) will be placed in the top-level directory. However,
automake: this behaviour will change in future Automake versions: they will
automake: unconditionally cause object files to be placed in the same subdirectory
automake: of the corresponding sources.
automake: You are advised to start using 'subdir-objects' option throughout your
automake: project, to avoid future incompatibilities.
Solution 8:
Use subdir-objects, that means adjusting references to some .o that will now
be in config/.
Problem 9:
configure.ac:375: warning: AC_LANG_CONFTEST: no AC_LANG_SOURCE call detected in body
../../lib/autoconf/lang.m4:193: AC_LANG_CONFTEST is expanded from...
../../lib/autoconf/general.m4:2601: _AC_COMPILE_IFELSE is expanded from...
../../lib/autoconf/general.m4:2617: AC_COMPILE_IFELSE is expanded from...
../../lib/m4sugar/m4sh.m4:639: AS_IF is expanded from...
../../lib/autoconf/general.m4:2042: AC_CACHE_VAL is expanded from...
../../lib/autoconf/general.m4:2063: AC_CACHE_CHECK is expanded from...
configure.ac:375: the top level
Solution 9:
Use AC_LANG_SOURCE, or use proper quoting.
Problem 10 (in intl/):
configure.ac:7: warning: AC_COMPILE_IFELSE was called before AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
/usr/share/aclocal/threadlib.m4:36: gl_THREADLIB_EARLY_BODY is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/threadlib.m4:29: gl_THREADLIB_EARLY is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/threadlib.m4:318: gl_THREADLIB is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/lock.m4:9: gl_LOCK is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/intl.m4:211: gt_INTL_SUBDIR_CORE is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/intl.m4:25: AM_INTL_SUBDIR is expanded from...
/usr/share/aclocal/gettext.m4:57: AM_GNU_GETTEXT is expanded from...
configure.ac:7: the top level
Solution 10:
Add AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS in configure.ac.
ChangeLog:
* libtool.m4: Use AC_LANG_SOURCE.
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ, use AC_LANG_SOURCE.
* README-maintainer-mode: Update version requirements.
* ar-lib: New file.
* test-driver: New file.
* configure: Re-generate.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.11.
(INCLUDES): Rename to ...
(AM_CPPFLAGS): ... this.
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* doc/Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.9, cygnus, add
info-in-builddir no-texinfo.tex.
(info_TEXINFOS): Rename bfd.texinfo to bfd.texi.
* doc/bfd.texinfo: Rename to ...
* doc/bfd.texi: ... this.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* doc/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* doc/Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove cygnus, add
info-in-builddir no-texinfo.tex.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* doc/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
config/ChangeLog:
* override.m4 (_GCC_AUTOCONF_VERSION): Bump from 2.64 to 2.69.
etc/ChangeLog:
* configure.in: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* configure: Re-generate.
gas/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.11, add subdir-objects.
(TARG_CPU_O, OBJ_FORMAT_O, ATOF_TARG_O): Add config/ prefix.
* configure.ac (TARG_CPU_O, OBJ_FORMAT_O, ATOF_TARG_O, emfiles,
extra_objects): Add config/ prefix.
* doc/as.texinfo: Rename to...
* doc/as.texi: ... this.
* doc/Makefile.am: Rename as.texinfo to as.texi throughout.
Remove DISTCLEANFILES hack.
(AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.8, cygnus, add no-texinfo.tex and
info-in-builddir.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* doc/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/common-defs.h (PACKAGE_NAME, PACKAGE_VERSION,
PACKAGE_STRING, PACKAGE_TARNAME): Undefine.
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ, add missing quoting.
* gnulib/configure.ac: Modernize usage of
AC_INIT/AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE. Remove AC_PREREQ.
* gnulib/update-gnulib.sh (AUTOCONF_VERSION): Bump to 2.69.
(AUTOMAKE_VERSION): Bump to 1.15.1.
* configure: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* gnulib/aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* gnulib/config.in: Re-generate.
* gnulib/configure: Re-generate.
* gnulib/import/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ, add missing quoting.
* configure: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* configure: Re-generate.
gold/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ, add missing quoting and usage
of AC_LANG_SOURCE.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* testsuite/Makefile.in: Re-generate.
gprof/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* Makefile.am: Remove DISTCLEANFILES hack.
(AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.11, add info-in-builddir.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
* gconfig.in: Re-generate.
intl/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Add AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS, remove AC_PREREQ.
* configure: Re-generate.
* config.h.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
ld/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* Makefile.am: Remove DISTCLEANFILES hack, rename ld.texinfo to
ld.texi, ldint.texinfo to ldint.texi throughout.
(AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Add info-in-builddir.
* README: Rename ld.texinfo to ld.texi, ldint.texinfo to
ldint.texi throughout.
* gen-doc.texi: Likewise.
* h8-doc.texi: Likewise.
* ld.texinfo: Rename to ...
* ld.texi: ... this.
* ldint.texinfo: Rename to ...
* ldint.texi: ... this.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
libdecnumber/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* configure: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4.
libiberty/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* configure: Re-generate.
* config.in: Re-generate.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.11.
* configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
readline/ChangeLog.gdb:
* configure: Re-generate.
* examples/rlfe/configure: Re-generate.
sim/ChangeLog:
* All configure.ac: Remove AC_PREREQ.
* All configure: Re-generate.
zlib/ChangeLog.bin-gdb:
* configure.ac: Modernize AC_INIT call, remove AC_PREREQ.
* Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS): Remove 1.8, cygnus, add
foreign.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* aclocal.m4: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
|
|
In my multi-target branch I ran into problems with GDB's terminal
handling that exist in master as well, with multi-inferior debugging.
This patch adds a testcase for said problems
(gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp), fixes the problems, fixes PR
gdb/13211 as well (and adds a testcase for that too,
gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.exp).
The basis of the problem I ran into is the following. Consider a
scenario where you have:
- inferior 1 - started with "attach", process is running on some
other terminal.
- inferior 2 - started with "run", process is sharing gdb's terminal.
In this scenario, when you stop/resume both inferiors, you want GDB to
save/restore the terminal settings of inferior 2, the one that is
sharing GDB's terminal. I.e., you want inferior 2 to "own" the
terminal (in target_terminal::is_ours/target_terminal::is_inferior
sense).
Unfortunately, that's not what you get currently. Because GDB doesn't
know whether an attached inferior is actually sharing GDB's terminal,
it tries to save/restore its settings anyway, ignoring errors. In
this case, this is pointless, because inferior 1 is running on a
different terminal, but GDB doesn't know better.
And then, because it is only possible to have the terminal settings of
a single inferior be in effect at a time, or make one inferior/pgrp be
the terminal's foreground pgrp (aka, only one inferior can "own" the
terminal, ignoring fork children here), if GDB happens to try to
restore the terminal settings of inferior 1 first, then GDB never
restores the terminal settings of inferior 2.
This patch fixes that and a few things more along the way:
- Moves enum target_terminal::terminal_state out of the
target_terminal class (it's currently private) and makes it a
scoped enum so that it can be easily used elsewhere.
- Replaces the inflow.c:terminal_is_ours boolean with a
target_terminal_state variable. This allows distinguishing is_ours
and is_ours_for_output states. This allows finally making
child_terminal_ours_1 do something with its "output_only"
parameter.
- Makes each inferior have its own copy of the
is_ours/is_ours_for_output/is_inferior state.
- Adds a way for GDB to tell whether the inferior is sharing GDB's
terminal. Works best on Linux and Solaris; the fallback works just
as well as currently.
- With that, we can remove the inf->attach_flag tests from
child_terminal_inferior/child_terminal_ours.
- Currently target_ops.to_ours is responsible for both saving the
current inferior's terminal state, and restoring gdb's state.
Because each inferior has its own terminal state (possibly handled
by different targets in a multi-target world, even), we need to
split the inferior-saving part from the gdb-restoring part. The
patch adds a new target_ops.to_save_inferior target method for
that.
- Adds a new target_terminal::save_inferior() function, so that
sequences like:
scoped_restore_terminal_state save_state;
target_terminal::ours_for_output ();
... restore back inferiors that were
target_terminal_state::is_inferior before back to is_inferior, and
leaves inferiors that were is_ours alone.
- Along the way, this adds a default implementation of
target_pass_ctrlc to inflow.c (for inf-child.c), that handles
passing the Ctrl-C to a process running on GDB's terminal or to
some other process otherwise.
- Similarly, adds a new target default implementation of
target_interrupt, for the "interrupt" command. The current
implementation of this hook in inf-ptrace.c kills the whole process
group, but that's incorrect/undesirable because we may not be
attached to all processes in the process group. And also, it's
incorrect because inferior_process_group() doesn't really return
the inferior's real process group id if the inferior is not a
process group leader... This is the cause of PR gdb/13211 [1],
which this patch fixes. While at it, that target method's "ptid"
parameter is eliminated, because it's not really used.
- A new test is included that exercises and fixes PR gdb/13211, and
also fixes a GDB issue reported on stackoverflow that I ran into
while working on this [2]. The problem is similar to PR gdb/13211,
except that it also triggers with Ctrl-C. When debugging a daemon
(i.e., a process that disconnects from the controlling terminal and
is not a process group leader, then Ctrl-C doesn't work, you just
can't interrupt the inferior at all, resulting in a hung debug
session. The problem is that since the inferior is no longer
associated with gdb's session / controlling terminal, then trying
to put the inferior in the foreground fails. And so Ctrl-C never
reaches the inferior directly. pass_signal is only used when the
inferior is attached, but that is not the case here. This is fixed
by the new child_pass_ctrlc. Without the fix, the new
interrupt-daemon.exp testcase fails with timeout waiting for a
SIGINT that never arrives.
[1] PR gdb/13211 - Async / Process group and interrupt not working
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13211
[2] GDB not reacting Ctrl-C when after fork() and setsid()
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46101292/gdb-not-reacting-ctrl-c-when-after-fork-and-setsid
Note this patch does _not_ fix:
- PR gdb/14559 - The 'interrupt' command does not work if sigwait is in use
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14559
- PR gdb/9425 - When using "sigwait" GDB doesn't trap SIGINT. Ctrl+C terminates program when should break gdb.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9425
The only way to fix that that I know of (without changing the kernel)
is to make GDB put inferiors in a separate session (create a
pseudo-tty master/slave pair, make the inferior run with the slave as
its terminal, and have gdb pump output/input on the master end).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Check for getpgid.
* go32-nat.c (go32_pass_ctrlc): New.
(go32_target): Install it.
* inf-child.c (inf_child_target): Install
child_terminal_save_inferior, child_pass_ctrlc and
child_interrupt.
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_interrupt): Delete.
(inf_ptrace_target): No longer install it.
* infcmd.c (interrupt_target_1): Adjust.
* inferior.h (child_terminal_save_inferior, child_pass_ctrlc)
(child_interrupt): Declare.
(inferior::terminal_state): New.
* inflow.c (struct terminal_info): Update comments.
(inferior_process_group): Delete.
(terminal_is_ours): Delete.
(gdb_tty_state): New.
(child_terminal_init): Adjust.
(is_gdb_terminal, sharing_input_terminal_1)
(sharing_input_terminal): New functions.
(child_terminal_inferior): Adjust. Use sharing_input_terminal.
Set the process's actual process group in the foreground if
possible. Handle is_ours_for_output/is_ours distinction. Don't
mark terminal as the inferior's if not sharing GDB's terminal.
Don't check attach_flag.
(child_terminal_ours_for_output, child_terminal_ours): Adjust to
pass down a target_terminal_state.
(child_terminal_save_inferior): New, factored out from ...
(child_terminal_ours_1): ... this. Handle
target_terminal_state::is_ours_for_output.
(child_interrupt, child_pass_ctrlc): New.
(inflow_inferior_exit): Clear the inferior's terminal_state.
(copy_terminal_info): Copy the inferior's terminal state.
(_initialize_inflow): Remove reference to terminal_is_ours.
* inflow.h (inferior_process_group): Delete.
* nto-procfs.c (nto_handle_sigint, procfs_interrupt): Adjust.
* procfs.c (procfs_target): Don't install procfs_interrupt.
(procfs_interrupt): Delete.
* remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Adjust.
(remote_interrupt): Remove ptid parameter. Adjust.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target.c: Include "terminal.h".
(target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this.
(target_terminal::init): Adjust.
(target_terminal::inferior): Adjust to per-inferior
terminal_state.
(target_terminal::restore_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours_kind): New.
(target_terminal::ours, target_terminal::ours_for_output): Use
target_terminal_is_ours_kind.
(target_interrupt): Remove ptid parameter. Adjust.
(default_target_pass_ctrlc): Adjust.
* target.h (target_ops::to_terminal_save_inferior): New field.
(target_ops::to_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter.
(target_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter. Update comment.
(target_pass_ctrlc): Update comment.
* target/target.h (target_terminal_state): New scoped enum,
factored out of ...
(target_terminal::terminal_state): ... here.
(target_terminal::inferior): Update comments.
(target_terminal::restore_inferior): New.
(target_terminal::is_inferior, target_terminal::is_ours)
(target_terminal::is_ours_for_output): Adjust.
(target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state): Adjust to
rename, and call restore_inferior() instead of inferior().
(target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state::m_state): Change
type.
(target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this and change type.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.c: New.
* gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.exp: New.
* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.c: New.
* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: New.
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- Command line arguments are fetched via the kern.proc.args.<pid>
sysctl.
- The 'cwd' and 'exe' values are obtained from the per-process
file descriptor table returned by kinfo_getfile() from libutil.
- 'mappings' is implemented by walking the array of VM map entries
returned by kinfo_getvmmap() from libutil.
- 'status' output is generated by outputting fields from the structure
returned by the kern.proc.pid.<pid> sysctl.
- 'stat' is aliased to 'status'.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Check for kinfo_getfile in libutil.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* fbsd-nat.c: Include "fbsd-tdep.h".
(fbsd_fetch_cmdline): New.
(fbsd_fetch_kinfo_proc): Move earlier and change to return a bool
rather than calling error.
(fbsd_info_proc): New.
(fbsd_thread_name): Report error if fbsd_fetch_kinfo_proc fails.
(fbsd_wait): Report warning if fbsd_fetch_kinfo_proc fails.
(fbsd_nat_add_target): Set "to_info_proc" to "fbsd_info_proc".
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This is the previously mentioned patch to get rid of
unstructured/ioctl-based procfs support in procfs.c. Given that support
for structured procfs was introduced in Solaris 2.6 back in 1997 and
we're just removing support for Solaris < 10, there's no point in
carrying that baggage (and tons of support for IRIX and OSF/1 as well)
around any longer.
Most of the patch should be straightforward (removing support for
!NEW_PROC_API, non-Solaris OSes and pre-Solaris 10 quirks).
Only a few points need explanations:
* <sys/syscall.h> was already included unconditionally in most places,
so there's no need to have guards in a few remaining ones.
* configure.host already obsoletes i?86-*-sysv4.2, i?86-*-sysv5, so
NEW_PROC_API detection for those in configure.ac can go.
* I'm still including <sys/procfs.h> with #define _STRUCTURED_PROC 1.
Theoretically, it would be better to include <procfs.h> on Solaris
(which includes that define), but that breaks the build over
<procfs.h> vs. gdb's "procfs.h", and doesn't exist on Linux.
* I've regenerated syscall_table[] in proc-events.c with a small script
from Solaris 10, 11.3, 11.4 <sys/syscall.h>, so there should be no
traces of older Solaris versions and other OSes left.
* prsysent_t and DYNAMIC_SYSCALLS was only used for AIX 5, but AIX
doesn't use procfs.c any longer, so all related code can go.
The patch was generated with diff -w so one can easier see changes
without being distracted by simple reindentations.
So far, it has only been compiled and smoke-tested on
amd64-pc-solaris2.1[01], sparcv9-sun-solaris2.1[01], and
x86_64-pc-linux-gnu. Certainly needs more testing (Solaris 11.3
vs. 11.4, 32-bit gdb, testsuite once I've figured out what's wrong on
Solaris 10 etc.), but it's enough to get a first impression how much
cleanup is possible here.
* configure.ac Don't check for sys/fault.h, sys/syscall.h,
sys/proc.h.
(NEW_PROC_API): Remove.
(prsysent_t, pr_sigset_t, pr_sigaction64_t, pr_siginfo64_t):
Likewise.
* common/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Don't check for sys/syscall.h.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* gdbserver/configure: Regenerate.
* gdbserver/config.in: Regenerate.
* i386-sol2-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_nat): Remove
NEW_PROC_API test.
* sparc-sol2-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_sol2_nat): Likewise.
* linux-btrace.c: Remove HAVE_SYS_SYSCALL_H test.
* proc-api.c: Remove !NEW_PROC_API support.
Remove HAVE_SYS_PROC_H and HAVE_SYS_USER_H tests.
Remove tests for macros always defined on Solaris.
* proc-events.c: Remove !NEW_PROC_API support.
Remove Remove HAVE_SYS_SYSCALL_H, HAVE_SYS_PROC_H and
HAVE_SYS_USER_H tests.
(init_syscall_table): Remove non-Solaris syscalls.
Remove tests for syscalls present on all Solaris versions.
Add missing Solaris 10+ syscalls.
(signal_table): Remove non-Solaris signals.
Remove tests for signals present on all Solaris versions.
(fault_table): Remove non-Solaris faults.
Remove tests for faults present on all Solaris versions.
* proc-flags.c: Remove !NEW_PROC_API support.
(pr_flag_table): Remove non-Solaris and pre-Solaris 7 comments.
Remove non-Solaris flags.
* proc-why.c: Remove !NEW_PROC_API support.
(pr_why_table): Remove meaningless comments.
Remove tests for reasons present on all Solaris versions.
Remove OSF/1 cases.
(proc_prettyfprint_why): Likewise.
* procfs.c: Remove !NEW_PROC_API and DYNAMIC_SYSCALLS support.
Remove HAVE_SYS_FAULT_H and HAVE_SYS_SYSCALL_H tests.
Remove WA_READ test, IRIX watchpoint support.
(gdb_sigset_t, gdb_sigaction_t, gdb_siginfo_t): Replace by base
types. Change users.
(gdb_praddset, gdb_prdelset, gdb_premptysysset, gdb_praddsysset)
(gdb_prdelset, gdb_pr_issyssetmember): Replace by base macros.
Change callers.
Remove CTL_PROC_NAME_FMT tests.
(gdb_prstatus_t, gdb_lwpstatus_t): Replace by base types. Change
users.
(sysset_t_size): Remove. Use sizeof (sysset_t) in callers.
Remove PROCFS_DONT_PIOCSSIG_CURSIG support.
(proc_modify_flag): Replace GDBRESET by PCUNSET.
Remove PR_ASYNC, PR_KLC tests.
(proc_unset_inherit_on_fork): Remove PR_ASYNC test.
(proc_parent_pid): Remove PCWATCH etc. tests.
(proc_set_watchpoint): Remove !PCWATCH && !PIOCSWATCH support.
Remove PCAGENT test.
(proc_get_nthreads) [PIOCNTHR && PIOCTLIST]: Remove.
Remove SYS_lwpcreate || SYS_lwp_create test.
(proc_get_current_thread): Likewise.
[PIOCNTHR && PIOCTLIST]: Remove.
[PIOCLSTATUS]: Remove.
(procfs_debug_inferior): Remove non-Solaris cases, conditionals.
[PRFS_STOPEXEC]: Remove.
(syscall_is_lwp_exit): Remove non-Solaris cases, conditionals.
(syscall_is_exit): Likewise.
(syscall_is_exec): Likewise.
(syscall_is_lwp_create): Likewise.
Remove SYS_syssgi support.
(procfs_wait): Remove PR_ASYNC, !PIOCSSPCACT tests.
[SYS_syssgi]: Remove.
Remove non-Solaris cases, conditionals.
(unconditionally_kill_inferior) [PROCFS_NEED_PIOCSSIG_FOR_KILL]:
Remove.
(procfs_init_inferior) [SYS_syssgi]: Remove.
(procfs_set_exec_trap) [PRFS_STOPEXEC]: Remove.
(procfs_inferior_created) [SYS_syssgi]: Remove.
(procfs_set_watchpoint): Remove !AIX5 test.
(procfs_stopped_by_watchpoint): Remove FLTWATCH test, FLTKWATCH
case.
(mappingflags) [MA_PHYS]: Remove.
(info_mappings_callback): Remove PCAGENT test.
Remove PIOCOPENLWP || PCAGENT test.
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This second patch introduces mfpr_float_ops, an new implementation
of target_float_ops. This implements precise emulation of target
floating-point formats using the MPFR library. This is then used
to perform operations on types that do not match any host type.
Note that use of MPFR is still not required. The patch adds
a configure option --with-mpfr similar to --with-expat. If use of
MPFR is disabled via the option or MPFR is not available, code will
fall back to current behavior. This means that operations on types
that do not match any host type will be implemented on the host
long double type instead.
A new test case verifies that we can correctly print the largest
__float128 value now.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-22 Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
* NEWS: Document use of GNU MPFR.
* README: Likewise.
* Makefile.in (LIBMPFR): Add define.
(CLIBS): Add $(LIBMPFR).
* configure.ac: Add --with-mpfr configure option.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* target-float.c [HAVE_LIBMPFR]: Include <mpfr.h>.
(class mpfr_float_ops): New type.
(mpfr_float_ops::from_target): Two new overloaded functions.
(mpfr_float_ops::to_target): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::to_string): New function.
(mpfr_float_ops::from_string): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::to_longest): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::from_longest): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::from_ulongest): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::to_host_double): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::from_host_double): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::convert): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::binop): Likewise.
(mpfr_float_ops::compare): Likewise.
(get_target_float_ops): Use mpfr_float_ops if available.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2017-11-22 Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Requirements): Document use of GNU MPFR.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-11-22 Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
* gdb.base/float128.c (large128): New variable.
* gdb.base/float128.exp: Add test to print largest __float128 value.
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common/common.m4 still had checks for termio.h/sgtty.h that are stale
now. Remove them.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* common/common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): No longer check termio.h nor
sgtty.h.
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
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Triggered by https://launchpad.net/bugs/1275210, to be able to cope
with UTF-8 characters in gdbtui.
Reference:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-09/msg00356.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-26 Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
* configure.ac: Search ncursesw before ncurses.
Check ncursesw/ncurses.h before ncurses/ncurses.h.
* gdb_curses.h: Include <ncursesw/ncurses.h>
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
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Given that GCC has obsoleted/removed support for Solaris 9 in GCC 4.9/5 in 2013:
https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.9/changes.html
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2013-05/msg00728.html
and the last gdb version that can be compiled with gcc 4.9 is 7.12.1 only when
configured with --disable-build-with-cxx, it's time to obsolete/remove support
for Solaris < 10.
This patch does this, simplifying configure.nat along the way (only a single
sol2 configuration with variants for i386 and sparc).
Some configure checks for older Solaris versions can go, too, and the check
for libthread_db.so.1 removed:
* Since Solaris 10, dlopen has moved to libc and libdl.so is just a
filter on ld.so.1, so no need to check.
* $RDYNAMIC is already handled above (and is a no-op with Solaris ld
anyway).
Both proc-service.c and sol-thread.c lose support for (Solaris-only)
PROC_SERVICE_IS_OLD.
The attached revised patch has been tested on sparcv9-sun-solaris2.10,
sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.4, amd64-pc-solaris2.10, amd64-pc-solaris2.11.4,
and x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
I've also started an i386-pc-solaris2.9 build to check that it really
stops as expected.
PR gdb/22185
* configure.host <*-*-solaris2.[01], *-*-solaris2.[2-9]*>: Mark as
obsolete.
Use gdb_host sol2 for i[34567]86-*-solaris2*, x86_64-*-solaris2*.
Remove i386sol2 support.
* configure.nat <i386sol2>: Remove.
<sol2-64>: Fold into ...
<sol2>: ... this.
Move common settings to default section.
Add sol-thread.o.
* configure.tgt <i[34567]86-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*,
x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*>: Rename to ...
<i[34567]86-*-solaris2*, x86_64-*-solaris2*>: ... this.
<i[34567]86-*-solaris*>: Remove.
<sparc-*-solaris2.[0-6], sparc-*-solaris2.[0-6].*>: Remove.
* configure.ac: Remove wctype in libw check.
(_MSE_INT_H): Don't define on Solaris 7-9.
<solaris*>: Remove libthread_db.so.1 check.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* proc-service.c: Remove PROC_SERVICE_IS_OLD handling.
(gdb_ps_prochandle_t, gdb_ps_read_buf_t, gdb_ps_write_buf_t)
(gdb_ps_size_t): Remove.
Use base types in users.
* sol-thread.c: Likewise, also for gdb_ps_addr_t.
* NEWS (Changes since GDB 8.0): Document Solaris 2.0-9 removal.
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Version 2 of libipt adds an event system to instruction flow decoders and
deprecates indicating events via flags in struct pt_insn. Add configuration
checks to determine which version we have.
gdb/
* configure.ac: Check for pt_insn_event, struct pt_insn.enabled,
and struct pt_insn.resynced.
* configure: Regenerated.
* config.in: Regenerated.
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Complement commit 3831839c089c ("Delete IRIX support") and remove the
IRIX 5 <sys/proc.h> _KMEMUSER workaround from the `configure' script, as
IRIX is no longer a supported host configuration.
gdb/
* configure.ac <mips-sgi-irix5*>: Remove <sys/proc.h> _KMEMUSER
workaround.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
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Use AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX to detect if the compiler supports C++11,
and if -std=xxx switches are necessary to enable C++11.
We need to tweak AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX a bit though. Pristine
upstream AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX appends -std=gnu++11 to CXX directly.
That doesn't work for us, because the top level Makefile passes CXX
down to subdirs, and that overrides whatever gdb/Makefile may set CXX
to. The result would be that a make invocation from the build/gdb/
directory would use "g++ -std=gnu++11" as expected, while a make
invocation at the top level would not.
So instead of having AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX set CXX directly, tweak it
to AC_SUBST a separate variable -- CXX_DIALECT -- and use '$(CXX)
(CXX_DIALECT)' to compile/link.
Confirmed that this enables C++11 starting with gcc 4.8, the first gcc
release with full C++11 support.
Also confirmed that configure errors out gracefully with older GCC
releases:
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features by default... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with -std=gnu++11... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with -std=gnu++0x... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with -std=c++11... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with -std=c++0x... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with +std=c++11... no
checking whether /opt/gcc-4.7/bin/g++ supports C++11 features with -h std=c++11... no
configure: error: *** A compiler with support for C++11 language features is required.
Makefile:9451: recipe for target 'configure-gdb' failed
make[1]: *** [configure-gdb] Error 1
make[1]: Leaving directory '/home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/mygit/cxx-convertion/build-gcc-4.7'
If we need to revert back to making C++11 optional, all that's
necessary is to change the "mandatory" to "optional" in configure.ac
and regenerate configure (both gdb and gdbserver).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (CXX_DIALECT): Get from configure.
(COMPILE.pre, CC_LD): Append $(CXX_DIALECT).
(FLAGS_TO_PASS): Pass CXX_DIALECT.
* acinclude.m4: Include ax_cxx_compile_stdcxx.m4.
* ax_cxx_compile_stdcxx.m4: Add FSF copyright header. Set and
AC_SUBST CXX_DIALECT instead of changing CXX/CXXCPP.
* configure.ac: Call AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-10-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (CXX_DIALECT): Get from configure.
(COMPILE.pre, CC_LD): Append $(CXX_DIALECT).
* acinclude.m4: Include ../ax_cxx_compile_stdcxx.m4.
* configure.ac: Call AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
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All platforms on FreeBSD use a shared system call table, so use a
single XML file to describe the system calls available on each FreeBSD
platform.
Recent versions of FreeBSD include the identifier of the current
system call when reporting a system call entry or exit event in the
ptrace_lwpinfo structure obtained via PT_LWPINFO in fbsd_wait. As
such, FreeBSD native targets do not use the gdbarch method to fetch
the system call code. In addition, FreeBSD register sets fetched via
ptrace do not include an equivalent of 'orig_rax' (on amd64 for
example), so the system call code cannot be extracted from the
available registers during a system call exit. However, GDB assumes
that system call catch points are not supported if the gdbarch method
is not present. As a workaround, FreeBSD ABIs install a dummy gdbarch
method that throws an internal_error if it is ever invoked.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Check for support for system call LWP fields on
FreeBSD.
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
* data-directory/Makefile.in (SYSCALLS_FILES): Add freebsd.xml.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_wait) [HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_SYSCALL_CODE]:
Report system call events.
[HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_SYSCALL_CODE]
(fbsd_set_syscall_catchpoint): New function.
(fbsd_nat_add_target) [HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_SYSCALL_CODE]:
Set "to_set_syscall_catchpoint" to "fbsd_set_syscall_catchpoint".
* fbsd-tdep.c: Include xml-syscall.h
(fbsd_get_syscall_number): New function.
(fbsd_init_abi): Set XML system call file name.
Add "get_syscall_number" gdbarch method.
* syscalls/freebsd.xml: New file.
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I wanted to unit test the Rust lexer, so I added a simple unit testing
command to gdb.
The intent is that self tests will only be compiled into gdb in
development mode. In release mode they simply won't exist. So, this
exposes $development to C code as GDB_SELF_TEST.
In development mode, test functions are registered with the self test
module. A test function is just a function that does some checks, and
throws an exception on failure.
Then this adds a new "maint selftest" command which invokes the test
functions, and a new dejagnu test case that invokes it.
2016-05-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* NEWS: Add "maint selftest" entry.
* selftest.h: New file.
* selftest.c: New file.
* maint.c: Include selftest.h.
(maintenance_selftest): New function.
(_initialize_maint_cmds): Add "maint selftest" command.
* configure.ac (GDB_SELF_TEST): Maybe define.
* config.in, configure: Rebuild.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add selftest.c.
(COMMON_OBS): Add selftest.o.
2016-05-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document "maint selftest".
2016-05-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb.gdb/unittest.exp: New file.
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Older versions of FreeBSD supported userland threading via a pure
user-space threading library (N threads scheduled on 1 process) and
a N:M model (N threads scheduled on M LWPs). However, modern FreeBSD
versions only support a M:M threading model where each user thread is
backed by a dedicated LWP. This thread target only supports this
threading model. It also uses ptrace to query and alter LWP state
directly rather than using libthread_db to simplify the implementation.
FreeBSD recently gained support for reporting LWP events (birth and death
of LWPs). GDB will use LWP events when present. For older systems it
fetches the list of LWPs in the to_update_thread_list target op to update
the list of threads on each stop.
This target supports scheduler locking by using ptrace to suspend
individual LWPs as necessary before resuming a process.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Check for support for LWP names on FreeBSD.
* fbsd-nat.c [PT_LWPINFO] New variable debug_fbsd_lwp.
[TDP_RFPPWAIT || HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_TDNAME]
(fbsd_fetch_kinfo_proc): Move function earlier.
[PT_LWPINFO] (fbsd_thread_alive): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] (fbsd_pid_to_str): New function.
[HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_TDNAME] (fbsd_thread_name): New function.
[PT_LWP_EVENTS] (fbsd_enable_lwp_events): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] (fbsd_add_threads): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] (fbsd_update_thread_list): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] New variable super_resume.
[PT_LWPINFO] (resume_one_thread_cb): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] (resume_all_threads_cb): New function.
[PT_LWPINFO] (fbsd_resume): New function.
(fbsd_remember_child): Save full ptid instead of plain pid.
(fbsd_is_child_pending): Return ptid of saved child process.
(fbsd_wait): Include lwp in returned ptid and switch to LWP ptid on
first stop.
[PT_LWP_EVENTS] Handle LWP events.
[TDP_RFPPWAIT] Include LWP in child ptid.
(fbsd_post_startup_inferior) [PT_LWP_EVENTS]: Enable LWP events.
(fbsd_post_attach) [PT_LWP_EVENTS]: Enable LWP events.
Add threads for existing processes.
(fbsd_nat_add_target) [PT_LWPINFO]: Set "to_thread_alive" to
"fbsd_thread_alive".
Set "to_pid_to_str" to "fbsd_pid_to_str".
[HAVE_STRUCT_PTRACE_LWPINFO_PL_TDNAME]: Set "to_thread_name" to
"fbsd_thread_name".
[PT_LWPINFO]: Set "to_update_thread_list" to "fbsd_update_thread_list".
Set "to_has_thread_control" to "tc_schedlock".
Set "to_resume" to "fbsd_resume".
(_initialize_fbsd_nat): New function.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Debugging Output): Document "set/show debug fbsd-lwp".
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Multitarget builds currently fail when:
(1) simulator support is enabled (the main --target supports target sim)
(2) powerpc is included in the --enable-targets list
(3) powerpc is not the main/default target (--target)
This is because the powerpc sim provides a non-standard API function
sim_spr_register_name which gdb/rs6000-tdep.c utilizes. Since the sim
does not yet support multitarget, only the sim (if one exists) for the
main target is built. When that target isn't powerpc, this function
is not available leading to linking errors:
rs6000-tdep.c:(.text+0x1e34d): undefined reference to
`sim_spr_register_name'
Fix this by only using that API if the sim linked in is the powerpc
sim.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-01-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR sim/13418
* configure.ac: Define WITH_PPC_SIM when linking in the sim and
the target is powerpc*.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
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Since we now rely on PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE being available (added in
Linux 2.5.46), we're relying on NPTL.
This commit removes the support for older LinuxThreads, as well as the
workarounds for vendor 2.4 kernels with NPTL backported.
- Rely on tkill being available.
- Assume gdb doesn't get cancel signals.
- Remove code that checks the LinuxThreads restart and cancel signals
in the inferior.
- Assume that __WALL is available.
- Assume that non-leader threads report WIFEXITED.
- Thus, no longer need to send signal 0 to check whether threads are
still alive.
- Update comments throughout.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Remove tkill checks.
* configure, config.in: Regenerate.
* linux-nat.c: Remove HAVE_TKILL_SYSCALL check. Update top level
comments.
(linux_nat_post_attach_wait): Remove 'cloned' parameter. Use
__WALL.
(attach_proc_task_lwp_callback): Don't set the cloned flag.
(linux_nat_attach): Adjust.
(kill_lwp): Remove HAVE_TKILL_SYSCALL check. No longer fall back
to 'kill'.
(linux_handle_extended_wait): Use __WALL. Don't set the cloned
flag.
(wait_lwp): Use __WALL. Update comments.
(running_callback, stop_and_resume_callback): Delete.
(linux_nat_filter_event): Don't stop and resume all lwps. Don't
check if the event LWP has previously exited.
(check_zombie_leaders): Update comments.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Use __WALL.
(kill_wait_callback): Don't handle clone processes separately.
Use __WALL instead.
(linux_thread_alive): Delete.
(linux_nat_thread_alive): Return true as long as the LWP is in the
LWP list.
(linux_nat_update_thread_list): Assume the kernel supports
PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE.
(get_signo): Delete.
(lin_thread_get_thread_signals): Remove LinuxThreads references.
No longer check __pthread_sig_restart / __pthread_sig_cancel in
the inferior.
* linux-nat.h (struct lwp_info) <cloned>: Delete field.
* linux-thread-db.c: Update comments.
(_initialize_thread_db): Remove LinuxThreads references.
* nat/linux-waitpid.c (my_waitpid): No longer emulate __WALL.
Pass down flags unmodified.
* linux-waitpid.h (my_waitpid): Update documentation.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-low.c (linux_kill_one_lwp): Remove references to
LinuxThreads.
(kill_lwp): Remove HAVE_TKILL_SYSCALL check. No longer fall back
to 'kill'.
(linux_init_signals): Delete.
(initialize_low): Adjust.
* thread-db.c (thread_db_init): Remove LinuxThreads reference.
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Since we're using sighandler_t, nothing else refers to RETSIGTYPE in
gdb.
(Actually, given gdb/remote.c has been assuming signal handlers return
void for a long time, we could have gotten get rid of this even
without gnulib's sighandler_t.)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* configure.ac: Remove AC_TYPE_SIGNAL call.
* configure, config.in: Regenerate.
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Building in C++ mode issues ~40 warnings like this:
../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c: In function ‘int linux_handle_extended_wait(lwp_info*, int, int)’:
../../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:2016:51: warning: invalid conversion from ‘int’ to ‘__ptrace_request’ [-fpermissive]
ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG, pid, 0, &new_pid);
The issue is that in glibc, ptrace's first parameter is an enum.
That's not a problem if we pick the PTRACE_XXX requests from
sys/ptrace.h, as those will be values of the corresponding enum.
However, we have fallback definitions for PTRACE_XXX symbols when the
system headers miss them (such as PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG above), and those
are plain integer constants. E.g., nat/linux-ptrace.h:
#define PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG 0x4201
One idea would be to fix this by defining those fallbacks like:
-#define PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG 0x4201
+#define PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG ((enum __ptrace_request) 0x4201)
However, while glibc's ptrace uses enum __ptrace_request for first
parameter:
extern long int ptrace (enum __ptrace_request __request, ...) __THROW;
other libc's, like e.g., Android's bionic do not -- in that case, the
first parameter is int:
long ptrace(int request, pid_t pid, void * addr, void * data);
So the fix I came up is to make configure/ptrace.m4 also detect the
type of the ptrace's first parameter and defin PTRACE_TYPE_ARG1, as
already does the for parameters 3-4, and then simply wrap ptrace with
a macro that casts the first argument to the detected type. (I'm
leaving adding a nicer wrapper for when we drop building in C).
While this adds the wrapper, GNU/Linux files won't use it until the
next patch, which makes all native GNU/Linux files include
gdb_ptrace.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-07-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ptrace.m4 (ptrace tests): Test in C++ mode. Try with 'enum
__ptrace_request as first parameter type instead of int.
(PTRACE_TYPE_ARG1): Define.
* nat/gdb_ptrace.h [!PTRACE_TYPE_ARG5] (ptrace): Define as wrapper
that casts first argument to PTRACE_TYPE_ARG1.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-07-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
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Check for libipt, an Intel(R) Processor Trace decoder library. The sources
can be found on github at:
https://github.com/01org/processor-trace
gdb/
* configure.ac: Check for libipt
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* Makefile.in (LIBIPT): New.
(CLIBS): Add $LIBIPT.
* NEWS: document new configure options
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This commit introduces new shared files nat/linux-namespaces.[ch]
containing code to support Linux namespaces that will be used by
both GDB and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add setns.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Likewise.
* nat/linux-namespaces.h: New file.
* nat/linux-namespaces.c: Likewise.
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add nat/linux-namespaces.h.
(linux-namespaces.o): New rule.
* config/aarch64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add linux-namespaces.o.
* config/alpha/alpha-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/arm/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/i386/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/i386/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/ia64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/m32r/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/m68k/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/mips/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/pa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/powerpc/spu-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/s390/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/sparc/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/tilegx/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
* config/xtensa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add setns.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Likewise.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add nat/linux-namespaces.c.
(linux-namespaces.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (srv_linux_obj): Add linux-namespaces.o.
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This patch adds --with-system-zlib and removes --with-zlib in gdb.
* Makefile.in (ZLIB): New.
(ZLIBINC): Likewise.
(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add $(ZLIBINC).
(CLIBS): Add $(ZLIB).
* acinclude.m4: (GDB_AC_CHECK_BFD): Add $zlibdir to LDFLAGS.
Add -lz to LIBS.
* gdb_bfd.c: Don't check HAVE_ZLIB_H to include <zlib.h>.
* top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Remove --with-zlib and
--without-zlib.
* config.in: Regenerated.
* configure: Likewise.
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Use kinfo_getvmmap from libutil on FreeBSD to enumerate memory
regions in a running process instead of /proc/<pid>/map. FreeBSD systems
do not mount procfs by default, but kinfo_getvmmap uses a sysctl that
is always available.
Skip memory regions for devices as well as regions an application has
requested to not be dumped via the MAP_NOCORE flag to mmap or
MADV_NOCORE advice to madvise.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: AC_CHECK_LIB(util, kinfo_getvmmap).
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* fbsd-nat.c [!HAVE_KINFO_GETVMMAP] (fbsd_read_mapping): Don't
define.
(fbsd_find_memory_regions): Use kinfo_getvmmap to
enumerate memory regions if present.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
* guile/guile.c (_initialize_guile): Disable automatic
finalization, if Guile offers us that possibility.
* guile/guile.c (call_initialize_gdb_module):
* guile/scm-safe-call.c (gdbscm_with_catch): Arrange to run
finalizers in appropriate places.
* config.in (HAVE_GUILE_MANUAL_FINALIZATION): New definition.
* configure.ac (AC_TRY_LIBGUILE): Add a check for
scm_set_automatic_finalization_enabled.
* configure: Regenerated.
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Converting GDB to be a C++ program, I stumbled on 'basename' issues,
like:
src/gdb/../include/ansidecl.h:169:64: error: new declaration ‘char* basename(const char*)’
/usr/include/string.h:597:26: error: ambiguates old declaration ‘const char* basename(const char*)’
which I believe led to this bit in gold's configure.ac:
dnl We have to check these in C, not C++, because autoconf generates
dnl tests which have no type information, and current glibc provides
dnl multiple declarations of functions like basename when compiling
dnl with C++.
AC_CHECK_DECLS([basename, ffs, asprintf, vasprintf, snprintf, vsnprintf, strverscmp])
These checks IIUC intend to generate all the HAVE_DECL_FOO symbols
that libiberty.h and ansidecl.h check.
GDB is missing these checks currently, which results in the conflict
shown above.
This adds an m4 file that both GDB and GDBserver's configury use to
pull in the autoconf checks that libiberty clients needs done in order
to use these libiberty.h/ansidecl.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* libiberty.m4: New file.
* acinclude.m4: Include libiberty.m4.
* configure.ac: Call libiberty_INIT.
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-02-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* acinclude.m4: Include libiberty.m4.
* configure.ac: Call libiberty_INIT.
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
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This patch is to teach both GDB and GDBServer to detect 64-bit inferior
correctly. We find a problem that GDBServer is unable to detect on a
e5500 core processor. Current GDBServer assumes that MSR is a 64-bit
register, but MSR is a 32-bit register in Book III-E. This patch is
to fix this problem by checking the right bit in MSR, in order to handle
both Book III-S and Book III-E. In order to detect Book III-S and
Book III-E, we check the PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE from the host's HWCAP (by
getauxval on glibc >= 2.16. If getauxval doesn't exist, we implement
the fallback by parsing /proc/self/auxv), because it should an invariant
on the same machine cross different processes.
In order to share code, I add nat/ppc-linux.c for both GDB and
GDBserver side.
gdb:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (ppc-linux.o): New rule.
* config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add ppc-linux.o.
* configure.ac: AC_CHECK_FUNCS(getauxval).
* config.in: Re-generated.
* configure: Re-generated.
* nat/ppc-linux.h [__powerpc64__] (ppc64_64bit_inferior_p):
Declare.
* nat/ppc-linux.c: New file.
* ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_target_wordsize) [__powerpc64__]:
Call ppc64_64bit_inferior_p.
gdb/gdbserver:
2015-01-14 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add nat/ppc-linux.c.
(ppc-linux.o): New rule.
* configure.srv (powerpc*-*-linux*): Add ppc-linux.o.
* configure.ac: AC_CHECK_FUNCS(getauxval).
* config.in: Re-generated.
* configure: Re-generated.
* linux-ppc-low.c (ppc_arch_setup) [__powerpc64__]: Call
ppc64_64bit_inferior_p
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On Sun, 14 Dec 2014 07:00:28 +0100, Yao Qi wrote:
The build on mingw host is broken because mingw has no mkdtemp.
../../../git/gdb/compile/compile.c: In function 'get_compile_file_tempdir':
../../../git/gdb/compile/compile.c:194:3: error: implicit declaration of function 'mkdtemp' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
tempdir_name = mkdtemp (tname);
^
../../../git/gdb/compile/compile.c:194:16: error: assignment makes pointer from integer without a cast [-Werror]
tempdir_name = mkdtemp (tname);
^
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
In the end I have managed to test it by Wine myself:
$ wine build_win32/gdb/gdb.exe -q build_win32/gdb/gdb.exe -ex start -ex 'compile code 1' -ex 'set confirm no' -ex quit
[...]
Temporary breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x241418) at ../../gdb/gdb.c:29
29 args.argc = argc;
Could not load libcc1.so: Module not found.
Even if it managed to load libcc1.so (it needs host-dependent name libcc1.dll)
then it would soon end up at least on:
default_infcall_mmap:
error (_("This target does not support inferior memory allocation by mmap."));
As currently there is only:
linux-tdep.c:
set_gdbarch_infcall_mmap (gdbarch, linux_infcall_mmap);
While one could debug Linux targets from MS-Windows host I find it somehow
overcomplicated now when we are trying to get it running at least on native
Linux x86*.
The 'compile' project needs a larger port effort to run on MS-Windows.
gdb/ChangeLog
2014-12-17 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix MinGW compilation.
* compile/compile.c (get_compile_file_tempdir): Call error if
!HAVE_MKDTEMP.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add mkdtemp.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2014-12-17 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Fix MinGW compilation.
* gdb.compile/compile-ops.exp: Update untested message if
!skip_compile_feature_tests.
* gdb.compile/compile-setjmp.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.compile/compile-tls.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.compile/compile.exp: Likewise.
* lib/gdb.exp (skip_compile_feature_tests): Check also "Command not
supported on this host".
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gdb:
2014-11-28 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Remove canonicalize_file_name
and realpath.
* config.in: Re-generated.
* configure: Re-generated.
* utils.c (gdb_realpath): Remove code calling realpath,
canonicalize_file_name and pathconf.
[!_WIN32]: Call canonicalize_file_name.
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