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Nothing uses thread continuations anymore.
(inferior continuations are still used by the attach command.)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-09-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* continuations.c (add_continuation, restore_thread_cleanup)
(do_all_continuations_ptid, do_all_continuations_thread_callback)
(do_all_continuations_thread, do_all_continuations)
(discard_all_continuations_thread_callback)
(discard_all_continuations_thread, discard_all_continuations)
(add_intermediate_continuation)
(do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback)
(do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread)
(do_all_intermediate_continuations)
(discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback)
(discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread)
(discard_all_intermediate_continuations): Delete.
* continuations.h (add_continuation, do_all_continuations)
(do_all_continuations_thread, discard_all_continuations)
(discard_all_continuations_thread, add_intermediate_continuation)
(do_all_intermediate_continuations)
(do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread)
(discard_all_intermediate_continuations)
(discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread): Delete
declarations.
* event-top.c (stdin_event_handler): Delete references to
continuations.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Delete continuations and
intermediate_continuations fields.
* inf-loop.c (inferior_event_handler): Remove references to
continuations.
* infrun.c (infrun_thread_stop_requested_callback): Remove
references to continuations.
* target.h (enum inferior_event_type) <INF_EXEC_CONTINUE>: Delete.
* thread.c: Don't include "continuations.h".
(clear_thread_inferior_resources): Remove references to
continuations.
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This adds an object oriented replacement for the "struct continuation"
mechanism, and converts the stepping commands (step, next, stepi,
nexti) and the "finish" commands to use it.
It adds a new thread "class" (struct thread_fsm) that contains the
necessary info and callbacks to manage the state machine of a thread's
execution command.
This allows getting rid of some hacks. E.g., in fetch_inferior_event
and normal_stop we no longer need to know whether a thread is doing a
multi-step (e.g., step N). This effectively makes the
intermediate_continuations unused -- they'll be garbage collected in a
separate patch. (They were never a proper abstraction, IMO. See how
fetch_inferior_event needs to check step_multi before knowing whether
to call INF_EXEC_CONTINUE or INF_EXEC_COMPLETE.)
The target async vs !async uiout hacks in mi_on_normal_stop go away
too.
print_stop_event is no longer called from normal_stop. Instead it is
now called from within each interpreter's normal_stop observer. This
clears the path to make each interpreter print a stop event the way it
sees fit. Currently we have some hacks in common code to
differenciate CLI vs TUI vs MI around this area.
The "finish" command's FSM class stores the return value plus that
value's position in the value history, so that those can be printed to
both MI and CLI's streams. This fixes the CLI "finish" command when
run from MI -- it now also includes the function's return value in the
CLI stream:
(gdb)
~"callee3 (strarg=0x400730 \"A string argument.\") at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/basics.c:35\n"
~"35\t}\n"
+~"Value returned is $1 = 0\n"
*stopped,reason="function-finished",frame=...,gdb-result-var="$1",return-value="0",thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="0"
-FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-cli.exp: CLI finish: check CLI output
+PASS: gdb.mi/mi-cli.exp: CLI finish: check CLI output
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-09-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (COMMON_OBS): Add thread-fsm.o.
* breakpoint.c (handle_jit_event): Print debug output.
(bpstat_what): Split event callback handling to ...
(bpstat_run_callbacks): ... this new function.
(momentary_bkpt_print_it): No longer handle bp_finish here.
* breakpoint.h (bpstat_run_callbacks): Declare.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <step_multi>: Delete field.
<thread_fsm>: New field.
(thread_cancel_execution_command): Declare.
* infcmd.c: Include thread-fsm.h.
(struct step_command_fsm): New.
(step_command_fsm_ops): New global.
(new_step_command_fsm, step_command_fsm_prepare): New functions.
(step_1): Adjust to use step_command_fsm_prepare and
prepare_one_step.
(struct step_1_continuation_args): Delete.
(step_1_continuation): Delete.
(step_command_fsm_should_stop): New function.
(step_once): Delete.
(step_command_fsm_clean_up, step_command_fsm_async_reply_reason)
(prepare_one_step): New function, based on step_once.
(until_next_command): Remove step_multi reference.
(struct return_value_info): New.
(print_return_value): Rename to ...
(print_return_value_1): ... this. New struct return_value_info
parameter. Adjust.
(print_return_value): Reimplement as wrapper around
print_return_value_1.
(struct finish_command_fsm): New.
(finish_command_continuation): Delete.
(finish_command_fsm_ops): New global.
(new_finish_command_fsm, finish_command_fsm_should_stop): New
functions.
(finish_command_fsm_clean_up, finish_command_fsm_return_value):
New.
(finish_command_continuation_free_arg): Delete.
(finish_command_fsm_async_reply_reason): New.
(finish_backward, finish_forward): Change symbol parameter to a
finish_command_fsm. Adjust.
(finish_command): Create a finish_command_fsm. Adjust.
* infrun.c: Include "thread-fsm.h".
(clear_proceed_status_thread): Delete the thread's FSM.
(infrun_thread_stop_requested_callback): Cancel the thread's
execution command.
(clean_up_just_stopped_threads_fsms): New function.
(fetch_inferior_event): Handle the event_thread's should_stop
method saying the command isn't done yet.
(process_event_stop_test): Run breakpoint callbacks here.
(print_stop_event): Rename to ...
(print_stop_location): ... this.
(restore_current_uiout_cleanup): New function.
(print_stop_event): Reimplement.
(normal_stop): No longer notify the end_stepping_range observers
here handle "step N" nor "finish" here. No longer call
print_stop_event here.
* infrun.h (struct return_value_info): Forward declare.
(print_return_value): Declare.
(print_stop_event): Change prototype.
* thread-fsm.c: New file.
* thread-fsm.h: New file.
* thread.c: Include "thread-fsm.h".
(thread_cancel_execution_command): New function.
(clear_thread_inferior_resources): Call it.
* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_on_normal_stop): New function.
(cli_interpreter_init): Install cli_on_normal_stop as normal_stop
observer.
* mi/mi-interp.c: Include "thread-fsm.h".
(restore_current_uiout_cleanup): Delete.
(mi_on_normal_stop): If the thread has an FSM associated, and it
finished, ask it for the async-reply-reason to print. Always call
print_stop_event here, regardless of the top-level interpreter.
Check bpstat_what to tell whether an asynchronous breakpoint hit
triggered.
* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_on_normal_stop): New function.
(tui_init): Install tui_on_normal_stop as normal_stop observer.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2015-09-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.mi/mi-cli.exp: Add CLI finish tests.
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That is, step past breakpoints by:
- pausing all threads
- removing breakpoint at PC
- single-step
- reinsert breakpoint
- restart threads
similarly to all-stop (with displaced stepping disabled). This allows
non-stop to work on targets/architectures without displaced stepping
support. That is, it makes displaced stepping an optimization instead
of a requirement. For example, in principle, all GNU/Linux ports
support non-stop mode at the target_ops level, but not all
corresponding gdbarch's implement displaced stepping. This should
make non-stop work for all (albeit, not as efficiently). And then
there are scenarios where even if the architecture supports displaced
stepping, we can't use it, because we e.g., don't find a usable
address to use as displaced step scratch pad. It should also fix
stepping past watchpoints on targets that have non-continuable
watchpoints in non-stop mode (e.g., PPC, untested). Running the
instruction out of line in the displaced stepping scratch pad doesn't
help that case, as the copied instruction reads/writes the same
watched memory... We can fix that too by teaching GDB to only remove
the watchpoint from the thread that we want to move past the
watchpoint (currently, removing a watchpoint always removes it from
all threads), but again, that can be considered an optimization; not
all targets would support it.
For those familiar with the gdb and gdbserver Linux target_ops
backends, the implementation should look similar, except it is done on
the core side. When we pause threads, we may find they stop with an
interesting event that should be handled later when the thread is
re-resumed, thus we store such events in the thread object, and mark
the event as pending. We should only consume pending events if the
thread is indeed resumed, thus we add a new "resumed" flag to the
thread object. At a later stage, we might add new target methods to
accelerate some of this, like "pause all threads", with corresponding
RSP packets, but we'd still need a fallback method for remote targets
that don't support such packets, so, again, that can be deferred as
optimization.
My _real_ motivation here is making it possible to reimplement
all-stop mode on top of the target always working on non-stop mode, so
that e.g., we can send RSP packets to a remote target even while the
target is running -- can't do that in the all-stop RSP variant, by
design).
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, with and without "set displaced off"
forced. The latter forces the new code paths whenever GDB needs to
step past a breakpoint.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-07 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
* breakpoint.c (breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now): If any thread
has a pending status, return true.
* gdbthread.h: Include target/waitstatus.h.
(struct thread_suspend_state) <stop_reason, waitstatus_pending_p,
stop_pc>: New fields.
(struct thread_info) <resumed>: New field.
(set_resumed): Declare.
* infrun.c: Include "event-loop.h".
(infrun_async_inferior_event_token, infrun_is_async): New globals.
(infrun_async): New function.
(clear_step_over_info): Add debug output.
(displaced_step_in_progress_any_inferior): New function.
(displaced_step_fixup): New returns int.
(start_step_over): Handle in-line step-overs too. Assert the
thread is marked resumed.
(resume_cleanups): Clear the thread's resumed flag.
(resume): Set the thread's resumed flag. Return early if the
thread has a pending status. Allow stepping a breakpoint with no
signal.
(proceed): Adjust to check 'resumed' instead of 'executing'.
(clear_proceed_status_thread): If the thread has a pending status,
and that status is a finished step, discard the pending status.
(clear_proceed_status): Don't clear step_over_info here.
(random_pending_event_thread, do_target_wait): New functions.
(prepare_for_detach, wait_for_inferior, fetch_inferior_event): Use
do_target_wait.
(wait_one): New function.
(THREAD_STOPPED_BY): New macro.
(thread_stopped_by_watchpoint, thread_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(thread_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New functions.
(switch_to_thread_cleanup, save_waitstatus, stop_all_threads): New
functions.
(handle_inferior_event): Also call set_resumed(false) on all
threads implicitly stopped by the event.
(restart_threads, resumed_thread_with_pending_status): New
functions.
(finish_step_over): If we were doing an in-line step-over before,
and no longer are after trying to start a new step-over, restart
all threads. If we have multiple threads with pending events,
save the current event and go through the event loop again.
(handle_signal_stop): Return early if finish_step_over returns
false.
<random signal>: If we get a signal while stepping over a
breakpoint in-line in non-stop mode, restart all threads. Clear
step_over_info before delivering the signal.
(keep_going_stepped_thread): Use internal_error instead of
gdb_assert. Mark the thread as resumed.
(keep_going_pass_signal): Assert the thread isn't already resumed.
If some other thread is doing an in-line step-over, defer the
resume. If we just started a new in-line step-over, stop all
threads. Don't clear step_over_info.
(infrun_async_inferior_event_handler): New function.
(_initialize_infrun): Create async event handler with
infrun_async_inferior_event_handler as callback.
(infrun_async): New declaration.
* target.c (target_async): New function.
* target.h (target_async): Declare macro and readd as function
declaration.
* target/waitstatus.h (enum target_stop_reason)
<TARGET_STOPPED_BY_SINGLE_STEP>: New value.
* thread.c (new_thread): Clear the new waitstatus field.
(set_resumed): New function.
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The main motivation of this patch is sharing more code between the
proceed (starting the inferior for the first time) and keep_going
(restarting the inferior after handling an event) paths and using the
step_over_chain queue now embedded in the thread_info object for
pending in-line step-overs too (instead of just for displaced
stepping).
So this commit:
- splits out a new keep_going_pass_signal function out of keep_going
that is just like keep_going except for the bits that clear the
signal to pass if the signal is set to "handle nopass".
- makes proceed use keep_going too.
- Makes start_step_over use keep_going_pass_signal instead of lower
level displaced stepping things.
One user visible change: if inserting breakpoints while trying to
proceed fails, we now get:
(gdb) si
Warning:
Could not insert hardware watchpoint 7.
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.
Command aborted.
(gdb)
while before we only saw warnings with no indication that the command
was cancelled:
(gdb) si
Warning:
Could not insert hardware watchpoint 7.
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.
(gdb)
Tested on x86_64-linux-gnu, ppc64-linux-gnu and s390-linux-gnu.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <prev_pc>: Extend comment.
* infrun.c (struct execution_control_state): Move higher up in the
file.
(reset_ecs): New function.
(start_step_over): Now returns int. Rewrite to use
keep_going_pass_signal instead of manually starting a displaced step.
(resume): Don't call set_running here. If displaced stepping
can't start now, clear trap_expected.
(find_thread_needs_step_over): Delete function.
(proceed): Set up finish_thread_state_cleanup. Call set_running.
If the current thread needs a step over, push it in the step-over
chain. Don't set insert breakpoints nor call resume directly
here. Instead rewrite to use start_step_over and
keep_going_pass_signal.
(finish_step_over): New function.
(handle_signal_stop): Call finish_step_over instead of
start_step_over.
(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): If the event thread needs another
step-over do that first. Use start_step_over.
(keep_going_pass_signal): New function, factored out from ...
(keep_going): ... here.
(_initialize_infrun): Comment moved here.
* thread.c (set_running_thread): New function.
(set_running, finish_thread_state): Use set_running_thread.
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In order to teach non-stop mode to do in-line step-overs (pause all
threads, remove breakpoint, single-step, reinsert breakpoint, restart
threads), we'll need to be able to queue in-line step over requests,
much like we queue displaced stepping (out-of-line) requests.
Actually, the queue should be the same -- threads wait for their turn
to step past something (breakpoint, watchpoint), doesn't matter what
technique we end up using when the step over actually starts.
I found that the queue management ends up simpler and more efficient
if embedded in the thread objects themselves. This commit converts
the existing displaced stepping queue to that. Later patches will
make the in-line step-overs code paths use it too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <step_over_prev,
step_over_next>: New fields.
(thread_step_over_chain_enqueue, thread_step_over_chain_remove)
(thread_step_over_chain_next, thread_is_in_step_over_chain): New
declarations.
* infrun.c (struct displaced_step_request): Delete.
(struct displaced_step_inferior_state) <step_request_queue>:
Delete field.
(displaced_step_prepare): Assert that trap_expected is set. Use
thread_step_over_chain_enqueue. Split starting a new displaced
step to ...
(start_step_over): ... this new function.
(resume): Assert the thread isn't waiting for a step over already.
(proceed): Assert the thread isn't waiting for a step over
already.
(infrun_thread_stop_requested): Adjust to remove threads from the
embedded step-over chain.
(handle_inferior_event) <fork/vfork>: Call start_step_over after
displaced_step_fixup.
(handle_signal_stop): Call start_step_over after
displaced_step_fixup.
* infrun.h (step_over_queue_head): New declaration.
* thread.c (step_over_chain_enqueue, step_over_chain_remove)
(thread_step_over_chain_next, thread_is_in_step_over_chain)
(thread_step_over_chain_enqueue)
(thread_step_over_chain_remove): New functions.
(delete_thread_1): Remove thread from the step-over chain.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
* inferior.h (struct inferior_suspend_state): Delete, unused.
All references deleted.
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Now stop_registers are no longer used and it can be removed.
I am not much sure what 'proceed_to_finish' really means now so I make a wild
guess while updating comments about it.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-05-13 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state): Update comment for
proceed_to_finish.
* infcall.c (run_inferior_call): Update comment about
proceed_to_finish.
* infcmd.c (get_return_value): Update comment about stop_registers.
(finish_forward): Update comment about proceed_to_finish.
* infrun.c (stop_registers): Remove.
(clear_proceed_status, normal_stop): Remove stop_registers handling.
* infrun.h (stop_registers): Remove.
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On GNU/Linux, if the running kernel supports clone events, then
linux-thread-db.c defers thread listing to the target beneath:
static void
thread_db_update_thread_list (struct target_ops *ops)
{
...
if (target_has_execution && !thread_db_use_events ())
ops->beneath->to_update_thread_list (ops->beneath);
else
thread_db_update_thread_list_td_ta_thr_iter (ops);
...
}
However, when live debugging, the target beneath, linux-nat.c, does
not implement the to_update_thread_list method. The result is that if
a thread is marked exited (because it can't be deleted right now,
e.g., it was the selected thread), then it won't ever be deleted,
until the process exits or is killed/detached.
A similar thing happens with the remote.c target. Because its
target_update_thread_list implementation skips exited threads when it
walks the current thread list looking for threads that no longer exits
on the target side, using ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE, stale exited
threads are never deleted.
This is not a big deal -- I can't think of any way this might be user
visible, other than gdb's memory growing a tiny bit whenever a thread
gets stuck in exited state. Still, might as well clean things up
properly.
All other targets use prune_threads, so are unaffected.
The fix adds a ALL_THREADS_SAFE macro, that like
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE, walks the thread list and allows deleting
the iterated thread, and uses that in places that are walking the
thread list in order to delete threads. Actually, after converting
linux-nat.c and remote.c to use this, we find the only other user of
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE is also walking the list to delete
threads. So we convert that too, and end up deleting
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-04-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE): Rename to ...
(ALL_THREADS_SAFE): ... this, and don't skip exited threads.
(delete_exited_threads): New declaration.
* infrun.c (follow_exec): Use ALL_THREADS_SAFE.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_update_thread_list): New function.
(linux_nat_add_target): Install it.
* remote.c (remote_update_thread_list): Use ALL_THREADS_SAFE.
* thread.c (prune_threads): Use ALL_THREADS_SAFE.
(delete_exited_threads): New function.
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Currently, "set scheduler-locking step" is a bit odd. The manual
documents it as being optimized for stepping, so that focus of
debugging does not change unexpectedly, but then it says that
sometimes other threads may run, and thus focus may indeed change
unexpectedly... A user can then be excused to get confused and wonder
why does GDB behave like this.
I don't think a user should have to know about details of how "next"
or whatever other run control command is implemented internally to
understand when does the "scheduler-locking step" setting take effect.
This patch completes a transition that the code has been moving
towards for a while. It makes "set scheduler-locking step" hold
threads depending on whether the _command_ the user entered was a
stepping command [step/stepi/next/nexti], or not.
Before, GDB could end up locking threads even on "continue" if for
some reason run control decides a thread needs to be single stepped
(e.g., for a software watchpoint).
After, if a "continue" happens to need to single-step for some reason,
we won't lock threads (unless when stepping over a breakpoint,
naturally). And if a stepping command wants to continue a thread for
bit, like when skipping a function to a step-resume breakpoint, we'll
still lock threads, so focus of debugging doesn't change.
In order to make this work, we need to record in the thread structure
whether what set it running was a stepping command.
(A follow up patch will remove the "step" parameters of 'proceed' and 'resume')
FWIW, Fedora GDB, which defaults to "scheduler-locking step" (mainline
defaults to "off") carries a different patch that goes in this
direction as well.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state) <stepping_command>:
New field.
* infcmd.c (step_once): Pass step=1 to clear_proceed_status. Set
the thread's stepping_command field.
* infrun.c (resume): Check the thread's stepping_command flag to
determine which threads should be resumed. Rename 'entry_step'
local to user_step.
(clear_proceed_status_thread): Clear 'stepping_command'.
(schedlock_applies): Change parameter type to struct thread_info
pointer. Adjust.
(find_thread_needs_step_over): Remove 'step' parameter. Adjust.
(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Adjust calls to
'schedlock_applies'.
(_initialize_infrun): Adjust "set scheduler-locking step" help.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2015-03-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp (test_step): No longer expect that
"set scheduler-locking step" with "next" over a function call runs
threads unlocked.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2015-03-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.texinfo (test_step) <set scheduler-locking step>: No longer
mention that threads may sometimes run unlocked.
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I noticed that step_start_function is still a global, while it
obviously should be a per-thread field.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* infrun.c (step_start_function): Delete and ...
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state) <step_start_function>:
... now a field here.
* infrun.c (clear_proceed_status_thread): Clear the thread's
step_start_function.
(proceed, process_event_stop_test, print_stop_event): Adjust.
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This patch renames symbols that happen to have names which are
reserved keywords in C++.
Most of this was generated with Tromey's cxx-conversion.el script.
Some places where later hand massaged a bit, to fix formatting, etc.
And this was rebased several times meanwhile, along with re-running
the script, so re-running the script from scratch probably does not
result in the exact same output. I don't think that matters anyway.
gdb/
2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
gdb/gdbserver/
2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
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downstream Fedora request:
Please make it easier to find the backtrace of the crashing thread
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1024504
Currently after loading a core file GDB prints:
Core was generated by `./threadcrash1'.
Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
8 *(volatile int *)0=0;
(gdb) _
there is nowhere seen which of the threads had crashed. In reality GDB always
numbers that thread as #1 and it is the current thread that time. But after
dumping all the info into a file for later analysis it is no longer obvious.
'thread apply all bt' even puts the thread #1 to the _end_ of the output!!!
Should GDB always print after loading a core file what "thread" command would
print?
[Current thread is 1 (Thread 0x7fcbe28fe700 (LWP 15453))]
BTW I think it will print the thread even when loading single/non-threaded
core file when other inferior(s) exist. But that currently crashes
[Bug threads/12074] multi-inferior internal error
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12074
plus I think that would be a correct behavior anyway.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-01-22 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* corelow.c (core_open): Call also thread_command.
* gdbthread.h (thread_command): New prototype moved from ...
* thread.c (thread_command): ... here.
(thread_command): Make it global.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
Update year range in copyright notice of all files.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
* eval.c: Include gdbthread.h.
(evaluate_subexp): Enable thread stack temporaries before
evaluating a complete expression and clean them up after the
evaluation is complete.
* gdbthread.h: Include common/vec.h.
(value_ptr): New typedef.
(VEC (value_ptr)): New vector type.
(value_vec): New typedef.
(struct thread_info): Add new fields stack_temporaries_enabled
and stack_temporaries.
(enable_thread_stack_temporaries)
(thread_stack_temporaries_enabled_p, push_thread_stack_temporary)
(get_last_thread_stack_temporary)
(value_in_thread_stack_temporaries): Declare.
* gdbtypes.c (class_or_union_p): New function.
* gdbtypes.h (class_or_union_p): Declare.
* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand): Store return values of class
type as temporaries on stack.
* thread.c (enable_thread_stack_temporaries): New function.
(thread_stack_temporaries_enabled_p, push_thread_stack_temporary)
(get_last_thread_stack_temporary): Likewise.
(value_in_thread_stack_temporaries): Likewise.
* value.c (value_force_lval): New function.
* value.h (value_force_lval): Declare.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.cp/chained-calls.cc: New file.
* gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: New file.
* gdb.cp/smartp.exp: Remove KFAIL for "p c2->inta".
|
|
TL;DR - if we step an instruction that is as long as
decr_pc_after_break (1-byte on x86) right after removing the
breakpoint at PC, in non-stop mode, adjust_pc_after_break adjusts the
PC, but it shouldn't.
In non-stop mode, when a breakpoint is removed, it is moved to the
"moribund locations" list. This is because other threads that are
running may have tripped on that breakpoint as well, and we haven't
heard about it. When a trap is reported, we check if perhaps it was
such a deleted breakpoint that caused the trap. If so, we also need
to adjust the PC (decr_pc_after_break).
Now, say that, on x86:
- a breakpoint was placed at an address where we have an instruction
of the same length as decr_pc_after_break on this arch (1 on x86).
- the breakpoint is removed, and thus put on the moribund locations
list.
- the thread is single-stepped.
As there's no breakpoint inserted at PC anymore, the single-step
actually executes the 1-byte instruction normally. GDB should _not_
adjust the PC for the resulting SIGTRAP. But, adjust_pc_after_break
confuses the step SIGTRAP reported for this single-step as being a
SIGTRAP for the moribund location of the breakpoint that used to be at
the previous PC, and so infrun applies the decr_pc_after_break
adjustment incorrectly.
The confusion comes from the special case mentioned in the comment:
static void
adjust_pc_after_break (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
{
...
As a special case, we could have hardware single-stepped a
software breakpoint. In this case (prev_pc == breakpoint_pc),
we also need to back up to the breakpoint address. */
if (thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set (ecs->event_thread)
|| !ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)
|| !currently_stepping (ecs->event_thread)
|| (ecs->event_thread->stepped_breakpoint
&& ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc))
regcache_write_pc (regcache, breakpoint_pc);
The condition that incorrectly triggers is the
"ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc" one.
Afterwards, the next resume resume re-executes an instruction that had
already executed, which if you're lucky, results in the inferior
crashing. If you're unlucky, you'll get silent bad behavior...
The fix is to remember that we stepped a breakpoint. Turns out the
only case we step a breakpoint instruction today isn't covered by the
testsuite. It's the case of a 'handle nostop" signal arriving while a
step is in progress _and_ we have a software watchpoint, which forces
always single-stepping. This commit extends sigstep.exp to cover
that, and adds a new test for the adjust_pc_after_break issue.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/
2014-10-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/12623
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <stepped_breakpoint>: New
field.
* infrun.c (resume) <stepping breakpoint instruction>: Set the
thread's stepped_breakpoint field. Skip if reverse debugging.
Add comment.
(init_thread_stepping_state, handle_signal_stop): Clear the
thread's stepped_breakpoint field.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/12623
* gdb.base/sigstep.c (no_handler): New global.
(main): If 'no_handler is true, set the signal handlers to
SIG_IGN.
* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (breakpoint_over_handler): Add
with_sw_watch and no_handler parameters. Handle them.
(top level) <stepping over handler when stopped at a breakpoint
test>: Add a test axis for testing with a software watchpoint, and
another for testing with the signal handler set to SIG_IGN.
* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.c: New file.
* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.exp: New file.
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdbthread.h (set_running): Fix comment.
(set_executing, finish_thread_state): Fix comment.
|
|
This commit avoids the prune_threads call in the remote target's
target_update_thread_list's implementation, eliminating all the "thread
alive" RSP traffic (one packet per thread) whenever we fetch the
thread list.
IOW, this:
Sending packet: $Tp2141.2150#82...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $Tp2141.214f#b7...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $Tp2141.2141#82...Packet received: OK
... more T packets; it's one per previously known live thread ...
Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,fff#03...Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="p2141.2141" core="2"/>\n<thread id="p2141.214f" core="1"/>\n<thread id="p2141.2150" core="2"/>\n</threads>\n
Becomes:
Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,fff#03...Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="p2141.2141" core="2"/>\n<thread id="p2141.214f" core="1"/>\n<thread id="p2141.2150" core="2"/>\n</threads>\n
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native gdbserver:
- tests the qXfer:threads:read method.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native gdbserver with qXfer:threads:read
force-disabled in gdbserver:
- So that GDB falls back to the qfThreadInfo/qsThreadInfo method.
And also manually smoked tested force disabling both
qXfer:threads:read and qfThreadInfo/qsThreadInfo in gdbserver.
gdb/
2014-10-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS_SAFE): New macro.
* remote.c (remote_update_thread_list): Skip calling prune_threads
if any thread listing method is supported, and instead walk over
the set of remote threads listed, deleting those that are not
found in GDB's thread list.
|
|
When GDB wants to sync the thread list with the target's (e.g., due to
"info threads"), it calls update_thread_list:
update_thread_list (void)
{
prune_threads ();
target_find_new_threads ();
update_threads_executing ();
}
And then prune_threads does:
prune_threads (void)
{
struct thread_info *tp, *next;
for (tp = thread_list; tp; tp = next)
{
next = tp->next;
if (!thread_alive (tp))
delete_thread (tp->ptid);
}
}
Calling thread_live on each thread one by one is expensive.
E.g., on Linux, it ends up doing kill(SIG0) once for each thread. Not
a big deal, but still a bunch of syscalls...
With the remote target, it's cumbersome. That thread_alive call ends
up generating one T packet per thread:
Sending packet: $Tp2141.2150#82...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $Tp2141.214f#b7...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $Tp2141.2141#82...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $qXfer:threads:read::0,fff#03...Packet received: l<threads>\n<thread id="p2141.2141" core="2"/>\n<thread id="p2141.214f" core="1"/>\n<thread id="p2141.2150" core="2"/>\n</threads>\n
That seems a bit silly when target_find_new_threads method
implementations will always fetch the whole current set of target
threads, and then add those that are not in GDB's thread list, to
GDB's thread list.
This patch thus pushes down the responsibility of pruning dead threads
to the target_find_new_threads method instead, so a target may
implement pruning dead threads however it wants.
Once we do that, target_find_new_threads becomes a misnomer, so the
patch renames it to target_update_thread_list.
The patch doesn't attempt to do any optimization to any target yet.
It simply exports prune_threads, and makes all implementations of
target_update_thread_list call that. It's meant to be a no-op.
gdb/
2014-10-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-tasks.c (print_ada_task_info, task_command_1): Adjust.
* bsd-uthread.c (bsd_uthread_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(bsd_uthread_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(bsd_uthread_target): Adjust.
* corelow.c (core_open): Adjust.
* dec-thread.c (dec_thread_find_new_threads): Update comment.
(dec_thread_update_thread_list): New function.
(init_dec_thread_ops): Adjust.
* gdbthread.h (prune_threads): New declaration.
* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(thread_db_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(init_thread_db_ops): Adjust.
* nto-procfs.c (procfs_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(procfs_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(procfs_attach, procfs_create_inferior, init_procfs_targets):
Adjust.
* obsd-nat.c (obsd_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(obsd_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(obsd_add_target): Adjust.
* procfs.c (procfs_target): Adjust.
(procfs_notice_thread): Update comment.
(procfs_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(procfs_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
* ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_update_inferior_ptid): Update
comment.
(ravenscar_wait): Adjust.
(ravenscar_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(ravenscar_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(init_ravenscar_thread_ops): Adjust.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(record_btrace_update_thread_list): ... this. Adjust comment.
(init_record_btrace_ops): Adjust.
* remote.c (remote_threads_info): Rename to ...
(remote_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads.
(remote_start_remote, extended_remote_attach_1, init_remote_ops):
Adjust.
* sol-thread.c (check_for_thread_db): Adjust.
(sol_find_new_threads_callback): Rename to ...
(sol_update_thread_list_callback): ... this.
(sol_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(sol_update_thread_list): ... this. Call prune_threads. Adjust.
(sol_get_ada_task_ptid, init_sol_thread_ops): Adjust.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target.c (target_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(target_update_thread_list): ... this.
* target.h (struct target_ops): Rename to_find_new_threads field
to to_update_thread_list.
(target_find_new_threads): Rename to ...
(target_update_thread_list): ... this.
* thread.c (prune_threads): Make extern.
(update_thread_list): Adjust.
|
|
This patch finally makes each thread have its own set of single-step
breakpoints. This paves the way to have multiple threads software
single-stepping, though this patch doesn't flip that switch on yet.
That'll be done on a subsequent patch.
gdb/
2014-10-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (single_step_breakpoints): Delete global.
(insert_single_step_breakpoint): Adjust to store the breakpoint
pointer in the current thread.
(single_step_breakpoints_inserted, remove_single_step_breakpoints)
(cancel_single_step_breakpoints): Delete functions.
(breakpoint_has_location_inserted_here): Make extern.
(single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Adjust to walk the
breakpoint list.
* breakpoint.h (breakpoint_has_location_inserted_here): New
declaration.
(single_step_breakpoints_inserted, remove_single_step_breakpoints)
(cancel_single_step_breakpoints): Remove declarations.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state)
<single_step_breakpoints>: New field.
(delete_single_step_breakpoints)
(thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set)
(thread_has_single_step_breakpoint_here): New declarations.
* infrun.c (follow_exec): Also clear the single-step breakpoints.
(singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p, singlestep_ptid)
(singlestep_pc): Delete globals.
(infrun_thread_ptid_changed): Remove references to removed
globals.
(resume_cleanups): Delete the current thread's single-step
breakpoints.
(maybe_software_singlestep): Remove references to removed globals.
(resume): Adjust to use thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set and
delete_single_step_breakpoints.
(init_wait_for_inferior): Remove references to removed globals.
(delete_thread_infrun_breakpoints): Delete the thread's
single-step breakpoints too.
(delete_just_stopped_threads_infrun_breakpoints): Don't delete
single-step breakpoints here.
(delete_stopped_threads_single_step_breakpoints): New function.
(adjust_pc_after_break): Adjust to use
thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set.
(handle_inferior_event): Remove references to removed globals.
Use delete_stopped_threads_single_step_breakpoints.
(handle_signal_stop): Adjust to per-thread single-step
breakpoints. Swap test order to do cheaper tests first.
(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Extend debug output. Remove
references to removed globals.
* record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Adjust to per-thread
single-step breakpoints.
* thread.c (delete_single_step_breakpoints)
(thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set)
(thread_has_single_step_breakpoint_here): New functions.
(clear_thread_inferior_resources): Also delete the thread's
single-step breakpoints.
|
|
When GDB finds out the target triggered a watchpoint, and the target
has non-continuable watchpoints, GDB sets things up to step past the
instruction that triggered the watchpoint. This is just like stepping
past a breakpoint, but goes through a different mechanism - it resumes
only the thread that needs to step past the watchpoint, but also
switches a "infwait state" global, that has the effect that the next
target_wait only wait for events only from that thread.
This forcing of a ptid to pass to target_wait obviously becomes a
bottleneck if we ever support stepping past different watchpoints
simultaneously (in separate processes).
It's also unnecessary -- the target should only return events for
threads that have been resumed; if no other thread than the one we're
stepping past the watchpoint has been resumed, then those other
threads should not report events. If we couldn't assume that, then
stepping past regular breakpoints would be broken for not likewise
forcing a similar infwait_state.
So this patch eliminates infwait_state, and instead teaches keep_going
to mark step_over_info in a way that has the breakpoints module skip
inserting watchpoints (because we're stepping past one), like it skips
breakpoints when we're stepping past one.
Tested on:
- x86_64 Fedora 20 (continuable watchpoints)
- PPC64 Fedora 18 (non-steppable watchpoints)
gdb/
2014-10-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (should_be_inserted): Don't insert watchpoints if
trying to step past a non-steppable watchpoint.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <stepping_over_watchpoint>: New
field.
* infrun.c (struct step_over_info): Add new field
'nonsteppable_watchpoint_p' and adjust comments.
(set_step_over_info): New 'nonsteppable_watchpoint_p' parameter.
Adjust.
(clear_step_over_info): Clear nonsteppable_watchpoint_p as well.
(stepping_past_nonsteppable_watchpoint): New function.
(step_over_info_valid_p): Also return true if stepping past a
nonsteppable watchpoint.
(proceed): Adjust call to set_step_over_info. Remove reference to
init_infwait_state.
(init_wait_for_inferior): Remove reference to init_infwait_state.
(waiton_ptid): Delete global.
(struct execution_control_state)
<stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint>: Delete field.
(wait_for_inferior, fetch_inferior_event): Always pass
minus_one_ptid to target_wait.
(init_thread_stepping_state): Clear 'stepping_over_watchpoint'
field.
(init_infwait_state): Delete function.
(handle_inferior_event): Remove infwait_state handling.
(handle_signal_stop) <watchpoints handling>: Adjust after
stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint removal. Don't remove
breakpoints here nor set infwait_state. Set the thread's
stepping_over_watchpoint flag, and call keep_going instead.
(keep_going): Handle stepping_over_watchpoint. Adjust
set_step_over_info calls.
* infrun.h (stepping_past_nonsteppable_watchpoint): Declare
function.
|
|
Commit a25a5a45 (Fix "breakpoint always-inserted off"; remove
"breakpoint always-inserted auto") regressed non-stop remote
debugging.
This was exposed by mi-nsintrall.exp intermittently failing with a
spurious SIGTRAP.
The problem is that when debugging with "target remote", new threads
the target has spawned but have never reported a stop aren't visible
to GDB until it explicitly resyncs its thread list with the target's.
For example, in a program like this:
int
main (void)
{
pthread_t child_thread;
pthread_create (&child_thread, NULL, child_function, NULL);
return 0; <<<< set breakpoint here
}
If the user sets a breakpoint at the "return" statement, and runs the
program, when that breakpoint hit is reported, GDB is only aware of
the main thread. So if we base the decision to remove or insert
breakpoints from the target based on whether all the threads we know
about are stopped, we'll miss that child_thread is running, and thus
we'll remove breakpoints from the target, even through they should
still remain inserted, otherwise child_thread will miss them.
The break-while-running.exp test actually should also be exposing this
thread-list-out-of-synch problem. That test sets a breakpoint while
the main thread is stopped, but other threads are running. Because
other threads are running, the breakpoint is supposed to be inserted
immediately. But, unless something forces a refetch of the thread
list, like, e.g., "info threads", GDB won't be aware of the other
threads that had been spawned by the main thread, and so won't insert
new or old breakpoints in the target. And it turns out that the test
is exactly doing an explicit "info threads", masking out the
problem... This commit adjust the test to exercise the case of not
issuing "info threads". The test then fails without the GDB fix.
In the ni-nsintrall.exp case, what happens is that several threads hit
the same breakpoint, and when the first thread reports the stop,
because GDB wasn't aware other threads exist, all threads known to GDB
are found stopped, so GDB removes the breakpoints from the target.
The other threads follow up with SIGTRAPs too for that same
breakpoint, which has already been removed. For the first few
threads, the moribund breakpoints machinery suppresses the SIGTRAPs,
but after a few events (precisely '3 * thread_count () + 1' at the
time the breakpoint was removed, see update_global_location_list), the
moribund breakpoint machinery is no longer aware of the removed
breakpoint, and the SIGTRAP is reported as a spurious stop.
The fix is naturally then to stop assuming that if no thread in the
list is executing, then the target is fully stopped. We can't know
that until we fully sync the thread list. Because updating the thread
list on every stop would be too much RSP traffic, I chose instead to
update it whenever we're about to present a stop to the user.
Actually updating the thread list at that point happens to be an item
I had added to the local/remote parity wiki page a while ago:
Native GNU/Linux debugging adds new threads to the thread list as
the program creates them "The [New Thread foo] messages". Remote
debugging can't do that, and it's arguable whether we shouldn't even
stop native debugging from doing that, as it hinders inferior
performance. However, a related issue is that with remote targets
(and gdbserver), even after the program stops, the user still needs
to do "info threads" to pull an updated thread list. This, should
most likely be addressed, so that GDB pulls the list itself, perhaps
just before presenting a stop to the user.
With that in place, the need to delay "Program received signal FOO"
was actually caught by the manythreads.exp test. Without that bit, I
was getting:
[Thread 0x7ffff7f13700 (LWP 4499) exited]
[New Thread 0x7ffff7f0b700 (LWP 4500)]
^C
Program received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
[New Thread 0x7ffff7f03700 (LWP 4501)] <<< new output
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7f0b700 (LWP 4500)]
__GI___nptl_death_event () at events.c:31
31 {
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/manythreads.exp: stop threads 1
That is, I was now getting "New Thread" lines after the "Program
received signal" line, and the test doesn't expect them. As the
number of new threads discovered before and after the "Program
received signal" output is unbounded, it's much nicer to defer
"Program received signal" until after synching the thread list, thus
close to the "switching to thread" output and "current frame/source"
info:
[Thread 0x7ffff7863700 (LWP 7647) exited]
^C[New Thread 0x7ffff786b700 (LWP 7648)]
Program received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7fc4740 (LWP 6243)]
__GI___nptl_create_event () at events.c:25
25 {
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/manythreads.exp: stop threads 1
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/
2014-10-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now): Use
threads_are_executing.
* breakpoint.h (breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now): Add
describing comment.
* gdbthread.h (threads_are_executing): Declare.
(handle_signal_stop) <random signals>: Don't print about the
signal here if stopping.
(end_stepping_range): Don't notify observers here.
(normal_stop): Update the thread list. If stopped by a random
signal or a stepping range ended, notify observers.
* thread.c (threads_executing): New global.
(init_thread_list): Clear 'threads_executing'.
(set_executing): Set or clear 'threads_executing'.
(threads_are_executing): New function.
(update_threads_executing): New function.
(update_thread_list): Use it.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/break-while-running.exp (test): Add new
'update_thread_list' argument. Skip "info threads" if false.
(top level): Add new 'update_thread_list' axis.
|
|
A patch I wrote made GDB pull the thread list sooner when debugging
with target remote, and I noticed an intended consequence. GDB
started bouncing around the currently selected remote/general thread
more frequently. E.g.:
Sending packet: $qTMinFTPILen#3b...Packet received: 5
+Sending packet: $Hgp726d.726d#53...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $m400680,40#2f...Packet received: 85c0741455bff00d60004889e5ffd05de97bffffff0f1f00e973ffffff0f1f00554889e5c745fc00000000c745fc01000000e900000000c745fc02000000b800
+Sending packet: $Hgp726d.7278#28...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $m4006b2,1#28...Packet received: e9
Fast tracepoint 2 at 0x4006b2: file gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/range-stepping.c, line 53.
Sending packet: $qTStatus#49...Packet received: T0;tnotrun:0;tframes:0;tcreated:0;tfree:500000;tsize:500000;circular:0;disconn:0;starttime:0;stoptime:0;username:;notes::
This ended up breaking "tstart" when one has fast tracepoints set,
because gdbserver isn't expecting an Hg packet in response to
qRelocInsn:
(gdb) ftrace *set_point
Fast tracepoint 3 at 0x4006b2: file gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/range-stepping.c, line 53.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: ftrace: ftrace *set_point
tstart
gdbserver: Malformed response to qRelocInsn, ignoring: Hgp2783.2783
Target does not support this command.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: ftrace: tstart
remote_trace_start should probably start by making sure the remote
current thread matches inferior_ptid (calling set_general_thread), but
still, reducing unnecessary bouncing is a good idea. It happens
because the memory/symbol/breakpoint routines use
switch_to_program_space_and_thread to do something in the right
context and then revert back to the previously current thread.
The fix is to simply make any_thread_of_process,
find_inferior_for_program_space, etc. give preference to the current
thread/inferior it if matches.
gdb/
2014-10-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (any_thread_of_process, any_live_thread_of_process):
Adjust comments.
* inferior.c (find_inferior_for_program_space): Give preference to
the current inferior.
* inferior.h (find_inferior_for_program_space): Update comment.
* progspace.c (switch_to_program_space_and_thread): Prefer the
current inferior if it's bound to the program space requested. If
the inferior found doesn't have a PID yet, don't bother looking up
a thread.
* progspace.h (switch_to_program_space_and_thread): Adjust
comment.
* thread.c (any_thread_of_process, any_live_thread_of_process):
Give preference to the current thread.
|
|
Currently, GDB can pass a signal to the wrong thread in several
different but related scenarios.
E.g., if thread 1 stops for signal SIGFOO, the user switches to thread
2, and then issues "continue", SIGFOO is actually delivered to thread
2, not thread 1. This obviously messes up programs that use
pthread_kill to send signals to specific threads.
This has been a known issue for a long while. Back in 2008 when I
made stop_signal be per-thread (2020b7ab), I kept the behavior -- see
code in 'proceed' being removed -- wanting to come back to it later.
The time has finally come now.
The patch fixes this -- on resumption, intercepted signals are always
delivered to the thread that had intercepted them.
Another example: if thread 1 stops for a breakpoint, the user switches
to thread 2, and then issues "signal SIGFOO", SIGFOO is actually
delivered to thread 1, not thread 2, because 'proceed' first switches
to thread 1 to step over its breakpoint... If the user deletes the
breakpoint before issuing "signal FOO", then the signal is delivered
to thread 2 (the current thread).
"signal SIGFOO" can be used for two things: inject a signal in the
program while the program/thread had stopped for none, bypassing
"handle nopass"; or changing/suppressing a signal the program had
stopped for. These scenarios are really two faces of the same coin,
and GDB can't really guess what the user is trying to do. GDB might
have intercepted signals in more than one thread even (see the new
signal-command-multiple-signals-pending.exp test). At least in the
inject case, it's obviously clear to me that the user means to deliver
the signal to the currently selected thread, so best is to make the
command's behavior consistent and easy to explain.
Then, if the user is trying to suppress/change a signal the program
had stopped for instead of injecting a new signal, but, the user had
changed threads meanwhile, then she will be surprised that with:
(gdb) continue
Thread 1 stopped for signal SIGFOO.
(gdb) thread 2
(gdb) signal SIGBAR
... GDB actually delivers SIGFOO to thread 1, and SIGBAR to thread 2
(with scheduler-locking off, which is the default, because then
"signal" or any other resumption command resumes all threads).
So the patch makes GDB detect that, and ask for confirmation:
(gdb) thread 1
[Switching to thread 1 (Thread 10979)]
(gdb) signal SIGUSR2
Note:
Thread 3 previously stopped with signal SIGUSR2, User defined signal 2.
Thread 2 previously stopped with signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1.
Continuing thread 1 (the current thread) with specified signal will
still deliver the signals noted above to their respective threads.
Continue anyway? (y or n)
All these scenarios are covered by the new tests.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/
2014-07-25 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* NEWS: Mention signal passing and "signal" command changes.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_suspend_state) <stop_signal>: Extend
comment.
* breakpoint.c (until_break_command): Adjust clear_proceed_status
call.
* infcall.c (run_inferior_call): Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
* infcmd.c (proceed_thread_callback, continue_1, step_once)
(jump_command): Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
(signal_command): Warn if other thread that are resumed have
signals that will be delivered. Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
(until_next_command, finish_command)
(proceed_after_attach_callback, attach_command_post_wait)
(attach_command): Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
* infrun.c (proceed_after_vfork_done): Likewise.
(proceed_after_attach_callback): Adjust comment.
(clear_proceed_status_thread): Clear stop_signal if not in pass
state.
(clear_proceed_status_callback): Delete.
(clear_proceed_status): New 'step' parameter. Only clear the
proceed status of threads the command being prepared is about to
resume.
(proceed): If passed in an explicit signal, override stop_signal
with it. Don't pass the last stop signal to the thread we're
resuming.
(init_wait_for_inferior): Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Clear the signal if it should not
be passed.
* infrun.h (clear_proceed_status): New 'step' parameter.
(user_visible_resume_ptid): Add comment.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_resume_callback): Don't check whether the
signal is in pass state.
* remote.c (append_pending_thread_resumptions): Likewise.
* mi/mi-main.c (proceed_thread): Adjust clear_proceed_status call.
gdb/doc/
2014-07-25 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
* gdb.texinfo (Signaling) <signal command>: Explain what happens
with multi-threaded programs.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-07-25 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/signal-command-handle-nopass.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/signal-command-handle-nopass.exp: New file.
* gdb.threads/signal-command-multiple-signals-pending.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/signal-command-multiple-signals-pending.exp: New file.
* gdb.threads/signal-delivered-right-thread.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/signal-delivered-right-thread.exp: New file.
|
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Not properly marked as 1/2.
This reverts commit 1a76d598884a052dacd8feb49f1999e1a0d537f1.
|
|
* thread.c (any_running): New function.
|
|
Function any_running isn't used. This patch is to remove it.
Rebuild GDB for linux and mingw.
gdb:
2014-06-19 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* gdbthread.h (any_running): Remove the declaration.
* thread.c (any_running): Remove.
|
|
This patch is to change field state's type to 'enum thread_state', and
replace RUNNING with THREAD_RUNNING and STOPPED with THREAD_STOPPED
respectively in comments.
gdb:
2014-06-19 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <state>: Change its type to
'enum thread_state'. Update comments.
|
|
Running gdb.threads/thread-execl.exp with scheduler-locking set to
"step" reveals a problem:
(gdb) next^M
[Thread 0x7ffff7fda700 (LWP 27168) exited]^M
[New LWP 27168]^M
[Thread 0x7ffff74ee700 (LWP 27174) exited]^M
process 27168 is executing new program: /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/thread-execl^M
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]^M
Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1".^M
infrun.c:5225: internal-error: switch_back_to_stepped_thread: Assertion `!schedlock_applies (1)' failed.^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,^M
further debugging may prove unreliable.^M
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) FAIL: gdb.threads/thread-execl.exp: schedlock step: get to main in new image (GDB internal error)
The assertion is correct. The issue is that GDB is mistakenly trying
to switch back to an exited thread, that was previously stepping when
it exited. This is exactly the sort of thing the test wants to make
sure doesn't happen:
# Now set a breakpoint at `main', and step over the execl call. The
# breakpoint at main should be reached. GDB should not try to revert
# back to the old thread from the old image and resume stepping it
We don't see this bug with schedlock off only because a different
sequence of events makes GDB manage to delete the thread instead of
marking it exited.
This particular internal error can be fixed by making the loop over
all threads in switch_back_to_stepped_thread skip exited threads.
But, looking over other ALL_THREADS users, all either can or should be
skipping exited threads too. So for simplicity, this patch replaces
ALL_THREADS with a new macro that skips exited threads itself, and
updates everything to use it.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/
2014-06-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (ALL_THREADS): Delete.
(ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS): New macro.
* btrace.c (btrace_free_objfile): Use ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS
instead of ALL_THREADS.
* infrun.c (find_thread_needs_step_over)
(switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS
instead of ALL_THREADS.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_open)
(record_btrace_stop_recording, record_btrace_close)
(record_btrace_is_replaying, record_btrace_resume)
(record_btrace_find_thread_to_move, record_btrace_wait): Likewise.
* remote.c (append_pending_thread_resumptions): Likewise.
* thread.c (thread_apply_all_command): Likewise.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-06-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/thread-execl.exp (do_test): New procedure, factored
out from ...
(top level): ... here. Iterate running tests under different
scheduler-locking settings.
|
|
output in async mode.
The other part of PR gdb/13860 is about console execution commands in
MI getting their output half lost. E.g., take the finish command,
executed on a frontend's GDB console:
sync:
finish
&"finish\n"
~"Run till exit from #0 usleep (useconds=10) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/usleep.c:27\n"
^running
*running,thread-id="1"
(gdb)
~"0x00000000004004d7 in foo () at stepinf.c:6\n"
~"6\t usleep (10);\n"
~"Value returned is $1 = 0\n"
*stopped,reason="function-finished",frame={addr="0x00000000004004d7",func="foo",args=[],file="stepinf.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/tests/stepinf.c",line="6"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="1"
async:
finish
&"finish\n"
~"Run till exit from #0 usleep (useconds=10) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/usleep.c:27\n"
^running
*running,thread-id="1"
(gdb)
*stopped,reason="function-finished",frame={addr="0x00000000004004d7",func="foo",args=[],file="stepinf.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/tests/stepinf.c",line="6"},gdb-result-var="$1",return-value="0",thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="0"
Note how all the "Value returned" etc. output is missing in async mode.
The same happens with e.g., catchpoints:
=breakpoint-modified,bkpt={number="1",type="catchpoint",disp="keep",enabled="y",what="22016",times="1"}
~"\nCatchpoint "
~"1 (forked process 22016), 0x0000003791cbd8a6 in __libc_fork () at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fork.c:131\n"
~"131\t pid = ARCH_FORK ();\n"
*stopped,reason="fork",disp="keep",bkptno="1",newpid="22016",frame={addr="0x0000003791cbd8a6",func="__libc_fork",args=[],file="../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fork.c",fullname="/usr/src/debug/glibc-2.14-394-g8f3b1ff/nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fork.c",line="131"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="0"
where all those ~ lines are missing in async mode, or just the "step"
current line indication:
s
&"s\n"
^running
*running,thread-id="all"
(gdb)
~"13\t foo ();\n"
*stopped,frame={addr="0x00000000004004ef",func="main",args=[{name="argc",value="1"},{name="argv",value="0x7fffffffdd78"}],file="stepinf.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/tests/stepinf.c",line="13"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="3"
(gdb)
Or in the case of the PRs example, the "Stopped due to shared library
event" note:
start
&"start\n"
~"Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x400608: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c, line 21.\n"
=breakpoint-created,bkpt={number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="del",enabled="y",addr="0x0000000000400608",func="main",file="../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",line="21",times="0",original-location="main"}
~"Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main \n"
=thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="21990"
=thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
^running
*running,thread-id="all"
(gdb)
=library-loaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1"
~"Stopped due to shared library event (no libraries added or removed)\n"
*stopped,reason="solib-event",thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="3"
(gdb)
IMO, if you're typing execution commands in a frontend's console, you
expect to see their output. Indeed it's what you get in sync mode. I
think async mode should do the same. Deciding what to mirror to the
console wrt to breakpoints and random stops gets messy real fast.
E.g., say "s" trips on a breakpoint. We'd clearly want to mirror the
event to the console in this case. But what about more complicated
cases like "s&; thread n; s&", and one of those steps spawning a new
thread, and that thread hitting a breakpoint? It's impossible in
general to track whether the thread had any relation to the commands
that had been executed. So I think we should just simplify and always
mirror breakpoints and random events to the console.
Notes:
- mi->out is the same as gdb_stdout when MI is the current
interpreter. I think that referring to that directly is cleaner.
An earlier revision of this patch made the changes that are now
done in mi_on_normal_stop directly in infrun.c:normal_stop, and so
not having an obvious place to put the new uiout by then, and not
wanting to abuse CLI's uiout, I made a temporary uiout when
necessary.
- Hopefuly the rest of the patch is more or less obvious given the
comments added.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, no regressions.
2014-05-21 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13860
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state): New field
`command_interp'.
* infrun.c (follow_fork): Copy the new thread control field to the
child fork thread.
(clear_proceed_status_thread): Clear the new thread control field.
(proceed): Set the new thread control field.
* interps.h (command_interp): Declare.
* interps.c (command_interpreter): New global.
(command_interp): New function.
(interp_exec): Set `command_interpreter' while here.
* cli-out.c (cli_uiout_dtor): New function.
(cli_ui_out_impl): Install it.
* mi/mi-interp.c: Include cli-out.h.
(mi_cmd_interpreter_exec): Add comment.
(restore_current_uiout_cleanup): New function.
(ui_out_free_cleanup): New function.
(mi_on_normal_stop): If finishing an execution command started by
a CLI command, or any kind of breakpoint-like event triggered,
print the stop event to the output (CLI) stream.
* mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out_impl): Install NULL `dtor' handler.
2014-05-21 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13860
* gdb.mi/mi-cli.exp (line_callee4_next_step): New global.
(top level): Test that output related to execution commands is
sent to the console with CLI commands, but not with MI commands.
Test that breakpoint events are always mirrored to the console.
Also expect the new source line to be output after a "next" in
async mode too. Make it a pass/fail test.
* gdb.mi/mi-solib.exp: Test that the CLI solib event note is
output.
* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_gdb_expect_cli_output): New procedure.
|
|
|
|
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
Replace GET_LWP with ptid_get_lwp.
* aix-thread.c (BUILD_THREAD, BUILD_LWP): Remove.
Replace BUILD_THREAD with ptid_build.
Replace BUILD_LWP with ptid_build.
Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
* alphabsd-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* amd64-linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
* amd64bsd-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* arm-linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
Replace GET_LWP with ptid_get_lwp.
* armnbsd-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* auxv.c: Likewise.
* breakpoint.c: Likewise.
* common/ptid.c (ptid_is_pid): Condense check for
null_ptid and minus_one_ptid.
(ptid_lwp_p): New function.
(ptid_tid_p): New function.
* common/ptid.h: Update comments for accessors.
(ptid_lwp_p): New prototype.
(ptid_tid_p): New prototype.
* defs.h (PIDGET, TIDGET, MERGEPID): Do not define.
* gcore.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* gdbthread.h: Likewise.
* gnu-nat.c: Likewise.
* hppa-linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
* hppabsd-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* hppanbsd-nat.c: Likewise.
* i386-linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace TIDGET with ptid_get_lwp.
* i386bsd-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* ia64-linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
* infcmd.c: Likewise.
* inferior.h: Likewise.
* inflow.c: Likewise.
* infrun.c: Likewise.
* linux-fork.c: Likewise.
* linux-nat.c: Replace PIDGET with ptid_get_pid.
Replace GET_PID with ptid_get_pid.
Replace is_lwp with ptid_lwp_p.
Replace GET_LWP with ptid_get_lwp.
Replace BUILD_LWP with ptid_build.
|
|
This patch teaches GDB to take advantage of target-assisted range
stepping. It adds a new 'r ADDR1,ADDR2' action to vCont (vCont;r),
meaning, "step once, and keep stepping as long as the thread is in the
[ADDR1,ADDR2) range".
Rationale:
When user issues the "step" command on the following line of source,
a = b + c + d * e - a;
GDB single-steps every single instruction until the program reaches a
new different line. E.g., on x86_64, that line compiles to:
0x08048434 <+65>: mov 0x1c(%esp),%eax
0x08048438 <+69>: mov 0x30(%esp),%edx
0x0804843c <+73>: add %eax,%edx
0x0804843e <+75>: mov 0x18(%esp),%eax
0x08048442 <+79>: imul 0x2c(%esp),%eax
0x08048447 <+84>: add %edx,%eax
0x08048449 <+86>: sub 0x34(%esp),%eax
0x0804844d <+90>: mov %eax,0x34(%esp)
0x08048451 <+94>: mov 0x1c(%esp),%eax
and the following is the RSP traffic between GDB and GDBserver:
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:3c840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:1;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:3e840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:2;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:42840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:2;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:47840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:0;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:49840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:0;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:4d840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:0;
--> vCont;s:p2e13.2e13;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:51840408;thread:p2e13.2e13;core:0;
IOW, a lot of roundtrips between GDB and GDBserver.
If we add a new command to the RSP, meaning "keep stepping and don't
report a stop until the program goes out of the [0x08048434,
0x08048451) address range", then the RSP traffic can be reduced down
to:
--> vCont;r8048434,8048451:p2db0.2db0;c
<-- T0505:68efffbf;04:30efffbf;08:51840408;thread:p2db0.2db0;core:1;
As number of packets is reduced dramatically, the performance of
stepping source lines is much improved.
In case something is wrong with range stepping on the stub side, the
debug info or even gdb, this adds a "set/show range-stepping" command
to be able to turn range stepping off.
gdb/
2013-05-23 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state) <may_range_step>: New
field.
* infcmd.c (step_once, until_next_command): Enable range stepping.
* infrun.c (displaced_step_prepare): Disable range stepping.
(resume): Disable range stepping if stepping over a breakpoint or
we have software watchpoints. If range stepping is enabled,
assert the thread is in the stepping range.
(clear_proceed_status_thread): Clear may_range_step.
(handle_inferior_event): Disable range stepping as soon as we know
the thread that hit the event. Re-enable it whenever we're going
to step with a step range.
* remote.c (struct vCont_action_support) <r>: New field.
(use_range_stepping): New global.
(remote_vcont_probe): Handle 'r' action.
(append_resumption): Append an 'r' action if the thread may range
step.
(show_range_stepping): New function.
(set_range_stepping): New function.
(_initialize_remote): Call add_setshow_boolean_cmd to register the
'set range-stepping' and 'show range-stepping' commands.
* NEWS: Mention range stepping, the new vCont;r action, and the
new "set/show range-stepping" commands.
gdb/doc/
2013-05-23 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Packets): Document 'vCont;r'.
(Continuing and Stepping): Document target-assisted range
stepping, and the 'set range-stepping' and 'show range-stepping'
commands.
|
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This adds a function for doing within-thread's-stepping-range checks,
and converts a couple spots to use it. Following patches will add
more uses.
gdb/
2013-05-23 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (pc_in_thread_step_range): New declaration.
* thread.c (pc_in_thread_step_range): New function.
* infrun.c (handle_inferior_event): Use it.
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Add functions to enable, disable, clear, and fetch a thread's branch trace.
gdb/
* target.h: Include btrace.h.
(struct target_ops) <to_supports_btrace, to_enable_btrace,
to_disable_btrace, to_teardown_btrace, to_read_btrace>: New.
* target.c (target_supports_btrace): New function.
(target_enable_btrace): New function.
(target_disable_btrace): New function.
(target_teardown_btrace): New function.
(target_read_btrace): New function.
* btrace.h: New file.
* btrace.c: New file.
* Makefile.in: Add btrace.c.
* gdbthread.h: Include btrace.h.
(struct thread_info): Add btrace field.
* thread.c: Include btrace.h.
(clear_thread_inferior_resources): Call target_teardown_btrace.
* common/btrace-common.h: New file.
|
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Two modifications:
1. The addition of 2013 to the copyright year range for every file;
2. The use of a single year range, instead of potentially multiple
year ranges, as approved by the FSF.
|
|
2012-06-28 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (ALL_THREADS): New macro.
(thread_list): Declare.
* infrun.c (handle_inferior_event) <spurious signal>: Don't keep
going, but instead fall through to the stepping handling.
* linux-nat.c (resume_lwp): New parameter 'signo'. Resume with
the passed in signal. Adjust debug output.
(resume_callback): Rename to ...
(linux_nat_resume_callback): ... this. Pass the thread's last
stop signal, if in "pass" state.
(linux_nat_resume): Adjust to rename.
(stop_wait_callback): New assertion. Don't respawn signals;
instead let the LWP remain with SIGNALLED set.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Remove flushing of pending SIGSTOPs.
* remote.c (append_pending_thread_resumptions): New.
(remote_vcont_resume): Call it.
* target.h (target_resume): Extend comment.
gdb/testsuite/
2012-06-28 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.exp: New file.
* gdb.threads/siginfo-threads.c: New file.
* gdb.threads/sigstep-threads.exp: New file.
* gdb.threads/sigstep-threads.c: New file.
|
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Remove stale dummy frames.
* breakpoint.c: Include dummy-frame.h.
(longjmp_breakpoint_ops): New variable.
(update_breakpoints_after_exec, breakpoint_init_inferior): Delete also
bp_longjmp_call_dummy.
(bpstat_what, bptype_string, print_one_breakpoint_location)
(init_bp_location): Support bp_longjmp_call_dummy.
(set_longjmp_breakpoint): Use longjmp_breakpoint_ops. Comment why.
(set_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy)
(check_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy, longjmp_bkpt_dtor): New
functions.
(initialize_breakpoint_ops): Initialize longjmp_breakpoint_ops.
* breakpoint.h (enum bptype): New item bp_longjmp_call_dummy. Delete
FIXME comment and extend the other comment for bp_call_dummy.
(set_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy)
(check_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy): New declarations.
* dummy-frame.c: Include gdbthread.h.
(pop_dummy_frame_bpt): New function.
(pop_dummy_frame): Call pop_dummy_frame_bpt.
(dummy_frame_discard): New function.
(cleanup_dummy_frames): Update the comment about longjmps.
* dummy-frame.h (dummy_frame_discard): New declaration.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Extend initiating_frame comment.
* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand): New variable longjmp_b. Call
set_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy. Chain its breakpoints with BPT.
* infrun.c (handle_inferior_event) <BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME>:
Add case 4 comment. Call check_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy and
keep_going if IS_LONGJMP and there is no other reason to stop.
gdb/testsuite/
Remove stale dummy frames.
* gdb.base/call-signal-resume.exp (maintenance print dummy-frames)
(maintenance info breakpoints): New tests.
* gdb.base/stale-infcall.c: New file.
* gdb.base/stale-infcall.exp: New file.
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2012-05-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/7205
Replace target_signal with gdb_signal throughout.
gdb/gdbserver/
2012-05-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/7205
Replace target_signal with gdb_signal throughout.
include/gdb/
2012-05-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/7205
Replace target_signal with gdb_signal throughout.
sim/common/
2012-05-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/7205
Replace target_signal with gdb_signal throughout.
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gdb/ChangeLog:
Copyright year update in most files of the GDB Project.
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* gdbthread.h (enum thread_state): Moved here.
(struct thread_info): Rename `executing_' field to `executing' and
`state_' to `state'.
* thread.c (enum thread_state): Moved to gdbthread.h.
(new_thread, add_thread_silent, delete_thread_1)
(any_live_thread_of_process, thread_alive, set_running)
(set_running, is_thread_state, any_running, is_executing)
(set_executing, finish_thread_state, print_thread_info)
(do_captured_thread_select): Adjust.
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* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Remove fields
`stepping_through_solib_after_catch' and
`stepping_through_solib_catchpoints'.
* infrun.c (init_thread_stepping_state): Update.
(process_event_stop_test, currently_stepping): Update.
(currently_stepping_or_nexting_callback): Update.
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* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Comment on field
`step_after_step_resume_breakpoint'.
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* thread.c (any_live_thread_of_process): Prioritize threads
that are not executing.
* gdbthread.h (any_live_thread_of_process): Update comment
as per above change.
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* gdbthread.h (print_thread_info): Change prototype.
* thread.c (print_thread_info): Accept char* instead of int for
requested_threads argument. Use new function number_is_in_list
to determine which threads to list.
(info_threads_command): Pass char* to print_thread_info.
* cli/cli-utils.c (number_is_in_list): New function.
* cli/cli-utils.h (number_is_in_list): Export.
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_thread_info): Pass char* to
print_thread_info.
(print_one_inferior): Ditto.
(mi_cmd_list_thread_groups): Ditto.
2011-02-21 Michael Snyder <msnyder@vmware.com>
* gdb.threads/thread-find.exp: Update patterns for changes in
output of "info threads" command.
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PR mi/8618:
* thread.c (free_thread): Free 'name'.
(print_thread_info): Emit thread name. Change CLI output.
(thread_name_command): New function.
(do_captured_thread_select): Emit newline.
(_initialize_thread): Register 'thread name' command.
* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_thread_name>: New field.
(target_thread_name): New macro.
* target.c (update_current_target): Handle to_thread_name.
* python/py-infthread.c (thpy_get_name): New function.
(thpy_set_name): Likewise.
(thread_object_getset): Add "name".
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_thread_name): New function.
(linux_nat_add_target): Set to_thread_name.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <name>: New field.
gdb/doc
* gdb.texinfo (Threads): Document thread name output and `thread
name' command.
(Threads In Python): Document Thread.name attribute.
(GDB/MI Thread Commands): Document thread attributes.
gdb/testsuite
* gdb.python/py-infthread.exp: Add thread tests.
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* ada-lang.c: Comment cleanup, mostly periods and spaces.
* ada-lang.h: Ditto.
* ada-tasks.c: Ditto.
* ada-valprint.c: Ditto.
* aix-threads.c: Ditto.
* alpha-linux-nat.c: Ditto.
* alpha-linux-tdep.c: Ditto.
* alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Ditto.
* alpha-nat.c: Ditto.
* alpha-osf1-tdep.c: Ditto.
* alpha-tdep.c: Ditto.
* alphabsd-nat.c: Ditto.
* alphabsd-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-linux-nat.c: Ditto.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-sol2-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-fbsd-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-nbsd-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Ditto.
* amd64-linux-nat.c: Ditto.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Ditto.
* arm-tdep.c: Ditto.
* arm-tdep.h: Ditto.
* armnbsd-nat.c: Ditto.
* avr-tdep.c: Ditto.
* bfin-tdep.c: Ditto.
* bsd-kvm.c: Ditto.
* c-typeprintc: Ditto.
* c-valprint.c: Ditto.
* coff-pe-read.h: Ditto.
* coffreead.c: Ditto.
* cris-tdep.c: Ditto.
* d-lang.c: Ditto.
* darwin-nat-info.c: Ditto.
* darwin-nat.c: Ditto.
* dbug-rom.c: Ditto.
* dbxread.c: Ditto.
* dcache.c: Ditto.
* dcache.h: Ditto.
* dec-thread.c: Ditto.
* defs.h: Ditto.
* demangle.c: Ditto.
* dicos-tdep.c: Ditto.
* dictionary.c: Ditto.
* dictionary.h: Ditto.
* dink32-rom.c: Ditto.
* disasm.c: Ditto.
* doublest.c: Ditto.
* dsrec.c: Ditto.
* dummy-frame.c: Ditto.
* dwarf2-frame.c: Ditto.
* dwarf2expr.c: Ditto.
* dwarf2loc.c: Ditto.
* dwarf2read.c: Ditto.
* elfread.c: Ditto.
* environ.c: Ditto.
* eval.c: Ditto.
* event-top.h: Ditto.
* exceptions.c: Ditto.
* exceptions.h: Ditto.
* exec.c: Ditto.
* expprint.c: Ditto.
* expression.h: Ditto.
* f-exp.y: Ditto.
* f-lang.c: Ditto.
* f-lang.h: Ditto.
* f-typeprint.c: Ditto.
* f-valprint.c: Ditto.
* fbsd-nat.c: Ditto.
* findvar.c: Ditto.
* fork-child.c: Ditto.
* frame.c: Ditto.
* frame.h: Ditto.
* frv-linux-tdep.c: Ditto.
* frv-tdep.c: Ditto.
* gcore.c: Ditto.
* gdb-stabs.h: Ditto.
* gdb_assert.h: Ditto.
* gdb_string.h: Ditto.
* gdb_thread_db.h: Ditto.
* gdb_wait.h: Ditto.
* gdbarch.sh: Ditto.
* gdbcore.h: Ditto.
* gdbthread.h: Ditto.
* gdbtypes.c: Ditto.
* gdbtypes.h: Ditto.
* gnu-nat.c: Ditto.
* gnu-nat.h: Ditto.
* gnu-v2-abi.c: Ditto.
* gnu-v3-abi.c: Ditto.
* go32-nat.c: Ditto.
* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
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PR c++/9593:
* thread.c (clear_thread_inferior_resources): Call
delete_longjmp_breakpoint.
* infrun.c (handle_inferior_event): Handle exception breakpoints.
(handle_inferior_event): Likewise.
(insert_exception_resume_breakpoint): New function.
(check_exception_resume): Likewise.
* inferior.h (delete_longjmp_breakpoint_cleanup): Declare.
* infcmd.c (delete_longjmp_breakpoint_cleanup): No longer static.
(step_1): Set thread's initiating frame.
(until_next_continuation): New function.
(until_next_command): Support exception breakpoints.
(finish_command_continuation): Delete longjmp breakpoint.
(finish_forward): Support exception breakpoints.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <initiating_frame>: New field.
* breakpoint.h (enum bptype) <bp_exception, bp_exception_resume,
bp_exception_master>: New constants.
(struct bpstat_what) <is_longjmp>: New field.
(set_longjmp_breakpoint): Update.
* breakpoint.c (create_exception_master_breakpoint): New function.
(update_breakpoints_after_exec): Handle bp_exception_master. Call
create_exception_master_breakpoint.
(print_it_typical): Handle bp_exception_master, bp_exception.
(bpstat_stop_status): Handle bp_exception_master.
(bpstat_what): Handle bp_exception_master, bp_exception,
bp_exception_resume.
(bptype_string): Likewise.
(print_one_breakpoint_location): Likewise.
(allocate_bp_location): Likewise.
(set_longjmp_breakpoint): Handle exception breakpoints. Change
interface.
(delete_longjmp_breakpoint): Handle exception breakpoints.
(mention): Likewise.
(struct until_break_command_continuation_args) <thread_num>: New
field.
(until_break_command_continuation): Call
delete_longjmp_breakpoint.
(until_break_command): Support exception breakpoints.
(delete_command): Likewise.
(breakpoint_re_set_one): Likewise.
(breakpoint_re_set): Likewise.
gdb/testuite
* gdb.java/jnpe.java: New file.
* gdb.java/jnpe.exp: New file.
* gdb.cp/nextoverthrow.exp: New file.
* gdb.cp/nextoverthrow.cc: New file.
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Fix step_resume_breakpoint unsaved during an infcall.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state): Move here field
step_resume_breakpoint ...
(struct thread_info): ... from here.
* infrun.c (save_infcall_control_state): Reset
control.step_resume_breakpoint to NULL.
(restore_infcall_control_state, discard_infcall_control_state): Delete
control.step_resume_breakpoint.
* arm-linux-tdep.c, infrun.c, thread.c: Update all the references to
the moved field.
gdb/testsuite/
Fix step_resume_breakpoint unsaved during an infcall.
* gdb.base/step-resume-infcall.exp: New file.
* gdb.base/step-resume-infcall.c: New file.
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Rename and move inferior_thread_state and inferior_status.
* gdbthread.h (struct thread_control_state): New struct, move fields
step_range_start, step_range_end, step_frame_id, step_stack_frame_id,
trap_expected, proceed_to_finish, in_infcall, step_over_calls,
stop_step and stop_bpstat here from struct thread_info.
(struct thread_suspend_state): New struct, move field stop_signal here
from struct thread_info.
(struct thread_info): Move the fields above from this struct.
* inferior.h: Move the inferior_thread_state and inferior_status
declarations comment to their definitions at infrun.c.
(struct inferior_control_state): New struct, move field stop_soon from
struct inferior here.
(struct inferior_suspend_state): New empty struct.
(struct inferior): New fields control and suspend. Move out field
stop_soon.
* infrun.c (struct inferior_thread_state): Rename to ...
(infcall_suspend_state): ... here. Replace field stop_signal by
fields thread_suspend and inferior_suspend.
(save_inferior_thread_state): Rename to ...
(save_infcall_suspend_state): ... here. New variable inf. Update the
code for new fields.
(restore_inferior_thread_state): Rename to ...
(restore_infcall_suspend_state): ... here. New variable inf. Update
the code for new fields.
(do_restore_inferior_thread_state_cleanup): Rename to ...
(do_restore_infcall_suspend_state_cleanup): ... here.
(make_cleanup_restore_inferior_thread_state): Rename to ...
(make_cleanup_restore_infcall_suspend_state): ... here.
(discard_inferior_thread_state): Rename to ...
(discard_infcall_suspend_state): ... here.
(get_inferior_thread_state_regcache): Rename to ...
(get_infcall_suspend_state_regcache): ... here.
(struct inferior_status): Rename to ...
(struct infcall_control_state): ... here. Replace fields
step_range_start, step_range_end, step_frame_id, step_stack_frame_id,
trap_expected, proceed_to_finish, in_infcall, step_over_calls,
stop_step, stop_bpstat and stop_soon by fields thread_control and
inferior_control.
(save_inferior_status): Rename to ...
(save_infcall_control_state): ... here. Update the code for new
fields.
(restore_inferior_status): Rename to ...
(restore_infcall_control_state): ... here. Update the code for new
fields.
(do_restore_inferior_status_cleanup): Rename to ...
(do_restore_infcall_control_state_cleanup): ... here.
(make_cleanup_restore_inferior_status): Rename to ...
(make_cleanup_restore_infcall_control_state): ... here.
(discard_inferior_status): Rename to ...
(discard_infcall_control_state): ... here.
* alpha-tdep.c, breakpoint.c, dummy-frame.c, dummy-frame.h,
exceptions.c, fbsd-nat.c, gdbthread.h, infcall.c, infcmd.c,
inferior.c, inferior.h, infrun.c, linux-nat.c, mi/mi-interp.c,
mips-tdep.c, procfs.c, solib-irix.c, solib-osf.c, solib-spu.c,
solib-sunos.c, solib-svr4.c, thread.c, windows-nat.c: Update all the
references to the moved fields and renamed functions.
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