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procfs.c compilation is currently broken on Solaris:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/procfs.c: In member function ‘virtual ptid_t procfs_target::wait(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, target_wait_flags)’:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/procfs.c:2067:34: error: ‘wait’ is not a member of ‘gdb’; did you mean ‘wait’?
2067 | wait_retval = gdb::wait (&wstat);
| ^~~~
In file included from ../gnulib/import/sys/wait.h:28,
from /usr/include/stdlib.h:16,
from /usr/gcc/14/include/c++/14.2.0/cstdlib:79,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/../gdbsupport/common-defs.h:99,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/defs.h:26,
from <command-line>:
/usr/include/sys/wait.h:85:14: note: ‘wait’ declared here
85 | extern pid_t wait(int *);
| ^~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/procfs.c:2154:41: error: ‘wait’ is not a member of ‘gdb’; did you mean ‘wait’?
2154 | int temp = gdb::wait (&wstat);
| ^~~~
/usr/include/sys/wait.h:85:14: note: ‘wait’ declared here
85 | extern pid_t wait(int *);
| ^~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/procfs.c: In function ‘void unconditionally_kill_inferior(procinfo*)’:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/gdb-16-branch/git/gdb/procfs.c:2566:12: error: ‘wait’ is not a member of ‘gdb’; did you mean ‘wait’?
2566 | gdb::wait (NULL);
| ^~~~
/usr/include/sys/wait.h:85:14: note: ‘wait’ declared here
85 | extern pid_t wait(int *);
| ^~~~
The use of gdb::wait was introduced in
commit 4e4dfc4728622d83c5d600949024449e21de868a
Author: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Date: Fri Nov 22 17:44:29 2024 +0100
[gdb] Add gdb::wait
but obviously never tested.
Fixed by including gdbsupport/eintr.h to provide the declaration.
Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11 and sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
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Add gdb::wait, and use it in gdb/procfs.c, making sure that EINTR is handled.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
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Use gdb::waitpid instead of plain waitpid, making sure that EINTR is handled.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
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Fix the following common misspellings:
...
accidently -> accidentally
additonal -> additional
addresing -> addressing
adress -> address
agaisnt -> against
albiet -> albeit
arbitary -> arbitrary
artifical -> artificial
auxillary -> auxiliary
auxilliary -> auxiliary
bcak -> back
begining -> beginning
cannonical -> canonical
compatiblity -> compatibility
completetion -> completion
diferent -> different
emited -> emitted
emiting -> emitting
emmitted -> emitted
everytime -> every time
excercise -> exercise
existance -> existence
fucntion -> function
funtion -> function
guarentee -> guarantee
htis -> this
immediatly -> immediately
layed -> laid
noone -> no one
occurances -> occurrences
occured -> occurred
originaly -> originally
preceeded -> preceded
preceeds -> precedes
propogate -> propagate
publically -> publicly
refering -> referring
substract -> subtract
substracting -> subtracting
substraction -> subtraction
taht -> that
targetting -> targeting
teh -> the
thier -> their
thru -> through
transfered -> transferred
transfering -> transferring
upto -> up to
vincinity -> vicinity
whcih -> which
whereever -> wherever
wierd -> weird
withing -> within
writen -> written
wtih -> with
doesnt -> doesn't
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
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I believe that the get_exec_file function is unnecessary, and the code
can be simplified if we remove it.
Consider for instance when you "run" a program on Linux with native
debugging.
1. run_command_1 obtains the executable file from
`current_program_space->exec_filename ()`
2. it passes it to `run_target->create_inferior()`, which is
`inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior()` in this case, which then
passes it to `fork_inferior()`
3. `fork_inferior()` then has a fallback, where if the passed exec file
is nullptr, it gets its from `get_exec_file()`.
4. `get_exec_file()` returns `current_program_space->exec_filename ()`
- just like the things we started with - or errors out if the
current program space doesn't have a specified executable.
If there's no exec filename passed in step 1, there's not going to be
any in step 4, so it seems pointless to call `get_exec_file()`, we could
just error out when `exec_file` is nullptr. But we can't error out
directly in `fork_inferior()`, since the error is GDB-specific, and that
function is shared with GDBserver.
Speaking of GDBserver, all code paths that lead to `fork_inferior()`
provide a non-nullptr exec file.
Therefore, to simplify things:
- Make `fork_inferior()` assume that the passed exec file is not
nullptr, don't call `get_exec_file()`
- Change some targets (darwin-nat, go32-nat, gnu-nat, inf-ptrace,
nto-procfs, procfs) to error out when the exec file passed to their
create_inferior method is nullptr. Some targets are fine with a
nullptr exec file, so we can't check that in `run_command_1()`.
- Add the `no_executable_specified_error()` function, which re-uses the
error message that `get_exec_file()` had.
- Change some targets (go32-nat, nto-procfs) to not call
`get_exec_file()`, since it's pointless for the same reason as in the
example above, if it returns, it's going the be the same value as the
`exec_file` parameter. Just rely on `exec_file`.
- Remove the final use of `get_exec_file()`, in `load_command()`.
- Remove the `get_exec_file()` implementations in GDB and GDBserver and
remove the shared declaration.
Change-Id: I601c16498e455f7baa1f111a179da2f6c913baa3
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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`current_program_space->exec_filename ()`
Calls of `get_exec_file (0)` are equivalent to just getting the exec
filename from the current program space. I'm looking to remove
`get_exec_file`, so replace these uses with
`current_program_space->exec_filename ()`.
Remove the `err` parameter of `get_exec_wrapper` since all the calls
that remain pass 1, meaning to error out if no executable is specified.
Change-Id: I7729ea4c7f03dbb046211cc5aa3858ab3a551965
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Most files including gdbcmd.h currently rely on it to access things
actually declared in cli/cli-cmds.h (setlist, showlist, etc). To make
things easy, replace all includes of gdbcmd.h with includes of
cli/cli-cmds.h. This might lead to some unused includes of
cli/cli-cmds.h, but it's harmless, and much faster than going through
the 170 or so files by hand.
Change-Id: I11f884d4d616c12c05f395c98bbc2892950fb00f
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Move the declarations out of defs.h, and the implementations out of
findvar.c.
I opted for a new file, because this functionality of converting
integers to bytes and vice-versa seems a bit to generic to live in
findvar.c.
Change-Id: I524858fca33901ee2150c582bac16042148d2251
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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Now that defs.h, server.h and common-defs.h are included via the
`-include` option, it is no longer necessary for source files to include
them. Remove all the inclusions of these files I could find. Update
the generation scripts where relevant.
Change-Id: Ia026cff269c1b7ae7386dd3619bc9bb6a5332837
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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This commit is the result of the following actions:
- Running gdb/copyright.py to update all of the copyright headers to
include 2024,
- Manually updating a few files the copyright.py script told me to
update, these files had copyright headers embedded within the
file,
- Regenerating gdbsupport/Makefile.in to refresh it's copyright
date,
- Using grep to find other files that still mentioned 2023. If
these files were updated last year from 2022 to 2023 then I've
updated them this year to 2024.
I'm sure I've probably missed some dates. Feel free to fix them up as
you spot them.
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While working on a later commit in this series I realised that the
error() function doesn't support output styling. Due to the way that
output from error() calls is passed around within the exception
object and often combined with other output, it's not immediately
obvious to me if we should be trying to support styling in this
context or not.
On inspection, I found one place in GDB where we apparently try to
apply styling within the error() output (in procfs.c). I suspect this
error() call might not be tested.
Rather than try to implement styling in the error() output, right now
I'm proposing to just remove the attempt to style error() output.
This doesn't mean that someone shouldn't add error() styling in the
future, but right now, I'm not planning to do that, I just wanted to
fix this in passing.
Approved-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
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procfs.c doesn't currently compile on Solaris:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In member function ‘virtual int procfs_target::can_use_hw_breakpoint(bptype, int, int)’:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:3017:9: error: ‘ptr_type’ was not declared in this scope; did you mean ‘var_types’?
3017 | type *ptr_type
| ^~~~~~~~
| var_types
This was caused by this patch:
commit 99d9c3b92ca96a7425cbb6b1bf453ede9477a2ee
Author: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Date: Fri Sep 29 14:24:38 2023 -0400
gdb: remove target_gdbarch
Partially undoing it restores the build.
Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11.
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Since GDB now requires C++17, we don't need the internally maintained
gdb::optional implementation. This patch does the following replacing:
- gdb::optional -> std::optional
- gdb::in_place -> std::in_place
- #include "gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h" -> #include <optional>
This change has mostly been done automatically. One exception is
gdbsupport/thread-pool.* which did not use the gdb:: prefix as it
already lives in the gdb namespace.
Change-Id: I19a92fa03e89637bab136c72e34fd351524f65e9
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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Remove get_current_regcache, inlining the call to get_thread_regcache in
callers. When possible, pass the right thread_info object known from
the local context. Otherwise, fall back to passing `inferior_thread ()`.
This makes the reference to global context bubble up one level, a small
step towards the long term goal of reducing the number of references to
global context (or rather, moving those references as close as possible
to the top of the call tree).
No behavior change expected.
Change-Id: Ifa6980c88825d803ea586546b6b4c633c33be8d6
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This function is just a wrapper around the current inferior's gdbarch.
I find that having that wrapper just obscures where the arch is coming
from, and that it's often used as "I don't know which arch to use so
I'll use this magical target_gdbarch function that gets me an arch" when
the arch should in fact come from something in the context (a thread,
objfile, symbol, etc). I think that removing it and inlining
`current_inferior ()->arch ()` everywhere will make it a bit clearer
where that arch comes from and will trigger people into reflecting
whether this is the right place to get the arch or not.
Change-Id: I79f14b4e4934c88f91ca3a3155f5fc3ea2fadf6b
Reviewed-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
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This started with me running into this comment in symfile.c:
/* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */
gdb_printf (_("`%ps' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n"),
styled_string (file_name_style.style (), filename));
In this particular case I think I disagree with the comment; I think
the output should be a warning rather than just a message printed to
gdb_stdout, I think when the executable, or some other objfile that is
currently being debugged, disappears from disk, this is likely an
unexpected situation, and worth warning the user about.
So, in theory, I could just call print_sys_errmsg and remove the
comment, but that would mean loosing the filename styling in the
output... so in the end I remove the comment and updated the code to
call warning.
But that got me looking at print_sys_errmsg and how it's used.
Currently the function takes a string and an errno, and prints, to
stderr, the string followed by the result of calling strerror on the
errno.
In some places the string passed to print_sys_errmsg is just a
filename, and this is used when something goes wrong. In these cases,
I think calling warning rather than gdb_printf to gdb_stderr, would be
better, and in fact, in a couple of places we manually print a
"warning" prefix, and then call print_sys_errmsg. And so, for these
users I have added a new function warning_filename_and_errno, which
takes a filename, which is printed with styling, and an errno, which
is passed through strerror and the resulting string printed. This new
function calls warning to print its output. I then updated some of
the print_sys_errmsg users to use this new function.
Some other users of print_sys_errmsg are also emitting what is clearly
a warning, however, the string being passed in is more than just a
filename, so the new warning_filename_and_errno function can't be
used, it would style the whole string. For these users I have
switched to calling warning directly, this allows me to style the
warning message correctly.
Finally, in inflow.c there is one last call to print_sys_errmsg, in
this case I just inlined the definition of print_sys_errmsg. This is
a really weird case, as after printing this message GDB just does a
hard exit. This is pretty old code, dating back to the initial GDB
import, I guess it should be updated to call error() maybe, but I'm
reluctant to make this change as part of this commit, just in case
there's some reason why we can't throw an error at this point.
With that done there are now no users of print_sys_errmsg, and so the
old function can be removed.
While I was doing all of the above I added some additional filename
styling in soure.c, this is in an else block where the if contained
the print_sys_errmsg call, so these felt related.
And finally, while I was updating the uses of print_sys_errmsg in
procfs.c, I noticed that we used a static errmsg buffer to format some
error strings. As the above changes got rid of one of the users of
errmsg I also removed the other two users, and the static buffer.
There were a couple of tests that depended on the existing output
message format that needed updating. In one case we gained an extra
'warning: ' prefix, and in the other 'Warning: ' becomes 'warning: ',
I think in both cases the new output is an improvement.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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I noticed in procfs.c that we use a static buffer for building error
strings when we could easily use std::string and string_printf to
achieve the same result, this commit does that.
I ran into this while performing a further refactor/cleanup that will
be presented in a later patch in this series, and thought this was
worth splitting out into its own patch.
As far as I can tell, only Solaris uses procfs.c, so I did a test
build on a Solaris machine, and I don't believe that I've broken
anything.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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I noticed a comment by an include and remembered that I think these
don't really provide much value -- sometimes they are just editorial,
and sometimes they are obsolete. I think it's better to just remove
them. Tested by rebuilding.
Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
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Currently, each target backend is responsible for printing "[Thread
...exited]" before deleting a thread. This leads to unnecessary
differences between targets, like e.g. with the remote target, we
never print such messages, even though we do print "[New Thread ...]".
E.g., debugging the gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp
with gdbserver, letting it run for a bit, and then pressing Ctrl-C, we
currently see:
(gdb) c
Continuing.
^C[New Thread 3850398.3887449]
[New Thread 3850398.3887500]
[New Thread 3850398.3887551]
[New Thread 3850398.3887602]
[New Thread 3850398.3887653]
...
Thread 1 "attach-many-sho" received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
0x00007ffff7e6a23f in __GI___clock_nanosleep (clock_id=clock_id@entry=0, flags=flags@entry=0, req=req@entry=0x7fffffffda80, rem=rem@entry=0x7fffffffda80)
at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c:78
78 in ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c
(gdb)
Above, we only see "New Thread" notifications, even though threads
were deleted.
After this patch, we'll see:
(gdb) c
Continuing.
^C[Thread 3558643.3577053 exited]
[Thread 3558643.3577104 exited]
[Thread 3558643.3577155 exited]
[Thread 3558643.3579603 exited]
...
[New Thread 3558643.3597415]
[New Thread 3558643.3600015]
[New Thread 3558643.3599965]
...
Thread 1 "attach-many-sho" received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
0x00007ffff7e6a23f in __GI___clock_nanosleep (clock_id=clock_id@entry=0, flags=flags@entry=0, req=req@entry=0x7fffffffda80, rem=rem@entry=0x7fffffffda80)
at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c:78
78 in ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c
(gdb) q
This commit fixes this by moving the thread exit printing to common
code instead, triggered from within delete_thread (or rather,
set_thread_exited).
There's one wrinkle, though. While most targest want to print:
[Thread ... exited]
the Windows target wants to print:
[Thread ... exited with code <exit_code>]
... and sometimes wants to suppress the notification for the main
thread. To address that, this commits adds a delete_thread_with_code
function, only used by that target (so far).
This fix was originally posted as part of a larger series:
https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/20221212203101.1034916-1-pedro@palves.net/
But didn't really need to be part of that series. In order to get
this fix merged sooner, I (Andrew Burgess) have rebased this commit
outside of the original series. Any bugs introduced while splitting
this patch out and rebasing, are entirely my own.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30129
Co-Authored-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
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PR tdep/30252 reports that using GDB on Solaris fails an assertion in
target_resume:
target.c:2648: internal-error: target_resume: Assertion `inferior_ptid != null_ptid' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
The backtrace, after running it through c++filt, looks like:
----- Backtrace -----
0xa18914 gdb_internal_backtrace_1
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:122
0xa18914 gdb_internal_backtrace()
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:168
0xdec834 internal_vproblem
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:401
0xdecad8 internal_verror(char const*, int, char const*, __va_list_tag*)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:481
0xf3638c internal_error_loc(char const*, int, char const*, ...)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:58
0xd70580 target_resume(ptid_t, int, gdb_signal)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2648
0xc59e85 procfs_target::wait(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, enum_flags<target_wait_flag>)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/procfs.c:2187
0xcf6da7 sol_thread_target::wait(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, enum_flags<target_wait_flag>)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/sol-thread.c:442
0xd73711 target_wait(ptid_t, target_waitstatus*, enum_flags<target_wait_flag>)
/root/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2586
...
The problem is that the procfs backend, while inside target_wait,
called target_resume without switching to the leader thread of that
resumption.
The target_resume interface is:
/* Resume execution (or prepare for execution) of the current thread
(INFERIOR_PTID), while optionally letting other threads of the
current process or all processes run free.
...
Thus calling target_resume with inferior_ptid == null_ptid is bogus.
target_wait (which leads to procfs_target::wait on Solaris) is called
with inferior_ptid == null_ptid on entry exactly to help catch such
bogus uses.
From the backtrace, it seems that the relevant line in question is
procfs.c:2187:
2186 /* How to keep going without returning to wfi: */
2187 target_continue_no_signal (ptid);
2188 goto wait_again;
target_continue_no_signal is a small wrapper around target_resume,
which would make sense.
The fix is to not call target_resume or go via the target stack at
all. Instead, factor out a new proc_resume function out of
procfs_target::resume, and call that. The new function does not rely
on inferior_ptid.
I've not been able to test it myself, but Petr confirmed it fixes the
assertion failure with his test case, and Marcel Telka also confirmed
it solves the problem.
Tested-By: Petr Šumbera <petr.sumbera@oracle.com>
Tested-By: Marcel Telka <marcel@telka.sk>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30252
Change-Id: I6213c59b081d400a22e799ee621c2eff6dcafbf3
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Make find_thread_ptid (the overload that takes a process_stratum_target)
a method of process_stratum_target.
Change-Id: Ib190a925a83c6b93e9c585dc7c6ab65efbdd8629
Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
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Currently, "info files" and "info program" on a few native targets
show:
(gdb) info files
Symbols from "/home/pedro/gdb/tests/threads".
Native process:
Using the running image of child Thread 0x7ffff7d89740 (LWP 1097968).
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
(gdb) info program
Using the running image of child Thread 0x7ffff7d89740 (LWP 1097968).
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Program stopped at 0x555555555278.
...
This patch changes them to:
(gdb) info files
Symbols from "/home/pedro/gdb/tests/threads".
Native process:
Using the running image of child process 1097968.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
(gdb) info program
Using the running image of child process 1097968.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Program stopped at 0x555555555278.
...
... which I think makes a lot more sense in this context. The "info
program" manual entry even says:
"Display information about the status of your program: whether it is
running or not, what process it is, and why it stopped."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This change affects ptrace targets, procfs targets, and Windows.
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Change-Id: I6aab061ff494a84ba3398cf98fd49efd7a6ec1ca
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This commit is the result of running the gdb/copyright.py script,
which automated the update of the copyright year range for all
source files managed by the GDB project to be updated to include
year 2023.
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Some class members were changed to bool, but there was
still some assignments or comparisons using 0/1.
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
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procfs.c has accumulated several compilation errors lately (some of them
new with GCC 12), which are fixed by this patch:
* auxv_parse gets:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:144:7: error: int
procfs_target::auxv_parse(gdb_byte**, gdb_byte*, CORE_ADDR*, CORE_ADDR*)
marked override, but does not override
144 | int auxv_parse (gdb_byte **readptr,
| ^~~~~~~~~~
Obviouly, procfs.c was missed in the auxv_parse constification.
* dead_procinfo has:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In function void
dead_procinfo(procinfo*, const char*, int):
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:563:11: warning: the address
of procinfo::pathname will never be NULL [-Waddress]
563 | if (pi->pathname)
| ~~~~^~~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:238:8: note:
procinfo::pathname declared here
238 | char pathname[MAX_PROC_NAME_SIZE]; /* Pathname to /proc entry */
| ^~~~~~~~
The warning is correct, so the code can lose support for the NULL
pathname case.
* create_inferior has this ugly warning:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In member function virtual void procfs_target::create_inferior(const char*, const std::string&, char**, int):
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:2815:19: warning: char* std::strncpy(char*, const char*, size_t) output truncated before terminating nul copying as many bytes from a string as its length [-Wstringop-truncation]
2815 | strncpy (tryname, p, len);
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:2814:26: note: length computed here
2814 | len = strlen (p);
| ~~~~~~~^~~
It seems that this is another case of GCC PR middle-end/88059, which
Martin Sebor refuses to fix. So I'm using the hack suggested in the
PR to use memcpy instead of strncpy.
* find_memory_regions_callback fails with
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In function int find_memory_regions_callback(prmap*, find_memory_region_ftype, void*):
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:3167:18: error: too few arguments to function
3167 | return (*func) ((CORE_ADDR) map->pr_vaddr,
| ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3168 | map->pr_size,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3169 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_READ) != 0,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3170 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_WRITE) != 0,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3171 | (map->pr_mflags & MA_EXEC) != 0,
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3172 | 1, /* MODIFIED is unknown, pass it as true. */
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3173 | data);
| ~~~~~
Again, procfs.c was overlooked when adding the new memory_tagged arg.
Unfortunately, it wasn't even documented in gdb/defs.h when it was
added in
commit 68cffbbd4406b4efe1aa6e18460b1d7ca02549f1
Author: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
Date: Thu Mar 31 11:42:35 2022 +0100
[AArch64] MTE corefile support
With those changes, procfs.c compiles again. Together with the hack
from the Solaris gdbsupport breakage reported in PR build/29791, I was
able to build and test gdb on both amd64-pc-solaris2.11 and
sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
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Remove the macro, replace all uses with calls to type::length.
Change-Id: Ib9bdc954576860b21190886534c99103d6a47afb
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I ran into this error while working on AArch64 GDB:
Unable to fetch VFP registers.: Invalid argument.
Notice the '.:' in the middle of this error message.
This is because of this call in aarch64-linux-nat.c:
perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VFP registers."));
The perror_with_name function take a string, and adds ': <message>' to
the end the string, so I don't think the string that we pass to
perror_with_name should end in '.'.
This commit removes all of the trailing '.' characters from
perror_with_name calls, which give more readable error messages.
I don't believe that any of these errors are tested in the
testsuite (after a little grepping).
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This changes target_pid_to_exec_file and target_ops::pid_to_exec_file
to return a "const char *". I couldn't build many of these targets,
but did examine the code by hand -- also, as this only affects the
return type, it's normally pretty safe. This brings gdb and gdbserver
a bit closer, and allows for the removal of a const_cast as well.
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procfs.c doesn't compile on Solaris:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c: In member function ‘virtual bool procfs_target::info_proc(const char*, info_proc_what)’:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c:3302:3: error: ‘gdb_argv’ was not declared in this scope
3302 | gdb_argv built_argv (args);
| ^~~~~~~~
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/local/gdb/procfs.c:3303:20: error: ‘built_argv’ was not declared in this scope; did you mean ‘buildargv’?
3303 | for (char *arg : built_argv)
| ^~~~~~~~~~
| buildargv
Fixed by including "gdbsupport/buildargv.h".
Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11, sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
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Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the printf family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_printf". Most of this patch was written by script.
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A number of spots call printf_unfiltered only because they are in code
that should not be interrupted by the pager. However, I believe these
cases are all handled by infrun's blanket ban on paging, and so can be
converted to the default (_filtered) API.
After this patch, I think all the remaining _unfiltered calls are ones
that really ought to be. A few -- namely in complete_command -- could
be replaced by a scoped assignment to pagination_enabled, but for the
remainder, the code seems simple enough like this.
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target_announce_detach was added in commit 0f48b757 ("Factor out
"Detaching from program" message printing"). There, Pedro wrote:
(For now, I left the couple targets that print this a bit differently
alone. Maybe this could be further pulled out into infcmd.c. If we
did that, and those targets want to continue printing differently,
this new function could be converted to a target method.)
It seems to me that the differences aren't very big, and in some cases
other targets handled the output a bit more nicely. In particular,
some targets will print a different message when exec_file==NULL,
rather than printing the same output with an empty string as
exec_file.
This patch incorporates the nicer output into target_announce_detach,
then changes the remaining ports to use this function.
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This introduces target_announce_attach, by analog with
target_announce_detach. Then it converts existing targets to use
this, rather than emitting their own output by hand.
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This commit brings all the changes made by running gdb/copyright.py
as per GDB's Start of New Year Procedure.
For the avoidance of doubt, all changes in this commits were
performed by the script.
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store_waitstatus is basically a translation function between a status
integer and an equivalent target_waitstatus object. It would make sense
for it to take the integer as a parameter and return the
target_waitstatus by value. Do that, and rename to
host_status_to_waitstatus. Users can then do:
ws = host_status_to_waitstatus (status)
which does the right thing, given the move constructor of
target_waitstatus.
Change-Id: I7a07d59d3dc19d3ed66929642f82f44f3e85d61b
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I stumbled on a bug caused by the fact that a code path read
target_waitstatus::value::sig (expecting it to contain a gdb_signal
value) while target_waitstatus::kind was TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED. This
meant that the active union field was in fact
target_waitstatus::value::related_pid, and contained a ptid. The read
signal value was therefore garbage, and that caused GDB to crash soon
after. Or, since that GDB was built with ubsan, this nice error
message:
/home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:1271:12: runtime error: load of value 2686365, which is not a valid value for type 'gdb_signal'
Despite being a large-ish change, I think it would be nice to make
target_waitstatus safe against that kind of bug. As already done
elsewhere (e.g. dynamic_prop), validate that the type of value read from
the union matches what is supposed to be the active field.
- Make the kind and value of target_waitstatus private.
- Make the kind initialized to TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE on
target_waitstatus construction. This is what most users appear to do
explicitly.
- Add setters, one for each kind. Each setter takes as a parameter the
data associated to that kind, if any. This makes it impossible to
forget to attach the associated data.
- Add getters, one for each associated data type. Each getter
validates that the data type fetched by the user matches the wait
status kind.
- Change "integer" to "exit_status", "related_pid" to "child_ptid",
just because that's more precise terminology.
- Fix all users.
That last point is semi-mechanical. There are a lot of obvious changes,
but some less obvious ones. For example, it's not possible to set the
kind at some point and the associated data later, as some users did.
But in any case, the intent of the code should not change in this patch.
This was tested on x86-64 Linux (unix, native-gdbserver and
native-extended-gdbserver boards). It was built-tested on x86-64
FreeBSD, NetBSD, MinGW and macOS. The rest of the changes to native
files was done as a best effort. If I forgot any place to update in
these files, it should be easy to fix (unless the change happens to
reveal an actual bug).
Change-Id: I0ae967df1ff6e28de78abbe3ac9b4b2ff4ad03b7
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With the current code, both a NULL pointer and an empty string can mean
"no arguments". We don't need this distinction. Changing to a string
has the advantage that there is now a single state for that (an empty
string), which makes the code a bit simpler in my opinion.
Change-Id: Icdc622820f7869478791dbaa84b4a1c7fec21ced
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Add args/set_args to the inferior class, remove the set_inferior_args
and get_inferior_args functions, that would just be wrappers around
them.
Change-Id: If87d52f3402ce08be26c32897ae8915d9f6d1ea3
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It fixes a regression caused by commit
1edb66d856c82c389edfd7610143236a68c76846 where thread_info::suspend was
made private.
The public thread_info API has to be used to get stop signal and avoid
build failures.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-07-14 Libor Bukata <libor.bukata@oracle.com>
* gdb/procfs.c (find_stop_signal): Use thread_info API.
Change-Id: I53bc57a05cd0eca5f28ef0726d6faeeb306e7904
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A following patch will want to use scoped_ignore_sigttou in code
shared between GDB and GDBserver. Move it under gdbsupport/.
Note that despite what inflow.h/inflow.c's first line says, inflow.c
is no longer about ptrace, it is about terminal management. Some
other files were unnecessarily including inflow.h, I guess a leftover
from the days when inflow.c really was about ptrace. Those inclusions
are simply dropped.
gdb/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove inflow.h.
* inf-ptrace.c, inflow.c, procfs.c: Don't include "inflow.h".
* inflow.h: Delete, moved to gdbsupport/ under a different name.
* ser-unix.c: Don't include "inflow.h". Include
"gdbsupport/scoped_ignore_sigttou.h".
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* scoped_ignore_sigttou.h: New file, moved from gdb/ and renamed.
Change-Id: Ie390abf42c3a78bec6d282ad2a63edd3e623559a
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Since c8fbd44a018a9923f906bfd2be5489caa87b602a (gdb: remove
target_is_pushed free function), procfs.c compilation is broken, which
went unnoticed for lack of functioning buildbots:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In member function 'virtual void procfs_target::attach(const char*, int)':
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:1772:8: error: 'inf' was not declared in this scope; did you mean 'info'?
1772 | if (!inf->target_is_pushed (this))
| ^~~
| info
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c: In member function 'virtual void procfs_target::create_inferior(const char*, const string&, char**, int)':
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/procfs.c:2865:8: error: 'inf' was not declared in this scope; did you mean 'info'?
2865 | if (!inf->target_is_pushed (this))
| ^~~
| info
Fixed by defining inf. Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11 and
sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
2021-03-29 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
gdb:
* procfs.c (procfs_target::attach): Define inf.
Use it.
(procfs_target::create_inferior): Likewise.
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The current_top_target function is a hidden dependency on the current
inferior. Since I'd like to slowly move towards reducing our dependency
on the global current state, remove this function and make callers use
current_inferior ()->top_target ()
There is no expected change in behavior, but this one step towards
making those callers use the inferior from their context, rather than
refer to the global current inferior.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (current_top_target): Remove, make callers use the
current inferior instead.
* target.c (current_top_target): Remove.
Change-Id: Iccd457036f84466cdaa3865aa3f9339a24ea001d
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Same principle as the previous patches.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (target_is_pushed): Remove, update callers to use
inferior::target_is_pushed instead.
* target.c (target_is_pushed): Remove.
Change-Id: I9862e6205acc65672da807cbe4b46cde009e7b9d
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Same as the previous patch, but for the push_target functions.
The implementation of the move variant is moved to a new overload of
inferior::push_target.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (push_target): Remove, update callers to use
inferior::push_target.
* target.c (push_target): Remove.
* inferior.h (class inferior) <push_target>: New overload.
Change-Id: I5a95496666278b8f3965e5e8aecb76f54a97c185
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Since this is a GDB 9 -> 10 regression, I would like to push it to
gdb-10-branch.
This is a follow-up to:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-February/176202.html
This patch fixes a segfault seen when attaching to a process on Solaris.
The steps leading to the segfault are:
- procfs_target::attach calls do_attach, at this point the inferior's
process slot in the target stack is empty.
- do_attach adds a thread with `add_thread (&the_procfs_target, ptid)`
- in add_thread_silent, the passed target (&the_procfs_target) is
passed to find_inferior_ptid
- find_inferior_ptid returns nullptr, as there is no inferior with this
ptid that has &the_procfs_target as its process target
- the nullptr `inf` is passed to find_thread_ptid, which dereferences
it, causing a segfault
- back in procfs_target::attach, after do_attach, we push the
the_procfs_target on the inferior's target stack, although we never
reach this because the segfault happens before.
To fix this, I think we need to do the same as is done in
inf_ptrace_target::attach: push the target early and unpush it in case
the attach fails (and keep it if the attach succeeds).
Implement it by moving target_unpush_up to target.h, so it can be
re-used here. Make procfs_target::attach use it. Note that just like
is mentioned in inf_ptrace_target::attach, we should push the target
before calling target_pid_to_str, so that calling target_pid_to_str ends
up in procfs_target::pid_to_str.
Tested by trying to attach on a process on gcc211 on the gcc compile
farm.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/27435
* inf-ptrace.c (struct target_unpusher): Move to target.h.
(target_unpush_up): Likewise.
* procfs.c (procfs_target::attach): Push target early. Use
target_unpush_up to unpush target in case of error.
* target.h (struct target_unpusher): Move here.
(target_unpush_up): Likewise.
Change-Id: I88aff8b20204e1ca1d792e27ac6bc34fc1aa0d52
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This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start
of New Year procedure...
gdb/ChangeLog
Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
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Since we converted gdbarch_make_corefile_notes to returning a
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr, I figured it would make sense to converted
target_ops::make_corefile_notes as well.
The only implementation of that is in procfs.c, and it should ideally be
re-written as a gdbarch method (see comment in write_gcore_file_1), but
in the mean time I guess it doesn't hurt to throw some unique pointer at
it.
I tested that it builds on Solaris 11 (gcc compile farm machine gcc211),
but I am not able to test it, because I can't get GDB to start a
process (I'll look at that separately).
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target.h (struct target_ops) <make_corefile_notes>:
Change return type to unique pointer.
* target.c (dummy_make_corefile_notes): Likewise.
* exec.c (struct exec_target) <make_corefile_notes>:
Likewise.
(exec_target::make_corefile_notes): Likewise.
* procfs.c (class procfs_target) <make_corefile_notes>:
Likewise.
(procfs_do_thread_registers): Adjust to unique pointer.
(struct procfs_corefile_thread_data): Add constructor.
<note_data>: Change type to unique pointer.
(procfs_corefile_thread_callback): Adjust to unique pointer.
(procfs_target::make_corefile_notes): Change return type to
unique pointer.
* target-delegates.c: Re-generate.
* gcore.c (write_gcore_file_1): Adjust.
* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_gdb_unique_xmalloc_ptr_char):
New.
Change-Id: I768fb17ac0f7adc67d2fe95e952c784fe0ac37ab
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I just noticed that in a7aba2668a7b ("gdb: remove arguments from
inferior_created observable"), I forgot to update
aix_thread_inferior_created and procfs_inferior_created, which are in
files I can't compile.
Remove the parameters from aix_thread_inferior_created. And simply
remove procfs_inferior_created, since it's empty anyway.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* aix-thread.c (aix_thread_inferior_created): Remove parameters.
* procfs.c (procfs_inferior_created): Remove.
(_initialize_procfs): Don't register procfs_inferior_created.
Change-Id: Ifc7def7c096332033b5d466d32cb873d1df18c2c
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This changes the object-like macro target_have_steppable_watchpoint
into an inline function.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-09-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* infrun.c (displaced_step_fixup, thread_still_needs_step_over)
(handle_signal_stop): Update.
* procfs.c (procfs_target::insert_watchpoint): Update.
* target.h (target_have_steppable_watchpoint): Now a function.
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This changes TARGET_WNOHANG to be a member of an enum, rather than a
define, and also adds a DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE for this type. Then, it
changes target_wait and the various target wait methods to use this
type rather than "int".
This didn't catch any bugs, but it seems like a decent cleanup
nevertheless.
I did not change deprecated_target_wait_hook, since that's only used
out-of-tree (by Insight), and there didn't seem to be a need.
I can't build some of these targets, so I modified them on a
best-effort basis. I don't think this patch should go in before the
release branch is made.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-09-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (struct windows_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
(windows_nat_target::wait): Update.
* target/wait.h (enum target_wait_flag): New. Use
DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE.
* target/target.h (target_wait): Change type of options.
* target.h (target_options_to_string, default_target_wait):
Update.
(struct target_ops) <wait>: Change type of options.
* target.c (target_wait, default_target_wait, do_option): Change
type of "options".
(target_options_to_string): Likewise.
* target-delegates.c: Rebuild.
* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_target_wait_flags): Rename
from target_debug_print_options.
* sol-thread.c (class sol_thread_target) <wait>: Update.
(sol_thread_target::wait): Update.
* rs6000-nat.c (class rs6000_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
(rs6000_nat_target::wait): Update.
* remote.c (class remote_target) <wait, wait_ns, wait_as>:
Update.
(remote_target::wait_ns, remote_target::wait_as): Change type of
"options".
(remote_target::wait): Update.
* remote-sim.c (struct gdbsim_target) <wait>: Update.
(gdbsim_target::wait): Update.
* record-full.c (class record_full_base_target) <wait>: Update.
(record_full_wait_1): Change type of "options".
(record_full_base_target::wait): Update.
* record-btrace.c (class record_btrace_target) <wait>: Update.
(record_btrace_target::wait): Update.
* ravenscar-thread.c (struct ravenscar_thread_target) <wait>:
Update.
(ravenscar_thread_target::wait): Update.
* procfs.c (class procfs_target) <wait>: Update.
(procfs_target::wait): Update.
* obsd-nat.h (class obsd_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::wait): Update.
* nto-procfs.c (struct nto_procfs_target) <wait>: Update.
(nto_procfs_target::wait): Update.
* nbsd-nat.h (struct nbsd_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* nbsd-nat.c (nbsd_wait): Change type of "options".
(nbsd_nat_target::wait): Update.
* linux-thread-db.c (class thread_db_target) <wait>: Update.
(thread_db_target::wait): Update.
* linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::wait): Update.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Update.
* infrun.c (do_target_wait_1, do_target_wait): Change type of
"options".
* inf-ptrace.h (struct inf_ptrace_target) <wait>: Update.
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_target::wait): Update.
* go32-nat.c (struct go32_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
(go32_nat_target::wait): Update.
* gnu-nat.h (struct gnu_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* gnu-nat.c (gnu_nat_target::wait): Update.
* fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target::wait): Update.
* darwin-nat.h (class darwin_nat_target) <wait>: Update.
* darwin-nat.c (darwin_nat_target::wait): Update.
* bsd-uthread.c (struct bsd_uthread_target) <wait>: Update.
(bsd_uthread_target::wait): Update.
* aix-thread.c (class aix_thread_target) <wait>: Update.
(aix_thread_target::wait): Update.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-09-18 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* netbsd-low.h (class netbsd_process_target) <wait>: Update.
* netbsd-low.cc (netbsd_waitpid, netbsd_wait)
(netbsd_process_target::wait): Change type of target_options.
* win32-low.h (class win32_process_target) <wait>: Update.
* win32-low.cc (win32_process_target::wait): Update.
* target.h (class process_stratum_target) <wait>: Update.
(mywait): Update.
* target.cc (mywait, target_wait): Change type of "options".
* linux-low.h (class linux_process_target) <wait, wait_1>:
Update.
* linux-low.cc (linux_process_target::wait)
(linux_process_target::wait_1): Update.
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