Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I334a319909a50b5cc5570a45c38c70e10dc00630
|
|
Replace with equivalent methods.
Change-Id: I31ec00f5bf85335c8b23d306ca0fe0b84d489101
|
|
Remove all macros related to getting and setting some symbol value:
#define SYMBOL_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.ivalue
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol) \
#define SET_SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol, new_value) \
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES(symbol) (symbol)->value.bytes
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_COMMON_BLOCK(symbol) (symbol)->value.common_block
#define SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.block
#define SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN(symbol) (symbol)->value.chain
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.ivalue
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_RAW_ADDRESS(symbol) ((symbol)->value.address + 0)
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(objfile, symbol) \
#define BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol) \
#define SET_MSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol, new_value) \
#define MSYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES(symbol) (symbol)->value.bytes
#define MSYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.block
Replace them with equivalent methods on the appropriate objects.
Change-Id: Iafdab3b8eefc6dc2fd895aa955bf64fafc59ed50
|
|
This patch removes gdb's dbx mode. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora
34.
|
|
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.
|
|
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the puts family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_puts". Most of this patch was written by script.
|
|
GDB notifies users about user selected thread changes somewhat
inconsistently as mentioned on gdb-patches mailing list here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-February/185989.html
Consider GDB debugging a multi-threaded inferior with both CLI and GDB/MI
interfaces connected to separate terminals.
Assuming inferior is stopped and thread 1 is selected, when a thread
2 is selected using '-thread-select 2' command on GDB/MI terminal:
-thread-select 2
^done,new-thread-id="2",frame={level="0",addr="0x00005555555551cd",func="child_sub_function",args=[],file="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",fullname="/home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",line="30",arch="i386:x86-64"}
(gdb)
and on CLI terminal we get the notification (as expected):
[Switching to thread 2 (Thread 0x7ffff7daa640 (LWP 389659))]
#0 child_sub_function () at /home/uuu/gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c:30
30 volatile int dummy = 0;
However, now that thread 2 is selected, if thread 1 is selected
using 'thread-select --thread 1 1' command on GDB/MI terminal
terminal:
-thread-select --thread 1 1
^done,new-thread-id="1",frame={level="0",addr="0x0000555555555294",func="main",args=[],file="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",fullname="/home/jv/Projects/gdb/users_jv_patches/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c",line="66",arch="i386:x86-64"}
(gdb)
but no notification is printed on CLI terminal, despite the fact
that user selected thread has changed.
The problem is that when `-thread-select --thread 1 1` is executed
then thread is switched to thread 1 before mi_cmd_thread_select () is
called, therefore the condition "inferior_ptid != previous_ptid"
there does not hold.
To address this problem, we have to move notification logic up to
mi_cmd_execute () where --thread option is processed and notify
user selected contents observers there if context changes.
However, this in itself breaks GDB/MI because it would cause context
notification to be sent on MI channel. This is because by the time
we notify, MI notification suppression is already restored (done in
mi_command::invoke(). Therefore we had to lift notification suppression
logic also up to mi_cmd_execute (). This change in made distinction
between mi_command::invoke() and mi_command::do_invoke() unnecessary
as all mi_command::invoke() did (after the change) was to call
do_invoke(). So this patches removes do_invoke() and moves the command
execution logic directly to invoke().
With this change, all gdb.mi tests pass, tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20631
|
|
This changes iterate_over_block_local_vars and
iterate_over_block_arg_vars to take a gdb::function_view rather than a
function pointer and a user-data. In one spot, this allows us to
remove a helper structure and helper function. In another spot, this
looked more complicated, so I changed the helper function to be an
"operator()" -- also a simplification, just not as big.
|
|
It is possible for a compiler to optimize a function in a such ways that
the function does not follow the calling convention of the target. In
such situation, the compiler can use the DW_AT_calling_convention
attribute with the value DW_CC_nocall to tell the debugger that it is
unsafe to call the function. The DWARF5 standard states, in 3.3.1.1:
> If the value of the calling convention attribute is the constant
> DW_CC_nocall, the subroutine does not obey standard calling
> conventions, and it may not be safe for the debugger to call this
> subroutine.
Non standard calling convention can affect GDB's assumptions in multiple
ways, including how arguments are passed to the function, how values are
returned, and so on. For this reason, it is unsafe for GDB to try to do
the following operations on a function with marked with DW_CC_nocall:
- call / print an expression requiring the function to be evaluated,
- inspect the value a function returns using the 'finish' command,
- force the value returned by a function using the 'return' command.
This patch ensures that if a command which relies on GDB's knowledge of
the target's calling convention is used on a function marked nocall, GDB
prints an appropriate message to the user and does not proceed with the
operation which is unreliable.
Note that it is still possible for someone to use a vendor specific
value for the DW_AT_calling_convention attribute for example to indicate
the use of an alternative calling convention. This commit does not
prevent this, and target dependent code can be adjusted if one wanted to
support multiple calling conventions.
Tested on x86_64-Linux, with no regression observed.
Change-Id: I72970dae68234cb83edbc0cf71aa3d6002a4a540
|
|
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's type. Remove the corresponding
macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ie1a137744c5bfe1df4d4f9ae5541c5299577c8de
|
|
Add a getter and a setter for whether a symbol is an argument. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I71b4f0465f3dfd2ed8b9e140bd3f7d5eb8d9ee81
|
|
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's domain. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I54465b50ac89739c663859a726aef8cdc6e4b8f3
|
|
Change-Id: I83211d5a47efc0564386e5b5ea4a29c00b1fd46a
|
|
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's language. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I9f4d840b11c19f80f39bac1bce020fdd1739e11f
|
|
This changes all existing calls to wrap_here to call the method on the
appropriate ui_file instead. The choice of ui_file is determined by
context.
|
|
I think it only really makes sense to call wrap_here with an argument
consisting solely of spaces. Given this, it seemed better to me that
the argument be an int, rather than a string. This patch is the
result. Much of it was written by a script.
|
|
In an earlier version of the pager rewrite series, it was important to
audit unfiltered output calls to see which were truly necessary.
This is no longer necessary, but it still seems like a decent cleanup
to change calls to avoid explicitly passing gdb_stdout. That is,
rather than using something like fprintf_unfiltered with gdb_stdout,
the code ought to use plain printf_unfiltered instead.
This patch makes this change. I went ahead and converted all the
_filtered calls I could find, as well, for the same clarity.
|
|
This moves the gdb_argv class to a new header in gdbsupport.
|
|
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.
|
|
The bug fixed by this [1] patch was caused by an out-of-bounds access to
a value's content. The code gets the value's content (just a pointer)
and then indexes it with a non-sensical index.
This made me think of changing functions that return value contents to
return array_views instead of a plain pointer. This has the advantage
that when GDB is built with _GLIBCXX_DEBUG, accesses to the array_view
are checked, making bugs more apparent / easier to find.
This patch changes the return types of these functions, and updates
callers to call .data() on the result, meaning it's not changing
anything in practice. Additional work will be needed (which can be done
little by little) to make callers propagate the use of array_view and
reap the benefits.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182306.html
Change-Id: I5151f888f169e1c36abe2cbc57620110673816f3
|
|
The pattern for using execute_command_to_string is:
...
std::string output;
output = execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out);
...
This results in a problem when using it in a try/catch:
...
try
{
output = execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out)
}
catch (const gdb_exception &e)
{
/* Use output. */
}
...
If an expection was thrown during execute_fn_to_string, then the output
remains unassigned, while it could be worthwhile to known what output was
generated by gdb before the expection was thrown.
Fix this by returning the string using a parameter instead:
...
execute_fn_to_string (output, fn, term_out)
...
Also add a variant without string parameter, to support places where the
function is used while ignoring the result:
...
execute_fn_to_string (fn, term_out)
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
|
|
String-like settings (var_string, var_filename, var_optional_filename,
var_string_noescape) currently take a pointer to a `char *` storage
variable (typically global) that holds the setting's value. I'd like to
"mordernize" this by changing them to use an std::string for storage.
An obvious reason is that string operations on std::string are often
easier to write than with C strings. And they avoid having to do any
manual memory management.
Another interesting reason is that, with `char *`, nullptr and an empty
string often both have the same meaning of "no value". String settings
are initially nullptr (unless initialized otherwise). But when doing
"set foo" (where `foo` is a string setting), the setting now points to
an empty string. For example, solib_search_path is nullptr at startup,
but points to an empty string after doing "set solib-search-path". This
leads to some code that needs to check for both to check for "no value".
Or some code that converts back and forth between NULL and "" when
getting or setting the value. I find this very error-prone, because it
is very easy to forget one or the other. With std::string, we at least
know that the variable is not "NULL". There is only one way of
representing an empty string setting, that is with an empty string.
I was wondering whether the distinction between NULL and "" would be
important for some setting, but it doesn't seem so. If that ever
happens, it would be more C++-y and self-descriptive to use
optional<string> anyway.
Actually, there's one spot where this distinction mattered, it's in
init_history, for the test gdb.base/gdbinit-history.exp. init_history
sets the history filename to the default ".gdb_history" if it sees that
the setting was never set - if history_filename is nullptr. If
history_filename is an empty string, it means the setting was explicitly
cleared, so it leaves it as-is. With the change to std::string, this
distinction doesn't exist anymore. This can be fixed by moving the code
that chooses a good default value for history_filename to
_initialize_top. This is ran before -ex commands are processed, so an
-ex command can then clear that value if needed (what
gdb.base/gdbinit-history.exp tests).
Another small improvement, in my opinion is that we can now easily
give string parameters initial values, by simply initializing the global
variables, instead of xstrdup-ing it in the _initialize function.
In Python and Guile, when registering a string-like parameter, we
allocate (with new) an std::string that is owned by the param_smob (in
Guile) and the parmpy_object (in Python) objects.
This patch started by changing all relevant add_setshow_* commands to
take an `std::string *` instead of a `char **` and fixing everything
that failed to build. That includes of course all string setting
variable and their uses.
string_option_def now uses an std::string also, because there's a
connection between options and settings (see
add_setshow_cmds_for_options).
The add_path function in source.c is really complex and twisted, I'd
rather not try to change it to work on an std::string right now.
Instead, I added an overload that copies the std:string to a `char *`
and back. This means more copying, but this is not used in a hot path
at all, so I think it is acceptable.
Change-Id: I92c50a1bdd8307141cdbacb388248e4e4fc08c93
Co-authored-by: Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>
|
|
With current master and gcc 7.5.0/8.5.0, we have this timeout:
...
(gdb) print s^M
Multiple matches for s^M
[0] cancel^M
[1] s at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/interface/foo.adb:20^M
[2] s at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/interface/foo.adb:?^M
> FAIL: gdb.ada/interface.exp: print s (timeout)
...
[ The FAIL doesn't reproduce with gcc 9.3.1. This difference in
behaviour bisects to gcc commit d70ba0c10de.
The FAIL with earlier gcc bisects to gdb commit ba8694b650b. ]
The FAIL is caused by gcc generating this debug info describing a named
artificial variable:
...
<2><1204>: Abbrev Number: 31 (DW_TAG_variable)
<1205> DW_AT_name : s.14
<1209> DW_AT_type : <0x1213>
<120d> DW_AT_artificial : 1
<120d> DW_AT_location : 5 byte block: 91 e0 7d 23 18 \
(DW_OP_fbreg: -288; DW_OP_plus_uconst: 24)
...
An easy way to fix this would be to simply not put named artificial variables
into the symbol table. However, that causes regressions for Ada. It relies
on being able to get the value from such variables, using a named reference.
Fix this instead by marking the symbol as artificial, and:
- ignoring such symbols in ada_resolve_variable, which fixes the FAIL
- ignoring such ada symbols in do_print_variable_and_value, which prevents
them from showing up in "info locals"
Note that a fix for the latter was submitted here (
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2008-January/054994.html ), and
this patch borrows from it.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28180
|
|
I believe that many calls to fprintf_symbol_filtered are incorrect.
In particular, there are some that pass a symbol's print name, like:
fprintf_symbol_filtered (gdb_stdout, sym->print_name (),
current_language->la_language, DMGL_ANSI);
fprintf_symbol_filtered uses the "demangle" global to decide whether
or not to demangle -- but print_name does this as well. This can lead
to double-demangling. Normally this could be innocuous, except I also
plan to change Ada demangling in a way that causes this to fail.
|
|
I spotted some indentation issues where we had some spaces followed by
tabs at beginning of line, that I wanted to fix. So while at it, I did
a quick grep to find and fix all I could find.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Fix tab after space indentation issues throughout.
Change-Id: I1acb414dd9c593b474ae2b8667496584df4316fd
|
|
I wrote a small script to spot a pattern of indentation mistakes I saw
happened in breakpoint.c. And while at it I ran it on all files and
fixed what I found. No behavior changes intended, just indentation and
addition / removal of curly braces.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Fix some indentation mistakes throughout.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Fix some indentation mistakes throughout.
Change-Id: Ia01990c26c38e83a243d8f33da1d494f16315c6e
|
|
Same idea as previous patch, but for add_info_alias.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* command.h (add_info_alias): Accept target as
cmd_list_element. Update callers.
Change-Id: If830d423364bf42d7bea5ac4dd3a81adcfce6f7a
|
|
The alias creation functions currently accept a name to specify the
target command. They pass this to add_alias_cmd, which needs to lookup
the target command by name.
Given that:
- We don't support creating an alias for a command before that command
exists.
- We always use add_info_alias just after creating that target command,
and therefore have access to the target command's cmd_list_element.
... change add_com_alias to accept the target command as a
cmd_list_element (other functions are done in subsequent patches). This
ensures we don't create the alias before the target command, because you
need to get the cmd_list_element from somewhere when you call the alias
creation function. And it avoids an unecessary command lookup. So it
seems better to me in every aspect.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* command.h (add_com_alias): Accept target as
cmd_list_element. Update callers.
Change-Id: I24bed7da57221cc77606034de3023fedac015150
|
|
Some add_set_show commands return a single cmd_list_element, the one for
the "set" command. A subsequent patch will need to access the show
command's cmd_list_element as well. Change these functions to return a
new structure type that holds both pointers.
I initially only modified add_setshow_boolean_cmd (the one I needed),
but I think it's better to change the whole chain to keep everything in
sync.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* command.h (set_show_commands): New.
(add_setshow_enum_cmd, add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd,
add_setshow_boolean_cmd, add_setshow_filename_cmd,
add_setshow_string_cmd, add_setshow_string_noescape_cmd,
add_setshow_optional_filename_cmd, add_setshow_integer_cmd,
add_setshow_uinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zinteger_cmd,
add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zuinteger_unlimited_cmd):
Return set_show_commands. Adjust callers.
* cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_cmd_full): Return
set_show_commands, remove result parameters, adjust callers.
Change-Id: I17492b01b76002d09effc84830f9c6db26f1db7a
|
|
Previously, the prefixname field of struct cmd_list_element was manually
set for prefix commands. This seems verbose and error prone as it
required every single call to functions adding prefix commands to
specify the prefix name while the same information can be easily
generated.
Historically, this was not possible as the prefix field was null for
many commands, but this was fixed in commit
3f4d92ebdf7f848b5ccc9e8d8e8514c64fde1183 by Philippe Waroquiers, so
we can rely on the prefix field being set when generating the prefix
name.
This commit also fixes a use after free in this scenario:
* A command gets created via Python (using the gdb.Command class).
The prefix name member is dynamically allocated.
* An alias to the new command is created. The alias's prefixname is set
to point to the prefixname for the original command with a direct
assignment.
* A new command with the same name as the Python command is created.
* The object for the original Python command gets freed and its
prefixname gets freed as well.
* The alias is updated to point to the new command, but its prefixname
is not updated so it keeps pointing to the freed one.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* command.h (add_prefix_cmd): Remove the prefixname argument as
it can now be generated automatically. Update all callers.
(add_basic_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
(add_show_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
(add_prefix_cmd_suppress_notification): Ditto.
(add_abbrev_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
* cli/cli-decode.c (add_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
(add_basic_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
(add_show_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
(add_prefix_cmd_suppress_notification): Ditto.
(add_prefix_cmd_suppress_notification): Ditto.
(add_abbrev_prefix_cmd): Ditto.
* cli/cli-decode.h (struct cmd_list_element): Replace the
prefixname member variable with a method which generates the
prefix name at runtime. Update all code reading the prefix
name to use the method, and remove all code setting it.
* python/py-cmd.c (cmdpy_destroyer): Remove code to free the
prefixname member as it's now a method.
(cmdpy_function): Determine if the command is a prefix by
looking at prefixlist, not prefixname.
|
|
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.
|
|
This adds a new helper method, expression::first_opcode, that extracts
the outermost opcode of an expression. This simplifies some patches
in the expression rewrite series.
Note that this patch requires the earlier patch to avoid manual
dissection of OP_TYPE operations.
2020-12-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* varobj.c (varobj_create): Use first_opcode.
* value.c (init_if_undefined_command): Use first_opcode.
* typeprint.c (whatis_exp): Use first_opcode.
* tracepoint.c (validate_actionline): Use first_opcode.
(encode_actions_1): Use first_opcode.
* stack.c (return_command): Use first_opcode.
* expression.h (struct expression) <first_opcode>: New method.
* eval.c (parse_and_eval_type): Use first_opcode.
* dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_process_dof_probe): Use first_opcode.
|
|
Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example,
there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward
when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong
indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also
wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same
patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch.
So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully).
One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology
more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last
change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when
git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit"
anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are
interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you
already need a somewhat efficient way to do this.
Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this
trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past
the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke.
It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it).
Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't
really make archeology more difficult.
The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with
existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those
are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git
rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will
re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing
the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy).
gdb/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* ada-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* ada-lang.h: Fix indentation.
* ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation.
* ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation.
* addrmap.c: Fix indentation.
* addrmap.h: Fix indentation.
* agent.c: Fix indentation.
* aix-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* annotate.c: Fix indentation.
* arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* arch-utils.c: Fix indentation.
* arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation.
* arch/arm.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* auto-load.c: Fix indentation.
* auxv.c: Fix indentation.
* avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation.
* ax-general.c: Fix indentation.
* bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* block.c: Fix indentation.
* block.h: Fix indentation.
* blockframe.c: Fix indentation.
* bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation.
* break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation.
* break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation.
* breakpoint.c: Fix indentation.
* breakpoint.h: Fix indentation.
* bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation.
* btrace.c: Fix indentation.
* build-id.c: Fix indentation.
* buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation.
* buildsym.c: Fix indentation.
* c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* c-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* c-varobj.c: Fix indentation.
* charset.c: Fix indentation.
* cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation.
* cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation.
* cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation.
* cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation.
* cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation.
* coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation.
* coffread.c: Fix indentation.
* compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation.
* compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation.
* compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation.
* completer.c: Fix indentation.
* corefile.c: Fix indentation.
* corelow.c: Fix indentation.
* cp-abi.h: Fix indentation.
* cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation.
* cp-support.c: Fix indentation.
* cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation.
* darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation.
* dbxread.c: Fix indentation.
* dcache.c: Fix indentation.
* disasm.c: Fix indentation.
* dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation.
* dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation.
* elfread.c: Fix indentation.
* eval.c: Fix indentation.
* event-top.c: Fix indentation.
* exec.c: Fix indentation.
* exec.h: Fix indentation.
* expprint.c: Fix indentation.
* f-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* f-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* findvar.c: Fix indentation.
* fork-child.c: Fix indentation.
* frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation.
* frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation.
* frame.c: Fix indentation.
* frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* gcore.c: Fix indentation.
* gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation.
* gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation.
* gdbarch.c: Re-generate
* gdbarch.h: Re-generate.
* gdbcore.h: Fix indentation.
* gdbthread.h: Fix indentation.
* gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation.
* gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation.
* glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation.
* gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation.
* gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation.
* go32-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation.
* guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation.
* h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation.
* ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* infcall.c: Fix indentation.
* infcmd.c: Fix indentation.
* inferior.c: Fix indentation.
* infrun.c: Fix indentation.
* iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* language.c: Fix indentation.
* linespec.c: Fix indentation.
* linux-fork.c: Fix indentation.
* linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation.
* lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m2-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* machoread.c: Fix indentation.
* macrocmd.c: Fix indentation.
* macroexp.c: Fix indentation.
* macroscope.c: Fix indentation.
* macrotab.c: Fix indentation.
* macrotab.h: Fix indentation.
* main.c: Fix indentation.
* mdebugread.c: Fix indentation.
* mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation.
* mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation.
* microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* minidebug.c: Fix indentation.
* minsyms.c: Fix indentation.
* mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* namespace.h: Fix indentation.
* nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation.
* nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation.
* nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation.
* nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation.
* nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation.
* nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation.
* nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* objfiles.c: Fix indentation.
* objfiles.h: Fix indentation.
* opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* osabi.c: Fix indentation.
* osabi.h: Fix indentation.
* osdata.c: Fix indentation.
* p-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* p-valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* parse.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* printcmd.c: Fix indentation.
* proc-api.c: Fix indentation.
* producer.c: Fix indentation.
* producer.h: Fix indentation.
* prologue-value.c: Fix indentation.
* prologue-value.h: Fix indentation.
* psymtab.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-event.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-event.h: Fix indentation.
* python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation.
* python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-value.c: Fix indentation.
* python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation.
* python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation.
* python/python.c: Fix indentation.
* ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* record-btrace.c: Fix indentation.
* record-full.c: Fix indentation.
* record.c: Fix indentation.
* reggroups.c: Fix indentation.
* regset.h: Fix indentation.
* remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation.
* remote.c: Fix indentation.
* reverse.c: Fix indentation.
* riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* rust-lang.c: Fix indentation.
* rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* score-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* ser-base.c: Fix indentation.
* ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation.
* ser-uds.c: Fix indentation.
* ser-unix.c: Fix indentation.
* serial.c: Fix indentation.
* sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* skip.c: Fix indentation.
* sol-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* solib-aix.c: Fix indentation.
* solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation.
* solib-frv.c: Fix indentation.
* solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation.
* solib.c: Fix indentation.
* source.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* stabsread.c: Fix indentation.
* stack.c: Fix indentation.
* stap-probe.c: Fix indentation.
* stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation.
* stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation.
* stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation.
* stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation.
* stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation.
* symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation.
* symfile.c: Fix indentation.
* symfile.h: Fix indentation.
* symmisc.c: Fix indentation.
* symtab.c: Fix indentation.
* symtab.h: Fix indentation.
* target-float.c: Fix indentation.
* target.c: Fix indentation.
* target.h: Fix indentation.
* tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* top.c: Fix indentation.
* tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation.
* tracepoint.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation.
* tui/tui.c: Fix indentation.
* typeprint.c: Fix indentation.
* ui-out.h: Fix indentation.
* unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation.
* unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation.
* utils.c: Fix indentation.
* v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* valarith.c: Fix indentation.
* valops.c: Fix indentation.
* valprint.c: Fix indentation.
* valprint.h: Fix indentation.
* value.c: Fix indentation.
* value.h: Fix indentation.
* varobj.c: Fix indentation.
* vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* windows-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* xcoffread.c: Fix indentation.
* xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation.
* xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation.
* xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation.
* xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation.
* xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
* xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* ax.cc: Fix indentation.
* dll.cc: Fix indentation.
* inferiors.h: Fix indentation.
* linux-low.cc: Fix indentation.
* linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation.
* linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation.
* linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation.
* linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation.
* linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation.
* regcache.cc: Fix indentation.
* server.cc: Fix indentation.
* tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation.
* event-loop.cc: Fix indentation.
* fileio.cc: Fix indentation.
* filestuff.cc: Fix indentation.
* gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation.
* gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation.
* job-control.cc: Fix indentation.
* signals.cc: Fix indentation.
Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
|
|
If the remote target closes while we're reading registers/memory for
restoring the selected frame in scoped_restore_current_thread's dtor,
the corresponding TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR error is swallowed by the
scoped_restore_current_thread's dtor, because letting exceptions
escape from a dtor is bad. It isn't great to lose that errors like
that, though. I've been thinking about how to avoid it, and I came up
with this patch.
The idea here is to make scoped_restore_current_thread's dtor do as
little as possible, to avoid any work that might throw in the first
place. And to do that, instead of having the dtor call
restore_selected_frame, which re-finds the previously selected frame,
just record the frame_id/level of the desired selected frame, and have
get_selected_frame find the frame the next time it is called. In
effect, this implements most of Cagney's suggestion, here:
/* On demand, create the selected frame and then return it. If the
selected frame can not be created, this function prints then throws
an error. When MESSAGE is non-NULL, use it for the error message,
otherwize use a generic error message. */
/* FIXME: cagney/2002-11-28: At present, when there is no selected
frame, this function always returns the current (inner most) frame.
It should instead, when a thread has previously had its frame
selected (but not resumed) and the frame cache invalidated, find
and then return that thread's previously selected frame. */
extern struct frame_info *get_selected_frame (const char *message);
The only thing missing to fully implement that would be to make
reinit_frame_cache just clear selected_frame instead of calling
select_frame(NULL), and the call select_frame(NULL) explicitly in the
places where we really wanted reinit_frame_cache to go back to the
current frame too. That can done separately, though, I'm not
proposing to do that in this patch.
Note that this patch renames restore_selected_frame to
lookup_selected_frame, and adds a new restore_selected_frame function
that doesn't throw, to be paired with the also-new save_selected_frame
function.
There's a restore_selected_frame function in infrun.c that I think can
be replaced by the new one in frame.c.
Also done in this patch is make the get_selected_frame's parameter be
optional, so that we don't have to pass down nullptr explicitly all
over the place.
lookup_selected_frame should really move from thread.c to frame.c, but
I didn't do that here, just to avoid churn in the patch while it
collects comments. I did make it extern and declared it in frame.h
already, preparing for the move. I will do the move as a follow up
patch if people agree with this approach.
Incidentally, this patch alone would fix the crashes fixed by the
previous patches in the series, because with this,
scoped_restore_current_thread's constructor doesn't throw either.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* blockframe.c (block_innermost_frame): Use get_selected_frame.
* frame.c
(scoped_restore_selected_frame::scoped_restore_selected_frame):
Use save_selected_frame. Save language as well.
(scoped_restore_selected_frame::~scoped_restore_selected_frame):
Use restore_selected_frame, and restore language as well.
(selected_frame_id, selected_frame_level): New.
(selected_frame): Update comments.
(save_selected_frame, restore_selected_frame): New.
(get_selected_frame): Use lookup_selected_frame.
(get_selected_frame_if_set): Delete.
(select_frame): Record selected_frame_level and selected_frame_id.
* frame.h (scoped_restore_selected_frame) <m_level, m_lang>: New
fields.
(get_selected_frame): Make 'message' parameter optional.
(get_selected_frame_if_set): Delete declaration.
(select_frame): Update comments.
(save_selected_frame, restore_selected_frame)
(lookup_selected_frame): Declare.
* gdbthread.h (scoped_restore_current_thread) <m_lang>: New field.
* infrun.c (struct infcall_control_state) <selected_frame_level>:
New field.
(save_infcall_control_state): Use save_selected_frame.
(restore_selected_frame): Delete.
(restore_infcall_control_state): Use restore_selected_frame.
* stack.c (select_frame_command_core, frame_command_core): Use
get_selected_frame.
* thread.c (restore_selected_frame): Rename to ...
(lookup_selected_frame): ... this and make extern. Select the
current frame if the frame level is -1.
(scoped_restore_current_thread::restore): Also restore the
language.
(scoped_restore_current_thread::~scoped_restore_current_thread):
Don't try/catch.
(scoped_restore_current_thread::scoped_restore_current_thread):
Save the language as well. Use save_selected_frame.
Change-Id: I73fd1cfc40d8513c28e5596383b7ecd8bcfe700f
|
|
This removes the target_has_stack object-like macro, replacing it with
the underlying function.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-09-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* windows-tdep.c (tlb_make_value): Update.
* tui/tui-regs.c (tui_data_window::show_registers): Update.
* thread.c (scoped_restore_current_thread::restore)
(scoped_restore_current_thread::scoped_restore_current_thread)
(thread_command): Update.
* stack.c (backtrace_command_1, frame_apply_level_command)
(frame_apply_all_command, frame_apply_command): Update.
* infrun.c (siginfo_make_value, restore_infcall_control_state):
Update.
* gcore.c (derive_stack_segment): Update.
* frame.c (get_current_frame, has_stack_frames): Update.
* auxv.c (info_auxv_command): Update.
* ada-tasks.c (ada_build_task_list): Update.
* target.c (target_has_stack): Rename from target_has_stack_1.
* target.h (target_has_stack): Remove macro.
(target_has_stack): Rename from target_has_stack_1.
|
|
When running test-case gdb.fortran/mixed-lang-stack.exp, it passes, but we
find in gdb.log:
...
(gdb) bt^M
...
#7 0x000000000040113c in mixed_func_1b (a=1, b=2, c=3, d=(4,5), \
e=<error reading variable: value requires 140737488341744 bytes, which \
is more than max-value-size>, g=..., _e=6) at mixed-lang-stack.f90:87^M
...
while a bit later in gdb.log, we have instead for the same frame (after
adding a gdb_test_no_output "set print frame-arguments all" to prevent
getting "e=..."):
...
(gdb) up^M
#7 0x000000000040113c in mixed_func_1b (a=1, b=2, c=3, d=(4,5), \
e='abcdef', g=( a = 1.5, b = 2.5 ), _e=6) at mixed-lang-stack.f90:87^M
...
The difference is that in the latter case, we print the frame while it's
selected, while in the former, it's not.
The problem is that while trying to resolve the dynamic type of e in
resolve_dynamic_type, we call dwarf2_evaluate_property with a frame == NULL
argument, and then use the selected frame as the context in which to evaluate
the dwarf property, effectively evaluating a DW_OP_fbreg operation in the
wrong frame context.
Fix this by temporarily selecting the frame of which we're trying to print the
arguments in print_frame_args, borrowing code from print_frame_local_vars that
was added to fix a similar issue in commit 16c3b12f19 "error/internal-error
printing local variable during "bt full".
Build and tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-08-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR backtrace/26390
* stack.c (print_frame_args): Temporarily set the selected
frame to FRAME while printing the frame's arguments.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-08-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR backtrace/26390
* gdb.fortran/mixed-lang-stack.exp: Call bt with -frame-arguments all.
Update expected pattern.
|
|
This undoes most of the changes from these commits:
commit ec8e2b6d3051f0b4b2a8eee9917898e95046c62f
Date: Fri Jun 14 23:43:00 2019 +0100
gdb: Don't allow annotations to influence what else GDB prints
commit 0d3abd8cc936360f8c46502135edd2e646473438
Date: Wed Jun 12 22:34:26 2019 +0100
gdb: Remove an update of current_source_line and current_source_symtab
as a result of the discussion here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2020-April/048468.html
Having taken time to reflect on the discussion, and reading the
documentation again I believe we should revert GDB's behaviour back to
how it used to be.
The original concern that triggered the initial patch was that when
annotations were on the current source and line were updated (inside
the annotation code), while when annotations are off this update would
not occur. This was incorrect, as printing the source with the call
to print_source_lines does also update the current source and line.
Further, the documentation here:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Source-Annotations.html#Source-Annotations
Clearly states:
"The following annotation is used instead of displaying source code:
^Z^Zsource filename:line:character:middle:addr
..."
So it is documented that the 'source' annotation is a replacement for,
and not in addition to, actually printing the source lie.
There are still a few issues that I can see, these are:
1. In source.c:info_line_command, when annotations are on we call
annotate_source_line, however, if annotations are off then there is
no corresponding call to print the source line. This means that a
if a user uses 'info line ...' with annotations on, and then does a
'list', they will get different results than if they had done this
with annotations off.
2. It bothers me that the call to annotate_source_line returns a
boolean, and that this controls a call to print_source_line (in
stack.c:print_frame_info).
The reason for this is that the source line annotation will only
print something if the file is found, and the line number is in
range for the file.
It seems to me like an annotation should always be printed, either
one that identifies the file and line, or one that identifies the
file and line GDB would like to access, but couldn't.
I considered changing this, but in the end decided not too, if I
extend the existing 'source' annotation to print something in all
cases then I risk breaking existing UIs that rely on the file and
line always being valid. If I add a new annotation then this might
also break existing UIs that rely on GDB itself printing the error
from within print_source_line.
Given that annotations is deprecated (as I understand it) mechanism
for UIs to interact with GDB (in favour of MI) I figure we should just
restore the old behaviour, and leave the mini-bugs in until someone
actually complains.
This isn't a straight revert of the two commits mentioned above. I've
left annotate_source_line instead of going back to the original
identify_source_line, which lived in source.c, but was really
annotation related. The API for setting the current source and line
has changed since the original patches, so I updated for that change
too. Finally I wrote the code in stack.c so that we avoided an extra
level of indentation, which I felt made things easier to read.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* annotate.c (annotate_source_line): Update return type, add call
to update current symtab and line.
* annotate.h (annotate_source_line): Update return type, and
extend header comment.
* source.c (info_line_command): Check annotation_level before
calling annotate_source_line.
* stack.c (print_frame_info): If calling annotate_source_line
returns true, then don't print any other source line information.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/annota1.exp: Update expected results.
* gdb.cp/annota2.exp: Update expected results, remove duplicate
test name.
* gdb.cp/annota3.exp: Update expected results.
|
|
This commit finally does the (small) change that started this patch
series.
It ensures that the class_alias is only used for user-defined aliases.
So, the few GDB pre-defined aliases that were using the 'class_alias'
class are now using a real help class, typically the class of
the aliased command.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* command.h (enum command_class): Improve comments, document
that class_alias is for user-defined aliases, give the class
name for each class, remove unused class_xdb.
* cli/cli-decode.c (add_com_alias): Document THECLASS intended usage.
* breakpoint.c (_initialize_breakpoint): Replace class_alias
by a precise class.
* infcmd.c (_initialize_infcmd): Likewise.
* reverse.c (_initialize_reverse): Likewise.
* stack.c (_initialize_stack): Likewise.
* symfile.c (_initialize_symfile): Likewise.
* tracepoint.c (_initialize_tracepoint): Likewise.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* gdb.base/alias.exp: Verify 'help aliases' shows user defined aliases.
|
|
Remove TYPE_CODE, changing all the call sites to use type::code
directly. This is quite a big diff, but this was mostly done using sed
and coccinelle. A few call sites were done by hand.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdbtypes.h (TYPE_CODE): Remove. Change all call sites to use
type::code instead.
|
|
"frame" and "f" are created twice by stack.c _initialize_stack.
Remove the second creation.
Regression tested on amd64/Debian.
2020-04-30 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* stack.c (_initialize_stack): Remove duplicated creation
of "frame" command and "f" alias.
|
|
print_block_frame_labels has been commented out since 2010.
I don't think we need it; this patch removes it.
2020-04-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* stack.c (print_block_frame_labels): Remove.
|
|
A (much) later patch will remove the call to value_check_printable
from common_val_print. This will needed to preserve some details of
how optimized-out structures are printed.
However, doing this will also break dw2-op-out-param.exp. Making the
change causes "bt" to print:
However, the test wants to see:
... operand2=<optimized out>
That is, a wholly-optimized out structure should not print its fields.
So, this patch introduces a new common_val_print_checked, which calls
value_check_printable first, and then arranges to use it in the one
spot that affects the test suite.
I was not completely sure if it would be preferable to change the
test. However, I reasoned that, assuming this output was intentional
in the first place, in a backtrace space is at a premium and so this
is a reasonable approach. In other spots calling common_val_print,
this behavior is probably unintended, or at least a "don't care".
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-03-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* valprint.h (common_val_print_checked): Declare.
* valprint.c (common_val_print_checked): New function.
* stack.c (print_frame_arg): Use common_val_print_checked.
|
|
This commit brings support for the DWARF line table is_stmt field to
GDB. The is_stmt field is used by the compiler when a single source
line is split into multiple assembler instructions, especially if the
assembler instructions are interleaved with instruction from other
source lines.
The compiler will set the is_stmt flag false from some instructions
from the source lines, these instructions are not a good place to
insert a breakpoint in order to stop at the source line.
Instructions which are marked with the is_stmt flag true are a good
place to insert a breakpoint for that source line.
Currently GDB ignores all instructions for which is_stmt is false.
This is fine in a lot of cases, however, there are some cases where
this means the debug experience is not as good as it could be.
Consider stopping at a random instruction, currently this instruction
will be attributed to the last line table entry before this point for
which is_stmt was true - as these are the only line table entries that
GDB tracks. This can easily be incorrect in code with even a low
level of optimisation.
With is_stmt tracking in place, when stopping at a random instruction
we now attribute the instruction back to the real source line, even
when is_stmt is false for that instruction in the line table.
When inserting breakpoints we still select line table entries for
which is_stmt is true, so the breakpoint placing behaviour should not
change.
When stepping though code (at the line level, not the instruction
level) we will still stop at instruction where is_stmt is true, I
think this is more likely to be the desired behaviour.
Instruction stepping is, of course, unchanged, stepping one
instruction at a time, but we should now report more accurate line
table information with each instruction step.
The original motivation for this work was a patch posted by Bernd
here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2019-11/msg00792.html
As part of that thread it was suggested that many issues would be
resolved if GDB supported line table views, this isn't something I've
attempted in this patch, though reading the spec, it seems like this
would be a useful feature to support in GDB in the future. The spec
is here:
http://dwarfstd.org/ShowIssue.php?issue=170427.1
And Bernd gives a brief description of the benefits here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2020-01/msg00147.html
With that all said, I think that there is benefit to having proper
is_stmt support regardless of whether we have views support, so I
think we should consider getting this in first, and then building view
support on top of this.
The gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp test is based off a test proposed
by Bernd Edlinger in this message:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2019-12/msg00842.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
* buildsym-legacy.c (record_line): Pass extra parameter to
record_line.
* buildsym.c (buildsym_compunit::record_line): Take an extra
parameter, reduce duplication in the line table, and record the
is_stmt flag in the line table.
* buildsym.h (buildsym_compunit::record_line): Add extra
parameter.
* disasm.c (do_mixed_source_and_assembly_deprecated): Ignore
non-statement lines.
* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf_record_line_1): Add extra parameter, pass
this to the symtab builder.
(dwarf_finish_line): Pass extra parameter to dwarf_record_line_1.
(lnp_state_machine::record_line): Pass a suitable is_stmt flag
through to dwarf_record_line_1.
* infrun.c (process_event_stop_test): When stepping, don't stop at
a non-statement instruction, and only refresh the step info when
we land in the middle of a line's range. Also add an extra
comment.
* jit.c (jit_symtab_line_mapping_add_impl): Initialise is_stmt
field.
* record-btrace.c (btrace_find_line_range): Only record lines
marked as is-statement.
* stack.c (frame_show_address): Show the frame address if we are
in a non-statement sal.
* symmisc.c (dump_symtab_1): Print the is_stmt flag.
(maintenance_print_one_line_table): Print a header for the is_stmt
column, and include is_stmt information in the output.
* symtab.c (find_pc_sect_line): Find lines marked as statements in
preference to non-statements.
(find_pcs_for_symtab_line): Prefer is-statement entries.
(find_line_common): Likewise.
* symtab.h (struct linetable_entry): Add is_stmt field.
(struct symtab_and_line): Likewise.
* xcoffread.c (arrange_linetable): Initialise is_stmt field when
arranging the line table.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.cc: New file.
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.exp: New file.
* gdb.cp/step-and-next-inline.h: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.c: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt.exp: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt-2.c: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-is-stmt-2.exp: New file.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-ranges-base.exp: Update line table pattern.
|
|
Consider a test-case compiled with -g:
...
int main (void) {
static int b = 2;
return 0;
}
...
When running info locals in main, we get:
...
(gdb) info locals
No locals.
...
The info locals documentation states:
...
Print the local variables of the selected frame, each on a separate line.
These are all variables (declared either static or automatic) accessible at
the point of execution of the selected frame.
...
So, "info locals" should have printed static variable b.
The variable is present in dwarf info:
...
<2><14a>: Abbrev Number: 6 (DW_TAG_variable)
<14b> DW_AT_name : b
<153> DW_AT_const_value : 2
...
but instead of a location attribute, it has a const_value attribute, which
causes the corresponding symbol to have LOC_CONST, which causes info locals to
skip it.
Fix this by handling LOC_CONST in iterate_over_block_locals.
Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-02-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR gdb/25592
* stack.c (iterate_over_block_locals): Handle LOC_CONST.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-02-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR gdb/25592
* gdb.base/info-locals-unused-static-var.c: New test.
* gdb.base/info-locals-unused-static-var.exp: New file.
|
|
I'd like to enable the -Wmissing-declarations warning. However, it
warns for every _initialize function, for example:
CXX dcache.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c: In function ‘void _initialize_dcache()’:
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c:688:1: error: no previous declaration for ‘void _initialize_dcache()’ [-Werror=missing-declarations]
_initialize_dcache (void)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The only practical way forward I found is to add back the declarations,
which were removed by this commit:
commit 481695ed5f6e0a8a9c9c50bfac1cdd2b3151e6c9
Author: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Date: Sat Sep 9 11:02:37 2017 -0700
Remove unnecessary function prototypes.
I don't think it's a big problem to have the declarations for these
functions, but if anybody has a better solution for this, I'll be happy
to use it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* aarch64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* aarch64-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_newlib_tdep): Add declaration.
* aarch64-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_tdep): Add declaration.
* ada-exp.y (_initialize_ada_exp): Add declaration.
* ada-lang.c (_initialize_ada_language): Add declaration.
* ada-tasks.c (_initialize_tasks): Add declaration.
* agent.c (_initialize_agent): Add declaration.
* aix-thread.c (_initialize_aix_thread): Add declaration.
* alpha-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_alphabsd_nat): Add declaration.
* alpha-linux-nat.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* alpha-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* alpha-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphanbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* alpha-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphaobsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* alpha-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_darwin_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_dicos_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* amd64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* amd64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_nat): Add declaration.
* amd64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_tdep): Add declaration.
* amd64-windows-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_nat): Add declaration.
* amd64-windows-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_tdep): Add declaration.
* annotate.c (_initialize_annotate): Add declaration.
* arc-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_newlib_tdep): Add declaration.
* arc-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_tdep): Add declaration.
* arch-utils.c (_initialize_gdbarch_utils): Add declaration.
* arm-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* arm-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-linux-nat.c (_initialize_arm_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* arm-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* arm-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_armobsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-pikeos-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_pikeos_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-symbian-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_symbian_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_tdep): Add declaration.
* arm-wince-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_wince_tdep): Add declaration.
* auto-load.c (_initialize_auto_load): Add declaration.
* auxv.c (_initialize_auxv): Add declaration.
* avr-tdep.c (_initialize_avr_tdep): Add declaration.
* ax-gdb.c (_initialize_ax_gdb): Add declaration.
* bfin-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* bfin-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_tdep): Add declaration.
* break-catch-sig.c (_initialize_break_catch_sig): Add declaration.
* break-catch-syscall.c (_initialize_break_catch_syscall): Add declaration.
* break-catch-throw.c (_initialize_break_catch_throw): Add declaration.
* breakpoint.c (_initialize_breakpoint): Add declaration.
* bsd-uthread.c (_initialize_bsd_uthread): Add declaration.
* btrace.c (_initialize_btrace): Add declaration.
* charset.c (_initialize_charset): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-cmds.c (_initialize_cli_cmds): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-dump.c (_initialize_cli_dump): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-interp.c (_initialize_cli_interp): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-script.c (_initialize_cli_script): Add declaration.
* cli/cli-style.c (_initialize_cli_style): Add declaration.
* coff-pe-read.c (_initialize_coff_pe_read): Add declaration.
* coffread.c (_initialize_coffread): Add declaration.
* compile/compile-cplus-types.c (_initialize_compile_cplus_types): Add declaration.
* compile/compile.c (_initialize_compile): Add declaration.
* complaints.c (_initialize_complaints): Add declaration.
* completer.c (_initialize_completer): Add declaration.
* copying.c (_initialize_copying): Add declaration.
* corefile.c (_initialize_core): Add declaration.
* corelow.c (_initialize_corelow): Add declaration.
* cp-abi.c (_initialize_cp_abi): Add declaration.
* cp-namespace.c (_initialize_cp_namespace): Add declaration.
* cp-support.c (_initialize_cp_support): Add declaration.
* cp-valprint.c (_initialize_cp_valprint): Add declaration.
* cris-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* cris-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_tdep): Add declaration.
* csky-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* csky-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_tdep): Add declaration.
* ctfread.c (_initialize_ctfread): Add declaration.
* d-lang.c (_initialize_d_language): Add declaration.
* darwin-nat-info.c (_initialize_darwin_info_commands): Add declaration.
* darwin-nat.c (_initialize_darwin_nat): Add declaration.
* dbxread.c (_initialize_dbxread): Add declaration.
* dcache.c (_initialize_dcache): Add declaration.
* disasm-selftests.c (_initialize_disasm_selftests): Add declaration.
* disasm.c (_initialize_disasm): Add declaration.
* dtrace-probe.c (_initialize_dtrace_probe): Add declaration.
* dummy-frame.c (_initialize_dummy_frame): Add declaration.
* dwarf-index-cache.c (_initialize_index_cache): Add declaration.
* dwarf-index-write.c (_initialize_dwarf_index_write): Add declaration.
* dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c (_initialize_tailcall_frame): Add declaration.
* dwarf2-frame.c (_initialize_dwarf2_frame): Add declaration.
* dwarf2expr.c (_initialize_dwarf2expr): Add declaration.
* dwarf2loc.c (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Add declaration.
* dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read): Add declaration.
* elfread.c (_initialize_elfread): Add declaration.
* exec.c (_initialize_exec): Add declaration.
* extension.c (_initialize_extension): Add declaration.
* f-lang.c (_initialize_f_language): Add declaration.
* f-valprint.c (_initialize_f_valprint): Add declaration.
* fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* filesystem.c (_initialize_filesystem): Add declaration.
* findcmd.c (_initialize_mem_search): Add declaration.
* findvar.c (_initialize_findvar): Add declaration.
* fork-child.c (_initialize_fork_child): Add declaration.
* frame-base.c (_initialize_frame_base): Add declaration.
* frame-unwind.c (_initialize_frame_unwind): Add declaration.
* frame.c (_initialize_frame): Add declaration.
* frv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* frv-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_tdep): Add declaration.
* ft32-tdep.c (_initialize_ft32_tdep): Add declaration.
* gcore.c (_initialize_gcore): Add declaration.
* gdb-demangle.c (_initialize_gdb_demangle): Add declaration.
* gdb_bfd.c (_initialize_gdb_bfd): Add declaration.
* gdbarch-selftests.c (_initialize_gdbarch_selftests): Add declaration.
* gdbarch.c (_initialize_gdbarch): Add declaration.
* gdbtypes.c (_initialize_gdbtypes): Add declaration.
* gnu-nat.c (_initialize_gnu_nat): Add declaration.
* gnu-v2-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v2_abi): Add declaration.
* gnu-v3-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v3_abi): Add declaration.
* go-lang.c (_initialize_go_language): Add declaration.
* go32-nat.c (_initialize_go32_nat): Add declaration.
* guile/guile.c (_initialize_guile): Add declaration.
* h8300-tdep.c (_initialize_h8300_tdep): Add declaration.
* hppa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* hppa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* hppa-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* hppa-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* hppa-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppaobsd_nat): Add declaration.
* hppa-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppabsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* hppa-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386bsd_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-cygwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_cygwin_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-darwin-nat.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_dicos_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-gnu-nat.c (_initialize_i386gnu_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-gnu-tdep.c (_initialize_i386gnu_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-go32-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_go32_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-linux-nat.c (_initialize_i386_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-nto-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nto_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386obsd_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386obsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-sol2-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_nat): Add declaration.
* i386-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_sol2_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_tdep): Add declaration.
* i386-windows-nat.c (_initialize_i386_windows_nat): Add declaration.
* ia64-libunwind-tdep.c (_initialize_libunwind_frame): Add declaration.
* ia64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* ia64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* ia64-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_tdep): Add declaration.
* ia64-vms-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_vms_tdep): Add declaration.
* infcall.c (_initialize_infcall): Add declaration.
* infcmd.c (_initialize_infcmd): Add declaration.
* inflow.c (_initialize_inflow): Add declaration.
* infrun.c (_initialize_infrun): Add declaration.
* interps.c (_initialize_interpreter): Add declaration.
* iq2000-tdep.c (_initialize_iq2000_tdep): Add declaration.
* jit.c (_initialize_jit): Add declaration.
* language.c (_initialize_language): Add declaration.
* linux-fork.c (_initialize_linux_fork): Add declaration.
* linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* linux-tdep.c (_initialize_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* linux-thread-db.c (_initialize_thread_db): Add declaration.
* lm32-tdep.c (_initialize_lm32_tdep): Add declaration.
* m2-lang.c (_initialize_m2_language): Add declaration.
* m32c-tdep.c (_initialize_m32c_tdep): Add declaration.
* m32r-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* m32r-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* m32r-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_tdep): Add declaration.
* m68hc11-tdep.c (_initialize_m68hc11_tdep): Add declaration.
* m68k-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* m68k-bsd-tdep.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* m68k-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* m68k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* m68k-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_tdep): Add declaration.
* machoread.c (_initialize_machoread): Add declaration.
* macrocmd.c (_initialize_macrocmd): Add declaration.
* macroscope.c (_initialize_macroscope): Add declaration.
* maint-test-options.c (_initialize_maint_test_options): Add declaration.
* maint-test-settings.c (_initialize_maint_test_settings): Add declaration.
* maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add declaration.
* mdebugread.c (_initialize_mdebugread): Add declaration.
* memattr.c (_initialize_mem): Add declaration.
* mep-tdep.c (_initialize_mep_tdep): Add declaration.
* mi/mi-cmd-env.c (_initialize_mi_cmd_env): Add declaration.
* mi/mi-cmds.c (_initialize_mi_cmds): Add declaration.
* mi/mi-interp.c (_initialize_mi_interp): Add declaration.
* mi/mi-main.c (_initialize_mi_main): Add declaration.
* microblaze-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* microblaze-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* mips-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips-linux-nat.c (_initialize_mips_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* mips-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* mips-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips-sde-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_sde_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_tdep): Add declaration.
* mips64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_nat): Add declaration.
* mips64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* mipsread.c (_initialize_mipsread): Add declaration.
* mn10300-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* mn10300-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_tdep): Add declaration.
* moxie-tdep.c (_initialize_moxie_tdep): Add declaration.
* msp430-tdep.c (_initialize_msp430_tdep): Add declaration.
* nds32-tdep.c (_initialize_nds32_tdep): Add declaration.
* nios2-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* nios2-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_tdep): Add declaration.
* nto-procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration.
* objc-lang.c (_initialize_objc_language): Add declaration.
* observable.c (_initialize_observer): Add declaration.
* opencl-lang.c (_initialize_opencl_language): Add declaration.
* or1k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* or1k-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_tdep): Add declaration.
* osabi.c (_initialize_gdb_osabi): Add declaration.
* osdata.c (_initialize_osdata): Add declaration.
* p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint): Add declaration.
* parse.c (_initialize_parse): Add declaration.
* ppc-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* ppc-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* ppc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* ppc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* ppc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* ppc-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_nat): Add declaration.
* ppc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd): Add declaration.
* probe.c (_initialize_probe): Add declaration.
* proc-api.c (_initialize_proc_api): Add declaration.
* proc-events.c (_initialize_proc_events): Add declaration.
* proc-service.c (_initialize_proc_service): Add declaration.
* procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration.
* producer.c (_initialize_producer): Add declaration.
* psymtab.c (_initialize_psymtab): Add declaration.
* python/python.c (_initialize_python): Add declaration.
* ravenscar-thread.c (_initialize_ravenscar): Add declaration.
* record-btrace.c (_initialize_record_btrace): Add declaration.
* record-full.c (_initialize_record_full): Add declaration.
* record.c (_initialize_record): Add declaration.
* regcache-dump.c (_initialize_regcache_dump): Add declaration.
* regcache.c (_initialize_regcache): Add declaration.
* reggroups.c (_initialize_reggroup): Add declaration.
* remote-notif.c (_initialize_notif): Add declaration.
* remote-sim.c (_initialize_remote_sim): Add declaration.
* remote.c (_initialize_remote): Add declaration.
* reverse.c (_initialize_reverse): Add declaration.
* riscv-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* riscv-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* riscv-linux-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* riscv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* riscv-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add declaration.
* rl78-tdep.c (_initialize_rl78_tdep): Add declaration.
* rs6000-aix-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_aix_tdep): Add declaration.
* rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_lynx178_tdep):
Add declaration.
* rs6000-nat.c (_initialize_rs6000_nat): Add declaration.
* rs6000-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_tdep): Add declaration.
* run-on-main-thread.c (_initialize_run_on_main_thread): Add declaration.
* rust-exp.y (_initialize_rust_exp): Add declaration.
* rx-tdep.c (_initialize_rx_tdep): Add declaration.
* s12z-tdep.c (_initialize_s12z_tdep): Add declaration.
* s390-linux-nat.c (_initialize_s390_nat): Add declaration.
* s390-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* s390-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_tdep): Add declaration.
* score-tdep.c (_initialize_score_tdep): Add declaration.
* ser-go32.c (_initialize_ser_dos): Add declaration.
* ser-mingw.c (_initialize_ser_windows): Add declaration.
* ser-pipe.c (_initialize_ser_pipe): Add declaration.
* ser-tcp.c (_initialize_ser_tcp): Add declaration.
* ser-uds.c (_initialize_ser_socket): Add declaration.
* ser-unix.c (_initialize_ser_hardwire): Add declaration.
* serial.c (_initialize_serial): Add declaration.
* sh-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* sh-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_shnbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* sh-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_shnbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sh-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_tdep): Add declaration.
* skip.c (_initialize_step_skip): Add declaration.
* sol-thread.c (_initialize_sol_thread): Add declaration.
* solib-aix.c (_initialize_solib_aix): Add declaration.
* solib-darwin.c (_initialize_darwin_solib): Add declaration.
* solib-dsbt.c (_initialize_dsbt_solib): Add declaration.
* solib-frv.c (_initialize_frv_solib): Add declaration.
* solib-svr4.c (_initialize_svr4_solib): Add declaration.
* solib-target.c (_initialize_solib_target): Add declaration.
* solib.c (_initialize_solib): Add declaration.
* source-cache.c (_initialize_source_cache): Add declaration.
* source.c (_initialize_source): Add declaration.
* sparc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc32obsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_sol2_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_nat): Add declaration.
* sparc64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration.
* sparc64-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_adi_tdep): Add declaration.
* stabsread.c (_initialize_stabsread): Add declaration.
* stack.c (_initialize_stack): Add declaration.
* stap-probe.c (_initialize_stap_probe): Add declaration.
* std-regs.c (_initialize_frame_reg): Add declaration.
* symfile-debug.c (_initialize_symfile_debug): Add declaration.
* symfile-mem.c (_initialize_symfile_mem): Add declaration.
* symfile.c (_initialize_symfile): Add declaration.
* symmisc.c (_initialize_symmisc): Add declaration.
* symtab.c (_initialize_symtab): Add declaration.
* target.c (_initialize_target): Add declaration.
* target-connection.c (_initialize_target_connection): Add
declaration.
* target-dcache.c (_initialize_target_dcache): Add declaration.
* target-descriptions.c (_initialize_target_descriptions): Add declaration.
* thread.c (_initialize_thread): Add declaration.
* tic6x-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* tic6x-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_tdep): Add declaration.
* tilegx-linux-nat.c (_initialize_tile_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* tilegx-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* tilegx-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_tdep): Add declaration.
* tracectf.c (_initialize_ctf): Add declaration.
* tracefile-tfile.c (_initialize_tracefile_tfile): Add declaration.
* tracefile.c (_initialize_tracefile): Add declaration.
* tracepoint.c (_initialize_tracepoint): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-hooks.c (_initialize_tui_hooks): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-interp.c (_initialize_tui_interp): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-layout.c (_initialize_tui_layout): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-regs.c (_initialize_tui_regs): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-stack.c (_initialize_tui_stack): Add declaration.
* tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win): Add declaration.
* tui/tui.c (_initialize_tui): Add declaration.
* typeprint.c (_initialize_typeprint): Add declaration.
* ui-style.c (_initialize_ui_style): Add declaration.
* unittests/array-view-selftests.c (_initialize_array_view_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/child-path-selftests.c (_initialize_child_path_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_cli_utils_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/common-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_common_utils_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c (_initialize_copy_bitwise_utils_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/environ-selftests.c (_initialize_environ_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/filtered_iterator-selftests.c
(_initialize_filtered_iterator_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c (_initialize_format_pieces_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/function-view-selftests.c (_initialize_function_view_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/help-doc-selftests.c (_initialize_help_doc_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c (_initialize_lookup_name_info_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/main-thread-selftests.c
(_initialize_main_thread_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/memory-map-selftests.c (_initialize_memory_map_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/memrange-selftests.c (_initialize_memrange_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c (_initialize_mkdir_recursive_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/observable-selftests.c (_initialize_observer_selftest): Add declaration.
* unittests/offset-type-selftests.c (_initialize_offset_type_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/optional-selftests.c (_initialize_optional_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c (_initialize_parse_connection_spec_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c (_initialize_rsp_low_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_fd_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_mmap_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_restore_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/string_view-selftests.c (_initialize_string_view_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/style-selftests.c (_initialize_style_selftest): Add declaration.
* unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c (_initialize_tracepoint_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/tui-selftests.c (_initialize_tui_selftest): Add
declaration.
* unittests/unpack-selftests.c (_initialize_unpack_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/utils-selftests.c (_initialize_utils_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_vec_utils_selftests): Add declaration.
* unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_xml_utils): Add declaration.
* user-regs.c (_initialize_user_regs): Add declaration.
* utils.c (_initialize_utils): Add declaration.
* v850-tdep.c (_initialize_v850_tdep): Add declaration.
* valops.c (_initialize_valops): Add declaration.
* valprint.c (_initialize_valprint): Add declaration.
* value.c (_initialize_values): Add declaration.
* varobj.c (_initialize_varobj): Add declaration.
* vax-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_vaxbsd_nat): Add declaration.
* vax-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_vaxnbsd_tdep): Add declaration.
* vax-tdep.c (_initialize_vax_tdep): Add declaration.
* windows-nat.c (_initialize_windows_nat): Add declaration.
(_initialize_check_for_gdb_ini): Add declaration.
(_initialize_loadable): Add declaration.
* windows-tdep.c (_initialize_windows_tdep): Add declaration.
* x86-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_x86_bsd_nat): Add declaration.
* x86-linux-nat.c (_initialize_x86_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* xcoffread.c (_initialize_xcoffread): Add declaration.
* xml-support.c (_initialize_xml_support): Add declaration.
* xstormy16-tdep.c (_initialize_xstormy16_tdep): Add declaration.
* xtensa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_nat): Add declaration.
* xtensa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_tdep): Add declaration.
* xtensa-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_tdep): Add declaration.
Change-Id: I13eec7e0ed2b3c427377a7bdb055cf46da64def9
|
|
In this commit:
commit ec8e2b6d3051f0b4b2a8eee9917898e95046c62f
Date: Fri Jun 14 23:43:00 2019 +0100
gdb: Don't allow annotations to influence what else GDB prints
A change was accidentally made that moved a call to do_gdb_disassembly
out of an if block guarded by 'if (source_print && sal.symtab)'. The
result was that if a user has 'set disassemble-next-line on' then the
backtrace would now include some disassembly of a few instructions in
each frame.
This change was not intentional, but was not spotted by any tests.
This commit restores the old behaviour and adds a test to ensure this
doesn't break again in the future.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* stack.c (print_frame_info): Move disassemble_next_line code
inside source_print block.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/backtrace.c: New file.
* gdb.base/backtrace.exp: New file.
Change-Id: I47c52a202fa74be138382646b695827940178689
|
|
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
|
|
Also renames the member variable to m_language to make code easier to read
when more functions become member functions.
I was originally hoping to eventually make m_language private (after a few
more patches), but unfortunately then it no longer counts as a POD type,
which means gdbsupport/poison.h won't let us use memset to initialize
this type, which psymtabs rely on to clear padding bytes so that bcache
can work properly.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-12-15 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_add_block_symbols): Update.
(ada_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Update.
* ax-gdb.c (gen_expr): Update.
* block.c (block_lookup_symbol): Update.
(block_lookup_symbol_primary): Update.
(block_find_symbol): Update.
* cp-namespace.c (cp_lookup_symbol_imports_or_template): Update.
* dbxread.c (process_one_symbol): Update.
* dictionary.c (insert_symbol_hashed): Update.
(collate_pending_symbols_by_language): Update.
(mdict_add_symbol): Update.
* dwarf-index-write.c (write_psymbols): Update.
* dwarf2read.c (fixup_go_packaging): Update.
* findvar.c (read_var_value): Update.
* ft32-tdep.c (ft32_skip_prologue): Update.
* go-lang.c (go_symbol_package_name): Update.
* language.h (scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto::
scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto): Update.
* linespec.c (find_method): Update.
(find_label_symbols_in_block): Update.
* mdebugread.c (parse_symbol): Update.
* mi/mi-cmd-stack.c (list_arg_or_local): Update.
* minsyms.c (add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table): Update.
(minimal_symbol_reader::install): Update.
* moxie-tdep.c (moxie_skip_prologue): Update.
* parse.c (parse_exp_in_context): Update.
* psymtab.c (psymbol_name_matches): Update.
(match_partial_symbol): Update.
(lookup_partial_symbol): Update.
(psymbol_hash): Update.
(psymbol_compare): Update.
* python/py-framefilter.c (extract_sym): Update.
(py_print_single_arg): Update.
* stabsread.c (define_symbol): Update.
* stack.c (print_frame_arg): Update.
(find_frame_funname): Update.
(info_frame_command_core): Update.
* symfile.c (set_initial_language): Update.
* symtab.c (symbol_set_demangled_name): Update.
(symbol_get_demangled_name): Update.
(symbol_set_language): Update.
(symbol_find_demangled_name): Update.
(symbol_set_names): Update.
(general_symbol_info::natural_name): Update.
(general_symbol_info::demangled_name): Update.
(general_symbol_info::search_name): Update.
(symbol_matches_search_name): Update.
(eq_symbol_entry): Update.
(iterate_over_symbols): Update.
(completion_list_add_symbol): Update.
(completion_list_add_msymbol): Update.
(completion_list_add_fields): Update.
* symtab.h (struct general_symbol_info) <language>: New function.
<language>: Rename to...
<m_language>: ...this.
(SYMBOL_LANGUAGE): Remove.
(MSYMBOL_LANGUAGE): Remove.
(struct symbol) <ctor>: Update.
* xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_skip_prologue): Update.
Change-Id: I6464d477457e61639c63ddf8b145e407a35c235a
|
|
GDB crashes when doing:
(gdb) faas
Aborted
Do the needed check to avoid crashing.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-12-06 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* stack.c (faas_command): Check a command is provided.
* thread.c (taas_command, tfaas_command): Likewise.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-12-06 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* gdb.threads/pthreads.exp: Test taas and tfaas without command.
* gdb.base/frameapply.exp: Test faas without command.
|
|
All these functions are only used in their respective files, they are
missing the static keyword, add them.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* arc-tdep.c (arc_insn_get_memory_base_reg): Make static.
(arc_insn_get_memory_offset): Likewise.
(arc_insn_dump): Likewise.
* cp-support.c (test_cp_symbol_name_matches): Likewise.
* csky-linux-tdep.c (csky_supply_fregset): Likewise.
* dictionary.c (dict_iterator_next): Likewise.
(dict_iter_match_first): Likewise.
(dict_iter_match_next): Likewise.
* f-lang.c (evaluate_subexp_f): Likewise.
* hppa-tdep.c (hppa_read_pc): Likewise.
* i386-tdep.c (i386_floatformat_for_type): Likewise.
* parse.c (write_exp_elt_msym): Likewise.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c (ppc_floatformat_for_type): Likewise.
* remote.c (remote_packet_size): Likewise.
(remote_notif_stop_parse): Likewise.
* rs6000-aix-tdep.c (aix_sighandle_frame_sniffer): Likewise.
* s12z-tdep.c (s12z_disassemble_info): Likewise.
* source.c (prepare_path_for_appending): Likewise.
* sparc64-linux-tdep.c
(sparc64_linux_handle_segmentation_fault); Likewise.
* stack.c (frame_selection_by_function_completer): Likewise.
Change-Id: I18e187ad279075b961e3e22e5b034f5c0f6188f0
|