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2024-01-12Update copyright year range in header of all files managed by GDBAndrew Burgess1-1/+1
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.
2023-11-21gdb: Replace gdb::optional with std::optionalLancelot Six1-5/+5
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>
2023-11-17gdb: remove regcache's address spaceSimon Marchi1-8/+0
While looking at the regcache code, I noticed that the address space (passed to regcache when constructing it, and available through regcache::aspace) wasn't relevant for the regcache itself. Callers of regcache::aspace use that method because it appears to be a convenient way of getting the address space for a thread, if you already have the regcache. But there is always another way to get the address space, as the callers pretty much always know which thread they are dealing with. The regcache code itself doesn't use the address space. This patch removes anything related to address_space from the regcache code, and updates callers to get it from the thread in context. This removes a bit of unnecessary complexity from the regcache code. The current get_thread_arch_regcache function gets an address_space for the given thread using the target_thread_address_space function (which calls the target_ops::thread_address_space method). This suggest that there might have been the intention of supporting per-thread address spaces. But digging through the history, I did not find any such case. Maybe this method was just added because we needed a way to get an address space from a ptid (because constructing a regcache required an address space), and this seemed like the right way to do it, I don't know. The only implementations of thread_address_space and process_stratum_target::thread_address_space and linux_nat_target::thread_address_space, which essentially just return the inferior's address space. And thread_address_space is only used in the current get_thread_arch_regcache, which gets removed. So, I think that the thread_address_space target method can be removed, and we can assume that it's fine to use the inferior's address space everywhere. Callers of regcache::aspace are updated to get the address space from the relevant inferior, either using some context they already know about, or in last resort using the current global context. So, to summarize: - remove everything in regcache related to address spaces - in particular, remove get_thread_arch_regcache, and rename get_thread_arch_aspace_regcache to get_thread_arch_regcache - remove target_ops::thread_address_space, and target_thread_address_space - adjust all users of regcache::aspace to get the address space another way Change-Id: I04fd41b22c83fe486522af7851c75bcfb31c88c7
2023-11-13Thread options & clone events (core + remote)Pedro Alves1-0/+8
A previous patch taught GDB about a new TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED event kind, and made the Linux target report clone events. A following patch will teach Linux GDBserver to do the same thing. However, for remote debugging, it wouldn't be ideal for GDBserver to report every clone event to GDB, when GDB only cares about such events in some specific situations. Reporting clone events all the time would be potentially chatty. We don't enable thread create/exit events all the time for the same reason. Instead we have the QThreadEvents packet. QThreadEvents is target-wide, though. This patch makes GDB instead explicitly request that the target reports clone events or not, on a per-thread basis. In order to be able to do that with GDBserver, we need a new remote protocol feature. Since a following patch will want to enable thread exit events on per-thread basis too, the packet introduced here is more generic than just for clone events. It lets you enable/disable a set of options at once, modelled on Linux ptrace's PTRACE_SETOPTIONS. IOW, this commit introduces a new QThreadOptions packet, that lets you specify a set of per-thread event options you want to enable. The packet accepts a list of options/thread-id pairs, similarly to vCont, processed left to right, with the options field being a number interpreted as a bit mask of options. The only option defined in this commit is GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE (0x1), which ask the remote target to report clone events. Another patch later in the series will introduce another option. For example, this packet sets option "1" (clone events) on thread p1000.2345: QThreadOptions;1:p1000.2345 and this clears options for all threads of process 1000, and then sets option "1" (clone events) on thread p1000.2345: QThreadOptions;0:p1000.-1;1:p1000.2345 This clears options of all threads of all processes: QThreadOptions;0 The target reports the set of supported options by including "QThreadOptions=<supported options>" in its qSupported response. infrun is then tweaked to enable GDB_THREAD_OPTION_CLONE when stepping over a breakpoint. Unlike PTRACE_SETOPTIONS, fork/vfork/clone children do NOT inherit their parent's thread options. This is so that GDB can send e.g., "QThreadOptions;0;1:TID" without worrying about threads it doesn't know about yet. Documentation for this new remote protocol feature is included in a documentation patch later in the series. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Change-Id: Ie41e5093b2573f14cf6ac41b0b5804eba75be37e
2023-11-13Step over clone syscall w/ breakpoint, TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONEDPedro Alves1-0/+7
(A good chunk of the problem statement in the commit log below is Andrew's, adjusted for a different solution, and for covering displaced stepping too. The testcase is mostly Andrew's too.) This commit addresses bugs gdb/19675 and gdb/27830, which are about stepping over a breakpoint set at a clone syscall instruction, one is about displaced stepping, and the other about in-line stepping. Currently, when a new thread is created through a clone syscall, GDB sets the new thread running. With 'continue' this makes sense (assuming no schedlock): - all-stop mode, user issues 'continue', all threads are set running, a newly created thread should also be set running. - non-stop mode, user issues 'continue', other pre-existing threads are not affected, but as the new thread is (sort-of) a child of the thread the user asked to run, it makes sense that the new threads should be created in the running state. Similarly, if we are stopped at the clone syscall, and there's no software breakpoint at this address, then the current behaviour is fine: - all-stop mode, user issues 'stepi', stepping will be done in place (as there's no breakpoint to step over). While stepping the thread of interest all the other threads will be allowed to continue. A newly created thread will be set running, and then stopped once the thread of interest has completed its step. - non-stop mode, user issues 'stepi', stepping will be done in place (as there's no breakpoint to step over). Other threads might be running or stopped, but as with the continue case above, the new thread will be created running. The only possible issue here is that the new thread will be left running after the initial thread has completed its stepi. The user would need to manually select the thread and interrupt it, this might not be what the user expects. However, this is not something this commit tries to change. The problem then is what happens when we try to step over a clone syscall if there is a breakpoint at the syscall address. - For both all-stop and non-stop modes, with in-line stepping: + user issues 'stepi', + [non-stop mode only] GDB stops all threads. In all-stop mode all threads are already stopped. + GDB removes s/w breakpoint at syscall address, + GDB single steps just the thread of interest, all other threads are left stopped, + New thread is created running, + Initial thread completes its step, + [non-stop mode only] GDB resumes all threads that it previously stopped. There are two problems in the in-line stepping scenario above: 1. The new thread might pass through the same code that the initial thread is in (i.e. the clone syscall code), in which case it will fail to hit the breakpoint in clone as this was removed so the first thread can single step, 2. The new thread might trigger some other stop event before the initial thread reports its step completion. If this happens we end up triggering an assertion as GDB assumes that only the thread being stepped should stop. The assert looks like this: infrun.c:5899: internal-error: int finish_step_over(execution_control_state*): Assertion `ecs->event_thread->control.trap_expected' failed. - For both all-stop and non-stop modes, with displaced stepping: + user issues 'stepi', + GDB starts the displaced step, moves thread's PC to the out-of-line scratch pad, maybe adjusts registers, + GDB single steps the thread of interest, [non-stop mode only] all other threads are left as they were, either running or stopped. In all-stop, all other threads are left stopped. + New thread is created running, + Initial thread completes its step, GDB re-adjusts its PC, restores/releases scratchpad, + [non-stop mode only] GDB resumes the thread, now past its breakpoint. + [all-stop mode only] GDB resumes all threads. There is one problem with the displaced stepping scenario above: 3. When the parent thread completed its step, GDB adjusted its PC, but did not adjust the child's PC, thus that new child thread will continue execution in the scratch pad, invoking undefined behavior. If you're lucky, you see a crash. If unlucky, the inferior gets silently corrupted. What is needed is for GDB to have more control over whether the new thread is created running or not. Issue #1 above requires that the new thread not be allowed to run until the breakpoint has been reinserted. The only way to guarantee this is if the new thread is held in a stopped state until the single step has completed. Issue #3 above requires that GDB is informed of when a thread clones itself, and of what is the child's ptid, so that GDB can fixup both the parent and the child. When looking for solutions to this problem I considered how GDB handles fork/vfork as these have some of the same issues. The main difference between fork/vfork and clone is that the clone events are not reported back to core GDB. Instead, the clone event is handled automatically in the target code and the child thread is immediately set running. Note we have support for requesting thread creation events out of the target (TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED). However, those are reported for the new/child thread. That would be sufficient to address in-line stepping (issue #1), but not for displaced-stepping (issue #3). To handle displaced-stepping, we need an event that is reported to the _parent_ of the clone, as the information about the displaced step is associated with the clone parent. TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CREATED includes no indication of which thread is the parent that spawned the new child. In fact, for some targets, like e.g., Windows, it would be impossible to know which thread that was, as thread creation there doesn't work by "cloning". The solution implemented here is to model clone on fork/vfork, and introduce a new TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED event. This event is similar to TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED and TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED, except that we end up with a new thread in the same process, instead of a new thread of a new process. Like FORKED and VFORKED, THREAD_CLONED waitstatuses have a child_ptid property, and the child is held stopped until GDB explicitly resumes it. This addresses the in-line stepping case (issues #1 and #2). The infrun code that handles displaced stepping fixup for the child after a fork/vfork event is thus reused for THREAD_CLONE, with some minimal conditions added, addressing the displaced stepping case (issue #3). The native Linux backend is adjusted to unconditionally report TARGET_WAITKIND_THREAD_CLONED events to the core. Following the follow_fork model in core GDB, we introduce a target_follow_clone target method, which is responsible for making the new clone child visible to the rest of GDB. Subsequent patches will add clone events support to the remote protocol and gdbserver. displaced_step_in_progress_thread becomes unused with this patch, but a new use will reappear later in the series. To avoid deleting it and readding it back, this patch marks it with attribute unused, and the latter patch removes the attribute again. We need to do this because the function is static, and with no callers, the compiler would warn, (error with -Werror), breaking the build. This adds a new gdb.threads/stepi-over-clone.exp testcase, which exercises stepping over a clone syscall, with displaced stepping vs inline stepping, and all-stop vs non-stop. We already test stepping over clone syscalls with gdb.base/step-over-syscall.exp, but this test uses pthreads, while the other test uses raw clone, and this one is more thorough. The testcase passes on native GNU/Linux, but fails against GDBserver. GDBserver will be fixed by a later patch in the series. Co-authored-by: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com> Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19675 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27830 Change-Id: I95c06024736384ae8542a67ed9fdf6534c325c8e Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2023-10-19gdb: remove target_section_table typedefSimon Marchi1-3/+3
Remove this typedef. I think that hiding the real type (std::vector) behind a typedef just hinders readability. Change-Id: I80949da3392f60a2826c56c268e0ec6f503ad79f Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> Reviewed-By: Reviewed-By: Lancelot Six <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2023-10-10gdb: remove target_gdbarchSimon Marchi1-1/+1
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>
2023-09-20Remove explanatory comments from includesTom Tromey1-3/+3
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>
2023-09-19Use gdb::checked_static_cast for tracepointsTom Tromey1-2/+2
This replaces some casts to 'tracepoint *' with checked_static_cast. Some functions are changed to accept a 'tracepoint *' now, for better type safety. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2023-09-05Read Ada main name from executable, not inferiorTom Tromey1-0/+4
An upstream bug report points out this bug: if the user switches from one Ada executable to another without "kill"ing the inferior, then the "start" command will fail. What happens here is that the Ada "main" name is found in a constant string in the executable. But, if the inferior is running, then the process_stratum target reads from the inferior memory. This patch fixes the problem by changing the main name code to set trust-readonly-sections, causing the target stack to read from the executable instead. I looked briefly at changing GNAT to emit DW_AT_main_subprogram instead, but this looks to be pretty involved. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25811
2023-08-28gdb: Store an x86_xsave_layout in i386_gdbarch_tdep.John Baldwin1-0/+7
This structure is fetched from the current target in i386_gdbarch_init via a new "fetch_x86_xsave_layout" target method. Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2023-08-24[gdb/build] Return gdb::array_view in thread_info_to_thread_handleTom de Vries1-3/+7
In remote_target::thread_info_to_thread_handle we return a copy: ... gdb::byte_vector remote_target::thread_info_to_thread_handle (struct thread_info *tp) { remote_thread_info *priv = get_remote_thread_info (tp); return priv->thread_handle; } ... Fix this by returning a gdb::array_view instead: ... gdb::array_view<const gdb_byte> remote_target::thread_info_to_thread_handle (struct thread_info *tp) ... Tested on x86_64-linux. This fixes the build when building with -std=c++20. Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2023-07-10Remove target_closeTom Tromey1-9/+0
I noticed that target_close is only called in two places: solib-svr4.c, and target_ops_ref_policy::decref. This patch fixes the former by changing target_bfd_reopen to return a target_ops_up and then fixing the sole caller. Then it removes target_close by inlining its body into the decref method. The advantage of this approach is that targets are now automatically managed. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 38. Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2023-06-03[gdb] Fix typosTom de Vries1-1/+1
Fix a few typos: - implemention -> implementation - convertion(s) -> conversion(s) - backlashes -> backslashes - signoring -> ignoring - (un)ambigious -> (un)ambiguous - occured -> occurred - hidding -> hiding - temporarilly -> temporarily - immediatelly -> immediately - sillyness -> silliness - similiar -> similar - porkuser -> pokeuser - thats -> that - alway -> always - supercede -> supersede - accomodate -> accommodate - aquire -> acquire - priveleged -> privileged - priviliged -> privileged - priviledges -> privileges - privilige -> privilege - recieve -> receive - (p)refered -> (p)referred - succesfully -> successfully - successfuly -> successfully - responsability -> responsibility - wether -> whether - wich -> which - disasbleable -> disableable - descriminant -> discriminant - construcstor -> constructor - underlaying -> underlying - underyling -> underlying - structureal -> structural - appearences -> appearances - terciarily -> tertiarily - resgisters -> registers - reacheable -> reachable - likelyhood -> likelihood - intepreter -> interpreter - disassemly -> disassembly - covnersion -> conversion - conviently -> conveniently - atttribute -> attribute - struction -> struct - resonable -> reasonable - popupated -> populated - namespaxe -> namespace - intialize -> initialize - identifer(s) -> identifier(s) - expection -> exception - exectuted -> executed - dungerous -> dangerous - dissapear -> disappear - completly -> completely - (inter)changable -> (inter)changeable - beakpoint -> breakpoint - automativ -> automatic - alocating -> allocating - agressive -> aggressive - writting -> writing - reguires -> requires - registed -> registered - recuding -> reducing - opeartor -> operator - ommitted -> omitted - modifing -> modifying - intances -> instances - imbedded -> embedded - gdbaarch -> gdbarch - exection -> execution - direcive -> directive - demanged -> demangled - decidely -> decidedly - argments -> arguments - agrument -> argument - amespace -> namespace - targtet -> target - supress(ed) -> suppress(ed) - startum -> stratum - squence -> sequence - prompty -> prompt - overlow -> overflow - memember -> member - languge -> language - geneate -> generate - funcion -> function - exising -> existing - dinking -> syncing - destroh -> destroy - clenaed -> cleaned - changep -> changedp (name of variable) - arround -> around - aproach -> approach - whould -> would - symobl -> symbol - recuse -> recurse - outter -> outer - freeds -> frees - contex -> context Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-01-01Update copyright year range in header of all files managed by GDBJoel Brobecker1-1/+1
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.
2022-12-14gdb: remove the pop_all_targets (and friends) global functionsAndrew Burgess1-11/+0
This commit removes the global functions pop_all_targets, pop_all_targets_above, and pop_all_targets_at_and_above, and makes them methods on the inferior class. As the pop_all_targets functions will unpush each target, which decrements the targets reference count, it is possible that the target might be closed. Right now, closing a target, in some cases, depends on the current inferior being set correctly, that is, to the inferior from which the target was popped. To facilitate this I have used switch_to_inferior_no_thread within the new methods. Previously it was the responsibility of the caller to ensure that the correct inferior was selected. In a couple of places (event-top.c and top.c) I have been able to remove a previous switch_to_inferior_no_thread call. In remote_unpush_target (remote.c) I have left the switch_to_inferior_no_thread call as it is required for the generic_mourn_inferior call.
2022-12-14gdb: remove decref_targetAndrew Burgess1-7/+3
The decref_target function is not really needed. Calling target_ops::decref will just redirect to decref_target anyway, so why not just rename decref_target to target_ops::decref? That's what this commit does. It's not exactly renaming to target_ops::decref, because the decref functionality is handled by a policy class, so the new name is now target_ops_ref_policy::decref. There should be no user visible change after this commit.
2022-12-14gdb: have target_stack automate reference count handlingAndrew Burgess1-2/+2
This commit changes the target_stack class from using a C style array of 'target_ops *' to using a C++ std::array<target_ops_ref, ...>. The benefit of this change is that some of the reference counting of target_ops objects is now done automatically. This commit fixes a crash in gdb.python/py-inferior.exp where GDB crashes at exit, leaving a core file behind. The crash occurs in connpy_connection_dealloc, and is actually triggered by this assert: gdb_assert (conn_obj->target == nullptr); Now a little aside... ... the assert is never actually printed, instead GDB crashes due to calling a pure virtual function. The backtrace at the point of crash looks like this: #7 0x00007fef7e2cf747 in std::terminate() () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #8 0x00007fef7e2d0515 in __cxa_pure_virtual () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 #9 0x0000000000de334d in target_stack::find_beneath (this=0x4934d78, t=0x2bda270 <the_dummy_target>) at ../../s> #10 0x0000000000df4380 in inferior::find_target_beneath (this=0x4934b50, t=0x2bda270 <the_dummy_target>) at ../.> #11 0x0000000000de2381 in target_ops::beneath (this=0x2bda270 <the_dummy_target>) at ../../src/gdb/target.c:3047 #12 0x0000000000de68aa in target_ops::supports_terminal_ours (this=0x2bda270 <the_dummy_target>) at ../../src/gd> #13 0x0000000000dde6b9 in target_supports_terminal_ours () at ../../src/gdb/target.c:1112 #14 0x0000000000ee55f1 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_li> Notice in frame #12 we called target_ops::supports_terminal_ours, however, this is the_dummy_target, which is of type dummy_target, and so we should have called dummy_target::supports_terminal_ours. I believe the reason we ended up in the wrong implementation of supports_terminal_ours (which is a virtual function) is because we made the call during GDB's shut-down, and, I suspect, the vtables were in a weird state. Anyway, the point of this patch is not to fix GDB's ability to print an assert during exit, but to address the root cause of the assert. With that aside out of the way, we can return to the main story... Connections are represented in Python with gdb.TargetConnection objects (or its sub-classes). The assert in question confirms that when a gdb.TargetConnection is deallocated, the underlying GDB connection has itself been removed from GDB. If this is not true then we risk creating multiple different gdb.TargetConnection objects for the same connection, which would be bad. To ensure that we have one gdb.TargetConnection object for each connection, the all_connection_objects map exists, this maps the process_stratum_target object (the connection) to the gdb.TargetConnection object that represents the connection. When a connection is removed in GDB the connection_removed observer fires, which we catch with connpy_connection_removed, this function then sets conn_obj->target to nullptr, and removes the corresponding entry from the all_connection_objects map. The first issue here is that connpy_connection_dealloc is being called as part of GDB's exit code, which is run after the Python interpreter has been shut down. The connpy_connection_dealloc function is used to deallocate the gdb.TargetConnection Python object. Surely it is wrong for us to be deallocating Python objects after the interpreter has been shut down. The reason why connpy_connection_dealloc is called during GDB's exit is that the global all_connection_objects map is still holding a reference to the gdb.TargetConnection object. When the map is destroyed during GDB's exit, the gdb.TargetConnection objects within the map can finally be deallocated. The reason why all_connection_objects has contents when GDB exits, and the reason the assert fires, is that, when GDB exits, there are still some connections that have not yet been removed from GDB, that is, they have a non-zero reference count. If we take a look at quit_force (top.c) you can see that, for each inferior, we call pop_all_targets before we (later in the function) call do_final_cleanups. It is the do_final_cleanups call that is responsible for shutting down the Python interpreter. The pop_all_targets calls should, in theory, cause all the connections to be removed from GDB. That this isn't working indicates that some targets have a non-zero reference count even after this final pop_all_targets call, and indeed, when I debug GDB, that is what I see. I tracked the problem down to delete_inferior where we do some house keeping, and then delete the inferior object, which calls inferior::~inferior. In neither delete_inferior or inferior::~inferior do we call pop_all_targets, and it is this missing call that means we leak some references to the target_ops objects on the inferior's target_stack. In this commit I will provide a partial fix for the problem. I say partial fix, but this will actually be enough to resolve the crash. In a later commit I will provide the final part of the fix. As mentioned at the start of the commit message, this commit changes the m_stack in target_stack to hold target_ops_ref objects. This means that when inferior::~inferior is called, and m_stack is released, we automatically decrement the target_ops reference count. With this change in place we no longer leak any references, and now, in quit_force the final pop_all_targets calls will release the final references. This means that the targets will be correctly closed at this point, which means the connections will be removed from GDB and the Python objects deallocated before the Python interpreter shuts down. There's a slight oddity in target_stack::unpush, where we std::move the reference out of m_stack like this: auto ref = std::move (m_stack[stratum]); the `ref' isn't used explicitly, but it serves to hold the target_ops_ref until the end of the scope while allowing the m_stack entry to be reset back to nullptr. The alternative would be to directly set the m_stack entry to nullptr, like this: m_stack[stratum] = nullptr; The problem here is that when we set the m_stack entry to nullptr we first decrement the target_ops reference count, and then set the array entry to nullptr. If the decrement means that the target_ops object reaches a zero reference count then the target_ops object will be closed by calling target_close. In target_close we ensure that the target being closed is not in any inferiors target_stack. As we decrement before clearing, then this check in target_close will fail, and an assert will trigger. By using std::move to move the reference out of m_stack, this clears the m_stack entry, meaning the inferior no longer contains the target_ops in its target_stack. Now when the REF object goes out of scope and the reference count is decremented, target_close can run successfully. I've made use of the Python connection_removed listener API to add a test for this issue. The test installs a listener and then causes delete_inferior to be called, we can then see that the connection is then correctly removed (because the listener triggers).
2022-09-29gdb: constify auxv parse functionsSimon Marchi1-2/+2
Constify the input parameters of the various auxv parse functions, they don't need to modify the raw auxv data. Change-Id: I13eacd5ab8e925ec2b5c1f7722cbab39c41516ec
2022-09-29gdb: constify target_stack::is_pushedSimon Marchi1-1/+1
The target_ops parameters here can be made const. Change-Id: Ibc18b17d6b21d06145251a03e68aca90538117d6
2022-09-21gdbsupport: convert FILEIO_* macros to an enumSimon Marchi1-14/+15
Converting from free-form macros to an enum gives a bit of type-safety. This caught places where we would assign host error numbers to what should contain a target fileio error number, for instance in target_fileio_pread. I added the FILEIO_SUCCESS enumerator, because remote.c:remote_hostio_parse_result initializes the remote_errno output variable to 0. It seems better to have an explicit enumerator than to assign a value for which there is no enumerator. I considered initializing this variable to FILEIO_EUNKNOWN instead, such that if the remote side replies with an error and omits the errno value, we'll get an errno that represents an error instead of 0 (which reprensents no error). But it's not clear what the consequences of that change would be, so I prefer to err on the side of caution and just keep the existing behavior (there is no intended change in behavior with this patch). Note that remote_hostio_parse_resul still reads blindly what the remote side sends as a target errno into this variable, so we can still end up with a nonsensical value here. It's not good, but out of the scope of this patch. Convert host_to_fileio_error and fileio_errno_to_host to return / accept a fileio_error instead of an int, and cascade the change in the whole chain that uses that. Change-Id: I454b0e3fcf0732447bc872252fa8e57d138b0e03
2022-07-22Change target_ops::async to accept boolTom Tromey1-2/+2
This changes the parameter of target_ops::async from int to bool. Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 34.
2022-05-13Constify target_pid_to_exec_fileTom Tromey1-2/+2
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.
2022-04-29Slightly tweak and clarify target_resume's interfacePedro Alves1-11/+20
The current target_resume interface is a bit odd & non-intuitive. I've found myself explaining it a couple times the recent past, while reviewing patches that assumed STEP/SIGNAL always applied to the passed in PTID. It goes like this today: - if the passed in PTID is a thread, then the step/signal request is for that thread. - otherwise, if PTID is a wildcard (all threads or all threads of process), the step/signal request is for inferior_ptid, and PTID indicates which set of threads run free. Because GDB always switches the current thread to "leader" thread being resumed/stepped/signalled, we can simplify this a bit to: - step/signal are always for inferior_ptid. - PTID indicates the set of threads that run free. Still not ideal, but it's a minimal change and at least there are no special cases this way. That's what this patch does. It renames the PTID parameter to SCOPE_PTID, adds some assertions to target_resume, and tweaks target_resume's description. In addition, it also renames PTID to SCOPE_PTID in the remote and linux-nat targets, and simplifies their implementation a little bit. Other targets could do the same, but they don't have to. Change-Id: I02a2ec2ab3a3e9b191de1e9a84f55c17cab7daaf
2022-04-14Move target_read_string to target/target.cTom Tromey1-8/+0
This moves the two overloads of target_read_string to a new file, target/target.c, and updates both gdb and gdbserver to build this.
2022-04-06gdb: move gdb_disassembly_flag into a new disasm-flags.h fileAndrew Burgess1-1/+1
While working on the disassembler I was getting frustrated. Every time I touched disasm.h it seemed like every file in GDB would need to be rebuilt. Surely the disassembler can't be required by that many parts of GDB, right? Turns out that disasm.h is included in target.h, so pretty much every file was being rebuilt! The only thing from disasm.h that target.h needed is the gdb_disassembly_flag enum, as this is part of the target_ops api. In this commit I move gdb_disassembly_flag into its own file. This is then included in target.h and disasm.h, after which, the number of files that depend on disasm.h is much reduced. I also audited all the other includes of disasm.h and found that the includes in mep-tdep.c and python/py-registers.c are no longer needed, so I've removed these. Now, after changing disasm.h, GDB rebuilds much quicker. There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2022-01-27gdb, gdbserver: update thread identifier in enable_btrace target methodMarkus Metzger1-3/+3
The enable_btrace target method takes a ptid_t to identify the thread on which tracing shall be enabled. Change this to thread_info * to avoid translating back and forth between the two. This will be used in a subsequent patch.
2022-01-06Introduce target_announce_attachTom Tromey1-0/+5
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.
2022-01-01Automatic Copyright Year update after running gdb/copyright.pyJoel Brobecker1-1/+1
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.
2021-12-13gdb: make post_startup_inferior a virtual method on inf_ptrace_targetAndrew Burgess1-14/+0
While working on a later patch that required me to understand how GDB starts up inferiors, I was confused by the target_ops::post_startup_inferior method. The post_startup_inferior target function is only called from inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior. Part of the target class hierarchy looks like this: inf_child_target | '-- inf_ptrace_target | |-- linux_nat_target | |-- fbsd_nat_target | |-- nbsd_nat_target | |-- obsd_nat_target | '-- rs6000_nat_target Every sub-class of inf_ptrace_target, except rs6000_nat_target, implements ::post_startup_inferior. The rs6000_nat_target picks up the implementation of ::post_startup_inferior not from inf_ptrace_target, but from inf_child_target. No descendent of inf_child_target, outside the inf_ptrace_target sub-tree, implements ::post_startup_inferior, which isn't really surprising, as they would never see the method called (remember, the method is only called from inf_ptrace_target::create_inferior). What I find confusing is the role inf_child_target plays in implementing, what is really a helper function for just one of its descendents. In this commit I propose that we formally make ::post_startup_inferior a helper function of inf_ptrace_target. To do this I will remove the ::post_startup_inferior from the target_ops API, and instead make this a protected, pure virtual function on inf_ptrace_target. I'll remove the empty implementation of ::post_startup_inferior from the inf_child_target class, and add a new empty implementation to the rs6000_nat_target class. All the other descendents of inf_ptrace_target already provide an implementation of this method and so don't need to change beyond making the method protected within their class declarations. To me, this makes much more sense now. The helper function, which is only called from within the inf_ptrace_target class, is now a part of the inf_ptrace_target class. The only way in which this change is visible to a user is if the user turns on 'set debug target 1'. With this debug flag on, prior to this patch the user would see something like: -> native->post_startup_inferior (...) <- native->post_startup_inferior (2588939) After this patch these lines are no longer present, as the post_startup_inferior is no longer a top level target method. For me, this is an acceptable change.
2021-11-25gdb: introduce a new overload of target_can_async_pAndrew Burgess1-0/+4
There are a few places where we call the target_ops::can_async_p member function directly, instead of using the target_can_async_p wrapper. In some of these places this is because we need to ask before the target has been pushed, and in another location (in target.c) it seems unnecessary to go through the wrapper when we are already in target.c code. However, in the next commit I'd like to hoist some common checks out of target specific code into target.c. To achieve this, in this commit, I introduce a new overload of target_can_async_p which takes a target_ops pointer, and calls the ::can_async_p method directly. I then make use of the new overload where appropriate. There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
2021-09-24gdb: change thread_info::name to unique_xmalloc_ptr, add helper functionSimon Marchi1-1/+4
This started out as changing thread_info::name to a unique_xmalloc_ptr. That showed that almost all users of that field had the same logic to get a thread's name: use thread_info::name if non-nullptr, else ask the target. Factor out this logic in a new thread_name free function. Make the field private (rename to m_name) and add some accessors. Change-Id: Iebdd95f4cd21fbefc505249bd1d05befc466a2fc
2021-09-23Change get_ada_task_ptid parameter typeTom Tromey1-2/+2
get_ada_task_ptid currently takes a 'long' as its 'thread' parameter type. However, on some platforms this is actually a pointer, and using 'long' can sometimes end up with the value being sign-extended. This sign extension can cause problems later, if the tid is then later used as an address again. This patch changes the parameter type to ULONGEST and updates all the uses. This approach preserves sign extension on the targets where it is apparently intended, while avoiding it on others. Co-Authored-By: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
2021-08-03gdb: follow-fork: push target and add thread in target_follow_forkSimon Marchi1-3/+4
In the context of ROCm-gdb [1], the ROCm target sits on top of the linux-nat target. when a process forks, it needs to carry over some data from the forking inferior to the fork child inferior. Ideally, the ROCm target would implement the follow_fork target_ops method, but there are some small problems. This patch fixes these, which helps the ROCm target, but also makes things more consistent and a bit nicer in general, I believe. The main problem is: when follow-fork-mode is "parent", target_follow_fork is called with the parent as the current inferior. When it's "child", target_follow_fork is called with the child as the current inferior. This means that target_follow_fork is sometimes called on the parent's target stack and sometimes on the child's target stack. The parent's target stack may contain targets above the process target, such as the ROCm target. So if follow-fork-child is "parent", the ROCm target would get notified of the fork and do whatever is needed. But the child's target stack, at that moment, only contains the exec and process target copied over from the parent. The child's target stack is set up by follow_fork_inferior, before calling target_follow_fork. In that case, the ROCm target wouldn't get notified of the fork. For consistency, I think it would be good to always call target_follow_fork on the parent inferior's target stack. I think it makes sense as a way to indicate "this inferior has called fork, do whatever is needed". The desired outcome of the fork (whether an inferior is created for the child, do we need to detach from the child) can be indicated by passed parameter. I therefore propose these changes: - make follow_fork_inferior always call target_follow_fork with the parent as the current inferior. That lets all targets present on the parent's target stack do some fork-related handling and push themselves on the fork child's target stack if needed. For this purpose, pass the child inferior down to target_follow_fork and follow_fork implementations. This is nullptr if no inferior is created for the child, because we want to detach from it. - as a result, in follow_fork_inferior, detach from the parent inferior (if needed) only after the target_follow_fork call. This is needed because we want to call target_follow_fork before the parent's target stack is torn down. - hand over to the targets in the parent's target stack (including the process target) the responsibility to push themselves, if needed, to the child's target stack. Also hand over the responsibility to the process target, at the same time, to create the child's initial thread (just like we do for follow_exec). - pass the child inferior to exec_on_vfork, so we don't need to swap the current inferior between parent and child. Nothing in exec_on_vfork depends on the current inferior, after this change. Although this could perhaps be replaced with just having the exec target implement follow_fork and push itself in the child's target stack, like the process target does... We would just need to make sure the process target calls beneath()->follow_fork(...). I'm not sure about this one. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Add inferior* parameter. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. (fbsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork. * linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork. * obsd-nat.h (obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call inf_ptrace_target::follow_fork. * remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. (remote_target::follow_fork): Likewise, and call process_stratum_target::follow_fork. * process-stratum-target.h (class process_stratum_target) <follow_fork>: New. * process-stratum-target.c (process_stratum_target::follow_fork): New. * target-delegates.c: Re-generate. [1] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCgdb Change-Id: I460bd0af850f0485e8aed4b24c6d8262a4c69929
2021-07-14gdb: pass child_ptid and fork kind to target_ops::follow_forkSimon Marchi1-7/+8
This is a small cleanup I think would be nice, that I spotted while doing the following patch. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Add ptid and target_waitkind parameters. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise. * linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise. * obsd-nat.h (class obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise. * remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * target-debug.h (target_debug_print_target_waitkind): New. * target-delegates.c: Re-generate. Change-Id: I5421a542f2e19100a22b74cc333d2b235d0de3c8
2021-07-13Fix detach with target remote (PR gdb/28080)Pedro Alves1-0/+6
Commit 408f66864a1a823591b26420410c982174c239a2 ("detach in all-stop with threads running") regressed "detach" with "target remote": (gdb) detach Detaching from program: target:/any/program, process 3671843 Detaching from process 3671843 Ending remote debugging. [Inferior 1 (process 3671843) detached] In main terminate called after throwing an instance of 'gdb_exception_error' Aborted (core dumped) Here's the exception above being thrown: (top-gdb) bt #0 throw_error (error=TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR, fmt=0x555556035588 "Remote connection closed") at src/gdbsupport/common-exceptions.cc:222 #1 0x0000555555bbaa46 in remote_target::readchar (this=0x555556a11040, timeout=10000) at src/gdb/remote.c:9440 #2 0x0000555555bbb9e5 in remote_target::getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0, expecting_notif=0, is_notif=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:9928 #3 0x0000555555bbbda9 in remote_target::getpkt_sane (this=0x555556a11040, buf=0x555556a11058, forever=0) at src/gdb/remote.c:10030 #4 0x0000555555bc0e75 in remote_target::remote_hostio_send_command (this=0x555556a11040, command_bytes=13, which_packet=14, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0, attachment=0x0, attachment_len=0x0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12137 #5 0x0000555555bc1b6c in remote_target::remote_hostio_close (this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12455 #6 0x0000555555bc1bb4 in remote_target::fileio_close (During symbol reading: .debug_line address at offset 0x64f417 is 0 [in module build/gdb/gdb] this=0x555556a11040, fd=8, remote_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/remote.c:12462 #7 0x0000555555c9274c in target_fileio_close (fd=3, target_errno=0x7fffffffcfd0) at src/gdb/target.c:3365 #8 0x000055555595a19d in gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0, stream=0x555556b11530) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:439 #9 0x0000555555e09e3f in opncls_bclose (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:599 #10 0x0000555555e0a2c7 in bfd_close_all_done (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:847 #11 0x0000555555e0a27a in bfd_close (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/bfd/opncls.c:814 #12 0x000055555595a9d3 in gdb_bfd_close_or_warn (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:626 #13 0x000055555595ad29 in gdb_bfd_unref (abfd=0x555556b9f8a0) at src/gdb/gdb_bfd.c:715 #14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573 #15 0x0000555555ae955a in std::_Sp_counted_ptr<objfile*, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_dispose (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:377 #16 0x000055555572b7c8 in std::_Sp_counted_base<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::_M_release (this=0x555556c20db0) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:155 #17 0x00005555557263c3 in std::__shared_count<(__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_count (this=0x555556bf0588, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:730 #18 0x0000555555ae745e in std::__shared_ptr<objfile, (__gnu_cxx::_Lock_policy)2>::~__shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr_base.h:1169 #19 0x0000555555ae747e in std::shared_ptr<objfile>::~shared_ptr (this=0x555556bf0580, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/shared_ptr.h:103 #20 0x0000555555b1c1dc in __gnu_cxx::new_allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (this=0x5555564cdd60, __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/ext/new_allocator.h:153 #21 0x0000555555b1bb1d in std::allocator_traits<std::allocator<std::_List_node<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > > >::destroy<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > (__a=..., __p=0x555556bf0580) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/alloc_traits.h:497 #22 0x0000555555b1b73e in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::_M_erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/stl_list.h:1921 #23 0x0000555555b1afeb in std::__cxx11::list<std::shared_ptr<objfile>, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<objfile> > >::erase (this=0x5555564cdd60, __position=std::shared_ptr<objfile> (expired, weak count 1) = {get() = 0x555556515540}) at /usr/include/c++/9/bits/list.tcc:158 #24 0x0000555555b19576 in program_space::remove_objfile (this=0x5555564cdd20, objfile=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/progspace.c:210 #25 0x0000555555ae4502 in objfile::unlink (this=0x555556515540) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:487 #26 0x0000555555ae5a12 in objfile_purge_solibs () at src/gdb/objfiles.c:875 #27 0x0000555555c09686 in no_shared_libraries (ignored=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/solib.c:1236 #28 0x00005555559e3f5f in detach_command (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/infcmd.c:2769 So frame #28 already detached the remote process, and then we're purging the shared libraries. GDB had opened remote shared libraries via the target: sysroot, so it tries closing them. GDBserver is tearing down already, so remote communication breaks down and we close the remote target and throw TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR. Note frame #14: #14 0x0000555555ae4730 in objfile::~objfile (this=0x555556515540, __in_chrg=<optimized out>) at src/gdb/objfiles.c:573 That's a dtor, thus noexcept. That's the reason for the std::terminate. Stepping back a bit, why do we still have open remote files if we've managed to detach already, and, we're debugging with "target remote"? The reason is that commit 408f66864a1a823591b26420410c982174c239a2 makes detach_command hold a reference to the target, so the remote target won't be finally closed until frame #28 returns. It's closing the target that invalidates target file I/O handles. This commit fixes the issue by not relying on target_close to invalidate the target file I/O handles, instead invalidate them immediately in remote_unpush_target. So when GDB purges the solibs, and we end up in target_fileio_close (frame #7 above), there's nothing to do, and we don't try to talk with the remote target anymore. The regression isn't seen when testing with --target_board=native-gdbserver, because that does "set sysroot" to disable the "target:" sysroot, for test run speed reasons. So this commit adds a testcase that explicitly tests detach with "set sysroot target:". gdb/ChangeLog: yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> PR gdb/28080 * remote.c (remote_unpush_target): Invalidate file I/O target handles. * target.c (fileio_handles_invalidate_target): Make extern. * target.h (fileio_handles_invalidate_target): Declare. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> PR gdb/28080 * gdb.base/detach-sysroot-target.exp: New. * gdb.base/detach-sysroot-target.c: New. Reported-By: Jonah Graham <jonah@kichwacoders.com> Change-Id: I851234910172f42a1b30e731161376c344d2727d
2021-05-23[gdb/tdep] Use pid to choose process 64/32-bitnessTom de Vries1-4/+11
In a linux kernel mailing list discussion, it was mentioned that "gdb has this odd thing where it takes the 64-bit vs 32-bit data for the whole process from one thread, and picks the worst possible thread to do it (ie explicitly not even the main thread, ...)" [1]. The picking of the thread is done here in x86_linux_nat_target::read_description: ... /* GNU/Linux LWP ID's are process ID's. */ tid = inferior_ptid.lwp (); if (tid == 0) tid = inferior_ptid.pid (); /* Not a threaded program. */ ... To understand what this code does, let's investigate a scenario in which inferior_ptid.lwp () != inferior_ptid.pid (). Say we start exec jit-attach-pie, identified with pid x. The main thread starts another thread that sleeps, and then the main thread waits for the sleeping thread. So we have two threads, identified with LWP IDs x and x+1: ... PID LWP CMD x x ./jit-attach-pie x x+1 ./jit-attach-pie ... [ The thread with LWP x is known as the thread group leader. ] When attaching to this exec using the pid, gdb does a stop_all_threads which iterates over all the threads, first LWP x, and then LWP x+1. So the state we arrive with at x86_linux_nat_target::read_description is: ... (gdb) p inferior_ptid $1 = {m_pid = x, m_lwp = x+1, m_tid = 0} ... and consequently we probe 64/32-bitness from thread LWP x+1. [ Note that this is different from when gdb doesn't attach but instead launches the exec itself, in which case there's just one thread to begin with, and consequently the probed thread is LWP x. ] According to aforementioned remark, a better choice would have been the main thread, that is, LWP x. This patch implement that choice, by simply doing: ... tid = inferior_ptid.pid (); ... The fact that gdb makes a per-process permanent choice for 64/32-bitness is a problem in itself: each thread can be in either 64 or 32 bit mode, and change forth and back. That is a problem that this patch doesn't fix. Now finally: why does this matter in the context of the linux kernel discussion? The discussion was related to a patch that exposed io_uring threads to user-space. This made it possible that one of those threads would be picked out to select 64/32-bitness. Given that such threads are atypical user-space threads in the sense that they don't return to user-space and don't have a userspace register state, reading their registers returns garbage, and so it could f.i. occur that in a 64-bit process with all normal user-space threads in 64-bit mode, the probing would return 32-bit. It may be that this is worked-around on the kernel side by providing userspace register state in those threads such that current gdb is happy. Nevertheless, it seems prudent to fix this on the gdb size as well. Tested on x86_64-linux. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/io-uring/CAHk-=wh0KoEZXPYMGkfkeVEerSCEF1AiCZSvz9TRrx=Kj74D+Q@mail.gmail.com/ gdb/ChangeLog: 2021-05-23 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> PR tdep/27822 * target.h (struct target_ops): Mention target_thread_architecture in read_description comment. * x86-linux-nat.c (x86_linux_nat_target::read_description): Use pid to determine if process is 64-bit or 32-bit. * aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_nat_target::read_description): Same. * ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_nat_target::read_description): Same. * riscv-linux-nat.c (riscv_linux_nat_target::read_description): Same. * s390-linux-nat.c (s390_linux_nat_target::read_description): Same. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_linux_nat_target::read_description): Same. Likewise, use pid to determine if kernel supports reading VFP registers.
2021-05-13gdb: on exec, delegate pushing / unpushing target and adding thread to ↵Simon Marchi1-6/+13
target_ops::follow_exec On "exec", some targets need to unpush themselves from the inferior, and do some bookkeeping, like forgetting the data associated to the exec'ing inferior. One such example is the thread-db target. It does so in a special case in thread_db_target::wait, just before returning the TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD event to its caller. We have another such case in the context of rocm-gdb [1], where the "rocm" target is pushed on top of the linux-nat target. When an exec happens, we want to unpush the rocm target from the exec'ing inferior to close some file descriptors that refer to the pre-exec address space and forget about that inferior. We then want to push the target on the inferior in which execution continues, to open the file descriptors for the post-exec address space. I think that a good way to address this cleanly is to do all this in the target_ops::follow_exec implementations. Make the process_stratum_target::follow_exec implementation have the default behavior of pushing itself to the new inferior's target stack (if execution continues in a new inferior) and add the initial thread. remote_target::follow_exec is an example of process target that wants to do a bit more than the default behavior. So it calls process_stratum_target::follow_exec first and does the extra work second. linux-thread-db (a non-process target) implements follow_exec to do some bookeeping (forget about that process' data), before handing down the event down to the process target (which hits process_stratum_target::follow_exec). gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_exec>: Add ptid_t parameter. (target_follow_exec): Likewise. * target.c (target_follow_exec): Add ptid_t parameter. * infrun.c (follow_exec): Adjust call to target_follow_exec, don't push target nor create thread. * linux-thread-db.c (class thread_db_target) <follow_exec>: New. (thread_db_target::wait): Just return on TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD. (thread_db_target::follow_exec): New. * remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_exec>: Add ptid_t parameter. (remote_target::follow_exec): Call process_stratum_target::follow_exec. * target-delegates.c: Re-generate. Change-Id: I3f96d0ba3ea0dde6540b7e1b4d5cdb01635088c8
2021-05-13gdb: call target_follow_exec when "set follow-exec-mode" is "same"Simon Marchi1-2/+5
target_follow_exec is currently only called in the "follow-exec-mode == new" branch of follow_exec, not the "follow-exec-mode == same" branch. I think it would make sense to call it regardless of the mode to let targets do some necessary handling. This is needed in the context of rocm-gdb [1], where a target is pushed on top of the linux-nat target. On exec, it needs to do some bookkeeping, close some file descriptors / handles that were related to the process pre-exec and open some new ones for the process post-exec. However, by looking at the only in-tree implementation of target_ops::follow_exec, remote_target::follow_exec, I found that it would be useful for the extended-remote target too, to align its behavior with native debugging (although I think that behavior is not very user-friendly, see PR 27745 [2]). Using two programs, one (let's call it "execer") that execs the other (let's call it "execee"), with native: $ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory ./execer Reading symbols from ./execer... (gdb) r Starting program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer I am execer process 1495622 is executing new program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee I am execee [Inferior 1 (process 1495622) exited normally] (gdb) r Starting program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee I am execee [Inferior 1 (process 1495626) exited normally] And now with gdbserver (some irrelevant output lines removed for brevity): $ ./gdbserver --once --multi :1234 ... $ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory ./execer -ex "set remote exec-file /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer" -ex "tar ext :1234" Reading symbols from ./execer... Remote debugging using :1234 (gdb) r Starting program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer process 1495724 is executing new program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee [Inferior 1 (process 1495724) exited normally] (gdb) r `target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee' has disappeared; keeping its symbols. Starting program: target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee warning: Build ID mismatch between current exec-file target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee and automatically determined exec-file target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask" Reading /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer from remote target... Load new symbol table from "target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer"? (y or n) When handling the exec, GDB updates the exec-file of the inferior to be the execee. This means that a subsequent "run" will run the execee, not the original executable (execer). remote_target::follow_exec is meant to update the "remote exec-file", which is the file on the remote system that will be executed if you "run" the inferior, to the execee as well. However, this is not called when follow-exec-mode is same, because target_follow_exec is not called in this branch. As a result, GDB thinks the inferior is executing execee but the remote side is really executing execer, hence the mismatch message. By calling target_follow_exec in the "same" branch of the follow_exec function, we ensure that everybody agrees, and we get the same behavior with the extended-remote target as we get with the native target, the execee is executed on the second run: $ ./gdbserver --once --multi :1234 ... $ ./gdb -q -nx --data-directory=data-directory ./execer -ex "set remote exec-file /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer" -ex "tar ext :1234" Reading symbols from ./execer... Remote debugging using :1234 (gdb) r Starting program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execer process 1501445 is executing new program: /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee [Inferior 1 (process 1501445) exited normally] (gdb) r `target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee' has disappeared; keeping its symbols. Starting program: target:/home/simark/build/binutils-gdb/gdb/execee [Inferior 1 (process 1501447) exited normally] (gdb) This scenario is tested in gdb.base/foll-exec-mode.exp, and in fact this patch fixes the test for me when using --target_board=native-extended-gdbserver. gdb/ChangeLog: * infrun.c (follow_exec): Call target_follow_fork when follow-exec-mode is same. * target.h (target_follow_fork): Improve doc. [1] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCgdb [2] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27745 Change-Id: I4ee84a875e39bf3f8eaf3e6789a4bfe23a2a430e
2021-04-07gdb: make target_ops::follow_fork return voidSimon Marchi1-5/+3
I noticed that all implementations return false, so target_ops::follow_fork doesn't really need to return a value. Change it to return void. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Return void. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise. (target_follow_fork): Likewise. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior): Adjust. * fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Return void. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target:::follow_fork): Likewise. * linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Return void. * obsd-nat.h (class obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Return void. * obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise. * remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise. (remote_target::follow_fork): Likewise. * target-delegates.c: Re-generate. Change-Id: If908c2f68b29fa275be2b0b9deb41e4c6a1b7879
2021-03-26gdb: defer commit resume until all available events are consumedSimon Marchi1-0/+14
Rationale --------- Let's say you have multiple threads hitting a conditional breakpoint at the same time, and all of these are going to evaluate to false. All these threads will need to be resumed. Currently, GDB fetches one target event (one SIGTRAP representing the breakpoint hit) and decides that the thread should be resumed. It calls resume and commit_resume immediately. It then fetches the second target event, and does the same, until it went through all threads. The result is therefore something like: - consume event for thread A - resume thread A - commit resume (affects thread A) - consume event for thread B - resume thread B - commit resume (affects thread B) - consume event for thread C - resume thread C - commit resume (affects thread C) For targets where it's beneficial to group resumptions requests (most likely those that implement target_ops::commit_resume), it would be much better to have: - consume event for thread A - resume thread A - consume event for thread B - resume thread B - consume event for thread C - resume thread C - commit resume (affects threads A, B and C) Implementation details ---------------------- To achieve this, this patch adds another check in maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets to avoid setting the commit-resumed flag of targets that readily have events to provide to infrun. To determine if a target has events readily available to report, this patch adds an `has_pending_events` target_ops method. The method returns a simple bool to say whether or not it has pending events to report. Testing ======= To test this, I start GDBserver with a program that spawns multiple threads: $ ../gdbserver/gdbserver --once :1234 ~/src/many-threads-stepping-over-breakpoints/many-threads-stepping-over-breakpoints I then connect with GDB and install a conditional breakpoint that always evaluates to false (and force the evaluation to be done by GDB): $ ./gdb -nx --data-directory=data-directory \ /home/simark/src/many-threads-stepping-over-breakpoints/many-threads-stepping-over-breakpoints \ -ex "set breakpoint condition-evaluation host" \ -ex "set pag off" \ -ex "set confirm off" \ -ex "maint set target-non-stop on" \ -ex "tar rem :1234" \ -ex "tb main" \ -ex "b 13 if 0" \ -ex c \ -ex "set debug infrun" \ -ex "set debug remote 1" \ -ex "set debug displaced" I then do "continue" and look at the log. The remote target receives a bunch of stop notifications for all threads that have hit the breakpoint. infrun consumes and processes one event, decides it should not cause a stop, prepares a displaced step, after which we should see: [infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_process_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target remote, target has pending events Same for a second thread (since we have 2 displaced step buffers). For the following threads, their displaced step is deferred since there are no more buffers available. After consuming the last event the remote target has to offer, we get: [infrun] maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_process_targets: enabling commit-resumed for target remote [infrun] maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_process_targets: calling commit_resumed for target remote [remote] Sending packet: $vCont;s:p14d16b.14d1b1;s:p14d16b.14d1b2#55 [remote] Packet received: OK Without the patch, there would have been one vCont;s just after each prepared displaced step. gdb/ChangeLog: yyyy-mm-dd Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com> Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> * async-event.c (async_event_handler_marked): New. * async-event.h (async_event_handler_marked): Declare. * infrun.c (maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets): Switch to inferior before calling target method. Don't commit-resumed if target_has_pending_events is true. * remote.c (remote_target::has_pending_events): New. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate. * target.c (target_has_pending_events): New. * target.h (target_ops::has_pending_events): New target method. (target_has_pending_events): New. Change-Id: I18112ba19a1ff4986530c660f530d847bb4a1f1d
2021-03-26gdb: generalize commit_resume, avoid commit-resuming when threads have ↵Simon Marchi1-18/+13
pending statuses The rationale for this patch comes from the ROCm port [1], the goal being to reduce the number of back and forths between GDB and the target when doing successive operations. I'll start with explaining the rationale and then go over the implementation. In the ROCm / GPU world, the term "wave" is somewhat equivalent to a "thread" in GDB. So if you read if from a GPU stand point, just s/thread/wave/. ROCdbgapi, the library used by GDB [2] to communicate with the GPU target, gives the illusion that it's possible for the debugger to control (start and stop) individual threads. But in reality, this is not how it works. Under the hood, all threads of a queue are controlled as a group. To stop one thread in a group of running ones, the state of all threads is retrieved from the GPU, all threads are destroyed, and all threads but the one we want to stop are re-created from the saved state. The net result, from the point of view of GDB, is that the library stopped one thread. The same thing goes if we want to resume one thread while others are running: the state of all running threads is retrieved from the GPU, they are all destroyed, and they are all re-created, including the thread we want to resume. This leads to some inefficiencies when combined with how GDB works, here are two examples: - Stopping all threads: because the target operates in non-stop mode, when the user interface mode is all-stop, GDB must stop all threads individually when presenting a stop. Let's suppose we have 1000 threads and the user does ^C. GDB asks the target to stop one thread. Behind the scenes, the library retrieves 1000 thread states and restores the 999 others still running ones. GDB asks the target to stop another one. The target retrieves 999 thread states and restores the 998 remaining ones. That means that to stop 1000 threads, we did 1000 back and forths with the GPU. It would have been much better to just retrieve the states once and stop there. - Resuming with pending events: suppose the 1000 threads hit a breakpoint at the same time. The breakpoint is conditional and evaluates to true for the first thread, to false for all others. GDB pulls one event (for the first thread) from the target, decides that it should present a stop, so stops all threads using stop_all_threads. All these other threads have a breakpoint event to report, which is saved in `thread_info::suspend::waitstatus` for later. When the user does "continue", GDB resumes that one thread that did hit the breakpoint. It then processes the pending events one by one as if they just arrived. It picks one, evaluates the condition to false, and resumes the thread. It picks another one, evaluates the condition to false, and resumes the thread. And so on. In between each resumption, there is a full state retrieval and re-creation. It would be much nicer if we could wait a little bit before sending those threads on the GPU, until it processed all those pending events. To address this kind of performance issue, ROCdbgapi has a concept called "forward progress required", which is a boolean state that allows its user (i.e. GDB) to say "I'm doing a bunch of operations, you can hold off putting the threads on the GPU until I'm done" (the "forward progress not required" state). Turning forward progress back on indicates to the library that all threads that are supposed to be running should now be really running on the GPU. It turns out that GDB has a similar concept, though not as general, commit_resume. One difference is that commit_resume is not stateful: the target can't look up "does the core need me to schedule resumed threads for execution right now". It is also specifically linked to the resume method, it is not used in other contexts. The target accumulates resumption requests through target_ops::resume calls, and then commits those resumptions when target_ops::commit_resume is called. The target has no way to check if it's ok to leave resumed threads stopped in other target methods. To bridge the gap, this patch generalizes the commit_resume concept in GDB to match the forward progress concept of ROCdbgapi. The current name (commit_resume) can be interpreted as "commit the previous resume calls". I renamed the concept to "commit_resumed", as in "commit the threads that are resumed". In the new version, we have two things: - the commit_resumed_state field in process_stratum_target: indicates whether GDB requires target stacks using this target to have resumed threads committed to the execution target/device. If false, an execution target is allowed to leave resumed threads un-committed at the end of whatever method it is executing. - the commit_resumed target method: called when commit_resumed_state transitions from false to true. While commit_resumed_state was false, the target may have left some resumed threads un-committed. This method being called tells it that it should commit them back to the execution device. Let's take the "Stopping all threads" scenario from above and see how it would work with the ROCm target with this change. Before stopping all threads, GDB would set the target's commit_resumed_state field to false. It would then ask the target to stop the first thread. The target would retrieve all threads' state from the GPU and mark that one as stopped. Since commit_resumed_state is false, it leaves all the other threads (still resumed) stopped. GDB would then proceed to call target_stop for all the other threads. Since resumed threads are not committed, this doesn't do any back and forth with the GPU. To simplify the implementation of targets, this patch makes it so that when calling certain target methods, the contract between the core and the targets guarantees that commit_resumed_state is false. This way, the target doesn't need two paths, one for commit_resumed_state == true and one for commit_resumed_state == false. It can just assert that commit_resumed_state is false and work with that assumption. This also helps catch places where we forgot to disable commit_resumed_state before calling the method, which represents a probable optimization opportunity. The commit adds assertions in the target method wrappers (target_resume and friends) to have some confidence that this contract between the core and the targets is respected. The scoped_disable_commit_resumed type is used to disable the commit resumed state of all process targets on construction, and selectively re-enable it on destruction (see below for criteria). Note that it only sets the process_stratum_target::commit_resumed_state flag. A subsequent call to maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets is necessary to call the commit_resumed method on all target stacks with process targets that got their commit_resumed_state flag turned back on. This separation is because we don't want to call the commit_resumed methods in scoped_disable_commit_resumed's destructor, as they may throw. On destruction, commit-resumed is not re-enabled for a given target if: 1. this target has no threads resumed, or 2. this target has at least one resumed thread with a pending status known to the core (saved in thread_info::suspend::waitstatus). The first point is not technically necessary, because a proper commit_resumed implementation would be a no-op if the target has no resumed threads. But since we have a flag do to a quick check, it shouldn't hurt. The second point is more important: together with the scoped_disable_commit_resumed instance added in fetch_inferior_event, it makes it so the "Resuming with pending events" described above is handled efficiently. Here's what happens in that case: 1. The user types "continue". 2. Upon destruction, the scoped_disable_commit_resumed in the `proceed` function does not enable commit-resumed, as it sees some threads have pending statuses. 3. fetch_inferior_event is called to handle another event, the breakpoint hit evaluates to false, and that thread is resumed. Because there are still more threads with pending statuses, the destructor of scoped_disable_commit_resumed in fetch_inferior_event still doesn't enable commit-resumed. 4. Rinse and repeat step 3, until the last pending status is handled by fetch_inferior_event. In that case, scoped_disable_commit_resumed's destructor sees there are no more threads with pending statues, so it asks the target to commit resumed threads. This allows us to avoid all unnecessary back and forths, there is a single commit_resumed call once all pending statuses are processed. This change required remote_target::remote_stop_ns to learn how to handle stopping threads that were resumed but pending vCont. The simplest example where that happens is when using the remote target in all-stop, but with "maint set target-non-stop on", to force it to operate in non-stop mode under the hood. If two threads hit a breakpoint at the same time, GDB will receive two stop replies. It will present the stop for one thread and save the other one in thread_info::suspend::waitstatus. Before this patch, when doing "continue", GDB first resumes the thread without a pending status: Sending packet: $vCont;c:p172651.172676#f3 It then consumes the pending status in the next fetch_inferior_event call: [infrun] do_target_wait_1: Using pending wait status status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP for Thread 1517137.1517137. [infrun] target_wait (-1.0.0, status) = [infrun] 1517137.1517137.0 [Thread 1517137.1517137], [infrun] status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP It then realizes it needs to stop all threads to present the stop, so stops the thread it just resumed: [infrun] stop_all_threads: Thread 1517137.1517137 not executing [infrun] stop_all_threads: Thread 1517137.1517174 executing, need stop remote_stop called Sending packet: $vCont;t:p172651.172676#04 This is an unnecessary resume/stop. With this patch, we don't commit resumed threads after proceeding, because of the pending status: [infrun] maybe_commit_resumed_all_process_targets: not requesting commit-resumed for target extended-remote, a thread has a pending waitstatus When GDB handles the pending status and stop_all_threads runs, we stop a resumed but pending vCont thread: remote_stop_ns: Enqueueing phony stop reply for thread pending vCont-resume (1520940, 1520976, 0) That thread was never actually resumed on the remote stub / gdbserver, so we shouldn't send a packet to the remote side asking to stop the thread. Note that there are paths that resume the target and then do a synchronous blocking wait, in sort of nested event loop, via wait_sync_command_done. For example, inferior function calls, or any run control command issued from a breakpoint command list. We handle that making wait_sync_command_one a "sync" point -- force forward progress, or IOW, force-enable commit-resumed state. gdb/ChangeLog: yyyy-mm-dd Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com> Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net> * infcmd.c (run_command_1, attach_command, detach_command) (interrupt_target_1): Use scoped_disable_commit_resumed. * infrun.c (do_target_resume): Remove target_commit_resume call. (commit_resume_all_targets): Remove. (maybe_set_commit_resumed_all_targets): New. (maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets): New. (enable_commit_resumed): New. (scoped_disable_commit_resumed::scoped_disable_commit_resumed) (scoped_disable_commit_resumed::~scoped_disable_commit_resumed) (scoped_disable_commit_resumed::reset) (scoped_disable_commit_resumed::reset_and_commit) (scoped_enable_commit_resumed::scoped_enable_commit_resumed) (scoped_enable_commit_resumed::~scoped_enable_commit_resumed): New. (proceed): Use scoped_disable_commit_resumed and maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_targets. (fetch_inferior_event): Use scoped_disable_commit_resumed. * infrun.h (struct scoped_disable_commit_resumed): New. (maybe_call_commit_resumed_all_process_targets): New. (struct scoped_enable_commit_resumed): New. * mi/mi-main.c (exec_continue): Use scoped_disable_commit_resumed. * process-stratum-target.h (class process_stratum_target): <commit_resumed_state>: New. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Change commit_resumed_state around calling commit_resumed. * remote.c (class remote_target) <commit_resume>: Rename to... <commit_resumed>: ... this. (struct stop_reply): Move up. (remote_target::commit_resume): Rename to... (remote_target::commit_resumed): ... this. Check if there is any thread pending vCont resume. (remote_target::remote_stop_ns): Generate stop replies for resumed but pending vCont threads. (remote_target::wait_ns): Add gdb_assert. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate. * target.c (target_wait, target_resume): Assert that the current process_stratum target isn't in commit-resumed state. (defer_target_commit_resume): Remove. (target_commit_resume): Remove. (target_commit_resumed): New. (make_scoped_defer_target_commit_resume): Remove. (target_stop): Assert that the current process_stratum target isn't in commit-resumed state. * target.h (struct target_ops) <commit_resume>: Rename to ... <commit_resumed>: ... this. (target_commit_resume): Remove. (target_commit_resumed): New. (make_scoped_defer_target_commit_resume): Remove. * top.c (wait_sync_command_done): Use scoped_enable_commit_resumed. [1] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCgdb/ [2] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCdbgapi Change-Id: I836135531a29214b21695736deb0a81acf8cf566
2021-03-24gdb: remove current_top_target functionSimon Marchi1-5/+0
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
2021-03-24gdb: move all "current target" wrapper implementations to target.cSimon Marchi1-185/+111
The following patch removes the current_top_target function, replacing uses with `current_inferior ()->top_target ()`. This is a problem for uses in target.h, because they don't have access to the current_inferior function and the inferior structure: target.h can't include inferior.h, otherwise that would make a cyclic inclusion. Avoid this by moving all implementations of the wrappers that call target methods with the current target to target.c. Many of them are changed from a macro to a function, which is an improvement for readability and debuggability, IMO. target_shortname and target_longname were not function-like macros, so a few adjustments are needed. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (target_shortname): Change to function declaration. (target_longname): Likewise. (target_attach_no_wait): Likewise. (target_post_attach): Likewise. (target_prepare_to_store): Likewise. (target_supports_enable_disable_tracepoint): Likewise. (target_supports_string_tracing): Likewise. (target_supports_evaluation_of_breakpoint_conditions): Likewise. (target_supports_dumpcore): Likewise. (target_dumpcore): Likewise. (target_can_run_breakpoint_commands): Likewise. (target_files_info): Likewise. (target_post_startup_inferior): Likewise. (target_insert_fork_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_remove_fork_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_insert_vfork_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_remove_vfork_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_insert_exec_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_remove_exec_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_set_syscall_catchpoint): Likewise. (target_rcmd): Likewise. (target_can_lock_scheduler): Likewise. (target_can_async_p): Likewise. (target_is_async_p): Likewise. (target_execution_direction): Likewise. (target_extra_thread_info): Likewise. (target_pid_to_exec_file): Likewise. (target_thread_architecture): Likewise. (target_find_memory_regions): Likewise. (target_make_corefile_notes): Likewise. (target_get_bookmark): Likewise. (target_goto_bookmark): Likewise. (target_stopped_by_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_have_steppable_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_can_do_single_step): Likewise. (target_insert_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_remove_watchpoint): Likewise. (target_insert_hw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_remove_hw_breakpoint): Likewise. (target_can_accel_watchpoint_condition): Likewise. (target_can_execute_reverse): Likewise. (target_get_ada_task_ptid): Likewise. (target_filesystem_is_local): Likewise. (target_trace_init): Likewise. (target_download_tracepoint): Likewise. (target_can_download_tracepoint): Likewise. (target_download_trace_state_variable): Likewise. (target_enable_tracepoint): Likewise. (target_disable_tracepoint): Likewise. (target_trace_start): Likewise. (target_trace_set_readonly_regions): Likewise. (target_get_trace_status): Likewise. (target_get_tracepoint_status): Likewise. (target_trace_stop): Likewise. (target_trace_find): Likewise. (target_get_trace_state_variable_value): Likewise. (target_save_trace_data): Likewise. (target_upload_tracepoints): Likewise. (target_upload_trace_state_variables): Likewise. (target_get_raw_trace_data): Likewise. (target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (target_set_disconnected_tracing): Likewise. (target_set_circular_trace_buffer): Likewise. (target_set_trace_buffer_size): Likewise. (target_set_trace_notes): Likewise. (target_get_tib_address): Likewise. (target_set_permissions): Likewise. (target_static_tracepoint_marker_at): Likewise. (target_static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid): Likewise. (target_traceframe_info): Likewise. (target_use_agent): Likewise. (target_can_use_agent): Likewise. (target_augmented_libraries_svr4_read): Likewise. (target_log_command): Likewise. * target.c (target_shortname): New. (target_longname): New. (target_attach_no_wait): New. (target_post_attach): New. (target_prepare_to_store): New. (target_supports_enable_disable_tracepoint): New. (target_supports_string_tracing): New. (target_supports_evaluation_of_breakpoint_conditions): New. (target_supports_dumpcore): New. (target_dumpcore): New. (target_can_run_breakpoint_commands): New. (target_files_info): New. (target_post_startup_inferior): New. (target_insert_fork_catchpoint): New. (target_remove_fork_catchpoint): New. (target_insert_vfork_catchpoint): New. (target_remove_vfork_catchpoint): New. (target_insert_exec_catchpoint): New. (target_remove_exec_catchpoint): New. (target_set_syscall_catchpoint): New. (target_rcmd): New. (target_can_lock_scheduler): New. (target_can_async_p): New. (target_is_async_p): New. (target_execution_direction): New. (target_extra_thread_info): New. (target_pid_to_exec_file): New. (target_thread_architecture): New. (target_find_memory_regions): New. (target_make_corefile_notes): New. (target_get_bookmark): New. (target_goto_bookmark): New. (target_stopped_by_watchpoint): New. (target_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint): New. (target_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint): New. (target_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New. (target_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New. (target_have_steppable_watchpoint): New. (target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint): New. (target_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint): New. (target_can_do_single_step): New. (target_insert_watchpoint): New. (target_remove_watchpoint): New. (target_insert_hw_breakpoint): New. (target_remove_hw_breakpoint): New. (target_can_accel_watchpoint_condition): New. (target_can_execute_reverse): New. (target_get_ada_task_ptid): New. (target_filesystem_is_local): New. (target_trace_init): New. (target_download_tracepoint): New. (target_can_download_tracepoint): New. (target_download_trace_state_variable): New. (target_enable_tracepoint): New. (target_disable_tracepoint): New. (target_trace_start): New. (target_trace_set_readonly_regions): New. (target_get_trace_status): New. (target_get_tracepoint_status): New. (target_trace_stop): New. (target_trace_find): New. (target_get_trace_state_variable_value): New. (target_save_trace_data): New. (target_upload_tracepoints): New. (target_upload_trace_state_variables): New. (target_get_raw_trace_data): New. (target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): New. (target_set_disconnected_tracing): New. (target_set_circular_trace_buffer): New. (target_set_trace_buffer_size): New. (target_set_trace_notes): New. (target_get_tib_address): New. (target_set_permissions): New. (target_static_tracepoint_marker_at): New. (target_static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid): New. (target_traceframe_info): New. (target_use_agent): New. (target_can_use_agent): New. (target_augmented_libraries_svr4_read): New. (target_log_command): New. * bfin-tdep.c (bfin_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): Adjust. * infrun.c (set_schedlock_func): Adjust. * mi/mi-main.c (exec_reverse_continue): Adjust. * reverse.c (exec_reverse_once): Adjust. * sh-tdep.c (sh_sw_breakpoint_from_kind): Adjust. * tui/tui-stack.c (tui_locator_window::make_status_line): Adjust. * remote-sim.c (gdbsim_target::detach): Adjust. (gdbsim_target::files_info): Adjust. Change-Id: I72ef56e9a25adeb0b91f1ad05e34c89f77ebeaa8
2021-03-24New target methods for memory tagging supportLuis Machado1-0/+41
This patch starts adding some of the generic pieces to accomodate memory tagging. We have three new target methods: - supports_memory_tagging: Checks if the target supports memory tagging. This defaults to false for targets that don't support memory tagging. - fetch_memtags: Fetches the allocation tags associated with a particular memory range [address, address + length). The default is to return 0 without returning any tags. This should only be called if memory tagging is supported. - store_memtags: Stores a set of allocation tags for a particular memory range [address, address + length). The default is to return 0. This should only be called if memory tagging is supported. gdb/ChangeLog: 2021-03-24 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org> * remote.c (remote_target) <supports_memory_tagging>: New method override. <fetch_memtags>: New method override. <store_memtags>: New method override. (remote_target::supports_memory_tagging): New method. (remote_target::fetch_memtags): New method. (remote_target::store_memtags): New method. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate. * target.h (struct target_ops) <supports_memory_tagging>: New virtual method. <fetch_memtags>: New virtual method. <store_memtags>: New virtual method. (target_supports_memory_tagging): Define. (target_fetch_memtags): Define. (target_store_memtags): Define. * target-debug.h (target_debug_print_size_t) (target_debug_print_const_gdb_byte_vector_r) (target_debug_print_gdb_byte_vector_r): New functions.
2021-03-23gdb: remote target_longnameSimon Marchi1-1/+0
I noticed it was unused. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (target_longname): Remove. Change-Id: Id4f514ea038a6d8d40e11179db587b11793cbbd8
2021-03-23gdb: remove target_is_pushed free functionSimon Marchi1-2/+0
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
2021-03-23gdb: remove push_target free functionsSimon Marchi1-5/+0
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
2021-03-23gdb: remove unpush_target free functionSimon Marchi1-6/+1
unpush_target unpushes the passed-in target from the current inferior's target stack. Calling it is therefore an implicit dependency on the current global inferior. Remove that function and make the callers use the inferior::unpush_target method directly. This sometimes allows using the inferior from the context rather than the global current inferior. target_unpusher::operator() now needs to be implemented in target.c, otherwise target.h and inferior.h both need to include each other, and that wouldn't work. gdb/ChangeLog: * target.h (unpush_target): Remove, update all callers to use `inferior::unpush_target` instead. (struct target_unpusher) <operator()>: Just declare. * target.c (unpush_target): Remove. (target_unpusher::operator()): New. Change-Id: Ia5172dfb3f373e0a75b991885b50322ca2142a8c
2021-02-24gdb: move get_section_table from exec_target to dummy_targetAndrew Burgess1-1/+5
The only target that implements target_ops::get_section_table in a meaningful way is exec_target. This target calls back into the program space to return the current global section_table. The global section table is populated whenever the user provides GDB with an executable, or when a symbol file is loaded, e.g. when a dynamic library is loaded, or when the user does add-symbol-file. I recently ran into a situation where a user, debugging a remote target, was not supplying GDB with a main executable at all. Instead the user attached to the target then did add-symbol-file, and then proceeded to debug the target. This works fine, but it was noticed that even when trust-readonly-sections was on GDB was still accessing the target to get the contents of readonly sections. The problem is that by not providing an executable there was no exec_target in the target stack, and so when GDB calls the target_ops::get_section_table function GDB ends up in dummy_target::get_section_table, which just returns NULL. What I want is that even when GDB doesn't have an exec_target in the target stack, a call to target_ops::get_section_table will still return the section_table from the current program space. When considering how to achieve this my first though was, why is the request for the section table going via the target stack at all? The set of sections loaded is a property of the program space, not the target. This is, after all, why the data is being stored in the program space. So I initially tried changing target_get_section_table so that, instead of calling into the target it just returns current_program_space->target_sections (). This would be fine except for one issue, target_bfd (from bfd-target.c). This code is used from solib-svr4.c to create a temporary target_ops structure that implements two functions target_bfd::xfer_partial and target_bfd::get_section_table. The purpose behind the code is to enable two targets, ppc64 and frv to decode function descriptors from the dynamic linker, based on the non-relocated addresses from within the dynamic linker bfd object. Both of the implemented functions in target_bfd rely on the target_bfd object holding a section table, and the ppc64 target requires that the target_bfd implement ::get_section_table. The frv target doesn't require ::get_section_table, instead it requires the ::xfer_partial. We could in theory change the ppc64 target to use the same approach as frv, however, this would be a bad idea. I believe that the frv target approach is broken. I'll explain: The frv target calls get_target_memory_unsigned to read the function descriptor. The address being read is the non-relocated address read from the dynamic linker in solib-srv4.c:enable_break. Calling get_target_memory_unsigned eventually ends up in target_xfer_partial with an object type of TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY. This will then call memory_xfer_check_region. I believe that it is quite possible that a the non-relocated addresses pulled from the dynamic linker could be in a memory region that is not readable, while the relocated addresses are in a readable memory region. If this was ever the case for the frv target then GDB would reject the attempt to read the non-relocated function pointer. In contrast the ppc64 target calls target_section_by_addr, which calls target_get_section_table, which then calls the ::get_section_table function on the target. Thus, when reflecting on target_bfd we see two functions, ::xfer_partial and ::get_section_table. The former is required by the frv target, but that target is (I think) potentially broken. While the latter is required by the ppc64 target, but this forces ::get_section_table to exist as a target_ops member function. So my original plan, have target_get_section_table NOT call a target_ops member function appears to be flawed. My next idea was to remove exec_target::get_section_table, and instead move the implementation into dummy_target::get_section_table. Currently the dummy_target implementation always returns NULL indicating no section table, but plenty of other dummy_target member functions do more than just return null values. So now, dummy_target::get_section_table returns the section table from the current program space. This allows target_bfd to remain unchanged, so ppc64 and frv should not be affected. Making this change removes the requirement for the user to provide an executable, GDB can now always access the section_table, as the dummy_target always exists in the target stack. Finally, there's a test that the target_section table is not empty in the case where the user does add-symbol-file without providing an executable. gdb/ChangeLog: * exec.c (exec_target::get_section_table): Delete member function. (section_table_read_available_memory): Use current_top_target, not just the exec_ops target. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate. * target.c (default_get_section_table): New function. * target.h (target_ops::get_section_table): Change default behaviour to call default_get_section_table. (default_get_section_table): Declare.