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2020-05-20PR25993, read of freed memoryAlan Modra4-12/+24
ldmain.c:add_archive_element copies file name pointers from the bfd to a lang_input_statement_type. input->filename = abfd->filename; input->local_sym_name = abfd->filename; This results in stale pointers when twiddling the bfd filename in places like the pe ld after_open. So don't free the bfd filename, and make copies using bfd_alloc memory that won't result in small memory leaks that annoy memory checkers. PR 25993 bfd/ * archive.c (_bfd_get_elt_at_filepos): Don't strdup filename, use bfd_set_filename. * elfcode.h (_bfd_elf_bfd_from_remote_memory): Likewise. * mach-o.c (bfd_mach_o_fat_member_init): Likewise. * opncls.c (bfd_fopen, bfd_openstreamr, bfd_openr_iovec, bfd_openw), (bfd_create): Likewise. (_bfd_delete_bfd): Don't free filename. (bfd_set_filename): Copy filename param to bfd_alloc'd memory, return pointer to the copy or NULL on alloc fail. * vms-lib.c (_bfd_vms_lib_get_module): Free newname and test result of bfd_set_filename. * bfd-in2.h: Regenerate. gdb/ * solib-darwin.c (darwin_bfd_open): Don't strdup pathname for bfd_set_filename. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_bfd_open): Use std::string for name passed to bfd_set_filename. * symfile-mem.c (add_vsyscall_page): Likewise for string passed to symbol_file_add_from_memory. (symbol_file_add_from_memory): Make name param a const char* and don't strdup. ld/ * emultempl/pe.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Don't copy other_bfd_filename for bfd_set_filename, and test result of bfd_set_filename call. Don't create a new is->filename, simply copy from bfd filename. Free new_name after bfd_set_filename. * emultempl/pep.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Likewise.
2020-05-20Use bfd_get_filename throughout gdbAlan Modra8-12/+25
This patch makes gdb use the inline accessor for all bfd->filename read accesses. * coff-pe-read.c (read_pe_exported_syms): Use bfd_get_filename rather than accessing bfd->filename directly. * dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_static_probe_ops::get_probes): Likewise, and use bfd_section_name. * dwarf2/frame.c (decode_frame_entry): Likewise. * exec.c (exec_set_section_address): Likewise. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_bfd_open): Likewise. * stap-probe.c (get_stap_base_address): Likewise. * symfile.c (reread_symbols): Likewise.
2020-05-19Restore missing Rust testTom Tromey2-1/+5
An earlier patch inadvertently broke a Rust test. This restores it. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com> * gdb.rust/simple.exp: Restore missing test result.
2020-05-19[gdb/testsuite] Fix typo in gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.expTom de Vries2-1/+5
Fix intial -> initial typo. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-19 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: Fix typo.
2020-05-19Fix duplicate tests in gdb.rustTom Tromey2-8/+15
gdb.rust complains about some duplicate test names. This patch fixes this in a straightforward way. 2020-05-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com> * gdb.rust/simple.exp: Add some test descriptions. (test_one_slice): Use with_test_prefix.
2020-05-19Update call to target_fileio_openTom Tromey2-1/+5
An earlier patch changed target_fileio_open, but missed a caller. This patch fixes it. 2020-05-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com> * sparc64-tdep.c (adi_tag_fd): Update call to target_fileio_open.
2020-05-19gdb: fix off-by-one error in quirk_rust_enumSimon Marchi2-1/+5
Found by inspection, so I don't have a test for it (I don't think it would be easy to have this bug cause a failure reliably). We allocate space for N fields into `new_fields`, then memcpy N fields at `new_fields + 1`. This overflows the allocated buffer by one field. Fix it by allocating `N + 1` fields. gdb/ChangeLog: * dwarf2/read.c (quirk_rust_enum): Allocate enough fields.
2020-05-19Make exec-file-mismatch compare build IDsPedro Alves7-36/+100
The patch makes GDB do exec-file-mismatch validation by comparing build IDs instead of the current method of comparing filenames. Currently, the exec-file-mismatch feature simply compares filenames to decide whether the exec file loaded in gdb and the exec file the target reports is running match. This causes false positives when remote debugging, because it'll often be the case that the paths in the host and the target won't match. And of course misses the case of the files having the same name but being actually different files (e.g., different builds). This also broke many testcases when running against gdbserver, causing tests to be skipped like (here native-extended-gdbserver): (gdb) run Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink-filelink warning: Mismatch between current exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink-filelink and automatically determined exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask" Load new symbol table from "/home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink"? (y or n) UNTESTED: gdb.base/argv0-symlink.exp: could not run to main or to fail like (here native-gdbserver): (gdb) spawn /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../gdbserver/gdbserver --once localhost:2346 /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/te stsuite/outputs/gdb.btrace/buffer-size/skip_btrace_tests-19968.x Process /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.btrace/buffer-size/skip_btrace_tests-19968.x created; pid = 20040 Listening on port 2346 target remote localhost:2346 Remote debugging using localhost:2346 warning: Mismatch between current exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/temp/19968/skip_btrace_tests-19968.x and automatically determined exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.btrace/buffer-size/skip_btrace_tests-19968.x exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask" Load new symbol table from "/home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.btrace/buffer-size/skip_btrace_tests-19968.x"? (y or n) Quit (gdb) UNSUPPORTED: gdb.btrace/buffer-size.exp: target does not support record-btrace The former case is about GDB not realizing the two files are the same, because one of the them is a symlink to the other. The latter case is about GDB realizing that one file is a copy of the other. Over the years, the toolchain has settled on build ID matching being the canonical method to match core dumps to executables, and executables with no debug info to their debug info. This patch makes us use build IDs to match the running image of a binary with its version loaded in gdb, which may or may not have debug info. This is very much like the core dump/executable matching. The change to gdb_bfd_open is necessary to get rid of the "transfers from remote targets can be slow" warning when we open the remote file to read its build ID: (gdb) r Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break Reading /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink from remote target... warning: File transfers from remote targets can be slow. Use "set sysroot" to access files locally instead. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ warning: Mismatch between current exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break and automatically determined exec-file /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask" Load new symbol table from "/home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/argv0-symlink/argv0-symlink"? (y or n) While trying this out, I was worried that bfd would read a lot of stuff from the binary in order to extract the build ID, making it potentially slow, but turns out we don't read all that much. Maybe a couple hundred bytes, and most of it seemingly is the read-ahead cache. So I'm not worried about that. Otherwise I'd consider whether a new qXfer:buildid:read would be better. But I'm happy that we seemingly don't need to worry about it. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * NEWS (set exec-file-mismatch): Adjust entry. * exec.c: Include "build-id.h". (validate_exec_file): Try to match build IDs instead of filenames. * gdb_bfd.c (struct gdb_bfd_open_closure): New. (gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_open): Adjust to use gdb_bfd_open_closure and pass down 'warn_if_slow'. (gdb_bfd_open): Add 'warn_if_slow' parameter. Use gdb_bfd_open_closure to pass it down. * gdb_bfd.h (gdb_bfd_open): Add 'warn_if_slow' parameter. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2020-05-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.texinfo (Attach): Update exec-file-mismatch description to mention build IDs. (Separate Debug Files): Add "build id" anchor.
2020-05-19Eliminate target_fileio_open_warn_if_slowPedro Alves4-46/+26
This basically makes target_fileio_open_1 extern, renamed to target_fileio_open, and eliminates the current target_fileio_open_warn_if_slow and target_fileio_open. A following parameter will want to change gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_open, the only caller of target_fileio_open_warn_if_slow, to pass down "warn_if_slow" true/false from the caller, instead of hardcoding "warn_if_slow" true. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb_bfd.c (gdb_bfd_iovec_fileio_open): Adjust. * target.c (target_fileio_open_1): Rename to target_fileio_open and make extern. Use bool. (target_fileio_open, target_fileio_open_warn_if_slow): Delete. (target_fileio_read_alloc_1): Adjust. * target.h (target_fileio_open): Add 'warn_if_slow' parameter. (target_fileio_open_warn_if_slow): Delete declaration.
2020-05-19Default gdb_bfd_open's fd parameter to -1Pedro Alves10-13/+19
A following patch will add one more defaulted parameter. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb_bfd.h: (gdb_bfd_open): Default to 'fd' parameter to -1. Adjust all callers.
2020-05-19gdb: fix -Wtautological-overlap-compare error in h8300-tdep.cYoshinori Sato2-6/+12
Compiling with clang 11 gives us: CXX h8300-tdep.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/h8300-tdep.c:225:21: error: overlapping comparisons always evaluate to false [-Werror,-Wtautological-overlap-compare] if (disp < 0 && disp > 0xffffff) ~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/h8300-tdep.c:203:17: error: overlapping comparisons always evaluate to false [-Werror,-Wtautological-overlap-compare] if (disp < 0 && disp > 0xffffff) ~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/h8300-tdep.c:184:17: error: overlapping comparisons always evaluate to false [-Werror,-Wtautological-overlap-compare] if (disp < 0 && disp > 0xffffff) ~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Indeed, disp (of type LONGEST) can't be less than 0 and greater than 0xffffff. Fix it by changing the way we check if disp is negative. Check the sign bit of disp, which is a 24-bit number. gdb/ChangeLog: * h8300-tdep.c (h8300_is_argument_spill): Change how we check whether disp is negative.
2020-05-19gdb: make symfile_segment_data::segment_info an std::vectorSimon Marchi4-8/+15
Change the symfile_segment_data::segment_info array to be an std::vector. No functional changes are expected. gdb/ChangeLog: * symfile.h (struct symfile_segment_data) <~symfile_segment_data>: Remove. <segment_info>: Change to std::vector. * symfile.c (default_symfile_segments): Update. * elfread.c (elf_symfile_segments): Update.
2020-05-19gdb: use std::vector to store segments in symfile_segment_dataSimon Marchi6-41/+45
Instead of maintaining two vectors, I added a small `segment` class which holds both the base address and size of one segment and replaced the two `segment_bases` and `segment_sizes` arrays with a single vector. The rest of the changes are straightforward, no behavior changes are expected. gdb/ChangeLog: * symfile.h (struct symfile_segment_data) <struct segment>: New. <segments>: New. <segment_bases, segment_sizes>: Remove. * symfile.c (default_symfile_segments): Update. * elfread.c (elf_symfile_segments): Update. * remote.c (remote_target::get_offsets): Update. * solib-target.c (solib_target_relocate_section_addresses): Update.
2020-05-19gdb: allocate symfile_segment_data with newSimon Marchi7-45/+55
- Allocate this structure with new instead of XNEW, use a unique pointer to manage its lifetime. - Change a few functions to return a unique pointer instead of a plain pointer. - Change free_symfile_segment_data to be symfile_segment_data's destructor. gdb/ChangeLog: * symfile.h (struct symfile_segment_data): Initialize fields. <~symfile_segment_data>: Add. (symfile_segment_data_up): New. (struct sym_fns) <sym_segments>: Return a symfile_segment_data_up. (default_symfile_segments): Return a symfile_segment_data_up. (free_symfile_segment_data): Remove. (get_symfile_segment_data): Return a symfile_segment_data_up. * symfile.c (default_symfile_segments): Likewise. (get_symfile_segment_data): Likewise. (free_symfile_segment_data): Remove. (symfile_find_segment_sections): Update. * elfread.c (elf_symfile_segments): Return a symfile_segment_data_up. * remote.c (remote_target::get_offsets): Update. * solib-target.c (solib_target_relocate_section_addresses): Update. * symfile-debug.c (debug_sym_segments): Return a symfile_segment_data_up.
2020-05-18Avoid short i386 register names on Solaris/x86 [PR25981]Rainer Orth2-4/+20
This is the 32-bit companion to Remove unused ps_lgetLDT etc. on Solaris/x86 [PR25981] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168713.html A 32-bit-default gdb fails to compile with the updated <sys/regset.h>. While it is also affected by the lack of a GS definition, which the compantion patch above fixes, it also fails to compile i386-sol2-nat.c like this /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/git/gdb/i386-sol2-nat.c:181:3: error: 'EAX' was not declared in this scope 181 | EAX, ECX, EDX, EBX, | ^~~ and several more. While this could be fixed by either including <ucontext.h> here or provding fallback definitions of the register macros, I chose to do what the 64-bit-default code in the same file (amd64_sol2_gregset32_reg_offset[]) does, namely just hardcode the numeric values instead. They are part of the ABI and thus guaranteed not to change. With this patch, a i386-pc-solaris2.11 configuration on master compiles again, however, it doesn't work. However, I could successfully test it on the gdb-9 branch. Compiling and testing proved to be messy, unfortunately: * For one, Solaris <sys/procfs.h> and largefile support used to be mutually exclusive (fixed in Solaris 11.4 and Illumos), which was exacerbated by the fact that g++ predefines _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 since GCC 9.1.0. For now I've worked around this by adding -U_FILE_OFFSET_BITS to CXXFLAGS and configuring with --disable-largefile. I hope to clean this up in a future patch. * gdb still defaults to startup-with-shell on. However, /bin/bash is a 64-bit executable which cannot be debugged by a 32-bit gdb. I hacked around that part by pointing $SHELL at a 32-bit bash before running make check. PR build/25981 * i386-sol2-nat.c [PR_MODEL_NATIVE != PR_MODEL_LP64] (regmap): Hardcode register numbers.
2020-05-18Remove unused ps_lgetLDT etc. on Solaris/x86 [PR25981]Rainer Orth4-117/+10
As reported in PR build/25981, a future Solaris 11.4 update will soon remove the short i386 register names like SS etc. from <sys/regset.h>. They could leak into user code (e.g. via <signal.h> -> <sys/signal.h> -> <sys/ucontext.h>) and pollute the user namespace. Affected code would have a hard time avoiding the issue: LLVM is one of those. While the short names are required to be present by the i386 psABI, that document only demands that they exist in <ucontext.h>, which is what the upcoming update assures. With this change, in a 64-bit-default configuration, procfs.c fails to compile on Solaris/x86: /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/git/gdb/procfs.c: In function 'ssd* procfs_find_LDT_entry(ptid_t)': /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/git/gdb/procfs.c:1643:18: error: 'GS' was not declared in this scope 1643 | key = (*gregs)[GS] & 0xffff; | ^~ make[2]: *** [Makefile:1607: procfs.o] Error 1 Initially I meant to provide a definition using the planned replacement macro, but closer inspection revealed a better way. procfs_find_LDT_entry and its helper proc_get_LDT_entry are only used to implement ps_lgetLDT, one of the callback functions required by libthread_db.so.1 (cf. <proc_service.h>). While that function is still documented as being required even in Solaris 11.4, I found that calls to it had been removed long ago in Solaris 9, so just removing the three functions above is the easiest fix. The following patch does just that. It compiled successfully on amd64-pc-solaris2.11, however, as reported in PR gdb/25939, master is completely broken on Solaris since the multi-target patch. The patch applies cleanly to the gdb-9 branch and there I could test it successfully. PR build/25981 * procfs.c [(__i386__ || __x86_64__) && sun] (proc_get_LDT_entry, procfs_find_LDT_entry): Remove. * procfs.h [(__i386__ || __x86_64__) && sun] (struct ssd, procfs_find_LDT_entry): Remove. * sol-thread.c [(__i386__ || __x86_64__) && sun] (ps_lgetLDT): Remove.
2020-05-18[gdb/testsuite] Use with_test_prefix in gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.expTom de Vries2-18/+28
When running test-case gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp all passes are unique, but fails might not be. Fix this by using with_test_prefix. Tested on x86_64-linux. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.base/gdb-caching-proc.exp: Use with_test_prefix.
2020-05-17Stop considering hw and sw breakpoint locations duplicates (PR gdb/25741)Pedro Alves4-86/+267
In the following conditions: - A target with hardware breakpoints available, and - A target that uses software single stepping, - An instruction at ADDRESS loops back to itself, Now consider the following steps: 1. The user places a hardware breakpoint at ADDRESS (an instruction that loops to itself), 2. The inferior runs and hits the breakpoint at ADDRESS, 3. The user tells GDB to 'continue'. In #3 when the user tells GDB to continue, GDB first disables the hardware breakpoint at ADDRESS, and then inserts a software single-step breakpoint at ADDRESS. The original user-created breakpoint was a hardware breakpoint, while the single-step breakpoint will be a software breakpoint. GDB continues and immediately hits the software single-step breakpoint. GDB then deletes the software single-step breakpoint by calling delete_single_step_breakpoints, which eventually calls delete_breakpoint, which, once the breakpoint (and its locations) are deleted, calls update_global_location_list. During update_global_location_list GDB spots that we have an old location (the software single step breakpoint location) that is inserted, but being deleted, and a location (the original hardware breakpoint) at the same address which we are keeping, but which is not currently inserted, GDB then calls breakpoint_locations_match on these two locations. Currently the locations do match, and so GDB calls swap_insertion which swaps the "inserted" state of the two locations. The user created hardware breakpoint is marked as inserted, while the GDB internal software single step breakpoint is now marked as not inserted. After this GDB returns through the call stack and leaves delete_single_step_breakpoints. After this GDB continues with its normal "stopping" process, as part of this stopping process GDB removes all the breakpoints from the target. Due to the swap it is now the user-created hardware breakpoint that is marked as inserted, so it is this breakpoint GDB tries to remove. The problem is that GDB inserted the software single-step breakpoint as a software breakpoint, but is now trying to remove the hardware breakpoint. The problem is removing a software breakpoint is very different to removing a hardware breakpoint, this could result is some undetected undefined behaviour, or as in the original bug report (PR gdb/25741), could result in the target throwing an error. With "set breakpoint always-inserted on", we can easily reproduce this against GDBserver. E.g.: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m400700,40#28...Packet received: 89e58b.... Sending packet: $m400736,1#fe...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 1 at 0x400736: file threads.c, line 57. Sending packet: $Z1,400736,1#48...Packet received: OK Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 1 also set at pc 0x400736. Sending packet: $m400736,1#fe...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 2 at 0x400736: file threads.c, line 57. (gdb) del Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y Sending packet: $z0,400736,1#67...Packet received: E01 warning: Error removing breakpoint 2 This patch adds a testcase that does exactly that. Trying to enhance GDB to handle this scenario while continuing to avoid inserting redundant software and hardware breakpoints at the same address turns out futile, because, given non-stop and breakpoints always-inserted, if the user: #1 - inserts a hw breakpoint, then #2 - inserts a sw breakpoint at the same address, and then #3 - removes the original hw breakpoint, GDB would have to make sure to insert the sw breakpoint before removing the hw breakpoint, to avoid running threads missing the breakpoint. I.e., there's always going to be a window where a target needs to be able to handle both sw and a hw breakpoints installed at the same address. You can see more detailed description of that issue here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-April/167738.html So the fix here is to just stop considering software breakpoints and hw breakpoints duplicates, and let GDB insert sw and hw breakpoints at the same address. The central change is to make breakpoint_locations_match consider the location's type too. There are several other changes necessary to actually make that that work correctly, however: - We need to handle the duplicates detection better. Take a look at the loop at the tail end of update_global_location_list. Currently, because breakpoint locations aren't sorted by type, we can end up with, at the same address, a sw break, then a hw break, then a sw break, etc. The result is that that second sw break won't be considered a duplicate of the first sw break. Seems like we already handle that incorrectly for range breakpoints. - The "set breakpoint auto-hw on" handling is moved out of insert_bp_location to update_global_location_list, before the duplicates determination. Moving "set breakpoint auto-hw off" handling as well and downgrading it to a warning+'disabling the location' was considered too, but in the end discarded, because we want to error out with internal and momentary breakpoints, like software single-step breakpoints. Disabling such locations at update_global_location_list time would make GDB lose control of the inferior. - In update_breakpoint_locations, the logic of matching old locations with new locations, in the have_ambiguous_names case, is updated to still consider sw vs hw locations the same. - Review all ALL_BP_LOCATIONS_AT_ADDR uses, and update those that might need to be updated, and update comments for those that don't. Note that that macro walks all locations at a given address, and doesn't call breakpoint_locations_match. The result against GDBserver (with "set breakpoint condition-evaluation host" to avoid seeing confusing reinsertions) is: (gdb) hbreak main Sending packet: $m400736,1#fe...Packet received: 48 Hardware assisted breakpoint 1 at 0x400736: file main.c, line 57. Sending packet: $Z1,400736,1#48...Packet received: OK (gdb) b main Note: breakpoint 1 also set at pc 0x400736. Sending packet: $m400736,1#fe...Packet received: 48 Breakpoint 4 at 0x400736: file main.c, line 57. Sending packet: $Z0,400736,1#47...Packet received: OK (gdb) del 3 Sending packet: $z1,400736,1#68...Packet received: OK gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com> Keno Fischer <keno@juliacomputing.com> PR gdb/25741 * breakpoint.c (build_target_condition_list): Update comments. (build_target_command_list): Update comments and skip matching locations. (insert_bp_location): Move "set breakpoint auto-hw on" handling to a separate function. Simplify "set breakpoint auto-hw off" handling. (insert_breakpoints): Update comment. (tracepoint_locations_match): New parameter. For breakpoints, compare location types too, if the caller wants to. (handle_automatic_hardware_breakpoints): New functions. (bp_location_is_less_than): Also sort by location type and hardware breakpoint length. (update_global_location_list): Handle "set breakpoint auto-hw on" here. (update_breakpoint_locations): Ask breakpoint_locations_match to ignore location types. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/25741 * gdb.base/hw-sw-break-same-address.exp: New file.
2020-05-16Fix gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp with native-gdbserverPedro Alves2-0/+12
The new exec-file-mismatch feature reveals that when running gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp against --target_board=native-gdbserver, we've been starting gdbserver with the wrong program: (gdb) spawn /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../gdbserver/gdbserver --once localhost:2347 /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/te stsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-re-run/multi-re-run-2 Process /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-re-run/multi-re-run-2 created; pid = 6280 Listening on port 2347 target remote localhost:2347 Remote debugging using localhost:2347 warning: Mismatch between current exec-file /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-re-run/multi-re-run-1 and automatically determined exec-file /home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-re-run/multi-re-run-2 exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask" Load new symbol table from "/home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-re-run/multi-re-run-2"? (y or n) Quit (gdb) FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp: re_run_inf=1: iter=1: running to all_started in runto The problem is that gdb_reload uses the last loaded file as binary to spawn, but we load the program for inferior 2 and then switch to inferior 1 and run it, so the last loaded file is the program for inferior 2. Fix this by tweaking last_loaded_file. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.multi/multi-re-run.exp (test_re_run): Switch LAST_LOADED_FILE accordingly.
2020-05-16gdb: remove TYPE_NAME macroSimon Marchi46-331/+334
Remove `TYPE_NAME`, changing all the call sites to use `type::name` directly. This is quite a big diff, but this was mostly done using sed and coccinelle. A few call sites were done by hand. gdb/ChangeLog: * gdbtypes.h (TYPE_NAME): Remove. Change all cal sites to use type::name instead.
2020-05-16gdb: add type::name / type::set_nameSimon Marchi21-99/+114
Add the `name` and `set_name` methods on `struct type`, in order to remove the `TYPE_NAME` macro. In this patch, the `TYPE_NAME` macro is changed to use `type::name`, so all the call sites that are used to set the type name are changed to use `type::set_name`. The next patch will remove `TYPE_NAME` completely. gdb/ChangeLog: * gdbtypes.h (struct type) <name, set_name>: New methods. (TYPE_CODE): Use type::name. Change all call sites used to set the name to use type::set_name instead.
2020-05-16Remove ALL_UISTom Tromey4-7/+16
Continuing my goal of removing the "ALL_*" iterator macros, this removes ALL_UIS, replacing it with an iterator adaptor. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-16 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * top.c (quit_force): Update. * infrun.c (handle_no_resumed): Update. * top.h (all_uis): New function. (ALL_UIS): Remove.
2020-05-16gdb: fix -Wtautological-overlap-compare warning in mips-linux-tdep.cSimon Marchi2-4/+6
When building with clang 11, I get: CXX mips-linux-tdep.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-linux-tdep.c:643:30: error: overlapping comparisons always evaluate to true [-Werror,-Wtautological-overlap-compare] if (insn != 0x03e07821 || insn != 0x03e07825) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/mips-linux-tdep.c:636:30: error: overlapping comparisons always evaluate to true [-Werror,-Wtautological-overlap-compare] if (insn != 0x03e0782d || insn != 0x03e07825) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Indeed, given two different values, `insn` will always be different to one of them, and these conditions always be true. This code is meant to return if `insn` isn't one of these two values, so the `||` should be replaced with `&&`. gdb/ChangeLog: * mips-linux-tdep.c (mips_linux_in_dynsym_stub): Fix condition.
2020-05-16Fix IA64 GNU/Linux buildPedro Alves2-3/+12
This commit should fix: ../../gdb/ia64-linux-nat.c: In function ‘void enable_watchpoints_in_psr(ptid_t)’: ../../gdb/ia64-linux-nat.c:535:56: error: no matching function for call to ‘get_thread_regcache(ptid_t&)’ struct regcache *regcache = get_thread_regcache (ptid); ^ In file included from ../../gdb/ia64-linux-nat.c:25:0: ../../gdb/regcache.h:35:25: note: candidate: regcache* get_thread_regcache(process_stratum_target*, ptid_t) extern struct regcache *get_thread_regcache (process_stratum_target *target, ^ ../../gdb/regcache.h:35:25: note: candidate expects 2 arguments, 1 provided ../../gdb/regcache.h:39:25: note: candidate: regcache* get_thread_regcache(thread_info*) extern struct regcache *get_thread_regcache (thread_info *thread); ^ ../../gdb/regcache.h:39:25: note: no known conversion for argument 1 from ‘ptid_t’ to ‘thread_info*’ gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * ia64-linux-nat.c (ia64_linux_nat_target) <enable_watchpoints_in_psr(ptid_t)>: Declare method. (enable_watchpoints_in_psr): Now a method of ia64_linux_nat_target.
2020-05-15gdb: remove unnecessary struct typedef in sparc64-tdep.cSimon Marchi2-4/+9
When building with clang 11, I get: CXX sparc64-tdep.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:89:15: error: anonymous non-C-compatible type given name for linkage purposes by typedef declaration; add a tag name here [-Werror,-Wnon-c-typedef-for-linkage] typedef struct ^ adi_stat_t /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:103:16: note: type is not C-compatible due to this default member initializer int tag_fd = 0; ^ /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:111:3: note: type is given name 'adi_stat_t' for linkage purposes by this typedef declaration } adi_stat_t; ^ The typedef is not needed in C++ anyway, just remove them. gdb/ChangeLog: * sparc64-tdep.c (adi_stat_t): Remove typedef (leaving struct). (sparc64_adi_info): Likewise.
2020-05-15Remove lookup_objfile_from_blockTom Tromey5-41/+41
lookup_objfile_from_block mostly duplicates the functionality of block_objfile, but in a less efficient way. This patch removes this function and changes the callers to use block_objfile instead. Tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * symtab.c (lookup_language_this, lookup_symbol_aux): Use block_objfile. (lookup_objfile_from_block): Remove. (lookup_symbol_in_block, lookup_symbol_in_static_block) (lookup_global_symbol): Use block_objfile. * symtab.h (lookup_objfile_from_block): Don't declare. * printcmd.c (clear_dangling_display_expressions): Use block_objfile. * parse.c (operator_check_standard): Use block_objfile.
2020-05-15Remove allocate_symbol et alTom Tromey11-71/+52
This removes allocate_symbol, allocate_template_symbol, and initialize_objfile_symbol in favor of changing the default values for symbol members, and updating the one per-arch caller. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * language.c (language_alloc_type_symbol): Set SYMBOL_SECTION. * symtab.c (initialize_objfile_symbol): Remove. (allocate_symbol): Remove. (allocate_template_symbol): Remove. * dwarf2/read.c (fixup_go_packaging): Use "new". (new_symbol): Use "new". (read_variable): Don't call initialize_objfile_symbol. Use "new". (read_func_scope): Use "new". * xcoffread.c (process_xcoff_symbol): Don't call initialize_objfile_symbol. (SYMBOL_DUP): Remove. * coffread.c (process_coff_symbol, coff_read_enum_type): Use "new". * symtab.h (allocate_symbol, initialize_objfile_symbol) (allocate_template_symbol): Don't declare. (struct symbol): Add copy constructor. Change defaults. * jit.c (finalize_symtab): Use "new". * ctfread.c (ctf_add_enum_member_cb, new_symbol, ctf_add_var_cb): Use "new". * stabsread.c (patch_block_stabs, define_symbol, read_enum_type) (common_block_end): Use "new". * mdebugread.c (parse_symbol): Use "new". (new_symbol): Likewise.
2020-05-15Update NEWS and documentation for help and apropos changes.Philippe Waroquiers4-10/+29
gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * NEWS: Mention changes to help and apropos. gdb/doc/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.texinfo (Help): Document the help and apropos changes. (Aliases): Document new meaning of -a abbreviation flag.
2020-05-15Ensure class_alias is only used for user-defined aliases.Philippe Waroquiers11-32/+81
This commit finally does the (small) change that started this patch series. It ensures that the class_alias is only used for user-defined aliases. So, the few GDB pre-defined aliases that were using the 'class_alias' class are now using a real help class, typically the class of the aliased command. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * command.h (enum command_class): Improve comments, document that class_alias is for user-defined aliases, give the class name for each class, remove unused class_xdb. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_com_alias): Document THECLASS intended usage. * breakpoint.c (_initialize_breakpoint): Replace class_alias by a precise class. * infcmd.c (_initialize_infcmd): Likewise. * reverse.c (_initialize_reverse): Likewise. * stack.c (_initialize_stack): Likewise. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (_initialize_tracepoint): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.base/alias.exp: Verify 'help aliases' shows user defined aliases.
2020-05-15Fix/improve 'apropos' outputPhilippe Waroquiers4-30/+71
Similarly to 'help CLASS', apropos possibly shows several times the same help (for the command and for each of its aliases). This patch changes 'apropos' so that the help for a command and all its aliases is shown once. So, apropos_cmd now skips all aliases/abbreviations, as these are printed as part of the help of the aliased command. When 'apropos' prints the help of a command, function 'help_cmd' now unconditionally print the command name and its possible aliases (as we must indicate to the user the command/aliases for which the help is printed). When 'help somecommand' prints the help of a command, if the command is not aliased, the command name is not printed (to avoid a useless first line), but if it has aliases, then the command name and all its aliases are now printed. In addition to provide to the user the choice of the best way to type a command, it also avoids the strange behaviour that the output of 'help somealias' does not mention somealias. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-decode.c (apropos_cmd): Produce output for aliases when their aliased command is traversed. (help_cmd): Add fput_command_names_styled call to output command name and aliases when command has an alias. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.base/help.exp: Test apropos and help for commands having aliases. Fixed comments not starting with an upper-case letter or not finishing with a dot.
2020-05-15Fix/improve 'help CLASS' outputPhilippe Waroquiers6-33/+118
Currently, help CLASS possibly shows several times the same help, as it shows it once for the command, and once for each alias. The final objective of this patch series is to have class_alias used only for user defined aliases, not anymore for aliases predefined by GDB. The command 'help aliases' will then only show the user defined aliases. So, the idea is that GDB predefined aliases will be shown together with their aliased command. This commit changes 'help CLASS' so that a command is shown once in the output, with all its aliases. This ensures: * that the user has only to read once the same help text * and sees the command and all its aliases in a glance, a.o. allowing the user to choose the preferred way (e.g. the shortest one, or the most mnemonic one) to type the command. For example, the old output: (gdb) help stack ... List of commands: backtrace -- Print backtrace of all stack frames, or innermost COUNT frames. bt -- Print backtrace of all stack frames, or innermost COUNT frames. ... (note that 'where' is not shown in this output) becomes (gdb) help stack ... List of commands: backtrace, where, bt -- Print backtrace of all stack frames, or innermost COUNT frames. ... The output layout chosen is to have the command first, followed by all its aliases separated by a comma. Note that the command and alias names are title-styled. For sure, other layouts could be discussed, but this one is IMO readable and compact. The function 'help_cmd_list' can be simplified by removing the prefix argument, as the prefixname of a command can now be retrieved in the GDB command tree structure. This also fixes the fact that 'help aliases' wrongly shows a long list of (non-alias) when defining an alias for a prefix command. For example, after: (gdb) alias montre = show then (gdb) help aliases shows hundreds of sub-commands starting with the non aliased command, such as: montre -- Generic command for showing things about the debugger. show ada -- Generic command for showing Ada-specific settings. show ada print-signatures -- Show whether the output of formal ... .... 'help_cmd_list' is also made static, as it is only used inside cli-decode.c. Note that the 'help CLASS' is somewhat broken, in the sense that it sometimes shows too many commands (commands not belonging to CLASS) and sometimes shows not enough commands (not showing some commands belonging to CLASS). For example, 'help breakpoints' shows the command 'disable pretty-printer' and 'disable unwinder', not related to breakpoints. On the other end, 'help stack' does not show 'disable unwinder' while 'disable unwinder' is defined in unwinders.py as belonging to class_stack. Fixing the missing commands is easy to do, but fixing the excess commands is not straightforward, as many subcommands have a class 'no_class' or 'all_class'. Possibly, some of this might be improved/fixed in another patch series. With this patch series, the 'abbrev flag' has as only remaining purpose to avoid having the abbreviation alias appearing in the completion list, so change 'help alias' accordingly. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-decode.h (help_cmd_list): Remove declaration. * cli/cli-decode.c (help_cmd_list): Declare as static, remove prefix argument, use bool for recurse arg, rework to show the aliases of a command together with the command. (fput_command_name_styled, fput_command_names_styled): New functions. (print_help_for_command): Remove prefix arg, use bool for recurse arg, use fput_command_name_styled. (help_list, help_all): Update callers to remove prefix arg and use bool recurse. * cli/cli-cmds.c (_initialize_cli_cmds): Update alias_command doc. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.base/alias.exp: Update help output check.
2020-05-15Fix inconsistent output of prefix and bugs in 'show' commandPhilippe Waroquiers8-23/+40
cmd_show_list function implements the 'show' command. cmd_show_list output is inconsistent: it sometimes shows a prefix and sometimes does not. For example, in the below, you see that there is a prefix before each value, except for 'enabled'. (gdb) show style style address background: The "address" style background color is: none style address foreground: The "address" style foreground color is: blue style address intensity: The "address" style display intensity is: normal enabled: CLI output styling is enabled. style filename background: The "filename" style background color is: none ... There are other inconsistencies or bugs e.g. in the below we see twice insn-number-max, once with a prefix and once without prefix : last line, just before the value of instruction-history-size which is itself without prefix. (gdb) show record record btrace bts buffer-size: The record/replay bts buffer size is 65536. record btrace cpu: btrace cpu is 'auto'. record btrace pt buffer-size: The record/replay pt buffer size is 16384. record btrace replay-memory-access: Replay memory access is read-only. record full insn-number-max: Record/replay buffer limit is 200000. record full memory-query: Whether query if PREC cannot record memory change of next instruction is off. record full stop-at-limit: Whether record/replay stops when record/replay buffer becomes full is on. function-call-history-size: Number of functions to print in "record function-call-history" is 10. insn-number-max: instruction-history-size: Number of instructions to print in "record instruction-history" is 10. (gdb) Also, some values are output several times due to some aliases, so avoid outputting duplicated values by skipping all aliases. Now that the command structure has a correct 'back-pointer' from a command to its prefix command, we can simplify cmd_show_list by removing its prefix argument and at the same time fix the output inconsistencies and bugs. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-setshow.h (cmd_show_list): Remove prefix argument. * cli/cli-decode.c (do_show_prefix_cmd): Likewise. * command.h (cmd_show_list): Likewise. * dwarf2/index-cache.c (show_index_cache_command): Likewise. * cli/cli-setshow.c (cmd_show_list): Use the prefix to produce the output. Skip aliases. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.base/default.exp: Update output following fixes.
2020-05-15command-def-selftests.c: detect missing or wrong prefix cmd in subcommands.Philippe Waroquiers2-2/+41
This test revealed a number of problems that are fixed in the previous commit. 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * unittests/command-def-selftests.c (traverse_command_structure): Verify all commands of a list have the same prefix command and that only the top cmdlist commands have a null prefix.
2020-05-15Fix the problems reported by prefix check of command-def-selftests.cPhilippe Waroquiers5-41/+71
The next commit updates command-def-selftests.c to detect missing or wrong prefix commands in a list of subcommands. This command structure selftest detects a series of problems that are fixed by this commit. Many commands have a null prefix command, e.g. (gdb) maintenance selftest command_str Running selftest command_structure_invariants. list 0x560417949cb8 reachable via prefix 'append binary '. command 'memory' has null prefixcmd list 0x560417949cb8 reachable via prefix 'append binary '. command 'value' has null prefixcmd ... Most of these are fixed by the following changes: * do_add_cmd searches the prefix command having the list in which the command is added. This ensures that a command defined after its prefix command gets the correct prefix command. * Due to the GDB initialization order, a GDB file can define a subcommand before the prefix command is defined. So, have add_prefix_cmd calling a new recursive function 'update_prefix_field_of_prefix_commands' to set the prefix command of all sub-commands that are now reachable from this newly defined prefix command. Note that this recursive call replaces the function 'set_prefix_cmd' that was providing a partial solution to this problem. Following that, 2 python commands (defined after all the other GDB commands) got a wrong prefix command, e.g. "info frame-filter" has as prefix command the "i" alias of "info". This is fixed by having lookup_cmd_for_prefixlist returning the aliased command rather than the alias. After that, one remaining problem: (gdb) maintenance selftest command_str Running selftest command_structure_invariants. list 0x55f320272298 reachable via prefix 'set remote '. command 'system-call-allowed' has null prefixcmd Self test failed: self-test failed at ../../classfix/gdb/unittests/command-def-selftests.c:196 Ran 1 unit tests, 1 failed (gdb) Caused by initialize_remote_fileio that was taking the address of its arguments remote_set_cmdlist and remote_show_cmdlist instead of receiving the correct values to use as list. 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-decode.c (lookup_cmd_for_prefix): Return the aliased command as prefix, not one of its aliases. (set_cmd_prefix): Remove. (do_add_cmd): Centralize the setting of the prefix of a command, when command is defined after its full chain of prefix commands. (add_alias_cmd): Remove call to set_cmd_prefix, as do_add_cmd does it. (add_setshow_cmd_full): Likewise. (update_prefix_field_of_prefixed_commands): New function. (add_prefix_cmd): Replace non working call to set_cmd_prefix by update_prefix_field_of_prefixed_commands. * gdb/remote-fileio.c (initialize_remote_fileio): Use the real addresses of remote_set_cmdlist and remote_show_cmdlist given as argument, not the address of an argument. * gdb/remote-fileio.h (initialize_remote_fileio): Likewise. * gdb/remote.c (_initialize_remote): Likewise.
2020-05-15Fix problem that alias can be defined or not depending on the order.Philippe Waroquiers5-9/+51
When an alias name starts with the name of another alias, GDB was accepting to define the aliases in one order (short first, long after), but refused it the other way around. So, fix the logic to recognise an already existing alias by using lookup_cmd_composition. Also, this revealed a bug in lookup_cmd_composition: when the searched command is a prefix command, lookup_cmd_composition was not returning the fact that a command was found even if the TEXT to parse was fully consumed. gdb/ChangeLog YYYY-MM-DD Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-cmds.c (alias_command): Check for an existing alias using lookup_cmd_composition, as valid_command_p is too strict and forbids aliases that are the prefix of an existing alias or command. * cli/cli-decode.c (lookup_cmd_composition): Ensure a prefix command is properly recognised as a valid command. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * gdb.base/alias.exp: Test aliases starting with a prefix of another alias.
2020-05-15Add a selftest that detects a 'corrupted' command tree structure in GDB.Philippe Waroquiers3-4/+92
The GDB data structure that records the GDB commands is made of 'struct cmd_list_element' defined in cli-decode.h. A cmd_list_element has various pointers to other cmd_list_element structures, All these pointers are together building a graph of commands. However, when following the 'next' and '*prefixlist' pointers of cmd_list_element, the structure must better be a tree. If such pointers do not form a tree, then some other elements of cmd_list_element cannot get a correct semantic. In particular, the prefixname has no correct meaning if the same prefix command can be reached via 2 different paths. This commit introduces a selftest that detects (at least some cases of) errors leading to 'next' and '*prefixlist' not giving a tree structure. The new 'command_structure_invariants' selftest detects one single case where the command structure is not a tree: (gdb) maintenance selftest command_structure_invariants Running selftest command_structure_invariants. list 0x56362e204b98 duplicated, reachable via prefix 'show ' and 'info set '. Duplicated list first command is 'ada' Self test failed: self-test failed at ../../classfix/gdb/unittests/command-def-selftests.c:160 Ran 1 unit tests, 1 failed (gdb) This was fixed by the previous commit. 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * unittests/help-doc-selftests.c: Rename to unittests/command-def-selftests.c * unittests/command-def-selftests.c (help_doc_tests): Update some comments. (command_structure_tests, traverse_command_structure): New namespace and function. (command_structure_invariants_tests): New function. (_initialize_command_def_selftests) Renamed from _initialize_help_doc_selftests, register command_structure_invariants selftest.
2020-05-15Fix the only incorrect case found by command_structure_invariants selftest.Philippe Waroquiers2-4/+8
The next commit introduces a selftest that detects when the GDB command structure does not define a tree when using the pointers 'next/*prefixlist'. This test detects one such case, fixed by this commit. The command 'info set' was defined as a specific prefix command, but re-using the command list already used for the 'show' command. This leads to the command tree 'next/*prefixlist' to not be a tree. This change defines 'info set ' as an alias, thereby fixing the selftest. 2020-05-15 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be> * cli/cli-cmds.c (_initialize_cli_cmds): Define 'info set' as an alias of 'show'.
2020-05-15update name of several Ada fixed-point type handling functionsJoel Brobecker5-30/+43
The purpose of this patch is to prepare for the future where fixed point types become described using standard DWARF info, rather than GNAT encodings. For that, we rename a number of routines manipulating Ada fixed point types to make it explicit from their new names that they rely on the GNAT encodings to work. This will allow us, when we introduce support for fixed point types from standard DWARF to use names that are not ambiguous with the functions that do similar work, but only for GNAT encodings. gdb/ChangeLog: * ada-lang.h: (ada_is_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type): Renames ada_is_fixed_point_type. Update all callers. (gnat_encoded_fixed_point_delta): Renames ada_delta. Update all callers. * ada-lang.c (gnat_encoded_fixed_type_info): Renames fixed_type_info. Update all callers. * ada-typeprint.c (print_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type): Renames print_fixed_point_type. Update all callers. * ada-valprint.c (ada_value_print_num): Replace call to ada_is_fixed_point_type by ada_is_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type.
2020-05-15Fix "control reaches end of non-void function" errors in testsuiteGary Benson16-1/+39
When running the testsuite with clang, a number of testcases fail to build with the following errors: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type] warning: control may reach end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type] This prevents a number of testcases from executing. This commit fixes. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/info-os.c (main): Add return statement. * gdb.base/info_minsym.c (minsym_fun): Likewise. * gdb.base/large-frame-2.c (func): Likewise. * gdb.base/pr10179-a.c (foo1, bar1): Likewise. * gdb.base/pr10179-b.c (foo2): Likewise. * gdb.base/valgrind-disp-step.c (foo): Likewise. * gdb.base/watch-cond.c (func): Likewise. * gdb.multi/goodbye.c (verylongfun): Likewise. * gdb.multi/hello.c (commonfun): Likewise. * gdb.python/py-finish-breakpoint.c (call_longjmp): Likewise. * gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.c (thread_func): Likewise. * gdb.threads/forking-threads-plus-breakpoint.c (thread_forks): Likewise. * gdb.threads/hand-call-new-thread.c (foo): Likewise. * gdb.threads/interrupt-while-step-over.c (child_function): Likewise. * gdb.trace/actions-changed.c (end): Likewise.
2020-05-15Don't silently skip tests if OpenCL is unsupportedGary Benson6-0/+13
A number of tests silently exit if OpenCL support is not detected. This commit fixes. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.opencl/callfuncs.exp: Report when test skipped. * gdb.opencl/convs_casts.exp: Likewise. * gdb.opencl/datatypes.exp: Likewise. * gdb.opencl/operators.exp: Likewise. * gdb.opencl/vec_comps.exp: Likewise.
2020-05-15[gdb/testsuite] Rename *.exp.in to *.exp.tclTom de Vries33-24/+67
Say we have some common tcl code that we want to include in test-cases t1.exp and t1.exp. We could put the common code into a file common.exp alongside the test-cases, but that will make dejagnu treat that file as another test-case. To prevent this, we use a suffix, currently .in, in other words we put the common code in a file common.exp.in. The .in suffix however is also used in autoconf, which might cause confusion. Change the suffix from .in to .tcl. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-15 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.base/align.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.base/align.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.base/align-c++.exp: Update. * gdb.base/align-c.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.base/all-architectures.exp: ... this. * gdb.base/all-architectures-0.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-1.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-2.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-3.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-4.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-5.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-6.exp: Update. * gdb.base/all-architectures-7.exp: Update. * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs-c++.exp: Update. * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs-c.exp: Update. * gdb.base/info-types.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.base/info-types.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.base/info-types-c++.exp: Update. * gdb.base/info-types-c.exp: Update. * gdb.base/max-depth.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.base/max-depth.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.base/max-depth-c++.exp: Update. * gdb.base/max-depth-c.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/cpexprs.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.cp/cpexprs.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.cp/cpexprs-debug-types.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/cpexprs.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c++-d0.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c++-d1.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c-d0.exp: Update. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c-d1.exp: Update. * gdb.dwarf2/clang-debug-names.exp.in: Rename to ... * gdb.dwarf2/clang-debug-names.exp.tcl: ... this. * gdb.dwarf2/clang-debug-names-2.exp: Update. * gdb.dwarf2/clang-debug-names.exp: Update.
2020-05-15gdb/testsuite: Revert commit 843f4d93576eef02139f7b1b3fa1cea7b0f286f1Andrew Burgess2-20/+5
Revert this commit: commit 843f4d93576eef02139f7b1b3fa1cea7b0f286f1 Date: Tue May 12 17:38:17 2020 +0100 gdb/testsuite: Disable path and duplicate checks when parallel testing Now that this commit has landed: commit c959562d9ba0b2eaf240c601b2c2fd49c42c1f2f Date: Fri May 15 11:23:59 2020 +0100 contrib: Update dg-extract-results.* from gcc We can now make use of the mechanism for detecting paths in test names and duplicate test names, even when we run tests in parallel. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * lib/check-test-names.exp: Remove code that prevents this file loading when tests are run in parallel.
2020-05-15Fix gdb.multi/multi-kill.expPedro Alves2-5/+12
The previous patch misssed declaring the 'testpid' array as namespace variable. While it at, might as well go back to having start_inferior refer to the "global" testpid, using "variable" too. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp (start_inferior): Remove 'testpid' parameter. Refer to namespace variable directly. (testpid): Declare as namespace variable.
2020-05-15Fix global variable collision in gdb.multi/multi-kill.expPedro Alves2-5/+22
The new gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp testcase added an 'testpid' array, which may conflict with other global 'testpid' variables used by other testcases, resulting in: ... ERROR: tcl error sourcing /data/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp. ERROR: can't set "testpid(1)": variable isn't array while executing "set testpid($num) [get_integer_valueof "pid" -1]" or $ runtest gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp ... Running /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp ... Running /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp ... ERROR: tcl error sourcing /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/check-libthread-db.exp. ERROR: can't set "testpid": variable is array while executing "set testpid [spawn_id_get_pid $test_spawn_id]" ("uplevel" body line 8) Fix this with a namespace, like gdb.linespec/explicit.exp does. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-15 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.multi/multi-kill.exp: Wrap in namespace. (start_inferior): Add TESTPID parameter. Use it instead of the testpid global. (top level): Define empty TESTPID array, and pass it down to start_inferior.
2020-05-14Disable record btrace bts support for AMD processorsKevin Buettner2-0/+12
Some Intel processors implement a Branch Trace Store (BTS) which GDB uses for reverse execution support via the "record btrace bts" command. I have been unable to find a description of a similar feature in a recent (April 2020) AMD64 architecture reference: https://www.amd.com/system/files/TechDocs/40332.pdf While it is the case that AMD processors have an LBR (last branch record) bit in the DebugCtl MSR, it seems that it affects only four MSRs when enabled. The names of these MSRs are LastBranchToIP, LastBranchFromIP, LastIntToIP, and LastIntFromIP. I can find no mention of anything more extensive. While looking at an Intel architecture document, I noticed that Intel's P6 family from the mid-90s had registers of the same name. Therefore... This commit disables "record btrace bts" support in GDB for AMD processors. Using the test case from gdb.base/break.exp, the sessions below show the expected behavior (run on a machine with an Intel processor) versus that on a machine with an AMD processor. The AMD processor in question is reported as follows by "lscpu": AMD Ryzen Threadripper 2950X 16-Core Processor . Finally, I'll note that the AMD machine is actually a VM, but I see similar behavior on both the virtualization host and the VM. Intel machine - Desired behavior: [kevinb@mohave gdb]$ ./gdb -q testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break Reading symbols from testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break... (gdb) start Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x401179: file /home/kevinb/sourceware-git/native-build/bld/../../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c, line 43. Starting program: /home/kevinb/sourceware-git/native-build/bld/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break Temporary breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd748, envp=0x7fffffffd758) at /home/kevinb/sourceware-git/native-build/bld/../../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:43 43 if (argc == 12345) { /* an unlikely value < 2^16, in case uninited */ /* set breakpoint 6 here */ (gdb) record btrace (gdb) b factorial Breakpoint 2 at 0x40121b: file /home/kevinb/sourceware-git/native-build/bld/../../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c, line 63. (gdb) c Continuing. Breakpoint 2, factorial (value=6) at /home/kevinb/sourceware-git/native-build/bld/../../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:63 63 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) info record Active record target: record-btrace Recording format: Branch Trace Store. Buffer size: 64kB. Recorded 768 instructions in 22 functions (0 gaps) for thread 1 (process 19215). (gdb) record function-call-history 13 do_lookup_x 14 _dl_lookup_symbol_x 15 _dl_fixup 16 _dl_runtime_resolve_xsavec 17 atoi 18 strtoq 19 ____strtoll_l_internal 20 atoi 21 main 22 factorial (gdb) record instruction-history 759 0x00007ffff7ce0917 <____strtoll_l_internal+647>: pop %r15 760 0x00007ffff7ce0919 <____strtoll_l_internal+649>: retq 761 0x00007ffff7cdd064 <atoi+20>: add $0x8,%rsp 762 0x00007ffff7cdd068 <atoi+24>: retq 763 0x00000000004011b1 <main+75>: mov %eax,%edi 764 0x00000000004011b3 <main+77>: callq 0x401210 <factorial> 765 0x0000000000401210 <factorial+0>: push %rbp 766 0x0000000000401211 <factorial+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp 767 0x0000000000401214 <factorial+4>: sub $0x10,%rsp 768 0x0000000000401218 <factorial+8>: mov %edi,-0x4(%rbp) AMD machine - Wrong behavior: [kev@f32-1 gdb]$ ./gdb -q testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break Reading symbols from testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break... (gdb) start Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x401179: file /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f32-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c, line 43. Starting program: /mesquite2/sourceware-git/f32-master/bld/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/break/break Temporary breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd5b8, envp=0x7fffffffd5c8) at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f32-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:43 43 if (argc == 12345) { /* an unlikely value < 2^16, in case uninited */ /* set breakpoint 6 here */ (gdb) record btrace (gdb) b factorial Breakpoint 2 at 0x40121b: file /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f32-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c, line 63. (gdb) c Continuing. Breakpoint 2, factorial (value=6) at /ironwood1/sourceware-git/f32-master/bld/../../worktree-master/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:63 63 if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ (gdb) info record Active record target: record-btrace Recording format: Branch Trace Store. Buffer size: 64kB. warning: Recorded trace may be incomplete at instruction 7737 (pc = 0x405000). warning: Recorded trace may be incomplete at instruction 7739 (pc = 0x0). Recorded 7740 instructions in 46 functions (2 gaps) for thread 1 (process 1402911). (gdb) record function-call-history 37 ?? 38 values 39 some_enum_global 40 ?? 41 some_union_global 42 some_variable 43 ?? 44 [decode error (2): unknown instruction] 45 ?? 46 [decode error (2): unknown instruction] (gdb) record instruction-history 7730 0x0000000000404ff3: add %al,(%rax) 7731 0x0000000000404ff5: add %al,(%rax) 7732 0x0000000000404ff7: add %al,(%rax) 7733 0x0000000000404ff9: add %al,(%rax) 7734 0x0000000000404ffb: add %al,(%rax) 7735 0x0000000000404ffd: add %al,(%rax) 7736 0x0000000000404fff: .byte 0x0 7737 0x0000000000405000: Cannot access memory at address 0x405000 Lastly, I'll note that I see a lot of gdb.btrace failures without this commit. Worse still, the results aren't always the same which causes a lot of noise when comparing test results. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * btrace-common.h (btrace_cpu_vendor): Add CV_AMD. gdb/ChangeLog: * nat/linux-btrace.c (btrace_this_cpu): Add check for AMD processors. (cpu_supports_bts): Add CV_AMD case.
2020-05-14gdb: infrun: consume multiple events at each pass in stop_all_threadsLaurent Morichetti2-132/+142
[Simon: I send this patch on behalf of Laurent Morichetti, I added the commit message and performance measurement stuff. Also, this patch is better viewed with "git show -w".] stop_all_threads, in infrun.c, is used to stop all running threads on targets that are always non-stop. It's used, for example, when the program hits a breakpoint while GDB is set to "non-stop off". It sends a stop request for each running thread, then collects one wait event for each. Since new threads can spawn while we are stopping the threads, it's written in a way where it makes multiple such "send stop requests to running threads & collect wait events" passes. The function completes when it has made two passes where it hasn't seen any running threads. With the way it's written right now is, it iterates on the thread list, sending a stop request for each running thread. It then waits for a single event, after which it iterates through the thread list again. It sends stop requests for any running threads that's been created since the last iteration. It then consumes another single wait event. This makes it so we iterate on O(n^2) threads in total, where n is the number of threads. This patch changes the function to reduce it to O(n). This starts to have an impact when dealing with multiple thousands of threads (see numbers below). At each pass, we know the number of outstanding stop requests we have sent, for which we need to collect a stop event. We can therefore loop to collect this many stop events before proceeding to the next pass and iterate on the thread list again. To check the performance improvements with this patch, I made an x86/Linux program with a large number of idle threads (varying from 1000 to 10000). The program's main thread hits a breakpoint once all these threads have started, which causes stop_all_threads to be called to stop all these threads. I measured (by patching stop_all_threads): - the execution time of stop_all_threads - the total number of threads we iterate on during the complete execution of the function (the total number of times we execute the "for (thread_info *t : all_non_exited_threads ())" loop) These are the execution times, in milliseconds: # threads before after 1000 226 106 2000 997 919 3000 3461 2323 4000 4330 3570 5000 8642 6600 6000 9918 8039 7000 12662 10930 8000 16652 11222 9000 21561 15875 10000 26613 20019 Note that I very unscientifically executed each case only once. These are the number of loop executions: # threads before after 1000 1003002 3003 2000 4006002 6003 3000 9009002 9003 4000 16012002 12003 5000 25015002 15003 6000 36018002 18003 7000 49021002 21003 8000 64024002 24003 9000 81027002 27003 10000 100030002 30003 This last table shows pretty well the O(n^2) vs O(n) behaviors. Reg-tested on x86 GNU/Linux (Ubuntu 16.04). gdb/ChangeLog: YYYY-MM-DD Laurent Morichetti <Laurent.Morichetti@amd.com> YYYY-MM-DD Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com> * infrun.c (stop_all_threads): Collect multiple wait events at each pass.
2020-05-14gdb: remove TYPE_CODE macroSimon Marchi145-1746/+1744
Remove TYPE_CODE, changing all the call sites to use type::code directly. This is quite a big diff, but this was mostly done using sed and coccinelle. A few call sites were done by hand. gdb/ChangeLog: * gdbtypes.h (TYPE_CODE): Remove. Change all call sites to use type::code instead.
2020-05-14gdb: add type::code / type::set_codeSimon Marchi12-52/+71
Add the code and set_code methods on code, in order to remove the TYPE_CODE macro. In this patch, the TYPE_CODE macro is changed to use type::code, so all the call sites that are used to set the type code are changed to use type::set_code. The next patch will remove TYPE_CODE completely. gdb/ChangeLog: * gdbtypes.h (struct type) <code, set_code>: New methods. (TYPE_CODE): Use type::code. Change all call sites used to set the code to use type::set_code instead.
2020-05-14[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2.exp with gdbserverTom de Vries2-1/+6
When running test-case gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2.exp with target board native-gdbserver, we have: ... (gdb) call contains_keyword::subroutine_to_call()^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2.exp: src_prefix=0: nest_prefix=1: \ call contains_keyword::subroutine_to_call() ... This is caused by the fact that we're trying to match inferior output using gdb_test. Fix this by using gdb_test_stdio instead. Tested on x86_64-linux. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.fortran/nested-funcs-2.exp: Use gdb_test_stdio to test inferior output.
2020-05-14[gdb/testsuite] Split up multi-exec test-casesTom de Vries18-105/+307
With test-case gdb.base/align.exp and target board native-gdbserver, we run into: ... (gdb) file outputs/gdb.base/align/c/align^M Reading symbols from outputs/gdb.base/align/c/align...^M (gdb) delete breakpoints^M (gdb) info breakpoints^M No breakpoints or watchpoints.^M (gdb) break main^M Breakpoint 1 at 0x4004ab: file outputs/gdb.base/align/c/align.c, line 838.^M (gdb) kill^M The program is not being run.^M (gdb) spawn gdbserver --once localhost:2592 outputs/gdb.base/align/align^M Process outputs/gdb.base/align/align created; pid = 6946^M Listening on port 2592^M target remote localhost:2592^M Remote debugging using localhost:2592^M warning: Mismatch between current exec-file outputs/gdb.base/align/c/align^M and automatically determined exec-file outputs/gdb.base/align/align^M exec-file-mismatch handling is currently "ask"^M Load new symbol table from "outputs/gdb.base/align/align"? (y or n) Quit^M (gdb) ERROR: test suppressed ... Fix this by turning this and similar test-cases into regular, single executable test-cases. This fixes 100+ FAILs with target board native-gdbserver. Tested on x86_64-linux. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2020-05-14 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.base/align.exp: Split into ... * gdb.base/align.exp.in: ... * gdb.base/align-c++.exp: ... * gdb.base/align-c.exp: ... these. * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs.exp: Split into ... * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs.exp.in: ... * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs-c++.exp: ... * gdb.base/infcall-nested-structs-c.exp: ... these. * gdb.base/info-types.exp: Split into ... * gdb.base/info-types.exp.in: ... * gdb.base/info-types-c++.exp: ... * gdb.base/info-types-c.exp: ... these. * gdb.base/max-depth.exp: Split into ... * gdb.base/max-depth.exp.in: ... * gdb.base/max-depth-c++.exp: ... * gdb.base/max-depth-c.exp: ... these. * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug.exp: Split into ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug.exp.in: ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c++-d0.exp: ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c++-d1.exp: ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c-d0.exp: ... * gdb.cp/infcall-nodebug-c-d1.exp: ... these.