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3 daysRevert "gdbserver: pass osabi to GDB in target description"Andrew Burgess1-2/+1
This reverts commit 98bcde5e268ea7cd54186c5f2c27c65103218fc3. This commit was causing build problems on at least sparc, ppc, and s390, though I suspect some other targets might be impacted too.
4 daysgdbserver: pass osabi to GDB in target descriptionAndrew Burgess1-1/+2
On a Windows machine I built gdbserver, configured for the target 'x86_64-w64-mingw32', then on a GNU/Linux machine I built GDB with support for all target (--enable-targets=all). On the Windows machine I start gdbserver with a small test binary: $ gdbserver 192.168.129.25:54321 C:\some\directory\executable.exe On the GNU/Linux machine I start GDB without the test binary, and connect to gdbserver. As I have not given GDB the test binary, my expectation is that GDB would connect to gdbserver and then download the file over the remote protocol, but instead I was presented with this message: (gdb) target remote 192.168.129.25:54321 Remote debugging using 192.168.129.25:54321 warning: C:\some\directory\executable.exe: No such file or directory. 0x00007ffa3e1e1741 in ?? () (gdb) What I found is that if I told GDB where to find the binary, like this: (gdb) file target:C:/some/directory/executable.exe A program is being debugged already. Are you sure you want to change the file? (y or n) y Reading C:/some/directory/executable.exe from remote target... warning: File transfers from remote targets can be slow. Use "set sysroot" to access files locally instead. Reading C:/some/directory/executable.exe from remote target... Reading symbols from target:C:/some/directory/executable.exe... (gdb) then GDB would download the executable. I eventually tracked the problem down to exec_file_find (solib.c). The remote target was passing an absolute Windows filename (beginning with "C:/" in this case), but in exec_file_find GDB was failing the IS_TARGET_ABSOLUTE_PATH call, and so was treating the filename as relative. The IS_TARGET_ABSOLUTE_PATH call was failing because GDB thought that the file system kind was "unix", and as the filename didn't start with a "/" it assumed the filename was not absolute. But I'm connecting to a Windows target, my 'target-file-system-kind' was set to "auto", so should be figuring out that my file-system is "dos-based". Looking in effective_target_file_system_kind (filesystem.c), we find that the logic of "auto" is delegated to the current gdbarch. However in windows-tdep.c we see: set_gdbarch_has_dos_based_file_system (gdbarch, 1); So if we are using a Windows gdbarch we should have "dos-based" filesystems. What this means is that after connecting to the remote target GDB has selected the wrong gdbarch. What's happening is that the target description sent back by the remote target only includes the x86-64 registers. There's no information about which OS we're on. As a consequence, GDB picks the first x86-64 gdbarch which can handle the provided register set, which happens to be a GNU/Linux gdbarch. And indeed, there doesn't appear to be anywhere in gdbserver that sets the osabi on the target descriptions, though some target descriptions do have their osabi set when the description is created, e.g. in: gdb/arch/amd64.c - Sets GNU/Linux osabi when appropriate. gdb/arch/i386.c - Likewise. gdb/arch/tic6x.c - Always set GNU/Linux osabi. Most target descriptions are created without an osabi, gdbserver does nothing to fix this, and the description is returned to GDB without an osabi included. I propose that we always set the osabi name on the target descriptions returned from gdbserver. We could try to do this when the description is first created, but that would mean passing extra flags into the tdesc creation code (or just passing the osabi string in), and I don't think that's really necessary. If we consider the tdesc creation as being about figuring out which registers are on the target, then it makes sense that the osabi information is injected later. So what I've done is require the osabi name to be passed to the init_target_desc function. This is called, I believe, for all targets, in the gdbserver code. Now when I connect to the Windows remote the target description returned includes the osabi name. With this extra information GDB selects the correct gdbarch object, which means that GDB understands the target has a "dos-based" file-system. With that correct GDB understands that the filename it was given is absolute, and so fetches the file from the remote as we'd like. Approved-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com> Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2024-09-05gdbserver: aarch64: Fix expedited registers listThiago Jung Bauermann1-8/+4
Since this commit: commit a8651ef51822f91ec86d0d5caffbf2e50b174c23 CommitDate: Fri Jun 14 14:47:38 2024 +0100 gdb/aarch64: prevent crash from in process agent gdbserver isn't sending expedited registers with its stop reply packets anymore. The problem is with how the constructor of the expedited_registers std::vector is called: The intent of the expedited_registers initialization in aarch64_linux_read_description is to create a vector with capacity for 6 elements, but that's not how the std::vector constructor works. Instead it creates a vector pre-populated with 6 elements initialized with the default value for the type of the elements, and thus the first 6 elements are null pointers. The actual expedited registers are added starting at the 7th element. This causes init_target_desc to consider that the expedite_regs list is empty, since it stops checking at the first nullptr element. The end result is that gdbserver doesn't send any expedited registers to GDB in its stop replies. Fix by not specifying an element count when declaring the vector. Tested for regressions on aarch64-linux-gnu native-extended-remote. Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2024-06-14gdb/aarch64: prevent crash from in process agentAndrew Burgess1-8/+14
Since this commit: commit 0ee6b1c511c0e2a6793568692d2e5418cd6bc10d Date: Wed May 18 13:32:04 2022 -0700 Use aarch64_features to describe register features in target descriptions. There has been an issue with how aarch64 target descriptions are cached within gdbserver, and specifically, how this caching impacts the in process agent (IPA). The function initialize_tracepoint_ftlib (gdbserver/tracepoint.cc) is part of the IPA, this function is a constructor function, i.e. is called as part of the global initialisation process. We can't guarantee the ordering of when this function is called vs when other global state is initialised. Now initialize_tracepoint_ftlib calls initialize_tracepoint, which calls initialize_low_tracepoint, which for aarch64 calls aarch64_linux_read_description. The aarch64_linux_read_description function lives in linux-aarch64-tdesc.cc and after the above commit, depends on a std::unordered_map having been initialized. Prior to the above commit aarch64_linux_read_description used a global C style array, which obviously requires no runtime initialization. The consequence of the above is that any inferior linked with the IPA (for aarch64) will experience undefined behaviour (access to an uninitialized std::unordered_map) during startup, which for me manifests as a segfault. I propose fixing this by moving the std::unordered_map into the function body, but leaving it static. The map will now be initialized the first time the function is called, which removes the undefiend behaviour. The same problem exists for the expedited_registers global, however this global can just be made into a function local instead. The expedited_registers variable is used to build a pointer list which is then passed to init_target_desc, however init_target_desc copies the values it is given so expedited_registers does not need to live longer than its containing function. On most of the AArch64 machines I have access too tracing is not supported, and so the gdb.trace/*.exp tests that use the IPA just exit early reporting unsupported. I've added a test which links an inferior with the IPA and just starts the inferior. No tracing is performed. This exposes the current issue even on hosts that don't support tracing. After this patch the test passes.
2024-03-26gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: remove includes of early headersSimon Marchi1-1/+0
Now that defs.h, server.h and common-defs.h are included via the `-include` option, it is no longer necessary for source files to include them. Remove all the inclusions of these files I could find. Update the generation scripts where relevant. Change-Id: Ia026cff269c1b7ae7386dd3619bc9bb6a5332837 Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
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.
2023-10-04sme: Add support for SMELuis Machado1-0/+7
Enable SME support in gdbserver by adjusting the usual fields. There is not much to this patch because the code is either in gdb or it is shared between gdbserver and gdb. One exception is the bump to gdbserver's PBUFSIZ from 18432 to 131104. Since the ZA register can be quite big (256 * 256 bytes), the g/G remote packet will also become quite big From gdbserver/tdesc.cc:init_target_desc, I estimated the new size should be at least (2 * 256 * 256 + 32), which yields 131104. It is also unlikely we will find a process starting up with SVL set to 256. Ideally we'd adjust the packet size dynamically based on what we need, but for now this should do. Please note we have the same limitation for SME that we have for SVE, and that is the fact gdbserver cannot communicate vector length changes to gdb via the remote protocol. Thiago is working on this improvement, which hopefully will be able to be adapted to SME in an easy way. Co-Authored-By: Ezra Sitorus <ezra.sitorus@arm.com> Reviewed-by: Thiago Jung Bauermann <thiago.bauermann@linaro.org>
2023-10-04refactor: Adjust expedited registers dynamicallyLuis Machado1-7/+14
Instead of using static arrays, build the list of expedited registers dynamically using a std::vector. This refactor shouldn't cause any user-visible changes. Regression-tested for aarch64-linux Ubuntu 22.04/20.04. Reviewed-by: Thiago Jung Bauermann <thiago.bauermann@linaro.org>
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.
2022-05-18Use aarch64_features to describe register features in target descriptions.John Baldwin1-9/+9
Replace the sve bool member of aarch64_features with a vq member that holds the vector quotient. It is zero if SVE is not present. Add std::hash<> specialization and operator== so that aarch64_features can be used as a key with std::unordered_map<>. Change the various functions that create or lookup aarch64 target descriptions to accept a const aarch64_features object rather than a growing number of arguments. Replace the multi-dimension tdesc_aarch64_list arrays used to cache target descriptions with unordered_maps indexed by aarch64_feature.
2022-05-03gdbserver: Read the tpidr register from NT_ARM_TLS on Linux.John Baldwin1-5/+6
2022-05-03Add an aarch64-tls feature which includes the tpidr register.John Baldwin1-1/+1
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.
2021-03-24AArch64: Add target description/feature for MTE registersLuis Machado1-5/+5
This patch adds a target description and feature "mte" for aarch64. It includes one new register, tag_ctl, that can be used to configure the tag generation rules and sync/async modes. It is 64-bit in size. The patch also adjusts the code that creates the target descriptions at runtime based on CPU feature checks. gdb/ChangeLog: 2021-03-24 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org> * aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_nat_target::read_description): Take MTE flag into account. Slight refactor to hwcap flag checking. * aarch64-linux-tdep.c (aarch64_linux_core_read_description): Likewise. * aarch64-tdep.c (tdesc_aarch64_list): Add one more dimension for MTE. (aarch64_read_description): Add mte_p parameter and update to use it. Update the documentation. (aarch64_gdbarch_init): Update call to aarch64_read_description. * aarch64-tdep.h (aarch64_read_description): Add mte_p parameter. * arch/aarch64.c: Include ../features/aarch64-mte.c. (aarch64_create_target_description): Add mte_p parameter and update the code to use it. * arch/aarch64.h (aarch64_create_target_description): Add mte_p parameter. * features/Makefile (FEATURE_XMLFILES): Add aarch64-mte.xml. * features/aarch64-mte.c: New file, generated. * features/aarch64-mte.xml: New file. gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2021-03-24 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org> * linux-aarch64-ipa.cc (get_ipa_tdesc): Update call to aarch64_linux_read_description. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Likewise. * linux-aarch64-low.cc (aarch64_target::low_arch_setup): Take MTE flag into account. * linux-aarch64-tdesc.cc (tdesc_aarch64_list): Add one more dimension for MTE. (aarch64_linux_read_description): Add mte_p parameter and update to use it. * linux-aarch64-tdesc.h (aarch64_linux_read_description): Add mte_p parameter.
2021-01-01Update copyright year range in all GDB filesJoel Brobecker1-1/+1
This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start of New Year procedure... gdb/ChangeLog Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
2020-02-13gdbserver: rename source files to .ccSimon Marchi1-0/+60
For the same reasons outlined in the previous patch, this patch renames gdbserver source files to .cc. I have moved the "-x c++" switch to only those rules that require it. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in: Rename source files from .c to .cc. * %.c: Rename to %.cc. * configure.ac: Rename server.c to server.cc. * configure: Re-generate.