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2023-11-15Finalized intl-update patchesArsen Arsenovi?1-0/+18
* intl: Remove directory. Replaced with out-of-tree GNU gettext. * .gitignore: Add '/gettext*'. * configure.ac (host_libs): Replace intl with gettext. (hbaseargs, bbaseargs, baseargs): Split baseargs into {h,b}baseargs. (skip_barg): New flag. Skips appending current flag to bbaseargs. <library exemptions>: Exempt --with-libintl-{type,prefix} from target and build machine argument passing. * configure: Regenerate. * Makefile.def (host_modules): Replace intl module with gettext module. (configure-ld): Depend on configure-gettext. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * src-release.sh: Remove references to the intl/ directory.
2023-10-28gdb/gdbsupport/gdbserver: Require c++17Lancelot Six1-2/+2
This patch proposes to require a C++17 compiler to build gdb / gdbsupport / gdbserver. Before this patch, GDB required a C++11 compiler. The general policy regarding bumping C++ language requirement in GDB (as stated in [1]) is: Our general policy is to wait until the oldest compiler that supports C++NN is at least 3 years old. Rationale: We want to ensure reasonably widespread compiler availability, to lower barrier of entry to GDB contributions, and to make it easy for users to easily build new GDB on currently supported stable distributions themselves. 3 years should be sufficient for latest stable releases of distributions to include a compiler for the standard, and/or for new compilers to appear as easily installable optional packages. Requiring everyone to build a compiler first before building GDB, which would happen if we required a too-new compiler, would cause too much inconvenience. See the policy proposal and discussion [here](https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-10/msg00616.html). The first GCC release which with full C++17 support is GCC-9[2], released in 2019[3], which is over 4 years ago. Clang has had C++17 support since Clang-5[4] released in 2018[5]. A discussions with many distros showed that a C++17-able compiler is always available, meaning that this no hard requirement preventing us to require it going forward. [1] https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/Internals%20GDB-C-Coding-Standards#When_is_GDB_going_to_start_requiring_C.2B-.2B-NN_.3F [2] https://gcc.gnu.org/projects/cxx-status.html#cxx17 [3] https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-9/ [4] https://clang.llvm.org/cxx_status.html [5] https://releases.llvm.org/ Change-Id: Id596f5db17ea346e8a978668825787b3a9a443fd Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> Approved-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2023-01-05gdbsupport: move libxxhash configure check to gdbsupportSimon Marchi1-0/+3
The following patch moves the fast_hash function, which uses libxxhash, to gdbsupport. Move the libxxhash configure check to gdbsupport (and transitively to gdbserver). Change-Id: I242499e50c8cd6fe9f51e6e92dc53a1b3daaa96e Approved-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
2022-06-27Make GDBserver abort on internal error in development modePedro Alves1-0/+3
Currently, if GDBserver hits some internal assertion, it exits with error status, instead of aborting. This makes it harder to debug GDBserver, as you can't just debug a core file if GDBserver fails an assertion. I've had to hack the code to make GDBserver abort to debug something several times before. I believe the reason it exits instead of aborting, is to prevent potentially littering the filesystem of smaller embedded targets with core files. I think I recall Daniel Jacobowitz once saying that many years ago, but I can't be sure. Anyhow, that seems reasonable to me. Since we nowadays have a distinction between development and release modes, I propose to make GDBserver abort on internal error if in development mode, while keeping the status quo when in release mode. Thus, after this patch, in development mode, you get: $ ../gdbserver/gdbserver ../../src/gdbserver/server.cc:3711: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected. captured_main: Assertion `0' failed. Aborted (core dumped) $ while in release mode, you'll continue to get: $ ../gdbserver/gdbserver ../../src/gdbserver/server.cc:3711: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected. captured_main: Assertion `0' failed. $ echo $? 1 I do not think that this requires a separate configure switch. A "--target_board=native-extended-gdbserver" run on Ubuntu 20.04 ends up with: === gdb Summary === # of unexpected core files 29 ... for me, of which 8 are GDBserver core dumps, 7 more than without this patch. Change-Id: I6861e08ad71f65a0332c91ec95ca001d130b0e9d
2021-11-09Fix build on rhES5Tom Tromey1-0/+4
The rhES5 build failed due to an upstream import a while back. The bug here is that, while the 'personality' function exists, ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE is only defined in <linux/personality.h>, not <sys/personality.h>. However, <linux/personality.h> does not declare the 'personality' function, and <sys/personality.h> and <linux/personality.h> cannot both be included. This patch restores one of the removed configure checks and updates the code to check it. We had this as a local patch at AdaCore, because it seemed like there was no interest upstream. However, now it turns out that this fixes PR build/28555, so I'm sending it now.
2021-10-19Fix format_pieces selftest on WindowsTom Tromey1-0/+3
The format_pieces selftest currently fails on Windows hosts. The selftest doesn't handle the "%ll" -> "%I64" rewrite that the formatter may perform, but also gdbsupport was missing a configure check for PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG. This patch fixes both issues.
2021-10-04gdbsupport: remove attempt to define TARGET_WORD_SIZEAndrew Burgess1-3/+0
In the gdbsupport configure.ac file, there is an attempt to define TARGET_WORD_SIZE. This is done by running grep on the file ../bfd/bfd-in3.h. The problem with this is, the file bfd-in3.h is generated into the bfd build directory when bfd is configured, and there is no dependency between the gdbsupport module and the bfd module, so, for example, if I do: $ ../src/configure $ make all-gdbsupport Then bfd will neither be configured, or built. In this case TARGET_WORD_SIZE ends up being defined, but with no value because the grep on bfd-in3.h fails. However, it turns out that this doesn't matter; we don't actually use TARGET_WORD_SIZE anywhere. My proposal in this commit is to just remove the definition of TARGET_WORD_SIZE, the alternative would be to add a dependency between configure-gdbsupport and configure-bfd into Makefile.def, but adding a dependency for something we don't need seems pretty pointless.
2021-07-05gdbsupport/common.m4: check for sigtimedwaitSimon Marchi1-0/+3
The next patch will make the use of sigtimedwait conditional to whether the platform provides it. Start by adding a configure check for it. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for sigtimedwait. * config.in, configure: Re-generate. gdb/ChangeLog: * config.in, configure: Re-generate. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * config.in, configure: Re-generate. Change-Id: Ic7613fe14521b966b4d991bbcd0933ab14629c05
2021-05-08gdbsupport: re-generate configure & friendsSimon Marchi1-7/+0
I get these changes when re-generating the autoconf stuff in gdbsupport, fallouts from 4655f8509fd4 ("Don't run personality syscall at configure time; don't check it at all"). gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in: Re-generate. * config.in: Re-generate. * configure: Re-generate. Change-Id: Ie1876ee58d6f4f1cf25fa14900eecf4c85a744c1
2020-09-16Require kinfo_get_file and kinfo_get_vmmap for FreeBSD hosts.John Baldwin1-1/+1
FreeBSD systems have provided these functions in libutil since 7.1 release. The most recent release without support is 6.4 released in November of 2008. This also requires libutil-freebsd on GNU/kFreeBSD systems. I assume that those systems have supported kinfo_get_file and kinfo_get_vmmap over a similar timeframe. gdb/ChangeLog: * configure.ac: Remove check for kinfo_getvmmap(). * configure, config.in: Regenerate. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_read_mapping): Remove (fbsd_nat_target::find_memory_regions): Remove the procfs version. (fbsd_nat_target::info_proc): Assume kinfo_getfile() and kinfo_get_vmmap() are always present. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Refactor checks for kinfo_getfile(). * configure, config.in: Regenerate.
2020-07-30Unify Solaris procfs and largefile handlingRainer Orth1-0/+3
GDB currently doesn't build on 32-bit Solaris: * On Solaris 11.4/x86: In file included from /usr/include/sys/procfs.h:26, from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/i386-sol2-nat.c:24: /usr/include/sys/old_procfs.h:31:2: error: #error "Cannot use procfs in the large file compilation environment" #error "Cannot use procfs in the large file compilation environment" ^~~~~ * On Solaris 11.3/x86 there are several more instances of this. The interaction between procfs and large-file support historically has been a royal mess on Solaris: * There are two versions of the procfs interface: ** The old ioctl-based /proc, deprecated and not used any longer in either gdb or binutils. ** The `new' (introduced in Solaris 2.6, 1997) structured /proc. * There are two headers one can possibly include: ** <procfs.h> which only provides the structured /proc, definining _STRUCTURED_PROC=1 and then including ... ** <sys/procfs.h> which defaults to _STRUCTURED_PROC=0, the ioctl-based /proc, but provides structured /proc if _STRUCTURED_PROC == 1. * procfs and the large-file environment didn't go well together: ** Until Solaris 11.3, <sys/procfs.h> would always #error in 32-bit compilations when the large-file environment was active (_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64). ** In both Solaris 11.4 and Illumos, this restriction was lifted for structured /proc. So one has to be careful always to define _STRUCTURED_PROC=1 when testing for or using <sys/procfs.h> on Solaris. As the errors above show, this isn't always the case in binutils-gdb right now. Also one may need to disable large-file support for 32-bit compilations on Solaris. config/largefile.m4 meant to do this by wrapping the AC_SYS_LARGEFILE autoconf macro with appropriate checks, yielding ACX_LARGEFILE. Unfortunately the macro doesn't always succeed because it neglects the _STRUCTURED_PROC part. To make things even worse, since GCC 9 g++ predefines _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 on Solaris. So even if largefile.m4 deciced not to enable large-file support, this has no effect, breaking the gdb build. This patch addresses all this as follows: * All tests for the <sys/procfs.h> header are made with _STRUCTURED_PROC=1, the definition going into the various config.h files instead of having to make them (and sometimes failing) in the affected sources. * To cope with the g++ predefine of _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64, -U_FILE_OFFSET_BITS is added to various *_CPPFLAGS variables. It had been far easier to have just #undef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS in config.h, but unfortunately such a construct in config.in is commented by config.status irrespective of indentation and whitespace if large-file support is disabled. I found no way around this and putting the #undef in several global headers for bfd, binutils, ld, and gdb seemed way more invasive. * Last, the applicability check in largefile.m4 was modified only to disable largefile support if really needed. To do so, it checks if <sys/procfs.h> compiles with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 defined. If it doesn't, the disabling only happens if gdb exists in-tree and isn't disabled, otherwise (building binutils from a tarball), there's no conflict. What initially confused me was the check for $plugins here, which originally caused the disabling not to take place. Since AC_PLUGINGS does enable plugin support if <dlfcn.h> exists (which it does on Solaris), the disabling never happened. I could find no explanation why the linker plugin needs large-file support but thought it would be enough if gld and GCC's lto-plugin agreed on the _FILE_OFFSET_BITS value. Unfortunately, that's not enough: lto-plugin uses the simple-object interface from libiberty, which includes off_t arguments. So to fully disable large-file support would mean also disabling it in libiberty and its users: gcc and libstdc++-v3. This seems highly undesirable, so I decided to disable the linker plugin instead if large-file support won't work. The patch allows binutils+gdb to build on i386-pc-solaris2.11 (both Solaris 11.3 and 11.4, using GCC 9.3.0 which is the worst case due to predefined _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64). Also regtested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11 (again on Solaris 11.3 and 11.4), x86_64-pc-linux-gnu and i686-pc-linux-gnu. config: * largefile.m4 (ACX_LARGEFILE) <sparc-*-solaris*|i?86-*-solaris*>: Check for <sys/procfs.h> incompatilibity with large-file support on Solaris. Only disable large-file support and perhaps plugins if needed. Set, substitute LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS if so. bfd: * bfd.m4 (BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H): New macro. (BFD_HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_TYPE): Require BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H. Don't define _STRUCTURED_PROC. (BFD_HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_TYPE_MEMBER): Likewise. * elf.c [HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_H] (_STRUCTURED_PROC): Don't define. * configure.ac: Use BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H to check for <sys/procfs.h>. * configure, config.in: Regenerate. * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate. binutils: * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. gas: * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. gdb: * proc-api.c (_STRUCTURED_PROC): Don't define. * proc-events.c: Likewise. * proc-flags.c: Likewise. * proc-why.c: Likewise. * procfs.c: Likewise. * Makefile.in (INTERNAL_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * configure, config.in: Regenerate. gdbserver: * configure, config.in: Regenerate. gdbsupport: * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Use BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H to check for <sys/procfs.h>. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * configure, config.in: Regenerate. gnulib: * configure.ac: Run ACX_LARGEFILE before gl_EARLY. * configure: Regenerate. gprof: * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. ld: * Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS. * Makefile.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate.
2020-04-13Move event-loop configury to common.m4Tom Tromey1-0/+12
gdb_select.h and the event loop require some configure checks, so this moves the needed checks to common.m4 and updates the configure scripts. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Remove checks that are now in GDB_AC_COMMON. gdbserver/ChangeLog 2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * config.in: Rebuild. gdbsupport/ChangeLog 2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * config.in, configure: Rebuild. * common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Check for poll.h, sys/poll.h, sys/select.h, and poll.
2020-03-20gdb: remove HAVE_DECL_PTRACESimon Marchi1-4/+0
I stumbled on this snippet in nat/gdb_ptrace.h: /* Some systems, in particular DEC OSF/1, Digital Unix, Compaq Tru64 or whatever it's called these days, don't provide a prototype for ptrace. Provide one to silence compiler warnings. */ #ifndef HAVE_DECL_PTRACE extern PTRACE_TYPE_RET ptrace(); #endif I believe this is unnecessary today and should be removed. First, the comment only mentions OSes we don't support (and to be honest, I had never even heard of). But most importantly, in C++, a declaration with empty parenthesis declares a function that accepts no arguments, unlike in C. So if this declaration was really used, GDB wouldn't build, since all ptrace call sites pass some arguments. Since we haven't heard anything about this causing some build failures since we have transitioned to C++, I conclude that it's not used. This patch removes it as well as the corresponding configure check. gdb/ChangeLog: * ptrace.m4: Don't check for ptrace declaration. * config.in: Re-generate. * configure: Re-generate. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Don't declare ptrace if HAVE_DECL_PTRACE is not defined. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * config.in: Re-generate. * configure: Re-generate. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * config.in: Re-generate. * configure: Re-generate.
2020-01-14Move many configure checks to common.m4Tom Tromey1-0/+140
This moves many needed configure checks from gdb and gdbserver into common.m4. This helps gdbsupport, nat, and target be self-contained. The result is a bit spaghetti-ish, because gdbsupport uses another m4 file from gdb/. The resulting code is somewhat non-obvious. However, these problems already exist, so it's not really that much worse than what is already done. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Move many checks to ../gdbsupport/common.m4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Remove any checks that were added to common.m4. * acinclude.m4: Include lib-ld.m4, lib-prefix.m4, and lib-link.m4. gdbsupport/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure, Makefile.in, aclocal.m4, common.m4, config.in: Rebuild. * common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Move many checks from gdb/configure.ac. * acinclude.m4: Include bfd.m4, ptrace.m4. Change-Id: I931eaa94065df268b30a2f1354390710df89c7f8
2020-01-14Move gdbsupport to the top levelTom Tromey1-0/+274
This patch moves the gdbsupport directory to the top level. This is the next step in the ongoing project to move gdbserver to the top level. The bulk of this patch was created by "git mv gdb/gdbsupport gdbsupport". This patch then adds a build system to gdbsupport and wires it into the top level. Then it changes gdb to use the top-level build. gdbserver, on the other hand, is not yet changed. It still does its own build of gdbsupport. ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * src-release.sh (GDB_SUPPORT_DIRS): Add gdbsupport. * MAINTAINERS: Add gdbsupport. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac (configdirs): Add gdbsupport. * gdbsupport: New directory, move from gdb/gdbsupport. * Makefile.def (host_modules, dependencies): Add gnulib. * Makefile.in: Rebuild. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * nat/x86-linux-dregs.c: Include configh.h. * nat/linux-ptrace.c: Include configh.h. * nat/linux-btrace.c: Include configh.h. * defs.h: Include config.h, bfd.h. * configure.ac: Don't source common.host. (CONFIG_OBS, CONFIG_SRCS): Remove gdbsupport files. * configure: Rebuild. * acinclude.m4: Update path. * Makefile.in (SUPPORT, LIBSUPPORT, INCSUPPORT): New variables. (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR): Remove gdbsupport. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add INCSUPPORT. (CLIBS): Add LIBSUPPORT. (CDEPS): Likewise. (COMMON_SFILES): Remove gdbsupport files. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Likewise. (stamp-version): Update path to create-version.sh. (ALLDEPFILES): Remove gdbsupport files. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * server.h: Include config.h. * gdbreplay.c: Include config.h. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Don't source common.host. * acinclude.m4: Update path. * Makefile.in (INCSUPPORT): New variable. (INCLUDE_CFLAGS): Add INCSUPPORT. (SFILES): Update paths. (version-generated.c): Update path to create-version.sh. (gdbsupport/%-ipa.o, gdbsupport/%.o): Update paths. gdbsupport/ChangeLog 2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * common-defs.h: Add GDBSERVER case. Update includes. * acinclude.m4, aclocal.m4, config.in, configure, configure.ac, Makefile.am, Makefile.in, README: New files. * Moved from ../gdb/gdbsupport/ Change-Id: I07632e7798635c1bab389bf885971e584fb4bb78