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It was pointed out on IRC that the RISC-V target allocates target
descriptions and stores them in a global map, and doesn't delete these
target descriptions when GDB shuts down.
This isn't a particular problem, the total number of target
descriptions we can create is very limited so creating these on demand
and holding them for the entire run on GDB seems reasonable.
However, not deleting these objects on GDB exit means extra warnings
are printed from tools like valgrind, and the address sanitiser,
making it harder to spot real issues. As it's reasonably easy to have
GDB correctly delete these objects on exit, lets just do that.
I started by noticing that we already have a target_desc_up type, a
wrapper around unique_ptr that calls a function that will correctly
delete target descriptions, so I want to use that, but....
...that type is declared in gdb/target-descriptions.h. If I try to
include that file in gdb/arch/riscv.c I run into a problem, that file
is compiled into both GDB and GDBServer.
OK, I could guard the include with #ifdef, but surely we can do
better.
So then I decided to move the target_desc_up type into
gdbsupport/tdesc.h, this is the interface file for generic code shared
between GDB and GDBserver (relating to target descriptions). The
actual implementation for the delete function still lives in
gdb/target-description.c, but now gdb/arch/riscv.c can see the
declaration. Problem solved....
... but, though RISC-V doesn't use it I've now exposed the
target_desc_up type to gdbserver, so in future someone _might_ start
using it, which is fine, except right now there's no definition of the
delete function - remember the delete I used is only defined in GDB
code.
No problem, I add an implementation of the delete operator into
gdbserver/tdesc.cc, and all is good..... except....
I start getting this error from GCC:
tdesc.cc:109:10: error: deleting object of polymorphic class type ‘target_desc’ which has non-virtual destructor might cause undefined behavior [-Werror=delete-non-virtual-dtor]
Which is caused because gdbserver's target_desc type inherits from
tdesc_element which has a virtual method, and so GCC worries that
target_desc might be used as a base class.
The solution is to declare gdbserver's target_desc class as final.
This is fine so long as we never intent to inherit from
target_desc (in gdbserver). But if we did then we'd want to make
target_desc's destructor virtual anyway, so the error above would be
resolved, and there wouldn't be an issue.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* arch/riscv.c (riscv_tdesc_cache): Change map type.
(riscv_lookup_target_description): Return pointer out of
unique_ptr.
* target-descriptions.c (allocate_target_description): Add
comment.
(target_desc_deleter::operator()): Likewise.
* target-descriptions.h (struct target_desc_deleter): Moved to
gdbsupport/tdesc.h.
(target_desc_up): Likewise.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.cc (allocate_target_description): Add header comment.
(target_desc_deleter::operator()): New function.
* tdesc.h (struct target_desc): Declare as final.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.h (struct target_desc_deleter): Moved here
from gdb/target-descriptions.h, extend comment.
(target_desc_up): Likewise.
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gdb's copy of basic_string_view includes a to_string method. However,
according to cppreference, this is not a method on the real
std::basic_string_view:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/string/basic_string_view
This difference matters because gdb_string_view.h will use the
standard implementation when built with a C++17 or later. This caused
PR build/26183.
This patch fixes the problem by changing the method to be a standalone
helper function, and then rewriting the uses. Tested by rebuilding
with a version of GCC that defaults to C++17.
(Note that the build still is not clean; and also I noticed that the
libstdc++ string_view forbids the use of nullptr ... I wonder if gdb
violates that.)
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-06-30 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/26183:
* ada-lang.c (ada_lookup_name_info::ada_lookup_name_info): Use
gdb::to_string.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-06-30 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/26183:
* gdb_string_view.h (basic_string_view::to_string): Remove.
(gdb::to_string): New function.
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Fixes this clang error:
CXX tdesc.o
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/tdesc.cc:444:25: error: format string is not a string literal [-Werror,-Wformat-nonliteral]
string_vappendf (tmp, fmt, ap);
^~~
There is already a but about GCC not emitting this warning:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=82206
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.h (class print_xml_feature) <add_line>: Add
ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
Change-Id: I7014075e83717f6d7e19d044a3675ff9981ebe17
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This commit adds a new maintenance command that dumps the current
target description as an XML document. This is a maintenance command
as I currently only see this being useful for GDB developers, or for
people debugging a new remote target.
By default the command will print whatever the current target
description is, whether this was delivered by the remote, loaded by
the user from a file, or if it is a built in target within GDB.
The command can also take an optional filename argument. In this case
GDB loads a target description from the file, and then reprints it.
This could be useful for testing GDB's parsing of target descriptions,
or to check that GDB can successfully parse a particular XML
description.
It is worth noting that the XML description printed will not be an
exact copy of the document fed into GDB. For example this minimal
input file:
<target>
<feature name="abc">
<reg name="r1" bitsize="32"/>
</feature>
</target>
Will produce this output:
(gdb) maint print xml-tdesc path/to/file.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE target SYSTEM "gdb-target.dtd">
<target>
<feature name="abc">
<reg name="r1" bitsize="32" type="int" regnum="0"/>
</feature>
</target>
Notice that GDB filled in both the 'type' and 'regnum' fields of the
<reg>. I think this is actually a positive as it means we get to
really understand how GDB processed the document, if GDB made some
assumptions that differ to those the user expected then hopefully this
will bring those issues to the users attention.
To implement this I have tweaked the output produced by the
print_xml_feature which is defined within the gdbsupport/ directory.
The changes I have made to this class are:
1. The <architecture>...</architecture> tags are now not produced if
the architecture name is NULL.
2. The <osabi>...</osabi> tags get a newline at the end.
3. And, the whole XML document is indented using white space in a
nested fashion (as in the example output above).
I think that these changes should be fine, the print_xml_feature class
is used:
1. In gdbserver to generate an XML document to send as the target
description to GDB.
2. In GDB as part of a self-check function, a target_desc is
converted to XML then parsed back into a target_desc. We then check
the before and after target_desc objects are the same.
3. In the new 'maint print xml-tdesc' command.
In all of these use cases adding the extra white space should be fine.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.cc (print_xml_feature::visit_pre): Use add_line to add
output content, and call indent as needed in all overloaded
variants.
(print_xml_feature::visit_post): Likewise.
(print_xml_feature::visit): Likewise.
(print_xml_feature::add_line): Two new overloaded functions.
* tdesc.h (print_xml_feature::indent): New member function.
(print_xml_feature::add_line): Two new overloaded member
functions.
(print_xml_feature::m_depth): New member variable.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target-descriptions.c (tdesc_architecture_name): Protect against
NULL pointer dereference.
(maint_print_xml_tdesc_cmd): New function.
(_initialize_target_descriptions): Register new 'maint print
xml-tdesc' command and give it the filename completer.
* NEWS: Mention new 'maint print xml-tdesc' command.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.xml/tdesc-reload.c: New file.
* gdb.xml/tdesc-reload.exp: New file.
* gdb.xml/maint-xml-dump-01.xml: New file.
* gdb.xml/maint-xml-dump-02.xml: New file.
* gdb.xml/maint-xml-dump.exp: New file.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document new 'maint print
xml-desc' command.
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The gdbsupport directory contains a helper class print_xml_feature
that is shared between gdb and gdbserver. This class is used for
printing an XML representation of a target_desc object.
Currently this class doesn't have the ability to print the
<compatible> entities that can appear within a target description, I
guess no targets have needed that functionality yet.
The print_xml_feature classes API is based around operating on the
target_desc class, however, the sharing between gdb and gdbserver is
purely textural, we rely on their being a class called target_desc in
both gdb and gdbserver, but there is no shared implementation. We
then have a set of functions declared that operate on an object of
type target_desc, and again these functions have completely separate
implementations.
Currently then the gdb version of target_desc contains a vector of
bfd_arch_info pointers which represents the compatible entries from a
target description. The gdbserver version of target_desc has no such
information. Further, the gdbserver code doesn't seem to include the
bfd headers, and so doesn't know about the bfd types.
I was reluctant to include the bfd headers into gdbserver just so I
can reference the compatible information, which isn't (currently) even
needed in gdbserver.
So, the approach I take in this patch is to wrap the compatible
information into a new helper class. This class is declared in the
gdbsupport library, but implemented separately in both gdb and
gdbserver.
In gdbserver the class is empty. The compatible information within
the gdbserver is an empty list, of empty classes.
In gdb the class contains a pointer to the bfd_arch_info object.
With this in place we can now add support to print_xml_feature for
printing the compatible information if it is present. In the
gdbserver code this will never happen, as the gdbserver never has any
compatible information. But in gdb, this code will trigger when
appropriate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* target-descriptions.c (class tdesc_compatible_info): New class.
(struct target_desc): Change type of compatible vector.
(tdesc_compatible_p): Update for change in type of
target_desc::compatible.
(tdesc_compatible_info_list): New function.
(tdesc_compatible_info_arch_name): New function.
(tdesc_add_compatible): Update for change in type of
target_desc::compatible.
(print_c_tdesc::visit_pre): Likewise.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.cc (struct tdesc_compatible_info): New struct.
(tdesc_compatible_info_list): New function.
(tdesc_compatible_info_arch_name): New function.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* tdesc.cc (print_xml_feature::visit_pre): Print compatible
information.
* tdesc.h (struct tdesc_compatible_info): Declare new struct.
(tdesc_compatible_info_up): New typedef.
(tdesc_compatible_info_list): Declare new function.
(tdesc_compatible_info_arch_name): Declare new function.
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The function did not properly escape special characters
and all uses have been replaced in previous commits, so
drop the now unused function.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-utils.cc, common-utils.h (stringify_argv): Drop
now unused function stringify_argv
Change-Id: Id5f861f44eae1f0fbde3476a5eac23a842ed04fc
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Adapt the construct_inferior_arguments function to
take a gdb::array_view<char * const> parameter instead
of a char * array and an int indicating the length
and adapt the only call site.
This will allow calling it more simply in a follow-up
patch introducing more uses of the function.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-inferior.cc, common-inferior.h (construct_inferior_arguments):
Adapt to take a gdb::array_view<char * const> parameter.
Adapt call site.
Change-Id: I1c6496c8c0b0eb3ef3fda96e9e3bd64c5e6cac3c
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Allow construct_inferior_arguments to handle zero args
and have it return a std::string, similar to how
stringify_argv in gdbsupport/common-utils does.
Also, add a const qualifier for the second parameter,
since it is only read, not written to.
The intention is to replace existing uses of
stringify_argv by construct_inferior_arguments
in a subsequent step, since construct_inferior_arguments
properly handles special characters, while stringify_argv
doesn't.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-inferior.cc, common-inferior.h (construct_inferior_arguments):
Adapt to handle zero args and return a std::string.
Adapt call site.
Change-Id: I126c4390a1018c7527b0b8fd545252ab8a5a7adc
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This moves the function construct_inferior_arguments from
gdb/inferior.h and gdb/infcmd.c to gdbsupport/common-inferior.{h,cc}.
While at it, also move the function's comment to the header file
to align with current standards.
The intention is to use it from gdbserver in a follow-up commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* infcmd.c, inferior.h: (construct_inferior_arguments):
Moved function from here to gdbsupport/common-inferior.{h,cc}
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-inferior.h, common-inferior.cc: (construct_inferior_arguments):
Move function here from gdb/infcmd.c, gdb/inferior.h
Change-Id: Ib9290464ce8c0872f605d8829f88352d064c30d6
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This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing &
comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase
TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h
tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions.
This commit:
commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51
Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100
Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973)
did something similar, except in the expression parser.
This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly.
Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from
sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower
functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the
profiling samples on Windows
(https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html).
I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0"
build of gdb.
I ran GDB 10 times like:
/bin/time -f %e \
./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \
-batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0
Then I computed the mean time.
The baseline mean time was
gdb 2.515
This patch brings the number down to
gdb 2.096
Which is an around 16% improvement.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h".
(parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit.
(puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint.
(fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum.
(cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use
ISSPACE instead of isspace.
(strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE
instead of isspace.
(strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace.
(string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT
instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
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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.
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It possible that a thread whose PC we attempt to read is already dead.
In this case, 'regcache_read_pc' errors out. This impacts the
"proceed" execution flow, where GDB quits early before having a chance
to check if there exists a pending event. To remedy, keep going with
a 0 value for the PC if 'regcache_read_pc' fails. Because the value
of PC before resuming a thread is mostly used for storing and checking
the next time the thread stops, this tolerance is expected to be
harmless for a dead thread/process.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-05-14 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* regcache.c (regcache_read_pc_protected): New function
implementation that returns 0 if the PC cannot read via
'regcache_read_pc'.
* infrun.c (proceed): Call 'regcache_read_pc_protected'
instead of 'regcache_read_pc'.
(keep_going_pass_signal): Ditto.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-05-14 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* common-regcache.h (regcache_read_pc_protected): New function
declaration.
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gdb/stubs/ChangeLog:
2020-04-28 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* ia64vms-stub.c: Fix typo in comment (thead -> thread).
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-04-28 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* gdb.threads/stop-with-handle.exp: Fix typo in comment
(theads -> threads).
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-04-28 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* gdb-sigmask.h: Fix typo (pthead_sigmask -> pthread_sigmask).
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In PR 25731 [1], the following build failure was reported:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbtypes.c:1254:10: error: no member named 'abs' in namespace 'std'; did you mean simply 'abs'?
= ((std::abs (stride) * element_count) + 7) / 8;
^~~~~~~~
abs
/usr/include/stdlib.h:129:6: note: 'abs' declared here
int abs(int) __pure2;
^
The original report was using:
$ gcc -v
Apple LLVM version 8.0.0 (clang-800.0.42.1)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin15.6.0
Note that I was _not_ able to reproduce using:
$ g++ --version
Configured with: --prefix=/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/usr --with-gxx-include-dir=/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/include/c++/4.2.1
Apple clang version 11.0.0 (clang-1100.0.33.17)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin19.3.0
The proposed fix is to include <cstdlib> in addition to <stdlib.h>.
Here's an excerpt of [2] relevant to this problem:
These headers [speaking of the .h form] are allowed to also declare
the same names in the std namespace, and the corresponding cxxx
headers are allowed to also declare the same names in the global
namespace: including <cstdlib> definitely provides std::malloc and
may also provide ::malloc. Including <stdlib.h> definitely provides
::malloc and may also provide std::malloc
Since we use std::abs, we should not assume that our include of stdlib.h
declares an `abs` function in the `std` namespace.
If we replace the include of stdlib.h with cstdlib, then we fall in the
opposite situation. A standard C++ library may decide to only put the
declarations in the std namespace, requiring us to prefix all standard
functions with `std::`. I'm not against that, but for the moment I think the
safest way forward is to just include both.
Note that I don't know what effect this patch can have on any stdlib.h fix
provided by gnulib.
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25731
[2] https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/header#C_compatibility_headers
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* common-defs.h: Include cstdlib.h.
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I recently learned that move constructors generally should be marked
"noexcept". This ensures that standard containers will move objects
when possible, rather than copy them.
This patch fixes the cases I could find. Note that implicitly-defined
or defaulted move constructors will automatically do what you'd
expect; that is, they are noexcept if all the members have noexcept
move constructors.
While doing this, I noticed a couple of odd cases where the move
constructor seemed to assume that the object being constructed could
have state requiring destruction. I've fixed these as well. See
completion_result and scoped_mmap.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-20 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* python/python.c (struct gdbpy_event): Mark move constructor as
noexcept.
* python/py-tui.c (class gdbpy_tui_window_maker): Mark move
constructor as noexcept.
* completer.h (struct completion_result): Mark move constructor as
noexcept.
* completer.c (completion_result::completion_result): Use
initialization style. Don't call reset_match_list.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-20 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* scoped_mmap.h (scoped_mmap): Mark move constructor as noexcept.
Use initialization style. Don't call destroy.
* scoped_fd.h (class scoped_fd): Mark move constructor as
noexcept.
* gdb_ref_ptr.h (class ref_ptr): Mark move constructor as
noexcept.
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|
This moves the gdb_notifier comment a bit lower in event-loop.c, to
where it belongs; and removes an obsolete comment that Pedro pointed
out.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* event-loop.c: Move comment. Remove obsolete comment.
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|
This moves event-loop.[ch] to gdbsupport/ and updates the uses in gdb.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* run-on-main-thread.c: Update include.
* unittests/main-thread-selftests.c: Update include.
* tui/tui-win.c: Update include.
* tui/tui-io.c: Update include.
* tui/tui-interp.c: Update include.
* tui/tui-hooks.c: Update include.
* top.h: Update include.
* top.c: Update include.
* ser-base.c: Update include.
* remote.c: Update include.
* remote-notif.c: Update include.
* remote-fileio.c: Update include.
* record-full.c: Update include.
* record-btrace.c: Update include.
* python/python.c: Update include.
* posix-hdep.c: Update include.
* mingw-hdep.c: Update include.
* mi/mi-main.c: Update include.
* mi/mi-interp.c: Update include.
* main.c: Update include.
* linux-nat.c: Update include.
* interps.c: Update include.
* infrun.c: Update include.
* inf-loop.c: Update include.
* event-top.c: Update include.
* event-loop.c: Move to ../gdbsupport/.
* event-loop.h: Move to ../gdbsupport/.
* async-event.h: Update include.
* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES, HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Update.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* event-loop.h: Move from ../gdb/.
* event-loop.cc: Move from ../gdb/.
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Code in gdbsupport can't call gdb_flush, so this introduces a new
"flush_streams" function that must be supplied by the client.
Note that the similar gdb_flush_out_err exists, but it isn't defined
in quite the same way, so it wasn't clear to me whether the two could
be merged.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* utils.c (flush_streams): New function.
* event-loop.c (gdb_wait_for_event): Call flush_streams.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* errors.h (flush_streams): Declare.
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This moves gdb_select.h to gdbsupport/, so it can be used by other
code there.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb_select.h: Move to ../gdbsupport/.
* event-loop.c: Update include path.
* top.c: Update include path.
* ser-base.c: Update include path.
* ui-file.c: Update include path.
* ser-tcp.c: Update include path.
* guile/scm-ports.c: Update include path.
* posix-hdep.c: Update include path.
* ser-unix.c: Update include path.
* gdb_usleep.c: Update include path.
* mingw-hdep.c: Update include path.
* inflow.c: Update include path.
* infrun.c: Update include path.
* event-top.c: Update include path.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb_select.h: Move from ../gdb/.
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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.
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I compiled gdb with -fsanitize=undefined and ran the test suite.
A couple of reports came from passing NULL to memcpy, e.g.:
[...]btrace-common.cc:176:13: runtime error: null pointer passed as argument 2, which is declared to never be null
While it would be better to fix this in the standard, in the meantime
it seems easy to avoid this error.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-03-31 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* dwarf2/abbrev.c (abbrev_table::read): Conditionally call
memcpy.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-03-31 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* btrace-common.cc (btrace_data_append): Conditionally call
memcpy.
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Run shellcheck (version 0.4.7) on the create-version.sh script, and
resolve the issues it highlighter - they all seemed reasonable.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* create-version.sh: Resolve issues highlighted by shellcheck.
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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.
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|
Fixes build on NetBSD, where alloca() is defined in <stdlib.h>.
gdbsupport:
* common-defs.h: Include alloca.h if HAVE_ALLOCA_H is defined.
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This changes gdbsupport so that it no longer relies on BFD. This is a
precursor to making gdbserver use the already-built gdbsupport,
because building gdbserver should not require BFD to be built.
The most notable change here is that CORE_ADDR is always a 64-bit
type. This makes it so that gdb acts as if it were always built in
64-bit mode.
ChangeLog
2020-03-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* Makefile.def (gdbsupport): Don't depend on bfd.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-03-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* common-types.h: Remove GDBSERVER code.
(gdb_byte, CORE_ADDR, LONGEST, ULONGEST): Redefine.
* common-defs.h: Remove GDBSERVER code.
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|
The selftest.m4 file is used by gdb, gdbserver and gdbsupport, I think
it belongs in gdbsupport.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* selftest.m4: Move to gdbsupport/.
* acinclude.m4: Update path to selftest.m4.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* acinclude.m4: Update path to selftest.m4.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* selftest.m4: Moved from gdb/.
* acinclude.m4: Update path to selftest.m4.
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|
The same is done for gdb, gdbserver and gdbsupport. I therefore think
it makes sense to move that to GDB_AC_COMMON.
It is required to move the call to GDB_AC_COMMON so it is before
GDB_AC_SELFTEST in gdbserver/configure.ac, otherwise the $development
variable isn't set when the code behind GDB_AC_SELFTEST executes.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Don't source bfd/development.sh.
* selftest.m4: Modify comment.
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Don't source bfd/development.sh, move
GDB_AC_COMMON higher.
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Don't source bfd/development.sh.
* common.m4: Source bfd/development.sh.
* configure: Re-generate.
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|
Before commit 3d1e5a43cbe ("gdbsupport/configure.ac: source
development.sh"), the GDB build in non-development mode (turn
development to false in bfd/development.sh if you want to try) was
broken because the gdbsupport configure script didn't source
bfd/development.sh to set the development variable.
Since the GDB_AC_SELFTEST macro relies on the `development` variable, I
propose to modify it such that it errors out if $development does not
have an expected value of "true" or "false". This could prevent a
future similar problem from happening while refactoring the configure
scripts. It would have caught the problem fixed by the patch mentioned
earlier.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* selftest.m4 (GDB_AC_SELFTEST): Error out if $development is
not "true" or "false".
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
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While compiling with clang, I noticed it didn't catch cases where my
function declaration didn't match my function definition. This is
normally caught by gcc with -Wmissing-declarations.
On clang, this is caught by -Wmissing-prototypes instead.
Note that on gcc, -Wmissing-prototypes also exists, but is only valid
for C and Objective-C. It gets correctly rejected by the configure
script since gcc rejects it with:
cc1plus: error: command line option '-Wmissing-prototypes' is valid for C/ObjC but not for C++ -Werror
So this warning flag ends up not used for gcc (which is what we want).
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
* warning.m4: Enable -Wmissing-prototypes.
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I noticed a couple of typos in gdb_binary_search.h. This fixes them.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb_binary_search.h: Fix two typos.
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Copy the .dir-locls.el file from gdb/ to gdbserver/ and gdbsupport/ so
that we get the GNU/GDB style when editing these files in Emacs.
I initially wanted to remove the (c-mode . ((mode . c++))) that
switches c-mode files into c++-mode as we store C++ code in *.cc files
in the gdbserver/ directory, unlike gdb/ where we use *.c, however, I
was forgetting about the header files - we still use *.h for our C++
header files, so for now I left the settings in place to open all C
files in c++-mode.
We now have three copies of this file, which are all identical. It
would be nice if we could remove this duplication, however, for now we
haven't found a good way to do this.
Some options considered were:
1. Use symlinks to only have one copy of the file. This was
rejected as not all targets support symlinks in the way.
2. Have two of the .dir-locals.el files contain some mechanism by
which the third copy of the file is sourced. Though this would, in
theory, be possible, it would involve some advanced Emacs scripting,
would be fragile, and a maintenance burdon.
3. Move the .dir-locals up into top level src/ directory, then use
Emacs dir-locals directory pattern matching to only apply the rules
for the three directories we care about. The problem is that each
directory has to be listed separately, so we still end up having to
duplicate all the rules.
In the end, it was decided that having three copies of the file,
though not ideal, is probably easiest for now. This was all discussed
in this mailing list thread:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2020-03/msg00024.html
The copyright date in the new files is left as for gdb/.dir-locals.el,
as the new files are a copy of the old, this is inline with this rule:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/ContributionChecklist#Copyright_Header
gdb/ChangeLog:
* .dir-locals.el: Add a comment referencing the other copies of
this file.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* .dir-locals.el: New file.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* .dir-locals.el: New file.
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[Commit message by Simon Marchi]
The GDB build in non-development mode (turn development to false in
bfd/development.sh if you want to try) is currently broken:
CXXLD gdb
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm-selftests.c:218: error: undefined reference to 'selftests::register_test_foreach_arch(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, void (*)(gdbarch*))'
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/disasm-selftests.c:220: error: undefined reference to 'selftests::register_test_foreach_arch(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, void (*)(gdbarch*))'
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2/frame.c:2310: error: undefined reference to 'selftests::register_test_foreach_arch(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, void (*)(gdbarch*))'
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbarch-selftests.c:168: error: undefined reference to 'selftests::register_test_foreach_arch(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, void (*)(gdbarch*))'
/home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/selftest.cc:96: error: undefined reference to 'selftests::reset()'
This is because the gdbsupport configure script doesn't source
bfd/development.sh to set the development variable. When $development
is unset, GDB_AC_SELFTEST defaults to enabling selftests. I don't think
the macro was written with this intention in mind, it just happens to be
that way.
So gdbsupport thinks selftests are enabled, while gdb thinks they are
disabled. gdbsupport compiles in code that calls selftests:: functions,
which are normally provided by gdb, but gdb doesn't provide them, hence
the undefined references.
Fix this by sourcing bfd/development.sh in gdbsupport/configure.ac, so
that the development variable is set.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure.ac: Added call development.sh.
* configure: Regenerate.
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Create .gitattributes files in gdb/, gdbserver/, and gdbsupport/.
The files specify cpp-style diffs for .h and .c files. This is
particularly helpful if a class in a header file is modified.
For instance, if the `stop_requested` field of `thread_info` in
gdb/gdbthread.h is modified, we get the following diff with
'git diff' (using git version 2.17.1):
@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ public:
struct target_waitstatus pending_follow;
/* True if this thread has been explicitly requested to stop. */
- int stop_requested = 0;
+ bool stop_requested = 0;
/* The initiating frame of a nexting operation, used for deciding
which exceptions to intercept. If it is null_frame_id no
Note that the context of the change shows up as 'public:'; not so
useful. With the .gitattributes file, we get:
@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ class thread_info : public refcounted_object
struct target_waitstatus pending_follow;
/* True if this thread has been explicitly requested to stop. */
- int stop_requested = 0;
+ bool stop_requested = 0;
/* The initiating frame of a nexting operation, used for deciding
which exceptions to intercept. If it is null_frame_id no
The context is successfully shown as 'class thread_info'.
This patch creates a .gitattributes file per each of gdb, gdbserver,
and gdbsupport folders. An alternative would be to define the
attributes in the root folder -- this would impact all the top-level
folders, though. I opted for the more conservative approach.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-03-05 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* .gitattributes: New file.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2020-03-05 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* .gitattributes: New file.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-03-05 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
* .gitattributes: New file.
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It looks like after doing last minute changes to Makefile.am in commit
06b3c5bdb ("gdbsupport: rename source files to .cc"), I forgot to
re-generate Makefile.in. This patch fixes it.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
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The 'gdb_dlopen' function doesn't return NULL if the shlib load
fails; it actually throws an error. This patch updates the comment
to reflect this.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-02-28 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* gdb-dlfcn.h (gdb_dlopen): Update comment.
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GCC's config/ChangeLog since the last time this merge was done
(in the binutils-gdb commit 0b4d000cc4e8e77c823) is included at the
end of this commit message.
It is worth noting that the binutils-gdb commit 301a9420d947da1458
added the file config/debuginfod.m4 which is not present in GCC's
config/ directory. This file is preserved, unmodified, after this
commit.
In order to regenerate all of the configure files, I configured with
--enable-maintainer-mode, and built the 'all' target. I then did the
same thing on a source tree without this patch, and only committed
those files that changed when this patch was added.
GCC's config/ChangeLog entries:
2020-02-12 Sandra Loosemore <sandra@codesourcery.com>
PR libstdc++/79193
PR libstdc++/88999
* no-executables.m4: Use a non-empty program to test for linker
support.
2020-02-01 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
* lib-link.m4 (AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY): Update shell syntax.
2020-01-27 Andrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>
* lib-link.m4 (AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY): Add new
--with-libXXX-type=... option. Use this to guide the selection of
either a shared library or a static library.
2020-01-24 Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@wdc.com>
* toolexeclibdir.m4: New file.
2019-09-10 Christophe Lyon <christophe.lyon@st.com>
* futex.m4: Handle *-uclinux*.
* tls.m4 (GCC_CHECK_TLS): Likewise.
2019-09-06 Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
* futex.m4 (GCC_LINUX_FUTEX): Include <unistd.h> for the syscall
function.
2019-07-08 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com>
* bootstrap-Og.mk: New file.
2019-06-25 Kwok Cheung Yeung <kcy@codesourcery.com>
Andrew Stubbs <ams@codesourcery.com>
* gthr.m4 (GCC_AC_THREAD_HEADER): Add case for gcn.
2019-05-30 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
* ax_count_cpus.m4: New file.
2019-05-02 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
PR bootstrap/85574
* bootstrap-lto.mk (extra-compare): Set to gcc/lto1$(exeext).
2019-04-16 Martin Liska <mliska@suse.cz>
* bootstrap-lto-lean.mk: Filter out -flto in STAGEtrain_CFLAGS.
2019-04-09 Martin Liska <mliska@suse.cz>
* bootstrap-lto-lean.mk: New file.
2019-03-02 Johannes Pfau <johannespfau@gmail.com>
* mh-mingw: Also set __USE_MINGW_ACCESS flag for C++ code.
2018-10-31 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
PR bootstrap/82856
* math.m4, tls.m4: Use AC_LANG_SOURCE.
Merge from binutils-gdb:
2018-06-19 Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>
* override.m4 (_GCC_AUTOCONF_VERSION): Bump from 2.64 to 2.69.
config/ChangeLog:
* ax_count_cpus.m4: New file, backported from GCC.
* bootstrap-Og.mk: New file, backported from GCC.
* bootstrap-lto-lean.mk: New file, backported from GCC.
* bootstrap-lto.mk: Changes backported from GCC.
* futex.m4: Changes backported from GCC.
* gthr.m4: Changes backported from GCC.
* lib-link.m4: Changes backported from GCC.
* mh-mingw: Changes backported from GCC.
* no-executables.m4: Changes backported from GCC.
* tls.m4: Changes backported from GCC.
* toolexeclibdir.m4: New file, backported from GCC.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
intl/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
libiberty/ChangeLog:
* configure: Regenerate.
zlib/ChangeLog.bin-gdb:
* configure: Regenerate.
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This changes gdbserver so that it no longer builds its own gnulib and
libiberty. Instead, it now relies on the ones that were already built
at the top level.
gdbsupport is still built specially for gdbserver. This is more
complicated and will be tackled in a subsequent patch.
ChangeLog
2020-02-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* Makefile.def: Make gdbserver require gnulib and libiberty.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-02-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* acinclude.m4: Don't include acx_configure_dir.m4.
* Makefile.in (LIBIBERTY_BUILDDIR, GNULIB_BUILDDIR): Update.
(SUBDIRS, CLEANDIRS, REQUIRED_SUBDIRS): Remove.
(all, install-only, uninstall, clean-info, clean)
(maintainer-clean): Don't recurse.
(subdir_do, all-lib): Remove.
($(LIBGNU) $(LIBIBERTY) $(GNULIB_H)): Remove rule.
(GNULIB_H): Remove.
(generated_files): Update.
($(GNULIB_BUILDDIR)/Makefile): Remove rule.
* configure: Rebuild.
* configure.ac: Don't configure gnulib or libiberty.
(GNULIB): Update.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-02-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* common-defs.h: Change path to gnulib/config.h.
Change-Id: I469cbbf5db2ab37109c058e9e3a1e4f4dabdfc98
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This patch renames the .c source files in gdbsupport to .cc.
In the gdb directory, there is an argument against renaming the source
files, which is that it makes using some git commands more difficult to
do archeology. Some commands have some kind of "follow" option that
makes git try to follow renames, but it doesn't work in all situations.
Given that we have just moved the gdbsupport directory, that argument
doesn't hold for source files in that directory. I therefore suggest
renaming them to .cc, so that they are automatically recognized as C++
by various tools and editors.
The original motivation behind this is that when building gdbsupport
with clang, I get:
CC agent.o
clang: error: treating 'c' input as 'c++' when in C++ mode, this behavior is deprecated [-Werror,-Wdeprecated]
In the gdb/ directory, we make clang happy by passing "-x c++". We
could do this in gdbsupport too, but I think that renaming the files is
a better long-term solution.
gdbserver still does its own build of gdbsupport, so a few changes in
its Makefile are necessary.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.am: Rename source files from .c to .cc.
(CC, CFLAGS): Don't override.
(AM_CFLAGS): Rename to ...
(AM_CXXFLAGS): ... this.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* %.c: Rename to %.cc.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Rename gdbsupport source files from .c to .cc.
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In my previous commit, I did a last minute modification of warning.m4,
but forgot to re-generate the configure scripts, this commit fixes that.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
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Commit 85f0dd3ce ("[gdb] Fix -Wstrict-null-sentinel warnings") fixed
some violations of -Wstrict-null-sentinel. If we want to enforce this
warning, I think we should enable it in our warning.m4 file.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* warning.m4: Add -Wstrict-null-sentinel.
* configure: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* configure: Re-generate.
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This file is used by gdbsupport, gdbserver and gdb, so I think it
belongs in gdbsupport. Move it there and update the references the
various acinclude.m4 files.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* warning.m4: Move here, from gdb/warning.m4.
* acinclude.m4: Update warning.m4 path.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* acinclude.m4: Update warning.m4 path.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* acinclude: Update warning.m4 path.
* warning.m4: Move to gdbsupport.
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Since gdbsupport has been given its own build system, it is no longer
compiled with the warning flags specified in gdb/warning.m4.
This patch makes it use AM_GDB_WARNINGS.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* acinclude.m4: Include ../gdb/warning.m4.
* configure.ac: Use AM_GDB_WARNINGS.
* Makefile.am: Set AM_CFLAGS to WARN_CFLAGS and WERROR_CFLAGS.
* Makefile.in: Re-generate.
* configure: Re-generate.
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When passed in CXXFLAGS, -Wstrict-null-sentinel triggers twice in a
gdb/gdbserver build.
Fix the two occurrences.
Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-02-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* dwarf2/read.c (process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader): Cast concat NULL
sentinel to char *.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-02-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* environ.c (gdb_environ::set): Cast concat NULL sentinel to char *.
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On NetBSD, pthread_setname_np takes a printf-style format string plus
one argument:
https://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?pthread_setname_np++NetBSD-current
This patch makes thread-pool.c handle that.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-01-24 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* thread-pool.c (set_thread_name): Add an overload for the NetBSD
version of pthread_setname_np.
Change-Id: I61e664a813eaa7f52b6811b1a43e08ac3082d8ef
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gdbsupport fails to build with compilers that don't default to C++11
or above. gdbsupport's configure.ac is already using
AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX, which sets CXX_DIALECT to the -std=gnu++11
switch if necessary, but the problem is that nowhere are we using
CXX_DIALECT. This fixes it.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-01-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.am: Append CXX_DIALECT to CXX.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
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I'm seeing this on F27 (a clean build from scratch):
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/pedro/brno/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/build/gdbsupport'
CC gdb_tilde_expand.o
In file included from /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdbsupport/../gnulib/import/libc-config.h:33:0,
from ../gnulib/import/glob.h:544,
from /home/pedro/gdb/binutils-gdb/src/gdbsupport/gdb_tilde_expand.c:22:
../bfd/config.h:7:4: error: #error config.h must be #included before system headers
# error config.h must be #included before system headers
^~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
libc-config.h, where it includes config.h, says:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/* This is intended to be a good-enough substitute for glibc system
macros like those defined in <sys/cdefs.h>, so that Gnulib code
shared with glibc can do this as the first #include:
#ifndef _LIBC
# include <libc-config.h>
#endif
When compiled as part of glibc this is a no-op; when compiled as
part of Gnulib this includes Gnulib's <config.h> and defines macros
that glibc library code would normally assume. */
#include <config.h>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The issue is that that '#include <config.h>' picks up bfd's config.h
instead of gnulib's.
This problem doesn't trigger in the gdb dir because there we generate
config.h under that exact name so gnulib's libc-config.h ends up
picking gdb's config.h instead of gnulib.c and that ends up harmless.
In gdbsupport, the config.h file is really named support-config.h, so
that '#include <config.h>' in libc-config.h doesn't pick it like it
would if it had the conventional config.h name.
This patch fixes it by simply renaming gdbserver's support-config.h to
config.h.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
2020-01-17 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* configure.ac: Generate config.h instead of support-config.h.
* common-defs.h: Include <gdbsupport/config.h> instead of
<gdbsupport/support-config.h>.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
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Compiling GDB with '-fvisibility=hidden' removes the symbols that
should be exported.
This patch explicitly marks them as visible.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-01-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Norbert Lange <nolange79@gmail.com>
PR build/24805
* gdbsupport/gdb_proc_service.h (PS_EXPORT): New.
(ps_get_thread_area, ps_getpid, ps_lcontinue, ps_lgetfpregs)
(ps_lgetregs, ps_lsetfpregs, ps_lsetregs, ps_lstop, ps_pcontinue)
(ps_pdread, ps_pdwrite, ps_pglobal_lookup, ps_pstop, ps_ptread)
(ps_ptwrite, ps_lgetxregs, ps_lgetxregsize, ps_lsetxregs)
(ps_plog): Redeclare exported functions with default visibility.
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This adds a new script that tries to check that none of the support
code uses defines that are not defined by common.m4. This check is
necessarily inexact, but this script caught all the issues fixed in
the previous patches.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-01-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
* Makefile.am (check-defines): New target.
* check-defines.el: New file.
Change-Id: I59450e91394d5e6a7fa59e9ab53c95843c4bacd9
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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
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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
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