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.
Pull out the common parts of the genmloop invocation into the common
code. This will make it easier to add more, and make the per-port
differences a little more obvious.
This regenerates sim files.
Tested with the following tools from a recent binutils build in
sim-site-config.exp, plus a few cross compilers.
set AS_FOR_TARGET_AARCH64 "/home/alan/build/gas/aarch64-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_AARCH64 "/home/alan/build/gas/aarch64-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_AARCH64 "aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc"
set AS_FOR_TARGET_ARM "/home/alan/build/gas/arm-linux-gnueabi/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_ARM "/home/alan/build/gas/arm-linux-gnueabi/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_ARM "arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc"
set AS_FOR_TARGET_AVR "/home/alan/build/gas/avr-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_AVR "/home/alan/build/gas/avr-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_AVR ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_BFIN "/home/alan/build/gas/bfin-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_BFIN "/home/alan/build/gas/bfin-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_BFIN ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_BPF "/home/alan/build/gas/bpf-none/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_BPF "/home/alan/build/gas/bpf-none/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_BPF ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_CR16 "/home/alan/build/gas/cr16-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_CR16 "/home/alan/build/gas/cr16-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_CR16 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_CRIS "/home/alan/build/gas/cris-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_CRIS "/home/alan/build/gas/cris-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_CRIS ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_D10V "/home/alan/build/gas/d10v-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_D10V "/home/alan/build/gas/d10v-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_D10V ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_FRV "/home/alan/build/gas/frv-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_FRV "/home/alan/build/gas/frv-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_FRV ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_FT32 "/home/alan/build/gas/ft32-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_FT32 "/home/alan/build/gas/ft32-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_FT32 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_H8300 "/home/alan/build/gas/h8300-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_H8300 "/home/alan/build/gas/h8300-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_H8300 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_IQ2000 "/home/alan/build/gas/iq2000-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_IQ2000 "/home/alan/build/gas/iq2000-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_IQ2000 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_LM32 "/home/alan/build/gas/lm32-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_LM32 "/home/alan/build/gas/lm32-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_LM32 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_M32C "/home/alan/build/gas/m32c-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_M32C "/home/alan/build/gas/m32c-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_M32C ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_M32R "/home/alan/build/gas/m32r-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_M32R "/home/alan/build/gas/m32r-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_M32R ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_M68HC11 "/home/alan/build/gas/m68hc11-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_M68HC11 "/home/alan/build/gas/m68hc11-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_M68HC11 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MCORE "/home/alan/build/gas/mcore-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MCORE "/home/alan/build/gas/mcore-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MCORE ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MICROBLAZE "/home/alan/build/gas/microblaze-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MICROBLAZE "/home/alan/build/gas/microblaze-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MICROBLAZE "microblaze-linux-gnu-gcc"
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MIPS "/home/alan/build/gas/mips-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MIPS "/home/alan/build/gas/mips-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MIPS "mips-linux-gnu-gcc"
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MN10300 "/home/alan/build/gas/mn10300-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MN10300 "/home/alan/build/gas/mn10300-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MN10300 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MOXIE "/home/alan/build/gas/moxie-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MOXIE "/home/alan/build/gas/moxie-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MOXIE ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_MSP430 "/home/alan/build/gas/msp430-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_MSP430 "/home/alan/build/gas/msp430-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_MSP430 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_OR1K "/home/alan/build/gas/or1k-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_OR1K "/home/alan/build/gas/or1k-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_OR1K ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_PPC "/home/alan/build/gas/powerpc-linux-gnu/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_PPC "/home/alan/build/gas/powerpc-linux-gnu/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_PPC "powerpc-linux-gnu-gcc"
set AS_FOR_TARGET_PRU "/home/alan/build/gas/pru-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_PRU "/home/alan/build/gas/pru-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_PRU ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_RISCV "/home/alan/build/gas/riscv32-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_RISCV "/home/alan/build/gas/riscv32-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_RISCV ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_RL78 "/home/alan/build/gas/rl78-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_RL78 "/home/alan/build/gas/rl78-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_RL78 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_RX "/home/alan/build/gas/rx-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_RX "/home/alan/build/gas/rx-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_RX ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_SH "/home/alan/build/gas/sh-rtems/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_SH "/home/alan/build/gas/sh-rtems/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_SH ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_ERC32 ""
set LD_FOR_TARGET_ERC32 ""
set CC_FOR_TARGET_ERC32 ""
set AS_FOR_TARGET_V850 "/home/alan/build/gas/v850-elf/gas/as-new"
set LD_FOR_TARGET_V850 "/home/alan/build/gas/v850-elf/ld/ld-new"
set CC_FOR_TARGET_V850 ""
Results both before and after were:
FAIL: crisv10 mem1.ms (execution)
FAIL: crisv10 mem2.ms (execution)
FAIL: crisv32 mem1.ms (execution)
FAIL: crisv32 mem2.ms (execution)
FAIL: microblaze fail.s (execution)
FAIL: microblaze pass.s (execution)
expected passes 5288
unexpected failures 6
expected failures 3
untested testcases 373
unsupported tests 14
I had reason yesterday to want to regenerate configury files which I
do with --enable-maintainer-mode, and added --enable-cgen-maint
accidentally. The first problem I hit is that sim looks for cgen in a
different directory by default than opcodes, and I had my source
layout set up for opcodes rather than sim. Fix that by making both
use ../cgen first, then ../../cgen relative to sim/ and opcodes/. The
next problem was that various sim local.mk files expected generated
sources in the build dir rather than the source dir. Fix that by
adding $(srcdir) to paths. Finally, the generated iq2000 files had a
compile error, fixed by the cpu/iq2000.cpu patch.
cpu/
* iq2000.cpu (syscall): Add pc arg.
opcodes/
* configure.ac (cgendir): Default to ../../cgen, but use ../cgen
if found there.
* configure: Regenerate.
sim/m4/
* sim_ac_option_cgen_maint.m4 (cgendir): Look in ../cgen too.
sim/
* cris/local.mk: Add $(srcdir) to paths for regenerated source.
* frv/local.mk: Likewise.
* iq2000/local.mk: Likewise.
* lm32/local.mk: Likewise.
* m32r/local.mk: Likewise.
* or1k/local.mk: Likewise.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
Add explicit arch-specific modules.c rules to keep the build from
generating an incorrect common/modules.c. Otherwise the pattern
rules would cascade such that it'd look for $arch/modules.o which
turned into common/modules.c which triggered the gen rule.
My local testing of this code didn't catch this bug because of how
Automake manages .Po (dependency files) in incremental builds -- it
was adding extra rules that override the pattern rules which caused
the build to generate correct modules.c files. But when building
from a cold cache, the pattern rules would force common/modules.c to
be used leading to crashes at runtime.
This makes sure the arch-specific modules.c wildcard is matched and
not the common/%.c so that we compile it correctly. It also makes
sure each subdir has depdir logic enabled.
Now that we build these objects in the top dir & generate modules.c
there, we don't need to generate them all first -- we can let the
normal dependency graph take care of building things in parallel.
This simplifies the build logic and avoids an Automake bug where the
common_libcommon_a_OBJECTS variable isn't set in the arch libsim.a
DEPENDENCIES for targets that, alphabetically, come before "common".
We aren't affected by that bug with the current code, but as we move
things out of SIM_ALL_RECURSIVE_DEPS and rely on finer dependencies,
we will trip over it.
The objects are still compiled in the subdir, but the creation of the
archive itself is in the top-level. This is a required step before we
can move compilation itself up, and makes it easier to review.
The downside is that each object compile is a recursive make instead of
a single one. On my 4 core system, it adds ~100msec to the build per
port, so it's not great, but it shouldn't be a big deal. This will go
away of course once the top-level compiles objects.
Add rules for tracking generated subdir modules.c files. This doesn't
actually generate the file from the top-level, but allows us to add
rules that need to be ordered wrt it. Once those changes land, we can
rework this to actually generate from the top-level.
This currently builds off of the objects that go into the libsim.a as
we don't build those from the top-level either. Once we migrate that
up, we can switch this to the source files directly. It's a bit hacky
overall, but makes it easier to migrate things in smaller chunks, and
we aren't going to keep this logic long term.
Automake's automatic header deptracking has a bootstrap problem where
it can't detect generated headers when compiling. We've been handling
that by adding a custom SIM_ALL_RECURSIVE_DEPS variable, but that only
works when building objects recursively in subdirs. As we move those
out to the top-level, we don't have any recursive steps anymore. The
Automake approach is to declare those headers in BUILT_SOURCES.
This isn't completely foolproof as the Automake manual documents: it
only activates for `make all`, not `make foo.o`, but that shouldn't be
a huge limitation as it only affects the initial compile. After that,
rebuilds should work fine.
Clean up includes a bit by making ports include opcodes/ headers
explicitly. This matches other projects, and makes it more clear
where these headers are coming from.
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.
All the runtimes were only initializing a single CPU. When SMP is
enabled, things quickly crash as none of the other CPU structs are
setup. Change the default from 0 to the compile time value.
There's no need for these settings to be in sim-main.h which is shared
with common/ sim code, so move it all out to the existing or1k-sim.h.
Unfortunately, we can't yet drop the or1k-sim.h include from sim-main.h
as many of the generated CGEN files refer only to sim-main.h. We'll
have to improve the CGEN interface before we can make more progress,
but this is at least a minor improvement.
The cgen-types.h header sets up types that are needed by cgen-defs.h,
so move the include out of sim-main.h and to that header. It might
be needed in other specific modules, but for now let's kick it out of
sim-main.h to make some progress. Things still build with just this.
Since SIM_ADDR is always 32-bit, it might truncate the address with
64-bit ELFs. Since we load that addr from the bfd, use the bfd_vma
type which matches the bfd_get_start_address API.
We've been using this only to set the default word size to 32. We
can easily move this into the makefile via a -D compiler flag and
clean up the build logic quite a bit.
Automake will run each subdir individually before moving on to the next
one. This means that the linking phase, a single threaded process, will
not run in parallel with anything else. When we have to link ~32 ports,
that's 32 link steps that don't take advantage of parallel systems. On
my really old 4-core system, this cuts a multi-target build from ~60 sec
to ~30 sec. We eventually want to move all compile+link steps to this
common dir anyways, so might as well move linking now for a nice speedup.
We use noinst_PROGRAMS instead of bin_PROGRAMS because we're taking care
of the install ourselves rather than letting automake process it.
These manual settings were necessary when we weren't doing automatic
header dependency tracking. That was changed a while ago, and we use
automake now to do it all for us. As a result, many of these vars
aren't even referenced anymore.
Further, some of the source file generation (e.g. .c files, or igen,
or cgen outputs) were moved to the common automake build, and it takes
care of dependency tracking for us with the object files.
We have configure tests for this in the top-level configure script
to link this when necessary, so we don't need to explicitly list it
for specific ports.
When reading/writing arbitrary data to the system's memory, the unsigned
char pointer type doesn't make that much sense. Switch it to void so we
align a bit with standard C library read/write functions, and to avoid
having to sprinkle casts everywhere.
This was left in subdirs because of the dynamic cgen usage. However,
we can move this breakpoint call to runtime and let gdb detect whether
the symbol exists.
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.
These are just using the default behavior for the 3rd arg, so drop
it to make it more clear. This also makes them match all other
ports that only use the first 2 arguments.
The ## marker tells automake to not include the comment in its
generated output, so use that in most places where the comment
only makes sense in the inputs.
We use the program argv to both find the program to run (argv[0]) and
to hold the arguments to the program. Most of the time this is fine,
but if we want to let programs specify argv[0] independently (which is
possible in standard *NIX programs), this double duty doesn't work.
So let's split the path to the program to run out into a separate
field by itself. This simplifies the various sim_open funcs too.
By itself, this code is more of a logical cleanup than something that
is super useful. But it will open up customization of argv[0] in a
follow up commit. Split the changes to make it easier to review.
These rules don't depend on the target compiler settings, so hoist
the build logic up to the common builds for better parallelization.
We have to extend the genmloop.sh logic a bit to allow outputting
to a subdir since it always assumed cwd was the right place.
We leave the cgen maintainer rules in the subdirs for now as they
aren't normally run, and they rely on cgen logic that has not yet
been generalized.