This patch is to pass ptid to aarch64_linux_get_debug_reg_capacity,
and stop using global variable inferior_ptid.
gdb:
2015-07-09 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_get_debug_reg_capacity): Add
argument ptid. Update comments. Caller update.
Hi,
I happen to read the comments in regs_info below,
struct regs_info
{
...
/* Info used when accessing registers with PTRACE_PEEKUSER /
PTRACE_POKEUSER. This can be NULL if all registers are
transferred with regsets .*/
struct usrregs_info *usrregs;
that usrregs can be NULL if all registers are transferred with
regsets, which is exactly what aarch64-linux does. This patch
is to set usrregs to NULL in regs_info and remove
aarch64_usrregs_info and aarch64_regmap.
gdb/gdbserver:
2015-07-09 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_regmap): Remove.
(aarch64_usrregs_info): Remove.
(regs_info): Set field usrregs to NULL.
Add support for dumping new Intel(R) Processor Trace packets in the
"maint btrace packet-history" command.
gdb/
* btrace.c (pt_print_packet): Print stop, vmcs, tma, mtc, cyc, and
mnt packets.
When compiling GDB with 32-bit BFD, the build fails with:
In file included from btrace.h:33:0,
from btrace.c:23:
/usr/include/intel-pt.h:1643:51: note: expected 'int (*)(uint8_t *, size_t,
const struct pt_asid *, uint64_t, void *)' but argument is of type 'int
(*)(gdb_byte *, size_t, const struct pt_asid *, CORE_ADDR, void *)' extern
pt_export int pt_image_set_callback(struct pt_image *image, ^
gdb/
* btrace.c (btrace_pt_readmem_callback): Change type of PC argument.
When deleting an inferior, delete the associated program space as well
if it becomes unused. This replaces the "pruning" approach, with which
you could forget to call prune_program_spaces (as seen, with the
-remove-inferior command, see [1]).
This allows to remove the prune_program_spaces function. At the same
time, I was able to clean up the delete_inferior* family:
- delete_inferior is unused
- delete_inferior_silent is only used in monitor_close, but is replaced
with discard_all_inferiors [2], so it becomes unused
- All remaining calls to delete_inferior_1 are with silent=1, so the
parameter is removed
- delete_inferior_1 is renamed to delete_inferior
I renamed pspace_empty_p to program_space_empty_p. I prefer if the
"exported" functions have a more explicit and standard name.
Tested on Ubuntu 14.10.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-09/msg00717.html
[2] See https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-07/msg00228.html and
follow-ups for details.
gdb/Changelog:
* inferior.c (delete_inferior_1): Rename to ...
(delete_inferior): ..., remove 'silent' parameter, delete
program space when unused and remove call to prune_program_spaces.
Remove the old, unused, delete_inferior.
(delete_inferior_silent): Remove.
(prune_inferiors): Change call from delete_inferior_1 to
delete_inferior and remove 'silent' parameter. Remove call to
prune_program_spaces.
(remove_inferior_command): Idem.
* inferior.h (delete_inferior_1): Rename to...
(delete_inferior): ..., remove 'silent' parameter and remove the
original delete_inferior.
(delete_inferior_silent): Remove.
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_remove_inferior): Change call from
delete_inferior_1 to delete_inferior and remove 'silent'
parameter.
* progspace.c (prune_program_spaces): Remove.
(pspace_empty_p): Rename to...
(program_space_empty_p): ... and make non-static.
(delete_program_space): New.
* progspace.h (prune_program_spaces): Remove declaration.
(program_space_empty_p): New declaration.
(delete_program_space): New declaration.
* monitor.c (monitor_close): Replace call to
delete_thread_silent and delete_inferior_silent with
discard_all_inferiors.
This is a straightforward replacement of the TUI's use of the
aforementioned hook with the register_changed observer. Since this was
the only user of the hook, this patch also removes the hook.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* defs.h (deprecated_register_changed_hook): Remove prototype.
* interps.c (clear_iterpreter_hooks): Remove reference to
deprecated_register_changed_hook.
* top.c (deprecated_register_changed_hook): Remove prototype.
* valops.c (value_assign): Remove reference to
deprecated_register_changed_hook.
* tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_register_changed): Add parameter "frame".
Add comment documenting the function.
(tui_register_changed_observer): Define.
(tui_install_hooks): Remove reference to
deprecated_register_changed_hook. Set
tui_register_changed_observer.
(tui_remove_hooks): Remove reference to
deprecated_register_changed_hook. Unset
tui_register_changed_observer.
When generating relocation (tc_gen_reloc) 32 bit relocation fixup
is changed to new 32 bit PC relative relocation if the fixup has pc-relative
flag set.
bfd/ChangeLog
2015-07-06 Pitchumani Sivanupandi <pitchumani.s@atmel.com>
* elf32-avr.c: Add 32 bit PC relative relocation for AVR target.
gas/ChangeLog
2015-07-06 Pitchumani Sivanupandi <pitchumani.s@atmel.com>
* config/tc-avr.c (tc_gen_reloc): Change 32 bit relocation to
32 bit PC relative and update offset if the fixup is pc-relative.
* config/tc-avr.h (DIFF_EXPR_OK): Define to enable PC relative diff
relocs.
gas/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-07-06 Pitchumani Sivanupandi <pitchumani.s@atmel.com>
* gas/avr/pc-relative-reloc.d: New test for 32 bit pc relative reloc.
* gas/avr/per-function-debugline.s: New test source.
include/ChangeLog
2015-07-06 Pitchumani Sivanupandi <pitchumani.s@atmel.com>
* elf/avr.h: Add new 32 bit PC relative relocation.
ld/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-07-06 Pitchumani Sivanupandi <pitchumani.s@atmel.com>
* ld-avr/gc-section-debugline.d: New test.
* ld-avr/per-function-debugline.s: Source for new test.
The documentation for the 'frame' command has gotten a little out of
date, it still mentions architecturally specific details that are no
longer relevant.
This commit removes the old details that no longer apply, and tries to
expand the existing text a little to make the usage clearer for some
cases.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Selection): Update documentation for 'frame'
command.
When deleting an inferior, delete the associated program space as well
if it becomes unused. This replaces the "pruning" approach, with which
you could forget to call prune_program_spaces (as seen, with the
-remove-inferior command, see [1]).
This allows to remove the prune_program_spaces function. At the same
time, I was able to clean up the delete_inferior* family.
delete_inferior_silent and delete_inferior were unused, which allowed
renaming delete_inferior_1 to delete_inferior. Also, since all calls to
it were with silent=1, I removed that parameter completely.
I renamed pspace_empty_p to program_space_empty_p. I prefer if the
"exported" functions have a more explicit and standard name.
Tested on Ubuntu 14.10.
This obsoletes my previous patch "Add call to prune_program_spaces in
mi_cmd_remove_inferior" [1].
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-09/msg00717.html
gdb/Changelog:
* inferior.c (delete_inferior_1): Rename to ...
(delete_inferior): ..., remove 'silent' parameter, delete
program space when unused and remove call to prune_program_spaces.
Remove the old, unused, delete_inferior.
(delete_inferior_silent): Remove.
(prune_inferiors): Change call from delete_inferior_1 to
delete_inferior and remove 'silent' parameter. Remove call to
prune_program_spaces.
(remove_inferior_command): Idem.
* inferior.h (delete_inferior_1): Rename to...
(delete_inferior): ..., remove 'silent' parameter and remove the
original delete_inferior.
(delete_inferior_silent): Remove.
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_remove_inferior): Change call from
delete_inferior_1 to delete_inferior and remove 'silent'
parameter.
* progspace.c (prune_program_spaces): Remove.
(pspace_empty_p): Rename to...
(program_space_empty_p): ... and make non-static.
(delete_program_space): New.
* progspace.h (prune_program_spaces): Remove declaration.
(program_space_empty_p): New declaration.
(delete_program_space): New declaration.
GDB could:
compile code struct_object.selffield = &struct_object
./compile/compile-c-types.c:83: internal-error: insert_type: Assertion `add == NULL || add->gcc_type == gcc_type' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) FAIL: gdb.compile/compile.exp: compile code struct_object.selffield = &struct_object (GDB internal
error)
The bug was not in GDB but in the GCC part interfacing with GDB.
Alexandre Oliva has fixed it the right way:
https://gcc.gnu.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=gcc.git;a=commitdiff;h=072dfdba0ea62abb65514cb3a90cdf3868efe286
git://gcc.gnu.org/git/gcc.git
aoliva/libcp1
Attaching this GDB testsuite update + info to user s/he should upgrade GCC.
After Alex upstreams the fix I can update the message to contain the specific
GCC release.
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-07-08 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
PR compile/18484
* compile/compile-c-types.c (insert_type): Change gdb_assert to error.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-07-08 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
PR compile/18484
* gdb.compile/compile.c (struct struct_type): Add volatile to
selffield's type.
* gdb.compile/compile.exp
(compile code struct_object.selffield = &struct_object): Skip further
struct_object tests if this one xfails.
The existing code preserves 'from' bits, which is incorrect. E.g.
(gdb) maint agent-eval (char)255L
Scope: 0x4008d6
Reg mask: 00
0 const16 255
3 ext 64
5 end
'ext 64' should be 'ext 8'; this bytecode evaluates to 255 instead of
the correct result of -1. The fix is simple. I ran the entire test
suite on x86-64 and there were no new test failures.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-07-08 Robert O'Callahan <robert@ocallahan.org>
PR exp/18617
* ax-gdb.c (gen_conversion): Extend to 'to' bits, not 'from'.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2015-07-08 Robert O'Callahan <robert@ocallahan.org>
PR exp/18617
* gdb.trace/ax.exp: Add test.
Do not use strerror(), instead use safe_strerror().
gdb/
* nat/linux-btrace.c (kernel_supports_bts, kernel_supports_pt):
Use safe_strerror() instead of strerror().
2015-07-07 Han Shen <shenhan@google.com>
gold/ChangeLog:
2015-07-06 Han Shen <shenhan@google.com>
* aarch64.cc (AArch64_relobj::do_count_local_symbols): Make legal
of mapping symbols.
Some tests expect the the target is aarch64, but checking target
triplet is not accurate, because target triplet can be aarch64 but
the program is in arm (or aarch32) state.
This patch addes a new proc is_aarch64_target which returns true
if the target is on aarch64 state.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.arch/aarch64-atomic-inst.exp: Check is_aarch64_target
instead of istarget "aarch64*-*-*".
* gdb.arch/aarch64-fp.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.base/float.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.reverse/aarch64.exp: Likewise.
* lib/gdb.exp (is_aarch64_target): New proc.
GDB tests running on arm target should be also run on aarch32
(32-bit mode on aarch64). There should be no difference. It is not
precise to check target triplet to decide which tests should be run,
because if I compiler all the test binary in 32-bit (arm program),
but target triplet is still aarch64, so that these arm specific tests
are skipped.
This patch is to add a new proc is_aarch32_target which return true
if target triplet is arm or the test binary is compiled for arm.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* lib/gdb.exp (is_aarch32_target): New proc.
* gdb.arch/arm-bl-branch-dest.exp: Check is_aarch32_target
instead of "istarget "arm*-*-*"".
* gdb.arch/arm-disp-step.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.arch/thumb-bx-pc.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.arch/thumb-prologue.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.arch/thumb-singlestep.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.base/float.exp: Likewise.
This patch is to enable test_catch_syscall_multi_arch on aarch64.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp (test_catch_syscall_multi_arch):
Set arch1, arch2, syscall1_name, syscall2_name and syscall_number.
Multi-arch related tests under gdb.multi are to compile programs with
the same compiler but different compiler options (-m64 vs -m32). However,
different compilers are needed to compile both aarch64 program and
arm (aarch32) program. This patch is to adjust these test cases to
compile programs in different modes with different compiler.
When we use gcc for arm-linux target, its file name can be different,
arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc, arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc, or arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc,
so I add a variable ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET, so that user can set the name
of gcc for arm-linux target on aarch64, like:
$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS='ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET=arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc multi-arch.exp'
gdb/testsuite:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.multi/multi-arch-exec.exp: Set march1 and march2 to "" if target
is aarch64. If target is aarch64, set compiler=${ARM_CC_FOR_TARGET}
if it exists.
* gdb.multi/multi-arch.exp: Likewise.
This patch is to add the following line to various arm target description
xml files,
<architecture>arm</architecture>
in order to fix problems I've seen on aarch64 multi-arch debugging,
detach^M
Detaching from program: build-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/attach, process 17145^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/attach.exp: attach1 detach file^M
No executable file now.^M
Architecture of file not recognized.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/attach.exp: attach1, purging symbols after detach
Without this patch, struct target_desc *tdesc_* are not initialised
properly, that is, fields arch and osabi in 'struct target_desc' are
not set properly. This doesn't cause any problems on single arch
debugging, because arch-utils.c:gdbarch_info_fill will guess correctly.
However, in multi-arch debugging, gdbarch_info_fill gets the aarch64
arch, but the target description is for arm (because the current
inferior is 32-bit arm).
It is a surprise to me we didn't set architecture to "arm" before in *.xml
files, and I didn't find out why didn't do so. AFAICS,
gdb/features/arm-with-iwmmxt.xml was added firstly (in patch
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2007-01/msg00593.html)
which had <architecture>iwmmxt</architecture>, however, afterwards,
architecture isn't set anymore in features/arm-*.xml files (in patches
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2009-07/msg00689.html and
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-08/msg00225.html).
gdb:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* features/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.xml: Set architecture to arm.
* features/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.c: Regenerated.
* features/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.xml: Likewise.
* features/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.c: Regenerated.
* features/arm-with-m.xml: Likewise.
* features/arm-with-m.c: Regenerated.
* features/arm-with-neon.xml: Likewise.
* features/arm-with-neon.c: Regenerated.
* features/arm-with-vfpv2.xml: Likewise.
* features/arm-with-vfpv2.c: Regenerated.
* features/arm-with-vfpv3.xml: Likewise.
* features/arm-with-vfpv3.c: Regenerated.
This patch is to let aarch64 GDB debug 32-bit arm program natively. In
each function for fetching and storing registers, GDB will check
gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (gdbarch)->bits_per_word, if it is 32, call
the corresponding aarch32 functions in aarch32-linux-nat.c, otherwise
fall back to aarch64 code to fetch and store registers.
aarch64_linux_read_description has to return the right target description,
but we don't have gdbarch available there, so GDB fetches auxv and gets
AT_PHENT, in order to determine whether the target is 32-bit or 64-bit.
I learned this trick from solib-svr4.c.
gdb:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* aarch32-linux-nat.h (VFP_REGS_SIZE): New macro, moved from
arm-linux-nat.c.
* aarch64-linux-nat.c: Include aarch32-linux-nat.h and
elf/external.h.
(fetch_gregs_from_thread): Call aarch32_gp_regcache_supply
if target is 32-bit.
(store_gregs_to_thread): Call aarch32_gp_regcache_collect
if target is 32-bit.
(fetch_fpregs_from_thread): Call aarch32_vfp_regcache_supply
if target is 32-bit.
(store_fpregs_to_thread): Call aarch32_vfp_regcache_collect
if target is 32-bit.
(tdesc_arm_with_vfpv3, tdesc_arm_with_neon): Declare.
(aarch64_linux_read_description): Return the right target
description.
* arm-linux-nat.c (VFP_REGS_SIZE): Moved to aarch32-linux-nat.h.
* config/aarch64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add aarch32-linux-nat.o.
* configure.tgt (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add arm-tdep.o and
arm-linux-tdep.o
This patch is to move all the code about transferring
regcache <-> byte buffer for arm (aarch32) to a separate file
aarch32-linux-nat.c. Then, in the following patch, aarch64 code
can use it to do multi-arch debugging. This is a refactory patch.
gdb:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* aarch32-linux-nat.c: New file.
* aarch32-linux-nat.h: New file.
* arm-linux-nat.c: Include aarch32-linux-nat.h.
(fetch_regs): Move code to aarch32-linux-nat.c. Call
aarch32_gp_regcache_supply.
(store_regs): Move code to aarch32-linux-nat.c. Call
aarch32_gp_regcache_collect.
(fetch_vfp_regs): Move code to aarch32-linux-nat.c. Call
aarch32_vfp_regcache_supply.
(store_vfp_regs): Move code to aarch32-linux-nat.c. Call
aarch32_vfp_regcache_collect.
* config/arm/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add aarch32-linux-nat.o.
This patch is to remove fetch_fpregister, fech_register,
store_fpregister and store_register, and use fetch_fpregs,
fetch_regs, store_regs, and store_fpregs instead.
gdb:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* arm-linux-nat.c (store_fpregister): Remove.
(store_register): Likewise.
(fetch_fpregister): Likewise.
(fetch_register): Likewise.
(arm_linux_store_inferior_registers): Call store_regs and
store_fpregs instead.
(arm_linux_fetch_inferior_registers): Call fetch_fpregs and
fetch_regs instead.
Patch "Do not skip prologue for asm (.S) files" [1] changes GDB's
behaviour on which test gdb.arch/thumb-singlestep.exp depends, so
it causes the fail below:
(gdb) si^M
37 blx foo^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/thumb-singlestep.exp: step into foo
the test assumes the program will stop at the instruction after "push"
but it doesn't. The fix to this fail is to do one more single step.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2015-06/msg00561.html
gdb/testsuite:
2015-07-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.arch/thumb-singlestep.exp: Do one more single step.
Changes the documentation for the layout and focus commands.
Instead of documenting each layout (or focus) sub-command as a separate
command, document a single layout (and focus) command which takes a
parameter, then list the possible parameters in a table nested under
each command.
The documentation for the layout command has been extended little to
make it clearer which windows are shown in each layout.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* doc/gdb.texinfo (TUI): Restructure documentation on TUI layout
and focus commands.
Now that the GDB 7.10 branch has been created, we can
bump the version number.
gdb/ChangeLog:
GDB 7.10 branch created (66c4b3e8a6):
* version.in: Bump version to 7.10.50.DATE-cvs.
This fixes regressions introduced with the original change to not
consider permanent breakpoints always inserted:
6ae8866180 is the first bad commit
commit 6ae8866180
Author: Luis Machado <lgustavo@codesourcery.com>
Date: Wed Jun 17 16:50:57 2015 -0300
Fix problems with finishing a dummy function call on simulators.
Some checks were mistakenly left out of the original patch, which
caused the following failures:
-PASS: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: print mainshr1(1)
-PASS: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: step into mainshr1
+FAIL: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: print mainshr1(1)
+FAIL: gdb.base/shlib-call.exp: step into mainshr1
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(p())
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(p())
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(p() + r())
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(p() + r())
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: g(f(g(f() + f())) + f())
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: g(f(g(f() + f())) + f())
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: *c
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: *c + *c
-PASS: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(*c + *c)
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: *c
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: *c + *c
+FAIL: gdb.cp/chained-calls.exp: q(*c + *c)
-PASS: gdb.cp/classes.exp: calling method for small class
+FAIL: gdb.cp/classes.exp: calling method for small class
The above is likely caused by GDB not removing the permanent
breakpoints from the target, leading to the inferior executing
the breakpoint instruction and tripping on a SIGSEGV.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-07-06 Luis Machado <lgustavo@codesourcery.com>
* breakpoint.c (remove_breakpoint_1): Don't handle permanent
breakpoints in a special way.
(remove_breakpoint): Likewise.
(mark_breakpoints_out): Likewise.
All uses of @xref must be followed by either '.' or ','. In commit
a4ea0946c an incorrect use of @xref was introduced. This commit
adds a comma after the use of @xref.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* doc/gdb.texinfo (TUI): Add comma after @xref.
Instead of casting between structure types to get the 'tui_gen_win_info'
info from a 'tui_win_info' access the generic member variable. This is
inline with what is done throughout the rest of the tui code.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* tui/tui-win.c (tui_set_focus): Use structure member 'generic'
instead of casting the structure type.
I was trying to understand what the OFFSET parameter was for, and
realized it was set to 0 in every call to search_struct_field. I
assume that it was used at some point, but some subsequent changes
made it useless.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* valops.c (search_struct_field): Remove OFFSET parameter.
(value_cast_structs): Adjust calls to search_struct_field.
(value_struct_elt): Same.
(find_overload_match): Same.
The comment for value_fetch_lazy seems outdated. It says that it's only
called from the value_contents and value_contents_all (macros!), which
is not true. Also, the return value seems useless now, despite what the
comment says.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* value.c (value_fetch_lazy): Update comment, change return
value to void.
* value.h (value_fetch_lazy): Change return value to void.
This commit makes the parameter and the result for 'tui_win_name'
constant. There's one place in the code that is then updated as a
result of this change.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* tui/tui-data.c (tui_partial_win_by_name): Window name is const.
(tui_win_name): Make parameter and result const.
* tui/tui-data.h (tui_win_name): Make parameter and result const.
"show" functions should not throw an exception in part because it causes
the output of the commands "info set" and "show" to get truncated.
This fixes the following fails:
FAIL: gdb.base/default.exp: info set
FAIL: gdb.base/default.exp: show
gdb/ChangeLog:
* i386-tdep.c (i386_mpx_info_bounds): Don't call error, instead
use printf_unfiltered.
(set_mpx_cmd): Add missing trailing space to command string
literal.
(_initialize_i386_tdep): Give the "mpx" prefix command its
correct name.
bfd/
* elf64-ppc.c (toc_adjusting_stub_needed): Use the symbol value
plus addend rather than the original st_value when looking up
entries in opd->adjust.
ld/testsuite/
* ld-powerpc/tocopt6-inc.s, ld-powerpc/tocopt6a.s,
ld-powerpc/tocopt6b.s, ld-powerpc/tocopt6c.s,
ld-powerpc/tocopt6.d: New test.
* ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp (ppc64elftests): Add it.
Back in the day support for these processors was added, we probably
didn't want to waste PPC_OPCODE bits on minor variations. I've had a
complaint that disassembly of mfspr/mtspr was wrong for power8. This
patch fixes that problem.
Note that since -m860/-m850/-m821 are new gas options enabling the
mpc8xx specific mfspr/mtspr variants it is possible that this change
will break some mpc8xx assembly code. ie. you might need to modify
makefiles to pass -m860 to gas.
include/opcode/
* ppc.h (PPC_OPCODE_750, PPC_OPCODE_7450, PPC_OPCODE_860): Define.
opcodes/
* ppc-opc.c (PPC750, PPC7450, PPC860): Define using PPC_OPCODE_*.
* ppc-dis.c (ppc_opts): Add 821, 850 and 860 entries. Add
PPC_OPCODE_7450 to 7450 entry. Add PPC_OPCODE_750 to 750cl entry.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (md_show_usage): Add -m821, -m850, -m860.
* doc/c-ppc.texi (PowerPC-Opts): Likewise.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/ppc/titan.d: Correct mfmcsrr0 disassembly.
This change adds support for backtracing through Renesas RX exception
frames.
Determination about the type of frame is made by scanning the
remainder of the function for a return instruction and then looking at
which, if any, return instruction is found. A normal RTS instruction
indicates that the frame is a normal frame. An RTFI instruction
indicates that it's a fast interrupt, and an RTE instruction indicates
that the frame is a (normal) exception frame. If no return instruction
is found within the scanned region - which can happen when the end of
the function cannot be found - it is assumed to be a normal frame.
I was able to test that normal prologue scanning still works by
disabling the dwarf2 sniffer. I've tested this code for normal
interrupts. The fast interrupt case has not been tested.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* rx-tdep.c (RX_USP_REGNUM, RX_BPC_REGNUM): New constants.
(enum rx_frame_type): New.
(struct rx_prologue): Add new field `frame_type'.
(rx_analyze_prologue): Add `frame_type' parameter. Cache this
parameter in the prologue struct. Add code for recording
locations of PC and PSW for fast interrupt and exception frames.
(rx_skip_prologue): Adjust call to rx_analyze_prologue.
(rx_analyze_frame_prologue): Add `frame_type' parameter.
(rx_frame_type): New function.
(rx_frame_base): Fetch frame type and pass it to rx_analyze_prologue.
(rx_frame_this_id): Rename parameter `this_prologue_cache' to
`this_cache'.
(rx_frame_prev_register): Rename parameter `this_prologue_cache' to
`this_cache'. Add cases for RX_FRAME_TYPE_EXCEPTION and
RX_FRAME_TYPE_FAST_INTERRUPT.
(normal_frame_p, exception_frame_p, rx_frame_sniffer_common)
(rx_frame_sniffer, rx_exception_sniffer): New functions.
(rx_frame_unwind): Use rx_frame_sniffer instead of
default_frame_sniffer.
(rx_frame_unwind): New unwinder.
(rx_gdbarch_init): Register new unwinder.