Sometimes, get_msymbol_address can cause infinite recursion, leading
to a crash. This was reported previously here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2019-November/162154.html
A user on irc reported this as well, and with his help and the help of
a friend of his, we found that the problem occurred because, when
reloading a separate debug objfile, the objfile would lose the
OBJF_MAINLINE flag. This would cause some symbols from this separate
debug objfile to be marked "maybe_copied" -- but then
get_msymbol_address could find the same symbol and fail as reported.
This patch fixes the bug by preserving OBJF_MAINLINE.
No test case, unfortunately, because I could not successfully make
one.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* symfile.c (symbol_file_add_separate): Preserve OBJF_MAINLINE.
get_symbol_address and get_msymbol_address call
lookup_minimal_symbol_linkage, which iterates over the separate debug
files of the objfile that is passed in.
This means that if these functions pass in a separate debug objfile,
then they are doing unnecessary work.
This patch avoids the extra work by skipping separate debug objfiles
in the loops.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* symtab.c (get_symbol_address, get_msymbol_address): Skip
separate debug files.
The new code regarding pending stops only checks for EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT,
but for WOW64 processes STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT is necessary as well.
Also, ignore_first_breakpoint is used now in nat/windows-nat.c as well,
but was not available there.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-04-10 Hannes Domani <ssbssa@yahoo.de>
* nat/windows-nat.c (STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT, STATUS_WX86_SINGLE_STEP):
Move to...
* nat/windows-nat.h (STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT, STATUS_WX86_SINGLE_STEP):
... here.
* windows-nat.c (windows_nat_target::get_windows_debug_event):
Check for STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT.
(windows_nat_target::wait): Same.
Three ld tests currently FAIL on Solaris/SPARC:
FAIL: shared (non PIC)
FAIL: shared (non PIC, load offset)
FAIL: shared (PIC main, non PIC so)
all of them in the same way:
/var/gcc/binutils/sparcv7/obj/binutils/ld/tmpdir/ld/collect-ld: read-only
segment has dynamic relocations
Given that Solaris defaults to -z text, this is to be expected, thus
this patch xfail's them.
Tested on sparc-sun-solaris2.11 and sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Remove dangling comments.
xfail shared non PIC tests on Solaris.
When running test-case gdb.base/style.exp with target board readnow, we run
into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/style.exp: filename is styled when loading symbol file
...
The problem is that with -readnow, an extra "Expanding full symbols" message
is generated:
...
(gdb) file $file^M
Reading symbols from $file...^M
Expanding full symbols from $file...^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/style.exp: filename is styled when loading symbol file
...
and the test does not expect this message.
Fix this by expecting the additional message for -readnow.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-04-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/style.exp: Expect "Expanding full symbols" message for
-readnow.
Consider the test-case gdb.base/async.exp. Using the executable, I run to
main, and land on a line advertised as line 26:
...
$ gdb outputs/gdb.base/async/async -ex start
Reading symbols from outputs/gdb.base/async/async...
Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x4004e4: file gdb.base/async.c, line 26.
Starting program: outputs/gdb.base/async/async
Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at gdb.base/async.c:26
26 y = foo ();
...
But actually, the line turns out to be line 28:
...
$ cat -n gdb.base/async.c
...
26 y = 2;
27 z = 9;
28 y = foo ();
...
This is caused by the following: the python colorizer initializes the lexer
with default options (no second argument to get_lexer_for_filename):
...
def colorize(filename, contents):
# Don't want any errors.
try:
lexer = lexers.get_lexer_for_filename(filename)
formatter = formatters.TerminalFormatter()
return highlight(contents, lexer, formatter)
...
which include option stripnl=True, which strips leading and trailing newlines.
This causes the python colorizer to strip the two leading newlines of async.c.
Fix this by initializing the lexer with stripnl=False.
Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-04-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR cli/25808
* python/lib/gdb/__init__.py: Initialize lexer with stripnl=False.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-04-10 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR cli/25808
* gdb.base/style.c: Add leading newlines.
* gdb.base/style.exp: Use gdb_get_line_number to get specific lines.
Check listing of main's one-line body.
This reverts the following commit partially:
commit 64dc2d4bd2
Author: Bernd Edlinger <bernd.edlinger@hotmail.de>
Date: Thu Mar 12 11:52:34 2020 +0100
Fix an undefined behavior in record_line
Additionally do not completely remove symbols
at the same PC than the end marker, instead
make them non-is-stmt breakpoints.
We keep the undefined behavoir fix,
but have to restore the original behavior
regarding deletion of the line entries.
2020-04-09 Bernd Edlinger <bernd.edlinger@hotmail.de>
revert partially:
2020-04-01 Bernd Edlinger <bernd.edlinger@hotmail.de>
* buildsym.c (record_line): Fix undefined behavior and preserve
lines at eof.
NetBSD and OpenBSD always use an int to store the type as
defined in the SVR4 psABI specifications rather than long
as assumed by the default parser.
Define svr4_auxv_parse() that shares code with default_auxv_parse().
Remove obsd_auxv_parse() and switch OpenBSD to svr4_auxv_parse().
Remove not fully accurate comment from obsd-tdep.c.
Use svr4_auxv_parse() on NetBSD.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* auxv.h (svr4_auxv_parse): New.
* auxv.c (default_auxv_parse): Split into default_auxv_parse
and generic_auxv_parse.
(svr4_auxv_parse): Add.
* obsd-tdep.c: Include "auxv.h".
(obsd_auxv_parse): Remove.
(obsd_init_abi): Remove comment.
(obsd_init_abi): Change set_gdbarch_auxv_parse passed argument
from `obsd_auxv_parse' to `svr4_auxv_parse'.
* nbsd-tdep.c: Include "auxv.h".
(nbsd_init_abi): Call set_gdbarch_auxv_parse.
pr22269-1.s currently FAILs to assemble on 32-bit Solaris/SPARC:
ERROR: -K PIC tmpdir/pr22269-1.s: assembly failed
UNRESOLVED: pr22269-1 (static pie undefined weak)
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s: Assembler messages:
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:27: Error: Architecture mismatch on "be,pn %icc,.LL4 ,pn %icc,.LL4".
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:27: (Requires v9|v9a|v9b|v9c|v9d|v9e|v9v|v9m|m8; requested architecture is sparclite.)
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:32: Error: Architecture mismatch on "return %i7+8".
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:32: (Requires v9|v9a|v9b|v9c|v9d|v9e|v9v|v9m|m8; requested architecture is sparclite.)
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:36: Error: Architecture mismatch on "return %i7+8".
tmpdir/pr22269-1.s:36: (Requires v9|v9a|v9b|v9c|v9d|v9e|v9v|v9m|m8; requested architecture is sparclite.)
I could trace this to the fact that gcc on sparc-sun-solaris2.* defaults
to --with-cpu=v9. So the gcc -S step of compiling the testcase is run
with -mcpu=v9, while the manual invocation of as-new lacks the
corresponding -Av9, creating a mismatch.
Solaris seems to be the only affected target, otherwise only
64-bit-default configurations default to --with-cpu=v9 or
--with-cpu=ultrasparc: sparcv9-*-*, sparc64-*-*,
sparc64-*-freebsd*, ultrasparc-*-freebsd*, and sparc64-*-openbsd*.
This patch just adds -Av9 to AFLAGS_PIC in ld-elf/shared.exp. It has a
precedent in ld-elfvers/vers.exp where -Av9a is added to as_options on
sparc-*-*. It lets the test pass and causes no other changes in
sparc-sun-solaris2.11 test results.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Add -Av9 to AFLAGS_PIC on sparc*-*-*.
This changes gdbserver to also handle pending stops, the same way that
gdb does. This is PR gdb/22992.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR gdb/22992
* win32-low.c (child_continue): Call matching_pending_stop.
(get_child_debug_event): Call fetch_pending_stop. Push pending
stop when needed.
This changes the Windows gdbserver port to implement the
stopped_by_sw_breakpoint target method. This is needed to support
pending stops.
This is a separate patch now, because Pedro suggested splitting it out
for simpler bisecting, in the case that it introduces a bug.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.h (win32_process_target::stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(win32_process_target::supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint):
Declare.
* win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): Always handle
Z_PACKET_SW_BP.
(win32_insert_point): Call insert_memory_breakpoint when needed.
(win32_remove_point): Call remove_memory_breakpoint when needed.
(win32_process_target::stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(win32_process_target::supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint): New
methods.
(win32_target_ops): Update.
(maybe_adjust_pc): New function.
(win32_wait): Call maybe_adjust_pc.
This adds a decr_pc_after_break member to win32_target_ops and updates
the two Windows targets to set it.
Note that I can't test the win32-arm-low.c change.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops) <decr_pc_after_break>: New
field.
* win32-i386-low.c (the_low_target): Update.
* win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Update.
This changes win32-low.c to implement the read_pc and write_pc
methods. A subsequent patch will need these.
Note that I have no way to test, or even compile, the win32-arm-low.c
change.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.h (win32_process_target::read_pc)
(win32_process_target::write_pc): Declare.
* win32-low.c (win32_process_target::read_pc)
(win32_process_target::write_pc): New methods.
* win32-i386-low.c (i386_win32_get_pc, i386_win32_set_pc): New
functions.
(the_low_target): Update.
* win32-arm-low.c (arm_win32_get_pc, arm_win32_set_pc): New
functions.
(the_low_target): Update.
Now that last_wait_event is entirely handled in nat/windows-nat.c, it
can be made static.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* nat/windows-nat.h (last_wait_event): Don't declare.
(wait_for_debug_event): Update comment.
* nat/windows-nat.c (last_wait_event): Now static.
This moves the wait_for_debug_event helper function to
nat/windows-nat.c, and changes gdbserver to use it.
wait_for_debug_event is a wrapper for WaitForDebugEvent that also sets
last_wait_event when appropriate. This is needed to properly handle
queued stops.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (wait_for_debug_event): Move to
nat/windows-nat.c.
* nat/windows-nat.h (wait_for_debug_event): Declare.
* nat/windows-nat.c (wait_for_debug_event): Move from
windows-nat.c. No longer static.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (win32_kill, get_child_debug_event): Use
wait_for_debug_event.
This introduces a new "fetch_pending_stop" function and changes gdb to
use it. This function removes the first matching pending stop from
the list of such stops.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event): Use
fetch_pending_stop.
* nat/windows-nat.h (fetch_pending_stop): Declare.
* nat/windows-nat.c (fetch_pending_stop): New function.
This adds a couple of functions to nat/windows-nat.c and changes gdb
and gdbserver to use them. One function checks the list of pending
stops for a match (not yet used by gdbserver, but will be in a
subsequent patch); and the other is a wrapper for ContinueDebugEvent
that always uses the last "real" stop event.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (windows_continue): Use matching_pending_stop and
continue_last_debug_event.
* nat/windows-nat.h (matching_pending_stop)
(continue_last_debug_event): Declare.
* nat/windows-nat.c (DEBUG_EVENTS): New define.
(matching_pending_stop, continue_last_debug_event): New
functions.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (child_continue): Call continue_last_debug_event.
Both gdb and gdbserver have a "handle_exception" function, the bulk of
which is shared between the two implementations. This patch arranges
for the entire thing to be moved into nat/windows-nat.c, with the
differences handled by callbacks. This patch introduces one more
callback to make this possible.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (MS_VC_EXCEPTION): Move to nat/windows-nat.c.
(handle_exception_result): Move to nat/windows-nat.h.
(DEBUG_EXCEPTION_SIMPLE): Remove.
(windows_nat::handle_ms_vc_exception): New function.
(handle_exception): Move to nat/windows-nat.c.
(get_windows_debug_event): Update.
(STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT, STATUS_WX86_SINGLE_STEP): Move to
nat/windows-nat.c.
* nat/windows-nat.h (handle_ms_vc_exception): Declare.
(handle_exception_result): Move from windows-nat.c.
(handle_exception): Declare.
* nat/windows-nat.c (MS_VC_EXCEPTION, handle_exception)
(STATUS_WX86_SINGLE_STEP, STATUS_WX86_BREAKPOINT): Move from
windows-nat.c.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (handle_exception): Remove.
(windows_nat::handle_ms_vc_exception): New function.
(get_child_debug_event): Add "continue_status" parameter.
Update.
(win32_wait): Update.
windows-nat.c has a few "count" globals that don't seem to be used.
Possibly they were used for debugging at some point, but they no
longer seem useful to me. Because they get in the way of some code
sharing, this patch removes them.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (exception_count, event_count): Remove.
(handle_exception, get_windows_debug_event)
(do_initial_windows_stuff): Update.
This changes nat/windows-nat.h to declare handle_load_dll and
handle_unload_dll. The embedding application is required to implement
these -- while the actual code was difficult to share due to some
other differences between the two programs, sharing the declaration
lets a subsequent patch share more code that uses these as callbacks.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (windows_nat::handle_load_dll)
(windows_nat::handle_unload_dll): Rename. No longer static.
* nat/windows-nat.h (handle_load_dll, handle_unload_dll):
Declare.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (windows_nat::handle_load_dll): Rename from
handle_load_dll. No longer static.
(windows_nat::handle_unload_dll): Rename from handle_unload_dll.
No longer static.
If 'complaint' is used in a namespace context, it will fail because
'stop_whining' is only declared at the top level. This patch fixes
this problem in a simple way, by moving the declaration of
'stop_whining' out of the macro and to the top-level.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* complaints.h (stop_whining): Declare at top-level.
(complaint): Don't declare stop_whining.
This changes gdbserver's implementation of handle_output_debug_string
to have the same calling convention as that of gdb. This allows for
sharing some more code in a subsequent patch.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (windows_nat::handle_output_debug_string):
Rename. No longer static.
* nat/windows-nat.h (handle_output_debug_string): Declare.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (handle_output_debug_string): Add parameter. Change
return type.
(win32_kill, get_child_debug_event): Update.
This moves get_image_name to nat/windows-nat.c so that it can be
shared between gdb and gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (get_image_name): Move to nat/windows-nat.c.
(handle_load_dll): Update.
* nat/windows-nat.c (get_image_name): Move from windows-nat.c.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (get_image_name): Remove.
(handle_load_dll): Update.
This changes gdb and gdbserver to use the same calling convention for
the "thread_rec" helper function. Fully merging these is difficult
due to differences in how threads are managed by the enclosing
applications; but sharing a declaration makes it possible for future
shared code to call this method.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (enum thread_disposition_type): Move to
nat/windows-nat.h.
(windows_nat::thread_rec): Rename from thread_rec. No longer
static.
(windows_add_thread, windows_nat_target::fetch_registers)
(windows_nat_target::store_registers, handle_exception)
(windows_nat_target::resume, get_windows_debug_event)
(windows_nat_target::get_tib_address)
(windows_nat_target::thread_name)
(windows_nat_target::thread_alive): Update.
* nat/windows-nat.h (enum thread_disposition_type): Move from
windows-nat.c.
(thread_rec): Declare.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (windows_nat::thread_rec): Rename from thread_rec.
No longer static. Change parameters.
(child_add_thread, child_fetch_inferior_registers)
(child_store_inferior_registers, win32_resume)
(win32_get_tib_address): Update.
PR gdb/22992 concerns an assertion failure in gdb when debugging a
certain inferior:
int finish_step_over(execution_control_state*): Assertion `ecs->event_thread->control.trap_expected' failed.
Initially the investigation centered on the discovery that gdb was not
suspending other threads when attempting to single-step. This
oversight is corrected in this patch: now, when stepping a thread, gdb
will call SuspendThread on all other threads.
However, the bug persisted even after this change. In particular,
WaitForDebugEvent could see a stop for a thread that was ostensibly
suspended. Our theory of what is happening here is that there are
actually simultaneous breakpoint hits, and the Windows kernel queues
the events, causing the second stop to be reported on a suspended
thread.
In Windows 10 or later gdb could use the DBG_REPLY_LATER flag to
ContinueDebugEvent to request that such events be re-reported later.
However, relying on that did not seem advisable, so this patch instead
arranges to queue such "pending" stops, and then to report them later,
once the step has completed.
In the PR, Pedro pointed out that it's best in this scenario to
implement the stopped_by_sw_breakpoint method, so this patch does this
as well.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR gdb/22992
* windows-nat.c (current_event): Update comment.
(last_wait_event, desired_stop_thread_id): New globals.
(struct pending_stop): New.
(pending_stops): New global.
(windows_nat_target) <stopped_by_sw_breakpoint>
<supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint>: New methods.
(windows_fetch_one_register): Add assertions. Adjust PC.
(windows_continue): Handle pending stops. Suspend other threads
when stepping. Use last_wait_event
(wait_for_debug_event): New function.
(get_windows_debug_event): Use wait_for_debug_event. Handle
pending stops. Queue spurious stops.
(windows_nat_target::wait): Set stopped_at_software_breakpoint.
(windows_nat_target::kill): Use wait_for_debug_event.
* nat/windows-nat.h (struct windows_thread_info)
<stopped_at_software_breakpoint>: New field.
* nat/windows-nat.c (windows_thread_info::resume): Clear
stopped_at_software_breakpoint.
windows-nat.c:thread_rec accepts an integer parameter whose
interpretation depends on whether it is less than, equal to, or
greater than zero. I found this confusing at times, so this patch
replaces it with an enum instead.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (enum thread_disposition_type): New.
(thread_rec): Replace "get_context" parameter with "disposition";
change type.
(windows_add_thread, windows_nat_target::fetch_registers)
(windows_nat_target::store_registers, handle_exception)
(windows_nat_target::resume, get_windows_debug_event)
(windows_nat_target::get_tib_address)
(windows_nat_target::thread_name)
(windows_nat_target::thread_alive): Update.
This adds "suspend" and "resume" methods to windows_thread_info, and
changes gdb and gdbserver to share this code.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (thread_rec): Use windows_thread_info::suspend.
(windows_continue): Use windows_continue::resume.
* nat/windows-nat.h (struct windows_thread_info) <suspend,
resume>: Declare new methods.
* nat/windows-nat.c: New file.
* configure.nat (NATDEPFILES): Add nat/windows-nat.o when needed.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (win32_require_context, suspend_one_thread): Use
windows_thread_info::suspend.
(continue_one_thread): Use windows_thread_info::resume.
* configure.srv (srv_tgtobj): Add windows-nat.o when needed.
This changes windows-nat.c to put the Windows thread id into the "lwp"
field of ptid_t, not the "tid" field. This is done for two reasons.
First, ptid.h has this to say:
process_stratum targets that handle threading themselves should
prefer using the ptid.lwp field, leaving the ptid.tid field for any
thread_stratum target that might want to sit on top.
Second, this change brings gdb and gdbserver into sync here, which
makes sharing code simpler.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (windows_add_thread, windows_delete_thread)
(windows_nat_target::fetch_registers)
(windows_nat_target::store_registers, fake_create_process)
(windows_nat_target::resume, windows_nat_target::resume)
(get_windows_debug_event, windows_nat_target::wait)
(windows_nat_target::pid_to_str)
(windows_nat_target::get_tib_address)
(windows_nat_target::get_ada_task_ptid)
(windows_nat_target::thread_name)
(windows_nat_target::thread_alive): Use lwp, not tid.
This changes windows_thread_info::name to be a unique_xmalloc_ptr,
removing some manual memory management.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (handle_exception)
(windows_nat_target::thread_name): Update.
* nat/windows-nat.h (windows_thread_info): Remove destructor.
<name>: Now unique_xmalloc_ptr.
This changes a couple of fields of windows_thread_info to have type
"bool". It also updates the comment of another field, to clarify the
possible values it can hold.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (thread_rec)
(windows_nat_target::fetch_registers): Update.
* nat/windows-nat.h (struct windows_thread_info) <suspended>:
Update comment.
<debug_registers_changed, reload_context>: Now bool.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-i386-low.c (update_debug_registers)
(i386_prepare_to_resume, i386_thread_added): Update.
This adds a constructor, destructor, and member initializers to
windows_thread_info, and changes gdb and gdbserver to use new and
delete.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (windows_add_thread): Use new.
(windows_init_thread_list, windows_delete_thread): Use delete.
(get_windows_debug_event): Update.
* nat/windows-nat.h (struct windows_thread_info): Add constructor,
destructor, and initializers.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.c (child_add_thread): Use new.
(delete_thread_info): Use delete.
This introduces a new file, nat/windows-nat.h, which holds the
definition of windows_thread_info. This is now shared between gdb and
gdbserver.
Note that the two implementations different slightly. gdb had a
couple of fields ("name" and "reload_context") that gdbserver did not;
while gdbserver had one field ("base_context") that gdb did not, plus
better comments. The new file preserves all the fields, and the
comments.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (struct windows_thread_info): Remove.
* nat/windows-nat.h: New file.
gdbserver/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* win32-low.h (struct windows_thread_info): Remove.
This changes the name of a field in windows_thread_info, bringing gdb
and gdbserver closer into sync.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (struct windows_thread_info) <tid>: Rename from "id".
(thread_rec, windows_add_thread, windows_delete_thread)
(windows_continue): Update.
This changes windows_thread_info to remove the "next" field, replacing
the linked list of threads with a vector. This is a prerequisite to
sharing this structure with gdbserver, which manages threads
differently.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* windows-nat.c (struct windows_thread_info): Remove typedef.
(thread_head): Remove.
(thread_list): New global.
(thread_rec, windows_add_thread, windows_init_thread_list)
(windows_delete_thread, windows_continue): Update.
The signal enumeration in windows-tdep.c is defined differently whether
it is compiled on Cygwin or not. This is problematic, since the code in
tdep files is not supposed to be influenced by the host platform (the
platform GDB itself runs on).
This makes a difference in windows_gdb_signal_to_target. An obvious
example of clash is SIGABRT. Let's pretend we are cross-debugging a
Cygwin process from a MinGW (non-Cygwin Windows) GDB. If GDB needs to
translate the gdb signal number GDB_SIGNAL_ABRT into a target
equivalent, it would obtain the MinGW number (22), despite the target
being a Cygwin process. Conversely, if debugging a MinGW process from a
Cygwin-hosted GDB, GDB_SIGNAL_ABRT would be converted to a Cygwin signal
number (6) despite the target being a MinGW process. This is wrong,
since we want the result to depend on the target's platform, not GDB's
platform.
This known flaw was accepted because at the time we had a single OS ABI
(called Cygwin) for all Windows binaries (Cygwin ones and non-Cygwin
ones). This limitation is now lifted, as we now have separate Windows
and Cygwin OS ABIs. This means we are able to detect at runtime whether
the binary we are debugging is a Cygwin one or non-Cygwin one.
This patch splits the signal enum in two, one for the MinGW flavors and
one for Cygwin, removing all the ifdefs that made it depend on the host
platform. It then makes two separate gdb_signal_to_target gdbarch
methods, that are used according to the OS ABI selected at runtime.
There is a bit of re-shuffling needed in how the gdbarch'es are
initialized, but nothing major.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* windows-tdep.h (windows_init_abi): Add comment.
(cygwin_init_abi): New declaration.
* windows-tdep.c: Split signal enumeration in two, one for
Windows and one for Cygwin.
(windows_gdb_signal_to_target): Only deal with signal of the
Windows OS ABI.
(cygwin_gdb_signal_to_target): New function.
(windows_init_abi): Rename to windows_init_abi_common, don't set
gdb_signal_to_target gdbarch method. Add new new function with
this name.
(cygwin_init_abi): New function.
* amd64-windows-tdep.c (amd64_windows_init_abi_common): Add
comment. Don't call windows_init_abi.
(amd64_windows_init_abi): Add comment, call windows_init_abi.
(amd64_cygwin_init_abi): Add comment, call cygwin_init_abi.
* i386-windows-tdep.c (i386_windows_init_abi): Rename to
i386_windows_init_abi_common, don't call windows_init_abi. Add
a new function of this name.
(i386_cygwin_init_abi): New function.
(_initialize_i386_windows_tdep): Bind i386_cygwin_init_abi to
OS ABI Cygwin.
I noticed this was unused, so remove it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2/read.c (read_gdb_index_from_buffer): Remove objfile
parameter.c.
(dwarf2_read_gdb_index): Update.
The m32c target header has a duplicate entry for MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION.
The duplication was present since the initial commit of the port.
* config/tc-m32c.h (MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION): Delete duplicate define.
(md_pcrel_from_section): Remove duplicate prototype.
The moxie target header uses md_pcrel_from, thus the local prototype and
the macro definition for MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION are not needed.
* config/tc-moxie.h (MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION): Delete define.
(md_pcrel_from): Remove prototytpe.
The test-case gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit.exp contains a test testing partial
symbols, so when we run the test-case using either target board readnow,
cc-with-gdb-index or cc-with-debug-names, we run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit.exp: no static partial symbols in importing unit
...
Fix this by marking the test unsupported if there are no partial symbols.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-04-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* lib/gdb.exp (psymtabs_p): New proc.
* gdb.dwarf2/imported-unit.exp: Mark "no static partial symbols in
importing unit" unsupported if there are no partial symbols.
When running test-case gdb.ada/call_pn.exp with target board
unix/-flto/-O0/-flto-partition=none/-ffat-lto-objects, we run into:
...
(gdb) print last_node_id^M
Multiple matches for last_node_id^M
[0] cancel^M
[1] pck.last_node_id at gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/call_pn/pck.adb:17^M
[2] pck.last_node_id at gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/call_pn/foo.adb:17^M
> FAIL: gdb.ada/call_pn.exp: print last_node_id after calling pn (timeout)
...
This failure is due to a gcc bug that declares two instead of one symbols,
filed as PR gcc/94469.
Add an xfail at this test. Also add a similar xfail at an earlier test, that
only triggers with -readnow. Stabilize test results by making sure the
earlier xfail is always triggered, using "maint expand-symtabs".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-04-08 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR testsuite/25760
* gdb.ada/call_pn.exp: Call "maint expand-symtabs". Add xfails.