Commit Graph

2160 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joel Brobecker
3666a04883 Update copyright year range in all GDB files
This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start
of New Year procedure...

gdb/ChangeLog

        Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
2021-01-01 12:12:21 +04:00
Anton Kolesov
04c9f85efc gdb: Add native support for ARC in GNU/Linux
With this patch in place it is possible to build a GDB that
can run on ARC (GNU/Linux) hosts for debugging ARC targets.

The "arc-linux-nat.c" is a rather small one that mostly deals
with registers and a few thread related hooks.

v2 [1]:
- Remove "void" from the input of "_initialize_arc_linux_nat ()"

[1] Tom's remark after the first patch
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-November/173223.html

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (ALLDEPFILES): Add arc-linux-nat.c.
	* configure.host (host to gdb names): Add arc*-*-linux*.
	* configure.nat (gdb_host_cpu): Add arc.
	* arc-linux-nat.c: New.
2020-12-22 12:18:40 +01:00
Simon Marchi
c7acb87bc6 gdb: move displaced stepping types to displaced-stepping.{h,c}
Move displaced-stepping related stuff unchanged to displaced-stepping.h
and displaced-stepping.c.  This helps make the following patch a bit
smaller and easier to read.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add displaced-stepping.c.
	* aarch64-tdep.h: Include displaced-stepping.h.
	* displaced-stepping.h (struct displaced_step_copy_insn_closure):
	Move here.
	(displaced_step_copy_insn_closure_up): Move here.
	(struct buf_displaced_step_copy_insn_closure): Move here.
	(struct displaced_step_inferior_state): Move here.
	(debug_displaced): Move here.
	(displaced_debug_printf_1): Move here.
	(displaced_debug_printf): Move here.
	* displaced-stepping.c: New file.
	* gdbarch.sh: Include displaced-stepping.h in gdbarch.h.
	* gdbarch.h: Re-generate.
	* inferior.h: Include displaced-stepping.h.
	* infrun.h (debug_displaced): Move to displaced-stepping.h.
	(displaced_debug_printf_1): Likewise.
	(displaced_debug_printf): Likewise.
	(struct displaced_step_copy_insn_closure): Likewise.
	(displaced_step_copy_insn_closure_up): Likewise.
	(struct buf_displaced_step_copy_insn_closure): Likewise.
	(struct displaced_step_inferior_state): Likewise.
	* infrun.c (show_debug_displaced): Move to displaced-stepping.c.
	(displaced_debug_printf_1): Likewise.
	(displaced_step_copy_insn_closure::~displaced_step_copy_insn_closure):
	Likewise.
	(_initialize_infrun): Don't register "set/show debug displaced".

Change-Id: I29935f5959b80425370630a45148fc06cd4227ca
2020-12-04 16:43:55 -05:00
Andrew Burgess
a5c641b57b gdb/fortran: Add support for Fortran array slices at the GDB prompt
This commit brings array slice support to GDB.

WARNING: This patch contains a rather big hack which is limited to
Fortran arrays, this can be seen in gdbtypes.c and f-lang.c.  More
details on this below.

This patch rewrites two areas of GDB's Fortran support, the code to
extract an array slice, and the code to print an array.

After this commit a user can, from the GDB prompt, ask for a slice of
a Fortran array and should get the correct result back.  Slices can
(optionally) have the lower bound, upper bound, and a stride
specified.  Slices can also have a negative stride.

Fortran has the concept of repacking array slices.  Within a compiled
Fortran program if a user passes a non-contiguous array slice to a
function then the compiler may have to repack the slice, this involves
copying the elements of the slice to a new area of memory before the
call, and copying the elements back to the original array after the
call.  Whether repacking occurs will depend on which version of
Fortran is being used, and what type of function is being called.

This commit adds support for both packed, and unpacked array slicing,
with the default being unpacked.

With an unpacked array slice, when the user asks for a slice of an
array GDB creates a new type that accurately describes where the
elements of the slice can be found within the original array, a
value of this type is then returned to the user.  The address of an
element within the slice will be equal to the address of an element
within the original array.

A user can choose to select packed array slices instead using:

  (gdb) set fortran repack-array-slices on|off
  (gdb) show fortran repack-array-slices

With packed array slices GDB creates a new type that reflects how the
elements of the slice would look if they were laid out in contiguous
memory, allocates a value of this type, and then fetches the elements
from the original array and places then into the contents buffer of
the new value.

One benefit of using packed slices over unpacked slices is the memory
usage, taking a small slice of N elements from a large array will
require (in GDB) N * ELEMENT_SIZE bytes of memory, while an unpacked
array will also include all of the "padding" between the
non-contiguous elements.  There are new tests added that highlight
this difference.

There is also a new debugging flag added with this commit that
introduces these commands:

  (gdb) set debug fortran-array-slicing on|off
  (gdb) show debug fortran-array-slicing

This prints information about how the array slices are being built.

As both the repacking, and the array printing requires GDB to walk
through a multi-dimensional Fortran array visiting each element, this
commit adds the file f-array-walk.h, which introduces some
infrastructure to support this process.  This means the array printing
code in f-valprint.c is significantly reduced.

The only slight issue with this commit is the "rather big hack" that I
mentioned above.  This hack allows us to handle one specific case,
array slices with negative strides.  This is something that I don't
believe the current GDB value contents model will allow us to
correctly handle, and rather than rewrite the value contents code
right now, I'm hoping to slip this hack in as a work around.

The problem is that, as I see it, the current value contents model
assumes that an object base address will be the lowest address within
that object, and that the contents of the object start at this base
address and occupy the TYPE_LENGTH bytes after that.

( We do have the embedded_offset, which is used for C++ sub-classes,
such that an object can start at some offset from the content buffer,
however, the assumption that the object then occupies the next
TYPE_LENGTH bytes is still true within GDB. )

The problem is that Fortran arrays with a negative stride don't follow
this pattern.  In this case the base address of the object points to
the element with the highest address, the contents of the array then
start at some offset _before_ the base address, and proceed for one
element _past_ the base address.

As the stride for such an array would be negative then, in theory the
TYPE_LENGTH for this type would also be negative.  However, in many
places a value in GDB will degrade to a pointer + length, and the
length almost always comes from the TYPE_LENGTH.

It is my belief that in order to correctly model this case the value
content handling of GDB will need to be reworked to split apart the
value's content buffer (which is a block of memory with a length), and
the object's in memory base address and length, which could be
negative.

Things are further complicated because arrays with negative strides
like this are always dynamic types.  When a value has a dynamic type
and its base address needs resolving we actually store the address of
the object within the resolved dynamic type, not within the value
object itself.

In short I don't currently see an easy path to cleanly support this
situation within GDB.  And so I believe that leaves two options,
either add a work around, or catch cases where the user tries to make
use of a negative stride, or access an array with a negative stride,
and throw an error.

This patch currently goes with adding a work around, which is that
when we resolve a dynamic Fortran array type, if the stride is
negative, then we adjust the base address to point to the lowest
address required by the array.  The printing and slicing code is aware
of this adjustment and will correctly slice and print Fortran arrays.

Where this hack will show through to the user is if they ask for the
address of an array in their program with a negative array stride, the
address they get from GDB will not match the address that would be
computed within the Fortran program.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add f-array-walker.h.
	* NEWS: Mention new options.
	* f-array-walker.h: New file.
	* f-lang.c: Include 'gdbcmd.h' and 'f-array-walker.h'.
	(repack_array_slices): New static global.
	(show_repack_array_slices): New function.
	(fortran_array_slicing_debug): New static global.
	(show_fortran_array_slicing_debug): New function.
	(value_f90_subarray): Delete.
	(skip_undetermined_arglist): Delete.
	(class fortran_array_repacker_base_impl): New class.
	(class fortran_lazy_array_repacker_impl): New class.
	(class fortran_array_repacker_impl): New class.
	(fortran_value_subarray): Complete rewrite.
	(set_fortran_list): New static global.
	(show_fortran_list): Likewise.
	(_initialize_f_language): Register new commands.
	(fortran_adjust_dynamic_array_base_address_hack): New function.
	* f-lang.h (fortran_adjust_dynamic_array_base_address_hack):
	Declare.
	* f-valprint.c: Include 'f-array-walker.h'.
	(class fortran_array_printer_impl): New class.
	(f77_print_array_1): Delete.
	(f77_print_array): Delete.
	(fortran_print_array): New.
	(f_value_print_inner): Update to call fortran_print_array.
	* gdbtypes.c: Include 'f-lang.h'.
	(resolve_dynamic_type_internal): Call
	fortran_adjust_dynamic_array_base_address_hack.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.fortran/array-slices-bad.exp: New file.
        * gdb.fortran/array-slices-bad.f90: New file.
        * gdb.fortran/array-slices-sub-slices.exp: New file.
        * gdb.fortran/array-slices-sub-slices.f90: New file.
        * gdb.fortran/array-slices.exp: Rewrite tests.
        * gdb.fortran/array-slices.f90: Rewrite tests.
        * gdb.fortran/vla-sizeof.exp: Correct expected results.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.texinfo (Debugging Output): Document 'set/show debug
        fortran-array-slicing'.
        (Special Fortran Commands): Document 'set/show fortran
        repack-array-slices'.
2020-11-19 11:23:23 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
b34c74ab9a gmp-utils: New API to simply use of GMP's integer/rational/float objects
This API was motivated by a number of reasons:
  - GMP's API does not handle "long long" and "unsigned long long",
    so using LONGEST and ULONGEST is not straightforward;
  - Automate the need to initialize GMP objects before use, and
    clear them when no longer used.

However, this API grew also to help with similar matter such
as formatting to a string, and also reading/writing fixed-point
values from byte buffers.

Dedicated unit testing is also added.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * gmp-utils.h,  gmp-utils.h: New file.
        * unittests/gmp-utils-selftests.c: New file.
        * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
        unittests/gmp-utils-selftests.c.
        (COMMON_SFILES) Add gmp-utils.c.
        (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add gmp-utils.h.
2020-11-15 03:09:44 -05:00
Joel Brobecker
2c947d9bc2 gdb/configure: Add --with-libgmp-prefix option
This patch allows a user to tell gdb's configure script where
his GMP library is installed.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * configure.ac: Add support for --with-libgmp-prefix.
        * Makefile.in (LIBGMP): New variable.
        (CLIBS): Include $(LIBGMP).
        * configure, config.in: Regenerate
2020-11-15 03:07:45 -05:00
Tom Tromey
257e02d836 Add x86_64 ravenscar support
Support for x86_64 ravenscar was recently added to the Ada runtime.
This patch updates gdb to follow.

As this is Ada-specific, and was reviewed internally by Joel, I am
checking it in.

2020-11-02  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS): Add amd64-ravenscar-thread.o.
	(ALLDEPFILES): Add amd64-ravenscar-thread.c.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add amd64-ravenscar-thread.h.
	* amd64-ravenscar-thread.c: New file.
	* amd64-ravenscar-thread.h: New file.
	* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_init_abi): Register ravenscar ops.
	* configure.tgt (amd64_tobjs): Add ravenscar objects.
2020-11-02 12:10:51 -07:00
Tom Tromey
b1ec273502 Have stamp-init depend on config.status
I recently wrote a patch to modify configure.tgt.  However, I did this
incorrectly the first time, and had to go back and add another file.
After building, I was surprised that my changes did not seem to work.
I tracked this down to the fact that init.c had not been rebuilt after
my changes -- because the files I added to the build were already
older than the existing init.c.

This patch changes the gdb Makefile so that init.c will be rebuilt if
config.status changes.  This should cover various scenarios that cause
a re-configure, like editing configure.tgt.

2020-10-30  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* Makefile.in (stamp-init): Depend on config.status.
2020-10-30 12:31:29 -06:00
Kamil Rytarowski
1b71cfcfdc Normalize names of the NetBSD files
The files used to be named 'nbsd', which incorrectly reflects
the name of the OS and confuses it with other BSD derived OSes.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * Makefile.in (ALL_64_TARGET_OBS, ALL_TARGET_OBS)
        HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, ALLDEPFILES): Rename files.
        * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Adjust include.
        * alpha-bsd-tdep.h: Adjust comment.
        * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * alpha-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * amd64-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * amd64-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * amd64-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * amd64-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * amd64-tdep.h: Adjust include.
        * arm-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * arm-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * arm-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * arm-nbsd-tdep.h: Rename to ...
        * arm-netbsd-tdep.h: ... this, adjust include.
        * configure.nat: Adjust file lists.
        * configure.tgt: Likewise.
        * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * hppa-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * hppa-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * i386-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * i386-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * i386-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * i386-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Adjust include.
        * mips-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * mips-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * mips-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * mips-nbsd-tdep.h: Rename to ...
        * mips-netbsd-tdep.h: ... this.
        * nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * nbsd-nat.h: Rename to ...
        * netbsd-nat.h: ... this, adjust include.
        * nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * nbsd-tdep.h: Rename to ...
        * netbsd-tdep.h: ... this.
        * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * ppc-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * ppc-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include and comment.
        * ppc-nbsd-tdep.h: Rename to ...
        * ppc-netbsd-tdep.h: ... this.
        * sh-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * sh-netbsd-nat.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * sh-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * sparc-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * sparc-netbsd-nat.c: ... this.
        * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * sparc-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * sparc64-nbsd-nat.c: Rename to ...
        * sparc64-netbsd-nat.c: ... this.
        * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * sparc64-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
        * sparc64-tdep.h: Adjust comment.
        * vax-bsd-nat.c: Adjust include.
        * vax-nbsd-tdep.c: Rename to ...
        * vax-netbsd-tdep.c: ... this, adjust include.
2020-10-13 13:33:35 +02:00
Andrew Burgess
361cb21935 gnulib: Ensure all libraries are used when building gdb/gdbserver
An issue was reported here related to building GDB on MinGW:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2020-September/048927.html

It was suggested here:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb/2020-September/048931.html

that the solution might be to make use of $(LIB_GETRANDOM), a variable
defined in the gnulib makefile, when linking GDB.

In fact I think the issue is bigger than just LIB_GETRANDOM.  When
using the script binutils-gdb/gnulib/update-gnulib.sh to reimport
gnulib there is a lot of output from gnulib's gnulib-tool.  Part of
that output is this:

  You may need to use the following makefile variables when linking.
  Use them in <program>_LDADD when linking a program, or
  in <library>_a_LDFLAGS or <library>_la_LDFLAGS when linking a library.
    $(FREXPL_LIBM)
    $(FREXP_LIBM)
    $(INET_NTOP_LIB)
    $(LIBTHREAD)
    $(LIB_GETLOGIN)
    $(LIB_GETRANDOM)
    $(LIB_HARD_LOCALE)
    $(LIB_MBRTOWC)
    $(LIB_SETLOCALE_NULL)
    $(LTLIBINTL) when linking with libtool, $(LIBINTL) otherwise

What I think this is telling us is that we should be including the
value of all these variables on the link line for gdb and gdbserver.

The problem though is that these variables are define in gnulib's
makefile, but are not (necessarily) defined in GDB's makefile.

One solution would be to recreate the checks that gnulib performs in
order to recreate these variables in both gdb's and gdbserver's
makefile.  Though this shouldn't be too hard, most (if not all) of
these checks are in the form macros defined in m4 files in the gnulib
tree, so we could just reference these as needed.  However, in this
commit I propose a different solution.

Currently, in the top level makefile, we give gdb and gdbserver a
dependency on gnulib.  Once gnulib has finished building gdb and
gdbserver can start, these projects then have a hard coded (relative)
path to the compiled gnulib library in their makefiles.

In this commit I extend the gnulib configure script to install a new
makefile fragment in the gnulib build directory.  This new file will
have the usual variable substitutions applied to it, and so can
include the complete list (see above) of all the extra libraries that
are needed when linking against gnulib.

In fact the new makefile fragment defines three variables, these are:

LIBGNU: The path to the archive containing gnulib.  Can be used as a
       dependency as when this file changes gdb/gdbserver should be
       relinked.

LIBGNU_EXTRA_LIBS: A list of linker -l.... flags that should be
       included in the link line of gdb/gdbserver.  These are
       libraries that $(LIBGNU) depends on.  This list is taken from
       the output of gnulib-tool, which is run by our
       gnulib/update-gnulib.sh script.

INCGNU: A list of -I.... include paths that should be passed to the
       compiler, these are where the gnulib headers can be found.

Now both gdb and gdbserver can include the makefile fragment and make
use of these variables.

The makefile fragment relies on the variable GNULIB_BUILDDIR being
defined.  This is checked for in the fragment, and was already defined
in the makefiles of gdb and gdbserver.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Include Makefile.gnulib.inc.  Don't define LIBGNU
	or INCGNU.  Make use of LIBGNU_EXTRA_LIBS when linking.

gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Include Makefile.gnulib.inc.  Don't define LIBGNU
	or INCGNU.  Make use of LIBGNU_EXTRA_LIBS when linking.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.gnulib.inc.in: New file.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* configure.ac: Install the new file.
2020-10-09 09:31:43 +01:00
Tom Tromey
485c47e523 Add simple_search_memory unit tests
This adds some unit tests for simple_search_memory.  I tried here to
reproduce some bugs (PR gdb/11158 and PR gdb/17756), but was unable
to.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-10-07  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* unittests/search-memory-selftests.c: New file.
	* Makefile.in (SELFTESTS_SRCS): Add
	unittests/search-memory-selftests.c.
2020-10-07 12:07:56 -06:00
Simon Marchi
a038ffd88e gdb: put user-supplied CFLAGS at the end
GDB currently doesn't build cleanly with clang (a -Wdeprecated-copy-dtor
error).  I configured my clang-based GDB build with
CXXFLAGS="-Wno-error=deprecated-copy-dtor", so I can use it despite that
problem.  However, I found that it had no effect.  This is because my
-Wno-error=Wdeprecated-copy-dtor switch is followed by -Werror in the
command line, which switches back all warnings to be errors.

If we want the user-supplied C(XX)FLAGS to be able to override flags
added by our configure script, the user-supplied C(XX)FLAGS should
appear after the configure-supplied flags.

This patch moves the user-supplied CXXFLAGS at the very end of the
compilation command line, which fixes the problem described above.  This
means moving it out of INTERNAL_CFLAGS and inlining it in the users of
INTERNAL_CFLAGS.

I observed the problem when building GDB, but the same problem could
happen with GDBserver, so the change is done there too.

In GDBserver, INTERNAL_CFLAGS is passed when linking

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (COMPILE): Add CXXFLAGS.
	(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Remove CXXFLAGS.
	(check-headers): Add CXXFLAGS.

gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (COMPILE): Add CXXFLAGS.
	(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Remove CXXFLAGS.
	(gdbserver$(EXEEXT)): Add CXXFLAGS.
	(gdbreplay$(EXEEXT)): Add CXXFLAGS.
	($(IPA_LIB)): Add CXXFLAGS.
	(IPAGENT_COMPILE): Add CXXFLAGS.

Change-Id: I00e054506695e0e9536095c6d14827e48abd8f69
2020-10-07 13:59:23 -04:00
Simon Marchi
9e6dbd8b54 gdb: sync tui header files in HFILES_NO_SRCDIR
I noticed that tui/tui-windata.h didn't exist anymore, and that
tui/tui-out.h wasn't listed.  Fix that.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove tui/tui-windata.h, add
	tui/tui-out.h.

Change-Id: Ic75cc68432b90ba5be857a2852ad52dea326fe36
2020-10-05 12:37:23 -04:00
Pedro Alves
04902b0995 Rewrite enum_flags, add unit tests, fix problems
This patch started by adding comprehensive unit tests for enum_flags.

For the testing part, it adds:

 - tests of normal expected uses of the API.

 - checks that _invalid_ uses of the API would fail to compile.  I.e.,
   it validates that enum_flags really is a strong type, and that
   incorrect mixing of enum types would be caught at compile time.  It
   pulls that off making use of SFINEA and C++11's decltype/constexpr.

This revealed many holes in the enum_flags API.  For example, the f1
assignment below currently incorrectly fails to compile:

 enum_flags<flags> f1 = FLAG1;
 enum_flags<flags> f2 = FLAG2 | f1;

The unit tests also revealed that this useful use case doesn't work:

    enum flag { FLAG1 = 1, FLAG2 = 2 };
    enum_flags<flag> src = FLAG1;
    enum_flags<flag> f1 = condition ? src : FLAG2;

It fails to compile because enum_flags<flag> and flag are convertible
to each other.

Turns out that making enum_flags be implicitly convertible to the
backing raw enum type was not a good idea.

If we make it convertible to the underlying type instead, we fix that
ternary operator use case, and, we find cases throughout the codebase
that should be using the enum_flags but were using the raw backing
enum instead.  So it's a good change overall.

Also, several operators were missing.

These holes and more are plugged by this patch, by reworking how the
enum_flags operators are implemented, and making use of C++11's
feature of being able to delete methods/functions.

There are cases in gdb/compile/ where we need to call a function in a
C plugin API that expects the raw enum.  To address cases like that,
this adds a "raw()" method to enum_flags.  This way we can keep using
the safer enum_flags to construct the value, and then be explicit when
we need to get at the raw enum.

This makes most of the enum_flags operators constexpr.  Beyond
enabling more compiler optimizations and enabling the new unit tests,
this has other advantages, like making it possible to use operator|
with enum_flags values in switch cases, where only compile-time
constants are allowed:

    enum_flags<flags> f = FLAG1 | FLAG2;
    switch (f)
      {
      case FLAG1 | FLAG2:
	break;
      }

Currently that fails to compile.

It also switches to a different mechanism of enabling the global
operators.  The current mechanism isn't namespace friendly, the new
one is.

It also switches to C++11-style SFINAE -- instead of wrapping the
return type in a SFINAE-friently structure, we use an unnamed template
parameter.  I.e., this:

  template <typename enum_type,
	    typename = is_enum_flags_enum_type_t<enum_type>>
  enum_type
  operator& (enum_type e1, enum_type e2)

instead of:

  template <typename enum_type>
  typename enum_flags_type<enum_type>::type
  operator& (enum_type e1, enum_type e2)

Note that the static_assert inside operator~() was converted to a
couple overloads (signed vs unsigned), because static_assert is too
late for SFINAE-based tests, which is important for the CHECK_VALID
unit tests.

Tested with gcc {4.8, 7.1, 9.3} and clang {5.0.2, 10.0.0}.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (SELFTESTS_SRCS): Add
	unittests/enum-flags-selftests.c.
	* btrace.c (ftrace_update_caller, ftrace_fixup_calle): Use
	btrace_function_flags instead of enum btrace_function_flag.
	* compile/compile-c-types.c (convert_qualified): Use
	enum_flags::raw.
	* compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c (convert_one_symbol)
	(convert_symbol_bmsym):
	* compile/compile-cplus-types.c (compile_cplus_convert_method)
	(compile_cplus_convert_struct_or_union_methods)
	(compile_cplus_instance::convert_qualified_base):
	* go-exp.y (parse_string_or_char): Add cast to int.
	* unittests/enum-flags-selftests.c: New file.
	* record-btrace.c (btrace_thread_flag_to_str): Change parameter's
	type to btrace_thread_flags from btrace_thread_flag.
	(record_btrace_cancel_resume, record_btrace_step_thread): Change
	local's type to btrace_thread_flags from btrace_thread_flag.  Add
	cast in DEBUG call.

gdbsupport/ChangeLog:

	* enum-flags.h: Include "traits.h".
	(DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE): Declare a function instead of defining a
	structure.
	(enum_underlying_type): Update comment.
	(namespace enum_flags_detail): New.  Move struct zero_type here.
	(EnumIsUnsigned, EnumIsSigned): New.
	(class enum_flags): Make most methods constexpr.
	(operator&=, operator|=, operator^=): Take an enum_flags instead
	of an enum_type.  Make rvalue ref versions deleted.
	(operator enum_type()): Delete.
	(operator&, operator|, operator^, operator~): Delete, moved out of
	class.
	(raw()): New method.
	(is_enum_flags_enum_type_t): Declare.
	(ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_BINOP, ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMPOUND_ASSIGN)
	(ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMP): New.  Use them to reimplement global
	operators.
	(operator~): Now constexpr and reimplemented.
	(operator<<, operator>>): New deleted functions.
	* valid-expr.h (CHECK_VALID_EXPR_5, CHECK_VALID_EXPR_6): New.
2020-09-14 22:21:07 +01:00
Anton Kolesov
8d7f06359a arc: Add GNU/Linux support for ARC
ARC Linux targets differences from baremetal:

- No support for hardware single instruction stepping.
- Different access rules to registers.
- Use of another instruction for breakpoints.

v2: Changes after Tom's remarks [1]
 arc-linux-tdep.c
  - Use true/false instead of TRUE/FALSE.
  - arc_linux_sw_breakpoint_from_kind (): Break long lines into two.
  - arc_linux_sw_breakpoint_from_kind (): Remove starting blank line.
  - Use explicit number evaluation, e.g: if (a & b) -> if ((a & b) != 0)
 arc-tdep.c
  - Use explicit number evaluation, e.g: if (a & b) -> if ((a & b) != 0)
 gdb/configure.tgt
  - arc*-*-linux*): Remove "build_gdbserver=yes".

v3: Changes after Simon's remarks [2]
  arc-linux-tdep.c
  - Use "return trap_size" instead of cryptic "return 2".
  - Removed unnecessary curly braces.
  - Removed "void" from "_initialize_arc_linux_tdep (void)".

v5: Changes after Simon's remarks [3]
- Remove unnecessary empty lines.
- Replace "breakpoint uses" with "breakpoints use" in a comment.
- "return condition;" i.s.o. "if (condition) return true; else return false;"

[1] Tom's remarks
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-April/167887.html

[2] Simon's remarks on v2
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168513.html

[3] Simon's remarks on v4
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-August/170994.html

gdb/ChangeLog:

2020-08-25  Anton Kolesov  <anton.kolesov@synopsys.com>

	* configure.tgt: ARC support for GNU/Linux.
	* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBJS): Likewise.
	* arc-linux-tdep.c: New file.
	* arc-tdep.h (ARC_STATUS32_L_MASK, ARC_STATUS32_DE_MASK): Declare.
	* arc-tdep.c (arc_write_pc): Use it.
2020-08-25 17:31:29 +02:00
Aaron Merey
d138725a62 gdb/Makefile.in: Add DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS, DEBUGINFOD_LIBS variables.
Introduce Makefile variables DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS and DEBUGINFOD_LIBS
that map to the configuration variables of the same names.

Replace @DEBUGINFOD_LIBS@ with $(DEBUGINFOD_LIBS) in the definition
of CLIBS in order to conform to the usage of other *_LIBS variables
in Makefile.in.

Add DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS to INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE. This fixes an issue
where GDB would fail to find debuginfod.h if it was not installed
in a default location searched by the compiler.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS, DEBUGINFOD_LIBS): New variables.
	(INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add DEBUGINFOD_CFLAGS.
	(CLIBS): Add DEBUGINFOD_LIBS.
2020-08-18 18:02:26 -04:00
Jose E. Marchesi
39791af2a2 gdb: support for eBPF
This patch adds basic support for the eBPF target: tdep and build
machinery.  The accompanying simulator is introduced in subsequent
patches.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2020-08-04  Weimin Pan <weimin.pan@oracle.com>
	    Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* configure.tgt: Add entry for bpf-*-*.
	* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add bpf-tdep.o
	(ALLDEPFILES): Add bpf-tdep.c.
	* bpf-tdep.c: New file.
	* MAINTAINERS: Add bpf target and maintainer.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

2020-08-04  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Contributors): Add information for the eBPF
	support.
	(BPF): New section.
2020-08-04 18:01:55 +02:00
Rainer Orth
c8693053f8 Unify Solaris procfs and largefile handling
GDB currently doesn't build on 32-bit Solaris:

* On Solaris 11.4/x86:

In file included from /usr/include/sys/procfs.h:26,
                 from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/hg/master/dist/gdb/i386-sol2-nat.c:24:
/usr/include/sys/old_procfs.h:31:2: error: #error "Cannot use procfs in the large file compilation environment"
 #error "Cannot use procfs in the large file compilation environment"
  ^~~~~

* On Solaris 11.3/x86 there are several more instances of this.

The interaction between procfs and large-file support historically has
been a royal mess on Solaris:

* There are two versions of the procfs interface:

** The old ioctl-based /proc, deprecated and not used any longer in
   either gdb or binutils.

** The `new' (introduced in Solaris 2.6, 1997) structured /proc.

* There are two headers one can possibly include:

** <procfs.h> which only provides the structured /proc, definining
   _STRUCTURED_PROC=1 and then including ...

** <sys/procfs.h> which defaults to _STRUCTURED_PROC=0, the ioctl-based
   /proc, but provides structured /proc if _STRUCTURED_PROC == 1.

* procfs and the large-file environment didn't go well together:

** Until Solaris 11.3, <sys/procfs.h> would always #error in 32-bit
   compilations when the large-file environment was active
   (_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64).

** In both Solaris 11.4 and Illumos, this restriction was lifted for
   structured /proc.

So one has to be careful always to define _STRUCTURED_PROC=1 when
testing for or using <sys/procfs.h> on Solaris.  As the errors above
show, this isn't always the case in binutils-gdb right now.

Also one may need to disable large-file support for 32-bit compilations
on Solaris.  config/largefile.m4 meant to do this by wrapping the
AC_SYS_LARGEFILE autoconf macro with appropriate checks, yielding
ACX_LARGEFILE.  Unfortunately the macro doesn't always succeed because
it neglects the _STRUCTURED_PROC part.

To make things even worse, since GCC 9 g++ predefines
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 on Solaris.  So even if largefile.m4 deciced not to
enable large-file support, this has no effect, breaking the gdb build.

This patch addresses all this as follows:

* All tests for the <sys/procfs.h> header are made with
  _STRUCTURED_PROC=1, the definition going into the various config.h
  files instead of having to make them (and sometimes failing) in the
  affected sources.

* To cope with the g++ predefine of _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64,
  -U_FILE_OFFSET_BITS is added to various *_CPPFLAGS variables.  It had
  been far easier to have just

  #undef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS

  in config.h, but unfortunately such a construct in config.in is
  commented by config.status irrespective of indentation and whitespace
  if large-file support is disabled.  I found no way around this and
  putting the #undef in several global headers for bfd, binutils, ld,
  and gdb seemed way more invasive.

* Last, the applicability check in largefile.m4 was modified only to
  disable largefile support if really needed.  To do so, it checks if
  <sys/procfs.h> compiles with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 defined.  If it
  doesn't, the disabling only happens if gdb exists in-tree and isn't
  disabled, otherwise (building binutils from a tarball), there's no
  conflict.

  What initially confused me was the check for $plugins here, which
  originally caused the disabling not to take place.  Since AC_PLUGINGS
  does enable plugin support if <dlfcn.h> exists (which it does on
  Solaris), the disabling never happened.

  I could find no explanation why the linker plugin needs large-file
  support but thought it would be enough if gld and GCC's lto-plugin
  agreed on the _FILE_OFFSET_BITS value.  Unfortunately, that's not
  enough: lto-plugin uses the simple-object interface from libiberty,
  which includes off_t arguments.  So to fully disable large-file
  support would mean also disabling it in libiberty and its users: gcc
  and libstdc++-v3.  This seems highly undesirable, so I decided to
  disable the linker plugin instead if large-file support won't work.

The patch allows binutils+gdb to build on i386-pc-solaris2.11 (both
Solaris 11.3 and 11.4, using GCC 9.3.0 which is the worst case due to
predefined _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64).  Also regtested on
amd64-pc-solaris2.11 (again on Solaris 11.3 and 11.4),
x86_64-pc-linux-gnu and i686-pc-linux-gnu.

	config:
	* largefile.m4 (ACX_LARGEFILE) <sparc-*-solaris*|i?86-*-solaris*>:
	Check for <sys/procfs.h> incompatilibity with large-file support
	on Solaris.
	Only disable large-file support and perhaps plugins if needed.
	Set, substitute LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS if so.

	bfd:
	* bfd.m4 (BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H): New macro.
	(BFD_HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_TYPE): Require BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H.
	Don't define _STRUCTURED_PROC.
	(BFD_HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_TYPE_MEMBER): Likewise.
	* elf.c [HAVE_SYS_PROCFS_H] (_STRUCTURED_PROC): Don't define.
	* configure.ac: Use BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H to check for <sys/procfs.h>.
	* configure, config.in: Regenerate.
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.

	binutils:
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.

	gas:
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* Makefile.in, doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.

	gdb:
	* proc-api.c (_STRUCTURED_PROC): Don't define.
	* proc-events.c: Likewise.
	* proc-flags.c: Likewise.
	* proc-why.c: Likewise.
	* procfs.c: Likewise.

	* Makefile.in (INTERNAL_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* configure, config.in: Regenerate.

	gdbserver:
	* configure, config.in: Regenerate.

	gdbsupport:
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* common.m4 (GDB_AC_COMMON): Use BFD_SYS_PROCFS_H to check for
	<sys/procfs.h>.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure, config.in: Regenerate.

	gnulib:
	* configure.ac: Run ACX_LARGEFILE before gl_EARLY.
	* configure: Regenerate.

	gprof:
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.

	ld:
	* Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS): Add LARGEFILE_CPPFLAGS.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2020-07-30 15:41:50 +02:00
Aaron Merey
f6720b1cfe config/debuginfod.m4: Use PKG_CHECK_MODULES
Use PKG_CHECK_MODULES to set debuginfod autoconf vars. Also add
pkg.m4 to config/.

ChangeLog:

	* config/debuginfod.m4: use PKG_CHECK_MODULES.
	* config/pkg.m4: New file.
	* configure: Rebuild.
	* configure.ac: Remove AC_DEBUGINFOD.

ChangeLog/binutils:

	* Makefile.am: Replace LIBDEBUGINFOD with DEBUGINFOD_LIBS.
	* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
	* configure: Rebuild.
	* doc/Makefile.in: Rebuild.

ChangeLog/gdb:

	* Makefile.in: Replace LIBDEBUGINFOD with DEBUGINFOD_LIBS.
	* configure: Rebuild.
2020-07-24 15:16:20 -04:00
Andrew Burgess
0f767f942b gdb/python: Add gdb.Architecture.registers method
This commit adds a new method gdb.Architecture.registers that returns
an object of the new type gdb.RegisterDescriptorIterator.  This
iterator returns objects of the new type gdb.RegisterDescriptor.

A RegisterDescriptor is not a way to read the value of a register,
this is already covered by Frame.read_register, a RegisterDescriptor
is simply a way to discover from Python, which registers are
available for a given architecture.

I did consider just returning a string, the name of each register,
instead of a RegisterDescriptor, however, I'm aware that it we don't
want to break the existing Python API in any way, so if I return just
a string now, but in the future we want more information about a
register then we would have to add a second API to get that
information.  By going straight to a descriptor object now, it is easy
to add additional properties in the future should we wish to.

Right now the only property of a register that a user can access is
the name of the register.

In future we might want to be able to ask the register about is
register groups, or its type.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_PYTHON_SRCS): Add py-registers.c
	* python/py-arch.c (archpy_registers): New function.
	(arch_object_methods): Add 'registers' method.
	* python/py-registers.c: New file.
	* python/python-internal.h
	(gdbpy_new_register_descriptor_iterator): Declare.
	(gdbpy_initialize_registers): Declare.
	* python/python.c (do_start_initialization): Call
	gdbpy_initialize_registers.
	* NEWS: Mention additions to the Python API.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-arch-reg-names.exp: New file.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Python API): Add new section the menu.
	(Frames In Python): Add new @anchor.
	(Architectures In Python): Document new registers method.
	(Registers In Python): New section.
2020-07-06 15:06:06 +01:00
Nick Alcock
1776e3e59c Fix --enable-libctf and --disable-static
This fixes test runs and compilation when --disable-libctf,
--disable-static, or --enable-shared are passed.

Changes since v2: Use GCC_ENABLE and fix indentation.  Fix prototype
using 'void'.  Use 'unsupported' and gdb_caching_proc.

Changes since v3: Adapt to upstream changes providing skip_ctf_tests.

Changes since v4: Adapt to upstream changes in the seven months (!)
since I last looked at this.

gdb/ChangeLog
	* configure.ac: Add --enable-libctf: handle --disable-static
	properly.
	* acinclude.m4: sinclude ../config/enable.m4.
	* Makefile.in (aclocal_m4_deps): Adjust accordingly.
	(LIBCTF): Substitute in.
	(CTF_DEPS): New, likewise.
	(CLIBS): libctf needs symbols from libbfd: move earlier.
	(CDEPS): Use CTF_DEPS, not LIBCTF, now LIBCTF can include rpath
	flags.
	* ctfread.c: Surround in ENABLE_LIBCTF.
	(elfctf_build_psymtabs) [!ENABLE_LIBCTF]: New stub.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
	* configure.ac: Add --enable-libctf.
	* aclocal.m4: sinclude ../config/enable.m4.
	* Makefile.in (site.exp): Add enable_libctf to site.exp.
	* lib/gdb.exp (skip_ctf_tests): Use it.
	* gdb.base/ctf-constvars.exp: Error message tweak.
	* gdb.base/ctf-ptype.exp: Likewise.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2020-06-26 15:56:38 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers
58e6ac7006 Add a selftest that detects a 'corrupted' command tree structure in GDB.
The GDB data structure that records the GDB commands is made of
'struct cmd_list_element' defined in cli-decode.h.

A cmd_list_element has various pointers to other cmd_list_element structures,
All these pointers are together building a graph of commands.

However, when following the 'next' and '*prefixlist' pointers of
cmd_list_element, the structure must better be a tree.

If such pointers do not form a tree, then some other elements of
cmd_list_element cannot get a correct semantic.  In particular, the prefixname
has no correct meaning if the same prefix command can be reached via 2 different
paths.

This commit introduces a selftest that detects (at least some cases of) errors
leading to 'next' and '*prefixlist' not giving a tree structure.

The new 'command_structure_invariants' selftest detects one single case where
the command structure is not a tree:

  (gdb) maintenance selftest command_structure_invariants
  Running selftest command_structure_invariants.
  list 0x56362e204b98 duplicated, reachable via prefix 'show ' and 'info set '.  Duplicated list first command is 'ada'
  Self test failed: self-test failed at ../../classfix/gdb/unittests/command-def-selftests.c:160
  Ran 1 unit tests, 1 failed
  (gdb)

This was fixed by the previous commit.

2020-05-15  Philippe Waroquiers  <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>

	* unittests/help-doc-selftests.c: Rename to
	unittests/command-def-selftests.c
	* unittests/command-def-selftests.c (help_doc_tests): Update some
	comments.
	(command_structure_tests, traverse_command_structure): New namespace
	and function.
	(command_structure_invariants_tests): New function.
	(_initialize_command_def_selftests) Renamed from
	_initialize_help_doc_selftests, register command_structure_invariants
	selftest.
2020-05-15 22:17:45 +02:00
Tom Tromey
400b5eca00 Move event-loop.[ch] to gdbsupport/
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/.
2020-04-13 14:10:04 -06:00
Tom Tromey
93b54c8ed3 Introduce async-event.[ch]
This patch splits out some gdb-specific code from event-loop, into new
files async-event.[ch].  Strictly speaking this code could perhaps be
put into gdbsupport/, but because gdbserver does not currently use it,
it seemed better, for size reasons, to split it out.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-13  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-win.c: Include async-event.h.
	* remote.c: Include async-event.h.
	* remote-notif.c: Include async-event.h.
	* record-full.c: Include async-event.h.
	* record-btrace.c: Include async-event.h.
	* infrun.c: Include async-event.h.
	* event-top.c: Include async-event.h.
	* event-loop.h: Move some declarations to async-event.h.
	* event-loop.c: Don't include ser-event.h or top.h.  Move some
	code to async-event.c.
	* async-event.h: New file.
	* async-event.c: New file.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add async-event.c.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add async-event.h.
2020-04-13 14:10:04 -06:00
Tom Tromey
2b2558bfac Move DWARF-constant stringifying code to new file
This moves the DWARF debugging functions that stringify various
constants to a new file, dwarf2/stringify.c.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-03-26  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf_unit_type_name, dwarf_tag_name)
	(dwarf_attr_name, dwarf_form_name, dwarf_bool_name)
	(dwarf_type_encoding_name): Move to stringify.c.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/stringify.c.
	* dwarf2/stringify.c: New file.
	* dwarf2/stringify.h: New file.
2020-03-26 09:28:26 -06:00
Tom Tromey
c90ec28ae4 Move code to new file dwarf2/macro.c
This moves some more code out of dwarf2/read.c, introducing new files
dwarf2/macro.c and dwarf2/macro.h.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-03-26  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_macro_malformed_definition_complaint)
	(macro_start_file, consume_improper_spaces)
	(parse_macro_definition, skip_form_bytes, skip_unknown_opcode)
	(dwarf_parse_macro_header, dwarf_decode_macro_bytes)
	(dwarf_decode_macros): Move to macro.c.
	* dwarf2/macro.c: New file.
	* dwarf2/macro.h: New file.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/macro.c.
2020-03-26 09:28:15 -06:00
Tom Tromey
0314b3901c Add dwz.c and dwz_file::read_string
This changes read_indirect_string_from_dwz to be a method on the
dwz_file, and adds a new dwarf2/dwz.c file.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-03-26  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2/read.c (read_attribute_value): Update.
	(read_indirect_string_from_dwz): Move to dwz.c; change into
	method.
	(dwarf_decode_macro_bytes): Update.
	* dwarf2/dwz.h (struct dwz_file) <read_string>: Declare method.
	* dwarf2/dwz.c: New file.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwz.c.
2020-03-26 09:28:09 -06:00
Anton Kolesov
817a758576 arc: Migrate to new target features
This patch replaces usage of target descriptions in ARC, where the whole
description is fixed in XML, with new target descriptions where XML describes
individual features, and GDB assembles those features into actual target
description.

v2:
Removed arc.c from ALLDEPFILES in gdb/Makefile.in.
Removed vim modeline from arc-tdep.c to have it in a separate patch.
Removed braces from one line "if/else".
Undid the type change for "jb_pc" (kept it as "int").
Joined the unnecessary line breaks into one line.
No more moving around arm targets in gdb/features/Makefile.
Changed pattern checking for ARC features from "arc/{aux,core}" to "arc/".

v3:
Added include gaurds to arc.h.
Added arc_read_description to _create_ target descriptions less.

v4:
Got rid of ARC_SYS_TYPE_NONE.
Renamed ARC_SYS_TYPE_INVALID to ARC_SYS_TYPE_NUM.
Fixed a few indentations/curly braces.
Converted arc_sys_type_to_str from a macro to an inline function.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-03-16  Anton Kolesov  <anton.kolesov@synopsys.com>
	    Shahab Vahedi  <shahab@synopsys.com>

	* Makefile.in: Add arch/arc.o
	* configure.tgt: Likewise.
	* arc-tdep.c (arc_tdesc_init): Use arc_read_description.
	(_initialize_arc_tdep): Don't initialize old target descriptions.
        (arc_read_description): New function to cache target descriptions.
	* arc-tdep.h (arc_read_description): Add proto type.
	* arch/arc.c: New file.
	* arch/arc.h: Likewise.
	* features/Makefile: Replace old target descriptions with new.
	* features/arc-arcompact.c: Remove.
	* features/arc-arcompact.xml: Likewise.
	* features/arc-v2.c: Likewise
	* features/arc-v2.xml: Likewise
	* features/arc/aux-arcompact.xml: New file.
	* features/arc/aux-v2.xml: Likewise.
	* features/arc/core-arcompact.xml: Likewise.
	* features/arc/core-v2.xml: Likewise.
	* features/arc/aux-arcompact.c: Generate.
	* features/arc/aux-v2.c: Likewise.
	* features/arc/core-arcompact.c: Likewise.
	* features/arc/core-v2.c: Likewise.
	* target-descriptions (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Support ARC features.
2020-03-16 22:53:10 +01:00
Simon Marchi
7a1998dffb gdb: rename i386-cygwin-tdep.c to i386-windows-tdep.c
Since this file contains things that apply not only to Cygwin binaries,
but also to non-Cygwin Windows binaries, I think it would make more
sense for it to be called i386-windows-tdep.c.  It is analogous to
amd64-windows-tdep.c, which we already have.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* i386-cygwin-tdep.c: Rename to...
	* i386-windows-tdep.c: ... this.
	* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Rename i386-cygwin-tdep.c to
	i386-windows-tdep.c.
	* configure.tgt: Likewise.
2020-03-16 16:56:35 -04:00
Simon Marchi
74cd3f9d7e Don't include selftests objects in build when unit tests are disabled
While working on the preceding selftests patches, I noticed that some
selftests-specific files are included in the build even when selftests
are disabled, namely disasm-selftest.c and gdbarch-selftests.c.  These
files are entirely #if'ed out when building with selftests disabled.

This is not a huge problem, but I think it would make more sense if
these files were simply not built.

With this patch, I propose to put all the selftests-specific source
files into a SELFTESTS_SRCS Makefile variable (even selftest-arch.c,
which is currently added by the configure script).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Rename to...
	(SELFTESTS_SRCS): ... this.  Add disasm-selftests.c,
	gdbarch-selfselftests.c and selftest-arch.c.
	(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Rename to...
	(SELFTESTS_OBS): ... this.
	(COMMON_SFILES): Remove disasm-selftests.c and
	gdbarch-selftests.c.
	* configure.ac: Don't add selftest-arch.{c,o} to
	CONFIG_{SRCS,OBS}.
	* disasm-selftests.c, gdbarch-selftests.c: Remove GDB_SELF_TEST
	preprocessor conditions.
2020-03-12 14:18:36 -04:00
Christian Biesinger
8dd8e1c722 Remove use of deprecated core functions (in NetBSD/ARM)
This is in preparation for deleting deprecated_add_core_fns and
related code.

As a side-effect, this makes it possible to read NetBSD/ARM
core files on non-NetBSD/ARM platforms, subject to PR corefiles/25638.

I have removed this comment:
-  /* This is ok: we're running native...  */
Since we are using the gdbarch from the regcache, we should be
guaranteed to be calling the right function here, so it shouldn't
matter whether we are running native.

Tested by reading a NetBSD/ARM core file on Linux/x86-64 and NetBSD/ARM;
the "info registers" output matches the one from the system GDB.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2020-03-12  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add new arm-nbsd-tdep.h file.
	* arm-nbsd-nat.c (arm_supply_gregset): Moved to arm-nbsd-tdep and
	renamed to arm_nbsd_supply_gregset.
	(fetch_register): Update to call arm_nbsd_supply_gregset.
	(fetch_regs): Remove in favor of fetch_register with a -1 regno.
	(arm_netbsd_nat_target::fetch_registers): Update.
	(fetch_elfcore_registers): Removed.
	(_initialize_arm_netbsd_nat): Removed call to deprecated_add_core_fns.
	* arm-nbsd-tdep.c (struct arm_nbsd_reg): New struct.
	(arm_nbsd_supply_gregset): Moved from arm-nbsd-nat.c and updated to
	not require NetBSD system headers.
	(arm_nbsd_regset): New struct.
	(arm_nbsd_iterate_over_regset_sections): New function.
	(arm_netbsd_init_abi_common): Updated to call
	set_gdbarch_iterate_over_regset_sections.
	* arm-nbsd-tdep.h: New file.
2020-03-12 12:23:17 -05:00
Aaron Merey
0d79cdc494 Add debuginfod support to GDB
debuginfod is a lightweight web service that indexes ELF/DWARF debugging
resources by build-id and serves them over HTTP.

This patch enables GDB to query debuginfod servers for separate debug
files and source code when it is otherwise not able to find them.

GDB can be built with debuginfod using the --with-debuginfod configure
option.

This requires that libdebuginfod be installed and found at configure time.

debuginfod is packaged with elfutils, starting with version 0.178.

For more information see https://sourceware.org/elfutils/.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 31.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-02-26  Aaron Merey  <amerey@redhat.com>

        * Makefile.in: Handle optional debuginfod support.
        * NEWS: Update.
        * README: Add --with-debuginfod summary.
        * config.in: Regenerate.
        * configure: Regenerate.
        * configure.ac: Handle optional debuginfod support.
        * debuginfod-support.c: debuginfod helper functions.
        * debuginfod-support.h: Ditto.
        * doc/gdb.texinfo: Add --with-debuginfod to configure options
        summary.
        * dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Query debuginfod servers
        when a dwz file cannot be found.
        * elfread.c (elf_symfile_read): Query debuginfod servers when a
        debuginfo file cannot be found.
        * source.c (open_source_file): Query debuginfod servers when a
        source file cannot be found.
        * top.c (print_gdb_configuration): Include
        --{with,without}-debuginfod in the output.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-02-26  Aaron Merey  <amerey@redhat.com>

        * gdb.debuginfod: New directory for debuginfod tests.
        * gdb.debuginfod/main.c: New test file.
        * gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: New tests.
2020-02-26 17:40:49 -05:00
Tom Tromey
01b1af321f Allow TUI windows in Python
This patch adds support for writing new TUI windows in Python.

2020-02-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* NEWS: Add entry for gdb.register_window_type.
	* tui/tui-layout.h (window_factory): New typedef.
	(tui_register_window): Declare.
	* tui/tui-layout.c (saved_tui_windows): New global.
	(tui_apply_current_layout): Use it.
	(tui_register_window): New function.
	* python/python.c (do_start_initialization): Call
	gdbpy_initialize_tui.
	(python_GdbMethods): Add "register_window_type" function.
	* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_register_tui_window)
	(gdbpy_initialize_tui): Declare.
	* python/py-tui.c: New file.
	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_PYTHON_SRCS): Add py-tui.c.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2020-02-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* python.texi (Python API): Add menu item.
	(TUI Windows In Python): New node.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2020-02-22  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.python/tui-window.exp: New file.
	* gdb.python/tui-window.py: New file.

Change-Id: I85fbfb923a1840450a00a7dce113a05d7f048baa
2020-02-22 12:57:25 -07:00
Tom Tromey
4057dfde49 Create dwarf2/comp-unit.[ch]
This creates the new files dwarf2/comp-unit.[ch], moving
comp_unit_head and helpers to those files.  A couple of functions are
turned into methods, because it was convenient to do so now.

2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/comp-unit.c.
	* dwarf2/read.c (struct comp_unit_head): Move to
	dwarf2/comp-unit.h.
	(enum class rcuh_kind): Move to comp-unit.h.
	(get_cu_length, offset_in_cu_p): Now methods on comp_unit_head.
	(read_comp_unit_head, error_check_comp_unit_head)
	(read_and_check_comp_unit_head): Move to comp-unit.c.
	(read_offset, dwarf_unit_type_name): Likewise.
	(create_debug_type_hash_table, read_cutu_die_from_dwo)
	(cutu_reader::cutu_reader, read_call_site_scope)
	(find_partial_die, follow_die_offset): Update.
	* dwarf2/comp-unit.h: New file, from dwarf2read.c.

Change-Id: Id961b9674c0081ed061083c8152c38b27b27388a
2020-02-08 13:43:24 -07:00
Tom Tromey
8fdd972c30 Move DWARF line_header to new file
This moves the line_header class to a pair of new files, making
dwarf2/read.c somewhat smaller.

2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2/read.h (dwarf_line_debug): Declare.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/line-header.c.
	* dwarf2/read.c: Move line_header code to new files.
	(dwarf_line_debug): No longer static.
	* dwarf2/line-header.c: New file.
	* dwarf2/line-header.h: New file.

Change-Id: I8d9d8a2398b4e888e20cc5dd68d041c28b5a06e3
2020-02-08 13:43:24 -07:00
Tom Tromey
82ca895718 Move DWARF code to dwarf2/ subdirectory
This moves all the remaining DWARF code to the new dwarf2
subdirectory.  This is just a simple renaming, with updates to
includes as needed.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2/expr.c: Rename from dwarf2expr.c.
	* dwarf2/expr.h: Rename from dwarf2expr.h.
	* dwarf2/frame-tailcall.c: Rename from dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c.
	* dwarf2/frame-tailcall.h: Rename from dwarf2-frame-tailcall.h.
	* dwarf2/frame.c: Rename from dwarf2-frame.c.
	* dwarf2/frame.h: Rename from dwarf2-frame.h.
	* dwarf2/index-cache.c: Rename from dwarf-index-cache.c.
	* dwarf2/index-cache.h: Rename from dwarf-index-cache.h.
	* dwarf2/index-common.c: Rename from dwarf-index-common.c.
	* dwarf2/index-common.h: Rename from dwarf-index-common.h.
	* dwarf2/index-write.c: Rename from dwarf-index-write.c.
	* dwarf2/index-write.h: Rename from dwarf-index-write.h.
	* dwarf2/loc.c: Rename from dwarf2loc.c.
	* dwarf2/loc.h: Rename from dwarf2loc.h.
	* dwarf2/read.c: Rename from dwarf2read.c.
	* dwarf2/read.h: Rename from dwarf2read.h.
	* dwarf2/abbrev.c, aarch64-tdep.c, alpha-tdep.c,
	amd64-darwin-tdep.c, arc-tdep.c, arm-tdep.c, bfin-tdep.c,
	compile/compile-c-symbols.c, compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c,
	compile/compile-loc2c.c, cris-tdep.c, csky-tdep.c, findvar.c,
	gdbtypes.c, guile/scm-type.c, h8300-tdep.c, hppa-bsd-tdep.c,
	hppa-linux-tdep.c, i386-darwin-tdep.c, i386-linux-tdep.c,
	i386-tdep.c, iq2000-tdep.c, m32c-tdep.c, m68hc11-tdep.c,
	m68k-tdep.c, microblaze-tdep.c, mips-tdep.c, mn10300-tdep.c,
	msp430-tdep.c, nds32-tdep.c, nios2-tdep.c, or1k-tdep.c,
	riscv-tdep.c, rl78-tdep.c, rs6000-tdep.c, rx-tdep.c, s12z-tdep.c,
	s390-tdep.c, score-tdep.c, sh-tdep.c, sparc-linux-tdep.c,
	sparc-tdep.c, sparc64-linux-tdep.c, sparc64-tdep.c, tic6x-tdep.c,
	tilegx-tdep.c, v850-tdep.c, xstormy16-tdep.c, xtensa-tdep.c:
	Update.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Update.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Update.

Change-Id: Ied9ce1436cd27ac4a4cffef10ec92e396f181928
2020-02-08 13:40:59 -07:00
Tom Tromey
162dce5526 Create dwarf2/attribute.[ch]
This moves the attribute-related code out of dwarf2read.c and into the
new files dwarf2/attribute.[ch].

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2read.c (struct attribute, DW_STRING)
	(DW_STRING_IS_CANONICAL, DW_UNSND, DW_BLOCK, DW_SND, DW_ADDR)
	(DW_SIGNATURE, struct dwarf_block, attr_value_as_address)
	(attr_form_is_block, attr_form_is_section_offset)
	(attr_form_is_constant, attr_form_is_ref): Move.
	* dwarf2/attribute.h: New file.
	* dwarf2/attribute.c: New file, from dwarf2read.c.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/attribute.c.

Change-Id: I1ea4c146256a1b9e38b66f1c605d782a14eeded7
2020-02-08 13:40:56 -07:00
Tom Tromey
3054dd5470 Create dwarf2/abbrev.[ch]
This moves the abbrev table code out of dwarf2read.c and into new
files dwarf2/abbrev.[ch].

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2read.c (abbrev_table_up, struct abbrev_info)
	(struct attr_abbrev, ABBREV_HASH_SIZE, struct abbrev_table):
	Move.
	(read_cutu_die_from_dwo, build_type_psymtabs_1): Update.
	(abbrev_table::alloc_abbrev, abbrev_table::add_abbrev)
	(abbrev_table::lookup_abbrev, abbrev_table_read_table): Move to
	abbrev.c.
	* dwarf2/abbrev.h: New file.
	* dwarf2/abbrev.c: New file, from dwarf2read.c.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/abbrev.c.

Change-Id: I87911bc5297de4407587ca849fef8e8d19136c30
2020-02-08 13:40:55 -07:00
Tom Tromey
2c86cff96f Create dwarf2/section.[ch]
This moves some section-handling code from dwarf2read.c into new
files, dwarf2/section.[ch].

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2read.h (struct dwarf2_section_info, dwarf2_read_section):
	Move to dwarf2/section.h.
	* dwarf2read.c (get_containing_section, get_section_bfd_owner)
	(get_section_bfd_section, get_section_name)
	(get_section_file_name, get_section_id, get_section_flags)
	(dwarf2_section_empty_p, dwarf2_read_section): Moe to
	dwarf2/section.c.
	* dwarf2/section.h: New file.
	* dwarf2/section.c: New file, from dwarf2read.c.
	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/section.c.

Change-Id: I9f8498094cf99d9521e9481622ce8adbd453daf4
2020-02-08 13:40:54 -07:00
Tom Tromey
f4382c45a4 Create dwarf2/leb.[ch]
This moves some scalar-unpacking code into a couple of new files,
dwarf2/leb.h and dwarf2/leb.c.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* dwarf2read.h (read_unsigned_leb128): Don't declare.
	* dwarf2read.c (read_1_byte, read_1_signed_byte, read_2_bytes)
	(read_2_signed_bytes, read_3_bytes, read_4_bytes)
	(read_4_signed_bytes, read_8_bytes): Move to dwarf2/leb.h.
	(read_unsigned_leb128, read_signed_leb128): Move to dwarf2/leb.c.
	* dwarf2/leb.h: New file, from dwarf2read.c.
	* dwarf2/leb.c: New file, from dwarf2read.c.
	* dwarf2-frame.c (read_1_byte, read_4_bytes, read_8_bytes):
	Remove.
	* Makefile.in (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR): Add dwarf2.
	(COMMON_SFILES): Add dwarf2/leb.c.

Change-Id: Idd19647686c8f959d226a95fdfca4db47c6e96d0
2020-02-08 13:40:54 -07:00
Tom Tromey
919adfe840 Move gdbserver to top level
This patch moves gdbserver to the top level.

This patch is as close to a pure move as possible -- gdbserver still
builds its own variant of gnulib and gdbsupport.  Changing this will
be done in a separate patch.

[v2] Note that, per Simon's review comment, this patch changes the
tree so that gdbserver is not built for or1k or score.  This makes
sense, because there is apparently not actually a gdbserver port here.

[v3] This version of the patch also splits out some configury into a
new file, gdbserver/configure.host, so that the top-level configure
script can simply rely on it in order to decide whether gdbserver
should be built.

[v4] This version adds documentation and removes some unnecessary
top-level dependencies.

[v5] Update docs to mention "make all-gdbserver" and change how
top-level configure decides whether to build gdbserver, switching to a
single, shared script.

Tested by the buildbot.

ChangeLog
2020-02-07  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* src-release.sh (GDB_SUPPORT_DIRS): Add gdbserver.
	* gdbserver: New directory, moved from gdb/gdbserver.
	* configure.ac (host_tools): Add gdbserver.
	Only build gdbserver on certain systems.
	* Makefile.in, configure: Rebuild.
	* Makefile.def (host_modules, dependencies): Add gdbserver.
	* MAINTAINERS: Add gdbserver.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-02-07  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* README: Update gdbserver documentation.
	* gdbserver: Move to top level.
	* configure.tgt (build_gdbserver): Remove.
	* configure.ac: Remove --enable-gdbserver.
	* configure: Rebuild.
	* Makefile.in (distclean): Don't mention gdbserver.

Change-Id: I826b7565b54604711dc7a11edea0499cd51ff39e
2020-02-07 08:42:25 -07:00
Tom Tromey
975f45b7e1 Don't link gdb twice against libiberty
I noticed that gdb includes libiberty twice in its link line.  I don't
think there's a need for this, so this patch removes one of the
references.

gdb/ChangeLog
2020-01-14  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* Makefile.in (CLIBS): Remove second use of $(LIBIBERTY).

Change-Id: I43bb7100660867081f937c67ea70ff751c62bbfb
2020-01-14 16:25:04 -07:00
Tom Tromey
01027315f5 Move gdbsupport to the top level
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
2020-01-14 16:25:02 -07:00
Pedro Alves
121b3efd49 Add "info connections" command, "info inferiors" connection number/string
This commit extends the CLI a bit for multi-target, in three ways.

#1 - New "info connections" command.

This is a new command that lists the open connections (process_stratum
targets).  For example, if you're debugging two remote connections, a
couple local/native processes, and a core dump, all at the same time,
you might see something like this:

 (gdb) info connections
   Num  What                     Description
   1    remote 192.168.0.1:9999  Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol
   2    remote 192.168.0.2:9998  Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol
 * 3    native                   Native process
   4    core                     Local core dump file

#2 - New "info inferiors" "Connection" column

You'll also see a new matching "Connection" column in "info
inferiors", showing you which connection an inferior is bound to:

 (gdb) info inferiors
   Num  Description       Connection                   Executable
   1    process 18526     1 (remote 192.168.0.1:9999)  target:/tmp/a.out
   2    process 18531     2 (remote 192.168.0.2:9998)  target:/tmp/a.out
   3    process 19115     3 (native)                   /tmp/prog1
   4    process 6286      4 (core)                     myprogram
 * 5    process 19122     3 (native)                   /bin/hello

#3 - Makes "add-inferior" show the inferior's target connection

"add-inferior" now shows you the connection you've just bound the
inferior to, which is the current process_stratum target:

 (gdb) add-inferior
 [New inferior 2]
 Added inferior 2 on connection 1 (extended-remote localhost:2346)

gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-01-10  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add target-connection.c.
	* inferior.c (uiout_field_connection): New function.
	(print_inferior): Add new "connection-id" column.
	(add_inferior_command): Show connection number/string of added
	inferior.
	* process-stratum-target.h
	(process_stratum_target::connection_string): New virtual method.
	(process_stratum_target::connection_number): New field.
	* remote.c (remote_target::connection_string): New override.
	* target-connection.c: New file.
	* target-connection.h: New file.
	* target.c (decref_target): Remove process_stratum targets from
	the connection list.
	(target_stack::push): Add process_stratum targets to the
	connection list.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2020-01-10  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/kill-detach-inferiors-cmd.exp: Adjust expected output
	of "add-inferior".
	* gdb.base/quit-live.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/remote-exec-file.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.guile/scm-progspace.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.linespec/linespec.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.multi/multi-target.exp (setup): Add "info connection" and
	"info inferiors" tests.
	* gdb.multi/remove-inferiors.exp: Adjust expected output of
	"add-inferior".
	* gdb.multi/watchpoint-multi.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.python/py-inferior.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.server/extended-remote-restart.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.threads/fork-plus-threads.exp: Adjust expected output of
	"info inferiors".
	* gdb.threads/forking-threads-plus-breakpoint.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.trace/report.exp: Likewise.
2020-01-10 20:06:14 +00:00
Eli Zaretskii
559e7e5056 Improve process exit status macros on MinGW
When a Windows program is terminated by a fatal exception, its exit
code is the value of that exception, as defined by the various
EXCEPTION_* symbols in the Windows API headers.  This commit emulates
WTERMSIG etc. by translating the fatal exception codes to more-or-less
equivalent Posix signals.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2020-01-06  Eli Zaretskii  <eliz@gnu.org>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add gdbsupport/gdb_wait.c.
	* windows-tdep.c: New enumeration of WINDOWS_SIG* signals.
	(windows_gdb_signal_to_target): New function, uses the above
	enumeration to convert GDB internal signal codes to equivalent
	Windows codes.
	(windows_init_abi): Call set_gdbarch_gdb_signal_to_target.
	* windows-nat.c: Include "gdb_wait.h".
	(get_windows_debug_event): Extract the fatal exception from the
	exit status and convert to the equivalent Posix signal number.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c (exit_status_set_internal_vars): Account for the
	possibility that WTERMSIG returns GDB_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN.
	* gdbsupport/gdb_wait.c: New file, implements
	windows_status_to_termsig.
	* gdbsupport/gdb_wait.h (WIFEXITED, WIFSIGNALED, WEXITSTATUS)
	(WTERMSIG) [__MINGW32__]: Separate definitions for MinGW.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2020-01-06  Eli Zaretskii  <eliz@gnu.org>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* win32-low.c (get_child_debug_event): Extract the fatal exception
	from the exit status and convert to the equivalent Posix signal
	number.
	(win32_wait): Allow TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED status as well.
	* Makefile.in (OBS, SFILES): Add gdb_wait.[co].
2020-01-06 11:51:54 +00:00
Hannes Domani
48189beca8 Fix install-strip for cross-compilation
The variable INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV sets up STRIPPROG for the cross-compiler.

If this is not done, the host 'strip' is used, and fails:

/bin/sh /c/src/repos/binutils-gdb.git/install-sh -c -s gdb.exe \
  /gdb/gdb64-git/bin/$transformed_name.exe
strip.exe:C:/gdb/gdb64-git/bin/_inst.33599_: file format not recognized

With this change, it's fine:

STRIPPROG='x86_64-w64-mingw32-strip' \
  /bin/sh /c/src/repos/binutils-gdb.git/install-sh -c -s gdb.exe \
  /gdb/gdb64-git/bin/$transformed_name.exe

gdb/ChangeLog:

2020-01-01  Hannes Domani  <ssbssa@yahoo.de>

	* Makefile.in: Use INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

2020-01-01  Hannes Domani  <ssbssa@yahoo.de>

	* Makefile.in: Use INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV.
2020-01-01 21:51:33 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
b811d2c292 Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
gdb/ChangeLog:

        Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
2020-01-01 10:20:53 +04:00
Tom Tromey
db3ad2f031 Ravenscar port for RISC-V
This adds Ravenscar support to gdb for RISC-V targets.

This was tested internally using AdaCore's test suite and qemu.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-12-12  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add riscv-ravenscar-thread.o.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add riscv-ravenscar-thread.h.
	(ALLDEPFILES): Add riscv-ravenscar-thread.c.
	* configure.tgt (riscv-*-*): Add riscv-ravenscar-thread.o.
	* riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: New file.
	* riscv-ravenscar-thread.h: New file.
	* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_gdbarch_init): Call
	register_riscv_ravenscar_ops.

Change-Id: Ic47a3b3cfbbe80c2c82a5f48d2e0481845cac8b0
2019-12-12 11:47:40 -07:00
Simon Marchi
610cfd618e Compare iterators, not values, in filtered_iterator::operator{==,!=}
The == and != operators on filtered_iterator are not doing the
right thing, they compare values pointed by the wrapped iterators
instead of comparing the iterators themselves.

As a result, operator== will return true if the two iterators point to
two equal values at different positions.  operator!= will fail
similarly.

Also, this causes it to deference past-the-end iterators when doing.
For example, in

  for (iter = ...; iter != end_iter; ++iter)

the != comparison dereferences end_iter.  I don't think this should
happen.

I don't think it's a problem today, given that we only use
filtered_iterator to wrap linked lists of threads and inferiors.
Dereferencing past-the-end iterators of these types is not fatal, it
just returns NULL, which is not a value we otherwise find in the lists.
But in other contexts, it could become problematic.

I have added a simple self test that fails without the fix applied.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* filtered-iterator.h (filtered_iterator) <operator==,
	operator!=>: Compare wrapped iterators, not wrapped pointers.
	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
	unittests/filtered_iterator-selftests.c.
	* unittests/filtered_iterator-selftests.c: New file.
2019-12-04 13:27:56 -05:00
Tom Tromey
517d261dfa Fix latent bug in tui_copy_source_line
tui_copy_source_line has a bug, where it can advance past the
terminating \0 in its input string.  This patch fixes the bug and adds
a test case for this function.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-12-01  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_copy_source_line): Don't advance past
	\0.
	* unittests/tui-selftests.c: New file.
	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add tui-selftests.c.

Change-Id: I46cdabe6e57549983149b8f640cda5edd16fa260
2019-12-01 12:29:50 -07:00