This commit adds Zfhmin and Zhinxmin extensions (subsets of Zfh and
Zhinx extensions, respectively). In the process supporting Zfhmin and
Zhinxmin extension, this commit also changes how instructions are
categorized considering Zfhmin, Zhinx and Zhinxmin extensions.
Detailed changes,
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN:
flh, fsh, fmv.x.h and fmv.h.x.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fmv.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fneg.h, fabs.h, fsgnj.h, fsgnjn.h, fsgnjx.h,
fadd.h, fsub.h, fmul.h, fdiv.h, fsqrt.h, fmin.h, fmax.h,
fmadd.h, fnmadd.h, fmsub.h, fnmsub.h,
fcvt.w.h, fcvt.wu.h, fcvt.h.w, fcvt.h.wu,
fcvt.l.h, fcvt.lu.h, fcvt.h.l, fcvt.h.lu,
feq.h, flt.h, fle.h, fgt.h, fge.h,
fclass.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN:
fcvt.s.h and fcvt.h.s.
* From INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D:
fcvt.d.h and fcvt.h.d.
* From INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q:
fcvt.q.h and fcvt.h.q.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Change implicit
subsets. Zfh->Zicsr is not needed and Zfh->F is replaced with
Zfh->Zfhmin and Zfhmin->F. Zhinx->Zicsr is not needed and
Zhinx->Zfinx is replaced with Zhinx->Zhinxmin and
Zhinxmin->Zfinx.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added zfhmin and zhinxmin.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Rewrite handling for new
instruction classes.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Updated.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Change error message to include
zfh and zfhmin extensions.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail.s: New complex
error handling test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.d: Renamed from fp-zhinx-insns.d
and refactored.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.s: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Removed INSN_CLASS_ZFH,
INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX and INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX. Added
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN, INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN,
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D and INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Change instruction classes for
Zfh and Zfhmin instructions. Fix `fcvt.h.lu' instruction
(two operand variant) mask.
This commit fixes floating point operand register names from ABI ones
to dynamically set ones.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.s: Test new behavior of
Zfinx extension and -M numeric disassembler option.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.d: Likewise.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Use dynamically set GPR
names to disassemble Zfinx instructions.
This commit fixes how instructions are masked on Zhinx+Z{d,q}inx.
fcvt.h.d and fcvt.d.h require ((D&&Zfh)||(Zdinx&&Zhinx)) and
fcvt.h.q and fcvt.q.h require ((Q&&Zfh)||(Zqinx&&Zhinx)).
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Fix feature gate
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Fix feature gate diagnostics
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zhinx-insns.d: Add Zqinx to -march
for proper testing.
This patch enables the first support for the "gprofng display html" command.
This command works for C/C++ applications on x86_64. Using one or more gprofng
experiment directories as input, a new directory with html files is created.
Through the index.html file in this directory, the performance results may be
viewed in a browser.
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-06-28 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: implement first support for x86_64 and C/C++
commit 74e315dbfe
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Dec 13 19:46:04 2021 -0800
elf: Set p_align to the minimum page size if possible
may ignore p_align of PT_GNU_STACK when copying ELF program header if
the maximum page size is larger than p_align of PT_LOAD segments. Copy
p_align of PT_GNU_STACK since p_align of PT_GNU_STACK describes stack
alignment, not page size,
PR binutils/29319
* elf.c (copy_elf_program_header): Copy p_align of PT_GNU_STACK
for stack alignment.
This once again allows to reduce redundancy in (and size of) the opcode
table.
Don't go as far as also making D work on the two 5-operand XOP insns:
This would significantly complicate the code, as there the first
(immediate) operand would need special treatment in several places.
Note that the .s suffix isn't being enabled to have any effect, for
being deprecated. Whereas neither {load} nor {store} pseudo prefixes
make sense here, as the respective operands are inputs (loads) only
anyway, regardless of order. Hence there is (as before) no way for the
programmer to request the alternative encoding to be used for register-
only insns.
Note further that it is always the first original template which is
retained (and altered), to make sure the same encoding as before is
used for register-only insns. This has the slightly odd (but pre-
existing) effect of XOP register-only insns having XOP.W clear, but FMA4
ones having VEX.W set.
The middle operand would have gone entirely unchecked, allowing e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, %esp, %xmm2
to assemble successfully, or e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, $4, %xmm2
causing an internal error. Alongside dealing with this also drop a
related comment, which hasn't been applicable anymore since the
introduction of 3-operand patterns with D set (and which perhaps never
had been logical to be there, as reverse-matched insns don't make it
there in the first place).
When using just slightly non-trivial combinations of .arch, it can be
quite useful to be able to go back to prior state without needing to
re-invoke perhaps many earlier directives and without needing to invoke
perhaps many "negative" ones. Like some other architectures allow
saving (pushing) and restoring (popping) present/prior state.
For now require the same .code<N> to be in effect for ".arch pop" that
was in effect for the corresponding ".arch push".
Also change the global "no_cond_jump_promotion" to be bool, to match the
new struct field.
I never really understood upon what basis ".arch .no*" options were made
available. Let's not have any "criteria" at all, and simply allow
disabling of all of them. Then we also have all data for a sub-arch in
a single place, as we now only need a single table.
So far there was no way to reset the architecture to that assembly would
start with in the absence of any overrides (command line or directives).
Note that for Intel MCU "default" is merely an alias of "iamcu".
While there also zap a stray @item from the doc section, as noticed
when inspecting the generated output (which still has some quirks, but
those aren't easy to address without re-flowing almost the entire
section).
While it may not be necessary in i386_target_format() (but then setting
the variable to NULL also wouldn't be necessary), at least in the other
cases strings may already have accumulated.
When running the test-case included with this patch, we run into:
...
(gdb) print ptm^M
$1 = gdb/gdbtypes.h:695: internal-error: loc_bitpos: \
Assertion `m_loc_kind == FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS' failed.^M
...
while printing a c++ pointer-to-member.
Fix this by skipping static fields in cp_find_class_member, such that we have:
...
(gdb) print ptm^M
$1 = &A::i^M
...
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29294
Sometimes an objfile comes from memory and not from a file. It can be
useful to be able to check this from Python, so this patch adds a new
"is_file" attribute.
Pierre-Marie noticed that, while gdb.events is a Python module, it
can't be imported. This patch changes how this module is created, so
that it can be imported, while also ensuring that the module is always
visible, just as it was in the past.
This new approach required one non-obvious change -- when running
gdb.base/warning.exp, where --data-directory is intentionally not
found, the event registries can now be nullptr. Consequently, this
patch probably also requires
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/189796.html
Note that this patch obsoletes
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2022-June/189797.html
The basic support for LoongArch has been merged into the upstream Linux
kernel since 5.19-rc1 on June 5, 2022. This commit adds orig_a0 which
is added into struct user_pt_regs [1] to match the upstream kernel, and
then the upstream GDB will work with the upstream kernel.
Note that orig_a0 was added into struct user_pt_regs in the development
cycle for merging LoongArch port into the upstream Linux kernel, so
earlier kernels (notably, the product kernel with version 4.19 used in
distros like UOS and Loongnix) don't have it. Inspect
arch/loongarch/include/uapi/asm/ptrace.h in the kernel tree to make sure.
To build upstream GDB for a kernel lacking orig_a0, it's necessary to
revert this commit locally.
[1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/loongarch/include/uapi/asm/ptrace.h#n24
Signed-off-by: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
Adding support for location and range lists for split-dwarf and dwarf-5.
Following issues are taken care.
1. Display of the index values for DW_FORM_loclistx and DW_FORM_rnglistx.
2. Display of .debug_loclists.dwo and .debug_rnglists.dwo sections.
* dwarf.c(read_and_display_attr_value): Handle DW_FORM_loclistx
and DW_FORM_rnglistx for .dwo files.
(process_debug_info): Load .debug_loclists.dwo and
.debug_rnglists.dwo if exists.
(load_separate_debug_files): Load .debug_loclists and
.debug_rnglists if exists.
Include 2 entries in debug_displays table.
* dwarf.h (enum dwarf_section_display_enum): Include 2 entries.
This is in preparation of dropping the leading . from the strings.
While there also move PROCESSOR_GENERIC{32,64} from the middle of AMD
entries to near the top.
Putting individual elements behind macros, besides (imo) improving
readability, will make subsequent (and likely also future) changes less
intrusive.
Utilize this right away to pack the table a little more tightly, by
converting "skip" to bool and putting it earlier in a group of bitfields
together with "len".
Lots of memory used in gas should go on this obstack. The patch also
frees all the gas obstacks on exit, which isn't a completely trivial
task.
* subsegs.c (alloc_seginfo): New function.
(subseg_change, subseg_get): Use it.
(subsegs_end): New function.
* as.h (subsegs_end): Declare.
* output-file.c: Include subsegs.h
(stash_frchain_obs): New function.
(output_file_close): Save obstacks attached to output bfd before
closing. Call subsegs_end with the array of obstacks.
This fixes an inconsequential objcopy memory leak. I'd normally
ignore reports of leaks like this one, that are merely one block or
fewer per section processed, since objcopy soon exits and frees all
memory. However I thought it worth providing support for allocating
memory on a bfd objalloc in objcopy and other utils.
PR 29233
* bucomm.c (bfd_xalloc): New function.
* bucomm.h (bfd_xalloc): Declare.
* objcopy.c (copy_relocations_in_section): Use it to allocate
array of reloc pointers. Rewrite code stripping relocs to do
without extra memory allocation.
* dwarf.c(process_debug_info): Include DW_TAG_skeleton_unit.
(display_debug_str_offsets): While dumping .debug_str_offsets.dwo,
pass proper str_offsets_base to fetch_indexed_string().
(load_separate_debug_files): Skip DWO ID dump for dwarf-5.
* disassemble.c: (disassemble_init_for_target): Set
created_styled_output for AVR based targets.
* avr-dis.c: (print_insn_avr): Use fprintf_styled_ftype
instead of fprintf_ftype throughout.
(avr_operand): Pass in and fill disassembler_style when
parsing operands.
The dwarf2_per_cu_data fields lang and unit_type both have a dont-know
initial value (respectively language_unknown and (dwarf_unit_type)0), which
allows us to add certain checks, f.i. checking that that a field is not read
before written.
Add get/set member functions for the two fields as a convenient location to
add such checks, make the fields private to enforce using the member
functions, and add the m_ prefix.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
The only case where 64-bit code uses non-sign-extended (can also be
considered zero-extended) displacements is when an address size override
is in place for a memory operand (i.e. particularly excluding
displacements of direct branches, which - if at all - are controlled by
operand size, and then are still sign-extended, just from 16 bits).
Hence the distinction in templates is unnecessary, allowing code to be
simplified in a number of places. The only place where logic becomes
more complicated is when signed-ness of relocations is determined in
output_disp().
The other caveat is that Disp64 cannot be specified anymore in an insn
template at the same time as Disp32. Unlike for non-64-bit mode,
templates don't specify displacements for both possible addressing
modes; the necessary adjustment to the expected ones has already been
done in match_template() anyway (but of course the logic there needs
tweaking now). Hence the single template so far doing so is split.
Commit 7d5e4556a3 rendered the check near the end of what is now
i386_finalize_displacement() entirely dead for AT&T mode, since for
operands involving a displacement .unspecified will always be set. But
the logic there is bogus anyway - Intel syntax operand size specifiers
are of no interest there either. The only thing which matters in the
"displacement only" determination is .baseindex.
Of course when masking displacement kinds we should not at the same time
also mask off other attributes.
Furthermore the type mask returned by lex_got() also needs to be
adjusted: The only case where we want Disp32 (rather than Disp32S) is
when dealing with 32-bit addressing mode in 64-bit code.
There are two related problems here: The use of "addr32" on a direct
branch would, besides causing a warning, result in operands to be
permitted which mistakenly are refused without "addr32". Plus at some
point not too long ago I'm afraid it may have been me who regressed the
relocation addends emitted for such branches. Correct both problems,
adding a testcase to guard against regressing this again.
Because ratified Zihintpause extension has a version number of 2.0
(not 1.0), we should update the number.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Update version
number of Zihintpause extension.
When building gdb with -fsanitize=thread and gcc 12, and running test-case
gdb.dwarf2/dwz.exp, we run into a data race between thread T2 and the main
thread in the same write:
...
Write of size 1 at 0x7b200000300c:^M
#0 cutu_reader::cutu_reader(dwarf2_per_cu_data*, dwarf2_per_objfile*, \
abbrev_table*, dwarf2_cu*, bool, abbrev_cache*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6252 \
(gdb+0x82f3b3)^M
...
which is here:
...
this_cu->dwarf_version = cu->header.version;
...
Both writes are called from the parallel for in dwarf2_build_psymtabs_hard,
this one directly:
...
#1 process_psymtab_comp_unit gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6774 (gdb+0x8304d7)^M
#2 operator() gdb/dwarf2/read.c:7098 (gdb+0x8317be)^M
#3 operator() gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:163 (gdb+0x872380)^M
...
and this via the PU import:
...
#1 cooked_indexer::ensure_cu_exists(cutu_reader*, dwarf2_per_objfile*, \
sect_offset, bool, bool) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:17964 (gdb+0x85c43b)^M
#2 cooked_indexer::index_imported_unit(cutu_reader*, unsigned char const*, \
abbrev_info const*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18248 (gdb+0x85d8ff)^M
#3 cooked_indexer::index_dies(cutu_reader*, unsigned char const*, \
cooked_index_entry const*, bool) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18302 (gdb+0x85dcdb)^M
#4 cooked_indexer::make_index(cutu_reader*) gdb/dwarf2/read.c:18443 \
(gdb+0x85e68a)^M
#5 process_psymtab_comp_unit gdb/dwarf2/read.c:6812 (gdb+0x830879)^M
#6 operator() gdb/dwarf2/read.c:7098 (gdb+0x8317be)^M
#7 operator() gdbsupport/parallel-for.h:171 (gdb+0x8723e2)^M
...
Fix this by setting the field earlier, in read_comp_units_from_section.
The write in cutu_reader::cutu_reader() is still needed, in case
read_comp_units_from_section is not used (run the test-case with say, target
board cc-with-gdb-index).
Make the write conditional, such that it doesn't trigger if the field is
already set by read_comp_units_from_section. Instead, verify that the
field already has the value that we're trying to set it to.
Move this logic into into a member function set_version (in analogy to the
already present member function version) to make sure it's used consistenly,
and make the field private in order to enforce access through the member
functions, and rename it to m_dwarf_version.
While we're at it, make sure that the version is set before read, to avoid
say returning true for "per_cu.version () < 5" if "per_cu.version () == 0".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
When building gdb with -fsanitize=thread, I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.base/early-init-file.exp: check startup version string has style \
version
...
due to this:
...
warning: Found custom handler for signal 7 (Bus error) preinstalled.^M
warning: Found custom handler for signal 8 (Floating point exception) \
preinstalled.^M
warning: Found custom handler for signal 11 (Segmentation fault) \
preinstalled.^M
Some signal dispositions inherited from the environment (SIG_DFL/SIG_IGN)^M
won't be propagated to spawned programs.^M
...
appearing before the "GNU gdb (GDB) $version" line.
This is similar to the problem fixed by commit f0bbba7886
("gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp: fix when GDB is built with
AddressSanitizer").
In that commit, the problem was fixed by starting gdb with -quiet, but using
that would mean the "GNU gdb (GDB) $version" line that we're trying to check
would disappear.
Fix this instead by updating the regexp to allow the message.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Remove indentation from the text of the manual after the example here:
" Completion will in some cases guide you with a suggestion of what
kind of argument an option expects. For example:
(gdb) print -elements <TAB><TAB>
NUMBER unlimited
Here, the option expects a number (e.g., '100'), not literal
'NUMBER'. Such metasyntactical arguments are always presented in
uppercase."
as this is a continuation of the same paragraph.
Completion results are usually different when the operation is applied
to a word that is or is not followed by a space. In some cases they are
equivalent, however a space would not be produced if completion was used
earlier on in the word processed.
However in the manual we have completion examples given using a space
that actually prevents the example from working. E.g.:
(gdb) info bre <TAB>
(nothing) and:
(gdb) info bre <TAB><TAB>
Display all 200 possibilities? (y or n)
as it now goes on to propose the entire symbol table, while:
(gdb) info bre<TAB>
(gdb) info breakpoints
does the right thing, but is not what is shown in the manual.
In other cases an extraneous space is used that does not correspond to
the actual completion pattern shown, which gives an impression of
sloppiness.
Remove extraneous spaces then from completion examples as appropriate.
Fix a completion consistency issue with `set' commands accepting integer
values and the special `unlimited' keyword:
(gdb) complete print -elements
print -elements NUMBER
print -elements unlimited
(gdb)
vs:
(gdb) complete set print elements
set print elements unlimited
(gdb)
(there is a space entered at the end of both commands, not shown here)
which also means if you strike <Tab> with `set print elements ' input,
it will, annoyingly, complete to `set print elements unlimited' right
away rather than showing a choice between `NUMBER' and `unlimited'.
Add `NUMBER' then as an available completion for such `set' commands:
(gdb) complete set print elements
set print elements NUMBER
set print elements unlimited
(gdb)
Adjust the testsuite accordingly. Also document the feature in the
Completion section of the manual in addition to the Command Options
section already there.
When testing GDB's ability to stop in constructors, gdb.cp/mb-ctor.exp
only tested objects allocated on the stack. This commit adds a couple of
dynamic allocations and tests if GDB can stop in it as well.
* dwarf.c (dwarf_select_sections_by_name): If the entry's value is
zero then clear the corresponding variable.
(dwarf_select_sections_by_letters): Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/debuginfo.exp: Expect -WE and -wE
debuginfod tests to fail.