This patch skips some tests related to floating point in structs.exp
if gdb_skip_float_test return false.
gdb/testsuite:
2016-10-13 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.base/structs.exp: Invoke gdb_skip_float_test, and do
floating point tests if $skip_float_test is false.
This changes macho_symfile_read_all_oso to use std::string. This
avoids a cleanup.
2016-10-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* machoread.c (macho_symfile_read_all_oso): Use std::string.
This changes wchar_iterator from charset.c into a real C++ class, then
updates the users to use the class. This lets us remove some cleanups
in favor of the class' destructor.
2016-10-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* valprint.c (generic_emit_char, count_next_character)
(generic_printstr): Update.
* charset.c (struct wchar_iterator): Move to charset.h.
(wchar_iterator::wchar_iterator): Rename from
make_wchar_iterator, turn into a constructor.
(wchar_iterator::~wchar_iterator): Rename from
do_cleanup_iterator, turn into a destructor.
(make_cleanup_wchar_iterator): Remove.
(wchar_iterator::iterate): Rename from wchar_iterate. Remove
"iter" argument. Update.
* charset.h: Include <vector>.
(class wchar_iterator): New class, from old struct
wchar_iterator.
(make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator): Don't
declare.
This patch changes selftest.c to use std::vector rather than VEC.
I think this is a small net plus.
2016-10-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* selftest.c: Include <vector>, not "vec.h".
(self_test_function_ptr): Remove.
(tests): Now a std::vector.
(register_self_test, run_self_tests): Update.
This converts tid_range_parser and get_number_or_range to be classes.
The various tid_range_parser_* and get_number_or_range_* functions
become methods on the respective classes. Then it updates the users
to follow.
The rationale for the change is that this provides better
encapsulation. For example, this forced me to think of a better
interface between tid_range_parser and get_number_or_range, since the
former peeked into the latter's internals a bit too much. That ended
up resulting mostly in these two not-just-straight-1-1 changes:
void
-tid_range_parser_skip (struct tid_range_parser *parser)
+tid_range_parser::skip_range ()
{
...
- tid_range_parser_init (parser, parser->range_parser.end_ptr,
- parser->default_inferior);
+ m_range_parser.skip_range ();
+ init (m_range_parser.string (), m_default_inferior);
}
and:
/* If we successfully parsed a thread number or finished parsing a
thread range, switch back to assuming the next TID is
inferior-qualified. */
- if (parser->range_parser.end_ptr == NULL
- || parser->range_parser.string == parser->range_parser.end_ptr)
+ if (!m_range_parser.in_range ())
{
For the same reason (encapsulation), this moves the enum
tid_range_state definition to within the tid_parser class's scope,
since that is private implementation detail.
While at it, switch to use "bool" for booleans.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-13 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* tid-parse.h (tid_range_parser): New class.
(enum tid_range_state): Move into tid_range_parser's scope.
Remove TID_RANGE_ prefix from all values.
(tid_range_parser_get_tid, tid_range_parser_get_tid_range)
(tid_range_parser_star_range, tid_range_parser_finished)
(tid_range_parser_skip, tid_range_parser_qualified): Don't
declare.
(tid_is_in_list): Update comment.
* tid-parse.c (tid_range_parser::tid_range_parser): New.
(init, finished, get_string, skip, tid_is_qualified)
(get_tid_or_range, get_tid_range, get_tid, star_range): Rename;
turn into methods.
(tid_is_in_list): Adjust.
* cli/cli-utils.h (number_or_range_parser): New class.
(init_number_or_range, get_number_or_range)
(number_range_setup_range): Don't declare.
* cli/cli-utils.c
(number_or_range_parser::number_or_range_parser): New.
(init_number_or_range, get_number_or_range)
(number_range_setup_range): Rename; turn into methods.
(number_is_in_list): Adjust.
* breakpoint.c (map_breakpoint_numbers): Adjust. Use bool.
(trace_pass_command, get_tracepoint_by_number): Adjust.
* breakpoint.h (get_tracepoint_by_number): Adjust.
* inferior.c (detach_inferior_command, kill_inferior_command)
(remove_inferior_command): Adjust.
* linespec.c (decode_line_2): Adjust.
* memattr.c (mem_enable_command, mem_disable_command)
(mem_delete_command): Adjust.
* printcmd.c (map_display_numbers): Adjust.
* reverse.c (delete_bookmark_command, bookmarks_info): Adjust.
* thread.c (thread_apply_command): Adjust.
I noticed that testing aarch64-elf gdb with a physical board
ran into issues with gdb.python/py-value.exp. Further investigation showed
that we were actually trying to dereference a NULL pointer (argv) when trying
to access argv[0].
Being bare-metal, argv is not guaranteed to be valid. So we need to make sure
argv is sane before accessing argv[0].
The following patch fixes up the test program to check for a NULL argv and also
improves the testcase a bit so it doesn't have to work with a hardcoded argc
value.
Regression-tested on x86-64 Ubuntu 16.04.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-10-12 Luis Machado <lgustavo@codesourcery.com>
* gdb.python/py-value.c (main): Check if argv is NULL before using it.
* gdb.python/py-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Don't use hardcoded
argc values.
Add 1 to argc so we guarantee distinct initial/modified argc values.
Add support for Newlib as an OS/ABI. The only thing that is specific to it
relatively to "generic" baremetal target is location of PC register in jump
buffer for longjump support.
Sniffer uses .ivt section to decide if ELF file is for ARC Newlib or not.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* arc-newlib-tdep.c: New file.
* configure.tgt: Add newlib support for ARC.
Standard get_longjmp_target implementation, similar to what is in arm-tdep.c.
Actual value of jb_pc should be set in init_osabi methods of particular OS/ABI
implementations.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* arc-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep) <jb_pc>: New field.
* arc-tdep.c (arc_get_longjmp_target): New function.
(arc_gdbarch_init): Set get_longjmp_target if jb_pc is non-negative.
(arc_dump_tdep): Print jb_pc.
We don't track FP registers in aarch64 prologue analyzer, so this causes
an internal error when FP registers are saved by "stp" instruction in
prologue (stp d8, d9, [sp,#128]),
tbreak _Unwind_RaiseException^M
aarch64-tdep.c:335: internal-error: CORE_ADDR aarch64_analyze_prologue(gdbarch*, CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR, aarch64_prologue_cache*): Assertion `inst.operands[0].type == AARCH64_OPND_Rt' failed.^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
This patch teaches GDB to track FP registers (D registers) in prologue
analyzer.
gdb:
2016-10-12 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
PR tdep/20682
* aarch64-tdep.c: Replace 32 with AARCH64_D_REGISTER_COUNT.
(aarch64_analyze_prologue): Extend array 'regs' for D registers.
Assert that operand 0 and 1 can be X or D registers. Update
register number for D registers. Update registers in frame
cache.
* aarch64-tdep.h (AARCH64_D_REGISTER_COUNT): New macro.
gcc-6.2.1
gdb compile failed, gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/powerpc-prologue.c: In function 'main':
gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/powerpc-prologue.c:32:3: warning: implicit declaration of function 'optimized_1' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
optimized_1 ();
^~~~~~~~~~~
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2016-10-11 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* gdb.arch/powerpc-prologue.c (optimized_1): New declaration.
This patch shares "enum arm_breakpoint_kinds", and use ARM_BP_KIND_THUMB2
in GDB.
gdb:
2016-10-10 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* arch/arm.h (enum arm_breakpoint_kinds): New.
* arm-tdep.c (arm_remote_breakpoint_from_pc): Use
ARM_BP_KIND_THUMB2.
gdb/gdbserver:
2016-10-10 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* linux-aarch32-low.c (enum arm_breakpoint_kinds): Remove.
This patch renames local 'arch' by 'gdbarch' in m32c_gdbarch_init, so
that I can use macros in the following patch.
gdb:
2016-10-10 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* m32c-tdep.c (m32c_gdbarch_init): Rename local 'arch' by
'gdbarch'.
v850 has two functions to install to gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc,
and it selects one according to info.bfd_arch_info->mach. However,
we can select the kind/length of breakpoint instruction inside
v850_breakpoint_from_pc by gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (gdbarch)->mach.
This patch is to do that, and remove v850_dbtrap_breakpoint_from_pc.
gdb:
2016-08-30 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* v850-tdep.c (v850_breakpoint_from_pc): Use the right
breakpoint instruction.
(v850_dbtrap_breakpoint_from_pc): Remove.
(v850_gdbarch_init): Update.
0a69eedb (Clean up the XML files for ARM) moves arm-*.xml files to
arm/ directory, so need update gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp accordingly.
gdb/testsuite:
2016-10-07 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Set regdir to "arm/".
The gdb.decode_line python function is documented to support the same location
expressions as the "break" command. It currently expects a linespec location.
Instead of creating a linespec location directly, create the location via
string_to_event_location_basic.
This simple commit consolidates the API of
target_supports_multi_process. Since both GDB and gdbserver use the
same function prototype, all that was needed was to move create this
prototype on gdb/target/target.h and turn the macros declared on
gdb/{,gdbserver/}target.h into actual functions.
Regtested (clean pass) on the BuildBot.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* target.c (target_supports_multi_process): New function, moved
from...
* target.h (target_supports_multi_process): ... here. Remove
macro.
* target/target.h (target_supports_multi_process): New prototype.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* target.c (target_supports_multi_process): New function, moved
from...
* target.h (target_supports_multi_process): ... here. Remove
macro.
Fixes this failure when building in C mode. I think it's relevant for master
as well, since it's a good practice to include (or forward-declare) what you
use.
In file included from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbarch.h:38:0,
from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/defs.h:653,
from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dictionary.c:23:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/frame.h:710:48: warning: ‘struct ui_out’ declared inside parameter list will not be visible outside of this definition or declaration
extern void print_stack_frame_to_uiout (struct ui_out *uiout,
gdb/ChangeLog:
* frame.h: Forward-declare struct ui_out.
Fix a regression from commit f8b73d13b7 ("Target-described register
support for MIPS"),
<https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2007-05/msg00340.html>,
<https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2007-06/msg00256.html>, which
caused Floating Point Control Registers (FCRs) to be shown as 64-bit
with 64-bit targets.
This came from the legacy register format where all raw registers
matched the width of the architecture regardless of their actual size.
The correct size was then set in `mips_register_type' for cooked
registers presented to the user, which in the case of FCRs meant the
cooked size was always forced to 32 bits, reflecting their actual
hardware size, even though the raw format carried them in 64-bit
quantities on 64-bit targets. The upper 32 bits carried in the raw FCR
format have always been don't-cares, not actually retrieved from
hardware and never written back.
With the introduction of XML register descriptions the layout of
previously defined raw registers has been preserved, so as to keep
existing register handling code unchanged and make it easier for GDB and
`gdbserver' to interact with each other whether neither, either or both
parties talking over RSP support XML register descriptions. For the
XML-described case however `mips_register_type' is not used in raw to
cooked register conversion, so any special cases coded there are not
taken into account.
Instead a new function, `mips_pseudo_register_type', has been introduced
to handle size conversion, however lacking the special case for FCRs for
the Linux and the now defunct IRIX target. The correct size has been
maintained for embedded targets however, due to the bundling of FCRs
with the embedded registers under the `rawnum >= MIPS_EMBED_FP0_REGNUM +
32' condition.
Add the missing case to `mips_pseudo_register_type' then, referring to
the FCR indices explicitly, and observing that between
`MIPS_EMBED_FP0_REGNUM + 32' and `MIPS_FIRST_EMBED_REGNUM' there is an
unused register slot whose contents are ignored so with the removal of
embedded FCRs from under that condition we don't have to care about it
and we can refer to the embedded registers starting from
MIPS_FIRST_EMBED_REGNUM instead.
Add a test case too so that we have means to check automatically that
the correct user-visible size of FCRs is maintained.
gdb/
* mips-tdep.c (mips_pseudo_register_type): Make FCRs always
32-bit.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.arch/mips-fcr.exp: New test.
* gdb.arch/mips-fcr.c: Source for the new test.
Rearrange comments throughout `mips_pseudo_register_type', placing them
ahead the condtionals they apply to consistently.
gdb/
* mips-tdep.c (mips_pseudo_register_type): Rearrange comments
throughout.
Correct a commit 2151ccc56c ("Always organize test artifacts in a
directory hierarchy") regression causing:
Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/solib-disc.exp ...
gdb compile failed, Assembler messages:
Fatal error: can't create .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/so-disc-shr.c.o: No such file or directory
by using `standard_output_file' to construct output file names
throughout.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.base/solib-disc.exp: Use `standard_output_file'
throughout.
Commit a038fa3e14 stack: check frame_unwind_caller_id adds a frame_id check to
frame_info and treats a missing frame_id as NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR. This causes a
regression in gdb.dwarf2/dw2-undefined-ret-addr.exp.
Treat a missing frame_id as OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR instead.
See also https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2016-07/msg00273.html.
Even though this was supposedly in the gdb 7.2 timeframe, the testcase
in PR11094 crashes current GDB with a segfault:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x00000000005ee894 in event_location_to_string (location=0x0) at
src/gdb/location.c:412
412 if (EL_STRING (location) == NULL)
(top-gdb) bt
#0 0x00000000005ee894 in event_location_to_string (location=0x0) at
src/gdb/location.c:412
#1 0x000000000057411a in print_breakpoint_location (b=0x18288e0, loc=0x0) at
src/gdb/breakpoint.c:6201
#2 0x000000000057483f in print_one_breakpoint_location (b=0x18288e0,
loc=0x182cf10, loc_number=0, last_loc=0x7fffffffd258, allflag=1)
at src/gdb/breakpoint.c:6473
#3 0x00000000005751e1 in print_one_breakpoint (b=0x18288e0,
last_loc=0x7fffffffd258, allflag=1) at
src/gdb/breakpoint.c:6707
#4 0x000000000057589c in breakpoint_1 (args=0x0, allflag=1, filter=0x0) at
src/gdb/breakpoint.c:6947
#5 0x0000000000575aa8 in maintenance_info_breakpoints (args=0x0, from_tty=0)
at src/gdb/breakpoint.c:7026
[...]
This is GDB trying to print the location spec of the JIT event
breakpoint, but that's an internal breakpoint without one.
If I add a NULL check, then we see that the JIT breakpoint is now
pending (because its location has shlib_disabled set):
(gdb) maint info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
[...]
-8 jit events keep y <PENDING> inf 1
[...]
But that's incorrect. GDB should have managed to recreate the JIT
breakpoint's location for the second run. So the problem is
elsewhere.
The problem is that if the JIT loads at the same address on the second
run, we never recreate the JIT breakpoint, because we hit this early
return:
static int
jit_breakpoint_re_set_internal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
struct jit_program_space_data *ps_data)
{
[...]
if (ps_data->cached_code_address == addr)
return 0;
[...]
delete_breakpoint (ps_data->jit_breakpoint);
[...]
ps_data->jit_breakpoint = create_jit_event_breakpoint (gdbarch, addr);
Fix this by deleting the breakpoint and discarding the cached code
address when the objfile where the previous JIT breakpoint was found
is deleted/unloaded in the first place.
The test that was originally added for PR11094 doesn't trip on this
because:
#1 - It doesn't test the case of the JIT descriptor's address _not_
changing between reruns.
#2 - And then it doesn't do "maint info breakpoints", or really
anything with the JIT at all.
#3 - and even then, to trigger the problem the JIT descriptor needs
to be in a separate library, while the current test puts it in
the main program.
The patch extends the test to cover all combinations of these
scenarios.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* jit.c (free_objfile_data): Delete the JIT breakpoint and clear
the cached code address.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/jit-simple-dl.c: New file.
* gdb.base/jit-simple-jit.c: New file, factored out from ...
* gdb.base/jit-simple.c: ... this.
* gdb.base/jit-simple.exp (jit_run): Delete.
(build_jit): New proc.
(jit_test_reread): Recompile either the main program or the shared
library, depending on what is being tested. Skip changing address
if caller wants to. Compare before/after addresses. If testing
standalone, explicitly load the binary. Test "maint info
breakpoints".
(top level): Add "standalone vs shared lib" and "change address"
vs "same address" axes.
I noticed that we sometimes get this:
(gdb) print &__jit_debug_descriptor
$1 = (struct jit_descriptor *) 0x601040 <__jit_debug_descriptor>
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/jit-simple.exp: blah 1
[...]
(gdb) run
[...]
Starting program: build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/jit-simple/jit-simple
Unsupported JIT protocol version 4 in descriptor (expected 1)
Breakpoint 2, main () at src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/jit-simple.c:36
36 return 0;
(gdb) print &__jit_debug_descriptor
$2 = (struct jit_descriptor *) 0x601040 <__jit_debug_descriptor>
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/jit-simple.exp: blah 1
All tests PASSed, but note the "Unsupported JIT protocol version 4"
message.
Also notice that "__jit_debug_descriptor" has the same address before
and after the rerun, while the test is built in a way that should make
that address change between runs.
The test doesn't catch any of this because it doesn't compare
before/after addresses.
And then notice the "blah 1" test messages. "blah" is clearly a WIP
message, but it should be at least "blah 2" the second time. :-)
The reason this sometimes happens is that the test recompiles the
program and expects gdb to reload it automaticallyt on "run". However,
if the original program and the new recompilation happen to be in the
same second, then gdb does not realize that the binary needs to be
reloaded. (This is an old problem out of scope of this series.) If
that happens, then GDB ends up using the wrong symbols for the program
that it spawns, reads the JIT descriptor out of the wrong address,
finds garbage, and prints that "unsupported version" notice.
Fix that in the same way gdb.base/reread.exp handles it -- by sleeping
one second before recompiling.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/jit-simple.exp (top level) Delete get_compiler_info
call.
(jit_run): Delete.
(jit_test_reread): Use with_test_prefix. Reload the main binary
explicitly. Compare the before/after addresses of the JIT
descriptor.
Newer gdbservers may be talking to older gdbs,
and older gdbs will flag a missing "end" as an error.
So just make "end" required again, and for compatibility
change the default field type to "bool".
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Doug Evans <dje@google.com>
* features/aarch64-core.xml (cpsr_flags): Elide "type" and specify
"end" in all fields.
* features/aarch64.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/32bit-mpx.xml (_bndcfgu): Specify type of "preserved"
and "enabled" fields. Correct size of "enabled" field.
* features/i386/64bit-mpx.xml (_bndcfgu): Specify type of "preserved"
and "enabled" fields.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx-linux.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/i386-avx-mpx.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/i386-avx512-linux.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/i386-avx512.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/i386-mpx-linux.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/i386-mpx.c: Regenerate.
* features/arc-arcompact.c: Regenerate.
* features/arc-v2.c: Regenerate.
* xml-tdesc.c (tdesc_start_field): Require "end" spec. Single bit
fields default to "bool" type.
Revert 2016-03-15 Doug Evans <dje@google.com>
* features/i386/32bit-core.xml (i386_eflags): Remove "end" spec.
* features/i386/32bit-sse.xml (i386_eflags): Ditto.
* features/i386/64bit-core.xml (i386_eflags): Ditto.
* features/i386/64bit-sse.xml (i386_eflags): Ditto.
* features/i386/x32-core.xml (i386_eflags): Ditto.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Doug Evans <dje@google.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Target Description Format): Update docs on "end"
field spec and field default type.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-10-06 Doug Evans <dje@google.com>
* gdb.xml/extra-regs.xml: Update, end field now required, default type
for single bitfields is bool.
* gdb.xml/tdesc-regs.exp: Ditto.
gcc-6.2.1-2.fc24.x86_64
(gdb) backtrace 10^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-signal.exp: backtrace 10
(gdb) disas/s
Dump of assembler code for function main:
.../gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/i386-signal.c:
30 {
0x000000000040057f <+0>: push %rbp
0x0000000000400580 <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp
31 setup ();
0x0000000000400583 <+4>: callq 0x400590 <setup>
=> 0x0000000000400588 <+9>: mov $0x0,%eax
32 }
0x000000000040058d <+14>: pop %rbp
0x000000000040058e <+15>: retq
End of assembler dump.
The .exp patch is an obvious typo fix I think. The regex was written to
accept "ADDR in main" and I find it OK as checking .debug_line validity is not
the purpose of this testfile.
gcc-4.8.5-11.el7.x86_64 did not put the 'mov $0x0,%eax' instruction there at
all so there was no problem with .debug_line.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2016-10-05 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* gdb.arch/i386-signal.exp (backtrace 10): Fix#2 typo.
handle_tracepoint_bkpts has two parallel "if"s. This changes the
second one to check ipa_error_tracepoint, which seems to be what was
intended.
2016-10-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR remote/20655:
* tracepoint.c (handle_tracepoint_bkpts): Check
ipa_error_tracepoint, not ipa_stopping_tracepoint.
This bug points out that string_to_explicit_location compares a char*
against '\0'; whereas comparing against NULL is more normal.
2016-10-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR breakpoints/20653:
* location.c (string_to_explicit_location): Use NULL, not '\0'.
This fixes an oversight in psymbol_compare.
2016-10-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR symtab/20652:
* psymtab.c (psymbol_compare): Correctly compare "ginfo.value"
fields.
If the target doesn't support float, we don't run float complex types
tests.
gdb/testsuite:
2016-10-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* lib/gdb.exp (support_complex_tests): Return zero if
gdb_skip_float_test return true.
In DWARF expression handling, some operators are required to be either
at the end of an expression or followed by a composition operator. So
far only the operators DW_OP_reg0-31 were allowed to be followed by
DW_OP_GNU_uninit instead, and particularly DW_OP_regx was not, which is
obviously inconsistent.
This patch allows DW_OP_GNU_uninit after all operators requiring a
composition, to simplify the code and make it more consistent. This
policy may be more permissive than necessary, but in the worst case just
leads to a DWARF location description resulting in an uninitialized
value instead of an error message.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_require_composition): Allow
DW_OP_GNU_uninit.
(execute_stack_op): Use dwarf_expr_require_composition instead of
copying its logic.
The logging message is called too often - once for each register when it's
value has to be evaluated. This floods the screen for commands like "info
register all", but doesn't give really any help at debugging GDB issues.
Between increasing the debug level of this message and removing it altogether I
think that removing it is preferable.
gdb/ChangeLog:
arc-tdep.c (arc_frame_prev_register): Remove annoying log message.
0a69eedb (Clean up the XML files for ARM) breaks the GDBserver build
on aarch64 because some arm-*.xml files can't be found.
This patch is to fix the build failure.
gdb/gdbserver:
2016-10-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* configure.srv: Update the path of arm-*.xml files.
If I remove all regformats/*.dat files and run
make GDB=/scratch/yao/gdb/build-git/all-targets/gdb/gdb all, some
powerpc .dat files are not generated.
This patch fixes it by adding them to WHICH, so these .dat files can
be generated.
gdb:
2016-10-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* features/Makefile (WHICH): Add
rs6000/powerpc-isa205-32l, rs6000/powerpc-isa205-64l,
rs6000/powerpc-isa205-altivec32l, rs6000/powerpc-isa205-altivec64l,
rs6000/powerpc-isa205-vsx32l and rs6000/powerpc-isa205-vsx64l.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-32l.dat: Regenerated.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-64l.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-altivec32l.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-altivec64l.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-vsx32l.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/rs6000/powerpc-isa205-vsx64l.dat: Likewise.
If I delete all target description c files under features/ directory,
and run make GDB=/scratch/yao/gdb/build-git/all-targets/gdb/gdb cfiles,
some s390 target description c files are not generated.
This patch adds these s390 xml files to XMLTOC, so these c files can
be generated.
gdb:
2016-10-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* features/Makefile (XMLTOC): Add s390-tevx-linux64.xml,
s390-vx-linux64.xml, s390x-tevx-linux64.xml and
s390x-vx-linux64.xml.
Nowadays, there are a lot of duplication about
i386/{i386, amd64, x32}*-expedite in features/Makefile. However,
in features/Makefile, we have
echo "expedite:$(if $($*-expedite),$($*-expedite),$($(firstword $(subst -, ,$(notdir $*)))-expedite))" \
>> $(outdir)/$*.tmp
which means for a given bar/foo-baz.xml, we'll look for either
bar/foo-baz-expedite or foo-expedite. In x86 expedite registers, we
use the former now, but it will be much simpler if we use the latter.
This is what this patch does. This patch removes them, and defines
three generic expedite. Re-run 'make GDB=/path/build/gdb all' to
regenerate regformats/*.dat files, and they are not changed.
gdb:
2016-10-05 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* features/Makefile: Remove i386/*-expedite. Add i386-expedite,
amd64-expedite, and x32-expedite.
This patch is move features/arm-*.xml to features/arm/, and it is based
on Terry's patch posted here
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-06/msg00794.html
One comment to Terry's patch is about losing "arm" prefix, and the new
patch fixes this problem.
gdb:
2016-10-05 Terry Guo <terry.guo@arm.com>
Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* arm-tdep.c: Adjust includes.
* features/Makefile (WHICH): Add "arm/" directory to arm
target descriptions.
(XMLTOC): Likewise.
(arm/arm-with-iwmmxt.dat): Adjust the path for
dependencies.
* features/arm-core.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-core.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-fpa.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-fpa.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-m-profile.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-m-profile.xm: ... it.
* features/arm-vfpv2.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-vfpv2.xm: ... it.
* features/arm-vfpv3.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-vfpv3.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-iwmmxt.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-iwmmxt.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-iwmmxt.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-iwmmxt.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m-fpa-layout.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m-vfp-d16.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-m.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-m.xm: ... it.
* features/arm-with-neon.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-neon.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-neon.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-neon.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-vfpv2.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-vfpv2.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-vfpv2.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-vfpv2.xml: ... it.
* features/arm-with-vfpv3.c: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-vfpv3.c: ... it.
* features/arm-with-vfpv3.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/arm-with-vfpv3.xml: ... it.
* features/xscale-iwmmxt.xml: Moved to ...
* features/arm/xscale-iwmmxt.xml: ... it.
gdb/gdbserver:
2016-10-05 Terry Guo <terry.guo@arm.com>
Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in: Adjust the path of rules.
* configure.srv: Update the path of xml files.
* regformats/arm-with-iwmmxt.dat: Regenerated.
* regformats/arm-with-neon.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/arm-with-vfpv2.dat: Likewise.
* regformats/arm-with-vfpv3.dat Likewise.
This patch adds a test to verify that events are sent properly to all
UIs when the user selection context (inferior, thread, frame) changes.
The goal of the C test file is to provide two threads that are stopped with the
same predictable backtrace (so that we can test frame switching). The barrier
helps us know when the child threads are started. Then, scheduler-locking is
used to bring each thread one by one to the position we expect them to be
during the test.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
YYYY-MM-DD Antoine Tremblay <antoine.tremblay@ericsson.com>
YYYY-MM-DD Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>
PR gdb/20487
* gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.exp: New file.
* gdb.mi/user-selected-context-sync.c: New file.
With this patch, when an inferior, thread or frame is explicitly
selected by the user, notifications will appear on all CLI and MI UIs.
When a GDB console is integrated in a front-end, this allows the
front-end to follow a selection made by the user ont he CLI, and it
informs the user about selection changes made behind the scenes by the
front-end.
This patch addresses PR gdb/20487.
In order to communicate frame changes to the front-end, this patch adds
a new field to the =thread-selected event for the selected frame. The
idea is that since inferior/thread/frame can be seen as a composition,
it makes sense to send them together in the same event. The vision
would be to eventually send the inferior information as well, if we find
that it's needed, although the "=thread-selected" event would be
ill-named for that job.
Front-ends need to handle this new field if they want to follow the
frame selection changes that originate from the console. The format of
the frame attribute is the same as what is found in the *stopped events.
Here's a detailed example for each command and the events they generate:
thread
------
1. CLI command:
thread 1.3
MI event:
=thread-selected,id="3",frame={...}
2. MI command:
-thread-select 3
CLI event:
[Switching to thread 1.3 ...]
3. MI command (CLI-in-MI):
thread 1.3
MI event/reply:
&"thread 1.3\n"
~"#0 child_sub_function () ...
=thread-selected,id="3",frame={level="0",...}
^done
frame
-----
1. CLI command:
frame 1
MI event:
=thread-selected,id="3",frame={level="1",...}
2. MI command:
-stack-select-frame 1
CLI event:
#1 0x00000000004007f0 in child_function...
3. MI command (CLI-in-MI):
frame 1
MI event/reply:
&"frame 1\n"
~"#1 0x00000000004007f9 in ..."
=thread-selected,id="3",frame={level="1"...}
^done
inferior
--------
Inferior selection events only go from the console to MI, since there's
no way to select the inferior in pure MI.
1. CLI command:
inferior 2
MI event:
=thread-selected,id="3"
Note that if the user selects an inferior that is not started or exited,
the MI doesn't receive a notification. Since there is no threads to
select, the =thread-selected event does not apply...
2. MI command (CLI-in-MI):
inferior 2
MI event/reply:
&"inferior 2\n"
~"[Switching to inferior 2 ...]"
=thread-selected,id="4",frame={level="0"...}
^done
Internal implementation detail: this patch makes it possible to suppress
notifications caused by a CLI command, like what is done in mi-interp.c.
This means that it's now possible to use the
add_com_suppress_notification function to register a command with some
event suppressed. It is used to implement the select-frame command in
this patch.
The function command_notifies_uscc_observer was added to extract
the rather complicated logical expression from the if statement. It is
also now clearer what that logic does: if the command used by the user
already notifies the user_selected_context_changed observer, there is
not need to notify it again. It therefore protects again emitting the
event twice.
No regressions, tested on ubuntu 14.04 x86 with target boards unix and
native-extended-gdbserver.
gdb/ChangeLog:
YYYY-MM-DD Antoine Tremblay <antoine.tremblay@ericsson.com>
YYYY-MM-DD Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com>
PR gdb/20487
* NEWS: Mention new frame field of =thread-selected event.
* cli/cli-decode.c (add_cmd): Initialize c->suppress_notification.
(add_com_suppress_notification): New function definition.
(cmd_func): Set and restore the suppress_notification flag.
* cli/cli-deicode.h (struct cmd_list_element)
<suppress_notification>: New field.
* cli/cli-interp.c (cli_suppress_notification): New global variable.
(cli_on_user_selected_context_changed): New function.
(_initialize_cli_interp): Attach to user_selected_context_changed
observer.
* command.h (struct cli_suppress_notification): New structure.
(cli_suppress_notification): New global variable declaration.
(add_com_suppress_notification): New function declaration.
* defs.h (enum user_selected_what_flag): New enum.
(user_selected_what): New enum flag type.
* frame.h (print_stack_frame_to_uiout): New function declaration.
* gdbthread.h (print_selected_thread_frame): New function declaration.
* inferior.c (print_selected_inferior): New function definition.
(inferior_command): Remove printing of inferior/thread/frame switch
notifications, notify user_selected_context_changed observer.
* inferior.h (print_selected_inferior): New function declaration.
* mi/mi-cmds.c (struct mi_cmd): Add user_selected_context
suppression to stack-select-frame and thread-select commands.
* mi/mi-interp.c (struct mi_suppress_notification)
<user_selected_context>: Initialize.
(mi_user_selected_context_changed): New function definition.
(_initialize_mi_interp): Attach to user_selected_context_changed.
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_thread_select): Print thread selection reply.
(mi_execute_command): Handle notification suppression. Notify
user_selected_context_changed observer on thread change instead of printing
event directly. Don't send it if command already sends the notification.
(command_notifies_uscc_observer): New function.
(mi_cmd_execute): Don't handle notification suppression.
* mi/mi-main.h (struct mi_suppress_notification)
<user_selected_context>: New field.
* stack.c (print_stack_frame_to_uiout): New function definition.
(select_frame_command): Notify user_selected_context_changed
observer.
(frame_command): Call print_selected_thread_frame if there's no frame
change or notify user_selected_context_changed observer if there is.
(up_command): Notify user_selected_context_changed observer.
(down_command): Likewise.
(_initialize_stack): Suppress user_selected_context notification for
command select-frame.
* thread.c (thread_command): Notify
user_selected_context_changed if the thread has changed, print
thread info directly if it hasn't.
(do_captured_thread_select): Do not print thread switch event.
(print_selected_thread_frame): New function definition.
* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_on_user_selected_context_changed):
New function definition.
(_initialize_tui_interp): Attach to user_selected_context_changed
observer.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/20487
* gdb.texinfo (Context management): Update mention of frame
change notifications.
(gdb/mi Async Records): Document frame field in
=thread-select event.
* observer.texi (GDB Observers): New user_selected_context_changed
observer.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/20487
* gdb.mi/mi-pthreads.exp (check_mi_thread_command_set): Adapt
=thread-select-event check.
Commit 049a8570 (Use target_continue{,_no_signal} instead of target_resume)
replaces the code stopping lwp with target_continue_no_signal in
target_stop_and_wait, like this,
- resume_info.thread = ptid;
- resume_info.kind = resume_stop;
- resume_info.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
- (*the_target->resume) (&resume_info, 1);
+ target_continue_no_signal (ptid);
the replacement is not equivalent, and it causes PR 20627. This patch
is just to revert that change.
Regression testing it on x86_64-linux.
gdb/gdbserver:
2016-09-30 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
PR gdbserver/20627
* target.c (target_stop_and_wait): Don't call
target_continue_no_signal, use resume_stop instead.