Commit Graph

107592 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nick Clifton
7325ba796b make objcopy fail if it is asked to redefine symbols in an object file containing LTO information.
* objcopy.c (filter_symbols): Fail if attempting to dredefine
	symbols in an LTO object file.
2021-09-30 12:56:19 +01:00
Tom de Vries
6010fb0c49 [gdb/testsuite] Fix full buffer in gdb.rust/dwindex.exp
On ubuntu 18.04.5, I run into:
...
(gdb) mt print objfiles dwindex^M
^M
Object file build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.rust/dwindex/dwindex:  \
  Objfile at 0x55dab0b87a50, bfd at 0x55dab0b0cfa0, 1095 minsyms^M
^M
Psymtabs:^M
vendor/compiler_builtins/src/int/specialized_div_rem/mod.rs at 0x55dab0db0720^M
  ...
library/std/src/sys/unix/stdio.rs at 0x55dab0d96320^M
ERROR: internal buffer is full.
UNRESOLVED: gdb.rust/dwindex.exp: check if index present
...

Fix this by using -lbl in proc ensure_gdb_index.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 12:02:14 +02:00
Libor Bukata
6420dd27cb Add Solaris specific ELF note processing
Add elfcore_grok_solaris_note function that enables to
obtain process status, register values, and program info
from Solaris's core files.

bfd/
	* elf.c (elfcore_grok_solaris_note): Solaris specific ELF
	note parser. Better GDB's coredump analysis on Solaris...
	(elfcore_grok_solaris_note_impl): New function.
	(elfcore_grok_solaris_prstatus): New function.
	(elfcore_grok_solaris_info): New function.
	(elfcore_grok_solaris_lwpstatus): New function.
	(elf_parse_notes): Added "CORE" groker element.
include/
	* elf/common.h: Add note segment constants for core files on
	Solaris systems.
2021-09-30 16:28:14 +09:30
Frederic Cambus
98ca73afe5 Add support to readelf for reading OpenBSD ELF core notes.
* readelf.c (get_openbsd_elfcore_note_type): New function.
	(process_note): Add support for OpenBSD core notes.
2021-09-30 10:00:57 +09:30
GDB Administrator
f141837642 Automatic date update in version.in 2021-09-30 00:00:08 +00:00
Tom de Vries
215b6d107c [gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/break-interp.exp for ld.so without debug
When running test-case gdb.base/break-interp.exp on openSUSE Leap 42.3, I get:
...
(gdb) info addr dl_main^M
Symbol "dl_main" is at 0x1750 in a file compiled without debugging.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/break-interp.exp: info addr dl_main
...
while the regexp expects "Symbol \"dl_main\" is a function at address $hex\\."

Fix this by also accepting this variant.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-30 00:29:32 +02:00
H.J. Lu
689580daaa Add a testcase for PR binutils/27202
PR binutils/27202
	* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-loc0.d: New file.
	* testsuite/gas/elf/dwarf-5-loc0.s: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/elf/elf.exp: Run dwarf-5-loc0.
2021-09-29 08:15:25 -07:00
Pedro Alves
8e4e0c7a49 Fix gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp race
The gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp testcase sometimes fails like so:

 Running /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp ...
 FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: stop with control-c (SIGINT)

It's easier to reproduce if you stress the machine at the same time, like e.g.:

  $ stress -c 24

Looking at gdb.log, we see:

 (gdb) attach 60422
 Attaching to program: build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings, process 60422
 [New Thread 60422.60422]
 Reading symbols from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6...
 Reading symbols from /usr/lib/debug//lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc-2.31.so...
 Reading symbols from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2...
 (No debugging symbols found in /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2)
 0x00007f2fc2485334 in __GI___clock_nanosleep (clock_id=<optimized out>, clock_id@entry <mailto:clock_id@entry>=0, flags=flags@entry <mailto:flags@entry>=0, req=req@entry <mailto:req@entry>=0x7ffe23126940, rem=rem@entry <mailto:rem@entry>=0x0) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c:78
 78	../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_nanosleep.c: No such file or directory.
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: inf2: attach
 set schedule-multiple on
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: set schedule-multiple on
 info inferiors
   Num  Description       Connection                         Executable
   1    process 60404     1 (extended-remote localhost:2349) build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings
 * 2    process 60422     1 (extended-remote localhost:2349) build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.multi/multi-term-settings/multi-term-settings
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: info inferiors
 pid=60422, count=46
 pid=60422, count=47
 pid=60422, count=48
 pid=60422, count=49
 pid=60422, count=50
 pid=60422, count=51
 pid=60422, count=52
 pid=60422, count=53
 pid=60422, count=54
 pid=60422, count=55
 pid=60422, count=56
 pid=60422, count=57
 pid=60422, count=58
 pid=60422, count=59
 pid=60422, count=60
 pid=60422, count=61
 pid=60422, count=62
 pid=60422, count=63
 pid=60422, count=64
 pid=60422, count=65
 pid=60422, count=66
 pid=60422, count=67
 pid=60422, count=68
 pid=60422, count=69
 pid=60404, count=54
 pid=60404, count=55
 pid=60404, count=56
 pid=60404, count=57
 pid=60404, count=58
 PASS: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: continue
 Quit
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: inf1_how=attach: inf2_how=attach: stop with control-c (SIGINT)

If you look at the testcase's sources, you'll see that the intention
is to resumes the program with "continue", wait to see a few of those
"pid=..., count=..." lines, and then interrupt the program with
Ctrl-C.  But somehow, that resulted in GDB printing "Quit", instead of
the Ctrl-C stopping the program with SIGINT.

Here's what is happening:

 #1 - those "pid=..., count=..." lines we see above weren't actually
      output by the inferior after it has been continued (see #1).
      Note that "inf1_how" and "inf2_how" are "attach".  What happened
      is that those "pid=..., count=..." lines were output by the
      inferiors _before_ they were attached to.  We see them at that
      point instead of earlier, because that's where the testcase
      reads from the inferiors' spawn_ids.

 #2 - The testcase mistakenly thinks those "pid=..., count=..." lines
      happened after the continue was processed by GDB, meaning it has
      waited enough, and so sends the Ctrl-C.  GDB hasn't yet passed
      the terminal to the inferior, so the Ctrl-C results in that
      Quit.

The fix here is twofold:

 #1 - flush inferior output right after attaching

 #2 - consume the "Continuing" printed by "continue", indicating the
      inferior has the terminal.  This is the same as done throughout
      the testsuite to handle this exact problem of sending Ctrl-C too
      soon.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd  Pedro Alves  <pedro@palves.net <mailto:pedro@palves.net>>

	* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp (create_inferior): Flush
	inferior output.
	(coretest): Use $gdb_test_name.  After issuing "continue", wait
	for "Continuing".

Change-Id: Iba7671dfe1eee6b98d29cfdb05a1b9aa2f9defb9
2021-09-29 15:53:52 +02:00
Tom de Vries
607679092f [gdb/testsuite] Disable vgdb tests if xml not supported
I build gdb without xml support using --without-expat, and ran into:
...
(gdb) target remote | vgdb --wait=2 --max-invoke-ms=2500 --pid=22032^M
Remote debugging using | vgdb --wait=2 --max-invoke-ms=2500 --pid=22032^M
relaying data between gdb and process 22032^M
warning: Can not parse XML target description; XML support was disabled at \
  compile time^M
  ...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/valgrind-infcall.exp: continue #1
p gdb_test_infcall ()^M
Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 560 bytes, got 800 bytes): ...^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/valgrind-infcall.exp: p gdb_test_infcall ()
...

After googling the error message with context valgrind gdbserver, I found
indications that the Remote 'g' packet reply error is due to missing xml
support.

And here ( https://www.valgrind.org/docs/manual/manual-core-adv.html ) I
found:
...
GDB version needed for ARM and PPC32/64.

You must use a GDB version which is able to read XML target description sent
by a gdbserver.  This is the standard setup if GDB was configured and built
with the "expat" library.  If your GDB was not configured with XML support, it
will report an error message when using the "target" command.  Debugging will
not work because GDB will then not be able to fetch the registers from the
Valgrind gdbserver.
...

So I guess I'm running into the same problem for x86_64.

Fix this by skipping all gdb.base/valgrind-*.exp tests if xml support is not
available.  Although only the gdb.base/valgrind-infcall*.exp produce fails,
the Remote 'g' packet reply error occurs in all tests, so it seems prudent to
disable them all.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 15:53:52 +02:00
Tom de Vries
6767cc642c [gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp with python 2
With a gdb build using python 2.7, I run into:
...
(gdb) python \
  gdb.events.breakpoint_modified.connect(lambda bp: print(bp.enabled))^M
  File "<string>", line 1^M
    gdb.events.breakpoint_modified.connect(lambda bp: print(bp.enabled))^M
                                                          ^^M
SyntaxError: invalid syntax^M
Error while executing Python code.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp: test_bkpt_auto_disable: \
  trap breakpoint_modified event
...

This is caused by the following:
- a lambda function body needs to be an expression
- in python 2, print is a statement, while in python 3 it's a function
- a function call is an expression, and a statement is not.

Fix this by defining a function print_bp_enabled:
...
def print_bp_enabled (bp):
    print (bp.enabled)
end
...
and using that instead.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 15:53:52 +02:00
Tom de Vries
f15ec499bf [gdb/testsuite] Fix breakpoint detection in gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp
With a gdb configured to be somewhat minimal, while still supporting python:
...
$ gdb --configuration
This GDB was configured as follows:
   configure --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu --target=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
             --with-auto-load-dir=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
             --with-auto-load-safe-path=$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load
             --without-expat
             --with-gdb-datadir=$install/share/gdb (relocatable)
             --with-jit-reader-dir=$install/lib64/gdb (relocatable)
             --without-libunwind-ia64
             --without-lzma
             --without-babeltrace
             --without-intel-pt
             --with-mpfr
             --without-xxhash
             --with-python=/usr
             --with-python-libdir=/usr/lib
             --with-debuginfod
             --without-guile
             --disable-source-highlight
             --with-separate-debug-dir=/usr/lib/debug
             --with-system-gdbinit=$devel/system-gdbinit
...
and using gcc 4.8 to build gdb (causing std::thread not to be used due to
PR28318) I ran into:
...
(gdb) PASS: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: start inner gdb
print 1^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, value_print () at src/gdb/valprint.c:1174^M
1174      scoped_value_mark free_values;^M
(xgdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: hit breakpoint in inner gdb (timeout)
...

The problem is that the regexp expects "hit Breakpoint $decimal".  The "hit"
part is missing.

The "hit" is printed by maybe_print_thread_hit_breakpoint, when
show_thread_that_caused_stop returns true:
...
int
show_thread_that_caused_stop (void)
{
  return highest_thread_num > 1;
}
...
Apparently, that's not the case.

Fix this by removing "hit" from the regexp, making the regexp more similar to
what is used in say, continue_to_breakpoint.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-29 15:53:52 +02:00
Andrew Burgess
74ea3b51c3 gdb: fix build when libbacktrace and execinfo backtrace are not available
In this commit:

  commit abbbd4a3e0
  Date:   Wed Aug 11 13:24:33 2021 +0100

      gdb: use libbacktrace to create a better backtrace for fatal signals

The build of GDB was broken iff, the execinfo backtrace API is not
available, and, libbacktrace is either disabled, or not usable.  In
this case you'll see build errors like this:

      CXX    bt-utils.o
    /home/username/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c: In function 'void gdb_internal_backtrace()':
    /home/username/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:165:5: error: 'gdb_internal_backtrace_1' was not declared in this scope
         gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ();
         ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This commit fixes the issue by guarding the call to
gdb_internal_backtrace_1 with '#ifdef GDB_PRINT_INTERNAL_BACKTRACE',
which is only defined when one of the backtrace libraries are
available.
2021-09-29 10:26:59 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
4180173142 gdb/doc: use 'standard error stream' instead of 'stderr' in some places
With this commit:

  commit 91f2597bd2
  Date:   Thu Aug 12 18:24:59 2021 +0100

      gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning

I included some references to 'stderr', which, it was pointed out,
would be better written as 'standard error stream'.  See:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-September/182225.html

This commit replaces the two instances of 'stderr' that I introduced.
2021-09-29 09:25:03 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
80656a8e4b gdb: fix manor -> manner typo in some comments
In a recent commit I used 'manor' in some comments rather than
'manner'.  This commit fixes those two mistakes.

I also looked through the gdb/ tree and found one additional instance
of this mistake that this commit also fixes.
2021-09-29 09:16:52 +01:00
Alan Modra
fba9460f7c PR27202, readelf -wL doesn't work on ".loc 0"
For DWARF revision 4 and earlier, display_debug_lines_decoded
populates the file_table array with entries read from .debug_line
after the directory table.  file_table[0] contains the first entry.
DWARF rev 4 line number programs index this entry as file number one.
DWARF revision 5 changes .debug_line format quite extensively, and in
particular gives file number zero a meaning.

	PR 27202
	* dwarf.c (display_debug_lines_decoded): Correct indexing used
	for DWARF5 files.
2021-09-29 12:07:37 +09:30
Simon Marchi
abe8cab7cb gdb: enable target_async around stop_all_threads call in process_initial_stop_replies
The following scenario hangs:

 - maint set target-non-stop on
 - `gdbserver --attach`
 - a multi-threaded program

For example:

Terminal 1:

    $ gnome-calculator&
    [1] 495731
    $ ../gdbserver/gdbserver --once --attach :1234 495731
    Attached; pid = 495731
    Listening on port 1234

Terminal 2:

    $ ./gdb -nx -q --data-directory=data-directory /usr/bin/gnome-calculator -ex "maint set target-non-stop on" -ex "tar rem :1234"
    Reading symbols from /usr/bin/gnome-calculator...
    (No debugging symbols found in /usr/bin/gnome-calculator)
    Remote debugging using :1234
    * hangs *

What happens is:

 - The protocol between gdb and gdbserver is in non-stop mode, but the
   user-visible behavior is all-stop
 - On connect, gdbserver sends one stop reply for one thread that is
   stops, the others stay running
 - In process_initial_stop_replies, gdb calls stop_all_threads to stop
   these other threads, because we are using the all-stop user-visible
   mode
 - stop_all_threads sends a stop request for all the running threads and
   then waits for resulting events
 - At this point, the remote target is in target_async(0) mode, which
   makes stop_all_threads not consider it for events
 - stop_all_threads loops indefinitely (it does not even block
   indefinitely, it is in an infinite busy loop) because there are no
   event sources.  wait_one_event returns a TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED
   wait status.

Fix that by making the remote target async around the stop_all_threads
call.

I haven't implemented it because I'm not sure how to do it, but I think
it would be a good idea to have, in stop_all_threads / wait_one /
handle_one, an assert to check that if we are expecting one or more
event, then there are some targets that are in a state where they can
supply some events.  Otherwise, we'll necessarily be stuck in this
infinite loop, and it's probably due to a bug in GDB.  I'm not too sure
where to put this or how to express it though.  Perhaps in
stop_all_threads, here:

	  for (int i = 0; i < waits_needed; i++)
	    {
	      wait_one_event event = wait_one ();
	      *here*
	      if (handle_one (event))
		break;
	    }

If at that point, the returned event is TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED,
there's a problem.  We expect some event, because we've asked some
threads to stop, but all targets are answering that they won't have any
events for us.  That's a contradiction, and a sign that something has
gone wrong.  It could perhaps event be:

    gdb_assert (event.ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED);

in handle_one, as the idea is the same in prepare_for_detach.

A bit more sophisticated would be: we know which targets we are
expecting waits from, since we know which threads we have asked to
stop.  So if any of these targets returns TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_RESUMED,
something is fishy.

Add a test that tests attaching with gdbserver's --attach flag to a
multi-threaded program, and then connecting to it.  Without the fix, the
test reproduces the hang.

Change-Id: If6f6690a4887ca66693ef1af64791dda4c65f24f
2021-09-28 20:18:30 -04:00
GDB Administrator
f08d6b8e02 Automatic date update in version.in 2021-09-29 00:00:11 +00:00
Simon Marchi
b5572c42cc gdb: fix darwin-nat build (again)
I made a mistake in the previous patch.  Adjust the format string to
match the arguments.

Change-Id: I4d45e0e0adb78eb3b5a06ba1a5287155940056ba
2021-09-28 19:50:30 -04:00
Simon Marchi
8c12140439 gdb: fix darwin-nat build
There are two errors of this kind:

      CXX    darwin-nat.o
    /Users/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/darwin-nat.c:1175:19: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long' but the argument has type 'ULONGEST' (aka 'unsigned long long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
	 ptid.pid (), ptid.tid ());
		      ^~~~~~~~~~~

Fix them by using ptid_t's to_string method.

Change-Id: I52087d5f7ee0fc01ac8b3f87d4db0217cb0d7cc7
2021-09-28 19:47:44 -04:00
Simon Marchi
4872f9a1b5 gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: accept "info breakpoints" output in any order
The test currently requires the "inf 1" breakpoint to be before the "inf
2" breakpoint.  This is not always the case:

    info breakpoints 2
    Num     Type           Disp Enb Address            What
    2       breakpoint     keep y   <MULTIPLE>
    2.1                         y   0x0000555555554730 in callee at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:9 inf 2
    2.2                         y   0x0000555555554730 in callee at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/foll-fork.c:9 inf 1
    (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: follow-fork-mode=parent: detach-on-fork=off: cmd=next 2: test_follow_fork: info breakpoints

Since add_location_to_breakpoint uses only the address as a criterion to
sort locations, the order of locations at the same address is not
stable: it will depend on the insertion order.  Here, the insertion
order comes from the order of SALs when creating the breakpoint, which
can vary from machine to machine.  While it would be more user-friendly
to have a more stable order for printed breakpoint locations, it doesn't
really matter for this test, and it would be hard to define an order
that will be the same everywhere, all the time.

So, loosen the regexp to accept "inf 1" and "inf 2" in any order.

Co-Authored-By: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
Change-Id: I5ada2e0c6ad0669e0d161bfb6b767229c0970d16
2021-09-28 19:30:41 -04:00
Cooper Qu
3a6a0158ee RISC-V: Fix wrong version number when arch contains 'p'.
When specify a default version for p extension in
riscv_supported_std_ext[](elfxx-riscv.c) and assembling with
-march=rv32imacp, the c extension's version in attribute will become
0p0, the expectation is 2p0.

TODO: Remember to add testcase when we have supported standrad p in
the future.

bfd/
	PR gas/28372
	* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parsing_subset_version): Break if p
	represent the 'p' extension.

Change-Id: Ia4e0cf26f3d7d07acaee8cefd86707ecac663a59
2021-09-28 19:39:16 +08:00
Nelson Chu
69a61890cb RISC-V: Allow to add numbers in the prefixed extension names.
We need to allow adding numbers in the prefixed extension names, since
the zve<32,64><d,f,x> extensions are included in the forzen rvv v1.0 spec
recently.  But there are two restrictions as follows,

* The extension name ends with <number>p is invalid, since this may
be confused with extension with <number>.0 version.  We report errors
for this case.

Invalid format: [z|h|s|zvm|x][0-9a-z]+[0-9]+p

* The extension name ends with numbers is valid, but the numbers will
be parsed as major version, so try to avoid naming extensions like this.

bfd/
	* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_recognized_prefixed_ext): Renamed from
	riscv_valid_prefixed_ext/
	(riscv_parsing_subset_version): The extensions end with <number>p
	is forbidden, we already report the detailed errors in the
	riscv_parse_prefixed_ext, so clean the code and unused parameters.
	(riscv_parse_std_ext): Updated.
	(riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Rewrite the parser to allow numbers
	in the prefixed extension names.
gas/
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-x-01.d: New testcases.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-x-02.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-z-01.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid-z-02.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-invalid.l: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version-x.d: Removed.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version-z.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/march-fail-version.l: Likewise.
2021-09-28 19:39:12 +08:00
Andrew Burgess
91f2597bd2 gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning
This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace
of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning.
This fixes PR gdb/26377.

There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in
most cases the user would probably continue their debug session.  And
so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing
of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings.

In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for
internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an
internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session.

Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new
settings:

  maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off
  maintenance show internal-error backtrace

  maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off
  maintenance show internal-warning backtrace

Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the
backtrace included:

  (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah
  ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
  A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
  further debugging may prove unreliable.
  ----- Backtrace -----
  0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123
  0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165
  0xe33237 internal_vproblem
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393
  0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470
  0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z
  	../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
  0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82
  0x636f57 do_simple_func
  	../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97
   .... snip, lots more backtrace lines ....
  ---------------------
  ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
  A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
  further debugging may prove unreliable.
  Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y

  This is a bug, please report it.  For instructions, see:
  <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>.

  ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah
  A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
  further debugging may prove unreliable.
  Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n

My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to
diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I
find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is
located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not
always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert.

Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-09-28 12:21:22 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
abbbd4a3e0 gdb: use libbacktrace to create a better backtrace for fatal signals
GDB recently gained the ability to print a backtrace when a fatal
signal is encountered.  This backtrace is produced using the backtrace
and backtrace_symbols_fd API available in glibc.

However, in order for this API to actually map addresses to symbol
names it is required that the application (GDB) be compiled with
-rdynamic, which GDB is not by default.

As a result, the backtrace produced often looks like this:

  Fatal signal: Bus error
  ----- Backtrace -----
  ./gdb/gdb[0x80ec00]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x80ed56]
  /lib64/libc.so.6(+0x3c6b0)[0x7fc2ce1936b0]
  /lib64/libc.so.6(__poll+0x4f)[0x7fc2ce24da5f]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x15495ba]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x15489b8]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x9b794d]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x9b7a6d]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x9b943b]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x9b94a1]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x4175dd]
  /lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf3)[0x7fc2ce17e1a3]
  ./gdb/gdb[0x4174de]
  ---------------------

This is OK if you have access to the exact same build of GDB, you can
manually map the addresses back to symbols, however, it is next to
useless if all you have is a backtrace copied into a bug report.

GCC uses libbacktrace for printing a backtrace when it encounters an
error.  In recent commits I added this library into the binutils-gdb
repository, and in this commit I allow this library to be used by
GDB.  Now (when GDB is compiled with debug information) the backtrace
looks like this:

  ----- Backtrace -----
  0x80ee08 gdb_internal_backtrace
  	../../src/gdb/event-top.c:989
  0x80ef0b handle_fatal_signal
  	../../src/gdb/event-top.c:1036
  0x7f24539dd6af ???
  0x7f2453a97a5f ???
  0x154976f gdb_wait_for_event
  	../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:613
  0x1548b6d _Z16gdb_do_one_eventv
  	../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:237
  0x9b7b02 start_event_loop
  	../../src/gdb/main.c:421
  0x9b7c22 captured_command_loop
  	../../src/gdb/main.c:481
  0x9b95f0 captured_main
  	../../src/gdb/main.c:1353
  0x9b9656 _Z8gdb_mainP18captured_main_args
  	../../src/gdb/main.c:1368
  0x4175ec main
  	../../src/gdb/gdb.c:32
  ---------------------

Which seems much more useful.

Use of libbacktrace is optional.  If GDB is configured with
--disable-libbacktrace then the libbacktrace directory will not be
built, and GDB will not try to use this library.  In this case GDB
would try to use the old backtrace and backtrace_symbols_fd API.

All of the functions related to writing the backtrace of GDB itself
have been moved into the new files gdb/by-utils.{c,h}.
2021-09-28 12:21:22 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
890026e317 src-release.sh: add libbacktrace to GDB_SUPPORT_DIRS
After the previous commit that imported libbacktrace from gcc, this
commit updates src-release.sh so that the libbacktrace directory is
included in the gdb release tar file.

ChangeLog:

	* src-release.sh (GDB_SUPPPORT_DIRS): Add libbacktrace.
2021-09-28 12:21:21 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
63a4b10683 Copy in libbacktrace from gcc
This copies in libbacktrace from the gcc repository as it was in the
commit 62e420293a293608f383d9b9c7f2debd666e9fc9.  GDB is going to
start using this library soon.

A dependency between GDB and libbacktrace has already been added to
the top level Makefile, so, after this commit, when building GDB,
libbacktrace will be built first.  However, libbacktrace is not yet
linked into GDB, or used by GDB in any way.

It is possible to stop libbacktrace being built by configuring the
tree with --disable-libbacktrace.

This commit does NOT update src-release.sh, that will be done in the
next commit, this commit ONLY imports libbacktrace from gcc.  This
means that if you try to make a release of GDB from exactly this
commit then the release tar file will not include libbacktrace.
However, as libbacktrace is an optional dependency this is fine.
2021-09-28 12:21:21 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
fbe3443dcf gdb: Add a dependency between gdb and libbacktrace
GDB is going to start using libbacktrace, so add a build dependency.

ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.def: Add all-gdb dependency on all-libbacktrace.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-09-28 12:21:21 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
d33228c946 top-level configure: setup target_configdirs based on repository
The top-level configure script is shared between the gcc repository
and the binutils-gdb repository.

The target_configdirs variable in the configure.ac script, defines
sub-directories that contain components that should be built for the
target using the target tools.

Some components, e.g. zlib, are built as both host and target
libraries.

This causes problems for binutils-gdb.  If we run 'make all' in the
binutils-gdb repository we end up trying to build a target version of
the zlib library, which requires the target compiler be available.
Often the target compiler isn't immediately available, and so the
build fails.

The problem with zlib impacted a previous attempt to synchronise the
top-level configure scripts from gcc to binutils-gdb, see this thread:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2019-May/107094.html

And I'm in the process of importing libbacktrace in to binutils-gdb,
which is also a host and target library, and triggers the same issues.

I believe that for binutils-gdb, at least at the moment, there are no
target libraries that we need to build.

In the configure script we build three lists of things we want to
build, $configdirs, $build_configdirs, and $target_configdirs, we also
build two lists of things we don't want to build, $skipdirs and
$noconfigdirs.  We then remove anything that is in the lists of things
not to build, from the list of things that should be built.

My proposal is to add everything in target_configdirs into skipdirs,
if the source tree doesn't contain a gcc/ sub-directory.  The result
is that for binutils-gdb no target tools or libraries will be built,
while for the gcc repository, nothing should change.

If a user builds a unified source tree, then the target tools and
libraries should still be built as the gcc/ directory will be present.

I've tested a build of gcc on x86-64, and the same set of target
libraries still seem to get built.  On binutils-gdb this change
resolves the issues with 'make all'.

ChangeLog:

	* configure: Regenerate.
	* configure.ac (skipdirs): Add the contents of target_configdirs if
	we are not building gcc.
2021-09-28 12:21:21 +01:00
Gleb Fotengauer-Malinovskiy
0d62064867 PR28391, strip/objcopy --preserve-dates *.a: cannot set time
After commit 985e026451 copy_archive function began to pass invalid
values to the utimensat(2) function when it tries to preserve
timestamps in ar archives.  This happens because the bfd_stat_arch_elt
implementation for ar archives fills only the st_mtim.tv_sec part of
the st_mtim timespec structure, but leaves the st_mtim.tv_nsec part
and the whole st_atim timespec untouched leaving them uninitialized

	PR 28391
	* ar.c (extract_file): Clear buf for preserve_dates.
	* objcopy.c (copy_archive): Likewise.
2021-09-28 20:18:48 +09:30
Mike Frysinger
cee4c731af sim: drop weak func attrs on module inits
When I first wrote this, I was thinking we'd scan all source files
that existed and generate a complete init list.  That means for any
particular build, we'd probably have a few functions that didn't
exist, so weak attributes was necessary.  What I ended up scanning
though was only the source files that went into a particular build.

There was another concern too: a source file might be included, but
the build settings would cause all of its contents to be skipped
(via CPP defines).  So scanning via naive grep would pick up names
not actually available.  A check of the source tree shows that we
never do this, and it's pretty easy to institute a policy that we
don't start (by at the very least including a stub init func).

The use of weak symbols ends up causing a problem in practice: for
a few modules (like profiling), nothing else pulls it in, so the
linker omits it entirely, which leads to the profiling module never
being available.  So drop the weak markings since we know all these
funcs will be available.
2021-09-28 01:51:38 -04:00
Cui,Lili
2c02075a8e x86: Print {bad} on invalid broadcast in OP_E_memory
Don't print broadcast for scalar_mode, and print {bad} for invalid broadcast.

gas/

	PR binutils/28381
	* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.s: Add a new testcase.
	* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/gas/i386/bad-bcast-intel.d: New.

opcodes/

	PR binutils/28381
	* i386-dis.c (static struct): Add no_broadcast.
	(OP_E_memory): Mark invalid broadcast with no_broadcast=1 and Print "{bad}"for it.
	(intel_operand_size): mark invalid broadcast with no_broadcast=1.
	(OP_XMM): Mark scalar_mode with no_broadcast=1.
2021-09-28 11:13:50 +08:00
Simon Marchi
901b98215e gdb: use intrusive_list for linux-nat lwp_list
Replace the manually maintained linked list of lwp_info objects with
intrusive_list.  Replace the ALL_LWPS macro with all_lwps, which returns
a range.  Add all_lwps_safe as well, for use in iterate_over_lwps, which
currently iterates in a safe manner.

Change-Id: I355313502510acc0103f5eaf2fbde80897d6376c
2021-09-27 22:30:11 -04:00
Simon Marchi
676362df18 gdb: add destructor to lwp_info
Replace the lwp_free function with a destructor.  Make lwp_info
non-copyable, since there is now a destructor (we wouldn't want an
lwp_info object getting copied and this->arch_private getting deleted
twice).

Change-Id: I09fcbe967e362566d3a06fed2abca2a9955570fa
2021-09-27 22:30:11 -04:00
Simon Marchi
b0f6c8d247 gdb: make lwp_info non-POD
Initialize all fields in the class declaration directly.  This opens the
door to using intrusive_list, done in the following patch.

Change-Id: I38bb27410cd9ebf511d310bb86fe2ea1872c3b05
2021-09-27 22:30:11 -04:00
GDB Administrator
a58f2d262b Automatic date update in version.in 2021-09-28 00:00:07 +00:00
Simon Marchi
da474da158 gdb: don't share aspace/pspace on fork with "detach-on-fork on" and "follow-fork-mode child"
We found that when handling forks, two inferiors can unexpectedly share
their program space and address space.  To reproduce:

 1. Using a test program that forks...
 2. "set follow-fork-mode child"
 3. "set detach-on-fork on" (the default)
 4. run to a breakpoint somewhere after the fork

Step 4 should have created a new inferior:

    (gdb) info inferiors
      Num  Description       Connection           Executable
      1    <null>                                 /home/smarchi/build/wt/amd/gdb/fork
    * 2    process 251425    1 (native)           /home/smarchi/build/wt/amd/gdb/fork

By inspecting the state of GDB, we can see that the two inferiors now
share one program space and one address space:

Inferior 1:

    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.num
    $2 = 1
    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.aspace
    $3 = (struct address_space *) 0x5595e2520400
    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.pspace
    $4 = (struct program_space *) 0x5595e2520440

Inferior 2:

    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.num
    $5 = 2
    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.aspace
    $6 = (struct address_space *) 0x5595e2520400
    (top-gdb) p inferior_list.m_front.next.pspace
    $7 = (struct program_space *) 0x5595e2520440

You can then run inferior 1 again and the two inferiors will still
erroneously share their spaces, but already at this point this is wrong.

The cause of the bad {a,p}space sharing is in follow_fork_inferior.
When following the child and detaching from the parent, we just re-use
the parent's spaces, rather than cloning them.  When we switch back to
inferior 1 and run again, we find ourselves with two unrelated inferiors
sharing spaces.

Fix that by creating new spaces for the parent after having moved them
to the child.  My initial implementation created new spaces for the
child instead.  Doing this breaks doing "next" over fork().  When "next"
start, we record the symtab of the starting location.  When the program
stops, we compare that symtab with the symtab the program has stopped
at.  If the symtab or the line number has changed, we conclude the
"next" is done.  If we create a new program space for the child and copy
the parent's program space to it with clone_program_space, it creates
new symtabs for the child as well.  When the child stop, but still on
the fork() line, GDB thinks the "next" is done because the symtab
pointers no longer match.  In reality they are two symtab instances that
represent the same file.  But moving the spaces to the child and
creating new spaces for the parent, we avoid this problem.

Note that the problem described above happens today with "detach-on-fork
off" and "follow-fork-mode child", because we create new spaces for the
child.  This will have to be addressed later.

Test-wise, improve gdb.base/foll-fork.exp to set a breakpoint that is
expected to have a location in each inferiors.  Without the fix, when
the two inferiors erroneously share a program space, GDB reports a
single location.

Change-Id: Ifea76e14f87b9f7321fc3a766217061190e71c6e
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Simon Marchi
8188f382a1 gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: use foreach_with_prefix to handle prefixes
No behavior change in the test expected, other than in the test names.

Change-Id: I111137483858ab0f23138439f2930009779a2b3d
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Simon Marchi
cfda0b5619 gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: rename variables
Rename the variables / parameters used to match the corresponding GDB
setting name, I find that easier to follow.

Change-Id: Idcbddbbb369279fcf1e808b11a8c478f21b2a946
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Simon Marchi
b45781ddac gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: refactor to restart GDB between each portion of the test
This test is difficult to follow and modify because the state of GDB is
preserved some tests.  Add a setup proc, which starts a new GDB and runs
to main, and use it in all test procs.  Use proc_with_prefix to avoid
duplicates.

The check_fork_catchpoints proc also seems used to check for follow-fork
support by checking if catchpoints are supported.  If they are not, it
uses "return -code return", which makes its caller return.  I find this
unnecessary complex, versus just returning a boolean.  Modify it to do
so.

Change-Id: I23e62b204286c5e9c5c86d2727f7d33fb126ed08
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Simon Marchi
09c0623ade gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: remove gating based on target triplet
It looks like this test has some code to check at runtime the support of
fork handling of the target (see check_fork_catchpoints).  So, it seems
to me that the check based on target triplet at the beginning of the
test is not needed.  This kind of gating is generally not desirable,
because we wouldn't think of updating it when adding fork support to a
target.  For example, FreeBSD supports fork, but it wasn't listed here.

Change-Id: I6b55f2298edae6b37c3681fb8633d8ea1b5aabee
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Simon Marchi
59767d3c39 gdb.base/foll-fork.exp: remove DUPLICATEs
Remove DUPLICATEs, and and at the same time replace two uses of
gdb_test_multiple with gdb_test.  I don't think using gdb_test_multiple
is necessary here.

Change-Id: I8dcf097c3364e92d4f0e11f0c0f05dbb88e86742
2021-09-27 16:55:46 -04:00
Nick Alcock
6ab5b6d0f3 libctf, lookup: fix bounds of pptrtab lookup
An off-by-one bug in the check for pptrtab lookup meant that we could
access the pptrtab past its bounds (*well* past its bounds),
particularly if we called ctf_lookup_by_name in a child dict with "*foo"
where "foo" is a type that exists in the parent but not the child and no
previous lookups by name have been carried out.  (Note that "*foo" is
not even a valid thing to call ctf_lookup_by_name with: foo * is.
Nonetheless, users sometimes do call ctf_lookup_by_name with invalid
content, and it should return ECTF_NOTYPE, not crash.)

ctf_pptrtab_len, as its name suggests (and as other tests of it in
ctf-lookup.c confirm), is one higher than the maximum valid permissible
index, so the comparison is wrong.

(Test added, which should fail pretty reliably in the presence of this
bug on any machine with 4KiB pages.)

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* ctf-lookup.c (ctf_lookup_by_name_internal): Fix pptrtab bounds.
	* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab-writable-page-deep-lookup.*:
	New test.
2021-09-27 20:31:26 +01:00
Nick Alcock
e695879142 libctf, testsuite: fix various warnings in tests
These warnings are all off by default, but if they do fire you get
spurious ERRORs when running make check-libctf.

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* testsuite/libctf-lookup/enum-symbol.c: Remove unused label.
	* testsuite/libctf-lookup/conflicting-type-syms.c: Remove unused
	variables.
	* testsuite/libctf-regression/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
	* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.c: Likewise.
	* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
	* testsuite/libctf-writable/reserialize-strtab-corruption.c:
	Likewise.
	* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld-r.c: Fix
	format string.
	* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.c:
	Likewise.
	* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.lk: Adjust.
	* testsuite/libctf-writable/symtypetab-nonlinker-writeout.c: Fix
	initializer.
2021-09-27 20:31:26 +01:00
Nick Alcock
b62d5edd0a libctf: fix handling of CTF symtypetab sections emitted by older GCC
Older (pre-upstreaming) GCC emits a function symtypetab section of a
format never read by any extant libctf.  We can detect such CTF dicts by
the lack of the CTF_F_NEWFUNCINFO flag in their header, and we do so
when reading in the symtypetab section -- but if the set of symbols with
types is sufficiently sparse, even an older GCC will emit a function
index section.

In NEWFUNCINFO-capable compilers, this section will always be the exact
same length as the corresponding function section (each is an array of
uint32_t, associated 1:1 with each other). But this is not true for the
older compiler, for which the sections are different lengths.  We check
to see if the function symtypetab section and its index are the same
length, but we fail to skip this check when this is not a NEWFUNCINFO
dict, and emit a spurious corruption error for a CTF dict we could
have perfectly well opened and used.

Fix trivial: check the flag (and fix the terrible grammar of the error
message at the same time).

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* ctf-open.c (ctf_bufopen_internal): Don't complain about corrupt
	function index symtypetab sections if this is an old-format
	function symtypetab section (which should be ignored in any case).
	Fix bad grammar.
2021-09-27 20:31:25 +01:00
Nick Alcock
b9004024b9 configure: regenerate in all projects that use libtool.m4
(including sim/, which has no changelog.)

bfd/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

binutils/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

gas/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

gprof/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

ld/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.

opcodes/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.

zlib/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerate.
2021-09-27 20:31:24 +01:00
Nick Alcock
ea9c200911 libctf: try several possibilities for linker versioning flags
Checking for linker versioning by just grepping ld --help output for
mentions of --version-script is inadequate now that Solaris 11.4
implements a --version-script with different semantics.  Try linking a
test program with a small wildcard-using version script with each
supported set of flags in turn, to make sure that linker versioning is
not only advertised but actually works.

The Solaris "GNU-compatible" linker versioning is not quite
GNU-compatible enough, but we can work around the differences by
generating a new version script that removes the comments from the
original (Solaris ld requires #-style comments), and making another
version script for libctf-nonbfd in particular which doesn't mention any
of the symbols that appear in libctf.la, to avoid Solaris ld introducing
corresponding new NOTYPE symbols to match the version script.

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27967
	* configure.ac (VERSION_FLAGS): Replace with...
	(ac_cv_libctf_version_script): ... this multiple test.
	(VERSION_FLAGS_NOBFD): Substitute this too.
	* Makefile.am (libctf_nobfd_la_LDFLAGS): Use it.  Split out...
	(libctf_ldflags_nover): ... non-versioning flags here.
	(libctf_la_LDFLAGS): Use it.
	* libctf.ver: Give every symbol not in libctf-nobfd a comment on
	the same line noting as much.
2021-09-27 20:31:24 +01:00
Nick Alcock
bef9ef8ca0 libtool.m4: fix nm BSD flag detection
Libtool needs to get BSD-format (or MS-format) output out of the system
nm, so that it can scan generated object files for symbol names for
-export-symbols-regex support.  Some nms need specific flags to turn on
BSD-formatted output, so libtool checks for this in its AC_PATH_NM.
Unfortunately the code to do this has a pair of interlocking flaws:

 - it runs the test by doing an nm of /dev/null.  Some platforms
   reasonably refuse to do an nm on a device file, but before now this
   has only been worked around by assuming that the error message has a
   specific textual form emitted by Tru64 nm, and that getting this
   error means this is Tru64 nm and that nm -B would work to produce
   BSD-format output, even though the test never actually got anything
   but an error message out of nm -B.  This is fixable by nm'ing *nm
   itself* (since we necessarily have a path to it).

 - the test is entirely skipped if NM is set in the environment, on the
   grounds that the user has overridden the test: but the user cannot
   reasonably be expected to know that libtool wants not only nm but
   also flags forcing BSD-format output.  Worse yet, one such "user" is
   the top-level Cygnus configure script, which neither tests for
   nor specifies any BSD-format flags.  So platforms needing BSD-format
   flags always fail to set them when run in a Cygnus tree, breaking
   -export-symbols-regex on such platforms.  Libtool also needs to
   augment $LD on some platforms, but this is done unconditionally,
   augmenting whatever the user specified: the nm check should do the
   same.

   One wrinkle: if the user has overridden $NM, a path might have been
   provided: so we use the user-specified path if there was one, and
   otherwise do the path search as usual.  (If the nm specified doesn't
   work, this might lead to a few extra pointless path searches -- but
   the test is going to fail anyway, so that's not a problem.)

(Tested with NM unset, and set to nm, /usr/bin/nm, my-nm where my-nm is a
symlink to /usr/bin/nm on the PATH, and /not-on-the-path/my-nm where
*that* is a symlink to /usr/bin/nm.)

ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27967
	* libtool.m4 (LT_PATH_NM): Try BSDization flags with a user-provided
	NM, if there is one.  Run nm on itself, not on /dev/null, to avoid
	errors from nms that refuse to work on non-regular files.  Remove
	other workarounds for this problem.  Strip out blank lines from the
	nm output.
2021-09-27 20:31:23 +01:00
Nick Alcock
bc4b140112 libtool.m4: augment symcode for Solaris 11
This reports common symbols like GNU nm, via a type code of 'C'.

ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27967
	* libtool.m4 (lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe): Augment symcode for
	Solaris 11.
2021-09-27 20:31:23 +01:00
Nick Alcock
7d53105d6e libctf: link against libiberty before linking in libbfd or libctf-nobfd
This ensures that the CTF_LIBADD, which always contains at least this
when doing a shared link:

-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic -liberty

appears in the link line before any requirements pulled in by libbfd.la,
which include -liberty but because it is install-time do not include the
-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic portion (in an indirect dep like this, the path
comes from the libbfd.la file, and is an install path).  libiberty also
appears after libbfd in the link line by virtue of libctf-nobfd.la,
because libctf-nobfd has to follow libbfd in the link line, and that
needs symbols from libiberty too.

Without this, an installed liberty might well be pulled in by libbfd,
and if --enable-install-libiberty is not specified this libiberty might
be completely incompatible with what is being installed and break either
or boht of libbfd and libctf. (The specific problem observed here is
that bsearch_r was not present, but other problems might easily be
observed in future too.)

Because ld links against libctf, this has a tendency to break the system
linker at install time too, if installing with --prefix=/usr.  That's
quite unpleasant to recover from.

libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27360
	* Makefile.am (libctf_la_LIBADD): Link against libiberty
	before pulling in libbfd.la or pulling in libctf-nobfd.la.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-09-27 20:31:22 +01:00
Tom de Vries
7f92ed6b41 [gdb/build] Fix build with g++-4.8
When building g++-4.8, we run into:
...
src/gdb/dwarf2/read.c:919:5: error: multiple fields in union \
  'partial_die_info::<anonymous union>' initialized
...

This is due to:
...
    union
    {
      struct
      {
       CORE_ADDR lowpc = 0;
       CORE_ADDR highpc = 0;
      };
      ULONGEST ranges_offset;
    };
...

The error looks incorrect, given that only one union member is initialized,
and does not reproduce with newer g++.

Nevertheless, work around this by moving the initialization to a constructor.

[ I considered just removing the initialization, with the idea that access
should be guarded by has_pc_info, but I ran into one failure in the testsuite,
for gdb.base/check-psymtab.exp due to add_partial_symbol using lowpc without
checking has_pc_info. ]

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2021-09-27 14:10:39 +02:00