We use the program argv to both find the program to run (argv[0]) and
to hold the arguments to the program. Most of the time this is fine,
but if we want to let programs specify argv[0] independently (which is
possible in standard *NIX programs), this double duty doesn't work.
So let's split the path to the program to run out into a separate
field by itself. This simplifies the various sim_open funcs too.
By itself, this code is more of a logical cleanup than something that
is super useful. But it will open up customization of argv[0] in a
follow up commit. Split the changes to make it easier to review.
The sim-basics.h is too big and includes too many things. This leads
to some arch's sim-main.h having circular loop issues with defs, and
makes it hard to separate out common objects from arch-specific defs.
By splitting up sim-basics.h and killing off sim-main.h, it'll make
it easier to separate out the two.
The m4 macro has 2 args: the "wire" settings (which represents the
hardwired port behavior), and the default settings (which are used
if nothing else is specified). If none are specified, the arch is
expected to support both, and the value will be probed based on the
user runtime options or the input program.
Only two arches today set the default value (bpf & mips). We can
probably let this go as it only shows up in one scenario: the sim
is invoked, but with no inputs, and no user endian selection. This
means bpf will not behave like the other arches: an error is shown
and forces the user to make a choice. If an input program is used
though, we'll still switch the default to that. This allows us to
remove the WITH_DEFAULT_TARGET_BYTE_ORDER setting.
For the ports that set a "wire" endian, move it to the runtime init
of the respective sim_open calls. This allows us to change the
WITH_TARGET_BYTE_ORDER to purely a user-selected configure setting
if they want to force a specific endianness.
With all the endian logic moved to runtime selection, we can move
the configure call up to the common dir so we only process it once
across all ports.
The ppc arch was picking the wire endian based on the target used,
but since we weren't doing that for other biendian arches, we can
let this go too. We'll rely on the input selecting the endian, or
make the user decide.
The defs.h header will take care of including the various config.h
headers. For now, it's just config.h, but we'll add more when we
integrate gnulib in.
This header should be used instead of config.h, and should be the
first include in every .c file. We won't rely on the old behavior
where we expected files to include the port's sim-main.h which then
includes the common sim-basics.h which then includes config.h. We
have a ton of code that includes things before sim-main.h, and it
sometimes needs to be that way. Creating a dedicated header avoids
the ordering mess and implicit inclusion that shows up otherwise.
The gdb/callback.h & gdb/remote-sim.h headers have nothing to do with
gdb and are really definitions for the libsim API under the sim/ tree.
While gdb uses those headers as a client, it's not specific to it. So
create a new sim/ namespace and move the headers there.
A lot of this code predates the bfd_vma format define, so we have a
random mix of casts to known types so we can printf the value. Use
the BFD_VMA_FMT that now exists to simplify and reliability output
across different build configs.
The printf fix is obvious enough, but the hash one is a real bug:
cr16/interp.c: In function 'sim_open':
cr16/interp.c:560:17: error: 'h' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
560 | h = h->next;
| ~~^~~~~~~~~
It happens to not cause a problem currently because the first entry in
the generated table that this loop operates matches a codepath where h
is initialized. Then when later entries don't match, the previous value
is pointing at the end of a valid hash table already, and the rest of
the code does nothing.
With this tidied up, we can delete the SIM_AC_OPTION_WARNINGS(no) call
to get the default common behavior where -Werror is enabled.
These ports declare their State variable in a header and then include
multiple times. This causes linker errors with newer gcc due to the
change in -fno-common behavior. Move the storage to a C file so we
only have one instance of it in the final program.
This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start
of New Year procedure...
gdb/ChangeLog
Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
This commit applies all changes made after running the gdb/copyright.py
script.
Note that one file was flagged by the script, due to an invalid
copyright header
(gdb/unittests/basic_string_view/element_access/char/empty.cc).
As the file was copied from GCC's libstdc++-v3 testsuite, this commit
leaves this file untouched for the time being; a patch to fix the header
was sent to gcc-patches first.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
This applies the second part of GDB's End of Year Procedure, which
updates the copyright year range in all of GDB's files.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
Fix a long standing todo where we let getopt write directly to stderr
when an invalid option is passed. Use the sim io funcs instead as they
go through the filtered callbacks that gdb wants.
Now that we have access to the sim state everywhere, we can convert to
the common engine logic for overall processing. This frees us up from
tracking exception state ourselves.
The cr16 port has a lot of translation/offset logic baked into it, but
it all looks like copy & paste from the d10v port rather than something
the cr16 port wants.
By itself, this commit doesn't really change anything. It lays the
groundwork for using the cpu state in follow up commits, both for
engine state and for cpu state. Splitting things up this way so it
is easier to see how things have changed.
Other than the nice advantage of all sims having to declare one fewer
common function, this also fixes leakage in pretty much every sim.
Many were not freeing any resources, and a few were inconsistent as
to the ones they did. Now we have a single module that takes care of
all the logic for us.
Most of the non-cgen based ones could be deleted outright. The cgen
ones required adding a callback to the arch-specific cleanup func.
The few that still have close callbacks are to manage their internal
state.
We do not convert erc32, m32c, ppc, rl78, or rx as they do not use
the common sim core.
Now that all targets have been converted to nrun, we can finally punt
this old inconsistent interface.
A few stray references to the old run were sprinkled about; clean them
up in the process.
We leave behind the run(1) man page mostly so that we get it updated for
the new nrun interface.
A lot of cpu state is stored in global variables, as is memory handling.
The sim_size support needs unwinding at some point. But at least this
is an improvement on the status quo.
In preparation for converting to nrun, call the common functions that
are needed. This doesn't produce any new warnings, and the generated
code should be the same.
It is rare for people to want to modify the cmd arg. In general, they
really shouldn't be, but a few still do. For those who misbehave, dupe
the string locally so they can bang on it.
This removes the last uses of PARAMS from sim.
2014-01-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* README-HACKING: Don't use PARAMS.
* arm/wrapper.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* bfin/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/callback.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/cgen-trace.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/run-sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/run.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-base.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-load.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-options.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-trace.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-trace.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-utils.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/cr16_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/gencode.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/simops.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/d10v_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/gencode.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/simops.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/erc32.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/exec.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/float.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/func.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/sis.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/sis.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* mips/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* mips/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* sh/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* v850/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* v850/v850_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
Two modifications:
1. The addition of 2013 to the copyright year range for every file;
2. The use of a single year range, instead of potentially multiple
year ranges, as approved by the FSF.
As pointed out by Sandra Loosemore, a bunch of targets define sim_write
themselves instead of using the common/ code. So constify them too.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>