Newer versions of bison emit a prototype for yyerror
void yyerror (const char *);
This clashes with some of our old code that declares yyerror to return
an int. Fix that in most cases by modernizing yyerror. bfin-parse.y
uses the return value all over the place, so for there disable
generation of the prototype as specified by posix.
binutils/
* arparse.y (yyerror): Return void.
* dlltool.c (yyerror): Likewise.
* dlltool.h (yyerror): Likewise.
* sysinfo.y (yyerror): Likewise.
* windmc.h (yyerror): Likewise.
* mclex.c (mc_error): Extract from ..
(yyerror): ..here, both now returning void.
gas/
* config/bfin-parse.y (yyerror): Define.
(yyerror): Make static.
* itbl-parse.y (yyerror): Return void.
ld/
* deffilep.y (def_error): Return void.
Calculating "0 - pointer" can indeed result in seeming randomness as
the pointer address varies.
PR 28541
* dwarf.c (display_debug_frames): Don't print cie offset when
invalid, print "invalid" instead. Remove now redundant warning.
While looking at an apparently malformed executable with
"readelf --debug-dump=loc", I got this warning:
readelf: ./main: Warning: There is a hole [0x89 - 0x95] in .debug_loc section.
However, the executable only has a .debug_loclists section.
This patch fixes the warning messages in display_debug_loc to use the
name of the section that is being processed.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-11-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* dwarf.c (display_debug_loc): Use section name in warnings.
yyleng gives the pattern length, xstrdup just copies up to the NUL.
So it is quite possible writing at an index of yyleng-2 overflows
the xstrdup allocated string buffer. xmemdup quite handily avoids
this problem, even writing the terminating NUL over the trailing
quote. Use it in ldlex.l too where we'd already had a report of this
problem and fixed it by hand, and to implement xmemdup0 in gas.
binutils/
* deflex.l (single and double quote strings): Use xmemdup.
gas/
* as.h (xmemdup0): Use xmemdup.
ld/
PR 20906
* ldlex.l (double quote string): Use xmemdup.
That assert would be more obvious if it were reported as
"addr_ranges <= end_ranges". Fix that by using the obvious variable
in the final loop. Stop the assertion by using a signed comparison:
It's possible for the rounding up of the arange pointer to exceed the
end of the block when the block size is fuzzed.
* dwarf.c (display_debug_aranges): Use "end_ranges" in loop
displaying ranges rather that "start". Simplify rounding up
to 2*address_size boundary. Use signed comparison in loop.
"tocopy" in this code was an int, which when the size to be copied was
larger than MAXINT could result in tocopy being negative. A negative
value of course is less than BUFSIZE, but when converted to
bfd_size_type is extremely large.
PR 995
* objcopy.c (copy_unknown_object): Correct calculation of "tocopy".
Use better variable types.
This patch adds readelf support for decoding the exception table
opcode for restoring the RA_AUTH_CODE pseudo register defined by the
EHABI
(https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/releases/download/2021Q1/ehabi32.pdf
Section 10.3).
* readelf.c (decode_arm_unwind_bytecode): Add support to decode
restoring RA_AUTH_CODE pseudo register.
This option has been present since the very early days of the
development of libctf as part of binutils, and it shows. Back in the
earliest days, I thought we might handle ambiguous types by introducing
new ELF sections on the fly named things like .ctf.foo.c for ambiguous
types found only in foo.c, etc. This turned out to be a terrible idea,
so we moved to using a CTF archive in the .ctf section which contained
all the CTF dictionaries -- but the --ctf-parent option in objdump and
readelf was never adjusted, and lingered as a mechanism to specify CTF
parent dictionaries in sections other than .ctf, even though the linker
has no way to produce parent dictionaries in different sections from
their children, libctf's ctf_open can't handle such split-up
parent/child dicts, and they are never found in the wild, emitted by GNU
ld or by any known third-party linking tool.
Meanwhile, the actually-useful ctf_link feature (albeit not used by ld)
which lets you remap the names of CTF archive members (so you can end up
with a parent archive member named something other than ".ctf", still
contained with all its children in a single .ctf section) had no support
in objdump or readelf: there was no way to tell them that these members
were parents, so all the types in the associated child dicts always
appeared corrupted, referencing nonexistent types from a parent objdump
couldn't find.
So adjust --ctf-parent so that rather than taking a section name it
takes a member name instead (if not specified, the name is ".ctf", which
is what GNU ld emits). Because the option was always useless before
now, this is expected to have no backward-compatibility implications.
As part of this, we have to slightly adjust the code which skips the
archive member name if redundant: right now it skips it if it's ".ctf",
on the assumption that this name will almost always be at the start
of the objdump output and thus we'll end up with a shared dump
and then smaller, headed dumps for the per-TU child dicts; but if
the parent name has been changed, that won't be true any more.
So change the rules to "members named .ctf which appear first in the
first have their member name skipped". Since we now need to count
members, move from ctf_archive_iter (for which passing in extra
parameters requires defining a new struct and is clumsy) to
ctf_archive_next, allowing us to just *call* dump_ctf_archive_member and
maintain a member count in the obvious way. In the process we fix a
tiny difference between readelf and objdump: if a ctf_dump ever failed,
readelf skipped every later member, while objdump tried to keep going as
much as it could. For a dumping tool the former is clearly preferable.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* objdump.c (usage): --ctf-parent now takes a name, not a section.
(dump_ctf): Don't open a separate section; use the parent_name in
ctf_dict_open instead. Use ctf_archive_next, not ctf_archive_iter,
so we can pass down a member count.
(dump_ctf_archive_member): Add the member count; don't return
anything. Import parents into children no matter what the
parent's name, while still avoiding displaying the header for the
common parent name of ".ctf".
* readelf.c (usage): Adjust similarly.
(dump_section_as_ctf): Likewise.
(dump_ctf_archive_member): Likewise. Never stop iterating over
archive members, even if ctf_dump of one member fails.
* doc/ctf.options.texi: Adjust.
Mainline gcc:
readelf.c: In function 'find_section':
readelf.c:349:8: error: the comparison will always evaluate as 'true' for the pointer operand in 'filedata->section_headers + (sizetype)((long unsigned int)i * 80)' must not be NULL [-Werror=address]
349 | ((X) != NULL \
| ^~
readelf.c:761:9: note: in expansion of macro 'SECTION_NAME_VALID'
761 | if (SECTION_NAME_VALID (filedata->section_headers + i)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This will likely be fixed in gcc, but inline functions are nicer than
macros.
* readelf.c (SECTION_NAME, SECTION_NAME_VALID),
(SECTION_NAME_PRINT, VALID_SYMBOL_NAME, VALID_DYNAMIC_NAME),
(GET_DYNAMIC_NAME): Delete. Replace with..
(section_name, section_name_valid, section_name_print),
(valid_symbol_name, valid_dynamic_name, get_dynamic_name): ..these
new inline functions. Update use throughout file.
bfd * linker.c (_bfd_generic_link_add_one_symbol): Test for a NULL
name before checking to see if the symbol is __gnu_lto_slim.
* archive.c (_bfd_compute_and_write_armap): Likewise.
binutils
* nm.c (filter_symbols): Test for a NULL name before checking to
see if the symbol is __gnu_lto_slim.
* objcopy.c (filter_symbols): Likewise.
I'd missed the fact that the .debug_rnglists dump doesn't exactly
display the contents of the section. Instead readelf rummages through
.debug_info looking for DW_AT_ranges entries, then displays the
entries in .debug_rnglists pointed at, sorted. A simpler dump of the
actual section contents might be more useful and robust, but it was
likely done that way to detect overlap and holes.
Anyway, the headers in .debug_rnglists besides the first are ignored,
and limiting to the unit length of the first header fails if there is
more than one unit.
PR 28459
* dwarf.c (display_debug_ranges): Don't constrain data to length
in header.
The PR28401 testcase has a section named "", ie. an empty string.
This results in some silly behaviour in load_debug_section, and
dump_dwarf_section. Fix that. Note that this patch doesn't correct
the main complaint in PR28401, "failed to allocate", since malloc
failures on sections having huge bogus sizes are to be expected. We
can't safely catch all such cases by comparing with file size, for
example, where sections contain compressed data.
PR 28401
* objdump.c (load_debug_section): Don't attempt to retrieve
empty name sections.
(dump_dwarf_section): Likewise.
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.
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.
When the RISC-V disassembler encounters an unknown instruction, it
currently just prints the value of the bytes, like this:
Dump of assembler code for function custom_insn:
0x00010132 <+0>: addi sp,sp,-16
0x00010134 <+2>: sw s0,12(sp)
0x00010136 <+4>: addi s0,sp,16
0x00010138 <+6>: 0x52018b
0x0001013c <+10>: 0x9c45
My proposal, in this patch, is to change the behaviour to this:
Dump of assembler code for function custom_insn:
0x00010132 <+0>: addi sp,sp,-16
0x00010134 <+2>: sw s0,12(sp)
0x00010136 <+4>: addi s0,sp,16
0x00010138 <+6>: .4byte 0x52018b
0x0001013c <+10>: .2byte 0x9c45
Adding the .4byte and .2byte opcodes. The benefit that I see here is
that in the patched version of the tools, the disassembler output can
be fed back into the assembler and it should assemble to the same
binary format. Before the patch, the disassembler output is invalid
assembly.
I've started a RISC-V specific test file under binutils so that I can
add a test for this change.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/riscv.exp: New file.
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/unknown.d: New file.
* testsuite/binutils-all/riscv/unknown.s: New file.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Print a .%dbyte opcode
before an unknown instruction, '%d' is replaced with the
instruction length.
The top level Makefile, the ld Makefile and others, define
CC_FOR_TARGET to be a compiler for the binutils target machine. This
is the compiler that should be used for almost all tests with C
source. There are _FOR_TARGET versions of CFLAGS, CXX, and CXXFLAGS
too. This was all supposed to work with the testsuite .exp files
using CC for the target compiler, and CC_FOR_HOST for the host
compiler, with the makefiles passing CC=$CC_FOR_TARGET and
CC_FOR_HOST=$CC to the runtest invocation.
One exception to the rule of using CC_FOR_TARGET is the native-only ld
bootstrap test, which uses the newly built ld to link a copy of
itself. Since the files being linked were created with the host
compiler, the boostrap test should use CC and CFLAGS, in case some
host compiler option provides needed libraries automatically.
However, bootstrap.exp used CC where it should have used CC_FOR_HOST.
I set about fixing that problem, then decided that playing games in
the makefiles with CC was a bad idea. Not only is it confusing, but
other dejagnu code knows about CC_FOR_TARGET. See dejagnu/target.exp.
So this patch gets rid of the makefile variable renaming and changes
all the .exp files to use the correct _FOR_TARGET variables.
CC_FOR_HOST and CFLAGS_FOR_HOST disappear. A followup patch will
correct bootstrap.exp to use CFLAGS, and a number of other things I
noticed.
binutils/
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (run_dump_test): Use
CC_FOR_TARGET and CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET rather than CC and CFLAGS.
ld/
* Makefile.am (check-DEJAGNU): Don't set CC to CC_FOR_TARGET
and similar. Pass variables with unchanged names. Don't set
CC_FOR_HOST or CFLAGS_FOR_HOST.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Update default CC and similar.
(compiler_supports, plug_opt): Use CC_FOR_TARGET.
* testsuite/ld-cdtest/cdtest.exp: Replace all uses of CC with
CC_FOR_TARGET, and similarly for CFLAGS, CXX and CXXFLAGS.
* testsuite/ld-auto-import/auto-import.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-cygwin/exe-export.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/dwarf.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/indirect.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfcomm/elfcomm.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvers/vers.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfvsb/elfvsb.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-elfweak/elfweak.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-gc/gc.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ifunc/ifunc.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-mn10300/mn10300.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-compile.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pe/pe-run2.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-pie/pie.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/lto.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-plugin/plugin.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-scripts/crossref.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-selective/selective.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-sh/sh.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-shared/shared.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-srec/srec.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-undefined/undefined.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-unique/unique.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/tls.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp: Likewise.
libctf/
* Makefile.am (check-DEJAGNU): Don't set CC to CC_FOR_TARGET.
Pass CC and CC_FOR_TARGET. Don't set CC_FOR_HOST.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Update default CC and similar.
* testsuite/lib/ctf-lib.exp (run_native_host_cmd): Use CC rather
than CC_FOR_HOST.
(run_lookup_test): Use CC_FOR_TARGET and CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET.
This defines a couple of macros used to avoid ubsan complaints about
calculations involving NULL pointers. PTR_ADD should be used in the
case where it is known that the offset is always zero with a NULL
pointer, and you'd like to know if a non-zero offset is ever used.
NPTR_ADD should be rarely used, but is defined for cases where a
non-zero offset is expected and should be ignored if the pointer is
NULL.
bfd/
* bfd-in.h (PTR_ADD, NPTR_ADD): Define.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* elf-eh-frame.c (adjust_eh_frame_local_symbols): Avoid NULL
pointer calculations.
* elflink.c (_bfd_elf_strip_zero_sized_dynamic_sections): Likewise.
(bfd_elf_add_dt_needed_tag, elf_finalize_dynstr): Likewise.
(elf_link_add_object_symbols, elf_link_input_bfd): Likewise.
(bfd_elf_final_link, bfd_elf_gc_record_vtinherit): Likewise.
binutils/
* objdump.c (disassemble_section): Use PTR_ADD for rel_ppend.
Similar to ARM/AARCH64, we add mapping symbols in the symbol table,
to mark the start addresses of data and instructions. The $d means
data, and the $x means instruction. Then the disassembler uses these
symbols to decide whether we should dump data or instruction.
Consider the mapping-04 test case,
$ cat tmp.s
.text
.option norelax
.option norvc
.fill 2, 4, 0x1001
.byte 1
.word 0
.balign 8
add a0, a0, a0
.fill 5, 2, 0x2002
add a1, a1, a1
.data
.word 0x1 # No need to add mapping symbols.
.word 0x2
$ riscv64-unknown-elf-as tmp.s -o tmp.o
$ riscv64-unknown-elf-objdump -d tmp.o
Disassembly of section .text:
0000000000000000 <.text>:
0: 00001001 .word 0x00001001 # Marked $d, .fill directive.
4: 00001001 .word 0x00001001
8: 00000001 .word 0x00000001 # .byte + part of .word.
c: 00 .byte 0x00 # remaining .word.
d: 00 .byte 0x00 # Marked $d, odd byte of alignment.
e: 0001 nop # Marked $x, nops for alignment.
10: 00a50533 add a0,a0,a0
14: 20022002 .word 0x20022002 # Marked $d, .fill directive.
18: 20022002 .word 0x20022002
1c: 2002 .short 0x2002
1e: 00b585b3 add a1,a1,a1 # Marked $x.
22: 0001 nop # Section tail alignment.
24: 00000013 nop
* Use $d and $x to mark the distribution of data and instructions.
Alignments of code are recognized as instructions, since we usually
fill nops for them.
* If the alignment have odd bytes, then we cannot just fill the nops
into the spaces. We always fill an odd byte 0x00 at the start of
the spaces. Therefore, add a $d mapping symbol for the odd byte,
to tell disassembler that it isn't an instruction. The behavior
is same as Arm and Aarch64.
The elf/linux toolchain regressions all passed. Besides, I also
disable the mapping symbols internally, but use the new objudmp, the
regressions passed, too. Therefore, the new objudmp should dump
the objects corretly, even if they don't have any mapping symbols.
bfd/
pr 27916
* cpu-riscv.c (riscv_elf_is_mapping_symbols): Define mapping symbols.
* cpu-riscv.h: extern riscv_elf_is_mapping_symbols.
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_maybe_function_sym): Do not choose mapping
symbols as a function name.
(riscv_elf_is_target_special_symbol): Add mapping symbols.
binutils/
pr 27916
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s: Updated.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64-unused: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64-unused: Likewise.
gas/
pr 27916
* config/tc-riscv.c (make_mapping_symbol): Create a new mapping symbol.
(riscv_mapping_state): Decide whether to create mapping symbol for
frag_now. Only add the mapping symbols to text sections.
(riscv_add_odd_padding_symbol): Add the mapping symbols for the
riscv_handle_align, which have odd bytes spaces.
(riscv_check_mapping_symbols): Remove any excess mapping symbols.
(md_assemble): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_frag_align_code): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_init_frag): Add mapping symbols for frag, it usually called
by frag_var. Marked as MAP_DATA for rs_align and rs_fill, and
marked as MAP_INSN for rs_align_code.
(s_riscv_insn): Marked as MAP_INSN.
(riscv_adjust_symtab): Call riscv_check_mapping_symbols.
* config/tc-riscv.h (md_cons_align): Defined to riscv_mapping_state
with MAP_DATA.
(TC_SEGMENT_INFO_TYPE): Record mapping state for each segment.
(TC_FRAG_TYPE): Record the first and last mapping symbols for the
fragments. The first mapping symbol must be placed at the start
of the fragment.
(TC_FRAG_INIT): Defined to riscv_init_frag.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01.s: New testcase.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-01b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-02b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-03b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-04b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-04a.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/mapping-norelax-04b.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/no-relax-align.d: Updated.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/no-relax-align-2.d: Likewise.
include/
pr 27916
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_seg_mstate): Added.
opcodes/
pr 27916
* riscv-dis.c (last_map_symbol, last_stop_offset, last_map_state):
Added to dump sections with mapping symbols.
(riscv_get_map_state): Get the mapping state from the symbol.
(riscv_search_mapping_symbol): Check the sorted symbol table, and
then find the suitable mapping symbol.
(riscv_data_length): Decide which data size we should print.
(riscv_disassemble_data): Dump the data contents.
(print_insn_riscv): Handle the mapping symbols.
(riscv_symbol_is_valid): Marked mapping symbols as invalid.
FAIL: objdump -S
FAIL: objdump --source-comment
is seen on mingw for the simple reason that gcc adds a .exe suffix on
the output file if not already present. Fix that, and tidy some objcopy
tests.
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (exeext): New proc.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objcopy.exp (exe, test_prog): Use it here.
(objcopy_remove_relocations_from_executable): Catch objcopy errors.
Only run on ELF targets.
* testsuite/binutils-all/objdump.exp (exe): Set variable.
(test_build_id_debuglink, test_objdump_S): Use exe file suffix.
The following patch synchronizes includes/objdump/readelf with the Linux
Kernel in terms of ARM regset notes.
We're currently missing 3 of them:
NT_ARM_PACA_KEYS
NT_ARM_PACG_KEYS
NT_ARM_PAC_ENABLED_KEYS
We don't need GDB to bother with this at the moment, so this doesn't update
bfd/elf.c. If needed, we can do it in the future.
binutils/
* readelf.c (get_note_type): Handle new ARM PAC notes.
include/elf/
* common.h (NT_ARM_PACA_KEYS, NT_ARM_PACG_KEYS)
(NT_ARM_PAC_ENABLED_KEYS): New constants.
As discussed previously, a.out support is now quite deprecated, and in
some cases removed, in both Binutils itself and NetBSD, so this legacy
default makes little sense. `netbsdelf*` and `netbsdaout*` still work
allowing the user to be explicit about there choice. Additionally, the
configure script warns about the change as Nick Clifton requested.
One possible concern was the status of NetBSD on NS32K, where only a.out
was supported. But per [1] NetBSD has removed support, and if it were to
come back, it would be with ELF. The binutils implementation is
therefore marked obsolete, per the instructions in the last message.
With that patch and this one applied, I have confirmed the following:
--target=i686-unknown-netbsd
--target=i686-unknown-netbsdelf
builds completely
--target=i686-unknown-netbsdaout
properly fails because target is deprecated.
--target=vax-unknown-netbsdaout builds completely except for gas, where
the target is deprecated.
[1]: https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-toolchain/2021/07/19/msg004025.html
---
bfd/config.bfd | 43 +++++++++++++--------
bfd/configure.ac | 5 +--
binutils/testsuite/binutils-all/nm.exp | 2 +-
binutils/testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp | 7 +---
config/picflag.m4 | 4 +-
gas/configure.tgt | 9 +++--
gas/testsuite/gas/arm/blx-bl-convert.d | 2 +-
gas/testsuite/gas/arm/blx-local-thumb.d | 2 +-
gas/testsuite/gas/sh/basic.exp | 2 +-
gdb/configure.host | 34 +++++++----------
gdb/configure.tgt | 2 +-
gdb/testsuite/gdb.asm/asm-source.exp | 6 +--
intl/configure | 2 +-
ld/configure.tgt | 44 +++++++++++-----------
ld/testsuite/ld-arm/arm-elf.exp | 4 +-
ld/testsuite/ld-elf/elf.exp | 2 +-
ld/testsuite/ld-elf/shared.exp | 4 +-
libiberty/configure | 4 +-
Fuzzers might put -1 in arhdr.ar_size. If the size is rounded up to
and even number of bytes we get zero.
* readelf.c (process_archive): Don't round up archive_file_size.
Do round up next_arhdr_offset calculation.
netbsdpe was deprecated in c2ce831330.
Since then, a release has passed (2.37), and it was marked obselete in
5c9cbf07f3. Unless I am mistaken, that
means we can now remove support altogether.
All branches in the "active" code are remove, and the target is
additionally marked as obsolete next to the other removed ones for
libbfd and gdb.
Per [1] from the NetBSD toolchain list, PE/COFF support was removed a
decade ago. Furthermore, the sole mention of this target in the binutils
commit history was in 2002. Together, I'm led to believe this target
hasn't seen much attention in quite a while.
[1]: https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-toolchain/2021/06/16/msg003996.html
bfd/
* config.bfd: Remove netbsdpe entry.
binutils/
* configure.ac: Remove netbsdpe entry.
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (is_pecoff_format): Likewise.
* configure: Regenerate.
gas/
* configure.tgt: Remove netbsdpe entry.
gdb/
* configure.tgt: Add netbsdpe to removed targets.
ld/
* configure.tgt: Remove netbsdpe entry.
* testsuite/ld-bootstrap/bootstrap.exp: Likewise.
DWARF sections have special names on AIX which need be handled
by objdump in order to correctly print them.
This patch also adds the correlation in bfd for future uses.
bfd/
* libxcoff.h (struct xcoff_dwsect_name): Add DWARF name.
* coff-rs6000.c (xcoff_dwsect_names): Update.
* coffcode.h (sec_to_styp_flags): Likewise.
(coff_new_section_hook): Likewise.
binutils/
* dwarf.h (struct dwarf_section): Add XCOFF name.
* dwarf.c (struct dwarf_section_display): Update.
* objdump.c (load_debug_section): Add XCOFF name handler.
(dump_dwarf_section): Likewise.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_change_debug_section): Update to
match new name's field.
Since gcc commit, 3c70b3ca1ef58f302bf8c16d9e7c7bb8626408bf, we now enable
elf attributes for all riscv targets by default in gcc. Therefore, I
think binutils should have the same behavior, in case users are writing
assembly files. If --enable-default-riscv-attribute isn't set, then we
enable the elf attributes for all riscv targets by default.
ChangLog:
binutils/
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s: Add comments for riscv.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.s-64-unused: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64: Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.ss-64-unused: Likewise.
gas/
* configure.ac: If --enable-default-riscv-attribute isn't set,
then we enable the elf attributes for all riscv targets by
default.
* configure: Regenerated.