Commit Graph

99353 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Tromey
bb69c5018b Minor updates to readline configury
Christian's recent patches to gnulib made me realize that readline
should be changed to use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS (ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS is
deprecated) and that it can put the automake options into
configure.ac.  I also added no-define to the automake options.  This
doesn't matter much (we don't generate a config.h here), but gnulib
does it, and it does make configure slightly smaller.

readline/ChangeLog
2019-11-15  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* configure, Makefile.in: Rebuild.
	* configure.ac: Use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS.  Pass options to
	AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE.
	* Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS, ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS): Remove.

Change-Id: If421599cc9dd9c4c3c37b9b439ab2c22c01742ed
2019-11-15 13:46:54 -07:00
Christian Biesinger
53fea9c7e6 Use ctime_r and localtime_r for threadsafety
To make these calls threadsafe. localtime_r is provided by gnulib if
necessary, and for ctime_r we can just use it because it is in a linux-
specific file.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* maint.c (scoped_command_stats::print_time): Use localtime_r
	instead of localtime (provided through gnulib if necessary).
	* nat/linux-osdata.c (time_from_time_t): Use ctime_r instead
	of ctime.

Change-Id: I329bbdc39d5b576f51859ba00f1617e024c30cbd
2019-11-15 11:49:46 -08:00
Christian Biesinger
f8e27d88e4 Import the time_r gnulib module
This allows GDB to use localtime_r unconditionally.

See https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2019-11/msg00022.html
for details on the compile error mentioned below.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* gdbsupport/common-defs.h: Include time.h before pathmax.h to
	avoid compile errors.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* aclocal.m4: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* import/Makefile.am: Update.
	* import/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Update.
	* import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Update.
	* import/m4/time_r.m4: New file.
	* import/time_r.c: New file.
	* update-gnulib.sh: Import time_r.

Change-Id: I53fc861b192940d613ca97f2910b4533c730f667
2019-11-15 11:48:08 -08:00
Christian Biesinger
5abebf3c3f Import the strerror_r-posix module and use it in GDB.
Makes sure to assign the return value of strerror_r to an int,
so that we get a compile error if we accidentally get the
wrong version.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* gdbsupport/common.m4: No longer check for strerror_r.
	* gdbsupport/posix-strerror.c (safe_strerror): Always call the
	POSIX version of strerror_r, now that gnulib provides it if
	necessary.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* aclocal.m4: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* import/Makefile.am: Update.
	* import/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* import/extra/config.rpath: New file.
	* import/glthread/lock.c: New file.
	* import/glthread/lock.h: New file.
	* import/glthread/threadlib.c: New file.
	* import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Update.
	* import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Update.
	* import/m4/lib-ld.m4: New file.
	* import/m4/lib-link.m4: New file.
	* import/m4/lib-prefix.m4: New file.
	* import/m4/lock.m4: New file.
	* import/m4/strerror_r.m4: New file.
	* import/m4/threadlib.m4: New file.
	* import/strerror_r.c: New file.
	* update-gnulib.sh: Import strerror_r-posix.

Change-Id: I5cfeb12a5203a4cd94a78581541e6085a68685c3
2019-11-15 11:12:24 -08:00
Christian Biesinger
33bd0102c1 Generate gnulib's toplevel Makefile.in using automake
This is a lot simpler and as a side-effect this will correctly
regenerate import/Makefile and config.h during rebuilds if
necessary.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

2019-11-15  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* Makefile.am: New file.
	* Makefile.in: Replace with generated file.
	* aclocal-m4-deps.mk: Remove.
	* configure.ac: Use the foreign option for automake and specify
	the aclocal search path here.
	* update-gnulib.sh: Don't generate aclocal-m4-deps.mk anymore.
	Also don't specify the aclocal include path here, now that it
	is in configure.ac.

Change-Id: I6a2c4d41cf4f0e21d5c813197bad63ed5c08e408
2019-11-15 11:00:39 -08:00
Nick Clifton
71d3dc7430 Revert previous delta.
PR 2587
	* Makefile.am: Revert change from 2019-11-13.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2019-11-15 11:52:50 +00:00
Christian Biesinger
9a3516679b Update README
Adds descriptions for some recent-ish configure options to README.

Also updates the minimum Python version per commit
6c28e44a35.

2019-11-14  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* README (`configure' options): Update.

Change-Id: I8ce8ca6935afbd130295e143802c585cf1e735f9
2019-11-14 16:47:19 -08:00
GDB Administrator
45e774e921 Automatic date update in version.in 2019-11-15 00:00:24 +00:00
Tom Tromey
55708e99ac Allow re-assigning to convenience variables
A customer reported somewhat odd gdb behavior, where re-assigning an
array or string to a convenience variable would yield "Too many array
elements".  A test case is:

    (gdb) p $x = "x"
    (gdb) p $x = "xyz"

This patch fixes the problem by making a special case in the evaluator
for assignment to convenience variables, which seems like the correct
behavior.

Note that a previous patch implemented this for Ada, see commit
f411722cb ("Allow re-assigning to convenience variables").

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-14  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard) <BINOP_ASSIGN>: Do not pass an
	expected type for the RHS if the LHS is a convenience variable.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-11-14  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* gdb.base/gdbvars.exp (test_convenience_variables): Add
	regression tests.

Change-Id: I5e66a2d243931a5c43c7af4bc9f6717464c2477e
2019-11-14 11:58:50 -07:00
Tom de Vries
6b92c0d353 [gdb/doc] Fix typos
Fix typos in gdb docs.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

2019-11-14  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	* gdb.texinfo: Fix typos.
	* python.texi: Same.
	* stabs.texinfo: Same.

Change-Id: I044d6788eeea48e4a9b73ee752e5aaf333e56a46
2019-11-14 14:43:11 +01:00
Nick Clifton
63442f6a2e Another attempt at fixing building gprof with gmake.
PR 2587
	* Makefile.am (SUFFIXES): Add .c.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2019-11-14 12:11:43 +00:00
Simon Marchi
4b09bb2eff gdb: fix build error in unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c
When building with gcc 9.2.0, I get the following build error:

    In file included from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c:23:
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbsupport/gdb_vecs.h: In instantiation of ‘T unordered_remove(std::__debug::vector<T>&, typename std::__debug::vector<T>::iterator) [with T = selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj; typename std::__debug::vector<T>::iterator = __gnu_debug::_Safe_iterator<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj*, std::__cxx1998::vector<selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj, std::allocator<selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj> > >, std::__debug::vector<selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj>, std::random_access_iterator_tag>]’:
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c:53:26:   required from here
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbsupport/gdb_vecs.h:53:5: error: implicitly-declared ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj::obj(const selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj&)’ is deprecated [-Werror=deprecated-copy]
       53 |   T removed = std::move (*it);
          |     ^~~~~~~
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c:41:10: note: because ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj’ has user-provided ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj& selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj::operator=(const selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj&)’
       41 |     obj &operator= (const obj &other)
          |          ^~~~~~~~
    In file included from /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c:23:
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbsupport/gdb_vecs.h:58:10: error: implicitly-declared ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj::obj(const selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj&)’ is deprecated [-Werror=deprecated-copy]
       58 |   return removed;
          |          ^~~~~~~
    /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c:41:10: note: because ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj’ has user-provided ‘selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj& selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj::operator=(const selftests::vector_utils_tests::unordered_remove_tests()::obj&)’
       41 |     obj &operator= (const obj &other)
          |          ^~~~~~~~

I think gcc is just trying to be nice and recommends the good practice
of providing a copy constructor if an assignment operator is provided.

Silence the warning by providing that copy constructor.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c (unordered_remove_tests::obj):
	Provide explicit default and copy constructor.

Change-Id: I323361b1c120bf8525613b74e7e5983910e002df
2019-11-14 06:51:30 -05:00
Jan Beulich
6aa385b96f x86: drop redundant SYSCALL/SYSRET templates
The Cpu64 forms are no different in their attributes except for the CPU
flags; there's no need to key these off of anything other than
CpuSYSCALL even for the 64-bit forms. Dropping these improves the
diagnostic on SYSRETQ used in 32-bit code from "unsupported instruction
`sysret'" to "invalid instruction suffix for `sysret'".
2019-11-14 08:48:22 +01:00
Jan Beulich
0cfa3eb352 x86: fold individual Jump* attributes into a single Jump one
..., taking just 3 bits instead of 5. No two of them are used together.
2019-11-14 08:47:44 +01:00
Jan Beulich
6f2f06bea8 x86: make JumpAbsolute an insn attribute
... instead of an operand one: There's only ever one operand here
anyway.
2019-11-14 08:47:03 +01:00
Jan Beulich
601e856422 x86: make AnySize an insn attribute
... instead of an operand one. Which operand it applies to can be
determined from other operand properties, but as it turns out the only
place it is actually used at doesn't even need further qualification.
2019-11-14 08:46:19 +01:00
Jan Beulich
db4e407b53 x86/Intel: correct CMPSD test cases' regexp closing paren placement
The CMPS test case derivation from their MOVS counterparts I did in
d241b91073 ("x86/Intel: correct MOVSD and CMPSD handling") ended up
with misplaced closing parentheses in som regexps. Correct this.
2019-11-14 08:45:26 +01:00
Jan Beulich
b15384304b x86/Intel: extend MOVSD/CMPSD testsuite coverage
This is still in the context of PR/gas 25167.
2019-11-14 08:44:57 +01:00
Philippe Waroquiers
bd454f8baf Fix python gdbpy_breakpoint_object leak.
valgrind reports a leak when a breakpoint is created then deleted:

==1313== 40 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,115 of 8,596
==1313==    at 0x4835753: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:307)
==1313==    by 0x6E05BC: _PyObject_New (object.c:255)
==1313==    by 0x470E4B: gdbpy_breakpoint_created(breakpoint*) (py-breakpoint.c:1023)
==1313==    by 0x2946D9: operator() (std_function.h:687)
==1313==    by 0x2946D9: notify (observable.h:106)
==1313==    by 0x2946D9: install_breakpoint(int, std::unique_ptr<breakpoint, std::default_delete<breakpoint> >&&, int) (breakpoint.c:8136)
==1313==    by 0x295BCA: create_breakpoint_sal (breakpoint.c:8878)
==1313==    by 0x295BCA: create_breakpoints_sal (breakpoint.c:8919)
==1313==    by 0x295BCA: create_breakpoints_sal_default (breakpoint.c:13671)
...

The leak is due to a superfluous Py_INCREF when the python object
is allocated inside gdbpy_breakpoint_created, when the python object
is allocated locally: this object has already a refcount of 1, and
the only reference is the reference from the C breakpoint object.
The Py_INCREF is however needed when the python object was created from
python: the python object was stored in bppy_pending_object, and
gdbpy_breakpoint_created creates a new reference to this object.

Solve the leak by calling 'Py_INCREF (newbp);' only in the bppy_pending_object
case.

Regression tested on debian/amd64 natively and under valgrind on centos/amd64.
Before the patch, 795 tests have a definite leak.
After the patch, 197 have a definite leak.

Thanks to Tom, that helped on irc with the python refcount logic.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-14  Philippe Waroquiers  <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>

	* python/py-finishbreakpoint.c (gdbpy_breakpoint_created):
	only call Py_INCREF (newbp) in the bppy_pending_object case.
2019-11-14 02:25:39 +01:00
GDB Administrator
7a13ef8500 Automatic date update in version.in 2019-11-14 00:00:21 +00:00
Tom Tromey
d1aa3cf0bb Remove symbol-related static asserts
commit 3573abe1d added static asserts to ensure that symbol sizes
don't vary.  However, this failed to build on Windows, on at least one
ARM platform (see PR build/25182) and internally at AdaCore for PPC.

So, I think it is probably best to just remove these assertions,
effectively reverting 3573abe1d.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-13  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	PR build/25182:
	* psympriv.h (partial_symbol): Remove static assert.
	* symtab.h (general_symbol_info, symbol): Remove static assert.

Change-Id: I51940fb2240c474838b48494b5072081701789bb
2019-11-13 12:52:40 -07:00
Nick Clifton
415ed2a175 Fix the rule for building C files in the gprof makefile.
PR 2587
	* Makefile.am: Fix rule to build .c files from .m files.
2019-11-13 11:21:39 +00:00
Christian Biesinger
17298d65f0 gnulib: Fix path to import/Makefile{,.in}
I don't know why this path is what it is but it is clearly wrong.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

2019-11-12  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* Makefile.in: Fix path to say import/ instead of gnulib/.

Change-Id: Ib7f6a319ee764d20072e38911766ca7032d6ca8e
2019-11-12 21:24:12 -06:00
Jim Wilson
7722d40a9c RISC-V: Support the INSN_CLASS.*F.* classes for .insn directive.
We have to enable the f extension through -march or ELF attribute if we use the
FPR in .insn directive.  The behavior is same as the riscv_opcodes.

	2019-11-12  Nelson Chu  <nelson.chu@sifive.com>
	opcodes/
	* riscv-opc.c (riscv_insn_types): Replace the INSN_CLASS_I with
	INSN_CLASS_F and the INSN_CLASS_C with INSN_CLASS_F_AND_C if we
	use the floating point register (FPR).

	gas/
	* testsuite/gas/riscv/insn.d: Add the f extension to -march option.

Change-Id: I4f59d04c82673ef84c56ecd2659ad8ce164dd626
2019-11-12 16:13:00 -08:00
GDB Administrator
31175a0d71 Automatic date update in version.in 2019-11-13 00:00:20 +00:00
Jim Wilson
c6261a00c3 RISC-V: Fix ld relax failure with calls and align directives.
Make _bfd_riscv_relax_call handle section alignment padding same as
the _bfd_riscv_relax_lui and _bfd_riscv_relax_pc functions already
do.  Use the max section alignment if section boundaries are crossed,
otherwise the alignment of the containing section.

	bfd/
	PR 25181
	* elfnn-riscv.c (_bfd_riscv_relax_call): Always add max_alignment to
	foff.  If sym_sec->output_section and sec->output_section are the same
	and not *ABS* then set max_alignment to that section's alignment.

	ld/
	PR 25181
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax-0.s: New file.
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax-1.s: New file.
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax-2.s: New file.
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax-3.s: New file.
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/call-relax.d: New test.
	* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Run call-relax test.

Change-Id: Iaf65cee52345abf1955f36e8e72c4f6cc0db8d9a
2019-11-12 15:53:22 -08:00
Andrew Burgess
e06f3d6eba gdb: Support printf 'z' size modifier
The gdb format mechanism doesn't currently support the 'z' size
modifier, there are a few places in GDB where this is used.  Instead
of removing these uses lets just add support to GDB for using 'z'.

I found this issue when trying to use some of the debug output.
Before this commit:

  (gdb) set debug dwarf-line 9
  (gdb) file test
  Reading symbols from test...
  Unrecognized format specifier 'z' in printf
  (No debugging symbols found in test)
  (gdb)

After this commit:

  (gdb) set debug dwarf-line 9
  (gdb) file test
  Reading symbols from test...
  Adding dir 1: /usr/include
  Adding file 1: test.c
  Adding file 2: stdc-predef.h
  Processing actual line 3: file 1, address 0x4004a0, is_stmt 1, discrim 0
  Processing actual line 4: file 1, address 0x4004a0, is_stmt 1, discrim 0
  .... lots of debug output ...
  Processing actual line 10: file 1, address 0x4003b7, is_stmt 0, discrim 0
  (gdb)

I've added a self test to cover the integer format size modifiers,
including the 'z' modifier.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbsupport/format.c (format_pieces::format_pieces): Support
	printf 'z' size modifier.
	* gdbsupport/format.h (enum argclass): Add size_t_arg.
	* printcmd.c (ui_printf):  Handle size_t_arg.
	* ui-out.c (ui_out::vmessage): Likewise.
	* unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c (test_format_int_sizes): New
	function.
	(run_tests): Call test_format_int_sizes.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:

	* ax.c (ax_printf): Handle size_t_arg.

Change-Id: Ib6c44d88aa5bce265d757e4c0698881803dd186f
2019-11-12 23:46:41 +00:00
Christian Biesinger
468c0cbb32 Make struct symbol inherit from general_symbol_info
Since this is now no longer a POD, also give it a constructor that
initializes all fields. (I have considered overloading operator new
to zero-initialize the memory instead; let me know if you prefer that)

gdb/ChangeLog:

2019-11-12  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* ada-exp.y (write_ambiguous_var): Update.
	* buildsym.c (add_symbol_to_list): Update.
	* dwarf2read.c (read_variable): Update.
	(new_symbol): Update.
	* jit.c (finalize_symtab): Update.
	* language.c (language_alloc_type_symbol): Update.
	* symtab.c (fixup_symbol_section): Update.
	(initialize_objfile_symbol_1): Move code to...
	(initialize_objfile_symbol): ...here. Remove now-unnecessary memset.
	(allocate_symbol): Update.
	(allocate_template_symbol): Update.
	(get_symbol_address): Update.
	* symtab.h (struct symbol): Inherit from general_symbol_info instead
	of having as a field, and add a constructor.
	(SYMBOL_VALUE): Update.
	(SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS): Update.
	(SET_SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS): Update.
	(SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES): Update.
	(SYMBOL_VALUE_COMMON_BLOCK): Update.
	(SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE): Update.
	(SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN): Update.
	(SYMBOL_LANGUAGE): Update.
	(SYMBOL_SECTION): Update.
	(SYMBOL_OBJ_SECTION): Update.
	(SYMBOL_SET_LANGUAGE): Update.
	(SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME): Update.
	(SYMBOL_SET_NAMES): Update.
	(SYMBOL_NATURAL_NAME): Update.
	(SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME): Update.
	(SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME): Update.
	(SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME): Update.
	(SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Update.
	(struct symbol): Update.
	(struct template_symbol): Update.
	(struct rust_vtable_symbol): Update.
	* xcoffread.c (SYMBOL_DUP): Update.

Change-Id: I05b1628455bcce3efaa101e65ef051708d17eb07
2019-11-12 15:21:35 -06:00
Tom Tromey
ed2c82c364 Consolidate setting of current_layout
Currently several functions in tui-layout.c set current_layout after
their work is done.  This moves this assignment to show_layout,
instead.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-12  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-layout.c (show_layout): Set current_layout.
	(show_source_disasm_command, show_data)
	(show_source_or_disasm_and_command): Don't set current_layout.

Change-Id: Id8b23797d68e607f0fcd6d29b8801869d40d1869
2019-11-12 12:29:15 -07:00
Tom Tromey
d9fcefd53a Move _initialize_tui_layout to end of file
This moves _initialize_tui_layout to the end of the file, conforming
to the typical gdb style.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-12  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-layout.c (_initialize_tui_layout): Move to end.

Change-Id: I667f741b44b2bc470878a36f093a96d89fa31893
2019-11-12 12:29:14 -07:00
Tom Tromey
45e4216376 Make TUI resizing tests more robust
As Sergio pointed out, the TUI resizing tests are flaky.  Debugging
this showed three main problems.

1. expect's "stty" command processes its arguments one-by-one.  So,
rather than requesting a single resize, it sends two separate resize
requests (one for rows and one for columns).  This means gdb sees two
SIGWINCH signals and resizes the terminal twice.

I consider this a bug in expect, but I couldn't readily see how to
report a bug; and anyway the fix wouldn't propagate very quickly.

This patch works around this problem by explicitly doing two separate
resizes (so it will be robust if expect ever does change); and then by
waiting for each resize to complete before continuing.

2. gdb uses curses to drive the console rendering.  Currently the test
suite looks for terminal text insertion sequences to decide when a
command has completed.  However, it turns out that, sometimes, curses
can output things in non-obvious ways.  I didn't debug into curses but
I guess this can happen due to output optimizations.  No matter the
reason, sometimes the current approach of only tracking text
insertions is not enough to detect that gdb has finished rendering.

This patch fixes this problem by arranging to detect the termination
output after any curses command, not just insertion.

3. Detecting when a resize has completed is tricky.  In fact, I could
not find a way to reliably do this.

This patch fixes this problem by adding a special maint
"tui-resize-message" setting to gdb.  When this is enabled, gdb will
print a message after each SIGWINCH has been fully processed.  The
test suite enables this mode and then waits for the message in order
to know when control can be returned to the calling test.

This patch also adds a timeout, to avoid the situation where the
terminal code fails to notice a change for some reason.  This lets the
test at least try to continue.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-12  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui-win.c (resize_message): New global.
	(show_tui_resize_message): New function.
	(tui_async_resize_screen): Print message if requested.
	(_initialize_tui_win): Add tui-resize-message setting.
	* NEWS: Add entry for new commands.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-12  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document new command.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-11-12  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* lib/tuiterm.exp (_accept): Add wait_for parameter.  Check output
	after any command.  Expect prompt after WAIT_FOR is seen.
	(enter_tui): Enable resize messages.
	(command): Expect command in output.
	(get_line): Avoid error when cursor appears to be off-screen.
	(dump_screen): Include screen size in title.
	(_do_resize): New proc, from "resize".
	(resize): Rewrite.  Do resize in two steps.
	* gdb.tui/empty.exp (layouts): Fix entries.
	(check_boxes): Remove xfail.
	(check_text): Dump screen on failure.

Change-Id: I420e0259cb99b21adcd28f671b99161eefa7a51d
2019-11-12 12:29:14 -07:00
Mihail Ionescu
ef8f595f73 [gas][arm] Enable VLDM, VSTM, VPUSH, VPOP for MVE
This patch enables a few instructions for Armv8.1-M MVE. Currently VLDM,
VSTM, VSTR, VLDR, VPUSH and VPOP are enabled only when the Armv8-M
Floating-point Extension is enabled.  According to the ARMv8.1-M ARM,
section A.1.4.2[1], they can be enabled by having "Armv8-M Floating-point
Extension and/or Armv8.1-M MVE".

[1]https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0553/bh/armv81-m-architecture-reference-manual

2019-11-12  Mihail Ionescu  <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>

	* config/tc-arm.c (do_vfp_nsyn_push): Move in order to enable it for
	both fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd and mve_ext and add call to the aliased vstm
	instruction for mve_ext.
	(do_vfp_nsyn_pop): Move in order to enable it for both
	fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd and mve_ext and add call to the aliased vldm
	instruction for mve_ext.
	(do_neon_ldm_stm): Add fpu_vfp_ext_v1 and mve_ext checks.
	(insns): Enable vldm, vldmia, vldmdb, vstm, vstmia, vstmdb, vpop,
	vpush, and fldd, fstd, flds, fsts for arm_ext_v6t2 instead
	of fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd.
	* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.s: New.
	* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.d: New.
2019-11-12 14:01:10 +00:00
Mihail Ionescu
ce760a7620 [binutils][arm] Update the decoding of MVE VMOV, VMVN
This patch updates the decoding of the VMOV and VMVN instructions which depend on cmode.
Previously VMOV and VMVN with cmode 1101 were not allowed.
The cmode changes also required updating of the MVE conflict checking.
Now instructions with opcodes 0xef800d50 and 0xef800e70 correctly get decoded as VMOV
and VMVN, respectively.

2019-11-12  Mihail Ionescu  <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>

	* opcodes/arm-dis.c (mve_opcodes): Enable VMOV imm to vec with
	cmode 1101.
	(is_mve_encoding_conflict): Update cmode conflict checks for
	MVE_VMVN_IMM.

2019-11-12  Mihail Ionescu  <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>

	* gas/config/tc-arm.c (do_neon_mvn): Allow mve_ext cmode=0xd.
	* testsuite/gas/arm/mve-vmov-vmvn-vorr-vbic.s: New test.
	* testsuite/gas/arm/mve-vmov-vmvn-vorr-vbic.d: Likewise.
2019-11-12 14:01:04 +00:00
Mihail Ionescu
f439988037 [gas][arm] Make .fpu reset the FPU/Coprocessor feature bits
This patch is fixes the '.fpu' behaviour.
Currently, using '.fpu' resets the previously selected '.fpu' options (by overwriting them),
but does not reset previous FPU options selected by other means (ie. when using
'.arch_extension fp' in conjunction with '.fpu <x>', the FPU is not reset).

Example:
.arch armv8-a         @ SET BASE
.arch_extension fp    @ ADD FP-ARMV8
.fpu vfpv2            @ ADD (already existing bits, does not reset)
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ OK

.arch armv8-a         @ RESET
.fpu fp-armv8         @ ADD FP-ARMV8
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ OK
.fpu vfpv2            @ RESET to VFPV2
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ ERROR

After the patch this becomes:
.arch armv8-a         @ SET BASE
.arch_extension fp    @ ADD FP-ARMV8
.fpu vfpv2            @ RESET TO VFPV2
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ ERROR

.arch armv8-a         @ RESET
.fpu fp-armv8         @ ADD FP-ARMV8
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ OK
.fpu vfpv2            @ RESET to VFPV2
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2   @ ERROR

gas/ChangeLog:

2019-11-11  Mihail Ionescu  <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>

        * config/tc-arm.c (s_arm_fpu): Clear selected_cpu fpu bits.
        (fpu_any): Remove OBJ_ELF guards.
        * gas/testsuite/gas/arm/fpu-rst.s: New.
        * gas/testsuite/gas/arm/fpu-rst.d: New.
        * gas/testsuite/gas/arm/fpu-rst.l: New.
2019-11-12 14:00:34 +00:00
Jan Beulich
51c8edf68b x86: fold EsSeg into IsString
EsSeg (a per-operand bit) is used with IsString (a per-insn attribute)
only. Extend the attribute to 2 bits, thus allowing to encode
- not a string insn,
- string insn with neither operand requiring use of %es:,
- string insn with 1st operand requiring use of %es:,
- string insn with 2nd operand requiring use of %es:,
which covers all possible cases, allowing to drop EsSeg.

The (transient) need to comment out the OTUnused #define did uncover an
oversight in the earlier OTMax -> OTNum conversion, which is being taken
care of here.
2019-11-12 09:09:31 +01:00
Jan Beulich
474da251bf x86: eliminate ImmExt abuse
Drop the remaining instances left in place by commit c3949f432f ("x86:
limit ImmExt abuse), now that we have a way to specify specific GPRs.

Take the opportunity and also introduce proper 16-bit forms of
applicable SVME insns as well as 1-operand forms of CLZERO.
2019-11-12 09:08:32 +01:00
Jan Beulich
75e5731b8f x86: introduce operand type "instance"
Special register "class" instances can't be combined with one another
(neither in templates nor in register entries), and hence it is not a
good use of resources (memory as well as execution time) to represent
them as individual bits of a bit field.

Furthermore the generalization becoming possible will allow
improvements to the handling of insns accepting only individual
registers as their operands.
2019-11-12 09:07:34 +01:00
GDB Administrator
aa16be3993 Automatic date update in version.in 2019-11-12 00:00:28 +00:00
Tom Tromey
c86d74cc7d Document and extend readline-bindable functions
This adds readline-bindable function names to a few gdb functions that
already had key bindings.  This lets users change the bindings.

This also removes the gdb-command function.  Due to how this function
is implemented, it doesn't make sense to allow binding it.

Finally, this updates the documentation to reflect these changes.

gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-11  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* tui/tui.c (tui_initialize_readline): Add new bindable readline
	functions.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-11  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (TUI Keys): Document readline function names.

Change-Id: I2233779b7aefe372f19bd03c8f325733c3385e72
2019-11-11 16:58:30 -07:00
Tom Tromey
c71acd153e Document operate-and-get-next
This adds some documentation for the operate-and-get-next readline
function that gdb supplies.  The text is largely taken from the Bash
manual.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-11  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Editing): Document operate-and-get-next.

Change-Id: I9adb16d9ce84bfbda5fe8a2828f668ea878c080c
2019-11-11 16:58:30 -07:00
Christian Biesinger
7b7b9424d3 Use getpwuid_r instead of getpwuid
gdb/ChangeLog:

2019-11-11  Christian Biesinger  <cbiesinger@google.com>

	* nat/linux-osdata.c (user_from_uid): Use getpwuid_r.

Change-Id: I587359267f8963ef1da6ba0223a1525807a721de
2019-11-11 15:28:22 -08:00
Tom Tromey
fb092e09a2 Fix typo in vFile:pwrite documentation
A user on irc noticed that the remote protocol documentation mentioned
"vFile:write" -- but this is a typo, there is only "vFile:pwrite".
This patch fixes the bug.  Tested by rebuilding, committing as
obvious.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-11  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Host I/O Packets): Fix typo in "vFile:pwrite".

Change-Id: I2f668a691eed7883ba6bc092471739f44c82301b
2019-11-11 12:45:35 -07:00
Jan Beulich
91802f3cfe Arm64: SVE2's smaxp/sminp require operands 1 and 3 to be the same register
This is just like for their umaxp/uminp and fmaxp/fminp counterparts.
2019-11-11 13:28:35 +01:00
Jan Beulich
4f5fc85d6c Arm64: fix build with old glibc
Some old glibc versions have string.h surface "index", which some
compilers then warn about if shadowed by a local variable. Re-use an
existing variable instead.
2019-11-11 13:27:47 +01:00
Miguel Saldivar
6f485ad416 PR24996, Gold fix for ternary operator within linker scripts
PR 24996
	* expression.cc (Trinary_expression::arg2_value): Use correct integer
	expression when calling "eval_maybe_dot" method.
	(Trinary_expression::arg3_value): Likewise.
2019-11-11 10:56:44 +10:30
GDB Administrator
b7a3015b1a Automatic date update in version.in 2019-11-11 00:00:24 +00:00
Andrew Burgess
086baaf134 gdb/python: Introduce gdb.lookup_static_symbols
If gdb.lookup_static_symbol is going to return a single symbol then it
makes sense (I think) for it to return a context sensitive choice of
symbol, that is the global static symbol that would be visible to the
program at that point.

However, if the user of the python API wants to instead get a
consistent set of global static symbols, no matter where they stop,
then they have to instead consider all global static symbols with a
given name - there could be many.  That is what this new API function
offers, it returns a list (possibly empty) of all global static
symbols matching a given name (and optionally a given symbol domain).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* python/py-symbol.c (gdbpy_lookup_static_symbols): New
	function.
	* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_lookup_static_symbols):
	Declare new function.
	* python/python.c (python_GdbMethods): Add
	gdb.lookup_static_symbols method.
	* NEWS: Mention gdb.lookup_static_symbols.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-symbol.exp: Add test for
	gdb.lookup_static_symbols.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Symbols In Python): Add documentation for
	gdb.lookup_static_symbols.

Change-Id: I1153b0ae5bcbc43b3dcf139043c7a48bf791e1a3
2019-11-10 21:35:32 +00:00
Andrew Burgess
09ff83af3c gdb/python: smarter symbol lookup for gdb.lookup_static_symbol
When using gdb.lookup_static_symbol I think that GDB should find
static symbols (global symbol with static linkage) from the current
object file ahead of static symbols from other object files.

This means that if we have two source files f1.c and f2.c, and both
files contains 'static int foo;', then when we are stopped in f1.c a
call to 'gdb.lookup_static_symbol ("foo")' will find f1.c::foo, and if
we are stopped in f2.c we would find 'f2.c::foo'.

Given that gdb.lookup_static_symbol always returns a single symbol,
but there can be multiple static symbols with the same name GDB is
always making a choice about which symbols to return.  I think that it
makes sense for the choice GDB makes in this case to match what a user
would get on the command line if they asked to 'print foo'.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-symbol.c: Declare and call function from new
	py-symbol-2.c file.
	* gdb.python/py-symbol.exp: Compile both source files, and add new
	tests for gdb.lookup_static_symbol.
	* gdb.python/py-symbol-2.c: New file.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Symbols In Python): Extend documentation for
	gdb.lookup_static_symbol.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* python/py-symbol.c (gdbpy_lookup_static_symbol): Lookup in
	static block of current object file first.  Also fix typo in
	header comment.

Change-Id: Ie55dbeb8806f35577b46015deecde27a0ca2ab64
2019-11-10 21:35:28 +00:00
Andrew Burgess
eb2dd8df76 gdb: Add a class to track last display symtab and line information
In stack.c we currently have a set of static global variables to track
the last displayed symtab and line.  This commit moves all of these
into a class and adds an instance of the class to track the same
information.

The API into stack.c is unchanged after this cleanup.

There should be no user visible changes after this commit.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* stack.c (set_last_displayed_sal): Delete.
	(last_displayed_sal_valid): Delete.
	(last_displayed_pspace): Delete.
	(last_displayed_addr): Delete.
	(last_displayed_symtab): Delete.
	(last_displayed_line): Delete.
	(class last_displayed_symtab_info_type): New.
	(last_displayed_symtab_info): New static global variable.
	(print_frame_info): Call methods on last_displayed_symtab_info.
	(clear_last_displayed_sal): Update header comment, and make use of
	last_displayed_symtab_info.
	(last_displayed_sal_is_valid): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_pspace): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_addr): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_symtab): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_line): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_sal): Likewise.
	* stack.h (clear_last_displayed_sal): Update header comment.
	(last_displayed_sal_is_valid): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_pspace): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_addr): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_symtab): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_line): Likewise.
	(get_last_displayed_sal): Likewise.

Change-Id: Ia3dbfe267feec03108c5c8ed8bd94fc0a030c3ed
2019-11-10 21:00:14 +00:00
Andrew Burgess
621377757c gdb: Convert frame_show_address to return a bool
Just a clean up, should be no user visible changes after this commit.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* stack.c (frame_show_address): Convert return type to bool.
	* stack.h (frame_show_address): Likewise, and update header
	comment.

Change-Id: Iaaa9ebd4ff6534db19c5329f1c604932c747bd7f
2019-11-10 21:00:13 +00:00