Triggered by https://launchpad.net/bugs/1275210, to be able to cope
with UTF-8 characters in gdbtui.
Reference:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-09/msg00356.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-26 Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
* configure.ac: Search ncursesw before ncurses.
Check ncursesw/ncurses.h before ncurses/ncurses.h.
* gdb_curses.h: Include <ncursesw/ncurses.h>
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
PR 22172
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_info_to_howto): Do not trigger an
assertion failure if elf_x86_64_rtype_to_howto has already issued
an error message.
Using read_attribute_value accomplishes two things: It checks for
unexpected formats, and ensures the buffer pointer always increments.
PR 22210
* dwarf2.c (read_formatted_entries): Use read_attribute_value to
read data.
Given that GCC has obsoleted/removed support for Solaris 9 in GCC 4.9/5 in 2013:
https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.9/changes.htmlhttps://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2013-05/msg00728.html
and the last gdb version that can be compiled with gcc 4.9 is 7.12.1 only when
configured with --disable-build-with-cxx, it's time to obsolete/remove support
for Solaris < 10.
This patch does this, simplifying configure.nat along the way (only a single
sol2 configuration with variants for i386 and sparc).
Some configure checks for older Solaris versions can go, too, and the check
for libthread_db.so.1 removed:
* Since Solaris 10, dlopen has moved to libc and libdl.so is just a
filter on ld.so.1, so no need to check.
* $RDYNAMIC is already handled above (and is a no-op with Solaris ld
anyway).
Both proc-service.c and sol-thread.c lose support for (Solaris-only)
PROC_SERVICE_IS_OLD.
The attached revised patch has been tested on sparcv9-sun-solaris2.10,
sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.4, amd64-pc-solaris2.10, amd64-pc-solaris2.11.4,
and x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
I've also started an i386-pc-solaris2.9 build to check that it really
stops as expected.
PR gdb/22185
* configure.host <*-*-solaris2.[01], *-*-solaris2.[2-9]*>: Mark as
obsolete.
Use gdb_host sol2 for i[34567]86-*-solaris2*, x86_64-*-solaris2*.
Remove i386sol2 support.
* configure.nat <i386sol2>: Remove.
<sol2-64>: Fold into ...
<sol2>: ... this.
Move common settings to default section.
Add sol-thread.o.
* configure.tgt <i[34567]86-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*,
x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*>: Rename to ...
<i[34567]86-*-solaris2*, x86_64-*-solaris2*>: ... this.
<i[34567]86-*-solaris*>: Remove.
<sparc-*-solaris2.[0-6], sparc-*-solaris2.[0-6].*>: Remove.
* configure.ac: Remove wctype in libw check.
(_MSE_INT_H): Don't define on Solaris 7-9.
<solaris*>: Remove libthread_db.so.1 check.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config.in: Regenerate.
* proc-service.c: Remove PROC_SERVICE_IS_OLD handling.
(gdb_ps_prochandle_t, gdb_ps_read_buf_t, gdb_ps_write_buf_t)
(gdb_ps_size_t): Remove.
Use base types in users.
* sol-thread.c: Likewise, also for gdb_ps_addr_t.
* NEWS (Changes since GDB 8.0): Document Solaris 2.0-9 removal.
When testing my Solaris < 10 removal patch on Solaris/SPARC, I found
that gdb mainline is currently broken there due to the recent SPARC M7
ADI patches:
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:1876:0: error: "PSR_ICC" redefined [-Werror]
#define PSR_ICC 0x00f00000
^
In file included from /usr/include/v7/sys/privregs.h:24:0,
from /usr/include/sys/regset.h:420,
from /usr/include/sys/ucontext.h:21,
from /usr/include/sys/signal.h:231,
from /usr/include/sys/procset.h:23,
from /usr/include/sys/wait.h:25,
from /usr/include/stdlib.h:21,
from build-gnulib/import/stdlib.h:36,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/common/common-defs.h:53,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/defs.h:28,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:20:
/usr/include/v7/sys/psr.h:35:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
#define PSR_ICC 0x00F00000 /* integer condition codes */
^
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:1878:0: error: "PSR_IMPL" redefined [-Werror]
#define PSR_IMPL 0xf0000000
^
In file included from /usr/include/v7/sys/privregs.h:24:0,
from /usr/include/sys/regset.h:420,
from /usr/include/sys/ucontext.h:21,
from /usr/include/sys/signal.h:231,
from /usr/include/sys/procset.h:23,
from /usr/include/sys/wait.h:25,
from /usr/include/stdlib.h:21,
from build-gnulib/import/stdlib.h:36,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/common/common-defs.h:53,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/defs.h:28,
from /vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:20:
/usr/include/v7/sys/psr.h:41:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
#define PSR_IMPL 0xF0000000 /* implementation */
^
Comparing Solaris 11.4 <v7/sys/psr.h> and sparc64-tdep.c, there are more
inconsistencies:
<v7/sys/psr.h>:
#define PSR_S 0x00000080 /* supervisor mode */
#define PSR_ICC 0x00F00000 /* integer condition codes */
#define PSR_VER 0x0F000000 /* mask version */
#define PSR_IMPL 0xF0000000 /* implementation */
#define PSR_RSV 0x000FC000 /* reserved */
sparc64-tdep.c:
#define PSR_S 0x00000080
#define PSR_ICC 0x00f00000
#define PSR_VERS 0x0f000000
#define PSR_IMPL 0xf0000000
#define PSR_V8PLUS 0xff000000
#define PSR_XCC 0x000f0000
Apart from the capitalization differences that trip g++, the names
differ (PSR_VER vs. PSR_VERS), PSR_XCC is included in Solaris' PSR_RSV,
and there's no PSR_V8PLUS on Solaris either.
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c: In function `int adi_tag_fd()':
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:296:63: error: format `%d' expects argument of type `int', but argument 4 has type `pid_t {aka long int}' [-Werror=format=]
snprintf (cl_name, sizeof(cl_name), "/proc/%d/adi/tags", pid);
^
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c: In function `bool adi_is_addr_mapped(CORE_ADDR, std::size_t)':
/vol/src/gnu/gdb/gdb/local/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:314:64: error: format `%d' expects argument of type `int', but argument 4 has type `pid_t {aka long int}' [-Werror=format=]
snprintf (filename, sizeof filename, "/proc/%d/adi/maps", pid);
^
You cannot always print a pid_t, which can be either int or long on
Solaris, as an int.
Obviously, the ADI patch which modifies code shared between all SPARC
targets, hasn't been tested on anything but Linux/SPARC.
The patch below includes the minimal fixes necessary to unbreak the
Solaris/SPARC build.
However, as detailed in the PR, there's more breakage here: apart from
not bothering to implement ADI support on Solaris, the code contains
several more changes to shared/common SPARC code that are simply wrong
on anything but Linux/SPARC.
The patch was tested on sparcv9-sun-solaris2.10 and
sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.4 (build and gdb/gdb gdb/gdb smoke test only).
PR build/22206
* sparc64-tdep.c (adi_tag_fd): Print pid as long.
(adi_is_addr_mapped): Likewise.
(PSR_ICC): Don't redefine.
(PSR_IMPL): Likewise.
This patch adds bounds checking for DW_FORM_ref_addr die refs, and
calculates them relative to the first .debug_info section. See the
big comment for why calculating relative to the current .debug_info
section was wrong for relocatable object files.
PR 22209
* dwarf2.c (struct comp_unit): Delete sec_info_ptr field.
(find_abstract_instance_name): Calculate DW_FORM_ref_addr relative
to stash->info_ptr_memory, and check die_ref is within that memory.
Set info_ptr_end correctly when another CU is refd. Check die_ref
for DW_FORM_ref4 etc. is within CU.
Fix commit 647d4de92e ("Test undefined symbols in shared libraries")
and remove "undefined symbols in shared lib (dyn reloc)" test failures
for MIPS and S+core targets.
This test assumes 3 dynamic relocation entries, however the respective
psABIs define an extra single dummy *_NONE relocation at the beginning
of the dynamic relocation table, which results in test output like the
following for MIPS:
Relocation section '.rel.dyn' at offset 0x33c contains 4 entries:
Offset Info Type Sym.Value Sym. Name
00000000 00000000 R_MIPS_NONE
00010364 00000903 R_MIPS_REL32 00000000 undef_pfun
00010360 00000a03 R_MIPS_REL32 00000000 undef_data
00010368 00000b03 R_MIPS_REL32 00000000 undef_notype
and S+core:
Relocation section '.rel.dyn' at offset 0x274 contains 4 entries:
Offset Info Type Sym.Value Sym. Name
00000000 00000000 R_SCORE_NONE
5ffe0464 00000e12 R_SCORE_REL32 00000000 undef_notype
5ffe045c 00000f12 R_SCORE_REL32 00000000 undef_data
5ffe0460 00001012 R_SCORE_REL32 00000000 undef_pfun
targets respectively, and also n64 MIPS targets pad relocation triplets
they use with extra *_NONE relocations, resulting in output like this:
Relocation section '.rel.dyn' at offset 0x4c0 contains 4 entries:
Offset Info Type Sym. Value Sym. Name
000000000000 000000000000 R_MIPS_NONE
Type2: R_MIPS_NONE
Type3: R_MIPS_NONE
000000010508 000900001203 R_MIPS_REL32 0000000000000000 undef_pfun
Type2: R_MIPS_64
Type3: R_MIPS_NONE
000000010500 000a00001203 R_MIPS_REL32 0000000000000000 undef_data
Type2: R_MIPS_64
Type3: R_MIPS_NONE
000000010510 000b00001203 R_MIPS_REL32 0000000000000000 undef_notype
Type2: R_MIPS_64
Type3: R_MIPS_NONE
Expect the right number of *_NONE relocations then, and adjust the total
number of relocations expected accordingly.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-undefined/undefined.exp: Correct the dyn reloc
test for MIPS and S+core targets.
From PR 22123:
The common opcodes of emac and mac seem to be only implemented for mac.
To reproduce:
echo "macw %d3l,%a0l" > /tmp/dummy.S
m68k-unknown-elf-as -m5208 /tmp/dummy.S
Outputs something like:
/tmp/dummy.S: Assembler messages:
/tmp/dummy.S:1: Error: operands mismatch -- statement `macw %d3l,%a0l' ignored
This behavior occurs only if the CPU supports only emac but not explicitly mac (but emac is a superset of mac).
compare-sections.exp has two cases that are not handled appropriately:
1) value read with msb set
2) error while patching that section
This patch adapts the "get value of read-only section" test to print
the value as an unsigned integer to fix 1) and test for the error
message to not set the written variable if read-only section cannot
be written to so as to solve 2).
2017-09-26 Thomas Preud'homme <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.base/compare-sections.exp (get value of read-only section): Read
as unsigned value.
(corrupt read-only section): Likewise and don't set written if patching
failed.
Preprocessor tokens like DWARF_VMA_FMT and BFD_VMA_FMT are not
understood by gettext, and cause the translation string to be
truncated. Even if it were not truncated, we wouldn't want a value
that changes depending on host or configure options to be put in a
translation string.
PR 21732
* dwarf.c (READ_ULEB): Don't use DWARF_VMA_FMT in translated string.
(READ_SLEB): Likewise.
* readelf.c (bfd_vmatoa): New function.
(get_data, get_dynamic_data): Use it for printing error messages.
This removes the last cleanup from regcache.c by changing one function
to use std::string.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* regcache.c (regcache::dump): Use string_printf.
This removes make_cleanup_regcache_invalidate in favor of a simple
RAII class that handles register invalidation.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-25 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* regcache.c (class regcache_invalidator): New.
(struct register_to_invalidate): Remove.
(make_cleanup_regcache_invalidate): Remove.
(regcache::raw_write): Use regcache_invalidator.
The PR22200 fuzzer testcase found one way to put NULLs into .debug_line
file tables. PR22205 finds another. This patch gives up on trying to
prevent NULL files in the file table and instead just copes with them.
Arguably, this is better than giving up and showing no info from
.debug_line. I've also fixed a case where the fairly recent DWARF5
support in handling broken DWARG could result in uninitialized memory
reads, and made a small tidy.
PR 22205
* dwarf2.c (concat_filename): Return "<unknown>" on NULL filename.
(read_formatted_entries): Init "fe".
(decode_line_info <DW_LNE_define_file>): Use line_info_add_file_name.
This documents the newly added support for guarded-storage registers on
IBM z.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Advertise support for guarded-storage registers on IBM z.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (S/390 and System z Features): Document the new
features org.gnu.gdb.s390.gs and org.gnu.gdb.s390.gsbc.
Enable gdbserver to deal with the new guarded-storage register sets.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* configure.srv (s390*-*-linux*): Add s390-gs-linux64.o and
s390x-gs-linux64.o to srv_regobj. Add s390-gs-linux64.xml,
s390x-gs-linux64.xml, s390-gs.xml, and s390-gsbc.xml to
srv_xmlfiles. Add s390-gs-linux64-ipa.o and
s390x-gs-linux64-ipa.o to ipa_obj.
* linux-s390-low.c (HWCAP_S390_GS): New define.
(s390_fill_gs, s390_store_gs, s390_fill_gsbc, s390_store_gsbc):
New functions.
(s390_regsets): Add regsets for NT_S390_GS_CB and NT_S390_GS_BC.
(s390_arch_setup): Check for guarded-storage support and choose
appropriate tdesc.
(initialize_low_arch): Invoke init_registers_s390_gs_linux64 and
init_registers_s390x_gs_linux64.
* linux-s390-tdesc.h (enum s390_linux_tdesc) <S390_TDESC_GS>: New
enum value.
(init_registers_s390x_gs_linux64, tdesc_s390x_gs_linux64)
(init_registers_s390_gs_linux64, tdesc_s390_gs_linux64): Declare.
Recognize targets with the new guarded-storage feature and then present
the guarded-storage registers and the Linux-specific guarded-storage
broadcast control block appropriately.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* s390-linux-nat.c (have_regset_gs): New static variable.
(s390_linux_fetch_inferior_registers): Handle guarded-storage
control block and guarded-storage broadcast control regsets.
(s390_read_description): Detect whether the target has
guarded-storage support, return appropriate tdesc.
* s390-linux-tdep.c (features/s390-gs-linux64.c): New include.
(features/s390x-gs-linux64.c): Likewise.
(struct gdbarch_tdep) <have_gs>: New field.
(s390_regmap_gs, s390_regmap_gsbc, s390_gs_regset)
(s390_gsbc_regset): New variables.
(s390_iterate_over_regset_sections): Iterate over s390_gs_regset
and s390_gsbc_regset, if applicable.
(s390_core_read_description): Check whether core file was from a
target with guarded-storage support; include appropriate regsets.
(s390_gdbarch_init): Add registers for guarded-storage support.
(_initialize_s390_tdep): Initialize new target descriptions that
include registers for guarded-storage support.
* s390-linux-tdep.h (HWCAP_S390_GS, S390_GSD_REGNUM)
(S390_GSSM_REGNUM, S390_GSEPLA_REGNUM)
(S390_BC_GSD_REGNUM, S390_BC_GSSM_REGNUM): New defines.
(S390_NUM_REGS): Adjust macro definition.
(s390_gs_regset, s390_gsbc_regset, tdesc_s390_gs_linux64)
(tdesc_s390x_gs_linux64): New declarations.
Newer Linux kernel versions offer two new register sets in support of the
z/Architecture's guarded storage facility. This patch adds XML
descriptions and the respective autogenerated .c and .dat files for
s390/s390x targets with this feature.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* features/s390-gs-linux64.xml: New file.
* features/s390-gs.xml: New file.
* features/s390-gsbc.xml: New file.
* features/s390x-gs-linux64.xml: New file.
* features/Makefile (WHICH): Add s390-gs-linux64 and
s390x-gs-linux64.
(s390-gs-linux64-expedite, s390x-gs-linux64-expedite): New macros.
(XMLTOC): Add s390-gs-linux64.xml and s390x-linux64.xml.
* features/s390-gs-linux64.c: New generated file.
* features/s390x-gs-linux64.c: New file.
* regformats/s390-gs-linux64.dat: New file.
* regformats/s390x-gs-linux64.dat: New file.
There was a complete lack of sanity checking in dwarf1.c
PR 22202
* dwarf1.c (parse_die): Sanity check pointer against section limit
before dereferencing.
(parse_line_table): Likewise.
DW_AT_name ought to always have a string value.
PR 22201
* dwarf2.c (scan_unit_for_symbols): Ignore DW_AT_name unless it
has string form.
(parse_comp_unit): Likewise.
Hi,
While compiling GDB using a mingw compiler from Fedora 26:
../gdb/configure --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 --target=x86_64-w64-mingw32 \
--disable-binutils --disable-ld --disable-gold --disable-gas --disable-sim \
--disable-gprof --enable-targets=all
I stumbled upon a simple occurrence of -Werror=maybe-uninitialized:
../../gdb/opcodes/aarch64-opc.c: In function 'expand_fp_imm':
../../gdb/opcodes/aarch64-opc.c:2880:10: error: 'imm' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
return imm;
^~~
It is the compiler's fault, because this function always assigns to
'imm' if the necessary conditions are met, and it calls "assert (0)"
otherwise, but I thought it'd be clearer to have 'imm' explicitly set
to zero anyway.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2017-09-21 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* aarch64-opc.c (expand_fp_imm): Initialize 'imm'.
table->sequences is a linked list before it is replaced by a bfd_alloc
array in sort_line_sequences.
PR 22191
* dwarf2.c (decode_line_info): Properly free line sequences on error.
This patch prevents the simple case of infinite recursion in
find_abstract_instance_name by ensuring that the attributes being
processed are not the same as the previous call.
The patch also does a little cleanup, and leaves in place some changes
to the nested_funcs array that I made when I wrongly thought looping
might occur in scan_unit_for_symbols.
PR 22187
* dwarf2.c (find_abstract_instance_name): Add orig_info_ptr and
pname param. Return status. Make name const. Don't abort,
return an error. Formatting. Exit if current info_ptr matches
orig_info_ptr. Update callers.
(scan_unit_for_symbols): Start at nesting_level of zero. Make
nested_funcs an array of structs for extensibility. Formatting.
The .debug_line header length field doesn't include the length field
itself, ie. it's the size of the rest of .debug_line.
PR 22169
* dwarf2.c (decode_line_info): Correct .debug_line unit_length check.
The sanity check covers the previous minimim size, plus that the size
is at least enough for sh_info verneed entries.
Also, since we write all verneed fields or exit with an error, there
isn't any need to zero the memory allocated for verneed entries.
PR 22166
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_slurp_version_tables): Test sh_info on
SHT_GNU_verneed section for sanity. Don't zalloc memory for
verref.
An earlier patch of mine removed make_cleanup_override_quit_handler,
but neglected to remove the declaration. This patch removes it.
Tested by rebuilding. I'm committing this as obvious.
ChangeLog
2017-09-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* defs.h (make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Don't declare.
Simon pointed out that scoped_input_handler::m_quit_handler must have
the correct scoped_restore_tmpl type, to avoid binding to a temporary.
This patch fixes the problem.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-22 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* utils.c (class scoped_input_handler) <m_quit_handler>: Change
type to scoped_restore_tmpl.
<scoped_input_handler>: Initialize m_quit_handler directly.
Reviewed-By: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
There should be only one entry in PLT for a given symbol. Set howto to
NULL after processing a PLT entry to guard against corrupted PLT so that
the duplicated PLT entries are skipped.
PR binutils/22170
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_get_synthetic_symtab): Guard against
corrupted PLT.
When dumping location lists, also dump locview lists that may be
interspersed with them, and bring view pairs next to the corresponding
location list entries.
This patch supports DW_AT_GNU_locviews as a separate attribute for
DWARF4- loc_lists and split (dwo) loclists, as well as DWARF5
loclists.
It also supports, in DWARF5 loclists, the proposed
DW_LLE_GNU_view_pair loclist entry type proposed for DWARF6.
The tests use 32-bit DWARF, even on 64-bit targets, resolving offsets
to constants so as to reduce the risk that relocations be created for
them, or that the offsets be rejected as nonconstants.
The patch also adds an xfail to an unrelated test, namely dw5, so that
no unexpected fails remain on nds32*-elf, one of the tested targets.
Reviewed-by: Alan Modra <amodra@gmail.com>
for include/ChangeLog
* dwarf2.def (DW_AT_GNU_locviews): New.
* dwarf2.h (enum dwarf_location_list_entry_type): Add
DW_LLE_GNU_view_pair.
(DW_LLE_view_pair): Define.
for binutils/ChangeLog
* dwarf.h (debug_info): Add loc_views and num_loc_views.
* dwarf.c (vm1): New constant.
(print_dwarf_view): New function.
(read_and_display_attr_value): Support DW_AT_GNU_locviews.
(process_debug_info): Keep num_loc_offsets and num_loc_views
in sync.
(display_view_pair_list): New function.
(display_loc_list_dwo): Take vstart_ptr; update it. Dump
location view pairs before the range they apply to, when a
viewlist augments the loc list.
(display_loc_list): Likewise. Check view numbers in range
tests.
(display_loclists_list): Likewise. Handle view pair entries,
and warn on trailing ones.
(loc_views): New variable.
(loc_offsets_compar): Compare loc_views if loc_offsets are the
same.
(display_debug_loc): Check and sort loc_views too. Accept
loc_view as expected_start. Skip if lists and views are the
same. Dump locview list separately in order, and pass the
locview list base to each list dump function. Warn and skip
overlap and hole checking if we find loclists and locviews to
not be adjacent.
* testsuite/binutils-all/locview-1.s: New.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.locview-1: New.
* testsuite/binutils-all/locview-2.s: New.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.locview-2: New.
* testsuite/binutils-all/readelf.exp: Run new tests. Fix
option spelling in pr18374 fail message. XFAIL dw5 test on
nds32*-elf.
Currently we have "current_directory" and "gdb_dirbuf" globals, which
means that we basically have two possible places to consult when we
want to know GDB's current working directory.
This is not ideal and can lead to confusion. Moreover, the way we're
using "gdb_difbuf" along with "getcwd" is problematic because we
declare the buffer with "1024" elements hardcoded, which does not take
into account longer pathnames that are possible in many filesystems.
Using "PATH_MAX" would also not be a solution because of portability
problems. Therefore, the best solution is to rely on the fact that
"getcwd (NULL, 0)" will "do the right thing" and return a
heap-allocated string containing the full path. With the new "getcwd"
module from gnulib, it is now possible to do that without worrying
about breaking some host.
With this patch "current_directory" is now the only place to check for
GDB's cwd.
Reviewed-by: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-22 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* cli/cli-cmds.c (pwd_command): Use "getcwd (NULL, 0)".
(cd_command): Likewise. Free "current_directory" before
assigning to it.
* main.c (captured_main_1): Use "getcwd (NULL, 0)".
* mi/mi-cmd-env.c (mi_cmd_env_pwd): Likewise.
* top.c (gdb_dirbuf): Remove global declaration.
* top.h (gdb_dirbuf): Likewise.
These two modules are necessary because of the rework that will be
done in the "change directory" logic on GDB/gdbserver in the next
commits.
First, we will get rid of the "gdb_dirbuf" global variable and instead
rely on the fact that "getcwd (NULL, 0)", which is a GNU extension,
returns a heap-allocated string with the necessary bytes to hold the
full path. This is a good practice not only because globals are not
ideal but also because there is no good way to know beforehand the
size of the full pathname allowed in the filesystem ("PATH_MAX" is not
portable and does not reflect all the possible filesystems out there).
We will also have a way to "cd" to a directory also on gdbserver, but
in order to do that uniformly, there must be a way to do tilde
expansion on directories provided by the user. Currently, GDB uses
"tilde_expand" from readline to do that, but gdbserver doesn't link
against readline and therefore cannot use this function. The solution
is to use "glob" instead, which can perform tilde expansion as a GNU
extension. Therefore, we need gnulib's version of "glob".
A special note is necessary for gdb/ser-tcp.c. It defines "close" as
"closesocket" on Win32 targets. If we leave the code as is, this
would conflict with gnulib's definition of "close". Therefore, in
order to keep the same code path from before this import, I decided to
"#undef close" first, and then let the original (re)definition of it
take place.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-22 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* gnulib/aclocal.m4: Regenerate.
* gnulib/config.in: Regenerate.
* gnulib/configure: Regenerate.
* gnulib/import/Makefile.am: Regenerate.
* gnulib/import/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* gnulib/import/assure.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/at-func.c: Likewise
* gnulib/import/chdir-long.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/chdir-long.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/cloexec.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/cloexec.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/close.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/closedir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/dirent-private.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/dup-safer.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/dup.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/dup2.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/error.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/error.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/exitfail.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/exitfail.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/fchdir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/fcntl.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/fcntl.in.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/fd-hook.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/fd-hook.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/fd-safer.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/fdopendir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/filename.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/filenamecat-lgpl.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/filenamecat.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/fstat.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/fstatat.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getcwd-lgpl.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getcwd.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getdtablesize.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getlogin_r.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getprogname.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/getprogname.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/gettext.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/glob-libc.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/glob.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/glob.in.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/intprops.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/chdir-long.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/close.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/closedir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/d-ino.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/d-type.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/dup.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/dup2.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/error.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fchdir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fcntl.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fcntl_h.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fdopendir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/filenamecat.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fstat.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/fstatat.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getcwd-abort-bug.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getcwd-path-max.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getcwd.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getdtablesize.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getlogin_r.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/getprogname.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/glob.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-cache.m4: Regenerate.
* gnulib/import/m4/gnulib-comp.m4: Regenerate.
* gnulib/import/m4/mempcpy.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/memrchr.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/mode_t.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/msvc-inval.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/msvc-nothrow.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/open.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/openat.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/opendir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/readdir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/realloc.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/rewinddir.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/save-cwd.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/strdup.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/strerror.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/m4/unistd-safer.m4: New file.
* gnulib/import/mempcpy.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/memrchr.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/msvc-inval.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/msvc-inval.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/msvc-nothrow.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/msvc-nothrow.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/open.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/openat-die.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/openat-priv.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/openat-proc.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/openat.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/openat.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/opendir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/pipe-safer.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/readdir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/realloc.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/rewinddir.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/save-cwd.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/save-cwd.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/strdup.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/strerror-override.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/strerror-override.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/strerror.c: New file.
* gnulib/import/unistd--.h: New file.
* gnulib/import/unistd-safer.h: New file.
* gnulib/update-gnulib.sh (IMPORTED_GNULIB_MODULES): Add
"getcwd" and "glob".
* ser-tcp.c: Undefine "close" before redefining it.
GNU-stack notes added in 2004, aarch64 port added in 2012, so no old object
files with missing GNU-stack notes that we need to worry about.
gold/
* aarch64.cc (Target_aarch64::aarch64_info): Set
is_default_stack_executable to false.
When trying to run gdbserver compiled for x86 win32 under wine, I get:
$ wine ./gdbserver/gdbserver.exe --once :1234 ./test
/home/emaisin/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbserver/regcache.c:177: A problem internal to GDBserver has been detected.
regcache* new_register_cache(const target_desc*): Assertion `tdesc->registers_size != 0' failed.
It seems like on that platform, init_target_desc is never called, so
registers_size is never computed.
My first thought was to call init_target_desc somewhere in win32-low.c,
but it turns out that when using win32 on arm, the target description is
already initialized by the generated code. My second thought was to
call it in {i386,amd64}_create_target_description, but those functions
are shared with GDB, and init_target_desc is gdbserver-specific. So I
ended up with the simplest fix, calling it in i386_arch_setup.
Now I hit some other problem:
$ wine ./gdbserver/gdbserver.exe --once :1234 ./test
Killing process(es): 39
No program to debug
Exiting
but still, I think fixing the tdesc issue this is a step forward.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* win32-i386-low.c (i386_arch_setup): Call init_target_desc.