Currently md_end is typically used for some final actions rather than
freeing memory like other *_end functions. Rename it to md_finish,
and rename target implementation. The renaming of target functions
makes it possible to find them all with "grep md_finish",
eg. md_mips_end is renamed to mips_md_finish, not md_mips_finish.
This patch leaves a number of md_end functions unchanged, those that
either do nothing or deallocate memory, and calls them late.
The idea here is that target maintainers implement md_end functions to
tidy memory, if anyone cares. Freeing persistent memory in gas is
not at all important, except that it can hide more important memory
leaks, those that happen once per some frequent gas operation, amongst
these unimportant memory leaks.
* as.c (main): Rename md_end to md_finish.
* config/tc-alpha.c, * config/tc-alpha.h,
* config/tc-arc.c, * config/tc-arc.h,
* config/tc-arm.c, * config/tc-arm.h,
* config/tc-csky.c, * config/tc-csky.h,
* config/tc-ia64.c, * config/tc-ia64.h,
* config/tc-mcore.c, * config/tc-mcore.h,
* config/tc-mips.c, * config/tc-mips.h,
* config/tc-mmix.c, * config/tc-mmix.h,
* config/tc-msp430.c, * config/tc-msp430.h,
* config/tc-nds32.c, * config/tc-nds32.h,
* config/tc-ppc.c, * config/tc-ppc.h,
* config/tc-pru.c, * config/tc-pru.h,
* config/tc-riscv.c, * config/tc-riscv.h,
* config/tc-s390.c, * config/tc-s390.h,
* config/tc-sparc.c, * config/tc-sparc.h,
* config/tc-tic4x.c, * config/tc-tic4x.h,
* config/tc-tic6x.c, * config/tc-tic6x.h,
* config/tc-v850.c, * config/tc-v850.h,
* config/tc-xtensa.c, * config/tc-xtensa.h,
* config/tc-z80.c, * config/tc-z80.h: Similarly.
* output-file.c (output_file_close): Call md_end.
So that the notes obstack can be used for persistent storage in
parse_args.
* as.c (parse_args): Use notes_alloc and notes_strdup.
(free_notes): New function.
(main): Init notes obstack, and arrange to be freed on exit.
* read.c (read_begin): Don't init notes obstack.
(read_end): Free cond_obstack.
* subsegs.c (subsegs_end): Don't free cond_obstack or notes.
itbl_files seems to be debug code. Get rid of it.
* as.c (struct itbl_file_list): Delete.
(itbl_files): Delete.
(parse_args): Don't keep itbl_files list.
Use notes obstack for dwcfi_hash entries, and free table. Freeing the
table makes memory checkers complain more about "definitely lost"
memory as we've moved some from the "still reachable" category.
That will be fixed with a later patch.
* dw2gencfi.c (get_debugseg_name): Allocate on notes obstack.
(alloc_debugseg_item): Likewise.
(dwcfi_hash_find_or_make): Adjust failure path free.
(cfi_finish): Delete dwfci_hash.
Another case of duplicated hash.h code, the only minor difference
being that macro->format_hash was created with 7 entries vs. str_hash
with 16 entries.
* macro.c (macro_init, define_macro): Use str_htab_create.
(do_formals, define_macro, macro_expand_body): Use str_hash_insert
(macro_expand_body): Use str_hash_find and str_hash_delete.
(delete_macro): Likewise.
(sub_actual, macro_expand, check_macro): Use str_hash_find.
(expand_irp): Use str_htab_create and str_hash_insert.
* macro.h (struct macro_struct): Tidy.
(struct macro_hash_entry, macro_hash_entry_t, hash_macro_entry),
(eq_macro_entry, macro_entry_alloc, macro_entry_find),
(struct formal_hash_entry, formal_hash_entry_t),
(hash_formal_entry, eq_formal_entry, formal_entry_alloc),
(formal_entry_find): Delete.
* config/tc-iq2000.c (iq2000_add_macro): Use str_htab_create
and str_hash_insert.
po_hash code duplicates the str_hash code in hash.h for no good reason.
* read.c (struct po_entry, po_entry_t): Delete.
(hash_po_entry, eq_po_entry, po_entry_alloc, po_entry_find): Delete.
(pop_insert): Use str_hash_insert.
(pobegin): Use str_htab_create.
(read_a_source_file, s_macro): Use str_hash_find.
read_symbol_name mallocs the string it returns. Free it when done.
* read.c (read_symbol_name): Free name on error path.
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_GNU_visibility): Free name returned from
read_symbol_name.
(ppc_extern, ppc_globl, ppc_weak): Likewise.
This is mostly a tidy with the aim of being able to free
out_file_name, but it does fix a possible attempt to unlink the output
file twice (not that that matters).
* as.h (keep_it): New global.
* as.c (keep_it): Delete.
(close_output_file): Delete, merged into..
* output-file.c (output_file_close): ..here. Delete parameter.
* output-file.h (output_file_close): Update prototype.
Makes it a little easier to use the notes obstack for persistent
storage.
* as.h (gas_mul_overflow): Define.
* symbols.h (notes_alloc, notes_calloc, notes_memdup),
(notes_strdup, notes_concat, notes_free): Declare.
* symbols.c (notes_alloc, notes_calloc, notes_memdup),
(notes_strdup, notes_concat, notes_free): New functions.
(save_symbol_name): Use notes_strdup.
(symbol_create, local_symbol_make, local_symbol_convert),
(symbol_clone, decode_local_label_name): Use notes_alloc.
arm gas is only supposed to warn once per symbol for -mwarn-syms, but
doesn't because the str_hash_find added with commit 629310abec
always returns NULL. That's so because the str_hash_insert inserts a
NULL value for the key,value pair. Let str_hash_insert do the job
instead.
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_tc_equal_in_insn): Correct already_warned
logic.
* testsuite/gas/arm/pr18347.s: Modify to generate duplicate
warning without this patch.
Until we update the recommended versions of autoconf/automake, files
should be regenerated with automake-1.15.1 and autoconf-2.69. That's
not because we think those versions are golden, and newer versions are
bad. It's simply because maintainers want to be able to update
configury files without trouble, and if someone regenerates files with
automake-1.16.5 then --enable-maintainer-mode builds will hit errors:
checking that generated files are newer than configure... configure.ac:26: error: version mismatch. This is Automake 1.15.1,
configure.ac:26: but the definition used by this AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
configure.ac:26: comes from Automake 1.16.5. You should recreate
configure.ac:26: aclocal.m4 with aclocal and run automake again.
WARNING: 'automake-1.15' is probably too old.
Correcting this requires regenerating the files by hand.
PR python/27000 points out that gdb.block_for_pc will accept a Python
integer, but not a gdb.Value. This patch corrects this oversight.
I looked at all uses of GDB_PY_LLU_ARG and fixed these up to use
get_addr_from_python instead. I also looked at uses of GDB_PY_LL_ARG,
but those seemed relatively unlikely to be useful with a gdb.Value, so
I didn't change them. My thinking here is that a Value will typically
come from inferior memory, and something like a line number is not too
likely to be found this way.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27000
PR python/29217 points out that gdb.parameter will return bool values,
but gdb.set_parameter will not properly accept them. This patch fixes
the problem by adding a special case to set_parameter.
I looked at a fix involving rewriting set_parameter in C++. However,
this one is simpler.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29217
When building gdb with guile 3.0.8, we run into:
...
gdb/guile/guile.c: In function \
'void gdbscm_initialize(const extension_language_defn*)':
gdb/guile/guile.c:680:5: error: 'scm_install_gmp_memory_functions' is \
deprecated [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
680 | scm_install_gmp_memory_functions = 0;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /usr/include/guile/3.0/libguile.h:128,
from gdb/guile/guile-internal.h:30,
from gdb/guile/guile.c:36:
/usr/include/guile/3.0/libguile/deprecated.h:164:20: note: declared here
164 | SCM_DEPRECATED int scm_install_gmp_memory_functions;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
cc1plus: all warnings being treated as errors
make[1]: *** [Makefile:1896: guile/guile.o] Error 1
...
The variable has been deprecated because it no longer has any effect.
Fix this by disabling the specific deprecation warning.
Also handle upcoming guile versions > 3.0, in which the variable will be
removed, by limiting the usage of the variable to guile versions <= 3.0.
This does not break anything. The variable was merely used to address a
problem present in guile versions <= v3.0.5.
Note that we don't limit the usage of the variable to guile versions <= 3.0.5,
because we want to support f.i. building against 3.0.6 and then using a shared
lib with 3.0.5.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Co-Authored-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=28994
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/dw2-symtab-includes.exp with target board
cc-with-debug-names, I run into:
...
(gdb) maint expand-symtab dw2-symtab-includes.h^M
src/gdb/dwarf2/read.h:311: internal-error: unit_type: \
Assertion `m_unit_type != 0' failed.^M
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,^M
further debugging may prove unreliable.^M
----- Backtrace -----^M
FAIL: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-symtab-includes.exp: maint expand-symtab \
dw2-symtab-includes.h (GDB internal error)
...
The assert was recently added in commit 2c474c4694 ("[gdb/symtab] Add get/set
functions for per_cu->lang/unit_type").
The assert is triggered here:
...
/* We're importing a C++ compilation unit with tag DW_TAG_compile_unit
into another compilation unit, at root level. Regard this as a hint,
and ignore it. */
if (die->parent && die->parent->parent == NULL
&& per_cu->unit_type () == DW_UT_compile
&& per_cu->lang () == language_cplus)
return;
...
We're trying to access unit_type / lang which hasn't been set yet.
Normally, these are set during cooked index creation, but that's not the case
when using an index (or using -readnow).
In other words, this lto binary reading speed optimization only works in the
normal use case.
IWBN to have this working in all use cases, but for now, allow lang () and
unit_type () to return language_unknown and 0 here.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29321
When running test-case gdb.cp/cpexprs-debug-types.exp with target board
cc-with-debug-names, I run into:
...
(gdb) print base::operator new^M
^M
^M
Fatal signal: Segmentation fault^M
----- Backtrace -----^M
0x57ea46 gdb_internal_backtrace_1^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/bt-utils.c:122^M
0x57eae9 _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/bt-utils.c:168^M
0x75b8ad handle_fatal_signal^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/event-top.c:946^M
0x75ba19 handle_sigsegv^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/event-top.c:1019^M
0x7f795f46a8bf ???^M
0x6d3cb1 _ZNK18dwarf2_per_objfile12symtab_set_pEPK18dwarf2_per_cu_data^M
/home/vries/gdb_versions/devel/src/gdb/dwarf2/read.c:1515^M
...
The problem is in this piece of code in dw2_debug_names_iterator::next:
...
case DW_IDX_type_unit:
/* Don't crash on bad data. */
if (ull >= per_bfd->tu_stats.nr_tus)
{
complaint (_(".debug_names entry has bad TU index %s"
" [in module %s]"),
pulongest (ull),
objfile_name (objfile));
continue;
}
per_cu = per_bfd->get_cu (ull + per_bfd->tu_stats.nr_tus);
break;
...
The all_comp_units vector (which get_cu accesses) contains both CUs and TUs,
with CUs first.
So to get the nth TU we need the element at "nr_cus + n", but
the code uses "nr_tus + n" instead.
Fix this by using "nr_cus + n".
Tested on x86_64-linux.
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29334
On a machine with gcc 12, I get this warning:
CXX nat/linux-btrace.o
In function ‘btrace_error linux_read_bts(btrace_data_bts*, btrace_target_info*, btrace_read_type)’,
inlined from ‘btrace_error linux_read_btrace(btrace_data*, btrace_target_info*, btrace_read_type)’ at ../gdb/nat/linux-btrace.c:935:29:
../gdb/nat/linux-btrace.c:865:21: warning: ‘data_head’ may be used uninitialized [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
865 | pevent->last_head = data_head;
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~
../gdb/nat/linux-btrace.c: In function ‘btrace_error linux_read_btrace(btrace_data*, btrace_target_info*, btrace_read_type)’:
../gdb/nat/linux-btrace.c:792:9: note: ‘data_head’ was declared here
792 | __u64 data_head, data_tail;
| ^~~~~~~~~
Fix this by initializing the 'data_head' variable.
Tested by rebuilding on x86_64 openSUSE Tumbleweed with gcc 12.
This commit adds disassembler style to the libopcodes s390
disassembler. This conversion was pretty straight forward, I just
converted the fprintf_func calls to fprintf_styled_func calls and
added an appropriate style.
For testing the new styling I just assembled then disassembled the
source files in gas/testsuite/gas/s390 and manually checked that the
styling looked reasonable.
If the user does not request styled output from objdump, then there
should be no change in the disassembler output after this commit.
Trying to run a simple program (empty main) on AIX, I get:
(gdb) run
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
Child process unexpectedly missing: There are no child processes..
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304: internal-error: find_inferior_pid: Assertion `pid != 0' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
----- Backtrace -----
0x10ef12a8 gdb_internal_backtrace_1()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:122
0x10ef1470 gdb_internal_backtrace()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/bt-utils.c:168
0x1004d368 internal_vproblem(internal_problem*, char const*, int, char const*, char*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:396
0x1004d8a8 internal_verror(char const*, int, char const*, char*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c:476
0x1004c424 internal_error(char const*, int, char const*, ...)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55
0x102ab344 find_inferior_pid(process_stratum_target*, int)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304
0x102ab4a4 find_inferior_ptid(process_stratum_target*, ptid_t)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:318
0x1061bae8 find_thread_ptid(process_stratum_target*, ptid_t)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/thread.c:519
0x10319e98 handle_inferior_event(execution_control_state*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:5532
0x10315544 fetch_inferior_event()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:4221
0x10952e34 inferior_event_handler(inferior_event_type)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inf-loop.c:41
0x1032640c infrun_async_inferior_event_handler(void*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:9548
0x10673188 check_async_event_handlers()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/async-event.c:335
0x1066fce4 gdb_do_one_event()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:214
0x10001a94 start_event_loop()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:411
0x10001ca0 captured_command_loop()
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:471
0x10003d74 captured_main(void*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1329
0x10003e48 gdb_main(captured_main_args*)
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1344
0x10000744 main
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:32
---------------------
../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inferior.c:304: internal-error: find_inferior_pid: Assertion `pid != 0' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
This is due to some bit-rot in the AIX port, still relying on the entry
value of inferior_ptid in the wait methods.
Problem #1 is in rs6000_nat_target::wait, here:
/* Ignore terminated detached child processes. */
if (!WIFSTOPPED (status) && pid != inferior_ptid.pid ())
pid = -1;
At this point, waitpid has returned an "exited" status for some pid, so
pid is non-zero. Since inferior_ptid is set to null_ptid on entry, the
pid returned by wait is not equal to `inferior_ptid.pid ()`, so we reset
pid to -1 and go to waiting again. Since there are not more children to
wait for, waitpid then returns -1 so we get here:
if (pid == -1)
{
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr,
_("Child process unexpectedly missing: %s.\n"),
safe_strerror (save_errno));
/* Claim it exited with unknown signal. */
ourstatus->set_signalled (GDB_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN);
return inferior_ptid;
}
We therefore return a "signalled" status with a null_ptid (again,
inferior_ptid is null_ptid). This confuses infrun, because if the
target returns a "signalled" status, it should be coupled with a ptid
for an inferior that exists.
So, the first step is to fix the snippets above to not use
inferior_ptid. In the first snippet, use find_inferior_pid to see if
we know the event process. If there is no inferior with that pid, we
assume it's a detached child process to we ignore the event. That
should be enough to fix the problem, because it should make it so we
won't go into the second snippet. But still, fix the second snippet to
return an "ignore" status. This is copied from inf_ptrace_target::wait,
which is where rs6000_nat_target::wait appears to be copied from in the
first place.
These changes, are not sufficient, as the aix_thread_target, which sits
on top of rs6000_nat_target, also relies on inferior_ptid.
aix_thread_target::wait, by calling pd_update, assumes that
rs6000_nat_target has set inferior_ptid to the appropriate value (the
ptid of the event thread), but that's not the case. pd_update
returns inferior_ptid - null_ptid - and therefore
aix_thread_target::wait returns null_ptid too, and we still hit the
assert shown above.
Fix this by changing pd_activate, pd_update, sync_threadlists and
get_signaled_thread to all avoid using inferior_ptid. Instead, they
accept as a parameter the pid of the process we are working on.
With this patch, I am able to run the program to completion:
(gdb) r
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
[Inferior 1 (process 11010794) exited normally]
As well as break on main:
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x1000036c
(gdb) r
Starting program: /scratch/simark/build/gdb/a.out
Breakpoint 1, 0x1000036c in main ()
(gdb) c
Continuing.
[Inferior 1 (process 26083688) exited normally]
Change-Id: I7c2613bbefe487d75fa1a0c0994423471d961ee9
The DWARF spec says:
Any debugging information entry representing the declaration of an object,
module, subprogram or type may have DW_AT_decl_file, DW_AT_decl_line and
DW_AT_decl_column attributes, each of whose value is an unsigned integer
^^^^^^^^
constant.
Grepping around the DWARF-assembler-based testcases, I noticed that
gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp emits decl_line with
DW_FORM_sdata, a signed integer form. This commit tweaks it to use
DW_FORM_udata instead.
Unsurprisingly, this:
$ make check \
TESTS="gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp" \
RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
... still passes cleanly for me after this change.
I've noticed this because current llvm-dwarfdump crashed on an
ROCm-internal DWARF-assembler-based testcase that incorrectly used
signed forms for DW_AT_decl_file/DW_AT_decl_line.
The older llvm-dwarfdump found on Ubuntu 20.04 (LLVM 10) reads the
line numbers with signed forms as "0" instead of crashing. Here's the
before/after fix for gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp with that
llvm-dwarfdump version:
$ diff -up before.txt after.txt
--- before.txt 2022-07-07 13:21:28.387690334 +0100
+++ after.txt 2022-07-07 13:21:39.379801092 +0100
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
DW_AT_name ("s")
DW_AT_byte_size (3)
DW_AT_decl_file (0)
- DW_AT_decl_line (0)
+ DW_AT_decl_line (1)
0x0000002f: DW_TAG_member
DW_AT_name ("a")
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@
DW_AT_name ("t")
DW_AT_byte_size (3)
DW_AT_decl_file (0)
- DW_AT_decl_line (0)
+ DW_AT_decl_line (1)
0x00000054: DW_TAG_member
DW_AT_name ("a")
Change-Id: I5c866946356da421ff944019d0eca2607b2b738f
We currently have no coverage for the `print -elements ...' command (or
`p -elements ...' in the shortened form), so add a couple of test cases
mimicking ones using corresponding `set print elements ...' values.
This commit adds Zfhmin and Zhinxmin extensions (subsets of Zfh and
Zhinx extensions, respectively). In the process supporting Zfhmin and
Zhinxmin extension, this commit also changes how instructions are
categorized considering Zfhmin, Zhinx and Zhinxmin extensions.
Detailed changes,
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN:
flh, fsh, fmv.x.h and fmv.h.x.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fmv.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX:
fneg.h, fabs.h, fsgnj.h, fsgnjn.h, fsgnjx.h,
fadd.h, fsub.h, fmul.h, fdiv.h, fsqrt.h, fmin.h, fmax.h,
fmadd.h, fnmadd.h, fmsub.h, fnmsub.h,
fcvt.w.h, fcvt.wu.h, fcvt.h.w, fcvt.h.wu,
fcvt.l.h, fcvt.lu.h, fcvt.h.l, fcvt.h.lu,
feq.h, flt.h, fle.h, fgt.h, fge.h,
fclass.h.
* From INSN_CLASS_ZFH_OR_ZHINX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN:
fcvt.s.h and fcvt.h.s.
* From INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D:
fcvt.d.h and fcvt.h.d.
* From INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX to INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q:
fcvt.q.h and fcvt.h.q.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_implicit_subsets): Change implicit
subsets. Zfh->Zicsr is not needed and Zfh->F is replaced with
Zfh->Zfhmin and Zfhmin->F. Zhinx->Zicsr is not needed and
Zhinx->Zfinx is replaced with Zhinx->Zhinxmin and
Zhinxmin->Zfinx.
(riscv_supported_std_z_ext): Added zfhmin and zhinxmin.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports): Rewrite handling for new
instruction classes.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Updated.
(riscv_parse_check_conflicts): Change error message to include
zfh and zfhmin extensions.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail.s: New complex
error handling test.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-1.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-2.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-3.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-4.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfhmin-d-insn-class-fail-5.l: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.d: Renamed from fp-zhinx-insns.d
and refactored.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zhinx.s: Likewise.
include/ChangeLog:
* opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_insn_class): Removed INSN_CLASS_ZFH,
INSN_CLASS_D_AND_ZFH_INX and INSN_CLASS_Q_AND_ZFH_INX. Added
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN, INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_OR_ZHINXMIN,
INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_D and INSN_CLASS_ZFHMIN_AND_Q.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-opc.c (riscv_opcodes): Change instruction classes for
Zfh and Zfhmin instructions. Fix `fcvt.h.lu' instruction
(two operand variant) mask.
This commit fixes floating point operand register names from ABI ones
to dynamically set ones.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.s: Test new behavior of
Zfinx extension and -M numeric disassembler option.
* testsuite/gas/riscv/zfinx-dis-numeric.d: Likewise.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
* riscv-dis.c (riscv_disassemble_insn): Use dynamically set GPR
names to disassemble Zfinx instructions.
This commit fixes how instructions are masked on Zhinx+Z{d,q}inx.
fcvt.h.d and fcvt.d.h require ((D&&Zfh)||(Zdinx&&Zhinx)) and
fcvt.h.q and fcvt.q.h require ((Q&&Zfh)||(Zqinx&&Zhinx)).
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_multi_subset_supports): Fix feature gate
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
(riscv_multi_subset_supports_ext): Fix feature gate diagnostics
on INSN_CLASS_{D,Q}_AND_ZFH_INX.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/riscv/fp-zhinx-insns.d: Add Zqinx to -march
for proper testing.
This patch enables the first support for the "gprofng display html" command.
This command works for C/C++ applications on x86_64. Using one or more gprofng
experiment directories as input, a new directory with html files is created.
Through the index.html file in this directory, the performance results may be
viewed in a browser.
gprofng/Changelog:
2022-06-28 Ruud van der Pas <ruud.vanderpas@oracle.com>
* gp-display-html/gp-display-html.in: implement first support for x86_64 and C/C++
commit 74e315dbfe
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Dec 13 19:46:04 2021 -0800
elf: Set p_align to the minimum page size if possible
may ignore p_align of PT_GNU_STACK when copying ELF program header if
the maximum page size is larger than p_align of PT_LOAD segments. Copy
p_align of PT_GNU_STACK since p_align of PT_GNU_STACK describes stack
alignment, not page size,
PR binutils/29319
* elf.c (copy_elf_program_header): Copy p_align of PT_GNU_STACK
for stack alignment.
This once again allows to reduce redundancy in (and size of) the opcode
table.
Don't go as far as also making D work on the two 5-operand XOP insns:
This would significantly complicate the code, as there the first
(immediate) operand would need special treatment in several places.
Note that the .s suffix isn't being enabled to have any effect, for
being deprecated. Whereas neither {load} nor {store} pseudo prefixes
make sense here, as the respective operands are inputs (loads) only
anyway, regardless of order. Hence there is (as before) no way for the
programmer to request the alternative encoding to be used for register-
only insns.
Note further that it is always the first original template which is
retained (and altered), to make sure the same encoding as before is
used for register-only insns. This has the slightly odd (but pre-
existing) effect of XOP register-only insns having XOP.W clear, but FMA4
ones having VEX.W set.
The middle operand would have gone entirely unchecked, allowing e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, %esp, %xmm2
to assemble successfully, or e.g.
vmovss %xmm0, $4, %xmm2
causing an internal error. Alongside dealing with this also drop a
related comment, which hasn't been applicable anymore since the
introduction of 3-operand patterns with D set (and which perhaps never
had been logical to be there, as reverse-matched insns don't make it
there in the first place).
When using just slightly non-trivial combinations of .arch, it can be
quite useful to be able to go back to prior state without needing to
re-invoke perhaps many earlier directives and without needing to invoke
perhaps many "negative" ones. Like some other architectures allow
saving (pushing) and restoring (popping) present/prior state.
For now require the same .code<N> to be in effect for ".arch pop" that
was in effect for the corresponding ".arch push".
Also change the global "no_cond_jump_promotion" to be bool, to match the
new struct field.
I never really understood upon what basis ".arch .no*" options were made
available. Let's not have any "criteria" at all, and simply allow
disabling of all of them. Then we also have all data for a sub-arch in
a single place, as we now only need a single table.
So far there was no way to reset the architecture to that assembly would
start with in the absence of any overrides (command line or directives).
Note that for Intel MCU "default" is merely an alias of "iamcu".
While there also zap a stray @item from the doc section, as noticed
when inspecting the generated output (which still has some quirks, but
those aren't easy to address without re-flowing almost the entire
section).
While it may not be necessary in i386_target_format() (but then setting
the variable to NULL also wouldn't be necessary), at least in the other
cases strings may already have accumulated.