This changes catch_command_errors_const to be an overload of
catch_command_errors, which may mildly help future constification
efforts.
Tested by rebuilding.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* main.c (catch_command_errors): Rename from
catch_command_errors_const.
(captured_main_1): Update.
Currently, with an ambiguous "list first,last", we get:
(gdb) list bar,main
Specified first line 'bar' is ambiguous:
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98
This commit makes gdb's output above a bit clearer by printing the
symbol name as well:
(gdb) list bar,main
Specified first line 'bar' is ambiguous:
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97, symbol: "bar(A)"
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98, symbol: "bar(B)"
And while at it, makes gdb print the symbol name when actually listing
multiple locations too. I.e., before (with "set listsize 2"):
(gdb) list bar
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97
96
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
98 int bar (B) { return 22; }
After:
(gdb) list bar
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97, symbol: "bar(A)"
96
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98, symbol: "bar(B)"
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
98 int bar (B) { return 22; }
Currently, the result of decoding a linespec loses information about
the original symbol that was found. All we end up with is an address.
This makes it difficult to find the original symbol again to get at
its print name. Fix that by storing a pointer to the symbol in the
sal. We already store the symtab and obj_section, so it feels like a
natural progression to me. This avoids having to do any extra symbol
lookup too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cli/cli-cmds.c (list_command): Use print_sal_location.
(print_sal_location): New function.
(ambiguous_line_spec): Use print_sal_location.
* linespec.c (symbol_to_sal): Record the symbol in the sal.
* symtab.c (find_function_start_sal): Likewise.
* symtab.h (symtab_and_line::symbol): New field.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/list-ambiguous.exp (test_list_ambiguous_symbol): Expect
symbol names in gdb's output.
* gdb.cp/overload.exp ("list all overloads"): Likewise.
The "list" command allows specifying the name of variables as
argument, not just functions, so that users can type "list
a_global_variable".
That support is a broken when it comes to ambiguous locations though.
If there's more than one such global variable in the program, e.g.,
static globals in different compilation units, GDB ends up listing the
source of the first variable it finds, only.
linespec.c does find both symbol and minsym locations for all the
globals. The problem is that it ends up merging all the resulting
sals into one, because they all have address, zero. I.e., all sals
end up with sal.pc == 0, so maybe_add_address returns false for all
but the first.
The zero addresses appear because:
- in the minsyms case, linespec.c:minsym_found incorrectly treats all
minsyms as if they were function/text symbols. In list mode we can
end up with data symbols there, and we shouldn't be using
find_pc_sect_line on data symbols.
- in the debug symbols case, symbol_to_sal misses recording an address
(sal.pc) for non-block, non-label symbols.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linespec.c (minsym_found): Handle non-text minsyms.
(symbol_to_sal): Record a sal.pc for non-block, non-label symbols.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/list-ambiguous.exp (test_list_ambiguous_function):
Rename to ...
(test_list_ambiguous_symbol): ... this and add a symbol name
parameter. Adjust.
(test_list_ambiguous_function): Reimplement on top of
test_list_ambiguous_symbol and also test listing ambiguous
variables.
* gdb.base/list-ambiguous0.c (ambiguous): Rename to ...
(ambiguous_fun): ... this.
(ambiguous_var): New.
* gdb.base/list-ambiguous1.c (ambiguous): Rename to ...
(ambiguous_fun): ... this.
(ambiguous_var): New.
In an old commit the backslash of was missing in the rule for creating the
i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.dat file. No need to regenerate the files, this
was done by another commit from Yao.
2017-09-20 Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>
* features/Makefile (i386-avx-mpx-avx512-pku.dat): Add backslash.
Test was running on a fault during code execution. Analysis have shown
that the wrong instruction had been used. An instruction that takes
not alligned memory is more appropriated for the task.
ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>
gdb/testesuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.arch/i386-avx512.c (move_zmm_data_to_reg): Use
vmovups instead vmovaps.
(move_zmm_data_to_memory): Use vmovups instead vmovaps.
Change-Id: I4a95560861ef1792ed6ce86578fdd726162863f1
ppc32, like many targets, defines the address of a function as the PLT
call stub code for functions referenced but not defined in a non-PIC
executable. ppc32 gold, unlike other targets, inherits the ppc64
multiple stub capability for dealing with very large binaries where
one set of stubs can't be reached from all code locations. This means
there can be multiple choices of address for a function, which might
cause function pointer comparison failures. So for ppc32, make
non-branch references always use the first stub group.
(PowerPC64 ELFv1 is always PIC so doesn't need to define the address
of an external function as the PLT stub. PowerPC64 ELFv2 needs a
special set of global entry stubs to serve as the address of external
functions, so it too is not affected by this bug.)
* powerpc.cc (Target_powerpc::Branch_info::make_stub): Put
stubs for ppc32 non-branch relocs in first stub table.
(Target_powerpc::Relocate::relocate): Resolve similarly.
This works like 'start' but it stops at the first instruction rather
than the first line in main(). This is useful if one wants to single
step through runtime linker startup.
While here, introduce a RUN_ARGS_HELP macro for shared help text
between run, start, and starti. This includes expanding the help for
start and starti to include details from run's help text.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS (Changes since GDB 8.0): Add starti.
* infcmd.c (enum run_break): New.
(run_command_1): Queue pending event for RUN_STOP_AT_FIRST_INSN
case.
(run_command): Use enum run_how.
(start_command): Likewise.
(starti_command): New function.
(RUN_ARGS_HELP): New macro.
(_initialize_infcmd): Use RUN_ARGS_HELP for run and start
commands. Add starti command.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Starting your Program): Add description of
starti command. Mention starti command as an alternative for
debugging the elaboration phase.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/starti.c: New file.
* gdb.base/starti.exp: New file.
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_starti_cmd): New procedure.
Complement commit 26eebcf553 ("Update OpenBSD/mips64 support"),
<https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2005-04/msg00382.html>, which added
OpenBSD/mips64 support to GAS, and also add it to LD, avoiding a build
failure at the configuration stage, like:
*** ld does not support target mips64-unknown-openbsd
*** see ld/configure.tgt for supported targets
make[1]: *** [configure-ld] Error 1
As per OS support only include n64 MIPS emulations, and use the
traditional ones, matching the choice already made with the addition of
GAS support.
ld/
* configure.tgt <mips64el-*-openbsd*, mips64-*-openbsd*>: New
targets.
gdb/monitor.c was removed by 40e0b27 (Delete the remaining ROM monitor
targets).
gdb:
2017-09-19 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* Makefile.in (monitor.o): Remove the rule.
After the PR 21411 fix, the linker generated .eh_frame for ppc64 glink
can be edited by the generic code. The sequence of events goes
something like:
1) Some object file adds .eh_frame aligned to 8, making the output
.eh_frame aligned to at least 8, so linker generated .eh_frame FDE
is padded to an 8 byte boundary.
2) All .eh_frame past the glink .eh_frame is garbage collected.
3) Generic code detects that last FDE (the glink .eh_frame) doesn't
need to be padded to an 8 byte boundary, reducing size from 88 to
84.
4) elf64-ppc.c check fails.
PR 21441
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_build_stubs): Don't check glink_eh_frame
size.
elf_gc_sweep_symbol should run after verdefs are calculated, since
the verdef code creates symbols for the versions. However,
elf_gc_sweep_symbol needs to run before verrefs so as to not emit
useless verrefs for symbols that are gc'd.
I've also removed a _bfd_elf_link_renumber_dynsyms calls added by
Maciej after I fussed about it when reviewing. On further examination
the call appears to be unnecessary. Looking at renumber_dynsyms also
made me realize that the test to exclude .gnu.version has been wrong
since 2016-04-26 (git commit d5486c4372), so fix that too.
PR 22150
* elflink.c (bfd_elf_size_dynamic_sections): Garbage collect
symbols before calculating verrefs. Don't renumber dynsyms
after gc. Exclude .gnu.version when zero or one dynsym.
Localize some vars and reindent.
The trouble with stubs per output section is that ppc32 uses a plt
stub as the address of a global function. This needs to be unique,
otherwise we'll get multiple addresses for a function.
Obviously this is only a partial solution, since ppc32 will get
multiple stubs when code is larger than 33M. A proper fix will
involve selecting a unique stub to use for non-branch relocs.
* options.h (stub-group-multi): Default to true. Add
--no-stub-group-multi.
Since bfd_canonicalize_dynamic_reloc returns -1 on error, check it in
_bfd_x86_elf_get_synthetic_symtab.
PR ld/22148
* elfxx-x86.c (_bfd_x86_elf_get_synthetic_symtab): Check error
return from bfd_canonicalize_dynamic_reloc.
The label abort_expression is unused, so remove it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Remove
label abort_expression.
From the original email:
Note this brings in the interface files for libcc1/G++ as well, which
we will be needing in GDB soon anyway. That commit renamed a method
in the C interface and that required a small update to GDB's compile/
code, which I've included that in this patch to keep the tree
building.
From the follow up email:
That breaks gold:
g++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I../../binutils/gold -I../../binutils/gold -I../../binutils/gold/../include -I../../binutils/gold/../elfcpp -DLOCALEDIR="\"/usr/share/locale\"" -DBINDIR="\"/usr/bin\"" -DTOOLBINDIR="\"/usr/x86_64-linux/bin\"" -DTOOLLIBDIR="\"/usr/x86_64-linux/lib\"" -W -Wall -Werror -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -frandom-seed=dwarf_reader.o -O2 -g -MT dwarf_reader.o -MD -MP -MF .deps/dwarf_reader.Tpo -c -o dwarf_reader.o ../../binutils/gold/dwarf_reader.cc
In file included from ../../binutils/gold/../elfcpp/dwarf.h:83:0,
from ../../binutils/gold/dwarf_reader.cc:30:
../../binutils/gold/../include/dwarf2.def:781:1: error: expected ?}? before ?DW_CFA_DUP?
DW_CFA_DUP (DW_CFA_AARCH64_negate_ra_state, 0x2d)
Using std::string in handle_qxfer_libraries and friends allow to
simplify the code. We don't have to manually free the buffer, and we
don't have to pre-compute the required space.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (accumulate_file_name_length): Remove.
(emit_dll_description): Adjust to std::string change.
(handle_qxfer_libraries): Use std::string to hold document.
This is a simple replacement, it allows removing some manual free'ing in
the callers.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/buffer.c (buffer_xml_printf): Adjust.
* common/xml-utils.c (xml_escape_text): Change return type to
std::string, update code accordingly.
* common/xml-utils.h (xml_escape_text): Change return type to
std::string.
* rs6000-aix-tdep.c (rs6000_aix_shared_library_to_xml): Adjust.
* windows-tdep.c (windows_xfer_shared_library): Adjust.
* unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c (test_xml_escape_text):
Adjust.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* linux-low.c (linux_qxfer_libraries_svr4): Adjust to change of
return type of xml_escape_text.
* server.c (emit_dll_description): Likewise.
The following patch modifies xml_escape_text, so I took the opportunity
to write a unit test for it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add new source file.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add new object file.
* unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c: New file.
With the growing number of selftests, I think it would be useful to be
able to run only a subset of the tests. This patch associates a name to
each registered selftest. It then allows doing something like:
(gdb) maintenance selftest aarch64
Running self-tests.
Running selftest aarch64-analyze-prologue.
Running selftest aarch64-process-record.
Ran 2 unit tests, 0 failed
or with gdbserver:
./gdbserver --selftest=aarch64
In both cases, only the tests that contain "aarch64" in their name are
ran. To help validate that the tests you want to run were actually ran,
it also prints a message with the test name before running each test.
Right now, all the arch-dependent tests are registered as a single test
of the selftests. To be able to filter those too, I made them
"first-class citizen" selftests. The selftest type is an interface,
with different implementations for "simple selftests" and "arch
selftests". The run_tests function simply iterates on that an invokes
operator() on each test.
I changed the tests data structure from a vector to a map, because
- it allows iterating in a stable (alphabetical) order
- it allows to easily verify if a test with a given name has been
registered, to avoid duplicates
There's also a new command "maintenance info selftests" that lists the
registered selftests.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* common/selftest.h (selftest): New struct/interface.
(register_test): Add name parameter, add new overload.
(run_tests): Add filter parameter.
(for_each_selftest_ftype): New typedef.
(for_each_selftest): New declaration.
* common/selftest.c (tests): Change type to
map<string, unique_ptr<selftest>>.
(simple_selftest): New struct.
(register_test): New function.
(register_test): Add name parameter and use it.
(run_tests): Add filter parameter and use it. Add prints.
Adjust to vector -> map change.
* aarch64-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_tdep): Add names when
registering selftests.
* arm-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_tdep): Likewise.
* disasm-selftests.c (_initialize_disasm_selftests): Likewise.
* dwarf2-frame.c (_initialize_dwarf2_frame): Likewise.
* dwarf2loc.c (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Likewise.
* findvar.c (_initialize_findvar): Likewise.
* gdbarch-selftests.c (_initialize_gdbarch_selftests): Likewise.
* maint.c (maintenance_selftest): Update call to run_tests.
(maintenance_info_selftests): New function.
(_initialize_maint_cmds): Register "maintenance info selftests"
command. Update "maintenance selftest" doc.
* regcache.c (_initialize_regcache): Add names when registering
selftests.
* rust-exp.y (_initialize_rust_exp): Likewise.
* selftest-arch.c (gdbarch_selftest): New struct.
(gdbarch_tests): Remove.
(register_test_foreach_arch): Add name parameter. Call
register_test.
(tests_with_arch): Remove, move most content to
gdbarch_selftest::operator().
(_initialize_selftests_foreach_arch): Remove.
* selftest-arch.h (register_test_foreach_arch): Add name
parameter.
(run_tests_with_arch): New declaration.
* utils-selftests.c (_initialize_utils_selftests): Add names
when registering selftests.
* utils.c (_initialize_utils): Likewise.
* unittests/array-view-selftests.c
(_initialize_array_view_selftests): Likewise.
* unittests/environ-selftests.c (_initialize_environ_selftests):
Likewise.
* unittests/function-view-selftests.c
(_initialize_function_view_selftests): Likewise.
* unittests/offset-type-selftests.c
(_initialize_offset_type_selftests): Likewise.
* unittests/optional-selftests.c
(_initialize_optional_selftests): Likewise.
* unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c
(_initialize_scoped_restore_selftests): Likewise.
* NEWS: Document "maintenance selftest" and "maint info
selftests".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (captured_main): Accept argument for --selftest.
Update run_tests call.
* linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c (initialize_low_tdesc): Add names
when registering selftests.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document filter parameter
of "maint selftest". Document "maint info selftests" command.
Simply use a scoped_restore instead of manually saving and restoring
current_uiout.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_load_progress): Restore current_uiout using a
scoped_restore.
This is a followup patch to the build breakage fix on AArch64. While
doing the fix, I found it better to convert tdesc->reg_defs (on
gdbserver/tdesc.h) from using VEC to using std::vector. This makes
the code easier to read and maintain, and also is one more step
towards the C++fication.
Regtested on BuildBot.
2017-09-16 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* regcache.c (get_thread_regcache): Update code to use "std::vector"
instead of "VEC" for "target_desc.reg_defs".
(regcache_cpy): Likewise.
(registers_to_string): Likewise.
(registers_from_string): Likewise.
(find_regno): Likewise.
(supply_regblock): Likewise.
(regcache_raw_read_unsigned): Likewise.
* tdesc.c (init_target_desc): Likewise.
(tdesc_create_reg): Likewise.
* tdesc.h: Remove declaration of "tdesc_reg_p". Include <vector>.
(struct target_desc) <reg_defs>: Convert to "std::vector".
(target_desc): Do not initialize "reg_defs".
(~target_desc): Update code to use "std::vector" instead of "VEC"
for "target_desc.reg_defs".
(operator==): Likewise.
As explained in the previous patch, the gdb_id concept is no longer
relevant. The function thread_to_gdb_id is trivial, it returns the
thread's ptid. Remove it and replace its usage with ptid_of.
The changes in nto-low.c and lynx-low.c are fairly straightforward, but
I was not able to build test them.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* inferiors.h (thread_to_gdb_id): Remove.
* inferiors.c (thread_to_gdb_id): Remove.
* server.c (handle_qxfer_threads_worker, handle_query): Adjust.
* lynx-low.c (lynx_resume, lynx_wait_1, lynx_fetch_registers,
lynx_store_registers, lynx_read_memory, lynx_write_memory):
Likewise.
* nto-low.c (nto_fetch_registers, nto_store_registers,
nto_stopped_by_watchpoint, nto_stopped_data_address): Likewise.
From what I understand, this function is not doing anything useful as of
today.
Here's the result of my archeological research:
- The field thread_info::gdb_id was added in
a06660f7 Use LWP IDs for thread IDs in gdbserver
There was problem when using a 32-bits gdb with a 64-bits gdbserver.
For some reason that I don't fully understand, the thread ids
exchanged between gdb and gdbserver could overflow a 32 bits data
type. My guess is that they were the thread address (e.g. the
0x7ffff7f20b40 in "Thread 0x7ffff7f20b40 (LWP 1058)" today). This
patch changed that so gdb/gdbserver would talk in terms of the OS
assigned numerical id (as shown in ps). It therefore added a way to
convert between this gdb_id (the numerical id) and the thread id (the
address).
- 95954743cb Implement the multiprocess extensions, and add linux
multiprocess supportNon-stop mode support.
This patch made gdbserver deal with threads using their numerical ids
and not the address-like id. Starting from there, the gdb_id <->
thread id conversion was not needed anymore, since the remote protocol
and gdbserver were using the same kind of ids again. The gdb_id field
in the thread_info structure was also unused starting there.
- d50171e4 Teach linux gdbserver to step-over-breakpoints.
This patch moved the thread_info structure around, and got rid of the
gdb_id field (which was unused).
Looking at the implementation of gdb_id_to_thread_id, it is not doing
anything useful. It is looking up a thread by ptid using
find_thread_ptid, which basically loops over all threads looking at
their entry.id field. If a thread with that ptid is found, it returns
its entry.id field. So it will always return the same thing as it input
(with the exception of if no thread exist with that ptid, then it will
return null_ptid).
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* inferiors.h (gdb_id_to_thread_id): Remove.
* inferiors.c (gdb_id_to_thread_id): Remove.
* server.c (process_serial_event): Adjust to gdb_id_to_thread_id
removal. Move pid declaration closer to where it's used.
The code required to handle the 'D' packet is non trivial, so move it
out to its own function.
The moved out code is identical, except for the call to strtol and some
breaks that became returns.
Tested manually, and by running gdb.base/*detach*.exp with
native-gdbserver and native-extended-gdbserver.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (handle_detach): New function.
(process_serial_event): Move code out, call handle_detach.
I find it very confusing to define the require_running in the middle of
the file, and re-define it to something else later in the middle of the
same file. I think it would be better if those macros had different
names so that we know exactly what they do.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (require_running): Rename to ...
(require_running_or_return): ... this ...
(require_running_or_break): ... and this.
(handle_query, process_serial_event): Adjust.
Since we are updating src-release.sh I thought I would check in this
small patch. It adds the option to create lzip compressed tarballs
via the -l command line option.
* src-release.sh (LZIPPROG): New define. Provides the name of the
lzip program.
(do_lz): New function. Compresses a tarball using the lzip
program.
(do_compress): Add support for lzip compression.
(usage): Mention -l option.
(build_release): Support -l option to invoke lzip compression.
copy_string does the exact same thing as savestring, so replace the
usages of the former with the latter.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2read.c (copy_string): Remove.
(parse_macro_definition): Replace copy_string with savestring.
We have about 6 functions/callbacks to find_inferior meant to find a
thread that belongs to a given pid. Remove all but
find_any_thread_of_pid and replace their uses with
find_any_thread_of_pid.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (first_thread_of): Remove.
(process_serial_event): Replace usage of first_thread_of with
find_any_thread_of_pid.
* tracepoint.c (same_process_p): Remove.
(gdb_agent_about_to_close): Replace usage of same_process_p with
find_any_thread_of_pid.
* linux-x86-low.c (same_process_callback): Remove.
(x86_arch_setup_process_callback): Replace usage of
same_process_callback with find_any_thread_of_pid.
* thread-db.c (any_thread_of): Remove.
(switch_to_process): Replace usage of any_thread_of with
find_any_thread_of_pid.
* inferiors.c (thread_pid_matches_callback): Remove.
(find_thread_process): Adjust to use find_any_thread_of_pid.
Christophe Lyon told me that GDB build failed on i386-linux with
--enable-64-bit-bfd=yes, so I audit the gdb/configure.tgt again. I
find that i386-darwin has the same issue too. Additionally, GDB
for solaris target fails to build too. This patch fixes all of them.
gdb:
2017-09-15 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* configure.tgt (i[34567]86-*-darwin*): Append amd64.o to
gdb_target_obs.
(i[34567]86-*-solaris2.1[0-9]* | x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*):
Likewise.
(i[34567]86-*-linux*): Likewise.
gold needs to be enabled for a binutils release, but it's rather odd
to do so for gas, gdb or sim. This patch passes various --enable and
--disable options depending on the directories being released.
* src-release.sh (do_proto_toplev): Revert last patch. Enable or
disable binutils, gas, gdb, gold, gprof, ld, libdecnumber, readline,
and sim depending on $tool and $support_files. Echo configure line.
We used to silently truncate the size returned by stat() to 32 bits.
While it is possible to make binutils handle a 64-bit off_t on a
32-bit host, to me the effort needed doesn't seem worth the benefit.
Instead, error if we truncate the size. I've written the test the way
I have to avoid a signed/unsigned warning.
PR 22116
* archive.c (bfd_ar_hdr_from_filesystem): Detect when status.st_size
overflows bfd_size_type.
Replace the manually managed array with a vector. It is mostly
straightforward, except maybe one thing in execute_stack_op, in the
handling of DW_OP_fbreg. When the code stumbles on that opcode while
evaluating an expression, it needs to evaluate a subexpression to find
where the fb reg has been saved. Rather than creating a new context, it
reuses the current context. It saves the size of the stack before and
restores the stack to that size after.
I think we can do a little bit better by saving the current stack
locally and installing a new empty stack. This way, if the
subexpression is malformed and underflows, we'll get an exception.
Before, it would have overwritten the top elements of the top-level
expression. The evaluation of the top-level expression would have then
resumed with the same stack size, but possibly some corrupted elements.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2expr.h (dwarf_stack_value): Add constructor.
(dwarf_expr_context) <~dwarf_expr_context>: Define as default.
<stack>: Change type to std::vector.
<stack_len, stack_allocated>: Remove.
<grow_stack>: Remove.
* dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::~dwarf_expr_context): Remove.
(dwarf_expr_context::grow_stack): Remove.
(dwarf_expr_context::push): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::pop): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::fetch): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::fetch_in_stack_memory): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::stack_empty_p): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Adjust.
With -PIE on x86-64, we get
0x000000006ffffffb (FLAGS_1) Flags: GLOBAUDIT PIE
We should allow additional bits in DT_FLAGS_1.
PR ld/22139
* testsuite/ld-elf/globalaudit.rd: Allow additional bits in
DT_FLAGS_1.
bfd/
PR ld/22135
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_convert_load_reloc): Add an argument
to indicate if conversion is performed.
(elf_i386_check_relocs): Cache section contents and relocations
if conversion is performed.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Cache section
contents and relocations if conversion is performed.
ld/
PR ld/22135
* testsuite/ld-i386/i386.exp: Run pr22135.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr22135.d: New file.
* testsuite/ld-i386/pr22135.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr22135.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-x86-64/pr22135.s: Likewise.
I'm seeing these failures on my system:
FAIL: gdb.base/nodebug.exp: p (double) mult (2.0, 3.0)
FAIL: gdb.base/nodebug.exp: p ((double (*) (double, double)) mult)(2.0f, 3.0f)
FAIL: gdb.base/nodebug.exp: p ((double (*) (double, double)) mult)(2, 3)
The problem is simply that GDB is finding a symbol named "mult" from
glibc's debug info:
(gdb) ptype mult
type = enum expression_operator {var, num, lnot, mult, divide, module, plus, minus, less_than, greater_than, less_or_equal, greater_or_equal, equal, not_equal, land, lor, qmop}
(gdb) info types expression_operator
All types matching regular expression "expression_operator":
File plural-exp.h:
enum expression_operator;
Fix this by unloading symbols from shared libraries.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-14 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/nodebug.exp (nodebug_runto): New procedure.
(top level): Use it instead of runto.
Replace int with bool, because that's what it is.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2expr.h (dwarf_expr_piece) <v.mem.in_stack_memory>:
Change type to bool.
(dwarf_stack_value) <in_stack_memory>: Likewise.
(dwarf_expr_context) <push_address>: Change parameter type to
bool.
<fetch_in_stack_memory>: Change return type to bool.
<push>: Change parameter type to bool.
* dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::push): Change parameter type
to bool.
(dwarf_expr_context::push_address): Likewise.
(dwarf_expr_context::fetch_in_stack_memory): Change return type
to bool.
(dwarf_expr_context::execute_stack_op): Adjust.
* dwarf2loc.c (dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Adjust.
Change the manually managed array dwarf_expr_piece::piece with an
std::vector. After passing the pieces array to allocate_piece_closure,
dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full doesn't need that data anymore. We can
therefore move the content of the vector to avoid copying it.
Reg-tested on the buildbot.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2expr.h (struct dwarf_expr_piece): Move up.
(struct dwarf_expr_context) <n_pieces>: Remove.
<pieces>: Change type to std::vector.
* dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_context::dwarf_expr_context): Adjust.
(dwarf_expr_context::~dwarf_expr_context): Don't manually free
pieces.
(dwarf_expr_context::add_piece): Adjust.
* dwarf2loc.c (struct piece_closure): Initialize fields.
<n_pieces>: Remove.
<pieces>: Change type to std::vector.
(allocate_piece_closure): Adjust, change parameter to
std::vector rvalue and std::move it to piece_closure.
(rw_pieced_value): Adjust.
(check_pieced_synthetic_pointer): Adjust.
(indirect_synthetic_pointer): Adjust.
(coerce_pieced_ref): Adjust.
(free_pieced_value_closure): Adjust. Use delete to free
piece_closure.
(dwarf2_evaluate_loc_desc_full): Adjust. std::move ctx.pieces
to allocate_piece_closure.
(dwarf2_loc_desc_get_symbol_read_needs): Adjust.