* config/i386/tm-i386aix.h (I386_AIX_TARGET): Remove.
* config/i386/tm-linux.h (LOW_RETURN_REGNUM, HIGH_RETURN_REGNUM):
Remove
* i386-tdep.c (LOW_RETURN_REGNUM, HIGH_RETURN_REGNUM): New defines.
(i386_extract_return_value): Rewritten. Correctly support all
floating-point types and large integer types on targets that use
the standard i386 GDB register layout and return floating-point
values in the FPU.
* breakpoint.c (insert_breakpoints, remove_breakpoint)
(bpstat_stop_status, can_use_hardware_watchpoint): Don't insert,
remove, or check status of hardware watchpoints for entire structs
and arrays unless the user explicitly asked to watch that struct
or array.
(insert_breakpoints): Try to insert watchpoints for all the values
on the value chain, even if some of them fail to insert.
* values.c (value_primitive_field): Set the offset in struct value
we return when the field is a packed bitfield.
* remote.c (remote_threads_extra_info): new function.
Implement the extra thread info query for "info threads".
(remote_threads_info): clean up a bit.
(use_threadinfo_query, use_threadextra_query): new variables.
Control whether GDB will use the new or old protocol for
thread info queries.
(remote_open_1): initialize new variables.
(remote_async_open_1): ditto.
(remote_cisco_open): ditto.
(LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN0, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET0,
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1,
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN2, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET2, linux_sigtramp_code,
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN, i386_linux_sigtramp_start,
LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN0, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET0,
LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1,
linux_rt_sigtramp_code, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN,
i386_linux_rt_sigtramp_start, i386_linux_in_sigtramp,
i386_linux_sigcontext_addr, LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_PC_OFFSET,
i386_linux_sigtramp_saved_pc, LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_SP_OFFSET,
i386_linux_sigtramp_saved_sp): Deleted. Folks rightly pointed
out that these are target-dependent, and useful in non-native
configurations. Moved to...
* i386-linux-tdep.c: ... Here, a new file.
* Makefile.in (ALLDEPFILES): Add i386-linux-tdep.c.
(i386-linux-tdep.o): New rule.
(i386-linux-nat.o): We no longer depend on frame.h.
* config/i386/linux.mt (TDEPFILES): Add i386-linux-tdep.o.
* event-loop.c (top-level) [NO_FD_SET]: Deprecate this branch.
Print an error at compile time if we are to use select, but FD_SET
is not available.
(SELECT_MASK, NBBY, FD_SETSIZE, NFDBITS, MASK_SIZE): Define only
if HAVE_POLL is not defined and NO_FD_SET *is* defined.
(create_file_handler) [!HAVE_POLL]: Use FD_SET and FD_CLR.
(delete_file_handler) [!HAVE_POLL]: Use FD_CLR and FD_ISSET.
(gdb_wait_for_event) [!HAVE_POLL]: Copy fd_set sets directly
instead of using memcpy and memset. Use FD_ISSET.
* config/i386/xm-go32.h (fd_mask): Remove typedef.
it:
* config/djgpp/djconfig.sh: New file.
* config/djgpp/config.sed: New file.
* config/djgpp/README: New file.
* config/djgpp/fnchange.lst: New file.
* config/djgpp/djcheck.sh: New file.
complain_overflow_bitfield doesn't complain) from -2**(n-1)..2**n-1 to
-2**n..2**n. This might mean that some reloc overflows are no longer
caught, but it solves the address wrap problem for 16-bit relocs
nicely. In any case, ports that rely on complain_overflow_bitfield
for reloc overflow checking were not getting a very good check
previously. A bitfield range in a machine instruction is typically
either the signed or unsigned n bit numbers, not the overlap of these
two ranges.
not supported by the current arch, only change the name if
its contents are the same as prev_name.
(get_specific): If the the architecture doesn't match, fail.
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1,
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN2, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET2, linux_sigtramp_code,
LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN, i386_linux_sigtramp_start,
LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN0, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET0,
LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1,
linux_rt_sigtramp_code, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN,
i386_linux_rt_sigtramp_start, i386_linux_in_sigtramp,
i386_linux_sigcontext_addr, LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_PC_OFFSET,
i386_linux_sigtramp_saved_pc, LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_SP_OFFSET,
i386_linux_sigtramp_saved_sp): Deleted. These all implement
Linux-specific signal trampoline detection, and should be moved to...
* i386-linux-nat.c: ... here.
* config/i386/tm-linux.h (I386_LINUX_SIGTRAMP): No need to define
this any more, since we're not enabling OS-specific code in a
OS-independent file.