Commit Graph

105785 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
GDB Administrator
2cbb0a1b2e Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-11 00:00:15 +00:00
Eli Zaretskii
b3885679dd Fix handling DLL loads at run time
This patch makes handling a DLL load at run time (using LoadLibrary)
much more reliable when its file name cannot be obtained using the
lpImageName pointer provided by the DLL load debug event.  The
solution is to enumerate all the DLLs loaded by the inferior, looking
for the DLL that's loaded at base address provided by the lpBaseOfDll
pointer of the debug event.  Correctly resolving the DLL file name is
important, because without that GDB doesn't record the DLL in the list
of solibs, and then later is unable to show functions in that DLL in
the backtraces, which produces corrupted and truncated backtraces.
See this thread for the problems that causes:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-March/177022.html

gdb/ChangeLog:

2021-04-10  Eli Zaretskii  <eliz@gnu.org>

	* windows-nat.c (windows_nat::handle_load_dll): Call
	windows_add_dll if get_image_name failed to glean the name of the
	DLL by using the lpImageName pointer.
	(windows_add_all_dlls): Now a thin wrapper around windows_add_dll.
	(windows_add_dll): Now does what windows_add_all_dlls did before,
	but also accepts an argument LOAD_ADDR, which, if non-NULL,
	specifies the address where the DLL was loaded into the inferior,
	and looks for the single DLL loaded at that address.
2021-04-10 11:42:54 +03:00
GDB Administrator
ac4d7c7bfa Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-10 00:00:15 +00:00
Luis Machado
3a3fa80109 Add missing ChangeLog entry for sim/rx change. 2021-04-09 11:39:00 -03:00
Luis Machado
1ef6a59696 [AArch64] Fix include order for MTE
Similarly to commit 665af52ec2, fix a build
failure seen with an updated glibc, due to the enum/constant mismatch.

The old include file order eventually makes asm/ptrace.h get included before
sys/ptrace.h.

This patch fixes it. Seems fairly obvious and I'll push it shortly.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2021-04-09  Luis Machado  <luis.machado@linaro.org>

	* nat/aarch64-mte-linux-ptrace.c: Update include file order.
2021-04-09 11:36:55 -03:00
Luis Machado
ed29efbd17 [sim,rx] Silence warning that turns into a build error
On a 32-bit build, I ran into the following:

sim/rx/fpu.c:789:6: error: "*((void *)&a+8)" may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
rv = fp_implode (&a);

To silence this, just initialize the struct with 0's.

sim/rx/ChangeLog:

2021-04-09  Luis Machado  <luis.machado@linaro.org>

	* fpu.c (rxfp_itof): Initialize structure.
2021-04-09 09:17:32 -03:00
Tejas Belagod
dd17020328 AArch64: Fix Diagnostic messaging for LD/ST Exclusive.
A summary of what this patch set fixes:

For instructions

	STXR w0,x2,[x0]
	STLXR w0,x2,[x0]

The warning we emit currently is misleading:

Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`stlxr w0,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`stxr w0,x2,[x0]'

it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stlxr w0,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stxr w0,x2,[x0]'

For instructions:

	ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]
	ldxp x0,x0,[x0]

The warning we emit is incorrect

Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`ldxp x0,x0,[x0]'

it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable load of register pair -- `ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable load of register pair -- `ldxp x0,x0,[x0]'

For instructions

	stlxp   w0, x2, x2, [x0]
	stxp    w0, x2, x2, [x0]

We don't emit any warning when it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stlxp w0,x2,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stxp w0,x2,x2,[x0]'

gas/ChangeLog:

2021-04-09  Tejas Belagod  <tejas.belagod@arm.com>

	* config/tc-aarch64.c (warn_unpredictable_ldst): Clean-up diagnostic messages
	for LD/ST Exclusive instructions.
	* testsuite/gas/aarch64/diagnostic.s: Add a diagnostic test for STLXP.
	* testsuite/gas/aarch64/diagnostic.l: Fix-up test after message clean-up.
2021-04-09 12:32:00 +01:00
Tejas Belagod
52efda8266 AArch64: Fix Atomic LD64/ST64 classification.
Patch 1: Fix diagnostics for exclusive load/stores and reclassify
	 Armv8.7-A ST/LD64 Atomics.

Following upstream pointing out some inconsistencies in diagnostics,

https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-February/115356.html

attached is a patch set that fixes the issues. I believe a combination
of two patches mainly contributed to these bugs:

https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2020-November/113961.html
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2018-June/103322.html

A summary of what this patch set fixes:

For instructions

	STXR w0,x2,[x0]
	STLXR w0,x2,[x0]

The warning we emit currently is misleading:

Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`stlxr w0,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`stxr w0,x2,[x0]'

it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stlxr w0,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stxr w0,x2,[x0]'

For instructions:

	ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]
	ldxp x0,x0,[x0]

The warning we emit is incorrect

Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`ldxp x0,x0,[x0]'

it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable load of register pair -- `ldaxp x0,x0,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable load of register pair -- `ldxp x0,x0,[x0]'

For instructions

	stlxp   w0, x2, x2, [x0]
	stxp    w0, x2, x2, [x0]

We don't emit any warning when it ought to be:

Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stlxp w0,x2,x2,[x0]'
Warning: unpredictable: identical base and status registers --`stxp w0,x2,x2,[x0]'

For instructions:

	st64bv  x0, x2, [x0]
	st64bv  x2, x0, [x0]

We incorrectly warn when its not necessary. This is because we classify them
incorrectly as ldstexcl when it should be lse_atomics in the opcode table.
The incorrect classification makes it pick up the warnings from warning on
exclusive load/stores.

Patch 2: Reclassify Armv8.7-A ST/LD64 Atomics.

This patch reclassifies ST64B{V,V0}, LD64B as lse_atomics rather than ldstexcl
according to their encoding class as specified in the architecture. This also
has the fortunate side-effect of spurious unpredictable warnings getting
eliminated.

For eg. For instruction:

	st64bv  x0, x2, [x0]

We incorrectly warn when its not necessary:

Warning: unpredictable: identical transfer and status registers --`st64bv x0,x2,[x0]'

This is because we classify them incorrectly as ldstexcl when it should be
lse_atomics in the opcode table. The incorrect classification makes it pick
up the warnings from warning on exclusive load/stores. This patch fixes it
by reclassifying it and no warnings are issued for this instruction.

opcodes/ChangeLog:

2021-04-09  Tejas Belagod  <tejas.belagod@arm.com>

	* aarch64-tbl.h (struct aarch64_opcode aarch64_opcode_table): Reclassify
	LD64/ST64 instructions to lse_atomic instead of ldstexcl.
2021-04-09 12:27:54 +01:00
Alan Modra
c3f72de4f5 PowerPC disassembly of pcrel references
This adds some annotation to Power10 pcrel instructions, displaying
the target address (ie. pc + D34 field) plus a symbol if there is one
at exactly that target address.  pld from the .got or .plt will also
look up the entry and display it, symbolically if there is a dynamic
relocation on the entry.

include/
	* dis-asm.h (struct disassemble_info): Add dynrelbuf and dynrelcount.
binutils/
	* objdump.c (struct objdump_disasm_info): Delete dynrelbuf and
	dynrelcount.
	(find_symbol_for_address): Adjust for dynrelbuf and dynrelcount move.
	(disassemble_section, disassemble_data): Likewise.
opcodes/
	* ppc-dis.c (struct dis_private): Add "special".
	(POWERPC_DIALECT): Delete.  Replace uses with..
	(private_data): ..this.  New inline function.
	(disassemble_init_powerpc): Init "special" names.
	(skip_optional_operands): Add is_pcrel arg, set when detecting R
	field of prefix instructions.
	(bsearch_reloc, print_got_plt): New functions.
	(print_insn_powerpc): For pcrel instructions, print target address
	and symbol if known, and decode plt and got loads too.
gas/
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/prefix-pcrel.d: Update expected output.
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/prefix-reloc.d: Likewise.
	* gas/testsuite/gas/ppc/vsx_32byte.d: Likewise.
ld/
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/inlinepcrel-1.d: Update expected output.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/inlinepcrel-2.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc2.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/notoc3.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pcrelopt.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/startstop.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsget2.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/tlsld.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/weak1.d: Likewise.
	* testsuite/ld-powerpc/weak1so.d: Likewise.
2021-04-09 16:56:43 +09:30
GDB Administrator
39178037a1 Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-09 00:00:18 +00:00
Tom Tromey
06a88b3b39 Avoid sequence point warning in h8300 sim
GCC gives a -Wsequence-point warning for this code in the h8300 sim.
The bug is that memory_size is both assigned and used in the same
expression.  The fix is to assign after the print.

sim/h8300/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* compile.c (init_pointers): Fix sequence point warning.
2021-04-08 15:15:59 -06:00
Tom Tromey
32a046ab0d Add system includes in sim
This updates various parts of the sim to include missing system
headers.  I made the includes unconditional, because other parts of
the tree are already doing this.

2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* traps.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* cris-tmpl.c: Include stdlib.h.

sim/erc32/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* func.c: Include sys/time.h.

sim/frv/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* traps.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* registers.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* profile.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* memory.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* interrupts.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* frv.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* cache.c: Include stdlib.h.

sim/iq2000/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* iq2000.c: Include stdlib.h.

sim/m32r/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* traps.c: Include stdlib.h.
	* m32r.c: Include stdlib.h.

sim/ppc/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* emul_unix.c: Include time.h.
2021-04-08 14:34:42 -06:00
Tom Tromey
81e6e8ae40 Do not use old-style definitions in sim
This changes all the non-generated (hand-written) code in sim to use
"new" (post-K&R) style function definitions.

2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* bpf.c (bpf_def_model_init): Use new-style declaration.

sim/common/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* cgen-utils.c (RORQI, ROLQI, RORHI, ROLHI, RORSI, ROLSI): Use
	new-style declaration.

sim/erc32/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* sis.c (run_sim, main): Use new-style declaration.
	* interf.c (run_sim, sim_open, sim_close, sim_load)
	(sim_create_inferior, sim_store_register, sim_fetch_register)
	(sim_info, sim_stop_reason, flush_windows, sim_do_command): Use
	new-style declaration.
	* help.c (usage, gen_help): Use new-style declaration.
	* func.c (batch, set_regi, set_rega, disp_reg, limcalc)
	(reset_stat, show_stat, init_bpt, int_handler, init_signals)
	(disp_fpu, disp_regs, disp_ctrl, disp_mem, dis_mem, event)
	(init_event, set_int, advance_time, now, wait_for_irq, check_bpt)
	(reset_all, sys_reset, sys_halt): Use new-style declaration.
	* float.c (get_accex, clear_accex, set_fsr): Use new-style
	declaration.
	* exec.c (sub_cc, add_cc, log_cc, dispatch_instruction, fpexec)
	(chk_asi, execute_trap, check_interrupts, init_regs): Use
	new-style declaration.
	* erc32.c (init_sim, reset, decode_ersr, mecparerror)
	(error_mode, decode_memcfg, decode_wcr, decode_mcr, sim_halt)
	(close_port, exit_sim, mec_reset, mec_intack, chk_irq, mec_irq)
	(set_sfsr, mec_read, mec_write, init_stdio, restore_stdio)
	(port_init, read_uart, write_uart, flush_uart, uarta_tx)
	(uartb_tx, uart_rx, uart_intr, uart_irq_start, wdog_intr)
	(wdog_start, rtc_intr, rtc_start, rtc_counter_read)
	(rtc_scaler_set, rtc_reload_set, gpt_intr, gpt_start)
	(gpt_counter_read, gpt_scaler_set, gpt_reload_set, timer_ctrl)
	(memory_read, memory_write, get_mem_ptr, sis_memory_write)
	(sis_memory_read): Use new-style declaration.

sim/frv/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* sim-if.c (sim_open, frv_sim_close, sim_create_inferior): Use
	new-style declaration.

sim/h8300/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* compile.c (cmdline_location): Use new-style declaration.

sim/iq2000/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* sim-if.c (sim_open, sim_create_inferior): Use new-style
	declaration.
	* iq2000.c (fetch_str): Use new-style declaration.

sim/lm32/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* sim-if.c (sim_open, sim_create_inferior): Use new-style
	declaration.

sim/m32r/ChangeLog
2021-04-08  Tom Tromey  <tom@tromey.com>

	* sim-if.c (sim_open, sim_create_inferior): Use new-style
	declaration.
2021-04-08 14:34:42 -06:00
Dominique Quatravaux
83a559f7b9 Remove unused variable un darwin_nat_target::resume
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* darwin-nat.c (darwin_nat_target::resume): Remove status
	variable.

Change-Id: Ibcbdd6641a12252840c7dea9f388f4f8ce265e3d
2021-04-08 15:22:49 -04:00
Luis Machado
b7f507caf0 Fix DTB generation mechanism and build failure
I ran into a build failure with --enable-targets=all due to the fact that
the moxie sim expects to be able to use the dtc tool.  If it isn't available,
the builds fails.

The following patch adds a prebuilt dtb file to the tree. That file is the one
that is used for installations.

The patch also enables (re-)generation of the dtb file through maintainer
mode, if it needs to be updated due to a change in the dts file.

Tested on aarch64-linux/x86_64-linux.

sim/moxie/ChangeLog:

2021-04-08  Luis Machado  <luis.machado@linaro.org>

	* Makefile.in (moxie-gdb.dtb): Add maintainer mode dependency.
	(install-dtb): Install prebuilt dtb file.
	* moxie-gdb.dtb: New prebuilt file.
2021-04-08 15:02:14 -03:00
Simon Marchi
2b8d134be4 sim: set ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=0 when running igen and opc2c
The igen/dgen and opc2c tools leak their heap-allocated memory (on
purpose) at program exit, which makes AddressSanitizer fail the tool
execution.  This breaks the build, as it makes the tool return a
non-zero exit code.

Fix that by disabling leak detection through the setting of that
environment variable.

I also changed the opc2c rules for m32c to go through a temporary file.
What happened is that the failing opc2c would produce an incomplete file
(probably because ASan exits the process before stdout is flushed).
This meant that further make attempts didn't try to re-create the file,
as it already existed.  A "clean" was therefore necessary.  This can
also happen in regular builds if the user interrupts the build (^C) in
the middle of the opc2c execution and tries to resume it.  Going to a
temporary file avoids this issue.

sim/m32c/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running opc2c.

sim/mips/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.

sim/mn10300/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.

sim/ppc/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.

sim/v850/ChangeLog:

	* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.

Change-Id: I00f21d4dc1aff0ef73471925d41ce7c23e83e082
2021-04-08 09:49:30 -04:00
Felix Willgerodt
16e311ab6d gdb: Allow prologue detection via symbols for Intel compilers.
The next-gen Intel Fortran compiler isn't flang-based, but emits
prologue_end in the same manner.  As do the newer Intel C/C++ compilers.
This allows prologue detection based on dwarf for all newer Intel compilers.
The cut-off version was not chosen for any specific reason other than the
effort to test this.

gdb/Changelog:
2021-04-08  Felix Willgerodt  <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>

    	* i386-tdep.c (i386_skip_prologue): Use symbol table to find the
    	prologue end for Intel compilers.
    	* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_skip_prologue): Likewise.
    	* producer.c (producer_is_icc_ge_19): New function.
    	* producer.h (producer_is_icc_ge_19): New declaration.
2021-04-08 09:19:57 +02:00
Felix Willgerodt
fbb3bcfcd8 gdb: Update producer check for Intel compilers.
The main goal of this patch is to get rid of a warning for the new Fortran
compiler:

(gdb) b 9
warning: Could not recognize version of Intel Compiler in: "Intel(R) Fortran 21.0-2087b"
Breakpoint 1 at 0x4048cf: file comp.f90, line 9.

While trying to fix this I analyzed DW_AT_producer of all latest Intel
compilers for C, C++ and Fortran.  They do no longer necessarily start with
"Intel (R)" nor do they follow the internal and external version number
scheme that the original patch for this check assumed.  Some newer compilers
even contradict the "intermediate" digit in the old version scheme and have
the MINOR number as the second digit, even when having 3 or 4 digits overall.

Therefore I rewrote the check to consider the first MAJOR.MINOR string found
as the version number.  This might not be 100% correct for some older
internal compilers, but the only current user of this function is only
checking for the major version anyway.  Hence this should be reliable enough
and extendable enough going forward.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-04-08  Felix Willgerodt  <felix.willgerodt@intel.com>

    	* producer.c: (producer_is_icc): Update for new version scheme.
    	(producer_parsing_tests): Update names and expected results.
    	* producer.h: (producer_is_icc): Update comment accordingly.
2021-04-08 09:18:55 +02:00
Mike Frysinger
05385fc777 sim: testsuite: support exit 77 for unsupported tests
Exit status 77 is common (including the autotools world) to indicate
"skip this test".  Add support for mapping that to "unsupported" as
that's the closest in the dejagnu world.
2021-04-08 00:48:54 -04:00
Mike Frysinger
1bcee7fd87 sim: testsuite: skip tests when the port is disabled
If the port hasn't been enabled, don't try to run its tests.  Making
this dynamic simplifies the test harnesses and avoids duplicating a
bunch of target tuple checks.
2021-04-08 00:47:49 -04:00
Mike Frysinger
eec8bf7eab bfd: use https for bugzilla 2021-04-08 00:46:48 -04:00
Mike Frysinger
23cb7bac66 sim: testsuite: calculate $arch from $subdir
Since we require ports to use a matching subdir name in the testsuite
tree, we can use that to calculate the $arch value.
2021-04-08 00:45:07 -04:00
Jim Wilson
0592e80bcf Aarch64 sim fix for gcc-10 miscompilation.
This fixes a problem that occurs when compiled by gcc-10, as the code
is relying on undefined overflow behavior.  This is fixed by replacing
compares between 32-bit and 64-bit results with compares that just use
the 64-bit results with a cast.

	PR sim/27483
	* simulator.c (set_flags_for_add32): Compare uresult against
	itself.  Compare sresult against itself.
2021-04-07 18:51:52 -07:00
GDB Administrator
bf5271659d Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-08 00:00:14 +00:00
Alan Modra
ce7d813a0f PR27684, PowerPC missing mfsprg0 and others
PR 27684
	* ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): Correct usprg typos, add mfpir.
2021-04-08 08:28:27 +09:30
Alan Modra
97bf40d859 PR27676, PowerPC missing extended dcbt, dcbtst mnemonics
Note that this doesn't implement the ISA to the letter regarding
dcbtds (and dcbtstds), which says that the TH field may be zero.  That
doesn't make sense because allowing TH=0 would mean you no long have a
dcbtds but rather a dcbtct instruction.  I'm interpreting the ISA
wording about allowing TH=0 to mean that the TH field of dcbtds is
optional (in which case the TH value is 0b1000).

opcodes/
	PR 27676
	* ppc-opc.c (DCBT_EO): Move earlier.
	(insert_thct, extract_thct, insert_thds, extract_thds): New functions.
	(powerpc_operands): Add THCT and THDS entries.
	(powerpc_opcodes): Add dcbtstct, dcbtstds, dcbna, dcbtct, dcbtds.
gas/
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/pr27676.d,
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/pr27676.s: New test.
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/ppc.exp: Run it.
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/dcbt.d: Update.
	* testsuite/gas/ppc/power4_32.d: Update.
2021-04-08 08:28:11 +09:30
Simon Marchi
e97007b64a gdb: make target_ops::follow_fork return void
I noticed that all implementations return false, so
target_ops::follow_fork doesn't really need to return a value.  Change
it to return void.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* target.h (struct target_ops) <follow_fork>: Return void.
	(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
	* target.c (default_follow_fork): Likewise.
	(target_follow_fork): Likewise.
	* infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior): Adjust.
	* fbsd-nat.h (class fbsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Return void.
	* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target:::follow_fork): Likewise.
	* linux-nat.h (class linux_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
	* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_target::follow_fork): Return void.
	* obsd-nat.h (class obsd_nat_target) <follow_fork>: Return void.
	* obsd-nat.c (obsd_nat_target::follow_fork): Likewise.
	* remote.c (class remote_target) <follow_fork>: Likewise.
	(remote_target::follow_fork): Likewise.
	* target-delegates.c: Re-generate.

Change-Id: If908c2f68b29fa275be2b0b9deb41e4c6a1b7879
2021-04-07 16:57:29 -04:00
Weimin Pan
dc2b480f3d CTF: handle forward reference type
Added function fetch_tid_type which calls get_tid_type and will set up
the type, associated with a tid, if it is not read in yet. Also implement
function read_forward_type which handles the CTF_K_FORWARD kind.

Expanded gdb.base/ctf-ptype.exp to add cases with forward references.

gdb/ChangeLog:
       * ctfread.c (fetch_tid_type): New function, use throughout file.
       (read_forward_type): New function.
       (read_type_record): Call read_forward_type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
       * gdb.base/ctf-ptype.c: Add struct link containing a forward
       reference type.
       * gdb.base/ctf-ptype.exp: Add "ptype struct link".
2021-04-07 14:07:48 -04:00
Andrew Burgess
0a703a4ced gdb/fortran: handle dynamic types within arrays and structures
This commit replaces this patch:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/174933.html

which was itself a replacement for this patch:

  https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-July/170335.html

The motivation behind the original patch can be seen in the new test,
which currently gives a GDB session like this:

  (gdb) ptype var8
  type = Type type6
      PTR TO -> ( Type type2 :: ptr_1 )
      PTR TO -> ( Type type2 :: ptr_2 )
  End Type type6
  (gdb) ptype var8%ptr_2
  type = PTR TO -> ( Type type2
      integer(kind=4) :: spacer
      Type type1, allocatable :: t2_array(:)	<------ Issue #1
  End Type type2 )
  (gdb) ptype var8%ptr_2%t2_array
  Cannot access memory at address 0x38		<------ Issue #2
  (gdb)

Issue #1: Here we see the abstract dynamic type, rather than the
resolved concrete type.  Though in some cases the user might be
interested in the abstract dynamic type, I think that in most cases
showing the resolved concrete type will be of more use.  Plus, the
user can always figure out the dynamic type (by source code inspection
if nothing else) given the concrete type, but it is much harder to
figure out the concrete type given only the dynamic type.

Issue #2: In this example, GDB evaluates the expression in
EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode (due to ptype).  The value returned for
var8%ptr_2 will be a non-lazy, zero value of the correct dynamic
type.  However, when GDB asks about the type of t2_array this requires
GDB to access the value of var8%ptr_2 in order to read the dynamic
properties.  As this value was forced to zero (thanks to the use of
EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS) then GDB ends up accessing memory at a base
of zero plus some offset.

Both this patch, and my previous two attempts, have all tried to
resolve this problem by stopping EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS replacing the
result value with a zero value in some cases.

This new patch is influenced by how Ada handles its tagged typed.
There are plenty of examples in ada-lang.c, but one specific case is
ada_structop_operation::evaluate.  When GDB spots that we are dealing
with a tagged (dynamic) type, and we're in EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS
mode, then GDB re-evaluates the child operation in EVAL_NORMAL mode.

This commit handles two cases like this specifically for Fortran, a
new fortran_structop_operation, and the already existing
fortran_undetermined, which is where we handle array accesses.

In these two locations we spot when we are dealing with a dynamic type
and re-evaluate the child operation in EVAL_NORMAL mode so that we
are able to access the dynamic properties of the type.

The rest of this commit message is my attempt to record why my
previous patches failed.

To understand my second patch, and why it failed lets consider two
expressions, this Fortran expression:

  (gdb) ptype var8%ptr_2%t2_array	--<A>
  Operation: STRUCTOP_STRUCT		--(1)
   Operation: STRUCTOP_STRUCT		--(2)
    Operation: OP_VAR_VALUE		--(3)
     Symbol: var8
     Block: 0x3980ac0
    String: ptr_2
   String: t2_array

And this C expression:

  (gdb) ptype ptr && ptr->a == 3	--<B>
  Operation: BINOP_LOGICAL_AND		--(4)
   Operation: OP_VAR_VALUE		--(5)
    Symbol: ptr
    Block: 0x45a2a00
   Operation: BINOP_EQUAL		--(6)
    Operation: STRUCTOP_PTR		--(7)
     Operation: OP_VAR_VALUE		--(8)
      Symbol: ptr
      Block: 0x45a2a00
     String: a
    Operation: OP_LONG			--(9)
     Type: int
     Constant: 0x0000000000000003

In expression <A> we should assume that t2_array is of dynamic type.
Nothing has dynamic type in expression <B>.

This is how GDB currently handles expression <A>, in all cases,
EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS or EVAL_NORMAL, an OP_VAR_VALUE operation
always returns the real value of the symbol, this is not forced to a
zero value even in EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode.  This means that (3),
(5), and (8) will always return a real lazy value for the symbol.

However a STRUCTOP_STRUCT will always replace its result with a
non-lazy, zero value with the same type as its result.  So (2) will
lookup the field ptr_2 and create a zero value with that type.  In
this case the type is a pointer to a dynamic type.

Then, when we evaluate (1) to figure out the resolved type of
t2_array, we need to read the types dynamic properties.  These
properties are stored in memory relative to the objects base address,
and the base address is in var8%ptr_2, which we already figured out
has the value zero.  GDB then evaluates the DWARF expressions that
take the base address, add an offset and dereference.  GDB then ends
up trying to access addresses like 0x16, 0x8, etc.

To fix this, I proposed changing STRUCTOP_STRUCT so that instead of
returning a zero value we instead returned the actual value
representing the structure's field in the target.  My thinking was
that GDB would not try to access the value's contents unless it needed
it to resolve a dynamic type.  This belief was incorrect.

Consider expression <B>.  We already know that (5) and (8) will return
real values for the symbols being referenced.  The BINOP_LOGICAL_AND,
operation (4) will evaluate both of its children in
EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS in order to get the types, this is required
for C++ operator lookup.  This means that even if the value of (5)
would result in the BINOP_LOGICAL_AND returning false (say, ptr is
NULL), we still evaluate (6) in EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode.

Operation (6) will evaluate both children in EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS
mode, operation (9) is easy, it just returns a value with the constant
packed into it, but (7) is where the problem lies.  Currently in GDB
this STRUCTOP_STRUCT will always return a non-lazy zero value of the
correct type.

When the results of (7) and (9) are back in the BINOP_LOGICAL_AND
operation (6), the two values are passed to value_equal which performs
the comparison and returns a result.  Note, the two things compared
here are the immediate value (9), and a non-lazy zero value from (7).

However, with my proposed patch operation (7) no longer returns a zero
value, instead it returns a lazy value representing the actual value
in target memory.  When we call value_equal in (6) this code causes
GDB to try and fetch the actual value from target memory.  If `ptr` is
NULL then this will cause GDB to access some invalid address at an
offset from zero, this will most likely fail, and cause GDB to throw
an error instead of returning the expected type.

And so, we can now describe the problem that we're facing.  The way
GDB's expression evaluator is currently written we assume, when in
EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode, that any value returned from a child
operation can safely have its content read without throwing an
error.  If child operations start returning real values (instead of
the fake zero values), then this is simply not true.

If we wanted to work around this then we would need to rewrite almost
all operations (I would guess) so that EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS mode
does not cause evaluation of an operation to try and read the value of
a child operation.  As an example, consider this current GDB code from
eval.c:

  struct value *
  eval_op_equal (struct type *expect_type, struct expression *exp,
  	       enum noside noside, enum exp_opcode op,
  	       struct value *arg1, struct value *arg2)
  {
    if (binop_user_defined_p (op, arg1, arg2))
      {
        return value_x_binop (arg1, arg2, op, OP_NULL, noside);
      }
    else
      {
        binop_promote (exp->language_defn, exp->gdbarch, &arg1, &arg2);
        int tem = value_equal (arg1, arg2);
        struct type *type = language_bool_type (exp->language_defn,
  					      exp->gdbarch);
        return value_from_longest (type, (LONGEST) tem);
      }
  }

We could change this function to be this:

  struct value *
  eval_op_equal (struct type *expect_type, struct expression *exp,
  	       enum noside noside, enum exp_opcode op,
  	       struct value *arg1, struct value *arg2)
  {
    if (binop_user_defined_p (op, arg1, arg2))
      {
        return value_x_binop (arg1, arg2, op, OP_NULL, noside);
      }
    else
      {
        struct type *type = language_bool_type (exp->language_defn,
  					      exp->gdbarch);
        if (noside == EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS)
  	  return value_zero (type, VALUE_LVAL (arg1));
        else
  	{
  	  binop_promote (exp->language_defn, exp->gdbarch, &arg1, &arg2);
  	  int tem = value_equal (arg1, arg2);
  	  return value_from_longest (type, (LONGEST) tem);
  	}
      }
  }

Now we don't call value_equal unless we really need to.  However, we
would need to make the same, or similar change to almost all
operations, which would be a big task, and might not be a direction we
wanted to take GDB in.

So, for now, I'm proposing we go with the more targeted, Fortran
specific solution, that does the minimal required in order to
correctly resolve the dynamic types.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* f-exp.h (class fortran_structop_operation): New class.
	* f-exp.y (exp): Create fortran_structop_operation instead of the
	generic structop_operation.
	* f-lang.c (fortran_undetermined::evaluate): Re-evaluate
	expression as EVAL_NORMAL if the result type was dynamic so we can
	extract the actual array bounds.
	(fortran_structop_operation::evaluate): New function.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.fortran/dynamic-ptype-whatis.exp: New file.
	* gdb.fortran/dynamic-ptype-whatis.f90: New file.
2021-04-07 17:19:46 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
30ab358668 gdb: allow casting to rvalue reference in more cases
It is not currently possible to cast some values to an rvaule
reference.  This happens when simple scalar values are cast to an
rvalue reference of the same type, e.g.:

  int global_var;

Then in GDB:

  (gdb) p static_cast<int&&> (global_var)
  Attempt to take address of value not located in memory.

Which is clearly silly.

The problem is that as part of the cast an intermediate value is
created within GDB that becomes an lval_none rather than the original
lval_memory.  The casting logic basically goes like this:

The call tree that leads to the error looks like this:

  value_cast
    value_cast
    value_ref
      value_addr
        error

The first value_cast call is casting the value for 'global_var' to
type 'int&&'.  GDB spots that the target type is a reference, and so
calls value_cast again, this time casting 'global_var' to type 'int'.
We then call value_ref to convert the result of the second value_cast
into a reference.

Unfortunately, the second cast results in the value (for global_var)
changing from an lval_memory to an lval_none.  This is because int to
int casting calls extract_unsigned_integer and then
value_from_longest.

In theory value_cast has a check at its head that should help in this
case, the code is:

  if (value_type (arg2) == type)
    return arg2;

However, this only works in some cases.  In our case
'value_type (arg2)' will be an objfile owned type, while the type from
the expression parser 'int&&' will be gdbarch owned.  The pointers
will not be equal, but the meaning of the type will be equal.

I did consider making the int to int casting case smarter, but this
obviously is only one example.  We must also consider things like
float to float, or pointer to pointer....

So, I instead decided to try and make the initial check smarter.
Instead of a straight pointer comparison, I now propose that we use
types_deeply_equal.  If this is true then we are casting something
back to its current type, in which case we can preserve the lval
setting by using value_copy.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* valops.c (value_cast): Call value_deeply_equal before performing
	any cast.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.cp/rvalue-ref-params.cc (f3): New function.
	(f4): New function.
	(global_int): New global variable.
	(global_float): Likeiwse.
	(main): Call both new functions.
	* gdb.cp/rvalue-ref-params.exp: Add new tests.
2021-04-07 12:49:12 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
5e18990f1f gdb: move cheap pointer equality check earlier in types_equal
I noticed that in types equal we start with a cheap pointer equality
check, then resolve typedefs, then do a series of (semi-)expensive
checks, including checking type names, before, finally performing
another pointer equality check.

We should hoist the second pointer equality check to immediately after
we have resolved typedefs.  This would save performing the more
expensive checks.

This isn't going to give any noticable performance improvement, I just
spotted this in passing and figured I might as well commit the fix.

There should be no user visible changes after this commit.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbtypes.c (types_equal): Move pointer equality check earlier in
	the function.
2021-04-07 12:49:12 +01:00
Simon Marchi
efd86e5b0f sim: m32c: opc2c: remove unused vlist variable
When building with AddressSanitizer, sim/m32c fails with:

./opc2c -l r8c.out /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/sim/m32c/r8c.opc > r8c.c
sim_log: r8c.out

=================================================================
==3919390==ERROR: LeakSanitizer: detected memory leaks

    Direct leak of 4 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
        #0 0x7ffff7677459 in __interceptor_malloc /build/gcc/src/gcc/libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:145
        #1 0x55555555b3df in main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/sim/m32c/opc2c.c:658
        #2 0x7ffff741fb24 in __libc_start_main (/usr/lib/libc.so.6+0x27b24)

Fix the leak in main by removing the vlist variable, which seems unused.
2021-04-07 07:41:33 -04:00
Caroline Tice
56d467f4ee gdb: handle relative paths to DWO files
DWARF allows .dwo file paths to be relative rather than absolute.

When they are relative, DWARF uses DW_AT_comp_dir to find the .dwo
file.  DW_AT_comp_dir can also be relative, making the entire search
patch for the .dwo file relative.

In this case, GDB currently searches relative to its current working
directory, i.e. the directory from which the debugger was launched,
but not relative to the directory containing the built binary.  This
cannot be right, as the compiler, when generating the relative paths,
knows where it's building the binary but can have no idea where the
debugger will be launched.

The correct thing is to add the directory containing the binary to the
search paths used for resolving relative locations of dwo files. That
is what this patch does.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2/read.c (try_open_dwop_file): Add path for the binary to
	the search paths used resolve relative location of .dwo file.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-relative-dwo.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-relative-dwo.exp: New file.
2021-04-07 11:41:50 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
61dee7220e gdb/testsuite: fix fission support in the Dwarf assembler
This commit fixes fission support in the Dwarf assembler. I added the
new test gdb.dwarf2/fission-absolute-dwo.exp which is a simple example
of using the fission support.  I also rewrote the existing test
gdb.dwarf2/fission-multi-cu.exp to use the new functionality (instead
of using an x86-64 only assembler file).

To better support compiling the assembler files produced by the Dwarf
assembler I have added the new proc build_executable_and_dwo_files in
lib/dwarf.exp, this replaces build_executable_from_fission_assembler,
all the tests that used the old proc have been updated.  Where the old
proc assumed a single .S source file which contained the entire test,
the new proc allows for multiple source files.

The Dwarf assembler already had some fission support, however, this
was not actually used in any tests, and when I tried using it there
were a few issues.

The biggest change is that we now generate DW_FORM_GNU_addr_index
instead of DW_FORM_addr for the low and high pc in
_handle_macro_at_range, support for the DW_FORM_GNU_addr_index is new
in this commit.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-absolute-dwo.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-absolute-dwo.exp: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.exp: Use build_executable_and_dwo_files
	instead of build_executable_from_fission_assembler.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists-pie.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.exp: Likewise.
2021-04-07 11:41:49 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
1fd999d909 gdb: Handle missing .debug_str section
While messing with the Dwarf assembler (gdb/testsuite/lib/dwarf.exp) I
managed to create an ELF which made use of DW_FORM_strp, but didn't
include a .debug_str section.

When I started GDB on this ELF, GDB crashed.  I would have expected to
get an error instead.

I tracked this down to an unfortunate design choice in
dwarf2_section_info, a class which wraps around a bfd section, and is
used for reading in debug information.  GBB creates many
dwarf2_section_info objects, one for each debug section that might
need to be read, then as we find the input bfd sections we associate
them with the corresponding dwarf2_section_info.

If no matching input bfd section is found then the dwarf2_section_info
is left in an unassociated state, its internal bfd section pointer is
null.

If later GDB tries to read content from the dwarf2_section_info, for
example, which trying to read the string associated with DW_FORM_strp,
we spot that there is no associated bfd section and issue an error
message.

To make the users life easier, the error message includes the section
name being looked for, and the bfd from which the section was
obtained.

However, we get the section name by calling bfd_section_name on the
associated section, and we get the bfd filename by calling
bfd_get_filename on the owner of the associated section.

Of course, if there is no associated section then both the calls
bfd_section_name and dwarf2_section_info::get_bfd_owner will result in
undefined behaviour (e.g. a crash).

The solution I propose in this patch is, I know, not ideal.  I simply
spot the case where there is no associated section, and print a
simpler error message, leaving out the section name and filename.

A better solution would involve redesigning dwarf2_section_info, we
could associate each dwarf2_section_info with the initial bfd being
parsed.  We would then display this filename if there's nothing better
to display (e.g. if we find a section in a dwo/dwp split dwarf file
then we would probably use that filename in preference).

Each dwarf2_section_info could also have the concept of the default
section name that would be read for that section, for example, string
data might appear in ".debug_str" or ".zdebug_str", but if neither is
found, then it would probably be OK to just say ".debug_str" is
missing.

Anyway, I didn't do any of that redesign, I just wanted to stop GDB
crashing for now, so instead we get this:

  Dwarf Error: DW_FORM_strp used without required section

Which isn't the best, but in context, isn't too bad:

  Reading symbols from /path/to/executable...
  Dwarf Error: DW_FORM_strp used without required section
  (No debugging symbols found in /path/to/executable)

I also added some asserts into dwarf2_section_info which should
trigger before GDB crashes in future, if we trigger any other bad
paths through this code.

And there's a test for the specific issue I hit.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* dwarf2/section.c (dwarf2_section_info::get_bfd_owner): Add an
	assert.
	(dwarf2_section_info::get_file_name): Add an assert.
	(dwarf2_section_info::read_string): Display a minimal, sane error
	when the dwarf2_section_info is not associated with a bfd section.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-using-debug-str.exp: Add an additional test.
2021-04-07 11:31:30 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
79c024436b gdb/py: fix gdb.parameter('data-directory')
It was reported on IRC that using gdb.parameter('data-directory')
doesn't work correctly.

The problem is that the data directory is stored in 'gdb_datadir',
however the set/show command is associated with a temporary
'staged_gdb_datadir'.

When the user does 'set data-directory VALUE', the VALUE is stored in
'staged_gdb_datadir' by GDB, then set_gdb_datadir is called.  This in
turn calls set_gdb_data_directory to copy the value from
staged_gdb_datadir into gdb_datadir.

However, set_gdb_data_directory will resolve relative paths, so the
value stored in gdb_datadir might not match the value in
staged_gdb_datadir.

The Python gdb.parameter API fetches the parameter values by accessing
the variable associated with the show command, so in this case
staged_gdb_datadir.  This causes two problems:

1. Initially staged_gdb_datadir is NULL, and remains as such until the
user does 'set data-directory VALUE' (which might never happen), but
gdb_datadir starts with GDB's default data-directory value.  So
initially from Python gdb.parameter('data-directory') will return the
empty string, even though at GDB's CLI 'show data-directory' prints a
real path.

2. If the user does 'set data-directory ./some/relative/path', GDB
will resolve the relative path, thus, 'show data-directory' at the CLI
will print an absolute path.  However, the value is staged_gdb_datadir
will still be the relative path, and gdb.parameter('data-directory')
from Python will return the relative path.

In this commit I fix both of these issues by:

1. Initialising the value in staged_gdb_datadir based on the initial
value in gdb_datadir, and

2. In set_gdb_datadir, after calling set_gdb_data_directory, I copy
the value in gdb_datadir back into staged_gdb_datadir.

With these two changes in place the value in staged_gdb_datadir should
always match the value in gdb_datadir, and accessing data-directory
from Python should now work correctly.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* top.c (staged_gdb_datadir): Update comment.
	(set_gdb_datadir): Copy the value of gdb_datadir back into
	staged_datadir.
	(init_main): Initialise staged_gdb_datadir.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-parameter.exp: Add test for reading data-directory
	using gdb.parameter API.
2021-04-07 11:14:26 +01:00
Alan Modra
b12389f219 Fix pr27217 testcase failure
aarch64_be-linux-gnu_ilp32  +FAIL: PR27212

	PR 27217
	* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pr27217.d: Correct name.  Accept ilp32 relocs.
2021-04-07 18:14:20 +09:30
GDB Administrator
e23446bf96 Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-07 00:00:15 +00:00
Alan Modra
a2e6677373 Return symbol from symbol_at_address_func
include/
	* dis-asm.h (struct disassemble_info <symbol_at_address_func>):
	Return asymbol*.
binutils/
	* objdump.c (objdump_symbol_at_address): Return asymbol*.
opcodes/
	* dis-buf.c (generic_symbol_at_address): Return symbol* NULL.
	* s12z-dis.c (decode_possible_symbol): Use symbol returned from
	symbol_at_address_func.
2021-04-06 23:25:09 +09:30
Alan Modra
4db29512ce C99 NEWS and README
* NEWS: Mention C99 requirement.
	* README: Likewise.  Modernise examples and "Reporting bugs".
2021-04-06 23:25:09 +09:30
Tom de Vries
340d00fb78 [gdb/breakpoints] Workaround missing line-table entry
When running test-case gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp, we run into this KFAIL with
gcc:
...
Breakpoint 7, main () at gdb.opt/inline-cmds.c:71^M
71        result = 0; /* set breakpoint 3 here */^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: continue to breakpoint: consecutive func1
next^M
73        func1 (); /* first call */^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: next to first func1
next^M
75        marker ();^M
(gdb) KFAIL: gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: next to second func1 (PRMS: gdb/25884)
...
while with clang we have instead:
...
next^M
74        func1 (); /* second call */^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: next to second func1
...

The relevant bit of the test source is here in inline-cmds.c:
...
    71    result = 0; /* set breakpoint 3 here */
    72
    73    func1 (); /* first call */
    74    func1 (); /* second call */
    75    marker ();
...
with func1 defined as:
...
    33  inline __attribute__((always_inline)) int func1(void)
    34  {
    35    bar ();
    36    return x * y;
    37  }
...

The corresponding insns are:
...
  40050b:       movl   $0x0,0x200b1f(%rip)        # 601034 <result>
  400515:       callq  40057b <bar>
  40051a:       callq  40057b <bar>
  40051f:       callq  400596 <marker>
...
and the line number info is:
...
Line number    Starting address    View    Stmt
         71            0x40050b               x
         35            0x400515               x
         75            0x40051f               x
...

The line number info is missing an entry for the insn at 40051a, and that is
causing the FAIL.  This is a gcc issue, filed as PR gcc/98780 -" Missing line
table entry for inlined stmt at -g -O0".

[ For contrast, with clang we have an extra entry:
...
Line number    Starting address    View    Stmt
         71            0x40050b               x
         35            0x400515               x
         35            0x40051a
         75            0x40051f               x
...
though it appears to be missing the start-of-statement marker. ]

However, there is debug info that indicates that the insn at 40051a is not
part of the line table entry for the insn at 400515:
...
<2><1c4>: Abbrev Number: 8 (DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine)
    <1c5>   DW_AT_abstract_origin: <0x2a2>
    <1c9>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x400515
    <1d1>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0x5
    <1d9>   DW_AT_call_file   : 1
    <1da>   DW_AT_call_line   : 73
 <2><1db>: Abbrev Number: 8 (DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine)
    <1dc>   DW_AT_abstract_origin: <0x2a2>
    <1e0>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x40051a
    <1e8>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0x5
    <1f0>   DW_AT_call_file   : 1
    <1f1>   DW_AT_call_line   : 74
...
and indeed lldb manages to "next" from line 73 to line 74.

Work around the missing line table entry, by using the inline frame info to
narrow the stepping range in prepare_one_step.

Tested on x86_64-linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2021-04-06  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	PR breakpoints/25884
	* infcmd.c (prepare_one_step): Using inline frame info to narrow
	stepping range.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2021-04-06  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	PR breakpoints/25884
	* gdb.opt/inline-cmds.exp: Remove kfail.
2021-04-06 15:12:38 +02:00
Nick Clifton
eac4eb8ecb Fix a problem assembling AArch64 sources when a relocation is generated against a symbol that has a defined value.
PR 27217
	* config/tc-aarch64.c (my_get_expression): Rename to
	aarch64_get_expression.  Add a fifth argument to enable deferring
	of expression resolution.
	(parse_typed_reg): Update calls to my_get_expression.
	(parse_vector_reg_list): Likewise.
	(parse_immediate_expression): Likewise.
	(parse_big_immediate): Likewise.
	(parse_shift): Likewise.
	(parse_shifter_operand_imm): Likewise.
	(parse_operands): Likewise.
	(parse_shifter_operand_reloc): Update calls to my_get_expression
	and call aarch64_force_reloc to determine the value of the new
	fifth argument.
	(parse_address_main): Likewise.
	(parse_half): Likewise.
	(parse_adrp): Likewise.
	(aarch64_force_reloc): New function.  Contains code extracted from...
	(aarch64_force_relocation): ... here.
	* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pr27217.s: New test case.
	* testsuite/gas/aarch64/pr27217.d: New test driver.
2021-04-06 13:27:50 +01:00
Jan Beulich
da0835aebe gas: missing (re-)initialization of local variable in fixup_segment()
At the very least this has been causing bogus diagnostics, e.g.

	.text
	.data
	.long .bss - .
	.long -.text
	.bss

yielding

Error: can't resolve `0' {.bss section} - `.text' {.text section}

instead of

Error: can't resolve `0' {*ABS* section} - `.text' {.text section}

In particular for targets overriding any of TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_* & Co
or for ones setting md_register_arithmetic to true the problems may be
worse.
2021-04-06 10:56:30 +02:00
Jan Beulich
bd3d1480a8 ld: warn about PE base relocations to sections above .reloc
Due to a bogus linker script, or perhaps because a section doesn't get
placed by a linker script while default placement puts it too high up,
sections can end up above .reloc. Since the process of determining its
contents (and hence its size) happens before final section placement,
relocations needed for such sections would no longer point at the
correct address in the final binary. Warn about this (down the road this
may want to become an error, unless size determination and content
creation for .reloc would get decoupled).

To avoid triggering the warning when .reloc gets discarded, suppress
populating the section in the first place in this case.
2021-04-06 10:54:57 +02:00
Tom de Vries
d811a7cf74 [gdb/tui] Fix len_without_escapes in tui-disasm.c
On openSUSE Tumbleweed I run into:
...
FAIL: gdb.tui/basic.exp: asm window shows main
ERROR: invalid command name "_csi_L"
...

Using a minimal example, we get:
...
$ gdb -q outputs/gdb.tui/basic/basic -ex "tui enable" -ex "layout asm"
<TUI output>
src/gdb/ui-style.c:243: internal-error: bool \
  ui_file_style::parse(const char*, size_t*): Assertion `match == 0' failed.
...

The problem is in len_without_escapes, where we detect the start of an escape
sequence, but then pass ptr to style.parse while ptr no longer points to the
escape due to the ptr++ in the while condition:
...
  while ((c = *ptr++) != '\0')
     {
      if (c == '\033')
        {
          ui_file_style style;
          size_t n_read;
          if (style.parse (ptr, &n_read))
...

Fix this by removing the ++ in the while condition, and adding ptr++ in the
loop body where appropriate.

Tested on x86_64-linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2021-04-06  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	PR tui/27680
	* tui/tui-disasm.c (len_without_escapes): Pass ptr pointing at escape
	to style.parse.
2021-04-06 10:40:11 +02:00
Tom de Vries
043bcbaf81 [gdb/testsuite] Fix xfail handling in gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp
When running test-case gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp on openSUSE Tumbleweed,
I run into these XFAILs:
...
XFAIL: gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp: clear __stack_user.next
XFAIL: gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp: clear stack_used.next
...

Apart from the xfail, the test-case also sets core0file to "":
...
        -re "No symbol \"${symbol}\" in current context\\.\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
            xfail $test
            # Do not do the verification.
            set core0file ""
        }
...

After which we run into this FAIL, because gdb_core_cmd fails to load a
core file called "":
...
(gdb) core ^M
No core file now.^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp: core0file: \
  re-load generated corefile
...

Fix this FAIL by skipping gdb_core_cmd if the core file is "".

Tested on x86_64-linux.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2021-04-06  Tom de Vries  <tdevries@suse.de>

	PR testsuite/27691
	* gdb.threads/gcore-thread.exp: Don't call gdb_core_cmd with core
	file "".
2021-04-06 10:40:11 +02:00
GDB Administrator
a32a7fdc94 Automatic date update in version.in 2021-04-06 00:00:15 +00:00
Tom Tromey
53e123a578 Adjust location of readline in sim/erc32
sim/erc32 uses an obsolete path to the in-tree build of readline.
readline was moved into a subdirectory some time ago.  This patch
fixes the problem.  Tested by rebuilding.

sim/erc32/ChangeLog
2021-04-05  Tom Tromey  <tromey@adacore.com>

	* configure: Rebuild.
	* configure.ac (READLINE): Adjust in-tree value.
2021-04-05 06:53:35 -06:00
Alan Modra
c774eab1c8 C99 ld configury
* configure.ac: Move initfini-array arg handling earlier.  Don't
	check for string.h, strings.h, stdlib.h, or locale.h.  Do check
	for inttypes.h, stdint.h, sys/types.h.  Don't check for
	setlocale, free, getev or strstr.
	(AC_ISC_POSIX): Don't invoke.
	* sysdep.h: Include string.h and stdlib.h unconditionally.  Test
	HAVE_SYS_TYPE_H and HAVE_SYS_STAT_H.  Remove strstr, free and
	getenv fallback declarations.
	* ld.h: Don't test HAVE_LOCALE_H.
	* ldmain.c: Don't test HAVE_SETLOCALE.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2021-04-05 15:31:53 +09:30
Alan Modra
23d613801d C99 gas configury
Also remove alloca stuff since we don't use alloca in gas nowadays.

	* configure.ac: Don't check for string.h, strings.h, stdlib.h,
	errno.h, limits.h, locale.h or time.h.  Don't check for unlink,
	remove, sbrk (unused) or setlocale.  Adjust gas_test_headers.
	Don't check for errno, free, malloc, realoc, sbrk, strstr, getenv
	strstr, or vsnprintf declarations.
	(AC_ISC_POSIX, AC_FUNC_ALLOCA, AC_C_INLINE): Don't invoke.
	* as.h: Don't include alloca-conf.h, include config.h instead.
	Include string.h, stdlib.h, errno.h unconditionally.  Remove
	various fallback declarations.
	* asintl.h: Don't test HAVE_LOCALE_H.
	* as.c: Don't test HAVE_SETLOCALE.
	* dwarf2dbg.c: Include limits.h unconditionally.
	* expr.c: Likewise.
	* sb.c: Likewise.
	* symbols.c: Likewise.
	* config/tc-cr16.c: Likewise.
	* config/tc-d30v.c: Likewise.
	* config/tc-i386.c: Likewise.
	* config/tc-ia64.c: Likewise.
	* config/tc-tic54x.c (tic54x_mlib): Call remove rather than unlink.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
	* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
2021-04-05 15:31:25 +09:30