This splits STRUCTOP_STRUCT into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_structop_struct): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits TERNOP_SLICE into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_ternop): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits BINOP_CONCAT into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_concat): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_OBJC_SELECTOR into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_objc_selector): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_STRING into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_string): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_REGISTER into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_register): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_func_static_var): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_var_msym_value): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_VAR_ENTRY_VALUE into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_var_entry_value): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
This splits OP_SCOPE into a new function for future use.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* eval.c (eval_op_scope): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Use it.
An earlier patch of mine introduced a build failure in ada-lang.c. A
couple of "to_string" calls were not namespace-qualified. In the
failing setup, the std string_view is being used, and so (apparently)
ADL doesn't find gdb::to_string.
This patch, from the bug, fixes the problem.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Chernov Sergey <klen_s@mail.ru>
PR gdb/27528:
* ada-lang.c (ada_fold_name): Use gdb::to_string.
This moves dwarf2_get_dwz_file and some helper code to dwarf2/dwz.h.
The main benefit of this is just shrinking dwarf2/read.c a little bit.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* dwarf2/sect-names.h (dwarf2_elf_names): Declare.
* dwarf2/read.h (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Move to dwz.h.
* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_elf_names): No longer static.
(locate_dwz_sections, dwz_search_other_debugdirs)
(dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Move to dwz.c.
* dwarf2/dwz.h (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Move declaration from
read.h.
* dwarf2/dwz.c (locate_dwz_sections, dwz_search_other_debugdirs)
(dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Move from read.c.
debuginfod-support.h requires scoped_fd, so include the header here.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* debuginfod-support.h: Include scoped_fd.h.
If DWARF contains a reference to a "dwz" file, but there is no
.gnu_debugaltlink section, then gdb will crash. This happens because
dwarf2_get_dwz_file will return NULL, but some callers do not expect
this.
This patch changes dwarf2_get_dwz_file so that callers can require a
dwz file. Then, it updates the callers that are attempting to process
references to the dwz file to require one.
This includes a new testcase. The dwarf.exp changes don't handle the
new forms exactly correctly -- they are only handled well enough to
let this test case complete.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* dwarf2/read.h (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Add 'require' parameter.
* dwarf2/read.c (dwarf2_get_dwz_file): Add 'require' parameter.
(get_abbrev_section_for_cu, read_attribute_value)
(get_debug_line_section): Update.
* dwarf2/macro.c (dwarf_decode_macro_bytes): Update.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* lib/dwarf.exp (_handle_DW_FORM): Treat DW_FORM_GNU_ref_alt and
DW_FORM_GNU_strp_alt like DW_FORM_sec_offset.
* gdb.dwarf2/dwznolink.exp: New file.
This creates a new file, dwarf2/sect-names.h, and moves some
DWARF-specific type definitions from symfile.h into it.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* xcoffread.c: Include sect-names.h.
* symfile.h (struct dwarf2_section_names, struct
dwarf2_debug_sections): Move to dwarf2/sect-names.h.
* dwarf2/sect-names.h: New file, from symfile.h.
* dwarf2/read.c: Include sect-names.h.
Currently, and abbrev_info points to a separately allocated array of
attr_abbrev objects. This array is constructed in a temporary vector,
then copied to the abbrev table's obstack.
This patch changes abbrev_info to use the struct hack to store the
objects directly, and changes abbrev_table::read to avoid an extra
copy when allocating, using the "growing objects" capability of
obstacks.
This saves a bit of space, and also perhaps a little time.
2021-03-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* dwarf2/read.c (read_attribute): Make 'abbrev' const.
* dwarf2/abbrev.c (abbrev_table::alloc_abbrev): Remove.
(abbrev_table::read): Update.
* dwarf2/abbrev.h (struct attr_abbrev): Move earlier.
(struct abbrev_info): Reformat.
<attrs>: Now an array.
(struct abbrev_table) <alloc_abbrev>: Remove.
With the following change which was made last April:
[gdb] Use partial symbol table to find language for main
commit d321419811
The ctf reader was modified to enter all members of an enum type,
similar to what the dwarf2 reader did, into the psymtab or gdb
won't be able to find them. In addition, the empty name checking
needed to be moved down so members of a unnamed enum were not left
out.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ctfread.c (ctf_psymtab_add_enums): New function.
(ctf_psymtab_type_cb): call ctf_psymtab_add_enums.
Added this support in read_func_kind_type after gcc started generating
CTF for function arguments.
Replaced XNEW with std::vector and NULL with nullptr.
Expanded gdb.base/ctf-ptype.exp to test function arguments. Also fixed
some typos.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ctfread.c (read_func_kind_type): Set up function arguments.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/ctf-ptype.exp: Add function tests and fix typos.
Use the current target description to include CSRs into the RISC-V
baremetal core dumps.
Every CSR declared in the current target description will be included
in the core dump.
It will be critical for users that they have the same target
description in use when loading the core file as was in use when
writing the core file. This should be fine if the user allows the
target description to be written into the core file.
In more detail, this commit adds a NT_RISCV_CSR note type. The
contents of this section is a series of either 4-byte (on RV32
targets), or 8-byte (on RV64 targets) values. Every CSR that is
mentioned in the current target description is written out in the
order the registers appear in the target description. As a
consequence it is critical that the exact same target description,
including the same register order, is in use when the CSRs are loaded
from the core file.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* riscv-none-tdep.c: Add 'user-regs.h' and 'target-description.h'
includes.
(riscv_csrset): New static global.
(riscv_update_csrmap): New function.
(riscv_iterate_over_regset_sections): Process CSRs.
A later commit will need the names of the RISC-V target description
features in files other than riscv-tdep.c. This commit just makes the
names global strings that can be accessed from other riscv-*.c files.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_feature_name_csr): Define.
(riscv_feature_name_cpu): Define.
(riscv_feature_name_fpu): Define.
(riscv_feature_name_virtual): Define.
(riscv_xreg_feature): Use riscv_feature_name_cpu.
(riscv_freg_feature): Use riscv_feature_name_fpu.
(riscv_virtual_feature): Use riscv_feature_name_virtual.
(riscv_csr_feature): Use riscv_feature_name_csr.
* riscv-tdep.h (riscv_feature_name_csr): Declare.
This commit adds the ability for bare metal RISC-V target to generate
core files from within GDB.
The intended use case is that a user will connect to a remote bare
metal target, debug up to some error condition, then generate a core
file in the normal way using:
(gdb) generate-core-file
This core file can then be used to revisit the state of the remote
target without having to reconnect to the remote target.
The core file creation code is split between two new files. In
elf-none-tdep.c is code for any architecture with the none
ABI (i.e. bare metal) when the BFD library is built with ELF support.
In riscv-none-tdep.c are the RISC-V specific parts. This is where the
regset and regcache_map_entry structures are defined that control how
registers are laid out in the core file. As this file could (in
theory at least) be used for a non-ELF bare metal RISC-V target, the
calls into elf-none-tdep.c are guarded with '#ifdef HAVE_ELF'.
Currently for RISC-V only the x-regs and f-regs (if present) are
written out. In future commits I plan to add support for writing out
the RISC-V CSRs.
The core dump format is based around generating an ELF containing
sections for the writable regions of memory that a user could be
using. Which regions are dumped rely on GDB's existing common core
dumping code, GDB will attempt to figure out the stack and heap as
well as copying out writable data sections as identified by the
original ELF.
Register information is added to the core dump using notes, just as it
is for Linux of FreeBSD core dumps. The note types used consist of
the 3 basic types you would expect in a OS based core dump,
NT_PRPSINFO, NT_PRSTATUS, NT_FPREGSET.
The layout of these notes differs slightly (due to field sizes)
between RV32 and RV64. Below I describe the data layout for each
note. In all cases, all padding fields should be set to zero.
Note NT_PRPSINFO is optional. Its data layout is:
struct prpsinfo32_t /* For RV32. */
{
uint8_t padding[32];
char fname[16];
char psargs[80];
}
struct prpsinfo64_t /* For RV64. */
{
uint8_t padding[40];
char fname[16];
char psargs[80];
}
Field 'fname' - null terminated string consisting of the basename of
(up to the fist 15 characters of) the executable. Any additional
space should be set to zero. If there's no executable name then
this field can be set to all zero.
Field 'psargs' - a null terminated string up to 80 characters in
length. Any additional space should be filled with zero. This
field contains the full executable path and any arguments passed
to the executable. If there's nothing sensible to write in this
field then fill it with zero.
Note NT_PRSTATUS is required, its data layout is:
struct prstatus32_t /* For RV32. */
{
uint8_t padding_1[12];
uint16_t sig;
uint8_t padding_2[10];
uint32_t thread_id;
uint8_t padding_3[44];
uint32_t x_regs[32];
uint8_t padding_4[4];
}
struct prstatus64_t /* For RV64. */
{
uint8_t padding_1[12];
uint16_t sig;
uint8_t padding_2[18];
uint32_t thread_id;
uint8_t padding_3[76];
uint64_t x_regs[32];
uint8_t padding_4[4];
}
Field 'sig' - the signal that stopped this thread. It's implementation
defined what this field actually means. Within GDB this will be
the signal number that the remote target reports as the stop
reason for this thread.
Field 'thread_is' - the thread id for this thread. It's implementation
defined what this field actually means. Within GDB this will be
thread thread-id that is assigned to each remote thread.
Field 'x_regs' - at index 0 we store the program counter, and at
indices 1 to 31 we store x-registers 1 to 31. x-register 0 is not
stored, its value is always zero anyway.
Note NT_FPREGSET is optional, its data layout is:
fpregset32_t /* For targets with 'F' extension. */
{
uint32_t f_regs[32];
uint32_t fcsr;
}
fpregset64_t /* For targets with 'D' extension . */
{
uint64_t f_regs[32];
uint32_t fcsr;
}
Field 'f_regs' - stores f-registers 0 to 31.
Field 'fcsr' - stores the fcsr CSR register, and is always 4-bytes.
The rules for ordering the notes is the same as for Linux. The
NT_PRSTATUS note must come before any other notes about additional
register sets. And for multi-threaded targets all registers for a
single thread should be grouped together. This is because only
NT_PRSTATUS includes a thread-id, all additional register notes after
a NT_PRSTATUS are assumed to belong to the same thread until a
different NT_PRSTATUS is seen.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add riscv-none-tdep.o.
(ALLDEPFILES): Add riscv-none-tdep.c.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (CONFIG_OBS): Add elf-none-tdep.o when BFD has ELF
support.
* configure.tgt (riscv*-*-*): Include riscv-none-tdep.c.
* elf-none-tdep.c: New file.
* elf-none-tdep.h: New file.
* riscv-none-tdep.c: New file.
When a core file is created from within GDB add the target description
into a note within the core file.
When loading a core file, if the target description note is present
then load the target description from the core file.
The benefit of this is that we can be sure that, when analysing the
core file within GDB, that we are using the exact same target
description as was in use at the time the core file was created.
GDB already supports a mechanism for figuring out the target
description from a given corefile; gdbarch_core_read_description.
This new mechanism (GDB adding the target description) is not going to
replace the old mechanism. Core files generated outside of GDB will
not include a target description, and so GDB still needs to be able to
figure out a target description for these files.
My primary motivation for adding this feature is that, in a future
commit, I will be adding support for bare metal core dumps on some
targets. For RISC-V specifically, I want to be able to dump all the
available control status registers. As different targets will present
different sets of register in their target description, including
registers that are possibly not otherwise known to GDB I wanted a way
to capture these registers in the core dump.
I therefore need a mechanism to write out an arbitrary set of
registers, and to then derive a target description from this arbitrary
set when later loading the core file. The obvious approach (I think)
is to just reuse the target description.
Once I'd decided to add support for writing out the target description
I could either choose to make this RISC-V only, or make it generic. I
figure that having the target description in the core file doesn't
hurt, and _might_ be helpful. So that's how I got here, general
support for including the target description in GDB generated core
files.
In previous versions of this patch I added the target description from
generic code (in gcore.c). However, doing this creates a dependency
between GDB's common code and bfd ELF support. As ELF support in gdb
is optional (for example the target x86_64-apple-darwin20.3.0 does not
include ELF support) then having gcore.c require ELF support would
break the GDB build in some cases.
Instead, in this version of the patch, writing the target description
note is done from each specific targets make notes function. Each of
these now calls a common function in gcore-elf.c (which is only linked
in when bfd has ELF support). And so only targets that are ELF based
will call the new function and we can therefore avoid an unconditional
dependency on ELF support.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* corelow.c: Add 'xml-tdesc.h' include.
(core_target::read_description): Load the target description from
the core file when possible.
* fbsd-tdep.c (fbsd_make_corefile_notes): Add target description
note.
* gcore-elf.c: Add 'gdbsupport/tdesc.h' include.
(gcore_elf_make_tdesc_note): New function.
* gcore-elf.h (gcore_elf_make_tdesc_note): Declare.
* linux-tdep.c (linux_make_corefile_notes): Add target description
note.
While reviewing the Linux and FreeBSD core dumping code within GDB for
another patch series, I noticed that the code that collects the
registers for each thread and writes these into ELF note format is
basically identical between Linux and FreeBSD.
This commit merges this code and moves it into a new file gcore-elf.c.
The function find_signalled_thread is moved from linux-tdep.c to
gcore.c despite not being shared. A later commit will make use of
this function.
I did merge, and then revert a previous version of this patch (commit
82a1fd3a49 for the original patch and 03642b7189 for the revert).
The problem with the original patch is that it introduced a
unconditional dependency between GDB and some ELF specific functions
in the BFD library, e.g. elfcore_write_prstatus and
elfcore_write_register_note. It was pointed out in this mailing list
post:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-February/175750.html
that this change was breaking any build of GDB for non-ELF targets.
To confirm this breakage, and to test this new version of GDB I
configured and built for the target x86_64-apple-darwin20.3.0.
Where the previous version of this patch placed all of the common code
into gcore.c, which is included in all builds of GDB, this new patch
only places non-ELF specific generic code (i.e. find_signalled_thread)
into gcore.c, the ELF specific code is put into the new gcore-elf.c
file, which is only included in GDB if BFD has ELF support.
The contents of gcore-elf.c are referenced unconditionally from
linux-tdep.c and fbsd-tdep.c, this is fine, we previously always
assumed that these two targets required ELF support, and we continue
to make that assumption after this patch; nothing has changed there.
With my previous version of this patch the darwin target mentioned
above failed to build, but with the new version, the target builds
fine.
There are a couple of minor changes to the FreeBSD target after this
commit, but I believe that these are changes for the better:
(1) For FreeBSD we always used to record the thread-id in the core
file by using ptid_t.lwp (). In contrast the Linux code did this:
/* For remote targets the LWP may not be available, so use the TID. */
long lwp = ptid.lwp ();
if (lwp == 0)
lwp = ptid.tid ();
Both target now do this:
/* The LWP is often not available for bare metal target, in which case
use the tid instead. */
if (ptid.lwp_p ())
lwp = ptid.lwp ();
else
lwp = ptid.tid ();
Which is equivalent for Linux, but is a change for FreeBSD. I think
that all this means is that in some cases where GDB might have
previously recorded a thread-id of 0 for each thread, we might now get
something more useful.
(2) When collecting the registers for Linux we collected into a zero
initialised buffer. By contrast on FreeBSD the buffer is left
uninitialised. In the new code the buffer is always zero initialised.
I suspect once the registers are copied into the buffer there's
probably no gaps left so this makes no difference, but if it does then
using zeros rather than random bits of GDB's memory is probably a good
thing.
Otherwise, there should be no other user visible changes after this
commit.
Tested this on x86-64/GNU-Linux and x86-64/FreeBSD-12.2 with no
regressions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add gcore-elf.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add gcore-elf.h
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Add gcore-elf.o to CONFIG_OBS if we have ELF
support.
* fbsd-tdep.c: Add 'gcore-elf.h' include.
(struct fbsd_collect_regset_section_cb_data): Delete.
(fbsd_collect_regset_section_cb): Delete.
(fbsd_collect_thread_registers): Delete.
(struct fbsd_corefile_thread_data): Delete.
(fbsd_corefile_thread): Delete.
(fbsd_make_corefile_notes): Call
gcore_elf_build_thread_register_notes instead of the now deleted
FreeBSD code.
* gcore-elf.c: New file, the content was moved here from
linux-tdep.c, functions were renamed and given minor cleanup.
* gcore-elf.h: New file.
* gcore.c (gcore_find_signalled_thread): Moved here from
linux-tdep.c and given a new name. Minor cleanups.
* gcore.h (gcore_find_signalled_thread): Declare.
* linux-tdep.c: Add 'gcore.h' and 'gcore-elf.h' includes.
(struct linux_collect_regset_section_cb_data): Delete.
(linux_collect_regset_section_cb): Delete.
(linux_collect_thread_registers): Delete.
(linux_corefile_thread): Call
gcore_elf_build_thread_register_notes.
(find_signalled_thread): Delete.
(linux_make_corefile_notes): Call gcore_find_signalled_thread.
PR 27147 shows that on sparc64, GDB is unable to properly unwind:
Expected result (from GDB 9.2):
#0 0x0000000000108de4 in puts ()
#1 0x0000000000100950 in hello () at gdb-test.c:4
#2 0x0000000000100968 in main () at gdb-test.c:8
Actual result (from GDB latest git):
#0 0x0000000000108de4 in puts ()
#1 0x0000000000100950 in hello () at gdb-test.c:4
Backtrace stopped: previous frame inner to this frame (corrupt stack?)
The first failing commit is 5b6d1e4fa4 ("Multi-target support"). The cause
of the change in behavior is due to (thanks for Andrew Burgess for finding
this):
- inferior_ptid is no longer set on entry of target_ops::wait, whereas
it was set to something valid previously
- deep down in linux_nat_target::wait (see stack trace below), we fetch
the registers of the event thread
- on sparc64, fetching registers involves reading memory (in
sparc_supply_rwindow, see stack trace below)
- reading memory (target_ops::xfer_partial) relies on inferior_ptid
being set to the thread from which we want to read memory
This is where things go wrong:
#0 linux_nat_target::xfer_partial (this=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, annex=0x0, readbuf=0x7feffe3b000 "", writebuf=0x0, offset=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3697
#1 0x00000100007f5b10 in raw_memory_xfer_partial (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, readbuf=0x7feffe3b000 "", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:912
#2 0x00000100007f60e8 in memory_xfer_partial_1 (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, readbuf=0x7feffe3b000 "", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1043
#3 0x00000100007f61b4 in memory_xfer_partial (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, readbuf=0x7feffe3b000 "", writebuf=0x0, memaddr=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1072
#4 0x00000100007f6538 in target_xfer_partial (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, annex=0x0, readbuf=0x7feffe3b000 "", writebuf=0x0, offset=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1129
#5 0x00000100007f7094 in target_read_partial (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, annex=0x0, buf=0x7feffe3b000 "", offset=8791798050744, len=8, xfered_len=0x7feffe3ae88) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1375
#6 0x00000100007f721c in target_read (ops=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, object=TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, annex=0x0, buf=0x7feffe3b000 "", offset=8791798050744, len=8) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1415
#7 0x00000100007f69d4 in target_read_memory (memaddr=8791798050744, myaddr=0x7feffe3b000 "", len=8) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:1218
#8 0x0000010000758520 in sparc_supply_rwindow (regcache=0x10000fea4f0, sp=8791798050736, regnum=-1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc-tdep.c:1960
#9 0x000001000076208c in sparc64_supply_gregset (gregmap=0x10000be3190 <sparc64_linux_ptrace_gregmap>, regcache=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=-1, gregs=0x7feffe3b230) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc64-tdep.c:1974
#10 0x0000010000751b64 in sparc_fetch_inferior_registers (regcache=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc-nat.c:170
#11 0x0000010000759d68 in sparc64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers (this=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, regcache=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/sparc64-linux-nat.c:38
#12 0x00000100008146ec in target_fetch_registers (regcache=0x10000fea4f0, regno=80) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:3287
#13 0x00000100006a8c5c in regcache::raw_update (this=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:584
#14 0x00000100006a8d94 in readable_regcache::raw_read (this=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80, buf=0x7feffe3b7c0 "") at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:598
#15 0x00000100006a93b8 in readable_regcache::cooked_read (this=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80, buf=0x7feffe3b7c0 "") at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:690
#16 0x00000100006b288c in readable_regcache::cooked_read<unsigned long, void> (this=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80, val=0x7feffe3b948) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:777
#17 0x00000100006a9b44 in regcache_cooked_read_unsigned (regcache=0x10000fea4f0, regnum=80, val=0x7feffe3b948) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:791
#18 0x00000100006abf3c in regcache_read_pc (regcache=0x10000fea4f0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/regcache.c:1295
#19 0x0000010000507920 in save_stop_reason (lp=0x10000fc5b10) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:2612
#20 0x00000100005095a4 in linux_nat_filter_event (lwpid=520983, status=1407) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3050
#21 0x0000010000509f9c in linux_nat_wait_1 (ptid=..., ourstatus=0x7feffe3c8f0, target_options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3194
#22 0x000001000050b1d0 in linux_nat_target::wait (this=0x10000fa2c40 <the_sparc64_linux_nat_target>, ptid=..., ourstatus=0x7feffe3c8f0, target_options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:3432
#23 0x00000100007f8ac0 in target_wait (ptid=..., status=0x7feffe3c8f0, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/target.c:2000
#24 0x00000100004ac17c in do_target_wait_1 (inf=0x1000116d280, ptid=..., status=0x7feffe3c8f0, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3464
#25 0x00000100004ac3b8 in operator() (__closure=0x7feffe3c678, inf=0x1000116d280) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3527
#26 0x00000100004ac7cc in do_target_wait (wait_ptid=..., ecs=0x7feffe3c8c8, options=...) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3540
#27 0x00000100004ad8c4 in fetch_inferior_event () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/infrun.c:3880
#28 0x0000010000485568 in inferior_event_handler (event_type=INF_REG_EVENT) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/inf-loop.c:42
#29 0x000001000050d394 in handle_target_event (error=0, client_data=0x0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/linux-nat.c:4060
#30 0x0000010000ab5c8c in handle_file_event (file_ptr=0x10001207270, ready_mask=1) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:575
#31 0x0000010000ab6334 in gdb_wait_for_event (block=0) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:701
#32 0x0000010000ab487c in gdb_do_one_event () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:212
#33 0x0000010000542668 in start_event_loop () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:348
#34 0x000001000054287c in captured_command_loop () at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:408
#35 0x0000010000544e84 in captured_main (data=0x7feffe3d188) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1242
#36 0x0000010000544f2c in gdb_main (args=0x7feffe3d188) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/main.c:1257
#37 0x00000100000c1f14 in main (argc=4, argv=0x7feffe3d548) at /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/gdb.c:32
There is a target_read_memory call in sparc_supply_rwindow, whose return
value is not checked. That call fails, because inferior_ptid does not
contain a valid ptid, and uninitialized buffer contents is used.
Ultimately it results in a corrupt stop_pc.
target_ops::fetch_registers can be (and should remain, in my opinion)
independent of inferior_ptid, because the ptid of the thread from which
to fetch registers can be obtained from the regcache. In other words,
implementations of target_ops::fetch_registers should not rely on
inferior_ptid having a sensible value on entry.
The sparc64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers case is special, because it calls
a target method that is dependent on the inferior_ptid value
(target_read_inferior, and ultimately target_ops::xfer_partial). So I would
say it's the responsibility of sparc64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers to set
up inferior_ptid correctly prior to calling target_read_inferior.
This patch makes sparc64_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers (and
store_registers, since it works the same) temporarily set inferior_ptid. If we
ever make target_ops::xfer_partial independent of inferior_ptid, setting
inferior_ptid won't be necessary, we'll simply pass down the ptid as a
parameter in some way.
I chose to set/restore inferior_ptid in sparc_fetch_inferior_registers, because
I am not convinced that doing so in an inner location (in sparc_supply_rwindow
for instance) would always be correct. We have access to the ptid in
sparc_supply_rwindow (from the regcache), so we _could_ set inferior_ptid
there. However, I don't want to just set inferior_ptid, as that would make it
not desync'ed with `current_thread ()` and `current_inferior ()`. It's
preferable to use switch_to_thread instead, as that switches all the global
"current" stuff in a coherent way. But doing so requires a `thread_info *`,
and getting a `thread_info *` from a ptid requires a `process_stratum_target
*`. We could use `current_inferior()->process_target()` in
sparc_supply_rwindow for this (using target_read_memory uses the current
inferior's target stack anyway). However, sparc_supply_rwindow is also used in
the context of BSD uthreads, where a thread stratum target defines threads. I
presume the ptid in the regcache would be the ptid of the uthread, defined by
the thread stratum target (bsd_uthread_target). Using
`current_inferior()->process_target()` would look up a ptid defined by the
thread stratum target using the process stratum target. I don't think it would
give good results. So I prefer playing it safe and looking up the thread
earlier, in sparc_fetch_inferior_registers.
I added some assertions (in sparc_supply_rwindow and others) to verify
that the regcache's ptid matches inferior_ptid. That verifies that the
caller has properly set the correct global context. This would have
caught (though a failed assertion) the current problem.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/27147
* sparc-nat.h (sparc_fetch_inferior_registers): Add
process_stratum_target parameter,
sparc_store_inferior_registers): update callers.
* sparc-nat.c (sparc_fetch_inferior_registers,
sparc_store_inferior_registers): Add process_stratum_target
parameter. Switch current thread before calling
sparc_supply_gregset / sparc_collect_rwindow.
(sparc_store_inferior_registers): Likewise.
* sparc-obsd-tdep.c (sparc32obsd_supply_uthread): Add assertion.
(sparc32obsd_collect_uthread): Likewise.
* sparc-tdep.c (sparc_supply_rwindow, sparc_collect_rwindow):
Add assertion.
* sparc64-obsd-tdep.c (sparc64obsd_collect_uthread,
sparc64obsd_supply_uthread): Add assertion.
Change-Id: I16c658cd70896cea604516714f7e2428fbaf4301
Christian suggested switching an "int" in ada-lang.c to "bool"
instead. This patch makes this change. Tested on x86-64 Fedora 32.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (struct match_data) <found_sym>: Now bool.
(aux_add_nonlocal_symbols): Update.
(ada_add_block_symbols): Change "found_sym" to bool.
This patch addresses some review comments that I forgot to deal with
in an earlier patch. See the comments here:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-February/176278.html
For the most part this is fixing up comments, but it also includes
adding a constructor and initializers to "match_data".
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 32.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-03 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_resolve_function): Update comment.
(is_nonfunction, add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs)
(remove_extra_symbols): Likewise.
(struct match_data): Add constructor, initializers.
(add_nonlocal_symbols): Remove memset.
(aux_add_nonlocal_symbols): Update comment.
(ada_add_block_renamings, add_nonlocal_symbols)
(ada_add_all_symbols): Likewise.
* ada-exp.y (write_var_or_type): Clean up trailing whitespace.
gdb currently supports two different styles of fixed-point. The
original style, where fixed point types are "GNAT encoded", is handled
primarily in the Ada code. The newer style, encoded using DWARF, is
handled by the core of gdb.
This patch changes gdb to read the GNAT encodings in the DWARF reader
as well. This removes some code and unifies the two paths. As a
result, GNAT-encoded fixed-point now works a bit better.
One possible drawback of this change is that, if someone uses stabs,
then fixed-point might now stop working. I consider stabs to be fully
obsolete, though, so I don't intend to address this.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (cast_from_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type)
(cast_to_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type): Remove.
(ada_value_cast, ada_evaluate_subexp): Update.
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type_info)
(ada_is_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type)
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_delta)
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_scaling_factor): Remove.
* ada-lang.h (ada_is_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type)
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_delta)
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_scaling_factor): Don't declare.
* ada-typeprint.c (print_gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type): Remove.
(ada_print_type): Update.
* ada-valprint.c (ada_value_print_num): Update.
* dwarf2/read.c (ada_get_gnat_encoded_number)
(ada_get_gnat_encoded_ratio): New functions.
(finish_fixed_point_type): Use them. Add parameters.
(GNAT_FIXED_POINT_SUFFIX): New define.
(gnat_encoded_fixed_point_type_info): New function.
(read_base_type): Handle gnat encodings.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* gdb.ada/fixed_points.exp: Remove most special cases for minimal
encodings.
This removes the "GROW_VECT" macro and helper function in favor of
simply using std::string in a few spots.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_fold_name, ada_variant_discrim_name)
(ada_enum_name, scan_discrim_bound, to_fixed_range_type): Use
std::string.
(GROW_VECT): Remove.
(grow_vect): Remove.
This changes ada_lookup_symbol_list to return a std::vector, and
changes various other helper functions to follow. This simplifies the
code, and makes it more type-safe (by using a vector where an obstack
had been used).
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.h (ada_lookup_symbol_list): Return a vector.
* ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Update.
(ada_resolve_function): Accept a vector.
(is_nonfunction, add_defn_to_vec)
(add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs): Likewise.
(num_defns_collected, defns_collected): Remove.
(remove_extra_symbols): Return a vector.
(remove_irrelevant_renamings): Return void.
(ada_add_local_symbols): Accept a vector.
(struct match_data) <obstackp>: Remove.
<resultp>: New member.
(aux_add_nonlocal_symbols): Update.
(ada_add_block_renamings, add_nonlocal_symbols)
(ada_add_all_symbols): Accept a vector.
(ada_lookup_symbol_list_worker, ada_lookup_symbol_list): Return a
vector.
(ada_lookup_symbol): Update.
(ada_add_block_symbols): Accept a vector.
(get_var_value, iterate_over_symbols): Update.
* ada-exp.y (block_lookup, write_var_or_type, write_name_assoc):
Update.
This changes resolve_subexp to use any_of and the erase-remove idiom
to simplify the code somewhat. This simplifies the next patch a bit.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Use any_of and erase-remove idiom.
This changes the ada_symbol_cache to be allocated with 'new' and
managed via unique_ptr. This simplifies the code somewhat. Also,
ada_clear_symbol_cache is changed so that it does not allocate a
symbol cache just to clear it.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (struct ada_symbol_cache) <cache_space>: Now an
auto_obstack.
<root>: Initialize.
(ada_pspace_data): Remove destructor.
<sym_cache>: Now a unique_ptr.
(ada_init_symbol_cache, ada_free_symbol_cache): Remove.
(ada_get_symbol_cache): Use 'new'.
(ada_clear_symbol_cache): Rewrite.
Most places in gdb that reference objfile->sf also check that it is
not null. It is valid for it to be null, because find_sym_fns can
return null for some kinds of object file. However, it's rare to
encounter this scenario with Ada code. I only encountered it when
looking at a fork of gdb that, I believe, makes its own objfiles
without setting 'sf'.
This patch changes ada-lang.c to check this field before using it.
This avoids any potential crash here. There's no test case because
I'm not even sure this is possible to trip over with an unmodified
gdb.
There are some other unchecked uses in gdb, but at a quick glance they
all seem to be involved with symbol reading, which of course won't
happen when sf==null.
gdb/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* ada-lang.c (add_nonlocal_symbols): Handle case where objfile->sf
is null.
As reported in gdb/27393, the 'directory' and 'set directories' commands
fail when parsing an empty dir name:
(gdb) set directories ""
/home/lsix/dev/gnu/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/pathstuff.cc:132: internal-error: gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> gdb_abspath(const char*): Assertion `path != NULL && path[0] != '\0'' failed.
or
(gdb) dir :
/home/lsix/dev/gnu/binutils-gdb/gdbsupport/pathstuff.cc:132: internal-error: gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> gdb_abspath(const char*): Assertion `path != NULL && path[0] != '\0'' failed.
This patch fixes this issue by ignoring any attempt to add an empty
name to the source directories list. 'set dir ""' will reset the
directories list the same way 'set dir' would do it.
Tested on x86_64.
I added the same comment for nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c yesterday.
Christian suggested adding the comment for the other file that I had
identified as including both <sys/ptrace.h> and <asm/ptrace.h>.
I searched the sources in gdb/, but found no other files which include
both of these headers.
If possible, I would prefer to see us use <sys/ptrace.h> when possible,
however, from past experience, I've found that this file does not always
contain all of the constants, etc. required by the particular source
file.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.h: Add comment regarding include
order for <sys/ptrace.h> and <asm/ptrace.h>.
As reported in PR 26861, when killing an inferior on macOS, we hit the
assert:
../../gdb-10.1/gdb/target.c:2149: internal-error: void target_mourn_inferior(ptid_t): Assertion `ptid == inferior_ptid' failed.
This is because darwin_nat_target::kill passes a pid-only ptid to
target_mourn_inferior, with the pid of the current inferior:
target_mourn_inferior (ptid_t (inf->pid));
... which doesn't satisfy the assert in target_mourn_inferior:
gdb_assert (ptid == inferior_ptid);
The reason for this assertion is that target_mourn_inferior is a
prototype shared between GDB and GDBserver, so that shared code in
gdb/nat (used in both GDB and GDBserver) can call target_mourn_inferior.
In GDB's implementation, it is likely that some targets still rely on
inferior_ptid being set to "the current thread we are working on". So
until targets are completely decoupled from inferior_ptid (at least
their mourn_inferior implementations), we need to ensure the passed in
ptid matches inferior_ptid, to ensure the calling code called
target_mourn_inferior with the right global context.
However, I think the assert is a bit too restrictive. The
mourn_inferior operation works on an inferior, not a specific thread.
And by the time we call mourn_inferior, the threads of the inferior
don't exist anymore, the process is gone, so it doesn't really make
sense to require inferior_ptid to point a specific thread.
I looked at all the target_ops::mourn_inferior implementations, those
that read inferior_ptid only care about the pid field, which supports
the idea that only the inferior matters. Other implementations look at
the current inferior (call `current_inferior ()`).
I think it would make sense to change target_mourn_inferior to accept
only a pid rather than a ptid. It would then assert that the pid is the
same as the current inferior's pid. However, this would be a quite
involved change, so I'll keep it for later.
To fix the macOS issue immediately, I propose to relax the assert to
only compare the pids, as is done in this patch.
Another solution would obviously be to make darwin_nat_target::kill pass
inferior_ptid to target_mourn_inferior. However, the solution I propose
is more in line with where I think we want to go (passing a pid to
target_mourn_inferior).
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/26861
* target.c (target_mourn_inferior): Only compare pids in
target_mourn_inferior.
Change-Id: If2439ccc5aa67272ea16148a43c5362ef23fb2b8
This change fixes the initial state of the main thread of remote
targets which have no concept of threading. Such targets are
treated as single-threaded by gdb, and this single thread needs
to be initially set to the "resumed" state, in the same manner as
threads in thread-aware remote targets (see remote.c,
remote_target::remote_add_thread).
Without this fix, the following assert was triggered on thread-
unaware remote targets:
remote_target::select_thread_for_ambiguous_stop_reply(const target_waitstatus*): Assertion `first_resumed_thread != nullptr' failed.
The bug can be reproduced using gdbserver
* by disabling packets 'T' and 'qThreadInfo', or
* by disabling all thread-related packets.
The test suite has been updated to include these two scenarios, see
gdb.server/stop-reply-no-thread.exp.
Change-Id: I2c39c9de17e8d6922a8c1b9e259eb316a554a43d
An extra \n in calls to fprintf_unfiltered() caused invalid MI records
to be emitted:
> gdb -i mi3 -ex "target remote :7000"
=thread-group-added,id="i1"
~"GNU gdb (GDB) 11.0.50.20201019-git\n"
~"Copyright (C) 2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.\n"
...
~"Remote debugging using :7001\n"
=tsv-created,name="trace_timestamp",initial="0"\n
=thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="304973"
This commit fixes the problem.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdb/mi/mi-interp.c (mi_traceframe_changed): Remove trailing \n from output.
(mi_tsv_created): Likewise.
(mi_tsv_deleted): Likewise.
When running test-case gdb.dwarf2/fission-mix.exp using gcc-11 (and using the
tentative fix for PR27353 to get past that assertion failure), I run into:
...
(gdb) file fission-mix^M
Reading symbols from fission-mix...^M
Dwarf Error: wrong unit_type in compilation unit header \
(is DW_UT_split_compile (0x05), should be DW_UT_type (0x02)) \
[in module fission-mix2.dwo]^M
(No debugging symbols found in fission-mix)^M
...
The compilation unit that is complained about is:
...
Contents of the .debug_info.dwo section (loaded from fission-mix2.dwo):
Compilation Unit @ offset 0x0:
Length: 0x57 (32-bit)
Version: 5
Unit Type: DW_UT_split_compile (5)
Abbrev Offset: 0x0
Pointer Size: 8
DWO ID: 0x3e3930d3cc1805df
<0><14>: Abbrev Number: 1 (DW_TAG_compile_unit)
...
And the dwarf error is triggered here in read_comp_unit_head:
...
case DW_UT_split_compile:
if (section_kind != rcuh_kind::COMPILE)
error (_("Dwarf Error: wrong unit_type in compilation unit header "
"(is %s, should be %s) [in module %s]"),
dwarf_unit_type_name (cu_header->unit_type),
dwarf_unit_type_name (DW_UT_type), filename);
break;
...
due to passing rcuh_kind::TYPE here in open_and_init_dwo_file:
...
create_debug_type_hash_table (per_objfile, dwo_file.get (),
&dwo_file->sections.info, dwo_file->tus,
rcuh_kind::TYPE);
...
Fix this by changing the section_kind argument to create_debug_type_hash_table
to rcuh_kind::COMPILE, to reflect that we're passing &dwo_file->sections.info
rather than &dwo_file->sections.types.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-02-25 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/27354
* dwarf2/read.c (open_and_init_dwo_file): Use rcuh_kind::COMPILE as
section_kind for &dwo_file->sections.info.
When attempting to call a Fortran function for which there is no debug
information we currently trigger undefined behaviour in GDB by
accessing non-existent type fields.
The reason is that in order to prepare the arguments, for a call to a
Fortran function, we need to know the type of each argument. If the
function being called has no debug information then obviously GDB
doesn't know about the argument types and we should either give the
user an error or pick a suitable default. What we currently do is
just assume the field exist and access undefined memory, which is
clearly wrong.
The reason GDB needs to know the argument type is to tell if the
argument is artificial or not, artificial arguments will be passed by
value while non-artificial arguments will be passed by reference.
An ideal solution for this problem would be to allow the user to cast
the function to the correct type, we already do this to some degree
with the return value, for example:
(gdb) print some_func_ ()
'some_func_' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
(gdb) print (integer) some_func_ ()
$1 = 1
But if we could extend this to allow casting to the full function
type, GDB could figure out from the signature what are real
parameters, and what are artificial parameters. Maybe something like
this:
(gdb) print ((integer () (integer, double)) some_other_func_ (1, 2.3)
Alas, right now the Fortran expression parser doesn't seem to support
parsing function signatures, and we certainly don't have support for
figuring out real vs artificial arguments from a signature.
Still, I think we can prevent GDB from accessing undefined memory and
provide a reasonable default behaviour.
In this commit I:
- Only ask if the argument is artificial if the type of the argument
is actually known.
- Unknown arguments are assumed to be artificial and passed by
value (non-artificial arguments are pass by reference).
- If an artificial argument is prefixed with '&' by the user then we
treat the argument as pass-by-reference.
With these three changes we avoid undefined behaviour in GDB, and
allow the user, in most cases, to get a reasonably natural default
behaviour.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/26155
* f-lang.c (fortran_argument_convert): Delete declaration.
(fortran_prepare_argument): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_f): Move logic to new function
fortran_prepare_argument.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/26155
* gdb.fortran/call-no-debug-func.f90: New file.
* gdb.fortran/call-no-debug-prog.f90: New file.
* gdb.fortran/call-no-debug.exp: New file.
This commit adds support for the ASSOCIATED builtin to the Fortran
expression evaluator. The ASSOCIATED builtin takes one or two
arguments.
When passed a single pointer argument GDB returns a boolean indicating
if the pointer is associated with anything.
When passed two arguments the second argument should either be some a
pointer could point at or a second pointer.
If the second argument is a pointer target, then the result from
associated indicates if the pointer is pointing at this target.
If the second argument is another pointer, then the result from
associated indicates if the two pointers are pointing at the same
thing.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* f-exp.y (f77_keywords): Add 'associated'.
* f-lang.c (fortran_associated): New function.
(evaluate_subexp_f): Handle FORTRAN_ASSOCIATED.
(operator_length_f): Likewise.
(print_unop_or_binop_subexp_f): New function.
(print_subexp_f): Make use of print_unop_or_binop_subexp_f for
FORTRAN_ASSOCIATED, FORTRAN_LBOUND, and FORTRAN_UBOUND.
(dump_subexp_body_f): Handle FORTRAN_ASSOCIATED.
(operator_check_f): Likewise.
* std-operator.def: Add FORTRAN_ASSOCIATED.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.fortran/associated.exp: New file.
* gdb.fortran/associated.f90: New file.
gfortran supports .xor. as an alias for .neqv., see:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gfortran/_002eXOR_002e-operator.html
this commit adds support for this operator to GDB.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* f-exp.y (fortran_operators): Add ".xor.".
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.fortran/dot-ops.exp (dot_operations): Test ".xor.".
With test-case gdb.cp/temargs.exp on target board \
unix/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5 I run into:
...
(gdb) info addr I^M
ERROR: GDB process no longer exists
GDB process exited with wait status 32286 exp19 0 0 CHILDKILLED SIGABRT SIGABRT
UNRESOLVED: gdb.cp/temargs.exp: test address of I in templ_m
...
This is a regression since commit 529908cbd0 "Remove DW_UNSND".
The problem is that this DW_AT_decl_file:
...
<1><221>: Abbrev Number: 4 (DW_TAG_structure_type)
<222> DW_AT_name : Base<double, 23, (& a_global), &S::f>
<226> DW_AT_byte_size : 1
<226> DW_AT_decl_file : 1
<226> DW_AT_decl_line : 30
<227> DW_AT_sibling : <0x299>
...
is not read by this code in new_symbol:
....
attr = dwarf2_attr (die,
inlined_func ? DW_AT_call_file : DW_AT_decl_file,
cu);
if (attr != nullptr && attr->form_is_unsigned ())
...
because DW_AT_decl_file has form DW_FORM_implicit_const:
...
4 DW_TAG_structure_type [has children]
DW_AT_name DW_FORM_strp
DW_AT_byte_size DW_FORM_implicit_const: 1
DW_AT_decl_file DW_FORM_implicit_const: 1
DW_AT_decl_line DW_FORM_data1
DW_AT_sibling DW_FORM_ref4
DW_AT value: 0 DW_FORM value: 0
...
which is a signed LEB128, so attr->form_is_unsigned () returns false.
Fix this by introducing new functions is_nonnegative and as_nonnegative, and
use these instead of form_is_unsigned and as_unsigned.
Tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-02-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
PR symtab/27336
* dwarf2/attribute.c (attribute::form_is_signed): New function
factored out of ...
* dwarf2/attribute.h (attribute::as_signed): ... here.
(attribute::is_nonnegative, attribute::as_nonnegative): New function.
(attribute::form_is_signed): Declare.
* dwarf2/read.c (new_symbol): Use is_nonnegative and as_nonnegative
for DW_AT_decl_file.
Due to a recent glibc header file change, the file
nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c no longer builds on Fedora rawhide.
An enum for PTRACE_SYSEMU is now provided by <sys/ptrace.h>. In the
past, PTRACE_SYSEMU was defined only in <asm/ptrace.h>. This is
what it looks like...
In <asm/ptrace.h>:
#define PTRACE_SYSEMU 31
In <sys/ptrace.h>:
enum __ptrace_request
{
...
PTRACE_SYSEMU = 31,
#define PT_SYSEMU PTRACE_SYSEMU
...
}
When <asm/ptrace.h> and <sys/ptrace.h> are both included in a source
file, we run into the following build problem when the former is
included before the latter:
In file included from nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c:26:
/usr/include/sys/ptrace.h:86:3: error: expected identifier before numeric constant
86 | PTRACE_SYSEMU = 31,
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~
(There are more errors after this one too.)
The file builds without error when <asm/ptrace.h> is included after
<sys/ptrace.h>. I found that this is already done in
nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.h (which is included by
nat/aarch64-linux-ptrace.c).
I've tested this change on Fedora rawhide and Fedora 33, both
running on an aarch64 machine.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c: Include <asm/ptrace.h> after
<sys/ptrace.h>.
The 'section' command uses a fixed size buffer into which a section
name is copied. This commit replaces this with a use of std::string
so we can now display very long section names.
The expected results of one test need to be updated.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* exec.c (set_section_command): Move variable declarations into
the function body, and use std::string instead of a fixed size
buffer.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.base/sect-cmd.exp: Update expected results.
The only target that implements target_ops::get_section_table in a
meaningful way is exec_target. This target calls back into the
program space to return the current global section_table.
The global section table is populated whenever the user provides GDB
with an executable, or when a symbol file is loaded, e.g. when a
dynamic library is loaded, or when the user does add-symbol-file.
I recently ran into a situation where a user, debugging a remote
target, was not supplying GDB with a main executable at all. Instead
the user attached to the target then did add-symbol-file, and then
proceeded to debug the target.
This works fine, but it was noticed that even when
trust-readonly-sections was on GDB was still accessing the target to
get the contents of readonly sections.
The problem is that by not providing an executable there was no
exec_target in the target stack, and so when GDB calls the
target_ops::get_section_table function GDB ends up in
dummy_target::get_section_table, which just returns NULL.
What I want is that even when GDB doesn't have an exec_target in the
target stack, a call to target_ops::get_section_table will still
return the section_table from the current program space.
When considering how to achieve this my first though was, why is the
request for the section table going via the target stack at all? The
set of sections loaded is a property of the program space, not the
target. This is, after all, why the data is being stored in the
program space.
So I initially tried changing target_get_section_table so that,
instead of calling into the target it just returns
current_program_space->target_sections ().
This would be fine except for one issue, target_bfd (from
bfd-target.c). This code is used from solib-svr4.c to create a
temporary target_ops structure that implements two functions
target_bfd::xfer_partial and target_bfd::get_section_table.
The purpose behind the code is to enable two targets, ppc64 and frv to
decode function descriptors from the dynamic linker, based on the
non-relocated addresses from within the dynamic linker bfd object.
Both of the implemented functions in target_bfd rely on the target_bfd
object holding a section table, and the ppc64 target requires that the
target_bfd implement ::get_section_table.
The frv target doesn't require ::get_section_table, instead it
requires the ::xfer_partial. We could in theory change the ppc64
target to use the same approach as frv, however, this would be a bad
idea. I believe that the frv target approach is broken. I'll
explain:
The frv target calls get_target_memory_unsigned to read the function
descriptor. The address being read is the non-relocated address read
from the dynamic linker in solib-srv4.c:enable_break. Calling
get_target_memory_unsigned eventually ends up in target_xfer_partial
with an object type of TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY. This will then call
memory_xfer_check_region. I believe that it is quite possible that a
the non-relocated addresses pulled from the dynamic linker could be in
a memory region that is not readable, while the relocated addresses
are in a readable memory region. If this was ever the case for the
frv target then GDB would reject the attempt to read the non-relocated
function pointer.
In contrast the ppc64 target calls target_section_by_addr, which calls
target_get_section_table, which then calls the ::get_section_table
function on the target.
Thus, when reflecting on target_bfd we see two functions,
::xfer_partial and ::get_section_table. The former is required by the
frv target, but that target is (I think) potentially broken. While
the latter is required by the ppc64 target, but this forces
::get_section_table to exist as a target_ops member function.
So my original plan, have target_get_section_table NOT call a
target_ops member function appears to be flawed.
My next idea was to remove exec_target::get_section_table, and instead
move the implementation into dummy_target::get_section_table.
Currently the dummy_target implementation always returns NULL
indicating no section table, but plenty of other dummy_target member
functions do more than just return null values.
So now, dummy_target::get_section_table returns the section table from
the current program space. This allows target_bfd to remain
unchanged, so ppc64 and frv should not be affected.
Making this change removes the requirement for the user to provide an
executable, GDB can now always access the section_table, as the
dummy_target always exists in the target stack.
Finally, there's a test that the target_section table is not empty in
the case where the user does add-symbol-file without providing an
executable.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* exec.c (exec_target::get_section_table): Delete member function.
(section_table_read_available_memory): Use current_top_target, not
just the exec_ops target.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target.c (default_get_section_table): New function.
* target.h (target_ops::get_section_table): Change default
behaviour to call default_get_section_table.
(default_get_section_table): Declare.
Following on from earlier commits which made access to the
target_sections table more 'const', this commit makes the table
private within the program_space class and provides member functions
to access the table.
Ideally I would have liked for the new target_sections member
function (on program_space) to return a 'const' reference to the table
within the program_space. Unfortunately, there are two places in
solib-*.c, where code outside of the program_space class modifies the
target_sections table, and so to support this we need to return a
non-const reference.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* exec.c (exec_target::close): Call new clear_target_sections
function.
(program_space::add_target_sections): Update name of member
variable.
(program_space::foreach_target_section): New function.
(program_space::add_target_sections): Update name of member
variable.
(program_space::remove_target_sections): Likewise.
(exec_one_fork): Use new target_sections member function.
(exec_target::get_section_table): Likewise.
(exec_target::files_info): Likewise.
(set_section_command): Use new foreach_target_section member
function.
(exec_set_section_address): Likewise.
(exec_target::has_memory): Use new target_sections member
function.
* progspace.h (program_space::clear_target_sections): New member
function.
(program_space::target_sections): Rename member variable to
m_target_sections, replace with a new member function.
(program_space::foreach_target_section): Declare new member
function.
(program_space::m_target_sections): New member variable.
* solib-dsbt.c (scan_dyntag): Use new member function.
* solib-svr4.c (scan_dyntag): Likewise.
The code to access the target section table can be made more const, so
lets do that. There should be no user visible changes after this
commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdb/bfd-target.c (class target_bfd) <get_section_table>: Make
return type const.
* gdb/exec.c (struct exec_target) <get_section_table>: Likewise.
(section_table_read_available_memory): Make local const.
(exec_target::xfer_partial): Make local const.
(print_section_info): Make parameter const.
* gdb/exec.h (print_section_info): Likewise.
* gdb/ppc64-tdep.c (ppc64_convert_from_func_ptr_addr): Make local
const.
* gdb/record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target::xfer_partial):
Likewise.
* gdb/remote.c (remote_target::remote_xfer_live_readonly_partial):
Likewise.
* gdb/s390-tdep.c (s390_load): Likewise.
* gdb/solib-dsbt.c (scan_dyntag): Likewise.
* gdb/solib-svr4.c (scan_dyntag): Likewise.
* gdb/target-debug.h (target_debug_print_target_section_table_p):
Rename to...
(target_debug_print_const_target_section_table_p): ...this.
* gdb/target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* gdb/target.c (target_get_section_table): Make return type const.
(target_section_by_addr): Likewise. Also make some locals const.
(memory_xfer_partial_1): Make some locals const.
* gdb/target.h (struct target_ops) <get_section_table>: Make
return type const.
(target_section_by_addr): Likewise.
(target_get_section_table): Likewise.