PR gas/18087
gas/test * gas/i386/dw2-compress-1.d: Allow the test to pass regardless of
whether the .debug_info section was compressed on not.
bfd * compress.c (bfd_compress_section_contents): Do not define this
function if it is not used.
This fixes several problems with this test.
E.g,. with --target_board=native-extended-gdbserver on x86_64 Fedora
20, I get:
Running /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: get hexadecimal valueof "$pc" (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: single step over vfork final pc
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: delete break vfork insn
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: continue to marker (vfork) (the program is no longer running)
And with --target=native-gdbserver, I get:
Running /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp ...
KPASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: single step over vfork (PRMS server/13796)
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: get hexadecimal valueof "$pc" (timeout)
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: single step over vfork final pc
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: delete break vfork insn
FAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: continue to marker (vfork) (the program is no longer running)
First, the lack of fork support on remote targets is supposed to be
kfailed, so the KPASS is obviously bogus. The extended-remote board
should have KFAILed too.
The problem is that the test is using "is_remote" instead of
gdb_is_target_remote.
And then, I get:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: set displaced-stepping on
stepi
Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
The program no longer exists.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: single step over vfork
Obviously, that should be a FAIL. The problem is that the test only
expects SIGILL, not SIGSEGV. It also doesn't bail correctly if an
internal error or some other pattern caught by gdb_test_multiple
matches. The test doesn't really need to match specific exits/crashes
patterns, if the PASS regex is improved, like in ...
... this and the other "stepi" tests are a bit too lax, passing on
".*". This tightens those up to expect "x/i" and the "=>" current PC
indicator, like in:
1: x/i $pc
=> 0x3b36abc9e2 <vfork+34>: syscall
On x86_64 Fedora 20, I now get a quick KFAIL instead of timeouts with
both the native-extended-gdbserver and native-gdbserver boards:
PASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: delete break vfork
PASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: continue to syscall insn vfork
PASS: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: set displaced-stepping on
KFAIL: gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp: vfork: single step over vfork (PRMS: server/13796)
and a full pass with native testing.
gdb/testsuite/
2015-03-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/disp-step-syscall.exp (disp_step_cross_syscall):
Use gdb_is_target_remote instead of is_remote. Use
gdb_test_multiple instead of gdb_expect. Exit early if
gdb_test_multiple hits its internal matches. Tighten stepi tests
expected output. Fail on exit with any signal, instead of just
SIGILL.
PR binutils/18087
gas * doc/as.texinfo: Note that when gas compresses debug sections the
compression is only performed if it makes the section smaller.
* write.c (compress_debug): Do not compress a debug section if
doing so would make it larger.
tests * gas/i386/dw2-compress-1.d: Do not expect the .debug_abbrev or
.debug_info sections to be compressed.
binu * doc/binutils.texi: Note that when objcopy compresses debug
sections the compression is only performed if it makes the section
smaller.
bfd * coffgen.c (make_a_section_from_file): Only prepend a z to a
debug section's name if the section was actually compressed.
* elf.c (_bfd_elf_make_section_from_shdr): Likewise.
* compress.c (bfd_init_section_compress_status): Do not compress
the section if doing so would make it bigger. In such cases leave
the section alone and return COMPRESS_SECTION_NONE.
Unwind info in system dlls uses almost all possible codes, contrary to unwind
info generated by gcc. A few issues have been discovered: incorrect handling
of SAVE_NONVOL opcodes and incorrect in prologue range checks. Furthermore I
added comments not to forget what has been investigated.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* amd64-windows-tdep.c (amd64_windows_find_unwind_info): Move
redirection code to ...
(amd64_windows_frame_decode_insns): ... Here. Fix in prologue
checks. Fix SAVE_NONVOL operations. Add debug code and comments.
This commit makes support for the "vFile:fstat" packet be detected
by probing rather than using qSupported, for consistency with the
other vFile: packets.
gdb/ChangeLog:
(remote_protocol_features): Remove the "vFile:fstat" feature.
(remote_hostio_fstat): Probe for "vFile:fstat" support.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (General Query Packets): Remove documentation
for now-removed vFile:fstat qSupported features.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
* server.c (handle_query): Do not report vFile:fstat as supported.
Hi,
This patch is to support catch syscall on aarch64 linux. We
implement gdbarch method get_syscall_number for aarch64-linux,
and add aarch64-linux.xml file, which looks straightforward, however
the changes to test case doesn't.
First of all, we enable catch-syscall.exp on aarch64-linux target,
but skip the multi_arch testing on current stage. I plan to touch
multi arch debugging on aarch64-linux later.
Then, when I run catch-syscall.exp on aarch64-linux, gcc errors that
SYS_pipe isn't defined. We find that aarch64 kernel only has pipe2
syscall and libc already convert pipe to pipe2. As a result, I change
catch-syscall.c to use SYS_pipe if it is defined, otherwise use
SYS_pipe2 instead. The vector all_syscalls in catch-syscall.exp can't
be pre-determined, so I add a new proc setup_all_syscalls to fill it,
according to the availability of SYS_pipe.
Regression tested on {x86_64, aarch64}-linux x {native, gdbserver}.
gdb:
2015-03-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
PR tdep/18107
* aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Include xml-syscall.h
(aarch64_linux_get_syscall_number): New function.
(aarch64_linux_init_abi): Call
set_gdbarch_get_syscall_number.
* syscalls/aarch64-linux.xml: New file.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-03-18 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
PR tdep/18107
* gdb.base/catch-syscall.c [!SYS_pipe] (pipe2_syscall): New
variable.
* gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: Don't skip it on
aarch64*-*-linux* target. Remove elements in all_syscalls.
(test_catch_syscall_multi_arch): Skip it on aarch64*-linux*
target.
(setup_all_syscalls): New proc.
When src or dst is NULL, the next fread or fwrite will cause a
segmentation fault, so we need to treat it as fatal.
* ldmain.c (main): Use %F instead of %X for einfo.
Forward declarations of struct stat break the Windows build.
This commit removes a forward declaration of struct stat and
includes sys/stat.h directly instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/18131
* common/common-remote-fileio.h (sys/stat.h): New include.
(stuct stat): Remove forward declaration.
We see some fails in watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp on aarch64-linux, because
it sets some HW breakpoint on some address doesn't meet the alignment
requirements by kernel, kernel will reject the
ptrace (PTRACE_SETHBPREGS) call, and some fails are caused, for example:
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp: always-inserted off: watch x hbreak: : width 1, iter 0: base + 0: delete $bpnum
hbreak *(buf.byte + 0 + 1)^M
Hardware assisted breakpoint 80 at 0x410a61^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp: always-inserted off: watch x hbreak: : width 1, iter 0: base + 1: hbreak *(buf.byte + 0 + 1)
stepi^M
Warning:^M
Cannot insert hardware breakpoint 80.^M
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:^M
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.^M
^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp: always-inserted off: watch x hbreak: : width 1, iter 0: base + 1: stepi advanced
hbreak *(buf.byte + 0 + 1)^M
Hardware assisted breakpoint 440 at 0x410a61^M
Warning:^M
Cannot insert hardware breakpoint 440.^M
Could not insert hardware breakpoints:^M
You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.^M
^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp: always-inserted on: watch x hbreak: : width 1, iter 0: base + 1: hbreak *(buf.byte + 0 + 1)
This patch is to skip some tests by checking proc valid_addr_p.
We can handle other targets in valid_addr_p too.
gdb/testsuite:
2015-03-16 Yao Qi <yao.qi@linaro.org>
* gdb.base/watchpoint-reuse-slot.exp (valid_addr_p): New proc.
(top level): Skip tests if valid_addr_p returns false for
$cmd1 or $cmd2.
Sync with GCC
2014-11-17 Bob Dunlop <bob.dunlop@xyzzy.org.uk>
* mt-ospace (CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET): Append -g -Os rather than
overwriting.
(CXXFLAGS_FOR_TARGET): Similarly.
Without this, not all registers were present in the core generated by
gcore. For example, running 'gcore' on a program without examining
the vector registers (SSE or AVX) would store all the vector registers
as zeros because they were not pulled into the regcache. Running
'info vector' before 'gcore' would store the correct values in the
core since it populated the regcache. For Linux processes, a similar
operation is achieved by having the thread iterator callback invoke
target_fetch_registers on each thread before its corresponding
register notes are dumped.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* fbsd-tdep.c (fbsd_make_corefile_notes): Fetch all target registers
before writing core register notes.
Fixes linking an --enable-build-with-cxx build on mingw:
../readline/terminal.c:278: undefined reference to `tgetnum'
../readline/terminal.c:297: undefined reference to `tgetnum'
../readline/libreadline.a(terminal.o): In function `get_term_capabilities':
../readline/terminal.c:427: undefined reference to `tgetstr'
../readline/libreadline.a(terminal.o): In function `_rl_init_terminal_io':
[etc.]
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-16 Yuanhui Zhang <asmwarrior@gmail.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb_curses.h (tgetnum): Mark with EXTERN_C.
* stub-termcap.c (tgetent, tgetnum, tgetflag, tgetstr, tputs)
(tgoto): Wrap with extern "C".
src/gdb/stub-termcap.c: In function 'int tputs(char*, int, int (*)())':
src/gdb/stub-termcap.c:67:22: error: too many arguments to function
outfun (*string++);
^
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Yuanhui Zhang <asmwarrior@gmail.com>
* stub-termcap.c (tputs): Change prototype.
Building mingw GDB with --enable-build-with-cxx shows:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/windows-nat.c: At global scope:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/windows-nat.c:192:1: error: conflicting declaration 'typedef struct thread_info_struct thread_info'
thread_info;
^
In file included from ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/windows-nat.c:52:0:
../../binutils-gdb/gdb/gdbthread.h:160:8: error: 'struct thread_info' has a previous declaration as 'struct thread_info'
struct thread_info
^
Simply rename the structure to avoid the conflict.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-03-16 Yuanhui Zhang <asmwarrior@gmail.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* windows-nat.c (struct thread_info_struct): Rename to ...
(struct windows_thread_info_struct): ... this.
(thread_info): Rename to ...
(windows_thread_info): ... this.
All users updated.
Rather than manually include tconfig.h when we think we'll need it (which
is error prone as it can define symbols we expect from config.h), have it
be included directly by config.h. Since we know we have to include that
header everywhere already, this will make sure tconfig.h isn't missed.
It should also be fine as tconfig.h is supposed to be simple and only set
up a few core defines for the target.
This allows us to stop symlinking it in place all the time and just use
it straight out of the respective source directory.
Pull out the duplicated dv_sockser_install prototype from the tconfig.in
files and put it in the one place it gets used -- sim-module.c. This is
still arguably incorrect, but it's better than the status quo where the
tconfig.in has to include header files and duplicate the dv-sockser func.
The tconfig header is meant to be simple and contain a target defines.
This dates back to the start of the repo, but has never really been used.
The sim-inline.c file has been checked in to the source, and attempts to
build it in the build tree leads to a circular dep warning from make. It
also doesn't produce a file that is usable -- it can't be compiled. Punt!
We want people to stop using the run.c frontend, but it's hard to notice
when it's still set as the default. Lets flip things so nrun.c is the
default, and users of run.c will get an error by default. We turn that
error into a warning for existing sims so we don't break them -- this is
mostly meant for people starting new ports.