Commit graph

81711 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yao Qi
6ce8c98020 Match the working directory on remote host
The test in gdb.python/python.exp tests "extended-prompt" and expects
working directory is printed.  However, working directory on remote
host doesn't have "gdb/testsuite", so the test fails on remote host
like:

set extended-prompt \w ^M
^M
/home/yao FAIL: gdb.python/python.exp: set extended prompt working directory (timeout)

This patch is to get the working directory first, and use it to match
the output of "set extended-prompt \\w ".  It works for remote host
and non remote host.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-11-02  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.python/python.exp: Get working directory and match the
	output of "set extended-prompt \\w " with it.
2014-11-02 21:08:06 +08:00
Alan Modra
a218b38d2e daily update 2014-11-02 09:30:42 +10:30
Doug Evans
4f072d17b2 objfiles.h: Remove some unused macros.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* objfiles.h (ALL_PSPACE_OBJFILES_SAFE): Delete, unused.
	(ALL_PSPACE_SYMTABS, ALL_PSPACE_PRIMARY_SYMTABS): Ditto.
2014-10-31 21:46:08 -07:00
Doug Evans
8301c89eb5 valops.c: Fix some whitespace.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* valops.c (value_cast_pointers): Fix whitespace.
	(typecmp, search_struct_method, value_struct_elt, find_oload_champ):
	Ditto.
2014-10-31 20:20:48 -07:00
Hans-Peter Nilsson
2a03f30731 Fix %lx format used with bfd_size_type mismatch in readelf.c
* readelf.c (get_32bit_elf_symbols): Cast error
	parameters of bfd_size_type with the %lx format to
	unsigned long.
2014-11-01 03:34:00 +01:00
Alan Modra
657a7d7d23 daily update 2014-11-01 09:30:35 +10:30
Naveen H.S
2c62985659 MIPS: Add Octeon 3 support
binutils:
2014-10-31  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>
            Naveen H.S  <Naveen.Hurugalawadi@caviumnetworks.com>

	* readelf.c (print_mips_isa_ext): Print the value of Octeon3.

gas:
2014-10-31  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>
            Naveen H.S  <Naveen.Hurugalawadi@caviumnetworks.com>

	* config/tc-mips.c (CPU_IS_OCTEON): Handle CPU_OCTEON3.
	(mips_cpu_info_table): Octeon3 enables virt ase.
	* doc/c-mips.texi: Document octeon3 as an acceptable value for
	-march=.

gas/testsuite:
2014-10-31  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>
            Naveen H.S  <Naveen.Hurugalawadi@caviumnetworks.com>

	* gas/mips/mips.exp: Add support for Octeon3 architecture.
	Also add in support for running Octeon3 tests.
	* gas/mips/octeon3.d: New test.
	* gas/mips/octeon3.s: New test source.

opcodes:
2014-10-31  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>
            Naveen H.S  <Naveen.Hurugalawadi@caviumnetworks.com>

	* mips-dis.c (mips_arch_choices): Add octeon3.
	* mips-opc.c (IOCT): Include INSN_OCTEON3.
	(IOCT2): Likewise.
	(IOCT3): New define.
	(IVIRT): New define.
	(mips_builtin_opcodes): Add dmfgc0, dmtgc0, hypcall, mfgc0, mtgc0,
	tlbinv, tlbinvf, tlbgr, tlbgwi, tlbginv, tlbginvf, tlbgwr, tlbgp, tlti
	IVIRT instructions.
	Extend mtm0, mtm1, mtm2, mtp0, mtp1, mtp2 instructions to take another
	operand for IOCT3.

bfd:
2014-10-31  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>
            Naveen H.S  <Naveen.Hurugalawadi@caviumnetworks.com>

	* archures.c: Add octeon3 for mips target.
	* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
	* bfd/cpu-mips.c: Define I_mipsocteon3.
	nfo_struct): Add octeon3 support.
	* bfd/elfxx-mips.c: (_bfd_elf_mips_mach): Add support for
	octeon3.
	(mips_set_isa_flags): Add support for octeon3.
	(bfd_mips_isa_ext): Add bfd_mach_mips_octeon3.
	(mips_mach_extensions): Make bfd_mach_mips_octeon3 an
	extension of bfd_mach_mips_octeon2.
	(print_mips_isa_ext): Print the value of Octeon3.
2014-10-31 13:50:10 -07:00
Andrew Pinski
2220166513 Add forgotten changelog entry.
2014-10-21  Andrew Pinski  <apinski@cavium.com>

	* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_cpus):
	Add thunderx.
	* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document that thunderx
	is a valid processor name.
2014-10-31 13:24:24 -07:00
Iain Buclaw
da37262b20 Add dlang demangling support to c++filt.
binutils/ChangeLog:
	* cxxfilt.c (main): Add case for dlang_demangling style.
2014-10-31 18:40:43 +00:00
Nick Clifton
690725fa0d Fix an (almost) infinite loop in the tekhex parser.
PR binutils/17512
	* tekhex.c (first_phase): Check that the section range is sane.
2014-10-31 18:00:55 +00:00
Nick Clifton
f54498b457 Avoid allocating over-large buffers when parsing corrupt binaries.
PR binutils/17512
	* coffgen.c (_bfd_coff_get_external_symbols): Do not try to load a
	symbol table bigger than the file.
	* elf.c (bfd_elf_get_str_section): Do not try to load a string
	table bigger than the file.

	* readelf.c (process_program_headers): Avoid memory exhaustion due
	to corrupt values in a dynamis segment header.
	(get_32bit_elf_symbols): Do not attempt to read an over-large
	section.
	(get_64bit_elf_symbols): Likewise.
2014-10-31 16:36:31 +00:00
Nick Clifton
fe06005387 oops - changelog omitted from previous delta. 2014-10-31 10:19:53 +00:00
Nick Clifton
7fac9594c4 In response to a public outcry the strings program now defaults to using the
--all option which displays text from anywhere in the input file(s).  The
default used to be --data, which only displays text from loadable data sections,
but this requires the use of the BFD library.  Since the BFD library almost
certainly still contains buffer overrun and/or memory corruption bugs, and
since the strings program is often used to examine malicious code, it was
decided that the --data option option represents a possible security risk.

	* strings.c: Add new command line option --data to only scan the
	initialized, loadable data secions of binaries.  Choose the
	default behaviour of --all or --data based upon a configure
	option.
	* doc/binutils.texi (strings): Update documentation.  Include
	description  of why the --data option might be unsafe.
	* configure.ac: Add new option --disable-default-strings-all which
	restores the old behaviour of strings using --data by default.  If
	the option is not used make strings use --all by default.
	* NEWS: Mention the new behaviour of strings.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
2014-10-31 10:10:37 +00:00
Doug Evans
02be9a7100 Add ability to add attributes to gdb.Objfile and gdb.Progspace objects.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention ability add attributes to gdb.Objfile and
	gdb.Progspace objects.
	* python/py-objfile.c (objfile_object): New member dict.
	(objfpy_dealloc): Py_XDECREF dict.
	(objfpy_initialize): Initialize dict.
	(objfile_getset): Add __dict__.
	(objfile_object_type): Set tp_dictoffset member.
	* python/py-progspace.c (progspace_object): New member dict.
	(pspy_dealloc): Py_XDECREF dict.
	(pspy_initialize): Initialize dict.
	(pspace_getset): Add __dict__.
	(pspace_object_type): Set tp_dictoffset member.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* python.texi (Progspaces In Python): Document ability to add
	random attributes to gdb.Progspace objects.
	(Objfiles In Python): Document ability to add random attributes to
	gdb.objfile objects.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-objfile.exp: Add tests for setting random attributes
	in objfiles.
	* gdb.python/py-progspace.exp: Add tests for setting random attributes
	in progspaces.
2014-10-30 17:05:17 -07:00
Alan Modra
c21c8bde37 daily update 2014-10-31 09:30:33 +10:30
Nick Clifton
0102ea8cec Fixes a seg-fault in the ihex parser when it encounters a malformed ihex file.
PR binutils/17512
	* ihex.c (ihex_scan): Fix typo in invocation of ihex_bad_byte.
2014-10-30 17:16:17 +00:00
Nick Clifton
7e760b06b2 Closes another memory corruption, this time due to heap overrun.
PR binutils/17512
	* coffgen.c (coff_get_normalized_symtab): Prevent buffer overrun.
2014-10-30 15:52:10 +00:00
Luis Machado
3bdff46b67 Skip tests that use cd for remote hosts
Several GDB tests change directory before compiling the test program
in order to test source file names that include directories.  This
doesn't work on a remote host because default_target_compile in
DejaGnu's target.exp copies each source file with
"[remote_download host $x]" which uses "[file tail $file] to strip
off the directory of each file.  If the source directory is remote
mounted on the host, this also leaves copied files in the source
directory.

A similar skip is already used in gdb.test/fullname.exp:

    # We rely on being able to copy things around.

    if { [is_remote host] } {
	untested "setting breakpoints by full path"
	return -1
    }

This patch causes three GDB tests that use "cd" to be skipped for a
remote host.  For gdb.base/fullpath-expand.exp this eliminates two
failures and prevents the test from leaving files fullpath-expand.c
and fullpath-expand-func.c in gdb/testsuite.  For
gdb.base/realname-expand.exp it eliminates two failures.  For
gdb.linespec/macro-relative.exp it prevents file macro-relative.c
from being left in gdb/testsuite/gdb.linespec/base/two.

gdb/testsuite/

	* gdb.base/fullpath-expand.exp: Skip for a remote host.
	* gdb.base/realname-expand.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.linespec/macro-relative.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-30 09:48:10 -02:00
Will Newton
62cf91a31e ld/testsuite/ld-unique: Fix running unique tests on ARM
The @ character is a comment character on ARM, so use % instead. Also
use a wider glob for matching ARM targets to make sure the test gets
run.

ld/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2014-10-30  Will Newton  <will.newton@linaro.org>

	* ld-unique/unique.exp: Use a wider glob for matching ARM
	targets.
	* ld-unique/unique.s: Use % instead of @ in .type directive.
	* ld-unique/unique_shared.s: Likewise.
2014-10-30 11:06:43 +00:00
Dr Philipp Tomsich
f803aa8ead Remove the artificial limit on code alignment through the use of the
fixed part of a fragment for output generation only, which required
MAX_MEM_FOR_RS_ALIGN_CODE to be large enough to hold the maximum pad.

	* config/tc-aarch64.h (MAX_MEM_FOR_RS_ALIGN_CODE): Define to 7.
	* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_handle_align): Rewrite to handle
	large alignments with a constant fragment size of
	MAX_MEM_FOR_RS_ALIGN_CODE.
2014-10-30 10:53:09 +00:00
Nick Clifton
76ca31c09f Fix error message strings so that they can be translated properly.
* readelf.c (CHECK_ENTSIZE_VALUES): Rewrite error message so that
	there is a single string for translation.
	(dynamic_section_mips_val): Likewise.
2014-10-30 09:53:56 +00:00
Yao Qi
6427bef6d1 Don't replace '\' with '\\' in before_prompt_hook
In gdb/command/prompt.py:before_prompt_hook, the '\' in the new prompt
is replaced with '\\', shown as below,

>     def before_prompt_hook(self, current):
>         if self.value is not '':
>             newprompt = gdb.prompt.substitute_prompt(self.value)
>             return newprompt.replace('\\', '\\\\')
>         else:
>             return None

I don't see any explanations on this in comments nor email.  As doc
said, "set extended-prompt \w" substitute the current working
directory, but it prints something different from what pwd or
os.getcwdu() prints on mingw32 host.

(gdb) python print os.getcwdu()^M
\\build2-lucid-cs\yqi\yqi\arm-none-eabi

(gdb) pwd^M
Working directory \\build2-lucid-cs\yqi\yqi\arm-none-eabi

(gdb) set extended-prompt \w
\\\\build2-lucid-cs\\yqi\\yqi\\arm-none-eabi

This makes me think whether the substitution in before_prompt_hook is
necessary or not.  This patch is to remove this substitution.

Run gdb.python on x86_64-linux and arm-none-eabi on mingw32 host.  No
regressions.

gdb:

2014-10-30  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* python/lib/gdb/command/prompt.py (before_prompt_hook): Don't
	replace '\\' with '\\\\'.
2014-10-30 09:42:36 +08:00
Alan Modra
0d93a331c2 daily update 2014-10-30 09:30:40 +10:30
Nick Clifton
e5b470e24c Fixes another memory corruption bug introduced by patches for PR 17512.
* elf.c (bfd_section_from_shdr): Fix heap use after free memory
	leak.
2014-10-29 20:58:13 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
f60325bea5 Document the GDB 7.8.1 release in gdb/ChangeLog
gdb/ChangeLog:

	GDB 7.8.1 released.
2014-10-29 12:57:04 -07:00
Han Shen
9726c3c179 Misc about gold for aarch64 backend.
The patch does the following things:
  -- Add support for ifunc.
  -- Enable safe icf
  -- Add support for TLSLD relocations
     R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21,
     R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
     R_AARCH64_TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1,
     R_AARCH64_TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
     (R_AARCH64_TLSLD_MOVW_* are used by LLVM.)
  -- Add support for TLSLD->TLSLE relaxation.
  -- Add support for R_AARCH64_LD_PREL_LO19, R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_LO21.
  -- Fix 2 encoding bugs in AArch64_relocate_functions::update_movnz.
  -- Correct TLS relocation properties in gold/aarch64-reloc.def.
  -- Update testsuite/icf_safe_so_test.cc, testsuite/icf_safe_test.sh.

gold/
2014-10-29  Han Shen  <shenhan@google.com>
            Jing Yu   <jingyu@google.com>

	* aarch64-reloc.def: Add LD_PREL_LO12, ADR_PREL_LO21,
	TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC. Change property of TLS relocations to
	Symbol::TLS_REF.
	* aarch64.cc (Target_aarch64::do_can_check_for_function_pointers): New
	method.
	(Target_aarch64::reloc_needs_plt_for_ifunc): New method.
	(Target_aarch64::tls_ld_to_le): New method.
	(Target_aarch64::aarch64_info): Enable can_icf_inline_merge_sections
	for 64bit targets.
	(Output_data_plt_aarch64::irelative_rel_): New data member.
	(Output_data_plt_aarch64::add_entry): Add irelative entries to plt.
	(Output_data_plt_aarch64::add_local_ifunc_entry): New method.
	(Output_data_plt_aarch64::add_relocation): New method.
	(Output_data_plt_aarch64::do_write): Add gold_assert on got_irelative
	offset. Add got_irelative size to got size.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions): Typedef AArch64_valtype. Replace long
	type string with the new typename.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::update_adr): Replace parameter x with
	immed.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::update_movnz): Correct wrong val mask.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::reloc_common): New method.
	(AArch64_relocate_funcsions::rela_general): Extract common part out
	into reloc_common method.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::rela_general): Likewise.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::pcrela_general): Likewise.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::adr): New method.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::adrp): Calculate immed before calling
	update_adr.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::adrp): Likewise.
	(AArch64_relocate_functions::movnz): Cast x to SignedW type when
	comparing x to 0. Calculate immed from ~x when x < 0.
	(Target_aarch64::optimize_tls_reloc): Add new cases for
	TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
	(Target_aarch64::possible_function_pointer_reloc): Implement this
	method.
	(Target_aarch64::Scan::local_reloc_may_be_function_pointer): Update
	comment.
	(Target_aarch64::Scan::local): Add codes to handle STT_GNU_IFUNC
	symbol. Add cases for TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
	(Target_aarch64::Scan::global): Add codes to handle STT_GNU_IFUNC
	symbol. Add cases for TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
	(Target_aarch64::make_plt_entry): Call add_entry with two more
	parameters.
	(Target_aarch64::make_local_ifunc_plt_entry): New method.
	(Target_aarch64::Relocate::relocate): Add cases for LD_PREL_LO19,
	ADR_PREL_LO21, TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
	(Target_aarch64::Relocate::relocate_tls): Add cases for
	TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC, TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G1,
	TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_G0_NC.
	* testsuite/icf_safe_so_test.cc: Correct test comment.
	* testsuite/icf_safe_test.sh: Add AArch64 arch.
2014-10-29 11:31:36 -07:00
Pedro Alves
ab917dfb5a This PR shows that GDB can easily trigger an assertion here, in
infrun.c:

 5392              /* Did we find the stepping thread?  */
 5393              if (tp->control.step_range_end)
 5394                {
 5395                  /* Yep.  There should only one though.  */
 5396                  gdb_assert (stepping_thread == NULL);
 5397
 5398                  /* The event thread is handled at the top, before we
 5399                     enter this loop.  */
 5400                  gdb_assert (tp != ecs->event_thread);
 5401
 5402                  /* If some thread other than the event thread is
 5403                     stepping, then scheduler locking can't be in effect,
 5404                     otherwise we wouldn't have resumed the current event
 5405                     thread in the first place.  */
 5406                  gdb_assert (!schedlock_applies (currently_stepping (tp)));
 5407
 5408                  stepping_thread = tp;
 5409                }

Like:

 gdb/infrun.c:5406: internal-error: switch_back_to_stepped_thread: Assertion `!schedlock_applies (1)' failed.

The way the assertion is written is assuming that with schedlock=step
we'll always leave threads other than the one with the stepping range
locked, while that's not true with the "next" command.  With schedlock
"step", other threads still run unlocked when "next" detects a
function call and steps over it.  Whether that makes sense or not,
still, it's documented that way in the manual.  If another thread hits
an event that doesn't cause a stop while the nexting thread steps over
a function call, we'll get here and fail the assertion.

The fix is just to adjust the assertion.  Even though we found the
stepping thread, we'll still step-over the breakpoint that just
triggered correctly.

Surprisingly, gdb.threads/schedlock.exp doesn't have any test that
steps over a function call.  This commits fixes that.  This ensures
that "next" doesn't switch focus to another thread, and checks whether
other threads run locked or not, depending on scheduler locking mode
and command.  There's a lot of duplication in that file that this ends
cleaning up.  There's more that could be cleaned up, but that would
end up an unrelated change, best done separately.

This new coverage in schedlock.exp happens to trigger the internal
error in question, like so:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (1) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (3) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (5) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (7) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (9) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next does not change thread (switched to thread 0)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: current thread advanced - unlocked (wrong amount)

That's because we have more than one thread running the same loop, and
while one thread is stepping over a function call, the other thread
hits the step-resume breakpoint of the first, which needs to be
stepped over, and we end up in switch_back_to_stepped_thread exactly
in the problem case.

I think a simpler and more directed test is also useful, to not rely
on internal breakpoint magics.  So this commit also adds a test that
has a thread trip on a conditional breakpoint that doesn't cause a
user-visible stop while another thread is stepping over a call.  That
currently fails like this:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: schedlock=step: next over function call (GDB internal error)

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* infrun.c (switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use currently_stepping
	instead of assuming a thread with a stepping range is always
	stepping.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.c (some_function): New function.
	(call_function): New global.
	(MAYBE_CALL_SOME_FUNCTION): New macro.
	(thread_function): Call it.
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp (get_args): Add description parameter,
	and use it instead of a global counter.  Adjust all callers.
	(get_current_thread): Use "find current thread" for test message
	here rather than having all callers pass down the same string.
	(goto_loop): New procedure, factored out from ...
	(my_continue): ... this.
	(step_ten_loops): Change parameter from test message to command to
	use.  Adjust.
	(list_count): Delete global.
	(check_result): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top
	level code.
	(continue tests): Wrap in with_test_prefix.
	(test_step): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top level
	code.
	(top level): Test "step" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes.  Test "next" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes, and in combination with stepping over a function call or
	not.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 18:25:27 +00:00
Pedro Alves
354204061c PR 17408 - assertion failure in switch_back_to_stepped_thread
This PR shows that GDB can easily trigger an assertion here, in
infrun.c:

 5392              /* Did we find the stepping thread?  */
 5393              if (tp->control.step_range_end)
 5394                {
 5395                  /* Yep.  There should only one though.  */
 5396                  gdb_assert (stepping_thread == NULL);
 5397
 5398                  /* The event thread is handled at the top, before we
 5399                     enter this loop.  */
 5400                  gdb_assert (tp != ecs->event_thread);
 5401
 5402                  /* If some thread other than the event thread is
 5403                     stepping, then scheduler locking can't be in effect,
 5404                     otherwise we wouldn't have resumed the current event
 5405                     thread in the first place.  */
 5406                  gdb_assert (!schedlock_applies (currently_stepping (tp)));
 5407
 5408                  stepping_thread = tp;
 5409                }

Like:

 gdb/infrun.c:5406: internal-error: switch_back_to_stepped_thread: Assertion `!schedlock_applies (1)' failed.

The way the assertion is written is assuming that with schedlock=step
we'll always leave threads other than the one with the stepping range
locked, while that's not true with the "next" command.  With schedlock
"step", other threads still run unlocked when "next" detects a
function call and steps over it.  Whether that makes sense or not,
still, it's documented that way in the manual.  If another thread hits
an event that doesn't cause a stop while the nexting thread steps over
a function call, we'll get here and fail the assertion.

The fix is just to adjust the assertion.  Even though we found the
stepping thread, we'll still step-over the breakpoint that just
triggered correctly.

Surprisingly, gdb.threads/schedlock.exp doesn't have any test that
steps over a function call.  This commits fixes that.  This ensures
that "next" doesn't switch focus to another thread, and checks whether
other threads run locked or not, depending on scheduler locking mode
and command.  There's a lot of duplication in that file that this ends
cleaning up.  There's more that could be cleaned up, but that would
end up an unrelated change, best done separately.

This new coverage in schedlock.exp happens to trigger the internal
error in question, like so:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (1) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (3) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (5) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (7) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next to increment (9) (GDB internal error)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: next does not change thread (switched to thread 0)
 FAIL: gdb.threads/schedlock.exp: schedlock=step: cmd=next: call_function=1: current thread advanced - unlocked (wrong amount)

That's because we have more than one thread running the same loop, and
while one thread is stepping over a function call, the other thread
hits the step-resume breakpoint of the first, which needs to be
stepped over, and we end up in switch_back_to_stepped_thread exactly
in the problem case.

I think a simpler and more directed test is also useful, to not rely
on internal breakpoint magics.  So this commit also adds a test that
has a thread trip on a conditional breakpoint that doesn't cause a
user-visible stop while another thread is stepping over a call.  That
currently fails like this:

 FAIL: gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: schedlock=step: next over function call (GDB internal error)

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* infrun.c (switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use currently_stepping
	instead of assuming a thread with a stepping range is always
	stepping.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17408
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.c (some_function): New function.
	(call_function): New global.
	(MAYBE_CALL_SOME_FUNCTION): New macro.
	(thread_function): Call it.
	* gdb.threads/schedlock.exp (get_args): Add description parameter,
	and use it instead of a global counter.  Adjust all callers.
	(get_current_thread): Use "find current thread" for test message
	here rather than having all callers pass down the same string.
	(goto_loop): New procedure, factored out from ...
	(my_continue): ... this.
	(step_ten_loops): Change parameter from test message to command to
	use.  Adjust.
	(list_count): Delete global.
	(check_result): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top
	level code.
	(continue tests): Wrap in with_test_prefix.
	(test_step): New procedure, factored out from duplicate top level
	code.
	(top level): Test "step" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes.  Test "next" in combination with all scheduler-locking
	modes, and in combination with stepping over a function call or
	not.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/next-bp-other-thread.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 18:15:39 +00:00
Pedro Alves
d3d4baedb6 PR python/17372 - Python hangs when displaying help()
This is more of a readline/terminal issue than a Python one.

PR17372 is a regression in 7.8 caused by the fix for PR17072:

 commit 0017922d02
 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
 Date:   Mon Jul 14 19:55:32 2014 +0100

    Background execution + pagination aborts readline/gdb

    gdb_readline_wrapper_line removes the handler after a line is
    processed.  Usually, we'll end up re-displaying the prompt, and that
    reinstalls the handler.  But if the output is coming out of handling
    a stop event, we don't re-display the prompt, and nothing restores the
    handler.  So the next input wakes up the event loop and calls into
    readline, which aborts.
...
    gdb/
    2014-07-14  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

        PR gdb/17072
        * top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_line): Tweak comment.
        (gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup): If readline is enabled, reinstall
        the input handler callback.

The problem is that installing the input handler callback also preps
the terminal, putting it in raw mode and with echo disabled, which is
bad if we're going to call a command that assumes cooked/canonical
mode, and echo enabled, like in the case of the PR, Python's
interactive shell.  Another example I came up with that doesn't depend
on Python is starting a subshell with "(gdb) shell /bin/sh" from a
multi-line command.  Tests covering both these examples are added.

The fix is to revert the original fix for PR gdb/17072, and instead
restore the callback handler after processing an asynchronous target
event.

Furthermore, calling rl_callback_handler_install when we already have
some input in readline's line buffer discards that input, which is
obviously a bad thing to do while the user is typing.  No specific
test is added for that, because I first tried calling it even if the
callback handler was still installed and that resulted in hundreds of
failures in the testsuite.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR python/17372
	* event-top.c (change_line_handler): Call
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove.
	(callback_handler_installed): New global.
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove, gdb_rl_callback_handler_install)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_reinstall): New functions.
	(display_gdb_prompt): Call gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove and
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_install instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove and rl_callback_handler_install.
	(gdb_disable_readline): Call gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove
	instead of rl_callback_handler_remove.
	* event-top.h (gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_install)
	(gdb_rl_callback_handler_reinstall): New declarations.
	* infrun.c (reinstall_readline_callback_handler_cleanup): New
	cleanup function.
	(fetch_inferior_event): Install it.
	* top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper_line) Call
	gdb_rl_callback_handler_remove instead of
	rl_callback_handler_remove.
	(gdb_readline_wrapper_cleanup): Don't call
	rl_callback_handler_install.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR python/17372
	* gdb.python/python.exp: Test a multi-line command that spawns
	interactive Python.
	* gdb.base/multi-line-starts-subshell.exp: New file.
2014-10-29 17:29:26 +00:00
Dennis Brueni
d1e8523e40 Thix fixes an obvious coding error that led to a GDB crash on AIX or HPUX.
* elf.c (elfcore_write_lwpstatus): fix typo in call to memcpy
2014-10-29 17:17:32 +00:00
Nick Clifton
64b588b51e Updated/new translations provided by the Translations Project. 2014-10-29 16:34:04 +00:00
Pedro Alves
6e5d7f393e Fix uninitialized value access when very first GDB command entered is <RET>
While running GDB under Valgrind, I noticed that if the very first
command entered is just <RET>, GDB accesses an uninitialized value:

 $ valgrind ./gdb -q -nx
 ==26790== Memcheck, a memory error detector
 ==26790== Copyright (C) 2002-2013, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
 ==26790== Using Valgrind-3.9.0 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
 ==26790== Command: ./gdb -q -nx
 ==26790==

 (gdb)
 ==26790== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
 ==26790==    at 0x619DFC: command_line_handler (event-top.c:588)
 ==26790==    by 0x7813D5: rl_callback_read_char (callback.c:220)
 ==26790==    by 0x6194B4: rl_callback_read_char_wrapper (event-top.c:166)
 ==26790==    by 0x61988A: stdin_event_handler (event-top.c:372)
 ==26790==    by 0x61847D: handle_file_event (event-loop.c:762)
 ==26790==    by 0x617964: process_event (event-loop.c:339)
 ==26790==    by 0x617A2B: gdb_do_one_event (event-loop.c:403)
 ==26790==    by 0x617A7B: start_event_loop (event-loop.c:428)
 ==26790==    by 0x6194E6: cli_command_loop (event-top.c:181)
 ==26790==    by 0x60F86B: current_interp_command_loop (interps.c:317)
 ==26790==    by 0x610A34: captured_command_loop (main.c:321)
 ==26790==    by 0x60C728: catch_errors (exceptions.c:237)
 ==26790==
 (gdb)

It's this check here:

  /* If we just got an empty line, and that is supposed to repeat the
     previous command, return the value in the global buffer.  */
  if (repeat && p == linebuffer && *p != '\\')
    {

The problem is that linebuffer's contents were never initialized at
this point.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* event-top.c (command_line_handler): Clear the first byte of
	linebuffer, when it is first allocated.
2014-10-29 14:54:17 +00:00
Pedro Alves
1e1e619b6b PR tui/16138 is about failure to initialize curses resulting in GDB
exiting instead of throwing an error.  E.g.:

 $ TERM=foo gdb
 (gdb) layout asm
 Error opening terminal: foo.
 $

The problem is that we're calling initscr to initialize the screen.
As mentioned in
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/initscr.html:

 If errors occur, initscr() writes an appropriate error message to
 standard error and exits.
                    ^^^^^

Instead, we should use newterm:

 "A program that needs an indication of error conditions, so it can
 continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal cannot support
 a screen-oriented program, would also use this function."

After the patch:

 $ TERM=foo gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: error opening terminal [TERM=foo]
 (gdb)

And then PR tui/17519 is about GDB not validating whether the terminal
has the necessary capabilities when enabling the TUI.  If one tries to
enable the TUI with TERM=dumb (and e.g., from a shell within emacs),
GDB ends up with a clear screen, the cursor is placed at the
bottom/right corner of the screen, there's no prompt, typing shows no
echo, and there's no indication of what's going on.  c-x,a gets you
out of the TUI, but it's completely non-obvious.

After the patch, we get:

 $ TERM=dumb gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

While at it, I've moved all the tui_allowed_p validation to
tui_enable, and expanded the error messages.  Previously we'd get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"TUI mode not allowed\n"
 ^error,msg="TUI mode not allowed"

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 TUI mode not allowed

While now we get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'\n"
 ^error,msg="Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'"
 (gdb)

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR tui/16138
	PR tui/17519
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_is_toplevel): Delete global.
	(tui_allowed_p): Delete function.
	* tui/tui.c: Include "interps.h".
	(tui_enable): Don't use tui_allowed_p.  Error out here with
	detailed error messages if the TUI is the top level interpreter,
	or if output is not a terminal.  Use newterm instead of initscr,
	and error out if initializing the terminal fails.  Also error out if
	the terminal doesn't support cursor addressing.
	* tui/tui.h (tui_allowed_p): Delete declaration.
2014-10-29 14:49:05 +00:00
Pedro Alves
551cb6a52d TUI: don't let exceptions escape while handling readline key bindings
I noticed that with:

 $ TERM=dumb ./gdb -q -nx
 <c-x,a>
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

The next key the user types is silently eaten.

The problem is that we're throwing an exception while in a readline
callback that isn't prepared for that:

(top-gdb) bt
#0  tui_enable () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/tui/tui.c:388
#1  0x000000000051f47b in tui_rl_switch_mode (notused1=1, notused2=1) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/tui/tui.c:101
#2  0x0000000000768d6f in _rl_dispatch_subseq (key=1, map=0xd069c0 <emacs_ctlx_keymap>, got_subseq=0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/readline.c:774
#3  0x0000000000768acb in _rl_dispatch_callback (cxt=0x1ce6190) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/readline.c:686
#4  0x000000000078120b in rl_callback_read_char () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/readline/callback.c:170
#5  0x0000000000619445 in rl_callback_read_char_wrapper (client_data=0x0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-top.c:166
#6  0x000000000061981b in stdin_event_handler (error=0, client_data=0x0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-top.c:372
#7  0x000000000061840e in handle_file_event (data=...) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:762
#8  0x00000000006178f5 in process_event () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:339
#9  0x00000000006179bc in gdb_do_one_event () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:403
#10 0x0000000000617a0c in start_event_loop () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/../src/gdb/event-loop.c:428

Here, in _rl_dispatch_subseq:

769
770               rl_executing_keymap = map;
771
772               rl_dispatching = 1;
773               RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_DISPATCHING);
774               (*map[key].function)(rl_numeric_arg * rl_arg_sign, key);
775               RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_DISPATCHING);
776               rl_dispatching = 0;
777
778               /* If we have input pending, then the last command was a prefix
779                  command.  Don't change the state of rl_last_func.  Otherwise,

GDB is called from line 774, but longjmp'ing at that point leaves
rl_dispatching and RL_STATE_DISPATCHING set.

Fix this by wrapping tui_rl_switch_mode in a TRY_CATCH.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* tui/tui.c (tui_rl_switch_mode): Wrap tui_enable/tui_disable in
	TRY_CATCH.
2014-10-29 14:36:21 +00:00
Pedro Alves
84eda397bc PR tui/16138, PR tui/17519, and misc failures to initialize the terminal
PR tui/16138 is about failure to initialize curses resulting in GDB
exiting instead of throwing an error.  E.g.:

 $ TERM=foo gdb
 (gdb) layout asm
 Error opening terminal: foo.
 $

The problem is that we're calling initscr to initialize the screen.
As mentioned in
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/initscr.html:

 If errors occur, initscr() writes an appropriate error message to
 standard error and exits.
                    ^^^^^

Instead, we should use newterm:

 "A program that needs an indication of error conditions, so it can
 continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal cannot support
 a screen-oriented program, would also use this function."

After the patch:

 $ TERM=foo gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: error opening terminal [TERM=foo]
 (gdb)

And then PR tui/17519 is about GDB not validating whether the terminal
has the necessary capabilities when enabling the TUI.  If one tries to
enable the TUI with TERM=dumb (and e.g., from a shell within emacs),
GDB ends up with a clear screen, the cursor is placed at the
bottom/right corner of the screen, there's no prompt, typing shows no
echo, and there's no indication of what's going on.  c-x,a gets you
out of the TUI, but it's completely non-obvious.

After the patch, we get:

 $ TERM=dumb gdb -q -nx
 (gdb) layout asm
 Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
 (gdb)

While at it, I've moved all the tui_allowed_p validation to
tui_enable, and expanded the error messages.  Previously we'd get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"TUI mode not allowed\n"
 ^error,msg="TUI mode not allowed"

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 TUI mode not allowed

While now we get:

 $ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
 (gdb)
 layout asm
 &"layout asm\n"
 &"Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'\n"
 ^error,msg="Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'"
 (gdb)

and:

 $ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
 Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/
2014-10-29  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR tui/16138
	PR tui/17519
	* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_is_toplevel): Delete global.
	(tui_allowed_p): Delete function.
	* tui/tui.c: Include "interps.h".
	(tui_enable): Don't use tui_allowed_p.  Error out here with
	detailed error messages if the TUI is the top level interpreter,
	or if output is not a terminal.  Use newterm instead of initscr,
	and error out if initializing the terminal fails.  Also error out if
	the terminal doesn't support cursor addressing.
	* tui/tui.h (tui_allowed_p): Delete declaration.
2014-10-29 14:23:57 +00:00
Yao Qi
563e8d8516 Prepare directory in case test_system fails
In gdb.base/fileio.c, some functions may depend on others.  For
example, test_rename renames a file to one directory which is created
in test_system.  That is means, if test_system fails, test_rename
fails too, which is not a good practise, IMO.

In test_system, system ("mkdir -p XX") is used to create directories
needed for test_rename.  In this patch, we use dejagnu remote_exec
proc to create these directories on host.

In my gdb testing, mingw32 host and arm-none-eabi target, system
("mkdir -p XX") doesn't work properly (this issue can be addressed
separately), and this patch fixes the following fails.

FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Renaming a directory to a non-empty directory returns ENOTEMPTY or EEXIST
FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Unlink a file
FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Unlinking a file in a directory w/o write access returns EACCES

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/fileio.exp: Make directories on host.
2014-10-29 21:43:05 +08:00
Yao Qi
0ea4d52e43 Close the file in fileio.exp test
I see the following fail in fileio.exp on mingw32 host gdb,

rename 1: ret = -1, errno = 13^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, stop () at fileio.c:76^M
76      static void stop () {}^M
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Rename a file

the test fails to rename a file which is not expected.  The previous
test test_write doesn't close the file, so the rename fails as a
result on Windows.  This patch fixes it by closing file in test_write,
and the fail goes away.

rename 1: ret = 0, errno = 0 OK^M
^M
Breakpoint 2, stop () at fileio.c:76^M
76      static void stop () {}^M
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/fileio.exp: Rename a file

gdb/testsuite:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.base/fileio.c (test_write): Close the file.
2014-10-29 21:43:05 +08:00
Joel Brobecker
6041179a74 ARM: stricter __stack_chk_guard check during prologue analysis
We are trying to insert a breakpoint on line 4 for the following
Ada code.

  3 procedure STR is
  4    XX : String (1 .. Blocks.Sz) := (others => 'X'); -- STOP
  5    K : Integer;
  6 begin
  7    K := 13;

The code generated on ARM (-march=armv7-m) starts like this:

    (gdb) disass str'address
    Dump of assembler code for function _ada_str:
       --# Line str.adb:3
       0x08000014 <+0>:     push    {r4, r7, lr}
       0x08000016 <+2>:     sub     sp, #28
       0x08000018 <+4>:     add     r7, sp, #0
       0x0800001a <+6>:     mov     r3, sp
       0x0800001c <+8>:     mov     r4, r3
       --# Line str.adb:4
       0x0800001e <+10>:    ldr     r3, [pc, #84]   ; (0x8000074 <_ada_str+96>)
       0x08000020 <+12>:    ldr     r3, [r3, #0]
       0x08000022 <+14>:    str     r3, [r7, #20]
       0x08000024 <+16>:    ldr     r3, [r7, #20]
       [...]

When computing the address related to str.adb:4, GDB correctly
resolves it to 0x0800001e first, but then considers the next
3 instructions as being part of the prologue because it thinks
they are part of stack-protector code. As a result, instead
of inserting the breakpoint at line 4, it skips those instruction
and consequently the rest of the instructions until the start
of the next line, which his line 7.

The stack-protector code is expected to start like this...

        ldr     Rn, .Label
        ....
        .Lable:
        .word   __stack_chk_guard

... but the implementation actually accepts a sequence where
the ldr location points to an address for which there is no symbol.
It only aborts if the address points to a symbol which is not
__stack_chk_guard.

Since the __stack_chk_guard symbol is always expected to exist
when used (it lives in .dynsym), this patch fixes the issue by
requiring that the ldr gets the address of the __stack_chk_guard
symbol. If the address could not be resolved, then it rejects
the sequence as being stack-protector code.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * arm-tdep.c (arm_skip_stack_protector): Return early if
        address loaded by first "ldr" instruction does not have
        a corresponding minimal symbol.  Update comment.

Tested on arm-eabi using AdaCore's testsuite.
Tested on arm-linux-gnueabi by Yao as well.
2014-10-29 06:10:24 -07:00
Yao Qi
6ae274b7dc Fix skipping stack protector on arm
This patch fixes the bug in my patch skipping stack protector
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2010-12/msg00110.html

In my skipping stack protector patch, I misunderstood the constant vs.
immediate on instruction encodings, and treated immediate as constant
by mistake.  The instruction 'ldr Rd, [PC, #immed]' loads the
address of __stack_chk_guard to Rd, and #immed is an offset from PC.
We should get the __stack_chk_guard from *(pc + #immed).

As a result of this mistake, arm_analyze_load_stack_chk_guard returns
the wrong address of __stack_chk_guard, and the symbol
__stack_chk_guard can't be found.  However, we continue to match the
following instructions when symbol isn't found, so the code still
works.  In other words, the code just matches the instruction pattern
without checking __stack_chk_guard symbol correctly.

Joel's patch <https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00605.html>
makes the heuristics stricter that we stop matching instructions if
symbol __stack_chk_guard isn't found.  Then the bug is exposed.  This
patch is to correct the load address computation for ldr instruction,
and it fixes some fails in gdb.mi/gdb792.exp on armv4t both arm and
thumb mode.

Regression tested on arm-linux-gnueabi target with
{armv4t, armv7-a} x {marm, mthumb} x {-fstack-protector,-fno-stack-protector}

gdb:

2014-10-29  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* arm-tdep.c (arm_analyze_load_stack_chk_guard): Compute the
	loaded address correctly of ldr instruction.
2014-10-29 13:39:16 +08:00
Alan Modra
5e1b37e7a3 daily update 2014-10-29 09:31:03 +10:30
Pedro Alves
7f5ef60532 PR gdb/12623: non-stop crashes inferior, PC adjustment and 1-byte insns
TL;DR - if we step an instruction that is as long as
decr_pc_after_break (1-byte on x86) right after removing the
breakpoint at PC, in non-stop mode, adjust_pc_after_break adjusts the
PC, but it shouldn't.

In non-stop mode, when a breakpoint is removed, it is moved to the
"moribund locations" list.  This is because other threads that are
running may have tripped on that breakpoint as well, and we haven't
heard about it.  When a trap is reported, we check if perhaps it was
such a deleted breakpoint that caused the trap.  If so, we also need
to adjust the PC (decr_pc_after_break).

Now, say that, on x86:

 - a breakpoint was placed at an address where we have an instruction
of the same length as decr_pc_after_break on this arch (1 on x86).

 - the breakpoint is removed, and thus put on the moribund locations
   list.

 - the thread is single-stepped.

As there's no breakpoint inserted at PC anymore, the single-step
actually executes the 1-byte instruction normally.  GDB should _not_
adjust the PC for the resulting SIGTRAP.  But, adjust_pc_after_break
confuses the step SIGTRAP reported for this single-step as being a
SIGTRAP for the moribund location of the breakpoint that used to be at
the previous PC, and so infrun applies the decr_pc_after_break
adjustment incorrectly.

The confusion comes from the special case mentioned in the comment:

 static void
 adjust_pc_after_break (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
 {
 ...
	  As a special case, we could have hardware single-stepped a
	  software breakpoint.  In this case (prev_pc == breakpoint_pc),
	  we also need to back up to the breakpoint address.  */

       if (thread_has_single_step_breakpoints_set (ecs->event_thread)
	   || !ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)
	   || !currently_stepping (ecs->event_thread)
	   || (ecs->event_thread->stepped_breakpoint
	       && ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc))
	 regcache_write_pc (regcache, breakpoint_pc);

The condition that incorrectly triggers is the
"ecs->event_thread->prev_pc == breakpoint_pc" one.

Afterwards, the next resume resume re-executes an instruction that had
already executed, which if you're lucky, results in the inferior
crashing.  If you're unlucky, you'll get silent bad behavior...

The fix is to remember that we stepped a breakpoint.  Turns out the
only case we step a breakpoint instruction today isn't covered by the
testsuite.  It's the case of a 'handle nostop" signal arriving while a
step is in progress _and_ we have a software watchpoint, which forces
always single-stepping.  This commit extends sigstep.exp to cover
that, and adds a new test for the adjust_pc_after_break issue.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/12623
	* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <stepped_breakpoint>: New
	field.
	* infrun.c (resume) <stepping breakpoint instruction>: Set the
	thread's stepped_breakpoint field.  Skip if reverse debugging.
	Add comment.
	(init_thread_stepping_state, handle_signal_stop): Clear the
	thread's stepped_breakpoint field.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/12623
	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (no_handler): New global.
	(main): If 'no_handler is true, set the signal handlers to
	SIG_IGN.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (breakpoint_over_handler): Add
	with_sw_watch and no_handler parameters.  Handle them.
	(top level) <stepping over handler when stopped at a breakpoint
	test>: Add a test axis for testing with a software watchpoint, and
	another for testing with the signal handler set to SIG_IGN.
	* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/step-sw-breakpoint-adjust-pc.exp: New file.
2014-10-28 16:00:06 +00:00
Pedro Alves
abbdbd03db Test for PR gdb/17511, spurious SIGTRAP after stepping into+in signal handler
I noticed that when I single-step into a signal handler with a
pending/queued signal, the following single-steps while the program is
in the signal handler leave $eflags.TF set.  That means subsequent
continues will trap after one instruction, resulting in a spurious
SIGTRAP being reported to the user.

This is a kernel bug; I've reported it to kernel devs (turned out to
be a known bug).  I'm seeing it on x86_64 Fedora 20 (Linux
3.16.4-200.fc20.x86_64), and I was told it's still not fixed upstream.

This commit extends gdb.base/sigstep.exp to cover this use case,
xfailed.

Here's what the bug looks like:

 (gdb) start
 Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at si-handler.c:48
 48        setup ();
 (gdb) next
 50        global = 0; /* set break here */

Let's queue a signal, so we can step into the handler:

 (gdb) handle SIGUSR1
 Signal        Stop      Print   Pass to program Description
 SIGUSR1       Yes       Yes     Yes             User defined signal 1
 (gdb) queue-signal SIGUSR1

TF is not set:

 (gdb) display $eflags
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]

Now step into the handler -- "si" does PTRACE_SINGLESTEP+SIGUSR1:

 (gdb) si
 sigusr1_handler (sig=0) at si-handler.c:31
 31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]

No TF yet.  But another single-step...

 (gdb) si
 0x0000000000400621      31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]

... ends up with TF left set.  This results in PTRACE_CONTINUE
trapping after each instruction is executed:

 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
 0x0000000000400624 in sigusr1_handler (sig=0) at si-handler.c:31
 31      {
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]

 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
 sigusr1_handler (sig=10) at si-handler.c:32
 32        global = 0;
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)

Note that even another PTRACE_SINGLESTEP does not fix it:

 (gdb) si
 33      }
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)

Eventually, it gets "fixed" by the rt_sigreturn syscall, when
returning out of the handler:

 (gdb) bt
 #0  sigusr1_handler (sig=10) at si-handler.c:33
 #1  <signal handler called>
 #2  main () at si-handler.c:50
 (gdb) set disassemble-next-line on
 (gdb) si
 0x0000000000400632      33      }
    0x0000000000400631 <sigusr1_handler+17>:     5d      pop    %rbp
 => 0x0000000000400632 <sigusr1_handler+18>:     c3      retq
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)
 <signal handler called>
 => 0x0000003b36a358f0 <__restore_rt+0>: 48 c7 c0 0f 00 00 00    mov    $0xf,%rax
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb) si
 <signal handler called>
 => 0x0000003b36a358f7 <__restore_rt+7>: 0f 05   syscall
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF TF IF ]
 (gdb)
 main () at si-handler.c:50
 50        global = 0; /* set break here */
 => 0x000000000040066b <main+9>: c7 05 cb 09 20 00 00 00 00 00   movl   $0x0,0x2009cb(%rip)        # 0x601040 <global>
 1: $eflags = [ PF ZF IF ]
 (gdb)

The bug doesn't happen if we instead PTRACE_CONTINUE into the signal
handler -- e.g., set a breakpoint in the handler, queue a signal, and
"continue".

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/17511
	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (handler): Add a few more writes to 'done'.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (other_handler_location): New global.
	(advance): Support stepping into the signal handler, and running
	commands while in the handler.
	(in_handler_map): New global.
	(top level): In the advance test, add combinations for getting
	into the handler with stepping commands, and for running commands
	in the handler.  Add comment descripting the advancei tests.
2014-10-28 15:51:30 +00:00
Nick Clifton
5a4b0ccc20 More fixes for corrupt binaries crashing the binutils.
PR binutils/17512
	* elf.c (bfd_section_from_shdr): Allocate and free the recursion
	detection table on a per-bfd basis.
	* peXXigen.c (pe_print_edata): Handle binaries with a truncated
	export table.
2014-10-28 15:42:56 +00:00
Pedro Alves
1df4399f27 gdb.base/sigstep.exp: cleanup and make it easier to extend
Hacking on sigstep.exp, I found it harder to understand and extend
than ideal.

 - GDB is currently not restarted between the different
   tests/combinations in the file, and some parts of the tests' setup
   are done on the top level, and shared between tests.  It's not
   trivial to understand which breakpoints each test procedure expects
   to be set or not set.  And it's not trivial to disable parts of the
   test if you want quickly try out just a subset of the tests
   (running the whole file takes a bit).

 - Because GDB is currently not restarted between tests, if some test
   triggers a ptrace/kernel bug, the following tests may end up with
   cascading fails.  That makes it hard to add a test to cover a
   kernel bug that isn't fixed yet, with a xfail/kfail.  E.g,. note
   how with kernels with bug gdb/8744 (stepi over sigreturn syscall
   exits program) the test program exits, and nothing restarts it
   afterwards...

 - The manual test message prefix management gets a bit in the way.
   Nowadays, we have with_test_prefix which makes it simpler.

 - 'i' is used as parameter name in the various procedures, meaning
   'the command the test', which isn't as obvious as it could.

This commit addresses all that.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp: Use build_executable instead of
	prepare_for_testing.
	(top level): Move code that starts GDB, runs to main and creates a
	display to ...
	(restart): ... this new procedure.
	(top level): Move backtrace from signal handler test to ...
	(validate_backtrace): ... this new procedure.
	(advance, advancei): Rename parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use
	with_test_prefix.  Always restart GDB.
	(skip_to_handler): Rename parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use
	with_test_prefix.  Always restart GDB.  No need to delete
	breakpoints after the test.
	(test_skip_handler): Remove prefix parameter.
	(skip_over_handler, breakpoint_to_handler)
	(breakpoint_to_handler_entry, breakpoint_over_handler): Rename
	parameter from 'i' to 'cmd'.  Use with_test_prefix.  Always
	restart GDB.  No need to delete breakpoints after the test.
	(top level): Use foreach to call the test procedures with
	different commands.
2014-10-28 15:34:00 +00:00
Pedro Alves
a5b6e449e3 update bug numbers (GNATS -> Bugzilla) in a few signal related tests
This makes it easier to find the bugs in Bugzilla.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-28  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigaltstack.exp: Update to use Bugzilla bug numbers
	instead of GNATS numbers.
	* gdb.base/sigbpt.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/siginfo.exp: Likewise.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp: Likewise.
2014-10-28 15:31:55 +00:00
Pedro Alves
7d1a114c44 Workaround remote targets that report an empty list to qfThreadInfo
In https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00652.html, Sandra
shows a target that was broken by the recent update_thread_list
optimization:

 (gdb) target remote qa8-centos32-cs:10514
 ...
 (gdb) continue
 Continuing.
 Cannot execute this command without a live selected thread.
 (gdb)

The error means that the current thread is in "exited" state when the
continue command is processed.  The root of the problem was found
here:

 > Sending packet: $Hg0#df...Packet received:
 ...
 > Sending packet: $?#3f...Packet received: S00
 > Sending packet: $qfThreadInfo#bb...Packet received: l
 > Sending packet: $Hc-1#09...Packet received:
 > Sending packet: $qC#b4...Packet received: unset

This target doesn't really support threads (no thread indication in
stop reply packets; no support for qC), but then supports
qfThreadInfo, and returns an empty thread list to GDB.

See https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-10/msg00665.html for
why the target does that.

As remote_update_thread_list deletes threads from GDB's list that are
not found in the thread list that the target reports, the result is
that GDB deletes the "fake" main thread that GDB added itself.  (As
that thread is currently selected, it is marked "exited" instead of
being deleted straight away.)

This commit avoids deleting the main thread in this scenario.

gdb/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* remote.c (remote_thread_alive): New, factored out from ...
	(remote_thread_alive): ... this.
	(remote_update_thread_list): Bail out before deleting threads if
	the target returned an empty list, and, the current thread has a
	magic/fake ptid.
2014-10-28 11:35:10 +00:00
Nick Clifton
708d7d0d11 This patch fixes a flaw in the SREC parser which could cause a stack overflow
and potential secuiryt breach.

	PR binutils/17510
	* srec.c (srec_bad_byte): Increase size of buf to allow for
	negative values.
	(srec_scan): Use an unsigned char buffer to hold header bytes.
2014-10-28 10:48:14 +00:00
Alan Modra
6fb9c0f832 daily update 2014-10-28 09:30:34 +10:30
Pedro Alves
e5f8a7cc2d stepi/nexti: skip signal handler if "handle nostop" signal arrives
I noticed that "si" behaves differently when a "handle nostop" signal
arrives while the step is in progress, depending on whether the
program was stopped at a breakpoint when "si" was entered.
Specifically, in case GDB needs to step off a breakpoint, the handler
is skipped and the program stops in the next "mainline" instruction.
Otherwise, the "si" stops in the first instruction of the signal
handler.

I was surprised the testsuite doesn't catch this difference.  Turns
out gdb.base/sigstep.exp covers a bunch of cases related to stepping
and signal handlers, but does not test stepi nor nexti, only
step/next/continue.

My first reaction was that stopping in the signal handler was the
correct thing to do, as it's where the next user-visible instruction
that is executed is.  I considered then "nexti" -- a signal handler
could be reasonably considered a subroutine call to step over, it'd
seem intuitive to me that "nexti" would skip it.

But then, I realized that signals that arrive while a plain/line
"step" is in progress _also_ have their handler skipped.  A user might
well be excused for being confused by this, given:

  (gdb) help step
  Step program until it reaches a different source line.

And the signal handler's sources will be in different source lines,
after all.

I think that having to explain that "stepi" steps into handlers, (and
that "nexti" wouldn't according to my reasoning above), while "step"
does not, is a sign of an awkward interface.

E.g., if a user truly is interested in stepping into signal handlers,
then it's odd that she has to either force the signal to "handle
stop", or recall to do "stepi" whenever such a signal might be
delivered.  For that use case, it'd seem nicer to me if "step" also
stepped into handlers.

This suggests to me that we either need a global "step-into-handlers"
setting, or perhaps better, make "handle pass/nopass stop/nostop
print/noprint" have have an additional axis - "handle
stepinto/nostepinto", so that the user could configure whether
handlers for specific signals should be stepped into.

In any case, I think it's simpler (and thus better) for all step
commands to behave the same.  This commit thus makes "si/ni" skip
handlers for "handle nostop" signals that arrive while the command was
already in progress, like step/next do.

To be clear, nothing changes if the program was stopped for a signal,
and the user enters a stepping command _then_ -- GDB still steps into
the handler.  The change concerns signals that don't cause a stop and
that arrive while the step is in progress.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (handle_signal_stop): Also skip handlers when a random
	signal arrives while handling a "stepi" or a "nexti".  Set the
	thread's 'step_after_step_resume_breakpoint' flag.

gdb/doc/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Continuing and Stepping): Add cross reference to
	info on stepping and signal handlers.
	(Signals): Explain stepping and signal handlers.  Add context
	index entry, and cross references.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/sigstep.c (dummy): New global.
	(main): Issue a couple writes to the new global.
	* gdb.base/sigstep.exp (get_next_pc, test_skip_handler): New
	procedures.
	(skip_over_handler): Use test_skip_handler.
	(top level): Call skip_over_handler for stepi and nexti too.
	(breakpoint_over_handler): Use test_skip_handler.
	(top level): Call breakpoint_over_handler for stepi and nexti too.
2014-10-27 20:26:12 +00:00
Nick Clifton
bf67003b45 This fixes more seg-faults in tools like "strings" and "objdump" when
presented with corrupt binaries.

	PR binutils/17512
	* elf.c (bfd_section_from_shdr): Detect and warn about ELF
	binaries with a group of sections linked by the string table
	indicies.
	* peXXigen.c (pe_print_edata): Detect out of range rvas and
	entry counts for the Export Address table, Name Pointer table
	 and Ordinal table.
2014-10-27 18:05:37 +00:00