This patch constifies the target_ops method to_detach.
This is a small cleanup, but also, I think, a bug-prevention fix,
since gdb already acts as if the "args" argument here was const.
In particular, top.c:quit_force calls kill_or_detach via
iterate_over_inferiors. kill_or_detach calls target_detach, passing
the same argument each time. So, if one of these methods was not
const-correct, then kill_or_detach would change its behavior in a
strange way.
I could not build every target I modified in this patch. I've
inspected them all by hand, though. Many targets do not use the
"args" parameter; a couple pass it to atoi; and a few pass it on to
the to_detach method of the target beneath. The only code that
required a real change was in linux-nat.c, and that only needed the
introduction of a temporary variable for const-correctness.
2013-11-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* aix-thread.c (aix_thread_detach): Update.
* corelow.c (core_detach): Update.
* darwin-nat.c (darwin_detach): Update.
* dec-thread.c (dec_thread_detach): Update.
* gnu-nat.c (gnu_detach): Update.
* go32-nat.c (go32_detach): Update.
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_detach): Update.
* inf-ttrace.c (inf_ttrace_detach): Update.
* linux-fork.c (linux_fork_detach): Update.
* linux-fork.h (linux_fork_detach): Update.
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_detach): Update. Introduce "tem"
local for const-correctness.
* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_detach): Update.
* monitor.c (monitor_detach): Update.
* nto-procfs.c (procfs_detach): Update.
* procfs.c (procfs_detach): Update.
* record.c (record_detach): Update.
* record.h (record_detach): Update.
* remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_detach): Update.
* remote-mips.c (mips_detach): Update.
* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_detach): Update.
* remote.c (remote_detach_1, remote_detach)
(extended_remote_detach): Update.
* sol-thread.c (sol_thread_detach): Update.
* target.c (target_detach): Make "args" const.
(init_dummy_target): Update.
* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_detach>: Make argument const.
(target_detach): Likewise.
* windows-nat.c (windows_detach): Update.
bfd/
* archures.c (bfd_mach_i386_nacl): Fix definition so it doesn't
collide with bfd_mach_l1om.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
* elf32-i386.c (elf32_i386_nacl_elf_object_p): New function.
(elf_backend_object_p): Use that in elf32-i386-nacl definition.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf64_x86_64_nacl_elf_object_p): New function.
(elf_backend_object_p): Use that in elf64-x86-64-nacl definition.
(elf32_x86_64_nacl_elf_object_p): New function.
(elf_backend_object_p): Use that in elf32-x86-64-nacl definition.
binutils/
* objdump.c (dump_dwarf): Grok bfd_mach_x86_64_nacl and
bfd_mach_x64_32_nacl as equivalent to bfd_mach_x86_64.
ld/testsuite/
* ld-x86-64/x86-64.exp (mixed1, mixed2): Loosen error string match
so it accepts "i386:nacl" in place of "i386".
* ld-x86-64/ilp32-2.d: Likewise.
* ld-x86-64/ilp32-3.d: Likewise.
* ld-x86-64/lp64-2.d: Likewise.
* ld-x86-64/lp64-3.d: Likewise.
* python/py-breakpoint.c (bppy_get_temporary): New function.
(bppy_init): New keyword: temporary. Parse it and set breakpoint
to temporary if True.
2013-11-07 Phil Muldoon <pmuldoon@redhat.com>
* gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp: Add temporary breakpoint tests.
2013-11-07 Phil Muldoon <pmuldoon@redhat.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Breakpoints In Python): Document temporary
option in breakpoint constructor, and add documentation to the
temporary attribute.
This patch does some cleanups, removing some language-related stuff.
Note that mi_cmd_var_info_expression uses varobj_language_string,
which is redundant, because we can get language name from
lang->la_natural_name.
varobj_language_string doesn't have "Ada", which looks like a bug to
me. With this patch applied, this problem doesn't exist, because the
language name is got from the same place (field la_natural_name).
gdb:
2013-11-07 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Include "language.h".
(mi_cmd_var_info_expression): Get language name from
language_defn.
* varobj.c (varobj_language_string): Remove.
(variable_language): Remove declaration.
(languages): Remove.
(varobj_get_language): Change the type of return value.
(variable_language): Remove.
* varobj.h (enum varobj_languages): Remove.
(varobj_language_string): Remove declaration.
(varobj_get_language): Update declaration.
gdb/doc:
2013-11-07 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Variable Objects): Update doc about the
output of "-var-info-expression".
Hi,
When I add another name of language, I find field 'la_name' can be
'const char *'. This patch is to constify it.
gdb:
2013-11-07 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* language.c (language_str): Return const char *.
(add_language): Add const to 'language_names'
* language.h (struct language_defn) <la_name>: Add const.
(language_str: Update declaration.
When checking for the presence of the TDB regset, the current code
interprets ENODATA from PTRACE_GETREGSET as an indication that the TDB
regset *could* occur on this system, but the inferior stopped outside
a transaction. However, the Linux kernel actually reports ENODATA
even on systems without the transactional execution facility. Thus
the logic is now changed to check the TE field in the HWCAP as well.
This version also checks the existence of the TDB regset -- just to be
on the safe side when running on TE-enabled hardware with a kernel
that does not offer the TDB regset for some reason.
gdb/
* s390-linux-nat.c (s390_read_description): Consider the TE field
in the HWCAP for determining 'have_regset_tdb'.
gdbserver/
* linux-s390-low.c (HWCAP_S390_TE): New define.
(s390_arch_setup): Consider the TE field in the HWCAP for
determining 'have_regset_tdb'.
When reading objects with corrupt debug information it is possible that
the sibling chain can form a loop, which leads to an infinite loop and
memory exhaustion.
Avoid this situation by disregarding and DW_AT_sibling values that point
to a lower address than the current entry.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2013-11-06 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
PR gdb/12866
* dwarf2read.c (skip_one_die): Sanity check DW_AT_sibling
values. (read_partial_die): Likewise.
When Bash is started non-interactively, it runs the script pointed by
the BASH_ENV environment variable, not .bashrc. While at it, mention
Z shell in the warning too, and mention non-interactive mode
explicitly.
gdb/doc/
2013-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Starting) <set/show startup-with-shell>: Mention
non-interactive mode.
(Environment) <shell startup files warning>: Mention
non-interactive mode. Mention .zshenv for Z shell, and talk about
BASH_ENV instead of .bashrc for BASH.
This patch is to add a test case to on the performance of GDB handling
load and unload of shared library.
In V4:
- Handle malloc and dlopen failure,
- Document test parameters.
In V3, there are some changes,
- Adapt to perf test framework changes.
- Measure load and unload separately.
In V2, there are some changes,
- A new proc gdb_produce_source to produce source files. I tried to
move all source file generation code out of solib.exp, but
compilation step still needs to know the generated file names. I
have to hard-code the file names in compilation step, which is not
good to me, so I give up on this moving.
- SOLIB_NUMBER -> SOLIB_COUNT
- New variable SOLIB_DLCLOSE_REVERSED_ORDER to control the order of
iterating a list of shared libs to dlclose them.
- New variable GDB_PERFORMANCE to enable these perf test cases.
- Remove dlsym call in solib.c.
- Update solib.py for the updated framework.
gdb/testsuite/
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_produce_source): New procedure.
* gdb.perf/solib.c: New.
* gdb.perf/solib.exp: New.
* gdb.perf/solib.py: New.
This patch adds a basic framework to do performance testing for GDB.
perftest.py is about the test case, testresult.py is about test
results, and how are they saved. reporter.py is about how results
are reported (in what format). measure.py is about measuring the
execution of tests by a collection of measurements.
In V5:
- Simplify perftest.exp.
In V4:
- Rename MeasurementCPUTime to MeasurementCpuTime,
- Add 'pass' in empty method,
- Simplify string comparison in perftest.exp.
- Rename GDB_PERFORMANCE to GDB_PERFTEST_MODE and rename
GDB_PERFORMANCE_TIMEOUT to GDB_PERFTEST_TIMEOUT.
In V3, there are some changes,
- Add wall time measurement, cpu time measurement and vmsize
measurement.
- Rename SingleStatisticTestCase to TestCaseWithBasicMeasurements,
which measures cpu time, wall time, and memory (vmsize).
- GDB_PERFORMANCE=run|compile|both to control the mode of perf
testing.
- New GDB_PERFORMANCE_TIMEOUT to specify the timeout.
- Split proc prepare to proc compile and startup.
- Disable GC while doing measurements.
In V2, there are several changes to address Doug and Sanimir's
comments.
- Add copyright header and docstring in perftest/__init__.py
- Remove config.py.
- Fix docstring format.
- Rename classes "SingleVariable" to "SingleStatistic".
- Don't extend gdb.Function in class TestCase. Add a new method run
to run the test case so that we can pass parameters to test.
- Allow to customize whether to warm up and to append test log.
- Move time measurement into test harness. Add a new class
Measurement for a specific measurement and a new class Measure to
measure them for a given test case.
- A new class ResultFactory to create instances of TestResult.
- New file lib/perftest.exp, which is to do some preparations and
cleanups to simplify each *.exp file.
- Skip compilation step if GDB_PERFORMANCE_SKIP_COMPILE is set.
gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-06 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* lib/perftest.exp: New.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/__init__.py: New.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/measure.py: New.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/perftest.py: New.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/reporter.py: New.
* gdb.perf/lib/perftest/testresult.py: New.
We add a new dir gdb.perf in testsuite for all performance tests.
However, current 'make check' logic will either run dejagnu in
directory testsuite or iterate all gdb.* directories which has *.exp
files. Both of them will run tests in gdb.perf. We want to achieve:
1) typical 'make check' should not run performance tests. In each perf
test case, GDB_PERFTEST_MODE is checked. If it doesn't exist, return.
2) run perf tests easily. We add a new makefile target 'check-perf'.
gdb:
2013-11-06 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (check-perf): New target.
gdb/testsuite:
2013-11-06 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* Makefile.in (check-perf): New target.
* configure.ac (AC_OUTPUT): Output Makefile in gdb.perf.
* configure: Re-generated.
* gdb.perf/Makefile.in: New.
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_sys_reg): Update to use aarch64_sys_reg;
call aarch64_sys_reg_deprecated_p and warn about the deprecated
system registers.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/aarch64/deprecated.d: New file.
* gas/aarch64/deprecated.l: New file.
* gas/aarch64/deprecated.s: New file.
* gas/aarch64/sysreg-1.s: Add tests.
* gas/aarch64/sysreg-1.d: Add tests.
include/opcode/
* aarch64.h (aarch64_sys_reg): New typedef.
(aarch64_sys_regs): Change to define with the new type.
(aarch64_sys_reg_deprecated_p): Declare.
opcodes/
* aarch64-opc.c (F_DEPRECATED): New macro.
(aarch64_sys_regs): Update; flag "spsr_svc" and "spsr_hyp" with
F_DEPRECATED.
(aarch64_print_operand): Call aarch64_sys_reg_deprecated_p on
AARCH64_OPND_SYSREG.
Parsing a vector mov instruction currently leads to a phantom undefined
symbol being added to the symbol table. e.g.:
.text
mov x0, v0.D[0]
Produces an undefined symbol called "v0.D".
gas/ChangeLog:
2013-11-05 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
PR gas/16103
* config/tc-aarch64.c (parse_operands): Avoid trying to
parse a vector register as an immediate.
gas/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2013-11-05 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* gas/aarch64/advsimd-mov-bad.d: New file.
* gas/aarch64/advsimd-mov-bad.s: Likewise.
I can't see any good reason why anyone would want a dynamic .TOC., so
hide it in a way that is respected by _bfd_elf_export_symbol. This
also fixes an abort in relocate_section on not finding sreloc for .TOC.
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_func_desc_adjust): Make .TOC. defined and
hidden.
(ppc64_elf_set_toc): Adjust.
These shortcuts to dynamic sections in ppc_link_hash_table predated
their geneneric elf hash table equivalents.
* elf64-ppc.c (struct ppc_link_hash_table): Remove got, plt, relplt,
iplt, reliplt. Update all references to use elf.sgot, elf.splt,
elf.srelplt, elf.iplt and elf.irelplt.
This switches "make check" to fully parallel mode.
One primary issue facing full parallelization is the overhead of
"runtest". On my machine, if I "touch gdb.base/empty.exp", making a
new file, and then "time runtest.exp", it takes 0.08 seconds.
Multiply this by the 1008 (in my configuration) tests and you get ~80
seconds. This is the overhead that would theoretically be present if
all tests were run in parallel.
However, the problem isn't nearly as bad as this, for two reasons.
First, you must divide by the number of jobs, assuming perfect
parallelization -- reasonably true for small -j numbers, based on the
results I see.
Second, the current test suite parallelization approach bundles the
tests, largely by directory, but also splitting up gdb.base into two
halves.
I was curious to see how the current bundling played out in practice,
so I ran "make -j1 check RUNTEST='/bin/time runtest'". This invokes
the parallel mode (thus the bundling) and then shows the time taken by
each invocation of runtest.
Then, I ran "/bin/time make -j3 check". (See below about -j2.)
The time for the entire -j3 test run was the same as the time for
"gdb.base1". What this means is that gdb.base1 is currently the
time-limiting run, preventing further parallelization gains.
So, I reason, whatever overhead we see from full parallelization will
only be seen by "-j1" and "-j2".
I then tried a -j2 test run. This does take longer than a -j3 build,
meaning that the gdb.base1 job finishes and then proceeds to other
runtest invocations.
Finally I tried a -j2 test run with the appended patch.
This was 9% slower than the -j2 run without the patch.
I think that is a reasonable slowdown for what is probably a rare
case. I believe this patch will yield faster test results for all -j
values greater than 2. For -j3 on my machine, the test suite is a few
seconds faster; I didn't try any larger -j values.
For -j1, I went ahead and changed the Makefile so that, if no -j
option is given, then the "check-single" mode is used. You can still
use "make -j1 check" to get single-job parallel-mode, though of course
there's no good reason to do so.
This change is likely to speed up the plain "make check" scenario a
little as we will now bypass dg-extract-results.sh.
One drawback of this change is that "make -jN check" is now much more
verbose. I generally only look at the .sum and .log files, but
perhaps this will bother some.
Another interesting question is scalability of the result. The
slowest test, which limits the scalability, took 80.78 seconds. The
mean of the remaining tests is 1.08 seconds. (Note that this is just
a rough estimate, since there are still outliers.)
This means we can run 80.78 / 1.08 =~ 74 tests in the time available.
And, in this data set (slightly older than the above, but materially
the same) there were 948 tests. So, I think the current test suite
should scale ok up to about -j12.
We could improve this number if need be by breaking up the biggest
tests.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (TEST_DIRS): Remove.
(TEST_TARGETS, check-parallel): Rewrite.
(check-gdb.%, BASE1_FILES, BASE2_FILES, check-gdb.base%)
(subdir_do, subdirs): Remove.
(do-check-parallel, check/%): New targets.
(clean): Remove outputs, temp, and cache directories.
(saw_dash_j): New variable.
(CHECK_TARGET): Use it.
(check): Depend on all, site.exp. Rewrite.
(check-single): Remove dependencies.
(slow_tests, all_tests, reordered_tests): New variables.
A couple of Fission tests rely on the current directory layout. This
assumption is not valid in parallel mode.
This patch fixes the problem by removing the relative directory from
the .S files and instead having the tests set debug-file-directory
before opening the main file.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.S: Remove "gdb.dwarf/".
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-base.exp: Set debug-file-directory
before loading binfile.
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.S: Remove "gdb.dwarf/".
* gdb.dwarf2/fission-loclists.exp: Set debug-file-directory
before loading binfile.
A few tests run an inferior that execs some other program. The name
of this exec'd program is compiled in. These tests assume the current
test suite directory layout, but fail in parallel mode.
This patch fixes these tests by letting the .exp files pass in the
directory names at compile time.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/foll-exec.c (main): Use BASEDIR.
* gdb.base/foll-exec.exp: Define BASEDIR during compilation.
* gdb.base/foll-vfork.c (main): Use BASEDIR.
* gdb.base/foll-vfork.exp: Define BASEDIR during compilation.
* gdb.multi/bkpt-multi-exec.c (main): Use BASEDIR.
* gdb.multi/bkpt-multi-exec.exp: Define BASEDIR during compilation.
argv0-symlink.exp doesn't work properly if standard_output_file puts
files into a per-test subdirectory. That's because it assumes that
files appear in $subdir, which is no longer true.
This patch fixes the problem by computing the correct directory at
runtime.
Tested both with and without GDB_PARALLEL on x86-64 Fedora 18.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/argv0-symlink.exp: Compute executable's directory
dynamically.
This introduces a new relative_filename proc to gdb.exp and changes
some tests to use it. This helps make these tests parallel-safe.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/fullname.exp: Use standard_output_file,
relative_filename.
* gdb.base/hashline1.exp: Use standard_testfile,
standard_output_file, relative_filename, clean_restart.
* gdb.base/hashline2.exp: Use standard_testfile,
standard_output_file.
* gdb.base/hashline3.exp: Use standard_testfile,
standard_output_file, relative_filename.
* lib/gdb.exp (relative_filename): New proc.
This updates the fileio test to be parallel-safe.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/fileio.c (test_open, test_write, test_read)
(test_lseek, test_close, test_stat, test_fstat)
(test_isatty, test_system, test_rename, test_unlink):
Use OUTDIR define.
* gdb.base/fileio.exp: Define OUTDIR during compilation.
Use standard_output_file.
This fixes the "checkpoint" test to use the standard output directory.
This makes the test be parallel-safe.
2013-11-04 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/checkpoint.c (main): Use PI_TXT and COPY1_TXT
defines.
* gdb.base/checkpoint.exp: Define PI_TXT and COPY1_TXT during
compilation. Use prepare_for_testing, standard_output_file.