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3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joel Brobecker
32d0add0a6 Update year range in copyright notice of all files owned by the GDB project.
gdb/ChangeLog:

        Update year range in copyright notice of all files.
2015-01-01 13:32:14 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
ecd75fc8ee Update Copyright year range in all files maintained by GDB. 2014-01-01 07:54:24 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
4d804846db [dwarf] Mark all functions as prototyped except C functions.
This makes sure that the types of the arguments are taken into account
when performing an inferior function call to a non-C (or C-like)
function.  In particular, this makes sure that the arguments are
appropriatly converted to the correct type.

For instance, on x86_64-linux, with the following Ada code:

   procedure Set_Float (F : Float) is
   begin
      Global_Float := F;
   end Set_Float;

The following sequence shows that Float arguments are incorrectly
passed (Ada's Float type is the equivalent of type "float" in C):

    (gdb) call set_float (2.0)
    (gdb) print global_float
    $1 = 0.0

Putting a breakpoint inside set_float to inspect the value of
register xmm0 gives the first hint of the problem:

    (gdb) p $xmm0
    $2 = (v4_float => (0 => 0.0, 2.0, 0.0, 0.0),
          v2_double => (0 => 2.0, 0.0),
    [...]

It shows that the argument was passed as a double.

The code responsible for doing appropriate type conversions
for the arguments (value_arg_coerce) found that our function
was not prototyped, and thus could not use typing information
for the arguments. Instead, it defaulted to the value of "set
coerce-float-to-double", which by default is true, to determine
the argument type.

This patch fixes the problem by setting the PROTOTYPE flag
for all functions of any language except C and Objective C.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * dwarf2read.c (prototyped_function_p): New function.
        (read_subroutine_type): Use it.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/float_param: New testcase.
2013-05-20 09:45:13 +00:00