A patch I wrote made GDB pull the thread list sooner when debugging
with target remote, and I noticed an intended consequence. GDB
started bouncing around the currently selected remote/general thread
more frequently. E.g.:
Sending packet: $qTMinFTPILen#3b...Packet received: 5
+Sending packet: $Hgp726d.726d#53...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $m400680,40#2f...Packet received: 85c0741455bff00d60004889e5ffd05de97bffffff0f1f00e973ffffff0f1f00554889e5c745fc00000000c745fc01000000e900000000c745fc02000000b800
+Sending packet: $Hgp726d.7278#28...Packet received: OK
Sending packet: $m4006b2,1#28...Packet received: e9
Fast tracepoint 2 at 0x4006b2: file gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/range-stepping.c, line 53.
Sending packet: $qTStatus#49...Packet received: T0;tnotrun:0;tframes:0;tcreated:0;tfree:500000;tsize:500000;circular:0;disconn:0;starttime:0;stoptime:0;username:;notes::
This ended up breaking "tstart" when one has fast tracepoints set,
because gdbserver isn't expecting an Hg packet in response to
qRelocInsn:
(gdb) ftrace *set_point
Fast tracepoint 3 at 0x4006b2: file gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/range-stepping.c, line 53.
(gdb) PASS: gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: ftrace: ftrace *set_point
tstart
gdbserver: Malformed response to qRelocInsn, ignoring: Hgp2783.2783
Target does not support this command.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.trace/range-stepping.exp: ftrace: tstart
remote_trace_start should probably start by making sure the remote
current thread matches inferior_ptid (calling set_general_thread), but
still, reducing unnecessary bouncing is a good idea. It happens
because the memory/symbol/breakpoint routines use
switch_to_program_space_and_thread to do something in the right
context and then revert back to the previously current thread.
The fix is to simply make any_thread_of_process,
find_inferior_for_program_space, etc. give preference to the current
thread/inferior it if matches.
gdb/
2014-10-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdbthread.h (any_thread_of_process, any_live_thread_of_process):
Adjust comments.
* inferior.c (find_inferior_for_program_space): Give preference to
the current inferior.
* inferior.h (find_inferior_for_program_space): Update comment.
* progspace.c (switch_to_program_space_and_thread): Prefer the
current inferior if it's bound to the program space requested. If
the inferior found doesn't have a PID yet, don't bother looking up
a thread.
* progspace.h (switch_to_program_space_and_thread): Adjust
comment.
* thread.c (any_thread_of_process, any_live_thread_of_process):
Give preference to the current thread.
Currently, with "set breakpoint auto-hw off", we'll still try to
insert a software breakpoint at addresses covered by supposedly
read-only or inacessible regions:
(top-gdb) mem 0x443000 0x450000 ro
(top-gdb) set mem inaccessible-by-default off
(top-gdb) disassemble
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x0000000000443956 <+34>: movq $0x0,0x10(%rax)
=> 0x000000000044395e <+42>: movq $0x0,0x18(%rax)
0x0000000000443966 <+50>: mov -0x24(%rbp),%eax
0x0000000000443969 <+53>: mov %eax,-0x20(%rbp)
End of assembler dump.
(top-gdb) b *0x0000000000443969
Breakpoint 5 at 0x443969: file ../../src/gdb/gdb.c, line 29.
(top-gdb) c
Continuing.
warning: cannot set software breakpoint at readonly address 0x443969
Breakpoint 5, 0x0000000000443969 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffd918) at ../../src/gdb/gdb.c:29
29 args.argc = argc;
(top-gdb)
We warn, saying that the insertion can't be done, but then proceed
attempting the insertion anyway, and in case of manually added
regions, the insert actually succeeds.
This is a regression; GDB used to fail inserting the breakpoint. More
below.
I stumbled on this as I wrote a test that manually sets up a read-only
memory region with the "mem" command, in order to test GDB's behavior
with breakpoints set on read-only regions, even when the real memory
the breakpoints are set at isn't really read-only. I wanted that in
order to add a test that exercises software single-stepping through
read-only regions.
Note that the memory regions that target_memory_map returns aren't
like e.g., what would expect to see in /proc/PID/maps on Linux.
Instead, they're the physical memory map from the _debuggers_
perspective. E.g., a read-only region would be real ROM or flash
memory, while a read-only+execute mapping in /proc/PID/maps is still
read-write to the debugger (otherwise the debugger wouldn't be able to
set software breakpoints in the code segment).
If one tries to manually write to memory that falls within a memory
region that is known to be read-only, with e.g., "p foo = 1", then we
hit a check in memory_xfer_partial_1 before the write mananges to make
it to the target side.
But writing a software/memory breakpoint nowadays goes through
target_write_raw_memory, and unlike when writing memory with
TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY, nothing on the TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY path
checks whether we're trying to write to a read-only region.
At the time "breakpoint auto-hw" was added, we didn't have the
TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY vs TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY target object
distinction yet, and the code path in memory_xfer_partial that blocks
writes to read-only memory was hit for memory breakpoints too. With
GDB 6.8 we had:
warning: cannot set software breakpoint at readonly address 0000000000443943
Warning:
Cannot insert breakpoint 1.
Error accessing memory address 0x443943: Input/output error.
So I started out by fixing this by adding the memory region validation
to TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY too.
But later, when testing against GDBserver, I realized that that would
only block software/memory breakpoints GDB itself inserts with
gdb/mem-break.c. If a target has a to_insert_breakpoint method, the
insertion request will still pass through to the target. So I ended
up converting the "cannot set breakpoint" warning in breakpoint.c to a
real error return, thus blocking the insertion sooner.
With that, we'll end up no longer needing the TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY
changes once software single-step breakpoints are converted to real
breakpoints. We need them today as software single-step breakpoints
bypass insert_bp_location. But, it'll be best to leave that in as
safeguard anyway, for other direct uses of TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native and gdbserver.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location): Error out if inserting a
software breakpoint at a read-only address.
* target.c (memory_xfer_check_region): New function, factored out
from ...
(memory_xfer_partial_1): ... this. Make the 'reg_len' local a
ULONGEST.
(target_xfer_partial) <TARGET_OBJECT_RAW_MEMORY>: Check the access
against the memory region attributes.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/breakpoint-in-ro-region.c: New file.
* gdb.base/breakpoint-in-ro-region.exp: New file.
Don't reset the exit code at inferior exit and print it in
-list-thread-groups.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* NEWS: Announce new exit-code field in -list-thread-groups
output.
* inferior.c (exit_inferior_1): Don't clear exit code.
(inferior_appeared): Clear exit code.
* mi/mi-main.c (print_one_inferior): Add printing of the exit
code.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.mi/mi-exit-code.exp: New file.
* gdb.mi/mi-exit-code.c: New file.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Miscellaneous gdb/mi Commands): Document new
exit-code field in -list-thread-groups output.
This makes it easier to rebuild all GDB's generated target description
C files.
It also clarifies the comments a bit. One might think we need a GDB
configured for the particular arquitecture (--target=foo). But a
build that includes support for the target description is sufficient.
(GDB rejects target descriptions that explicitly specify the
architecture, with an <architecture> element, if the architecture is
unknown.)
Tested that "make clean-cfiles" deletes all .c files under
src/gdb/features/, and that "make cfiles" generates them all without
error, and that diffing the newly generated C files against master
comes out an empty diff.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/Makefile: Update comments.
(XMLTOC): List all xml files we build C files from.
(clean-cfiles): New rule.
I regenerated all the .c files under src/gdb/features/ and this is
what I got.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/i386/amd64-avx512-linux.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/amd64-avx512.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/x32-avx512-linux.c: Regenerate.
* features/i386/x32-avx512.c: Regenerate.
The only reason .dat files exist is for GBBserver to use them in its
build system.
A few .dat files are listed as targets for generation that shouldn't.
The target descriptions these files are built from aren't used by
GDBserver. They're fallback descriptions GDB itself has baked in.
Remove them from the list of .dat files to be generated, otherwise a
plain "make" under src/gdb/features/ generates new .dat files that
aren't even in the tree today.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/Makefile (WHICH): Remove arm-with-m,
arm-with-m-fpa-layout and arm-with-m-vfp-d16.
So that we can do "make clean all" to regenerate all the renerated
.dat files.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/Makefile (clean): New rule.
This file's format is invalid, as it's missing some end quotes.
I noticed this because I tried to regenerate all the .dat files in
gdb/regformats/. I got:
sh ../../move-if-change ../regformats/i386/x32-avx.tmp ../regformats/i386/x32-avx.dat
echo "# DO NOT EDIT: generated from i386/x32-avx512.xml" > ../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.tmp
echo "name:`echo x32-avx512 | sed 's/-/_/g'`" >> ../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.tmp
echo "xmltarget:x32-avx512.xml" >> ../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.tmp
echo "expedite:rbp,rsp,rip" \
>> ../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.tmp
xsltproc --path "/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/features" --xinclude number-regs.xsl i386/x32-avx512.xml | \
xsltproc sort-regs.xsl - | \
xsltproc gdbserver-regs.xsl - >> ../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.tmp
i386/64bit-avx512.xml:81: parser error : Unescaped '<' not allowed in attributes values
<reg name="zmm11h" bitsize="256" type="v2ui128/>
^
i386/64bit-avx512.xml:81: parser error : attributes construct error
<reg name="zmm11h" bitsize="256" type="v2ui128/>
^
i386/64bit-avx512.xml:81: parser error : Couldn't find end of Start Tag reg line 80
<reg name="zmm11h" bitsize="256" type="v2ui128/>
^
i386/64bit-avx512.xml:82: parser error : Unescaped '<' not allowed in attributes values
<reg name="zmm12h" bitsize="256" type="v2ui128/>
^
i386/64bit-avx512.xml:82: parser error : attributes construct error
<reg name="zmm12h" bitsize="256" type="v2ui128/>
^
...
i386/x32-avx512.xml:17: element include: XInclude error : could not load i386/64bit-avx512.xml, and no fallback was found
-:1: parser error : Document is empty
^
-:1: parser error : Start tag expected, '<' not found
^
unable to parse -
-:1: parser error : Document is empty
^
-:1: parser error : Start tag expected, '<' not found
^
unable to parse -
make: *** [../regformats/i386/x32-avx512.dat] Error 6
Interestingly, gdb/expat manages to grok the broken file.
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/i386/64bit-avx512.xml (zmm10h, zmm11h, zmm12h, zmm13h)
(zmm14h): Add missing end quotes.
This reverts commit a4d9ba85 - 'AARCH64: Change cpsr type to be
64bit.'.
Even though Linux's ptrace exposes CPSR as 64-bit, CPSR is really
32-bit, and basing GDB's fundamentals on a particular OS's ptrace(2)
implementation is a bad idea.
In addition, while that commit intended to fix big endian Aarch64, it
ended up breaking floating point debugging against GDBserver, for both
big and little endian, because it changed the CPSR to be 64-bit in the
features/aarch64-core.xml file, but missed regenerating the
regformats/aarch64.dat file. If we generate it now, we see this:
diff --git c/gdb/regformats/aarch64.dat w/gdb/regformats/aarch64.dat
index afe1028..0d32183 100644
--- c/gdb/regformats/aarch64.dat
+++ w/gdb/regformats/aarch64.dat
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ expedite:x29,sp,pc
64:x30
64:sp
64:pc
-32:cpsr
+64:cpsr
128:v0
128:v1
128:v2
IOW, that commit left regformats/aarch64.dat still considering CPSR as
32-bits. regformats/aarch64.dat is used by GDBserver for its internal
regcache layout, and for the g/G packet register block. See the
generated aarch64.c file in GDBserver's build dir.
So the target description xml file that GDBserver reports to GDB is
now claiming that CPSR is 64-bit, but what GDBserver actually puts in
the g/G register packets is 32-bits. Because GDB thinks CPSR is
64-bit (because that's what the XML description says), GDB will be
reading the remaining 32-bit bits of CPSR out of v0 (the register
immediately afterwards), and then all the registers that follow CPSR
in the register packet end up wrong in GDB, because they're being read
from the wrong offsets...
gdb/
2014-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* features/aarch64-core.xml (cpsr): Change back to 32-bit.
* features/aarch64.c: Regenerate.
When --hash-style-both is used, gold currently builds the sysv hash
table first, then the gnu hash table. Building the gnu hash table
renumbers the dynamic symbol table, invalidating the sysv hash
table. This patch reverses the order in which the hash tables are
build so that both hash tables are correct.
gold/
PR gold/13597
* layout.cc (Layout::create_dynamic_symtab): Build gnu-style
hash table before sysv-style hash table.
This patch reorganizes the code that implements follow-fork and
detach-on-fork in preparation for implementation of those features for the
extended-remote target. The function linux-nat.c:linux_child_follow_fork
contained target-independent code mixed in with target-dependent code. The
target-independent pieces need to be accessible for the host-side
implementation of follow-fork for extended-remote Linux targets.
The changes are fairly mechanical. A new routine, follow_fork_inferior,
is implemented in infrun.c, containing those parts of
linux_child_follow_fork that manage inferiors and the inferior list. The
parts of linux_child_follow_fork that deal with LWPs and target-specifics
were left in-place. Although the order of some operations was changed, the
resulting functionality was not.
Modifications were made to the other native target follow-fork functions,
inf_ttrace_follow_fork and inf_ptrace_follow_fork, that should allow them
to work with follow_fork_inferior. Some other adjustments were necessary
in inf-ttrace.c. The changes to inf-ttrace.c and inf-ptrace.c were not
tested.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_follow_fork): Remove target-independent
code so as to work with follow_fork_inferior.
* inf-ttrace.c (inf_ttrace_follow_fork): Ditto.
(inf_ttrace_create_inferior): Remove reference to
inf_ttrace_vfork_ppid.
(inf_ttrace_attach): Ditto.
(inf_ttrace_detach): Ditto.
(inf_ttrace_kill): Use current_inferior instead of
inf_ttrace_vfork_ppid.
(inf_ttrace_wait): Eliminate use of inf_ttrace_vfork_ppid, report
TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORK_DONE event, delete HACK that switched the
inferior away from the parent.
* infrun.c (follow_fork): Call follow_fork_inferior instead of
target_follow_fork.
(follow_fork_inferior): New function.
(follow_inferior_reset_breakpoints): Make function static.
* infrun.h (follow_inferior_reset_breakpoints): Remove declaration.
* linux-nat.c (linux_child_follow_fork): Move target-independent
code to infrun.c:follow_fork_inferior.
Now that all instances of the regset_from_core_section gdbarch method
have been replaced by the new iterator method, delete the obsolete
method from the gdbarch interface. Adjust all invocations and
references to it.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdbarch.sh (regset_from_core_section): Remove gdbarch method.
* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
* gdbarch.h: Likewise.
* corelow.c (sniff_core_bfd): Drop presence check for deleted
gdbarch method 'regset_from_core_section'.
(get_core_register_section): Remove handling for the case that
regset == NULL and regset_from_core_section is defined.
(get_core_registers): Drop check for deleted method.
* procfs.c (procfs_do_thread_registers): Adjust comment.
Now that all Linux targets use the regset iterator, the fall back to
the deprecated target method is dropped.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_collect_thread_registers): Remove.
(linux_nat_make_corefile_notes): Remove.
(linux_target_install_ops): Do not set target method
'make_corefile_notes'.
* linux-tdep.c (struct linux_corefile_thread_data)<collect>:
Remove field.
(linux_corefile_thread_callback): Instead of args->collect, call
linux_collect_thread_registers.
(linux_make_corefile_notes): Remove 'collect' parameter. Return
NULL unless there is a regset iterator.
(linux_make_corefile_notes_1): Remove.
(linux_init_abi): Replace reference to linux_make_corefile_notes_1
by linux_make_corefile_notes.
* linux-tdep.h (linux_make_corefile_notes): Remove prototype.
Now that all users of the target method 'fbsd_make_corefile_notes'
have been converted to the version in fbsd-tdep.c, the old method is
removed.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* fbsd-nat.c (find_signalled_thread, find_stop_signal)
(fbsd_collect_regset_section_cb, fbsd_make_corefile_notes):
Remove.
* fbsd-nat.h (fbsd_make_corefile_notes): Remove prototype.
For TILE-Gx GNU/Linux targets, no longer define the gdbarch method
'regset_from_core_section', but the iterator method instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* tilegx-linux-tdep.c (TILEGX_LINUX_SIZEOF_GREGSET): New macro.
(tilegx_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(tilegx_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(tilegx_linux_init_abi): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
For Super-H targets, no longer define the gdbarch method
'regset_from_core_section', but the iterator method instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* sh-linux-tdep.c (sh_linux_init_abi): Set tdep fields
'sizeof_gregset' and 'sizeof_fpregset'.
* sh-tdep.c (sh_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(sh_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(sh_gdbarch_init): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
* sh-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep): New fields sizeof_gregset and
sizeof_fpregset.
* shnbsd-tdep.c (shnbsd_init_abi): Set tdep field
'sizeof_gregset'.
For Nios II GNU/Linux targets, no longer define the gdbarch method
'regset_from_core_section', but the iterator method instead.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* nios2-linux-tdep.c (NIOS2_GREGS_SIZE): New macro.
(nios2_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(nios2_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(nios2_linux_init_abi): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
Don't define the 'regset_from_core_section' method, but the iterator
method instead. Do this for GNU/Linux- as well as
Net/OpenBSD-targets. In the case of GNU/Linux this should enable
non-native use of the 'generate-core-file' command.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* alpha-linux-tdep.c (alpha_linux_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(alpha_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(alpha_linux_init_abi): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
* alphabsd-tdep.h (alphanbsd_regset_from_core_section): Remove
prototype.
(alphanbsd_iterate_over_regset_sections): New prototype.
* alphafbsd-tdep.c (alphafbsd_init_abi): Add comment for missing
fbsd_init_abi invocation.
* alphanbsd-tdep.c (alphanbsd_supply_gregset): Move below
alphanbsd_aout_supply_gregset. Invoke the latter for the
appropriate size.
(alphanbsd_aout_gregset): Remove.
(alphanbsd_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(alphanbsd_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(alphanbsd_init_abi): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
* alphaobsd-tdep.c (alphaobsd_init_abi): Likewise.
Don't define the 'regset_from_core_section' method, but the iterator
method instead. This slightly reduces the code and enables non-native
use of the 'generate-core-file' command.
Also, when all instances of 'regset_from_core_section' are replaced,
it can be dropped from the gdbarch interface.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* aarch64-linux-tdep.c (aarch64_linux_regset_from_core_section):
Remove.
(aarch64_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(aarch64_linux_init_abi): Adjust gdbarch initialization.
This creates a new version of the FreeBSD core file note generation
logic in the new target-dependent file "fbsd-tdep.c". The new version
is mostly copied from "fbsd-nat.c", but uses the iterator instead of
regset_from_core_section and defines fbsd_make_corefile_notes as a
gdbarch method instead of a target method.
Consecutive architecture-dependent changes exploit the new version,
migrating away from the target method. When all FreeBSD targets are
changed, the target method can go away.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* fbsd-tdep.c: New file.
* fbsd-tdep.h: New file.
* Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add fbsd-tdep.o.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add fbsd-tdep.h.
(ALLDEPFILES): Add fbsd-tdep.c.
This adds the 'regset' parameter to the iterator callback.
Consequently the 'regset_from_core_section' method is dropped for all
targets that provide the iterator method.
This change prepares for replacing regset_from_core_section
everywhere, thereby eliminating one gdbarch interface. Since the
iterator is usually no more complex than regset_from_core_section
alone, targets that previously didn't define core_regset_sections will
then gain multi-arch capable core file generation support without
increased complexity.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* gdbarch.sh (iterate_over_regset_sections_cb): Add regset
parameter.
* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
* corelow.c (sniff_core_bfd): Don't sniff if gdbarch has a regset
iterator.
(get_core_register_section): Add parameter 'regset' and use it, if
set. Add parameter 'min_size' and verify the bfd section size
against it.
(get_core_registers_cb): Add parameter 'regset' and pass it to
get_core_register section. For the "standard" register sections
".reg" and ".reg2", set an appropriate default for human_name.
(get_core_registers): Don't abort when the gdbarch has an iterator
but no regset_from_core_section. Add NULL/0 for parameters
'regset'/'min_size' in calls to get_core_register_section.
* linux-tdep.c (linux_collect_regset_section_cb): Add parameter
'regset' and use it instead of calling the
regset_from_core_section gdbarch method.
* i386-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep): Add field 'fpregset'.
* i386-tdep.c (i386_supply_xstateregset)
(i386_collect_xstateregset, i386_xstateregset): Moved to
i386-linux-tdep.c.
(i386_regset_from_core_section): Drop handling for .reg-xfp and
.reg-xstate.
(i386_gdbarch_init): Set tdep field 'fpregset'. Enable generic
core file support only if the regset iterator hasn't been set.
* i386-linux-tdep.c (i386_linux_supply_xstateregset)
(i386_linux_collect_xstateregset, i386_linux_xstateregset): New.
Moved from i386-tdep.c and renamed to *_linux*.
(i386_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): Add regset parameter to
each callback invocation. Allow any .reg-xstate size when reading
from a core file.
* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_supply_xstateregset)
(amd64_collect_xstateregset, amd64_xstateregset): Moved to
amd64-linux-tdep.c.
(amd64_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(amd64_init_abi): Set new tdep field 'fpregset'. No longer
install an amd64-specific regset_from_core_section gdbarch method.
* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_linux_supply_xstateregset)
(amd64_linux_collect_xstateregset, amd64_linux_xstateregset): New.
Moved from amd64-tdep.c and renamed to *_linux*.
(amd64_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): Add regset parameter
to each callback invocation. Allow any .reg-xstate size when
reading from a core file.
* arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_linux_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(arm_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): Add regset parameter to
each callback invocation.
(arm_linux_init_abi): No longer set the regset_from_core_section
gdbarch method.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c (ppc_linux_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(ppc_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): Add regset parameter to
each callback invocation.
(ppc_linux_init_abi): No longer set the regset_from_core_section
gdbarch method.
* s390-linux-tdep.c (struct gdbarch_tdep): Remove the fields
gregset, sizeof_gregset, fpregset, and sizeof_fpregset.
(s390_regset_from_core_section): Remove.
(s390_iterate_over_regset_sections): Add regset parameter to each
callback invocation.
(s390_gdbarch_init): No longer set the regset_from_core_section
gdbarch method. Drop initialization of deleted tdep fields.
The core_regset_sections list in gdbarch (needed for multi-arch
capable core file generation support) is replaced by an iterator
method. Overall, this reduces the code a bit, and it allows for more
flexibility.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* amd64-linux-tdep.c (amd64_linux_regset_sections): Remove.
(amd64_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(amd64_linux_init_abi_common): Don't install the regset section
list, but the new iterator in gdbarch.
* arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_linux_fpa_regset_sections)
(arm_linux_vfp_regset_sections): Remove. Move combined logic...
(arm_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): ...here. New function.
(arm_linux_init_abi): Set iterator instead of section list.
* corelow.c (get_core_registers_cb): New function, logic moved
from...
(get_core_registers): ...loop body here. Use new iterator method
instead of walking through the regset section list.
* gdbarch.sh: Remove 'core_regset_sections'. New method
'iterate_over_regset_sections'. New typedef
'iterate_over_regset_sections_cb'.
* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
* gdbarch.h: Likewise.
* i386-linux-tdep.c (i386_linux_regset_sections)
(i386_linux_sse_regset_sections, i386_linux_avx_regset_sections):
Remove.
(i386_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): New.
(i386_linux_init_abi): Don't choose a regset section list, but
install new iterator in gdbarch.
* linux-tdep.c (struct linux_collect_regset_section_cb_data): New.
(linux_collect_regset_section_cb): New function, logic moved
from...
(linux_collect_thread_registers): ...loop body here. Use iterator
method instead of walking through list.
(linux_make_corefile_notes_1): Check for presence of iterator
method instead of regset section list.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c (ppc_linux_vsx_regset_sections)
(ppc_linux_vmx_regset_sections, ppc_linux_fp_regset_sections)
(ppc64_linux_vsx_regset_sections, ppc64_linux_vmx_regset_sections)
(ppc64_linux_fp_regset_sections): Remove. Move combined logic...
(ppc_linux_iterate_over_regset_sections): ...here. New function.
(ppc_linux_init_abi): Don't choose from above regset section
lists, but install new iterator in gdbarch.
* regset.h (struct core_regset_section): Remove.
* s390-linux-tdep.c (struct gdbarch_tdep): Add new fields
have_linux_v1, have_linux_v2, and have_tdb.
(s390_linux32_regset_sections, s390_linux32v1_regset_sections)
(s390_linux32v2_regset_sections, s390_linux64_regset_sections)
(s390_linux64v1_regset_sections, s390_linux64v2_regset_sections)
(s390x_linux64_regset_sections, s390x_linux64v1_regset_sections)
(s390x_linux64v2_regset_sections): Remove. Move combined logic...
(s390_iterate_over_regset_sections): ...here. New function. Use
new tdep fields.
(s390_gdbarch_init): Set new tdep fields. Don't choose from above
regset section lists, but install new iterator.
I see the following fails on arm-linux-gnueabi,
result of ldd build-git/arm/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.so is 1
output of ldd build-git/arm/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.so is not a dynamic executable
child process exited abnormally
FAIL: gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.exp: ldd dlopen-libpthread.so
FAIL: gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.exp: ldd dlopen-libpthread.so output contains libs
the test script invokes ldd (on host) for the target libraries, which
is wrong. ldd can't be cross because it invokes dynamic linker with
LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS and gets the dependent libraries. My first
reaction to this problem is to execute ld.so on the target (like
remote_exec target). When I start to hack proc build_executable_own_libs,
I find it has assumptions here and there that the native testing is
performed. Then I check the callers of build_executable_own_libs,
and they are all skipped if isnative is false. It is reasonable to do
the same in dlopen-libpthread.exp too.
gdb/testsuite:
2014-09-30 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* gdb.threads/dlopen-libpthread.exp: Skip it if isnative is
false.
commit 2268b414f4
added file "features/library-list-svr4.dtd" but the added code uses
"library-list.dtd" instead.
Curiously after changing for a test s/name/nXme/ in the DTD making the
gdbserver output non-conforming there is no warning or regression seen (tested
gdb.base/shlib-call.exp, using_xfer is still 1). I did not check more why the
DTD conformance verification does not work.
gdb/ChangeLog
2014-09-29 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
* solib-svr4.c (svr4_parse_libraries): Use "library-list-svr4.dtd".