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5443 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jan Kratochvil
06c868a8dc Fix SIGTERM signal safety (PR gdb/15358).
gdb/
2014-03-18  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/15358
	* defs.h (sync_quit_force_run): New declaration.
	(QUIT): Check also SYNC_QUIT_FORCE_RUN.
	* event-top.c (async_sigterm_handler): New declaration.
	(async_sigterm_token): New variable.
	(async_init_signals): Create also async_sigterm_token.
	(async_sigterm_handler): New function.
	(sync_quit_force_run): New variable.
	(handle_sigterm): Replace quit_force call by other calls.
	* utils.c (quit): Call quit_force if SYNC_QUIT_FORCE_RUN.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-03-18  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/15358
	* gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp: New file.

Message-ID: <20140316135334.GA30698@host2.jankratochvil.net>
2014-03-18 22:48:06 +01:00
Pedro Alves
0c7e1a4602 PR gdb/13860: make "-exec-foo"'s MI output equal to "foo"'s MI output.
Part of PR gdb/13860 is about the mi-solib.exp test's output being
different in sync vs async modes.

sync:

  >./gdb -nx -q ./testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main -ex "set stop-on-solib-events 1" -ex "set target-async off" -i=mi
  =thread-group-added,id="i1"
  ~"Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main..."
  ~"done.\n"
  (gdb)
  &"start\n"
  ~"Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x400608: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c, line 21.\n"
  =breakpoint-created,bkpt={number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="del",enabled="y",addr="0x0000000000400608",func="main",file="../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",line="21",times="0",original-location="main"}
  ~"Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main \n"
  =thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="17724"
  =thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
  ^running
  *running,thread-id="all"
  (gdb)
  =library-loaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1"
  ~"Stopped due to shared library event (no libraries added or removed)\n"
  *stopped,reason="solib-event",frame={addr="0x000000379180f990",func="_dl_debug_state",args=[],from="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="3"
  (gdb)

async:

  >./gdb -nx -q ./testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main -ex "set stop-on-solib-events 1" -ex "set target-async on" -i=mi
  =thread-group-added,id="i1"
  ~"Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main..."
  ~"done.\n"
  (gdb)
  start
  &"start\n"
  ~"Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x400608: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c, line 21.\n"
  =breakpoint-created,bkpt={number="1",type="breakpoint",disp="del",enabled="y",addr="0x0000000000400608",func="main",file="../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",fullname="/home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main.c",line="21",times="0",original-location="main"}
  ~"Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main \n"
  =thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="17729"
  =thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
  ^running
  *running,thread-id="all"
  =library-loaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1"
  (gdb)
  *stopped,reason="solib-event",thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="1"

For now, let's focus only on the *stopped event.  We see that the
async output is missing frame info.  And this causes a test failure in
async mode, as "mi_expect_stop solib-event" wants to see the frame
info.

However, if we compare the event output when a real MI execution
command is used, compared to a CLI command (e.g., run vs -exec-run,
next vs -exec-next, etc.), we see:

  >./gdb -nx -q ./testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main -ex "set stop-on-solib-events 1" -ex "set target-async off" -i=mi
  =thread-group-added,id="i1"
  ~"Reading symbols from /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main..."
  ~"done.\n"
  (gdb)
  r
  &"r\n"
  ~"Starting program: /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/build/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/solib-main \n"
  =thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="17751"
  =thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
  ^running
  *running,thread-id="all"
  (gdb)
  =library-loaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1"
  ~"Stopped due to shared library event (no libraries added or removed)\n"
  *stopped,reason="solib-event",frame={addr="0x000000379180f990",func="_dl_debug_state",args=[],from="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="3"
  (gdb)
  -exec-run
  =thread-exited,id="1",group-id="i1"
  =thread-group-exited,id="i1"
  =library-unloaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",thread-group="i1"
  =thread-group-started,id="i1",pid="17754"
  =thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
  ^running
  *running,thread-id="all"
  (gdb)
  =library-loaded,id="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",target-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",host-name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2",symbols-loaded="0",thread-group="i1"
  *stopped,reason="solib-event",thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all",core="1"
  =thread-selected,id="1"
  (gdb)

As seen above, with MI commands, the *stopped event _doesn't_ have
frame info.  This is because normal_stop, as commanded by the result
of bpstat_print, skips printing frame info in this case (it's an
"event", not a "breakpoint"), and when the interpreter is MI,
mi_on_normal_stop skips calling print_stack_frame, as the normal_stop
call was already done with the MI uiout.  This explains why the async
output is different even with a CLI command.  Its because in async
mode, the mi_on_normal_stop path is always taken; it is always reached
with the MI uiout, because the stop is handled from the event loop,
instead of from within `proceed -> wait_for_inferior -> normal_stop'
with the interpreter overridden, as in sync mode.

This patch fixes the issue by making all cases output the same
*stopped event, by factoring out the print code from normal_stop, and
using it from mi_on_normal_stop as well.  I chose the *stopped output
without a frame, mainly because that is what you already get if you
use MI execution commands, the commands frontends are supposed to use
(except when implementing a console).  This patch makes it simpler to
tweak the MI output differently if desired, as we only have to change
the centralized print_stop_event (taking into account whether the
uiout is MI-like), and all different modes will change accordingly.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, no regressions.  The mi-solib.exp test no
longer fails in async mode with this patch, so the patch removes the
kfail.

2014-03-18  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/13860
	* inferior.h (print_stop_event): Declare.
	* infrun.c (print_stop_event): New, factored out from ...
	(normal_stop): ... this.
	* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_on_normal_stop): Use print_stop_event instead
	of bpstat_print/print_stack_frame.

2014-03-18  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/13860
	* gdb.mi/mi-solib.exp: Remove gdb/13860 kfail.
	* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_stop): Add special handling for
	solib-event.
2014-03-18 17:50:28 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
f7c77d9323 [testsuite/Ada] New testcase for packed array renaming.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/pckd_arr_ren: New testcase.
2014-03-17 08:45:55 -07:00
Doug Evans
5a1e8c7a83 Fix pr 16612.
* guile/scm-type.c (tyscm_copy_type_recursive): Move type to its
	new eq?-hashtab.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.guile/scm-value.ep (test_value_after_death): Do a garbage
	collect after discarding symbols.
2014-03-13 09:55:12 -07:00
Doug Evans
350e1a768c Fix segv when referencing a value added to history after a Guile garbage collect.
* value.c (record_latest_value): Call release_value_or_incref
	instead of release_value.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.guile/scm-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Verify value added
	to history survives a gc.
2014-03-13 09:24:19 -07:00
Pedro Alves
a69900ae4e Rename Solaris's target to "target child" like most other ports.
Note that "target procfs" is used by QNX, but the test must be failing
there, as nto-procfs.c overrides to_open with a method that doesn't
throw the error being tested.  So I'm just removing the test
completely.

gdb/
2014-03-13  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* procfs.c (procfs_target): Don't override to_shortname,
	to_longname or to_doc.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-03-13  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/default.exp: Don't test "target procfs".
2014-03-13 12:30:38 +00:00
Pedro Alves
5db9f0bdb5 Don't mention "Unix" in native target name.
I find the mention of "Unix" unnecessary (and really slightly a lie)
on GNU/Linux in a couple of places:

 (gdb) maint print target-stack
 The current target stack is:
  - multi-thread (multi-threaded child process.)
  - child (Unix child process)
  - exec (Local exec file)
  - None (None)

 (gdb) help target child
 Unix child process (started by the "run" command).

 (gdb) target child
 Use the "run" command to start a Unix child process.

It's also odd that e.g., the Windows port says "Unix" in reaction to
"target child" (it was already that way before Windows used
inf-child.c):

 (gdb) target child
 Use the "run" command to start a Unix child process.
 (gdb)

So drop "Unix", going in the direction of saying mostly the same on
all native targets:

  (gdb) maint print target-stack
  The current target stack is:
   - multi-thread (multi-threaded child process.)
 - - child (Unix child process)
 + - child (Child process)
   - exec (Local exec file)
   - None (None)

  (gdb) help target child
 - Unix child process (started by the "run" command).
 + Child process (started by the "run" command).

 (gdb) target child
 -Use the "run" command to start a Unix child process.
 +Use the "run" command to start a child process.

gdb/
2014-03-13  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* inf-child.c (inf_child_open, inf_child_target): Don't mention
	Unix in user visible strings.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-03-13  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/default.exp: Update "target child" and "target procfs"
	tests to not expect "Unix".
2014-03-13 12:02:24 +00:00
Tom Tromey
b3ccfe11d3 fix regressions with target-async
A patch in the target cleanup series caused a regression when using
record with target-async.  Version 4 of the patch is here:

    https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00159.html

The immediate problem is that record supplies to_can_async_p and
to_is_async_p methods, but does not supply a to_async method.  So,
when target-async is set, record claims to support async -- but if the
underlying target does not support async, then the to_async method
call will end up in that method's default implementation, namely
tcomplain.

This worked previously because the record target used to provide a
to_async method; one that (erroneously, only at push time) checked the
other members of the target stack, and then simply dropped to_async
calls in the "does not implement async" case.

My first thought was to simply drop tcomplain as the default for
to_async.  This works, but Pedro pointed out that the only reason
record has to supply to_can_async_p and to_is_async_p is that these
default to using the find_default_run_target machinery -- and these
defaults are only needed by "run" and "attach".

So, a nicer solution presents itself: change run and attach to
explicitly call into the default run target when needed; and change
to_is_async_p and to_can_async_p to default to "return 0".  This makes
the target stack simpler to use and lets us remove the method
implementations from record.  This is also in harmony with other plans
for the target stack; namely trying to reduce the impact of
find_default_run_target.  This approach makes it clear that
find_default_is_async_p is not needed -- it is asking whether a target
that may not even be pushed is actually async, which seems like a
nonsensical question.

While an improvement, this approach proved to introduce the same bug
when using the core target.  Looking a bit deeper, the issue is that
code in "attach" and "run" may need to use either the current target
stack or the default run target -- but different calls into the target
API in those functions could wind up querying different targets.

This new patch makes the target to use more explicit in "run" and
"attach".  Then these commands explicitly make the needed calls
against that target.  This ensures that a single target is used for
all relevant operations.  This lets us remove a couple find_default_*
functions from various targets, including the dummy target.  I think
this is a decent understandability improvement.

One issue I see with this patch is that the new calls in "run" and
"attach" are not very much like the rest of the target API.  I think
fundamentally this is due to bad factoring in the target API, which
may need to be fixed for multi-target.  Tackling that seemed ambitious
for a regression fix.

While working on this I noticed that there don't seem to be any test
cases that involve both target-async and record, so this patch changes
break-precsave.exp to add some.  It also changes corefile.exp to add
some target-async tests; these pass with current trunk and with this
patch applied, but fail with the v1 patch.

This patch differs from v4 in that it moves initialization of
to_can_async_p and to_supports_non_stop into inf-child, adds some
assertions to complete_target_initialization, and adds some comments
to target.h.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 20.

2014-03-12  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* inf-child.c (return_zero): New function.
	(inf_child_target): Set to_can_async_p, to_supports_non_stop.
	* aix-thread.c (aix_thread_inferior_created): New function.
	(aix_thread_attach): Remove.
	(init_aix_thread_ops): Don't set to_attach.
	(_initialize_aix_thread): Register inferior_created observer.
	* corelow.c (init_core_ops): Don't set to_attach or
	to_create_inferior.
	* exec.c (init_exec_ops): Don't set to_attach or
	to_create_inferior.
	* infcmd.c (run_command_1): Use find_run_target.  Make direct
	target calls.
	(attach_command): Use find_attach_target.  Make direct target
	calls.
	* record-btrace.c (init_record_btrace_ops): Don't set
	to_create_inferior.
	* record-full.c (record_full_can_async_p, record_full_is_async_p):
	Remove.
	(init_record_full_ops, init_record_full_core_ops): Update.  Don't
	set to_create_inferior.
	* target.c (complete_target_initialization): Add assertion.
	(target_create_inferior): Remove.
	(find_default_attach, find_default_create_inferior): Remove.
	(find_attach_target, find_run_target): New functions.
	(find_default_is_async_p, find_default_can_async_p)
	(target_supports_non_stop, target_attach): Remove.
	(init_dummy_target): Don't set to_create_inferior or
	to_supports_non_stop.
	* target.h (struct target_ops) <to_attach>: Add comment.  Remove
	TARGET_DEFAULT_FUNC.
	<to_create_inferior>: Add comment.
	<to_can_async_p, to_is_async_p, to_supports_non_stop>: Use
	TARGET_DEFAULT_RETURN.
	<to_can_async_p, to_supports_non_stop, to_can_run>: Add comments.
	(find_attach_target, find_run_target): Declare.
	(target_create_inferior): Remove.
	(target_has_execution_1): Update comment.
	(target_supports_non_stop): Remove.
	* target-delegates.c: Rebuild.

2014-03-12  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/corefile.exp (corefile_test_run, corefile_test_attach):
	New procs.  Add target-async tests.
	* gdb.reverse/break-precsave.exp (precsave_tests): New proc.
	Add target-async tests.
2014-03-12 13:05:58 -06:00
Andreas Arnez
646f441776 Fix dw2-ifort-parameter.exp on PPC64
On PPC64, 'func' and 'main' are function descriptors and don't point
to the actual code.  Thus the usage of these symbols in the DWARF
assembler source was broken.  The patch introduces new labels
func_start and func_end for this purpose.
2014-03-12 16:22:19 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
288c211f8c Migrate dw2-ifort-parameter.exp to Dwarf::assemble
A "side effect" of the migration to Dwarf::assemble is that the DWARF
address size is now automatically adjusted to the target architecture.
The original assembler source hard-coded the DWARF address size to 4,
even on 64-bit architectures.  This address size mismatch caused a
test case failure on s390x due to a wrong result from DW_OP_deref.
2014-03-12 16:22:19 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
e0c0f156b4 Exploit 'prepare_for_testing' etc. for 'Dwarf::assemble'-generated files
Now that prepare_for_testing etc. can cope with absolute path names,
this can be exploited for test cases with generated source files.
This is just to simplify the code and shouldn't cause any functional
change.
2014-03-12 16:22:18 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
0e5c45554b gdb.exp: Support absolute path name args in 'prepare_for_testing' etc.
Test cases that produce source files in the build directory have not
been able to use prepare_for_testing and friends.  This was because
build_executable_from_specs unconditionally prepended the source
directory path name to its arguments.
2014-03-12 16:22:18 +01:00
Jerome Guitton
5ec18f2b48 [Ada] Full view of tagged type with ptype
When evaluating an expression, if it is of a tagged type, GDB reads
the tag in memory and deduces the full view. At parsing time, however,
this operation is done only in the case of OP_VAR_VALUE. ptype does
not go through a full evaluation of expressions so it may return some
odd results:

 (gdb) print c.menu_name
 $1 = 0x0
 (gdb) ptype $
 type = system.strings.string_access
 (gdb) ptype c.menu_name
 type = <void>

This change removes this peculiarity by extending the tag resolution
to UNOP_IND and STRUCTOP_STRUCT. As in the case of OP_VAR_VALUE, this
implies switching from EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS to EVAL_NORMAL when a
tagged type is dereferenced.

gdb/
	* ada-lang.c (ada_evaluate_subexp): Resolve tagged types to
	full view in the case of UNOP_IND and STRUCTOP_STRUCT.

gdb/testsuite/

	* gdb.ada/tagged_access: New testcase.
2014-03-10 14:40:35 +01:00
Markus Metzger
847fc4f296 btrace, test: fix gdb.btrace/data test
The format of the output changed.  Fix the test.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/data.exp: Update expected output.
2014-03-07 10:05:42 +01:00
Yao Qi
cc3da68801 Fix PR16508
This patch fixes PR16508, which is about MI "-trace-find frame-number 0"
behaves differently from CLI "tfind 0".  In CLI, we check both
status->running and status->filename, but in MI, we only check
status->running, which looks wrong to me.  This patch moves the code
of checking to a new function check_trace_running, and use it in
both CLI and MI.

This patch also adds a test case pr16508.exp, which fails without this
fix, and passes with the fix applied.

  FAIL: gdb.trace/pr16508.exp: interpreter-exec mi "-trace-find frame-number 0"

gdb:

2014-03-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	PR breakpoints/16508
	* tracepoint.c (check_trace_running): New function.
	(trace_find_command): Move code to check_trace_running and
	call check_trace_running.
	(trace_find_pc_command): Likewise.
	(trace_find_tracepoint_command): Likewise.
	(trace_find_line_command): Likewise.
	(trace_find_range_command): Likewise.
	* tracepoint.h (check_trace_running): Likewise.
	* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_trace_find): Call check_trace_running.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-03-06  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.trace/pr16508.exp: New file.
2014-03-06 11:33:06 +08:00
Pedro Alves
0f26cec1fd PR gdb/16575: stale breakpoint instructions in the code cache
In non-stop mode, or rather, breakpoints always-inserted mode, the
code cache can easily end up with stale breakpoint instructions:

All it takes is filling a cache line when breakpoints already exist in
that memory region, and then delete the breakpoint.

Vis. (from the new test):

 (gdb) set breakpoint always-inserted on
 (gdb) b 23
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x400540: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/breakpoint-shadow.c, line 23.
 (gdb) b 24
 Breakpoint 3 at 0x400547: file ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/breakpoint-shadow.c, line 24.
 disass main
 Dump of assembler code for function main:
    0x000000000040053c <+0>:     push   %rbp
    0x000000000040053d <+1>:     mov    %rsp,%rbp
 => 0x0000000000400540 <+4>:     movl   $0x1,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x0000000000400547 <+11>:    movl   $0x2,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x000000000040054e <+18>:    mov    $0x0,%eax
    0x0000000000400553 <+23>:    pop    %rbp
    0x0000000000400554 <+24>:    retq
 End of assembler dump.

So far so good.  Now flush the code cache:

 (gdb) set code-cache off
 (gdb) set code-cache on

Requesting a disassembly works as expected, breakpoint shadowing is
applied:

 (gdb) disass main
 Dump of assembler code for function main:
    0x000000000040053c <+0>:     push   %rbp
    0x000000000040053d <+1>:     mov    %rsp,%rbp
 => 0x0000000000400540 <+4>:     movl   $0x1,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x0000000000400547 <+11>:    movl   $0x2,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x000000000040054e <+18>:    mov    $0x0,%eax
    0x0000000000400553 <+23>:    pop    %rbp
    0x0000000000400554 <+24>:    retq
 End of assembler dump.

However, now delete the breakpoints:

 (gdb) delete
 Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y

And disassembly shows the old breakpoint instructions:

 (gdb) disass main
 Dump of assembler code for function main:
    0x000000000040053c <+0>:     push   %rbp
    0x000000000040053d <+1>:     mov    %rsp,%rbp
 => 0x0000000000400540 <+4>:     int3
    0x0000000000400541 <+5>:     rex.RB cld
    0x0000000000400543 <+7>:     add    %eax,(%rax)
    0x0000000000400545 <+9>:     add    %al,(%rax)
    0x0000000000400547 <+11>:    int3
    0x0000000000400548 <+12>:    rex.RB cld
    0x000000000040054a <+14>:    add    (%rax),%al
    0x000000000040054c <+16>:    add    %al,(%rax)
    0x000000000040054e <+18>:    mov    $0x0,%eax
    0x0000000000400553 <+23>:    pop    %rbp
    0x0000000000400554 <+24>:    retq
 End of assembler dump.

Those breakpoint instructions are no longer installed in target memory
they're stale in the code cache.  Easily confirmed by just disabling
the code cache:

 (gdb) set code-cache off
 (gdb) disass main
 Dump of assembler code for function main:
    0x000000000040053c <+0>:     push   %rbp
    0x000000000040053d <+1>:     mov    %rsp,%rbp
 => 0x0000000000400540 <+4>:     movl   $0x1,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x0000000000400547 <+11>:    movl   $0x2,-0x4(%rbp)
    0x000000000040054e <+18>:    mov    $0x0,%eax
    0x0000000000400553 <+23>:    pop    %rbp
    0x0000000000400554 <+24>:    retq
 End of assembler dump.


I stumbled upon this when writing a patch to infrun.c, that made
handle_inferior_event & co fill in the cache before breakpoints were
removed from the target.  Recall that wait_for_inferior flushes the
dcache for every event.  So in that case, always-inserted mode was not
necessary to trigger this.  It's just a convenient way to expose the
issue.

The dcache works at the raw memory level.  We need to update it
whenever memory is written, no matter what kind of target memory
object was originally passed down by the caller.  The issue is that
the dcache update code isn't reached when a caller explicitly writes
raw memory.  Breakpoint insertion/removal is one such case --
mem-break.c uses target_write_read_memory/target_write_raw_memory.

The fix is to move the dcache update code from memory_xfer_partial_1
to raw_memory_xfer_partial so that it's always reachable.

When we do that, we can actually simplify a series of things.
memory_xfer_partial_1 no longer needs to handle writes for any kind of
memory object, and therefore dcache_xfer_memory no longer needs to
handle writes either.  So the latter (dcache_xfer_memory) and its
callees can be simplified to only care about reads.  While we're
touching dcache_xfer_memory's prototype, might as well rename it to
reflect that fact that it only handles reads, and make it follow the
new target_xfer_status/xfered_len style.  This made me notice that
dcache_xfer_memory loses the real error status if a memory read fails:
we could have failed to read due to TARGET_XFER_E_UNAVAILABLE, for
instance, but we always return TARGET_XFER_E_IO, hence the FIXME note.
I felt that fixing that fell out of the scope of this patch.

Currently dcache_xfer_memory handles the case of a write failing.  The
whole cache line is invalidated when that happens.  However,
dcache_update, the sole mechanism for handling writes that will remain
after the patch, does not presently handle that scenario.  That's a
bug.  The patch makes it handle that, by passing down the
target_xfer_status status from the caller, so that it can better
decide what to do itself.  While I was changing the function's
prototype, I constified the myaddr parameter, getting rid of the need
for the cast as seen in its existing caller.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2014-03-05  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/16575
	* dcache.c (dcache_poke_byte): Constify ptr parameter.  Return
	void.  Update comment.
	(dcache_xfer_memory): Delete.
	(dcache_read_memory_partial): New, based on the read bits of
	dcache_xfer_memory.
	(dcache_update): Add status parameter.  Use ULONGEST for len, and
	adjust.  Discard cache lines if the reason for the update was
	error.
	* dcache.h (dcache_xfer_memory): Delete declaration.
	(dcache_read_memory_partial): New declaration.
	(dcache_update): Update prototype.
	* target.c (raw_memory_xfer_partial): Update the dcache here.
	(memory_xfer_partial_1): Don't handle dcache writes here.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-03-05  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/16575
	* gdb.base/breakpoint-shadow.exp (compare_disassembly): New
	procedure.
	(top level): Adjust to use it.  Add tests that exercise breakpoint
	interaction with the code-cache.
2014-03-05 14:18:28 +00:00
Ludovic Courtès
7a5a839f3a guile: Add 'history-append!' procedure.
gdb/
2014-02-26  Ludovic Courtès  <ludo@gnu.org>

	* guile/scm-value.c (gdbscm_history_append_x): New function.
	(value_functions): Add it.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-26  Ludovic Courtès  <ludo@gnu.org>

	* gdb.guile/scm-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Add
	test for 'history-append!'.

gdb/doc/
2014-02-26  Ludovic Courtès  <ludo@gnu.org>

	* gdb/doc/guile.texi (Basic Guile): Document 'history-append!'.
2014-02-26 22:59:42 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
31aa7e4ee9 DWARF: Read constant-class addresses correctly
Starting with DWARF version 4, the description of the DW_AT_high_pc
attribute was amended to say:

   if it is of class constant, the value is an unsigned integer offset
   which when added to the low PC gives the address of the first
   location past the last instruction associated with the entity.

A change was made in Apr 27th, 2012 to reflect that change:

  | commit 91da14142c
  | Author: Mark Wielaard <mjw@redhat.com>
  | Date:   Fri Apr 27 18:55:19 2012 +0000
  |
  |     * dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_get_pc_bounds): Check DW_AT_high_pc form to
  |     see whether it is an address or a constant offset from DW_AT_low_pc.
  |     (dwarf2_record_block_ranges): Likewise.
  |     (read_partial_die): Likewise.

Unfortunately, this new interpretation is now used regardless of
the CU's DWARF version. It turns out that one of WindRiver's compilers
(FTR: Diabdata 4.4) is generating DWARF version 2 info with
DW_AT_high_pc attributes improperly using the data4 form. Because of
that, we miscompute all high PCs incorrectly. This leads to a lot of
symtabs having overlapping ranges, which in turn causes havoc in
pc-to-symtab-and-line translations.

One visible effect is when inserting a breakpoint on a given function:

    (gdb) b world
    Breakpoint 1 at 0x4005c4

The source location of the breakpoint is missing. The output should be:

    (gdb) b world
    Breakpoint 1 at 0x4005c8: file dw2-rel-hi-pc-world.c, line 24.

What happens in this case is that the pc-to-SAL translation first
starts be trying to find the symtab associated to our PC using
each symtab's ranges. Because of the high_pc miscomputation,
many symtabs end up matching, and the heuristic trying to select
the most probable one unfortunately returns one that is unrelated
(it really had no change in this case to do any better). Once we
have the wrong symtab, the start searching the associated linetable,
where the addresses are correct, thus finding no match, and therefore
no SAL.

This patch is an attempt at handling the situation as gracefully
as we can, without guarantees.  It introduces a new function
"attr_value_as_address" which uses the correct accessor for getting
the value of a given attribute.  It then adjust the code throughout
this unit to use this function instead of assuming that addresses always
have the DW_FORM_addr format.

It also fixes the original issue of miscomputing the high_pc
by limiting the new interpretation of constant form DW_AT_high_pc
attributes to units using DWARF version 4 or later.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * dwarf2read.c (attr_value_as_address): New function.
        (dwarf2_find_base_address, read_call_site_scope): Use
        attr_value_as_address in place of DW_ADDR.
        (dwarf2_get_pc_bounds): Use attr_value_as_address to get
        the low and high addresses.  Slight rework of the handling
        of the high pc being a constant form, and limit it to
        DWARF verson 4 or higher.
        (dwarf2_record_block_ranges): Likewise.
        (read_partial_die): Likewise.
        (new_symbol_full): Use attr_value_as_address in place of DW_ADDR.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello-dbg.S: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc-hello.c: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc-world-dbg.S: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc-world.c: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.c: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-abs-hi-pc.exp: New file.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2014-02-26 11:43:23 -08:00
Joel Brobecker
1b58801583 [Python] Make regexp collection printers work with typedefs as well.
Consider the following type for which we would like to provide
a pretty-printer and manage it via RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter:

        typedef long time_t;

Currently, this does not work because this framework only considers
the type's tag name:

        typename = gdb.types.get_basic_type(val.type).tag
        if not typename:
            return None

This patch extends it to use the type's name if the basic type
does not have a tag name, thus allowing the framework to also
work with typedefs like the above.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * python/lib/gdb/printing.py (RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter):
        Use the type's name if its basic type does not have a tag.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * testsuite/gdb.python/py-pp-re-notag.c: New file.
        * testsuite/gdb.python/py-pp-re-notag.ex: New file.
        * testsuite/gdb.python/py-pp-re-notag.p: New file.
2014-02-26 11:04:12 -08:00
Joel Brobecker
55426c9d52 DWARF: Set enum type "flag_enum" and "unsigned" flags at type creation.
Consider the following Ada code:

   --  An array whose index is an enumeration type with 128 enumerators.
   type Enum_T is (Enum_000, Enum_001, [...], Enum_128);
   type Table is array (Enum_T) of Boolean;

When the compiler is configured to generate pure DWARF debugging info,
trying to print type Table's description yields:

    ptype pck.table
    type = array (enum_000 .. -128) of boolean

The expected output was:

    ptype pck.table
    type = array (enum_000 .. enum_128) of boolean

The DWARF debugging info for our array looks like this:

    <1><44>: Abbrev Number: 5 (DW_TAG_array_type)
       <45>   DW_AT_name        : pck__table
       <50>   DW_AT_type        : <0x28>
    <2><54>: Abbrev Number: 6 (DW_TAG_subrange_type)
       <55>   DW_AT_type        : <0x5c>
       <59>   DW_AT_lower_bound : 0
       <5a>   DW_AT_upper_bound : 128

The array index type is, by construction with the DWARF standard,
a subrange of our enumeration type, defined as follow:

    <2><5b>: Abbrev Number: 0
    <1><5c>: Abbrev Number: 7 (DW_TAG_enumeration_type)
       <5d>   DW_AT_name        : pck__enum_t
       <69>   DW_AT_byte_size   : 1
    <2><6b>: Abbrev Number: 8 (DW_TAG_enumerator)
       <6c>   DW_AT_name        : pck__enum_000
       <7a>   DW_AT_const_value : 0
    [etc]

Therefore, while processing these DIEs, the array index type ends
up being a TYPE_CODE_RANGE whose target type is our enumeration type.
But the problem is that we read the upper bound as a negative value
(-128), which is then used as is by the type printer to print the
array upper bound. This negative value explains the "-128" in the
output.

To understand why the range type's upper bound is read as a negative
value, one needs to look at how it is determined, in read_subrange_type:

  orig_base_type = die_type (die, cu);
  base_type = check_typedef (orig_base_type);
  [... high is first correctly read as 128, but then ...]
  if (!TYPE_UNSIGNED (base_type) && (high & negative_mask))
    high |= negative_mask;

The negative_mask is applied, here, because BASE_TYPE->FLAG_UNSIGNED
is not set. And the reason for that is because the base_type was only
partially constructed during the call to die_type. While the enum
is constructed on the fly by read_enumeration_type, its flag_unsigned
flag is only set later on, while creating the symbols corresponding to
the enum type's enumerators (see process_enumeration_scope), after
we've already finished creating our range type - and therefore too
late.

My first naive attempt at fixing this problem consisted in extracting
the part in process_enumeration_scope which processes all enumerators,
to generate the associated symbols, but more importantly set the type's
various flags when necessary. However, this does not always work well,
because we're still in the subrange_type's scope, and it might be
different from the scope where the enumeration type is defined.

So, instead, what this patch does to fix the issue is to extract
from process_enumeration_scope the part that determines whether
the enumeration type should have the flag_unsigned and/or the
flag_flag_enum flags set. It turns out that, aside from the code
implementing the loop, this part is fairly independent of the symbol
creation. With that part extracted, we can then use it at the end
of our enumeration type creation, to produce a type which should now
no longer need any adjustment.

Once the enumeration type produced is correctly marked as unsigned,
the subrange type's upper bound is then correctly read as an unsigned
value, therefore giving us an upper bound of 128 instead of -128.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * dwarf2read.c (update_enumeration_type_from_children): New
        function, mostly extracted from process_structure_scope.
        (read_enumeration_type): Call update_enumeration_type_from_children.
        (process_enumeration_scope): Do not set THIS_TYPE's flag_unsigned
        and flag_flag_enum fields.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.dwarf2/arr-subrange.c, gdb.dwarf2/arr-subrange.exp: New files.
2014-02-26 10:39:25 -08:00
Joel Brobecker
dc53a7adb5 DWARF: Add array DW_AT_bit_stride and DW_AT_byte_stride support
Consider the following declarations in Ada...

   type Item is range -32 .. 31;
   for Item'Size use 6;

   type Table is array (Natural range 0 .. 4) of Item;
   pragma Pack (Table);

... which declare a packed array whose elements are 6 bits long.
The debugger currently does not notice that the array is packed,
and thus prints values of this type incorrectly. This can be seen
in the "ptype" output:

    (gdb) ptype table
    type = array (0 .. 4) of foo.item

Normally, the debugger should print:

    (gdb) ptype table
    type = array (0 .. 4) of foo.item <packed: 6-bit elements>

The debugging information for this array looks like this:

        .uleb128 0xf    # (DIE (0x15c) DW_TAG_array_type)
        .long   .LASF9  # DW_AT_name: "pck__table"
        .byte   0x6     # DW_AT_bit_stride
        .long   0x1a9   # DW_AT_type
        .uleb128 0x10   # (DIE (0x16a) DW_TAG_subrange_type)
        .long   0x3b    # DW_AT_type
        .byte   0       # DW_AT_lower_bound
        .byte   0x4     # DW_AT_upper_bound
        .byte   0       # end of children of DIE 0x15c

The interesting part is the DW_AT_bit_stride attribute, which tells
the size of the array elements is 6 bits, rather than the normal
element type's size.

This patch adds support for this attribute by first creating
gdbtypes.c::create_array_type_with_stride, which is an enhanced
version of create_array_type taking an extra parameter as the stride.
The old create_array_type can then be re-implemented very simply
by calling the new create_array_type_with_stride.

We can then use this new function from dwarf2read, to create
arrays with or without stride.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * gdbtypes.h (create_array_type_with_stride): Add declaration.
        * gdbtypes.c (create_array_type_with_stride): New function,
        renaming create_array_type, but with an added parameter
        called "bit_stride".
        (create_array_type): Re-implement using
        create_array_type_with_stride.
        * dwarf2read.c (read_array_type): Add support for DW_AT_byte_stride
        and DW_AT_bit_stride attributes.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.dwarf2/arr-stride.c: New file.
        * gdb.dwarf2/arr-stride.exp: New file.

The test, relying purely on generating an assembly file, only
verifies the type description of our array. But I was also
able to verify manually that the debugger print values of these
types correctly as well (which was not the case prior to this
patch).
2014-02-26 06:32:39 -08:00
Pedro Alves
12ab52e977 Multiple Ada task-specific breakpoints at the same address.
With the test changed as in the patch, against current mainline, we get:

 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: info tasks before inserting breakpoint
 break break_me task 1
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x4030b0: file /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/tasks/foo.adb, line 27.
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: break break_me task 1
 break break_me task 3
 Note: breakpoint 2 also set at pc 0x4030b0.
 Breakpoint 3 at 0x4030b0: file /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/tasks/foo.adb, line 27.
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: break break_me task 3
 continue
 Continuing.
 [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7dc7700 (LWP 27133)]

 Breakpoint 2, foo.break_me () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/tasks/foo.adb:27
 27	      null;
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: continue to breakpoint
 info tasks
    ID       TID P-ID Pri State                  Name
     1    63b010       48 Waiting on RV with 3   main_task
     2    63bd80    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(1)
 *   3    63f510    1  48 Accepting RV with 1    task_list(2)
     4    642ca0    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(3)
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: info tasks after hitting breakpoint

The breakpoint that caused a stop is breakpoint 3, but GDB end up
reporting (and running breakpoint commands of) "Breakpoint 2" instead.

The issue is that the bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions logic of
"wrong thread" is missing the "wrong task" check.  This is usually
harmless, because the thread hop code in infrun.c code that handles
wrong-task-hitting-breakpoint does check for task-specific breakpoints
(within breakpoint_thread_match):

      /* Check if a regular breakpoint has been hit before checking
         for a potential single step breakpoint.  Otherwise, GDB will
         not see this breakpoint hit when stepping onto breakpoints.  */
      if (regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, stop_pc))
	{
	  if (!breakpoint_thread_match (aspace, stop_pc, ecs->ptid))
	    thread_hop_needed = 1;
	}

IOW, usually, when one only has a task specific breakpoint at a given
address, things work correctly.  Put another task-specific or
non-task-specific breakpoint there, and things break.

A patch that eliminates the special thread hop code in infrun.c is
what exposed this, as after that GDB solely relies on
bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions to know whether the right or wrong
task hit a breakpoint.  IOW, given the latent bug, Ada task-specific
breakpoints become non-task-specific, and that is caught by the
testsuite, as:

 break break_me task 3
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x4030b0: file /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/tasks/foo.adb, line 27.
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: break break_me task 3
 continue
 Continuing.
 [Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7fcb700 (LWP 17122)]

 Breakpoint 2, foo.break_me () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.ada/tasks/foo.adb:27
 27	      null;
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: continue to breakpoint
 info tasks
    ID       TID P-ID Pri State                  Name
     1    63b010       48 Waiting on RV with 2   main_task
 *   2    63bd80    1  48 Accepting RV with 1    task_list(1)
     3    63f510    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(2)
     4    642ca0    1  48 Accept or Select Term  task_list(3)
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.ada/tasks.exp: info tasks after hitting breakpoint

It was after seeing this that I thought of how to expose the bug with
current mainline.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.

gdb/
2014-02-26  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* breakpoint.c (bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions): Handle
	task-specific breakpoints.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-26  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.ada/tasks.exp: Set a task-specific breakpoint at break_me
	that won't ever trigger.  Make sure that GDB reports the correct
	breakpoint that caused the stop.
2014-02-26 14:22:33 +00:00
Jan Kratochvil
71b7d79337 PR gdb/16626
gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-25  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/16626
	* gdb.base/auto-load.exp: Fix out-of-srctree run.

Message-ID: <87k3cjt3jl.fsf@fleche.redhat.com>
2014-02-25 20:47:09 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
849c862eb2 PR gdb/16626
Fix auto-load 7.7 regression,
the regression affects any loading from /usr/share/gdb/auto-load .

5b2bf9471f is the first bad commit
commit 5b2bf9471f
Author: Doug Evans <xdje42@gmail.com>
Date:   Fri Nov 29 21:29:26 2013 -0800
    Move .debug_gdb_script processing to auto-load.c.
    Simplify handling of auto-loaded objfile scripts.

Fedora 20 x86_64
$ gdb -q /usr/lib64/libgobject-2.0.so
Reading symbols from /usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3800.2...Reading symbols from
/usr/lib/debug/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3800.2.debug...done.
done.
(gdb) _

Fedora Rawhide x86_64
$ gdb -q /usr/lib64/libgobject-2.0.so
Reading symbols from /usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so...Reading symbols from
/usr/lib/debug/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0.debug...done.
done.
warning: File "/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0-gdb.py" auto-loading has been declined by your `auto-load safe-path'
set to "$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load:/usr/bin/mono-gdb.py".
To enable execution of this file add
        add-auto-load-safe-path /usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0-gdb.py
line to your configuration file "/home/jkratoch/.gdbinit".
To completely disable this security protection add
        set auto-load safe-path /
line to your configuration file "/home/jkratoch/.gdbinit".
For more information about this security protection see the
"Auto-loading safe path" section in the GDB manual.  E.g., run from the shell:
        info "(gdb)Auto-loading safe path"
(gdb) _

That is it tries to load "forbidden"
	/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0-gdb.py
but it should load instead
	/usr/share/gdb/auto-load/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0-gdb.py*
Although that is also not exactly this way, there does not exist any
	/usr/lib64/libglib-2.0.so.0.3990.0-gdb.py
despite regressed GDB says so.

gdb/
2014-02-24  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/16626
	* auto-load.c (auto_load_objfile_script_1): Change filename to
	debugfile.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-24  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR gdb/16626
	* gdb.base/auto-load-script: New file.
	* gdb.base/auto-load.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/auto-load.exp: New file.

Message-ID: <20140223212400.GA8831@host2.jankratochvil.net>
2014-02-25 18:32:32 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
e2f0d509b3 Fix dw2-icycle.exp -fsanitize=address GDB crash.
binutils readelf -wi:
 <4><a2>: Abbrev Number: 26 (DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine)
    <a3>   DW_AT_abstract_origin: <0x5a>
    <a7>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x400590
    <ab>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0x4
    <af>   DW_AT_call_file   : 1
    <b0>   DW_AT_call_line   : 20
    <b1>   DW_AT_sibling     : <0xb8>
 <2><b8>: Abbrev Number: 35 (DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine)
    <b9>   DW_AT_abstract_origin: <0x5a>
    <bd>   DW_AT_low_pc      : 0x400590
    <c1>   DW_AT_high_pc     : 0x4
    <c5>   DW_AT_call_file   : 1
    <c6>   DW_AT_call_line   : 29

<b1> DW_AT_sibling points to the next DIE - but that DIE is 2 levels
upwards - definitely not a sibling.  This confuses GDB up to a crash:

==32143== ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow on address 0x6024000198ac at pc 0xb4d104 bp 0x7fff63e96e70 sp
0x7fff63e96e60
READ of size 1 at 0x6024000198ac thread T0
    #0 0xb4d103 in read_unsigned_leb128 (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb4d103)
    #1 0xb15f3c in peek_die_abbrev (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb15f3c)
    #2 0xb46185 in load_partial_dies (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb46185)
    #3 0xb103fb in process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb103fb)
    #4 0xb0d2a9 in init_cutu_and_read_dies (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb0d2a9)
    #5 0xb1115f in process_psymtab_comp_unit (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb1115f)
    #6 0xb1235f in dwarf2_build_psymtabs_hard (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb1235f)
    #7 0xb05536 in dwarf2_build_psymtabs (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0xb05536)
    #8 0x86d5a5 in read_psyms (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0x86d5a5)
    #9 0x9b1c37 in require_partial_symbols (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0x9b1c37)
    #10 0x9bf2d0 in read_symbols (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0x9bf2d0)
    #11 0x9c014c in syms_from_objfile_1 (/home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-clean/gdb/gdb+0x9c014c)

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-25  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	Fix dw2-icycle.exp -fsanitize=address GDB crash.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-icycle.S: Remove all DW_AT_sibling.

Message-ID: <20140224201011.GA28926@host2.jankratochvil.net>
2014-02-25 18:28:38 +01:00
Doug Evans
50cc37c849 lib/gdb.exp (run_on_host): Log error output if program fails. 2014-02-24 13:39:14 -08:00
Pedro Alves
ea4758f2dd Rename test.
I realized that the name of this test only made sense when considering
the old (never committed) implementation of the fix that came along
with the test originally, that forced a schedlock while a step-resume
(to get over the signal handler) was inserted.  The final solution
that went into the tree does not force that locking.

So this renames it to something more descriptive.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-21  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/step-after-sr-lock.c: Rename to ...
	* gdb.threads/signal-while-stepping-over-bp-other-thread.c: ... this.
	* gdb.threads/step-after-sr-lock.exp: Rename to ...
	* gdb.threads/signal-while-stepping-over-bp-other-thread.exp:
	... this.
2014-02-21 13:30:12 +00:00
Sergio Durigan Junior
d7b30f6729 Fix for PR tdep/16397: SystemTap SDT probe support for x86 doesn't work with "triplet operands"
This is the continuation of what Joel proposed on:

<https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00977.html>

Now that I have already submitted and pushed the patch to split
i386_stap_parse_special_token into two smaller functions, it is indeed
simpler to understand this patch.

It occurs because, on x86, triplet displacement operands are allowed
(like "-4+8-20(%rbp)"), and the current parser for this expression is
buggy.  It does not correctly extract the register name from the
expression, which leads to incorrect evaluation.  The parser was also
being very "generous" with the expression, so I included a few more
checks to ensure that we're indeed dealing with a triplet displacement
operand.

This patch also includes testcases for the two different kind of
expressions that can be encountered on x86: the triplet displacement
(explained above) and the three-argument displacement (as in
"(%rbx,%ebx,-8)").  The tests are obviously arch-dependent and are
placed under gdb.arch/.

Message-ID: <m3mwj1j12v.fsf@redhat.com>
URL: <https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-01/msg00310.html>

gdb/
2014-02-20  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR tdep/16397
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_stap_parse_special_token_triplet): Check if a
	number comes after the + or - signs.  Adjust length of register
	name to be extracted.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-20  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR tdep/16397
	* gdb.arch/amd64-stap-special-operands.exp: New file.
	* gdb.arch/amd64-stap-three-arg-disp.S: Likewise.
	* gdb.arch/amd64-stap-three-arg-disp.c: Likewise.
	* gdb.arch/amd64-stap-triplet.S: Likewise.
	* gdb.arch/amd64-stap-triplet.c: Likewise.
2014-02-20 18:49:09 -03:00
Joel Brobecker
83deb43f87 Simplify .section in dw2-icycle.S
The arm-elf assembler chokes on the extra parameters in the .section
pseudo-op, so this patch removes them.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-icycle.S: Remove second and third parameters
        in .section pseudo-op.
2014-02-20 18:38:44 +01:00
Doug Evans
adde2bff07 Fix PR symtab/16581
* dwarf2read.c (struct die_info): New member in_process.
	(reset_die_in_process): New function.
	(process_die): Set it at the start, reset when returning.
	(inherit_abstract_dies): Only call process_die if origin_child_die
	not already being processed.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-icycle.S: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-icycle.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-icycle.exp: New file.
2014-02-20 09:13:53 -08:00
Siva Chandra
f7bd0f7854 Call overloaded operators to perform operations on gdb.Value objects.
* NEWS: Add entry for the new feature
	* python/py-value.c (valpy_binop): Call value_x_binop for struct
	and class values.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.cc: Improve test case to enable testing
	operations on gdb.Value objects.
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.exp: Add new test to test operations on
	gdb.Value objects.

	doc/
	* python.texi (Values From Inferior): Add description about the
	new feature.
2014-02-19 15:47:45 -08:00
Doug Evans
c17ef0d5d2 New TESTS variable to run a subset of tests in parallel.
* Makefile.in (TESTS): New variable.
	(expanded_tests, expanded_tests_or_none): New variables
	(check-single): Pass $(expanded_tests_or_none) to runtest.
	(check-parallel): Only run tests in $(TESTS) if non-empty.
	(check/no-matching-tests-found): New rule.
	* README: Document TESTS makefile variable.
2014-02-18 16:11:02 -08:00
Doug Evans
5dd3176fb7 * Makefile.in (check-parallel): rm -rf outputs temp. 2014-02-18 16:01:34 -08:00
Jan Kratochvil
0b10be4faf Fix "ERROR: no fileid for" in the testsuite.
If GDB has crashed then gdb_spawn_id still exists (although it does not work).
So my patch does not change anything.  And also currently it will leave the
stale gdbserver running anyway.

In general if gdb_spawn_id does not exist then send_gdb + gdb_expect just do
not make sense anyway.  So this patch just prevents the error in such case.

The killing of stale gdbserver could be improved multiple ways (also as
suggested by Pedro in the original thread) but that is IMO outside of the
scope of this patch.  Apparently if there is no good response from GDB then
gdb_finish() should try to call gdb_start just to kill that gdbserver, IIUC.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-16  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	Fix "ERROR: no fileid for" in the testsuite.
	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_finish): Check gdb_spawn_id.

Message-ID: <20140206205814.GA18495@host2.jankratochvil.net>
2014-02-16 21:49:40 +01:00
Doug Evans
85f224e7e0 Test for binary,dwp symlinks into different directories.
* gdb.dwarf2/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add dwp-symlink.
	(MISCELLANEOUS): New variable.
	(clean): rm -rf $(MISCELLANEOUS).
	* gdb.dwarf2/dwp-symlink.exp: Test the case where the executable and
	dwp live in the same directory as symlinks, with each symlink pointed
	to a differently named file in a different directory.
2014-02-12 11:38:48 -08:00
Doug Evans
149b30ffe4 * gdb.dwarf2/dwp-symlink.exp: Rewrite to use remote_* commands instead
of Tcl file commands.
2014-02-11 15:48:44 -08:00
Mark Kettenis
1dfdac3275 Avoid killing all processes.
gdb/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.threads/step-after-sr-lock.exp: Avoid executing
        "kill -SIGUSR1 -1".
2014-02-10 18:07:12 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
aa4fb036e9 Wrong type for 'Length result.
Consider the following code:

   type Color is (Black, Red, Green, Blue, White);
   type Primary_Table is array (Color range Red .. Blue) of Boolean;
   Prim : Primary_Table := (True, False, False);

GDB prints the length of arrays in a fairly odd way:

   (gdb) p prim'length
   $2 = blue

The length returned should be an integer, not the array index type,
and this patch fixes this.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* ada-lang.c (ada_evaluate_subexp): Set the type of the value
	returned by the 'Length attribute to integer.

testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.ada/tick_length_array_enum_idx: New testcase.
2014-02-10 13:15:43 +04:00
Doug Evans
ed3ef33944 Add Guile as an extension language.
* NEWS: Mention Guile scripting.
	* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_GUILE_OBS): New variable.
	(SUBDIR_GUILE_SRCS, SUBDIR_GUILE_DEPS): New variables
	(SUBDIR_GUILE_LDFLAGS, SUBDIR_GUILE_CFLAGS): New variables.
	(INTERNAL_CPPFLAGS): Add GUILE_CPPFLAGS.
	(CLIBS): Add GUILE_LIBS.
	(install-guile): New rule.
	(guile.o): New rule.
	(scm-arch.o, scm-auto-load.o, scm-block.o): New rules.
	(scm-breakpoint.o, scm-disasm.o, scm-exception.o): New rules.
	(scm-frame.o, scm-iterator.o, scm-lazy-string.o): New rules.
	(scm-math.o, scm-objfile.o, scm-ports.o): New rules.
	(scm-pretty-print.o, scm-safe-call.o, scm-gsmob.o): New rules.
	(scm-string.o, scm-symbol.o, scm-symtab.o): New rules.
	(scm-type.o, scm-utils.o, scm-value.o): New rules.
	* configure.ac: New option --with-guile.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* auto-load.c: Remove #include "python/python.h".  Add #include
	"gdb/section-scripts.h".
	(source_section_scripts): Handle Guile scripts.
	(_initialize_auto_load): Add name of Guile objfile script to
	scripts-directory help text.
	* breakpoint.c (condition_command): Tweak comment to include Scheme.
	* breakpoint.h (gdbscm_breakpoint_object): Add forward decl.
	(struct breakpoint): New member scm_bp_object.
	* defs.h (enum command_control_type): New value guile_control.
	* cli/cli-cmds.c: Remove #include "python/python.h".  Add #include
	"extension.h".
	(show_user): Update comment.
	(_initialize_cli_cmds): Update help text for "show user".  Update help
	text for max-user-call-depth.
	* cli/cli-script.c: Remove #include "python/python.h".  Add #include
	"extension.h".
	(multi_line_command_p): Add guile_control.
	(print_command_lines): Handle guile_control.
	(execute_control_command, recurse_read_control_structure): Ditto.
	(process_next_line): Recognize "guile" commands.
	* disasm.c (gdb_disassemble_info): Make non-static.
	* disasm.h: #include "dis-asm.h".
	(struct gdbarch): Add forward decl.
	(gdb_disassemble_info): Declare.
	* extension.c: #include "guile/guile.h".
	(extension_languages): Add guile.
	(get_ext_lang_defn): Handle EXT_LANG_GDB.
	* extension.h (enum extension_language): New value EXT_LANG_GUILE.
	* gdbtypes.c (get_unsigned_type_max): New function.
	(get_signed_type_minmax): New function.
	* gdbtypes.h (get_unsigned_type_max): Declare.
	(get_signed_type_minmax): Declare.
	* guile/README: New file.
	* guile/guile-internal.h: New file.
	* guile/guile.c: New file.
	* guile/guile.h: New file.
	* guile/scm-arch.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-auto-load.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-block.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-breakpoint.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-disasm.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-exception.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-frame.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-gsmob.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-iterator.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-lazy-string.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-math.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-objfile.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-ports.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-pretty-print.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-safe-call.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-string.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-symbol.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-symtab.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-type.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-utils.c: New file.
	* guile/scm-value.c: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/boot.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/experimental.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/init.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/iterator.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/printing.scm: New file.
	* guile/lib/gdb/types.scm: New file.
	* data-directory/Makefile.in (GUILE_SRCDIR): New variable.
	(VPATH): Add $(GUILE_SRCDIR).
	(GUILE_DIR): New variable.
	(GUILE_INSTALL_DIR, GUILE_FILES): New variables.
	(all): Add stamp-guile dependency.
	(stamp-guile): New rule.
	(clean-guile, install-guile, uninstall-guile): New rules.
	(install-only): Add install-guile dependency.
	(uninstall): Add uninstall-guile dependency.
	(clean): Add clean-guile dependency.

	doc/
	* Makefile.in (GDB_DOC_FILES): Add guile.texi.
	* gdb.texinfo (Auto-loading): Add set/show auto-load guile-scripts.
	(Extending GDB): New menu entries Guile, Multiple Extension Languages.
	(Guile docs): Include guile.texi.
	(objfile-gdbdotext file): Add objfile-gdb.scm.
	(dotdebug_gdb_scripts section): Mention Guile scripts.
	(Multiple Extension Languages): New node.
	* guile.texi: New file.

	testsuite/
	* configure.ac (AC_OUTPUT): Add gdb.guile.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* lib/gdb-guile.exp: New file.
	* lib/gdb.exp (get_target_charset): New function.
	* gdb.base/help.exp: Update expected output from "apropos apropos".
	* gdb.guile/Makefile.in: New file.
	* gdb.guile/guile.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-arch.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-arch.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-block.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-block.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-breakpoint.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-disasm.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-disasm.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-equal.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-equal.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-error.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-error.scm: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame-args.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame-args.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame-args.scm: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame-inline.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame-inline.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-frame.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-generics.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-gsmob.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-iterator.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-iterator.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-math.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-math.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-objfile-script-gdb.in: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-objfile-script.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-objfile-script.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-objfile.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-objfile.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-ports.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-pretty-print.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-pretty-print.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-pretty-print.scm: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-section-script.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-section-script.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-section-script.scm: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-symbol.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-symbol.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-symtab-2.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-symtab.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-symtab.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-type.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-type.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-value-cc.cc: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-value-cc.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-value.c: New file.
	* gdb.guile/scm-value.exp: New file.
	* gdb.guile/source2.scm: New file.
	* gdb.guile/types-module.cc: New file.
	* gdb.guile/types-module.exp: New file.
2014-02-09 19:40:01 -08:00
Yao Qi
7026a7c16e Fix PR16543
Tests in gdb.gdb fail because directory gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb doesn't
exist in build tree.  This patch appends gdb.gdb/Makefile in AC_OUTPUT,
and adds new Makefile.in in gdb.gdb, so that directory gdb.gdb can be
created during configure.

With this patch applied, tests under gdb.gdb can be run,

$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS='--directory=gdb.gdb'

Using /usr/share/dejagnu/baseboards/unix.exp as board description file for target.
Using /usr/share/dejagnu/config/unix.exp as generic interface file for target.
Using ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/config/unix.exp as tool-and-target-specific interface file.
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/complaints.exp ...
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/observer.exp ...
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/python-interrupts.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-interrupts.exp: signal SIGINT
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/python-selftest.exp ...
FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-selftest.exp: call catch_command_errors(execute_command, "python print 5", 0, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/selftest.exp ...
Running ../../../../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.gdb/xfullpath.exp ...

                === gdb Summary ===

gdb/testsuite:

2014-02-10  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	PR testsuite/16543
	* configure.ac: Append gdb.gdb/Makefile in AC_OUTPUT.
	* configure: Regenerated.
	* Makefile.in: New file.
2014-02-10 09:51:10 +08:00
Andreas Schwab
6c46644734 Fix typo in test name
* gdb.python/py-framefilter.exp: Fix typo.
2014-02-08 10:44:11 +01:00
Yao Qi
6e85473513 Test no =breakpoint-modified is emitted for modifications from MI commands
As design, =breakpoint-modified isn't emitted when breakpoints are modified
by MI commands.  This patch is to add tests for this.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-02-08  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-breakpoint-changed.exp (test_insert_delete_modify): Test
	that no =breakpoint-modified is emitted when breakpoints are
	modified through MI commands.
2014-02-08 09:41:01 +08:00
Pedro Alves
d137e6dc79 Make sure we don't resume the stepped thread by accident.
Say:

<stopped at a breakpoint in thread 2>
(gdb) thread 3
(gdb) step

The above triggers the prepare_to_proceed/deferred_step_ptid process,
which switches back to thread 2, to step over its breakpoint before
getting back to thread 3 and "step" it.

If while stepping over the breakpoint in thread 2, a signal arrives,
and it is set to pass/nostop, we'll set a step-resume breakpoint at
the supposed signal-handler resume address, and call keep_going.  The
problem is that we were supposedly stepping thread 3, and that
keep_going delivers a signal to thread 2, and due to scheduler-locking
off, resumes everything else, _including_ thread 3, the thread we want
stepping.  This means that we lose control of thread 3 until the next
event, when we stop everything.  The end result for the user, is that
GDB lost control of the "step".

Here's the current infrun debug output of the above, with the testcase
in the patch below:

infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663))
infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662))
infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x2aaaab4f2b20 (LWP 11659))
infrun: proceed (addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=144, step=1)
infrun: prepare_to_proceed (step=1), switched to [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)]
infrun: resume (step=1, signal=0), trap_expected=1, current thread [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)] at 0x40098f
infrun: wait_for_inferior ()
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun:   11659 [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)],
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = SIGUSR1
infrun: infwait_normal_state
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
infrun: stop_pc = 0x40098f
infrun: random signal 30

Program received signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1.
infrun: signal arrived while stepping over breakpoint
infrun: inserting step-resume breakpoint at 0x40098f
infrun: resume (step=0, signal=30), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)] at 0x40098f

^^^ this is a wildcard resume.

infrun: prepare_to_wait
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun:   11659 [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)],
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = SIGTRAP
infrun: infwait_normal_state
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
infrun: stop_pc = 0x40098f
infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME
infrun: resume (step=1, signal=0), trap_expected=1, current thread [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)] at 0x40098f

^^^ step-resume hit, meaning the handler returned, so we go back to stepping thread 3.

infrun: prepare_to_wait
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun:   11659 [Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662)],
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = SIGTRAP
infrun: infwait_normal_state
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED

infrun: stop_pc = 0x40088b
infrun: switching back to stepped thread
infrun: Switching context from Thread 0x2aaaab6f4700 (LWP 11662) to Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)
infrun: resume (step=1, signal=0), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)] at 0x400938
infrun: prepare_to_wait
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun:   11659 [Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)],
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = SIGTRAP
infrun: infwait_normal_state
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
infrun: stop_pc = 0x40093a
infrun: keep going
infrun: resume (step=1, signal=0), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)] at 0x40093a
infrun: prepare_to_wait
infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
infrun:   11659 [Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)],
infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = SIGTRAP
infrun: infwait_normal_state
infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
infrun: stop_pc = 0x40091e
infrun: stepped to a different line
infrun: stop_stepping
[Switching to Thread 0x2aaaab8f5700 (LWP 11663)]
69            (*myp) ++; /* set breakpoint child_two here */

^^^ we stopped at the wrong line.  We still stepped a bit because the
test is running in a loop, and when we got back to stepping thread 3,
it happened to be in the stepping range.  (The loop increments a
counter, and the test makes sure it increments exactly once.  Without
the fix, the counter increments a bunch, since the user-stepped thread
runs free without GDB noticing.)

The fix is to switch to the stepping thread before continuing for the
step-resume breakpoint.

gdb/
2014-02-07  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* infrun.c (handle_signal_stop) <signal arrives while stepping
	over a breakpoint>: Switch back to the stepping thread.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-07  Pedro Alves  <pedro@codesourcery.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/step-after-sr-lock.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/step-after-sr-lock.exp: New file.
2014-02-07 19:35:30 +00:00
Pedro Alves
b5ee5a50d4 Fix gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp on software single-step targets.
Currently on software single-step Linux targets we get:

 (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp: before stepi: get hexadecimal valueof "$pc"
 stepi
 infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x7ffff7fca700 (LWP 7073))
 infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 7069))
 infrun: proceed (addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, step=1)
 infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 7069)] at 0x400700
 infrun: wait_for_inferior ()
 infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
 infrun:   7069 [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 7069)],
 infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
 infrun: infwait_normal_state
 infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
 infrun: stop_pc = 0x400704
 infrun: software single step trap for Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 7069)
 infrun: stepi/nexti
 infrun: stop_stepping
 44        while (counter != 0)
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp: stepi (no random signal)

Vs hardware-step targets:

 (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp: before stepi: get hexadecimal valueof "$pc"
 stepi
 infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x7ffff7fca700 (LWP 9565))
 infrun: clear_proceed_status_thread (Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 9561))
 infrun: proceed (addr=0xffffffffffffffff, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, step=1)
 infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_0), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 9561)] at 0x400700
 infrun: wait_for_inferior ()
 infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
 infrun:   9561 [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 9561)],
 infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_CHLD
 infrun: infwait_normal_state
 infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
 infrun: stop_pc = 0x400700
 infrun: random signal (GDB_SIGNAL_CHLD)
 infrun: random signal, keep going
 infrun: resume (step=1, signal=GDB_SIGNAL_CHLD), trap_expected=0, current thread [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 9561)] at 0x400700
 infrun: prepare_to_wait
 infrun: target_wait (-1, status) =
 infrun:   9561 [Thread 0x7ffff7fcb740 (LWP 9561)],
 infrun:   status->kind = stopped, signal = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP
 infrun: infwait_normal_state
 infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
 infrun: stop_pc = 0x400704
 infrun: stepi/nexti
 infrun: stop_stepping
 44        while (counter != 0)
 (gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp: stepi

The test turns on infrun debug, does a stepi while a SIGCHLD is
pending, and checks whether the "random signal" paths in infrun.c are
taken.

On the software single-step variant above, those paths were not taken.

This is a test bug.

The Linux backend short-circuits reporting signals that are set to
pass/nostop/noprint.  But _only_ if the thread is _not_
single-stepping.  So on hardware-step targets, even though the signal
is set to pass/nostop/noprint by default, the thread is indeed told to
single-step, and so the core sees the signal.  On the other hand, on
software single-step architectures, the backend never actually gets a
single-step request (steps are emulated by setting a breakpoint at the
next pc, and then the target told to continue, not step).  So the
short-circuiting code triggers and the core doesn't see the signal.

The fix is to make the test be sure the target doesn't bypass
reporting the signal to the core.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, both with and without a series that
implements software single-step for x86_64.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-07  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/stepi-random-signal.exp: Set SIGCHLD to print.
2014-02-07 19:04:10 +00:00
Jan Kratochvil
3c77faf33d Fix i386-sse-stack-align.exp regression since GDB_PARALLEL.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-02-06  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	Fix i386-sse-stack-align.exp regression since GDB_PARALLEL.
	* gdb.arch/i386-sse-stack-align.exp: Use standard_output_file.
2014-02-06 23:14:20 +01:00
Doug Evans
4f8fcb74d3 fix copyright year in new files in previous checkin 2014-02-05 20:17:30 -08:00
Doug Evans
6dddc817c1 Extension Language API
* configure.ac (libpython checking): Remove all but python.o from
	CONFIG_OBS.  Remove all but python.c from CONFIG_SRCS.
	* configure: Regenerate.

	* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add extension.c.
	(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add extension.h, extension-priv.h
	(COMMON_OBS): Add extension.o.
	* extension.h: New file.
	* extension-priv.h: New file.
	* extension.c: New file.

	* python/python-internal.h: #include "extension.h".
	(gdbpy_auto_load_enabled): Declare.
	(gdbpy_apply_val_pretty_printer): Declare.
	(gdbpy_apply_frame_filter): Declare.
	(gdbpy_preserve_values): Declare.
	(gdbpy_breakpoint_cond_says_stop): Declare.
	(gdbpy_breakpoint_has_cond): Declare.
	(void source_python_script_for_objfile): Delete.
	* python/python.c: #include "extension-priv.h".
	Delete inclusion of "observer.h".
	(extension_language_python): Moved here and renamed from
	script_language_python in py-auto-load.c.
	Redefined to be of type extension_language_defn.
	(python_extension_script_ops): New global.
	(python_extension_ops): New global.
	(struct python_env): New member previous_active.
	(restore_python_env): Call restore_active_ext_lang.
	(ensure_python_env): Call set_active_ext_lang.
	(gdbpy_clear_quit_flag): Renamed from clear_quit_flag, made static.
	New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_set_quit_flag): Renamed from set_quit_flag, made static.
	New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_check_quit_flag): Renamed from check_quit_flag, made static.
	New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_eval_from_control_command): Renamed from
	eval_python_from_control_command, made static.  New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_source_script) Renamed from source_python_script, made static.
	New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_before_prompt_hook): Renamed from before_prompt_hook.  Change
	result to int.  New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_source_objfile_script): Renamed from
	source_python_script_for_objfile, made static.  New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_start_type_printers): Renamed from start_type_printers, made
	static.  New args extlang, extlang_printers.  Change result type to
	"void".
	(gdbpy_apply_type_printers): Renamed from apply_type_printers, made
	static.  New arg extlang.  Rename arg printers to extlang_printers
	and change type to ext_lang_type_printers *.
	(gdbpy_free_type_printers): Renamed from free_type_printers, made
	static.  Replace argument arg with extlang, extlang_printers.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, eval_python_from_control_command): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, source_python_script): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, gdbpy_should_stop): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, gdbpy_breakpoint_has_py_cond): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, start_type_printers): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, apply_type_printers): Delete.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, free_type_printers): Delete.
	(_initialize_python): Delete call to observer_attach_before_prompt.
	(finalize_python): Set/restore active extension language.
	(gdbpy_finish_initialization) Renamed from
	finish_python_initialization, made static.  New arg extlang.
	(gdbpy_initialized): New function.
	* python/python.h: #include "extension.h".  Delete #include
	"value.h", "mi/mi-cmds.h".
	(extension_language_python): Declare.
	(GDBPY_AUTO_FILE_NAME): Delete.
	(enum py_bt_status): Moved to extension.h and renamed to
	ext_lang_bt_status.
	(enum frame_filter_flags): Moved to extension.h.
	(enum py_frame_args): Moved to extension.h and renamed to
	ext_lang_frame_args.
	(finish_python_initialization): Delete.
	(eval_python_from_control_command): Delete.
	(source_python_script): Delete.
	(apply_val_pretty_printer): Delete.
	(apply_frame_filter): Delete.
	(preserve_python_values): Delete.
	(gdbpy_script_language_defn): Delete.
	(gdbpy_should_stop, gdbpy_breakpoint_has_py_cond): Delete.
	(start_type_printers, apply_type_printers, free_type_printers): Delete.

	* auto-load.c: #include "extension.h".
	(GDB_AUTO_FILE_NAME): Delete.
	(auto_load_gdb_scripts_enabled): Make public.  New arg extlang.
	(script_language_gdb): Delete, moved to extension.c and renamed to
	extension_language_gdb.
	(source_gdb_script_for_objfile): Delete.
	(auto_load_pspace_info): New member unsupported_script_warning_printed.
	(loaded_script): Change type of language member to
	struct extension_language_defn *.
	(init_loaded_scripts_info): Initialize
	unsupported_script_warning_printed.
	(maybe_add_script): Make static.  Change type of language arg to
	struct extension_language_defn *.
	(clear_section_scripts): Reset unsupported_script_warning_printed.
	(auto_load_objfile_script_1): Rewrite to use extension language API.
	(auto_load_objfile_script): Make public.  Remove support-compiled-in
	and auto-load-enabled checks, moved to auto_load_scripts_for_objfile.
	(source_section_scripts): Rewrite to use extension language API.
	(load_auto_scripts_for_objfile): Rewrite to use
	auto_load_scripts_for_objfile.
	(collect_matching_scripts_data): Change type of language member to
	struct extension_language_defn *.
	(auto_load_info_scripts): Change type of language arg to
	struct extension_language_defn *.
	(unsupported_script_warning_print): New function.
	(script_not_found_warning_print): Make static.
	(_initialize_auto_load): Rewrite construction of scripts-directory
	help.
	* auto-load.h (struct objfile): Add forward decl.
	(struct script_language): Delete.
	(struct auto_load_pspace_info): Add forward decl.
	(struct extension_language_defn): Add forward decl.
	(maybe_add_script): Delete.
	(auto_load_objfile_script): Declare.
	(script_not_found_warning_print): Delete.
	(auto_load_info_scripts): Update prototype.
	(auto_load_gdb_scripts_enabled): Declare.
	* python/py-auto-load.c (gdbpy_auto_load_enabled): Renamed from
	auto_load_python_scripts_enabled and made public.
	(script_language_python): Delete, moved to python.c.
	(gdbpy_script_language_defn): Delete.
	(info_auto_load_python_scripts): Update to use
	extension_language_python.

	* breakpoint.c (condition_command): Replace call to
	gdbpy_breakpoint_has_py_cond with call to get_breakpoint_cond_ext_lang.
	(bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions): Replace call to gdbpy_should_stop
	with call to breakpoint_ext_lang_cond_says_stop.
	* python/py-breakpoint.c (gdbpy_breakpoint_cond_says_stop): Renamed
	from gdbpy_should_stop.  Change result type to enum scr_bp_stop.
	New arg slang.  Return SCR_BP_STOP_UNSET if py_bp_object is NULL.
	(gdbpy_breakpoint_has_cond): Renamed from gdbpy_breakpoint_has_py_cond.
	New arg slang.
	(local_setattro): Print name of extension language with existing
	stop condition.

	* valprint.c (val_print, value_print): Update to call
	apply_ext_lang_val_pretty_printer.
	* cp-valprint.c (cp_print_value): Update call to
	apply_ext_lang_val_pretty_printer.
	* python/py-prettyprint.c: Remove #ifdef HAVE_PYTHON.
	(gdbpy_apply_val_pretty_printer): Renamed from
	apply_val_pretty_printer.  New arg extlang.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, apply_val_pretty_printer): Delete.

	* cli/cli-cmds.c (source_script_from_stream): Rewrite to use
	extension language API.
	* cli/cli-script.c (execute_control_command): Update to call
	eval_ext_lang_from_control_command.

	* mi/mi-cmd-stack.c (mi_cmd_stack_list_frames): Update to use
	enum ext_lang_bt_status values.  Update call to
	apply_ext_lang_frame_filter.
	(mi_cmd_stack_list_locals): Ditto.
	(mi_cmd_stack_list_args): Ditto.
	(mi_cmd_stack_list_variables): Ditto.
	* mi/mi-main.c: Delete #include "python/python-internal.h".
	Add #include "extension.h".
	(mi_cmd_list_features): Replace reference to python internal variable
	gdb_python_initialized with call to ext_lang_initialized_p.

	* stack.c (backtrace_command_1): Update to use enum ext_lang_bt_status.
	Update to use enum ext_lang_frame_args.  Update to call
	apply_ext_lang_frame_filter.
	* python/py-framefilter.c (extract_sym): Update to use enum
	ext_lang_bt_status.
	(extract_value, py_print_type, py_print_value): Ditto.
	(py_print_single_arg, enumerate_args, enumerate_locals): Ditto.
	(py_mi_print_variables, py_print_locals, py_print_args): Ditto.
	(py_print_frame): Ditto.
	(gdbpy_apply_frame_filter): Renamed from apply_frame_filter.
	New arg extlang.  Update to use enum ext_lang_bt_status.

	* top.c (gdb_init): Delete #ifdef HAVE_PYTHON call to
	finish_python_initialization.  Replace with call to
	finish_ext_lang_initialization.

	* typeprint.c (do_free_global_table): Update to call
	free_ext_lang_type_printers.
	(create_global_typedef_table): Update to call
	start_ext_lang_type_printers.
	(find_global_typedef): Update to call apply_ext_lang_type_printers.
	* typeprint.h (struct ext_lang_type_printers): Add forward decl.
	(type_print_options): Change type of global_printers from "void *"
	to "struct ext_lang_type_printers *".

	* value.c (preserve_values): Update to call preserve_ext_lang_values.
	* python/py-value.c: Remove #ifdef HAVE_PYTHON.
	(gdbpy_preserve_values): Renamed from preserve_python_values.
	New arg extlang.
	(!HAVE_PYTHON, preserve_python_values): Delete.

	* utils.c (quit_flag): Delete, moved to extension.c.
	(clear_quit_flag, set_quit_flag, check_quit_flag): Delete, moved to
	extension.c.

	* eval.c: Delete #include "python/python.h".
	* main.c: Delete #include "python/python.h".

	* defs.h: Update comment.

	testsuite/

	* gdb.python/py-breakpoint.exp (test_bkpt_eval_funcs): Update expected
	output.

	* gdb.gdb/python-interrupts.exp: New file.
2014-02-05 19:27:58 -08:00
Yao Qi
de7b289385 Create inferior for ctf target.
This patch creates inferior when GDB opens a ctf trace data, to be
consistent with tfile target.  A test case is added to test for
live target, tfile and ctf target.

gdb:

2014-02-05  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* ctf.c: Include "inferior.h" and "gdbthread.h".
	(CTF_PID): A new macro.
	(ctf_open): Call inferior_appeared and add_thread_silent.
	(ctf_close): Call exit_inferior_silent and set inferior_ptid.
	(ctf_thread_alive): New function.
	(init_ctf_ops): Install ctf_thread_alive to to_thread_alive.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-02-05  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.trace/report.exp (use_collected_data): Test the output
	of "info threads" and "info inferiors".
2014-02-05 19:37:25 +08:00
Yao Qi
66d032ac62 Create inferior for tfile target
When a trace file is loaded in Eclipse, it is expected to see thread
and process (=thread-group-started and =thread-created).  Create an
inferior and add a thread for this purpose.

This patch just reverts my previous patch.

gdb/testsuite:

2014-02-05  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	Revert this patch:

	2013-05-24  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.trace/tfile.exp: Test inferior and thread.

gdb:

2014-02-05  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	Revert this patch:

	2013-05-24  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* tracepoint.c (TFILE_PID): Remove.
	(tfile_open): Don't add thread and inferior.
	(tfile_close): Don't set 'inferior_ptid'.  Don't call
	exit_inferior_silent.
	(tfile_thread_alive): Remove.
	(init_tfile_ops): Don't set field 'to_thread_alive' of
	tfile_ops.
2014-02-05 19:35:39 +08:00
Ulrich Weigand
591a12a1d4 PowerPC64 ELFv2 ABI: skip global entry point code
This patch handles another aspect of the ELFv2 ABI, which unfortunately
requires common code changes.

In ELFv2, functions may provide both a global and a local entry point.
The global entry point (where the function symbol points to) is intended
to be used for function-pointer or cross-module (PLT) calls, and requires
r12 to be set up to the entry point address itself.   The local entry
point (which is found at a fixed offset after the global entry point,
as defined by bits in the symbol table entries' st_other field), instead
expects r2 to be set up to the current TOC.

Now, when setting a breakpoint on a function by name, you really want
that breakpoint to trigger either way, no matter whether the function
is called via its local or global entry point.  Since the global entry
point will always fall through into the local entry point, the way to
achieve that is to simply set the breakpoint at the local entry point.

One way to do that would be to have prologue parsing skip the code
sequence that makes up the global entry point.  Unfortunately, this
does not work reliably, since -for optimized code- GDB these days
will not actuall invoke the prologue parsing code but instead just
set the breakpoint at the symbol address and rely on DWARF being
correct at any point throughout the function ...

Unfortunately, I don't really see any way to express the notion of
local entry points with the current set of gdbarch callbacks.

Thus this patch adds a new callback, skip_entrypoint, that is
somewhat analogous to skip_prologue, but is called every time
GDB needs to determine a function start address, even in those
cases where GDB decides to not call skip_prologue.

As a side effect, the skip_entrypoint implementation on ppc64
does not need to perform any instruction parsing; it can simply
rely on the local entry point flags in the symbol table entry.

With this implemented, two test cases would still fail to set
the breakpoint correctly, but that's because they use the construct:

 gdb_test "break *hello"

Now, using "*hello" explicitly instructs GDB to set the breakpoint
at the numerical value of "hello" treated as function pointer, so
it will by definition only hit the global entry point.

I think this behaviour is unavoidable, but acceptable -- most people
do not use this construct, and if they do, they get what they
asked for ...

In one of those two test cases, use of this construct is really
not appropriate.  I think this was added way back when as a means
to work around prologue skipping problems on some platforms.  These
days that shouldn't really be necessary any more ...

For the other (step-bt), we really want to make sure backtracing
works on the very first instruction of the routine.  To enable that
test also on powerpc64le-linux, we can modify the code to call the
test function via function pointer (which makes it use the global
entry point in the ELFv2 ABI).

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbarch.sh (skip_entrypoint): New callback.
	* gdbarch.c, gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
	* symtab.c (skip_prologue_sal): Call gdbarch_skip_entrypoint.
	* infrun.c (fill_in_stop_func): Likewise.
	* ppc-linux-tdep.c: Include "elf/ppc64.h".
	(ppc_elfv2_elf_make_msymbol_special): New function.
	(ppc_elfv2_skip_entrypoint): Likewise.
	(ppc_linux_init_abi): Install them for ELFv2.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/sigbpt.exp: Do not use "*" when setting breakpoint
	on a function.
	* gdb.base/step-bt.c: Call hello via function pointer to make
	sure its first instruction is executed on powerpc64le-linux.
2014-02-04 18:44:14 +01:00
Ulrich Weigand
0ff3e01fdc PowerPC64 little-endian fixes: 128-bit DFP parameters / registers
The powerpc64le-linux ABI specifies that when a 128-bit DFP value is
passed in a pair of floating-point registers, the first register holds
the most-significant part of the value.  This is as opposed to the
usual rule on little-endian systems, where the first register would
hold the least-significant part.

This affects two places in GDB, the read/write routines for the
128-bit DFP pseudo-registers, and the function call / return
sequence.  For the former, current code already distinguishes
between big- and little-endian targets, but gets the latter
wrong.  This is presumably because *GCC* also got it wrong,
and GDB matches the old GCC behavior.  But GCC is now fixed:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2013-11/msg02145.html
so GDB needs to be fixed too.  (Old code shouldn't really be
an issue since there is no code "out there" so far that uses
dfp128 on little-endian ...)

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* ppc-sysv-tdep.c (ppc64_sysv_abi_push_freg): Use correct order
	within a register pair holding a DFP 128-bit value on little-endian.
	(ppc64_sysv_abi_return_value_base): Likewise.
	* rs6000-tdep.c (dfp_pseudo_register_read): Likewise.
	(dfp_pseudo_register_write): Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.arch/powerpc-d128-regs.exp: Enable on powerpc64*-*.
2014-02-04 18:36:54 +01:00
Ulrich Weigand
084ee54552 PowerPC64 little-endian fixes: VSX tests and pseudo-regs
Many VSX test were failing on powerpc64le-linux, since -as opposed to the
AltiVec tests- there never were little-endian versions of the test patterns.

This patch adds such patterns, along the lines of altivec-regs.exp.

In addition, there is an actual code change required: For those VSX
registers that overlap a floating-point register, the FP register
overlaps the most-significant half of the VSX register both on big-
and little-endian systems.  However, on little-endian systems, that
half is stored at an offset of 8 bytes (not 0).  This works already
for the "real" FP registers, but current code gets it wrong for
the "extended" pseudo FP register GDB generates for the second
half of the VSX register bank.

This patch updates the corresponding pseudo read/write routines
to take the appropriate offset into consideration.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* rs6000-tdep.c (efpr_pseudo_register_read): Use correct offset
	of the overlapped FP register within the VSX register on little-
	endian platforms.
	(efpr_pseudo_register_write): Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.arch/vsx-regs.exp: Check target endianness.  Provide variants
	of the test patterns for use on little-endian systems.
2014-02-04 18:31:38 +01:00
Ulrich Weigand
6ed14ff339 PowerPC64 little-endian fixes: AltiVec tests
A couple of AltiVec tests fail spuriously on powerpc64le-linux, because
they compare against an incorrect pattern.  Note that those tests already
contain little-endian variants of the patterns, but those seem to have
bit-rotted a bit: when outputting a vector, GDB no longer omits trailing
zero elements (as it used to do in the past).

This patch updates the pattern to the new GDB output behavior.

In addition, the patch updates the endian test to use the new
gdb_test_multiple logic instead of gdb_expect.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.arch/altivec-regs.exp: Use gdb_test_multiple for endian test.
	(decimal_vector): Fix for little-endian.
2014-02-04 18:28:24 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
401e27fd71 This changeset makes sparc64_linux_step_trap to return 0 when a
breakpoint is set in a `ta 0x6d´ which is not a sigreturn syscall.  In
these cases no rt_frame exists in the stack and thus the read PC is
wrong.

ChangeLog
2014-01-29  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* sparc64-linux-tdep.c (sparc64_linux_step_trap): Get PC from
          the sigreturn register save area only if the syscall is
          sigreturn.

testsuite/ChangeLog
2014-01-29  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdb.arch/sparc-sysstep.exp: New file.
	* gdb.arch/sparc-sysstep.c: Likewise.

	* gdb.arch/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add sparc-sysstep.
2014-01-29 07:15:05 -08:00
Edjunior Barbosa Machado
8b92472967 Fix info-shared.exp testcase to expect the leading `.' found on ppc64's symbols.
gdb/testsuite/
2014-01-28  Edjunior Barbosa Machado  <emachado@linux.vnet.ibm.com>

	* gdb.base/info-shared.exp: Expect leading `.' on ppc64's symbols.
2014-01-28 15:31:23 -02:00
Joel Brobecker
fb15121096 Try printing array range using the name of its index type
type Char_Table is array (Character range Character'First .. Character'Last)
     of Natural;

Trying to print the type description of this type currently yields:

   (gdb) ptype char_table
   type = array ('["00"]' .. '["ff"]') of natural

Although technically correct, it seemed more useful to print the array
range as:

   (gdb) ptype char_table
   type = array (character) of natural

This patch implements this suggestion.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-typeprint (type_is_full_subrange_of_target_type):
        New function.
        (print_range): Add parameter bounds_prefered_p.  If not set,
        try printing range types using the name of their base type.
        (print_range_type): Add parameter bounds_prefered_p.
        Use it in call to print_range.
        (print_array_type, ada_print_type): Update calls to print_range
        and print_range_type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/array_char_idx: New testcase.
2014-01-27 08:27:21 +04:00
Tom Tromey
0740f8d82d fix erroneous error-handling in frame filter code
This fixes PR python/16487.

The bug here is that the function-name-handling code in py_print_frame
had a small logic error (really a misplaced closing brace).  This
error could lead to a Py_DECREF(NULL), which crashes.

This patch fixes the bug in the obvious way.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 18.  New test case included.

2014-01-23  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	PR python/16487:
	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Don't call Py_DECREF
	on a NULL pointer.  Move "goto error" to correct place.

2014-01-23  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	PR python/16487:
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter.exp: Add test using "Error" filter.
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter.py (ErrorInName, ErrorFilter): New
	classes.
2014-01-23 08:03:51 -07:00
Tom Tromey
21909fa1c6 fix crash in frame filters
apply_frame_filter calls ensure_python_env before computing the
gdbarch to use.  This means that python_gdbarch can be NULL while in
Python code, and if a frame filter depends on this somehow (easy to
do), gdb will crash.

The fix is to compute the gdbarch first.

Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 18.
New test case included.

2014-01-23  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	PR python/16491:
	* python/py-framefilter.c (apply_frame_filter): Call
	ensure_python_env after computing gdbarch.

2014-01-23  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	PR python/16491:
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter.py (Reverse_Function.function): Read a
	string from an inferior frame.
	* gdb.python/py-framefilter-mi.exp: Update.
2014-01-23 08:03:50 -07:00
Doug Evans
87ce2a04c5 New gdbserver option --debug-format=timestamp.
* NEWS: Mention it.

	gdbserver/
	* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add test for gettimeofday.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* config.in: Regenerate.
	* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add debug.c.
	(OBS): Add debug.o.
	* debug.c: New file.
	* debug.h: New file.
	* linux-aarch64-low.c (*): Update all debugging printfs to use
	debug_printf instead of fprintf.
	* linux-arm-low.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-cris-low.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-crisv32-low.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-m32r-low.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-sparc-low.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-x86.c (*): Ditto.
	* linux-low.c (*): Ditto.
	(linux_wait_1): Add calls to debug_enter, debug_exit.
	(linux_wait): Remove redundant debugging printf.
	(stop_all_lwps): Add calls to debug_enter, debug_exit.
	(linux_resume, unstop_all_lwps): Ditto.
	* mem-break.c (*): Update all debugging printfs to use
	debug_printf instead of fprintf.
	* remote-utils.c (*): Ditto.
	* thread-db.c (*): Ditto.
	* server.c #include <ctype.h>, "gdb_vecs.h".
	(debug_threads): Moved to debug.c.
	(*): Update all debugging printfs to use debug_printf instead of
	fprintf.
	(start_inferior): Replace call to fflush with call to debug_flush.
	(monitor_show_help): Mention set debug-format.
	(parse_debug_format_options): New function.
	(handle_monitor_command): Handle "monitor set debug-format".
	(gdbserver_usage): Mention --debug-format.
	(main): Parse --debug-format.
	* server.h (debug_threads): Declaration moved to debug.h.
	#include "debug.h".
	* tracepoint.c (trace_debug_1) [!IN_PROCESS_AGENT]: Add version of
	trace_debug_1 that uses debug_printf.
	(tracepoint_look_up_symbols): Update all debugging printfs to use
	debug_printf instead of fprintf.

	doc/
	* gdb.texinfo (Server): Mention --debug-format=all|none|timestamp.
	(gdbserver man): Ditto.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.server/server-mon.exp: Add tests for "set debug-format".
2014-01-22 14:17:39 -08:00
Andreas Arnez
237b092b9f gdb/ChangeLog:
* syscalls/s390x-linux.xml: New file.
	* syscalls/s390-linux.xml: New file.
	* s390-linux-tdep.c (XML_SYSCALL_FILENAME_S390): New macro.
	(XML_SYSCALL_FILENAME_S390X): Likewise.
	(op_svc): New enum value for SVC opcode.
	(s390_sigtramp_frame_sniffer): Replace literal by 'op_svc'.
	(s390_linux_get_syscall_number): New function.
	(s390_gdbarch_init): Register '*get_syscall_number' and the
	syscall xml file name.
	* data-directory/Makefile.in (SYSCALLS_FILES): Add
	"s390-linux.xml" and "s390x-linux.xml".
	* NEWS: Announce new feature.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: Activate test on s390*-linux.
2014-01-22 18:54:43 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
d674a7090f Fix regression on s390x with entry-values.exp.
The trace-specific test case 'entry-values' concludes fairly late in
the process that this platform doesn't support trace.  Before that,
there are some platform specifics that don't work on s390x.  The fix
addresses two aspects:

(1) Removal of an excess space character in the regex for the
    disassembly.  This is needed when there is a function alignment
    gap, because then the hex address is immediately followed by a
    colon, like in the first 'nopr' line below:

    (gdb) disassemble foo+50,+10
    Dump of assembler code from 0x32 to 0x3c:
       0x0000000000000032 <foo+50>: br      %r4
       0x0000000000000034:  nopr    %r7
       0x0000000000000036:  nopr    %r7
       0x0000000000000038 <bar+0>:  stmg    %r11,%r15,88(%r15)
    End of assembler dump.

(2) Handling for the s390-specific call instruction.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* gdb.trace/entry-values.exp: Remove excess space character from
	regex patterns.  Handle s390 call instruction.
2014-01-22 17:02:13 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
20fa339009 Re-introduce '_start' labels and add alignment in dw2-dir-file-name test case.
On ppc64-linux a function symbol does not point to code, but to the
function descriptor.  Thus the previous change for this test case
broke it:

      https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-01/msg00275.html

This patch reverts to the original method, re-introducing '_start'
symbols.  In addition, it adds sufficient alignment before the label,
such that the label never points into an alignment gap.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.c (FUNC): Insert alignment and
	define "*_start" label.  Make "name" static.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp: Replace references to
	${name} by references to ${name}_start.
2014-01-22 17:02:13 +01:00
Andreas Arnez
7846671423 Prevent appending "-g" after "-g3" to compile options in info-macros.exp.
When upstream gcc is given a command line with the "-g" option after
"-g3", it doesn't generate a ".debug_macro" section.  This is because
the last option wins, thus downgrading the debug level again.  Without
any macro debug information in the executable, info-macros.exp
obviously produces many failures.

Since the "-g" option is appended by DejaGnu's target_compile whenever
the "debug" option is set, the fix just removes that option.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* gdb.base/info-macros.exp: Remove "debug" from the compile
	options.
2014-01-22 17:02:13 +01:00
Iain Buclaw
ec9f644ac9 Fix and update D demangling support in gdb to the current mangling ABI.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2014-01-17  Iain Buclaw  <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>

    * d-lang.h (d_parse_symbol): Add declaration.
    * d-lang.c (extract_identifiers)
    (extract_type_info): Remove functions.
    (parse_call_convention, parse_attributes)
    (parse_function_types, parse_function_args)
    (parse_type, parse_identifier, call_convention_p)
    (d_parse_symbol): New functions.
    (d_demangle): Use d_parse_symbol to demangle D symbols.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2014-01-17  Iain Buclaw  <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>

* gdb.dlang/demangle.exp: New file.
2014-01-18 18:11:06 +00:00
Iain Buclaw
94b1b47ee1 Define all basic data types of D and add them to the primitive type
language vector.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2014-01-17  Iain Buclaw  <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>

    * d-lang.h (struct builtin_d_type): New data type.
    (builtin_d_type): Add declaration.
    * d-lang.c (d_language_arch_info, build_d_types)
    (builtin_d_type): New functions.
    (enum d_primitive_types): New data type.
    (d_language_defn): Change c_language_arch_info to
    d_language_arch_info.
    (d_type_data): New static variable.
    (_initialize_d_language): Initialize d_type_data.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2014-01-17  Iain Buclaw  <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>

    * gdb.dlang/primitive-types.exp: New file.
2014-01-18 18:10:47 +00:00
Iain Buclaw
7f420862a7 Add gdb.dlang to the gdb testsuite for the purpose of creating D
specific tests.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2014-01-17  Iain Buclaw  <ibuclaw@gdcproject.org>

    * configure.ac: Create gdb.dlang/Makefile.
    * configure: Regenerate.
    * Makefile.in (ALL_SUBDIRS): Add gdb.dlang.
    * gdb.dlang/Makefile.in: New file.
    * lib/d-support.exp: New file.
    * lib/gdb.exp (skip_d_tests): New proc.
2014-01-18 18:09:28 +00:00
Markus Metzger
52834460bc record-btrace: add (reverse-)stepping support
Provide to_resume and to_wait target methods for the btrace record target
to allow reverse stepping and replay support.

Replay is limited in the sense that only stepping and source correlation
are supported.  We do not record data and thus can not show variables.

Non-stop mode is not working.  Do not allow record-btrace in non-stop mode.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* btrace.h (btrace_thread_flag): New.
	(struct btrace_thread_info) <flags>: New.
	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_resume_thread)
	(record_btrace_find_thread_to_move, btrace_step_no_history)
	(btrace_step_stopped, record_btrace_start_replaying)
	(record_btrace_step_thread, record_btrace_decr_pc_after_break)
	(record_btrace_find_resume_thread): New.
	(record_btrace_resume, record_btrace_wait): Extend.
	(record_btrace_can_execute_reverse): New.
	(record_btrace_open): Fail in non-stop mode.
	(record_btrace_set_replay): Split into this, ...
	(record_btrace_stop_replaying): ... this, ...
	(record_btrace_clear_histories): ... and this.
	(init_record_btrace_ops): Init to_can_execute_reverse.
	* NEWS: Announce it.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/delta.exp: Check reverse stepi.
	* gdb.btrace/tailcall.exp: Update.  Add stepping tests.
	* gdb.btrace/finish.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/next.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/nexti.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/record_goto.c: Add comments.
	* gdb.btrace/step.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/stepi.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/multi-thread-step.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/multi-thread-step.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/rn-dl-bind.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/rn-dl-bind.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/data.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/data.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add new.

doc/
	* gdb.texinfo: Document limited reverse/replay support
	for target record-btrace.
2014-01-16 13:14:12 +01:00
Markus Metzger
6e07b1d27e record-btrace: show trace from enable location
The btrace record target shows the branch trace from the location of the first
branch destination.  This is the first BTS records.

After adding incremental updates, we can now add a dummy record for the current
PC when we enable tracing so we show the trace from the location where branch
tracing has been enabled.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* btrace.c: Include regcache.h.
	(btrace_add_pc): New.
	(btrace_enable): Call btrace_add_pc.
	(btrace_is_empty): New.
	* btrace.h (btrace_is_empty): New.
	* record-btrace.c (require_btrace, record_btrace_info): Call
	btrace_is_empty.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add delta.
	* gdb.btrace/exception.exp: Update.
	* gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Update.
	* gdb.btrace/record_goto.exp: Update.
	* gdb.btrace/tailcall.exp: Update.
	* gdb.btrace/unknown_functions.exp: Update.
	* gdb.btrace/delta.exp: New.
2014-01-16 13:12:00 +01:00
Markus Metzger
0b722aec57 record-btrace: extend unwinder
Extend the always failing unwinder to provide the PC based on the call
structure detected in the branch trace.

The unwinder supports normal frames and tailcall frames.
Inline frames are not supported.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* record.h (record_btrace_frame_unwind)
	(record_btrace_tailcall_frame_unwind): New declarations.
	* dwarf2-frame: Include record.h
	(dwarf2_frame_cfa): Throw an error for btrace frames.
	* record-btrace.c: Include hashtab.h.
	(btrace_get_bfun_name): New.
	(btrace_call_history): Call btrace_get_bfun_name.
	(struct btrace_frame_cache): New.
	(bfcache): New.
	(bfcache_hash, bfcache_eq, bfcache_new): New.
	(btrace_get_frame_function): New.
	(record_btrace_frame_unwind_stop_reason): Allow unwinding.
	(record_btrace_frame_this_id): Compute own id.
	(record_btrace_frame_prev_register): Provide PC, throw_error
	for all other registers.
	(record_btrace_frame_sniffer): Detect btrace frames.
	(record_btrace_tailcall_frame_sniffer): New.
	(record_btrace_frame_dealloc_cache): New.
	(record_btrace_frame_unwind): Add new functions.
	(record_btrace_tailcall_frame_unwind): New.
	(_initialize_record_btrace): Allocate cache.
	* btrace.c (btrace_clear): Call reinit_frame_cache.
	* NEWS: Announce it.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/record_goto.exp: Add backtrace test.
	* gdb.btrace/tailcall.exp: Add backtrace test.
2014-01-16 13:09:42 +01:00
Markus Metzger
066ce621f4 record-btrace: add record goto target methods
2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_set_replay)
	(record_btrace_goto_begin, record_btrace_goto_end)
	(record_btrace_goto): New.
	(init_record_btrace_ops): Initialize them.
	* NEWS: Announce it.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add record_goto.
	* gdb.btrace/record_goto.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/record_goto.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/x86-record_goto.S: New.
2014-01-16 13:08:05 +01:00
Markus Metzger
0688d04e19 record-btrace: make ranges include begin and end
The "record function-call-history" and "record instruction-history" commands
accept a range "begin, end".  End is not included in both cases.  Include it.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_insn_history_range): Include
	end.
	(record_btrace_insn_history_from): Adjust range.
	(record_btrace_call_history_range): Include
	end.
	(record_btrace_call_history_from): Adjust range.
	* NEWS: Announce changes.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/function_call_history.exp: Update tests.
	* gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Update tests.

doc/
	* gdb.texinfo (Process Record and Replay): Update documentation.
2014-01-16 13:05:38 +01:00
Markus Metzger
8710b7097e record-btrace: optionally indent function call history
Add a new modifier /c to the "record function-call-history" command to
indent the function name based on its depth in the call stack.

Also reorder the optional fields to have the indentation at the very beginning.
Prefix the insn range (/i modifier) with "inst ".
Prefix the source line (/l modifier) with "at ".
Change the range syntax from "begin-end" to "begin,end" to allow copy&paste to
the "record instruction-history" and "list" commands.

Adjust the respective tests and add new tests for the /c modifier.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* record.h (enum record_print_flag)
	<record_print_indent_calls>: New.
	* record.c (get_call_history_modifiers): Recognize /c modifier.
	(_initialize_record): Document /c modifier.
	* record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history): Add btinfo parameter.
	Reorder fields.  Optionally indent the function name.  Update
	all users.
	* NEWS: Announce changes.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/function_call_history.exp: Fix expected field
	order for "record function-call-history".
	Add new tests for "record function-call-history /c".
	* gdb.btrace/exception.cc: New.
	* gdb.btrace/exception.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/tailcall.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/x86-tailcall.S: New.
	* gdb.btrace/x86-tailcall.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/unknown_functions.c: New.
	* gdb.btrace/unknown_functions.exp: New.
	* gdb.btrace/Makefile.in (EXECUTABLES): Add new.

doc/
	* gdb.texinfo (Process Record and Replay): Document new /c
	modifier accepted by "record function-call-history".
	Add /i modifier to "record function-call-history" example.
2014-01-16 13:03:41 +01:00
Markus Metzger
5de9129b06 record-btrace: start counting at one
The record instruction-history and record-function-call-history commands start
counting instructions at zero.  This is somewhat unintuitive when we start
navigating in the recorded instruction history.  Start at one, instead.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* btrace.c (ftrace_new_function): Start counting at one.
	* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_info): Adjust number of calls
	and insns.
	* NEWS: Announce it.

testsuite/
    * gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Update.
    * gdb.btrace/function_call_history.exp: Update.
2014-01-16 12:58:25 +01:00
Markus Metzger
23a7fe7580 btrace: change branch trace data structure
The branch trace is represented as 3 vectors:
  - a block vector
  - a instruction vector
  - a function vector

Each vector (except for the first) is computed from the one above.

Change this into a graph where a node represents a sequence of instructions
belonging to the same function and where we have three types of edges to connect
the function segments:
  - control flow
  - same function (instance)
  - call stack

This allows us to navigate in the branch trace.  We will need this for "record
goto" and reverse execution.

This patch introduces the data structure and computes the control flow edges.
It also introduces iterator structs to simplify iterating over the branch trace
in control-flow order.

It also fixes PR gdb/15240 since now recursive calls are handled correctly.
Fix the test that got the number of expected fib instances and also the
function numbers wrong.

The current instruction had been part of the branch trace.  This will look odd
once we start support for reverse execution.  Remove it.  We still keep it in
the trace itself to allow extending the branch trace more easily in the future.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* btrace.h (struct btrace_func_link): New.
	(enum btrace_function_flag): New.
	(struct btrace_inst): Rename to ...
	(struct btrace_insn): ...this. Update all users.
	(struct btrace_func) <ibegin, iend>: Remove.
	(struct btrace_func_link): New.
	(struct btrace_func): Rename to ...
	(struct btrace_function): ...this. Update all users.
	(struct btrace_function) <segment, flow, up, insn, insn_offset)
	(number, level, flags>: New.
	(struct btrace_insn_iterator): Rename to ...
	(struct btrace_insn_history): ...this.
	Update all users.
	(struct btrace_insn_iterator, btrace_call_iterator): New.
	(struct btrace_target_info) <btrace, itrace, ftrace>: Remove.
	(struct btrace_target_info) <begin, end, level>
	<insn_history, call_history>: New.
	(btrace_insn_get, btrace_insn_number, btrace_insn_begin)
	(btrace_insn_end, btrace_insn_prev, btrace_insn_next)
	(btrace_insn_cmp, btrace_find_insn_by_number, btrace_call_get)
	(btrace_call_number, btrace_call_begin, btrace_call_end)
	(btrace_call_prev, btrace_call_next, btrace_call_cmp)
	(btrace_find_function_by_number, btrace_set_insn_history)
	(btrace_set_call_history): New.
	* btrace.c (btrace_init_insn_iterator)
	(btrace_init_func_iterator, compute_itrace): Remove.
	(ftrace_print_function_name, ftrace_print_filename)
	(ftrace_skip_file): Change
	parameter to const.
	(ftrace_init_func): Remove.
	(ftrace_debug): Use new btrace_function fields.
	(ftrace_function_switched): Also consider gaining and
	losing symbol information).
	(ftrace_print_insn_addr, ftrace_new_call, ftrace_new_return)
	(ftrace_new_switch, ftrace_find_caller, ftrace_new_function)
	(ftrace_update_caller, ftrace_fixup_caller, ftrace_new_tailcall):
	New.
	(ftrace_new_function): Move. Remove debug print.
	(ftrace_update_lines, ftrace_update_insns): New.
	(ftrace_update_function): Check for call, ret, and jump.
	(compute_ftrace): Renamed to ...
	(btrace_compute_ftrace): ...this. Rewritten to compute call
	stack.
	(btrace_fetch, btrace_clear): Updated.
	(btrace_insn_get, btrace_insn_number, btrace_insn_begin)
	(btrace_insn_end, btrace_insn_prev, btrace_insn_next)
	(btrace_insn_cmp, btrace_find_insn_by_number, btrace_call_get)
	(btrace_call_number, btrace_call_begin, btrace_call_end)
	(btrace_call_prev, btrace_call_next, btrace_call_cmp)
	(btrace_find_function_by_number, btrace_set_insn_history)
	(btrace_set_call_history): New.
	* record-btrace.c (require_btrace): Use new btrace thread
	info fields.
	(record_btrace_info, btrace_insn_history)
	(record_btrace_insn_history, record_btrace_insn_history_range):
	Use new btrace thread info fields and new iterator.
	(btrace_func_history_src_line): Rename to ...
	(btrace_call_history_src_line): ...this. Use new btrace
	thread info fields.
	(btrace_func_history): Rename to ...
	(btrace_call_history): ...this. Use new btrace thread info
	fields and new iterator.
	(record_btrace_call_history, record_btrace_call_history_range):
	Use new btrace thread info fields and new iterator.

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/function_call_history.exp: Fix expected function
	trace.
	* gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Initialize traced.
	Remove traced_functions.
2014-01-16 12:45:11 +01:00
Markus Metzger
724c7dd8a4 btrace, test: fix multi-line btrace tests
For testing multi-line test output, gdb.btrace tests used the following
pattern:

  gdb_test "..." "
  ...\r
  ..."

Change this to:

  gdb_test "..." [join [list \
    "..." \
    "..."] "\r\n"]

Also extract repeated tests into a test function and shorten or remove
test messages.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

testsuite/
	* gdb.btrace/function_call_history.exp: Update
	* gdb.btrace/instruction_history.exp: Update.
2014-01-16 12:45:09 +01:00
Markus Metzger
6d78d93b8d test, btrace: update expected text
The error message for starting recording twice changed.
Update the expected text to fix resulting regressions.

2014-01-16  Markus Metzger  <markus.t.metzger@intel.com>

	* gdb.btrace/enable.exp: Update expected text.
2014-01-16 12:45:08 +01:00
Omair Javaid
93a360cc5d Fix testsuite/gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dos-drive.exp on ARM.
This test currently fails on ARM:

  (gdb) PASS: gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dos-drive.exp: set breakpoint pending off
  break 'z:file.c':func
  Cannot access memory at address 0x0

The error is GDB trying to read the prologue at the breakpoint's
address, and failing:

  38 throw_error() exceptions.c:444 0x0016728c
  37 memory_error() corefile.c:204 0x001d1fcc
  36 read_memory() corefile.c:223 0x001d201a
  35 read_memory_unsigned_integer() corefile.c:312 0x001d2166
  34 arm_skip_prologue() arm-tdep.c:1452 0x00054270

  static CORE_ADDR
  arm_skip_prologue (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc)
  {
  ...
    for (skip_pc = pc; skip_pc < limit_pc; skip_pc += 4)
      {
        inst = read_memory_unsigned_integer (skip_pc, 4, byte_order_for_code);


The test doesn't execute the compiled object's code, so GDB will try
to read memory from the binary's sections.  Instructions on ARM are
4-byte wide, and thus ARM's prologue scanner reads in 4-byte chunks.
As the section 'func' is put at is only 1 byte long, and no other
section is allocated contiguously:

  ...
  Sections:
  Idx Name          Size      VMA       LMA       File off  Algn
    0 .text         00000001  00000000  00000000  00000034  2**0
                    CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, CODE
  ...

... the exec target fails the read the 4 bytes.

Fix this by increasing the function's size.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2014-01-16  Omair Javaid  <Omair.Javaid@linaro.org>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dos-drive.S: Increase text section size to 4
	bytes.
2014-01-16 10:09:34 +00:00
Maciej W. Rozycki
3772b53f14 AArch64: gdb.base/float.exp: Fix `info float' test
* gdb.base/float.exp: Handle "aarch64*-*-*" targets.
2014-01-15 22:17:53 +00:00
Omair Javaid
596662fa99 gdb: ARM: Update configure.tgt and enable gdb.reverse testsuite
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2014-01-15  Omair Javaid  <omair.javaid@linaro.org>

	* lib/gdb.exp (supports_process_record): Return true for
	arm*-linux*.  (supports_reverse): Likewise.
2014-01-15 16:57:38 +00:00
Siva Chandra
b5b08fb4ff Use bitpos and type to lookup a gdb.Field object when its name is 'None'.
PR python/15464
	PR python/16113
	* valops.c (value_struct_elt_bitpos): New function
	* py-type.c (convert_field): Set 'name' attribute of a gdb.Field
	object to 'None' if the field name is an empty string ("").
	* python/py-value.c (valpy_getitem): Use 'bitpos' and 'type'
	attribute to look for a field when 'name' is 'None'.
	(get_field_type): New function

	testsuite/
	* gdb.python/py-type.c: Enhance test case.
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.cc: Likewise
	* gdb.python/py-type.exp: Add new tests.
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.exp: Likewise
2014-01-13 17:35:56 -08:00
Andreas Arnez
52d7fb1303 Since upstream gcc has recently increased the function alignment on
S390, the dw2-dir-file-name test case fails in the first
gdb_continue_to_breakpoint.  Indeed, the breakpoint is now placed into
the alignment gap *before* the actual function.

This happens because the test case declares the respective "*_start"
symbol as a "loose" label before the function definition, and the
compiler inserts the alignment between that label and the function
itself.

The "*_start" symbols were only necessary because FUNC made the
function static.  The fix makes the functions extern instead, thus
making the "*_start" labels unnecessary.

testsuite/
2014-01-10  Andreas Arnez  <arnez@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
	    Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.c (FUNC): Remove "*_start" symbol.
	Make "name" extern.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp (out_cu, out_line): Replace
	references to ${name}_start by references to ${name}.
2014-01-10 15:37:36 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
a2cd8cfed1 Remove path from gdb.ada/pp-rec-component.exp "source" test
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.ada/pp-rec-component.exp: Remove path from "source" test.
2014-01-10 07:57:11 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
4e23fced81 Remove path from gdb.python/py-pp-integral.exp "source" test.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.python/py-pp-integral.exp: Remove path from "source" test.
2014-01-10 07:57:09 +04:00
Pedro Alves
c6a9e42ce4 gdb.mi/mi-info-os.exp: Fix cross-debugger testing
A live target is required for `-info-os' to work in non-native
configurations.

 (gdb)
 Expecting: ^(-info-os[
 ]+)?(.*\^done,OSDataTable=.*[
 ]+[(]gdb[)]
 [ ]*)
 -info-os
 ^error,msg="Don't know how to get OS data.  Try \"help target\"."
 (gdb)
 FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-info-os.exp: -info-os

If GDB does have a native configuration included, but we're testing
remote, it'll be worse, as if we're not connected yet, -info-os will
run against the default run target, and pass, falsely giving the
impression the remote bits were exercised.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-01-09  Maciej W. Rozycki  <macro@codesourcery.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.mi/mi-info-os.exp: Connect to the target with
        mi_gdb_target_load.
2014-01-09 19:57:13 +00:00
Pedro Alves
b7ea362b02 [remote/gdbserver] Don't lose signals when reconnecting.
Currently, when GDB connects in all-stop mode, GDBserver always
responds to the status packet with a GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP, even if the
program is actually stopped for some other signal.

 (gdb) tar rem ...
 ...
 (gdb) c
 Program received signal SIGUSR1, User defined signal 1.
 (gdb) disconnect
 (gdb) tar rem ...
 (gdb) c

(Or a GDB crash instead of an explicit disconnect.)

This results in the program losing that signal on that last continue,
because gdb will tell the target to resume with no signal (to suppress
the GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP, due to 'handle SISGTRAP nopass'), and that will
actually suppress the real signal the program had stopped for
(SIGUSR1).  To fix that, I think we should make GDBserver report the
real signal the thread had stopped for in response to the status
packet:

 @item ?
 @cindex @samp{?} packet
 Indicate the reason the target halted.  The reply is the same as for
 step and continue.

But, that raises the question -- which thread are we reporting the
status for?  Due to how the RSP in all-stop works, we can only report
one status.  The status packet's response is a stop reply packet, so
it includes the thread identifier, so it's not a problem packet-wise.
However, GDBserver is currently always reporting the status for first
thread in the thread list, even though that may well not be the thread
that got the signal that caused the program to stop.  So the next
logical step would be to report the status for the
last_ptid/last_status thread (the last event reported to gdb), if it's
still around; and if not, fallback to some other thread.

There's an issue on the GDB side with that, though...

GDB currently always adds the thread reported in response to the
status query as the first thread in its list.  That means that if we
start with e.g.,

 (gdb) info threads
   3 Thread 1003 ...
 * 2 Thread 1002 ...
   1 Thread 1001 ...

And reconnect:

 (gdb) disconnect
 (gdb) tar rem ...

We end up with:

 (gdb) info threads
   3 Thread 1003 ...
   2 Thread 1001 ...
 * 1 Thread 1002 ...

Not a real big issue, but it's reasonably fixable, by having GDB
fetch/sync the thread list before fetching the status/'?', and then
using the status to select the right thread as current on the GDB
side.  Holes in the thread numbers are squashed before/after
reconnection (e.g., 2,3,5 becomes 1,2,3), but the order is preserved,
which I think is both good, and good enough.

However (yes, there's more...), the previous GDB that was connected
might have had gdbserver running in non-stop mode, or could have left
gdbserver doing disconnected tracing (which also forces non-stop), and
if the new gdb/connection is in all-stop mode, we can end up with more
than one thread with a signal to report back to gdb.  As we can only
report one thread/status (in the all-stop RSP variant; the non-stop
variant doesn't have this issue), we get to do what we do at every
other place we have this situation -- leave events we can't report
right now as pending, so that the next resume picks them up.

Note all this ammounts to a QoI change, within the existing framework.
There's really no RSP change here.

The only user visible change (other than that the signal is program is
stopped at isn't lost / is passed to the program), is in "info
program", that now can show the signal the program stopped for.  Of
course, the next resume will respect the pass/nopass setting for the
signal in question.  It'd be reasonable to have the initial connection
tell the user the program was stopped with a signal, similar to when
we load a core to debug, but I'm leaving that out for a future change.
I think we'll need to either change how handle_inferior_event & co
handle stop_soon, or maybe bypass them completely (like
fork-child.c:startup_inferior) for that.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.

gdb/gdbserver/
2014-01-08  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdbthread.h (struct thread_info) <status_pending_p>: New field.
	* server.c (visit_actioned_threads, handle_pending_status): New
	function.
	(handle_v_cont): Factor out parts to ...
	(resume): ... this new function.  If in all-stop, and a thread
	being resumed has a pending status, report it without actually
	resuming.
	(myresume): Adjust to use the new 'resume' function.
	(clear_pending_status_callback, set_pending_status_callback)
	(find_status_pending_thread_callback): New functions.
	(handle_status): Handle the case of multiple threads having
	interesting statuses to report.  Report threads' real last signal
	instead of always reporting GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP.  Look for a thread
	with an interesting thread to report the status for, instead of
	always reporting the status of the first thread.

gdb/
2014-01-08  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* remote.c (remote_add_thread): Add threads silently if starting
	up.
	(remote_notice_new_inferior): If in all-stop, and starting up,
	don't call notice_new_inferior.
	(get_current_thread): New function, factored out from ...
	(add_current_inferior_and_thread): ... this.  Adjust.
	(remote_start_remote) <all-stop>: Fetch the thread list.  If we
	found any thread, then select the remote's current thread as GDB's
	current thread too.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-01-08  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/reconnect-signal.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/reconnect-signal.exp: New file.
2014-01-08 18:55:51 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
79301218fa Add missing ChangeLog entries. 2014-01-08 13:16:32 +04:00
Edjunior Barbosa Machado
5e3f4fab9a Fix dir command for duplicated paths and add a new testcase.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2014-01-07  Edjunior Barbosa Machado  <emachado@linux.vnet.ibm.com>

	* source.c (add_path): Fix check for duplicated paths in the previously
	included paths.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2014-01-07  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/source-dir.exp: New file.
2014-01-07 17:03:06 -02:00
Joel Brobecker
f30b8b38d4 varobj/Ada: Missing children for interface-wide tagged types
Consider the following code:

   type Element is abstract tagged null record;
   type GADataType is interface;
   type Data_Type is new Element and GADataType with record
      I : Integer := 42;
   end record;
   Result1 : Data_Type;
   GGG1    : GADataType'Class := GADataType'Class (Result1);

When trying to create a varobj for variable ggg1, GDB currently
returns an object which has no child:

    -var-create ggg1 * ggg1
    ^done,name="ggg1",numchild="0",[...]

This is incorrect, it should return an object which has one child
(field "i"). This is because tagged-type objects are dynamic, and
we need to apply a small transformation in order to get their actual
type. This is already done on the GDB/CLI side in ada-valprint,
and it needs to be done on the ada-varobj side as well.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-varobj.c (ada_varobj_adjust_for_child_access): Convert
        tagged type objects to their actual type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/mi_interface: New testcase.
2014-01-07 08:29:04 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
8e355c5d24 Ada: Fix missing call to pretty-printer for fields of records.
Consider the following types:

   type Time_T is record
      Secs : Integer;
   end record;
   Before : Time_T := (Secs => 1384395743);

In this example, we assume that type Time_T is the number of seconds
since Epoch, and so added a Python pretty-printer, to print this
type in a more human-friendly way. For instance:

    (gdb) print before
    $1 = Thu Nov 14 02:22:23 2013 (1384395743)

However, we've noticed that things stop working when this type is
embedded inside another record, and we try to print that record.
For instance, with the following declarations:

   type Composite is record
      Id : Integer;
      T : Time_T;
   end record;
   Afternoon : Composite := (Id => 1, T => (Secs => 1384395865));

    (gdb) print afternoon
    $2 = (id => 1, t => (secs => 1384395865))

We expected instead:

    (gdb) print afternoon
    $2 = (id => 1, t => Thu Nov 14 02:24:25 2013 (1384395865))

This patch fixes the problem by making sure that we try to print
each field via a call to val_print, rather than calling ada_val_print
directly. We need to go through val_print, as the val_print
handles all language-independent features such as calling the
pretty-printer, knowing that ada_val_print will get called eventually
if actual Ada-specific printing is required (which should be the
most common scenario).

And because val_print takes the language as parameter, we enhanced
the print_field_values and print_variant_part to also take a language.
As a bonus, this allows us to remove a couple of references to
current_language.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-valprint.c (print_field_values): Add "language" parameter.
        Update calls to print_field_values and print_variant_part.
        Pass new parameter "language" in call to val_print instead
        of "current_language".  Replace call to ada_val_print by call
        to val_print.
        (print_variant_part): Add "language" parameter.
        (ada_val_print_struct_union): Update call to print_field_values.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/pp-rec-component.exp, gdb.ada/pp-rec-component.py,
        gdb.ada/pp-rec-component/foo.adb, gdb.ada/pp-rec-component/pck.adb,
        gdb.ada/pp-rec-component/pck.ads: New files.
2014-01-07 08:17:40 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
c0d4881122 [python] Add gdb.Type.name attribute.
Consider the following declarations:

    typedef long our_time_t;
    our_time_t current_time = 1384395743;

The purpose of this patch is to allow the use of a pretty-printer
for variables of type our_time_t.  Normally, pretty-printing sniffers
use the tag name in order to determine which, if any, pretty-printer
should be used. But in the case above, the tag name is not set, since
it does not apply to integral types.

This patch extends the gdb.Type list of attributes to also include
the name of the type, thus allowing the sniffer to match against
that name. With that change, I was able to write a pretty-printer
which displays our variable as follow:

    (gdb) print current_time
    $1 = Thu Nov 14 02:22:23 2013 (1384395743)

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * python/py-type.c (typy_get_name): New function.
        (type_object_getset): Add entry for attribute "name".
        * NEWS: Add entry mentioning this new attribute.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.texinfo (Types In Python): Document new attribute Types.name.

gdb/testsuite:

        * gdb.python/py-pp-integral.c: New file.
        * gdb.python/py-pp-integral.py: New file.
        * gdb.python/py-pp-integral.exp: New file.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2014-01-07 07:11:17 +04:00
Hui Zhu
78f47043ff Fix a error of my previous commit. 2014-01-07 00:28:55 +08:00
Hui Zhu
adcf2eed05 Remove gdb_bfd_stash_filename to fix crash with fix of binutils/11983
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-01/msg00029.html
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-01/msg00053.html

2014-01-07  Hui Zhu  <hui@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb_bfd.c (gdb_bfd_stash_filename): Removed.
	(gdb_bfd_open): Removed gdb_bfd_stash_filename.
	(gdb_bfd_fopen): Ditto.
	(gdb_bfd_openr): Ditto.
	(gdb_bfd_openw): Ditto.
	(gdb_bfd_openr_iovec): Ditto.
	(gdb_bfd_fdopenr): Ditto.
	* gdb_bfd.h (gdb_bfd_stash_filename): Removed.
	* solib-aix.c (solib_aix_bfd_open): Alloc object_bfd->filename
	with xstrdup.
	* solib-darwin.c (darwin_bfd_open): Alloc res->filename
	with xstrdup.
	* symfile-mem.c (symbol_file_add_from_memory): Removed
	gdb_bfd_stash_filename.
2014-01-07 00:24:41 +08:00
Joel Brobecker
ecd75fc8ee Update Copyright year range in all files maintained by GDB. 2014-01-01 07:54:24 +04:00
Gabriel Krisman Bertazi
4924df7977 Fix PR breakpoints/16297: catch syscall with syscall 0
Code rationale
==============
by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi

This is a fix for bug 16297. The problem occurs when the user attempts
to catch any syscall 0 (such as syscall read on Linux/x86_64). GDB was
not able to catch the syscall and was missing the breakpoint.

Now, breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall returns immediately when it finds the
correct syscall number, avoiding a following check for the end of the
search vector, that returns a no hit if the syscall number was zero.

Testcase rationale
==================
by: Sergio Durigan Junior

This testcase is a little difficult to write.  By doing a quick
inspection at the Linux source, one can see that, in many targets, the
syscall number 0 is restart_syscall, which is forbidden to be called
from userspace.  Therefore, on many targets, there's just no way to test
this safely.

My decision was to take the simpler route and just adds the "read"
syscall on the default test.  Its number on x86_64 is zero, which is
"good enough" since many people here do their tests on x86_64 anyway and
it is a popular architecture.

However, there was another little gotcha.  When using "read" passing 0
as the third parameter (i.e., asking it to read 0 bytes), current libc
implementations could choose not to effectively call the syscall.
Therefore, the best solution was to create a temporary pipe, write 1
byte into it, and then read this byte from it.

gdb/ChangeLog
2013-12-19  Gabriel Krisman Bertazi  <gabriel@krisman.be>

	PR breakpoints/16297
	* breakpoint.c (breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall): Return immediately
	when expected syscall is hit.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2013-12-19  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	PR breakpoints/16297
	* gdb.base/catch-syscall.c (read_syscall, pipe_syscall)
	(write_syscall): New variables.
	(main): Create a pipe, write 1 byte in it, and read 1 byte from
	it.
	* gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp (all_syscalls): Include "pipe,
	"write" and "read" syscalls.
	(fill_all_syscalls_numbers): Improve the way to obtain syscalls
	numbers.
2013-12-19 17:01:49 -02:00
Keven Boell
530e8392d7 fortran: enable ptype/whatis for modules.
Added new domain MODULE_DOMAIN for fortran modules to avoid
issues with sharing namespaces (e.g. when a variable currently
in scope has the same name as a module).

	(gdb) ptype modname
	old> No symbol "modname" in current context.
	new> type = module modname

This fixes PR 15209 and also addresses the issue
with sharing namespaces:
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-02/msg00643.html

2013-11-19  Keven Boell  <keven.boell@intel.com>
            Sanimir Agovic  <sanimir.agovic@intel.com>

	* cp-namespace.c (cp_lookup_nested_symbol): Enable
	nested lookups for fortran modules.
	* dwarf2read.c (read_module): Add fortran module to
	the symbol table.
	(add_partial_symbol, add_partial_module): Add fortran
	module to the partial symbol table.
	(new_symbol_full): Create full symbol for fortran module.
	* f-exp.y (yylex): Add new module domain to be parsed.
	* symtab.h: New domain for fortran modules.

testsuite/

	* gdb.fortran/module.exp: Completion matches fortran module
	names as well. ptype/whatis on modules return a proper type.
	Add new check for having the correct scope.
2013-12-19 13:18:21 +01:00
Keven Boell
7f9b20bb35 fortran: enable ptype/whatis for user defined types.
(gdb) ptype type
	old> No symbol "type" in current context.
	new> type = Type type
	     integer(kind=4) :: t_i
	     End Type type

2013-11-19  Sanimir Agovic  <sanimir.agovic@intel.com>
            Keven Boell  <keven.boell@intel.com>

	* f-exp.y (yylex): Add domain array to enable lookup
	in multiple domains. Loop over lookup domains and try
	to find requested symbol. Add STRUCT_DOMAIN to lookup
	domains to be able to query for user defined types.

testsuite/
	* gdb.fortran/type.f90: New file.
	* gdb.fortran/whatis_type.f90: New file.
2013-12-19 13:18:11 +01:00
Sergio Durigan Junior
2e0d821f2d Improve and fix catch-syscall.exp
While fixing another bug, I found that the current
gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp is kind of messy, could use some
improvements, and is not correctly testing some things.

I've made the following patch to address all the issues I found.  On the
organization side, it does a cleanup and removes unecessary imports of
gdb_prompt, uses prepare_for_testing and clean_restart where needed, and
fixes some comments.  The testcase was also not correctly testing
catching syscalls using only numbers, or catching many syscalls at
once.  I fixed that.

The patch also uses a new method for obtaining the syscalls numbers: it
relies on the C source file to get them, via <sys/syscall.h> and SYS_*
macros.  This makes the .exp file simpler because there is no need to
include target conditionals there.

I tested this on x86_64 Fedora 18.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2013-12-18  Sergio Durigan Junior  <sergiodj@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/catch-syscall.c: Include <sys/syscall.h>.
	(close_syscall, chroot_syscall, exit_group_syscall): New
	variables.
	* gdb.base/catch-syscall.exp: Replace gdb_compile by
	prepare_for_testing.  Call fill_all_syscalls_numbers before
	starting.  Replace gdb_exit, gdb_start, gdb_reinitialize_dir and
	gdb_load by clean_restart.
	(check_info_bp_any_syscall, check_info_bp_specific_syscall)
	(check_info_bp_many_syscalls): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	(check_call_to_syscall): Likewise.  Add global decimal.  Improve
	testing regex.
	(check_return_from_syscall): Likewise.
	(check_continue, insert_catch_syscall_with_arg): Remove global
	gdb_prompt.
	(insert_catch_syscall_with_many_args): Likewise.  Add global
	decimal.  Fix $filter_str.  Improve testing regex.
	(check_for_program_end): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	(test_catch_syscall_without_args): Likewise.  Add global decimal.
	Improve testing regex.
	(test_catch_syscall_with_args, test_catch_syscall_with_many_args)
	(test_catch_syscall_with_wrong_args)
	(test_catch_syscall_restarting_inferior)
	(test_catch_syscall_fail_nodatadir): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	(do_syscall_tests): Likewise.  Remove global srcdir.
	(test_catch_syscall_without_args_noxml): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	Add global last_syscall_number.  Test for the exact syscall number
	to be caught.
	(test_catch_syscall_with_args_noxml): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	Add global all_syscalls_numbers.  Test each syscall number to be
	caught, instead of only testing "close".
	(test_catch_syscall_with_wrong_args_noxml): Remove global gdb_prompt.
	(do_syscall_tests_without_xml): Likewise.  Remove global srcdir.
	Remove stale comment.
	(fill_all_syscalls_numbers): Add global last_syscall_number.  Fill
	the correct syscall numbers using information from the inferior.
2013-12-18 20:19:01 -02:00
Pedro Alves
5ce0145de7 "tfind" across unavailable-stack frames.
Like when stepping, the current stack frame location is expected to be
printed as result of tfind command, if that results in moving to a
different function.  In tfind_1 we see:

  if (from_tty
      && (has_stack_frames () || traceframe_number >= 0))
    {
      enum print_what print_what;

      /* NOTE: in imitation of the step command, try to determine
         whether we have made a transition from one function to
         another.  If so, we'll print the "stack frame" (ie. the new
         function and it's arguments) -- otherwise we'll just show the
         new source line.  */

      if (frame_id_eq (old_frame_id,
                       get_frame_id (get_current_frame ())))
        print_what = SRC_LINE;
      else
        print_what = SRC_AND_LOC;

      print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 1, print_what, 1);
      do_displays ();
    }

However, when we haven't collected any registers in the tracepoint
(collect $regs), that doesn't actually work:

 (gdb) tstart
 (gdb) info tracepoints
 Num     Type           Disp Enb Address    What
 1       tracepoint     keep y   0x080483b7 in func0
                                            at ../.././../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/circ.c:28
         collect testload
     installed on target
 2       tracepoint     keep y   0x080483bc in func1
                                            at ../.././../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/circ.c:32
         collect testload
     installed on target
 (gdb) c
 Continuing.

 Breakpoint 3, end () at ../.././../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/circ.c:72
 72    }
 (gdb) tstop
 (gdb) tfind start
 Found trace frame 0, tracepoint 1
 #0  func0 () at ../.././../git/gdb/testsuite/gdb.trace/circ.c:28
 28    }
 (gdb) tfind
 Found trace frame 1, tracepoint 2
 32    }
 (gdb)

When we don't have info about the stack available
(UNWIND_UNAVAILABLE), frames end up with outer_frame_id as frame ID.
And in the scenario above, the issue is that both frames before and
after the second tfind (the frames for func0 an func1) have the same
id (outer_frame_id), so the frame_id_eq check returns false, even
though the frames were of different functions.  GDB knows that,
because the PC is inferred from the tracepoint's address, even if no
registers were collected.

To fix this, this patch adds support for frame ids with a valid code
address, but <unavailable> stack address, and then makes the unwinders
use that instead of the catch-all outer_frame_id for such frames.  The
frame_id_eq check in tfind_1 then automatically does the right thing
as expected.

I tested with --directory=gdb.trace/ , before/after the patch, and
compared the resulting gdb.logs, then adjusted the tests to expect the
extra output that came out.  Turns out that was only circ.exp, the
original test that actually brought this issue to light.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, native and gdbserver.

gdb/
2013-12-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* frame.h (enum frame_id_stack_status): New enum.
	(struct frame_id) <stack_addr>: Adjust comment.
	<stack_addr_p>: Delete field, replaced with ...
	<stack_status>: ... this new field.
	(frame_id_build_unavailable_stack): Declare.
	* frame.c (frame_addr_hash, fprint_field, outer_frame_id)
	(frame_id_build_special): Adjust.
	(frame_id_build_unavailable_stack): New function.
	(frame_id_build, frame_id_build_wild): Adjust.
	(frame_id_p, frame_id_eq, frame_id_inner): Adjust to take into
	account frames with unavailable stack.

	* amd64-tdep.c (amd64_frame_this_id)
	(amd64_sigtramp_frame_this_id, amd64_epilogue_frame_this_id): Use
	frame_id_build_unavailable_stack.
	* dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_this_id): Likewise.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_frame_this_id, i386_epilogue_frame_this_id)
	(i386_sigtramp_frame_this_id):  Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-12-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.trace/circ.exp: Expect frame info to be printed when
	switching between frames with unavailable stack, but different
	functions.
2013-12-17 20:47:36 +00:00
Andrew Burgess
bdf2220615 Convert the unavailable vector to be bit, not byte, based.
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00144.html

The vector of unavailable parts of a value is currently byte based.  Given
that we can model a value down to the bit level, we can potentially loose
information with the current implementation.  After this patch we model the
unavailable information in bits.

gdb/ChangeLog

	* dwarf2loc.c (read_pieced_value): Mark bits, not bytes
	unavailable, use correct bit length.
	* value.c (struct value): Extend comment on unavailable to
	indicate that it is bit based.
	(value_bits_available): New function.
	(value_bytes_available): Call value_bits_available.
	(value_entirely_available): Check against the bit length, not byte
	length.
	(mark_value_bits_unavailable): New function.
	(mark_value_bytes_unavailable): Move contents to
	mark_value_bits_unavailable, call to same.
	(memcmp_with_bit_offsets): New function.
	(value_available_contents_bits_eq): New function, takes the
	functionality from value_available_contents_eq but uses
	memcmp_with_bit_offsets now, and is bit not byte based.
	(value_available_contents_eq): Move implementation into
	value_available_contents_bits_eq, call to same.
	(value_contents_copy_raw): Work on bits, not bytes.
	(unpack_value_bits_as_long_1): Check availability in bits, not
	bytes.
	* value.h (value_bits_available): Declare new function.
	(mark_value_bits_unavailable): Declare new function.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog

	* gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.c: New file.
	* gdb.trace/unavailable-dwarf-piece.exp: New file.
2013-12-17 17:24:15 +00:00
Yao Qi
07d100d43e Perf test case: skip-prologue
This patch add a perf test case on skip-prologue by inserting
breakpoints on two functions many times, in order to exercise
skip-prologue.

gdb/testsuite:

2013-12-15  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.perf/skip-prologue.c: New.
	* gdb.perf/skip-prologue.exp: New.
	* gdb.perf/skip-prologue.py: New.
2013-12-15 16:16:10 +08:00
Joel Brobecker
8a48ac9579 wrong dimension found in ada-lang.c:ada_array_bound_from_type
This function has the following code:

  elt_type = type;
  for (i = n; i > 1; i--)
    elt_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);

For multi-dimension arrays, the code above tries to find the array
type corresponding to the dimension we're trying to inspect.
The problem is that, past the second dimension, the loop does
nothing other than repeat the first iteration. There is a little
thinko where it got the TYPE_TARGET_TYPE of TYPE instead of ELT_TYPE!

To my surprise, I was unable to produce an Ada exemple that demonstrated
the problem.  That's because the examples I created all trigger a parallel
___XA type which we then use in place of the ELT_TYPE in order to
determine the bounds - see the code that immediately follows our
loop above:

    index_type_desc = ada_find_parallel_type (type, "___XA");
    ada_fixup_array_indexes_type (index_type_desc);
    if (index_type_desc != NULL)
    [...]

So, in order to avoid depending on an Ada example where the compiler
can potentially decide one way or the other, I decided to use an
artificial example, written in C. With ...

  int multi[1][2][3];

... forcing the language to Ada, and trying to print the 'last,
we get:

    (gdb) p multi'last(1)
    $1 = 0
    (gdb) p multi'last(2)
    $2 = 1
    (gdb) p multi'last(3)
    $3 = 1   <<<---  This should be 2!

Additionally, I noticed that a couple of check_typedef's were missing.
This patch adds them. And since the variable in question only gets
used within an "else" block, I moved the variable declaration and
use inside that block - making it clear what the scope of the variable
is.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * ada-lang.c (ada_array_bound_from_type): Move the declaration
        and assignment of variable "elt_type" inside the else block
        where it is used.  Add two missing check_typedef calls.
        Fix bug where we got TYPE's TYPE_TARGET_TYPE, where in fact
        we really wanted to get ELT_TYPE's TYPE_TARGET_TYPE.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/arraydim: New testcase.
2013-12-13 09:55:24 +01:00
Siva Chandra
a16b0e220d 2013-12-12 Siva Chandra Reddy <sivachandra@google.com>
PR python/16113
	* NEWS (Python Scripting): Add entry for the new feature and the
	new attribute of gdb.Field objects.
	* python/py-type.c (gdbpy_is_field): New function
	(convert_field): Add 'parent_type' attribute to gdb.Field
	objects.
	* python/py-value.c (valpy_getitem): Allow subscript value to be
	a gdb.Field object.
	(value_has_field): New function
	(get_field_flag): New function
	* python/python-internal.h (gdbpy_is_field): Add declaration.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.cc: Improve test case.
	* gdb.python/py-value-cc.exp: Add new tests to test usage of
	gdb.Field objects as subscripts on gdb.Value objects.

	doc/
	* gdb.texinfo (Values From Inferior): Add a note about using
	gdb.Field objects as subscripts on gdb.Value objects.
	(Types In Python): Add description about the new attribute
	"parent_type" of gdb.Field objects.
2013-12-12 15:21:53 -08:00
Doug Evans
7b3fd68b73 add missing PR# to previous entry 2013-12-10 16:21:41 -08:00
Doug Evans
0987cf3512 PR 16286
* c-lang.c (c_get_string): Ignore the declared size of the object
	if a specific length is requested.

	testsuite/
	* gdb.python/py-value.c: #include stdlib.h, string.h.
	(str): New struct.
	(main): New local xstr.
	* gdb.python/py-value.exp (test_value_in_inferior): Add test to
	fetch a value as a string with a length beyond the declared length
	of the array.
2013-12-10 16:20:08 -08:00
Andrew Burgess
409d8f4815 Add call to get_compiler_info to gdb_compile_shlib.
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00374.html

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog

	* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_compile_shlib): Add call to get_compiler_info,
	update comment.
2013-12-10 17:04:17 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
036e93dfda Set language for Ada minimal symbols.
This helps with the following issue: Given an Ada program defining
a global variable:

    package Pck is
       Watch : Integer := 1974;
    end Pck;

When printing the address of this variable, GDB also tries to print
the associated symbol name:

    (gdb) p watch'address
    $1 = (access integer) 0x6139d8 <pck__watch>
                                       ^^
                                       ||

The problem is that GDB prints the variable's linkage name, instead
of its natural name. This is because the language of the associated
minimal symbol never really gets set.

This patch adds handling for Ada symbols in symbol_find_demangled_name.
After this patch, we now get:

    (gdb) p watch'address
    $1 = (access integer) 0x6139d8 <pck.watch>
                                       ^
                                       |

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * symtab.c (symbol_find_demangled_name): Add handling of
        Ada symbols.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/int_deref.exp: Add test verifying that we print
        the decoded symbol name when printing the address of Ada
        symbols.
2013-12-10 12:16:47 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
72bfa06c56 GDB/MI: Document support for -exec-run --start in -list-features
This adds "exec-run-start-option" in the output of the -list-features
commands, allowing front-ends to easily determine whether -exec-run
supports the --start option.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_list_features): add "exec-run-start-option".
        * NEWS: Expand the entry documenting the new -exec-run --start
        option to mention the corresponding new entry in the output of
        "-list-features".

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands): Document the new
	"exec-run-start-option" entry in the output of the "-list-features"
	command.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.mi/mi-start.exp: Add test verifying that -list-features
        contains "exec-run-start-option".
2013-12-10 12:12:14 +01:00
Yao Qi
11ec596510 Use gdb_produce_source
We added a new proc gdb_produce_source recently, and it can be used
more widely in lib/gdb.exp to generate source file.

gdb/testsuite:

2013-12-08  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* lib/gdb.exp (support_complex_tests): Use gdb_produce_source.
	(is_elf_target, is_ilp32_target, is_ilp64_target): Likewise.
	(is_64_target, is_amd64_regs_target): Likewise.
	(skip_altivec_tests, skip_vsx_tests, skip_btrace_tests): Likewise.
2013-12-08 15:20:18 +08:00
Mike Frysinger
594d8fa8e9 strip off +x bits on non-executable/script files
These files are source files and have no business being +x.  We couldn't
easily fix it in CVS (you need login+write access to the raw rcs files),
but we can fix this w/git.

Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
2013-12-07 02:03:03 -05:00
Mike Frysinger
d9a196da2e gdb: testsuite: fix ksh shebang to use sh
These scripts use /bin/ksh, but they're dirt simple and can be used with
/bin/sh, so just change the shebang.

Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
2013-12-07 01:59:26 -05:00
Pedro Alves
782d47dfbd Fix "info frame" in the outermost frame.
Doing "info frame" in the outermost frame, when that was indicated by
the next frame saying the unwound PC is undefined/not saved, results
in error and incomplete output:

 (gdb) bt
 #0  thread_function0 (arg=0x0) at threads.c:63
 #1  0x00000034cf407d14 in start_thread (arg=0x7ffff7fcb700) at pthread_create.c:309
 #2  0x000000323d4f168d in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:115

 (gdb) frame 2
 #2  0x000000323d4f168d in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:115
 115             call    *%rax

 (gdb) info frame
 Stack level 2, frame at 0x0:
  rip = 0x323d4f168d in clone (../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:115); saved rip Register 16 was not saved
 (gdb)

Not saved register values are treated as optimized out values
internally throughout.  stack.c:frame_info is handing unvailable
values, but not optimized out ones.  The patch deletes the
frame_unwind_caller_pc_if_available wrapper function and instead lets
errors propagate to frame_info (it's only user).

As frame_unwind_pc now needs to be able to handle and cache two
different error scenarios, the prev_pc.p variable is replaced with an
enumeration.

(FWIW, I looked into making gdbarch_unwind_pc or a variant return
struct value's instead, but it results in lots of boxing and unboxing
for no real gain -- e.g., the mips and arm implementations need to do
computation on the unboxed PC value.  Might as well throw an error on
first attempt to get at invalid contents.)

After the patch, we get:

 (gdb) info frame
 Stack level 2, frame at 0x0:
  rip = 0x323d4f168d in clone (../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:115); saved rip = <not saved>
  Outermost frame: outermost
  caller of frame at 0x7ffff7fcafc0
  source language asm.
  Arglist at 0x7ffff7fcafb8, args:
  Locals at 0x7ffff7fcafb8, Previous frame's sp is 0x7ffff7fcafc8
 (gdb)

A new test is added.  It's based off dw2-reg-undefined.exp, and tweaked to
mark the return address (rip) of "stop_frame" as undefined.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17.

gdb/
2013-12-06  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* frame.c (enum cached_copy_status): New enum.
	(struct frame_info) <prev_pc.p>: Change type to enum
	cached_copy_status.
	(fprint_frame): Handle not saved and unavailable prev_pc values.
	(frame_unwind_pc_if_available): Delete and merge contents into ...
	(frame_unwind_pc): ... here.  Handle OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR.  Adjust
	to use enum cached_copy_status.
	(frame_unwind_caller_pc_if_available): Delete.
	(create_new_frame): Adjust.
	* frame.h (frame_unwind_caller_pc_if_available): Delete
	declaration.
	* stack.c (frame_info): Use frame_unwind_caller_pc instead of
	frame_unwind_caller_pc_if_available, and handle
	NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR and OPTIMIZED_OUT_ERROR errors.
	* valprint.c (val_print_optimized_out): Use val_print_not_saved.
	(val_print_not_saved): New function.
	* valprint.h (val_print_not_saved): Declare.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-12-06  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-undefined-ret-addr.S: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-undefined-ret-addr.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-undefined-ret-addr.exp: New file.
2013-12-06 19:50:10 +00:00
Doug Evans
399d6e3089 * gdb.base/break.exp: Fix setting of $baz. 2013-12-06 10:19:01 -08:00
Andrew Burgess
16b5a7cbae Add support for DW_OP_bit_piece and DW_OP_plus_uconst to DWARF assembler.
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-12/msg00143.html

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog

	* lib/dwarf.exp: (Dwarf::_location): Handle DW_OP_bit_piece and
	DW_OP_plus_uconst.
2013-12-06 13:27:24 +00:00
Keven Boell
f84bc21877 testsuite: introduce index in varobj child eval.
In some languages, e.g. fortran, arrays start with index 1
instead 0. This patch changes the MI library to support testing
varobj children of fortran arrays.

2013-11-21  Keven Boell  <keven.boell@intel.com>

testsuite/

	* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_list_varobj_children_range): Add
	call to mi_list_array_varobj_children_with_index.
	(mi_list_array_varobj_children_with_index): New function.
	Add parameter to specify array start.
2013-12-06 10:02:16 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
489e41ddf4 Fixed typo in date in testsuite/ChangeLog entry 2013-12-03 04:41:30 -08:00
Jose E. Marchesi
f130030056 testsuite: handle SIGLOST/SIGPWR conflict in sparc64-*-linux-gnu targets.
2013-10-03  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdb.base/sigall.exp (test_one_sig): gdb identifies SIGLOST as a
	SIGPWR in sparc64.

	* gdb.base/sigall.c (main): In some targets SIGLOST and SIGPWR
	have the same signal number.  Handle this situation.
2013-12-03 04:34:48 -08:00
Joel Brobecker
7fb1b8b13f Ada: Reserved word "all" should not need to be spelled in lowercase.
Consider the following code:

   type Ptr is access all Integer;
   IP : Ptr := new Integer'(123);

IP is the Ada exception of a pointer to an integer. To dereference
the pointer and get its value, the user uses the reserved word "all"
as follow:

    (gdb) p ip.all
    $1 = 123

Ada being a case-insensitive language, the casing should not matter.
Unfortunately, for the reserved word "all", things don't work. For
instance:

    (gdb) p ip.ALL
    Type integer is not a structure or union type

This patch fixes the problem.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* ada-lex.l (find_dot_all): Use strncasecmp instead of strncmp.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.ada/dot_all: New testcase.
2013-12-03 16:04:26 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
2ea126fa78 Add "undefined-command" error code at end of ^error result...
... when trying to execute an undefined GDB/MI command. When trying
to execute a GDB/MI command which does not exist, the current error
result record looks like this:

    -unsupported
    ^error,msg="Undefined MI command: unsupported"

The only indication that the command does not exist is the error
message. It would be a little fragile for a consumer to rely solely
on the contents of the error message in order to determine whether
a command exists or not.

This patch improves the situation by adding concept of error
code, starting with one well-defined error code ("undefined-command")
identifying errors due to a non-existant command. Here is the new
output:

    -unsupported
    ^error,msg="Undefined MI command: unsupported",code="undefined-command"

This error code is only displayed when the corresponding error
condition is met. Otherwise, the error record remains unchanged.
For instance:

    -symbol-list-lines foo.adb
    ^error,msg="-symbol-list-lines: Unknown source file name."

For frontends to be able to know whether they can rely on this
variable, a new entry "undefined-command-error-code" has been
added to the "-list-features" command.  Another option would be
to always generate an error="..." variable (for the default case,
we could decide for instance that the error code is the empty string).
But it seems more efficient to provide that info in "-list-features"
and then only add the error code when meaningful.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        (from Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>)
        (from Joel Brobecker  <brobecker@adacore.com>)
        * exceptions.h (enum_errors) <UNDEFINED_COMMAND_ERROR>: New enum.
        * mi/mi-parse.c (mi_parse): Throw UNDEFINED_COMMAND_ERROR instead
        of a regular error when the GDB/MI command does not exist.
        * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_list_features): Add
        "undefined-command-error-code".
        (mi_print_exception): Print an "undefined-command"
        error code if EXCEPTION.ERROR is UNDEFINED_COMMAND_ERROR.
        * NEWS: Add entry documenting the new "code" variable in
        "^error" result records.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Result Records): Fix the syntax of the
        "^error" result record concerning the error message.  Document
        the error code that may also be part of that result record.
        (GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands): Document the
        "undefined-command-error-code" element in the output of
        the "-list-features" GDB/MI command.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.mi/mi-undefined-cmd.exp: New testcase.
2013-12-03 08:01:01 +04:00
Joel Brobecker
6b7cbff192 New GDB/MI command "-info-gdb-mi-command"
This patch adds a new GDB/MI command meant for graphical frontends
trying to determine whether a given GDB/MI command exists or not.

Examples:

    -info-gdb-mi-command unsupported-command
    ^done,command={exists="false"}
    (gdb)
    -info-gdb-mi-command symbol-list-lines
    ^done,command={exists="true"}
    (gdb)

At the moment, this is the only piece of information that this
command returns.

Eventually, and if needed, we can extend it to provide
command-specific pieces of information, such as updates to
the command's syntax since inception.  This could become,
for instance:

    -info-gdb-mi-command symbol-list-lines
    ^done,command={exists="true",features=[]}
    (gdb)
    -info-gdb-mi-command catch-assert
    ^done,command={exists="true",features=["conditions"]}

In the first case, it would mean that no extra features,
while in the second, it announces that the -catch-assert
command in this version of the debugger supports a feature
called "condition" - exact semantics to be documented with
combined with the rest of the queried command's documentation.

But for now, we start small, and only worry about existance.
And to bootstrap the process, I have added an entry in the
output of the -list-features command as well ("info-gdb-mi-command"),
allowing the graphical frontends to go through the following process:

  1. Send -list-features, collect info from there as before;
  2. Check if the output contains "info-gdb-mi-command".
     If it does, then support for various commands can be
     queried though -info-gdb-mi-command. Newer commands
     will be expected to always be checked via this new
     -info-gdb-mi-command.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * mi/mi-cmds.h (mi_cmd_info_gdb_mi_command): Declare.
        * mi/mi-cmd-info.c (mi_cmd_info_gdb_mi_command): New function.
        * mi/mi-cmds.c (mi_cmds): Add -info-gdb-mi-command command.
        * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_list_features): Add "info-gdb-mi-command"
        field to output of "-list-features".

        * NEWS: Add entry for new -info-gdb-mi-command.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.texinfo (GDB/MI Miscellaneous Commands): Document
        the new -info-gdb-mi-command GDB/MI command.  Document
        the meaning of "-info-gdb-mi-command" in the output of
        -list-features.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

        * gdb.mi/mi-i-cmd.exp: New file.
2013-12-03 07:57:24 +04:00
Jan Kratochvil
04affae3ef Record objfile->original_name as an absolute path
gdb/
2013-12-02  Doug Evans  <dje@google.com>
	    Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* objfiles.c (allocate_objfile): Save original_name as an absolute
	path.
	* objfiles.h (struct objfile): Expand comment on original_name.
	* source.c (openp): Call gdb_abspath.
	* utils.c (gdb_abspath): New function.
	* utils.h (gdb_abspath): Declare.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-12-02  Doug Evans  <dje@google.com>

	* gdb.dwarf/dwp-symlink.c: Fake out gdb to not load debug info
	at start.
	* gdb.dwarf/dwp-symlink.exp: Test trying to load dwp when the binary
	has been specified with a relative path and we have chdir'd before
	accessing the debug info.
2013-12-02 22:24:32 +01:00
Andrew Burgess
eebc056c8e Print entirely unavailable struct/union values as a single <unavailable>.
When printing an entirely optimized out structure/class/union, we
print a single <optimized out> instead of printing <optimized out> for
each field.

This patch makes an entirely unavailable structure/class/union be
likewise displayed with a single "<unavailable>" rather than the whole
object with all fields <unavailable>.

This seems good because this way the user can quickly tell whether the
whole value is unavailable, rather than having to skim all fields.
Consistency with optimized out values also seems to be a good thing to
have.

A few updates to gdb.trace/unavailable.exp where required.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, native gdbserver.

gdb/
2013-11-28  Andrew Burgess  <aburgess@broadcom.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* valprint.c (value_check_printable): If the value is entirely
	unavailable, print a single "<unavailable>" instead of printing
	all subfields.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-28  Andrew Burgess  <aburgess@broadcom.com>

	* gdb.trace/unavailable.exp (gdb_collect_args_test): Update
	expected results.
	(gdb_collect_locals_test): Likewise.
	(gdb_collect_globals_test): Likewise.
2013-11-28 18:54:20 +00:00
Yao Qi
8b5e6dc217 GDB perf test on disassemble
This patch adds a test case to test the performance of GDB doing
disassembly.

gdb/testsuite/

2013-11-28  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* lib/gdb.exp (with_gdb_prompt): New proc.
	* gdb.perf/disassemble.exp: New.
	* gdb.perf/disassemble.py: New.
2013-11-28 12:53:26 +08:00
Luis Machado
0db4ca1856 * gdb.base/callfuncs.c (main): Assign malloc's return value
and free it afterwards.
	* gdb.base/charset-malloc.c (malloc_stub): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/printcmds.c (main): Likewise.
	* gdb.base/randomize.c (main): Free "p" and change breakpoint
	marker position.
	* gdb.base/setvar.c (dummy): Assign malloc's return value
	and free it afterwards.
2013-11-27 10:39:26 -02:00
Andrew Burgess
d24a9f159c Tighten regexp in gdb.base/setshow.exp
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-11/msg00817.html

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog

	* gdb.base/setshow.exp: Add $gdb_prompt to the patterns in
	gdb_test_multiple.
2013-11-26 16:36:21 +00:00
Tom Tromey
158599681f revert patch from 2013-11-22
This reverts da2b2fdf57 and some
follow-up patches.  They were incorrect.

2013-11-26  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_cache): Revert patch from
	2013-11-22.

2013-11-26  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.S: Remove.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.c: Remove.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.exp: Remove.
2013-11-26 07:47:56 -07:00
Keith Seitz
f7e3ecae9f PR c++/14819: Explicit class:: inside class scope does not work
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-11/msg00102.html
2013-11-25 13:37:08 -08:00
Yao Qi
23e9d3b9ce GDB perf test on backtrace
gdb/testsuite/

2013-11-25  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.perf/backtrace.c: New.
	* gdb.perf/backtrace.exp: New.
	* gdb.perf/backtrace.py: New.
2013-11-25 09:12:38 +08:00
Yao Qi
22825df749 GDB perf test on single step
gdb/testsuite:

2013-11-24  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.perf/single-step.c: New.
	* gdb.perf/single-step.exp: New.
	* gdb.perf/single-step.py: New.
2013-11-24 14:33:31 +08:00
Doug Evans
c1ea7c017e * gdb.base/ena-dis-br.exp: Add missing quote to "step after continue
with ignore count".
2013-11-23 16:43:29 -08:00
Doug Evans
35720eaabd Test name tweaks for py-value.exp.
* gdb.python/py-value.exp (test_lazy_strings): Tweak test names.
	(test_subscript_regression): Ditto.
	(top level): Run test_subscript_regression for c++ with "c++" prefix.
2013-11-23 16:03:47 -08:00
Doug Evans
3cd14e4575 * gdb.python/py-type.exp (test_enums): Fix typo. 2013-11-23 15:54:05 -08:00
Doug Evans
985c818c2d * gdb.python/py-symbol.exp: Add some comments. Make all test names unique. 2013-11-23 15:45:43 -08:00
Doug Evans
f873dd7ade * gdb.python/py-symbol.exp: Fix whitespace. 2013-11-23 15:20:42 -08:00
Doug Evans
38a502a410 * gdb.python/python.exp: Don't call skip_python_tests, we still want
to test some things in the case where python is not configured in.
2013-11-23 15:08:28 -08:00
Pedro Alves
c0621699ff Rename gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.* to gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.*.
gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.S: Rename to ...
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.S: ... this.  Adjust.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.c: Rename to ...
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.c: ... this.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.exp: Rename to ...
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unspecified-ret-addr.exp: ... this.
2013-11-22 19:19:13 +00:00
Tom Tromey
f57e61cdf6 update comment in dw2-bad-cfi.S.
Pedro asked me to add a comment to dw2-bad-cfi.S explaining the nature
of the badness.

I'm checking this in.

2013-11-22  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.S: Update comment.
2013-11-22 12:08:15 -07:00
Tom Tromey
da2b2fdf57 handle an unspecified return address column
Debugging PR 16155 further, I found that the DWARF unwinder found the
function in question, but thought it had no registers saved
(fs->regs.num_regs == 0).

It seems to me that if a frame does not specify the return address
column, or if the return address column is explicitly marked as
DWARF2_FRAME_REG_UNSPECIFIED, then we should set the
"undefined_retaddr" flag and let the DWARF unwinder gracefully stop.

This patch implements that idea.

With this patch the backtrace works properly:

    (gdb) bt
    #0  0x0000007fb7ed485c in nanosleep () from /lib64/libc.so.6
    #1  0x0000007fb7ed4508 in sleep () from /lib64/libc.so.6
    #2  0x00000000004008bc in thread_function (arg=0x4) at threadapply.c:73
    #3  0x0000007fb7fad950 in start_thread () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
    #4  0x0000007fb7f0956c in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6

2013-11-22  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	PR backtrace/16155:
	* dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_cache): Set undefined_retaddr if
	the return address column is unspecified.

2013-11-22  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>

	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.exp: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-bad-cfi.S: New file.
2013-11-22 11:02:01 -07:00
Pedro Alves
33f8fe58b9 Don't let two frames with the same id end up in the frame chain.
The UNWIND_SAME_ID check is done between THIS_FRAME and the next frame
when we go try to unwind the previous frame.  But at this point, it's
already too late -- we ended up with two frames with the same ID in
the frame chain.  Each frame having its own ID is an invariant assumed
throughout GDB.  This patch applies the UNWIND_SAME_ID detection
earlier, right after the previous frame is unwound, discarding the dup
frame if a cycle is detected.

The patch includes a new test that fails before the change.  Before
the patch, the test causes an infinite loop in GDB, after the patch,
the UNWIND_SAME_ID logic kicks in and makes the backtrace stop with:

  Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)

The test uses dwarf CFI to emulate a corrupted stack with a cycle.  It
has a function with registers marked DW_CFA_same_value (most
importantly RSP/RIP), so that GDB computes the same ID for that frame
and its caller.  IOW, something like this:

 #0 - frame_id_1
 #1 - frame_id_2
 #2 - frame_id_3
 #3 - frame_id_4
 #4 - frame_id_4  <<<< outermost (UNWIND_SAME_ID).

(The test's code is just a copy of dw2-reg-undefined.S /
dw2-reg-undefined.c, adjusted to use DW_CFA_same_value instead of
DW_CFA_undefined, and to mark a different set of registers.)

The infinite loop is here, in value_fetch_lazy:

      while (VALUE_LVAL (new_val) == lval_register && value_lazy (new_val))
	{
	  frame = frame_find_by_id (VALUE_FRAME_ID (new_val));
...
	  new_val = get_frame_register_value (frame, regnum);
	}

get_frame_register_value can return a lazy register value pointing to
the next frame.  This means that the register wasn't clobbered by
FRAME; the debugger should therefore retrieve its value from the next
frame.

To be clear, get_frame_register_value unwinds the value in question
from the next frame:

 struct value *
 get_frame_register_value (struct frame_info *frame, int regnum)
 {
   return frame_unwind_register_value (frame->next, regnum);
                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^
 }

In other words, if we get a lazy lval_register, it should have the
frame ID of the _next_ frame, never of FRAME.

At this point in value_fetch_lazy, the whole relevant chunk of the
stack up to frame #4 has already been unwound.  The loop always
"unlazies" lval_registers in the "next/innermost" direction, not in
the "prev/unwind further/outermost" direction.

So say we're looking at frame #4.  get_frame_register_value in frame
#4 can return a lazy register value of frame #3.  So the next
iteration, frame_find_by_id tries to read the register from frame #3.
But, since frame #4 happens to have same id as frame #3,
frame_find_by_id returns frame #4 instead.  Rinse, repeat, and we have
an infinite loop.

This is an old latent problem, exposed by the recent addition of the
frame stash.  Before we had a stash, frame_find_by_id(frame_id_4)
would walk over all frames starting at the current frame, and would
always find #3 first.  The stash happens to return #4 instead:

struct frame_info *
frame_find_by_id (struct frame_id id)
{
  struct frame_info *frame, *prev_frame;

...
  /* Try using the frame stash first.  Finding it there removes the need
     to perform the search by looping over all frames, which can be very
     CPU-intensive if the number of frames is very high (the loop is O(n)
     and get_prev_frame performs a series of checks that are relatively
     expensive).  This optimization is particularly useful when this function
     is called from another function (such as value_fetch_lazy, case
     VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_register) which already loops over all frames,
     making the overall behavior O(n^2).  */
  frame = frame_stash_find (id);
  if (frame)
    return frame;

  for (frame = get_current_frame (); ; frame = prev_frame)
    {

gdb/
2013-11-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR 16155
	* frame.c (get_prev_frame_1): Do the UNWIND_SAME_ID check between
	this frame and the new previous frame, not between this frame and
	the next frame.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR 16155
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.S: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.c: New file.
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.exp: New file.
2013-11-22 13:50:48 +00:00
Pedro Alves
8ad6489081 Revert "Don't let two frames with the same id end up in the frame chain."
This reverts commit be2c48b4d5.
2013-11-22 13:46:51 +00:00
Pedro Alves
be2c48b4d5 Don't let two frames with the same id end up in the frame chain.
The UNWIND_SAME_ID check is done between THIS_FRAME and the next frame
when we go try to unwind the previous frame.  But at this point, it's
already too late -- we ended up with two frames with the same ID in
the frame chain.  Each frame having its own ID is an invariant assumed
throughout GDB.  This patch applies the UNWIND_SAME_ID detection
earlier, right after the previous frame is unwound, discarding the dup
frame if a cycle is detected.

The patch includes a new test that fails before the change.  Before
the patch, the test causes an infinite loop in GDB, after the patch,
the UNWIND_SAME_ID logic kicks in and makes the backtrace stop with:

  Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)

The test uses dwarf CFI to emulate a corrupted stack with a cycle.  It
has a function with registers marked DW_CFA_same_value (most
importantly RSP/RIP), so that GDB computes the same ID for that frame
and its caller.  IOW, something like this:

 #0 - frame_id_1
 #1 - frame_id_2
 #2 - frame_id_3
 #3 - frame_id_4
 #4 - frame_id_4  <<<< outermost (UNWIND_SAME_ID).

(The test's code is just a copy of dw2-reg-undefined.S /
dw2-reg-undefined.c, adjusted to use DW_CFA_same_value instead of
DW_CFA_undefined, and to mark a different set of registers.)

The infinite loop is here, in value_fetch_lazy:

      while (VALUE_LVAL (new_val) == lval_register && value_lazy (new_val))
	{
	  frame = frame_find_by_id (VALUE_FRAME_ID (new_val));
...
	  new_val = get_frame_register_value (frame, regnum);
	}

get_frame_register_value can return a lazy register value pointing to
the next frame.  This means that the register wasn't clobbered by
FRAME; the debugger should therefore retrieve its value from the next
frame.

To be clear, get_frame_register_value unwinds the value in question
from the next frame:

 struct value *
 get_frame_register_value (struct frame_info *frame, int regnum)
 {
   return frame_unwind_register_value (frame->next, regnum);
                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^
 }

In other words, if we get a lazy lval_register, it should have the
frame ID of the _next_ frame, never of FRAME.

At this point in value_fetch_lazy, the whole relevant chunk of the
stack up to frame #4 has already been unwound.  The loop always
"unlazies" lval_registers in the "next/innermost" direction, not in
the "prev/unwind further/outermost" direction.

So say we're looking at frame #4.  get_frame_register_value in frame
#4 can return a lazy register value of frame #3.  So the next
iteration, frame_find_by_id tries to read the register from frame #3.
But, since frame #4 happens to have same id as frame #3,
frame_find_by_id returns frame #4 instead.  Rinse, repeat, and we have
an infinite loop.

This is an old latent problem, exposed by the recent addition of the
frame stash.  Before we had a stash, frame_find_by_id(frame_id_4)
would walk over all frames starting at the current frame, and would
always find #3 first.  The stash happens to return #4 instead:

struct frame_info *
frame_find_by_id (struct frame_id id)
{
  struct frame_info *frame, *prev_frame;

...
  /* Try using the frame stash first.  Finding it there removes the need
     to perform the search by looping over all frames, which can be very
     CPU-intensive if the number of frames is very high (the loop is O(n)
     and get_prev_frame performs a series of checks that are relatively
     expensive).  This optimization is particularly useful when this function
     is called from another function (such as value_fetch_lazy, case
     VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_register) which already loops over all frames,
     making the overall behavior O(n^2).  */
  frame = frame_stash_find (id);
  if (frame)
    return frame;

  for (frame = get_current_frame (); ; frame = prev_frame)
    {

gdb/
2013-11-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR 16155
	* frame.c (get_prev_frame_1): Do the UNWIND_SAME_ID check between
	this frame and the new previous frame, not between this frame and
	the next frame.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-22  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR 16155
	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.S: New file.
 	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.c: New file.
 	* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dup-frame.exp: New file.
2013-11-22 13:41:43 +00:00
Yao Qi
0a1e61210c Check has_more in mi_create_dynamic_varobj
Hi,
I find "has_more" is not checked when a dynamic varobj is created in
proc mi_create_dynamic_varobj.  This patch adds the check to
"has_more".

gdb/testsuite:

2013-11-22  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_create_dynamic_varobj): Update
	comment and add one more argument "has_more".
	* gdb.python/py-mi.exp: Callers update.
2013-11-22 08:34:42 +08:00
Yao Qi
0061ea2440 Use mi_create_floating_varobj
In gdb.python/py-mi.exp, two varobjs container and nscont are created
when pretty-printing is still not enabled, so they are not dynamic
varobj, IIUC.  In this patch, we use mi_create_floating_varobj instead
of mi_create_dynamic_varobj.

gdb/testsuite:

2013-11-22  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* gdb.python/py-mi.exp: Use mi_create_floating_varobj instead
	of mi_create_dynamic_varobj.
2013-11-22 08:34:22 +08:00
Pedro Alves
069d6a0fbf Add missing ChangeLog entry.
2013-11-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/maint.exp (maint print objfiles): Consume one line at a
	time, and run it through all three milestone regexes.
2013-11-20 17:23:39 +00:00
Pedro Alves
e48744a00a Make the maint.exp:'maint print objfiles' test less fragile.
I was "lucky" enough that an unrelated patch changed how many symtabs
GDB expands in a plain run to main, and that triggered a latent issue
in this test:

  PASS: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint print objfiles: header
  PASS: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint print objfiles: psymtabs
  FAIL: gdb.base/maint.exp: maint print objfiles: symtabs

The problem is in my case, expect is managing to alway put in the
buffer chunks like this:


  Psymtabs:
  ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break1.c at 0x1ed2280, ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c at 0x1ed21d0,

  Symtabs:
  ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c at 0x1f044f0, /usr/include/stdio.h at 0x1ed25a0, /usr/include/libio.h at 0x1ed2510, /usr/include/bits/types.h at 0x1ed2480, /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-redhat-linux/4.7.2/include/stddef.h at 0x1ed23f0,


  Object file /usr/lib/debug/lib64/ld-2.15.so.debug:  Objfile at 0x1f4bff0, bfd at 0x1f2d940, 0 minsyms

  Psymtabs:
  bsearch.c at 0x1f65340, ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/init-arch.c at
  0x1f65290, ...

Note: Psymtabs:/Symtabs:/Psymtabs:.

So, the loop matches the first Psymtabs in the buffer.  Then we're
left with


  ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break1.c at 0x1ed2280, ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c at 0x1ed21d0,

  Symtabs:
  ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c at 0x1f044f0, /usr/include/stdio.h at 0x1ed25a0, /usr/include/libio.h at 0x1ed2510, /usr/include/bits/types.h at 0x1ed2480, /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-redhat-linux/4.7.2/include/stddef.h at 0x1ed23f0,


  Object file /usr/lib/debug/lib64/ld-2.15.so.debug:  Objfile at 0x1f4bff0, bfd at 0x1f2d940, 0 minsyms

  Psymtabs:
  bsearch.c at 0x1f65340, ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/init-arch.c at
  0x1f65290, ...

In the next iteration, because the psymtabs regex comes first, we
match with the Psymtabs: line, then of course, end up with just

  bsearch.c at 0x1f65340, ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/init-arch.c at
  0x1f65290, ...

in the buffer.  The "Symtabs:" line is lost.  expect then reads more
gdb output, and manages to again retrieve the same pattern.  Rinse,
repeat, and the test never matches any "Symtab:" line.

We don't know the order the matches lines will appear, so the fix is
to consume one line at a time, and run it through all three milestone
regexes.

gdb/testsuite/
2013-11-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/maint.exp (maint print objfiles): Consume one line at a
	time, and run it through all three milestone regexes.
2013-11-20 17:12:37 +00:00
Sanimir Agovic
10d8cbd222 test: test eval routines with EVAL_AVOID_SIDE_EFFECTS flag set
Ensure that certain commands (e.g. whatis/ptype) and sizeof intrinsic
have no side effects (variables cannot be altered).

2013-11-20  Sanimir Agovic  <sanimir.agovic@intel.com>

testsuite/
	* gdb.base/eval-avoid-side-effects.exp: New test.
2013-11-20 13:50:14 +00:00
Walfred Tedeschi
60650f2e2f Add MPX registers tests.
2013-11-20  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

	* common/i386-gcc-cpuid.h (bit_MPX): Synchronize with gcc file.
testsuite/
	* gdb.arch/i386-mpx.c: New file
	* gdb.arch/i386-mpx.exp: New file.

Change-Id: Ica4c9ee823c8210ca876e31f27dcd8583b660a9f
Signed-off-by: Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>
2013-11-20 14:42:53 +01:00
Walfred Tedeschi
09748966c1 Add pretty-printer for MPX bnd registers.
Boundary length is simpler implemented by means of a pretty
printer. This simplifies users life when examining a bound register.

Changelog:
2013-11-20  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

	* python/lib/gdb/command/bound_register.py: New file.
	* gdb/data-directory/Makefile.in: copy bond_register.py to the right path to
	be initialized at gdb startup.
testsuite/
	* gdb.python/py-pp-maint.exp: Consider new pretty-print added for registers.

Change-Id: Id4f39845e5ece56c370a1fd4343648909f08b731
Signed-off-by: Walfred Tedeschi <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

Conflicts:

	gdb/ChangeLog
2013-11-20 14:42:53 +01:00
Walfred Tedeschi
57803a3c60 Fix conditions in creating a bitfield.
Bitfields are represented by intervals [start, begin]. It means that for an
interval comprised by only one  bit start and end will be equal.
The present condition does not always hold. On the other hand in target-description.c
(tdesc_gdb_type) bitfield is created when "f->type" is null. The routine
maint_print_maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd is modified to follow the same strategy.

2013-11-20  Walfred Tedeschi  <walfred.tedeschi@intel.com>

	* target-descriptions.c (maint_print_maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd):
	Modified logic of creating a bitfield to be in sync with
	tdesc_gdb_type.

testsuite/
	* gdb.xml/maint_print_struct.xml (bitfield): Added bitfield having
	start and end equal 0.

Change-Id: I8c62db049995f0c0c30606d9696b86afe237cbb9
2013-11-20 14:42:49 +01:00
Yao Qi
3e9ecad3e8 Move changelog entry to the right ChangeLog 2013-11-20 11:02:17 +08:00
Yao Qi
31b4ab9e37 Remove unnecessary '\'.
Hi,
In proc mi_child_regexp, \(,thread-id=\"\[0-9\]+\") is appended to
children_exp, while the first '\' is not necessary.  This patch
is to remove it.  With this patch applied, Emacs can find the right
left paren.

gdb/testsuite:

2013-11-19  Yao Qi  <yao@codesourcery.com>

	* lib/mi-support.exp (mi_child_regexp): Remove unnecessary '\'.
2013-11-19 21:36:15 +08:00