(pending_macros): Ditto.
(get_macro_table): New function.
(buildsym_init): Initialize subfile_stack.
* coffread.c (type_vector,type_vector_length): Moved here from
buildsym.h.
(INITIAL_TYPE_VECTOR_LENGTH): Ditto.
(coff_symtab_read): Use it.
* dbxread.c (read_ofile_symtab): Delete init of subfile_stack.
* dwarf2read.c (macro_start_file): Replace uses of pending_macros
with call to get_macro_table.
* stabsread.c (type_vector,type_vector_length): Moved here from
buildsym.h.
(INITIAL_TYPE_VECTOR_LENGTH): Ditto.
* buildsym.h (get_macro_table): Declare.
This fixes PR python/15816.
The bug here is that python-selftest.exp can fail:
No symbol "RETURN_MASK_ALL" in current context.
RETURN_MASK_ALL is a macro, so if macros do not end up in the
debuginfo (very typical) then the test fails.
It seemed simplest to me to simply turn the RETURN_MASK_ defines into
enum constants. This way they end up in the debuginfo and all is
well.
PR python/15816:
* exceptions.h (return_mask): Now an enum.
(RETURN_MASK_QUIT, RETURN_MASK_ERROR, RETURN_MASK_ALL): Now
enum constants.
Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 18.
This moves the "gdbarch" field from the objfile into the BFD.
This field's value is derived from the BFD and is immutable over the
lifetime of the BFD. This makes it a reasonable candidate for pushing
into the per-BFD object.
This is part of the long-term objfile splitting project. In the long
run I think this patch will make it simpler to moves types from the
objfile to the per-BFD object; but the patch makes sense as a minor
cleanup by itself.
Built and regtested on x86-64 Fedora 18.
* cp-namespace.c (cp_lookup_symbol_imports_or_template): Use
get_objfile_arch.
* elfread.c (elf_rel_plt_read, elf_gnu_ifunc_record_cache)
(elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_by_got): Use get_objfile_arch.
* jit.c (jit_object_close_impl): Update.
* jv-lang.c (get_dynamics_objfile): Update.
* linespec.c (add_minsym): Use get_dynamics_objfile.
* objfiles.c (get_objfile_bfd_data): Initialize 'gdbarch' field.
(allocate_objfile): Don't initialize 'gdbarch' field.
(get_objfile_arch): Update.
* objfiles.h (struct objfile_per_bfd_storage) <gdbarch>: New field,
moved from...
(struct objfile) <gdbarch>: ... here. Remove.
* stap-probe.c (stap_can_evaluate_probe_arguments): Use
get_objfile_arch.
* symfile.c (init_entry_point_info): Use get_objfile_arch.
for IBM long double nan and inf.
(floatformat_is_negative, floatformat_classify,
floatformat_mantissa): Similarly.
(floatformat_ieee_single, floatformat_ieee_double,
floatformat_ieee_quad, floatformat_arm_ext,
floatformat_ia64_spill): Delete unused vars.
(_initialize_doublest): Delete unused function.
* gdbtypes.c (floatformats_ibm_long_double): Use new big- and
little-endian variants of floatformat_ibm_long_double.
* mips.h (M_DEXT, M_DINS): Delete.
opcodes/
* micromips-opc.c (micromips_opcodes): Replace "dext" and "dins"
macro entries with "dextm", "dextu", "dinsm" and "dinsu" aliases.
Use +H rather than +C for the real "dext".
* mips-opc.c (mips_builtin_opcodes): Likewise.
gas/
* config/tc-mips.c (report_bad_range, report_bad_field): Delete.
(macro): Remove M_DEXT and M_DINS handling.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/mips/ext-ill.l, gas/mips/mips64r2-ill.l: Expect DEXT and DINS
error messages to have the same form as the EXT and INS ones.
* gas/mips/micromips-insn32.d, gas/mips/micromips-noinsn32.d,
gas/mips/micromips-trap.d, gas/mips/micromips.d,
gas/mips/micromips@mips64r2.d, gas/mips/mips64r2.d: Expect
"dext" and "dins" instead of "dextm", "dextu", "dinsm" and "dinsu".
* config/tc-mips.c (mips_arg_info): Replace allow_nonconst and
lax_max with lax_match.
(match_int_operand): Update accordingly. Don't report an error
for !lax_match-only cases.
(match_insn): Replace more_alts with lax_match and use it to
initialize the mips_arg_info field. Add a complete_p parameter.
Handle implicit VU0 suffixes here.
(match_invalid_for_isa, match_insns, match_mips16_insns): New
functions.
(mips_ip, mips16_ip): Use them.
* config/tc-mips.c (mips_arg_info): Remove soft_match.
(match_out_of_range, match_not_constant): New functions.
(match_const_int): Remove fallback parameter and check for soft_match.
Use match_not_constant.
(match_mapped_int_operand, match_addiusp_operand)
(match_perf_reg_operand, match_save_restore_list_operand)
(match_mdmx_imm_reg_operand): Update accordingly. Use
match_out_of_range and set_insn_error* instead of as_bad.
(match_int_operand): Likewise. Use match_not_constant in the
!allows_nonconst case.
(match_float_constant): Report invalid float constants.
(match_insn, match_mips16_insn): Remove soft_match code. Rely on
match_float_constant to check for invalid constants. Fail the
match if match_const_int or match_float_constant return false.
(mips_ip): Update accordingly.
(mips16_ip): Likewise. Undo null termination of instruction name
once lookup is complete.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/mips/ext-ill.l, gas/mips/lui-1.l, gas/mips/mips16e-64.l,
gas/mips/mips32r2-ill-fp64.l, gas/mips/mips32r2-ill-nofp.l,
gas/mips/mips32r2-ill.l, gas/mips/mips64r2-ill.l,
gas/mips/octeon-ill.l, gas/mips/r5900-error-vu0.l,
gas/mips/vr5400-ill.l: Adjust expected errors.
* gas/mips/micromips-size-0.l,
gas/mips/micromips-size-0.s: Likewise. Add new tests.
* gas/mips/mips16e-save-err.s, gas/mips/mips16e-save-err.l: New test.
* gas/mips/mips.exp: Run it.
* config/tc-mips.c (mips_insn_error_format): New enum.
(mips_insn_error): New struct.
(insn_error): Change to a mips_insn_error.
(clear_insn_error, set_insn_error_format, set_insn_error)
(set_insn_error_i, set_insn_error_ss, report_insn_error): New
functions.
(mips_parse_argument_token, md_assemble, match_insn)
(match_mips16_insn): Use them instead of manipulating insn_error
directly.
(mips_ip, mips16_ip): Likewise. Simplify control flow.
gas/testsuite/
* gas/mips/micromips-ill.l: Expect "floating-point expression required"
* config/tc-mips.c (normalize_constant_expr): Move further up file.
(normalize_address_expr): Likewise.
(match_insn, match_mips16_insn): New functions, split out from...
(mips_ip, mips16_ip): ...here.
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Remove common/target-common.c and
add target/waitstatus.c.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove common/target-common.h and add
target/resume.h, target/wait.h and target/waitstatus.h.
(COMMON_OBS): Remove target-common.o and add
waitstatus.o.
(target-common.o): Remove.
(waitstatus.o): New target object file.
* common/target-common.c: Move contents to
target/waitstatus.c and remove.
* common/target-common.h: Move contents to other files and
remove.
(enum resume_kind: Move to target/resume.h.
(TARGET_WNOHANG): Move to target/wait.h.
(enum target_waitkind): Move to target/waitstatus.h.
(struct target_waitstatus): Likewise.
* target.h: Do not include target-common.h and
include target/resume.h, target/wait.h and
target/waitstatus.h.
* target/resume.h: New file.
* target/wait.h: New file.
* target/waitstatus.h: New file.
* target/waitstatus.c: New file.
gdb/gdbserver/
* Makefile.in (INCLUDE_CFLAGS): Include -I$(srcdir)/../.
(SFILES): Remove $(srcdir)/common/target-common.c and
add $(srcdir)/target/waitstatus.c.
(OBS): Remove target-common.o and add waitstatus.o.
(server_h): Remove $(srcdir)/../common/target-common.h and
add $(srcdir)/../target/resume.h, $(srcdir)/../target/wait.h
and $(srcdir)/../target/waitstatus.h.
(target-common.o): Remove.
(waitstatus.o): New target object file.
* target.h: Do not include target-common.h and
include target/resume.h, target/wait.h and
target/waitstatus.h.
2013-08-19 Tristan Gingold <gingold@adacore.com>
* nm.c (print_size_symbols): Directly get symbol size.
binutils/testsuite/
2013-08-19 Tristan Gingold <gingold@adacore.com>
* binutils-all/nm.exp: Add a test for nm --size-sort
* binutils-all/nm-elf-1.s: New file.
* binutils-all/nm-1.s: New file.
In http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-08/msg00174.html , the
issue of child signal handling around ptrace option support discovery
being different between GDB and GDBserver came up.
I recalled adding these block_child_signals calls, and the "We don't
want those ptrace calls to be interrupted" comment, but not exactly
why. So I looked into it. My first guess is that I got confused.
The patch that added this
<http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2009-04/msg00125.html> rewrote
the linux native async support completely, and the old async support
code had the SIGCHLD handler itself do waitpid, so in places that we'd
want a blocking waitpid, we'd have to have the signal handler blocked.
That was probably the mindset I had at the time. Anyway, whatever the
case, looks like I was wrong on the need for this blocking.
Given GDBserver doesn't block like this, I investigated why this is
currently needed on GDB but not on GDBserver.
I removed the block_child_signals (and restore) calls, and hacked
linux-nat.c to call linux_test_for_tracefork in a loop, like:
@@ -534,7 +534,10 @@ static int
linux_supports_tracefork (int pid)
{
if (linux_supports_tracefork_flag == -1)
- linux_test_for_tracefork (pid);
+ {
+ while (1)
+ linux_test_for_tracefork (pid);
+ }
return linux_supports_tracefork_flag;
}
Running the resulting GDB, I then saw bad things happening.
Specifically, I'd end up with a bunch of zombies, and eventually, the
machine would refuse to spawn new processes, claming insufficient
resources.
The issue is that linux_test_for_tracefork test forks, and has the
child fork again. If we don't block SIGCHLD on entry to the function,
the children will inherit SIGCHLD's action/disposition (meaning,
SIGCHLD will be unblocked in the child). When the first child forks
again a second child, and that child exits, the first child gets a
SIGCHLD. Now, when we try to wrap up for the whole options test, we
kill the first child, and collect the waitstatus. Here, when SIGCHLD
isn't blocked, GDB will first see the child reporting a stop with
SIGCHLD. gdbserver's ptrace options test does a PTRACE_KILL loop at
the end, which catches the SIGCHLD, and retries the kill. The GDB
version did not do that. So the GDB version would proceed, leaving
the child zombie (until GDB exists), as nothing collected its final
waitstatus.
So this patch makes the GDB version of linux_test_for_tracefork do the
exact same as the GDBserver version, removes all this unnecessary
blocking throughout, and adds a couple comments at places that do need
it -- namely: places where we'll use sleep with sigsuspend; and
linux_async_pipe, as that destroys the pipe the signal handler
touches.
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 17, sync and async.
gdb/
2013-08-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linux-nat.c (linux_test_for_tracefork)
(linux_test_for_tracesysgood, linux_child_follow_fork)
(lin_lwp_attach_lwp, linux_nat_resume): Don't block child signals.
(linux_nat_wait_1): Extend comment.
(linux_async_pipe): Add comment.
The nightly snapshots we have been creating in the past did not
include the "-cvs" suffix at the end of the version number. Snapshot
packaging started breaking ever since GDB switched to using BFD's
version number. Things got partially fixed with the previous change
to this file, but the change missed the fact that the "-cvs" suffix
in the tarball name (Eg: gdb-7.6.50-20130816-cvs.tar) is undesirable.
This patch removes it.
ChangeLog:
* src-release (VER): When using $(TOOL)/common/create-version.sh,
strip the "-cvs" suffix from the version number if present.
* ldgram.y: Likewise
* ldlex.l: Likewise
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* ld.texinfo: Document the new feature.
* ld-scripts/log2.exp: New: Run the new log2 test.
* ld-scripts/log2.s: Source for the new test.
* ld-scripts/log2.t: Linker script for new test.
This moves a few static variables from thread-info functions into
remote_state. Pedro said on irc that these functions implement the
ancient thread-discovery method and that he wouldn't be surprised if
they had rotted; nevertheless it seems safer to me to make them
explicitly per-remote.
This necessitated moving a couple of macros and a typedef earlier in
the file.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <echo_nextthread, nextthread,
resultthreadlist>: New fields.
(OPAQUETHREADBYTES, threadref, MAXTHREADLISTRESULTS): Move earlier.
(remote_get_threadlist, remote_threadlist_iterator): Use
new fields. Remove static variables.
This moves the globals remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p and
remote_watch_data_address into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p,
remote_watch_data_address>: New fields.
(remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p, remote_watch_data_address): Remove.
(process_stop_reply, remote_wait_as)
(remote_check_watch_resources, remote_stopped_data_address): Update.
The global sizeof_pkt is only used in remote_trace_find, like so:
reply = remote_get_noisy_reply (&(rs->buf), &sizeof_pkt);
I think in this situation it is more correct to use the recorded size
of the buffer. Otherwise it seems that some skew could result.
* remote.c (sizeof_pkt): Remove.
(remote_trace_find): Use rs->buf_size, not sizeof_pkt.
This moves the use_threadextra_query and use_threadinfo_query globals
into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <use_threadinfo_query,
use_threadextra_query>: New fields.
(remote_threads_info, remote_threads_extra_info)
(remote_open_1): Update.
This moves a few static variables out of remote_read_qxfer and into
remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <finished_object,
finished_annex, finished_offset>: New fields.
(remote_read_qxfer): Use remote_state fields; remove static
variables.
This moves the global last_sent_step into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <last_sent_step>:
New field.
(last_sent_step): Remove.
(remote_resume, remote_wait_as): Update.
This moves the global last_sent_signal into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <last_sent_signal>:
New field.
(last_sent_signal): Remove.
(new_remote_state, remote_resume, remote_wait_as): Update.
This moves the global last_program_signals_packet into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <last_program_signals_packet>:
New field.
(last_program_signals_packet): Remove.
(remote_program_signals, remote_open_1): Update.
This moves the global last_pass_packet into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <last_pass_packet>:
New field.
(last_pass_packet): Remove.
(remote_pass_signals, remote_open_1): Update.
This moves the global remote_traceframe_number into remote_state.
* remote.c (struct remote_state) <remote_traceframe_number>:
New field.
(remote_traceframe_number): Remove.
(new_remote_state, remote_open_1, set_remote_traceframe)
(remote_trace_find): Update.