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22640 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pedro Alves
fe978cb071 C++ keyword cleanliness, mostly auto-generated
This patch renames symbols that happen to have names which are
reserved keywords in C++.

Most of this was generated with Tromey's cxx-conversion.el script.
Some places where later hand massaged a bit, to fix formatting, etc.
And this was rebased several times meanwhile, along with re-running
the script, so re-running the script from scratch probably does not
result in the exact same output.  I don't think that matters anyway.

gdb/
2015-02-27  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.

gdb/gdbserver/
2015-02-27  Tom Tromey  <tromey@redhat.com>
	    Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
2015-02-27 16:33:07 +00:00
Pedro Alves
3bc3d82a00 Add --enable-build-with-cxx configure switch
This new option, disabled by default for now, allows specifying
whether to build GDB, GDBserver, and friends with a C++ (98/03)
compiler.

The name of the switch should be familiar to those who followed GCC's
own C++ conversion process.

. Adding -fpermissive to COMPILER in C++ mode (see the new
build-with-cxx.m4 file) makes errors like these be warnings instead:

  gdb/infrun.c:6597:1: error:   initializing argument 1 of ‘void sig_print_info(gdb_signal)’ [-fpermissive]
   sig_print_info (enum gdb_signal oursig)
   ^
  gdb/infrun.c: In function ‘void do_restore_infcall_suspend_state_cleanup(void*)’:
  gdb/infrun.c:7164:39: error: invalid conversion from ‘void*’ to ‘infcall_suspend_state*’ [-fpermissive]
     restore_infcall_suspend_state (state);
				 ^

so that the compiler carries on compiling the file.  -Werror still
catches the warnings, so nothing is lost, only our lifes are made
easier by concentrating on getting other more important things out of
the way first.

There's no way to quiet those warnings.  Until they're all fixed, when
building in C++ mode, -Werror is disabled by default.

. Adding -Wno-narrowing suppresses thousands of instances of this warning:

  gdb/arm-linux-tdep.c:439:1: error: narrowing conversion of ‘-1’ from ‘int’ to ‘ULONGEST {aka long unsigned int}’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Werror=narrowing]
  gdb/arm-linux-tdep.c:439:1: error: narrowing conversion of ‘-1l’ from ‘LONGEST {aka long int}’ to ‘ULONGEST {aka long unsigned int}’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Werror=narrowing]
  gdb/arm-linux-tdep.c:450:1: error: narrowing conversion of ‘-1’ from ‘int’ to ‘ULONGEST {aka long unsigned int}’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Werror=narrowing]

We can defer handling those until we target C++11.


. Adding -Wno-sign-compare suppresses thousands of instances of this warning:

  gdb/linux-record.c:1763:32: warning: comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions [-Wsign-compare]
	 if (tmpulongest == tdep->fcntl_F_GETLK64)
				  ^


. Adding -Wno-write-strings suppresses thousands of instances of this warning:

  gdb/mi/mi-cmd-var.c: In function ‘void mi_cmd_var_show_attributes(char*, char**, int)’:
  gdb/mi/mi-cmd-var.c:514:12: warning: deprecated conversion from string constant to ‘char*’ [-Wwrite-strings]
       attstr = "editable";
	      ^
  gdb/mi/mi-cmd-var.c:516:12: warning: deprecated conversion from string constant to ‘char*’ [-Wwrite-strings]
       attstr = "noneditable";
	      ^

For now, it's best to hide these warnings from view until we're
'-fpermissive'-clean, and can thus start building with -Werror.
The C compiler has always managed to build working GDBs with these
issues in the code, so a C++ compiler should too.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMPILER): New, get it from autoconf.
	(COMPILE.pre, CC_LD): Use COMPILER.
	(CXX): Get from autoconf instead.
	(CXX_FOR_TARGET): Default to g++ instead of gcc.
	* acinclude.m4: Include build-with-cxx.m4.
	* build-with-cxx.m4: New file.
	* configure.ac: Call AC_PROG_CXX and GDB_AC_BUILD_WITH_CXX.
	Disable -Werror by default if building in C++ mode.
	(build_warnings): Add -Wno-sign-compare, -Wno-write-strings and
	-Wno-narrowing in C++ mode.  Only enable -Wpointer-sign in C mode.
	Run supported-warning-flags tests with the C++ compiler.
	Save/restore CXXFLAGS too.
	* configure: Regenerate.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* Makefile.in (COMPILER): New, get it from autoconf.
	(CXX): Get from autoconf instead.
	(COMPILE.pre): Use COMPILER.
	(CC-LD): Rename to ...
	(CC_LD): ... this.  Use COMPILER.
	(gdbserver$(EXEEXT), gdbreplay$(EXEEXT), $(IPA_LIB)): Adjust.
	(CXX_FOR_TARGET): Default to g++ instead of gcc.
	* acinclude.m4: Include build-with-cxx.m4.
	* configure.ac: Call AC_PROG_CXX and GDB_AC_BUILD_WITH_CXX.
	Disable -Werror by default if building in C++ mode.
	(build_warnings): Add -Wno-sign-compare, -Wno-write-strings and
	-Wno-narrowing in C++ mode. Run supported-warning-flags tests with
	the C++ compiler.  Save/restore CXXFLAGS too.
	* configure: Regenerate.
2015-02-27 16:24:02 +00:00
Pedro Alves
07697489f4 Create libiberty.m4, have GDB and GDBserver use it
Converting GDB to be a C++ program, I stumbled on 'basename' issues,
like:

 src/gdb/../include/ansidecl.h:169:64: error: new declaration ‘char* basename(const char*)’
 /usr/include/string.h:597:26: error: ambiguates old declaration ‘const char* basename(const char*)’

which I believe led to this bit in gold's configure.ac:

 dnl We have to check these in C, not C++, because autoconf generates
 dnl tests which have no type information, and current glibc provides
 dnl multiple declarations of functions like basename when compiling
 dnl with C++.
 AC_CHECK_DECLS([basename, ffs, asprintf, vasprintf, snprintf, vsnprintf, strverscmp])

These checks IIUC intend to generate all the HAVE_DECL_FOO symbols
that libiberty.h and ansidecl.h check.

GDB is missing these checks currently, which results in the conflict
shown above.

This adds an m4 file that both GDB and GDBserver's configury use to
pull in the autoconf checks that libiberty clients needs done in order
to use these libiberty.h/ansidecl.h.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* libiberty.m4: New file.
	* acinclude.m4: Include libiberty.m4.
	* configure.ac: Call libiberty_INIT.
	* config.in, configure: Regenerate.

gdb/gdbserver/
2015-02-27  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* acinclude.m4: Include libiberty.m4.
	* configure.ac: Call libiberty_INIT.
	* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
2015-02-27 15:52:02 +00:00
Andreas Arnez
60abeae4f2 S390: Fix compiler invocation with "compile" command
On 64-bit S390 platforms the "compile" command always failed because
gcc was not invoked correctly.  This patch fixes the compiler
invocation.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* s390-linux-tdep.c (s390_gcc_target_options): Not just handle
	31-bit targets, but 64-bit targets as well.
	(s390_gnu_triplet_regexp): New function.
	(s390_gdbarch_init): Set the gcc_target_options gdbarch method for
	64-bit targets as well.  Set the gnu_triplet_regexp gdbarch
	method.
2015-02-27 10:47:54 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
f44466fb65 Mark latest entry in gdb/ChangeLog as "(tiny patch)". 2015-02-27 09:49:59 +01:00
Jon TURNEY
f0666312fd Retrieve segment registers on Windows amd64
For amd64, CONTEXT_FULL does not contain CONTEXT_SEGMENTS, which seems
to be needed to retrieve all the segment registers.  Add it explicitly,
with a little de-cruftification.

The value of the segment registers isn't terribly useful on amd64, but
at least this makes the output of 'info registers' correct.

Before:

    (gdb)  i r cs ss ds es fs gs
    cs             0x33     51
    ss             0x2b     43
    ds             0x0      0
    es             0x0      0
    fs             0x0      0
    gs             0x0      0

After:

    (gdb) i r cs ss ds es fs gs
    cs             0x33     51
    ss             0x2b     43
    ds             0x2b     43
    es             0x2b     43
    fs             0x53     83
    gs             0x2b     43

gdb/ChangeLog

2015-02-27  Jon TURNEY  <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>

	* windows-nat.c (CONTEXT_DEBUGGER): Remove.
	(CONTEXT_DEBUGGER_DR): Add CONTEXT_SEGMENTS.  Incorporate flags
	from CONTEXT_DEBUGGER.
2015-02-27 09:46:05 +01:00
Doug Evans
0def5aaad6 Add missing CHECK_TYPEDEF calls to recent vptr_{fieldno,basetype} cleanup.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* gdbtypes.c (internal_type_vptr_fieldno): Add missing call to
	CHECK_TYPEDEF.
	(set_type_vptr_fieldno): Ditto.
	(internal_type_vptr_basetype, set_type_vptr_basetype): Ditto.
	* gnu-v3-abi.c (gnuv3_dynamic_class): Ditto.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.cp/class2.cc (Dbase, D): New classes.
	(main): New local delta.
	* gdb.cp/class2.exp: Test printing delta.
	* gdb.cp/classes.cc (DynamicBase2, DynamicBar): New classes.
	(dynbar): New global.
	* gdb.cp/classes.exp (test_ptype_class_objects): Test ptype DynamicBar.
2015-02-26 17:31:29 -08:00
Pedro Alves
77b64a49e2 Add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF attributes, and fix fallout
Fixes building gdb on x86_64-apple-darwin14 with clang, which produces
a number of warnings from -Wformat-nonliteral.

Ref: https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb/2015-02/msg00047.html

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-26  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* auto-load.h (file_is_auto_load_safe): Add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
	* complaints.c (vcomplaint): Pass argument FMT directly to
	printf-like functions instead of complaint->fmt.
	* ctf.c (ctf_save_write_metadata): Add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
	* darwin-nat.c (inferior_debug): Add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
	* compile/compile-loc2c.c (pushf, unary, binary): Add
	ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
	(do_compile_dwarf_expr_to_c): Pass string literal as format string
	to pushf.
	(BINARY): Pass string literal as format string to 'binary'.
	* compile/compile-object-load.c (link_callbacks_einfo): Add
	ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
	* guile/guile-internal.h (gdbscm_printf): Add ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF.
2015-02-26 18:29:12 +00:00
Pedro Alves
532f44ed67 Rename windows-termcap.c -> stub-termcap.c
Preparation for using this on all hosts.

Confirmed that --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 still builds the stub
termcap.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-26  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* windows-termcap.c: Rename to ...
	* stub-termcap.c: ... this.  Adjust header line.
	* Makefile.in (SFILES): Refer to stub-termcap.c instead of
	windows-termcap.c.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* configure.ac: Refer to stub-termcap.o instead of
	windows-termcap.o.
	* gdb_curses.h: Mention stub-termcap.c instead of
	windows-termcap.c.
2015-02-26 17:13:58 +00:00
Jan Kratochvil
081a1c2ced compile: Fix GNU-IFUNC funcs called from injected code
One could not call IFUNCs (=indirect functions) from the compiled injected
code.  Either it errored with:
	gdb command line:1:1: error: function return type cannot be function

or it just called the IFUNC dispatcher in normal way, returning real function
implementation address instead of the function return value (and thus no
function was called).

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* compile/compile-c-symbols.c (convert_one_symbol, convert_symbol_bmsym)
	(gcc_symbol_address): Call gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-02-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gdb.compile/compile-ifunc.c: New file.
	* gdb.compile/compile-ifunc.exp: New file.
2015-02-26 17:40:57 +01:00
Antoine Tremblay
2f41223f62 Fix print of value type in a corner case of finish
When doing finish in a function, if gdb fails to return a value, gdb
also fails at printing the value type if this type is a struct.

For example :

(gdb) fin
....
Value returned has type: . Cannot determine contents

This patch fixes this by calling type_to_string to print the type
so that we can support these types.

This patch returns the following example output :

(gdb) fin
....
Value returned has type: struct test. Cannot determine contents

Also, this patch modifies structs.exp to check that we return the
correct type.

gdb/ChangeLog:
	* gdb/infcmd.c (print_return_value): use type_to_string to print type.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* gdb.base/structs.exp: Check for correct struct on finish.
2015-02-26 10:58:00 -05:00
Jan Kratochvil
80c570537e SEGV in ppc64_elf_get_synthetic_symtab reading a separate debug file
The attached patch fixes the SEGV and lets GDB successfully
load all kernel modules installed by default on RHEL 7.

Valgrind on F-21 x86_64 host has shown me more clear what is the problem:

Reading symbols from /home/jkratoch/t/cordic.ko...Reading symbols from
/home/jkratoch/t/cordic.ko.debug...=================================================================
==22763==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x6120000461c8 at pc 0x150cdbd bp 0x7fffffffc7e0 sp 0x7fffffffc7d0
READ of size 8 at 0x6120000461c8 thread T0
    #0 0x150cdbc in ppc64_elf_get_synthetic_symtab /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/bfd/elf64-ppc.c:3282
    #1 0x8c5274 in elf_read_minimal_symbols /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1205
    #2 0x8c55e7 in elf_symfile_read /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1268
[...]
0x6120000461c8 is located 264 bytes inside of 288-byte region [0x6120000460c0,0x6120000461e0)
freed by thread T0 here:
    #0 0x7ffff715454f in __interceptor_free (/lib64/libasan.so.1+0x5754f)
    #1 0xde9cde in xfree common/common-utils.c:98
    #2 0x9a04f7 in do_my_cleanups common/cleanups.c:155
    #3 0x9a05d3 in do_cleanups common/cleanups.c:177
    #4 0x8c538a in elf_read_minimal_symbols /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1229
    #5 0x8c55e7 in elf_symfile_read /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1268
[...]
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
    #0 0x7ffff71547c7 in malloc (/lib64/libasan.so.1+0x577c7)
    #1 0xde9b95 in xmalloc common/common-utils.c:41
    #2 0x8c4da2 in elf_read_minimal_symbols /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1147
    #3 0x8c55e7 in elf_symfile_read /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/gdb/elfread.c:1268
[...]
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free /home/jkratoch/redhat/gdb-test-asan/bfd/elf64-ppc.c:3282 ppc64_elf_get_synthetic_symtab
[...]
==22763==ABORTING

A similar case a few lines later I have fixed in 2010 by:
        https://sourceware.org/git/?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=commit;h=3f1eff0a2c7f0e7078f011f55b8e7f710aae0cc2

My testcase does not always reproduce it but at least a bit:
 * GDB without ppc64 target (even as a secondary one) is reported as "untested"
 * ASAN-built GDB with ppc64 target always crashes (and PASSes with this fix)
 * unpatched non-ASAN-built GDB with ppc64 target crashes from commandline
 * unpatched non-ASAN-built GDB with ppc64 target PASSes from runtest (?)

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* elfread.c (elf_read_minimal_symbols): Use bfd_alloc for
	bfd_canonicalize_symtab.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2015-02-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* gdb.arch/cordic.ko.bz2: New file.
	* gdb.arch/cordic.ko.debug.bz2: New file.
	* gdb.arch/ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp: New file.
2015-02-26 14:08:01 +01:00
John Baldwin
cf424aef0a Rework signal frame probing for FreeBSD/x86
- Use signal frame sniffers that look for the signal trampoline
  instruction sequence to detect most signal frames.

- FreeBSD kernels between 9.2 and 10.1 inclusive do not include the
  signal trampoline code in process core dumps.  To detect signal
  frames for core dumps under these kernels, use the
  kern.proc.sigtramp.<pid> sysctl to fetch the location of the signal
  trampoline in the gdb process and assume that PC values within this
  location are signal frames.  This depends on that location being
  identical for all binaries.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-25  John Baldwin  <jhb@FreeBSD.org>

	* amd64fbsd-nat.c: Include sys/user.h.
	(_initialize_amd64fbsd_nat): Use the KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP sysctl
	instead of KERN_PS_STRINGS to locate the signal trampoline.
	* i386fbsd-nat.c: Include sys/user.h.
	(_initialize_i386fbsd_nat): Use the KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP sysctl
	instead of KERN_PS_STRINGS to locate the signal trampoline.
	* amd64fbsd-tdep.c (amd64fbsd_sigtramp_code): New.
	(amd64fbsd_sigtramp_p): New.
	(amd64fbsd_sigtramp_start_addr, amd64fbsd_sigtramp_end_addr): No
	longer set default values.
	(amd64fbsd_init_abi): Set "sigtramp_p" to "amd64fbsd_sigtramp_p".
	* i386fbsd-tdep.c (i386fbsd_sigtramp_start)
	(i386fbsd_sigtramp_middle, i386fbsd_sigtramp_end)
	(i386fbsd_freebsd4_sigtramp_start)
	(i386fbsd_freebsd4_sigtramp_middle)
	(i386fbsd_freebsd4_sigtramp_end, i386fbsd_osigtramp_start)
	(i386fbsd_osigtramp_middle, i386fbsd_osigtramp_end): New.
	(i386fbsd_sigtramp_p): New.
	(i386fbsd_sigtramp_start_addr, i386fbsd_sigtramp_end_addr): No
	longer set default values.
	(i386fbsd_init_abi): Set "sigtramp_p" to "i386fbsd_sigtramp_p".
2015-02-26 11:10:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
c5cb74eeb3 Fix infinite recursion in amd64fbsd_sigcontext_addr
amd64fbsd_sigcontext_addr is using frame_unwind_register_unsigned to
fetch the stack pointer which results in infinite recursion.  This
patch changes it to use get_frame_register to match the
sigcontext_addr methods in the i386-bsd and amd64-linux targets
instead.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-25  John Baldwin  <jhb@freebsd.org>

	* amd64fbsd-tdep.c (amd64fbsd_sigcontext_addr): Use
	get_frame_register instead of frame_unwind_register_unsigned.
2015-02-26 11:07:57 +00:00
Jan Kratochvil
17487d857c Change // comment in gdb/compile/
Missing ChangeLog in the previous commit:
	bb2b33b939

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-26  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	PR build/18033
	* compile/compile-c-support.c (c_compute_program): Change // comment.
	* compile/compile-object-load.c (setup_sections): Change // comment.
2015-02-26 11:50:08 +01:00
Joel Brobecker
9357a9e66e Remove // comment in gdb/iq2000-tdep.c
gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR build/18033:
	* iq2000-tdep.c (iq2000_frame_cache): Delete C++-style comment.
2015-02-26 10:42:04 +01:00
Doug Evans
b615dd209f Fix typo in earlier entry. 2015-02-23 13:39:45 -08:00
Pedro Alves
1f10ba14bc remote.c: simplify parsing stop reasons in T stop replies
We need to be careful with parsing optional stop reasons that start
with an hex character ("awatch", "core"), as GDBs that aren't aware of
them parse them as real numbers.  That's silly of course, given that
there should be a colon after those magic "numbers".  So if strtol on
"abbz:" doesn't return "first invalid char" pointing to the colon, we
know that "abbz" isn't really a register number.  It must be optional
stop info we don't know about.  This adjusts GDB to work that way,
removing the need for the special casing done upfront:

	  /* If this packet is an awatch packet, don't parse the 'a'
	     as a register number.  */
	  if (strncmp (p, "awatch", strlen("awatch")) != 0
	      && strncmp (p, "core", strlen ("core") != 0))

For as long as we care about compatibility with GDB 7.9, we'll need to
continue to be careful about this, so I added a comment.

Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20, native gdbserver.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-23  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* remote.c (skip_to_semicolon): New function.
	(remote_parse_stop_reply) <T stop reply>: Use it.  Don't
	special case the stop reasons that look like hex numbers
	upfront.  Instead handle real register numbers after matching
	all the known stop reasons.
2015-02-23 16:45:39 +00:00
Doug Evans
96553a0cff PR c++/17976, symtab/17821
This patch addresses two issues.

The basic problem is that "(anonymous namespace)" doesn't get entered
into the symbol table because when dwarf2read.c:new_symbol_full is called
the DIE has no name (dwarf2_name returns NULL).

PR 17976: ptype '(anonymous namespace)' should work like any namespace

PR 17821: perf issue looking up (anonymous namespace)

bash$ gdb monster-program
(gdb) mt set per on
(gdb) mt set symbol-cache-size 0
(gdb) break (anonymous namespace)::foo

Before:

Command execution time: 3.266289 (cpu), 6.169030 (wall)
Space used: 811429888 (+12910592 for this command)

After:

Command execution time: 1.264076 (cpu), 4.057408 (wall)
Space used: 798781440 (+0 for this command)

gdb/ChangeLog:

	PR c++/17976, symtab/17821
	* cp-namespace.c (cp_search_static_and_baseclasses): New parameter
	is_in_anonymous.  All callers updated.
	(find_symbol_in_baseclass): Ditto.
	(cp_lookup_nested_symbol_1): Ditto.  Don't search all static blocks
	for symbols in an anonymous namespace.
	* dwarf2read.c (namespace_name): Don't call dwarf2_name, fetch
	DW_AT_name directly.
	(dwarf2_name): Convert missing namespace name to
	CP_ANONYMOUS_NAMESPACE_STR.

gdeb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.cp/anon-ns.exp: Add test for ptype '(anonymous namespace)'.
2015-02-21 21:58:31 -08:00
Pedro Alves
2db9a4275c GNU/Linux: Stop using libthread_db/td_ta_thr_iter
TL;DR - GDB can hang if something refreshes the thread list out of the
target while the target is running.  GDB hangs inside td_ta_thr_iter.
The fix is to not use that libthread_db function anymore.

Long version:

Running the testsuite against my all-stop-on-top-of-non-stop series is
still exposing latent non-stop bugs.

I was originally seeing this with the multi-create.exp test, back when
we were still using libthread_db thread event breakpoints.  The
all-stop-on-top-of-non-stop series forces a thread list refresh each
time GDB needs to start stepping over a breakpoint (to pause all
threads).  That test hits the thread event breakpoint often, resulting
in a bunch of step-over operations, thus a bunch of thread list
refreshes while some threads in the target are running.

The commit adds a real non-stop mode test that triggers the issue,
based on multi-create.exp, that does an explicit "info threads" when a
breakpoint is hit.  IOW, it does the same things the as-ns series was
doing when testing multi-create.exp.

The bug is a race, so it unfortunately takes several runs for the test
to trigger it.  In fact, even when setting the test running in a loop,
it sometimes takes several minutes for it to trigger for me.

The race is related to libthread_db's td_ta_thr_iter.  This is
libthread_db's entry point for walking the thread list of the
inferior.

Sometimes, when GDB refreshes the thread list from the target,
libthread_db's td_ta_thr_iter can somehow see glibc's thread list as a
cycle, and get stuck in an infinite loop.

The issue is that when a thread exits, its thread control structure in
glibc is moved from a "used" list to a "cache" list.  These lists are
simply circular linked lists where the "next/prev" pointers are
embedded in the thread control structure itself.  The "next" pointer
of the last element of the list points back to the list's sentinel
"head".  There's only one set of "next/prev" pointers for both lists;
thus a thread can only be in one of the lists at a time, not in both
simultaneously.

So when thread C exits, simplifying, the following happens.  A-C are
threads.  stack_used and stack_cache are the list's heads.

Before:

  stack_used -> A -> B -> C -> (&stack_used)
  stack_cache -> (&stack_cache)

After:

  stack_used -> A -> B -> (&stack_used)
  stack_cache -> C -> (&stack_cache)

td_ta_thr_iter starts by iterating at the list's head's next, and
iterates until it sees a thread whose next pointer points to the
list's head again.  Thus in the before case above, C's next points to
stack_used, indicating end of list.  In the same case, the stack_cache
list is empty.

For each thread being iterated, td_ta_thr_iter reads the whole thread
object out of the inferior.  This includes the thread's "next"
pointer.

In the scenario above, it may happen that td_ta_thr_iter is iterating
thread B and has already read B's thread structure just before thread
C exits and its control structure moves to the cached list.

Now, recall that td_ta_thr_iter is running in the context of GDB, and
there's no locking between GDB and the inferior.  From it's local copy
of B, td_ta_thr_iter believes that the next thread after B is thread
C, so it happilly continues iterating to C, a thread that has already
exited, and is now in the stack cache list.

After iterating C, td_ta_thr_iter finds the stack_cache head, which
because it is not stack_used, td_ta_thr_iter assumes it's just another
thread.  After this, unless the reverse race triggers, GDB gets stuck
in td_ta_thr_iter forever walking the stack_cache list, as no thread
in thatlist has a next pointer that points back to stack_used (the
terminating condition).

Before fully understanding the issue, I tried adding cycle detection
to GDB's td_ta_thr_iter callback.  However, td_ta_thr_iter skips
calling the callback in some cases, which means that it's possible
that the callback isn't called at all, making it impossible for GDB to
break the loop.  I did manage to get GDB stuck in that state more than
once.

Fortunately, we can avoid the issue altogether.  We don't really need
td_ta_thr_iter for live debugging nowadays, given PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE.
We already know how to map and lwp id to a thread id without iterating
(thread_from_lwp), so use that more.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-nat.c (linux_handle_extended_wait): Call
	thread_db_notice_clone whenever a new clone LWP is detected.
	(linux_stop_and_wait_all_lwps, linux_unstop_all_lwps): New
	functions.
	* linux-nat.h (thread_db_attach_lwp): Delete declaration.
	(thread_db_notice_clone, linux_stop_and_wait_all_lwps)
	(linux_unstop_all_lwps): Declare.
	* linux-thread-db.c (struct thread_get_info_inout): Delete.
	(thread_get_info_callback): Delete.
	(thread_from_lwp): Use td_thr_get_info and record_thread.
	(thread_db_attach_lwp): Delete.
	(thread_db_notice_clone): New function.
	(try_thread_db_load_1): If /proc is mounted and shows the
	process'es task list, walk over all LWPs and call thread_from_lwp
	instead of relying on td_ta_thr_iter.
	(attach_thread): Don't call check_thread_signals here.  Split the
	tail part of the function (which adds the thread to the core GDB
	thread list) to ...
	(record_thread): ... this function.  Call check_thread_signals
	here.
	(thread_db_wait): Don't call thread_db_find_new_threads_1.  Always
	call thread_from_lwp.
	(thread_db_update_thread_list): Rename to ...
	(thread_db_update_thread_list_org): ... this.
	(thread_db_update_thread_list): New function.
	(thread_db_find_thread_from_tid): Delete.
	(thread_db_get_ada_task_ptid): Simplify.
	* nat/linux-procfs.c: Include <sys/stat.h>.
	(linux_proc_task_list_dir_exists): New function.
	* nat/linux-procfs.h (linux_proc_task_list_dir_exists): Declare.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* thread-db.c: Include "nat/linux-procfs.h".
	(thread_db_init): Skip listing new threads if the kernel supports
	PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE and /proc/PID/task/ is accessible.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.threads/multi-create-ns-info-thr.exp: New file.
2015-02-20 21:40:31 +00:00
Pedro Alves
3b27ef472d linux-nat.c: fix a few lin_lwp_attach_lwp issues
This function has a few latent bugs that are triggered by a non-stop
mode test that will be added in a subsequent patch.

First, as described in the function's intro comment, the function is
supposed to return 1 if we're already auto attached to the thread, but
haven't processed the PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE event of its parent thread
yet.

Then, we may find that we're trying to attach to a clone child that
hasn't yet stopped for its initial stop, and therefore 'waitpid(...,
WNOHANG)' returns 0.  In that case, we're currently adding the LWP to
the stopped_pids list, which results in linux_handle_extended_wait
skipping the waitpid call on the child, and thus confusing things
later on when the child eventually reports the stop.

Then, the tail end of lin_lwp_attach_lwp always sets the
last_resume_kind of the LWP to resume_stop, which is wrong given that
the user may be doing "info threads" while some threads are running.

And then, the else branch of lin_lwp_attach_lwp always sets the
stopped flag of the LWP.  This branch is reached if the LWP is the
main LWP, which may well be running at this point (to it's wrong to
set its 'stopped' flag).

AFAICS, there's no reason anymore for special-casing the main/leader
LWP here:

- For the "attach" case, linux_nat_attach already adds the main LWP to
the lwp list, and sets its 'stopped' flag.

- For the "run" case, after linux_nat_create_inferior, end up in
linux_nat_wait_1 here:

  /* The first time we get here after starting a new inferior, we may
     not have added it to the LWP list yet - this is the earliest
     moment at which we know its PID.  */
  if (ptid_is_pid (inferior_ptid))
    {
      /* Upgrade the main thread's ptid.  */
      thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid,
			  ptid_build (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid),
				      ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid), 0));

      lp = add_initial_lwp (inferior_ptid);
      lp->resumed = 1;
    }

... which adds the LWP to the LWP list already, before
lin_lwp_attach_lwp can ever be reached.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-nat.c (lin_lwp_attach_lwp): No longer special case the
	main LWP.  Handle the case of waitpid returning 0 if we're already
	attached to the LWP.  Don't set the LWP's last_resume_kind to
	resume_stop if we already knew about the LWP.
	(linux_nat_filter_event): Add debug logs.
2015-02-20 20:21:59 +00:00
Pedro Alves
1cc28231d2 Garbage collect forward_target_decr_pc_after_break
The definition was removed a year ago, but the declaration managed to
stay behind.

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* target.h (forward_target_decr_pc_after_break): Delete
	declaration.
2015-02-20 20:11:02 +00:00
Pedro Alves
5c5019c27c PR18006: internal error if threaded program calls clone(CLONE_VM)
On GNU/Linux, if a pthreaded program has a thread call clone(CLONE_VM)
directly, and then that clone LWP hits a debug event (breakpoint,
etc.) GDB internal errors.  Threaded programs shouldn't really be
calling clone directly, but GDB shouldn't crash either.

The crash looks like this:

 (gdb) break clone_fn
 Breakpoint 2 at 0x4007d8: file clone-thread_db.c, line 35.
 (gdb) r
 ...
 [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
 ...
 src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1030: internal-error: lin_lwp_attach_lwp: Assertion `lwpid > 0' failed.
 A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
 further debugging may prove unreliable.

The problem is that 'clone' ends up clearing the parent thread's tid
field in glibc's thread data structure.  For x86_64, the glibc code in
question is here:

  sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:

   ...
          testq   $CLONE_THREAD, %rdi
          jne     1f
          testq   $CLONE_VM, %rdi
          movl    $-1, %eax            <----
          jne     2f
          movl    $SYS_ify(getpid), %eax
          syscall
  2:      movl    %eax, %fs:PID
          movl    %eax, %fs:TID        <----
  1:

When GDB refreshes the thread list out of libthread_db, it finds a
thread with LWP with pid -1 (the clone's parent), which naturally
isn't yet on the thread list.  GDB then tries to attach to that bogus
LWP id, which is caught by that assertion.

The fix is to detect the bad PID early.

Tested on x86-64 Fedora 20.  GDBserver doesn't need any fix.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR threads/18006
	* linux-thread-db.c (thread_get_info_callback): Return early if
	the thread's lwp id is -1.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2015-02-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	PR threads/18006
	* gdb.threads/clone-thread_db.c: New file.
	* gdb.threads/clone-thread_db.exp: New file.
2015-02-20 19:00:21 +00:00
Joel Brobecker
f3978e9100 Document the GDB 7.9 release in gdb/ChangeLog
gdb/ChangeLog:

	GDB 7.9 released.
2015-02-20 21:20:23 +04:00
Steve Ellcey
ffdf88ecd7 2015-02-19 Steve Ellcey <sellcey@imgtec.com>
* dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_process_dof_probe): Initialize arg.expr.
	(dtrace_get_probes) Change type of variable 'dof'.
2015-02-19 14:42:37 -08:00
Antoine Tremblay
c9587f8823 Fix non executable stack handling when calling functions in the inferior.
When gdb creates a dummy frame to execute a function in the inferior,
the process may generate a SIGSEGV, SIGTRAP or SIGILL because the stack
is non executable. If the signal handler set in gdb has option print
or stop enabled for these signals gdb handles this correctly.

However, in the case of noprint and nostop the signal is short-circuited
and the inferior process is sent the signal directly. This causes the
inferior to crash because of gdb.

This patch adds a check for SIGSEGV, SIGTRAP or SIGILL so that these
signals are sent to gdb rather than short-circuited in the inferior.
gdb then handles them properly and the inferior process does not
crash.

This patch also fixes the same behavior in gdbserver.

Also added a small testcase to test the issue called catch-gdb-caused-signals.

This applies to Linux only, tested on Linux.

gdb/ChangeLog:
	PR breakpoints/16812
	* linux-nat.c (linux_nat_filter_event): Report SIGTRAP,SIGILL,SIGSEGV.
	* nat/linux-ptrace.c (linux_wstatus_maybe_breakpoint): Add.
	* nat/linux-ptrace.h: Add linux_wstatus_maybe_breakpoint.

gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
	PR breakpoints/16812
	* linux-low.c (wstatus_maybe_breakpoint): Remove.
	(linux_low_filter_event): Update wstatus_maybe_breakpoint name.
	(linux_wait_1): Report SIGTRAP,SIGILL,SIGSEGV.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	PR breakpoints/16812
	* gdb.base/catch-gdb-caused-signals.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/catch-gdb-caused-signals.exp: New file.
2015-02-19 11:04:21 -05:00
David Taylor
53cf2ee0d9 [gdb/ax] small "setv" fix and documentation's adjustment.
gdb/doc/agentexpr.texi documents the "setv" opcode as follow:

    @item @code{setv} (0x2d) @var{n}: @result{} @var{v}
    Set trace state variable number @var{n} to the value found on the top
    of the stack.  The stack is unchanged, so that the value is readily
    available if the assignment is part of a larger expression.  The
    handling of @var{n} is as described for @code{getv}.

The @item line is incorrect (and does not match with its
description), so this patch fixes it.

Additionally, in gdb/common/ax.def we find the line:

    DEFOP (setv, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0x2d)

From the comment earlier in the file:

       Each line is of the form:

       DEFOP (name, size, data_size, consumed, produced, opcode)
[...]
       CONSUMED is the number of stack elements consumed.
       PRODUCED is the number of stack elements produced.

which is saying that nothing is consumed and one item is produced.
Both should be 0 or both should be 1.

This patch sets them both to 1, which seems better since if nothing
is on the stack an error will occur.

gdb/ChangeLog:

        * common/ax.def (setv): Fix consumed entry in setv DEFOP.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

        * agentexpr.texi (Bytecode Descriptions): Fix summary line for setv.

Tested on x86_64-linux.
2015-02-19 19:04:16 +04:00
Patrick Palka
acfe0940a8 Add missing gdb/ChangeLog entry for previous change. 2015-02-18 18:51:14 -05:00
Jose E. Marchesi
f6a88844c3 Factorize target program transformations in the GDB_AC_TRANSFORM macro.
This patch introduces a new M4 macro GDB_AC_TRANSFORM to avoid repeating
the common idiom which is the transformation of target program names,
i.e. from gdb to sparc64-linux-gnu-gdb.  It also makes gdb/configure.ac
and gdb/testsuite/configure.ac to use the new macro.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-18  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerated.
	* configure.ac: Use GDB_AC_TRANSFORM.
	* Makefile.in (aclocal_m4_deps): Added transform.m4.
	* acinclude.m4: sinclude transform.m4.
	* transform.m4: New file.
	(GDB_AC_TRANSFORM): New macro.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2015-02-18  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* configure: Regenerated.
	* configure.ac: Use GDB_AC_TRANSFORM.
	* aclocal.m4: sinclude ../transform.m4.
2015-02-18 13:52:53 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
b05e3b0dd2 Announce the DTrace USDT probes support in NEWS.
This patch simply adds a small entry to `Changes since GDB 7.8' announcing the
support for dtrace probes.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* NEWS: Announce the support for DTrace SDT probes.
2015-02-17 16:43:48 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
c3e3045e5c Support for DTrace USDT probes in x86_64 targets.
This patch adds the target-specific code in order to support the
calculation of DTrace probes arguments in x86_64 targets, and also the
enabling and disabling of probes.  This is done by implementing the
`dtrace_*' gdbarch handlers.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* amd64-linux-tdep.c: Include "parser-defs.h" and "user-regs.h".
	(amd64_dtrace_parse_probe_argument): New function.
	(amd64_dtrace_probe_is_enabled): Likewise.
	(amd64_dtrace_enable_probe): Likewise.
	(amd64_dtrace_disable_probe): Likewise.
	(amd64_linux_init_abi): Register the
	`gdbarch_dtrace_probe_argument', `gdbarch_dtrace_enable_probe',
	`gdbarch_dtrace_disable_probe' and
	`gdbarch_dtrace_probe_is_enabled' hooks.
	(amd64_dtrace_disabled_probe_sequence_1): New constant.
	(amd64_dtrace_disabled_probe_sequence_2): Likewise.
	(amd64_dtrace_enable_probe_sequence): Likewise.
	(amd64_dtrace_disable_probe_sequence): Likewise.
2015-02-17 16:04:01 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
d4777acbc9 New probe type: DTrace USDT probes.
This patch adds a new type of probe to GDB: the DTrace USDT probes.  The new
type is added by providing functions implementing all the entries of the
`probe_ops' structure defined in `probe.h'.  The implementation is
self-contained and does not depend on DTrace source code in any way.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-7  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* breakpoint.c (BREAK_ARGS_HELP): Help string updated to mention
	the -probe-dtrace new vpossible value for PROBE_MODIFIER.
	* configure.ac (CONFIG_OBS): dtrace-probe.o added if BFD can
	handle ELF files.
	* Makefile.in (SFILES): dtrace-probe.c added.
	* configure: Regenerate.
	* dtrace-probe.c: New file.
	(SHT_SUNW_dof): New constant.
	(dtrace_probe_type): New enum.
	(dtrace_probe_arg): New struct.
	(dtrace_probe_arg_s): New typedef.
	(struct dtrace_probe_enabler): New struct.
	(dtrace_probe_enabler_s): New typedef.
	(dtrace_probe): New struct.
	(dtrace_probe_is_linespec): New function.
	(dtrace_dof_sect_type): New enum.
	(dtrace_dof_dofh_ident): Likewise.
	(dtrace_dof_encoding): Likewise.
	(DTRACE_DOF_ENCODE_LSB): Likewise.
	(DTRACE_DOF_ENCODE_MSB): Likewise.
	(dtrace_dof_hdr): New struct.
	(dtrace_dof_sect): Likewise.
	(dtrace_dof_provider): Likewise.
	(dtrace_dof_probe): Likewise.
	(DOF_UINT): New macro.
	(DTRACE_DOF_PTR): Likewise.
	(DTRACE_DOF_SECT): Likewise.
	(dtrace_process_dof_probe): New function.
	(dtrace_process_dof): Likewise.
	(dtrace_build_arg_exprs): Likewise.
	(dtrace_get_arg): Likewise.
	(dtrace_get_probes): Likewise.
	(dtrace_get_probe_argument_count): Likewise.
	(dtrace_can_evaluate_probe_arguments): Likewise.
	(dtrace_evaluate_probe_argument): Likewise.
	(dtrace_compile_to_ax): Likewise.
	(dtrace_probe_destroy): Likewise.
	(dtrace_gen_info_probes_table_header): Likewise.
	(dtrace_gen_info_probes_table_values): Likewise.
	(dtrace_probe_is_enabled): Likewise.
	(dtrace_probe_ops): New variable.
	(info_probes_dtrace_command): New function.
	(_initialize_dtrace_probe): Likewise.
	(dtrace_type_name): Likewise.
2015-02-17 16:03:22 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
8b367e1771 New gdbarch functions: dtrace_parse_probe_argument, dtrace_probe_is_enabled, dtrace_enable_probe, dtrace_disable_probe.
This patch adds several gdbarch functions (along with the corresponding
predicates): `dtrace_parse_probe_argument', `dtrace_probe_is_enabled',
`dtrace_enable_probe' and `dtrace_disable_probe'.  These functions will
be implemented by target-specific code, and called from the DTrace
probes implementation in order to calculate the value of probe
arguments, and manipulate is-enabled probes.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdbarch.sh (dtrace_parse_probe_argument): New.
	(dtrace_probe_is_enabled): Likewise.
	(dtrace_enable_probe): Likewise.
	(dtrace_disable_probe): Likewise.
	* gdbarch.c: Regenerate.
	* gdbarch.h: Regenerate.
2015-02-17 15:54:44 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
9aca2ff83e New commands enable probe' and disable probe'.
This patch adds the above-mentioned commands to the generic probe
abstraction implemented in probe.[ch].  The effects associated to
enabling or disabling a probe depend on the type of probe being
handled, and is triggered by invoking two back-end hooks in
`probe_ops'.

In case some particular probe type does not support the notion of
enabling and/or disabling, the corresponding fields on `probe_ops' can
be initialized to NULL.  This is the case of SystemTap probes.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* stap-probe.c (stap_probe_ops): Add NULLs in the static
	stap_probe_ops for `enable_probe' and `disable_probe'.
	* probe.c (enable_probes_command): New function.
	(disable_probes_command): Likewise.
	(_initialize_probe): Define the cli commands `enable probe' and
	`disable probe'.
	(parse_probe_linespec): New function.
	(info_probes_for_ops): Use parse_probe_linespec.
	* probe.h (probe_ops): New hooks `enable_probe' and
	`disable_probe'.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdb.texinfo (Static Probe Points): Cover the `enable probe' and
	`disable probe' commands.
2015-02-17 15:51:07 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
03e98035a2 Move compute_probe_arg' and compile_probe_arg' to probe.c
This patch moves the `compute_probe_arg' and `compile_probe_arg' functions
from stap-probe.c to probe.c.  The rationale is that it is reasonable to
assume that all backends will provide the `$_probe_argN' convenience
variables, and that the user must be placed on the PC of the probe when
requesting that information.  The value and type of the argument can still be
determined by the probe backend via the `pops->evaluate_probe_argument' and
`pops->compile_to_ax' handlers.

Note that a test in gdb.base/stap-probe.exp had to be adjusted because the "No
SystemTap probe at PC" messages are now "No probe at PC".

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* probe.c (compute_probe_arg): Moved from stap-probe.c
	(compile_probe_arg): Likewise.
	(probe_funcs): Likewise.
	* stap-probe.c (compute_probe_arg): Moved to probe.c.
	(compile_probe_arg): Likewise.
	(probe_funcs): Likewise.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* gdb.base/stap-probe.exp (stap_test): Remove "SystemTap" from
	expected message when trying to access $_probe_* convenience
	variables while not on a probe.
2015-02-17 15:50:19 +01:00
Jose E. Marchesi
6f9b84910f Adapt `info probes' to support printing probes of different types.
A "probe type" (backend for the probe abstraction implemented in
probe.[ch]) can extend the information printed by `info probes' by
defining additional columns.  This means that when `info probes' is
used to print all the probes regardless of their types, some of the
columns will be "not applicable" to some of the probes (like, say, the
Semaphore column only makes sense for SystemTap probes).  This patch
makes `info probes' fill these slots with "n/a" marks (currently it
breaks the table) and not include headers for which no actual probe
has been found in the list of defined probes.

This patch also adds support for a new generic column "Type", that
displays the type of each probe.  SystemTap probes identify themselves
as "stap" probes.

gdb/ChangeLog:

2015-02-17  Jose E. Marchesi  <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>

	* probe.c (print_ui_out_not_applicables): New function.
	(exists_probe_with_pops): Likewise.
	(info_probes_for_ops): Do not include column headers for probe
	types for which no probe has been actually found on any object.
	Also invoke `print_ui_out_not_applicables' in order to match the
	column rows with the header when probes of several types are
	listed.
	Print the "Type" column.
	* probe.h (probe_ops): Added a new probe operation `type_name'.
	* stap-probe.c (stap_probe_ops): Add `stap_type_name'.
	(stap_type_name): New function.
2015-02-17 15:49:12 +01:00
Patrick Palka
69efdff130 Remove superfluous function key_is_command_char()
The function key_is_command_char() is simply a predicate that determines
whether the function tui_dispatch_ctrl_char() will do anything useful.
Since tui_dispatch_ctrl_char() performs the same checks as
key_is_command_char() it is unnecessary to keep key_is_command_char()
around.  This patch removes this useless function and instead
unconditionally calls tui_dispatch_ctrl_char() inside its only caller,
tui_getc().

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* tui/tui-io.c (tui_getc): Don't call key_is_command_char.
	(key_is_command_char): Delete.
2015-02-17 08:06:10 -05:00
Pedro Alves
f8e5e23e3d TUI: resize windows to new terminal size before displaying them
If the user:

   #1 - disables the TUI
   #2 - resizes the terminal
   #3 - and then re-enables the TUI

the next wgetch() returns KEY_RESIZE.  This indicates to the ncurses
client that ncurses detected that the terminal has been resized.  We
don't handle KEY_RESIZE anywhere, so it gets passed on to readline
which interprets it as a multibyte character, and then the end result
is that the first key press after enabling the TUI is misinterpreted.

We shouldn't really need to handle KEY_RESIZE (and not all ncurses
implementations have that).  We have our own SIGWINCH handler, and,
when we re-enable the TUI, we explicitly detect terminal resizes and
resize all windows.  The reason ncurses currently does detects a
resize is that something within tui_enable forces a refresh/display of
some window before we get to do the actual resizing.  Setting a break
on ncurses' 'resizeterm' function helps find the culprit(s):

 (top-gdb) bt
 #0  resizeterm (ToLines=28, ToCols=114) at ../../ncurses/base/resizeterm.c:462
 #1  0x0000003b42812f3f in _nc_update_screensize (sp=0x2674730) at ../../ncurses/tinfo/lib_setup.c:443
 #2  0x0000003b0821cbe0 in doupdate () at ../../ncurses/tty/tty_update.c:726
 #3  0x0000003b08215539 in wrefresh (win=0x2a7bc00) at ../../ncurses/base/lib_refresh.c:65
 #4  0x00000000005257cb in tui_refresh_win (win_info=0xd73d60 <_locator>) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui-wingeneral.c:60
 #5  0x000000000052265b in tui_show_locator_content () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui-stack.c:269
 #6  0x00000000005273a6 in tui_set_key_mode (mode=TUI_COMMAND_MODE) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui.c:321
 #7  0x00000000005278c7 in tui_enable () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui.c:494
 #8  0x0000000000527011 in tui_rl_switch_mode (notused1=1, notused2=1) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui.c:108

That is, tui_enable calls tui_set_key_mode before we've resized all
windows, and that refreshes a window as side effect.

And if we're already debugging something (there's a frame), then we'll
instead show a window from within tui_show_frame_info:

 (top-gdb) bt
 #0  resizeterm (ToLines=28, ToCols=114) at ../../ncurses/base/resizeterm.c:462
 #1  0x0000003b42812f3f in _nc_update_screensize (sp=0x202e6c0) at ../../ncurses/tinfo/lib_setup.c:443
 #2  0x0000003b0821cbe0 in doupdate () at ../../ncurses/tty/tty_update.c:726
 #3  0x0000003b08215539 in wrefresh (win=0x2042890) at ../../ncurses/base/lib_refresh.c:65
 #4  0x00000000005257cb in tui_refresh_win (win_info=0xd73d60 <_locator>) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui-wingeneral.c:60
 #5  0x000000000052265b in tui_show_locator_content () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui-stack.c:269
 #6  0x0000000000522931 in tui_show_frame_info (fi=0x16b9cc0) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui-stack.c:364
 #7  0x00000000005278ba in tui_enable () at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui.c:491
 #8  0x0000000000527011 in tui_rl_switch_mode (notused1=1, notused2=1) at /home/pedro/gdb/mygit/src/gdb/tui/tui.c:108

The fix is to resize windows earlier.

gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-02-17  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Resize windows before anything
	might show a window.
2015-02-17 10:05:52 +00:00
Maxim Ostapenko
9f2e07213a Fix GDB build fail on Aarch64 when -fno-common is enabled
Current trunk GDB (and gdb-7.8.1 too) fails to build on Aarch64 when
-fno-common is enabled.  It fails during link stage due to multiple
definition of `tdesc_aarch64':

...
[  199s] aarch64-linux-nat.o: In function `initialize_tdesc_aarch64':
[  199s]
/home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/gdb-7.8.1/gdb/features/aarch64.c:11:
multiple definition of `tdesc_aarch64'
[  199s]
aarch64-tdep.o:/home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/gdb-7.8.1/gdb/objfiles.h:540:
first defined here
[  199s] aarch64-linux-nat.o: In function `initialize_tdesc_aarch64':
[  199s]
/home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/gdb-7.8.1/gdb/features/aarch64.c:11:
multiple definition of `tdesc_aarch64'
[  199s]
aarch64-tdep.o:/home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/gdb-7.8.1/gdb/objfiles.h:540:
first defined here
[  199s] collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
[  199s] make[2]: *** [gdb] Error 1
...

This happens because struct target_desc *tdesc_aarch64 is defined in
gdb/features/aarch64.c, which is included by two files
(gdb/aarch64-linux-nat.c and gdb/aarch64-tdep.c).

gdb/Changelog
2015-02-17  Max Ostapenko  <m.ostapenko@partner.samsung.com>

	PR gdb/17984
	* aarch64-linux-nat.c: Don't include features/aarch64.c anymore.
	(aarch64_linux_read_description): Remove initialize_tdesc_aarch64
	call.
	* aarch64-tdep.h (tdesc_aarch64): Declare.
2015-02-17 09:10:49 +00:00
Mark Wielaard
171e6b1cf6 Remove true and false ARI checks now that we use stdbool.h.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Remove checks for "true" and "false".
2015-02-16 11:08:05 +01:00
Doug Evans
d5ff04826e misc cp-namespace.c cleanups
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* cp-namespace.c (cp_basic_lookup_symbol): Rename parameter
	anonymous_namespace to is_in_anonymous for consistency with the rest
	of the file.
	(cp_lookup_bare_symbol): Fix typo in comment.
	(cp_search_static_and_baseclasses): Ditto.
	(search_symbol_list): Use vertical space in comment better.
	(reset_directive_searched): Ditto. Fix typo.
	(cp_lookup_nested_symbol_1): Clarify contents of NESTED_NAME parameter.
2015-02-13 12:03:50 -08:00
Yao Qi
9f04ac5f92 Update Yao Qi's email address in MAINTAINERS
gdb:

	* MAINTAINERS: Update my email address.
2015-02-13 10:23:16 +00:00
Doug Evans
013d031916 completer.c (completion_list_add_name): Fix memory leak.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* completer.c (completion_list_add_name): Fix memory leak.
2015-02-12 13:32:36 -08:00
Doug Evans
9a7e538ee1 completer.c (complete_line): Remove incorrect comment.
gdb/ChangeLog:

	* completer.c (complete_line): Remove incorrect comment.
2015-02-12 12:20:37 -08:00
Jan Kratochvil
e1fcd5757b framefilter quit: Use RETURN_MASK_ERROR
Now when the code is exception safe we can let RETURN_QUIT to pass through as
all the installed cleanups with handle that.

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-11  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_single_arg, enumerate_locals)
	(py_print_frame): Use RETURN_MASK_ERROR.
2015-02-11 14:50:09 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
b99bf4e352 framefilter quit: Make it exception safe
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-11  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Mention RETURN_QUIT in
	function comment.  Wrap all function that can throw in cleanups.
	(gdbpy_apply_frame_filter): Wrap all function that can throw in
	cleanups.
2015-02-11 14:44:00 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
800eb1cebe framefilter quit: Code cleanup: Avoid gotos
goto error patters are sometimes AFAIK used in C for the cases like:
	int retval=-1;
	if (!(a=malloc())) goto error;
	if (!(b=malloc())) goto error_a;
	if (!(c=malloc())) goto error_b;
	retval=0;
	error_c: free(c);
	error_b: free(b);
	error_a: free(a);
	error: return retval;

But here there is single error label with one do_cleanups() which I do not find
it worth the goto complication.  Without goto one can then furher merge code in
the exit paths in the next patches and ... after all it is all the same, just
without a goto.

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-11  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Substitute goto error.
	Remove the error label.
2015-02-11 14:40:14 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
34019068f0 framefilter quit: Code cleanup: Reindentation
Nothing significant but I find code more clear with less deep indentation.

gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-11  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Put conditional code paths
	with goto first, indent the former else codepath left.  Put variable
	'elided' to a new inner block.
2015-02-11 14:37:40 +01:00
Jan Kratochvil
8d4a54e2fb framefilter quit: Obvious whitespacing fixes
gdb/ChangeLog
2015-02-11  Jan Kratochvil  <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>

	* python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Whitespacing fixes.
2015-02-11 14:33:48 +01:00
Pedro Alves
18ad82c163 xcoffread.c: delete 'within_function' definition
Linking GDB as a C++ program, we get:

  src/gdb/buildsym.c:226: multiple definition of `within_function'
  xcoffread.o:src/gdb/xcoffread.c:181: first defined here

gdb/
2015-02-11  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* xcoffread.c (within_function): Delete.
2015-02-11 11:32:38 +00:00