This changes partial symbol tables to use unrelocated_addr for the
text_high and text_low members. This revealed some latent bugs in
ctfread.c, which are fixed here.
This renames objfile_type to be an overload of builtin_type, in
preparation for their unification.
Reviewed-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
This changes the array type creation functions to accept a type
allocator, and updates all the callers. Note that symbol readers
should generally allocate on the relevant objfile, regardless of the
placement of the index type of the array, which is what this patch
implements.
Reviewed-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
This changes the range type creation functions to accept a type
allocator, and updates all the callers. Note that symbol readers
should generally allocate on the relevant objfile, regardless of the
underlying type of the range, which is what this patch implements.
Reviewed-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Simon pointed out a line table regression, and after a couple of false
starts, I was able to reproduce it by hand using his instructions.
The bug is that most of the code in do_mixed_source_and_assembly uses
unrelocated addresses, but one spot does:
pc = low;
... after the text offset has been removed.
This patch fixes the problem by introducing a new type to represent
unrelocated addresses in the line table. This prevents this sort of
bug to some degree (it's still possible to manipulate a CORE_ADDR in a
bad way, this is unavoidable).
However, this did let the compiler flag a few spots in that function,
and now it's not possible to compare an unrelocated address from a
line table with an ordinary CORE_ADDR.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 36, though note this setup never
reproduced the bug in the first place. I also tested it by hand on
the disasm-optim test program.
Linetables no longer change after they are created. This patch
applies const to them.
Note there is one hack to cast away const in mdebugread.c. This code
allocates a linetable using 'malloc', then later copies it to the
obstack. While this could be cleaned up, I chose not to do so because
I have no way of testing it.
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
This changes linetables to not add the text offset to the addresses
they contain. I did this in a few steps, necessarily combined
together in one patch: I renamed the 'pc' member to 'm_pc', added the
appropriate accessors, and then recompiled. Then I fixed all the
errors. Where possible I generally chose to use the raw_pc accessor,
as it is less expensive.
Note that this patch discounts the possibility that the text section
offset might cause wraparound in the addresses in the line table.
However, this was already discounted -- in particular,
objfile_relocate1 did not re-sort the table in this scenario. (There
was a bug open about this, but as far as I can tell this has never
happened, it's not even clear what inspired that bug.)
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
OBJF_REORDERED is set for nearly every object format. And, despite
the ominous warnings here and there, it does not seem very expensive.
This patch removes the flag entirely.
Reviewed-By: Andrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>
mdebugread.c allocates blocks on the heap. However, this is a memory
leak if the corresponding objfile is ever destroyed.
This patch changes this code to use allocate_block instead, fixing a
FIXME from 2003.
I don't know how to test this patch.
Most places in gdb that create a new symbol will apply a section
offset to the address. It seems to me that the choice of offset here
is also an implicit choice of the section. This is particularly true
if you examine fixup_section, which notes that it must be called
before such offsets are applied -- meaning that if any such call has
an effect, it's purely by accident.
This patch cleans up this area by tracking the section index and
applying it to a symbol when the address is set. This is done for
nearly every case -- the remaining cases will be handled in later
patches.
This commit is the result of running the gdb/copyright.py script,
which automated the update of the copyright year range for all
source files managed by the GDB project to be updated to include
year 2023.
Add the `length` and `set_length` methods on `struct type`, in order to remove
the `TYPE_LENGTH` macro. In this patch, the macro is changed to use the
getter, so all the call sites of the macro that are used as a setter are
changed to use the setter method directly. The next patch will remove the
macro completely.
Change-Id: Id1090244f15c9856969b9be5006aefe8d8897ca4
This changes struct objfile to use a gdb_bfd_ref_ptr. In addition to
removing some manual memory management, this fixes a use-after-free
that was introduced by the registry rewrite series. The issue there
was that, in some cases, registry shutdown could refer to memory that
had already been freed. This help fix the bug by delaying the
destruction of the BFD reference (and thus the per-bfd object) until
after the registry has been shut down.
This rewrites registry.h, removing all the macros and replacing it
with relatively ordinary template classes. The result is less code
than the previous setup. It replaces large macros with a relatively
straightforward C++ class, and now manages its own cleanup.
The existing type-safe "key" class is replaced with the equivalent
template class. This approach ended up requiring relatively few
changes to the users of the registry code in gdb -- code using the key
system just required a small change to the key's declaration.
All existing users of the old C-like API are now converted to use the
type-safe API. This mostly involved changing explicit deletion
functions to be an operator() in a deleter class.
The old "save/free" two-phase process is removed, and replaced with a
single "free" phase. No existing code used both phases.
The old "free" callbacks took a parameter for the enclosing container
object. However, this wasn't truly needed and is removed here as
well.
Replace with calls to blockvector::blocks, and the appropriate method
call on the returned array_view.
Change-Id: I04d1f39603e4d4c21c96822421431d9a029d8ddd
symtab::blockvector is a wrapper around compunit_symtab::blockvector.
It is a bit misleadnig, as it gives the impression that a symtab has a
blockvector. Remove it, change all users to fetch the blockvector
through the compunit instead.
Change-Id: Ibd062cd7926112a60d52899dff9224591cbdeebf
It's a bit confusing because we have both "compunit_symtab" and "symtab"
types, and many methods and functions containing "start_symtab" or
"end_symtab", which actually deal with compunit_symtabs. I believe this
comes from the time before compunit_symtab was introduced, where
symtab did the job of both.
Rename everything I found containing start_symtab or end_symtab to use
start_compunit_symtab or end_compunit_symtab.
Change-Id: If3849b156f6433640173085ad479b6a0b085ade2
Now that filtered and unfiltered output can be treated identically, we
can unify the printf family of functions. This is done under the name
"gdb_printf". Most of this patch was written by script.
A number of spots call printf_unfiltered only because they are in code
that should not be interrupted by the pager. However, I believe these
cases are all handled by infrun's blanket ban on paging, and so can be
converted to the default (_filtered) API.
After this patch, I think all the remaining _unfiltered calls are ones
that really ought to be. A few -- namely in complete_command -- could
be replaced by a scoped assignment to pagination_enabled, but for the
remainder, the code seems simple enough like this.
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's type. Remove the corresponding
macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ie1a137744c5bfe1df4d4f9ae5541c5299577c8de
Add a getter and a setter for whether a symbol is an argument. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I71b4f0465f3dfd2ed8b9e140bd3f7d5eb8d9ee81
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's domain. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I54465b50ac89739c663859a726aef8cdc6e4b8f3
Add a getter and a setter for a symbol's aclass index. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: Ie8c8d732624cfadb714aba5ddafa3d29409b3d39
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's language. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I9f4d840b11c19f80f39bac1bce020fdd1739e11f
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's linetable. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I159183fc0ccd8e18ab937b3c2f09ef2244ec6e9c
Add a getter and a setter for a symtab's compunit_symtab. Remove the
corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
For brevity, I chose the name "compunit" instead of "compunit_symtab"
the the field, getter and setter names. Since we are already in symtab
context, the _symtab suffix seems redundant.
Change-Id: I4b9b731c96e3594f7733e75af1e3d01bc0e4fe92
Add a getter and a setter for a compunit_symtab's blockvector. Remove
the corresponding macro and adjust all callers.
Change-Id: I99484c6619dcbbea7c5d89c72aa660316ca62f64