The DWARF index does not need access to the objfile or per-objfile
objects when writing -- it's entirely based on the objfile-independent
per-BFD data.
This patch implements this idea by changing the entire API to only be
passed the per-BFD object. This simplifies some lifetime reasoning
for the next patch.
This patch removes some code that ensures that the BFD came from a
file. It seems to me that checking for the existence of a build-id is
good enough for the index cache.
On DOS systems, absolute paths start with the drive letter. This can
trigger failures in the regexp from dump tests, especially for those
checking for warnings or errors. They are usually skipping everything
before the first ":" as it has to be the file path.
| [^:]*: warning: ...
In order to avoid modifying many regexps to allow such drive letters,
prune them from all the outputs if they are found at the beginning of
a line.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/lib/binutils-common.exp (prune_dump_output): New
(run_dump_test): Use it.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-elf/noinit-sections-2.l: Remove DOS drive letter
handler.
Several insns have a (typically shorter) non-ModR/M and a (typically
longer) ModR/M encoding. In most cases the former is used by default.
This isn't too dissimilar from register-only insns sometimes having two
encoding forms. In those cases {load} or {store} can be used to control
the encoding used. Extend this to ModR/M-less encodings which have a
ModR/M counterpart (note that BSWAP hasn't). For insn reading and
writing their (explicit) memory operand, both prefixes are honored;
otherwise only the applicable one is.
Note that for some forms of XCHG, {store} has already been performing
this function, apparently as an unnoticed side effect of adding D to
the template.
The feature isn't universally available on 64-bit CPUs.
Note that in i386-gen.c:isa_dependencies[] I'm only adding it to models
where I'm certain the functionality exists. For Nocona and Core I'm
uncertain in particular.
While MOV to/from segment register as well as selector storing insns
already permit 32- and 64-bit GPR operands, selector loading insns and
ARPL do not. Split templates accordingly.
For shifts (but not ordinary rotates) and other cases where an immediate
describes e.g. a bit count or position, allowing negative operands is at
best confusing. An extreme example would be the two rotate-through-carry
insns, where a negative value would _not_ mean rotating the
corresponding number of bits in the other direction. To refuse such,
give meaning to the combination of Imm8 and Imm8S in templates (so far
these weren't used together anywhere). The issue was with
smallest_imm_type() blindly setting .imm8 for signed numbers determined
to fit in a byte.
VPROT{B,W,D,Q} is a little special: The rotate count there is a signed
quantity, so Imm8 is replaced by Imm8S. Adjust affected testcases
accordingly as well.
Another small adjustment to the testsuite is necessary: AAM and AAD were
never sensible to use with 0xffffff90 operands. This should have been an
error.
In a recent commit I've added:
...
require {expr [have_compile_flag -fsplit-stack]}
...
but actually the expr bit is unnecessary, and we can just use:
...
require {have_compile_flag -fsplit-stack}
...
Reported-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Fix accesses to limited-length values in `contents_copy_raw' and
`contents_copy_raw_bitwise' so that they observe the limit of the
original allocation.
Reported by Simon Marchi as a heap-buffer-overflow AddressSanitizer
issue triggered with gdb.ada/limited-length.exp.
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
The segfault was a symptom of messing with the absolute section next
field, confusing bfd_section_removed_from_list in linker.c:fix_syms.
That's not all that was going wrong. The INSERT list of output
sections was being inserted into itself, ie. lost from the main
list of linker statements.
PR 30155
* ldlang.c (process_insert_statements): Handle pathological
case of the insert script being inserted before the first
output section statement in the default script.
(output_prev_sec_find): Don't test section owner here.
(insert_os_after): Change parameter to a list union pointer.
(lang_insert_orphan): Test section owner here and adjust
insert_os_after call.
--relax enables all relaxations. --no-relax-gp disables GP relaxation to
allow measuring its effect.
The option can test effectiveness of GP relaxation and support some ABI
variants that use GP for other purposes.
Link: https://github.com/riscv-non-isa/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/issues/298
bfd/
* elfnn-riscv.c (struct riscv_elf_link_hash_table): Add params.
(riscv_elfNN_set_options): New.
(riscv_info_to_howto_rela): Check relax_gp.
(_bfd_riscv_relax_section): Likewise.
* elfxx-riscv.h (struct riscv_elf_params): New.
(riscv_elf32_set_options): New.
(riscv_elf64_set_options): New.
ld/
* emultempl/riscvelf.em: Add option parsing.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/code-model-relax-medlow-01-norelaxgp.d: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-01-norelaxgp.d: New.
* testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcgp-relax-02.d: Test --relax --relax-gp can be
used together.
When we merged the GDB vector register support we did it a bit early,
just eating the risk in the very unlikely case that the vector register
names changed. They didn't, so we can now remove the caveat in the docs
that they might.
I noticed that the --disable-gdbmi option was broken for almost a year
(since 740b42ceb7c "gdb/python/mi: create MI commands using python").
The problem today is the python/py-cmd.c file. It is included in the
build if Python support is enabled, and it calls into some MI functions
(e.g. insert_mi_cmd_entry). If MI support is disabled, we get some
undefined symbols like:
mold: error: undefined symbol: insert_mi_cmd_entry(std::unique_ptr<mi_command, std::default_delete<mi_command> >)
>>> referenced by py-micmd.c
>>> python/py-micmd.o:(micmdpy_install_command(micmdpy_object*))
The python/py-cmd.c file should be included in the build if both Python
and MI support are enabled. It is not a case we support today, but it
could be done with a bit more configure code. However, I think we
should just remove the --disable-gdbmi option, and just include MI
support unconditionally.
Tom Tromey proposed a while ago to remove this option, but it ended
staying:
https://inbox.sourceware.org/gdb-patches/20180628172132.28843-1-tom@tromey.com/
However, there was no strong opposition to remove it. The argument was
just "bah, it doesn't hurt anybody".
But given today's case, I would rather remove complexity rather than add
some. I couldn't find anybody caring deeply for that option, and it's
not like MI adds any external dependency. It's just a bit more code.
Removing the option will not break anybody using --disable-gdbmi (it can
be found in many build scripts [1]), since we don't flag invalid
configure flags.
So, remove the option from configure.ac, and adjust Makefile.in
accordingly to always include the MI objects in the build.
[1] https://github.com/search?q=%22--disable-gdbmi%22&type=code
Change-Id: Ifcaa8c9fc4abc6fa686ed5fd984598644f745240
Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
The gdb_assert proc under-quotes the expression that is passed in.
This leads to weird code in a couple of spots that tries to
compensate:
gdb_assert {{$all_regs eq $completed_regs}} ...
The fix is to add a bit of quoting when evaluating the expression.
Commit 18b4d0736bc5 ("gdb: initial support for ROCm platform (AMDGPU)
debugging") missed adding these header files to the HFILES_NO_SRCDIR
list in the Makefile. Fix that now.
Change-Id: Ifd387096aef3d147b51aefa2037da5bf6373ea64
According to LoongArch ELF ABI specification [1], support the register
aliases in "info register" command.
Without this patch:
```
(gdb) info reg a0
Invalid register `a0'
```
With this patch:
```
(gdb) info reg a0
a0 0x1 1
```
[1] https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html#_register_convention
Signed-off-by: Hui Li <lihui@loongson.cn>
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
The "info register" command should only display general registers,
but it shows the information of all registers in the current code,
add loongarch_register_reggroup_p() so that we can get the expected
result.
Signed-off-by: Hui Li <lihui@loongson.cn>
Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn>
PR 30150
* dwarf2.c (comp_unit_contains_address): Renamed to ... (comp_unit_may_contain_address): this,
and added code to return true if the CU's ranges have not yet been computed.
(_bfd_dwarf2_find_nearest_line_with_alt): Use the renamed function, simplifying code in the process.
Instead of only testing this on systems that have a SYS_time syscall,
test it everywhere using the time(2) C function, and in addition, run
the tests again using the SYS_time syscall.
The C variant ensures that if some platform uses some syscall we are
not aware of yet, we'll still exercise it, and likely fail, at which
point we should teach GDB about the syscall.
The explicit syscall variant is useful on platforms where the C
function does not call a syscall at all by default, e.g., on some
systems the C time function wraps an implementation provided by the
vDSO.
Approved-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
Change-Id: Id4b755d76577d02c46b8acbfa249d9c31b587633
Just like we suppress emitting REX.W for e.g. MOV from/to segment
register, there's also no need for it for LAR and LSL - these can only
ever return 32-bit values and hence always zero-extend their results
anyway.
While there also drop the redundant Word from the first operand of
the second template each - this is already implied by Reg16.
In 64-bit mode BT can have REX.W or a data size prefix dropped in
certain cases. Outside of 64-bit mode all 4 insns can have the data
size prefix dropped in certain cases.
Commit f9c36cc99518 changed (and renamed) read_section_stabs with one
difference in overall behaviour. Previously read_section_stabs would
return a NULL for an empty section, which was then treated the same as
a missing section. Now an empty section is recognized and dumped.
This leads to NULL stabp and stabs_end in print_section_stabs. Since
stabs_end - STABSIZE is then a pointer to a very large address, the
test "stabp < stabs_end - STABSIZE" succeeds.
* objdump.c (print_section_stabs): Correct STABSIZE comparison.
A while back I discovered that this does not issue an error:
(gdb) p $x = (void * ) 57
$3 = (void *) 0x39
(gdb) p $x + 7 = 3
$6 = (void *) 0x3
This patch fixes the bug.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 36.
Reviewed-By: Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com>
Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19312
'gdb --configuration' does not mention if GDB was built with curses.
Since b5075fb68d4 (Rename to allow_tui_tests, 2023-01-08) it does show
--enable-tui (or --disable-tui), but one might want to know if GDB was
built with curses independently of the availability of the TUI.
Since configure.ac uses AC_SEARCH_LIBS to check for the curses library,
we do not get an automatically defined HAVE_LIBCURSES symbol in
config.in. We do have symbols defined by AC_CHECK_HEADERS
(HAVE_CURSES_H, etc.) but it would be cumbersome to use those in
print_gdb_configuration because we would have to check for all 6 symbols
corresponding the 6 headers listed. This would also increase the
maintenance burden if support for other variations of curses are added.
Instead, define 'HAVE_LIBCURSES' ourselves by adding an
'action-if-found' argument to AC_SEARCH_LIBS, and use it in
print_gdb_configuration.
While at it, remove the condition on 'ac_cv_search_waddstr' and set
'curses_found' directly in 'action-if-found'.
Change-Id: Id90e3d73990e169cee51bcc3e1d52072cfacd5b8
Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
With test-cases gdb.arch/aarch64-mte-core.exp and gdb.arch/aarch64-pauth.exp I
run into compilation errors due to unsupported compilation flags.
Fix this by requiring the compilation flags, such that I have instead:
...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.arch/aarch64-mte-core.exp: require failed: \
have_compile_flag -march=armv8.5-a+memtag
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.arch/aarch64-pauth.exp: require failed: \
have_compile_flag -mbranch-protection=pac-ret+leaf
...
Tested on aarch64-linux.
On aarch64-linux, I run into:
...
Running gdb.reverse/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp ...
gdb compile failed, gcc: error: unrecognized command line option \
'-mindirect-branch=thunk'; did you mean '-findirect-inlining'?
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-mfunction-return=thunk'; \
did you mean '-Wfunction-elimination'?
UNTESTED: gdb.reverse/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp: failed to prepare
...
Fix this by requiring istarget "x86*", similar to what was added in
gdb.base/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp by commit 43127ae5714 ("Fix
gdb.base/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp"), such that we have instead:
...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.reverse/step-indirect-call-thunk.exp: require failed: \
istarget "x86*
...
Tested on x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
On aarch64-linux, I run into:
...
gdb compile failed, cc1: error: '-fsplit-stack' is not supported by this \
compiler configuration
UNTESTED: gdb.base/morestack.exp: failed to prepare
...
Fix this by requiring -fsplit-stack, such that we have instead:
...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.base/morestack.exp: require failed: \
expr [have_compile_flag -fsplit-stack]
...
Tested on x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
On aarch64-linux, I run into:
...
Running gdb.reverse/time-reverse.exp ...
gdb compile failed, gdb.reverse/time-reverse.c: In function 'main':
gdb.reverse/time-reverse.c:39:12: error: 'SYS_time' undeclared \
(first use in this function); did you mean 'SYS_times'?
syscall (SYS_time, &time_global);
^~~~~~~~
SYS_times
gdb.reverse/time-reverse.c:39:12: note: each undeclared identifier is \
reported only once for each function it appears in
UNTESTED: gdb.reverse/time-reverse.exp: failed to prepare
...
Fix this by adding a new proc have_syscall, and requiring syscall time, such
that we have instead:
...
UNSUPPORTED: gdb.reverse/time-reverse.exp: require failed: \
expr [have_syscall time]
...
Tested on x86_64-linux and aarch64-linux.
When running test-case gdb.dap/basic-dap.exp with a gdb without python
support, I run into:
...
builtin_spawn gdb -nw -nx -iex set height 0 -iex set width 0 \
-data-directory data-directory -iex set debug dap-log-file dap.log.1 -q \
-i=dap
>>> {"seq": 1, "type": "request", "command": "initialize"}
Interpreter `dap' unrecognized
ERROR: eof reading json header
...
Fix this by requiring python in the test-case.
Tested on x86_64-linux, both with a gdb without and with python.
When dealing with case insensitive file systems, ".file line.s" and
".file Line.s" are identical and thus gas won't change the current
input file.
However, in line.l test, it's expecting to trigger an input file switch.
As the second filename doesn't matter in it, change it to fit for those
file systems.
gas/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/gas/elf/line.l: Change Line.s to Line2.s.
* testsuite/gas/elf/line.s: Adjust output.
At the moment GDB only handles pointer authentication (pauth) for userspace
addresses and if we're debugging a Linux-hosted program.
The Linux Kernel can be configured to use pauth instructions for some
additional security hardening, but GDB doesn't handle this well.
To overcome this limitation, GDB needs a couple things:
1 - The target needs to advertise pauth support.
2 - The hook to remove non-address bits from a pointer needs to be registered
in aarch64-tdep.c as opposed to aarch64-linux-tdep.c.
There is a patch for QEMU that addresses the first point, and it makes
QEMU's gdbstub expose a couple more pauth mask registers, so overall we will
have up to 4 pauth masks (2 masks or 4 masks):
pauth_dmask
pauth_cmask
pauth_dmask_high
pauth_cmask_high
pauth_dmask and pauth_cmask are the masks used to remove pauth signatures
from userspace addresses. pauth_dmask_high and pauth_cmask_high masks are used
to remove pauth signatures from kernel addresses.
The second point is easily addressed by moving code around.
When debugging a Linux Kernel built with pauth with an unpatched GDB, we get
the following backtrace:
#0 __fput (file=0xffff0000c17a6400) at /repos/linux/fs/file_table.c:296
#1 0xffff8000082bd1f0 in ____fput (work=<optimized out>) at /repos/linux/fs/file_table.c:348
#2 0x30008000080ade30 [PAC] in ?? ()
#3 0x30d48000080ade30 in ?? ()
Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)
With a patched GDB, we get something a lot more meaningful:
#0 __fput (file=0xffff0000c1bcfa00) at /repos/linux/fs/file_table.c:296
#1 0xffff8000082bd1f0 in ____fput (work=<optimized out>) at /repos/linux/fs/file_table.c:348
#2 0xffff8000080ade30 [PAC] in task_work_run () at /repos/linux/kernel/task_work.c:179
#3 0xffff80000801db90 [PAC] in resume_user_mode_work (regs=0xffff80000a96beb0) at /repos/linux/include/linux/resume_user_mode.h:49
#4 do_notify_resume (regs=regs@entry=0xffff80000a96beb0, thread_flags=4) at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/signal.c:1127
#5 0xffff800008fb9974 [PAC] in prepare_exit_to_user_mode (regs=0xffff80000a96beb0) at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/entry-common.c:137
#6 exit_to_user_mode (regs=0xffff80000a96beb0) at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/entry-common.c:142
#7 el0_svc (regs=0xffff80000a96beb0) at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/entry-common.c:638
#8 0xffff800008fb9d34 [PAC] in el0t_64_sync_handler (regs=<optimized out>) at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/entry-common.c:655
#9 0xffff800008011548 [PAC] in el0t_64_sync () at /repos/linux/arch/arm64/kernel/entry.S:586
Backtrace stopped: Cannot access memory at address 0xffff80000a96c0c8
Mingw doesn't have /dev/null and thus "-o /dev/null" will fail.
Currently, all the options are checked using this "-o /dev/null",
resulting in them being disabled on mingw hosts.
Fix that by outputting to a real file for all targets.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/config/default.exp: Replace "-o /dev/null" by a
file.