Andrew Burgess [Tue, 5 Nov 2019 14:24:17 +0000 (14:24 +0000)]
gdb: Support printf 'z' size modifier
The gdb format mechanism doesn't currently support the 'z' size
modifier, there are a few places in GDB where this is used. Instead
of removing these uses lets just add support to GDB for using 'z'.
I found this issue when trying to use some of the debug output.
Before this commit:
(gdb) set debug dwarf-line 9
(gdb) file test
Reading symbols from test...
Unrecognized format specifier 'z' in printf
(No debugging symbols found in test)
(gdb)
After this commit:
(gdb) set debug dwarf-line 9
(gdb) file test
Reading symbols from test...
Adding dir 1: /usr/include
Adding file 1: test.c
Adding file 2: stdc-predef.h
Processing actual line 3: file 1, address 0x4004a0, is_stmt 1, discrim 0
Processing actual line 4: file 1, address 0x4004a0, is_stmt 1, discrim 0
.... lots of debug output ...
Processing actual line 10: file 1, address 0x4003b7, is_stmt 0, discrim 0
(gdb)
I've added a self test to cover the integer format size modifiers,
including the 'z' modifier.
Make struct symbol inherit from general_symbol_info
Since this is now no longer a POD, also give it a constructor that
initializes all fields. (I have considered overloading operator new
to zero-initialize the memory instead; let me know if you prefer that)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-11-12 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
Tom Tromey [Fri, 16 Aug 2019 21:16:12 +0000 (15:16 -0600)]
Make TUI resizing tests more robust
As Sergio pointed out, the TUI resizing tests are flaky. Debugging
this showed three main problems.
1. expect's "stty" command processes its arguments one-by-one. So,
rather than requesting a single resize, it sends two separate resize
requests (one for rows and one for columns). This means gdb sees two
SIGWINCH signals and resizes the terminal twice.
I consider this a bug in expect, but I couldn't readily see how to
report a bug; and anyway the fix wouldn't propagate very quickly.
This patch works around this problem by explicitly doing two separate
resizes (so it will be robust if expect ever does change); and then by
waiting for each resize to complete before continuing.
2. gdb uses curses to drive the console rendering. Currently the test
suite looks for terminal text insertion sequences to decide when a
command has completed. However, it turns out that, sometimes, curses
can output things in non-obvious ways. I didn't debug into curses but
I guess this can happen due to output optimizations. No matter the
reason, sometimes the current approach of only tracking text
insertions is not enough to detect that gdb has finished rendering.
This patch fixes this problem by arranging to detect the termination
output after any curses command, not just insertion.
3. Detecting when a resize has completed is tricky. In fact, I could
not find a way to reliably do this.
This patch fixes this problem by adding a special maint
"tui-resize-message" setting to gdb. When this is enabled, gdb will
print a message after each SIGWINCH has been fully processed. The
test suite enables this mode and then waits for the message in order
to know when control can be returned to the calling test.
This patch also adds a timeout, to avoid the situation where the
terminal code fails to notice a change for some reason. This lets the
test at least try to continue.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* tui/tui-win.c (resize_message): New global.
(show_tui_resize_message): New function.
(tui_async_resize_screen): Print message if requested.
(_initialize_tui_win): Add tui-resize-message setting.
* NEWS: Add entry for new commands.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document new command.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-11-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* lib/tuiterm.exp (_accept): Add wait_for parameter. Check output
after any command. Expect prompt after WAIT_FOR is seen.
(enter_tui): Enable resize messages.
(command): Expect command in output.
(get_line): Avoid error when cursor appears to be off-screen.
(dump_screen): Include screen size in title.
(_do_resize): New proc, from "resize".
(resize): Rewrite. Do resize in two steps.
* gdb.tui/empty.exp (layouts): Fix entries.
(check_boxes): Remove xfail.
(check_text): Dump screen on failure.
Mihail Ionescu [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 13:57:20 +0000 (13:57 +0000)]
[gas][arm] Enable VLDM, VSTM, VPUSH, VPOP for MVE
This patch enables a few instructions for Armv8.1-M MVE. Currently VLDM,
VSTM, VSTR, VLDR, VPUSH and VPOP are enabled only when the Armv8-M
Floating-point Extension is enabled. According to the ARMv8.1-M ARM,
section A.1.4.2[1], they can be enabled by having "Armv8-M Floating-point
Extension and/or Armv8.1-M MVE".
2019-11-12 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (do_vfp_nsyn_push): Move in order to enable it for
both fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd and mve_ext and add call to the aliased vstm
instruction for mve_ext.
(do_vfp_nsyn_pop): Move in order to enable it for both
fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd and mve_ext and add call to the aliased vldm
instruction for mve_ext.
(do_neon_ldm_stm): Add fpu_vfp_ext_v1 and mve_ext checks.
(insns): Enable vldm, vldmia, vldmdb, vstm, vstmia, vstmdb, vpop,
vpush, and fldd, fstd, flds, fsts for arm_ext_v6t2 instead
of fpu_vfp_ext_v1xd.
* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.s: New.
* testsuite/gas/arm/v8_1m-mve.d: New.
Mihail Ionescu [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 13:55:37 +0000 (13:55 +0000)]
[binutils][arm] Update the decoding of MVE VMOV, VMVN
This patch updates the decoding of the VMOV and VMVN instructions which depend on cmode.
Previously VMOV and VMVN with cmode 1101 were not allowed.
The cmode changes also required updating of the MVE conflict checking.
Now instructions with opcodes 0xef800d50 and 0xef800e70 correctly get decoded as VMOV
and VMVN, respectively.
2019-11-12 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* opcodes/arm-dis.c (mve_opcodes): Enable VMOV imm to vec with
cmode 1101.
(is_mve_encoding_conflict): Update cmode conflict checks for
MVE_VMVN_IMM.
2019-11-12 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
Mihail Ionescu [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 13:53:06 +0000 (13:53 +0000)]
[gas][arm] Make .fpu reset the FPU/Coprocessor feature bits
This patch is fixes the '.fpu' behaviour.
Currently, using '.fpu' resets the previously selected '.fpu' options (by overwriting them),
but does not reset previous FPU options selected by other means (ie. when using
'.arch_extension fp' in conjunction with '.fpu <x>', the FPU is not reset).
Example:
.arch armv8-a @ SET BASE
.arch_extension fp @ ADD FP-ARMV8
.fpu vfpv2 @ ADD (already existing bits, does not reset)
vfms.f32 s0, s1, s2 @ OK
Jan Beulich [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 08:09:31 +0000 (09:09 +0100)]
x86: fold EsSeg into IsString
EsSeg (a per-operand bit) is used with IsString (a per-insn attribute)
only. Extend the attribute to 2 bits, thus allowing to encode
- not a string insn,
- string insn with neither operand requiring use of %es:,
- string insn with 1st operand requiring use of %es:,
- string insn with 2nd operand requiring use of %es:,
which covers all possible cases, allowing to drop EsSeg.
The (transient) need to comment out the OTUnused #define did uncover an
oversight in the earlier OTMax -> OTNum conversion, which is being taken
care of here.
Jan Beulich [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 08:07:34 +0000 (09:07 +0100)]
x86: introduce operand type "instance"
Special register "class" instances can't be combined with one another
(neither in templates nor in register entries), and hence it is not a
good use of resources (memory as well as execution time) to represent
them as individual bits of a bit field.
Furthermore the generalization becoming possible will allow
improvements to the handling of insns accepting only individual
registers as their operands.
Tom Tromey [Mon, 11 Nov 2019 19:45:35 +0000 (12:45 -0700)]
Fix typo in vFile:pwrite documentation
A user on irc noticed that the remote protocol documentation mentioned
"vFile:write" -- but this is a typo, there is only "vFile:pwrite".
This patch fixes the bug. Tested by rebuilding, committing as
obvious.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2019-11-11 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* gdb.texinfo (Host I/O Packets): Fix typo in "vFile:pwrite".
Jan Beulich [Mon, 11 Nov 2019 12:27:47 +0000 (13:27 +0100)]
Arm64: fix build with old glibc
Some old glibc versions have string.h surface "index", which some
compilers then warn about if shadowed by a local variable. Re-use an
existing variable instead.
Andrew Burgess [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 15:18:26 +0000 (16:18 +0100)]
gdb/python: Introduce gdb.lookup_static_symbols
If gdb.lookup_static_symbol is going to return a single symbol then it
makes sense (I think) for it to return a context sensitive choice of
symbol, that is the global static symbol that would be visible to the
program at that point.
However, if the user of the python API wants to instead get a
consistent set of global static symbols, no matter where they stop,
then they have to instead consider all global static symbols with a
given name - there could be many. That is what this new API function
offers, it returns a list (possibly empty) of all global static
symbols matching a given name (and optionally a given symbol domain).
Andrew Burgess [Mon, 23 Sep 2019 15:59:08 +0000 (16:59 +0100)]
gdb/python: smarter symbol lookup for gdb.lookup_static_symbol
When using gdb.lookup_static_symbol I think that GDB should find
static symbols (global symbol with static linkage) from the current
object file ahead of static symbols from other object files.
This means that if we have two source files f1.c and f2.c, and both
files contains 'static int foo;', then when we are stopped in f1.c a
call to 'gdb.lookup_static_symbol ("foo")' will find f1.c::foo, and if
we are stopped in f2.c we would find 'f2.c::foo'.
Given that gdb.lookup_static_symbol always returns a single symbol,
but there can be multiple static symbols with the same name GDB is
always making a choice about which symbols to return. I think that it
makes sense for the choice GDB makes in this case to match what a user
would get on the command line if they asked to 'print foo'.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.python/py-symbol.c: Declare and call function from new
py-symbol-2.c file.
* gdb.python/py-symbol.exp: Compile both source files, and add new
tests for gdb.lookup_static_symbol.
* gdb.python/py-symbol-2.c: New file.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* python.texi (Symbols In Python): Extend documentation for
gdb.lookup_static_symbol.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* python/py-symbol.c (gdbpy_lookup_static_symbol): Lookup in
static block of current object file first. Also fix typo in
header comment.
Andrew Burgess [Fri, 8 Nov 2019 16:18:43 +0000 (16:18 +0000)]
gdb: Add a class to track last display symtab and line information
In stack.c we currently have a set of static global variables to track
the last displayed symtab and line. This commit moves all of these
into a class and adds an instance of the class to track the same
information.
The API into stack.c is unchanged after this cleanup.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* stack.c (set_last_displayed_sal): Delete.
(last_displayed_sal_valid): Delete.
(last_displayed_pspace): Delete.
(last_displayed_addr): Delete.
(last_displayed_symtab): Delete.
(last_displayed_line): Delete.
(class last_displayed_symtab_info_type): New.
(last_displayed_symtab_info): New static global variable.
(print_frame_info): Call methods on last_displayed_symtab_info.
(clear_last_displayed_sal): Update header comment, and make use of
last_displayed_symtab_info.
(last_displayed_sal_is_valid): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_pspace): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_addr): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_symtab): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_line): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_sal): Likewise.
* stack.h (clear_last_displayed_sal): Update header comment.
(last_displayed_sal_is_valid): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_pspace): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_addr): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_symtab): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_line): Likewise.
(get_last_displayed_sal): Likewise.
Andrew Burgess [Fri, 8 Nov 2019 23:39:14 +0000 (23:39 +0000)]
gdb_vecs.h: Avoid self move assign
While working on another patch I ran into an issue with
unordered_remove (in gdb_vecs.h), where removing the last item of the
vector can cause a self move assign.
When compiling the C++ standard library in debug mode (with
-D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG=1) this causes an error to trigger.
I've fixed the issue in this patch and provided a unit test.
The provided unit test includes an assignment operator which checks
for self move assign, this removes the need to compile with
-D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG=1 in order to spot the bug. If you're keen to see
the error reported from the C++ standard library then remove operator=
from the unit test and recompile GDB with -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG=1.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add new file to the list.
* unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c: New file.
* gdbsupport/gdb_vecs.h (unordered_remove): Avoid self move assign.
Tom Tromey [Sun, 10 Nov 2019 17:33:07 +0000 (10:33 -0700)]
Remove can_highlight from TUI windows
Each TUI window has a "can_highlight" member. However, this has the
same meaning as "can_box" -- a window can be highlighted if and only
if it can be boxed. So, this patch removes can_highlight in favor of
simply using can_box.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
H.J. Lu [Fri, 8 Nov 2019 17:31:06 +0000 (09:31 -0800)]
i386: Only check suffix in instruction mnemonic
We should check suffix in instruction mnemonic when matching instruction.
In Intel syntax, normally we check for memory operand size. But the same
mnemonic with 2 different encodings can have the same memory operand
size and i.suffix is set to LONG_DOUBLE_MNEM_SUFFIX from memory operand
size in Intel syntax to distinguish them. When there is no suffix in
mnemonic, we check LONG_DOUBLE_MNEM_SUFFIX in i.suffix for mnemonic
suffix.
gas/
PR gas/25167
* config/tc-i386.c (match_template): Don't check instruction
suffix set from operand.
* testsuite/gas/i386/code16.d: New file.
* testsuite/gas/i386/code16.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/gas/i386/i386.exp: Run code16.
* testsuite/gas/i386/x86-64-branch-4.l: Updated.
opcodes/
PR gas/25167
* i386-opc.tbl: Remove IgnoreSize from cmpsd and movsd.
* i386-tbl.h: Regenerated.
Tom Tromey [Tue, 22 Oct 2019 19:32:39 +0000 (13:32 -0600)]
Constify command_line_input
This changes command_line_input to return a "const char *", which is
appropriate because the memory is owned by command_line_input. Then
it fixes up the users.
I looked at making command_line_input transfer ownership to its caller
instead, but this is complicated due to the way read_next_line is
called, so I decided against it.
Tested by rebuilding.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-08 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* top.c (read_command_file): Update.
(command_line_input): Make return type const.
* python/py-gdb-readline.c: Update.
* linespec.c (decode_line_2): Update.
* defs.h (command_line_input): Make return type const.
* cli/cli-script.c (read_next_line): Make return type const.
* ada-lang.c (get_selections): Update.
Jan Beulich [Fri, 8 Nov 2019 08:03:23 +0000 (09:03 +0100)]
x86: introduce operand type "class"
Many operand types, in particular the various kinds of registers, can't
be combined with one another (neither in templates nor in register
entries), and hence it is not a good use of resources (memory as well as
execution time) to represent them as individual bits of a bit field.
[gas][aarch64] Add the v8.6 Data Gathering Hint mnemonic [10/X]
Hi,
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
to binutils.
In this last patch, the new Data Gathering Hint mnemonic is introduced.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/dgh.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/dgh.d: New test.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* opcodes/aarch64-tbl.h (V8_6_INSN): New macro for v8.6 instructions.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Add data gathering hint mnemonic.
* opcodes/aarch64-dis-2.c: Account for new instruction.
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
This patch introduces the Matrix Multiply (Int8, F32, F64) extensions
to the aarch64 backend.
The following instructions are added: {s/u}mmla, usmmla, {us/su}dot,
fmmla, ld1rob, ld1roh, d1row, ld1rod, uzip{1/2}, trn{1/2}.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* config/tc-aarch64.c: Add new arch fetures to suppport the mm extension.
(parse_operands): Add new operand.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/i8mm.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/i8mm.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/f32mm.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/f32mm.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/f64mm.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/f64mm.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-movprfx-mm.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-movprfx-mm.d: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_I8MM): New.
(AARCH64_FEATURE_F32MM): New.
(AARCH64_FEATURE_F64MM): New.
(AARCH64_OPND_SVE_ADDR_RI_S4x32): New.
(enum aarch64_insn_class): Add new instruction class "aarch64_misc" for
instructions that do not require special handling.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
* aarch64-tbl.h (aarch64_feature_i8mm_sve, aarch64_feature_f32mm_sve,
aarch64_feature_f64mm_sve, aarch64_feature_i8mm, aarch64_feature_f32mm,
aarch64_feature_f64mm): New feature sets.
(INT8MATMUL_INSN, F64MATMUL_SVE_INSN, F64MATMUL_INSN,
F32MATMUL_SVE_INSN, F32MATMUL_INSN): New macros to define matrix multiply
instructions.
(I8MM_SVE, F32MM_SVE, F64MM_SVE, I8MM, F32MM, F64MM): New feature set
macros.
(QL_MMLA64, OP_SVE_SBB): New qualifiers.
(OP_SVE_QQQ): New qualifier.
(INT8MATMUL_SVE_INSNC, F64MATMUL_SVE_INSNC,
F32MATMUL_SVE_INSNC): New feature set for bfloat16 instructions to support
the movprfx constraint.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Support for SVE_ADDR_RI_S4x32.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Define new instructions smmla,
ummla, usmmla, usdot, sudot, fmmla, ld1rob, ld1roh, ld1row, ld1rod
uzip{1/2}, trn{1/2}.
* aarch64-opc.c (operand_general_constraint_met_p): Handle
AARCH64_OPND_SVE_ADDR_RI_S4x32.
(aarch64_print_operand): Handle AARCH64_OPND_SVE_ADDR_RI_S4x32.
* aarch64-dis-2.c (aarch64_opcode_lookup_1, aarch64_find_next_opcode):
Account for new instructions.
* opcodes/aarch64-asm-2.c (aarch64_insert_operand): Support the new
S4x32 operand.
* aarch64-opc-2.c (aarch64_operands): Support the new S4x32 operand.
[Patch][binutils][aarch64] .bfloat16 directive for AArch64 [7/10]
Hi,
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
This patch implements the '.bfloat' directive for the AArch64 backend.
The syntax for the directive is:
.bfloat16 <0-n numbers>
e.g.
.bfloat16 12.0
.bfloat16 0.123, 1.0, NaN, 5
This is implemented by utilizing the ieee_atof_detail function in order
to encode the slightly
different bfloat16 format.
Added testcases to verify the correct encoding for various bfloat16
values (NaN, Infinity (+ & -), normals, subnormals etc...).
Cross compiled and tested on aarch64-none-elf and aarch64-none-linux-gnu
with no issues.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-10-29 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-10-29 Barnaby Wilks <barnaby.wilks@arm.com>
* config/tc-aarch64.c (md_atof): Add encoding for the bfloat16 format.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/bfloat16-directive-le.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/bfloat16-directive-be.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/bfloat16-directive.s: New test.
[Patch][binutils][arm] .bfloat16 directive for Arm [6/X]
Hi,
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
This patch implements the '.bfloat16' directive for the Arm backend.
The syntax for the directive is:
.bfloat16 <0-n numbers>
e.g.
.bfloat16 12.0
.bfloat16 0.123, 1.0, NaN, 5
This is implemented by utilizing the ieee_atof_detail function (included
in the previous patch) in order to encode the slightly different
bfloat16 format.
Added testcases to verify the correct encoding for various bfloat16
values (NaN, Infinity (+ & -), normals, subnormals etc...).
Cross compiled and tested on arm-none-eabi and arm-none-linux-gnueabihf
with no issues.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-10-21 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-10-21 Barnaby Wilks <barnaby.wilks@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (md_atof): Add encoding for bfloat16
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-directive-le.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-directive-be.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-directive.s: New test.
[Patch][binutils] Generic support for parsing numbers in bfloat16 format [5/X]
Hi,
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions).
This patch contains some general refactoring of the atof_ieee
function, exposing a function that allows a higher level of control
over the format of IEEE-like floating point numbers.
This has been done in order to be able to add a directive for assembling
floating point literals in the bfloat16 format in the following patches.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
Tested on arm-none-eabi, arm-none-linux-gnueabihf, aarch64-none-elf
and aarch64-none-linux-gnuwith no issues.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-10-21 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-10-21 Barnaby Wilks <barnaby.wilks@arm.com>
* as.h (atof_ieee_detail): Add prototype for atof_ieee_detail function.
(atof_ieee): Move some code into the atof_ieee_detail function.
(atof_ieee_detail): Add function that provides a higher level of control over generating
IEEE-like numbers.
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
This patch introduces BFloat16 instructions to the arm backend.
The following BFloat16 instructions are added: vdot, vfma{l/t},
vmmla, vfmal{t/b}, vcvt, vcvt{t/b}.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_archs): Add armv8.6-a option.
(cpu_arch_ver): Add TAG_CPU_ARCH_V8 tag for Armv8.6-a.
* doc/c-arm.texi (-march): New armv8.6-a arch.
* config/tc-arm.c (arm_ext_bf16): New feature set.
(enum neon_el_type): Add NT_bfloat value.
(B_MNEM_vfmat, B_MNEM_vfmab): New bfloat16 encoder
helpers.
(BAD_BF16): New message.
(parse_neon_type): Add bf16 type specifier.
(enum neon_type_mask): Add N_BF16 type.
(type_chk_of_el_type): Account for NT_bfloat.
(el_type_of_type_chk): Account for N_BF16.
(neon_three_args): Split out from neon_three_same.
(neon_three_same): Part split out into neon_three_args.
(CVT_FLAVOUR_VAR): Add bf16_f32 cvt flavour.
(do_neon_cvt_1): Account for vcvt.bf16.f32.
(do_bfloat_vmla): New.
(do_mve_vfma): New function to deal with the mnemonic clash between the BF16
vfmat and the MVE vfma in a VPT block with a 't'rue condition.
(do_neon_cvttb_1): Account for vcvt{t,b}.bf16.f32.
(do_vdot): New
(do_vmmla): New
(insns): Add vdot and vmmla mnemonics.
(arm_extensions): Add "bf16" extension.
* doc/c-arm.texi: Document "bf16" extension.
* testsuite/gas/arm/attr-march-armv8_6-a.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-bad.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-bad.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-bad.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-cmdline-bad-2.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-cmdline-bad-3.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-cmdline-bad.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-neon.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-non-neon.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-thumb-bad.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-thumb-bad.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-thumb.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16-vfp.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/arm/bfloat16.s: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_EXT2_V8_6A, ARM_AEXT2_V8_6A,
ARM_ARCH_V8_6A): New.
* opcode/arm.h (ARM_EXT2_BF16): New feature macro.
(ARM_AEXT2_V8_6A): Include above macro in definition.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (select_arm_features): Update bfd_march_arm_8 with
Armv8.6-A.
(coprocessor_opcodes): Add bfloat16 vcvt{t,b}.
(neon_opcodes): Add bfloat SIMD instructions.
(print_insn_coprocessor): Add new control character %b to print
condition code without checking cp_num.
(print_insn_neon): Account for BFloat16 instructions that have no
special top-byte handling.
[Patch][binutils][arm] Create a new generic coprocessor array [3/10]
Hi,
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
Some generic instructions match a large range of encoding space (e.g.
stc, mcr, mrc).
Currently these instructions are in the coprocessor_opcodes array, which
means they are checked before many other instructions when disassembling
arm and thumb32 codes.
This patch moves the generic instructions into a separate array to be
checked later on.
This is done in order to avoid instruction conflict between the generic
instructions and newer ones -- this has already been seen with MVE, and
is also a problem with BFloat16.
One way to avoid the conflict could be to swap the search order between
coprocessor_opcodes and neon_opcodes.
We avoid this since it's a larger change that may introduce extra bugs
(that aren't caught by the testsuite).
We have decided against searching the generic array after searching the
arm specific and thumb32 specific arrays with a similar reasoning about
keeping the change small.
Regression tested with arm-none-linux-gnueabihf.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2019-10-29 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-10-29 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* arm-dis.c (print_insn_coprocessor,
print_insn_generic_coprocessor): Create wrapper functions around
the implementation of the print_insn_coprocessor control codes.
(print_insn_coprocessor_1): Original print_insn_coprocessor
function that now takes which array to look at as an argument.
(print_insn_arm): Use both print_insn_coprocessor and
print_insn_generic_coprocessor.
(print_insn_thumb32): As above.
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
(Matrix Multiply and BFloat16 extensions) to binutils.
This patch introduces the following BFloat16 instructions to the
aarch64 backend: bfdot, bfmmla, bfcvt, bfcvtnt, bfmlal[t/b],
bfcvtn2.
Committed on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* config/tc-aarch64.c (vectype_to_qualifier): Special case the
S_2H operand qualifier.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document bf16 and bf16mmla4 extensions.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/bfloat16.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/bfloat16.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-bfloat16.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-bfloat16.l: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/illegal-bfloat16.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-bfloat-movprfx.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/sve-bfloat-movprfx.d: New test.
include/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* opcode/aarch64.h (AARCH64_FEATURE_BFLOAT16): New feature macros.
(AARCH64_ARCH_V8_6): Include BFloat16 feature macros.
(enum aarch64_opnd_qualifier): Introduce new operand qualifier
AARCH64_OPND_QLF_S_2H.
(enum aarch64_insn_class): Introduce new class "bfloat16".
(BFLOAT16_SVE_INSNC): New feature set for bfloat16
instructions to support the movprfx constraint.
opcodes/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* aarch64-asm.c (aarch64_ins_reglane): Use AARCH64_OPND_QLF_S_2H
in reglane special case.
* aarch64-dis-2.c (aarch64_opcode_lookup_1,
aarch64_find_next_opcode): Account for new instructions.
* aarch64-dis.c (aarch64_ext_reglane): Use AARCH64_OPND_QLF_S_2H
in reglane special case.
* aarch64-opc.c (struct operand_qualifier_data): Add data for
new AARCH64_OPND_QLF_S_2H qualifier.
* aarch64-tbl.h (QL_BFDOT QL_BFDOT64, QL_BFDOT64I, QL_BFMMLA2,
QL_BFCVT64, QL_BFCVTN64, QL_BFCVTN2_64): New qualifiers.
(aarch64_feature_bfloat16, aarch64_feature_bfloat16_sve,
aarch64_feature_bfloat16_bfmmla4): New feature sets.
(BFLOAT_SVE, BFLOAT): New feature set macros.
(BFLOAT_SVE_INSN, BFLOAT_BFMMLA4_INSN, BFLOAT_INSN): New macros
to define BFloat16 instructions.
(aarch64_opcode_table): Define new instructions bfdot,
bfmmla, bfcvt, bfcvtnt, bfdot, bfdot, bfcvtn, bfmlal[b/t]
bfcvtn2, bfcvt.
This patch is part of a series that adds support for Armv8.6-A
to binutils.
This first patch adds the Armv8.6-A flag to binutils.
No instructions are behind it at the moment.
Commited on behalf of Mihail Ionescu.
gas/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
* config/tc-aarch64.c (armv8.6-a): New arch.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi (armv8.6-a): Document new arch.
include/ChangeLog:
2019-11-07 Mihail Ionescu <mihail.ionescu@arm.com>
2019-11-07 Matthew Malcomson <matthew.malcomson@arm.com>
Nick Clifton [Thu, 7 Nov 2019 11:56:54 +0000 (11:56 +0000)]
Allow the --output option of the "ar" prorgam to extract files to locations outside of the current directory.
* ar.c (open_output_file): Check for filename validity before
prefixing with output directory.
Display the constructed output filename if in verbose mode.
(extract_file): Let open_output_file display the filename.
Tom de Vries [Thu, 7 Nov 2019 09:49:56 +0000 (10:49 +0100)]
[gdb/contrib] Add words.sh script
Add a script that takes a list of files as arguments and output a list of
words from the C comments with their frequencies.
For:
...
$ ./gdb/contrib/words.sh $(find gdb -type f -name "*.c" -o -name "*.h")
...
it generates a list of ~15000 words prefixed with frequency.
This could be used to generate a dictionary that is kept as part of the
sources, against which new code can be checked, generating a warning or
error. The hope is that misspellings would trigger this frequently, and rare
words rarely, otherwise the burden of updating the dictionary would be too
much.
And for:
...
$ ./gdb/contrib/words.sh -f 1 $(find gdb -type f -name "*.c" -o -name "*.h")
...
it generates a list of ~5000 words with frequency 1.
This can be used to scan for misspellings manually.
Alan Modra [Thu, 7 Nov 2019 03:02:16 +0000 (13:32 +1030)]
Remove CR16C support
I think it is past time to remove CR16C support. CR16C was added in
2004, and only for ld. gas and binutils support is lacking, and there
have been no commits to bfd/elf32-cr16c.c other than warning fixes or
global maintainers making changes to all targets. I see no maintainer
listed for CR16C, and no commits from anyone at NSC supporting the
target. Furthermore, at the time the CR16 support was added in 2007,
config.sub was changed upstream to no longer recognise cr16c as a
valid cpu. That means the CR16C ld support is only available as a
secondary target by configuring with, for example,
--enable-targets=all or --enable-targets=cr16c-unknown-elf. No
testing of the CR16C target is possible.
Alan Modra [Wed, 6 Nov 2019 07:20:27 +0000 (17:50 +1030)]
Order targets in ld/configure.tgt
The target list was supposed to be more or less alphabetically sorted,
but this wasn't anywhere near the case. The comment about keeping
architecture variants together seems odd to me, and is no doubt the
reason why ix86 and x86_64 were grouped together, so I removed that
comment. The patch doesn't change order of entries for a given cpu.
Jan Beulich [Thu, 7 Nov 2019 08:28:20 +0000 (09:28 +0100)]
x86: adjust register names printed for MONITOR/MWAIT
As the comments (here: almost, in the opcode table: fully) correctly
state - all register operands except MONITOR's address one are fixed
at 32 bit size. Don't print 64-bit registers there.
Also adjust x86-64-suffix.d's name such that it wouldn't be identical to
x86-64-rep-suffix.d's, but instead resemble that of its sibling
x86-64-suffix-intel.d.
Tom Tromey [Sun, 27 Oct 2019 21:50:54 +0000 (15:50 -0600)]
Remove some includes of readline.h
I went through most of the spots that include readline.h and, when
appropriate, either removed the include or changed it to include
tilde.h.
Note that remote-sim.c and bsd-kvm.c could probably include tilde.h
instead, but I did not change these. I think I can't build the
latter, and I didn't want to set up a sim build for the former.
Tested by rebuilding.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-06 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* tui/tui-interp.c: Don't include readline.h.
* tui/tui-hooks.c: Don't include readline.h.
* symmisc.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* symfile.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* source.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* solib.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* psymtab.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* exec.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* corelow.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* cli/cli-dump.c: Include tilde.h, not readline.h.
* cli/cli-cmds.c: Don't include readline.h.
Fix an off-by-one error in the IN_RANGE macro used by readelf. Add another use of the macro.
* readelf.c (IN_RANGE): Rename parameter OFF to NELEM. Add
comment. Catch potential integer overflow and fix off by one
error whilst checking reloc location against section size.
(apply_relocations): Use IN_RANGE macro.
Tom Tromey [Thu, 3 Oct 2019 22:59:17 +0000 (16:59 -0600)]
Remove la_get_string member
The la_get_string member of struct language_defn was intended to
provide a way to fetch string data from a "string" object in a
language-dependent way. However, it turned out that this was never
needed, and was only ever implemented for C. This patch removes the
language hook entirely.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
Tom Tromey [Mon, 21 Oct 2019 17:21:14 +0000 (11:21 -0600)]
Style disassembly in the TUI
This patch changes the TUI disassembly window to style its contents.
The styling should be identical to what is seen in the CLI. This
involved a bit of rearrangement, so that the source and disassembly
windows could share both the copy_source_line utility function, and
the ability to react to changes in "set style enabled".
This version introduces a new function to strip the styling from the
address string when computing the length. As a byproduct, it also
removes the unused "insn_size" computation from
tui_disasm_window::set_contents.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-11-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* tui/tui-source.h (struct tui_source_window): Inline
constructor. Remove destructor.
<style_changed, m_observable>: Move to superclass.
* tui/tui-winsource.h (tui_copy_source_line): Declare.
(struct tui_source_window_base): Move private members to end.
<style_changed, m_observable>: Move from tui_source_window.
* tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_copy_source_line): Move from
tui-source.c. Rename from copy_source_line. Add special handling
for negative line number.
(tui_source_window_base::style_changed): Move from
tui_source_window.
(tui_source_window_base): Register observer.
(~tui_source_window_base): New.
* tui/tui-source.c (copy_source_line): Move to tui-winsource.c;
rename.
(tui_source_window::set_contents): Use tui_copy_source_line.
(tui_source_window::tui_source_window): Move to tui-source.h.
(tui_source_window::~tui_source_window): Remove.
(tui_source_window::style_changed): Move to superclass.
* tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_disassemble): Create string file with
styling, when possible. Add "addr_size" parameter.
(tui_disasm_window::set_contents): Use tui_copy_source_line.
Don't compute maximum size.
(len_without_escapes): New function
Tim R?hsen [Tue, 5 Nov 2019 16:03:07 +0000 (16:03 +0000)]
Fix memory allocation and release problems in the bfd documentation processor.
* doc/chew.c (add_to_definition): Use correct type when
calculating size of array reallocation.
(nextword): Always initialise the word return parameter.
(compile): Check return value of nextword().
Jan Beulich [Tue, 5 Nov 2019 08:18:23 +0000 (09:18 +0100)]
x86: consolidate disassembler enum naming a little
The original idea looks to have been for names to be composed in the
order that decoding gets done, which helps both reading and modifying
the code. Switch (back) to this model for some of the affected non-
vector insn enumerators.
Alan Modra [Fri, 1 Nov 2019 03:15:25 +0000 (13:45 +1030)]
GENERATE_SHLIB_SCRIPT vs. EMBEDDED.
A target that sets EMBEDDED non-empty is one that doesn't want to put
the ELF file header or program header in a memory image. Likely the
target isn't interested in supporting dynamically loaded executables,
shared libraries, or PIEs, because loaders for such binaries generally
require program headers to be present. This isn't 100% true though.
The target might be one where the loader accesses the file system in
order to retrieve headers.
Also, note that not all "shared libraries" require gcc -shared or the
shared library support in the linker. I believe one implementation of
shared libraries on uclinux is like this.
So, this patch removes GENERATE_SHLIB_SCRIPT and GENERATE_PIE_SCRIPT
in most emulparams files where EMBEDDED is set, restoring the shared
lib and pie support in emulparams files that unset EMBEDDED after
including a file where the support is removed.
Exceptions to the general rule that EMBEDDED disables shared libs are:
arm*-*-symbianelf*, where the OS wants shared library support
without ELF program headers in the image, and
sh*-*-uclinux*, where I've left things as they were, ie. both
EMBEDDED and GENERATE_SHLIB_SCRIPT because I'm unsure as to the
shared library scheme.
Right now it doesn't remove any code, but obviates the need to test on
that ancient platform. Besides, some of the patches I have in my queue
would require different solutions for Solaris 10 and 11.
There are a few comment-only references that I've kept since they are
still correct as is, even when GDB doesn't support Solaris 10 any
longer. The only code fragment I've left in is support for
/proc/<pid/path/a.out in procfs.c (procfs_target::pid_to_exec_file):
while current Solaris 11 updates provide /proc/<pid>/execname, that
wasn't present in Solaris 11.0 and still isn't in current Illumos and I
didn't want to make live harder for them.
Tested on i386-pc-solaris2.10 (obsolete configuration rejected) and
x86_64-pc-linux-gnu x sparc64-solaris2.10 (likewise)
resp. x86_64-pc-linux-gnu x sparcv9-solaris2.11 (still builds; I'm using
the sparcv9 form for 64-bit SPARC customary on Solaris in the
MAINTAINERS file now).
* NEWS (Changes since GDB 8.3): Document Solaris 10 removal.
* configure.host: Mark *-*-solaris2.10* obsolete.
* configure.tgt: Mark Solaris < 11 obsolete.
* MAINTAINERS (Target Instruction Set Architectures) <sparc>:
Update target triplet.
Jan Beulich [Mon, 4 Nov 2019 14:48:38 +0000 (15:48 +0100)]
x86: re-arrange process_operands()
Alter the sequence of conditions evaluated, without affecting the
overall result. This is going to help subsequent changes (and as a nice
side effect also slightly reduces overall indentation depth).
While doing this take the liberty of simplifying the calculation of the
operand index of the register operand in ShortForm handling.
Nick Clifton [Mon, 4 Nov 2019 12:02:20 +0000 (12:02 +0000)]
Fix potential array overruns when disassembling corrupt v850 binaries.
* v850-dis.c (get_v850_sreg_name): New function. Returns the name
of a v850 system register. Move the v850_sreg_names array into
this function.
(get_v850_reg_name): Likewise for ordinary register names.
(get_v850_vreg_name): Likewise for vector register names.
(get_v850_cc_name): Likewise for condition codes.
* get_v850_float_cc_name): Likewise for floating point condition
codes.
(get_v850_cacheop_name): Likewise for cache-ops.
(get_v850_prefop_name): Likewise for pref-ops.
(disassemble): Use the new accessor functions.
As a result, ARM targets only read the mapping symbols the first time we
load a symbol file. When reloaded, the speed optimization above will
cause an early return and gdbarch_record_special_symbol won't be called to
save mapping symbol data, which in turn affects disassembling of thumb
instructions.
First load and correct disassemble output:
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x0000821c <+0>: bx pc
0x0000821e <+2>: nop
0x00008220 <+4>: mov r0, #0
0x00008224 <+8>: bx lr
Second load and incorrect disassemble output:
Dump of assembler code for function main:
0x0000821c <+0>: bx pc
0x0000821e <+2>: nop
0x00008220 <+4>: movs r0, r0
0x00008222 <+6>: b.n 0x8966
0x00008224 <+8>: vrhadd.u16 d14, d14, d31
This happens because the mapping symbol data is stored in an objfile_key-based
container, and that data isn't preserved across the two symbol loading
operations.
The following patch fixes this by storing the mapping symbol data in a
bfd_key-based container, which doesn't change as long as the bfd is the same.
I've also added a new test to verify the correct disassemble output.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2019-11-01 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
PR gdb/25124
* arm-tdep.c (arm_per_objfile): Rename to ...
(arm_per_bfd): ... this.
(arm_objfile_data_key): Rename to ...
(arm_bfd_data_key): ... this.
(arm_find_mapping_symbol): Adjust access to new bfd_key-based
data.
(arm_record_special_symbol): Likewise.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2019-11-01 Luis Machado <luis.machado@linaro.org>
PR gdb/25124
* gdb.arch/pr25124.S: New file.
* gdb.arch/pr25124.exp: New file.
Andrew Burgess [Tue, 24 Sep 2019 22:01:14 +0000 (23:01 +0100)]
gdb: Don't print a newline in language la_print_typedef methods
When calling the language la_print_typedef method, don't include a
newline at the end, instead print the newline from the users of
la_print_typedef.
This change will be useful in a later commit when the output from
la_print_typedef will be placed into an MI output field, in which case
the trailing newline is not required.
There should be no user visible changes after this commit.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ada-typeprint.c (ada_print_typedef): Don't print newline at the
end.
* c-typeprint.c (c_print_typedef): Likewise.
* f-typeprint.c (f_print_typedef): Likewise.
* m2-typeprint.c (m2_print_typedef): Likewise.
* p-typeprint.c (pascal_print_typedef): Likewise.
* rust-lang.c (rust_print_typedef): Likewise.
* symtab.c (print_symbol_info): Print a newline after calling
typedef_print.
Andrew Burgess [Wed, 10 Jul 2019 14:54:03 +0000 (15:54 +0100)]
gdb: Add new commands to list module variables and functions
This patch adds two new commands "info module functions" and "info
module variables". These commands list all of the functions and
variables grouped by module and then by file.
For example:
(gdb) info module functions
All functions in all modules:
The new commands take set of flags that allow the output to be
filtered, the user can filter by variable/function name, type, or
containing module.
As GDB doesn't currently track the relationship between a module and
the variables or functions within it in the symbol table, so I filter
based on the module prefix in order to find the functions or variables
in each module. What this makes clear is that a user could get this
same information using "info variables" and simply provide the prefix
themselves, for example:
(gdb) info module functions -m mod1 _a
All functions matching regular expression "_a",
in all modules matching regular expression "mod1":
The benefits I see for a separate command are that the user doesn't
have to think (or know) about the module prefix format, nor worry
about building a proper regexp. The user can also easily scan across
modules without having to build complex regexps.
The new function search_module_symbols is extern in this patch despite
only being used within symtab.c, this is because a later patch in this
series will also be using this function from outside symtab.c.
This patch is a new implementation of an idea originally worked on by
Mark O'Connor, Chris January, David Lecomber, and Xavier Oro from ARM.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (info_module_cmdlist): New variable.
(info_module_command): New function.
(search_module_symbols): New function.
(info_module_subcommand): New function.
(struct info_modules_var_func_options): New struct.
(info_modules_var_func_options_defs): New variable.
(make_info_modules_var_func_options_def_group): New function.
(info_module_functions_command): New function.
(info_module_variables_command): New function.
(info_module_var_func_command_completer): New function.
(_initialize_symtab): Register new 'info module functions' and
'info module variables' commands.
* symtab.h (typedef symbol_search_in_module): New typedef.
(search_module_symbols): Declare new function.
* NEWS: Mention new commands.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Symbols): Document new 'info module variables' and
'info module functions' commands.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.fortran/info-modules.exp: Update expected results, and add
additional tests for 'info module functinos', and 'info module
variables'.
* gdb.fortran/info-types.exp: Update expected results.
* gdb.fortran/info-types.f90: Extend testcase with additional
module variables and functions.
Andrew Burgess [Tue, 9 Jul 2019 20:38:59 +0000 (21:38 +0100)]
gdb/fortran: Add new 'info modules' command
Add a new command 'info modules' that lists all of the modules GDB
knows about from the debug information.
A module is a debugging entity in the DWARF defined with
DW_TAG_module, currently Fortran is known to use this tag for its
modules. I'm not aware of any other language that currently makes use
of DW_TAG_module.
The output style is similar to the 'info type' output:
(gdb) info modules
All defined modules:
File info-types.f90:
16: mod1
24: mod2
(gdb)
Where the user is told the file the module is defined in and, on the
left hand side, the line number at which the module is defined along
with the name of the module.
This patch is a new implementation of an idea originally worked on by
Mark O'Connor, Chris January, David Lecomber, and Xavier Oro from ARM.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* dwarf2read.c (dw2_symtab_iter_next): Handle MODULE_DOMAIN.
(dw2_expand_marked_cus): Handle MODULES_DOMAIN.
(dw2_debug_names_iterator::next): Handle MODULE_DOMAIN and
MODULES_DOMAIN.
(scan_partial_symbols): Only create partial module symbols for non
declarations.
* psymtab.c (recursively_search_psymtabs): Handle MODULE_DOMAIN
and MODULES_DOMAIN.
* symtab.c (search_domain_name): Likewise.
(search_symbols): Likewise.
(print_symbol_info): Likewise.
(symtab_symbol_info): Likewise.
(info_modules_command): New function.
(_initialize_symtab): Register 'info modules' command.
* symtab.h (enum search_domain): Add MODULES_DOMAIN.
* NEWS: Mention new 'info modules' command.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Symbols): Document new 'info modules' command.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.fortran/info-modules.exp: New file.
* gdb.fortran/info-types.exp: Build with new file.
* gdb.fortran/info-types.f90: Include and use new module.
* gdb.fortran/info-types-2.f90: New file.
Test the convenience functions $_gdb_setting and $_gdb_setting_str.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-10-31 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* gdb.base/setshow.exp: Test $_gdb_setting and $_gdb_setting_str.
* gdb.base/settings.exp: Test all settings types using
$_gdb_maint_setting and $_gdb_maint_setting_str in proc_show_setting,
that now verifies that the value of "maint show" is the same as
returned by the settings functions. Test the type of the
maintenance settings.
* gdb.base/default.exp: Update show_conv_list.
Implement convenience functions to examine GDB settings.
The new convenience functions $_gdb_setting and $_gdb_setting_str
provide access to the GDB settings in user-defined commands.
Similarly, $_gdb_maint_setting and $_gdb_maint_setting_str
provide access to the GDB maintenance settings.
The patch was developed following a comment of Eli about the
'set may-call-functions'. Eli said that user-defined functions
should have a way to change their behavior according to this setting.
Rather than have a specialized $_may_call_functions, this patch
implements a general way to access any GDB setting.
Compared to doing such access via Python 'gdb.parameter' and/or
'gdb.execute("set somesetting tosomevalue"):
* The 'with' command is much better than the above python usage:
if the user types C-c or an error happens between the set pagination off
and the python "set pagination on", the above python
does not restore the original setting.
* Effectively, with the "gdb.parameter" python one liner, it is possible to do
simple 'if' conditions, such as set and restore pagination.
But mixing the "python if" within canned
sequence of commands is cumbersome for non trivial combinations.
E.g. if several commands have to be done for a certain condition
accessed from python, I guess something like will be needed:
python if __some_setting: gdb.execute("some command")
python if __some_setting: gdb.execute("some other command")
python if __some_setting: gdb.execute("some different command")
(without speaking about nested "if-s").
With the convenience function:
if $_gdb_setting("some_setting")
some command
some other command
some different command
end
Integer settings (for example print elements) will also be more difficult
to use.
For example, a user defined function that scans and prints a linked list
might want to use the value of "set print elements" to stop printing
the linked list.
Doing that by mixing python expression/if is likely doable, but seems
not easy with the above one liners.
So, in summary, the $_gdb_setting and $_gdb_setting_str avoids to have the
heterogeneous mix of python and GDB commands in one single script
(and of course, it works even if python is not configured, but that
must be an unusual setup I guess).
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-10-31 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* cli/cli-cmds.c (setting_cmd, value_from_setting)
(gdb_setting_internal_fn, gdb_maint_setting_internal_fn)
(str_value_from_setting, gdb_setting_str_internal_fn)
(gdb_maint_setting_str_internal_fn): New functions.
(_initialize_cli_cmds): Define the new convenience functions.
* gdb/cli/cli-setshow.h (get_setshow_command_value_string): Constify.
* gdb/cli/cli-setshow.c (get_setshow_command_value_string): Constify.
Since safe_strerror is in gdbsupport, gdbserver also needs to
check for strerror_r, although it's less critical since gdbserver
does not use threads as much.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2019-10-31 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com>
* config.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Also check for strerror_r.