This commit applies all changes made after running the gdb/copyright.py
script.
Note that one file was flagged by the script, due to an invalid
copyright header
(gdb/unittests/basic_string_view/element_access/char/empty.cc).
As the file was copied from GCC's libstdc++-v3 testsuite, this commit
leaves this file untouched for the time being; a patch to fix the header
was sent to gcc-patches first.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
Use scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto in treg_matches_sym_type_name to
replace the local logic that was doing the same as the new class
scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto.
Use scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto inside print_symbol_info, so
that symbol information is printed in the symbol language when
language mode is auto.
This modifies the behaviour of the test dw2-case-insensitive.exp,
as the function FUNC_lang is now printed with the Fortran syntax
(as declared in the .S file).
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-11-20 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* symtab.c (treg_matches_sym_type_name): Use
scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto instead of local logic.
(print_symbol_info): Use scoped_switch_to_sym_language_if_auto
to switch to SYM language when language mode is auto.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2018-11-20 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: Update due to auto switch to
FUNC_lang language syntax.
12615cba84 Add [-q] [-t TYPEREGEXP] [NAMEREGEXP] args to info [args|functions|locals|variables]
introduced a regression that minimal symbols were not listed anymore, due to a wrong
condition checking the absence of a type regexp in the loop scanning the minimal symbols.
Instead, before entering the loop scanning the minimal symbols, check that we
do not have a type regexp, as we will never match a minimal symbol with
this type regexp.
With the fix in this patch, for this part of the code, we basically go back
to the GDB 8.2 logic, with just the addition of
&& !treg.has_value ())
to 'enter' in the minsym case.
This should ensure that at least there is no regression compared to 8.2,
when not using the new type matching argument, as there was no treg in 8.2.
2018-11-20 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* symtab.c (search_symbols): Properly check absence of type regexp
before entering the loop scanning the minimal symbols.
Consider a test-case with source files msym.c:
...
static int foo (void) { return 1; }
...
and msym_main.c:
...
static int foo (void) { return 2; }
int main (void) { return 0; }
..
compiled as c++ with minimal symbols:
...
$ g++ msym_main.c msym.c
...
With objdump -x we find the two foo symbols prefixed with their corresponding
files in the symbol table:
...
0000000000000000 l df *ABS* 0000000000000000 msym_main.c
00000000004004c7 l F .text 000000000000000b _ZL3foov
0000000000000000 l df *ABS* 0000000000000000 msym.c
00000000004004dd l F .text 000000000000000b _ZL3foov
...
However, when we use gdb to print info on foo, both foos are listed, but we
get one symbol mangled and one symbol demangled:
...
$ gdb ./a.out -batch -ex "info func foo"
All functions matching regular expression "foo":
Non-debugging symbols:
0x00000000004004c7 foo()
0x00000000004004dd _ZL3foov
...
During minimal symbol reading symbol_set_names is called for each symbol.
First, it's called with foo from msym.c, an entry is created in
per_bfd->demangled_names_hash and symbol_find_demangled_name is called, which
has the side effect of setting the language of the symbol to language_cplus.
Then, it's called with foo from msym_main.c. Since
per_bfd->demangled_names_hash already has an entry for that name,
symbol_find_demangled_name is not called, and the language of the symbol
remains language_auto.
Fix this by doing the symbol_find_demangled_name call unconditionally.
Build and reg-tested on x86_64-linux.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-11-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* symtab.c (symbol_set_names): Call symbol_find_demangled_name
unconditionally, to set the language of the symbol. Manage freeing
returned pointer using gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-11-09 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.base/msym-lang.c: New test.
* gdb.base/msym-lang.exp: New file.
* gdb.base/msym-lang-main.c: New test.
Add [-q] [-t TYPEREGEXP] [NAMEREGEXP] args to info [args|functions|locals|variables]
Main changes are:
* stack.c: Add two regexp preg and treg to print_variable_and_value_data
and used them inside do_print_variable_and_value to filter the
variables to print.
* symtab.h: Add a new function bool treg_matches_sym_type_name, that
factorises type matching logic.
* symtab.c: Add type/name matching logic to 'info functions|variables'.
* stack.c : Add type/name matching logic to 'info args|locals'.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-10-27 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* stack.c (print_variable_and_value_data): Add preg and treg.
(print_frame_local_vars): Add quiet, regexp and t_regexp arguments,
and update callers.
(print_frame_arg_vars): Likewise.
(prepare_reg): New function.
(info_locals_command): Extract info print args and use them.
(info_args_command): Likewise.
(_initialize_stack): Modify on-line help.
* symtab.c (treg_matches_sym_type_name): New function.
(search_symbols): New arg t_regexp.
(symtab_symbol_info): New args quiet, regexp, t_regexp.
(info_variables_command): Extract info print args and use them.
(info_functions_command): Likewise.
(info_types_command): Update call to symtab_symbol_info.
(_initialize_symtab): Modify on-line help.
* symtab.h (treg_matches_sym_type_name): New function.
(search_symbols): New t_regexp arg.
This fixes all the straightforward -Wshadow=local warnings in gdb. A
few standard approaches are used here:
* Renaming an inner (or outer, but more commonly inner) variable;
* Lowering a declaration to avoid a clash;
* Moving a declaration into a more inner scope to avoid a clash,
including the special case of moving a declaration into a loop header.
I did not consider any of the changes in this patch to be particularly
noteworthy, though of course they should all still be examined.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-10-04 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* ctf.c (SET_ARRAY_FIELD): Rename "u32".
* p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Split inner "i" variable.
* xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_push_dummy_call): Declare "i" in loop
header.
* xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_push_dummy_call): Declare "val" in
more inner scope.
* xcoffread.c (read_xcoff_symtab): Rename inner "symbol".
* varobj.c (varobj_update): Rename inner "newobj",
"type_changed".
* valprint.c (generic_emit_char): Rename inner "buf".
* valops.c (find_overload_match): Rename inner "temp".
(value_struct_elt_for_reference): Declare "v" in more inner
scope.
* v850-tdep.c (v850_push_dummy_call): Rename "len".
* unittests/array-view-selftests.c (run_tests): Rename inner
"vec".
* tui/tui-stack.c (tui_show_frame_info): Declare "i" in loop
header.
* tracepoint.c (merge_uploaded_trace_state_variables): Declare
"tsv" in more inner scope.
(print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Rename inner
"tuple_emitter".
* tic6x-tdep.c (tic6x_analyze_prologue): Declare "inst" lower.
(tic6x_push_dummy_call): Don't redeclare "addr".
* target-float.c: Declare "dto" lower.
* symtab.c (lookup_local_symbol): Rename inner "sym".
(find_pc_sect_line): Rename inner "pc".
* stack.c (print_frame): Don't redeclare "gdbarch".
(return_command): Rename inner "gdbarch".
* s390-tdep.c (s390_prologue_frame_unwind_cache): Renam inner
"sp".
* rust-lang.c (rust_internal_print_type): Declare "i" in loop
header.
* rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_process_record): Rename inner "addr".
* riscv-tdep.c (riscv_push_dummy_call): Declare "info" in inner
scope.
* remote.c (remote_target::update_thread_list): Don't redeclare
"tp".
(remote_target::process_initial_stop_replies): Rename inner
"thread".
(remote_target::remote_parse_stop_reply): Don't redeclare "p".
(remote_target::wait_as): Don't redeclare "stop_reply".
(remote_target::get_thread_local_address): Rename inner
"result".
(remote_target::get_tib_address): Likewise.
This patch changes the linespec.c APIs to use block_symbol instead of just
a symbol. lookup_symbol et al already return block_symbol's.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* linespec.c (struct linespec) <function_symbols, label_symbols>:
Change to vector of block_symbol. Update all users.
(struct collect_info) <symbols>: Likewise.
(collect_info::add_symbol): Take block_symbol as argument.
Update all callers.
(decode_compound_collector) <m_symbols>: Change type to vector
of block_symbol. Update all users.
(decode_compound_collector::operator ()): Change parameter type
to block_symbol.
(find_method, find_function_symbols, find_linespec_symbols)
(find_label_symbols_in_block, find_label_symbols): Change symbol
vectors to block_symbol vectors.
* symtab.h (symbol_found_callback_ftype): Change parameter type to
block_symbol.
This change/patch substitues BLOCK_ENTRY_PC for BLOCK_START in
places where BLOCK_START is used to obtain the address at which
execution should enter the block. Since blocks can now contain
non-contiguous ranges, the BLOCK_START - which is still be the
very lowest address in the block - might not be the same as
BLOCK_ENTRY_PC.
There is a change to infrun.c which is less obvious and less mechanical.
I'm posting it as a separate patch.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* ax-gdb.c (gen_var_ref): Use BLOCK_ENTRY_PC in place of
BLOCK_START.
* blockframe.c (get_pc_function_start): Likewise.
* compile/compile-c-symbols.c (convert_one_symbol): Likewise.
(gcc_symbol_address): Likewise.
* compile/compile-object-run.c (compile_object_run): Likewise.
* compile/compile.c (get_expr_block_and_pc): Likewise.
* dwarf2loc.c (dwarf2_find_location_expression): Likewise.
(func_addr_to_tail_call_list): Likewise.
* findvar.c (default_read_var_value): Likewise.
* inline-frame.c (inline_frame_this_id): Likewise.
(skip-inline_frames): Likewise.
* infcmd.c (until_next_command): Likewise.
* linespec.c (convert_linespec_to_sals): Likewise.
* parse.c (parse_exp_in_context_1): Likewise.
* printcmd.c (build_address_symbolic): likewise.
(info_address_command): Likewise.
symtab.c (find_function_start_sal): Likewise.
(skip_prologue_sal): Likewise.
(find_function_alias_target): Likewise.
(find_gnu_ifunc): Likewise.
* stack.c (find_frame_funname): Likewise.
* symtab.c (fixup_symbol_section): Likewise.
(find_function_start_sal): Likewise.
(skip_prologue_sal): Likewsie.
(find_function_alias_target): Likewise.
(find_gnu_ifunc): Likewise.
* tracepoint.c (info_scope_command): Likewise.
* value.c (value_fn_field): Likewise.
While experimenting with the previous patch, I noticed this inconsistency
in GDB's output:
(gdb) b 32
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40062f: file inline-break.c, line 32. (1)
(gdb) r
....
Breakpoint 1, func1 (x=1) at inline-break.c:32 (2)
32 return x * 23; /* break here */
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
1 breakpoint keep y 0x40062f in main at inline-break.c:32 (3)
breakpoint already hit 1 time
(gdb)
Notice that when the breakpoint as set, GDB showed "inline-break.c,
line 32" (1), the same line number that was specified in the command.
When we run to the breakpoint, we present the stop at the same line
number, and correctly show "func1" as the function name (2).
But in "info break" output (3), notice that we say "in main", not "in
func1".
The same thing happens if you set a breakpoint by address. I.e.:
(gdb) b *0x40062f
Breakpoint 2 at 0x40062f: file inline-break.c, line 32.
(gdb) info breakpoints
Num Type Disp Enb Address What
2 breakpoint keep y 0x000000000040062f in main at inline-break.c:32
(gdb) r
....
Breakpoint 2, func1 (x=1) at inline-break.c:32
32 return x * 23; /* break here */
The problem is that the breakpoints were set at an inline function,
but when we set such a breakpoint by line number or address, we don't
record the functions symbol in the sal, and as consequence the
breakpoint location does not have an associated symbol either.
Then, in print_breakpoint_location, if the location does not have a
symbol, we call find_pc_sect_function to find one, and this is what
finds "main", because find_pc_sect_function uses
block_linkage_function:
/* Return the symbol for the function which contains a specified
lexical block, described by a struct block BL. The return value
will not be an inlined function; the containing function will be
returned instead. */
struct symbol *
block_linkage_function (const struct block *bl)
To fix this, this commit adds an alternative to find_pc_sect_function
that uses block_containing_function instead:
/* Return the symbol for the function which contains a specified
block, described by a struct block BL. The return value will be
the closest enclosing function, which might be an inline
function. */
struct symbol *
block_containing_function (const struct block *bl)
(It seems odd to me that block_linkage_function says "the CONTAINING
function will be returned", and then block_containing_function says it
returns "the closest enclosing function". Something seems reversed
here. Still, I've kept the same nomenclature and copied the comments,
so that at least there's consistency. Maybe we should fix that up
somehow.)
Then I wondered, why make print_breakpoint_location look up the symbol
every time it is called, instead of just always storing the symbol
when the location is created, since the location already stores the
symbol in some cases. So to find which cases might be missing setting
the symbol in the sal which is used to create the breakpoint location,
I added an assertion to print_breakpoint_location, and ran the
testsuite. That caught a few places, unsurprisingly:
- setting a breakpoint by line number
- setting a breapoint by address
- ifunc resolving
Those are all fixed by this commit. I decided not to add the
assertion to block_linkage_function and leave the existing "if (sym)"
check in place, because it's plausible that we have symtabs with line
info but no symbols. I.e., that would not be a GDB bug, but
a peculiarity of debug info input.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-06-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* blockframe.c (find_pc_sect_containing_function): New function.
* breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Don't call
find_pc_sect_function.
* linespec.c (create_sals_line_offset): Record the location's
symbol in the sal.
* linespec.c (convert_address_location_to_sals): Fill in sal's
symbol with find_pc_sect_containing_function.
* symtab.c (find_function_start_sal): Rename to ...
(find_function_start_sal_1): ... this.
(find_function_start_sal): Reimplement as wrapper around
find_function_start_sal_1, and use
find_pc_sect_containing_function to fill in the sal's symbol.
(find_function_start_sal(symbol*, bool)): Adjust.
* symtab.h (find_pc_function, find_pc_sect_function): Adjust
comments.
(find_pc_sect_containing_function): Declare.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-06-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.opt/inline-break.exp (line number, address): Add "info
break" tests.
The recent C++ification of target_ops replaced references to the old
"current_target" squashed target throughout with references to a
"target_stack" pointer. I had picked the "target_stack" name very
early in the multi-target work, and managed to stick with it, even
though it's a bit of a misnomer, since it isn't really a "target
stack" object, but a pointer into the current top target in the stack.
As I'm splitting more pieces off of the multi-target branch, I've come
to think that it's better to rename it now. A following patch will
introduce a new class to represent a target stack, and "target_stack"
would be _its_ ideal name. (In the branch, the class is called
a_target_stack to work around the clash.)
Thus this commit renames target_stack to current_top_target and
replaces all references throughout. Also, while at it,
current_top_target is made a function instead of a pointer, to make it
possible to change its internal implementation without leaking
implementation details out. In a couple patches, the implementation
of the function will change to refer to a target stack object, and
then further down the multi-target work, it'll change again to find
the right target stack for the current inferior.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-06-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* target.h (target_stack): Delete.
(current_top_target): Declare function.
* target.c (target_stack): Delete.
(g_current_top_target): New.
(current_top_target): New function.
* auxv.c: Use current_top_target instead of target_stack
throughout.
* avr-tdep.c: Likewise.
* breakpoint.c: Likewise.
* corefile.c: Likewise.
* elfread.c: Likewise.
* eval.c: Likewise.
* exceptions.c: Likewise.
* frame.c: Likewise.
* gdbarch-selftests.c: Likewise.
* gnu-v3-abi.c: Likewise.
* ia64-tdep.c: Likewise.
* ia64-vms-tdep.c: Likewise.
* infcall.c: Likewise.
* infcmd.c: Likewise.
* infrun.c: Likewise.
* linespec.c: Likewise.
* linux-tdep.c: Likewise.
* minsyms.c: Likewise.
* ppc-linux-nat.c: Likewise.
* ppc-linux-tdep.c: Likewise.
* procfs.c: Likewise.
* regcache.c: Likewise.
* remote.c: Likewise.
* rs6000-tdep.c: Likewise.
* s390-linux-nat.c: Likewise.
* s390-tdep.c: Likewise.
* solib-aix.c: Likewise.
* solib-darwin.c: Likewise.
* solib-dsbt.c: Likewise.
* solib-spu.c: Likewise.
* solib-svr4.c: Likewise.
* solib-target.c: Likewise.
* sparc-tdep.c: Likewise.
* sparc64-tdep.c: Likewise.
* spu-tdep.c: Likewise.
* symfile.c: Likewise.
* symtab.c: Likewise.
* target-descriptions.c: Likewise.
* target-memory.c: Likewise.
* target.c: Likewise.
* target.h: Likewise.
* tracefile-tfile.c: Likewise.
* tracepoint.c: Likewise.
* valops.c: Likewise.
* valprint.c: Likewise.
* value.c: Likewise.
* windows-tdep.c: Likewise.
* mi/mi-main.c: Likewise.
I.e., use C++ virtual methods and inheritance instead of tables of
function pointers.
Unfortunately, there's no way to do a smooth transition. ALL native
targets in the tree must be converted at the same time. I've tested
all I could with cross compilers and with help from GCC compile farm,
but naturally I haven't been able to test many of the ports. Still, I
made a best effort to port everything over, and while I expect some
build problems due to typos and such, which should be trivial to fix,
I don't expect any design problems.
* Implementation notes:
- The flattened current_target is gone. References to current_target
or current_target.beneath are replaced with references to
target_stack (the top of the stack) directly.
- To keep "set debug target" working, this adds a new debug_stratum
layer that sits on top of the stack, prints the debug, and delegates
to the target beneath.
In addition, this makes the shortname and longname properties of
target_ops be virtual methods instead of data fields, and makes the
debug target defer those to the target beneath. This is so that
debug code sprinkled around that does "if (debugtarget) ..." can
transparently print the name of the target beneath.
A patch later in the series actually splits out the
shortname/longname methods to a separate structure, but I preferred
to keep that chance separate as it is associated with changing a bit
the design of how targets are registered and open.
- Since you can't check whether a C++ virtual method is overridden,
the old method of checking whether a target_ops implements a method
by comparing the function pointer must be replaced with something
else.
Some cases are fixed by adding a parallel "can_do_foo" target_ops
methods. E.g.,:
+ for (t = target_stack; t != NULL; t = t->beneath)
{
- if (t->to_create_inferior != NULL)
+ if (t->can_create_inferior ())
break;
}
Others are fixed by changing void return type to bool or int return
type, and have the default implementation return false or -1, to
indicate lack of support.
- make-target-delegates was adjusted to generate C++ classes and
methods.
It needed tweaks to grok "virtual" in front of the target method
name, and for the fact that methods are no longer function pointers.
(In particular, the current code parsing the return type was simple
because it could simply parse up until the '(' in '(*to_foo)'.
It now generates a couple C++ classes that inherit target_ops:
dummy_target and debug_target.
Since we need to generate the class declarations as well, i.e., we
need to emit methods twice, we now generate the code in two passes.
- The core_target global is renamed to avoid conflict with the
"core_target" class.
- ctf/tfile targets
init_tracefile_ops is replaced by a base class that is inherited by
both ctf and tfile.
- bsd-uthread
The bsd_uthread_ops_hack hack is gone. It's not needed because
nothing was extending a target created by bsd_uthread_target.
- remote/extended-remote targets
This is a first pass, just enough to C++ify target_ops.
A later pass will convert more free functions to methods, and make
remote_state be truly per remote instance, allowing multiple
simultaneous instances of remote targets.
- inf-child/"native" is converted to an actual base class
(inf_child_target), that is inherited by all native targets.
- GNU/Linux
The old weird double-target linux_ops mechanism in linux-nat.c, is
gone, replaced by adding a few virtual methods to linux-nat.h's
target_ops, called low_XXX, that the concrete linux-nat
implementations override. Sort of like gdbserver's
linux_target_ops, but simpler, for requiring only one
target_ops-like hierarchy, which spares implementing the same method
twice when we need to forward the method to a low implementation.
The low target simply reimplements the target_ops method directly in
that case.
There are a few remaining linux-nat.c hooks that would be better
converted to low_ methods like above too. E.g.:
linux_nat_set_new_thread (t, x86_linux_new_thread);
linux_nat_set_new_fork (t, x86_linux_new_fork);
linux_nat_set_forget_process
That'll be done in a follow up patch.
- We can no longer use functions like x86_use_watchpoints to install
custom methods on an arbitrary base target.
The patch replaces instances of such a pattern with template mixins.
For example memory_breakpoint_target defined in target.h, or
x86_nat_target in x86-nat.h.
- linux_trad_target, MIPS and Alpha GNU/Linux
The code in the new linux-nat-trad.h/c files which was split off of
inf-ptrace.h/c recently, is converted to a C++ base class, and used
by the MIPS and Alpha GNU/Linux ports.
- BSD targets
The
$architecture x NetBSD/OpenBSD/FreeBSD
support matrix complicates things a bit. There's common BSD target
code, and there's common architecture-specific code shared between
the different BSDs. Currently, all that is stiched together to form
a final target, via the i386bsd_target, x86bsd_target,
fbsd_nat_add_target functions etc.
This introduces new fbsd_nat_target, obsd_nat_target and
nbsd_nat_target classes that serve as base/prototype target for the
corresponding BSD variant.
And introduces generic i386/AMD64 BSD targets, to be used as
template mixin to build a final target. Similarly, a generic SPARC
target is added, used by both BSD and Linux ports.
- bsd_kvm_add_target, BSD libkvm target
I considered making bsd_kvm_supply_pcb a virtual method, and then
have each port inherit bsd_kvm_target and override that method, but
that was resulting in lots of unjustified churn, so I left the
function pointer mechanism alone.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-05-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
* target.h (enum strata) <debug_stratum>: New.
(struct target_ops) <all delegation methods>: Replace by C++
virtual methods, and drop "to_" prefix. All references updated
throughout.
<to_shortname, to_longname, to_doc, to_data,
to_have_steppable_watchpoint, to_have_continuable_watchpoint,
to_has_thread_control, to_attach_no_wait>: Delete, replaced by
virtual methods. All references updated throughout.
<can_attach, supports_terminal_ours, can_create_inferior,
get_thread_control_capabilities, attach_no_wait>: New
virtual methods.
<insert_breakpoint, remove_breakpoint>: Now
TARGET_DEFAULT_NORETURN methods.
<info_proc>: Now returns bool.
<to_magic>: Delete.
(OPS_MAGIC): Delete.
(current_target): Delete. All references replaced by references
to ...
(target_stack): ... this. New.
(target_shortname, target_longname): Adjust.
(target_can_run): Now a function declaration.
(default_child_has_all_memory, default_child_has_memory)
(default_child_has_stack, default_child_has_registers)
(default_child_has_execution): Remove target_ops parameter.
(complete_target_initialization): Delete.
(memory_breakpoint_target): New template class.
(test_target_ops): Refactor as a C++ class with virtual methods.
* make-target-delegates (NAME_PART): Tighten.
(POINTER_PART, CP_SYMBOL): New.
(SIMPLE_RETURN_PART): Reimplement.
(VEC_RETURN_PART): Expect less.
(RETURN_PART, VIRTUAL_PART): New.
(METHOD): Adjust to C++ virtual methods.
(scan_target_h): Remove reference to C99.
(dname): Output "target_ops::" prefix.
(write_function_header): Adjust to output a C++ class method.
(write_declaration): New.
(write_delegator): Adjust to output a C++ class method.
(tdname): Output "dummy_target::" prefix.
(write_tdefault, write_debugmethod): Adjust to output a C++ class
method.
(tdefault_names, debug_names): Delete.
(return_types, tdefaults, styles, argtypes_array): New.
(top level): All methods are delegators.
(print_class): New.
(top level): Print dummy_target and debug_target classes.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target-debug.h (target_debug_print_enum_info_proc_what)
(target_debug_print_thread_control_capabilities)
(target_debug_print_thread_info_p): New.
* target.c (dummy_target): Delete.
(the_dummy_target, the_debug_target): New.
(target_stack): Now extern.
(set_targetdebug): Push/unpush debug target.
(default_child_has_all_memory, default_child_has_memory)
(default_child_has_stack, default_child_has_registers)
(default_child_has_execution): Remove target_ops parameter.
(complete_target_initialization): Delete.
(add_target_with_completer): No longer call
complete_target_initialization.
(target_supports_terminal_ours): Use regular delegation.
(update_current_target): Delete.
(push_target): No longer check magic number. Don't call
update_current_target.
(unpush_target): Don't call update_current_target.
(target_is_pushed): No longer check magic number.
(target_require_runnable): Skip for all stratums over
process_stratum.
(target_ops::info_proc): New.
(target_info_proc): Use find_target_at and
find_default_run_target.
(target_supports_disable_randomization): Use regular delegation.
(target_get_osdata): Use find_target_at.
(target_ops::open, target_ops::close, target_ops::can_attach)
(target_ops::attach, target_ops::can_create_inferior)
(target_ops::create_inferior, target_ops::can_run)
(target_can_run): New.
(default_fileio_target): Use regular delegation.
(target_ops::fileio_open, target_ops::fileio_pwrite)
(target_ops::fileio_pread, target_ops::fileio_fstat)
(target_ops::fileio_close, target_ops::fileio_unlink)
(target_ops::fileio_readlink): New.
(target_fileio_open_1, target_fileio_unlink)
(target_fileio_readlink): Always call the target method. Handle
FILEIO_ENOSYS.
(return_zero, return_zero_has_execution): Delete.
(init_dummy_target): Delete.
(dummy_target::dummy_target, dummy_target::shortname)
(dummy_target::longname, dummy_target::doc)
(debug_target::debug_target, debug_target::shortname)
(debug_target::longname, debug_target::doc): New.
(target_supports_delete_record): Use regular delegation.
(setup_target_debug): Delete.
(maintenance_print_target_stack): Skip debug_stratum.
(initialize_targets): Instantiate the_dummy_target and
the_debug_target.
* auxv.c (target_auxv_parse): Remove 'ops' parameter. Adjust to
use target_stack.
(target_auxv_search, fprint_target_auxv): Adjust.
(info_auxv_command): Adjust to use target_stack.
* auxv.h (target_auxv_parse): Remove 'ops' parameter.
* exceptions.c (print_flush): Handle a NULL target_stack.
* regcache.c (target_ops_no_register): Refactor as class with
virtual methods.
* exec.c (exec_target): New class.
(exec_ops): Now an exec_target.
(exec_open, exec_close_1, exec_get_section_table)
(exec_xfer_partial, exec_files_info, exec_has_memory)
(exec_make_note_section): Refactor as exec_target methods.
(exec_file_clear, ignore, exec_remove_breakpoint, init_exec_ops):
Delete.
(exec_target::find_memory_regions): New.
(_initialize_exec): Don't call init_exec_ops.
* gdbcore.h (exec_file_clear): Delete.
* corefile.c (core_target): Delete.
(core_file_command): Adjust.
* corelow.c (core_target): New class.
(the_core_target): New.
(core_close): Remove target_ops parameter.
(core_close_cleanup): Adjust.
(core_target::close): New.
(core_open, core_detach, get_core_registers, core_files_info)
(core_xfer_partial, core_thread_alive, core_read_description)
(core_pid_to_str, core_thread_name, core_has_memory)
(core_has_stack, core_has_registers, core_info_proc): Rework as
core_target methods.
(ignore, core_remove_breakpoint, init_core_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_corelow): Initialize the_core_target.
* gdbcore.h (core_target): Delete.
(the_core_target): New.
* ctf.c: (ctf_target): New class.
(ctf_ops): Now a ctf_target.
(ctf_open, ctf_close, ctf_files_info, ctf_fetch_registers)
(ctf_xfer_partial, ctf_get_trace_state_variable_value)
(ctf_trace_find, ctf_traceframe_info): Refactor as ctf_target
methods.
(init_ctf_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_ctf): Don't call it.
* tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_target): New class.
(tfile_ops): Now a tfile_target.
(tfile_open, tfile_close, tfile_files_info)
(tfile_get_tracepoint_status, tfile_trace_find)
(tfile_fetch_registers, tfile_xfer_partial)
(tfile_get_trace_state_variable_value, tfile_traceframe_info):
Refactor as tfile_target methods.
(tfile_xfer_partial_features): Remove target_ops parameter.
(init_tfile_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_tracefile_tfile): Don't call it.
* tracefile.c (tracefile_has_all_memory, tracefile_has_memory)
(tracefile_has_stack, tracefile_has_registers)
(tracefile_thread_alive, tracefile_get_trace_status): Refactor as
tracefile_target methods.
(init_tracefile_ops): Delete.
(tracefile_target::tracefile_target): New.
* tracefile.h: Include "target.h".
(tracefile_target): New class.
(init_tracefile_ops): Delete.
* spu-multiarch.c (spu_multiarch_target): New class.
(spu_ops): Now a spu_multiarch_target.
(spu_thread_architecture, spu_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(spu_fetch_registers, spu_store_registers, spu_xfer_partial)
(spu_search_memory, spu_mourn_inferior): Refactor as
spu_multiarch_target methods.
(init_spu_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_spu_multiarch): Remove references to init_spu_ops,
complete_target_initialization.
* ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_thread_target): New class.
(ravenscar_ops): Now a ravenscar_thread_target.
(ravenscar_resume, ravenscar_wait, ravenscar_update_thread_list)
(ravenscar_thread_alive, ravenscar_pid_to_str)
(ravenscar_fetch_registers, ravenscar_store_registers)
(ravenscar_prepare_to_store, ravenscar_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(ravenscar_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(ravenscar_stopped_by_watchpoint, ravenscar_stopped_data_address)
(ravenscar_mourn_inferior, ravenscar_core_of_thread)
(ravenscar_get_ada_task_ptid): Refactor as ravenscar_thread_target
methods.
(init_ravenscar_thread_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_ravenscar): Remove references to
init_ravenscar_thread_ops and complete_target_initialization.
* bsd-uthread.c (bsd_uthread_ops_hack): Delete.
(bsd_uthread_target): New class.
(bsd_uthread_ops): Now a bsd_uthread_target.
(bsd_uthread_activate): Adjust to refer to bsd_uthread_ops.
(bsd_uthread_close, bsd_uthread_mourn_inferior)
(bsd_uthread_fetch_registers, bsd_uthread_store_registers)
(bsd_uthread_wait, bsd_uthread_resume, bsd_uthread_thread_alive)
(bsd_uthread_update_thread_list, bsd_uthread_extra_thread_info)
(bsd_uthread_pid_to_str): Refactor as bsd_uthread_target methods.
(bsd_uthread_target): Delete function.
(_initialize_bsd_uthread): Remove reference to
complete_target_initialization.
* bfd-target.c (target_bfd_data): Delete. Fields folded into ...
(target_bfd): ... this new class.
(target_bfd_xfer_partial, target_bfd_get_section_table)
(target_bfd_close): Refactor as target_bfd methods.
(target_bfd::~target_bfd): New.
(target_bfd_reopen): Adjust.
(target_bfd::close): New.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target): New class.
(record_btrace_ops): Now a record_btrace_target.
(record_btrace_open, record_btrace_stop_recording)
(record_btrace_disconnect, record_btrace_close)
(record_btrace_async, record_btrace_info)
(record_btrace_insn_history, record_btrace_insn_history_range)
(record_btrace_insn_history_from, record_btrace_call_history)
(record_btrace_call_history_range)
(record_btrace_call_history_from, record_btrace_record_method)
(record_btrace_is_replaying, record_btrace_will_replay)
(record_btrace_xfer_partial, record_btrace_insert_breakpoint)
(record_btrace_remove_breakpoint, record_btrace_fetch_registers)
(record_btrace_store_registers, record_btrace_prepare_to_store)
(record_btrace_to_get_unwinder)
(record_btrace_to_get_tailcall_unwinder, record_btrace_resume)
(record_btrace_commit_resume, record_btrace_wait)
(record_btrace_stop, record_btrace_can_execute_reverse)
(record_btrace_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(record_btrace_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(record_btrace_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(record_btrace_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(record_btrace_update_thread_list, record_btrace_thread_alive)
(record_btrace_goto_begin, record_btrace_goto_end)
(record_btrace_goto, record_btrace_stop_replaying_all)
(record_btrace_execution_direction)
(record_btrace_prepare_to_generate_core)
(record_btrace_done_generating_core): Refactor as
record_btrace_target methods.
(init_record_btrace_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_record_btrace): Remove reference to
init_record_btrace_ops.
* record-full.c (RECORD_FULL_IS_REPLAY): Adjust to always refer to
the execution_direction global.
(record_full_base_target, record_full_target)
(record_full_core_target): New classes.
(record_full_ops): Now a record_full_target.
(record_full_core_ops): Now a record_full_core_target.
(record_full_target::detach, record_full_target::disconnect)
(record_full_core_target::disconnect)
(record_full_target::mourn_inferior, record_full_target::kill):
New.
(record_full_open, record_full_close, record_full_async): Refactor
as methods of the record_full_base_target class.
(record_full_resume, record_full_commit_resume): Refactor
as methods of the record_full_target class.
(record_full_wait, record_full_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(record_full_stopped_data_address)
(record_full_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(record_full_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(record_full_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(record_full_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): Refactor as
methods of the record_full_base_target class.
(record_full_store_registers, record_full_xfer_partial)
(record_full_insert_breakpoint, record_full_remove_breakpoint):
Refactor as methods of the record_full_target class.
(record_full_can_execute_reverse, record_full_get_bookmark)
(record_full_goto_bookmark, record_full_execution_direction)
(record_full_record_method, record_full_info, record_full_delete)
(record_full_is_replaying, record_full_will_replay)
(record_full_goto_begin, record_full_goto_end, record_full_goto)
(record_full_stop_replaying): Refactor as methods of the
record_full_base_target class.
(record_full_core_resume, record_full_core_kill)
(record_full_core_fetch_registers)
(record_full_core_prepare_to_store)
(record_full_core_store_registers, record_full_core_xfer_partial)
(record_full_core_insert_breakpoint)
(record_full_core_remove_breakpoint)
(record_full_core_has_execution): Refactor
as methods of the record_full_core_target class.
(record_full_base_target::supports_delete_record): New.
(init_record_full_ops): Delete.
(init_record_full_core_ops): Delete.
(record_full_save): Refactor as method of the
record_full_base_target class.
(_initialize_record_full): Remove references to
init_record_full_ops and init_record_full_core_ops.
* remote.c (remote_target, extended_remote_target): New classes.
(remote_ops): Now a remote_target.
(extended_remote_ops): Now an extended_remote_target.
(remote_insert_fork_catchpoint, remote_remove_fork_catchpoint)
(remote_insert_vfork_catchpoint, remote_remove_vfork_catchpoint)
(remote_insert_exec_catchpoint, remote_remove_exec_catchpoint)
(remote_pass_signals, remote_set_syscall_catchpoint)
(remote_program_signals, )
(remote_thread_always_alive): Remove target_ops parameter.
(remote_thread_alive, remote_thread_name)
(remote_update_thread_list, remote_threads_extra_info)
(remote_static_tracepoint_marker_at)
(remote_static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid)
(remote_get_ada_task_ptid, remote_close, remote_start_remote)
(remote_open): Refactor as methods of remote_target.
(extended_remote_open, extended_remote_detach)
(extended_remote_attach, extended_remote_post_attach):
(extended_remote_supports_disable_randomization)
(extended_remote_create_inferior): : Refactor as method of
extended_remote_target.
(remote_set_permissions, remote_open_1, remote_detach)
(remote_follow_fork, remote_follow_exec, remote_disconnect)
(remote_resume, remote_commit_resume, remote_stop)
(remote_interrupt, remote_pass_ctrlc, remote_terminal_inferior)
(remote_terminal_ours, remote_wait, remote_fetch_registers)
(remote_prepare_to_store, remote_store_registers)
(remote_flash_erase, remote_flash_done, remote_files_info)
(remote_kill, remote_mourn, remote_insert_breakpoint)
(remote_remove_breakpoint, remote_insert_watchpoint)
(remote_watchpoint_addr_within_range)
(remote_remove_watchpoint, remote_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(remote_check_watch_resources, remote_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(remote_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(remote_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(remote_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(remote_stopped_by_watchpoint, remote_stopped_data_address)
(remote_insert_hw_breakpoint, remote_remove_hw_breakpoint)
(remote_verify_memory): Refactor as methods of remote_target.
(remote_write_qxfer, remote_read_qxfer): Remove target_ops
parameter.
(remote_xfer_partial, remote_get_memory_xfer_limit)
(remote_search_memory, remote_rcmd, remote_memory_map)
(remote_pid_to_str, remote_get_thread_local_address)
(remote_get_tib_address, remote_read_description): Refactor as
methods of remote_target.
(remote_target::fileio_open, remote_target::fileio_pwrite)
(remote_target::fileio_pread, remote_target::fileio_close): New.
(remote_hostio_readlink, remote_hostio_fstat)
(remote_filesystem_is_local, remote_can_execute_reverse)
(remote_supports_non_stop, remote_supports_disable_randomization)
(remote_supports_multi_process, remote_supports_cond_breakpoints)
(remote_supports_enable_disable_tracepoint)
(remote_supports_string_tracing)
(remote_can_run_breakpoint_commands, remote_trace_init)
(remote_download_tracepoint, remote_can_download_tracepoint)
(remote_download_trace_state_variable, remote_enable_tracepoint)
(remote_disable_tracepoint, remote_trace_set_readonly_regions)
(remote_trace_start, remote_get_trace_status)
(remote_get_tracepoint_status, remote_trace_stop)
(remote_trace_find, remote_get_trace_state_variable_value)
(remote_save_trace_data, remote_get_raw_trace_data)
(remote_set_disconnected_tracing, remote_core_of_thread)
(remote_set_circular_trace_buffer, remote_traceframe_info)
(remote_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len)
(remote_set_trace_buffer_size, remote_set_trace_notes)
(remote_use_agent, remote_can_use_agent, remote_enable_btrace)
(remote_disable_btrace, remote_teardown_btrace)
(remote_read_btrace, remote_btrace_conf)
(remote_augmented_libraries_svr4_read, remote_load)
(remote_pid_to_exec_file, remote_can_do_single_step)
(remote_execution_direction, remote_thread_handle_to_thread_info):
Refactor as methods of remote_target.
(init_remote_ops, init_extended_remote_ops): Delete.
(remote_can_async_p, remote_is_async_p, remote_async)
(remote_thread_events, remote_upload_tracepoints)
(remote_upload_trace_state_variables): Refactor as methods of
remote_target.
(_initialize_remote): Remove references to init_remote_ops and
init_extended_remote_ops.
* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_target): New class.
(gdbsim_fetch_register, gdbsim_store_register, gdbsim_kill)
(gdbsim_load, gdbsim_create_inferior, gdbsim_open, gdbsim_close)
(gdbsim_detach, gdbsim_resume, gdbsim_interrupt)
(gdbsim_wait, gdbsim_prepare_to_store, gdbsim_xfer_partial)
(gdbsim_files_info, gdbsim_mourn_inferior, gdbsim_thread_alive)
(gdbsim_pid_to_str, gdbsim_has_all_memory, gdbsim_has_memory):
Refactor as methods of gdbsim_target.
(gdbsim_ops): Now a gdbsim_target.
(init_gdbsim_ops): Delete.
(gdbsim_cntrl_c): Adjust.
(_initialize_remote_sim): Remove reference to init_gdbsim_ops.
* amd64-linux-nat.c (amd64_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_amd64_linux_nat_target): New.
(amd64_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(amd64_linux_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
amd64_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_amd64_linux_nat): Adjust. Set linux_target.
* i386-linux-nat.c: Don't include "linux-nat.h".
(i386_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_i386_linux_nat_target): New.
(i386_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(i386_linux_store_inferior_registers, i386_linux_resume): Refactor
as methods of i386_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_i386_linux_nat): Adjust. Set linux_target.
* inf-child.c (inf_child_ops): Delete.
(inf_child_fetch_inferior_registers)
(inf_child_store_inferior_registers): Delete.
(inf_child_post_attach, inf_child_prepare_to_store): Refactor as
methods of inf_child_target.
(inf_child_target::supports_terminal_ours)
(inf_child_target::terminal_init)
(inf_child_target::terminal_inferior)
(inf_child_target::terminal_ours_for_output)
(inf_child_target::terminal_ours, inf_child_target::interrupt)
(inf_child_target::pass_ctrlc, inf_child_target::terminal_info):
New.
(inf_child_open, inf_child_disconnect, inf_child_close)
(inf_child_mourn_inferior, inf_child_maybe_unpush_target)
(inf_child_post_startup_inferior, inf_child_can_run)
(inf_child_pid_to_exec_file): Refactor as methods of
inf_child_target.
(inf_child_follow_fork): Delete.
(inf_child_target::can_create_inferior)
(inf_child_target::can_attach): New.
(inf_child_target::has_all_memory, inf_child_target::has_memory)
(inf_child_target::has_stack, inf_child_target::has_registers)
(inf_child_target::has_execution): New.
(inf_child_fileio_open, inf_child_fileio_pwrite)
(inf_child_fileio_pread, inf_child_fileio_fstat)
(inf_child_fileio_close, inf_child_fileio_unlink)
(inf_child_fileio_readlink, inf_child_use_agent)
(inf_child_can_use_agent): Refactor as methods of
inf_child_target.
(return_zero, inf_child_target): Delete.
(inf_child_target::inf_child_target): New.
* inf-child.h: Include "target.h".
(inf_child_target): Delete function prototype.
(inf_child_target): New class.
(inf_child_open_target, inf_child_mourn_inferior)
(inf_child_maybe_unpush_target): Delete.
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_target::~inf_ptrace_target): New.
(inf_ptrace_follow_fork, inf_ptrace_insert_fork_catchpoint)
(inf_ptrace_remove_fork_catchpoint, inf_ptrace_create_inferior)
(inf_ptrace_post_startup_inferior, inf_ptrace_mourn_inferior)
(inf_ptrace_attach, inf_ptrace_post_attach, inf_ptrace_detach)
(inf_ptrace_detach_success, inf_ptrace_kill, inf_ptrace_resume)
(inf_ptrace_wait, inf_ptrace_xfer_partial)
(inf_ptrace_thread_alive, inf_ptrace_files_info)
(inf_ptrace_pid_to_str, inf_ptrace_auxv_parse): Refactor as
methods of inf_ptrace_target.
(inf_ptrace_target): Delete function.
* inf-ptrace.h: Include "inf-child.h".
(inf_ptrace_target): Delete function declaration.
(inf_ptrace_target): New class.
(inf_ptrace_trad_target, inf_ptrace_detach_success): Delete.
* linux-nat.c (linux_target): New.
(linux_ops, linux_ops_saved, super_xfer_partial): Delete.
(linux_nat_target::~linux_nat_target): New.
(linux_child_post_attach, linux_child_post_startup_inferior)
(linux_child_follow_fork, linux_child_insert_fork_catchpoint)
(linux_child_remove_fork_catchpoint)
(linux_child_insert_vfork_catchpoint)
(linux_child_remove_vfork_catchpoint)
(linux_child_insert_exec_catchpoint)
(linux_child_remove_exec_catchpoint)
(linux_child_set_syscall_catchpoint, linux_nat_pass_signals)
(linux_nat_create_inferior, linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_detach)
(linux_nat_resume, linux_nat_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(linux_nat_stopped_data_address)
(linux_nat_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(linux_nat_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(linux_nat_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint)
(linux_nat_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint, linux_nat_wait)
(linux_nat_kill, linux_nat_mourn_inferior)
(linux_nat_xfer_partial, linux_nat_thread_alive)
(linux_nat_update_thread_list, linux_nat_pid_to_str)
(linux_nat_thread_name, linux_child_pid_to_exec_file)
(linux_child_static_tracepoint_markers_by_strid)
(linux_nat_is_async_p, linux_nat_can_async_p)
(linux_nat_supports_non_stop, linux_nat_always_non_stop_p)
(linux_nat_supports_multi_process)
(linux_nat_supports_disable_randomization, linux_nat_async)
(linux_nat_stop, linux_nat_close, linux_nat_thread_address_space)
(linux_nat_core_of_thread, linux_nat_filesystem_is_local)
(linux_nat_fileio_open, linux_nat_fileio_readlink)
(linux_nat_fileio_unlink, linux_nat_thread_events): Refactor as
methods of linux_nat_target.
(linux_nat_wait_1, linux_xfer_siginfo, linux_proc_xfer_partial)
(linux_proc_xfer_spu, linux_nat_xfer_osdata): Remove target_ops
parameter.
(check_stopped_by_watchpoint): Adjust.
(linux_xfer_partial): Delete.
(linux_target_install_ops, linux_target, linux_nat_add_target):
Delete.
(linux_nat_target::linux_nat_target): New.
* linux-nat.h: Include "inf-ptrace.h".
(linux_nat_target): New.
(linux_target, linux_target_install_ops, linux_nat_add_target):
Delete function declarations.
(linux_target): Declare global.
* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_target): New.
(thread_db_target::thread_db_target): New.
(thread_db_ops): Delete.
(the_thread_db_target): New.
(thread_db_detach, thread_db_wait, thread_db_mourn_inferior)
(thread_db_update_thread_list, thread_db_pid_to_str)
(thread_db_extra_thread_info)
(thread_db_thread_handle_to_thread_info)
(thread_db_get_thread_local_address, thread_db_get_ada_task_ptid)
(thread_db_resume): Refactor as methods of thread_db_target.
(init_thread_db_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_thread_db): Remove reference to init_thread_db_ops.
* x86-linux-nat.c: Don't include "linux-nat.h".
(super_post_startup_inferior): Delete.
(x86_linux_nat_target::~x86_linux_nat_target): New.
(x86_linux_child_post_startup_inferior)
(x86_linux_read_description, x86_linux_enable_btrace)
(x86_linux_disable_btrace, x86_linux_teardown_btrace)
(x86_linux_read_btrace, x86_linux_btrace_conf): Refactor as
methods of x86_linux_nat_target.
(x86_linux_create_target): Delete. Bits folded ...
(x86_linux_add_target): ... here. Now takes a linux_nat_target
pointer.
* x86-linux-nat.h: Include "linux-nat.h" and "x86-nat.h".
(x86_linux_nat_target): New class.
(x86_linux_create_target): Delete.
(x86_linux_add_target): Now takes a linux_nat_target pointer.
* x86-nat.c (x86_insert_watchpoint, x86_remove_watchpoint)
(x86_region_ok_for_watchpoint, x86_stopped_data_address)
(x86_stopped_by_watchpoint, x86_insert_hw_breakpoint)
(x86_remove_hw_breakpoint, x86_can_use_hw_breakpoint)
(x86_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): Remove target_ops parameter and
make extern.
(x86_use_watchpoints): Delete.
* x86-nat.h: Include "breakpoint.h" and "target.h".
(x86_use_watchpoints): Delete.
(x86_can_use_hw_breakpoint, x86_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(x86_stopped_by_watchpoint, x86_stopped_data_address)
(x86_insert_watchpoint, x86_remove_watchpoint)
(x86_insert_hw_breakpoint, x86_remove_hw_breakpoint)
(x86_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New declarations.
(x86_nat_target): New template class.
* ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_ppc_linux_nat_target): New.
(ppc_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(ppc_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint)
(ppc_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(ppc_linux_ranged_break_num_registers)
(ppc_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint, ppc_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint)
(ppc_linux_insert_mask_watchpoint)
(ppc_linux_remove_mask_watchpoint)
(ppc_linux_can_accel_watchpoint_condition)
(ppc_linux_insert_watchpoint, ppc_linux_remove_watchpoint)
(ppc_linux_stopped_data_address, ppc_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(ppc_linux_watchpoint_addr_within_range)
(ppc_linux_masked_watch_num_registers)
(ppc_linux_store_inferior_registers, ppc_linux_auxv_parse)
(ppc_linux_read_description): Refactor as methods of
ppc_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_ppc_linux_nat): Adjust. Set linux_target.
* procfs.c (procfs_xfer_partial): Delete forward declaration.
(procfs_target): New class.
(the_procfs_target): New.
(procfs_target): Delete function.
(procfs_auxv_parse, procfs_attach, procfs_detach)
(procfs_fetch_registers, procfs_store_registers, procfs_wait)
(procfs_xfer_partial, procfs_resume, procfs_pass_signals)
(procfs_files_info, procfs_kill_inferior, procfs_mourn_inferior)
(procfs_create_inferior, procfs_update_thread_list)
(procfs_thread_alive, procfs_pid_to_str)
(procfs_can_use_hw_breakpoint, procfs_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(procfs_stopped_data_address, procfs_insert_watchpoint)
(procfs_remove_watchpoint, procfs_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(proc_find_memory_regions, procfs_info_proc)
(procfs_make_note_section): Refactor as methods of procfs_target.
(_initialize_procfs): Adjust.
* sol-thread.c (sol_thread_target): New class.
(sol_thread_ops): Now a sol_thread_target.
(sol_thread_detach, sol_thread_resume, sol_thread_wait)
(sol_thread_fetch_registers, sol_thread_store_registers)
(sol_thread_xfer_partial, sol_thread_mourn_inferior)
(sol_thread_alive, solaris_pid_to_str, sol_update_thread_list)
(sol_get_ada_task_ptid): Refactor as methods of sol_thread_target.
(init_sol_thread_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_sol_thread): Adjust. Remove references to
init_sol_thread_ops and complete_target_initialization.
* windows-nat.c (windows_nat_target): New class.
(windows_fetch_inferior_registers)
(windows_store_inferior_registers, windows_resume, windows_wait)
(windows_attach, windows_detach, windows_pid_to_exec_file)
(windows_files_info, windows_create_inferior)
(windows_mourn_inferior, windows_interrupt, windows_kill_inferior)
(windows_close, windows_pid_to_str, windows_xfer_partial)
(windows_get_tib_address, windows_get_ada_task_ptid)
(windows_thread_name, windows_thread_alive): Refactor as
windows_nat_target methods.
(do_initial_windows_stuff): Adjust.
(windows_target): Delete function.
(_initialize_windows_nat): Adjust.
* darwin-nat.c (darwin_resume, darwin_wait_to, darwin_interrupt)
(darwin_mourn_inferior, darwin_kill_inferior)
(darwin_create_inferior, darwin_attach, darwin_detach)
(darwin_pid_to_str, darwin_thread_alive, darwin_xfer_partial)
(darwin_pid_to_exec_file, darwin_get_ada_task_ptid)
(darwin_supports_multi_process): Refactor as darwin_nat_target
methods.
(darwin_resume_to, darwin_files_info): Delete.
(_initialize_darwin_inferior): Rename to ...
(_initialize_darwin_nat): ... this. Adjust to C++ification.
* darwin-nat.h: Include "inf-child.h".
(darwin_nat_target): New class.
(darwin_complete_target): Delete.
* i386-darwin-nat.c (i386_darwin_nat_target): New class.
(darwin_target): New.
(i386_darwin_fetch_inferior_registers)
(i386_darwin_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
darwin_nat_target.
(darwin_complete_target): Delete, with ...
(_initialize_i386_darwin_nat): ... bits factored out here.
* alpha-linux-nat.c (alpha_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_alpha_linux_nat_target): New.
(alpha_linux_register_u_offset): Refactor as
alpha_linux_nat_target method.
(_initialize_alpha_linux_nat): Adjust.
* linux-nat-trad.c (inf_ptrace_register_u_offset): Delete.
(inf_ptrace_fetch_register, inf_ptrace_fetch_registers)
(inf_ptrace_store_register, inf_ptrace_store_registers): Refact as
methods of linux_nat_trad_target.
(linux_trad_target): Delete.
* linux-nat-trad.h (linux_trad_target): Delete function.
(linux_nat_trad_target): New class.
* mips-linux-nat.c (mips_linux_nat_target): New class.
(super_fetch_registers, super_store_registers, super_close):
Delete.
(the_mips_linux_nat_target): New.
(mips64_linux_regsets_fetch_registers)
(mips64_linux_regsets_store_registers)
(mips64_linux_fetch_registers, mips64_linux_store_registers)
(mips_linux_register_u_offset, mips_linux_read_description)
(mips_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint)
(mips_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(mips_linux_stopped_data_address)
(mips_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(mips_linux_insert_watchpoint, mips_linux_remove_watchpoint)
(mips_linux_close): Refactor as methods of mips_linux_nat.
(_initialize_mips_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* aix-thread.c (aix_thread_target): New class.
(aix_thread_ops): Now an aix_thread_target.
(aix_thread_detach, aix_thread_resume, aix_thread_wait)
(aix_thread_fetch_registers, aix_thread_store_registers)
(aix_thread_xfer_partial, aix_thread_mourn_inferior)
(aix_thread_thread_alive, aix_thread_pid_to_str)
(aix_thread_extra_thread_info, aix_thread_get_ada_task_ptid):
Refactor as methods of aix_thread_target.
(init_aix_thread_ops): Delete.
(_initialize_aix_thread): Remove references to init_aix_thread_ops
and complete_target_initialization.
* rs6000-nat.c (rs6000_xfer_shared_libraries): Delete.
(rs6000_nat_target): New class.
(the_rs6000_nat_target): New.
(rs6000_fetch_inferior_registers, rs6000_store_inferior_registers)
(rs6000_xfer_partial, rs6000_wait, rs6000_create_inferior)
(rs6000_xfer_shared_libraries): Refactor as rs6000_nat_target methods.
(super_create_inferior): Delete.
(_initialize_rs6000_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* arm-linux-nat.c (arm_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_arm_linux_nat_target): New.
(arm_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(arm_linux_store_inferior_registers, arm_linux_read_description)
(arm_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint, arm_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint)
(arm_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint)
(arm_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(arm_linux_insert_watchpoint, arm_linux_remove_watchpoint)
(arm_linux_stopped_data_address, arm_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(arm_linux_watchpoint_addr_within_range): Refactor as methods of
arm_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_arm_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_aarch64_linux_nat_target): New.
(aarch64_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(aarch64_linux_store_inferior_registers)
(aarch64_linux_child_post_startup_inferior)
(aarch64_linux_read_description)
(aarch64_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint)
(aarch64_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint)
(aarch64_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint)
(aarch64_linux_insert_watchpoint, aarch64_linux_remove_watchpoint)
(aarch64_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(aarch64_linux_stopped_data_address)
(aarch64_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(aarch64_linux_watchpoint_addr_within_range)
(aarch64_linux_can_do_single_step): Refactor as methods of
aarch64_linux_nat_target.
(super_post_startup_inferior): Delete.
(_initialize_aarch64_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* hppa-linux-nat.c (hppa_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_hppa_linux_nat_target): New.
(hppa_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(hppa_linux_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
hppa_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_hppa_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* ia64-linux-nat.c (ia64_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_ia64_linux_nat_target): New.
(ia64_linux_insert_watchpoint, ia64_linux_remove_watchpoint)
(ia64_linux_stopped_data_address)
(ia64_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint, ia64_linux_fetch_registers)
(ia64_linux_store_registers, ia64_linux_xfer_partial): Refactor as
ia64_linux_nat_target methods.
(super_xfer_partial): Delete.
(_initialize_ia64_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* m32r-linux-nat.c (m32r_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_m32r_linux_nat_target): New.
(m32r_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(m32r_linux_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as
m32r_linux_nat_target methods.
(_initialize_m32r_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* m68k-linux-nat.c (m68k_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_m68k_linux_nat_target): New.
(m68k_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(m68k_linux_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as
m68k_linux_nat_target methods.
(_initialize_m68k_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* s390-linux-nat.c (s390_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_s390_linux_nat_target): New.
(s390_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(s390_linux_store_inferior_registers, s390_stopped_by_watchpoint)
(s390_insert_watchpoint, s390_remove_watchpoint)
(s390_can_use_hw_breakpoint, s390_insert_hw_breakpoint)
(s390_remove_hw_breakpoint, s390_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint)
(s390_auxv_parse, s390_read_description): Refactor as methods of
s390_linux_nat_target.
(_initialize_s390_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* sparc-linux-nat.c (sparc_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_sparc_linux_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparc_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* sparc-nat.c (sparc_fetch_inferior_registers)
(sparc_store_inferior_registers): Remove target_ops parameter.
* sparc-nat.h (sparc_fetch_inferior_registers)
(sparc_store_inferior_registers): Remove target_ops parameter.
* sparc64-linux-nat.c (sparc64_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_sparc64_linux_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparc64_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* spu-linux-nat.c (spu_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_spu_linux_nat_target): New.
(spu_child_post_startup_inferior, spu_child_post_attach)
(spu_child_wait, spu_fetch_inferior_registers)
(spu_store_inferior_registers, spu_xfer_partial)
(spu_can_use_hw_breakpoint): Refactor as spu_linux_nat_target
methods.
(_initialize_spu_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* tilegx-linux-nat.c (tilegx_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_tilegx_linux_nat_target): New.
(fetch_inferior_registers, store_inferior_registers):
Refactor as methods.
(_initialize_tile_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* xtensa-linux-nat.c (xtensa_linux_nat_target): New class.
(the_xtensa_linux_nat_target): New.
(xtensa_linux_fetch_inferior_registers)
(xtensa_linux_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as
xtensa_linux_nat_target methods.
(_initialize_xtensa_linux_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* fbsd-nat.c (USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO): Delete.
(fbsd_pid_to_exec_file, fbsd_find_memory_regions)
(fbsd_find_memory_regions, fbsd_info_proc, fbsd_xfer_partial)
(fbsd_thread_alive, fbsd_pid_to_str, fbsd_thread_name)
(fbsd_update_thread_list, fbsd_resume, fbsd_wait)
(fbsd_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint)
(fbsd_supports_stopped_by_sw_breakpoint, fbsd_follow_fork)
(fbsd_insert_fork_catchpoint, fbsd_remove_fork_catchpoint)
(fbsd_insert_vfork_catchpoint, fbsd_remove_vfork_catchpoint)
(fbsd_post_startup_inferior, fbsd_post_attach)
(fbsd_insert_exec_catchpoint, fbsd_remove_exec_catchpoint)
(fbsd_set_syscall_catchpoint)
(super_xfer_partial, super_resume, super_wait)
(fbsd_supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): Delete.
(fbsd_handle_debug_trap): Remove target_ops parameter.
(fbsd_nat_add_target): Delete.
* fbsd-nat.h: Include "inf-ptrace.h".
(fbsd_nat_add_target): Delete.
(USE_SIGTRAP_SIGINFO): Define.
(fbsd_nat_target): New class.
* amd64-bsd-nat.c (amd64bsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(amd64bsd_store_inferior_registers): Remove target_ops parameter.
(amd64bsd_target): Delete.
* amd64-bsd-nat.h: New file.
* amd64-fbsd-nat.c: Include "amd64-bsd-nat.h" instead of
"x86-bsd-nat.h".
(amd64_fbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_amd64_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(amd64fbsd_read_description): Refactor as method of
amd64_fbsd_nat_target.
(amd64_fbsd_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New.
(_initialize_amd64fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* amd64-nat.h (amd64bsd_target): Delete function declaration.
* i386-bsd-nat.c (i386bsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(i386bsd_store_inferior_registers): Remove target_ops parameter.
(i386bsd_target): Delete.
* i386-bsd-nat.h (i386bsd_target): Delete function declaration.
(i386bsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(i386bsd_store_inferior_registers): Declare.
(i386_bsd_nat_target): New class.
* i386-fbsd-nat.c (i386_fbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_i386_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(i386fbsd_resume, i386fbsd_read_description): Refactor as
i386_fbsd_nat_target methods.
(i386_fbsd_nat_target::supports_stopped_by_hw_breakpoint): New.
(_initialize_i386fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* x86-bsd-nat.c (super_mourn_inferior): Delete.
(x86bsd_mourn_inferior, x86bsd_target): Delete.
(_initialize_x86_bsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* x86-bsd-nat.h: Include "x86-nat.h".
(x86bsd_target): Delete declaration.
(x86bsd_nat_target): New class.
* aarch64-fbsd-nat.c (aarch64_fbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_aarch64_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(aarch64_fbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(aarch64_fbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
aarch64_fbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* alpha-bsd-nat.c (alpha_bsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_alpha_bsd_nat_target): New.
(alphabsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(alphabsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as
alpha_bsd_nat_target methods.
(_initialize_alphabsd_nat): Refactor as methods of
alpha_bsd_nat_target.
* amd64-nbsd-nat.c: Include "amd64-bsd-nat.h".
(the_amd64_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_amd64nbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* amd64-obsd-nat.c: Include "amd64-bsd-nat.h".
(the_amd64_obsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_amd64obsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* arm-fbsd-nat.c (arm_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(the_arm_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(arm_fbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(arm_fbsd_store_inferior_registers, arm_fbsd_read_description):
(_initialize_arm_fbsd_nat): Refactor as methods of
arm_fbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_arm_fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* arm-nbsd-nat.c (arm_netbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_arm_netbsd_nat_target): New.
(armnbsd_fetch_registers, armnbsd_store_registers): Refactor as
arm_netbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_arm_netbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* hppa-nbsd-nat.c (hppa_nbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_hppa_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(hppanbsd_fetch_registers, hppanbsd_store_registers): Refactor as
hppa_nbsd_nat_target methods.
(_initialize_hppanbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* hppa-obsd-nat.c (hppa_obsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_hppa_obsd_nat_target): New.
(hppaobsd_fetch_registers, hppaobsd_store_registers): Refactor as
methods of hppa_obsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_hppaobsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* i386-nbsd-nat.c (the_i386_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_i386nbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* i386-obsd-nat.c (the_i386_obsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_i386obsd_nat): Use add_target.
* m68k-bsd-nat.c (m68k_bsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_m68k_bsd_nat_target): New.
(m68kbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(m68kbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
m68k_bsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_m68kbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* mips-fbsd-nat.c (mips_fbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_mips_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(mips_fbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(mips_fbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
mips_fbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_mips_fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* mips-nbsd-nat.c (mips_nbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_mips_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(mipsnbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(mipsnbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
mips_nbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_mipsnbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* mips64-obsd-nat.c (mips64_obsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_mips64_obsd_nat_target): New.
(mips64obsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(mips64obsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
mips64_obsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_mips64obsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* nbsd-nat.c (nbsd_pid_to_exec_file): Refactor as method of
nbsd_nat_target.
* nbsd-nat.h: Include "inf-ptrace.h".
(nbsd_nat_target): New class.
* obsd-nat.c (obsd_pid_to_str, obsd_update_thread_list)
(obsd_wait): Refactor as methods of obsd_nat_target.
(obsd_add_target): Delete.
* obsd-nat.h: Include "inf-ptrace.h".
(obsd_nat_target): New class.
* ppc-fbsd-nat.c (ppc_fbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_ppc_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(ppcfbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(ppcfbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
ppc_fbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_ppcfbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* ppc-nbsd-nat.c (ppc_nbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_ppc_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(ppcnbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(ppcnbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
ppc_nbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_ppcnbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* ppc-obsd-nat.c (ppc_obsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_ppc_obsd_nat_target): New.
(ppcobsd_fetch_registers, ppcobsd_store_registers): Refactor as
methods of ppc_obsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_ppcobsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* sh-nbsd-nat.c (sh_nbsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_sh_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(shnbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(shnbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as methods of
sh_nbsd_nat_target.
(_initialize_shnbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* sparc-nat.c (sparc_xfer_wcookie): Make extern.
(inf_ptrace_xfer_partial): Delete.
(sparc_xfer_partial, sparc_target): Delete.
* sparc-nat.h (sparc_fetch_inferior_registers)
(sparc_store_inferior_registers, sparc_xfer_wcookie): Declare.
(sparc_target): Delete function declaration.
(sparc_target): New template class.
* sparc-nbsd-nat.c (the_sparc_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparcnbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* sparc64-fbsd-nat.c (the_sparc64_fbsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparc64fbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* sparc64-nbsd-nat.c (the_sparc64_nbsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparc64nbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* sparc64-obsd-nat.c (the_sparc64_obsd_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_sparc64obsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification. Use
add_target.
* vax-bsd-nat.c (vax_bsd_nat_target): New class.
(the_vax_bsd_nat_target): New.
(vaxbsd_fetch_inferior_registers)
(vaxbsd_store_inferior_registers): Refactor as vax_bsd_nat_target
methods.
(_initialize_vaxbsd_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* bsd-kvm.c (bsd_kvm_target): New class.
(bsd_kvm_ops): Now a bsd_kvm_target.
(bsd_kvm_open, bsd_kvm_close, bsd_kvm_xfer_partial)
(bsd_kvm_files_info, bsd_kvm_fetch_registers)
(bsd_kvm_thread_alive, bsd_kvm_pid_to_str): Refactor as methods of
bsd_kvm_target.
(bsd_kvm_return_one): Delete.
(bsd_kvm_add_target): Adjust to C++ification.
* nto-procfs.c (nto_procfs_target, nto_procfs_target_native)
(nto_procfs_target_procfs): New classes.
(procfs_open_1, procfs_thread_alive, procfs_update_thread_list)
(procfs_files_info, procfs_pid_to_exec_file, procfs_attach)
(procfs_post_attach, procfs_wait, procfs_fetch_registers)
(procfs_xfer_partial, procfs_detach, procfs_insert_breakpoint)
(procfs_remove_breakpoint, procfs_insert_hw_breakpoint)
(procfs_remove_hw_breakpoint, procfs_resume)
(procfs_mourn_inferior, procfs_create_inferior, procfs_interrupt)
(procfs_kill_inferior, procfs_store_registers)
(procfs_pass_signals, procfs_pid_to_str, procfs_can_run): Refactor
as methods of nto_procfs_target.
(nto_procfs_ops): Now an nto_procfs_target_procfs.
(nto_native_ops): Delete.
(procfs_open, procfs_native_open): Delete.
(nto_native_ops): Now an nto_procfs_target_native.
(init_procfs_targets): Adjust to C++ification.
(procfs_can_use_hw_breakpoint, procfs_remove_hw_watchpoint)
(procfs_insert_hw_watchpoint, procfs_stopped_by_watchpoint):
Refactor as methods of nto_procfs_target.
* go32-nat.c (go32_nat_target): New class.
(the_go32_nat_target): New.
(go32_attach, go32_resume, go32_wait, go32_fetch_registers)
(go32_store_registers, go32_xfer_partial, go32_files_info)
(go32_kill_inferior, go32_create_inferior, go32_mourn_inferior)
(go32_terminal_init, go32_terminal_info, go32_terminal_inferior)
(go32_terminal_ours, go32_pass_ctrlc, go32_thread_alive)
(go32_pid_to_str): Refactor as methods of go32_nat_target.
(go32_target): Delete.
(_initialize_go32_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
* gnu-nat.c (gnu_wait, gnu_resume, gnu_kill_inferior)
(gnu_mourn_inferior, gnu_create_inferior, gnu_attach, gnu_detach)
(gnu_stop, gnu_thread_alive, gnu_xfer_partial)
(gnu_find_memory_regions, gnu_pid_to_str): Refactor as methods of
gnu_nat_target.
(gnu_target): Delete.
* gnu-nat.h (gnu_target): Delete.
(gnu_nat_target): New class.
* i386-gnu-nat.c (gnu_base_target): New.
(i386_gnu_nat_target): New class.
(the_i386_gnu_nat_target): New.
(_initialize_i386gnu_nat): Adjust to C++ification.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-05-02 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/breakpoint-in-ro-region.exp: Adjust to to_resume and
to_log_command renames.
* gdb.base/sss-bp-on-user-bp-2.exp: Likewise.
Running the new tests added later in the series on PPC64 (ELFv1)
revealed that the current ifunc support needs a bit of a design rework
to work properly on PPC64/ELFv1, as most of the new tests fail. The
ifunc support only kind of works today if the ifunc symbol and the
resolver have the same name, as is currently tested by the
gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp testcase, which is unlike how ifuncs are
written nowadays.
The crux of the problem is that ifunc symbols are really function
descriptors, not text symbols:
44: 0000000000020060 104 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 18 gnu_ifunc_resolver
54: 0000000000020060 104 GNU_IFUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 18 gnu_ifunc
But, currently GDB only knows about ifunc symbols that are text
symbols. GDB's support happens to work in practice for PPC64 when the
ifunc and resolver are one and only, like in the current
gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp testcase:
15: 0000000000020060 104 GNU_IFUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 18 gnu_ifunc
because in that case, the synthetic ".gnu_ifunc" entry point text
symbol that bfd creates from the actual GNU ifunc "gnu_ifunc" function
(descriptor) symbol ends up with the the "is a gnu ifunc" flag set /
copied over:
(gdb) maint print msymbols
...
[ 8] i 0x9c4 .gnu_ifunc section .text <<< mst_text_gnu_ifunc
...
[29] D 0x20060 gnu_ifunc section .opd crtstuff.c <<< mst_data
But, if the resolver gets a distinct symbol/name from the ifunc
symbol, then we end up with this:
(gdb) maint print msymbols
[ 8] T 0x9e4 .gnu_ifunc_resolver section .text <<< mst_text
...
[29] D 0x20060 gnu_ifunc section .opd crtstuff.c <<< mst_data
[30] D 0x20060 gnu_ifunc_resolver section .opd crtstuff.c <<< mst_data
I have a follow up bfd patch that turns that into:
(gdb) maint print msymbols
+ [ 8] i 0x9e4 .gnu_ifunc section .text <<< mst_text_gnu_ifunc
[ 8] T 0x9e4 .gnu_ifunc_resolver section .text <<< mst_text
...
[29] D 0x20060 gnu_ifunc section .opd crtstuff.c
[30] D 0x20060 gnu_ifunc_resolver section .opd crtstuff.c
but that won't help everything. We still need this patch.
Specifically, when we do a symbol lookup by name, like e.g., to call a
function (see c-exp.y hunk), e.g., "p gnu_ifunc()", then we need to
know that the found "gnu_ifunc" minimal symbol is an ifunc in order to
do some special processing. But, on PPC, that lookup by name finds
the function descriptor symbol, which presently is just a mst_data
symbol, while at present, we look for mst_text_gnu_ifunc symbols to
decide whether to do special GNU ifunc processing. In most of those
places, we could try to resolve the function descriptor with
gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr, and then lookup the minimal symbol
at the resolved PC, see if that finds a minimal symbol of type
mst_text_gnu_ifunc. If so, then we could assume that the original
mst_dadta / function descriptor "gnu_ifunc" symbol was an ifunc. I
tried it, and it mostly works, even if it's not the most efficient.
However, there's one case that can't work with such a design -- it's
that of the user calling the ifunc resolver directly to debug it, like
"p gnu_ifunc_resolver(0)", expecting that to return the function
pointer of the final function (which is exercised by the new tests
added later). In this case, with the not-fully-working solution, we'd
resolve the function descriptor, find that there's an
mst_text_gnu_ifunc symbol for the resolved address, and proceed
calling the function as if we tried to call "gnu_ifunc", the
user-visible GNU ifunc symbol, instead of the resolver. I.e., it'd be
impossible to call the resolver directly as a normal function.
Introducing mst_data_gnu_ifunc eliminates the need for several
gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr calls, and, fixes the "call
resolver directly" use case mentioned above too. It's the cleanest
approach I could think of.
In sum, we make GNU ifunc function descriptor symbols get a new
"mst_data_gnu_ifunc" minimal symbol type instead of the bare mst_data
type. So when symbol lookup by name finds such a minimal symbol, we
know we found an ifunc symbol, without resolving the entry/text
symbol. If the user calls the the resolver symbol instead, like "p
gnu_ifunc_resolver(0)", then we'll find the regular mst_data symbol
for "gnu_ifunc_resolver", and we'll call the resolver function as just
another regular function.
With this, most of the GNU ifunc tests added by a later patch pass on
PPC64 too. The following bfd patch fixes the remaining issues.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-04-26 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* breakpoint.c (set_breakpoint_location_function): Handle
mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* c-exp.y (variable production): Handle mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* elfread.c (elf_symtab_read): Give data symbols with
BSF_GNU_INDIRECT_FUNCTION set mst_data_gnu_ifunc type.
(elf_rel_plt_read): Update comment.
* linespec.c (convert_linespec_to_sals): Handle
mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
(minsym_found): Handle mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* minsyms.c (msymbol_is_function, minimal_symbol_reader::record)
(find_solib_trampoline_target): Handle mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* parse.c (find_minsym_type_and_address): Handle
mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* symmisc.c (dump_msymbols): Handle mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* symtab.c (find_gnu_ifunc): Handle mst_data_gnu_ifunc.
* symtab.h (minimal_symbol_type) <mst_text_gnu_ifunc>: Update
comment.
<mst_data_gnu_ifunc>: New enumerator.
I need to make the ifunc resolving code in elfread.c skip the target
function's prologue like minsym_found does. I thought of factoring
that out to a separate function, but turns out there's already a
comment in find_function_start_sal that says that should agree with
minsym_found...
Instead of making sure the code agrees with a comment, factor out the
common code to a separate function and use it from both places.
Note that the current find_function_start_sal does a bit more than
minsym_found's equivalent (the "We always should ..." bit), though
that's probably a latent bug.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-04-26 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linespec.c (minsym_found): Use find_function_start_sal CORE_ADDR
overload.
* symtab.c (find_function_start_sal(CORE_ADDR, obj_section *,bool)):
New, factored out from ...
(find_function_start_sal(symbol *, int)): ... this. Reimplement
and use bool.
* symtab.h (find_function_start_sal(CORE_ADDR, obj_section *,bool)):
New.
(find_function_start_sal(symbol *, int)): Change boolean parameter
type to bool.
If the GNU ifunc resolver has the same name as the user visible
symbol, and the resolver has debug info, then the DWARF info for the
resolver masks the ifunc minsym. In that scenario, if you try calling
the ifunc from GDB, you call the resolver instead. With the
gnu-ifunc.exp testcase added in a following patch, you'd see:
(gdb) p gnu_ifunc (3)
$1 = (int (*)(int)) 0x400753 <final>
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp: resolver_attr=0: resolver_debug=1: resolved_debug=0: p gnu_ifunc (3)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
That is, we called the ifunc resolver manually, which returned a
pointer to the ifunc target function ("final"). The "final" symbol is
the function that GDB should have called automatically,
~~~~~~~~~~~~
int
final (int arg)
{
return arg + 1;
}
~~~~~~~~~
which is what happens if you don't have debug info for the resolver:
(gdb) p gnu_ifunc (3)
$1 = 4
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp: resolver_attr=0: resolver_debug=0: resolved_debug=1: p gnu_ifunc (3)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
or if the resolver's symbol has a different name from the ifunc (as is
the case with modern uses of ifunc via __attribute__ ifunc, such as
glibc uses):
(gdb) p gnu_ifunc (3)
$1 = 4
(gdb) PASS: gdb.base/gnu-ifunc.exp: resolver_attr=1: resolver_debug=1: resolved_debug=0: p gnu_ifunc (3)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
in which case after this patch, you can still call the resolver
directly if you want:
(gdb) p gnu_ifunc_resolver (3)
$1 = (int (*)(int)) 0x400753 <final>
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-04-26 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* c-exp.y (variable production): Prefer ifunc minsyms over
regular function symbols.
* symtab.c (find_gnu_ifunc): New function.
* minsyms.h (lookup_msym_prefer): New enum.
(lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_section): Replace 'want_trampoline'
parameter by a lookup_msym_prefer parameter.
* symtab.h (find_gnu_ifunc): New declaration.
This commit:
b744723f57 -- Show line numbers in output for "info var/func/type"
adds the symbol declaration's line number to the output of certain GDB
commands. It also (inadvertently) changes the `rbreak' command's output,
like this:
(gdb) rbreak foo
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40049b: file rbreak.c, line 6.
4: static int foo1(void);
Breakpoint 2 at 0x4004b1: file rbreak.c, line 12.
10: static int foo2(void);
(gdb)
where the function declaration is now prefixed by its source line number,
followed by a colon. But without showing the declaration's file name, the
line number is useless and can possibly cause severe confusion.
No declaration line number was shown before. Instead, the function
declaration started at the first column:
(gdb) rbreak foo
Breakpoint 1 at 0x40049b: file rbreak.c, line 6.
static int foo1(void);
Breakpoint 2 at 0x4004b1: file rbreak.c, line 12.
static int foo2(void);
(gdb)
This old behavior is restored, fixing some FAILs in fullpath-expand.exp,
realname-expand.exp, and pr10179.exp.
In order to distinguish when to print location information, the meaning of
print_symbol_info()'s parameter `last' is changed. Now NULL means to skip
any filename or line number information. Previously NULL meant to always
print the filename.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (print_symbol_info): Skip printing filename and line
number when `last' is NULL.
(symtab_symbol_info): Use empty string instead of NULL for first
invocation of print_symbol_info.
(rbreak_command): Pass NULL to `last' parameter of
print_symbol_info.
The GDB commands "info variables", "info functions", and "info types" show
the appropriate list of definitions matching the given pattern. They also
group them by source files. But no line numbers within these source files
are shown.
The line number information is particularly useful to the user when a
simple "grep" doesn't readily point to a definition. This is often the
case when the definition involves a macro, occurs within a namespace, or
when the identifier appears very frequently in the source file.
This patch enriches the printout of these commands by the line numbers and
adjusts affected test cases to the changed output where necessary. The
new output looks like this:
(gdb) i variables
All defined variables:
File foo.c:
3: const char * const foo;
1: int x;
The line number is followed by a colon and a tab character, which is then
followed by the symbol definition. If no line number is available, the
tab is printed out anyhow, so definitions line up.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* symtab.c (print_symbol_info): Precede the symbol definition by
the line number when available.
* NEWS: Advertise this enhancement.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog:
* gdb.texinfo (Symbols): Mention the fact that "info
variables/functions/types" show source files and line numbers.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gdb.ada/info_types.exp: Adjust expected output to the line
numbers now printed by "info var/func/type".
* gdb.base/completion.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.base/included.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.cp/cp-relocate.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.cp/cplusfuncs.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.cp/namespace.exp: Likewise.
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: Likewise.
This patch fixes a compile error introduced by my previous change, which
caused the indentation of the following code block to become incorrect.
ChangeLog:
2018-03-20 Stephen Roberts <stephen.roberts@arm.com>
* gdb/symtab.c (find_pc_sect_line): fixed indentation.
This patch addresses slowness when setting breakpoints, especially in
heavily templatized code. Profiling showed that find_pc_sect_line in
symtab.c was the performance bottleneck. The original logic performed a
linear search over ordered data. This patch uses a binary search, as
suggested by comments around the function. There are no behavioural
changes, but gdb is now faster at setting breakpoints in template code.
Tested using on make check on an x86 target. The optimisation speeds up
the included template-breakpoints.py performance test by a factor of 7
on my machine.
ChangeLog:
2018-03-20 Stephen Roberts <stephen.roberts@arm.com>
* gdb/symtab.c (find_pc_sect_line): now uses binary search.
gdb/testsuite/
* gdb.perf/template-breakpoints.cc: New file.
* gdb.perf/template-breakpoints.exp: New file.
* gdb.perf/template-breakpoints.py: New file.
This converts observers from using a special source-generating script
to be plain C++. This version of the patch takes advantage of C++11
by using std::function and variadic templates; incorporates Pedro's
patches; and renames the header file to "observable.h" (this change
eliminates the need for a clean rebuild).
Note that Pedro's patches used a template lambda in tui-hooks.c, but
this failed to compile on some buildbot instances (presumably due to
differing C++ versions); I replaced this with an ordinary template
function.
Regression tested on the buildbot.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-03-19 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* unittests/observable-selftests.c: New file.
* common/observable.h: New file.
* observable.h: New file.
* ada-lang.c, ada-tasks.c, agent.c, aix-thread.c, annotate.c,
arm-tdep.c, auto-load.c, auxv.c, break-catch-syscall.c,
breakpoint.c, bsd-uthread.c, cli/cli-interp.c, cli/cli-setshow.c,
corefile.c, dummy-frame.c, event-loop.c, event-top.c, exec.c,
extension.c, frame.c, gdbarch.c, guile/scm-breakpoint.c,
infcall.c, infcmd.c, inferior.c, inflow.c, infrun.c, jit.c,
linux-tdep.c, linux-thread-db.c, m68klinux-tdep.c,
mi/mi-cmd-break.c, mi/mi-interp.c, mi/mi-main.c, objfiles.c,
ppc-linux-nat.c, ppc-linux-tdep.c, printcmd.c, procfs.c,
python/py-breakpoint.c, python/py-finishbreakpoint.c,
python/py-inferior.c, python/py-unwind.c, ravenscar-thread.c,
record-btrace.c, record-full.c, record.c, regcache.c, remote.c,
riscv-tdep.c, sol-thread.c, solib-aix.c, solib-spu.c, solib.c,
spu-multiarch.c, spu-tdep.c, stack.c, symfile-mem.c, symfile.c,
symtab.c, thread.c, top.c, tracepoint.c, tui/tui-hooks.c,
tui/tui-interp.c, valops.c: Update all users.
* tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_bp_created_observer)
(tui_bp_deleted_observer, tui_bp_modified_observer)
(tui_inferior_exit_observer, tui_before_prompt_observer)
(tui_normal_stop_observer, tui_register_changed_observer):
Remove.
(tui_observers_token): New global.
(attach_or_detach, tui_attach_detach_observers): New functions.
(tui_install_hooks, tui_remove_hooks): Use
tui_attach_detach_observers.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_thread_observer): Remove.
(record_btrace_thread_observer_token): New global.
* observer.sh: Remove.
* observer.c: Rename to observable.c.
* observable.c (namespace gdb_observers): Define new objects.
(observer_debug): Move into gdb_observers namespace.
(struct observer, struct observer_list, xalloc_observer_list_node)
(xfree_observer_list_node, generic_observer_attach)
(generic_observer_detach, generic_observer_notify): Remove.
(_initialize_observer): Update.
Don't include observer.inc.
* Makefile.in (generated_files): Remove observer.h, observer.inc.
(clean mostlyclean): Likewise.
(observer.h, observer.inc): Remove targets.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add observable-selftests.c.
(COMMON_SFILES): Use observable.c, not observer.c.
* .gitignore: Remove observer.h.
gdb/doc/ChangeLog
2018-03-19 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* observer.texi: Remove.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2018-03-19 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb.gdb/observer.exp: Remove.
This commit moves the path manipulation routines found on utils.c to a
new common/pathstuff.c, and updates the Makefile.in's accordingly.
The routines moved are "gdb_realpath", "gdb_realpath_keepfile" and
"gdb_abspath".
This will be needed because gdbserver will have to call "gdb_abspath"
on my next patch, which implements a way to expand the path of the
inferior provided by the user in order to allow specifying just the
binary name when starting gdbserver, like:
$ gdbserver :1234 a.out
With the recent addition of the startup-with-shell feature on
gdbserver, this scenario doesn't work anymore if the user doesn't have
the current directory listed in the PATH variable.
I had to do a minor adjustment on "gdb_abspath" because we don't have
access to "tilde_expand" on gdbserver, so now the function is using
"gdb_tilde_expand" instead. Otherwise, the code is the same.
Regression tested on the BuildBot, without regressions.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-02-28 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add "common/pathstuff.c".
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/pathstuff.h".
* auto-load.c: Include "common/pathstuff.h".
* common/common-def.h (current_directory): Move here.
* common/gdb_tilde_expand.c (gdb_tilde_expand_up): New
function.
* common/gdb_tilde_expand.h (gdb_tilde_expand_up): New
prototype.
* common/pathstuff.c: New file.
* common/pathstuff.h: New file.
* compile/compile.c: Include "common/pathstuff.h".
* defs.h (current_directory): Move to "common/common-defs.h".
* dwarf2read.c: Include "common/pathstuff.h".
* exec.c: Likewise.
* guile/scm-safe-call.c: Likewise.
* linux-thread-db.c: Likewise.
* main.c: Likewise.
* nto-tdep.c: Likewise.
* objfiles.c: Likewise.
* source.c: Likewise.
* symtab.c: Likewise.
* utils.c: Include "common/pathstuff.h".
(gdb_realpath): Move to "common/pathstuff.c".
(gdb_realpath_keepfile): Likewise.
(gdb_abspath): Likewise.
* utils.h (gdb_realpath): Move to "common/pathstuff.h".
(gdb_realpath_keepfile): Likewise.
(gdb_abspath): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2018-02-28 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add "$(srcdir)/common/pathstuff.c".
(OBJS): Add "pathstuff.o".
* server.c (current_directory): New global variable.
(captured_main): Initialize "current_directory".
This changes the macro scope functions (sal_macro_scope,
user_macro_scope, and default_macro_scope) to return a
unique_xmalloc_ptr, then fixes up the users. This allowed for the
removal of several cleanups.
2018-02-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* symtab.c (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on):
Use unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* macroscope.h: (sal_macro_scope, user_macro_scope)
(default_macro_scope): Return unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* macroscope.c (sal_macro_scope, user_macro_scope)
(default_macro_scope): Return unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* macroexp.h (macro_expand, macro_expand_once): Return
unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* macroexp.c (macro_expand, macro_expand_once): Return
unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* macrocmd.c (macro_expand_command, macro_expand_once_command)
(info_macro_command, info_macros_command): Use
unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* compile/compile-c-support.c (write_macro_definitions): Use
unique_xmalloc_ptr.
* c-exp.y (c_parse): Use unique_xmalloc_ptr.
Rename language_get_symbol_name_matcher -> get_symbol_name_matcher,
since the function is no longer a straight "language method".
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* language.h (language_get_symbol_name_matcher): Rename ...
(get_symbol_name_matcher): ... this.
* language.c (language_get_symbol_name_matcher): Ditto.
* dictionary.c, linespec.c, minsyms.c, psymtab.c, symtab.c: All
callers adjusted.
This patch fixes the regression covered by the test added by:
commit 344420da6b
Date: Thu Jan 4 03:30:37 2018 -0500
Subject: Add "complete break ada" test to gdb.ada/complete.exp
The regression had been introduced by:
commit b5ec771e60
Date: Wed Nov 8 14:22:32 2017 +0000
Subject: Introduce lookup_name_info and generalize Ada's FULL/WILD name matching
The gist of it is that linespec completion in Ada mode is generating
additional matches that should not appear in the match list
(internally generated symbols, or symbols that should be enclosed
between "<...>"). These extraneous entries have uppercase characters, such as:
break ada__stringsS
break ada__strings__R11s
[etc]
These matches come from minimal symbols. The problem is that Ada
minsyms end up with no language set (language_auto), and thus we end
up using the generic symbol name matcher for those instead of Ada's.
We already had a special case for in compare_symbol_name to handle
this, but it was limited to expressions, while the case at hand is
completing a linespec. Fix this by applying the special case to
linespec completion as well. I.e., remove the EXPRESSION check from
compare_symbol_name. That alone turns out to not be sufficient still
-- GDB would still show a couple entries that shouldn't be there:
~~
break ada__exceptions__exception_data__append_info_exception_name__2Xn
break ada__exceptions__exception_data__exception_name_length__2Xn
~~
The reason is that these minimal symbols end up with their language
set to language_cplus / C++, because those encoded names manage to
demangle successfully as C++ symbols (using an old C++ mangling
scheme):
$ echo ada__exceptions__exception_data__append_info_exception_name__2Xn | c++filt
Xn::ada__exceptions__exception_data__append_info_exception_name(void)
It's unfortunate that Ada's encoding scheme doesn't start with some
unique prefix like "_Z" in the C++ Itanium ABI mangling scheme. For
now, paper over that by treating C++ minsyms as Ada minsyms.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/22670
* ada-lang.c (ada_collect_symbol_completion_matches): If the
minsym's language is language_auto or language_cplus, pass down
language_ada instead.
* symtab.c (compare_symbol_name): Don't frob symbol language here.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-01-10 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/22670
* gdb.ada/complete.exp ("complete break ada"): Replace kfail with
a fail.
At <https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-12/msg00298.html>, Joel
wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consider the following code which first declares a tagged type (the
equivalent of a class in Ada), and then a procedure which takes a
pointer (access) to this type's 'Class.
package Pck is
type Top_T is tagged record
N : Integer := 1;
end record;
procedure Inspect (Obj: access Top_T'Class);
end Pck;
Putting a breakpoint in that procedure and then running to it triggers
an internal error:
(gdb) break inspect
(gdb) continue
Breakpoint 1, pck.inspect (obj=0x63e010
/[...]/gdb/stack.c:621: internal-error: void print_frame_args(symbol*, frame_info*, int, ui_file*): Assertion `nsym != NULL' failed.
What's special about this subprogram is that it takes an access to
what we call a 'Class type, and for implementation reasons, the
compiler adds an extra argument named "objL". If you are curious why,
it allows the compiler for perform dynamic accessibility checks that
are mandated by the language.
If we look at the location where we get the internal error (in
stack.c), we find that we are looping over the symbol of each
parameter, and for each parameter, we do:
/* We have to look up the symbol because arguments can have
two entries (one a parameter, one a local) and the one we
want is the local, which lookup_symbol will find for us.
[...]
nsym = lookup_symbol (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym),
b, VAR_DOMAIN, NULL).symbol;
gdb_assert (nsym != NULL);
The lookup_symbol goes through the lookup structure, which means the
symbol's linkage name ("objL") gets transformed into a
lookup_name_info object (in block_lookup_symbol), before it gets fed
to the block symbol dictionary iterators. This, in turn, triggers the
symbol matching by comparing the "lookup" name which, for Ada, means
among other things, lowercasing the given name to "objl". It is this
transformation that causes the lookup find no matches, and therefore
trip this assertion.
Going back to the "offending" call to lookup_symbol in stack.c, what
we are trying to do, here, is do a lookup by linkage name. So, I
think what we mean to be doing is a completely literal symbol lookup,
so maybe not even strcmp_iw, but actually just plain strcmp???
In the past, in practice, you could get that effect by doing a lookup
using the C language. But that doesn't work, because we still end up
somehow using Ada's lookup_name routine which transforms "objL".
So, ideally, as I hinted before, I think what we need is a way to
perform a literal lookup so that searches by linkage names like the
above can be performed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This commit fixes the problem by implementing something similar to
Joel's literal idea, but with some important differences.
I considered adding a symbol_name_match_type::LINKAGE and supporting
searching by linkage name for any language, but the problem with that
is that the dictionaries only work with SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME, because
that's what is used for hashing. We'd need separate dictionaries for
hashed linkage names.
So with the current symbol tables infrastructure, it's not literal
linkage names that we want to pass down, but instead literal _search_
names (SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME, etc.).
However, psymbols have no overload/function parameter info in C++, so
a straight strcmp doesn't work properly for C++ name matching.
So what we do is be a little less aggressive then and add a new
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_SYMBOL instead that takes as input a
non-user-input search symbol, and then we skip any decoding/demangling
steps and make:
- Ada treat that as a verbatim match,
- other languages treat it as symbol_name_match_type::FULL.
This also fixes the new '"maint check-psymtabs" for Ada' testcase for
me (gdb.ada/maint_with_ada.exp). I've not removed the kfail yet
because Joel still sees that testcase failing with this patch.
That'll be fixed in follow up patches.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/22670
* ada-lang.c (literal_symbol_name_matcher): New function.
(ada_get_symbol_name_matcher): Use it for
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME.
* block.c (block_lookup_symbol): New parameter 'match_type'. Pass
it down instead of assuming symbol_name_match_type::FULL.
* block.h (block_lookup_symbol): New parameter 'match_type'.
* c-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Use
lookup_symbol_search_name instead of lookup_symbol.
* compile/compile-object-load.c (get_out_value_type): Pass down
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME.
* cp-namespace.c (cp_basic_lookup_symbol): Pass down
symbol_name_match_type::FULL.
* cp-support.c (cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): Handle
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME.
* infrun.c (insert_exception_resume_breakpoint): Use
lookup_symbol_search_name.
* p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Use lookup_symbol_search_name.
* psymtab.c (maintenance_check_psymtabs): Use
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME and SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME.
* stack.c (print_frame_args): Use lookup_symbol_search_name and
SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME.
* symtab.c (lookup_local_symbol): Don't demangle the lookup name
if symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME.
(lookup_symbol_in_language): Pass down
symbol_name_match_type::FULL.
(lookup_symbol_search_name): New.
(lookup_language_this): Pass down
symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME.
(lookup_symbol_aux, lookup_local_symbol): New parameter
'match_type'. Pass it down.
* symtab.h (symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME): New enumerator.
(lookup_symbol_search_name): New declaration.
(lookup_symbol_in_block): New 'match_type' parameter.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-01-05 Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
PR gdb/22670
* gdb.ada/access_tagged_param.exp: New file.
* gdb.ada/access_tagged_param/foo.adb: New file.
I noticed this regression in the expression completer:
"(gdb) p std::[TAB]" => "(gdb) p std::std::"
obviously we should have not completed to "std::std::".
The problem is that in the earlier big completer rework, I missed
taking into account the fact that with expressions, the completion
word point is not always at the start of the symbol name (it is with
linespecs).
The fix is to run the common prefix / LCD string (what readline uses
to expand the input line) through make_completion_match_str too.
New testcase included, exercising both TAB completion and the complete
command.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-12-13 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* completer.c (completion_tracker::maybe_add_completion): New
'text' and 'word' parameters. Use make_completion_match_str.
(completion_tracker::add_completion): New 'text' and 'word'
parameters. Pass down.
(completion_tracker::recompute_lowest_common_denominator): Change
parameter type to gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr rval ref. Adjust.
* completer.h (completion_tracker::add_completion): New 'text' and
'word' parameters.
(completion_tracker::recompute_lowest_common_denominator): Change
parameter type to gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr rval ref.
(completion_tracker::recompute_lowest_common_denominator): Change
parameter type to gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr rval ref.
* symtab.c (completion_list_add_name): Pass down 'text' and 'word'
as well.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-12-13 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.cp/cpcompletion.exp: Load completion-support.exp.
("expression with namespace"): New set of tests.
* gdb.cp/pr9594.cc (Test_NS::foo, Test_NS::bar)
(Nested::Test_NS::qux): New.
* lib/completion-support.exp (test_gdb_complete_cmd_multiple): Add
defaults to 'start_quote_char' and 'end_quote_char' parameters.
We have several places doing essentially the same thing; factor them
out to a central place. Some of the places overallocate for no good
reason, or use strcat unnecessarily. The centralized version is more
precise and to the point.
(I considered making the gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr overload version of
make_completer_match_str try to realloc (not xrealloc) probably
avoiding an allocation in most cases, but that'd be probably overdoing
it, and also, now that I'm writing this I thought I'd try to see how
could we ever get to filename_completer with "text != word", but I
couldn't figure it out. Running the testsuite with 'gdb_assert (text
== word);' never tripped on the assertion either. So post gdb 8.1,
I'll probably propose a patch to simplify filename_completer a bit,
and the gdb::unique_xmalloc_str overload can be removed then.)
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-12-13 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cli/cli-decode.c (complete_on_cmdlist, complete_on_enum): Use
make_completion_match_str.
* completer.c: Use gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr and
make_completion_match_str.
(make_completion_match_str_1): New.
(make_completion_match_str(const char *, const char *,
const char *)): New.
(make_completion_match_str(gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> &&,
const char *, const char *)): New.
* completer.h (make_completion_match_str(const char *,
const char *, const char *)): New.
(make_completion_match_str(gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> &&,
const char *, const char *)): New.
* interps.c (interpreter_completer): Use make_completion_match_str.
* symtab.c (completion_list_add_name, add_filename_to_list): Use
make_completion_match_str.
A following patch will add support for wild matching for C++ symbols,
making completing on "b push_ba" on a C++ program complete to
std::vector<...>::push_back, std::string::push_back etc., like:
(gdb) b push_ba[TAB]
std::vector<...>::push_back(....)
std::string<...>::push_back(....)
Currently, we compute the "lowest common denominator" between all
completion candidates (what the input line is adjusted to) as the
common prefix of all matches. That's problematic with wild matching
as above, as then we'd end up with TAB changing the input line to
"b std::", losing the original input, like:
(gdb) b push_ba[TAB]
std::vector<...>::push_back(....)
std::string<...>::push_back(....)
(gdb) b std::
while obviously we'd want it to adjust itself to "b push_back(" instead:
(gdb) b push_ba[TAB]
std::vector<...>::push_back(....)
std::string<...>::push_back(....)
(gdb) b push_back(
This patch adds the core code necessary to support this, though
nothing really makes use of it yet in this patch.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_lookup_name_info::matches): Change type of
parameter from completion_match to completion_match_result.
Adjust.
(do_wild_match, do_full_match, ada_symbol_name_matches): Likewise.
* completer.c (completion_tracker::maybe_add_completion): Add
match_for_lcd parameter and use it.
(completion_tracker::add_completion): Likewise.
* completer.h (class completion_match_for_lcd): New class.
(completion_match_result::match_for_lcd): New field.
(completion_match_result::set_match): New method.
(completion_tracker): Add comments.
(completion_tracker::add_completion): Add match_for_lcd parameter.
(completion_tracker::reset_completion_match_result): Reset
match_for_lcd too.
(completion_tracker::maybe_add_completion): Add match_for_lcd
parameter.
(completion_tracker::m_lowest_common_denominator_unique): Extend
comments.
* cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1)
(cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Change type of parameter from
completion_match to completion_match_result. Adjust.
* language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Change type of
parameter from completion_match to completion_match_result.
Adjust.
* language.h (completion_match_for_lcd): Forward declare.
(default_symbol_name_matcher): Change type of parameter from
completion_match to completion_match_result.
* symtab.c (compare_symbol_name): Adjust.
(completion_list_add_name): Pass the match_for_lcd to the tracker.
* symtab.h (ada_lookup_name_info::matches): Change type of
parameter from completion_match to completion_match_result.
(symbol_name_matcher_ftype): Likewise, and update comments.
The recent-ish commit e5f25bc5d6 ('Fix "list ambiguous_variable"')
caused a serious regression on PPC64. See
<https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-11/msg00666.html>.
Basically, after that patch, GDB sets breakpoints in function
descriptors instead of where the descriptors point to, which is
incorrect.
The problem is that GDB now only runs a minsym's address through
gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr if msymbol_is_text returns true.
However, if the symbol points to a function descriptor,
msymbol_is_text is false since function descriptors are in fact
outside the text section.
The fix is to also run a non-text address through
gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr, and if that detects that it was
indeed a function descriptor, treat the resulting address as a
function.
While implementing that directly in linespec.c:minsym_found (where the
bad msymbol_is_text check is) fixes the issue, I noticed that
linespec.c:add_minsym has some code that also basically needs to do
the same checks, however it's implemented differently. Also,
add_minsym is calling find_pc_sect_line on non-function symbols, which
also doesn't look right.
So I introduced msymbol_is_function, so that we have a simple place to
consider minsyms and function descriptors.
And then, the only other use of msymbol_is_text is in
find_function_alias_target, which turns out to also be incorrect.
Changing that one to use msymbol_is_function, i.e., to consider
function descriptors too fixes (on PPC64):
-FAIL: gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp: p func_alias
-FAIL: gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp: p *func_alias()
+PASS: gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp: p func_alias
+PASS: gdb.base/symbol-alias.exp: p *func_alias()
And then after that, msymbol_is_text is no longer used anywhere, so it
can be removed.
Tested on x86_64 GNU/Linux, no regressions. Tested on PPC64 GNU/Linux
and results compared to a testrun of e5f25bc5d6db^ (before the
offending commit), also no regressions. (there's a couple new FAILs
and some new symbol name matching unit tests are crashing, but that
looks unrelated).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* linespec.c (minsym_found, add_minsym): Use msymbol_is_function.
* minsyms.c (msymbol_is_text): Delete.
(msymbol_is_function): New function.
* minsyms.h (msymbol_is_text): Delete.
(msymbol_is_function): New declaration.
* symtab.c (find_function_alias_target): Use msymbol_is_function.
This changes template_symbol to derive from symbol, which seems a bit
cleaner; and also more consistent with rust_vtable_symbol.
2017-11-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* dwarf2read.c (read_func_scope): Update.
* symtab.h (struct template_symbol): Derive from symbol.
<base>: Remove.
In Rust, virtual tables work a bit differently than they do in C++. In
C++, as you know, they are connected to a particular class hierarchy.
Rust, instead, can generate a virtual table for potentially any type --
in fact, one such virtual table for each trait (a trait is similar to an
abstract class or to a Java interface) that a type implements.
Objects that are referenced via a trait can't currently be inspected by
gdb. This patch implements the Rust equivalent of "set print object".
gdb relies heavily on the C++ ABI to decode virtual tables; primarily to
make "set print object" work; but also "info vtbl". However, Rust does
not currently have a specified ABI, so this approach seems unwise to
emulate.
Instead, I've changed the Rust compiler to emit some DWARF that
describes trait objects (previously their internal structure was
opaque), vtables (currently just a size -- but I hope to expand this in
the future), and the concrete type for which a vtable was emitted.
The concrete type is expressed as a DW_AT_containing_type on the
vtable's type. This is a small extension to DWARF.
This patch adds a new entry to quick_symbol_functions to return the
symtab that holds a data address. Previously there was no way in gdb to
look up a full (only minimal) non-text symbol by address. The psymbol
implementation of this method works by lazily filling in a map that is
added to the objfile. This avoids slowing down psymbol reading for a
feature that is likely to not be used too frequently.
I did not update .gdb_index. My thinking here is that the DWARF 5
indices will obsolete .gdb_index soon-ish, meaning that adding a new
feature to them is probably wasted work. If necessary I can update the
DWARF 5 index code when it lands in gdb.
Regression tested on x86-64 Fedora 25.
2017-11-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* symtab.h (struct symbol) <is_rust_vtable>: New member.
(struct rust_vtable_symbol): New.
(find_symbol_at_address): Declare.
* symtab.c (find_symbol_at_address): New function.
* symfile.h (struct quick_symbol_functions)
<find_compunit_symtab_by_address>: New member.
* symfile-debug.c (debug_qf_find_compunit_symtab_by_address): New
function.
(debug_sym_quick_functions): Link to
debug_qf_find_compunit_symtab_by_address.
* rust-lang.c (rust_get_trait_object_pointer): New function.
(rust_evaluate_subexp) <case UNOP_IND>: New case. Call
rust_get_trait_object_pointer.
* psymtab.c (psym_relocate): Clear psymbol_map.
(psym_fill_psymbol_map, psym_find_compunit_symtab_by_address): New
functions.
(psym_functions): Link to psym_find_compunit_symtab_by_address.
* objfiles.h (struct objfile) <psymbol_map>: New member.
* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_gdb_index_functions): Update.
(process_die) <DW_TAG_variable>: New case. Call read_variable.
(rust_containing_type, read_variable): New functions.
2017-11-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb.rust/traits.rs: New file.
* gdb.rust/traits.exp: New file.
Currently "b foo[TAB]" offers data symbols as completion candidates.
This doesn't make sense, since you can't set a breakpoint on data
symbols, only on code symbols.
(gdb) b globa[TAB]
(gdb) b global [ENTER]
Function "global" not defined.
Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n
(gdb) info symbol global
global in section .rodata
So this patch makes linespec completion ignore data symbols.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_make_symbol_completion_list): Use
completion_skip_symbol.
* symtab.c (symbol_is_function_or_method(minimal_symbol*)): New.
(symbol_is_function_or_method(symbol*)): New.
(add_symtab_completions): Add complete_symbol_mode parameter. Use
completion_skip_symbol.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on): Use
completion_skip_symbol. Pass down mode.
(collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Pass down mode.
* symtab.h (symbol_is_function_or_method): New declarations.
(completion_skip_symbol): New template function.
sym_text_len existed to strip parameters out of the lookup name. Now
that that's handled by the lookup_name_info objects, the
sym_text/sym_text_len parameters are no longer necessary.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_make_symbol_completion_list): Remove text and
text_len locals and don't pass them down.
* symtab.c (completion_list_add_name): Remove
sym_text/sym_text_len parameters and adjust.
(completion_list_add_symbol, completion_list_add_msymbol)
(completion_list_objc_symbol, completion_list_add_fields)
(add_symtab_completions): Likewise.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on)
(collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Remove sym_text_len
local and don't pass it down.
* symtab.h (completion_list_add_name): Remove
sym_text/sym_text_len parameters.
A few places in the completion code look for a "(" to find a
function's parameter list, in order to strip it, because psymtabs (and
gdb index) don't include parameter info in the symbol names.
See compare_symbol_name and
default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on.
This is too naive. Consider:
ns_overload2_test::([TAB]
We'd want to complete that to:
ns_overload2_test::(anonymous namespace)::struct_overload2_test
Or:
b (anonymous namespace)::[TAB]
That currently completes to:
b (anonymous namespace)
Which is obviously broken. This patch makes that work.
Also, the current compare_symbol_name hack means that while this
works:
"b function([TAB]" -> "b function()"
This does not:
"b function ([TAB]"
This patch fixes that. Whitespace "ignoring" now Just Works, i.e.,
assuming a symbol named "function(int, long)", this:
b function ( int , lon[TAB]
completes to:
b function ( int , long)
To address all of this, this patch builds on top of the rest of the
series, and pushes the responsibility of stripping parameters from a
lookup name to the new lookup_name_info object, where we can apply
per-language rules. Also note that we now only make a version of the
lookup name with parameters stripped out where it's actually required
to do that, in the psymtab and GDB index code.
For C++, the right way to strip parameters is with "cp_remove_params",
which uses a real parser (cp-name-parser.y) to split the name into a
component tree and then discards parameters.
The trouble for completion is that in that case we have an incomplete
name, like "foo::func(int" and thus cp_remove_params throws an error.
This patch sorts that by adding a cp_remove_params_if_any variant of
cp_remove_params that tries removing characters from the end of the
string until cp_remove_params works. So cp_remove_params_if_any
behaves like this:
With a complete name:
"foo::func(int)" => foo::func(int) # cp_remove_params_1 succeeds the first time.
With an incomplete name:
"foo::func(int" => NULL # cp_remove_params fails the first time.
"foo::func(in" => NULL # and again...
"foo::func(i" => NULL # and again...
"foo::func(" => NULL # and again...
"foo::func" => "foo::func" # success!
Note that even if this approach removes significant rightmost
characters, it's still OK, because this parameter stripping is only
necessary for psymtabs and gdb index, where we're determining whether
to expand a symbol table. Say cp_remove_params_if_any returned
"foo::" above for "foo::func(int". That'd cause us to expand more
symtabs than ideal (because we'd expand all symtabs with symbols that
start with "foo::", not just "foo::func"), but then when we actually
look for completion matches, we'd still use the original lookup name,
with parameter information ["foo::func(int"], and thus we'll return no
false positive to the user. Whether the stripping works as intended
and doesn't strip too much is thus covered by a unit test instead of a
testsuite test.
The "if_any" part of the name refers to the fact that while
cp_remove_params returns NULL if the input name has no parameters in
the first place, like:
"foo::func" => NULL # cp_remove_params
cp_remove_params_if_any still returns the function name:
"foo::func" => "foo::func" # cp_remove_params_if_any
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add
unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c.
(SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add lookup_name_info-selftests.o.
* cp-support.c: Include "selftest.h".
(cp_remove_params_1): Rename from cp_remove_params. Add
'require_param' parameter, and handle it.
(cp_remove_params): Reimplement.
(cp_remove_params_if_any): New.
(selftests::quote): New.
(selftests::check_remove_params): New.
(selftests::test_cp_remove_params): New.
(_initialize_cp_support): Install
selftests::test_cp_remove_params.
* cp-support.h (cp_remove_params_if_any): Declare.
* dwarf2read.c :Include "selftest.h".
(dw2_expand_symtabs_matching_symbol): Use
lookup_name_info::make_ignore_params.
(selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::mock_mapped_index)
(selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::string_or_null)
(selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::check_match)
(selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::test_symbols)
(selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::run_test): New.
(_initialize_dwarf2_read): Register
selftests::dw2_expand_symtabs_matching::run_test.
* psymtab.c (psym_expand_symtabs_matching): Use
lookup_name_info::make_ignore_params.
* symtab.c (demangle_for_lookup_info::demangle_for_lookup_info):
If the lookup name wants to ignore parameters, strip them.
(compare_symbol_name): Remove sym_text/sym_text_len parameters and
code handling '('.
(completion_list_add_name): Don't pass down sym_text/sym_text_len.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on): Don't try to
strip parameters.
* symtab.h (lookup_name_info::lookup_name_info): Add
'ignore_parameters' parameter.
(lookup_name_info::ignore_parameters)
(lookup_name_info::make_ignore_params): New methods.
(lookup_name_info::m_ignore_parameters): New field.
* unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c: New file.
Summary:
- This is preparation for supporting wild name matching on C++ too.
- This is also preparation for TAB-completion fixes.
- Makes symbol name matching (think strcmp_iw) be based on a per-language method.
- Merges completion and non-completion name comparison (think
language_ops::la_get_symbol_name_cmp generalized).
- Avoid re-hashing lookup name multiple times
- Centralizes preparing a name for lookup (Ada name encoding / C++ Demangling),
both completion and non-completion.
- Fixes Ada latent bug with verbatim name matches in expressions
- Makes ada-lang.c use common|symtab.c completion code a bit more.
Ada's wild matching basically means that
"(gdb) break foo"
will find all methods named "foo" in all packages. Translating to
C++, it's roughly the same as saying that "break klass::method" sets
breakpoints on all "klass::method" methods of all classes, no matter
the namespace. A following patch will teach GDB about fullname vs
wild matching for C++ too. This patch is preparatory work to get
there.
Another idea here is to do symbol name matching based on the symbol
language's algorithm. I.e., avoid dependency on current language set.
This allows for example doing
(gdb) b foo::bar< int > (<tab>
and having gdb name match the C++ symbols correctly even if the
current language is C or Assembly (or Rust, or Ada, or ...), which can
easily happen if you step into an Assembly/C runtime library frame.
By encapsulating all the information related to a lookup name in a
class, we can also cache hash computation for a given language in the
lookup name object, to avoid recomputing it over and over.
Similarly, because we don't really know upfront which languages the
lookup name will be matched against, for each language we store the
lookup name transformed into a search name. E.g., for C++, that means
demangling the name. But for Ada, it means encoding the name. This
actually forces us to centralize all the different lookup name
encoding in a central place, resulting in clearer code, IMO. See
e.g., the new ada_lookup_name_info class.
The lookup name -> symbol search name computation is also done only
once per language.
The old language->la_get_symbol_name_cmp / symbol_name_cmp_ftype are
generalized to work with both completion, and normal symbol look up.
At some point early on, I had separate completion vs non-completion
language vector entry points, but a single method ends up being better
IMO for simplifying things -- the more we merge the completion /
non-completion name lookup code paths, the less changes for bugs
causing completion vs normal lookup finding different symbols.
The ada-lex.l change is necessary because when doing
(gdb) p <UpperCase>
then the name that is passed to write_ write_var_or_type ->
ada_lookup_symbol_list misses the "<>", i.e., it's just "UpperCase",
and we end up doing a wild match against "UpperCase" lowercased by
ada_lookup_name_info's constructor. I.e., "uppercase" wouldn't ever
match "UpperCase", and the symbol lookup fails.
This wouldn't cause any regression in the testsuite, but I added a new
test that would pass before the patch and fail after, if it weren't
for that fix.
This is latent bug that happens to go unnoticed because that
particular path was inconsistent with the rest of Ada symbol lookup by
not lowercasing the lookup name.
Ada's symbol_completion_add is deleted, replaced by using common
code's completion_list_add_name. To make the latter work for Ada, we
needed to add a new output parameter, because Ada wants to return back
a custom completion candidates that are not the symbol name.
With this patch, minimal symbol demangled name hashing is made
consistent with regular symbol hashing. I.e., it now goes via the
language vector's search_name_hash method too, as I had suggested in a
previous patch.
dw2_expand_symtabs_matching / .gdb_index symbol names were a
challenge. The problem is that we have no way to telling what is the
language of each symbol name found in the index, until we expand the
corresponding full symbol, which is off course what we're trying to
avoid. Language information is simply not considered in the index
format... Since the symbol name hashing and comparison routines are
per-language, we now have a problem. The patch sorts this out by
matching each name against all languages. This is inneficient, and
indeed slows down completion several times. E.g., with:
$ cat script.cmd
set pagination off
set $count = 0
while $count < 400
complete b string_prin
printf "count = %d\n", $count
set $count = $count + 1
end
$ time gdb --batch -q ./gdb-with-index -ex "source script-string_printf.cmd"
I get, before patch (-O2, x86-64):
real 0m1.773s
user 0m1.737s
sys 0m0.040s
While after patch (-O2, x86-64):
real 0m9.843s
user 0m9.482s
sys 0m0.034s
However, the following patch will optimize this, and will actually
make this use case faster compared to the "before patch" above:
real 0m1.321s
user 0m1.285s
sys 0m0.039s
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_encode): Rename to ..
(ada_encode_1): ... this. Add throw_errors parameter and handle
it.
(ada_encode): Reimplement.
(match_name): Delete, folded into full_name.
(resolve_subexp): No longer pass the encoded name to
ada_lookup_symbol_list.
(should_use_wild_match): Delete.
(name_match_type_from_name): New.
(ada_lookup_simple_minsym): Use lookup_name_info and the
language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype.
(add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs, ada_add_local_symbols)
(ada_add_block_renamings): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(ada_lookup_name): New.
(add_nonlocal_symbols, ada_add_all_symbols)
(ada_lookup_symbol_list_worker, ada_lookup_symbol_list)
(ada_iterate_over_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(ada_name_for_lookup): Delete.
(ada_lookup_encoded_symbol): Construct a verbatim name.
(wild_match): Reverse sense of return type. Use bool.
(full_match): Reverse sense of return type. Inline bits of old
match_name here.
(ada_add_block_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(symbol_completion_match): Delete, folded into...
(ada_lookup_name_info::matches): ... .this new method.
(symbol_completion_add): Delete.
(ada_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type
parameter. Adjust to use lookup_name_info and
completion_list_add_name.
(get_var_value, ada_add_global_exceptions): Adjust to use
lookup_name_info.
(ada_get_symbol_name_cmp): Delete.
(do_wild_match, do_full_match): New functions.
(ada_lookup_name_info::ada_lookup_name_info): New method.
(ada_symbol_name_matches, ada_get_symbol_name_matcher): New
functions.
(ada_language_defn): Install ada_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* ada-lex.l (processId): If name starts with '<', copy it
verbatim.
* block.c (block_iter_match_step, block_iter_match_first)
(block_iter_match_next, block_lookup_symbol)
(block_lookup_symbol_primary, block_find_symbol): Adjust to use
lookup_name_info.
* block.h (block_iter_match_first, block_iter_match_next)
(ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS_WITH_NAME): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
* c-lang.c (c_language_defn, cplus_language_defn)
(asm_language_defn, minimal_language_defn): Adjust comments to
refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* completer.c (complete_files_symbols)
(collect_explicit_location_matches, symbol_completer): Pass a
symbol_name_match_type down.
* completer.h (class completion_match, completion_match_result):
New classes.
(completion_tracker::reset_completion_match_result): New method.
(completion_tracker::m_completion_match_result): New field.
* cp-support.c (make_symbol_overload_list_block): Adjust to use
lookup_name_info.
(cp_fq_symbol_name_matches, cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New
functions.
* cp-support.h (cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New declaration.
* d-lang.c: Adjust comments to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* dictionary.c (dict_vector) <iter_match_first, iter_match_next>:
Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next)
(iter_match_first_hashed, iter_match_next_hashed)
(iter_match_first_linear, iter_match_next_linear): Adjust to work
with a lookup_name_info.
* dictionary.h (dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next):
Likewise.
* dwarf2read.c (dw2_lookup_symbol): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(dw2_map_matching_symbols): Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type.
(gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher): New class.
(dw2_expand_symtabs_matching) Adjust to use lookup_name_info and
gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher. Accept a NULL symbol_matcher.
* f-lang.c (f_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Adjust to work
with a symbol_name_match_type.
(f_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* go-lang.c (go_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher)
(language_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions.
(unknown_language_defn, auto_language_defn): Adjust comments to
refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* language.h (symbol_name_cmp_ftype): Delete.
(language_defn) <la_collect_symbol_completion_matches>: Add match
type parameter.
<la_get_symbol_name_cmp>: Delete field.
<la_get_symbol_name_matcher>: New field.
<la_iterate_over_symbols>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(default_symbol_name_matcher, language_get_symbol_name_matcher):
Declare.
* linespec.c (iterate_over_all_matching_symtabs)
(iterate_over_file_blocks): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(find_methods): Add language parameter, and use lookup_name_info
and the language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype.
(linespec_complete_function): Adjust.
(lookup_prefix_sym): Use lookup_name_info.
(add_all_symbol_names_from_pspace): Adjust.
(find_superclass_methods): Add language parameter and pass it
down.
(find_method): Pass symbol language down.
(find_linespec_symbols): Don't demangle or Ada encode here.
(search_minsyms_for_name): Add lookup_name_info parameter.
(add_matching_symbols_to_info): Add name_match_type parameter.
Use lookup_name_info.
* m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* minsyms.c: Include <algorithm>.
(add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table): Remove table parameter and
add objfile parameter. Use search_name_hash, and add language to
demangled languages vector.
(struct found_minimal_symbols): New struct.
(lookup_minimal_symbol_mangled, lookup_minimal_symbol_demangled):
New functions.
(lookup_minimal_symbol): Adjust to use them. Don't canonicalize
input names here. Use lookup_name_info instead. Lookup up
demangled names once for each language in the demangled names
vector.
(iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. Lookup up
demangled names once for each language in the demangled names
vector.
(build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables): Adjust.
* minsyms.h (iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Adjust to pass down a
lookup_name_info.
* objc-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* objfiles.h: Include <vector>.
(objfile_per_bfd_storage) <demangled_hash_languages>: New field.
* opencl-lang.c (opencl_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* psymtab.c (psym_lookup_symbol): Use lookup_name_info.
(match_partial_symbol): Use symbol_name_match_type,
lookup_name_info and psymbol_name_matches.
(lookup_partial_symbol): Use lookup_name_info.
(map_block): Use symbol_name_match_type and lookup_name_info.
(psym_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type.
(psymbol_name_matches): New.
(recursively_search_psymtabs): Use lookup_name_info and
psymbol_name_matches. Rename 'kind' parameter to 'domain'.
(psym_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. Rename
'kind' parameter to 'domain'.
* rust-lang.c (rust_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to
la_get_symbol_name_matcher.
* symfile-debug.c (debug_qf_map_matching_symbols)
(debug_qf_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type.
(debug_qf_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info.
* symfile.c (expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info.
* symfile.h (quick_symbol_functions) <map_matching_symbols>:
Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type.
<expand_symtabs_matching>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
(expand_symtabs_matching): Adjust to use lookup_name_info.
* symmisc.c (maintenance_expand_symtabs): Use
lookup_name_info::match_any ().
* symtab.c (symbol_matches_search_name): New.
(eq_symbol_entry): Adjust to use lookup_name_info and the
language's matcher.
(demangle_for_lookup_info::demangle_for_lookup_info): New.
(lookup_name_info::match_any): New.
(iterate_over_symbols, search_symbols): Use lookup_name_info.
(compare_symbol_name): Add language, lookup_name_info and
completion_match_result parameters, and use them.
(completion_list_add_name): Make extern. Add language and
lookup_name_info parameters. Use them.
(completion_list_add_symbol, completion_list_add_msymbol)
(completion_list_objc_symbol): Add lookup_name_info parameters and
adjust. Pass down language.
(completion_list_add_fields): Add lookup_name_info parameters and
adjust. Pass down language.
(add_symtab_completions): Add lookup_name_info parameters and
adjust.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on): Add
name_match_type parameter, and use it. Use lookup_name_info.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches)
(collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type
parameter, and pass it down.
(collect_symbol_completion_matches_type): Adjust.
(collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type
parameter, and use lookup_name_info.
* symtab.h: Include <string> and "common/gdb_optional.h".
(enum class symbol_name_match_type): New.
(class ada_lookup_name_info): New.
(struct demangle_for_lookup_info): New.
(class lookup_name_info): New.
(symbol_name_matcher_ftype): New.
(SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Use symbol_matches_search_name.
(symbol_matches_search_name): Declare.
(MSYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Delete.
(default_collect_symbol_completion_matches)
(collect_symbol_completion_matches)
(collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type
parameter.
(iterate_over_symbols): Use lookup_name_info.
(completion_list_add_name): Declare.
* utils.c (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved to utils.h.
(strncmp_iw_with_mode): Now extern.
* utils.h (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved from utils.c.
(strncmp_iw_with_mode): Declare.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.ada/complete.exp (p <Exported_Capitalized>): New test.
(p Exported_Capitalized): New test.
(p exported_capitalized): New test.
Currently, we have a mess of symbol name hashing/comparison routines.
There's msymbol_hash for mangled names, and dict_hash and
msymbol_hash_iw for demangled names. Then there's strcmp_iw,
strcmp_iw_ordered and Ada's full_match/wild_match, which all have to
agree with the hashing routines. That's why dict_hash is really about
Ada names. From the inconsistency department, minimal symbol hashing
doesn't go via dict_hash, so Ada's wild matching can't ever work with
minimal symbols.
This patch starts fixing this, by doing two things:
#1 - adds a language vector method to let each language decide how to
compute a symbol name hash.
#2 - makes dictionaries know the language of the symbols they hold,
and then use the dictionaries language to decide which hashing
method to use.
For now, this is just scaffolding, since all languages install the
default method. The series will make C++ install its own hashing
method later on, and will add per-language symbol name comparison
routines too.
This patch was originally based on a patch that Keith wrote for the
libcc1/C++ WIP support.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-08 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com>
Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (ada_language_defn): Install
default_search_name_hash.
* buildsym.c (struct buildsym_compunit): <language>: New field.
(finish_block_internal): Pass language when creating dictionaries.
(start_buildsym_compunit, start_symtab): New language parameters.
Use them.
(restart_symtab): Pass down compilation unit's language.
* buildsym.h (enum language): Forward declare.
(start_symtab): New 'language' parameter.
* c-lang.c (c_language_defn, cplus_language_defn)
(asm_language_defn, minimal_language_defn): Install
default_search_name_hash.
* coffread.c (coff_start_symtab): Adjust.
* d-lang.c (d_language_defn): Install default_search_name_hash.
* dbxread.c (struct symloc): Add 'pst_language' field.
(PST_LANGUAGE): Define.
(start_psymtab, read_ofile_symtab): Use it.
(process_one_symbol): New 'language' parameter. Pass it down.
* dictionary.c (struct dictionary) <language>: New field.
(DICT_LANGUAGE): Define.
(dict_create_hashed, dict_create_hashed_expandable)
(dict_create_linear, dict_create_linear_expandable): New parameter
'language'. Set the dictionary's language.
(iter_match_first_hashed): Adjust to rename.
(insert_symbol_hashed): Assert we don't see mismatching
languages. Adjust to rename.
(dict_hash): Rename to ...
(default_search_name_hash): ... this and make extern.
* dictionary.h (struct language_defn): Forward declare.
(dict_create_hashed): New parameter 'language'.
* dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_start_symtab): Pass down language.
* f-lang.c (f_language_defn): Install default_search_name_hash.
* go-lang.c (go_language_defn): Install default_search_name_hash.
* jit.c (finalize_symtab): Pass compunit's language to dictionary
creation.
* language.c (unknown_language_defn, auto_language_defn):
* language.h (language_defn::la_search_name_hash): New field.
(default_search_name_hash): Declare.
* m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Install default_search_name_hash.
* mdebugread.c (new_block): New parameter 'language'.
* mdebugread.c (parse_symbol): Pass symbol language to block
allocation.
(psymtab_to_symtab_1): Pass down language.
(new_symtab): Pass compunit's language to block allocation.
* objc-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Install
default_search_name_hash.
* opencl-lang.c (opencl_language_defn):
* p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Install
default_search_name_hash.
* rust-lang.c (rust_language_defn): Install
default_search_name_hash.
* stabsread.h (enum language): Forward declare.
(process_one_symbol): Add 'language' parameter.
* symtab.c (search_name_hash): New function.
* symtab.h (search_name_hash): Declare.
* xcoffread.c (read_xcoff_symtab): Pass language to start_symtab.
This replaces start_rbreak_breakpoints and end_rbreak_breakpoints with
a new scoped class. This allows the removal of a cleanup.
This also fixes an earlier memory leak regression, by changing
"string" to be a std::string.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-11-04 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* breakpoint.c
(scoped_rbreak_breakpoints::scoped_rbreak_breakpoints): Rename
from start_rbreak_breakpoints.
(scoped_rbreak_breakpoints): Rename from end_rbreak_breakpoints.
* breakpoint.h (class scoped_rbreak_breakpoints): New.
(start_rbreak_breakpoints, end_rbreak_breakpoints): Remove.
* symtab.c (do_end_rbreak_breakpoints): Remove.
(rbreak_command): Use scoped_rbreak_breakpoints, std::string.
This changes search_symbols to return a std::vector, replacing the
previous linked list approach. This allows the removal of some
cleanups, as well as the use of std::sort and std::unique, saving some
code and extra allocations in sort_search_symbols_remove_dups.
Regression tested by the buildbot.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-10-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* symtab.c (free_search_symbols, do_free_search_symbols_cleanup)
(make_cleanup_free_search_symbols): Remove.
(search_symbols): Return std::vector.
(symbol_search::compare_search_syms): Now member of
symbol_search. Change arguments.
(sort_search_symbols_remove_dups): Change arguments. Rewrite.
(symtab_symbol_info, rbreak_command): Update.
* symtab.h (struct symbol_search) <next>: Remove.
Add constructors.
(symbol_search::operator<): New function.
(symbol_search::operator==): New function.
(search_symbols): Remove std::vector.
(free_search_symbols, make_cleanup_free_search_symbols): Remove.
(symbol_search::compare_search_syms): Declare.
This removes an unused outer cleanup from symtab.c, and an unused
cleanup declaration as well.
gdb/ChangeLog
2017-09-29 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* symtab.c (search_symbols): Remove unused outer cleanup.
(make_source_files_completion_list): Remove unused declaration.
Currently, with an ambiguous "list first,last", we get:
(gdb) list bar,main
Specified first line 'bar' is ambiguous:
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98
This commit makes gdb's output above a bit clearer by printing the
symbol name as well:
(gdb) list bar,main
Specified first line 'bar' is ambiguous:
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97, symbol: "bar(A)"
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98, symbol: "bar(B)"
And while at it, makes gdb print the symbol name when actually listing
multiple locations too. I.e., before (with "set listsize 2"):
(gdb) list bar
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97
96
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
98 int bar (B) { return 22; }
After:
(gdb) list bar
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 97, symbol: "bar(A)"
96
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
file: "src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.cp/overload.cc", line number: 98, symbol: "bar(B)"
97 int bar (A) { return 11; }
98 int bar (B) { return 22; }
Currently, the result of decoding a linespec loses information about
the original symbol that was found. All we end up with is an address.
This makes it difficult to find the original symbol again to get at
its print name. Fix that by storing a pointer to the symbol in the
sal. We already store the symtab and obj_section, so it feels like a
natural progression to me. This avoids having to do any extra symbol
lookup too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cli/cli-cmds.c (list_command): Use print_sal_location.
(print_sal_location): New function.
(ambiguous_line_spec): Use print_sal_location.
* linespec.c (symbol_to_sal): Record the symbol in the sal.
* symtab.c (find_function_start_sal): Likewise.
* symtab.h (symtab_and_line::symbol): New field.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-20 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/list-ambiguous.exp (test_list_ambiguous_symbol): Expect
symbol names in gdb's output.
* gdb.cp/overload.exp ("list all overloads"): Likewise.
Instead, make symtab_and_line initialize its members itself. Many
symtab_and_line declarations are moved to where the object is
initialized at the same time both for clarity and to avoid double
initialization. A few functions, like e.g., find_frame_sal are
adjusted to return the sal using normal function return instead of an
output parameter likewise to avoid having to default-construct a sal
and then immediately have the object overwritten.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (is_known_support_routine): Move sal declaration to
where it is initialized.
* breakpoint.c (create_internal_breakpoint, init_catchpoint)
(parse_breakpoint_sals, decode_static_tracepoint_spec)
(clear_command, update_static_tracepoint): Remove init_sal
references. Move declarations closer to initializations.
* cli/cli-cmds.c (list_command): Move sal declarations closer to
initializations.
* elfread.c (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop): Remove init_sal
references. Move sal declarations closer to initializations.
* frame.c (find_frame_sal): Return a symtab_and_line via function
return instead of output parameter. Remove init_sal references.
* frame.h (find_frame_sal): Return a symtab_and_line via function
return instead of output parameter.
* guile/scm-frame.c (gdbscm_frame_sal): Adjust.
* guile/scm-symtab.c (stscm_make_sal_smob): Use in-place new
instead of memset.
(gdbscm_find_pc_line): Remove init_sal reference.
* infcall.c (call_function_by_hand_dummy): Remove init_sal
references. Move declarations closer to initializations.
* infcmd.c (set_step_frame): Update. Move declarations closer to
initializations.
(finish_backward): Remove init_sal references. Move declarations
closer to initializations.
* infrun.c (process_event_stop_test, handle_step_into_function)
(insert_hp_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame)
(insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller): Likewise.
* linespec.c (create_sals_line_offset, decode_digits_ordinary)
(symbol_to_sal): Likewise.
* probe.c (parse_probes_in_pspace): Remove init_sal reference.
* python/py-frame.c (frapy_find_sal): Move sal declaration closer
to its initialization.
* reverse.c (save_bookmark_command): Use new/delete. Remove
init_sal references. Move declarations closer to initializations.
* source.c (get_current_source_symtab_and_line): Remove brace
initialization.
(set_current_source_symtab_and_line): Now takes the sal by const
reference. Remove brace initialization.
(line_info): Remove init_sal reference.
* source.h (set_current_source_symtab_and_line): Now takes a
symtab_and_line via const reference.
* stack.c (set_current_sal_from_frame): Adjust.
(print_frame_info): Adjust.
(get_last_displayed_sal): Return the sal via function return
instead of via output parameter. Simplify.
(frame_info): Adjust.
* stack.h (get_last_displayed_sal): Return the sal via function
return instead of via output parameter.
* symtab.c (init_sal): Delete.
(find_pc_sect_line): Remove init_sal references. Move
declarations closer to initializations.
(find_function_start_sal): Remove init_sal references. Move
declarations closer to initializations.
* symtab.h (struct symtab_and_line): In-class initialize all
fields.
* tracepoint.c (set_traceframe_context)
(print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Remove init_sal references.
Move declarations closer to initializations.
* tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_show_disassem_and_update_source): Adjust.
* tui/tui-stack.c (tui_show_frame_info): Adjust. Move
declarations closer to initializations.
* tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_update_source_window_as_is): Remove
init_sal references. Adjust.