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.
This adds alignof and _Alignof to the C/C++ expression parser, and
adds new tests to test the features. The tests are written to try to
ensure that gdb's knowledge of alignment rules stays in sync with the
compiler's.
2018-04-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR exp/17095:
* NEWS: Update.
* std-operator.def (UNOP_ALIGNOF): New operator.
* expprint.c (dump_subexp_body_standard) <case UNOP_ALIGNOF>:
New.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard) <case UNOP_ALIGNOF>: New.
* c-lang.c (c_op_print_tab): Add alignof.
* c-exp.y (ALIGNOF): New token.
(exp): Add "ALIGNOF" production.
(ident_tokens): Add _Alignof and alignof.
2018-04-30 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
PR exp/17095:
* gdb.dwarf2/dw2-align.exp: New file.
* gdb.cp/align.exp: New file.
* gdb.base/align.exp: New file.
* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_int128_helper): New proc.
(has_int128_c, has_int128_cxx): New caching procs.
When parsing floating-point literals, the language parsers currently
use parse_float or some equivalent routine to parse the input string
into a DOUBLEST, which is then stored within a OP_DOUBLE expression
node. When evaluating the expression, the OP_DOUBLE is finally
converted into a value in target format.
On the other hand, *decimal* floating-point literals are parsed
directly into target format and stored that way in a OP_DECFLOAT
expression node. In order to eliminate the DOUBLEST, this patch
therefore unifies the handling of binary and decimal floating-
point literals and stores them both in target format within a
new OP_FLOAT expression node, replacing both OP_DOUBLE and
OP_DECFLOAT.
In order to store literals in target format, the parse_float
routine needs to know the type of the literal. All parsers
therefore need to be changed to determine the appropriate type
(e.g. by detecting suffixes) *before* calling parse_float,
instead of after it as today. However, this change is mostly
straightforward -- again, this is already done for decimal FP
today.
The core of the literal parsing is moved into a new routine
floatformat_from_string, mirroring floatformat_to_string.
The parse_float routine now calls either floatformat_from_string
or decimal_from_sting, allowing it to handle any type of FP
literal.
All language parsers need to be updated. Some notes on
specific changes to the various languages:
- C: Decimal FP is now handled in parse_float, and no longer
needs to be handled specially.
- D: Straightforward.
- Fortran: Still used a hard-coded "atof", also replaced by
parse_float now. Continues to always use builtin_real_s8
as the type of literal, even though this is probably wrong.
- Go: This used to handle "f" and "l" suffixes, even though
the Go language actually doesn't support those. I kept this
support for now -- maybe revisit later. Note the the GDB
test suite for some reason actually *verifies* that GDB supports
those unsupported suffixes ...
- Pascal: Likewise -- this handles suffixes that are not
supported in the language standard.
- Modula-2: Like Fortran, used to use "atof".
- Rust: Mostly straightforward, except for a unit-testing hitch.
The code use to set a special "unit_testing" flag which would
cause "rust_type" to always return NULL. This makes it not
possible to encode a literal into target format (which type?).
The reason for this flag appears to have been that during
unit testing, there is no "rust_parser" context set up, which
means no "gdbarch" is available to use its types. To fix this,
I removed the unit_testing flag, and instead simply just set up
a dummy rust_parser context during unit testing.
- Ada: This used to check sizeof (DOUBLEST) to determine which
type to use for floating-point literal. This seems questionable
to begin with (since DOUBLEST is quite unrelated to target formats),
and in any case we need to get rid of DOUBLEST. I'm now simply
always using the largest type (builtin_long_double).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-10-25 Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
* doublest.c (floatformat_from_string): New function.
* doublest.h (floatformat_from_string): Add prototype.
* std-operator.def (OP_DOUBLE, OP_DECFLOAT): Remove, replace by ...
(OP_FLOAT): ... this.
* expression.h: Do not include "doublest.h".
(union exp_element): Replace doubleconst and decfloatconst by
new element floatconst.
* ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Handle OP_FLOAT instead of OP_DOUBLE.
(ada_evaluate_subexp): Likewise.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle OP_FLOAT instead of
OP_DOUBLE and OP_DECFLOAT.
* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Likewise.
(dump_subexp_body_standard): Likewise.
* breakpoint.c (watchpoint_exp_is_const): Likewise.
* parse.c: Include "dfp.h".
(write_exp_elt_dblcst, write_exp_elt_decfloatcst): Remove.
(write_exp_elt_floatcst): New function.
(operator_length_standard): Handle OP_FLOAT instead of OP_DOUBLE
and OP_DECFLOAT.
(operator_check_standard): Likewise.
(parse_float): Do not accept suffix. Take type as input. Return bool.
Return target format buffer instead of host DOUBLEST.
Use floatformat_from_string and decimal_from_string to parse
either binary or decimal floating-point types.
(parse_c_float): Remove.
* parser-defs.h: Do not include "doublest.h".
(write_exp_elt_dblcst, write_exp_elt_decfloatcst): Remove.
(write_exp_elt_floatcst): Add prototype.
(parse_float): Update prototype.
(parse_c_float): Remove.
* c-exp.y: Do not include "dfp.h".
(typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(typed_val_decfloat): Remove.
(DECFLOAT): Remove.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Update to new parse_float interface.
Parse suffixes and determine type before calling parse_float.
Handle decimal and binary FP types the same way.
* d-exp.y (typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(FLOAT_LITERAL): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Update to new parse_float interface.
Parse suffixes and determine type before calling parse_float.
* f-exp.y: Replace dval by typed_val_float.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Use parse_float instead of atof.
* go-exp.y (typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(parse_go_float): Remove.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Call parse_float instead of parse_go_float.
Parse suffixes and determine type before calling parse_float.
* p-exp.y (typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Update to new parse_float interface.
Parse suffixes and determine type before calling parse_float.
* m2-exp.y: Replace dval by byte buffer val.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(parse_number): Call parse_float instead of atof.
* rust-exp.y (typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(lex_number): Call parse_float instead of strtod.
(ast_dliteral): Use OP_FLOAT instead of OP_DOUBLE.
(convert_ast_to_expression): Handle OP_FLOAT instead of OP_DOUBLE.
Use write_exp_elt_floatcst.
(unit_testing): Remove static variable.
(rust_type): Do not check unit_testing.
(rust_lex_tests): Do not set uint_testing. Set up dummy rust_parser.
* ada-exp.y (type_float, type_double): Remove.
(typed_val_float): Use byte buffer instead of DOUBLEST.
(FLOAT): Use OP_FLOAT and write_exp_elt_floatcst.
* ada-lex.l (processReal): Use parse_float instead of sscanf.
While the previous commit made "p method()::static_var" (no
single-quotes) Just Work, if users (or frontends) try wrapping the
expression with quotes, they'll get:
(gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
'S::method()::static_var' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type
even if we _do_ have debug info for that variable. That's better than
the bogus/confusing value what GDB would print before the
stop-assuming-int patch:
(gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
$1 = 1
but I think it'd still be nice to make this case Just Work too.
In this case, due to the quoting, the C/C++ parser (c-exp.y)
interprets the whole expression/string as a single symbol name, and we
end up calling lookup_symbol on that name. There's no debug symbol
with that fully-qualified name, but since the compiler gives the
static variable a mangled linkage name exactly like the above, it
appears in the mininal symbols:
$ nm -A local-static | c++filt | grep static_var
local-static:0000000000601040 d S::method()::static_var
... and that's what GDB happens to find/print. This only happens in
C++, note, since for C the compiler uses different linkage names:
local-static-c:0000000000601040 d static_var.1848
So while (in C++, not C) function local static variables are given a
mangled name that demangles to the same syntax that GDB
documents/expects as the way to access function local statics, there's
no global symbol in the debug info with that name at all. The debug
info for a static local variable for a non-inline function looks like
this:
<1><2a1>: Abbrev Number: 19 (DW_TAG_subprogram)
...
<2><2f7>: Abbrev Number: 20 (DW_TAG_variable)
<2f8> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x4e9): static_var
<2fc> DW_AT_decl_file : 1
<2fd> DW_AT_decl_line : 64
<2fe> DW_AT_type : <0x25>
<302> DW_AT_location : 9 byte block: 3 40 10 60 0 0 0 0 0 (DW_OP_addr: 601040)
and for an inline function, it looks like this (linkage name run
through c++filt for convenience):
<2><21b>: Abbrev Number: 16 (DW_TAG_variable)
<21c> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x21a): static_var
<220> DW_AT_decl_file : 1
<221> DW_AT_decl_line : 48
<222> DW_AT_linkage_name: (indirect string, offset: 0x200): S::inline_method()::static_var
<226> DW_AT_type : <0x25>
<22a> DW_AT_external : 1
<22a> DW_AT_location : 9 byte block: 3 a0 10 60 0 0 0 0 0 (DW_OP_addr: 6010a0)
(The inline case makes the variable external so that the linker can
merge the different inlined copies. It seems like GCC never outputs
the linkage name for non-extern globals.)
When we read the DWARF, we record the static_var variable as a regular
variable of the containing function's block. This makes stopping in
the function and printing the variable as usual. The variable just so
happens to have a memory address as location.
So one way to make "p 'S::method()::static_var'" work would be to
record _two_ copies of the symbols for these variables. One in the
function's scope/block, with "static_var" as name, as we currently do,
and another in the static or global blocks (depending on whether the
symbol is external), with a fully-qualified name. I wrote a prototype
patch for that, and it works. For the non-inline case above, since
the debug info doesn't point to the linkage same, that patch built the
physname of the static local variable as the concat of the physname of
the containing function, plus "::", plus the variable's name. We
could make that approach work for C too, though it kind of feels
awkward to record fake symbol names like that in C.
The other approach I tried is to change the C++ symbol lookup routines
instead. This is the approach this commit takes. We can already
lookup up symbol in namespaces and classes, so this feels like a good
fit, and was easy enough. The advantage is that this doesn't require
recording extra symbols.
The test in gdb.cp/m-static.exp that exposed the need for this is
removed, since the same functionality is now covered by
gdb.cp/local-static.exp.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cp-namespace.c (cp_search_static_and_baseclasses): Handle
function/method scopes; lookup the nested name as a function local
static variable.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/local-static.exp: Also test with
class::method::variable wholly quoted.
* gdb.cp/m-static.exp (class::method::variable): Remove test.
This commit makes "print S::method()::static_var" actually find the
debug symbol for static_var. Currently, you get:
(gdb) print S::method()::static_var
A syntax error in expression, near `'.
Quoting the whole string would seemingly work before the previous
patch that made GDB stop assuming int for no-debug-info variables:
(gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
$1 = 1
... except that's incorrect output, because:
(gdb) ptype 'S::method()::static_var'
type = <data variable, no debug info>
The way to make it work correctly currently is by quoting the
function/method part, like this:
(gdb) print 'S::method()'::static_var
$1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
(gdb) ptype 'S::method()'::static_var
type = struct aggregate {
int i1;
int i2;
int i3;
}
At least after the "stop assuming int" patch, this is what we
now get:
(gdb) p 'S::method()::static_var'
'S::method()::static_var' has unknown type; cast it to its declared type
(gdb) p (struct aggregate) 'S::method()::static_var'
$1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
However, IMO, users shouldn't really have to care about any of this.
GDB should Just Work, without quoting, IMO.
So here's a patch that implements support for that in the C++ parser.
With this patch, you now get:
(gdb) p S::method()::S_M_s_var_aggregate
$1 = {i1 = 1, i2 = 2, i3 = 3}
(gdb) ptype S::method()::S_M_s_var_aggregate
type = struct aggregate {
int i1;
int i2;
int i3;
}
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
(%type <voidval>): Add function_method.
* c-exp.y (exp): New production for calls with no arguments.
(function_method, function_method_void_or_typelist): New
productions.
(exp): New production for "method()::static_var".
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
* parse.c (operator_length_standard):
Handle OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR.
* std-operator.def (OP_FUNC_STATIC_VAR): New.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/local-static.c: New.
* gdb.base/local-static.cc: New.
* gdb.base/local-static.exp: New.
Since minsym references now go via OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE, UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS
is no longer used anywhere.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Remove UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS
handling.
* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
Ditto.
* parse.c (operator_length_standard, operator_check_standard):
Ditto.
* std-operator.def (UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS): Delete.
The previous patch left GDB with an inconsistency. While with normal
expression evaluation the "unknown return type" error shows the name
of the function that misses debug info:
(gdb) p getenv ("PATH")
'getenv' has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
^^^^^^
which can by handy in more complicated expressions, "ptype" does not:
(gdb) ptype getenv ("PATH")
function has unknown return type; cast the call to its declared return type
^^^^^^^^
This commit is a step toward fixing it.
The problem is that while evaluating the expression above, we have no
reference to the minimal symbol where we could extract the name from.
This is because the resulting expression tree has no reference to the
minsym at all. During parsing, the type and address of the minsym are
extracted and an UNOP_MEMVAL / UNOP_MEMVAL_TLS operator is generated
(see write_exp_elt_msym). With "set debug expression", here's what
you see:
0 OP_FUNCALL Number of args: 0
3 UNOP_MEMVAL Type @0x565334a51930 (<text variable, no debug info>)
6 OP_LONG Type @0x565334a51c60 (__CORE_ADDR), value 140737345035648 (0x7ffff7751d80)
The "print" case finds the function name, because
call_function_by_hand looks up the function by address again.
However, for "ptype", we don't reach that code, because obviously we
don't really call the function.
Unlike minsym references, references to variables with debug info have
a pointer to the variable's symbol in the expression tree, with
OP_VAR_VALUE:
(gdb) ptype main()
...
0 OP_FUNCALL Number of args: 0
3 OP_VAR_VALUE Block @0x0, symbol @0x559bbbd9b358 (main(int, char**))
...
so I don't see why do minsyms need to be different. So to prepare for
fixing the missing function name issue, this commit adds a new
OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE operator that mimics OP_VAR_VALUE, except that it's
for minsyms instead of debug symbols. For infcalls, we now get
expressions like these:
0 OP_FUNCALL Number of args: 0
3 OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE Objfile @0x1e41bf0, msymbol @0x7fffe599b000 (getenv)
In the following patch, we'll make OP_FUNCALL extract the function
name from the symbol stored in OP_VAR_VALUE/OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE will be used more in a later patch in the series
too.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
* ax-gdb.c (gen_msym_var_ref): New function.
(gen_expr): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
* eval.c (evaluate_var_msym_value): New function.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
<OP_FUNCALL>: Extract function name from symbol/minsym and pass it
to call_function_by_hand.
* expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, dump_subexp_body_standard):
Handle OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
(union exp_element) <msymbol>: New field.
* minsyms.h (struct type): Forward declare.
(find_minsym_type_and_address): Declare.
* parse.c (write_exp_elt_msym): New function.
(write_exp_msymbol): Delete, refactored as ...
(find_minsym_type_and_address): ... this new function.
(write_exp_msymbol): Reimplement using OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
(operator_length_standard, operator_check_standard): Handle
OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE.
* std-operator.def (OP_VAR_MSYM_VALUE): New.
This applies the second part of GDB's End of Year Procedure, which
updates the copyright year range in all of GDB's files.
gdb/ChangeLog:
Update copyright year range in all GDB files.
TERNOP_SLICE was added for language Chill, but it is used for Ada and D later.
Since language Chill was removed from GDB, TERNOP_SLICE is only used for
Ada and D. This patch is to update its comments.
gdb:
2014-07-20 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* std-operator.def: Update comments to TERNOP_SLICE.
BINOP_RANGE was added by the following commit for chill language.
commit badefd2800
Author: Per Bothner <per@bothner.com>
Date: Wed Nov 29 22:59:31 1995 +0000
* expression.h (enum exp_opcode): Add BINOP_RANGE.
* expprint.c (dump_expression): Support BINOP_RANGE.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Handle BINOP_RANGE (as error).
(case MULTI_SUBSCRIPT): Fix broken f77 value->int ad hoc conversion.
* ch-lang.c (chill_op_print_tab): Support BINOP_RANGE.
(evaluate_subexp_chill): Error on BINOP_COMMA.
Chill language is no longer supported, so we can remove BINOP_RANGE too.
This patch is to remove BINOP_RANGE.
gdb:
2014-07-20 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* std-operator.def: Remove BINOP_RANGE.
* breakpoint.c (watchpoint_exp_is_const): Update.
* expprint.c (dump_subexp_body_standard): Likewise.
* eval.c (init_array_element): Remove dead code.
(evaluate_subexp_standard): Likewise.
Chill language support was removed several years ago, and BINOP_IN
isn't used for Pascal. This patch is to remove BINOP_IN.
gdb:
2014-07-20 Yao Qi <yao@codesourcery.com>
* std-operator.def: Remove BINOP_IN.
* breakpoint.c (watchpoint_exp_is_const): Update.
* eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Likewise.
* expprint.c (dump_subexp_body_standard): Likewise.
Two modifications:
1. The addition of 2013 to the copyright year range for every file;
2. The use of a single year range, instead of potentially multiple
year ranges, as approved by the FSF.
Fix debug printing of BINOP_IN, OP_OBJC_MSGCALL,
OP_F77_UNDETERMINED_ARGLIST, OP_COMPLEX, OP_OBJC_SELECTOR, OP_NAME,
OP_OBJC_NSSTRING, OP_F90_RANGE and OP_DECFLOAT.
* ada-operator.inc: Rename the file to ...
* ada-operator.def: ... here, wrap all the entries by macro OP.
* expprint.c (op_name_standard): Remove all the entries. Include
"std-operator.def" instead.
* expression.h (enum exp_opcode): Include "std-operator.def" and
"ada-operator.def". Move all the entries ...
* std-operator.def: ... here, wrap all the entries by macro OP.