The sim-basics.h is too big and includes too many things. This leads
to some arch's sim-main.h having circular loop issues with defs, and
makes it hard to separate out common objects from arch-specific defs.
By splitting up sim-basics.h and killing off sim-main.h, it'll make
it easier to separate out the two.
The defs.h header will take care of including the various config.h
headers. For now, it's just config.h, but we'll add more when we
integrate gnulib in.
This header should be used instead of config.h, and should be the
first include in every .c file. We won't rely on the old behavior
where we expected files to include the port's sim-main.h which then
includes the common sim-basics.h which then includes config.h. We
have a ton of code that includes things before sim-main.h, and it
sometimes needs to be that way. Creating a dedicated header avoids
the ordering mess and implicit inclusion that shows up otherwise.
Few arches implement STATE_WATCHPOINTS()->pc while all of them implement
sim_pc_get. Lets switch the sim-watch core for monitoring pc events to
the sim_pc_get API so this module works for all ports, and then we can
delete this old back channel of snooping in the port's cpu state -- the
code needs the pointer to the pc storage so that it can read out bytes
and compare them to the watchrange.
This also fixes the logic on multi-cpu sims by removing the limitation
of only being able to watch CPU0's state.
Existing ports already have sizeof_pc set to the same size as sim_cia,
so simply make that part of the core code. We already assume this in
places by way of sim_pc_{get,set}, and this is how it's documented in
the sim-base.h API.
There is code to allow sims to pick different register word sizes from
address sizes, but most ports use the defaults for both (32-bits), and
the few that support multiple register sizes never change the address
size (so address defaults to register). I can't think of any machine
where the register hardware size would be larger than the address word
size either. We have ABIs that behave that way (e.g. x32), but the
hardware is still equivalent register sized.
The default watchpoint handler is NULL. That means any port that
sets the STATE_WATCHPOINTS->pc field will crash if you try to use
the --watch options but don't configure the interrupt handler. In
the past, you had to setup STATE_WATCHPOINTS->pc if you wanted to
support PC profiling, and while that was fixed a while ago, we have
a lot of ports who still configure it.
We already add a default set of interrupts (just "int") if the port
doesn't define any. Let's also add a default handler that raises a
SIGTRAP. When connected to gdb, this is a breakpoint which is what
people would expect. When running standalone, it'll abort the sim,
but it's unclear whether there's anything better to do there. This
really is just to make the watchpoint module more usable out of the
box for most ports with very little setup, at least inside of gdb.
The code supports a <start>[,<end>] syntax, but the logic for handling
the <end> check was broken: it would detect the first byte was ",", but
then include that in the strtoul call meaning the result is always 0.
Further, it (re)assigned to arg0 when it meant arg1 which means this
code always processed a range expression as 0,0. Oops.
My change 1ac72f0659 ("sim: convert to
bfd_endian") subtly broke the watchpoint module on little endian host
systems. The old code used 0 to mean "whatever the host endian is",
and while that was changed to use BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN, this caller was
missed. Since its API used an int instead of an enum, the coercion
from 0 to the BFD endian enum was silently missed, and 0 happens to
be BFD_ENDIAN_BIG.
Instead of restoring the old logic by passing in BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN,
we know the right host endian at compile time, so use that directly.
Since we require C11 now, we can assume many headers exist, and
clean up all of the conditional includes. It's not like any of
this code actually accounted for the headers not existing, just
whether we could include them.
The strings.h cleanup is a little nuanced: it isn't in C11, but
every use of it in the codebase will include strings.h only if
string.h doesn't exist. Since we now assume the C11 string.h
exists, we'll never include strings.h, so we can delete it.
This commits the result of running gdb/copyright.py as per our Start
of New Year procedure...
gdb/ChangeLog
Update copyright year range in copyright header of all GDB files.
During building of several cgen simulator's I notices the below
warnings. Adding includes fixes these.
Including config.h allows stdio.h to properly configure itself to expose
asprintf().
The other warnings for abort, free, memset, strlen are trivial.
Warnings:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/or1k/../common/sim-watch.c: In function ‘sim_watchpoint_install’:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/or1k/../common/sim-watch.c:415:10: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘asprintf’; did you mean ‘vasprintf’? [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
if (asprintf (&name, "watch-%s-%s",
^~~~~~~~
vasprintf
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-device.c: In function ‘hw_strdup’:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-device.c:59:34: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘strlen’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
char *dup = hw_zalloc (me, strlen (str) + 1);
^~~~~~
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-events.c: In function ‘hw_event_queue_schedule’:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-events.c:92:3: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘memset’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
memset (&dummy, 0, sizeof dummy);
^~~~~~
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-handles.c: In function ‘hw_handle_remove_ihandle’:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/hw-handles.c:211:4: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘free’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
free (delete);
^~~~
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/sim-fpu.c: In function ‘pack_fpu’:
../../../binutils-gdb/sim/lm32/../common/sim-fpu.c:292:7: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘abort’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
abort ();
^~~~~
sim/common/ChangeLog:
* sim-options.c: Include "config.h".
Include <stdio.h>.
* sim-watch.c: Include "config.h".
Include <stdio.h>.
* hw-device.c: Include <string.h>.
* hw-events.c: Include <string.h>.
* hw-handles.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
* sim-fpu.c: Include <stdlib.h>.
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 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.
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.
The sim keeps track of which allocations are zero-ed internally (via
zalloc) and then calls a helper "zfree" function rather than "free".
But this "zfree" function simply calls "free" itself. Since I can
see no point in this and it is simply useless overhead, punt it.
The only real change is in hw-alloc.c where we remove the zalloc_p
tracking, and sim-utils.c where zfree is delete. The rest of the
changes are a simple `sed` from "zfree" to "free".
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The sim code has a lot of static initializer for options and devices, but
since they aren't using newer struct style, they have to specify a value
for every option otherwise gcc spits a lot of warnings about "missing
initializer". So add NULL/0 stubs for pointers/values.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
GCC issues warnings because const strings like "foo" are passed as char*.
sim-watch.c: In function 'watchpoint_type_to_str':
sim-watch.c:120: warning: return discards qualifiers from pointer target type
o Clarify how to use alias options
o use in sim-watch (better usage message)
o Don't pass something on the stack into the
watch-point interrupt hander.