This commit brings all the changes made by running gdb/copyright.py
as per GDB's Start of New Year Procedure.
For the avoidance of doubt, all changes in this commits were
performed by the script.
Rename thread_info::executing to thread_info::m_executing, and make it
private. Add a new get/set member functions, and convert GDB to make
use of these.
The only real change of interest in this patch is in thread.c where I
have deleted the helper function set_executing_thread, and now just
use the new set function thread_info::set_executing. However, the old
helper function set_executing_thread included some code to reset the
thread's stop_pc, so I moved this code into the new function
thread_info::set_executing. However, I don't believe there is
anywhere that this results in a change of behaviour, previously the
executing flag was always set true through a call to
set_executing_thread anyway.
A following patch will want to take some action when a pending wait
status is set on or removed from a thread. Add a getter and a setter on
thread_info for the pending waitstatus, so that we can add some code in
the setter later.
The thing is, the pending wait status field is in the
thread_suspend_state, along with other fields that we need to backup
before and restore after the thread does an inferior function call.
Therefore, make the thread_suspend_state member private
(thread_info::suspend becomes thread_info::m_suspend), and add getters /
setters for all of its fields:
- pending wait status
- stop signal
- stop reason
- stop pc
For the pending wait status, add the additional has_pending_waitstatus
and clear_pending_waitstatus methods.
I think this makes the thread_info interface a bit nicer, because we
now access the fields as:
thread->stop_pc ()
rather than
thread->suspend.stop_pc
The stop_pc field being in the `suspend` structure is an implementation
detail of thread_info that callers don't need to be aware of.
For the backup / restore of the thread_suspend_state structure, add
save_suspend_to and restore_suspend_from methods. You might wonder why
`save_suspend_to`, as opposed to a simple getter like
thread_suspend_state &suspend ();
I want to make it clear that this is to be used only for backing up and
restoring the suspend state, _not_ to access fields like:
thread->suspend ()->stop_pc
Adding some getters / setters allows adding some assertions. I find
that this helps understand how things are supposed to work. Add:
- When getting the pending status (pending_waitstatus method), ensure
that there is a pending status.
- When setting a pending status (set_pending_waitstatus method), ensure
there is no pending status.
There is one case I found where this wasn't true - in
remote_target::process_initial_stop_replies - which needed adjustments
to respect that contract. I think it's because
process_initial_stop_replies is kind of (ab)using the
thread_info::suspend::waitstatus to store some statuses temporarily, for
its internal use (statuses it doesn't intent on leaving pending).
process_initial_stop_replies pulls out stop replies received during the
initial connection using target_wait. It always stores the received
event in `evthread->suspend.waitstatus`. But it only sets
waitstatus_pending_p, if it deems the event interesting enough to leave
pending, to be reported to the core:
if (ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
|| ws.value.sig != GDB_SIGNAL_0)
evthread->suspend.waitstatus_pending_p = 1;
It later uses this flag a bit below, to choose which thread to make the
"selected" one:
if (selected == NULL
&& thread->suspend.waitstatus_pending_p)
selected = thread;
And ultimately that's used if the user-visible mode is all-stop, so that
we print the stop for that interesting thread:
/* In all-stop, we only print the status of one thread, and leave
others with their status pending. */
if (!non_stop)
{
thread_info *thread = selected;
if (thread == NULL)
thread = lowest_stopped;
if (thread == NULL)
thread = first;
print_one_stopped_thread (thread);
}
But in any case (all-stop or non-stop), print_one_stopped_thread needs
to access the waitstatus value of these threads that don't have a
pending waitstatus (those that had TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED +
GDB_SIGNAL_0). This doesn't work with the assertions I've
put.
So, change the code to only set the thread's wait status if it is an
interesting one that we are going to leave pending. If the thread
stopped due to a non-interesting event (TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED +
GDB_SIGNAL_0), don't store it. Adjust print_one_stopped_thread to
understand that if a thread has no pending waitstatus, it's because it
stopped with TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED + GDB_SIGNAL_0.
The call to set_last_target_status also uses the pending waitstatus.
However, given that the pending waitstatus for the thread may have been
cleared in print_one_stopped_thread (and that there might not even be a
pending waitstatus in the first place, as explained above), it is no
longer possible to do it at this point. To fix that, move the call to
set_last_target_status in print_one_stopped_thread. I think this will
preserve the existing behavior, because set_last_target_status is
currently using the current thread's wait status. And the current
thread is the last one for which print_one_stopped_thread is called. So
by calling set_last_target_status in print_one_stopped_thread, we'll get
the same result. set_last_target_status will possibly be called
multiple times, but only the last call will matter. It just means
possibly more calls to set_last_target_status, but those are cheap.
Change-Id: Iedab9653238eaf8231abcf0baa20145acc8b77a7
A following patch will want to use scoped_ignore_sigttou in code
shared between GDB and GDBserver. Move it under gdbsupport/.
Note that despite what inflow.h/inflow.c's first line says, inflow.c
is no longer about ptrace, it is about terminal management. Some
other files were unnecessarily including inflow.h, I guess a leftover
from the days when inflow.c really was about ptrace. Those inclusions
are simply dropped.
gdb/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove inflow.h.
* inf-ptrace.c, inflow.c, procfs.c: Don't include "inflow.h".
* inflow.h: Delete, moved to gdbsupport/ under a different name.
* ser-unix.c: Don't include "inflow.h". Include
"gdbsupport/scoped_ignore_sigttou.h".
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
yyyy-mm-dd Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
* scoped_ignore_sigttou.h: New file, moved from gdb/ and renamed.
Change-Id: Ie390abf42c3a78bec6d282ad2a63edd3e623559a
In a case open() returns 0 tty might be leaked. While 0 should be
stdin (and therefore is an unlikely return value from open()), it's
still the case that the test should be for non-negative return values
from open().
gdb/ChangeLog:
2021-05-11 Alexandra Hájková <ahajkova@redhat.com>
* inflow.c (new_tty): Do not leak tty.
Give a name to each observer, this will help produce more meaningful
debug message.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* observable.h (class observable) <struct observer> <observer>:
Add name parameter.
<name>: New field.
<attach>: Add name parameter, update all callers.
Change-Id: Ie0cc4664925215b8d2b09e026011b7803549fba0
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.
This moves gdb_select.h to gdbsupport/, so it can be used by other
code there.
gdb/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb_select.h: Move to ../gdbsupport/.
* event-loop.c: Update include path.
* top.c: Update include path.
* ser-base.c: Update include path.
* ui-file.c: Update include path.
* ser-tcp.c: Update include path.
* guile/scm-ports.c: Update include path.
* posix-hdep.c: Update include path.
* ser-unix.c: Update include path.
* gdb_usleep.c: Update include path.
* mingw-hdep.c: Update include path.
* inflow.c: Update include path.
* infrun.c: Update include path.
* event-top.c: Update include path.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog
2020-04-13 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* gdb_select.h: Move from ../gdb/.
The info_terminal_command declaration in inflow.h does not match the
current definition. It is not needed anyway, as info_terminal_command
is only used locally, so remove it and make the definition static.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* inferior.h (info_terminal_command): Remove declaration.
* inflow.c (info_terminal_command): Make static.
Change-Id: I22c3fcc44244e3cf877b5e27eff189af11c39503
GCC 9 has a few new warnings that aren't enabled in the gdb build by
default: -Wdeprecated-copy, -Wdeprecated-copy-dtor, and
-Wredundant-move. This patch enables them all.
Tested by rebuilding with a new GCC (git master) on x86-64 Fedora 29.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-05-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* inflow.c (struct terminal_info): Add default operator=.
* configure: Rebuild.
* warning.m4 (AM_GDB_WARNINGS): Add -Wdeprecated-copy,
-Wdeprecated-copy-dtor, -Wredundant-move.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog
2019-05-29 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
* configure: Rebuild.
Calls to error () can cause SIGTTOU to send gdb to the background.
For example, on an Arm build:
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x10774: file /build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/watchpoint.c, line 174.
(gdb) r
Starting program: /build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
[1]+ Stopped ../gdb ./outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
localhost$ fg
../gdb ./outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
Cannot parse expression `.L1199 4@r4'.
warning: Probes-based dynamic linker interface failed.
Reverting to original interface.
The SIGTTOU is raised whilst inside a syscall during the call to tcdrain.
Fix is to use scoped_ignore_sigttou to ensure SIGTTOU is blocked.
In addition fix include comments - job_control is not included via terminal.h
gdb/ChangeLog:
* event-top.c: Remove include comment.
* inflow.c (class scoped_ignore_sigttou): Move from here...
* inflow.h (class scoped_ignore_sigttou): ...to here.
* ser-unix.c (hardwire_drain_output): Block SIGTTOU during drain.
* top.c: Remove include comment.
This changes inflow.c to use the type-safe registry API. This fixes a
latent bug in swap_terminal_info, which previously said:
terminal_info *info_a
= (terminal_info *) inferior_data (a, inflow_inferior_data);
terminal_info *info_b
= (terminal_info *) inferior_data (a, inflow_inferior_data);
... both of which examine 'a'.
gdb/ChangeLog
2019-05-08 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* inflow.c (struct terminal_info): Add destructor and
initializers.
(inflow_inferior_data): Change type.
(~terminal_info): Rename from inflow_inferior_data_cleanup.
(get_inflow_inferior_data, inflow_inferior_exit)
(swap_terminal_info, _initialize_inflow): Update.
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.
As preparation for multi-target, this patch makes each inferior have
its own thread list.
This isn't absolutely necessary for multi-target, but simplifies
things. It originally stemmed from the desire to eliminate the
init_thread_list calls sprinkled around, plus it makes it more
efficient to iterate over threads of a given inferior (no need to
always iterate over threads of all inferiors).
We still need to iterate over threads of all inferiors in a number of
places, which means we'd need adjust the ALL_THREADS /
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS macros. However, naively tweaking those macros
to have an extra for loop, like:
#define ALL_THREADS (thr, inf) \
for (inf = inferior_list; inf; inf = inf->next) \
for (thr = inf->thread_list; thr; thr = thr->next)
causes problems with code that does "break" or "continue" within the
ALL_THREADS loop body. Plus, we need to declare the extra "inf" local
variable in order to pass it as temporary variable to ALL_THREADS
(etc.)
It gets even trickier when we consider extending the macros to filter
out threads matching a ptid_t and a target. The macros become tricker
to read/write. Been there.
An alternative (which was my next attempt), is to replace the
ALL_THREADS etc. iteration style with for_each_all_threads,
for_each_non_exited_threads, etc. functions which would take a
callback as parameter, which would usually be passed a lambda.
However, I did not find that satisfactory at all, because the
resulting code ends up a little less natural / more noisy to read,
write and debug/step-through (due to use of lambdas), and in many
places where we use "continue;" to skip to the next thread now need to
use "return;". (I ran into hard to debug bugs caused by a
continue/return confusion.)
I.e., before:
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS (tp)
{
if (tp->not_what_I_want)
continue;
// do something
}
would turn into:
for_each_non_exited_thread ([&] (thread_info *tp)
{
if (tp->not_what_I_want)
return;
// do something
});
Lastly, the solution I settled with was to replace the ALL_THREADS /
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS / ALL_INFERIORS macros with (C++20-like) ranges
and iterators, such that you can instead naturaly iterate over
threads/inferiors using range-for, like e.g,.:
// all threads, including THREAD_EXITED threads.
for (thread_info *tp : all_threads ())
{ .... }
// all non-exited threads.
for (thread_info *tp : all_non_exited_threads ())
{ .... }
// all non-exited threads of INF inferior.
for (thread_info *tp : inf->non_exited_threads ())
{ .... }
The all_non_exited_threads() function takes an optional filter ptid_t as
parameter, which is quite convenient when we need to iterate over
threads matching that filter. See e.g., how the
set_executing/set_stop_requested/finish_thread_state etc. functions in
thread.c end up being simplified.
Most of the patch thus is about adding the infrustructure for allowing
the above. Later on when we get to actual multi-target, these
functions/ranges/iterators will gain a "target_ops *" parameter so
that e.g., we can iterate over all threads of a given target that
match a given filter ptid_t.
The only entry points users needs to be aware of are the
all_threads/all_non_exited_threads etc. functions seen above. Thus,
those functions are declared in gdbthread.h/inferior.h. The actual
iterators/ranges are mainly "internals" and thus are put out of view
in the new thread-iter.h/thread-iter.c/inferior-iter.h files. That
keeps the gdbthread.h/inferior.h headers quite a bit more readable.
A common/safe-iterator.h header is added which adds a template that
can be used to build "safe" iterators, which are forward iterators
that can be used to replace the ALL_THREADS_SAFE macro and other
instances of the same idiom in future.
There's a little bit of shuffling of code between
gdbthread.h/thread.c/inferior.h in the patch. That is necessary in
order to avoid circular dependencies between the
gdbthread.h/inferior.h headers.
As for the init_thread_list calls sprinkled around, they're all
eliminated by this patch, and a new, central call is added to
inferior_appeared. Note how also related to that, there's a call to
init_wait_for_inferior in remote.c that is eliminated.
init_wait_for_inferior is currently responsible for discarding skipped
inline frames, which had to be moved elsewhere. Given that nowadays
we always have a thread even for single-threaded processes, the
natural place is to delete a frame's inline frame info when we delete
the thread. I.e., from clear_thread_inferior_resources.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-11-22 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (COMMON_SFILES): Add thread-iter.c.
* breakpoint.c (breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now): Replace
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS with all_non_exited_threads.
(print_one_breakpoint_location): Replace ALL_INFERIORS with
all_inferiors.
* bsd-kvm.c: Include inferior.h.
* btrace.c (btrace_free_objfile): Replace ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS
with all_non_exited_threads.
* common/filtered-iterator.h: New.
* common/safe-iterator.h: New.
* corelow.c (core_target_open): Don't call init_thread_list here.
* darwin-nat.c (thread_info_from_private_thread_info): Replace
ALL_THREADS with all_threads.
* fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_nat_target::resume): Replace
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS with inf->non_exited_threads.
* fbsd-tdep.c (fbsd_make_corefile_notes): Replace
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS with inf->non_exited_threads.
* fork-child.c (postfork_hook): Don't call init_thread_list here.
* gdbarch-selftests.c (register_to_value_test): Adjust.
* gdbthread.h: Don't include "inferior.h" here.
(struct inferior): Forward declare.
(enum step_over_calls_kind): Moved here from inferior.h.
(thread_info::deletable): Definition moved to thread.c.
(find_thread_ptid (inferior *, ptid_t)): Declare.
(ALL_THREADS, ALL_THREADS_BY_INFERIOR, ALL_THREADS_SAFE): Delete.
Include "thread-iter.h".
(all_threads, all_non_exited_threads, all_threads_safe): New.
(any_thread_p): Declare.
(thread_list): Delete.
* infcmd.c (signal_command): Replace ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS with
all_non_exited_threads.
(proceed_after_attach_callback): Delete.
(proceed_after_attach): Take an inferior pointer instead of an
integer PID. Adjust to use range-for.
(attach_post_wait): Pass down inferior pointer instead of pid.
Use range-for instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(detach_command): Remove init_thread_list call.
* inferior-iter.h: New.
* inferior.c (struct delete_thread_of_inferior_arg): Delete.
(delete_thread_of_inferior): Delete.
(delete_inferior, exit_inferior_1): Use range-for with
inf->threads_safe() instead of iterate_over_threads.
(inferior_appeared): Call init_thread_list here.
(discard_all_inferiors): Use all_non_exited_inferiors.
(find_inferior_id, find_inferior_pid): Use all_inferiors.
(iterate_over_inferiors): Use all_inferiors_safe.
(have_inferiors, number_of_live_inferiors): Use
all_non_exited_inferiors.
(number_of_inferiors): Use all_inferiors and std::distance.
(print_inferior): Use all_inferiors.
* inferior.h: Include gdbthread.h.
(enum step_over_calls_kind): Moved to gdbthread.h.
(struct inferior) <thread_list>: New field.
<threads, non_exited_threads, threads_safe>: New methods.
(ALL_INFERIORS): Delete.
Include "inferior-iter.h".
(ALL_NON_EXITED_INFERIORS): Delete.
(all_inferiors_safe, all_inferiors, all_non_exited_inferiors): New
functions.
* inflow.c (child_interrupt, child_pass_ctrlc): Replace
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS with all_non_exited_threads.
* infrun.c (follow_exec): Use all_threads_safe.
(clear_proceed_status, proceed): Use all_non_exited_threads.
(init_wait_for_inferior): Don't clear inline frame state here.
(infrun_thread_stop_requested, for_each_just_stopped_thread): Use
all_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(random_pending_event_thread): Use all_non_exited_threads instead
of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS. Use a lambda for repeated code.
(clean_up_just_stopped_threads_fsms): Use all_non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(handle_no_resumed): Use all_non_exited_threads instead of
ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS. Use all_inferiors instead of
ALL_INFERIORS.
(restart_threads, switch_back_to_stepped_thread): Use
all_non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* linux-nat.c (check_zombie_leaders): Replace ALL_INFERIORS with
all_inferiors.
(kill_unfollowed_fork_children): Use inf->non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* linux-tdep.c (linux_make_corefile_notes): Use
inf->non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_target::update_thread_list):
Replace ALL_INFERIORS with all_inferiors.
(thread_db_target::thread_handle_to_thread_info): Use
inf->non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* mi/mi-interp.c (multiple_inferiors_p): New.
(mi_on_resume_1): Simplify using all_non_exited_threads and
multiple_inferiors_p.
* mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_thread_list_ids): Use all_non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* nto-procfs.c (nto_procfs_target::open): Don't call
init_thread_list here.
* record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target_open)
(record_btrace_target::stop_recording)
(record_btrace_target::close)
(record_btrace_target::record_is_replaying)
(record_btrace_target::resume, record_btrace_target::wait)
(record_btrace_target::record_stop_replaying): Use
all_non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Use all_non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* regcache.c (cooked_read_test): Remove reference to global
thread_list.
* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_target::create_inferior): Don't call
init_thread_list here.
* remote.c (remote_target::update_thread_list): Use
all_threads_safe instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(remote_target::process_initial_stop_replies): Replace
ALL_INFERIORS with all_non_exited_inferiors and use
all_non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(remote_target::open_1): Don't call init_thread_list here.
(remote_target::append_pending_thread_resumptions)
(remote_target::remote_resume_with_hc): Use all_non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(remote_target::commit_resume)
(remote_target::remove_new_fork_children): Replace ALL_INFERIORS
with all_non_exited_inferiors and use all_non_exited_threads
instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
(remote_target::kill_new_fork_children): Use
all_non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS. Remove
init_thread_list and init_wait_for_inferior calls.
(remote_target::remote_btrace_maybe_reopen)
(remote_target::thread_handle_to_thread_info): Use
all_non_exited_threads instead of ALL_NON_EXITED_THREADS.
* target.c (target_terminal::restore_inferior)
(target_terminal_is_ours_kind): Replace ALL_INFERIORS with
all_non_exited_inferiors.
* thread-iter.c: New file.
* thread-iter.h: New file.
* thread.c: Include "inline-frame.h".
(thread_list): Delete.
(clear_thread_inferior_resources): Call clear_inline_frame_state.
(init_thread_list): Use all_threads_safe instead of
ALL_THREADS_SAFE. Adjust to per-inferior thread lists.
(new_thread): Adjust to per-inferior thread lists.
(add_thread_silent): Pass inferior to find_thread_ptid.
(thread_info::deletable): New, moved from the header.
(delete_thread_1): Adjust to per-inferior thread lists.
(find_thread_global_id): Use inf->threads().
(find_thread_ptid): Use find_inferior_ptid and pass inferior to
find_thread_ptid.
(find_thread_ptid(inferior*, ptid_t)): New overload.
(iterate_over_threads): Use all_threads_safe.
(any_thread_p): New.
(thread_count): Use all_threads and std::distance.
(live_threads_count): Use all_non_exited_threads and
std::distance.
(valid_global_thread_id): Use all_threads.
(in_thread_list): Use find_thread_ptid.
(first_thread_of_inferior): Adjust to per-inferior thread lists.
(any_thread_of_inferior, any_live_thread_of_inferior): Use
inf->non_exited_threads().
(prune_threads, delete_exited_threads): Use all_threads_safe.
(thread_change_ptid): Pass inferior pointer to find_thread_ptid.
(set_resumed, set_running): Use all_non_exited_threads.
(is_thread_state, is_stopped, is_exited, is_running)
(is_executing): Delete.
(set_executing, set_stop_requested, finish_thread_state): Use
all_non_exited_threads.
(print_thread_info_1): Use all_inferiors and all_threads.
(thread_apply_all_command): Use all_non_exited_threads.
(thread_find_command): Use all_threads.
(update_threads_executing): Use all_non_exited_threads.
* tid-parse.c (parse_thread_id): Use inf->threads.
* x86-bsd-nat.c (x86bsd_dr_set): Use inf->non_exited_threads ().
Here's a summary of PR 23368:
#include <unistd.h>
int main (void)
{
char *exec_args[] = { "/bin/ls", NULL };
execve (exec_args[0], exec_args, NULL);
}
$ gdb -nx t -ex "catch exec" -ex "set follow-exec-mode new" -ex run
...
[1] + 13146 suspended (tty output) gdb -q -nx t -ex "catch exec" -ex "set follow-exec-mode new" -ex run
$
Here's what happens: when the inferior execs with "follow-exec-mode
new", we first "mourn" it before creating the new one. This ends up
calling inflow_inferior_exit, which sets the per-inferior terminal state
to "is_ours":
inf->terminal_state = target_terminal_state::is_ours;
At this point, the inferior's terminal_state is is_ours, while the
"reality", tracked by gdb_tty_state, is is_inferior (GDB doesn't own the
terminal).
Later, we continue processing the exec inferior event and decide we want
to stop (because of the "catch exec") and call target_terminal::ours to
make sure we own the terminal. However, we don't actually go to the
target backend to change the settings, because the core thinks that no
inferior owns the terminal (inf->terminal_state is
target_terminal_state::is_ours, as checked in
target_terminal_is_ours_kind, for both inferiors). When something in
readline tries to mess with the terminal settings, it generates a
SIGTTOU.
This patch fixes this by tranferring the state of the terminal from the
old inferior to the new inferior.
gdb/ChangeLog:
PR gdb/23368
* infrun.c (follow_exec): In the follow_exec_mode_new case,
transfer terminal state from old new new inferior.
* terminal.h (swap_terminal_info): New function.
* inflow.c (swap_terminal_info): New function.
This patch fixes various unused variable warnings that are related to
conditional compilation. In these cases, either the variable is now
protected by the same #if as its uses, or the declaration is simply
lowered into the conditionally-compiled block.
gdb/ChangeLog
2018-07-22 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* windows-nat.c (saved_context): Conditionally define.
* remote.c (remote_target::remote_btrace_maybe_reopen):
Conditionally declare "warned".
* inflow.c (sigquit_ours): Conditionally define.
(new_tty): Move "tty" declaration inside #if.
* guile/guile.c (guile_datadir): Conditionally define.
* charset.c (set_be_le_names): Move some declarations inside #if.
* btrace.c (parse_xml_btrace): Move "errcode" declaration inside
#if.
(parse_xml_btrace_conf): Likewise.
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.
The recent commit e671cd59 ("Per-inferior target_terminal state, fix
PR gdb/13211, more") missed adjusting a few targets to the new
target_ops->to_interrupt interface, breaking the build for those
targets. This fixes it.
Note: remote-sim doesn't really support async execution, so I don't
think gdbsim_interrupt is ever reached via target_interrupt. (It is
reached via gdbsim_cntrl_c though).
The inflow.c changes are a bit ugly, but they're just doing what other
parts of the file already do to handle the same missing functions.
Targets that don't have 'kill', like mingw have their own
target_ops->to_interrupt implementation, so it's fine to make
child_interrupt be a nop.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-31 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* darwin-nat.c (darwin_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter.
* inflow.c (child_terminal_save_inferior): Wrap reference to
tcgetpgrp in HAVE_TERMIOS_H.
(child_interrupt, child_pass_ctrlc): Wrap references to signal in
_WIN32.
* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter and
always iterate over all inferiors.
(gdbsim_cntrl_c): Adjust.
* windows-nat.c (windows_interrupt): Remove 'ptid_t' parameter.
In my multi-target branch I ran into problems with GDB's terminal
handling that exist in master as well, with multi-inferior debugging.
This patch adds a testcase for said problems
(gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp), fixes the problems, fixes PR
gdb/13211 as well (and adds a testcase for that too,
gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.exp).
The basis of the problem I ran into is the following. Consider a
scenario where you have:
- inferior 1 - started with "attach", process is running on some
other terminal.
- inferior 2 - started with "run", process is sharing gdb's terminal.
In this scenario, when you stop/resume both inferiors, you want GDB to
save/restore the terminal settings of inferior 2, the one that is
sharing GDB's terminal. I.e., you want inferior 2 to "own" the
terminal (in target_terminal::is_ours/target_terminal::is_inferior
sense).
Unfortunately, that's not what you get currently. Because GDB doesn't
know whether an attached inferior is actually sharing GDB's terminal,
it tries to save/restore its settings anyway, ignoring errors. In
this case, this is pointless, because inferior 1 is running on a
different terminal, but GDB doesn't know better.
And then, because it is only possible to have the terminal settings of
a single inferior be in effect at a time, or make one inferior/pgrp be
the terminal's foreground pgrp (aka, only one inferior can "own" the
terminal, ignoring fork children here), if GDB happens to try to
restore the terminal settings of inferior 1 first, then GDB never
restores the terminal settings of inferior 2.
This patch fixes that and a few things more along the way:
- Moves enum target_terminal::terminal_state out of the
target_terminal class (it's currently private) and makes it a
scoped enum so that it can be easily used elsewhere.
- Replaces the inflow.c:terminal_is_ours boolean with a
target_terminal_state variable. This allows distinguishing is_ours
and is_ours_for_output states. This allows finally making
child_terminal_ours_1 do something with its "output_only"
parameter.
- Makes each inferior have its own copy of the
is_ours/is_ours_for_output/is_inferior state.
- Adds a way for GDB to tell whether the inferior is sharing GDB's
terminal. Works best on Linux and Solaris; the fallback works just
as well as currently.
- With that, we can remove the inf->attach_flag tests from
child_terminal_inferior/child_terminal_ours.
- Currently target_ops.to_ours is responsible for both saving the
current inferior's terminal state, and restoring gdb's state.
Because each inferior has its own terminal state (possibly handled
by different targets in a multi-target world, even), we need to
split the inferior-saving part from the gdb-restoring part. The
patch adds a new target_ops.to_save_inferior target method for
that.
- Adds a new target_terminal::save_inferior() function, so that
sequences like:
scoped_restore_terminal_state save_state;
target_terminal::ours_for_output ();
... restore back inferiors that were
target_terminal_state::is_inferior before back to is_inferior, and
leaves inferiors that were is_ours alone.
- Along the way, this adds a default implementation of
target_pass_ctrlc to inflow.c (for inf-child.c), that handles
passing the Ctrl-C to a process running on GDB's terminal or to
some other process otherwise.
- Similarly, adds a new target default implementation of
target_interrupt, for the "interrupt" command. The current
implementation of this hook in inf-ptrace.c kills the whole process
group, but that's incorrect/undesirable because we may not be
attached to all processes in the process group. And also, it's
incorrect because inferior_process_group() doesn't really return
the inferior's real process group id if the inferior is not a
process group leader... This is the cause of PR gdb/13211 [1],
which this patch fixes. While at it, that target method's "ptid"
parameter is eliminated, because it's not really used.
- A new test is included that exercises and fixes PR gdb/13211, and
also fixes a GDB issue reported on stackoverflow that I ran into
while working on this [2]. The problem is similar to PR gdb/13211,
except that it also triggers with Ctrl-C. When debugging a daemon
(i.e., a process that disconnects from the controlling terminal and
is not a process group leader, then Ctrl-C doesn't work, you just
can't interrupt the inferior at all, resulting in a hung debug
session. The problem is that since the inferior is no longer
associated with gdb's session / controlling terminal, then trying
to put the inferior in the foreground fails. And so Ctrl-C never
reaches the inferior directly. pass_signal is only used when the
inferior is attached, but that is not the case here. This is fixed
by the new child_pass_ctrlc. Without the fix, the new
interrupt-daemon.exp testcase fails with timeout waiting for a
SIGINT that never arrives.
[1] PR gdb/13211 - Async / Process group and interrupt not working
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13211
[2] GDB not reacting Ctrl-C when after fork() and setsid()
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46101292/gdb-not-reacting-ctrl-c-when-after-fork-and-setsid
Note this patch does _not_ fix:
- PR gdb/14559 - The 'interrupt' command does not work if sigwait is in use
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14559
- PR gdb/9425 - When using "sigwait" GDB doesn't trap SIGINT. Ctrl+C terminates program when should break gdb.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9425
The only way to fix that that I know of (without changing the kernel)
is to make GDB put inferiors in a separate session (create a
pseudo-tty master/slave pair, make the inferior run with the slave as
its terminal, and have gdb pump output/input on the master end).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* config.in, configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Check for getpgid.
* go32-nat.c (go32_pass_ctrlc): New.
(go32_target): Install it.
* inf-child.c (inf_child_target): Install
child_terminal_save_inferior, child_pass_ctrlc and
child_interrupt.
* inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_interrupt): Delete.
(inf_ptrace_target): No longer install it.
* infcmd.c (interrupt_target_1): Adjust.
* inferior.h (child_terminal_save_inferior, child_pass_ctrlc)
(child_interrupt): Declare.
(inferior::terminal_state): New.
* inflow.c (struct terminal_info): Update comments.
(inferior_process_group): Delete.
(terminal_is_ours): Delete.
(gdb_tty_state): New.
(child_terminal_init): Adjust.
(is_gdb_terminal, sharing_input_terminal_1)
(sharing_input_terminal): New functions.
(child_terminal_inferior): Adjust. Use sharing_input_terminal.
Set the process's actual process group in the foreground if
possible. Handle is_ours_for_output/is_ours distinction. Don't
mark terminal as the inferior's if not sharing GDB's terminal.
Don't check attach_flag.
(child_terminal_ours_for_output, child_terminal_ours): Adjust to
pass down a target_terminal_state.
(child_terminal_save_inferior): New, factored out from ...
(child_terminal_ours_1): ... this. Handle
target_terminal_state::is_ours_for_output.
(child_interrupt, child_pass_ctrlc): New.
(inflow_inferior_exit): Clear the inferior's terminal_state.
(copy_terminal_info): Copy the inferior's terminal state.
(_initialize_inflow): Remove reference to terminal_is_ours.
* inflow.h (inferior_process_group): Delete.
* nto-procfs.c (nto_handle_sigint, procfs_interrupt): Adjust.
* procfs.c (procfs_target): Don't install procfs_interrupt.
(procfs_interrupt): Delete.
* remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Adjust.
(remote_interrupt): Remove ptid parameter. Adjust.
* target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
* target.c: Include "terminal.h".
(target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this.
(target_terminal::init): Adjust.
(target_terminal::inferior): Adjust to per-inferior
terminal_state.
(target_terminal::restore_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours_kind): New.
(target_terminal::ours, target_terminal::ours_for_output): Use
target_terminal_is_ours_kind.
(target_interrupt): Remove ptid parameter. Adjust.
(default_target_pass_ctrlc): Adjust.
* target.h (target_ops::to_terminal_save_inferior): New field.
(target_ops::to_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter.
(target_interrupt): Remove ptid_t parameter. Update comment.
(target_pass_ctrlc): Update comment.
* target/target.h (target_terminal_state): New scoped enum,
factored out of ...
(target_terminal::terminal_state): ... here.
(target_terminal::inferior): Update comments.
(target_terminal::restore_inferior): New.
(target_terminal::is_inferior, target_terminal::is_ours)
(target_terminal::is_ours_for_output): Adjust.
(target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state): Adjust to
rename, and call restore_inferior() instead of inferior().
(target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state::m_state): Change
type.
(target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this and change type.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Rename to ...
(target_terminal::m_terminal_state): ... this.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2018-01-30 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/13211
* gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.c: New.
* gdb.base/interrupt-daemon.exp: New.
* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.c: New.
* gdb.multi/multi-term-settings.exp: New.
I expect to use this in more places (in inflow.c) in follow up
patches, but I think this is still good on its own.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-16 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* inflow.c (scoped_ignore_sigttou): New class.
(child_terminal_ours_1, new_tty): Use it.
The comment about Lynx in child_terminal_init reads a bit odd, since
it's not exactly clear what "This" in "This is for Lynx" is referring
to. Looking back in history makes it clearer. When the comment was
originally added, in commit 91ecc8efa9, back in 1994, the code
looked like this:
~~~
#ifdef PROCESS_GROUP_TYPE
#ifdef PIDGET
/* This is for Lynx, and should be cleaned up by having Lynx be
a separate debugging target with a version of
target_terminal_init_inferior which passes in the process
group to a generic routine which does all the work (and the
non-threaded child_terminal_init_inferior can just pass in
inferior_pid to the same routine). */
inferior_process_group = PIDGET (inferior_pid);
#else
inferior_process_group = inferior_pid;
#endif
#endif
~~~
So this looked like it was about when GDB was growing support for
multi-threading, and inferior_pid was still a single int for most
ports.
Eventually we got ptid_t, so the comment isn't really useful today.
Particularly more so since we no longer support Lynx as a GDB host.
The only caller left of child_terminal_init_with_pgrp is gnu-nat.c
(the Hurd), and that target uses fork-child, so when we reach
gnu_terminal_init after spawning a new child, the current inferior
must already have the PID set, and the child must be a process group
leader.
We can't add a 'getpgid(inf->pid) == inf->pid' assertion to
child_terminal_init though (like a previous version of this patch was
doing [1]), because child_terminal_init is also reached after
attaching to a process. If we did, the new
gdb.base/attach-non-pgrp-leader.exp test would fail, with:
(gdb) attach 12415
Attaching to program: build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/attach-non-pgrp-leader/attach-non-pgrp-leader, process 12415
src/gdb/inflow.c:180: internal-error: void child_terminal_init(target_ops*): Assertion `getpgid (inf->pid) == inf->pid' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) FAIL: gdb.base/attach-non-pgrp-leader.exp: child: attach to child (GDB internal error)
I'm not making GDB save the pgid for attached processes with getpgid
for now, because the saved process group affects other things which
I'm leaving for following patches, like e.g., the "interrupt" command.
[1] - https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-11/msg00039.html
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gnu-nat.c (gnu_terminal_init): Delete.
(gnu_target): Don't install gnu_terminal_init.
* inflow.c (child_terminal_init_with_pgrp): Delete, merged with ...
(child_terminal_init): ... this function.
I find this odd 'set flags twice' ancient code and comment annoyingly
distracting. It may well be that the reason for the double-set was
simply a copy/paste mistake, and that we've been doing this for
decades [1] for no good reason. Let's just get rid of it, and if we
find a real reason, add it back with a comment explaining why it's
necessary.
[1] This double-set was already in gdb 2.4 / 1988, the oldest release
we have sources for, and imported in git. From 'git show 7b4ac7e1ed
inflow.c':
+void
+terminal_inferior ()
+{
+ if (terminal_is_ours) /* && inferior_thisrun_terminal == 0) */
+ {
+ fcntl (0, F_SETFL, tflags_inferior);
+ fcntl (0, F_SETFL, tflags_inferior);
The "is there a reason" comment was added in 1993, by:
commit a88797b5ea
Author: Fred Fish <fnf@specifix.com>
AuthorDate: Thu Aug 5 01:33:45 1993 +0000
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* inflow.c (child_terminal_inferior, child_terminal_ours_1): No
longer set flags twice in row.
This commit garbage collects the termio and sgtty support.
GDB's terminal handling code still has support for the old termio and
sgtty interfaces in addition to termios. However, I think it's pretty
safe to assume that for a long, long time, Unix-like systems provide
termios. GNU/Linux, Solaris, Cygwin, AIX, DJGPP, macOS and the BSDs
all have had termios.h for many years. Looking around the web, I
found discussions about FreeBSD folks trying to get rid of old sgtty.h
a decade ago:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hackers/2007-March/019983.html
So I think support for termio and sgtty in GDB is just dead code that
is never compiled anywhere and is just getting in the way. For
example, serial_noflush_set_tty_state and the raw<->cooked concerns
mentioned in inflow.c only exist because of sgtty (see
hardwire_noflush_set_tty_state).
Regtested on GNU/Linux.
Confirmed that I can still build Solaris, DJGPP and AIX GDB and that
the resulting GDBs still include the termios.h-guarded code.
Confirmed mingw-w64 GDB still builds and skips the termios.h-guarded
code.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SER_HARDWIRE): Update comment.
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Remove gdb_termios.h.
* common/gdb_termios.h: Delete file.
* common/job-control.c: Include termios.h and unistd.h instead of
gdb_termios.h.
(gdb_setpgid): Remove HAVE_TERMIOS || TIOCGPGRP preprocessor
check.
(have_job_control): Check HAVE_TERMIOS_H instead of HAVE_TERMIOS.
Remove sgtty code.
* configure.ac: No longer check for termio.h and sgtty.h.
* configure: Regenerate.
* inflow.c: Include termios.h instead of gdb_termios.h. Replace
PROCESS_GROUP_TYPE checks with HAVE_TERMIOS_H checks throughout.
Replace PROCESS_GROUP_TYPE references with pid_t references
throughout.
(gdb_getpgrp): Delete.
(set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Use tcgetpgrp instead of gdb_getpgrp.
(child_terminal_inferior): Remove comment. Remove sgtty code.
(child_terminal_ours_1): Use tcgetpgrp directly instead of
gdb_getpgrp. Use serial_set_tty_state instead aof
serial_noflush_set_tty_state. Remove sgtty code.
* inflow.h: Include unistd.h instead of gdb_termios.h. Replace
PROCESS_GROUP_TYPE check with HAVE_TERMIOS_H check.
(inferior_process_group): Now returns pid_t.
* ser-base.c (ser_base_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
* ser-base.h (ser_base_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
* ser-event.c (serial_event_ops): Update.
* ser-go32.c (dos_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
(dos_ops): Update.
* ser-mingw.c (hardwire_ops, tty_ops, pipe_ops, tcp_ops): Update.
* ser-pipe.c (pipe_ops): Update.
* ser-tcp.c (tcp_ops): Update.
* ser-unix.c: Include termios.h instead of gdb_termios.h. Remove
HAVE_TERMIOS checks.
[HAVE_TERMIO] (struct hardwire_ttystate): Delete.
[HAVE_SGTTY] (struct hardwire_ttystate): Delete.
(get_tty_state, set_tty_state): Drop termio and sgtty code, and
assume termios.
(hardwire_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
(hardwire_print_tty_state, hardwire_drain_output)
(hardwire_flush_output, hardwire_flush_input)
(hardwire_send_break, hardwire_raw, hardwire_setbaudrate)
(hardwire_setstopbits, hardwire_setparity): Drop termio and sgtty
code, and assume termios.
(hardwire_ops): Update.
(_initialize_ser_hardwire): Remove HAVE_TERMIOS check.
* serial.c (serial_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
* serial.h (serial_noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
(serial_ops::noflush_set_tty_state): Delete.
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-11-06 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* configure.ac: No longer check for termio.h and sgtty.h.
* configure: Regenerate.
* remote-utils.c: Include termios.h instead of gdb_termios.h.
(remote_open): Check HAVE_TERMIOS_H instead of HAVE_TERMIOS.
Remove termio and sgtty code.
This commit moves a few bits responsible for dealing with inferior job
control from GDB to common/, which makes them available to gdbserver.
This is necessary for the upcoming patches that will share
fork_inferior et al between GDB and gdbserver.
We move some parts of gdb/terminal.h to gdb/common/common-terminal.h,
especifically the code that checks terminal features and that are used
to set job_control accordingly.
After sharing parts of gdb/terminal.h, we also to share the two
functions on gdb/inflow.c that are going to be needed by the
fork_inferior rework. They are 'gdb_setpgid' and the new
'have_job_control'. I've also taken the opportunity to give a more
meaningful name to "inflow.c" on common/. Now it is called
"job-control.c" (thanks Pedro for the suggestion).
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILES): Add "common/job-control.c".
(HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/job-control.h".
(COMMON_OBS): Add "job-control.o".
* common/job-control.c: New file, with contents from
"gdb/inflow.c".
* common/job-control.h: New file, with contents from "terminal.h".
* fork-child.c: Include "job-control.h".
* inflow.c: Include "job-control.h".
(gdb_setpgid): Move to "common/common-inflow.c".
(_initialize_inflow): Move setting of "job_control" to
"handle_job_control".
* terminal.h (job_control): Moved to "common/common-terminal.h".
(gdb_setpgid): Likewise.
* top.c: Include "job_control.h".
* utils.c: Likewise.
(job_control): Moved to "job-control.c".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-06-07 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (SFILE): Add "common/job-control.c".
(OBS): Add "job-control.o".
As requested, I'm sending this as a separate patch because it is ready
to be included as-is.
The idea here is that both gdb/terminal.h and gdb/gdbserver/terminal.h
share the same code, which is responsible for setting a bunch of
defines on based on the presence of termios.h and a few other headers.
This simple patch just moves this common code to common/gdb_termios.h
and makes the necessary adjustments on both GDB and gdbserver so that
they can use this new header. It also implements the some header
checks on common/common.m4.
As a bonus, gdb/gdbserver/terminal.h can be removed because it's now
empty.
Built on x86_64, no regressions found.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2017-04-12 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* Makefile.in (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add "common/gdb_termios.h".
* common/common.m4: Check headers 'termios.h', 'termio.h' and
'sgtty.h'.
* common/gdb_termios.h: New file, with parts of "terminal.h".
* inflow.c: Include "gdb_termios.h".
* ser-unix.c: Include "gdb_termios.h".
* terminal.h: Move terminal-related defines to
"common/gdb_termios.h".
gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog:
2017-04-12 Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@redhat.com>
* remote-utils.c: Include "gdb_termios.h" instead of
"terminal.h".
* terminal.h: Delete file.
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.
This patch fixes a problem that problem triggers if you start an
inferior, e.g., with the "start" command, in a UI created with the
new-ui command, and then run a foreground execution command in the
main UI. Once the program stops for the latter command, typing in the
main UI no longer echoes back to the user.
The problem revolves around this:
- gdb_has_a_terminal computes its result lazily, on first call.
that is what saves gdb's initial main UI terminal state (the UI
associated with stdin):
our_terminal_info.ttystate = serial_get_tty_state (stdin_serial);
This is the state that target_terminal_ours() restores.
- In this scenario, the gdb_has_a_terminal function happens to be
first ever called from within the target_terminal_init call in
startup_inferior:
(top-gdb) bt
#0 gdb_has_a_terminal () at src/gdb/inflow.c:157
#1 0x000000000079db22 in child_terminal_init_with_pgrp () at src/gdb/inflow.c:217
[...]
#4 0x000000000065bacb in target_terminal_init () at src/gdb/target.c:456
#5 0x00000000004676d2 in startup_inferior () at src/gdb/fork-child.c:531
[...]
#7 0x000000000046b168 in linux_nat_create_inferior () at src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1112
[...]
#9 0x00000000005f20c9 in start_command (args=0x0, from_tty=1) at src/gdb/infcmd.c:657
If the command to start the inferior is issued on the main UI, then
readline will have deprepped the terminal when we reach the above, and
the problem doesn't appear.
If however the command is issued on a non-main UI, then when we reach
that gdb_has_a_terminal call, the main UI's terminal state is still
set to whatever readline has sets it to in rl_prep_terminal, which
happens to have echo disabled. Later, when the following synchronous
execution command finishes, we'll call target_terminal_ours to restore
gdb's the main UI's terminal settings, and that restores the terminal
state with echo disabled...
Conceptually, the fix is to move the gdb_has_a_terminal call earlier,
to someplace during GDB initialization, before readline/ncurses have
had a chance to change terminal settings. Turns out that
"set_initial_gdb_ttystate" is exactly such a place.
I say conceptually, because the fix actually inlines the
gdb_has_a_terminal part that saves the terminal state in
set_initial_gdb_ttystate and then simplifies gdb_has_a_terminal, since
there's no point in making gdb_has_a_terminal do lazy computation.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-08-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/20494
* inflow.c (our_terminal_info, initial_gdb_ttystate): Update
comments.
(enum gdb_has_a_terminal_flag_enum, gdb_has_a_terminal_flag):
Delete.
(set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Record our_terminal_info here too,
instead of ...
(gdb_has_a_terminal): ... here. Reimplement in terms of
initial_gdb_ttystate. Make static.
* terminal.h (gdb_has_a_terminal): Delete declaration.
(set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Add comment.
* top.c (show_interactive_mode): Use input_interactive_p instead
of gdb_has_a_terminal.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2016-08-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR gdb/20494
* gdb.base/new-ui-echo.c: New file.
* gdb.base/new-ui-echo.exp: New file.
One spot needed ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED to cope with the new warnings.
The case in inflow.c is just a mass of ifdefs; and while the only use
of "result" is guarded by "#if 0", I thought it simplest to leave it
all in place.
2016-07-14 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
* inflow.c (child_terminal_ours_1): Use ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
This commit makes each UI have its own "stdin" stream pointer. This
is used to determine whether the "from_tty" argument to
execute_command, etc. should be true.
Related, this commit makes input_from_terminal_p take an UI parameter,
and then avoids the gdb_has_a_terminal in it. gdb_has_a_terminal only
returns info on gdb's own main/primary terminal (the real stdin).
However, the places that call input_from_terminal_p really want to
know is whether the command came from an interactive tty. This patch
thus renames input_from_terminal_p to input_interactive_p for clarity,
and then makes input_interactive_p check for "set interactive" itself,
along with ISATTY, instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal. Actually,
quit_force wants to call input_interactive_p _after_ stdin is closed,
we can't call ISATTY that late. So instead we save the result of
ISATTY in a field of the UI.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2016-06-21 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cli/cli-script.c (read_next_line): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
(read_command_lines): Use input_interactive_p instead of
input_from_terminal_p.
* defs.h (struct ui): Forward declare.
(input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ...
(input_interactive_p): ... this.
* event-top.c (stdin_event_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument
to quit_command.
(command_handler): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
(handle_line_of_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and use
input_interactive_p instead of ISATTY and input_from_terminal_p.
(gdb_readline_no_editing_callback): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
(command_line_handler): Always pass true as "from_tty" parameter
of handle_line_of_input and execute_command.
(async_sigterm_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to
quit_command.
* inflow.c (interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Moved to ...
(gdb_has_a_terminal): Don't check interactive_mode here.
(_initialize_inflow): Don't install "set interactive-mode" here.
* main.c (captured_command_loop): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
* mi/mi-interp.c (mi_execute_command_wrapper): Adjust to per-UI
stdin.
* top.c (new_ui): Save the stdin stream and whether it's a tty.
(dont_repeat): Adjust to per-UI stdin.
(command_line_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use
input_interactive_p.
(quit_force): Write history if any UI supports interactive input.
(interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Move here, from
inflow.c.
(input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ...
(input_interactive_p): ... this, and check the "interactive_mode"
global instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal.
(_initialize_top): Install "set interactive-mode" here.
* top.h (struct ui) <stdin_stream, input_interactive_p>: New
fields.
* utils.c (quit): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to quit_force.
(defaulted_query): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use
input_interactive_p.
GCC6 will warn about misleading indentation issues like:
gdb/ada-lang.c: In function ‘ada_evaluate_subexp’:
ada-lang.c:11423:9: error: statement is indented as if it were guarded by...
arg1 = unwrap_value (arg1);
^~~~
gdb/ada-lang.c:11421:7: note: ...this ‘else’ clause, but it is not
else
^~~~
In this case it would be a bug except for the fact the if clause already
returned early. So this misindented statement really only got executed
for the else case. But it could easily mislead a reader, so adding a
proper else block is the correct solution.
In case of c-typeprint.c (c_type_print_base) the if statement is indeed
misleadingly indented, but not a bug. Just indent correctly. The inflow.c
(terminal_ours_1) misindented block comes from the removal of an if clause
in commit d9d2d8b which looks correct. Just introduce an else to fixup the
indentation of the block. The linux-record.c misleadingly indented return
statements are just that. Misleading to the reader, but not actual bugs.
Just unindent them so they don't look like they fall under the wrong if
clause.
This fixes 14 build errors like these in C++ mode:
src/gdb/extension.c: In function ‘void install_sigint_handler(const signal_handler*)’:
src/gdb/extension.c:698:41: error: invalid conversion from ‘void (*)()’ to ‘__sighandler_t {aka void (*)(int)}’ [-fpermissive]
signal (SIGINT, handler_state->handler);
^
In file included from build-gnulib/import/signal.h:52:0,
from ../../src/gdb/extension.c:24:
/usr/include/signal.h:102:23: error: initializing argument 2 of ‘void (* signal(int, __sighandler_t))(int)’ [-fpermissive]
extern __sighandler_t signal (int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler)
^
Instead of this everywhere:
- RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) () = handle_sigint;
+ RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) (int) = handle_sigint;
Use sighandler_t (a GNU extension). That's OK to use unconditionaly
because gnulib's signal.h replacement makes sure that it is available.
gdb/ChangeLog:
2015-08-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Use sighandler_t. Remove cast.
* extension-priv.h: Include signal.h.
(struct signal_handler) <handler>: Change type to sighandler_t.
* extension.c (install_gdb_sigint_handler): Use sighandler_t.
* inflow.c (sigint_ours, sigquit_ours): Change type to
sighandler_t.
(child_terminal_inferior): Remove casts.
(child_terminal_ours_1, new_tty): Use sighandler_t. Remove casts.
(osig): Change type to sighandler_t.
* nto-procfs.c (ofunc): Change type to sighandler_t.
(procfs_wait): Remove casts.
* remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_wait, m32r_load): Use sighandler_t.
* remote-sim.c (gdbsim_wait): Use sighandler_t.
* utils.c (wait_to_die_with_timeout): Use sighandler_t.
Currently when we start an inferior we have the inferior inherit our
terminal state. Under TUI, our terminal is highly modified by ncurses
and readline. So when starting an inferior under TUI, the inferior will
have a highly modified terminal state which will interfere with standard
I/O. For example,
$ gdb gdb
(gdb) break main
(gdb) run
(gdb) print puts ("a\nb")
a
b
$1 = 4
(gdb) [enter TUI mode]
(gdb) run
(gdb) [exit TUI mode]
(gdb) print puts ("a\nb")
a
b
$2 = 4
(gdb) print puts ("a\r\nb\r")
a
b
$3 = 6
As you can see, when we start the inferior under the regular interface,
puts() prints the text properly. But when we start the inferior under
TUI, puts() does not print the text properly. This is because when we
start the inferior under TUI it inherits our current terminal state
which has been modified by ncurses to, among other things, require an
explicit \r\n to print a new line. As a result the inferior performs
standard I/O in an unexpected way.
Because of this discrepancy, it doesn't seem like a good idea to have
the inferior inherit our _current_ terminal state for it may have been
modified by readline and/or ncurses. Instead, we should have the
inferior inherit a pristine snapshot of our terminal state taken before
readline or ncurses have had a chance to alter it. This enables the
inferior to run in a more accurate way, more closely mimicking the
program's behavior had it run standalone. And it fixes the above
mentioned issue.
Tested on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* terminal.h (set_initial_gdb_ttystate): Declare.
* inflow.c (initial_gdb_ttystate): New static variable.
(set_initial_gdb_ttystate): New setter.
(child_terminal_init_with_pgrp): Copy initial_gdb_ttystate
instead of our current terminal state.
* top.c (gdb_init): Call set_initial_gdb_ttystate.