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Re: [Fwd: Re: [Fwd: Re: gdb/725: Crash using debug target and regcaches(in 5.3 branch?)]]
- From: Andrew Cagney <ac131313 at redhat dot com>
- To: Andrew Cagney <ac131313 at redhat dot com>, drow at mvista dot com
- Cc: Mark Kettenis <kettenis at chello dot nl>, msnyder at redhat dot com,gdb-patches at sources dot redhat dot com
- Date: Tue, 03 Dec 2002 12:10:34 -0500
- Subject: Re: [Fwd: Re: [Fwd: Re: gdb/725: Crash using debug target and regcaches(in 5.3 branch?)]]
- References: <3DE3F135.6030605@redhat.com> <3DE53144.3020502@redhat.com> <200211301613.gAUGDInq000267@elgar.kettenis.dyndns.org> <3DE8E9F8.5000902@redhat.com>
Is there any chance that the attached could be reviewed over the next few hours?
Apparently not :-(. Anyway, I've looked at it now and it appears that
GDB as it stands now isn't ready to cope with the abstraction of the
lin-lwp layer as I intended it. So I guess that until we overhaul the
way GDB deals with threads, Daniels patch (sans the #ifdef) is the way
to go.
(The US has holidays round this time?)
Thanks! I'll merge it in, test it and then start the 5.2.91 process.
Er, no I wont :-(
The attached is the refind patch. I added the comment:
+ /* NOTE: cagney/2002-12-02: This assumes that the target code can
+ directly transfer the register values into the register cache.
+ This works fine when there is a 1:1 mapping between light weight
+ process (LWP) (a.k.a. process on GNU/Linux) and the thread. On
+ an N:1 (user-land threads), or N:M (combination of user-land and
+ LWP threading), this does not work. An LWP can be sitting in the
+ thread context switch code and hence, the LWP's registers belong
+ to no thread. */
however, with the patch applied, I see (and consistently, well 2 out of
2, which is pretty amasing for the thread testsuite) the new failure:
gdb.threads/killed.exp: GDB exits after multi-threaded program exits messily
looking at the log file:
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/cagney/gdb/native/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/killed
[New Thread 1024 (LWP 6831)]
[New Thread 2049 (LWP 6832)]
[New Thread 1026 (LWP 6833)]
Cannot find user-level thread for LWP 6833: generic error
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/killed.exp: run program to completion
quit
The program is running. Exit anyway? (y or n) y
Cannot find thread 2049: generic error
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/killed.exp: GDB exits after multi-threaded
program exits
messily (gdb/568)
Which doesn't occure when the patch isn't applied.
The test system was:
$ uname -a
Linux torrens 2.4.9-13 #1 Tue Oct 30 20:11:04 EST 2001 i686 unknown
I'm instead, for the moment, going to document this as a known problem.
(It's a maintainer command so normal users won't use it).
Andrew
2002-12-03 Andrew Cagney <ac131313@redhat.com>
* sparc-nat.c (fetch_inferior_registers)
(store_inferior_registers): Add comment on problem of LWP vs
threads.
From 2002-11-21 Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
* lin-lwp.c (lin_lwp_fetch_registers): Remove.
(lin_lwp_store_registers): Remove.
(init_lin_lwp_ops): Use fetch_inferior_registers
and store_inferior_registers directly.
* sparc-nat.c (fetch_inferior_registers): Honor LWP ID.
(store_inferior_registers): Likewise.
Fix PR gdb/725
Index: lin-lwp.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/lin-lwp.c,v
retrieving revision 1.35.2.1
diff -u -r1.35.2.1 lin-lwp.c
--- lin-lwp.c 26 Nov 2002 01:32:21 -0000 1.35.2.1
+++ lin-lwp.c 3 Dec 2002 16:39:30 -0000
@@ -1346,32 +1346,6 @@
child_ops.to_mourn_inferior ();
}
-static void
-lin_lwp_fetch_registers (int regno)
-{
- struct cleanup *old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
-
- if (is_lwp (inferior_ptid))
- inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (inferior_ptid));
-
- fetch_inferior_registers (regno);
-
- do_cleanups (old_chain);
-}
-
-static void
-lin_lwp_store_registers (int regno)
-{
- struct cleanup *old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
-
- if (is_lwp (inferior_ptid))
- inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (GET_LWP (inferior_ptid));
-
- store_inferior_registers (regno);
-
- do_cleanups (old_chain);
-}
-
static int
lin_lwp_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *myaddr, int len, int write,
struct mem_attrib *attrib,
@@ -1431,8 +1405,10 @@
lin_lwp_ops.to_detach = lin_lwp_detach;
lin_lwp_ops.to_resume = lin_lwp_resume;
lin_lwp_ops.to_wait = lin_lwp_wait;
- lin_lwp_ops.to_fetch_registers = lin_lwp_fetch_registers;
- lin_lwp_ops.to_store_registers = lin_lwp_store_registers;
+ /* fetch_inferior_registers and store_inferior_registers will
+ honor the LWP id, so we can use them directly. */
+ lin_lwp_ops.to_fetch_registers = fetch_inferior_registers;
+ lin_lwp_ops.to_store_registers = store_inferior_registers;
lin_lwp_ops.to_xfer_memory = lin_lwp_xfer_memory;
lin_lwp_ops.to_kill = lin_lwp_kill;
lin_lwp_ops.to_create_inferior = lin_lwp_create_inferior;
Index: sparc-nat.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/sparc-nat.c,v
retrieving revision 1.13
diff -u -r1.13 sparc-nat.c
--- sparc-nat.c 21 Apr 2002 05:34:06 -0000 1.13
+++ sparc-nat.c 3 Dec 2002 16:39:30 -0000
@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
/* Functions specific to running gdb native on a SPARC running SunOS4.
- Copyright 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001
+ Copyright 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
+ 2002
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
@@ -58,6 +59,19 @@
struct regs inferior_registers;
struct fp_status inferior_fp_registers;
int i;
+ int fetch_pid;
+
+ /* NOTE: cagney/2002-12-02: This assumes that the target code can
+ directly transfer the register values into the register cache.
+ This works fine when there is a 1:1 mapping between light weight
+ process (LWP) (a.k.a. process on GNU/Linux) and the thread. On
+ an N:1 (user-land threads), or N:M (combination of user-land and
+ LWP threading), this does not work. An LWP can be sitting in the
+ thread context switch code and hence, the LWP's registers belong
+ to no thread. */
+ fetch_pid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid);
+ if (fetch_pid == 0)
+ fetch_pid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
/* We should never be called with deferred stores, because a prerequisite
for writing regs is to have fetched them all (PREPARE_TO_STORE), sigh. */
@@ -75,7 +89,7 @@
|| regno >= Y_REGNUM
|| (!register_valid[SP_REGNUM] && regno < I7_REGNUM))
{
- if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
+ if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, fetch_pid,
(PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & inferior_registers, 0))
perror ("ptrace_getregs");
@@ -105,7 +119,7 @@
regno == FPS_REGNUM ||
(regno >= FP0_REGNUM && regno <= FP0_REGNUM + 31))
{
- if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
+ if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, fetch_pid,
(PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & inferior_fp_registers,
0))
perror ("ptrace_getfpregs");
@@ -151,6 +165,19 @@
struct regs inferior_registers;
struct fp_status inferior_fp_registers;
int wanna_store = INT_REGS + STACK_REGS + FP_REGS;
+ int store_pid;
+
+ /* NOTE: cagney/2002-12-02: This assumes that the target code can
+ directly transfer the register values into the register cache.
+ This works fine when there is a 1:1 mapping between light weight
+ process (LWP) (a.k.a. process on GNU/Linux) and the thread. On
+ an N:1 (user-land threads), or N:M (combination of user-land and
+ LWP threading), this does not work. An LWP can be sitting in the
+ thread context switch code and hence, the LWP's registers belong
+ to no thread. */
+ store_pid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid);
+ if (store_pid == 0)
+ store_pid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
/* First decide which pieces of machine-state we need to modify.
Default for regno == -1 case is all pieces. */
@@ -233,7 +260,7 @@
inferior_registers.r_y =
*(int *) ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (Y_REGNUM)];
- if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_SETREGS, PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
+ if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_SETREGS, store_pid,
(PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & inferior_registers, 0))
perror ("ptrace_setregs");
}
@@ -247,7 +274,7 @@
memcpy (&inferior_fp_registers.Fpu_fsr,
®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (FPS_REGNUM)], sizeof (FPU_FSR_TYPE));
if (0 !=
- ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPREGS, PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
+ ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPREGS, store_pid,
(PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) & inferior_fp_registers, 0))
perror ("ptrace_setfpregs");
}