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Re: RFC: change needs_frame_tls_address
- From: Pedro Alves <pedro at codesourcery dot com>
- To: gdb-patches at sourceware dot org
- Cc: Tom Tromey <tromey at redhat dot com>
- Date: Sat, 24 Jul 2010 02:04:20 +0100
- Subject: Re: RFC: change needs_frame_tls_address
- References: <m31vat3k2y.fsf@fleche.redhat.com>
> For this we get a warning from value_static_field, then things go
> downhill and we hit an internal_error. From the PR:
(...)
> After tracing through the TLS code for a bit, I have concluded that TLS
> does not really need a frame, at least not in the gdb sense. Instead, I
> think it only needs registers -- a funny sort of distinction to make,
> but nevertheless...
Given that if you have registers, you always have a frame, I don't
think that's a good check.
> (gdb) p A::num
> $1 = 1
> (gdb) kill
> Kill the program being debugged? (y or n) y
> (gdb) p A::num
> Cannot access memory at address 0xb7fdb6d8
Is that useful? It seems to be trying to print a bogus
address. Actually, I'm surprised you even got that memory error
instead of "Cannot find thread-local variables on this target", which
is what I get on x86-64 (both -m64/-m32) with your change applied.
Clearly gdb didn't try reading any register, otherwise, you would see
some other error. Do you have other changes in your tree perhaps?
> If it is not acceptable, I would appreciate some enlightenment as to
> what other approach I should take.
The warning seems bogus to me:
> (gdb) print A::num
> warning: static field's value depends on the current frame - bad debug info?
> findvar.c:427: internal-error: read_var_value: Assertion `frame' failed.
> A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
> further debugging may prove unreliable.
> Quit this debugging session? (y or n)
I think we should throw an error instead, just like what you get when
you try to print a non class static global TLS variable:
__thread int global_num = 1;
Both cases are the same in the user's perpective, so should behave
equal. Trying to print `global_num' with no process/core throws an
error in value_of_variable. I guess we should make value_static_field
use value_of_variable instead of read_var_value directly too (or a factored
out variant that doesn't throw if read_var_value returns NULL).
--
Pedro Alves