259 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jkim
89265a4363 Initial gdbserver support for amd64. 2010-02-25 21:29:00 +00:00
rrs
05a9cdef84 These contain JC's patch to get gdb sort of working
on mips. Its not fully done yet but its a start.

Obtained from: JC - c.jayachandran@gmail.com

M    gnu/usr.bin/gdb/kgdb/trgt_mips.c
M    gnu/usr.bin/gdb/arch/mips/init.c
M    gnu/usr.bin/gdb/arch/mips/Makefile
M    gnu/usr.bin/Makefile
M    contrib/gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.h
2010-02-20 17:29:27 +00:00
marcel
17a0352c44 Compile fbsd-threads.c. Threading & TLS support is working just fine. 2010-02-16 16:38:57 +00:00
avg
8e8855f633 kgdb: initialize n_type field of nlist entry for kvm_nlist call
kvm_nlist skips lookup for entries that have n_type != N_UNDF.
N_UNDF happens to be zero, so n_type typically has a correct
value by accident, but not always.
Note: jhb has a patch that replaces kvm_nlist use with direct
gdb parsing.

MFC after:	5 days
X-MFC-Note:	unless jhb commits kvm_nlist => kgdb_parse change
2010-02-13 11:47:04 +00:00
raj
124e83aa64 Initial gdbserver support for PowerPC.
Obtained from:	Juniper Networks, Semihalf
2009-02-23 18:22:49 +00:00
raj
1aa21acd61 Initial gdbserver support for ARM.
Obtained from:	Juniper Networks, Semihalf
2008-11-17 16:32:57 +00:00
obrien
85d2767d87 Document what the sed trick is for.
Remove an embedded <TAB>, and use same style for both files.
2008-10-16 18:09:27 +00:00
jhb
4c38b5e473 Oops, initialize sections and sections_end to NULL.
Submitted by:	Navdeep Parhar
MFC after:	1 week
2008-10-02 20:42:10 +00:00
kib
802c3a1015 Differentiate between interrupt frames, trap interrupt frames and timer
frame in the kgdb, to allow it to properly backtrace over the interrupt
stacks.

Noted and reviewed by:	tegge
Tested by:	pho
MFC after:	1 week
2008-09-27 15:58:37 +00:00
jhb
b0ece4017c Use existing GDB routines for parsing the section table of klds in
the 'add-kld' command instead of doing it more by hand.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-09-25 19:32:03 +00:00
marcel
cdbf12a91a Widen psaddr_t from uintptr_t to uint64_t. This results in an
ABI change on ILP32 platforms and relating to events.  However
it's harmless on little-endian ILP32 platforms in the sense
that it doesn't cause breakages.  Old ILP32 thread libraries
write a 32-bit th_p and new thread libraries write a 64-bit
th_p.  But due to the fact that we have an unused 32-bit data
field right after th_p and that field is always initialized to
zero, little-endian ILP32 machines effectively have a valid
64-bit th_p by accident. Likewise for new thread libraries and
old libthread_db: little endian ILP32 is unaffected.

At this time we don't support big-endian threaded applications
in GDB, so the breakage for the ILP32 case goes unnoticed.
2008-09-14 16:52:42 +00:00
cognet
6c9ce7fd8f Unbreak the arm build, by spelling LIBSRCS correctly. 2008-08-02 12:33:39 +00:00
cognet
ae19dcc9d4 Do not build fbsd-threads.c if we're building a cross-debugger.
MFC after:	3 days
2008-08-02 01:21:04 +00:00
jhb
7941cfc256 Catch up to recentish kgdb changes:
- Use ptid_get_pid() rather than ptid_get_tid() (part of the changes to
  let 'tid' work for remote kgdb).
- Add a stub kgdb_trgt_new_objfile() hook.

Silence from:	obrien, mips@
2008-06-18 14:23:28 +00:00
obrien
aa024cf591 Add Juniper's copyright. 2008-05-20 22:58:47 +00:00
obrien
f8f3b5f095 MIPS arch target kgdb(1) support.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks.
2008-05-20 22:54:42 +00:00
jhb
0d214b5df6 Trim unneeded header. 2008-05-09 19:00:40 +00:00
jhb
97b58ed175 - Change how the vmcore target maps FreeBSD thread IDs to GDB ptids. We
now only use the TID and ignore the PID and use pid_to_ptid() to build a
  ptid treating the TID as a PID.  The benefit of this is that the vmcore
  target now uses the same scheme as GDB's remote targets.  As a result,
  the 'tid' command now works for remote targets (however, it only accepts
  TIDs and not addresses of 'struct thread' objects).
- Use gdb_thread_select() to do the actual thread switch for the 'tid' and
  'proc' commands.  This now gives the same UI feedback when switching
  threads as the GDB 'thread' command rather than providing no visual
  output at all.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-05-01 20:36:48 +00:00
jhb
2f2328129f Rework how kgdb manages kernel and vmcore files to be a bit more gdb-ish
so that kgdb can be used more like a normal gdb:
- Load the kernel via the standard 'exec' target and allow it to be changed
  via the 'file' command.
  - Instead of explicitly loading the kernel file as the mail symbol file
    during startup, just pass it to gdb_main() as the executable file.
  - Change the kld support (via shared libraries) to cache the address of
    the linker_files and linker_kernel_file variables in addition to the
    offsets of various members in 'struct linker_file'.
  - When a new symbol file is loaded, recompute the addresses and offsets
    used by the kld support code.
  - When a new symbol file is loaded, recalculate the ofs_fix variable to
    account for the different ways a trapframe can be passed to trap
    frame handlers in i386.  This is done by adding a MD
    kgdb_trgt_new_objfile() hook that is empty on all but i386.
  - Don't use the directory name of the kernel specified on the command
    line to find kernel modules in the kld support code.  Instead,
    extract the filename of the current executable via exec_bfd.  Now
    the 'kernel' variable is private to main.c again.
  - Make the 'add-kld' command explicitly fail if no executable is loaded.
- Make the support for vmcores a real core-dump target that opens the
  kernel and vmcore on open and closes the kvm connection when closed, etc.
  - The 'core' command can now be used to select a vmcore to use, either
    a crash dump file or /dev/mem for live debugging.
  - The 'detach' command can be used to detach from a vmcore w/o attaching
    to a new one.
  - kgdb no longer explicitly opens a core dump during startup and no longer
    has to use an atexit() hook to close the kvm connection on shutdown.
  - Symbols for kld's are automatically loaded anytime a core is opened.
    Also, the unread portion of dmesg is dumped just as it was done on kgdb
    startup previously.
- Don't require either a remote target or core dump if a kernel is specified.
  You can now just run 'kgdb kernel' similar to running gdb on an executable
  and later connect to a remote target or core dump.
- Use a more relaxed way to verify remote targets specified via -r.
  Instead of explicitly allowing a few non-file target specifications,
  just assume that if stat() on the arg and on "/dev/" + arg both fail
  that is some non-file target and pass it to gdb.
- Don't use a custom interpreter.  The existing kgdb_init() hook and the
  target_new_objfile() hook give us sufficient hooks during startup to
  setup kgdb-specific behavior now.
- Always add the 'proc', 'tid', and 'add-kld' commands on startup and not
  just if we have a core dump.  Currently the 'proc' and 'tid' commands do
  not work for remote targets (I will fix at least 'tid' in the next round
  of changes though).  However, the 'add-kld' command works fine for
  loading symbols for a kernel module on a remote target.
- Always setup the 'kld' shared library target operations instead of just
  if we have a core dump.  Although symbols for kernel modules are not
  automatically loaded when connecting to a remote target, you can do
  'info sharedlibrary' after connecting to the remote target and kgdb will
  find all the modules.  You can then use the 'sharedlibrary' command to
  load symbols from the module files.
- Change kthr_init() to free the existing list of kthr objects before
  generating a new one.  This allows it to be invoked multiple times
  w/o leaking memory.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-04-29 20:32:45 +00:00
jhb
23778603b0 - Add a global variable 'fbsdcoreops_suppress_target' that can be set to
force the FreeBSD multithreaded core target to not register any target
  for handling core dumps.  This is analogous to the
  'coreops_suppress_target' variable that GDB provides for suppressing the
  default core dump target.  KGDB will use this new variable so it can
  provide its own core dump target that uses libkvm to work with vmcore
  files.
- Adjust the long name and documentation of the FreeBSD multithreaded core
  dump target so it better matches what GDB's core dump target uses.

MFC after:	1 week
Reviewed by:	davidxu, marcel
2008-04-29 17:47:25 +00:00
jhb
4f05acb924 Use kgdb_parse() instead of libkvm(3) to read the first instruction from
"calltrap" to see which method is used to pass trap frames.  This seg
faulted on remote gdb connections (where libkvm isn't used).

MFC after:	3 days
2008-04-28 18:27:19 +00:00
jhb
42c3982ca9 Remove the 'add_kld_command' arg from load_kld(). It is always true since
the auto-loading of kld's switched to hooking into gdb's shared library
support.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-04-28 15:26:11 +00:00
imp
b568c603bc FreeBSD/mips gdb build suspport. From the mips2-jnpr branch. 2008-04-26 12:22:46 +00:00
jhb
cb2ee2cc92 Change kgdb_parse() to use wrapped versions of parse_expression() and
evaluate_expression() so that any errors are caught and cause the function
to return to 0.  Otherwise the errors posted an exception (via longjmp())
that aborted the current operation.  This fixes the kld handling for
older kernels (6.x and 7.x) that don't have the full pathname stored in
the kernel linker.

MFC after:	3 days
2008-03-29 17:46:03 +00:00
jhb
834e2b5e85 Initialize the head pointer in kld_current_sos() to NULL to avoid returning
a junk pointer and possibly causing a seg fault if we don't have any
non-kernel klds (or are unable to walk the list due to core / kernel
mismatch).

MFC after:	1 week
2008-03-29 03:48:06 +00:00
jhb
cc99de551e Remove a stale prototype I missed when converting the kld support over to
hooking into gdb's shared library infrastructure.
2008-02-25 22:04:07 +00:00
jhb
890a8204e8 - Rework the kld support to hook into GDB's shared library support.
kgdb(8) now treats kld's as shared libraries relative to the kernel
  "binary".  Thus, you can use 'info sharedlibrary' to list the kld's
  along with 'sharedlibrary' and 'nosharedlibrary' to manage symbol
  loading and unloading.  Note that there isn't an easy way to force GDB
  to use a specific path for a shared library.  However, you can use
  'nosharedlibrary' to unload all the klds and then use 'sharedlibrary'
  to load specific klds where it gets the kld correct and use
  'add-kld' for the kld's where the default open behavior doesn't work.
  klds opened via 'sharedlibrary' (and during startup) do have their
  sections listed in 'info files'.
- Change the 'add-kld' command to use filename completion to complete its
  argument.
2008-01-29 23:44:34 +00:00
jhb
12a6269e8f Don't close the kernel bfd object during startup. Instead, leave it open
and build a section table from the kernel file so that 'info files' output
for kgdb now matches the usage of gdb on a regular file with the exception
that we don't list sections for memory in the crash dump.
2008-01-29 23:37:59 +00:00
jhb
bddbfed7ec Use target_read_memory() and extract_unsigned_integer() instead of direct
KVM access to read kernel pointers.
2008-01-29 23:36:42 +00:00
jhb
2b547364ab Don't look for "foo.ko.symbols" files. GDB is smart enough to open the
".symbols" file automatically when you tell it to load "foo.ko" because of
the debug link.
2008-01-29 23:36:10 +00:00
jhb
8fe633f266 Use a for loop in find_kld_address() as in kgdb_auto_load_klds() and
replace the remaining goto's with continues as a result.
2008-01-28 21:45:09 +00:00
jhb
a92e1fcff2 Add support for automatically loading symbols for kld's on startup:
- Add a new 'kgdb_auto_load_klds()' routine which is invoked during
  startup that walks the list of linker files and tries to find a matching
  kld on disk for each non-kernel kld.  If a kld file is found, then it
  is added as if the 'add-kld' command is invoked.  One change from
  'add-kld' is that this method attempts to use the 'pathname' from the
  linker_file structure first to try to load the file.  If that fails
  it then looks in the kernel directory followed by the directories in
  the module path.
- Move the kld file suffix handling into a separate routine so that it
  can be called standalone and to reduce duplicate code in find_kld_path().
- Cache the offsets of members of 'struct linker_file' during startup
  instead of computing them for each 'add-kld'.
- Use GDB's target_read_string() instead of direct KVM access.
- Add all resident sections from a kld by using bfd_map_over_sections() to
  build the section list rather than just adding symbols for ".text",
  ".data", ".bss", and ".rodata".
- Change the 'add-kld' command to do a y/n prompt before adding the
  symbols when run interactively to match 'add-symbol-file'.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-01-28 21:40:10 +00:00
jhb
d3871c9ec1 Remove the warnx() from kgdb_lookup() so that we don't emit a warning about
optional symbols that are missing (e.g. kgdb complains about _stoppcbs and
_stopped_cpus on UP kernels).  Instead, callers that really want their
symbols to be present now do explicitly warnx() about the missing symbol.
2008-01-28 20:33:19 +00:00
jhb
df803c74ff If the quiet flag is specified (-q), don't dump the unread portion of
the message buffer on startup.
2008-01-28 20:31:30 +00:00
jhb
6d2956878d Move the code for working with kld's out into its own file. 2008-01-24 19:11:13 +00:00
emaste
3ccc28b1ea Include the thread name (in addition to the proc name) in "info threads." 2008-01-18 18:57:27 +00:00
jhb
7f24f24832 Add a new 'add-kld <kld>' command to kgdb to make it easier to analyze
crash dumps with kernel modules.  The command is basically a wrapper
around add-symbol-file except that it uses the kernel linker data
structures and the ELF section headers of the kld to calculate the
section addresses add-symbol-file needs.

The 'kld' parameter may either be an absolute path or a relative path.
kgdb looks for the kld in several locations checking for variants with
".symbols" or ".debug" suffixes in each location.  The first location it
tries is just opening the specified path (this handles absolute paths and
looks for the kld relative to the current directory otherwise).  Next
it tries to find the module in the same directory of the kernel image
being used.  If that fails it extracts the kern.module_path from the
kernel being debugged and looks in each of those paths.

The upshot is that for the common cases of debugging /boot/kernel/kernel
where the module is in either /boot/kernel or /boot/modules one can merely
do 'add-kld foo.ko'.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-01-17 21:43:12 +00:00
cognet
6ebbe5e1f8 Add thread support for arm.
MFC After:	1 week
2007-11-17 21:30:03 +00:00
cognet
26544f3861 There's no reason why we couldn't attach to a live process on arm.
MFC After:	1 week
2007-11-17 18:41:04 +00:00
jhb
5b26270d09 Teach kgdb how to handle double fault frames on i386:
- Save td_oncpu in 'struct kthr' so the i386 target code can see which CPU
  a thread is running on.
- Add a new frame unwinder for double fault frames.  This unwinder is used
  when "dblfault_handler" is encountered in the stack.  It uses the CPU of
  the current thread to lookup the base address of the TSS used for the
  double fault from the GDT.  It then fetches the various registers out
  of the TSS similar to how the current trapframe unwinder fetches
  registers out of the trapframe.

MFC after:	3 days
2007-11-16 22:17:37 +00:00
jhb
f6ef728f95 NMIs now come from 'nmi_calltrap' rather than 'calltrap', so teach 'kgdb'
to treat the frame under 'nmi_calltrap' as a trapframe.

MFC after:	3 days
Approved by:	re (bmah)
2007-08-22 20:28:13 +00:00
kan
5d4b28ff73 Remove extern int verbose declaration. It is declared static in the
only file it is used in.
2007-05-19 03:23:43 +00:00
kan
5b32f4b96f Fix static/extern mismatch by patching corresponding tdep files
in-place.
2007-05-19 03:22:19 +00:00
marcel
6a4e53f39d Add threading support. 2007-05-01 18:29:34 +00:00
kib
5b0899cab6 Unbreak the kgdb stepping over the special frames on i386 after rev. 1.117 of
i386/i386/exception.s.

No objections from:	marcel
2007-03-01 13:56:08 +00:00
kib
f680330859 Rename lookup() to kgdb_lookup() and make it global (for use in trgt_i386.c).
No objections from:	marcel
2007-03-01 13:55:15 +00:00
emaste
13b4da30e0 Avoid writing uninitialized stack data into a thread's MMX/SSE state by
first getting the current state with td_thr_getxmmregs_p.  Without this,
debugging a threaded app that uses libthr resulted in kernel panics or
spurious SIGFPEs for me.

(As of revision 1.6, sys/i386/i386/ptrace_machdep.c masks off the
reserved bits in the mxcsr register, which prevents the kernel panics.)

Architectures without PT_GETXMMREGS are not affected.

MFC after:      1 week
2007-02-20 18:10:13 +00:00
rodrigc
5ecf1e9826 Try to avoid a possible infinite loop when parsing an invalid kernel dump file.
PR:		108229
Submitted by:	Jessica Han <jessicah juniper net>
Reviewed by:	marcel
MFC after:	1 week
2007-01-25 06:39:25 +00:00
ru
fc876fdc9e Bump document date for the previous change. 2006-10-21 17:39:35 +00:00
jmg
d571cf9da2 Turn on gdbserver for the arch that supports it.. 2006-10-21 17:27:36 +00:00