* bsd-kvm target, always a thread
@ 2008-08-08 3:20 Pedro Alves
2008-08-09 8:17 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 8:34 ` Mark Kettenis
0 siblings, 2 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Pedro Alves @ 2008-08-08 3:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gdb-patches
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 519 bytes --]
Hi,
This patches makes the bsd-kvm target register a main thread.
I've "tested" this on a x86 OpenBSD-4.3 VM, but I'm not qualified
to do much more openbsd kernel debugging other than:
(gdb) tar kvm
#0 0x00000006 in ?? ()
(gdb) info threads
* 1 <kvm> 0x00000006 in ?? ()
B.T.W, with GDB 6.3, which came with the distro I always get:
(gdb) tar kvm
#0 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
With HEAD I always get 0x00000006.
Is this difference expected? Related to the recent change to
build on 4.3?
OK?
--
Pedro Alves
[-- Attachment #2: bsd_kvm.diff --]
[-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 3048 bytes --]
2008-08-08 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
* bsd-kvm.c: Include "gdbthread.h".
(bsd_kvm_ptid): New.
(bsd_kvm_open): Add a main thread.
(bsd_kvm_close): Delete it.
(bsd_kvm_thread_alive): New.
(bsd_kvm_pid_to_str): New.
(bsd_kvm_add_target): Register bsd_kvm_thread_alive and
bsd_kvm_pid_to_str.
---
gdb/bsd-kvm.c | 33 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 33 insertions(+)
Index: src/gdb/bsd-kvm.c
===================================================================
--- src.orig/gdb/bsd-kvm.c 2008-08-08 04:04:34.000000000 +0100
+++ src/gdb/bsd-kvm.c 2008-08-08 04:10:58.000000000 +0100
@@ -25,6 +25,7 @@
#include "target.h"
#include "value.h"
#include "gdbcore.h" /* for get_exec_file */
+#include "gdbthread.h"
#include "gdb_assert.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
@@ -56,6 +57,12 @@ static int (*bsd_kvm_supply_pcb)(struct
/* Target ops for libkvm interface. */
static struct target_ops bsd_kvm_ops;
+/* This is the ptid we use while we're connected to kvm. Its value is
+ arbitrary, as the kvm target don't have a notion or processes or
+ thread ids, but we need something non-null to place in
+ inferior_ptid. */
+static ptid_t bsd_kvm_ptid;
+
static void
bsd_kvm_open (char *filename, int from_tty)
{
@@ -89,6 +96,9 @@ bsd_kvm_open (char *filename, int from_t
core_kd = temp_kd;
push_target (&bsd_kvm_ops);
+ add_thread_silent (bsd_kvm_ptid);
+ inferior_ptid = bsd_kvm_ptid;
+
target_fetch_registers (get_current_regcache (), -1);
reinit_frame_cache ();
@@ -104,6 +114,9 @@ bsd_kvm_close (int quitting)
warning (("%s"), kvm_geterr(core_kd));
core_kd = NULL;
}
+
+ inferior_ptid = null_ptid;
+ delete_thread_silent (bsd_kvm_ptid);
}
static LONGEST
@@ -297,6 +310,20 @@ bsd_kvm_pcb_cmd (char *arg, int fromtty)
print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), -1, 1);
}
+static int
+bsd_kvm_thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
+{
+ return 1;
+}
+
+static char *
+bsd_kvm_pid_to_str (ptid_t ptid)
+{
+ static char buf[64];
+ xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "<kvm>");
+ return buf;
+}
+
/* Add the libkvm interface to the list of all possible targets and
register CUPPLY_PCB as the architecture-specific process control
block interpreter. */
@@ -316,6 +343,8 @@ Optionally specify the filename of a cor
bsd_kvm_ops.to_fetch_registers = bsd_kvm_fetch_registers;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_xfer_partial = bsd_kvm_xfer_partial;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_files_info = bsd_kvm_files_info;
+ bsd_kvm_ops.to_thread_alive = bsd_kvm_thread_alive;
+ bsd_kvm_ops.to_pid_to_str = bsd_kvm_pid_to_str;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_has_memory = 1;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
@@ -335,4 +364,8 @@ Generic command for manipulating the ker
add_cmd ("pcb", class_obscure, bsd_kvm_pcb_cmd,
/* i18n: PCB == "Process Control Block" */
_("Set current context from pcb address"), &bsd_kvm_cmdlist);
+
+ /* Yes, 42000 is arbitrary. The only sense out of it, is that it
+ isn't 0. */
+ bsd_kvm_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 0, 42000);
}
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-08 3:20 bsd-kvm target, always a thread Pedro Alves
@ 2008-08-09 8:17 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 8:34 ` Mark Kettenis
1 sibling, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Mark Kettenis @ 2008-08-09 8:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: pedro; +Cc: gdb-patches
> From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2008 04:20:04 +0100
>
> Hi,
>
> This patches makes the bsd-kvm target register a main thread.
>
> I've "tested" this on a x86 OpenBSD-4.3 VM, but I'm not qualified
> to do much more openbsd kernel debugging other than:
>
> (gdb) tar kvm
> #0 0x00000006 in ?? ()
> (gdb) info threads
> * 1 <kvm> 0x00000006 in ?? ()
>
> B.T.W, with GDB 6.3, which came with the distro I always get:
>
> (gdb) tar kvm
> #0 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
>
> With HEAD I always get 0x00000006.
>
> Is this difference expected? Related to the recent change to
> build on 4.3?
Hmm, for some reason the .sf_eip got lost when I committed that code.
Fixed by the attached diff, which I committed.
(I'll send a seperate reply to discuss your diff).
Index: ChangeLog
from Mark Kettenis <kettenis@gnu.org>
* i386obsd-nat.c (i386obsd_supply_pcb): Supply the right bytes for
the %eip register.
Index: i386obsd-nat.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/i386obsd-nat.c,v
retrieving revision 1.12
diff -u -p -r1.12 i386obsd-nat.c
--- i386obsd-nat.c 6 Aug 2008 19:56:20 -0000 1.12
+++ i386obsd-nat.c 9 Aug 2008 07:58:54 -0000
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ i386obsd_supply_pcb (struct regcache *re
pcb->pcb_esp = pcb->pcb_ebp;
pcb->pcb_ebp = read_memory_integer(pcb->pcb_esp, 4);
sf.sf_eip = read_memory_integer(pcb->pcb_esp + 4, 4);
- regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EIP_REGNUM, &sf);
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EIP_REGNUM, &sf.sf_eip);
}
regcache_raw_supply (regcache, I386_EBP_REGNUM, &pcb->pcb_ebp);
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-08 3:20 bsd-kvm target, always a thread Pedro Alves
2008-08-09 8:17 ` Mark Kettenis
@ 2008-08-09 8:34 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 11:28 ` Pedro Alves
1 sibling, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Mark Kettenis @ 2008-08-09 8:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: pedro; +Cc: gdb-patches
> From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2008 04:20:04 +0100
>
> Hi,
>
> This patches makes the bsd-kvm target register a main thread.
>
> OK?
Hmm, it is unfortunate that a process ID of 0 is "verboten", since
that's what you are really looking at with "target kvm". And it
should be possible for me to actually make all the running processes
visible as kernel "threads".
I guess your diff is right, although I'd prefer a less arbitrary ptid
to be used. Would something like ptid_build(0, 1, 0) work?
> 2008-08-08 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
>
> * bsd-kvm.c: Include "gdbthread.h".
> (bsd_kvm_ptid): New.
> (bsd_kvm_open): Add a main thread.
> (bsd_kvm_close): Delete it.
> (bsd_kvm_thread_alive): New.
> (bsd_kvm_pid_to_str): New.
> (bsd_kvm_add_target): Register bsd_kvm_thread_alive and
> bsd_kvm_pid_to_str.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-09 8:34 ` Mark Kettenis
@ 2008-08-09 11:28 ` Pedro Alves
2008-08-09 12:13 ` Mark Kettenis
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Pedro Alves @ 2008-08-09 11:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mark Kettenis; +Cc: gdb-patches
On Saturday 09 August 2008 09:32:57, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> Hmm, it is unfortunate that a process ID of 0 is "verboten", since
> that's what you are really looking at with "target kvm". And it
> should be possible for me to actually make all the running processes
> visible as kernel "threads".
>
> I guess your diff is right, although I'd prefer a less arbitrary ptid
> to be used. Would something like ptid_build(0, 1, 0) work?
I'd prefer to get away without pid == 0. I'm going to
introduce later a "struct inferior" which holds an "int pid", and
we will match a ptid to a struct inferior by its ptid.pid.
I'd rather avoid having an inferior with pid == 0.
Does something like this work for you?
ptid(42000, 0, 0) -> for use when we pass around a
ptid representing the whole inferior.
ptid(42000, 1, 0) -> in kernel
ptid(42000, 1, 1) -> process 1.
ptid(42000, 1, 2) -> process 2
ptid(42000, 1, 3) -> process 3
...
Or, does it make sense to have one or more threads for the kernel,
distinct from user visible processes?
ptid(42000, 0, 0) -> for use when we pass around a
ptid representing the whole inferior.
ptid(42000, 1, 1) -> kernel thread/context 1
ptid(42000, 1, 2) -> kernel thread/context 2
...
ptid(42000, 0, 1) -> user process 1.
ptid(42000, 0, 2) -> user process 2
ptid(42000, 0, 3) -> user process 3
...
These are internal ids, of course. We only show them what we
want in target_pid_to_str and target_extra_thread_info. The user
doesn't need to know anything about these ids.
--
Pedro Alves
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-09 11:28 ` Pedro Alves
@ 2008-08-09 12:13 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 14:31 ` Pedro Alves
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Mark Kettenis @ 2008-08-09 12:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: pedro; +Cc: gdb-patches
> From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2008 12:27:34 +0100
>
> On Saturday 09 August 2008 09:32:57, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
>
> > Hmm, it is unfortunate that a process ID of 0 is "verboten", since
> > that's what you are really looking at with "target kvm". And it
> > should be possible for me to actually make all the running processes
> > visible as kernel "threads".
> >
>
> > I guess your diff is right, although I'd prefer a less arbitrary ptid
> > to be used. Would something like ptid_build(0, 1, 0) work?
>
> I'd prefer to get away without pid == 0. I'm going to
> introduce later a "struct inferior" which holds an "int pid", and
> we will match a ptid to a struct inferior by its ptid.pid.
> I'd rather avoid having an inferior with pid == 0.
>
> Does something like this work for you?
>
> ptid(42000, 0, 0) -> for use when we pass around a
> ptid representing the whole inferior.
>
> ptid(42000, 1, 0) -> in kernel
>
> ptid(42000, 1, 1) -> process 1.
> ptid(42000, 1, 2) -> process 2
> ptid(42000, 1, 3) -> process 3
> ...
Something like that'd work fine for the OpenBSD kernel.
> These are internal ids, of course. We only show them what we
> want in target_pid_to_str and target_extra_thread_info. The user
> doesn't need to know anything about these ids.
Sure, I'd just think you should use something that's a bit less
arbitrary than 42000 (which could be confused with a real process ID)
here. I see that remote.c uses negative numbers for special cases.
Would using -1 or -2 work for you?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-09 12:13 ` Mark Kettenis
@ 2008-08-09 14:31 ` Pedro Alves
2008-08-10 15:56 ` Mark Kettenis
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Pedro Alves @ 2008-08-09 14:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mark Kettenis; +Cc: gdb-patches
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2670 bytes --]
On Saturday 09 August 2008 13:11:16, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> > Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2008 12:27:34 +0100
> >
> > On Saturday 09 August 2008 09:32:57, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > > > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> > >
> > > Hmm, it is unfortunate that a process ID of 0 is "verboten", since
> > > that's what you are really looking at with "target kvm". And it
> > > should be possible for me to actually make all the running processes
> > > visible as kernel "threads".
> > >
> > >
> > > I guess your diff is right, although I'd prefer a less arbitrary ptid
> > > to be used. Would something like ptid_build(0, 1, 0) work?
> >
> > I'd prefer to get away without pid == 0. I'm going to
> > introduce later a "struct inferior" which holds an "int pid", and
> > we will match a ptid to a struct inferior by its ptid.pid.
> > I'd rather avoid having an inferior with pid == 0.
> >
> > Does something like this work for you?
>
> Something like that'd work fine for the OpenBSD kernel.
> Sure, I'd just think you should use something that's a bit less
> arbitrary than 42000 (which could be confused with a real process ID)
> here.
Eh, 42 carries some history. :-) It was used in several targets already,
even before I started changing then to use ptid(pid,0,tid), and always
registering a thread. monitor used 42000, remote used 42000, remote-sim
used 42, go32-nat.c uses 42. I just thought that carrying it around
would make it easier to spot what it is.
> I see that remote.c uses negative numbers for special cases.
> Would using -1 or -2 work for you?
Those are in the tid field, which I just carried around when I
made the remote target use ptid(pid,0,tid) for threads instead
of ptid(tid,0,0). The magic is in using lwp != 0. The
special -1,-2 numbers have has some binding to the remote
stub current thread.
Let's not use -1, as that conflicts a bit with the special
ptid(-1,0,0) (aka, minus_one_ptid).
I actually have a patchlet in my series to bring back the 42000:
remote.c:
/* Take advantage of the fact that the LWP field is not used, to tag
special ptids with it set to != 0. */
- magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -1);
- not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -2);
- any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, 0);
+ magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -1);
+ not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -2);
+ any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, 0);
I guess we're numerically converging :-)
How about the attached?
With your fix for the %eip in, I now get,
(gdb) tar kvm
#0 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
(gdb) info threads
* 1 <kvm> 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
OK?
--
Pedro Alves
[-- Attachment #2: bsd_kvm.diff --]
[-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 3597 bytes --]
2008-08-09 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
* bsd-kvm.c: Include "gdbthread.h".
(bsd_kvm_ptid): New.
(bsd_kvm_open): Add a main thread.
(bsd_kvm_close): Delete it.
(bsd_kvm_thread_alive): New.
(bsd_kvm_pid_to_str): New.
(bsd_kvm_add_target): Register bsd_kvm_thread_alive and
bsd_kvm_pid_to_str.
(bsd_kvm_add_target): Initialize bsd_kvm_ptid.
---
gdb/bsd-kvm.c | 44 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 44 insertions(+)
Index: src/gdb/bsd-kvm.c
===================================================================
--- src.orig/gdb/bsd-kvm.c 2008-08-09 15:04:34.000000000 +0100
+++ src/gdb/bsd-kvm.c 2008-08-09 15:28:08.000000000 +0100
@@ -25,6 +25,7 @@
#include "target.h"
#include "value.h"
#include "gdbcore.h" /* for get_exec_file */
+#include "gdbthread.h"
#include "gdb_assert.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
@@ -56,6 +57,11 @@ static int (*bsd_kvm_supply_pcb)(struct
/* Target ops for libkvm interface. */
static struct target_ops bsd_kvm_ops;
+/* This is the ptid we use while we're connected to kvm. The kvm
+ target currently doesn't export any view of the running processes,
+ so this represents the kernel task. */
+static ptid_t bsd_kvm_ptid;
+
static void
bsd_kvm_open (char *filename, int from_tty)
{
@@ -89,6 +95,9 @@ bsd_kvm_open (char *filename, int from_t
core_kd = temp_kd;
push_target (&bsd_kvm_ops);
+ add_thread_silent (bsd_kvm_ptid);
+ inferior_ptid = bsd_kvm_ptid;
+
target_fetch_registers (get_current_regcache (), -1);
reinit_frame_cache ();
@@ -104,6 +113,9 @@ bsd_kvm_close (int quitting)
warning (("%s"), kvm_geterr(core_kd));
core_kd = NULL;
}
+
+ inferior_ptid = null_ptid;
+ delete_thread_silent (bsd_kvm_ptid);
}
static LONGEST
@@ -297,6 +309,20 @@ bsd_kvm_pcb_cmd (char *arg, int fromtty)
print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), -1, 1);
}
+static int
+bsd_kvm_thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
+{
+ return 1;
+}
+
+static char *
+bsd_kvm_pid_to_str (ptid_t ptid)
+{
+ static char buf[64];
+ xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "<kvm>");
+ return buf;
+}
+
/* Add the libkvm interface to the list of all possible targets and
register CUPPLY_PCB as the architecture-specific process control
block interpreter. */
@@ -316,6 +342,8 @@ Optionally specify the filename of a cor
bsd_kvm_ops.to_fetch_registers = bsd_kvm_fetch_registers;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_xfer_partial = bsd_kvm_xfer_partial;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_files_info = bsd_kvm_files_info;
+ bsd_kvm_ops.to_thread_alive = bsd_kvm_thread_alive;
+ bsd_kvm_ops.to_pid_to_str = bsd_kvm_pid_to_str;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_has_memory = 1;
bsd_kvm_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
@@ -335,4 +363,20 @@ Generic command for manipulating the ker
add_cmd ("pcb", class_obscure, bsd_kvm_pcb_cmd,
/* i18n: PCB == "Process Control Block" */
_("Set current context from pcb address"), &bsd_kvm_cmdlist);
+
+ /* Some notes on the ptid usage on this target.
+
+ The pid field represents the kvm inferior instance. Currently,
+ we don't support multiple kvm inferiors, but we start at 1
+ anyway. The lwp field is set to != 0, in case the core wants to
+ refer to the whole kvm inferior with ptid(1,0,0).
+
+ If kvm is made to export running processes as gdb threads,
+ the following form can be used:
+ ptid (1, 1, 0) -> kvm inferior 1, in kernel
+ ptid (1, 1, 1) -> kvm inferior 1, process 1
+ ptid (1, 1, 2) -> kvm inferior 1, process 2
+ ptid (1, 1, n) -> kvm inferior 1, process n
+ */
+ bsd_kvm_ptid = ptid_build (1, 1, 0);
}
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-09 14:31 ` Pedro Alves
@ 2008-08-10 15:56 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-10 17:34 ` Pedro Alves
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Mark Kettenis @ 2008-08-10 15:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: pedro; +Cc: gdb-patches
> From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2008 15:29:08 +0100
>
> On Saturday 09 August 2008 13:11:16, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> > > Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2008 12:27:34 +0100
> > >
> > > On Saturday 09 August 2008 09:32:57, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > > > > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> > > >
> > > > Hmm, it is unfortunate that a process ID of 0 is "verboten", since
> > > > that's what you are really looking at with "target kvm". And it
> > > > should be possible for me to actually make all the running processes
> > > > visible as kernel "threads".
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > I guess your diff is right, although I'd prefer a less arbitrary ptid
> > > > to be used. Would something like ptid_build(0, 1, 0) work?
> > >
> > > I'd prefer to get away without pid == 0. I'm going to
> > > introduce later a "struct inferior" which holds an "int pid", and
> > > we will match a ptid to a struct inferior by its ptid.pid.
> > > I'd rather avoid having an inferior with pid == 0.
> > >
> > > Does something like this work for you?
> >
> > Something like that'd work fine for the OpenBSD kernel.
>
> > Sure, I'd just think you should use something that's a bit less
> > arbitrary than 42000 (which could be confused with a real process ID)
> > here.
>
> Eh, 42 carries some history. :-) It was used in several targets already,
> even before I started changing then to use ptid(pid,0,tid), and always
> registering a thread. monitor used 42000, remote used 42000, remote-sim
> used 42, go32-nat.c uses 42. I just thought that carrying it around
> would make it easier to spot what it is.
I can see where that 42 is coming from. So 42000 can defenitely not
be the answer! ;).
Seriously though, the fact the it was changed for 42 to 42000 in some
places is a hint that there is a problem here. There must have been a
collision between 42 and a real process ID somehwre. And I guess it
was changed to 42000 since many Unix systems process IDs are 16-bit.
But there may be modern systems around that use larger values.
> Let's not use -1, as that conflicts a bit with the special
> ptid(-1,0,0) (aka, minus_one_ptid).
Not if you set the lwpid or tid to something non-zero.
> I actually have a patchlet in my series to bring back the 42000:
>
> remote.c:
> /* Take advantage of the fact that the LWP field is not used, to tag
> special ptids with it set to != 0. */
> - magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -1);
> - not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -2);
> - any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, 0);
> + magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -1);
> + not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -2);
> + any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, 0);
>
> I guess we're numerically converging :-)
Well, that diff would be simply wrong! What if you're debugging
process ID 42000 remotely?
> How about the attached?
>
> With your fix for the %eip in, I now get,
>
> (gdb) tar kvm
> #0 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
> (gdb) info threads
> * 1 <kvm> 0xd034ee05 in ?? ()
>
> OK?
I guess this will do for now.
> 2008-08-09 Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
>
> * bsd-kvm.c: Include "gdbthread.h".
> (bsd_kvm_ptid): New.
> (bsd_kvm_open): Add a main thread.
> (bsd_kvm_close): Delete it.
> (bsd_kvm_thread_alive): New.
> (bsd_kvm_pid_to_str): New.
> (bsd_kvm_add_target): Register bsd_kvm_thread_alive and
> bsd_kvm_pid_to_str.
> (bsd_kvm_add_target): Initialize bsd_kvm_ptid.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: bsd-kvm target, always a thread
2008-08-10 15:56 ` Mark Kettenis
@ 2008-08-10 17:34 ` Pedro Alves
0 siblings, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Pedro Alves @ 2008-08-10 17:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mark Kettenis; +Cc: gdb-patches
On Sunday 10 August 2008 16:54:52, Mark Kettenis wrote:
> > From: Pedro Alves <pedro@codesourcery.com>
> > > Sure, I'd just think you should use something that's a bit less
> > > arbitrary than 42000 (which could be confused with a real process ID)
> > > here.
> >
> > Eh, 42 carries some history. :-) It was used in several targets
> > already, even before I started changing then to use ptid(pid,0,tid), and
> > always registering a thread. monitor used 42000, remote used 42000,
> > remote-sim used 42, go32-nat.c uses 42. I just thought that carrying it
> > around would make it easier to spot what it is.
>
> I can see where that 42 is coming from. So 42000 can defenitely not
> be the answer! ;).
This is used in targets that either have no notion of pids
whatsoever, (monitor, go32-nat, remote-sim fall in this category) or
the protocol/stub doesn't report those (remote-m32c I guess). remote.c
falls a bit on both sides, and so has a somewhat special handling of
this. See below.
> Seriously though, the fact the it was changed for 42 to 42000 in some
> places is a hint that there is a problem here. There must have been a
> collision between 42 and a real process ID somehwre. And I guess it
> was changed to 42000 since many Unix systems process IDs are 16-bit.
> But there may be modern systems around that use larger values.
See below.
> > Let's not use -1, as that conflicts a bit with the special
> > ptid(-1,0,0) (aka, minus_one_ptid).
>
> Not if you set the lwpid or tid to something non-zero.
>
It does, if you want to use (pid,0,0) to refer to the whole inferior,
vs (-1,0,0) to mean all threads of all inferiors.
> > I actually have a patchlet in my series to bring back the 42000:
> >
> > remote.c:
> > /* Take advantage of the fact that the LWP field is not used, to tag
> > special ptids with it set to != 0. */
> > - magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -1);
> > - not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, -2);
> > - any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (0, 1, 0);
> > + magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -1);
> > + not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -2);
> > + any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, 0);
> >
> > I guess we're numerically converging :-)
>
> Well, that diff would be simply wrong! What if you're debugging
> process ID 42000 remotely?
No, notice that the lwp member is != 0.
There is currently no problem whatsoever in this case. This id is only
used when the remote side does *not* support or report any pid/thread
id, or is supported, hasn't reported to GDB yet. It is never passed
back to the remote side, e.g,
if (ptid_equal (ptid, magic_null_ptid))
{
/* MAGIC_NULL_PTID means that we don't have any active threads,
so we don't have any TID numbers the inferior will
understand. Make sure to only send forms that do not specify
a TID. */
if (step && siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
outbuf = xstrprintf ("vCont;S%02x", siggnal);
else if (step)
outbuf = xstrprintf ("vCont;s");
else if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
outbuf = xstrprintf ("vCont;C%02x", siggnal);
else
outbuf = xstrprintf ("vCont;c");
}
ptid(42000,1,-1) can never be mistaken with a real pid, since the
lwp member is != 0, and that is never used for a ptid representing a process
or thread id reported by the remote side.
...
Check out remote.c:set_thread:
/* If PTID is MAGIC_NULL_PTID, don't set any thread. If PTID is
MINUS_ONE_PTID, set the thread to -1, so the stub returns the
thread. If GEN is set, set the general thread, if not, then set
the step/continue thread. */
Also remote.c:record_currthread, where we detect that the stub reported
a pid/tid, which means we can stop using magic_null_ptid at that point.
Also see remote.c:remote_start_remote, where we override magic_null_ptid
current thread with reported by qC, if the stub suports it.
(yes, remote.c:extended_remote_create_inferior_1 could be checking
if the remote reported a pid/tid in the stop reply to vRun, and
querying the remote for the current thread with qC, if qC
is supported --- I've come across this when working on the
multi-process remote work)
> I guess this will do for now.
Thanks, I'll go check it in. Indeed, we can always revisit this when
we need it. I'm seriously *not* trying to get in your way. :-)
--
Pedro Alves
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-08-10 17:34 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2008-08-08 3:20 bsd-kvm target, always a thread Pedro Alves
2008-08-09 8:17 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 8:34 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 11:28 ` Pedro Alves
2008-08-09 12:13 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-09 14:31 ` Pedro Alves
2008-08-10 15:56 ` Mark Kettenis
2008-08-10 17:34 ` Pedro Alves
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