The igen/dgen and opc2c tools leak their heap-allocated memory (on
purpose) at program exit, which makes AddressSanitizer fail the tool
execution. This breaks the build, as it makes the tool return a
non-zero exit code.
Fix that by disabling leak detection through the setting of that
environment variable.
I also changed the opc2c rules for m32c to go through a temporary file.
What happened is that the failing opc2c would produce an incomplete file
(probably because ASan exits the process before stdout is flushed).
This meant that further make attempts didn't try to re-create the file,
as it already existed. A "clean" was therefore necessary. This can
also happen in regular builds if the user interrupts the build (^C) in
the middle of the opc2c execution and tries to resume it. Going to a
temporary file avoids this issue.
sim/m32c/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running opc2c.
sim/mips/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.
sim/mn10300/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.
sim/ppc/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.
sim/v850/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Set ASAN_OPTIONS when running igen.
Change-Id: I00f21d4dc1aff0ef73471925d41ce7c23e83e082
When building with AddressSanitizer, sim/m32c fails with:
./opc2c -l r8c.out /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/sim/m32c/r8c.opc > r8c.c
sim_log: r8c.out
=================================================================
==3919390==ERROR: LeakSanitizer: detected memory leaks
Direct leak of 4 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7ffff7677459 in __interceptor_malloc /build/gcc/src/gcc/libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:145
#1 0x55555555b3df in main /home/simark/src/binutils-gdb/sim/m32c/opc2c.c:658
#2 0x7ffff741fb24 in __libc_start_main (/usr/lib/libc.so.6+0x27b24)
Fix the leak in main by removing the vlist variable, which seems unused.
These use the same pattern as seen in the opcodes/ dir and in automake
in general (ish). This helps simplify the boilerplate for building and
linking build-time code, and fixes some inconsistency in flag usage.
For rules that were compiling+linking in a single step, split them into
separate steps so we can apply the correct set of options. This matches
automake behavior too.
This hasn't been initialized anywhere for years. It used to be for
passing in the path to libiberty, but that stopped happening long ago.
Delete it to simplify the build logic.
All the scripts were using this implicitly already, so there's no real
change for them, but we want to call it explicitly as the CPP tool is
used to generate nltvals.def.
This file is quite large and is getting unmanageable. Split it apart
to follow aclocal best practices by putting one-macro-per-file. There
shouldn't be any real functional changes here as can be seen in the
configure script regens.
Rather than hand maintain m4 includes in various autotool files,
use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS to declare the relevant search paths.
This simplifies the code, makes it more robust, and cleans out
unused logic from configure.
These ports don't use the common sim core, so they weren't providing
a sim_memory_map for gdb, so they failed to link with the new memory
map logic added for the sim. Add stubs to fix.
These settings might have made sense in darker compiler times, but I
think they're largely obsolete now. Looking through the values that
get used in HDEFINES, it's quite limited, and configure itself should
handle them. If we still need something, we can leverage standard
autoconf macros instead, after we get a clear user report.
TDEFINES was never set anywhere and was always empty, so prune that.
Since we require C11 now, we can assume many headers exist, and
clean up all of the conditional includes. It's not like any of
this code actually accounted for the headers not existing, just
whether we could include them.
The strings.h cleanup is a little nuanced: it isn't in C11, but
every use of it in the codebase will include strings.h only if
string.h doesn't exist. Since we now assume the C11 string.h
exists, we'll never include strings.h, so we can delete it.
We've had this off for a long time because the sim code was way too
full of warnings for it to be feasible. However, I've cleaned things
up significantly from when this was first merged, and we can start to
turn this around.
Change the macro to enable -Werror by default, and allow ports to opt
out. New ports will get it automatically (and we can push back on
them if they try to turn it off).
Also turn it off for the few ports that still hit warnings for me.
All the rest will get the new default, and we'll wait for feedback
if/when new issues come up.
With GDB requiring a C++11 compiler now, this hopefully shouldn't
be a big deal. It's been 10 years since C11 came out, so should
be plenty of time to upgrade.
This will allow us to start cleaning up random header logic and
many of our non-standard custom types.
We don't want arch-specific entries in the common ChangeLog files.
Most arches do this already, so clean up the recent additions, and
move some older entries down to help avoid confusing newcomers.
Rather than stuffing the command line with a bunch of -D flags, start
moving things to config.h which is managed by autoheader. This makes
the makefile a bit simpler and the build output tighter, and it makes
the migration to automake easier as there are fewer vars to juggle.
We'll want to move the other options out too, but it'll take more work.
This was imported from the ppc sim, but that was only used to control
a single file, and that is already governed by the hw models. There's
no need to have a sep configure option here, especially since none of
the other sims are using it. Even when the code is enabled, there's
no runtime overhead.
Currently ports have to call SIM_AC_OPTION_ENVIRONMENT explicitly in
order to make the configure flag available. There's no real reason
to not allow this flag for all ports, so move it to the common sim
macro. This way we get standard behavior across all ports too.
Currently ports have to call SIM_AC_OPTION_ASSERT explicitly in order
to make the configure flag available, which none of them do. There's
no real reason to not allow this flag for all ports, so move it to the
common sim macro. This way we get standard behavior across all ports.
We don't have alternative nltvals.def files, so always symlinking
the targ-vals.def file to it doesn't gain us anything. It does
make the build more complicated though and a pain to convert to
something newer (like automake). Drop the symlinking entirely.
In the future, we'll want to explode this file anyways into the
respective arch dirs so things can be selected dynamically at
runtime, so it's not like we'll be bringing this back.
Currently ports have to call SIM_AC_OPTION_INLINE explicitly in order
to make the configure flag available. There's no real reason to not
allow this flag for all ports, so move it to the common sim macro.
This way we get standard behavior across all ports too.
These options were never exposed for most sims (just the ppc one),
and they are really only useful on 32-bit x86 systems. Considering
modern systems tend to be 64-bit x86_64 and how well modern compilers
are at optimizing code, these have outlived their usefulness.
No other sub directory provides such a configuration option, so
drop it from the sim dir as well. This cleans up a good bit of
code in the process.
If people want to use custom flags for just the sim, they can
still run configure+make by hand in the sim subdir and use the
normal CFLAGS settings.
The common subdir sets up a cconfig.h file to hold checks for the common
code. In practice, most files still end up using config.h instead which
just leads to confusion.
Merge all the configure checks that went into cconfig.h into SIM_AC_COMMON
so we can drop the cconfig.h file altogether. Now there is only a single
config.h file like normal.
The compiler/C library should produce reasonable code for htonl/ntohl,
and at least glibc tries pretty hard to always produce good code for
them. This logic only had support for 32-bit x86 systems anymore, and
it's unlikely people were even opting into this, so drop it all.
The --enable-sim-hostendian flag was purely so people had an escape route
for when cross-compiling. This is because historically, AC_C_BIGENDIAN
did not work in those cases. That was fixed a while ago though, so we can
require that macro everywhere now and simplify a good bit of code.
No arch is using this anymore, and we want all new ports using the
hardware framework instead. Punt WITH_DEVICES and the two callbacks
device_io_{read,write}_buffer.
We can also punt the tconfig.h file as no port is using it anymore.
This fixes in-tree builds that get confused by picking up the wrong
one (common/ vs <port>/) caused by commit ae7d0cac8c.
Any port that needs to set up a global define can use their own
sim-main.h file that they must provide regardless.
Rather than manually include tconfig.h when we think we'll need it (which
is error prone as it can define symbols we expect from config.h), have it
be included directly by config.h. Since we know we have to include that
header everywhere already, this will make sure tconfig.h isn't missed.
It should also be fine as tconfig.h is supposed to be simple and only set
up a few core defines for the target.
This allows us to stop symlinking it in place all the time and just use
it straight out of the respective source directory.
Directories that don't use libtool need to add -ldl (on most *nix
hosts) to provide dlopen for libbfd.
config/
* plugins.m4 (AC_PLUGINS): If plugins are enabled, add -ldl to
LIBS via AC_SEARCH_LIBS.
gdb/
* acinclude.m4 (GDB_AC_CHECK_BFD): Don't add -ldl.
* config.in: Regenerate.
sim/ppc/
* configure.ac: Invoke AC_PLUGINS.
* config.in: Regenerate.
and regen lots of configure files.
It is rare for people to want to modify the cmd arg. In general, they
really shouldn't be, but a few still do. For those who misbehave, dupe
the string locally so they can bang on it.
I noticed the sim code is using an old implementation of the maintainer logic.
I cut it over to the new macro (like gdb has been doing). In practice, it
makes no difference currently as nothing in the sim tree uses it, but I have a
follow up commit for the Blackfin tree that needs it.